Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-serve.t @ 49010:681b25ea579e
contrib: add a partial-merge tool for sorted lists (such as Python imports)
This is a pretty naive tool that uses a regular expression for
matching lines. It is based on a Google-internal tool that worked in a
similar way.
For now, the regular expression is hard-coded to attempt to match
single-line Python imports. The only commit I've found in the hg core
repo where the tool helped was commit 9cd6292abfdf. I think that's
because we often use multiple imports per import statement. I think
this tool is still a decent first step (especially once the regex is
made configurable in the next patch). The merging should ideally use a
proper Python parser and do the merge at the AST (or CST?) level, but
that's significantly harder, especially if you want to preserve
comments and whitespace. It's also less generic.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D12380
author | Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 04 Mar 2022 16:12:56 -0800 |
parents | 6f43569729d4 |
children | 9c5e743e400c |
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#require serve $ hgserve() > { > hg serve -a localhost -d --pid-file=hg.pid -E errors.log -v $@ \ > | sed -e "s/:$HGPORT1\\([^0-9]\\)/:HGPORT1\1/g" \ > -e "s/:$HGPORT2\\([^0-9]\\)/:HGPORT2\1/g" \ > -e 's/http:\/\/[^/]*\//http:\/\/localhost\//' > if [ -f hg.pid ]; then > killdaemons.py hg.pid > fi > echo % errors > cat errors.log > } $ hg init test $ cd test $ echo '[web]' > .hg/hgrc $ echo 'accesslog = access.log' >> .hg/hgrc $ echo "port = $HGPORT1" >> .hg/hgrc Without -v $ hg serve -a localhost -p $HGPORT -d --pid-file=hg.pid -E errors.log $ cat hg.pid >> "$DAEMON_PIDS" $ if [ -f access.log ]; then > echo 'access log created - .hg/hgrc respected' > fi access log created - .hg/hgrc respected errors $ cat errors.log With -v $ hgserve listening at http://localhost/ (bound to *$LOCALIP*:HGPORT1) (glob) (?) % errors With -v and -p HGPORT2 $ hgserve -p "$HGPORT2" listening at http://localhost/ (bound to *$LOCALIP*:HGPORT2) (glob) (?) % errors With -v and -p daytime # On some system this will fails because port < 1024 are not bindable by normal # users. # # On some others the kernel is configured to allow any user to bind them and # this will work fine #if no-windows $ KILLQUIETLY=Y $ hgserve -p daytime abort: cannot start server at 'localhost:13': Permission denied (?) abort: child process failed to start (?) abort: no port number associated with service 'daytime' (?) listening at http://localhost/ (bound to $LOCALIP:13) (?) % errors $ KILLQUIETLY=N #endif With --prefix foo $ hgserve --prefix foo listening at http://localhost/foo/ (bound to *$LOCALIP*:HGPORT1) (glob) (?) % errors With --prefix /foo $ hgserve --prefix /foo listening at http://localhost/foo/ (bound to *$LOCALIP*:HGPORT1) (glob) (?) % errors With --prefix foo/ $ hgserve --prefix foo/ listening at http://localhost/foo/ (bound to *$LOCALIP*:HGPORT1) (glob) (?) % errors With --prefix /foo/ $ hgserve --prefix /foo/ listening at http://localhost/foo/ (bound to *$LOCALIP*:HGPORT1) (glob) (?) % errors $ "$PYTHON" $RUNTESTDIR/killdaemons.py $DAEMON_PIDS With out of bounds accesses $ rm access.log $ hg serve -a localhost -p $HGPORT -d --prefix some/dir \ > --pid-file=hg.pid -E errors.log $ cat hg.pid >> "$DAEMON_PIDS" $ hg id http://localhost:$HGPORT/some/dir7 abort: HTTP Error 404: Not Found [100] $ hg id http://localhost:$HGPORT/some abort: HTTP Error 404: Not Found [100] $ cat access.log errors.log $LOCALIP - - [$LOGDATE$] "GET /some/dir7?cmd=capabilities HTTP/1.1" 404 - (glob) $LOCALIP - - [$LOGDATE$] "GET /some?cmd=capabilities HTTP/1.1" 404 - (glob) $ "$PYTHON" $RUNTESTDIR/killdaemons.py $DAEMON_PIDS issue6362: Previously, this crashed on Python 3 $ hg serve -a 0.0.0.0 -d --pid-file=hg.pid listening at http://*:$HGPORT1/ (bound to *:$HGPORT1) (glob) (?) $ cat hg.pid > "$DAEMON_PIDS" $ "$PYTHON" $RUNTESTDIR/killdaemons.py $DAEMON_PIDS $ cd ..