view tests/test-lrucachedict.py @ 25115:5548f558db3d

revset: fix iteration over ordered addset composed of non-ordered operands Before this change, doing ordered iteration over an 'addset' object composed of operands without fastasc or fastdesc method could result in duplicated entries. This was the result of applying '_iterordered' on an unordered set. We fix it by ensuring we iterate over the set in a sorted order. Using the fast iterator when it exists on any operand. We kill the '_iterator' method in the process because it did not make a lot of sense independently. Thanks goes to Yuya Nishihara for reporting the issue and analysing the cause.
author Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@fb.com>
date Fri, 15 May 2015 00:25:43 -0700
parents 887ffa22fd0d
children 45d996a566d7
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from mercurial import util

def printifpresent(d, xs):
    for x in xs:
        present = x in d
        print "'%s' in d: %s" % (x, present)
        if present:
            print "d['%s']: %s" % (x, d[x])

def test_lrucachedict():
    d = util.lrucachedict(4)
    d['a'] = 'va'
    d['b'] = 'vb'
    d['c'] = 'vc'
    d['d'] = 'vd'

    # all of these should be present
    printifpresent(d, ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'])

    # 'a' should be dropped because it was least recently used
    d['e'] = 've'
    printifpresent(d, ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e'])

    # touch entries in some order (get or set).
    d['e']
    d['c'] = 'vc2'
    d['d']
    d['b'] = 'vb2'

    # 'e' should be dropped now
    d['f'] = 'vf'
    printifpresent(d, ['b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f'])

    d.clear()
    printifpresent(d, ['b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f'])

if __name__ == '__main__':
    test_lrucachedict()