test-serve: make the 'listening at *' lines optional
The daemonized serve process doesn't print these lines out (see 448d0c452140).
I was able to get it to with the following hack:
diff --git a/mercurial/win32.py b/mercurial/win32.py
--- a/mercurial/win32.py
+++ b/mercurial/win32.py
@@ -418,6 +418,11 @@
return str(ppid)
def spawndetached(args):
+
+ import subprocess
+ return subprocess.Popen(args, cwd=pycompat.getcwd(), env=encoding.environ,
+ creationflags=subprocess.CREATE_NEW_PROCESS_GROUP).pid
+
# No standard library function really spawns a fully detached
# process under win32 because they allocate pipes or other objects
# to handle standard streams communications. Passing these objects
However, MSYS translates --prefixes starting with '/' to 'C:/MinGW/msys/1.0',
which changes the output. The output isn't so important that I want to spend a
bunch of time on this, and risk breaking some subtle behavior of `hg serve -d`
with the more complicated code.
# Extension dedicated to test patch.diff() upgrade modes
from __future__ import absolute_import
from mercurial import (
cmdutil,
error,
patch,
scmutil,
)
cmdtable = {}
command = cmdutil.command(cmdtable)
@command('autodiff',
[('', 'git', '', 'git upgrade mode (yes/no/auto/warn/abort)')],
'[OPTION]... [FILE]...')
def autodiff(ui, repo, *pats, **opts):
diffopts = patch.difffeatureopts(ui, opts)
git = opts.get('git', 'no')
brokenfiles = set()
losedatafn = None
if git in ('yes', 'no'):
diffopts.git = git == 'yes'
diffopts.upgrade = False
elif git == 'auto':
diffopts.git = False
diffopts.upgrade = True
elif git == 'warn':
diffopts.git = False
diffopts.upgrade = True
def losedatafn(fn=None, **kwargs):
brokenfiles.add(fn)
return True
elif git == 'abort':
diffopts.git = False
diffopts.upgrade = True
def losedatafn(fn=None, **kwargs):
raise error.Abort('losing data for %s' % fn)
else:
raise error.Abort('--git must be yes, no or auto')
node1, node2 = scmutil.revpair(repo, [])
m = scmutil.match(repo[node2], pats, opts)
it = patch.diff(repo, node1, node2, match=m, opts=diffopts,
losedatafn=losedatafn)
for chunk in it:
ui.write(chunk)
for fn in sorted(brokenfiles):
ui.write(('data lost for: %s\n' % fn))