Mercurial > hg-stable
view tests/test-extensions-wrapfunction.py @ 40847:77173267878b
narrow: don't resurrect old commits when narrowing (don't strip obsmarkers)
If you have an old obsolescence-chain of commits that has been pruned
and you narrow your repo so that some of those commits get stripped
(because they affected the removed paths), then we would currently
resurrect the commit that came before (along the obsmarker chain) the
last stripped commit. That happens by the usual rules for
obsmarker-stripping. However, it's quite surprising when it happens
when you narrow your repo. This patch makes narrowing not strip
obsmarkers.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5364
author | Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 03 Dec 2018 16:56:09 -0800 |
parents | ac865f020b99 |
children | 2372284d9457 |
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from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function from mercurial import extensions def genwrapper(x): def f(orig, *args, **kwds): return [x] + orig(*args, **kwds) f.x = x return f def getid(wrapper): return getattr(wrapper, 'x', '-') wrappers = [genwrapper(i) for i in range(5)] class dummyclass(object): def getstack(self): return ['orig'] dummy = dummyclass() def batchwrap(wrappers): for w in wrappers: extensions.wrapfunction(dummy, 'getstack', w) print('wrap %d: %s' % (getid(w), dummy.getstack())) def batchunwrap(wrappers): for w in wrappers: result = None try: result = extensions.unwrapfunction(dummy, 'getstack', w) msg = str(dummy.getstack()) except (ValueError, IndexError) as e: msg = e.__class__.__name__ print('unwrap %s: %s: %s' % (getid(w), getid(result), msg)) batchwrap(wrappers + [wrappers[0]]) batchunwrap([(wrappers[i] if i is not None and i >= 0 else None) for i in [3, None, 0, 4, 0, 2, 1, None]]) wrap0 = extensions.wrappedfunction(dummy, 'getstack', wrappers[0]) wrap1 = extensions.wrappedfunction(dummy, 'getstack', wrappers[1]) # Use them in a different order from how they were created to check that # the wrapping happens in __enter__, not in __init__ print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) with wrap1: print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) with wrap0: print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) # Bad programmer forgets to unwrap the function, but the context # managers still unwrap their wrappings. extensions.wrapfunction(dummy, 'getstack', wrappers[2]) print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) # Wrap callable object which has no __name__ class callableobj(object): def __call__(self): return ['orig'] dummy.cobj = callableobj() extensions.wrapfunction(dummy, 'cobj', wrappers[0]) print('wrap callable object', dummy.cobj())