view tests/test-util.py @ 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 331ab85e910b
children 2372284d9457
line wrap: on
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# unit tests for mercuril.util utilities
from __future__ import absolute_import

import contextlib
import itertools
import unittest

from mercurial import pycompat, util, utils

@contextlib.contextmanager
def mocktimer(incr=0.1, *additional_targets):
    """Replaces util.timer and additional_targets with a mock

    The timer starts at 0. On each call the time incremented by the value
    of incr. If incr is an iterable, then the time is incremented by the
    next value from that iterable, looping in a cycle when reaching the end.

    additional_targets must be a sequence of (object, attribute_name) tuples;
    the mock is set with setattr(object, attribute_name, mock).

    """
    time = [0]
    try:
        incr = itertools.cycle(incr)
    except TypeError:
        incr = itertools.repeat(incr)

    def timer():
        time[0] += next(incr)
        return time[0]

    # record original values
    orig = util.timer
    additional_origs = [(o, a, getattr(o, a)) for o, a in additional_targets]

    # mock out targets
    util.timer = timer
    for obj, attr in additional_targets:
        setattr(obj, attr, timer)

    try:
        yield
    finally:
        # restore originals
        util.timer = orig
        for args in additional_origs:
            setattr(*args)

# attr.s default factory for util.timedstats.start binds the timer we
# need to mock out.
_start_default = (util.timedcmstats.start.default, 'factory')

@contextlib.contextmanager
def capturestderr():
    """Replace utils.procutil.stderr with a pycompat.bytesio instance

    The instance is made available as the return value of __enter__.

    This contextmanager is reentrant.

    """
    orig = utils.procutil.stderr
    utils.procutil.stderr = pycompat.bytesio()
    try:
        yield utils.procutil.stderr
    finally:
        utils.procutil.stderr = orig

class timedtests(unittest.TestCase):
    def testtimedcmstatsstr(self):
        stats = util.timedcmstats()
        self.assertEqual(str(stats), '<unknown>')
        self.assertEqual(bytes(stats), b'<unknown>')
        stats.elapsed = 12.34
        self.assertEqual(str(stats), pycompat.sysstr(util.timecount(12.34)))
        self.assertEqual(bytes(stats), util.timecount(12.34))

    def testtimedcmcleanexit(self):
        # timestamps 1, 4, elapsed time of 4 - 1 = 3
        with mocktimer([1, 3], _start_default):
            with util.timedcm('pass') as stats:
                # actual context doesn't matter
                pass

        self.assertEqual(stats.start, 1)
        self.assertEqual(stats.elapsed, 3)
        self.assertEqual(stats.level, 1)

    def testtimedcmnested(self):
        # timestamps 1, 3, 6, 10, elapsed times of 6 - 3 = 3 and 10 - 1 = 9
        with mocktimer([1, 2, 3, 4], _start_default):
            with util.timedcm('outer') as outer_stats:
                with util.timedcm('inner') as inner_stats:
                    # actual context doesn't matter
                    pass

        self.assertEqual(outer_stats.start, 1)
        self.assertEqual(outer_stats.elapsed, 9)
        self.assertEqual(outer_stats.level, 1)

        self.assertEqual(inner_stats.start, 3)
        self.assertEqual(inner_stats.elapsed, 3)
        self.assertEqual(inner_stats.level, 2)

    def testtimedcmexception(self):
        # timestamps 1, 4, elapsed time of 4 - 1 = 3
        with mocktimer([1, 3], _start_default):
            try:
                with util.timedcm('exceptional') as stats:
                    raise ValueError()
            except ValueError:
                pass

        self.assertEqual(stats.start, 1)
        self.assertEqual(stats.elapsed, 3)
        self.assertEqual(stats.level, 1)

    def testtimeddecorator(self):
        @util.timed
        def testfunc(callcount=1):
            callcount -= 1
            if callcount:
                testfunc(callcount)

        # timestamps 1, 2, 3, 4, elapsed time of 3 - 2 = 1 and 4 - 1 = 3
        with mocktimer(1, _start_default):
            with capturestderr() as out:
                testfunc(2)

        self.assertEqual(out.getvalue(), (
            b'    testfunc: 1.000 s\n'
            b'  testfunc: 3.000 s\n'
        ))

if __name__ == '__main__':
    import silenttestrunner
    silenttestrunner.main(__name__)