view tests/test-strict.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 e689b0d91546
children 9a299c39de01
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  $ hg init

  $ echo a > a
  $ hg ci -Ama
  adding a

  $ hg an a
  0: a

  $ hg --config ui.strict=False an a
  0: a

  $ echo "[ui]" >> $HGRCPATH
  $ echo "strict=True" >> $HGRCPATH

  $ hg an a
  hg: unknown command 'an'
  Mercurial Distributed SCM
  
  basic commands:
  
   add           add the specified files on the next commit
   annotate      show changeset information by line for each file
   clone         make a copy of an existing repository
   commit        commit the specified files or all outstanding changes
   diff          diff repository (or selected files)
   export        dump the header and diffs for one or more changesets
   forget        forget the specified files on the next commit
   init          create a new repository in the given directory
   log           show revision history of entire repository or files
   merge         merge working directory with another revision
   pull          pull changes from the specified source
   push          push changes to the specified destination
   remove        remove the specified files on the next commit
   serve         start stand-alone webserver
   status        show changed files in the working directory
   summary       summarize working directory state
   update        update working directory (or switch revisions)
  
  use "hg help" for the full list of commands or "hg -v" for details
  [255]
  $ hg annotate a
  0: a

should succeed - up is an alias, not an abbreviation

  $ hg up
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved