Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-contrib.t @ 44143:7f86426fdd2c
rust-node: binary Node ID and conversion utilities
The choice of type makes sure that a `Node` has the exact
wanted size. We'll use a different type for prefixes.
Added dependency: hexadecimal conversion relies on the
`hex` crate.
The fact that sooner or later Mercurial is going to need
to change its hash sizes has been taken strongly in
consideration:
- the hash length is a constant, but that is not directly
exposed to callers. Changing the value of that constant
is the only thing to do to change the hash length (even
in unit tests)
- the code could be adapted to support several sizes of hashes,
if that turned out to be useful. To that effect, only the
size of a given `Node` is exposed in the public API.
- callers not involved in initial computation, I/O and FFI
are able to operate without a priori assumptions on the hash
size. The traits `FromHex` and `ToHex` have not been directly
implemented, so that the doc-comments explaining these
restrictions would stay really visible in `cargo doc`
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7788
author | Georges Racinet <georges.racinet@octobus.net> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 22 Jan 2020 16:37:05 +0100 |
parents | 5abc47d4ca6b |
children |
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Set vars: $ CONTRIBDIR="$TESTDIR/../contrib" Test simplemerge command: $ cp "$CONTRIBDIR/simplemerge" . $ echo base > base $ echo local > local $ cat base >> local $ cp local orig $ cat base > other $ echo other >> other changing local directly $ "$PYTHON" simplemerge local base other && echo "merge succeeded" merge succeeded $ cat local local base other $ cp orig local printing to stdout $ "$PYTHON" simplemerge -p local base other local base other local: $ cat local local base conflicts $ cp base conflict-local $ cp other conflict-other $ echo not other >> conflict-local $ echo end >> conflict-local $ echo end >> conflict-other $ "$PYTHON" simplemerge -p conflict-local base conflict-other base <<<<<<< conflict-local not other ======= other >>>>>>> conflict-other end [1] 1 label $ "$PYTHON" simplemerge -p -L foo conflict-local base conflict-other base <<<<<<< foo not other ======= other >>>>>>> conflict-other end [1] 2 labels $ "$PYTHON" simplemerge -p -L foo -L bar conflict-local base conflict-other base <<<<<<< foo not other ======= other >>>>>>> bar end [1] 3 labels $ "$PYTHON" simplemerge -p -L foo -L bar -L base conflict-local base conflict-other base <<<<<<< foo not other end ||||||| base ======= other end >>>>>>> bar [1] too many labels $ "$PYTHON" simplemerge -p -L foo -L bar -L baz -L buz conflict-local base conflict-other abort: can only specify three labels. [255] binary file $ "$PYTHON" -c "f = open('binary-local', 'w'); f.write('\x00'); f.close()" $ cat orig >> binary-local $ "$PYTHON" simplemerge -p binary-local base other warning: binary-local looks like a binary file. [1] binary file --text $ "$PYTHON" simplemerge -a -p binary-local base other 2>&1 warning: binary-local looks like a binary file. \x00local (esc) base other help $ "$PYTHON" simplemerge --help simplemerge [OPTS] LOCAL BASE OTHER Simple three-way file merge utility with a minimal feature set. Apply to LOCAL the changes necessary to go from BASE to OTHER. By default, LOCAL is overwritten with the results of this operation. options: -L --label labels to use on conflict markers -a --text treat all files as text -p --print print results instead of overwriting LOCAL --no-minimal no effect (DEPRECATED) -h --help display help and exit -q --quiet suppress output wrong number of arguments $ "$PYTHON" simplemerge simplemerge: wrong number of arguments simplemerge [OPTS] LOCAL BASE OTHER Simple three-way file merge utility with a minimal feature set. Apply to LOCAL the changes necessary to go from BASE to OTHER. By default, LOCAL is overwritten with the results of this operation. options: -L --label labels to use on conflict markers -a --text treat all files as text -p --print print results instead of overwriting LOCAL --no-minimal no effect (DEPRECATED) -h --help display help and exit -q --quiet suppress output [1] bad option $ "$PYTHON" simplemerge --foo -p local base other simplemerge: option --foo not recognized simplemerge [OPTS] LOCAL BASE OTHER Simple three-way file merge utility with a minimal feature set. Apply to LOCAL the changes necessary to go from BASE to OTHER. By default, LOCAL is overwritten with the results of this operation. options: -L --label labels to use on conflict markers -a --text treat all files as text -p --print print results instead of overwriting LOCAL --no-minimal no effect (DEPRECATED) -h --help display help and exit -q --quiet suppress output [1]