Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-hgweb-non-interactive.t @ 37811:51dee6fad783 stable
infinitepush: ensure fileindex bookmarks use '/' separators (issue5840)
After loading up with status messages, I noticed that the subsequent matcher was
rejecting 'scratch\mybranch' on Windows. No bookmarks were reported back, and
the tests subsequently failed. I did a search for 'match', and nothing else
looks like it needs to be fixed up, but someone who understands this code should
also take a look.
I also tried setting `infinitepush.branchpattern=re:scratch\\.*` in
library-infinitepush.sh without this change, but that didn't work. Still,
should we ban '\' in these bookmarks to avoid confusion? I thought I saw code
that sandwiches a pattern between 're:^' and '.*', so perhaps regex characters
will need special care?
I also noticed comments in externalbundlestore.{read,write} that it won't work
on Windows because of opening an open file. But I don't see a test failure, so
this may lack test coverage.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 23 Apr 2018 23:22:52 -0400 |
parents | 27fb986e54d0 |
children | c20861b65688 |
line wrap: on
line source
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 __future__ import absolute_import > import os > import sys > from mercurial import ( > dispatch, > hg, > ui as uimod, > util, > ) > ui = uimod.ui > from mercurial.hgweb.hgweb_mod import ( > hgweb, > ) > stringio = util.stringio > > 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': '$LOCALIP', > 'SERVER_PORT': os.environ['HGPORT'], > 'SERVER_PROTOCOL': 'HTTP/1.0' > } > > i = hgweb('.') > for c in i(env, startrsp): > pass > 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') > with i._obtainrepo() as repo: > print(sorted([x for x in 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'] $ cd ..