view tests/test-encoding-func.py @ 41722:37b33c34bf4f

templatekw: add a {negrev} keyword Revision numbers are getting much maligned for two reasons: they are too long in large repos and users get confused by their local-only nature. It just occurred to me that negative revision numbers avoid both of those problems. Since negative revision numbers change whenever the repo changes, it's much more obvious that they are a local-only convenience. Additionally, for the recent commits that we usually care about the most, negative revision numbers are always near zero. This commit adds a negrev templatekw to more easily expose negative revision numbers. It's not easy to reliably produce this output with existing keywords due to hidden commits while at the same time ensuring good performance.
author Jordi Gutiérrez Hermoso <jordigh@octave.org>
date Fri, 15 Feb 2019 14:43:31 -0500
parents 3ea3c96ada54
children 2372284d9457
line wrap: on
line source

from __future__ import absolute_import

import unittest

from mercurial import (
    encoding,
)

class IsasciistrTest(unittest.TestCase):
    asciistrs = [
        b'a',
        b'ab',
        b'abc',
        b'abcd',
        b'abcde',
        b'abcdefghi',
        b'abcd\0fghi',
    ]

    def testascii(self):
        for s in self.asciistrs:
            self.assertTrue(encoding.isasciistr(s))

    def testnonasciichar(self):
        for s in self.asciistrs:
            for i in range(len(s)):
                t = bytearray(s)
                t[i] |= 0x80
                self.assertFalse(encoding.isasciistr(bytes(t)))

class LocalEncodingTest(unittest.TestCase):
    def testasciifastpath(self):
        s = b'\0' * 100
        self.assertTrue(s is encoding.tolocal(s))
        self.assertTrue(s is encoding.fromlocal(s))

class Utf8bEncodingTest(unittest.TestCase):
    def setUp(self):
        self.origencoding = encoding.encoding

    def tearDown(self):
        encoding.encoding = self.origencoding

    def testasciifastpath(self):
        s = b'\0' * 100
        self.assertTrue(s is encoding.toutf8b(s))
        self.assertTrue(s is encoding.fromutf8b(s))

    def testlossylatin(self):
        encoding.encoding = b'ascii'
        s = u'\xc0'.encode('utf-8')
        l = encoding.tolocal(s)
        self.assertEqual(l, b'?')  # lossy
        self.assertEqual(s, encoding.toutf8b(l))  # utf8 sequence preserved

    def testlosslesslatin(self):
        encoding.encoding = b'latin-1'
        s = u'\xc0'.encode('utf-8')
        l = encoding.tolocal(s)
        self.assertEqual(l, b'\xc0')  # lossless
        self.assertEqual(s, encoding.toutf8b(l))  # convert back to utf-8

    def testlossy0xed(self):
        encoding.encoding = b'euc-kr'  # U+Dxxx Hangul
        s = u'\ud1bc\xc0'.encode('utf-8')
        l = encoding.tolocal(s)
        self.assertIn(b'\xed', l)
        self.assertTrue(l.endswith(b'?'))  # lossy
        self.assertEqual(s, encoding.toutf8b(l))  # utf8 sequence preserved

    def testlossless0xed(self):
        encoding.encoding = b'euc-kr'  # U+Dxxx Hangul
        s = u'\ud1bc'.encode('utf-8')
        l = encoding.tolocal(s)
        self.assertEqual(l, b'\xc5\xed')  # lossless
        self.assertEqual(s, encoding.toutf8b(l))  # convert back to utf-8

if __name__ == '__main__':
    import silenttestrunner
    silenttestrunner.main(__name__)