color: add a 'ui.color' option to control color behavior
This new option control whether or not color will be used. It mirror the behavior
of '--color'. I usually avoid adding new option to '[ui]' as the section is
already filled with many option. However, I feel like 'color' is central enough
to deserves a spot in this '[ui]' section.
For now the option is not documented so it is still marked as experimental. Once
it get documented and official, we should be able to deprecate the color
extensions.
There is more cleanup to do before that documentation is written, but we need
this option early to made them. Having that option will allow for more cleanup
of the initialisation process and proper separation between color
configuration.
from __future__ import absolute_import
import glob
import os
import shutil
import tempfile
import unittest
from mercurial import (
util,
)
atomictempfile = util.atomictempfile
class testatomictempfile(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
self._testdir = tempfile.mkdtemp('atomictempfiletest')
self._filename = os.path.join(self._testdir, 'testfilename')
def tearDown(self):
shutil.rmtree(self._testdir, True)
def testsimple(self):
file = atomictempfile(self._filename)
self.assertFalse(os.path.isfile(self._filename))
tempfilename = file._tempname
self.assertTrue(tempfilename in glob.glob(
os.path.join(self._testdir, '.testfilename-*')))
file.write(b'argh\n')
file.close()
self.assertTrue(os.path.isfile(self._filename))
self.assertTrue(tempfilename not in glob.glob(
os.path.join(self._testdir, '.testfilename-*')))
# discard() removes the temp file without making the write permanent
def testdiscard(self):
file = atomictempfile(self._filename)
(dir, basename) = os.path.split(file._tempname)
file.write(b'yo\n')
file.discard()
self.assertFalse(os.path.isfile(self._filename))
self.assertTrue(basename not in os.listdir('.'))
# if a programmer screws up and passes bad args to atomictempfile, they
# get a plain ordinary TypeError, not infinite recursion
def testoops(self):
self.assertRaises(TypeError, atomictempfile)
# checkambig=True avoids ambiguity of timestamp
def testcheckambig(self):
def atomicwrite(checkambig):
f = atomictempfile(self._filename, checkambig=checkambig)
f.write('FOO')
f.close()
# try some times, because reproduction of ambiguity depends on
# "filesystem time"
for i in xrange(5):
atomicwrite(False)
oldstat = os.stat(self._filename)
if oldstat.st_ctime != oldstat.st_mtime:
# subsequent changing never causes ambiguity
continue
repetition = 3
# repeat atomic write with checkambig=True, to examine
# whether st_mtime is advanced multiple times as expected
for j in xrange(repetition):
atomicwrite(True)
newstat = os.stat(self._filename)
if oldstat.st_ctime != newstat.st_ctime:
# timestamp ambiguity was naturally avoided while repetition
continue
# st_mtime should be advanced "repetition" times, because
# all atomicwrite() occurred at same time (in sec)
self.assertTrue(newstat.st_mtime ==
((oldstat.st_mtime + repetition) & 0x7fffffff))
# no more examination is needed, if assumption above is true
break
else:
# This platform seems too slow to examine anti-ambiguity
# of file timestamp (or test happened to be executed at
# bad timing). Exit silently in this case, because running
# on other faster platforms can detect problems
pass
def testread(self):
with open(self._filename, 'wb') as f:
f.write(b'foobar\n')
file = atomictempfile(self._filename, mode='rb')
self.assertTrue(file.read(), b'foobar\n')
file.discard()
def testcontextmanagersuccess(self):
"""When the context closes, the file is closed"""
with atomictempfile('foo') as f:
self.assertFalse(os.path.isfile('foo'))
f.write(b'argh\n')
self.assertTrue(os.path.isfile('foo'))
def testcontextmanagerfailure(self):
"""On exception, the file is discarded"""
try:
with atomictempfile('foo') as f:
self.assertFalse(os.path.isfile('foo'))
f.write(b'argh\n')
raise ValueError
except ValueError:
pass
self.assertFalse(os.path.isfile('foo'))
if __name__ == '__main__':
import silenttestrunner
silenttestrunner.main(__name__)