Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-check-code.t @ 25122:755d23a49170
match: resolve filesets in subrepos for commands given the '-S' argument
This will work for any command that creates its matcher via scmutil.match(), but
only the files command is tested here (both workingctx and basectx based tests).
The previous behavior was to completely ignore the files in the subrepo, even
though -S was given.
My first attempt was to teach context.walk() to optionally recurse, but once
that was in place and the complete file list was built up, the predicate test
would fail with 'path in nested repo' when a file in a subrepo was accessed
through the parent context.
There are two slightly surprising behaviors with this functionality. First, any
path provided inside the fileset isn't narrowed when it is passed to the
subrepo. I dont see any clean way to do that in the matcher. Fortunately, the
'subrepo()' fileset is the only one to take a path.
The second surprise is that status predicates are resolved against the subrepo,
not the parent like 'hg status -S' is. I don't see any way to fix that either,
given the path auditor error mentioned above.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 16 May 2015 00:36:35 -0400 |
parents | 68633ff2b608 |
children | 317333e0793c |
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$ cat > correct.py <<EOF > def toto(arg1, arg2): > del arg2 > return (5 + 6, 9) > EOF $ cat > wrong.py <<EOF > def toto( arg1, arg2): > del(arg2) > return ( 5+6, 9) > EOF $ cat > quote.py <<EOF > # let's use quote in comments > (''' ( 4x5 ) > but """\\''' and finally''', > """let's fool checkpatch""", '1+2', > '"""', 42+1, """and > ( 4-1 ) """, "( 1+1 )\" and ") > a, '\\\\\\\\', "\\\\\\" x-2", "c-1" > EOF $ cat > non-py24.py <<EOF > # Using builtins that does not exist in Python 2.4 > if any(): > x = all() > y = format(x) > # next(generator) is new in 2.6 > z = next(x) > # but generator.next() is okay > x.next() > # and we can make our own next > def next(stuff): > pass > > # Do not complain about our own definition > def any(x): > pass > > # try/except/finally block does not exist in Python 2.4 > try: > pass > except StandardError, inst: > pass > finally: > pass > > # nested try/finally+try/except is allowed > try: > try: > pass > except StandardError, inst: > pass > finally: > pass > > # yield inside a try/finally block is not allowed in Python 2.4 > try: > pass > yield 1 > finally: > pass > try: > yield > pass > finally: > pass > > EOF $ cat > classstyle.py <<EOF > class newstyle_class(object): > pass > > class oldstyle_class: > pass > > class empty(): > pass > > no_class = 1: > pass > EOF $ check_code="$TESTDIR"/../contrib/check-code.py $ "$check_code" ./wrong.py ./correct.py ./quote.py ./non-py24.py ./classstyle.py ./wrong.py:1: > def toto( arg1, arg2): gratuitous whitespace in () or [] ./wrong.py:2: > del(arg2) Python keyword is not a function ./wrong.py:3: > return ( 5+6, 9) gratuitous whitespace in () or [] missing whitespace in expression ./quote.py:5: > '"""', 42+1, """and missing whitespace in expression ./non-py24.py:2: > if any(): any/all/format not available in Python 2.4 ./non-py24.py:3: > x = all() any/all/format not available in Python 2.4 ./non-py24.py:4: > y = format(x) any/all/format not available in Python 2.4 ./non-py24.py:6: > z = next(x) no next(foo) in Python 2.4 and 2.5, use foo.next() instead ./non-py24.py:35: > try: no yield inside try/finally in Python 2.4 ./non-py24.py:40: > try: no yield inside try/finally in Python 2.4 ./classstyle.py:4: > class oldstyle_class: old-style class, use class foo(object) ./classstyle.py:7: > class empty(): class foo() not available in Python 2.4, use class foo(object) [1] $ cat > python3-compat.py << EOF > foo <> bar > reduce(lambda a, b: a + b, [1, 2, 3, 4]) > dict(key=value) > EOF $ "$check_code" python3-compat.py python3-compat.py:1: > foo <> bar <> operator is not available in Python 3+, use != python3-compat.py:2: > reduce(lambda a, b: a + b, [1, 2, 3, 4]) reduce is not available in Python 3+ python3-compat.py:3: > dict(key=value) dict() is different in Py2 and 3 and is slower than {} [1] $ cat > is-op.py <<EOF > # is-operator comparing number or string literal > x = None > y = x is 'foo' > y = x is "foo" > y = x is 5346 > y = x is -6 > y = x is not 'foo' > y = x is not "foo" > y = x is not 5346 > y = x is not -6 > EOF $ "$check_code" ./is-op.py ./is-op.py:3: > y = x is 'foo' object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:4: > y = x is "foo" object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:5: > y = x is 5346 object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:6: > y = x is -6 object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:7: > y = x is not 'foo' object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:8: > y = x is not "foo" object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:9: > y = x is not 5346 object comparison with literal ./is-op.py:10: > y = x is not -6 object comparison with literal [1] $ cat > for-nolineno.py <<EOF > except: > EOF $ "$check_code" for-nolineno.py --nolineno for-nolineno.py:0: > except: naked except clause [1] $ cat > warning.t <<EOF > $ function warnonly { > > } > $ diff -N aaa > $ function onwarn {} > EOF $ "$check_code" warning.t $ "$check_code" --warn warning.t warning.t:1: > $ function warnonly { warning: don't use 'function', use old style warning.t:3: > $ diff -N aaa warning: don't use 'diff -N' warning.t:4: > $ function onwarn {} warning: don't use 'function', use old style [1] $ cat > raise-format.py <<EOF > raise SomeException, message > # this next line is okay > raise SomeException(arg1, arg2) > EOF $ "$check_code" not-existing.py raise-format.py Skipping*not-existing.py* (glob) raise-format.py:1: > raise SomeException, message don't use old-style two-argument raise, use Exception(message) [1] $ cat > rst.py <<EOF > """problematic rst text > > .. note:: > wrong > """ > > ''' > > .. note:: > > valid > > new text > > .. note:: > > also valid > ''' > > """mixed > > .. note:: > > good > > .. note:: > plus bad > """ > EOF $ $check_code -w rst.py rst.py:3: > .. note:: warning: add two newlines after '.. note::' rst.py:26: > .. note:: warning: add two newlines after '.. note::' [1] $ cat > ./map-inside-gettext.py <<EOF > print _("map inside gettext %s" % v) > > print _("concatenating " " by " " space %s" % v) > print _("concatenating " + " by " + " '+' %s" % v) > > print _("mapping operation in different line %s" > % v) > > print _( > "leading spaces inside of '(' %s" % v) > EOF $ "$check_code" ./map-inside-gettext.py ./map-inside-gettext.py:1: > print _("map inside gettext %s" % v) don't use % inside _() ./map-inside-gettext.py:3: > print _("concatenating " " by " " space %s" % v) don't use % inside _() ./map-inside-gettext.py:4: > print _("concatenating " + " by " + " '+' %s" % v) don't use % inside _() ./map-inside-gettext.py:6: > print _("mapping operation in different line %s" don't use % inside _() ./map-inside-gettext.py:9: > print _( don't use % inside _() [1] web templates $ mkdir -p mercurial/templates $ cat > mercurial/templates/example.tmpl <<EOF > {desc} > {desc|escape} > {desc|firstline} > {desc|websub} > EOF $ "$check_code" --warnings mercurial/templates/example.tmpl mercurial/templates/example.tmpl:2: > {desc|escape} warning: follow desc keyword with either firstline or websub [1]