Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-unified-test.t @ 40121:73fef626dae3
zstandard: vendor python-zstandard 0.10.1
This was just released.
The upstream source distribution from PyPI was extracted. Unwanted
files were removed.
The clang-format ignore list was updated to reflect the new source
of files.
setup.py was updated to pass a new argument to python-zstandard's
function for returning an Extension instance. Upstream had to change
to use relative paths because Python 3.7's packaging doesn't
seem to like absolute paths when defining sources, includes, etc.
The default relative path calculation is relative to setup_zstd.py
which is different from the directory of Mercurial's setup.py.
The project contains a vendored copy of zstandard 1.3.6. The old
version was 1.3.4.
The API should be backwards compatible and nothing in core should
need adjusted. However, there is a new "chunker" API that we
may find useful in places where we want to emit compressed chunks
of a fixed size.
There are a pair of bug fixes in 0.10.0 with regards to
compressobj() and decompressobj() when block flushing is used. I
actually found these bugs when introducing these APIs in Mercurial!
But existing Mercurial code is not affected because we don't
perform block flushing.
# no-check-commit because 3rd party code has different style guidelines
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4911
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 08 Oct 2018 16:27:40 -0700 |
parents | e504fa630860 |
children | bd0f122f3f51 |
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Test that the syntax of "unified tests" is properly processed ============================================================== Simple commands: $ echo foo foo $ printf 'oh no' oh no (no-eol) $ printf 'bar\nbaz\n' | cat bar baz Multi-line command: $ foo() { > echo bar > } $ foo bar Return codes before inline python: $ sh -c 'exit 1' [1] Doctest commands: >>> from __future__ import print_function >>> print('foo') foo $ echo interleaved interleaved >>> for c in 'xyz': ... print(c) x y z >>> print() >>> foo = 'global name' >>> def func(): ... print(foo, 'should be visible in func()') >>> func() global name should be visible in func() >>> print('''multiline ... string''') multiline string Regular expressions: $ echo foobarbaz foobar.* (re) $ echo barbazquux .*quux.* (re) Globs: $ printf '* \\foobarbaz {10}\n' \* \\fo?bar* {10} (glob) Literal match ending in " (re)": $ echo 'foo (re)' foo (re) Windows: \r\n is handled like \n and can be escaped: #if windows $ printf 'crlf\r\ncr\r\tcrlf\r\ncrlf\r\n' crlf cr\r (no-eol) (esc) \tcrlf (esc) crlf\r (esc) #endif Combining esc with other markups - and handling lines ending with \r instead of \n: $ printf 'foo/bar\r' fo?/bar\r (no-eol) (glob) (esc) #if windows $ printf 'foo\\bar\r' foo/bar\r (no-eol) (esc) #endif $ printf 'foo/bar\rfoo/bar\r' foo.bar\r [(]no-eol[)] (re) (esc) foo.bar\r \(no-eol\) (re) testing hghave $ hghave true $ hghave false skipped: missing feature: nail clipper [1] $ hghave no-true skipped: system supports yak shaving [1] $ hghave no-false Conditional sections based on hghave: #if true $ echo tested tested #else $ echo skipped #endif #if false $ echo skipped #else $ echo tested tested #endif #if no-false $ echo tested tested #else $ echo skipped #endif #if no-true $ echo skipped #else $ echo tested tested #endif Exit code: $ (exit 1) [1]