Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-largefiles-small-disk.t @ 46326:3e23794b9e1c
run-tests: work around the Windows firewall popup for server processes
Windows doesn't have a `python3` executable, so cc0b332ab9fc attempted to work
around the issue by copying the current python to `python3.exe`. That put it in
`_tmpbindir` because of failures in `test-run-tests.t` when using `_bindir`,
which looked like a process was trying to open it to write out a copy while it
was in use. (Interestingly, I couldn't reproduce this running the test by
itself in a loop for a couple of hours, but it happens constantly when running
all tests.) The problem with using `_tmpbindir` is that it is the randomly
generated path for the test run, and instead of Windows Firewall remembering the
executable signature or image hash when allowing the process to open a server
port, it apparently remembers the image path. That means every run will trigger
a popup to allow it, which is bad for firing off a test run and walking away.
I tried to symlink to the python executable, but that currently requires admin
priviledges[1]. This will prompt the first time if the underlying python binary
has never opened a server port, but appears to avoid it on subsequent runs.
[1] https://bugs.python.org/issue40687
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9815
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 18 Jan 2021 00:50:01 -0500 |
parents | c70bdd222dcd |
children | 42d2b31cee0b |
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Test how largefiles abort in case the disk runs full $ cat > criple.py <<EOF > from __future__ import absolute_import > import errno > import os > import shutil > from mercurial import util > # > # this makes the original largefiles code abort: > _origcopyfileobj = shutil.copyfileobj > def copyfileobj(fsrc, fdst, length=16 * 1024): > # allow journal files (used by transaction) to be written > if b'journal.' in fdst.name: > return _origcopyfileobj(fsrc, fdst, length) > fdst.write(fsrc.read(4)) > raise IOError(errno.ENOSPC, os.strerror(errno.ENOSPC)) > shutil.copyfileobj = copyfileobj > # > # this makes the rewritten code abort: > def filechunkiter(f, size=131072, limit=None): > yield f.read(4) > raise IOError(errno.ENOSPC, os.strerror(errno.ENOSPC)) > util.filechunkiter = filechunkiter > # > def oslink(src, dest): > raise OSError("no hardlinks, try copying instead") > util.oslink = oslink > EOF $ echo "[extensions]" >> $HGRCPATH $ echo "largefiles =" >> $HGRCPATH $ hg init alice $ cd alice $ echo "this is a very big file" > big $ hg add --large big $ hg commit --config extensions.criple=$TESTTMP/criple.py -m big abort: No space left on device [255] The largefile is not created in .hg/largefiles: $ ls .hg/largefiles dirstate The user cache is not even created: >>> import os; os.path.exists("$HOME/.cache/largefiles/") False Make the commit with space on the device: $ hg commit -m big Now make a clone with a full disk, and make sure lfutil.link function makes copies instead of hardlinks: $ cd .. $ hg --config extensions.criple=$TESTTMP/criple.py clone --pull alice bob requesting all changes adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files new changesets 390cf214e9ac updating to branch default getting changed largefiles abort: No space left on device [255] The largefile is not created in .hg/largefiles: $ ls bob/.hg/largefiles dirstate