Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/bitmanipulation.h @ 49836:3d7bf111f01e stable
packaging: add dependencies to the PyOxidizer build on macOS
Otherwise, we get a bunch of test failures for missing things like pygments, or
tests skipped entirely. The input file is a copy/paste from the equivalent
Windows file, but with dulwich, pygit2, and pytest-vcr commented out because
the build process errors out with them, flagging them as incompatible with
loading from memory. I have no idea if that's actually true or not, because
I've noticed that if I don't `make clean` after every build, the next build
flags the watchman stuff as incompatible with loading from memory.
The remaining failures are:
Failed test-alias.t: output changed
Failed test-basic.t: output changed
Failed test-check-help.t: output changed
Failed test-commit-interactive.t: output changed
Failed test-extension.t: output changed
Failed test-help.t: output changed
Failed test-i18n.t: output changed
Failed test-log.t: output changed
Failed test-qrecord.t: output changed
Failed test-share-safe.t: output changed
Most of the issues seem related to loading help for disabled extensions from
`hgext.__index__`, namely the full extension help being unavailable, not being
able to resolve what commands are provided by what extension, and not having the
command level help available.
test-log.t, test-commit-interactive.t, and test-i18n.t look like i18n (or lack
thereof) issues.
test-basic.t is just odd:
@@ -55,7 +55,7 @@
On Python 3, stdio may be None:
$ hg debuguiprompt --config ui.interactive=true 0<&-
- abort: Bad file descriptor (no-rhg !)
+ abort: response expected
abort: response expected (rhg !)
[255]
$ hg version -q 0<&-
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 06 Dec 2022 17:12:59 -0500 |
parents | d86908050375 |
children |
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#ifndef HG_BITMANIPULATION_H #define HG_BITMANIPULATION_H #include <string.h> #include "compat.h" /* Reads a 64 bit integer from big-endian bytes. Assumes that the data is long enough */ static inline uint64_t getbe64(const char *c) { const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c; return ((((uint64_t)d[0]) << 56) | (((uint64_t)d[1]) << 48) | (((uint64_t)d[2]) << 40) | (((uint64_t)d[3]) << 32) | (((uint64_t)d[4]) << 24) | (((uint64_t)d[5]) << 16) | (((uint64_t)d[6]) << 8) | (d[7])); } static inline uint32_t getbe32(const char *c) { const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c; return ((((uint32_t)d[0]) << 24) | (((uint32_t)d[1]) << 16) | (((uint32_t)d[2]) << 8) | (d[3])); } static inline int16_t getbeint16(const char *c) { const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c; return ((d[0] << 8) | (d[1])); } static inline uint16_t getbeuint16(const char *c) { const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c; return ((d[0] << 8) | (d[1])); } /* Writes a 64 bit integer to bytes in a big-endian format. Assumes that the buffer is long enough */ static inline void putbe64(uint64_t x, char *c) { c[0] = (x >> 56) & 0xff; c[1] = (x >> 48) & 0xff; c[2] = (x >> 40) & 0xff; c[3] = (x >> 32) & 0xff; c[4] = (x >> 24) & 0xff; c[5] = (x >> 16) & 0xff; c[6] = (x >> 8) & 0xff; c[7] = (x)&0xff; } static inline void putbe32(uint32_t x, char *c) { c[0] = (x >> 24) & 0xff; c[1] = (x >> 16) & 0xff; c[2] = (x >> 8) & 0xff; c[3] = (x)&0xff; } static inline double getbefloat64(const char *c) { const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c; double ret; int i; uint64_t t = 0; for (i = 0; i < 8; i++) { t = (t << 8) + d[i]; } memcpy(&ret, &t, sizeof(t)); return ret; } #endif