Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-parseindex.t @ 18757:1c8e0d6ac3b0 stable
localrepo: always write the filtered phasecache when nodes are destroyed (issue3827)
When the strip command is run, it calls repo.destroyed, which in turn checks if
we read _phasecache, and if we did calls filterunknown on it and flushes the
changes immediately. But in some cases, nothing causes _phasecache to be read,
so we miss out on this and the file remains the same on-disk.
Then a call to invalidate comes, which should refresh _phasecache if it
changed, but it didn't, so it keeps using the old one with the stripped
revision which causes an IndexError.
Test written by Yuya Nishihara.
author | Idan Kamara <idankk86@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 23 Mar 2013 13:34:50 +0200 |
parents | f2719b387380 |
children | 82d6a35cf432 |
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revlog.parseindex must be able to parse the index file even if an index entry is split between two 64k blocks. The ideal test would be to create an index file with inline data where 64k < size < 64k + 64 (64k is the size of the read buffer, 64 is the size of an index entry) and with an index entry starting right before the 64k block boundary, and try to read it. We approximate that by reducing the read buffer to 1 byte. $ hg init a $ cd a $ echo abc > foo $ hg add foo $ hg commit -m 'add foo' $ echo >> foo $ hg commit -m 'change foo' $ hg log -r 0: changeset: 0:7c31755bf9b5 user: test date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 summary: add foo changeset: 1:26333235a41c tag: tip user: test date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 summary: change foo $ cat >> test.py << EOF > from mercurial import changelog, scmutil > from mercurial.node import * > > class singlebyteread(object): > def __init__(self, real): > self.real = real > > def read(self, size=-1): > if size == 65536: > size = 1 > return self.real.read(size) > > def __getattr__(self, key): > return getattr(self.real, key) > > def opener(*args): > o = scmutil.opener(*args) > def wrapper(*a): > f = o(*a) > return singlebyteread(f) > return wrapper > > cl = changelog.changelog(opener('.hg/store')) > print len(cl), 'revisions:' > for r in cl: > print short(cl.node(r)) > EOF $ python test.py 2 revisions: 7c31755bf9b5 26333235a41c $ cd ..