view tests/test-audit-path.t @ 30776:3997edc4a86d

repair: determine what upgrade will do This commit introduces code for determining what actions/improvements an upgrade should perform. The "upgradefindimprovements" function introduces a mechanism to return a list of improvements that can be made to a repository. Each improvement is effectively an action that an upgrade will perform. Associated with each of these improvements is metadata that will be used to inform users what's wrong and what an upgrade will do. Each "improvement" is categorized as a "deficiency" or an "optimization." TBH, I'm not thrilled about the terminology and am receptive to constructive bikeshedding. The main difference between a "deficiency" and an "optimization" is a deficiency is always corrected (if it deviates from the current config) and an "optimization" is an optional action that goes above and beyond to improve the state of the repository (usually by requiring more CPU during upgrade). Our initial set of improvements identifies missing repository requirements, a single, easily correctable problem with changelog storage, and a set of "optimizations" related to delta recalculation. The main "upgraderepo" function has been expanded to handle improvements. It queries for the list of improvements and determines which of them will run based on the current repository state and user I went through numerous iterations of the output format before settling on a ReST-inspired definition list format. (I used bulleted lists in the first submission of this commit and could not get it to format just right.) Even with the various iterations, I'm still not super thrilled with the format. But, this is a debug* command, so that should mean we can refine the output without BC concerns.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sun, 18 Dec 2016 16:51:09 -0800
parents 15c6eb0a51bd
children 0134d839444b
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  $ hg init

audit of .hg

  $ hg add .hg/00changelog.i
  abort: path contains illegal component: .hg/00changelog.i (glob)
  [255]

#if symlink

Symlinks

  $ mkdir a
  $ echo a > a/a
  $ hg ci -Ama
  adding a/a
  $ ln -s a b
  $ echo b > a/b
  $ hg add b/b
  abort: path 'b/b' traverses symbolic link 'b' (glob)
  [255]
  $ hg add b

should still fail - maybe

  $ hg add b/b
  abort: path 'b/b' traverses symbolic link 'b' (glob)
  [255]

  $ hg commit -m 'add symlink b'


Test symlink traversing when accessing history:
-----------------------------------------------

(build a changeset where the path exists as a directory)

  $ hg up 0
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ mkdir b
  $ echo c > b/a
  $ hg add b/a
  $ hg ci -m 'add directory b'
  created new head

Test that hg cat does not do anything wrong the working copy has 'b' as directory

  $ hg cat b/a
  c
  $ hg cat -r "desc(directory)" b/a
  c
  $ hg cat -r "desc(symlink)" b/a
  b/a: no such file in rev bc151a1f53bd
  [1]

Test that hg cat does not do anything wrong the working copy has 'b' as a symlink (issue4749)

  $ hg up 'desc(symlink)'
  1 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ hg cat b/a
  b/a: no such file in rev bc151a1f53bd
  [1]
  $ hg cat -r "desc(directory)" b/a
  c
  $ hg cat -r "desc(symlink)" b/a
  b/a: no such file in rev bc151a1f53bd
  [1]

#endif


unbundle tampered bundle

  $ hg init target
  $ cd target
  $ hg unbundle "$TESTDIR/bundles/tampered.hg"
  adding changesets
  adding manifests
  adding file changes
  added 5 changesets with 6 changes to 6 files (+4 heads)
  (run 'hg heads' to see heads, 'hg merge' to merge)

attack .hg/test

  $ hg manifest -r0
  .hg/test
  $ hg update -Cr0
  abort: path contains illegal component: .hg/test (glob)
  [255]

attack foo/.hg/test

  $ hg manifest -r1
  foo/.hg/test
  $ hg update -Cr1
  abort: path 'foo/.hg/test' is inside nested repo 'foo' (glob)
  [255]

attack back/test where back symlinks to ..

  $ hg manifest -r2
  back
  back/test
#if symlink
  $ hg update -Cr2
  abort: path 'back/test' traverses symbolic link 'back'
  [255]
#else
('back' will be a file and cause some other system specific error)
  $ hg update -Cr2
  abort: * (glob)
  [255]
#endif

attack ../test

  $ hg manifest -r3
  ../test
  $ hg update -Cr3
  abort: path contains illegal component: ../test (glob)
  [255]

attack /tmp/test

  $ hg manifest -r4
  /tmp/test
  $ hg update -Cr4
  abort: path contains illegal component: /tmp/test (glob)
  [255]

  $ cd ..