Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-oldcgi.t @ 37271:0194dac77c93
scmutil: add method for looking up a context given a revision symbol
changectx's constructor currently supports a mix if inputs:
* integer revnums
* binary nodeids
* '.', 'tip', 'null'
* stringified revnums
* namespaced identifiers (e.g. bookmarks and tags)
* hex nodeids
* partial hex nodeids
The first two are always internal [1]. The other five can be specified
by the user. The third type ('.', 'tip', 'null') often comes from
either the user or internal callers. We probably have some internal
callers that pass hex nodeids too, perhaps even partial ones
(histedit?). There are only a few callers that pass user-supplied
strings: revsets.stringset, peer.lookup, webutil.changeidctx, and
maybe one or two more.
Supporting this mix of things in the constructor is convenient, but a
bit strange, IMO. For example, if repo[node] is given a node that's
not in the repo, it will first check if it's bookmark etc before
raising an exception. Of course, the risk of it being a bookmark is
extremely small, but it just feels ugly.
Also, a problem with having this code in the constructor (whether it
supports a mix of types or not) is that it's harder to override (I'd
like to override it, and that's how this series started).
This patch starts moving out the handling of user-supplied strings by
introducing scmutil.revsymbol(). So far, that just checks that the
input is indeed a string, and then delegates to repo[symbol]. The
patch also calls it from revsets.stringset to prove that it works.
[1] Well, you probably can enter a 20-byte binary nodeid on the
command line, but I don't think we should care to preserve
support for that.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3024
author | Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 02 Apr 2018 16:18:33 -0700 |
parents | 8e6f4939a69a |
children | 23b749b84b8a |
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#require no-msys # MSYS will translate web paths as if they were file paths This tests if CGI files from before d0db3462d568 still work. $ hg init test $ cat >hgweb.cgi <<HGWEB > #!$PYTHON > # > # An example CGI script to use hgweb, edit as necessary > > import cgitb, os, sys > cgitb.enable() > > # sys.path.insert(0, "/path/to/python/lib") # if not a system-wide install > from mercurial import hgweb > > h = hgweb.hgweb("test", "Empty test repository") > h.run() > HGWEB $ chmod 755 hgweb.cgi $ cat >hgweb.config <<HGWEBDIRCONF > [paths] > test = test > HGWEBDIRCONF $ cat >hgwebdir.cgi <<HGWEBDIR > #!$PYTHON > # > # An example CGI script to export multiple hgweb repos, edit as necessary > > import cgitb, sys > cgitb.enable() > > # sys.path.insert(0, "/path/to/python/lib") # if not a system-wide install > from mercurial import hgweb > > # The config file looks like this. You can have paths to individual > # repos, collections of repos in a directory tree, or both. > # > # [paths] > # virtual/path = /real/path > # virtual/path = /real/path > # > # [collections] > # /prefix/to/strip/off = /root/of/tree/full/of/repos > # > # collections example: say directory tree /foo contains repos /foo/bar, > # /foo/quux/baz. Give this config section: > # [collections] > # /foo = /foo > # Then repos will list as bar and quux/baz. > > # Alternatively you can pass a list of ('virtual/path', '/real/path') tuples > # or use a dictionary with entries like 'virtual/path': '/real/path' > > h = hgweb.hgwebdir("hgweb.config") > h.run() > HGWEBDIR $ chmod 755 hgwebdir.cgi $ . "$TESTDIR/cgienv" $ $PYTHON hgweb.cgi > page1 $ $PYTHON hgwebdir.cgi > page2 $ PATH_INFO="/test/" $ PATH_TRANSLATED="/var/something/test.cgi" $ REQUEST_URI="/test/test/" $ SCRIPT_URI="http://hg.omnifarious.org/test/test/" $ SCRIPT_URL="/test/test/" $ $PYTHON hgwebdir.cgi > page3 $ grep -i error page1 page2 page3 [1]