test: explicitly "add" file before some commit in test-filecache.py
`hg commit -A` will revert the `hg addremove` step if the commit fails. However
`hg rollback` currently does not.
We are about to improve internal consistency around transaction and dirstate and the behavior of `hg rollback` will align on the other behavior in the process.
Before doing so, we make sure the test is using a separate call to `hg add` to
avoid the test scenario to be affected by that future change.
note: the behavior change for `hg rollback` seems fine as it affect a niche
usecase and `hg rollback` usage have been strongly discouraged for a while.
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import os
import shlex
import subprocess
import sys
os.chdir(os.getenv('TESTTMP'))
if sys.argv[1] != "user@dummy":
sys.exit(-1)
os.environ["SSH_CLIENT"] = "%s 1 2" % os.environ.get('LOCALIP', '127.0.0.1')
log = open("dummylog", "ab")
log.write(b"Got arguments")
for i, arg in enumerate(sys.argv[1:]):
log.write(b" %d:%s" % (i + 1, arg.encode('latin1')))
log.write(b"\n")
log.close()
hgcmd = sys.argv[2]
if os.name == 'nt':
# hack to make simple unix single quote quoting work on windows
hgcmd = hgcmd.replace("'", '"')
cmds = shlex.split(hgcmd)
if cmds[0].endswith('.py'):
python_exe = os.environ['PYTHON']
cmds.insert(0, python_exe)
hgcmd = shlex.join(cmds)
# shlex generate windows incompatible string...
hgcmd = hgcmd.replace("'", '"')
r = subprocess.call(hgcmd, shell=True, close_fds=True)
sys.exit(bool(r))