Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-bookmarks-current.t @ 36958:644a02f6b34f
util: prefer "bytesio" to "stringio"
The io.BytesIO and io.StringIO types enforce the type of
data being operated on. On Python 2, we use cStringIO.StringIO(),
which is lax about mixing types. On Python 3, we actually use
io.BytesIO. Ideally, we'd use io.BytesIO on Python 2. But I believe
its performance is poor compared to cString.StringIO().
Anyway, we canonically define our pycompat type as "stringio."
That name is misleading, especially on Python 3.
This commit renames the canonical symbols to "bytesio."
"stringio" is preserved as an alias for API compatibility. There
are a lot of callers in the repo and I hesitate to take away the
old name. I also don't feel like changing everything at this time.
But at least new callers can use a "proper" name.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2868
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
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date | Wed, 14 Mar 2018 11:52:35 -0700 |
parents | 2e1bceeea520 |
children | 337443f09fc8 |
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$ hg init no bookmarks $ hg bookmarks no bookmarks set set bookmark X $ hg bookmark X list bookmarks $ hg bookmark * X -1:000000000000 list bookmarks with color $ hg --config extensions.color= --config color.mode=ansi \ > bookmark --color=always \x1b[0;32m * \x1b[0m\x1b[0;32mX\x1b[0m\x1b[0;32m -1:000000000000\x1b[0m (esc) update to bookmark X $ hg bookmarks * X -1:000000000000 $ hg update X 0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved list bookmarks $ hg bookmarks * X -1:000000000000 rename $ hg bookmark -m X Z list bookmarks $ cat .hg/bookmarks.current Z (no-eol) $ cat .hg/bookmarks 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 Z $ hg bookmarks * Z -1:000000000000 new bookmarks X and Y, first one made active $ hg bookmark Y X list bookmarks $ hg bookmark X -1:000000000000 * Y -1:000000000000 Z -1:000000000000 $ hg bookmark -d X commit $ echo 'b' > b $ hg add b $ hg commit -m'test' list bookmarks $ hg bookmark * Y 0:719295282060 Z -1:000000000000 Verify that switching to Z updates the active bookmark: $ hg update Z 0 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved (activating bookmark Z) $ hg bookmark Y 0:719295282060 * Z -1:000000000000 Switch back to Y for the remaining tests in this file: $ hg update Y 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved (activating bookmark Y) delete bookmarks $ hg bookmark -d Y $ hg bookmark -d Z list bookmarks $ hg bookmark no bookmarks set update to tip $ hg update tip 0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved set bookmark Y using -r . but make sure that the active bookmark is not activated $ hg bookmark -r . Y list bookmarks, Y should not be active $ hg bookmark Y 0:719295282060 now, activate Y $ hg up -q Y set bookmark Z using -i $ hg bookmark -r . -i Z $ hg bookmarks * Y 0:719295282060 Z 0:719295282060 deactivate active bookmark using -i $ hg bookmark -i Y $ hg bookmarks Y 0:719295282060 Z 0:719295282060 $ hg up -q Y $ hg bookmark -i $ hg bookmarks Y 0:719295282060 Z 0:719295282060 $ hg bookmark -i no active bookmark $ hg up -q Y $ hg bookmarks * Y 0:719295282060 Z 0:719295282060 deactivate active bookmark while renaming $ hg bookmark -i -m Y X $ hg bookmarks X 0:719295282060 Z 0:719295282060 bare update moves the active bookmark forward and clear the divergent bookmarks $ echo a > a $ hg ci -Am1 adding a $ echo b >> a $ hg ci -Am2 $ hg bookmark X@1 -r 1 $ hg bookmark X@2 -r 2 $ hg update X 0 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved (activating bookmark X) $ hg bookmarks * X 0:719295282060 X@1 1:cc586d725fbe X@2 2:49e1c4e84c58 Z 0:719295282060 $ hg update 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved updating bookmark X $ hg bookmarks * X 2:49e1c4e84c58 Z 0:719295282060 test deleting .hg/bookmarks.current when explicitly updating to a revision $ echo a >> b $ hg ci -m. $ hg up -q X $ test -f .hg/bookmarks.current try to update to it again to make sure we don't set and then unset it $ hg up -q X $ test -f .hg/bookmarks.current $ hg up -q 1 $ test -f .hg/bookmarks.current [1] when a bookmark is active, hg up -r . is analogous to hg book -i <active bookmark> $ hg up -q X $ hg up -q . $ test -f .hg/bookmarks.current [1] issue 4552 -- simulate a pull moving the active bookmark $ hg up -q X $ printf "Z" > .hg/bookmarks.current $ hg log -T '{activebookmark}\n' -r Z Z $ hg log -T '{bookmarks % "{active}\n"}' -r Z Z test that updating to closed branch head also advances active bookmark $ hg commit --close-branch -m "closed" $ hg update -q ".^1" $ hg bookmark Y $ hg bookmarks X 3:4d6bd4bfb1ae * Y 3:4d6bd4bfb1ae Z 0:719295282060 $ hg update 0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved updating bookmark Y $ hg bookmarks X 3:4d6bd4bfb1ae * Y 4:8fa964221e8e Z 0:719295282060 $ hg parents -q 4:8fa964221e8e