Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-profile.t @ 31936:806f9a883b4f
url: support auth.cookiesfile for adding cookies to HTTP requests
Mercurial can't currently send cookies as part of HTTP requests.
Some authentication systems use cookies. So, it seems like adding
support for sending cookies seems like a useful feature.
This patch implements support for reading cookies from a file
and automatically sending them as part of the request. We rely
on the "cookiejar" Python module to do the heavy lifting of
parsing cookies files. We currently only support the Mozilla
(really Netscape-era) cookie format. There is another format
supported by cookielib and we may want to consider using that,
especially since the Netscape cookie parser can't parse ports.
It wasn't immediately obvious to me what the format of the other
parser is, so I didn't know how to test it. I /think/ it might
be literal "Cookie" header values, but I'm not sure. If it is
more robust than the Netscape format, we may want to just
support it.
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
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date | Thu, 09 Mar 2017 22:40:52 -0800 |
parents | 262c2be8ea5a |
children | 49145a2b2fb0 |
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test --time $ hg --time help -q help 2>&1 | grep time > /dev/null $ hg init a $ cd a #if lsprof test --profile $ prof='hg --config profiling.type=ls --profile' $ $prof st 2>../out $ grep CallCount ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out $ $prof --config profiling.output=../out st $ grep CallCount ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out $ $prof --config profiling.output=blackbox --config extensions.blackbox= st $ grep CallCount .hg/blackbox.log > /dev/null || cat .hg/blackbox.log $ $prof --config profiling.format=text st 2>../out $ grep CallCount ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out $ echo "[profiling]" >> $HGRCPATH $ echo "format=kcachegrind" >> $HGRCPATH $ $prof st 2>../out $ grep 'events: Ticks' ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out $ $prof --config profiling.output=../out st $ grep 'events: Ticks' ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out #endif #if lsprof serve Profiling of HTTP requests works $ $prof --config profiling.format=text --config profiling.output=../profile.log serve -d -p $HGPORT --pid-file ../hg.pid -A ../access.log $ cat ../hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS $ hg -q clone -U http://localhost:$HGPORT ../clone A single profile is logged because file logging doesn't append $ grep CallCount ../profile.log | wc -l \s*1 (re) #endif Install an extension that can sleep and guarantee a profiler has time to run $ cat >> sleepext.py << EOF > import time > from mercurial import cmdutil, commands > cmdtable = {} > command = cmdutil.command(cmdtable) > @command('sleep', [], 'hg sleep') > def sleep(ui, *args, **kwargs): > time.sleep(0.1) > EOF $ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF > [extensions] > sleep = `pwd`/sleepext.py > EOF statistical profiler works $ hg --profile sleep 2>../out $ grep Sample ../out Sample count: \d+ (re) Various statprof formatters work $ hg --profile --config profiling.statformat=byline sleep 2>../out $ head -n 1 ../out % cumulative self $ grep Sample ../out Sample count: \d+ (re) $ hg --profile --config profiling.statformat=bymethod sleep 2>../out $ head -n 1 ../out % cumulative self $ grep Sample ../out Sample count: \d+ (re) $ hg --profile --config profiling.statformat=hotpath sleep 2>../out $ grep Sample ../out Sample count: \d+ (re) $ hg --profile --config profiling.statformat=json sleep 2>../out $ cat ../out \[\[\d+.* (re) statprof can be used as a standalone module $ $PYTHON -m mercurial.statprof hotpath must specify --file to load [1] $ cd ..