tests/test-locate.t
author Raphaël Gomès <rgomes@octobus.net>
Mon, 14 Oct 2019 13:57:30 +0200
changeset 43826 5ac243a92e37
parent 41576 15f63ac122ea
permissions -rw-r--r--
rust-performance: introduce FastHashMap type alias for HashMap Rust's default hashing is slow, because it is meant for preventing collision attacks. For all of the current Rust code, we don't care about those attacks, because if an person with bad intentions has write access to your repo, you have other issues. I've chosen to use the TwoXHash crate because it was made by a reputable member of the Rust community and has very good benchmarks. For now it does not seem to improve performance by much for the current code, but it's something else to not worry about when benchmarking code: in a previous experiment with copytracing in Rust, it accounted for more than 10% of the time of the entire script. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7116

  $ hg init repo
  $ cd repo
  $ echo 0 > a
  $ echo 0 > b
  $ echo 0 > t.h
  $ mkdir t
  $ echo 0 > t/x
  $ echo 0 > t/b
  $ echo 0 > t/e.h
  $ mkdir dir.h
  $ echo 0 > dir.h/foo

  $ hg ci -A -m m
  adding a
  adding b
  adding dir.h/foo
  adding t.h
  adding t/b
  adding t/e.h
  adding t/x

  $ touch nottracked

  $ hg locate a
  a

  $ hg locate NONEXISTENT
  [1]

  $ hg locate
  a
  b
  dir.h/foo
  t.h
  t/b
  t/e.h
  t/x

  $ hg rm a
  $ hg ci -m m

  $ hg locate a
  [1]
  $ hg locate NONEXISTENT
  [1]
  $ hg locate relpath:NONEXISTENT
  [1]
  $ hg locate
  b
  dir.h/foo
  t.h
  t/b
  t/e.h
  t/x
  $ hg locate -r 0 a
  a
  $ hg locate -r 0 NONEXISTENT
  [1]
  $ hg locate -r 0 relpath:NONEXISTENT
  [1]
  $ hg locate -r 0
  a
  b
  dir.h/foo
  t.h
  t/b
  t/e.h
  t/x

-I/-X with relative path should work:

  $ cd t
  $ hg locate
  b
  dir.h/foo
  t.h
  t/b
  t/e.h
  t/x
  $ hg locate -I ../t
  t/b
  t/e.h
  t/x

Issue294: hg remove --after dir fails when dir.* also exists

  $ cd ..
  $ rm -r t

  $ hg rm t/b

  $ hg locate 't/**'
  t/b
  t/e.h
  t/x

  $ hg files
  b
  dir.h/foo
  t.h
  t/e.h
  t/x
  $ hg files b
  b

-X with explicit path:

  $ hg files b -X b
  [1]

  $ mkdir otherdir
  $ cd otherdir

  $ hg files path:
  ../b
  ../dir.h/foo
  ../t.h
  ../t/e.h
  ../t/x
  $ hg files path:.
  ../b
  ../dir.h/foo
  ../t.h
  ../t/e.h
  ../t/x
  $ hg files --config ui.relative-paths=yes
  ../b
  ../dir.h/foo
  ../t.h
  ../t/e.h
  ../t/x
  $ hg files --config ui.relative-paths=no
  b
  dir.h/foo
  t.h
  t/e.h
  t/x
  $ hg files --config ui.relative-paths=legacy
  ../b
  ../dir.h/foo
  ../t.h
  ../t/e.h
  ../t/x

  $ hg locate b
  ../b
  ../t/b
  $ hg locate '*.h'
  ../t.h
  ../t/e.h
  $ hg locate path:t/x
  ../t/x
  $ hg locate 're:.*\.h$'
  ../t.h
  ../t/e.h
  $ hg locate -r 0 b
  ../b
  ../t/b
  $ hg locate -r 0 '*.h'
  ../t.h
  ../t/e.h
  $ hg locate -r 0 path:t/x
  ../t/x
  $ hg locate -r 0 're:.*\.h$'
  ../t.h
  ../t/e.h

  $ hg files
  ../b
  ../dir.h/foo
  ../t.h
  ../t/e.h
  ../t/x
  $ hg files .
  [1]

Fileset at null (i.e. a falsy context) shouldn't crash (issue6046)

  $ hg files -r null 'set:tracked()'
  [1]

Convert native path separator to slash (issue5572)

  $ hg files -T '{path|relpath|slashpath}\n'
  ../b
  ../dir.h/foo
  ../t.h
  ../t/e.h
  ../t/x

  $ cd ../..