view tests/test-exchange-obsmarkers-case-B1.t @ 36426:23d12524a202

http: drop custom http client logic Eight and a half years ago, as my starter bug on code.google.com, I investigated a mysterious "broken pipe" error from seemingly random clients[0]. That investigation revealed a tragic story: the Python standard library's httplib was (and remains) barely functional. During large POSTs, if a server responds early with an error (even a permission denied error!) the client only notices that the server closed the connection and everything breaks. Such server behavior is implicitly legal under RFC 2616 (the latest HTTP RFC as of when I was last working on this), and my understanding is that later RFCs have made it explicitly legal to respond early with any status code outside the 2xx range. I embarked, probably foolishly, on a journey to write a new http library with better overall behavior. The http library appears to work well in most cases, but it can get confused in the presence of proxies, and it depends on select(2) which limits its utility if a lot of file descriptors are open. I haven't touched the http library in almost two years, and in the interim the Python community has discovered a better way[1] of writing network code. In theory some day urllib3 will have its own home-grown http library built on h11[2], or we could do that. Either way, it's time to declare our current confusingly-named "http2" client logic and move on. I do hope to revisit this some day: it's still garbage that we can't even respond with a 401 or 403 without reading the entire POST body from the client, but the goalposts on writing a new http client library have moved substantially. We're almost certainly better off just switching to requests and eventually picking up their http fixes than trying to live with something that realistically only we'll ever use. Another approach would be to write an adapter so that Mercurial can use pycurl if it's installed. Neither of those approaches seem like they should be investigated prior to a release of Mercurial that works on Python 3: that's where the mindshare is going to be for any improvements to the state of the http client art. 0: http://web.archive.org/web/20130501031801/http://code.google.com/p/support/issues/detail?id=2716 1: http://sans-io.readthedocs.io/ 2: https://github.com/njsmith/h11 Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2444
author Augie Fackler <augie@google.com>
date Sun, 25 Feb 2018 23:51:32 -0500
parents 850a06176d82
children
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============================================
Testing obsolescence markers push: Cases B.1
============================================

Mercurial pushes obsolescences markers relevant to the "pushed-set", the set of
all changesets that requested to be "in sync" after the push (even if they are
already on both side).

This test belongs to a series of tests checking such set is properly computed
and applied. This does not tests "obsmarkers" discovery capabilities.

Category B: pruning case
TestCase 1: Prune on non-targeted common changeset

B.1 Prune on non-targeted common changeset
==========================================

.. {{{
..     ⊗ B
..     |
..     ◕ A
..     |
..     ● O
.. }}}
..
.. Marker exist from:
..
..  * B (prune)
..
.. Command runs:
..
..  * hg push -r O
..
.. Expected exclude:
..
..  * B (prune)

Setup
-----

  $ . $TESTDIR/testlib/exchange-obsmarker-util.sh

Initial

  $ setuprepos B.1
  creating test repo for test case B.1
  - pulldest
  - main
  - pushdest
  cd into `main` and proceed with env setup
  $ cd main
  $ mkcommit A
  $ mkcommit B

make both changeset known in remote

  $ hg push -qf ../pushdest
  $ hg push -qf ../pulldest

create prune marker

  $ hg prune -qd '0 0' .
  $ hg log -G --hidden
  x  f6fbb35d8ac9 (draft): B
  |
  @  f5bc6836db60 (draft): A
  |
  o  a9bdc8b26820 (public): O
  
  $ inspect_obsmarkers
  obsstore content
  ================
  f6fbb35d8ac958bbe70035e4c789c18471cdc0af 0 {f5bc6836db60e308a17ba08bf050154ba9c4fad7} (Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000) {'user': 'test'}
  $ cd ..
  $ cd ..

Actual Test
-----------

  $ dotest B.1 O
  ## Running testcase B.1
  # testing echange of "O" (a9bdc8b26820)
  ## initial state
  # obstore: main
  f6fbb35d8ac958bbe70035e4c789c18471cdc0af 0 {f5bc6836db60e308a17ba08bf050154ba9c4fad7} (Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000) {'user': 'test'}
  # obstore: pushdest
  # obstore: pulldest
  ## pushing "O" from main to pushdest
  pushing to pushdest
  searching for changes
  no changes found
  ## post push state
  # obstore: main
  f6fbb35d8ac958bbe70035e4c789c18471cdc0af 0 {f5bc6836db60e308a17ba08bf050154ba9c4fad7} (Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000) {'user': 'test'}
  # obstore: pushdest
  # obstore: pulldest
  ## pulling "a9bdc8b26820" from main into pulldest
  pulling from main
  no changes found
  ## post pull state
  # obstore: main
  f6fbb35d8ac958bbe70035e4c789c18471cdc0af 0 {f5bc6836db60e308a17ba08bf050154ba9c4fad7} (Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000) {'user': 'test'}
  # obstore: pushdest
  # obstore: pulldest