tests/test-check-shbang.t
author Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
Tue, 16 Oct 2018 15:48:00 +0200
changeset 41798 8c42b4a3d447
parent 33204 ddd65b4f3ae6
child 43692 2d8d4e08c493
permissions -rw-r--r--
strip: introduce a soft strip option This is the first user-accessible way to use the archived phase introduced in 4.8. This implements a feature discussed during the Stockholm sprint, using the archived phase for hiding changesets. The archived phase behaves exactly as stripping: changesets are no longer visible, but pulling/unbundling them will make then reappear. The only notable difference is that unlike hard stripping, soft stripping does not affect obsmarkers. The next changeset will make use of the archived phase for history rewriting command. However, having a way to manually trigger the feature first seems a necessary step before exposing users to this phase; there is a way to un-archived changesets (unbundling), so there must be a way to archive them again. Adding a flag to strip is a good way to provide access to the feature without taking a too big risk on the final UI we want. The flag is experimental so it won't be exposed by default. Using the archived phase is faster and less traumatic for the repository than actually stripping changesets.

#require test-repo

  $ . "$TESTDIR/helpers-testrepo.sh"
  $ cd "`dirname "$TESTDIR"`"

look for python scripts that do not use /usr/bin/env

  $ testrepohg files 'set:grep(r"^#!.*?python") and not grep(r"^#!/usr/bi{1}n/env python") - **/*.t'
  [1]

In tests, enforce $PYTHON and *not* /usr/bin/env python or similar:
  $ testrepohg files 'set:grep(r"#!.*?python") and **/*.t' \
  > -X tests/test-check-execute.t \
  > -X tests/test-check-module-imports.t \
  > -X tests/test-check-pyflakes.t \
  > -X tests/test-check-shbang.t
  [1]

The above exclusions are because they're looking for files that
contain Python but don't end in .py - please avoid adding more.

look for shell scripts that do not use /bin/sh

  $ testrepohg files 'set:grep(r"^#!.*/bi{1}n/sh") and not grep(r"^#!/bi{1}n/sh")'
  [1]