Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-demandimport.py @ 40418:89703e6151e7 stable
profiling: revert the default mode back to 'cpu' on Windows
On Windows, os.times() only returns user and system times. Real elapsed time is
0. That results in no actual times reported, an end wall time of 0.000000, and
seemingly randomly sorted stack frames. This at least provides test stability
in test-profile.t.
I kind of think that `default=pycompat.iswindows and 'cpu' or 'real'` would be a
better way to set the default in configitems, but I didn't see any other
examples of this, and thought maybe there's a reason for that. That might allow
plugging the value into the help text automatically- the documented default
wasn't updated in db0dba2d157d.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 24 Oct 2018 22:24:10 -0400 |
parents | 1d0610fdd63b |
children | dffd6a301570 |
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from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function from mercurial import demandimport demandimport.enable() import os import subprocess import sys # Only run if demandimport is allowed if subprocess.call(['python', '%s/hghave' % os.environ['TESTDIR'], 'demandimport']): sys.exit(80) if os.name != 'nt': try: import distutils.msvc9compiler print('distutils.msvc9compiler needs to be an immediate ' 'importerror on non-windows platforms') distutils.msvc9compiler except ImportError: pass import re rsub = re.sub def f(obj): l = repr(obj) l = rsub("0x[0-9a-fA-F]+", "0x?", l) l = rsub("from '.*'", "from '?'", l) l = rsub("'<[a-z]*>'", "'<whatever>'", l) return l demandimport.disable() os.environ['HGDEMANDIMPORT'] = 'disable' # this enable call should not actually enable demandimport! demandimport.enable() from mercurial import node print("node =", f(node)) # now enable it for real del os.environ['HGDEMANDIMPORT'] demandimport.enable() # Test access to special attributes through demandmod proxy from mercurial import error as errorproxy print("errorproxy =", f(errorproxy)) print("errorproxy.__doc__ = %r" % (' '.join(errorproxy.__doc__.split()[:3]) + ' ...')) print("errorproxy.__name__ = %r" % errorproxy.__name__) # __name__ must be accessible via __dict__ so the relative imports can be # resolved print("errorproxy.__dict__['__name__'] = %r" % errorproxy.__dict__['__name__']) print("errorproxy =", f(errorproxy)) import os print("os =", f(os)) print("os.system =", f(os.system)) print("os =", f(os)) from mercurial.utils import procutil print("procutil =", f(procutil)) print("procutil.system =", f(procutil.system)) print("procutil =", f(procutil)) print("procutil.system =", f(procutil.system)) from mercurial import hgweb print("hgweb =", f(hgweb)) print("hgweb_mod =", f(hgweb.hgweb_mod)) print("hgweb =", f(hgweb)) import re as fred print("fred =", f(fred)) import re as remod print("remod =", f(remod)) import sys as re print("re =", f(re)) print("fred =", f(fred)) print("fred.sub =", f(fred.sub)) print("fred =", f(fred)) remod.escape # use remod print("remod =", f(remod)) print("re =", f(re)) print("re.stderr =", f(re.stderr)) print("re =", f(re)) import contextlib print("contextlib =", f(contextlib)) try: from contextlib import unknownattr print('no demandmod should be created for attribute of non-package ' 'module:\ncontextlib.unknownattr =', f(unknownattr)) except ImportError as inst: print('contextlib.unknownattr = ImportError: %s' % rsub(r"'", '', str(inst))) from mercurial import util # Unlike the import statement, __import__() function should not raise # ImportError even if fromlist has an unknown item # (see Python/import.c:import_module_level() and ensure_fromlist()) contextlibimp = __import__('contextlib', globals(), locals(), ['unknownattr']) print("__import__('contextlib', ..., ['unknownattr']) =", f(contextlibimp)) print("hasattr(contextlibimp, 'unknownattr') =", util.safehasattr(contextlibimp, 'unknownattr'))