view tests/test-dispatch.py @ 29954:769aee32fae0

strip: don't use "full" and "partial" to describe bundles The partial bundle is not a subset of the full bundle, and the full bundle is not full in any way that i see. The most obvious interpretation of "full" I can think of is that it has all commits back to the null revision, but that is not what the "full" bundle is. The "full" bundle is simply a backup of what the user asked us to strip (unless --no-backup). The "partial" bundle contains the revisions we temporarily stripped because they had higher revision numbers that some commit that the user asked us to strip. The "full" bundle is already called "backup" in the code, so let's use that in user-facing messages too. Let's call the "partial" bundle "temporary" in the code.
author Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
date Mon, 19 Sep 2016 09:14:35 -0700
parents 1d9d29d4813a
children f0c94af0d70d
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from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import os
from mercurial import (
    dispatch,
)

def testdispatch(cmd):
    """Simple wrapper around dispatch.dispatch()

    Prints command and result value, but does not handle quoting.
    """
    print("running: %s" % (cmd,))
    req = dispatch.request(cmd.split())
    result = dispatch.dispatch(req)
    print("result: %r" % (result,))

testdispatch("init test1")
os.chdir('test1')

# create file 'foo', add and commit
f = open('foo', 'wb')
f.write('foo\n')
f.close()
testdispatch("add foo")
testdispatch("commit -m commit1 -d 2000-01-01 foo")

# append to file 'foo' and commit
f = open('foo', 'ab')
f.write('bar\n')
f.close()
testdispatch("commit -m commit2 -d 2000-01-02 foo")

# check 88803a69b24 (fancyopts modified command table)
testdispatch("log -r 0")
testdispatch("log -r tip")