tests/test-check-py3-commands.t
author Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
Mon, 13 Mar 2017 21:42:59 -0700
changeset 31414 d5eb20934c36
parent 31410 ed23f929af38
child 31459 b3b4c487707c
permissions -rw-r--r--
tests: duplicate test for pager for old extension and for in-core pager When the old pager extension is enabled, I think we should try to be as BC as reasonable. To help with that, this patch brings back test-pager.t as of 65a3b4d67a65 (pager: add a test of --pager=no functionality, 2017-02-06), but under the name test-pager-legacy.t However, since the behavior has changed in a few cases (notably by no longer respecting pager.attend), the file is modified to work with the current version. We will recover some lost BC in coming patches. Also, to make sure the in-core pager does not depend on the pager extension being enabled, this patch disables the extension in test-pager.t. It turns out that pager.attend-$cmd was only supported when the pager extension was enabled, so the tests are updated to reflect that. We will need to decide what to do with these.

#require py3exe

This test helps in keeping a track on which commands we can run on
Python 3 and see what kind of errors are coming up.
The full traceback is hidden to have a stable output.
  $ HGBIN=`which hg`

  $ for cmd in version debuginstall ; do
  >   echo $cmd
  >   $PYTHON3 $HGBIN $cmd 2>&1 2>&1 | tail -1
  > done
  version
  warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
  debuginstall
  no problems detected

#if test-repo
Make a clone so that any features in the developer's .hg/hgrc that
might confuse Python 3 don't break this test. When we can do commit in
Python 3, we'll stop doing this. We use e76ed1e480ef for the clone
because it has different files than 273ce12ad8f1, so we can test both
`files` from dirstate and `files` loaded from a specific revision.

  $ hg clone -r e76ed1e480ef "`dirname "$TESTDIR"`" testrepo 2>&1 | tail -1
  15 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved

Test using -R, which exercises some URL code:
  $ $PYTHON3 $HGBIN -R testrepo files -r 273ce12ad8f1 | tail -1
  testrepo/tkmerge

Now prove `hg files` is reading the whole manifest. We have to grep
out some potential warnings that come from hgrc as yet.
  $ cd testrepo
  $ $PYTHON3 $HGBIN files -r 273ce12ad8f1
  .hgignore
  PKG-INFO
  README
  hg
  mercurial/__init__.py
  mercurial/byterange.py
  mercurial/fancyopts.py
  mercurial/hg.py
  mercurial/mdiff.py
  mercurial/revlog.py
  mercurial/transaction.py
  notes.txt
  setup.py
  tkmerge

  $ $PYTHON3 $HGBIN files -r 273ce12ad8f1 | wc -l
  \s*14 (re)
  $ $PYTHON3 $HGBIN files | wc -l
  \s*15 (re)
  $ cd ..
#endif

  $ cat > included-hgrc <<EOF
  > [extensions]
  > babar = imaginary_elephant
  > EOF
  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF
  > %include $TESTTMP/included-hgrc
  > EOF
  $ $PYTHON3 $HGBIN version | tail -1
  *** failed to import extension babar from imaginary_elephant: *: 'imaginary_elephant' (glob)
  warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

  $ rm included-hgrc
  $ touch included-hgrc

Test bytes-ness of policy.policy with HGMODULEPOLICY

  $ HGMODULEPOLICY=py
  $ export HGMODULEPOLICY
  $ $PYTHON3 `which hg` debuginstall 2>&1 2>&1 | tail -1
  no problems detected

`hg init` can create empty repos

  $ $PYTHON3 `which hg` init emptyrepo