Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-status-inprocess.py @ 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> |
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date | Mon, 18 Jan 2021 00:50:01 -0500 |
parents | c102b704edb5 |
children | 23f5ed6dbcb1 |
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#!/usr/bin/env python3 from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import sys from mercurial import ( commands, localrepo, ui as uimod, ) print_ = print def print(*args, **kwargs): """print() wrapper that flushes stdout buffers to avoid py3 buffer issues We could also just write directly to sys.stdout.buffer the way the ui object will, but this was easier for porting the test. """ print_(*args, **kwargs) sys.stdout.flush() u = uimod.ui.load() print('% creating repo') repo = localrepo.instance(u, b'.', create=True) f = open('test.py', 'w') try: f.write('foo\n') finally: f.close print('% add and commit') commands.add(u, repo, b'test.py') commands.commit(u, repo, message=b'*') commands.status(u, repo, clean=True) print('% change') f = open('test.py', 'w') try: f.write('bar\n') finally: f.close() # this would return clean instead of changed before the fix commands.status(u, repo, clean=True, modified=True)