view tests/test-largefiles-small-disk.t @ 44651:00e0c5c06ed5

pycompat: change argv conversion semantics Use of os.fsencode() to convert Python's sys.argv back to bytes was not correct because it isn't the logically inverse operation from what CPython was doing under the hood. This commit changes the logic for doing the str -> bytes conversion. This required a separate implementation for POSIX and Windows. The Windows behavior is arguably not ideal. The previous behavior on Windows was leading to failing tests, such as test-http-branchmap.t, which defines a utf-8 branch name via a command argument. Previously, Mercurial's argument parser looked to be receiving wchar_t bytes in some cases. After this commit, behavior on Windows is compatible with Python 2, where CPython did not implement `int wmain()` and Windows was performing a Unicode to ANSI conversion on the wchar_t native command line. Arguably better behavior on Windows would be for Mercurial to preserve the original Unicode sequence coming from Python and to wrap this in a bytes-like type so we can round trip safely. But, this would be new, backwards incompatible behavior. My goal for this commit was to converge Mercurial behavior on Python 3 on Windows to fix busted tests. And I believe I was successful, as this commit fixes 9 tests on my Windows machine and 14 tests in the AWS CI environment! Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D8337
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sat, 28 Mar 2020 12:18:58 -0700
parents c70bdd222dcd
children 42d2b31cee0b
line wrap: on
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Test how largefiles abort in case the disk runs full

  $ cat > criple.py <<EOF
  > from __future__ import absolute_import
  > import errno
  > import os
  > import shutil
  > from mercurial import util
  > #
  > # this makes the original largefiles code abort:
  > _origcopyfileobj = shutil.copyfileobj
  > def copyfileobj(fsrc, fdst, length=16 * 1024):
  >     # allow journal files (used by transaction) to be written
  >     if b'journal.' in fdst.name:
  >         return _origcopyfileobj(fsrc, fdst, length)
  >     fdst.write(fsrc.read(4))
  >     raise IOError(errno.ENOSPC, os.strerror(errno.ENOSPC))
  > shutil.copyfileobj = copyfileobj
  > #
  > # this makes the rewritten code abort:
  > def filechunkiter(f, size=131072, limit=None):
  >     yield f.read(4)
  >     raise IOError(errno.ENOSPC, os.strerror(errno.ENOSPC))
  > util.filechunkiter = filechunkiter
  > #
  > def oslink(src, dest):
  >     raise OSError("no hardlinks, try copying instead")
  > util.oslink = oslink
  > EOF

  $ echo "[extensions]" >> $HGRCPATH
  $ echo "largefiles =" >> $HGRCPATH

  $ hg init alice
  $ cd alice
  $ echo "this is a very big file" > big
  $ hg add --large big
  $ hg commit --config extensions.criple=$TESTTMP/criple.py -m big
  abort: No space left on device
  [255]

The largefile is not created in .hg/largefiles:

  $ ls .hg/largefiles
  dirstate

The user cache is not even created:

  >>> import os; os.path.exists("$HOME/.cache/largefiles/")
  False

Make the commit with space on the device:

  $ hg commit -m big

Now make a clone with a full disk, and make sure lfutil.link function
makes copies instead of hardlinks:

  $ cd ..
  $ hg --config extensions.criple=$TESTTMP/criple.py clone --pull alice bob
  requesting all changes
  adding changesets
  adding manifests
  adding file changes
  added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files
  new changesets 390cf214e9ac
  updating to branch default
  getting changed largefiles
  abort: No space left on device
  [255]

The largefile is not created in .hg/largefiles:

  $ ls bob/.hg/largefiles
  dirstate