Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-bad-extension.t @ 33048:46fa46608ca5
namespaces: record and expose whether namespace is built-in
Currently, the templating layer tends to treat each namespace
as a one-off, with explicit usage of {bookmarks}, {tags}, {branch},
etc instead of using {namespaces}. It would be really useful if
we could iterate over namespaces and operate on them generically.
However, some consumers may wish to differentiate namespaces by
whether they are built-in to core Mercurial or provided by extensions.
Expected use cases include ignoring non-built-in namespaces or
emitting a generic label for non-built-in namespaces.
This commit introduces an attribute on namespace instances
that says whether the namespace is "built-in" and then exposes
this to the templating layer.
As part of this, we implement a reusable extension for defining
custom names on each changeset for testing. A second consumer
will be introduced in a subsequent commit.
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 24 Jun 2017 14:52:15 -0700 |
parents | 46ba2cdda476 |
children | fce4ed2912bb |
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ensure that failing ui.atexit handlers report sensibly $ cat > $TESTTMP/bailatexit.py <<EOF > from mercurial import util > def bail(): > raise RuntimeError('ui.atexit handler exception') > > def extsetup(ui): > ui.atexit(bail) > EOF $ hg -q --config extensions.bailatexit=$TESTTMP/bailatexit.py \ > help help hg help [-ecks] [TOPIC] show help for a given topic or a help overview error in exit handlers: Traceback (most recent call last): File "*/mercurial/dispatch.py", line *, in _runexithandlers (glob) func(*args, **kwargs) File "$TESTTMP/bailatexit.py", line *, in bail (glob) raise RuntimeError('ui.atexit handler exception') RuntimeError: ui.atexit handler exception [255] $ rm $TESTTMP/bailatexit.py another bad extension $ echo 'raise Exception("bit bucket overflow")' > badext.py $ abspathexc=`pwd`/badext.py $ cat >baddocext.py <<EOF > """ > baddocext is bad > """ > EOF $ abspathdoc=`pwd`/baddocext.py $ cat <<EOF >> $HGRCPATH > [extensions] > gpg = > hgext.gpg = > badext = $abspathexc > baddocext = $abspathdoc > badext2 = > EOF $ hg -q help help 2>&1 |grep extension *** failed to import extension badext from $TESTTMP/badext.py: bit bucket overflow *** failed to import extension badext2: No module named badext2 show traceback $ hg -q help help --traceback 2>&1 | egrep ' extension|^Exception|Traceback|ImportError' *** failed to import extension badext from $TESTTMP/badext.py: bit bucket overflow Traceback (most recent call last): Exception: bit bucket overflow *** failed to import extension badext2: No module named badext2 Traceback (most recent call last): ImportError: No module named badext2 names of extensions failed to load can be accessed via extensions.notloaded() $ cat <<EOF > showbadexts.py > from mercurial import commands, extensions, registrar > cmdtable = {} > command = registrar.command(cmdtable) > @command('showbadexts', norepo=True) > def showbadexts(ui, *pats, **opts): > ui.write('BADEXTS: %s\n' % ' '.join(sorted(extensions.notloaded()))) > EOF $ hg --config extensions.badexts=showbadexts.py showbadexts 2>&1 | grep '^BADEXTS' BADEXTS: badext badext2 show traceback for ImportError of hgext.name if debug is set (note that --debug option isn't applied yet when loading extensions) $ (hg -q help help --traceback --config ui.debug=True 2>&1) \ > | grep -v '^ ' \ > | egrep 'extension..[^p]|^Exception|Traceback|ImportError|not import' *** failed to import extension badext from $TESTTMP/badext.py: bit bucket overflow Traceback (most recent call last): Exception: bit bucket overflow could not import hgext.badext2 (No module named *badext2): trying hgext3rd.badext2 (glob) Traceback (most recent call last): ImportError: No module named *badext2 (glob) could not import hgext3rd.badext2 (No module named *badext2): trying badext2 (glob) Traceback (most recent call last): ImportError: No module named *badext2 (glob) *** failed to import extension badext2: No module named badext2 Traceback (most recent call last): ImportError: No module named badext2 confirm that there's no crash when an extension's documentation is bad $ hg help --keyword baddocext *** failed to import extension badext from $TESTTMP/badext.py: bit bucket overflow *** failed to import extension badext2: No module named badext2 Topics: extensions Using Additional Features