Mercurial > hg-stable
view tests/test-locate @ 4307:702f48570eb3
change relglob: patterns to be consistent with glob: patterns
With this change, you have to use "hg locate 'hgweb/**'" to locate
all the files in directories named hgweb. OTOH, "hg locate '*l'"
will locate only files that end with "l" - e.g. a file called "hg.py"
will not be matched just because it's in a directory whose name ends
with "l" (e.g. "mercurial").
author | Alexis S. L. Carvalho <alexis@cecm.usp.br> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 04 Apr 2007 04:22:06 -0300 |
parents | eca3277c4220 |
children | a5cde03cd019 |
line wrap: on
line source
#!/bin/sh hglocate() { echo "hg locate $@" hg locate "$@" ret=$? echo return $ret } mkdir t cd t hg init echo 0 > a echo 0 > b echo 0 > t.h mkdir t echo 0 > t/x echo 0 > t/b echo 0 > t/e.h mkdir dir.h echo 0 > dir.h/foo hg ci -A -m m -d "1000000 0" touch nottracked hglocate a && echo locate succeeded || echo locate failed hglocate NONEXISTENT && echo locate succeeded || echo locate failed hglocate hg rm a hg ci -m m -d "1000000 0" hglocate a hglocate NONEXISTENT hglocate hglocate -r 0 a hglocate -r 0 NONEXISTENT hglocate -r 0 echo % -I/-X with relative path should work cd t hglocate hglocate -I ../t # test issue294 cd .. rm -r t hglocate 't/**' mkdir otherdir cd otherdir hglocate b hglocate '*.h' hglocate path:t/x hglocate 're:.*\.h$' hglocate -r 0 b hglocate -r 0 '*.h' hglocate -r 0 path:t/x hglocate -r 0 're:.*\.h$'