Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-narrow-clone-non-narrow-server.t @ 36534:5faeabb07cf5
debugcommands: support for triggering push protocol
The mechanism for pushing to a remote is a bit more complicated
than other commands. On SSH, we wait for a positive reply from
the server before we start sending the bundle payload.
This commit adds a mechanism to the "command" action in
`hg debugwireproto` to trigger the "push protocol" and to
specify a file whose contents should be submitted as the command
payload.
With this new feature, we implement a handful of tests for the
"unbundle" command. We try to cover various server failures and
hook/output scenarios so protocol behavior is as comprehensively
tested as possible. Even with so much test output, we only cover
bundle1 with Python hooks. There's still a lot of test coverage
that needs to be implemented. But this is certainly a good start.
Because there are so many new tests, we split these tests into their
own test file.
In order to make output deterministic, we need to disable the
doublepipe primitive. We add an option to `hg debugwireproto`
to do that. Because something in the bowels of the peer does a
read of stderr, we still capture read I/O from stderr. So there
is test coverage of what the server emits.
The tests around I/O capture some wonkiness. For example,
interleaved ui.write() and ui.write_err() calls are emitted in
order. However, (presumably due to buffering), print() to
sys.stdout and sys.stderr aren't in order.
We currently only test bundle1 because bundle2 is substantially
harder to test because it is more complicated (the server responds
with a stream containing a bundle2 instead of a frame).
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2471
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 26 Feb 2018 18:01:13 -0800 |
parents | 54e2abc73686 |
children | c18ae7a07019 |
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Test attempting a narrow clone against a server that doesn't support narrowhg. $ . "$TESTDIR/narrow-library.sh" $ hg init master $ cd master $ for x in `$TESTDIR/seq.py 10`; do > echo $x > "f$x" > hg add "f$x" > hg commit -m "Add $x" > done $ hg serve -a localhost -p $HGPORT1 --config extensions.narrow=! -d \ > --pid-file=hg.pid $ cat hg.pid >> "$DAEMON_PIDS" $ hg serve -a localhost -p $HGPORT2 -d --pid-file=hg.pid $ cat hg.pid >> "$DAEMON_PIDS" Verify that narrow is advertised in the bundle2 capabilities: $ echo hello | hg -R . serve --stdio | \ > python -c "import sys, urllib; print urllib.unquote_plus(list(sys.stdin)[1])" | grep narrow narrow=v0 $ cd .. $ hg clone --narrow --include f1 http://localhost:$HGPORT1/ narrowclone requesting all changes abort: server doesn't support narrow clones [255] Make a narrow clone (via HGPORT2), then try to narrow and widen into it (from HGPORT1) to prove that narrowing is fine and widening fails gracefully: $ hg clone -r 0 --narrow --include f1 http://localhost:$HGPORT2/ narrowclone adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files new changesets * (glob) updating to branch default 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ cd narrowclone $ hg tracked --addexclude f2 http://localhost:$HGPORT1/ comparing with http://localhost:$HGPORT1/ searching for changes looking for local changes to affected paths $ hg tracked --addinclude f1 http://localhost:$HGPORT1/ comparing with http://localhost:$HGPORT1/ searching for changes no changes found abort: server doesn't support narrow clones [255]