lfs: explicitly add the Content-Length header when uploading blobs, for py3
This was the reason for test-lfs-test-server.t#git-server complaining about an
"invalid byte in chunk length". For some reason if this isn't explicitly added,
py3.7.1 is adding `transfer-encoding: chunked` as well as `Content-length: x`.
Wireshark flagged this as malformed. However, if this is set, it doesn't bother
with `transfer-encoding`.
Before this patch with py3:
PUT /objects/
31cf46fbc4ecd458a0943c5b4881f1f5a6dd36c53d6167d5b69ac45149b38e5b HTTP/1.1
Accept-Encoding: identity
Content-length: 12
accept: application/vnd.git-lfs
content-type: application/octet-stream
host: localhost:20062
transfer-encoding: chunked
user-agent: git-lfs/2.3.4 (Mercurial 4.9rc0+149-
7eb7637e34bf)
Before this patch with py27:
PUT /objects/
31cf46fbc4ecd458a0943c5b4881f1f5a6dd36c53d6167d5b69ac45149b38e5b HTTP/1.1
Accept-Encoding: identity
accept: application/vnd.git-lfs
content-type: application/octet-stream
content-length: 12
host: localhost:20062
user-agent: git-lfs/2.3.4 (Mercurial 4.9rc0+149-
7eb7637e34bf+
20190128)
With this patch and py3, the content is the same as the py27 example. RFC2616
says to ignore `Content-Length` if `Transfer-Encoding` is present, so maybe
there's nothing to do in the hg-server side (though I'm not sure which it is
using if presented both).
Maybe chunked encoding is better to do? If someone knows how to suppress the
`Content-Length`, we can try that instead.
This runs with TZ="GMT"
$ hg init
$ echo "test-parse-date" > a
$ hg add a
$ hg ci -d "2006-02-01 13:00:30" -m "rev 0"
$ echo "hi!" >> a
$ hg ci -d "2006-02-01 13:00:30 -0500" -m "rev 1"
$ hg tag -d "2006-04-15 13:30" "Hi"
$ hg backout --merge -d "2006-04-15 13:30 +0200" -m "rev 3" 1
reverting a
created new head
changeset 3:107ce1ee2b43 backs out changeset 1:25a1420a55f8
merging with changeset 3:107ce1ee2b43
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
(branch merge, don't forget to commit)
$ hg ci -d "1150000000 14400" -m "rev 4 (merge)"
$ echo "fail" >> a
$ hg ci -d "should fail" -m "fail"
hg: parse error: invalid date: 'should fail'
[255]
$ hg ci -d "100000000000000000 1400" -m "fail"
hg: parse error: date exceeds 32 bits: 100000000000000000
[255]
$ hg ci -d "100000 1400000" -m "fail"
hg: parse error: impossible time zone offset: 1400000
[255]
Check with local timezone other than GMT and with DST
$ TZ="PST+8PDT+7,M4.1.0/02:00:00,M10.5.0/02:00:00"
$ export TZ
PST=UTC-8 / PDT=UTC-7
Summer time begins on April's first Sunday at 2:00am,
and ends on October's last Sunday at 2:00am.
$ hg debugrebuildstate
$ echo "a" > a
$ hg ci -d "2006-07-15 13:30" -m "summer@UTC-7"
$ hg debugrebuildstate
$ echo "b" > a
$ hg ci -d "2006-07-15 13:30 +0500" -m "summer@UTC+5"
$ hg debugrebuildstate
$ echo "c" > a
$ hg ci -d "2006-01-15 13:30" -m "winter@UTC-8"
$ hg debugrebuildstate
$ echo "d" > a
$ hg ci -d "2006-01-15 13:30 +0500" -m "winter@UTC+5"
$ hg log --template '{date|date}\n'
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 -0800
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 -0700
Sun Jun 11 00:26:40 2006 -0400
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0200
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0000
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 -0500
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 +0000
Test issue1014 (fractional timezones)
$ hg debugdate "1000000000 -16200" # 0430
internal: 1000000000 -16200
standard: Sun Sep 09 06:16:40 2001 +0430
$ hg debugdate "1000000000 -15300" # 0415
internal: 1000000000 -15300
standard: Sun Sep 09 06:01:40 2001 +0415
$ hg debugdate "1000000000 -14400" # 0400
internal: 1000000000 -14400
standard: Sun Sep 09 05:46:40 2001 +0400
$ hg debugdate "1000000000 0" # GMT
internal: 1000000000 0
standard: Sun Sep 09 01:46:40 2001 +0000
$ hg debugdate "1000000000 14400" # -0400
internal: 1000000000 14400
standard: Sat Sep 08 21:46:40 2001 -0400
$ hg debugdate "1000000000 15300" # -0415
internal: 1000000000 15300
standard: Sat Sep 08 21:31:40 2001 -0415
$ hg debugdate "1000000000 16200" # -0430
internal: 1000000000 16200
standard: Sat Sep 08 21:16:40 2001 -0430
$ hg debugdate "Sat Sep 08 21:16:40 2001 +0430"
internal: 999967600 -16200
standard: Sat Sep 08 21:16:40 2001 +0430
$ hg debugdate "Sat Sep 08 21:16:40 2001 -0430"
internal: 1000000000 16200
standard: Sat Sep 08 21:16:40 2001 -0430
Test 12-hours times
$ hg debugdate "2006-02-01 1:00:30PM +0000"
internal: 1138798830 0
standard: Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 +0000
$ hg debugdate "1:00:30PM" > /dev/null
Normal range
$ hg log -d -1
Negative range
$ hg log -d "--2"
abort: -2 must be nonnegative (see 'hg help dates')
[255]
Whitespace only
$ hg log -d " "
abort: dates cannot consist entirely of whitespace
[255]
Test date formats with '>' or '<' accompanied by space characters
$ hg log -d '>' --template '{date|date}\n'
abort: invalid day spec, use '>DATE'
[255]
$ hg log -d '<' --template '{date|date}\n'
abort: invalid day spec, use '<DATE'
[255]
$ hg log -d ' >' --template '{date|date}\n'
abort: invalid day spec, use '>DATE'
[255]
$ hg log -d ' <' --template '{date|date}\n'
abort: invalid day spec, use '<DATE'
[255]
$ hg log -d '> ' --template '{date|date}\n'
abort: invalid day spec, use '>DATE'
[255]
$ hg log -d '< ' --template '{date|date}\n'
abort: invalid day spec, use '<DATE'
[255]
$ hg log -d ' > ' --template '{date|date}\n'
abort: invalid day spec, use '>DATE'
[255]
$ hg log -d ' < ' --template '{date|date}\n'
abort: invalid day spec, use '<DATE'
[255]
$ hg log -d '>02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'
$ hg log -d '<02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 -0800
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 -0700
Sun Jun 11 00:26:40 2006 -0400
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0200
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0000
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 -0500
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 +0000
$ hg log -d ' >02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'
$ hg log -d ' <02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 -0800
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 -0700
Sun Jun 11 00:26:40 2006 -0400
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0200
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0000
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 -0500
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 +0000
$ hg log -d '> 02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'
$ hg log -d '< 02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 -0800
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 -0700
Sun Jun 11 00:26:40 2006 -0400
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0200
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0000
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 -0500
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 +0000
$ hg log -d ' > 02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'
$ hg log -d ' < 02/01' --template '{date|date}\n'
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 -0800
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 -0700
Sun Jun 11 00:26:40 2006 -0400
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0200
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0000
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 -0500
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 +0000
$ hg log -d '>02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'
$ hg log -d '<02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 -0800
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 -0700
Sun Jun 11 00:26:40 2006 -0400
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0200
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0000
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 -0500
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 +0000
$ hg log -d ' >02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'
$ hg log -d ' <02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 -0800
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 -0700
Sun Jun 11 00:26:40 2006 -0400
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0200
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0000
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 -0500
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 +0000
$ hg log -d '> 02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'
$ hg log -d '< 02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 -0800
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 -0700
Sun Jun 11 00:26:40 2006 -0400
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0200
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0000
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 -0500
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 +0000
$ hg log -d ' > 02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'
$ hg log -d ' < 02/01 ' --template '{date|date}\n'
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sun Jan 15 13:30:00 2006 -0800
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 +0500
Sat Jul 15 13:30:00 2006 -0700
Sun Jun 11 00:26:40 2006 -0400
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0200
Sat Apr 15 13:30:00 2006 +0000
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 -0500
Wed Feb 01 13:00:30 2006 +0000
Test issue 3764 (interpreting 'today' and 'yesterday')
$ echo "hello" >> a
>>> import datetime
>>> today = datetime.date.today().strftime("%b %d")
>>> yesterday = (datetime.date.today() - datetime.timedelta(days=1)).strftime("%b %d")
>>> dates = open('dates', 'w')
>>> dates.write(today + '\n') and None
>>> dates.write(yesterday + '\n') and None
>>> dates.close()
$ hg ci -d "`sed -n '1p' dates`" -m "today is a good day to code"
$ hg log -d today --template '{desc}\n'
today is a good day to code
$ echo "goodbye" >> a
$ hg ci -d "`sed -n '2p' dates`" -m "the time traveler's code"
$ hg log -d yesterday --template '{desc}\n'
the time traveler's code
$ echo "foo" >> a
$ hg commit -d now -m 'Explicitly committed now.'
$ hg log -d today --template '{desc}\n'
Explicitly committed now.
today is a good day to code
Test parsing various ISO8601 forms
$ hg debugdate "2016-07-27T12:10:21"
internal: 1469646621 * (glob)
standard: Wed Jul 27 12:10:21 2016 -0700
$ hg debugdate "2016-07-27T12:10:21Z"
internal: 1469621421 0
standard: Wed Jul 27 12:10:21 2016 +0000
$ hg debugdate "2016-07-27T12:10:21+00:00"
internal: 1469621421 0
standard: Wed Jul 27 12:10:21 2016 +0000
$ hg debugdate "2016-07-27T121021Z"
internal: 1469621421 0
standard: Wed Jul 27 12:10:21 2016 +0000
$ hg debugdate "2016-07-27 12:10:21"
internal: 1469646621 * (glob)
standard: Wed Jul 27 12:10:21 2016 -0700
$ hg debugdate "2016-07-27 12:10:21Z"
internal: 1469621421 0
standard: Wed Jul 27 12:10:21 2016 +0000
$ hg debugdate "2016-07-27 12:10:21+00:00"
internal: 1469621421 0
standard: Wed Jul 27 12:10:21 2016 +0000
$ hg debugdate "2016-07-27 121021Z"
internal: 1469621421 0
standard: Wed Jul 27 12:10:21 2016 +0000
Test parsing months
$ for i in Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec; do
> hg log -d "$i 2018" -r null
> done