check-commit: make foo_bar naming regexp less greedy
\s is equivalent to the character class [ \t\n\r\f\v]. Using \s+ in
a regular expression against input with multiple lines may match across
multiple lines.
For the regexp in question, "\+\s+" would match "+\n " and similar
sequences, leading to false positives for functions that were included
in diff context, after a modified hunk.
from mercurial import wireproto
class proto(object):
def __init__(self, args):
self.args = args
def getargs(self, spec):
args = self.args
args.setdefault('*', {})
names = spec.split()
return [args[n] for n in names]
class clientpeer(wireproto.wirepeer):
def __init__(self, serverrepo):
self.serverrepo = serverrepo
def _call(self, cmd, **args):
return wireproto.dispatch(self.serverrepo, proto(args), cmd)
@wireproto.batchable
def greet(self, name):
f = wireproto.future()
yield {'name': mangle(name)}, f
yield unmangle(f.value)
class serverrepo(object):
def greet(self, name):
return "Hello, " + name
def filtered(self, name):
return self
def mangle(s):
return ''.join(chr(ord(c) + 1) for c in s)
def unmangle(s):
return ''.join(chr(ord(c) - 1) for c in s)
def greet(repo, proto, name):
return mangle(repo.greet(unmangle(name)))
wireproto.commands['greet'] = (greet, 'name',)
srv = serverrepo()
clt = clientpeer(srv)
print clt.greet("Foobar")
b = clt.batch()
fs = [b.greet(s) for s in ["Fo, =;o", "Bar"]]
b.submit()
print [f.value for f in fs]