test-rebase: add a brute force test
Rebase is becoming more complex and it looks like a good idea to try some
brute force enumeration to cover cases that are hard to find manually.
Using brute force to generate repos in different shapes and enumerating the
rebase source and destination would generate too many cases that takes too
long to compute. This patch limits the "brute force" to only the "rebase
source" part. Repo and destination are still manual.
The added test cases are crafted manually to reveal some behaviors that are
not covered by other tests:
- "revlog index out of range" crash
- after rebase, p1 == p2, p2 != null
- "nothing to merge" abort
In the future we might want to add more tests here. For now I'm more
interested in revealing interesting behaviors in a minified way. I tried
some more complex cases but didn't find other interesting behaviors.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D262
https://bz.mercurial-scm.org/1502
Initialize repository
$ hg init foo
$ touch foo/a && hg -R foo commit -A -m "added a"
adding a
$ hg clone foo foo1
updating to branch default
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ echo "bar" > foo1/a && hg -R foo1 commit -m "edit a in foo1"
$ echo "hi" > foo/a && hg -R foo commit -m "edited a foo"
$ hg -R foo1 pull
pulling from $TESTTMP/foo (glob)
searching for changes
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files (+1 heads)
(run 'hg heads' to see heads, 'hg merge' to merge)
$ hg -R foo1 book branchy
$ hg -R foo1 book
* branchy 1:e3e522925eff
Pull. Bookmark should not jump to new head.
$ echo "there" >> foo/a && hg -R foo commit -m "edited a again"
$ hg -R foo1 pull
pulling from $TESTTMP/foo (glob)
searching for changes
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files
(run 'hg update' to get a working copy)
$ hg -R foo1 book
* branchy 1:e3e522925eff