Don't use sed -r; instead use old-style regexp
Rev
d895158fe8af introduced some sed -r tests, but -r is only available on GNU
sed, while BSD sed uses -E. Better to use old-style regular expressions, that
way the tests work on all sed variants.
#!/bin/sh
echo % test --time
hg --time help -q help 2>&1 | grep Time > /dev/null || echo --time failed
hg init a
cd a
echo % test --profile
if "$TESTDIR/hghave" -q lsprof; then
hg --profile st 2>../out || echo --profile failed
grep CallCount < ../out > /dev/null || echo wrong --profile
hg --profile --config profiling.output=../out st 2>&1 \
|| echo --profile + output to file failed
grep CallCount < ../out > /dev/null \
|| echo wrong --profile output when saving to a file
hg --profile --config profiling.format=text st 2>&1 \
| grep CallCount > /dev/null || echo --profile format=text failed
echo "[profiling]" >> $HGRCPATH
echo "format=kcachegrind" >> $HGRCPATH
hg --profile st 2>../out || echo --profile format=kcachegrind failed
grep 'events: Ticks' < ../out > /dev/null || echo --profile output is wrong
hg --profile --config profiling.output=../out st 2>&1 \
|| echo --profile format=kcachegrind + output to file failed
grep 'events: Ticks' < ../out > /dev/null \
|| echo --profile output is wrong
fi