view tests/test-parseindex @ 8781:385a2d94885e

hgrc.5: fix quoting of literal strings The quotes would go wrong in many places due to differences between asciidoc version 8.2.7 used by Benoit and 8.4.5 used by me. Between those versions asciidoc stopped interpreting the content of `quoted strings`, and so `*` would start bold text in the old version, but do nothing in the new version. To complicate things further, `\*` would escape the bold tag in the old version, but in the new version the backslash was inserted literally into the output (because the backtick quotes it). I've now replaced backticks with non-quoting plusses and escaped backslashes as appropriate.
author Martin Geisler <mg@lazybytes.net>
date Thu, 11 Jun 2009 17:19:48 +0200
parents fb42030d79d6
children 4c94b6d0fb1c
line wrap: on
line source

#!/bin/sh
#
# 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' -d '1000000 0'

echo >> foo
hg commit -m 'change foo' -d '1000001 0'
hg log -r 0:

cat >> test.py << EOF
from mercurial import changelog, util
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 = util.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