view tests/test-nointerrupt.t @ 49779:7d6c8943353a stable

hg: show the correct message when cloning an LFS repo with extension disabled The `extensions._disabledpaths()` doesn't handle fetching help from `__index__`, so it returns an empty dictionary of paths. That means None is always returned from `extensions.disabled_help()` when embedding resources inside the pyoxidizer or py2exe binary, regardless of the arg or if is an external extension stored in the filesystem. And that means wrongly telling the user with an explicitly disabled LFS extension that it will be enabled locally upon cloning from an LFS remote. That causes test-lfs-serve.t:295 to fail. This effectively reverts most of the rest of 843418dc0b1b, while keeping the help text change in place (which was specifically identified as a problem).
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Mon, 05 Dec 2022 15:14:33 -0500
parents 8c75ae3f0eea
children
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#require no-windows no-rhg

XXX-RHG this test hangs if `hg` is really `rhg`. This was hidden by the use of
`alias hg=rhg` by run-tests.py. With such alias removed, this test is revealed
buggy. This need to be resolved sooner than later.

Dummy extension simulating unsafe long running command
  $ SYNC_FILE="$TESTTMP/sync-file"
  $ export SYNC_FILE
  $ DONE_FILE="$TESTTMP/done-file"
  $ export DONE_FILE
  $ 
  $ cat > wait_ext.py <<EOF
  > import os
  > import time
  > 
  > from mercurial.i18n import _
  > from mercurial import registrar
  > from mercurial import testing
  > 
  > cmdtable = {}
  > command = registrar.command(cmdtable)
  > 
  > @command(b'wait-signal', [], _(b'SYNC_FILE DONE_FILE'), norepo=True)
  > def sleep(ui, sync_file=b"$SYNC_FILE", done_file=b"$DONE_FILE", **opts):
  >     start = time.time()
  >     with ui.uninterruptible():
  >         testing.write_file(sync_file, b'%d' % os.getpid())
  >         testing.wait_file(done_file)
  >         ui.warn(b"end of unsafe operation\n")
  >     ui.warn(b"%d second(s) passed\n" % int(time.time() - start))
  > EOF

  $ cat > send-signal.sh << EOF
  > #!/bin/sh
  > SIG=\$1
  > if [ -z "\$SIG" ]; then
  >    echo "send-signal.sh requires one argument" >&2
  >    exit 1
  > fi
  > "$RUNTESTDIR/testlib/wait-on-file" 10 "$SYNC_FILE" || exit 2
  > kill -s \$SIG \`cat "$SYNC_FILE"\`
  > EOF

#if no-windows
  $ chmod +x send-signal.sh
#endif

  $ cat > wait-signal.sh << 'EOF'
  > #!/bin/sh
  > (hg wait-signal 2>&1; echo [$?]) | {
  >     read line
  >     touch "$DONE_FILE"
  >     echo "$line"
  >     cat
  > }
  > EOF

#if no-windows
  $ chmod +x wait-signal.sh
#endif

Kludge to emulate timeout(1) which is not generally available.

Set up repository
  $ hg init repo
  $ cd repo
  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
  > [extensions]
  > wait_ext = $TESTTMP/wait_ext.py
  > EOF

Test ctrl-c
  $ rm -f $SYNC_FILE $DONE_FILE
  $ sh -c "../send-signal.sh INT" &
  $ ../wait-signal.sh
  interrupted!
  [255]

  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
  > [experimental]
  > nointerrupt = yes
  > EOF

  $ rm -f $SYNC_FILE $DONE_FILE
  $ sh -c "../send-signal.sh INT" &
  $ ../wait-signal.sh
  interrupted!
  [255]

  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
  > [experimental]
  > nointerrupt-interactiveonly = False
  > EOF

  $ rm -f $SYNC_FILE $DONE_FILE
  $ sh -c "../send-signal.sh INT" &
  $ ../wait-signal.sh
  shutting down cleanly
  press ^C again to terminate immediately (dangerous)
  end of unsafe operation
  interrupted!
  [255]