view tests/filterpyflakes.py @ 34682:7e3001b74ab3

tersestatus: re-implement the functionality to terse the status The previous terse status implementation was hacking around os.listdir() and was flaky. There have been a lot of instances of mercurial buildbots failing and google's internal builds failing because of the hacky implementation of terse status. Even though I wrote the last implementation but it was hard for me to find the reason for the flake. The new implementation can be slower than the old one but is clean and easy to understand. In this we create a node object for each directory and create a tree like structure starting from the root of the working copy. While building the tree like structure we store some information on the nodes which will be helpful for deciding later whether we can terse the dir or not. Once the whole tree is build we traverse and built the list of files for each status with required tersing. There is no behaviour change as the old test, test-status-terse.t passes with the new implementation. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D985
author Pulkit Goyal <7895pulkit@gmail.com>
date Fri, 06 Oct 2017 20:54:23 +0530
parents 6029939f7e98
children 2372284d9457
line wrap: on
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#!/usr/bin/env python

# Filter output by pyflakes to control which warnings we check

from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function

import re
import sys

lines = []
for line in sys.stdin:
    # We blacklist tests that are too noisy for us
    pats = [
        r"undefined name 'WindowsError'",
        r"redefinition of unused '[^']+' from line",
        # for cffi, allow re-exports from pure.*
        r"cffi/[^:]*:.*\bimport \*' used",
        r"cffi/[^:]*:.*\*' imported but unused",
    ]

    keep = True
    for pat in pats:
        if re.search(pat, line):
            keep = False
            break # pattern matches
    if keep:
        fn = line.split(':', 1)[0]
        f = open(fn)
        data = f.read()
        f.close()
        if 'no-' 'check-code' in data:
            continue
        lines.append(line)

for line in lines:
    sys.stdout.write(line)
print()