view tests/test-hgignore.t @ 47315:825d5a5907b4

exewrapper: avoid directly linking against python3X.dll Subsequent code calls `LoadLibrary()` to attempt to load the DLL, but because of this symbol reference, there is an attempt to load the DLL used during the build prior to `_main()` running. This causes the whole process to fail if the DLL isn't in the standard search path. That also means it will never load the DLL for HackableMercurial. (Maybe we should get rid of that for py3, since you can install python for a user without admin rights?) This could also be resolved by calling `GetProcAddress()` on the symbol and dereferencing it, but using the environment variable is consistent with the *.bat file since fc8a5c9ecee0. (The environment variable persists after the interpreter is initialized.) Far more concerning is somehow I've gotten my system into a state where setting the flag causes any output to the pager to be lost (as if it wasn't set at all) in MSYS, cmd.exe, WSL, and PowerShell using py3.9.0, but the environment variable works properly. I'm sure this flag worked on some versions of py3, so I'm not sure what's going on here. This is might be related to init config related changes in 3.8[1], since it works with 3.7.8, but fails with 3.8.1. Somebody who understands encoding issues better than I do should give some thought to if we need to make some changes to our encoding strategy on Windows with py3. With or without the flag/envvar, there is proper output if the command is directly paged by piping to `more.com` (in any environment) or `less` (in MSYS and WSL), or if paging is disabled with `--pager=no`. Legacy mode is required though when Mercurial decides to spin up a pager. [1] https://bugs.python.org/issue41941 Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10756
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Tue, 11 May 2021 01:05:38 -0400
parents 6763913fa175
children 0ef8231e413f
line wrap: on
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#testcases dirstate-v1 dirstate-v1-tree dirstate-v2

#if dirstate-v1-tree
#require rust
  $ echo '[experimental]' >> $HGRCPATH
  $ echo 'dirstate-tree.in-memory=1' >> $HGRCPATH
#endif

#if dirstate-v2
#require rust
  $ echo '[format]' >> $HGRCPATH
  $ echo 'exp-dirstate-v2=1' >> $HGRCPATH
#endif

  $ hg init ignorerepo
  $ cd ignorerepo

debugignore with no hgignore should be deterministic:
  $ hg debugignore
  <nevermatcher>

Issue562: .hgignore requires newline at end:

  $ touch foo
  $ touch bar
  $ touch baz
  $ cat > makeignore.py <<EOF
  > f = open(".hgignore", "w")
  > f.write("ignore\n")
  > f.write("foo\n")
  > # No EOL here
  > f.write("bar")
  > f.close()
  > EOF

  $ "$PYTHON" makeignore.py

Should display baz only:

  $ hg status
  ? baz

  $ rm foo bar baz .hgignore makeignore.py

  $ touch a.o
  $ touch a.c
  $ touch syntax
  $ mkdir dir
  $ touch dir/a.o
  $ touch dir/b.o
  $ touch dir/c.o

  $ hg add dir/a.o
  $ hg commit -m 0
  $ hg add dir/b.o

  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? a.c
  ? a.o
  ? dir/c.o
  ? syntax

  $ echo "*.o" > .hgignore
  $ hg status
  abort: $TESTTMP/ignorerepo/.hgignore: invalid pattern (relre): *.o (glob)
  [255]

Ensure given files are relative to cwd

  $ echo "dir/.*\.o" > .hgignore
  $ hg status -i
  I dir/c.o

  $ hg debugignore dir/c.o dir/missing.o
  dir/c.o is ignored
  (ignore rule in $TESTTMP/ignorerepo/.hgignore, line 1: 'dir/.*\.o') (glob)
  dir/missing.o is ignored
  (ignore rule in $TESTTMP/ignorerepo/.hgignore, line 1: 'dir/.*\.o') (glob)
  $ cd dir
  $ hg debugignore c.o missing.o
  c.o is ignored
  (ignore rule in $TESTTMP/ignorerepo/.hgignore, line 1: 'dir/.*\.o') (glob)
  missing.o is ignored
  (ignore rule in $TESTTMP/ignorerepo/.hgignore, line 1: 'dir/.*\.o') (glob)

For icasefs, inexact matches also work, except for missing files

#if icasefs
  $ hg debugignore c.O missing.O
  c.o is ignored
  (ignore rule in $TESTTMP/ignorerepo/.hgignore, line 1: 'dir/.*\.o') (glob)
  missing.O is not ignored
#endif

  $ cd ..

  $ echo ".*\.o" > .hgignore
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? .hgignore
  ? a.c
  ? syntax

Ensure that comments work:

  $ touch 'foo#bar' 'quux#' 'quu0#'
#if no-windows
  $ touch 'baz\' 'baz\wat' 'ba0\#wat' 'ba1\\' 'ba1\\wat' 'quu0\'
#endif

  $ cat <<'EOF' >> .hgignore
  > # full-line comment
  >   # whitespace-only comment line
  > syntax# pattern, no whitespace, then comment
  > a.c  # pattern, then whitespace, then comment
  > baz\\# # (escaped) backslash, then comment
  > ba0\\\#w # (escaped) backslash, escaped comment character, then comment
  > ba1\\\\# # (escaped) backslashes, then comment
  > foo\#b # escaped comment character
  > quux\## escaped comment character at end of name
  > EOF
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? .hgignore
  ? quu0#
  ? quu0\ (no-windows !)

  $ cat <<'EOF' > .hgignore
  > .*\.o
  > syntax: glob
  > syntax# pattern, no whitespace, then comment
  > a.c  # pattern, then whitespace, then comment
  > baz\\#* # (escaped) backslash, then comment
  > ba0\\\#w* # (escaped) backslash, escaped comment character, then comment
  > ba1\\\\#* # (escaped) backslashes, then comment
  > foo\#b* # escaped comment character
  > quux\## escaped comment character at end of name
  > quu0[\#]# escaped comment character inside [...]
  > EOF
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? .hgignore
  ? ba1\\wat (no-windows !)
  ? baz\wat (no-windows !)
  ? quu0\ (no-windows !)

  $ rm 'foo#bar' 'quux#' 'quu0#'
#if no-windows
  $ rm 'baz\' 'baz\wat' 'ba0\#wat' 'ba1\\' 'ba1\\wat' 'quu0\'
#endif

Check that '^\.' does not ignore the root directory:

  $ echo "^\." > .hgignore
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? a.c
  ? a.o
  ? dir/c.o
  ? syntax

Test that patterns from ui.ignore options are read:

  $ echo > .hgignore
  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
  > [ui]
  > ignore.other = $TESTTMP/ignorerepo/.hg/testhgignore
  > EOF
  $ echo "glob:**.o" > .hg/testhgignore
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? .hgignore
  ? a.c
  ? syntax

empty out testhgignore
  $ echo > .hg/testhgignore

Test relative ignore path (issue4473):

  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
  > [ui]
  > ignore.relative = .hg/testhgignorerel
  > EOF
  $ echo "glob:*.o" > .hg/testhgignorerel
  $ cd dir
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? .hgignore
  ? a.c
  ? syntax
  $ hg debugignore
  <includematcher includes='.*\\.o(?:/|$)'>

  $ cd ..
  $ echo > .hg/testhgignorerel
  $ echo "syntax: glob" > .hgignore
  $ echo "re:.*\.o" >> .hgignore
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? .hgignore
  ? a.c
  ? syntax

  $ echo "syntax: invalid" > .hgignore
  $ hg status
  $TESTTMP/ignorerepo/.hgignore: ignoring invalid syntax 'invalid'
  A dir/b.o
  ? .hgignore
  ? a.c
  ? a.o
  ? dir/c.o
  ? syntax

  $ echo "syntax: glob" > .hgignore
  $ echo "*.o" >> .hgignore
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? .hgignore
  ? a.c
  ? syntax

  $ echo "relglob:syntax*" > .hgignore
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? .hgignore
  ? a.c
  ? a.o
  ? dir/c.o

  $ echo "relglob:*" > .hgignore
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o

  $ cd dir
  $ hg status .
  A b.o

  $ hg debugignore
  <includematcher includes='.*(?:/|$)'>

  $ hg debugignore b.o
  b.o is ignored
  (ignore rule in $TESTTMP/ignorerepo/.hgignore, line 1: '*') (glob)

  $ cd ..

Check patterns that match only the directory

"(fsmonitor !)" below assumes that fsmonitor is enabled with
"walk_on_invalidate = false" (default), which doesn't involve
re-walking whole repository at detection of .hgignore change.

  $ echo "^dir\$" > .hgignore
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? .hgignore
  ? a.c
  ? a.o
  ? dir/c.o (fsmonitor !)
  ? syntax

Check recursive glob pattern matches no directories (dir/**/c.o matches dir/c.o)

  $ echo "syntax: glob" > .hgignore
  $ echo "dir/**/c.o" >> .hgignore
  $ touch dir/c.o
  $ mkdir dir/subdir
  $ touch dir/subdir/c.o
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? .hgignore
  ? a.c
  ? a.o
  ? syntax
  $ hg debugignore a.c
  a.c is not ignored
  $ hg debugignore dir/c.o
  dir/c.o is ignored
  (ignore rule in $TESTTMP/ignorerepo/.hgignore, line 2: 'dir/**/c.o') (glob)

Check rooted globs

  $ hg purge --all --config extensions.purge=
  $ echo "syntax: rootglob" > .hgignore
  $ echo "a/*.ext" >> .hgignore
  $ for p in a b/a aa; do mkdir -p $p; touch $p/b.ext; done
  $ hg status -A 'set:**.ext'
  ? aa/b.ext
  ? b/a/b.ext
  I a/b.ext

Check using 'include:' in ignore file

  $ hg purge --all --config extensions.purge=
  $ touch foo.included

  $ echo ".*.included" > otherignore
  $ hg status -I "include:otherignore"
  ? foo.included

  $ echo "include:otherignore" >> .hgignore
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? .hgignore
  ? otherignore

Check recursive uses of 'include:'

  $ echo "include:nested/ignore" >> otherignore
  $ mkdir nested nested/more
  $ echo "glob:*ignore" > nested/ignore
  $ echo "rootglob:a" >> nested/ignore
  $ touch a nested/a nested/more/a
  $ hg status
  A dir/b.o
  ? nested/a
  ? nested/more/a
  $ rm a nested/a nested/more/a

  $ cp otherignore goodignore
  $ echo "include:badignore" >> otherignore
  $ hg status
  skipping unreadable pattern file 'badignore': $ENOENT$
  A dir/b.o

  $ mv goodignore otherignore

Check using 'include:' while in a non-root directory

  $ cd ..
  $ hg -R ignorerepo status
  A dir/b.o
  $ cd ignorerepo

Check including subincludes

  $ hg revert -q --all
  $ hg purge --all --config extensions.purge=
  $ echo ".hgignore" > .hgignore
  $ mkdir dir1 dir2
  $ touch dir1/file1 dir1/file2 dir2/file1 dir2/file2
  $ echo "subinclude:dir2/.hgignore" >> .hgignore
  $ echo "glob:file*2" > dir2/.hgignore
  $ hg status
  ? dir1/file1
  ? dir1/file2
  ? dir2/file1

Check including subincludes with other patterns

  $ echo "subinclude:dir1/.hgignore" >> .hgignore

  $ mkdir dir1/subdir
  $ touch dir1/subdir/file1
  $ echo "rootglob:f?le1" > dir1/.hgignore
  $ hg status
  ? dir1/file2
  ? dir1/subdir/file1
  ? dir2/file1
  $ rm dir1/subdir/file1

  $ echo "regexp:f.le1" > dir1/.hgignore
  $ hg status
  ? dir1/file2
  ? dir2/file1

Check multiple levels of sub-ignores

  $ touch dir1/subdir/subfile1 dir1/subdir/subfile3 dir1/subdir/subfile4
  $ echo "subinclude:subdir/.hgignore" >> dir1/.hgignore
  $ echo "glob:subfil*3" >> dir1/subdir/.hgignore

  $ hg status
  ? dir1/file2
  ? dir1/subdir/subfile4
  ? dir2/file1

Check include subignore at the same level

  $ mv dir1/subdir/.hgignore dir1/.hgignoretwo
  $ echo "regexp:f.le1" > dir1/.hgignore
  $ echo "subinclude:.hgignoretwo" >> dir1/.hgignore
  $ echo "glob:file*2" > dir1/.hgignoretwo

  $ hg status | grep file2
  [1]
  $ hg debugignore dir1/file2
  dir1/file2 is ignored
  (ignore rule in dir2/.hgignore, line 1: 'file*2')

#if windows

Windows paths are accepted on input

  $ rm dir1/.hgignore
  $ echo "dir1/file*" >> .hgignore
  $ hg debugignore "dir1\file2"
  dir1/file2 is ignored
  (ignore rule in $TESTTMP\ignorerepo\.hgignore, line 4: 'dir1/file*')
  $ hg up -qC .

#endif