view tests/hghave @ 23976:344939126579 stable

largefiles: don't interfere with logging normal files The previous code was adding standin files to the matcher's file list when neither the standin file nor the original existed in the context. Somehow, this was confusing the logging code into behaving differently from when the extension wasn't loaded. It seems that this was an attempt to support naming a directory that only contains largefiles, as a test fails if the else clause is dropped entirely. Therefore, only append the "standin" if it is a directory. This was found by running the test suite with --config extensions.largefiles=. The first added test used to log an additional cset that wasn't logged normally. The only relation it had to file 'a' is that 'a' was the source of a move, but it isn't clear why having '.hglf/a' in the list causes this change: @@ -47,6 +47,11 @@ Make sure largefiles doesn't interfere with logging a regular file $ hg log a --config extensions.largefiles= + changeset: 3:2ca5ba701980 + user: test + date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:04 1970 +0000 + summary: d + changeset: 0:9161b9aeaf16 user: test date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:01 1970 +0000 The second added test used to complain about a file not being in the parent revision: @@ -1638,10 +1643,8 @@ Ensure that largefiles doesn't intefere with following a normal file $ hg --config extensions.largefiles= log -f d -T '{desc}' -G - @ c - | - o a - + abort: cannot follow file not in parent revision: ".hglf/d" + [255] $ hg log -f d/a -T '{desc}' -G @ c | Note that there is still something fishy with the largefiles code, because when using a glob pattern like this: $ hg log 'glob:sub/*' the pattern list would contain '.hglf/glob:sub/*'. None of the tests show this (this test lives in test-largefiles.t at 1349), it was just something that I noticed when the code was loaded up with print statements.
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Fri, 30 Jan 2015 20:44:11 -0500
parents 05b3238ba901
children b94df10cc3b5
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#!/usr/bin/env python
"""Test the running system for features availability. Exit with zero
if all features are there, non-zero otherwise. If a feature name is
prefixed with "no-", the absence of feature is tested.
"""
import optparse
import sys
import hghave

checks = hghave.checks

def list_features():
    for name, feature in sorted(checks.iteritems()):
        desc = feature[1]
        print name + ':', desc

def test_features():
    failed = 0
    for name, feature in checks.iteritems():
        check, _ = feature
        try:
            check()
        except Exception, e:
            print "feature %s failed:  %s" % (name, e)
            failed += 1
    return failed

parser = optparse.OptionParser("%prog [options] [features]")
parser.add_option("--test-features", action="store_true",
                  help="test available features")
parser.add_option("--list-features", action="store_true",
                  help="list available features")
parser.add_option("-q", "--quiet", action="store_true",
                  help="check features silently")

if __name__ == '__main__':
    options, args = parser.parse_args()
    if options.list_features:
        list_features()
        sys.exit(0)

    if options.test_features:
        sys.exit(test_features())

    quiet = options.quiet

    failures = 0

    def error(msg):
        global failures
        if not quiet:
            sys.stderr.write(msg + '\n')
        failures += 1

    for feature in args:
        negate = feature.startswith('no-')
        if negate:
            feature = feature[3:]

        if feature not in checks:
            error('skipped: unknown feature: ' + feature)
            sys.exit(2)

        check, desc = checks[feature]
        try:
            available = check()
        except Exception, e:
            error('hghave check failed: ' + feature)
            continue

        if not negate and not available:
            error('skipped: missing feature: ' + desc)
        elif negate and available:
            error('skipped: system supports %s' % desc)

    if failures != 0:
        sys.exit(1)