check-code: catch Python 'is' comparing number or string literals
The Python 'is' operator compares object identity, so it should
definitely not be applied to string or number literals, which Python
implementations are free to represent with a temporary object.
This should catch the following kinds of bogus expressions (examples):
x is 'foo' x is not 'foo'
x is "bar" x is not "bar"
x is 42 x is not 42
x is -36 x is not -36
As originally proposed by Martin Geisler, amended with catching
negative numbers.
$ "$TESTDIR/hghave" inotify || exit 80
$ hg init repo1
$ cd repo1
$ touch a b c d e
$ mkdir dir
$ mkdir dir/bar
$ touch dir/x dir/y dir/bar/foo
$ hg ci -Am m
adding a
adding b
adding c
adding d
adding dir/bar/foo
adding dir/x
adding dir/y
adding e
$ cd ..
$ hg clone repo1 repo2
updating to branch default
8 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ echo "[extensions]" >> $HGRCPATH
$ echo "inotify=" >> $HGRCPATH
$ cd repo2
$ echo b >> a
check that daemon started automatically works correctly
and make sure that inotify.pidfile works
$ hg --config "inotify.pidfile=../hg2.pid" status
M a
make sure that pidfile worked. Output should be silent.
$ kill `cat ../hg2.pid`
$ cd ../repo1
inserve
$ hg inserve -d --pid-file=hg.pid
$ cat hg.pid >> "$DAEMON_PIDS"
let the daemon finish its stuff
$ sleep 1
cannot start, already bound
$ hg inserve
abort: inotify-server: cannot start: socket is already bound
[255]
issue907
$ hg status
? hg.pid
clean
$ hg status -c
C a
C b
C c
C d
C dir/bar/foo
C dir/x
C dir/y
C e
all
$ hg status -A
? hg.pid
C a
C b
C c
C d
C dir/bar/foo
C dir/x
C dir/y
C e
path patterns
$ echo x > dir/x
$ hg status .
M dir/x
? hg.pid
$ hg status dir
M dir/x
$ cd dir
$ hg status .
M x
$ cd ..
issue 1375
testing that we can remove a folder and then add a file with the same name
issue 1375
$ mkdir h
$ echo h > h/h
$ hg ci -Am t
adding h/h
adding hg.pid
$ hg rm h
removing h/h
$ echo h >h
$ hg add h
$ hg status
A h
R h/h
$ hg ci -m0
Test for issue1735: inotify watches files in .hg/merge
$ hg st
$ echo a > a
$ hg ci -Am a
$ hg st
$ echo b >> a
$ hg ci -m ab
$ hg st
$ echo c >> a
$ hg st
M a
$ HGMERGE=internal:local hg up 0
1 files updated, 1 files merged, 2 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ hg st
M a
$ HGMERGE=internal:local hg up
3 files updated, 1 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ hg st
M a
Test for 1844: "hg ci folder" will not commit all changes beneath "folder"
$ mkdir 1844
$ echo a > 1844/foo
$ hg add 1844
adding 1844/foo
$ hg ci -m 'working'
$ echo b >> 1844/foo
$ hg ci 1844 -m 'broken'
Test for issue884: "Build products not ignored until .hgignore is touched"
$ echo '^build$' > .hgignore
$ hg add .hgignore
$ hg ci .hgignore -m 'ignorelist'
Now, lets add some build products...
$ mkdir build
$ touch build/x
$ touch build/y
build/x & build/y shouldn't appear in "hg st"
$ hg st
$ kill `cat hg.pid`