view tests/test-churn.t @ 41163:0101a35deae2

phabricator: warn if unable to amend, instead of aborting after posting There was a divergence in behavior here between obsolete and strip based amending. I first noticed the abort when testing outside of the test harness, but then had trouble recreating it here after reverting the code changes. It turns out, strip based amend was successfully amending the public commit after it was posted! It looks like the protection is in the `commit --amend` command, not in the underlying code that it calls. I considered doing a preflight check and aborting. But the locks are only acquired at the end, if amending, and this is too large a section of code to be wrapped in a maybe-it's-held-or-not context manager for my tastes. Additionally, some people do post-push reviews, and amending is the default behavior, so they shouldn't see a misleading error message. The lack of a 'Differential Revision' entry in the commit message breaks a {phabreview} test, so it had to be partially conditionalized.
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Sat, 05 Jan 2019 15:20:33 -0500
parents 81e4f039a0cd
children b84c3d43ff2e
line wrap: on
line source

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

create test repository

  $ hg init repo
  $ cd repo
  $ echo a > a
  $ hg ci -Am adda -u user1 -d 6:00
  adding a
  $ echo b >> a
  $ echo b > b
  $ hg ci -m changeba -u user2 -d 9:00 a
  $ hg ci -Am addb -u user2 -d 9:30
  adding b
  $ echo c >> a
  $ echo c >> b
  $ echo c > c
  $ hg ci -m changeca -u user3 -d 12:00 a
  $ hg ci -m changecb -u user3 -d 12:15 b
  $ hg ci -Am addc -u user3 -d 12:30
  adding c
  $ mkdir -p d/e
  $ echo abc > d/e/f1.txt
  $ hg ci -Am "add d/e/f1.txt" -u user1 -d 12:45 d/e/f1.txt
  $ mkdir -p d/g
  $ echo def > d/g/f2.txt
  $ hg ci -Am "add d/g/f2.txt" -u user1 -d 13:00 d/g/f2.txt


churn separate directories

  $ cd d
  $ hg churn e
  user1      1 ***************************************************************

churn all

  $ hg churn
  user1      3 ***************************************************************
  user3      3 ***************************************************************
  user2      2 ******************************************

churn excluding one dir

  $ hg churn -X e
  user3      3 ***************************************************************
  user1      2 ******************************************
  user2      2 ******************************************

churn up to rev 2

  $ hg churn -r :2
  user2      2 ***************************************************************
  user1      1 *******************************
  $ cd ..

churn with aliases

  $ cat > ../aliases <<EOF
  > user1 alias1
  > user3 alias3
  > not-an-alias
  > EOF

churn with .hgchurn

  $ mv ../aliases .hgchurn
  $ hg churn
  skipping malformed alias: not-an-alias
  alias1      3 **************************************************************
  alias3      3 **************************************************************
  user2       2 *****************************************
  $ rm .hgchurn

churn with column specifier

  $ COLUMNS=40 hg churn
  user1      3 ***********************
  user3      3 ***********************
  user2      2 ***************

churn by hour

  $ hg churn -f '%H' -s
  06      1 ****************
  09      2 *********************************
  12      4 ******************************************************************
  13      1 ****************


churn with separated added/removed lines

  $ hg rm d/g/f2.txt
  $ hg ci -Am "removed d/g/f2.txt" -u user1 -d 14:00 d/g/f2.txt
  $ hg churn --diffstat
  user1           +3/-1 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-------------
  user3           +3/-0 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
  user2           +2/-0 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++

churn --diffstat with color

  $ hg --config extensions.color= churn --config color.mode=ansi \
  >     --diffstat --color=always
  user1           +3/-1 \x1b[0;32m++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++\x1b[0m\x1b[0;31m-------------\x1b[0m (esc)
  user3           +3/-0 \x1b[0;32m++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++\x1b[0m (esc)
  user2           +2/-0 \x1b[0;32m+++++++++++++++++++++++++++\x1b[0m (esc)


changeset number churn

  $ hg churn -c
  user1      4 ***************************************************************
  user3      3 ***********************************************
  user2      2 *******************************

  $ echo 'with space = no-space' >> ../aliases
  $ echo a >> a
  $ hg commit -m a -u 'with space' -d 15:00

churn with space in alias

  $ hg churn --aliases ../aliases -r tip
  no-space      1 ************************************************************

  $ cd ..


Issue833: ZeroDivisionError

  $ hg init issue-833
  $ cd issue-833
  $ touch foo
  $ hg ci -Am foo
  adding foo

this was failing with a ZeroDivisionError

  $ hg churn
  test      0 
  $ cd ..

Ignore trailing or leading spaces in emails

  $ cd repo
  $ touch bar
  $ hg ci -Am'bar' -u 'user4 <user4@x.com>'
  adding bar
  $ touch foo
  $ hg ci -Am'foo' -u 'user4 < user4@x.com >'
  adding foo
  $ hg log -l2 --template '[{author|email}]\n'
  [ user4@x.com ]
  [user4@x.com]
  $ hg churn -c
  user1            4 *********************************************************
  user3            3 ******************************************
  user2            2 ****************************
  user4@x.com      2 ****************************
  with space       1 **************

Test multibyte sequences in names

  $ echo bar >> bar
  $ hg --encoding utf-8 ci -m'changed bar' -u 'El NiƱo <nino@x.com>'
  $ hg --encoding utf-8 churn -ct '{author|person}'
  user1           4 **********************************************************
  user3           3 *******************************************
  user2           2 *****************************
  user4           2 *****************************
  El Ni\xc3\xb1o         1 ************** (esc)
  with space      1 **************

Test --template argument, with backwards compatibility

  $ hg churn -t '{author|user}'
  user1      4 ***************************************************************
  user3      3 ***********************************************
  user2      2 *******************************
  nino       1 ***************
  with       1 ***************
             0 
  user4      0 
  $ hg churn -T '{author|user}'
  user1      4 ***************************************************************
  user3      3 ***********************************************
  user2      2 *******************************
  nino       1 ***************
  with       1 ***************
             0 
  user4      0 
  $ hg churn -t 'alltogether'
  alltogether     11 *********************************************************
  $ hg churn -T 'alltogether'
  alltogether     11 *********************************************************

  $ cd ..