view tests/test-doctest.py @ 25691:5cda0ce05c42

wireproto: add config knob for http header length limit Well-behaved Mercurial clients will respect the httpheader capability by not sending http headers longer than the given limit in bytes. The limit is currently hard-coded at 1024 bytes, a safe value for any web server. Since parsing headers is a notable factor in web server performance, tuning header size can nontrivially improve performance for request-heavy operations (eg. obsolete marker negotiation). Exposing the maximum header length limit as a configuration setting is a simple way to enable such tuning.
author Mike Edgar <adgar@google.com>
date Mon, 29 Jun 2015 12:35:31 -0400
parents c87b05925054
children 1f6878c87c25
line wrap: on
line source

# this is hack to make sure no escape characters are inserted into the output
import os, sys
if 'TERM' in os.environ:
    del os.environ['TERM']
import doctest

def testmod(name, optionflags=0, testtarget=None):
    __import__(name)
    mod = sys.modules[name]
    if testtarget is not None:
        mod = getattr(mod, testtarget)
    doctest.testmod(mod, optionflags=optionflags)

testmod('mercurial.changelog')
testmod('mercurial.dagparser', optionflags=doctest.NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE)
testmod('mercurial.dispatch')
testmod('mercurial.encoding')
testmod('mercurial.hg')
testmod('mercurial.hgweb.hgwebdir_mod')
testmod('mercurial.match')
testmod('mercurial.minirst')
testmod('mercurial.patch')
testmod('mercurial.pathutil')
testmod('mercurial.parser')
testmod('mercurial.revset')
testmod('mercurial.store')
testmod('mercurial.subrepo')
testmod('mercurial.templatefilters')
testmod('mercurial.ui')
testmod('mercurial.url')
testmod('mercurial.util')
testmod('mercurial.util', testtarget='platform')
testmod('hgext.convert.cvsps')
testmod('hgext.convert.filemap')
testmod('hgext.convert.subversion')
testmod('hgext.mq')