view tests/filterpyflakes.py @ 40440:69d4c8c5c25e stable

subrepo: print the status line before creating the peer for better diagnostics I ran into a problem where I tried updating to a different branch, and the process appeared to hang. It turned out that the subrepo revision wasn't available locally, and I must have originally cloned it from an `hg serve -S` on a machine that currently wasn't serving anything. It took 2+ minutes to timeout, and didn't mention what it was connecting to even then. There are a couple of other issues in this scenario too. - The repo is dirty after the failed checkout because the top level repo is updated first. We should probably make 2 passes- top down to pull everything needed, and then do an update once everything is in place. - Something must be reading .hgsubstate from wdir because if the same merge command is run after the timeout, a prompt is issued that the local and remote subrepo diverged, instead of hanging. But it lists the local version and remote version as having the same hash.
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Fri, 16 Nov 2018 18:37:26 -0500
parents 6029939f7e98
children 2372284d9457
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#!/usr/bin/env python

# Filter output by pyflakes to control which warnings we check

from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function

import re
import sys

lines = []
for line in sys.stdin:
    # We blacklist tests that are too noisy for us
    pats = [
        r"undefined name 'WindowsError'",
        r"redefinition of unused '[^']+' from line",
        # for cffi, allow re-exports from pure.*
        r"cffi/[^:]*:.*\bimport \*' used",
        r"cffi/[^:]*:.*\*' imported but unused",
    ]

    keep = True
    for pat in pats:
        if re.search(pat, line):
            keep = False
            break # pattern matches
    if keep:
        fn = line.split(':', 1)[0]
        f = open(fn)
        data = f.read()
        f.close()
        if 'no-' 'check-code' in data:
            continue
        lines.append(line)

for line in lines:
    sys.stdout.write(line)
print()