view tests/test-wireproto-command-heads.t @ 43815:19da643dc10c

tests: finally fix up test-fuzz-targets.t It's been failing on my workstation for a while, since I have a new enough LLVM that I had the fuzzer goo, but not so new that I actually had FuzzedDataProvider. This is a better solution all around in my opinion. I _believe_ this should let us run these tests on most systems, even those using GCC instead of clang. That said, my one attempt to test this on my macOS laptop failed miserably, and I don't feel like doing more work on this right now. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7566
author Augie Fackler <augie@google.com>
date Fri, 06 Dec 2019 15:08:37 -0500
parents a732d70253b0
children
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  $ . $TESTDIR/wireprotohelpers.sh

  $ hg init server
  $ enablehttpv2 server
  $ cd server
  $ hg debugdrawdag << EOF
  > H I J
  > | | |
  > E F G
  > | |/
  > C D
  > |/
  > B
  > |
  > A
  > EOF

  $ hg phase --force --secret J
  $ hg phase --public E

  $ hg log -r 'E + H + I + G + J' -T '{rev}:{node} {desc} {phase}\n'
  4:78d2dca436b2f5b188ac267e29b81e07266d38fc E public
  7:ae492e36b0c8339ffaf328d00b85b4525de1165e H draft
  8:1d6f6b91d44aaba6d5e580bc30a9948530dbe00b I draft
  6:29446d2dc5419c5f97447a8bc062e4cc328bf241 G draft
  9:dec04b246d7cbb670c6689806c05ad17c835284e J secret

  $ hg serve -p $HGPORT -d --pid-file hg.pid -E error.log
  $ cat hg.pid > $DAEMON_PIDS

All non-secret heads returned by default

  $ sendhttpv2peer << EOF
  > command heads
  > EOF
  creating http peer for wire protocol version 2
  sending heads command
  response: [
    b'\x1dok\x91\xd4J\xab\xa6\xd5\xe5\x80\xbc0\xa9\x94\x850\xdb\xe0\x0b',
    b'\xaeI.6\xb0\xc83\x9f\xfa\xf3(\xd0\x0b\x85\xb4R]\xe1\x16^',
    b')Dm-\xc5A\x9c_\x97Dz\x8b\xc0b\xe4\xcc2\x8b\xf2A'
  ]

Requesting just the public heads works

  $ sendhttpv2peer << EOF
  > command heads
  >     publiconly 1
  > EOF
  creating http peer for wire protocol version 2
  sending heads command
  response: [
    b'x\xd2\xdc\xa46\xb2\xf5\xb1\x88\xac&~)\xb8\x1e\x07&m8\xfc'
  ]

  $ cat error.log