Mercurial > hg-stable
view tests/test-fix-metadata.t @ 46386:d6fa9fbd375d stable
commit: reorder if-else conditional to give mergestate info priority
Looking at the code now, I was unable to find a good reason as why we only rely
on mergestate extras info after checking whether a filelog parent is ancestor of
other or not.
I mean if we have stored in mergestate that `other` was chosed, we should
blindly pick that one.
This cleanup will also help introduce more cases when both `fparent1` and
`fparent2` are non-null but using info from mergestate, we can fastpath.
The test change actually demonstrates the point of the patch. During merge we
were getting the other side of the file but on commit we were marking that as
merged.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10147
author | Pulkit Goyal <7895pulkit@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 04 Mar 2021 17:35:58 +0530 |
parents | 2d70b1118af2 |
children |
line wrap: on
line source
A python hook for "hg fix" that prints out the number of files and revisions that were affected, along with which fixer tools were applied. Also checks how many times it sees a specific key generated by one of the fixer tools defined below. $ cat >> $TESTTMP/postfixhook.py <<EOF > import collections > def file(ui, repo, rev=None, path=b'', metadata=None, **kwargs): > ui.status(b'fixed %s in revision %d using %s\n' % > (path, rev, b', '.join(metadata.keys()))) > def summarize(ui, repo, replacements=None, wdirwritten=False, > metadata=None, **kwargs): > counts = collections.defaultdict(int) > keys = 0 > for fixername, metadatalist in metadata.items(): > for metadata in metadatalist: > if metadata is None: > continue > counts[fixername] += 1 > if 'key' in metadata: > keys += 1 > ui.status(b'saw "key" %d times\n' % (keys,)) > for name, count in sorted(counts.items()): > ui.status(b'fixed %d files with %s\n' % (count, name)) > if replacements: > ui.status(b'fixed %d revisions\n' % (len(replacements),)) > if wdirwritten: > ui.status(b'fixed the working copy\n') > EOF Some mock output for fixer tools that demonstrate what could go wrong with expecting the metadata output format. $ printf 'new content\n' > $TESTTMP/missing $ printf 'not valid json\0new content\n' > $TESTTMP/invalid $ printf '{"key": "value"}\0new content\n' > $TESTTMP/valid Configure some fixer tools based on the output defined above, and enable the hooks defined above. Disable parallelism to make output of the parallel file processing phase stable. $ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF > [extensions] > fix = > [fix] > metadatafalse:command=cat $TESTTMP/missing > metadatafalse:pattern=metadatafalse > metadatafalse:metadata=false > missing:command=cat $TESTTMP/missing > missing:pattern=missing > missing:metadata=true > invalid:command=cat $TESTTMP/invalid > invalid:pattern=invalid > invalid:metadata=true > valid:command=cat $TESTTMP/valid > valid:pattern=valid > valid:metadata=true > [hooks] > postfixfile = python:$TESTTMP/postfixhook.py:file > postfix = python:$TESTTMP/postfixhook.py:summarize > [worker] > enabled=false > EOF See what happens when we execute each of the fixer tools. Some print warnings, some write back to the file. $ hg init repo $ cd repo $ printf "old content\n" > metadatafalse $ printf "old content\n" > invalid $ printf "old content\n" > missing $ printf "old content\n" > valid $ hg add -q $ hg fix -w ignored invalid output from fixer tool: invalid fixed metadatafalse in revision 2147483647 using metadatafalse ignored invalid output from fixer tool: missing fixed valid in revision 2147483647 using valid saw "key" 1 times fixed 1 files with valid fixed the working copy $ cat metadatafalse new content $ cat missing old content $ cat invalid old content $ cat valid new content $ cd ..