Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-contrib-check-code.t @ 27947:571ba161f6be stable
largefiles: prevent committing a missing largefile
Previously, if the largefile was deleted at the time of a commit, the standin
was silently not updated and its current state (possibly garbage) was recorded.
The test makes it look like this is somewhat of an edge case, but the same thing
happens when an `hg revert` followed by `rm` changes the standin.
Aside from the second invocation of this in lfutil.updatestandinsbymatch()
(which is what triggers this test case), the three other uses are guarded by
dirstate checks for added or modified, or an existence check in the filesystem.
So aborting in lfutil.updatestandins() should be safe, and will avoid silent
skips in the future if this is used elsewhere.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 24 Jan 2016 00:10:19 -0500 |
parents | 8833daddfc3f |
children | d3990da51637 |
line wrap: on
line source
$ cat > correct.py <<EOF > def toto(arg1, arg2): > del arg2 > return (5 + 6, 9) > EOF $ cat > wrong.py <<EOF > def toto( arg1, arg2): > del(arg2) > return ( 5+6, 9) > EOF $ cat > quote.py <<EOF > # let's use quote in comments > (''' ( 4x5 ) > but """\\''' and finally''', > """let's fool checkpatch""", '1+2', > '"""', 42+1, """and > ( 4-1 ) """, "( 1+1 )\" and ") > a, '\\\\\\\\', "\\\\\\" x-2", "c-1" > EOF $ cat > classstyle.py <<EOF > class newstyle_class(object): > pass > > class oldstyle_class: > pass > > class empty(): > pass > > no_class = 1: > pass > EOF $ check_code="$TESTDIR"/../contrib/check-code.py $ "$check_code" ./wrong.py ./correct.py ./quote.py ./classstyle.py ./wrong.py:1: > def toto( arg1, arg2): gratuitous whitespace in () or [] ./wrong.py:2: > del(arg2) Python keyword is not a function ./wrong.py:3: > return ( 5+6, 9) gratuitous whitespace in () or [] missing whitespace in expression ./quote.py:5: > '"""', 42+1, """and missing whitespace in expression ./classstyle.py:4: > class oldstyle_class: old-style class, use class foo(object) ./classstyle.py:7: > class empty(): class foo() creates old style object, use class foo(object) [1] $ cat > python3-compat.py << EOF > foo <> bar > reduce(lambda a, b: a + b, [1, 2, 3, 4]) > dict(key=value) > EOF $ "$check_code" python3-compat.py python3-compat.py:1: > foo <> bar <> operator is not available in Python 3+, use != python3-compat.py:2: > reduce(lambda a, b: a + b, [1, 2, 3, 4]) reduce is not available in Python 3+ python3-compat.py:3: > dict(key=value) dict() is different in Py2 and 3 and is slower than {} [1] $ cat > is-op.py <<EOF > # is-operator comparing number or string literal > x = None > y = x is 'foo' > y = x is "foo" > y = x is 5346 > y = x is -6 > y = x is not 'foo' > y = x is not "foo" > y = x is not 5346 > y = x is not -6 > EOF $ "$check_code" ./is-op.py ./is-op.py:3: > y = x is 'foo' object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:4: > y = x is "foo" object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:5: > y = x is 5346 object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:6: > y = x is -6 object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:7: > y = x is not 'foo' object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:8: > y = x is not "foo" object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:9: > y = x is not 5346 object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:10: > y = x is not -6 object comparison with literal [1] $ cat > for-nolineno.py <<EOF > except: > EOF $ "$check_code" for-nolineno.py --nolineno for-nolineno.py:0: > except: naked except clause [1] $ cat > warning.t <<EOF > $ function warnonly { > > } > $ diff -N aaa > $ function onwarn {} > EOF $ "$check_code" warning.t $ "$check_code" --warn warning.t warning.t:1: > $ function warnonly { warning: don't use 'function', use old style warning.t:3: > $ diff -N aaa warning: don't use 'diff -N' warning.t:4: > $ function onwarn {} warning: don't use 'function', use old style [1] $ cat > raise-format.py <<EOF > raise SomeException, message > # this next line is okay > raise SomeException(arg1, arg2) > EOF $ "$check_code" not-existing.py raise-format.py Skipping*not-existing.py* (glob) raise-format.py:1: > raise SomeException, message don't use old-style two-argument raise, use Exception(message) [1] $ cat > rst.py <<EOF > """problematic rst text > > .. note:: > wrong > """ > > ''' > > .. note:: > > valid > > new text > > .. note:: > > also valid > ''' > > """mixed > > .. note:: > > good > > .. note:: > plus bad > """ > EOF $ $check_code -w rst.py rst.py:3: > .. note:: warning: add two newlines after '.. note::' rst.py:26: > .. note:: warning: add two newlines after '.. note::' [1] $ cat > ./map-inside-gettext.py <<EOF > print _("map inside gettext %s" % v) > > print _("concatenating " " by " " space %s" % v) > print _("concatenating " + " by " + " '+' %s" % v) > > print _("mapping operation in different line %s" > % v) > > print _( > "leading spaces inside of '(' %s" % v) > EOF $ "$check_code" ./map-inside-gettext.py ./map-inside-gettext.py:1: > print _("map inside gettext %s" % v) don't use % inside _() ./map-inside-gettext.py:3: > print _("concatenating " " by " " space %s" % v) don't use % inside _() ./map-inside-gettext.py:4: > print _("concatenating " + " by " + " '+' %s" % v) don't use % inside _() ./map-inside-gettext.py:6: > print _("mapping operation in different line %s" don't use % inside _() ./map-inside-gettext.py:9: > print _( don't use % inside _() [1] web templates $ mkdir -p mercurial/templates $ cat > mercurial/templates/example.tmpl <<EOF > {desc} > {desc|escape} > {desc|firstline} > {desc|websub} > EOF $ "$check_code" --warnings mercurial/templates/example.tmpl mercurial/templates/example.tmpl:2: > {desc|escape} warning: follow desc keyword with either firstline or websub [1]