chg: make timeout adjustable
Before this patch, chg will give up when it cannot connect to the new server
within 10 seconds. If the host has high load during that time, 10 seconds
is not enough.
This patch makes it adjustable using the CHGTIMEOUT environment variable.
Test if logtoprocess correctly captures command-related log calls.
$ hg init
$ cat > $TESTTMP/foocommand.py << EOF
> from mercurial import cmdutil
> from time import sleep
> cmdtable = {}
> command = cmdutil.command(cmdtable)
> @command('foo', [])
> def foo(ui, repo):
> ui.log('foo', 'a message: %(bar)s\n', bar='spam')
> EOF
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
> [extensions]
> logtoprocess=
> foocommand=$TESTTMP/foocommand.py
> [logtoprocess]
> command=echo 'logtoprocess command output:';
> echo "\$EVENT";
> echo "\$MSG1";
> echo "\$MSG2"
> commandfinish=echo 'logtoprocess commandfinish output:';
> echo "\$EVENT";
> echo "\$MSG1";
> echo "\$MSG2";
> echo "\$MSG3"
> foo=echo 'logtoprocess foo output:';
> echo "\$EVENT";
> echo "\$MSG1";
> echo "\$OPT_BAR"
> EOF
Running a command triggers both a ui.log('command') and a
ui.log('commandfinish') call. The foo command also uses ui.log.
Use head to ensure we wait for all lines to be produced, and sort to avoid
ordering issues between the various processes we spawn:
$ hg foo | head -n 17 | sort
0
a message: spam
command
commandfinish
foo
foo
foo
foo
foo exited 0 after * seconds (glob)
logtoprocess command output:
logtoprocess commandfinish output:
logtoprocess foo output:
spam