Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-worker.t @ 33708:71b77b61ed60
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
author | Jun Wu <quark@fb.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 06 Aug 2017 11:40:53 -0700 |
parents | fce4ed2912bb |
children | 4f0439981a8a |
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Test UI worker interaction $ cat > t.py <<EOF > from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function > import time > from mercurial import ( > error, > registrar, > ui as uimod, > worker, > ) > def abort(ui, args): > if args[0] == 0: > # by first worker for test stability > raise error.Abort('known exception') > return runme(ui, []) > def exc(ui, args): > if args[0] == 0: > # by first worker for test stability > raise Exception('unknown exception') > return runme(ui, []) > def runme(ui, args): > for arg in args: > ui.status('run\n') > yield 1, arg > time.sleep(0.1) # easier to trigger killworkers code path > functable = { > 'abort': abort, > 'exc': exc, > 'runme': runme, > } > cmdtable = {} > command = registrar.command(cmdtable) > @command(b'test', [], 'hg test [COST] [FUNC]') > def t(ui, repo, cost=1.0, func='runme'): > cost = float(cost) > func = functable[func] > ui.status('start\n') > runs = worker.worker(ui, cost, func, (ui,), range(8)) > for n, i in runs: > pass > ui.status('done\n') > EOF $ abspath=`pwd`/t.py $ hg init Run tests with worker enable by forcing a heigh cost $ hg --config "extensions.t=$abspath" test 100000.0 start run run run run run run run run done Run tests without worker by forcing a low cost $ hg --config "extensions.t=$abspath" test 0.0000001 start run run run run run run run run done #if no-windows Known exception should be caught, but printed if --traceback is enabled $ hg --config "extensions.t=$abspath" --config 'worker.numcpus=8' \ > test 100000.0 abort 2>&1 start abort: known exception [255] $ hg --config "extensions.t=$abspath" --config 'worker.numcpus=8' \ > test 100000.0 abort --traceback 2>&1 | egrep '^(SystemExit|Abort)' Abort: known exception SystemExit: 255 Traceback must be printed for unknown exceptions $ hg --config "extensions.t=$abspath" --config 'worker.numcpus=8' \ > test 100000.0 exc 2>&1 | grep '^Exception' Exception: unknown exception Workers should not do cleanups in all cases $ cat > $TESTTMP/detectcleanup.py <<EOF > from __future__ import absolute_import > import atexit > import os > import time > oldfork = os.fork > count = 0 > parentpid = os.getpid() > def delayedfork(): > global count > count += 1 > pid = oldfork() > # make it easier to test SIGTERM hitting other workers when they have > # not set up error handling yet. > if count > 1 and pid == 0: > time.sleep(0.1) > return pid > os.fork = delayedfork > def cleanup(): > if os.getpid() != parentpid: > os.write(1, 'should never happen\n') > atexit.register(cleanup) > EOF $ hg --config "extensions.t=$abspath" --config worker.numcpus=8 --config \ > "extensions.d=$TESTTMP/detectcleanup.py" test 100000 abort start abort: known exception [255] #endif