global: use raw strings for regular expressions with escapes
Escape sequences like \w, \s, and \d are technically invalid
in str/bytes. This became a deprecation warning in Python 3.6
(https://bugs.python.org/issue27364). Python 3.8 bumps it to
a SyntaxWarning (https://bugs.python.org/issue32912), which is
non-silent by default.
This commit changes a number of regular expressions to use
br'' so regular expression special sequences don't need \\
literals. This fixes roughly half of the SyntaxWarning we
see in the code base with Python 3.8.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5815
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import os
import sys
import unittest
def main(modulename):
'''run the tests found in module, printing nothing when all tests pass'''
module = sys.modules[modulename]
suite = unittest.defaultTestLoader.loadTestsFromModule(module)
results = unittest.TestResult()
suite.run(results)
if results.errors or results.failures:
for tc, exc in results.errors:
print('ERROR:', tc)
print()
sys.stdout.write(exc)
for tc, exc in results.failures:
print('FAIL:', tc)
print()
sys.stdout.write(exc)
sys.exit(1)
if os.environ.get('SILENT_BE_NOISY'):
main = unittest.main