Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-hgweb-non-interactive.t @ 16634:435375cc0ca0 stable
mq: backup local changes in qpush --force
qpush help says the following about --force:
1- When -f/--force is applied, all local changes in patched files will
be lost.
2- Apply on top of local changes
In practice, qpush --force will attempt to apply the patch on top of
local changes, and on success will merge them in the pushed patch. On
failure, patched files will contain a mix of local changes (where the
patch could not apply) and a mix of patch changes (were it applied). So,
local changes are less lost than entangled with a mass of other changes.
This patch makes qpush --force backup all locally modified files touched
by the next patch being applied. When multiple patches are being pushed,
this logic is repeated for each patch. Note that modified but
successfully patched files are preserved as well.
author | Patrick Mezard <patrick@mezard.eu> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 11 May 2012 16:18:47 +0200 |
parents | ffb5c09ba822 |
children | f2719b387380 |
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Tests if hgweb can run without touching sys.stdin, as is required by the WSGI standard and strictly implemented by mod_wsgi. $ hg init repo $ cd repo $ echo foo > bar $ hg add bar $ hg commit -m "test" $ cat > request.py <<EOF > from mercurial import dispatch > from mercurial.hgweb.hgweb_mod import hgweb > from mercurial.ui import ui > from mercurial import hg > from StringIO import StringIO > import os, sys > > class FileLike(object): > def __init__(self, real): > self.real = real > def fileno(self): > print >> sys.__stdout__, 'FILENO' > return self.real.fileno() > def read(self): > print >> sys.__stdout__, 'READ' > return self.real.read() > def readline(self): > print >> sys.__stdout__, 'READLINE' > return self.real.readline() > > sys.stdin = FileLike(sys.stdin) > errors = StringIO() > input = StringIO() > output = StringIO() > > def startrsp(status, headers): > print '---- STATUS' > print status > print '---- HEADERS' > print [i for i in headers if i[0] != 'ETag'] > print '---- DATA' > return output.write > > env = { > 'wsgi.version': (1, 0), > 'wsgi.url_scheme': 'http', > 'wsgi.errors': errors, > 'wsgi.input': input, > 'wsgi.multithread': False, > 'wsgi.multiprocess': False, > 'wsgi.run_once': False, > 'REQUEST_METHOD': 'GET', > 'SCRIPT_NAME': '', > 'PATH_INFO': '', > 'QUERY_STRING': '', > 'SERVER_NAME': '127.0.0.1', > 'SERVER_PORT': os.environ['HGPORT'], > 'SERVER_PROTOCOL': 'HTTP/1.0' > } > > i = hgweb('.') > i(env, startrsp) > print '---- ERRORS' > print errors.getvalue() > print '---- OS.ENVIRON wsgi variables' > print sorted([x for x in os.environ if x.startswith('wsgi')]) > print '---- request.ENVIRON wsgi variables' > print sorted([x for x in i.repo.ui.environ if x.startswith('wsgi')]) > EOF $ python request.py ---- STATUS 200 Script output follows ---- HEADERS [('Content-Type', 'text/html; charset=ascii')] ---- DATA ---- ERRORS ---- OS.ENVIRON wsgi variables [] ---- request.ENVIRON wsgi variables ['wsgi.errors', 'wsgi.input', 'wsgi.multiprocess', 'wsgi.multithread', 'wsgi.run_once', 'wsgi.url_scheme', 'wsgi.version']