Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-run-tests.py @ 35362:79968f91ad0c
lfs: override walk() in lfsvfs
In order to fix the missing lfs store after an upgrade, I attempted to walk the
store vfs to hardlink to the upgraded repo's store. But the custom join()
clashes with the default walk() implementation. First, 'path=None' blew up in
the regex matcher, because it wanted a string. But even if that is fixed, the
join to walk the root of the vfs wouldn't match the required xx/xx...xx pattern.
The first cut of this was a copy/paste/tweak of the base implementation, but
this version of walk() hides the internal directories, and treats the vfs as a
flat store. I think this makes sense because most vfs methods call join() on
input paths, which wants the simple oid format. It also relieves the caller
from having to deal with bogus files/directories in the store.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 07 Dec 2017 23:44:06 -0500 |
parents | 2e43c5cd57a7 |
children | 14fd435763ee |
line wrap: on
line source
"""test line matching with some failing examples and some which warn run-test.t only checks positive matches and can not see warnings (both by design) """ from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import doctest import os import re # this is hack to make sure no escape characters are inserted into the output if 'TERM' in os.environ: del os.environ['TERM'] run_tests = __import__('run-tests') def prn(ex): m = ex.args[0] if isinstance(m, str): print(m) else: print(m.decode('utf-8')) def lm(expected, output): r"""check if output matches expected does it generally work? >>> lm(b'H*e (glob)\n', b'Here\n') True fail on bad test data >>> try: lm(b'a\n',b'a') ... except AssertionError as ex: print(ex) missing newline >>> try: lm(b'single backslash\n', b'single \backslash\n') ... except AssertionError as ex: prn(ex) single backslash or unknown char """ assert (expected.endswith(b'\n') and output.endswith(b'\n')), 'missing newline' assert not re.search(br'[^ \w\\/\r\n()*?]', expected + output), \ b'single backslash or unknown char' test = run_tests.TTest(b'test-run-test.t', b'.', b'.') match = test.linematch(expected, output) if isinstance(match, str): return 'special: ' + match elif isinstance(match, bytes): return 'special: ' + match.decode('utf-8') else: return bool(match) # do not return match object def wintests(): r"""test matching like running on windows enable windows matching on any os >>> _osaltsep = os.altsep >>> os.altsep = True valid match on windows >>> lm(b'g/a*/d (glob)\n', b'g\\abc/d\n') True direct matching, glob unnecessary >>> lm(b'g/b (glob)\n', b'g/b\n') 'special: -glob' missing glob >>> lm(b'/g/c/d/fg\n', b'\\g\\c\\d/fg\n') 'special: +glob' restore os.altsep >>> os.altsep = _osaltsep """ pass def otherostests(): r"""test matching like running on non-windows os disable windows matching on any os >>> _osaltsep = os.altsep >>> os.altsep = False backslash does not match slash >>> lm(b'h/a* (glob)\n', b'h\\ab\n') False direct matching glob can not be recognized >>> lm(b'h/b (glob)\n', b'h/b\n') True missing glob can not not be recognized >>> lm(b'/h/c/df/g/\n', b'\\h/c\\df/g\\\n') False restore os.altsep >>> os.altsep = _osaltsep """ pass if __name__ == '__main__': doctest.testmod()