view tests/test-dispatch.py @ 29489:54ad81b0665f

sslutil: handle default CA certificate loading on Windows See the inline comment for what's going on here. There is magic built into the "ssl" module that ships with modern CPython that knows how to load the system CA certificates on Windows. Since we're not shipping a CA bundle with Mercurial, if we're running on legacy CPython there's nothing we can do to load CAs on Windows, so it makes sense to print a warning. I don't anticipate many people will see this warning because the official (presumed popular) Mercurial distributions on Windows bundle Python and should be distributing a modern Python capable of loading system CA certs.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Mon, 04 Jul 2016 10:04:11 -0700
parents 1d9d29d4813a
children f0c94af0d70d
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from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import os
from mercurial import (
    dispatch,
)

def testdispatch(cmd):
    """Simple wrapper around dispatch.dispatch()

    Prints command and result value, but does not handle quoting.
    """
    print("running: %s" % (cmd,))
    req = dispatch.request(cmd.split())
    result = dispatch.dispatch(req)
    print("result: %r" % (result,))

testdispatch("init test1")
os.chdir('test1')

# create file 'foo', add and commit
f = open('foo', 'wb')
f.write('foo\n')
f.close()
testdispatch("add foo")
testdispatch("commit -m commit1 -d 2000-01-01 foo")

# append to file 'foo' and commit
f = open('foo', 'ab')
f.write('bar\n')
f.close()
testdispatch("commit -m commit2 -d 2000-01-02 foo")

# check 88803a69b24 (fancyopts modified command table)
testdispatch("log -r 0")
testdispatch("log -r tip")