Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-contrib-testparseutil.t @ 40327:55836a34f41b
exchangev2: recognize narrow patterns when pulling
pulloperation instances were recently taught to record file
include and exclude patterns to facilitate narrow file transfer.
Teaching the exchangev2 code to transfer a subset of files is
as simple as constructing a narrow matcher from these patterns and
filtering all seen file paths through it.
Keep in mind that this change only influences file data: we're
still fetching all changeset and manifest data. So, there's still
a ton of "partial clone" to implement in exchangev2.
On a personal note, I derive gratification that this feature requires
very few lines of new code to implement.
To test this, we implemented a minimal extension which allows us to specify
--include/--exclude to clone. While the narrow extension provides these
arguments, I explicitly wanted to test this functionality without the
narrow extension enabled, as that extension monkeypatches various things
and I want to isolate the behavior of core Mercurial.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5132
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 26 Sep 2018 14:38:43 -0700 |
parents | 726cfc47f17a |
children |
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$ testparseutil="$TESTDIR"/../contrib/testparseutil.py Internal test by doctest $ "$PYTHON" -m doctest "$testparseutil" Tests for embedded python script Typical cases $ "$PYTHON" "$testparseutil" -v pyembedded <<NO_CHECK_EOF > >>> for f in [1, 2, 3]: > ... foo = 1 > >>> foo = 2 > $ echo "doctest is terminated by command, empty line, or comment" > >>> foo = 31 > expected output of doctest fragment > >>> foo = 32 > > >>> foo = 33 > > >>> foo = 34 > comment > >>> foo = 35 > > $ "\$PYTHON" <<EOF > > foo = 4 > > > > EOF > $ cat > foo.py <<EOF > > foo = 5 > > EOF > $ cat >> foo.py <<EOF > > foo = 6 # appended > > EOF > > NO_CHECK_EOF limit mark makes parsing ignore corresponded fragment > (this is useful to use bad code intentionally) > > $ "\$PYTHON" <<NO_CHECK_EOF > > foo = 7 # this should be ignored at detection > > NO_CHECK_EOF > $ cat > foo.py <<NO_CHECK_EOF > > foo = 8 # this should be ignored at detection > > NO_CHECK_EOF > > doctest fragment ended by EOF > > >>> foo = 9 > NO_CHECK_EOF <stdin>:1: <anonymous> starts |for f in [1, 2, 3]: | foo = 1 |foo = 2 <stdin>:4: <anonymous> ends <stdin>:5: <anonymous> starts |foo = 31 | |foo = 32 | |foo = 33 <stdin>:10: <anonymous> ends <stdin>:11: <anonymous> starts |foo = 34 <stdin>:12: <anonymous> ends <stdin>:13: <anonymous> starts |foo = 35 <stdin>:14: <anonymous> ends <stdin>:16: <anonymous> starts |foo = 4 | <stdin>:18: <anonymous> ends <stdin>:20: foo.py starts |foo = 5 <stdin>:21: foo.py ends <stdin>:23: foo.py starts |foo = 6 # appended <stdin>:24: foo.py ends <stdin>:38: <anonymous> starts |foo = 9 <stdin>:39: <anonymous> ends Invalid test script (similar test for shell script and hgrc configuration is omitted, because this tests common base class of them) $ "$PYTHON" "$testparseutil" -v pyembedded <<NO_CHECK_EOF > detected > $ "\$PYTHON" <<EOF > > foo = 1 > > $ "\$PYTHON" <<EOF > > foo = 2 > $ cat > bar.py <<EOF > > bar = 2 # this fragment will be detected as expected > > EOF > > $ cat > foo.py <<EOF > > foo = 3 > NO_CHECK_EOF <stdin>:3: unexpected line for "heredoc python invocation" <stdin>:6: unexpected line for "heredoc python invocation" <stdin>:11: unexpected end of file for "heredoc .py file" [1] $ cat detected <stdin>:7: bar.py starts |bar = 2 # this fragment will be detected as expected <stdin>:8: bar.py ends Tests for embedded shell script $ "$PYTHON" "$testparseutil" -v shembedded <<NO_CHECK_EOF > $ cat > foo.sh <<EOF > > foo = 1 > > > > foo = 2 > > EOF > $ cat >> foo.sh <<EOF > > foo = 3 # appended > > EOF > > NO_CHECK_EOF limit mark makes parsing ignore corresponded fragment > (this is useful to use bad code intentionally) > > $ cat > foo.sh <<NO_CHECK_EOF > > # this should be ignored at detection > > foo = 4 > > NO_CHECK_EOF > > NO_CHECK_EOF <stdin>:2: foo.sh starts |foo = 1 | |foo = 2 <stdin>:5: foo.sh ends <stdin>:7: foo.sh starts |foo = 3 # appended <stdin>:8: foo.sh ends Tests for embedded hgrc configuration $ "$PYTHON" "$testparseutil" -v hgrcembedded <<NO_CHECK_EOF > $ cat > .hg/hgrc <<EOF > > [ui] > > verbose = true > > > > # end of local configuration > > EOF > > $ cat > \$HGRCPATH <<EOF > > [extensions] > > rebase = > > # end of global configuration > > EOF > > $ cat >> \$HGRCPATH <<EOF > > # appended > > [extensions] > > rebase =! > > EOF > > NO_CHECK_EOF limit mark makes parsing ignore corresponded fragment > (this is useful to use bad code intentionally) > > $ cat > .hg/hgrc <<NO_CHECK_EOF > > # this local configuration should be ignored at detection > > [ui] > > username = foo bar > > NO_CHECK_EOF > > $ cat > \$HGRCPATH <<NO_CHECK_EOF > > # this global configuration should be ignored at detection > > [extensions] > > foobar = > > NO_CHECK_EOF > NO_CHECK_EOF <stdin>:2: .hg/hgrc starts |[ui] |verbose = true | |# end of local configuration <stdin>:6: .hg/hgrc ends <stdin>:9: $HGRCPATH starts |[extensions] |rebase = |# end of global configuration <stdin>:12: $HGRCPATH ends <stdin>:15: $HGRCPATH starts |# appended |[extensions] |rebase =! <stdin>:18: $HGRCPATH ends