Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-hgweb-raw.t @ 19651:902c646019ad
dirstate.status: don't ignore symlink placeholders in the normal set
On Windows, there are two ways symlinks can manifest themselves:
1. As placeholders: text files containing the symlink's target. This is what
usually happens with fresh clones on Windows.
2. With their dereferenced contents. This happens with clones accessed over NFS
or Samba.
In order to handle case 2, ca6cebd8734e made dirstate.status ignore all symlink
placeholders on Windows. It doesn't ignore symlinks in the lookup set, though,
since those don't have the link bit set. This is problematic because it
violates the invariant that `hg status` with every file in the normal set
produces the same output as `hg status` with every file in the lookup set.
With this change, symlink placeholders in the normal set are no longer ignored.
We instead rely on code in localrepo.status that uses heuristics to look for
suspect placeholders.
An upcoming patch will test this out by no longer adding files written in the
last second of an update to the lookup set.
author | Siddharth Agarwal <sid0@fb.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 31 Aug 2013 10:20:15 -0700 |
parents | 91aac2797c40 |
children | 7a9cbb315d84 |
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$ "$TESTDIR/hghave" serve || exit 80 Test raw style of hgweb $ hg init test $ cd test $ mkdir sub $ cat >'sub/some text%.txt' <<ENDSOME > This is just some random text > that will go inside the file and take a few lines. > It is very boring to read, but computers don't > care about things like that. > ENDSOME $ hg add 'sub/some text%.txt' $ hg commit -d "1 0" -m "Just some text" $ hg serve -p $HGPORT -A access.log -E error.log -d --pid-file=hg.pid $ cat hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS $ ("$TESTDIR/get-with-headers.py" localhost:$HGPORT '?f=bf0ff59095c9;file=sub/some%20text%25.txt;style=raw' content-type content-length content-disposition) >getoutput.txt $ "$TESTDIR/killdaemons.py" hg.pid $ cat getoutput.txt 200 Script output follows content-type: application/binary content-length: 157 content-disposition: inline; filename="some text%.txt" This is just some random text that will go inside the file and take a few lines. It is very boring to read, but computers don't care about things like that. $ cat access.log error.log 127.0.0.1 - - [*] "GET /?f=bf0ff59095c9;file=sub/some%20text%25.txt;style=raw HTTP/1.1" 200 - (glob) $ rm access.log error.log $ hg serve -p $HGPORT -A access.log -E error.log -d --pid-file=hg.pid \ > --config web.guessmime=True $ cat hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS $ ("$TESTDIR/get-with-headers.py" localhost:$HGPORT '?f=bf0ff59095c9;file=sub/some%20text%25.txt;style=raw' content-type content-length content-disposition) >getoutput.txt $ "$TESTDIR/killdaemons.py" hg.pid $ cat getoutput.txt 200 Script output follows content-type: text/plain; charset="ascii" content-length: 157 content-disposition: inline; filename="some text%.txt" This is just some random text that will go inside the file and take a few lines. It is very boring to read, but computers don't care about things like that. $ cat access.log error.log 127.0.0.1 - - [*] "GET /?f=bf0ff59095c9;file=sub/some%20text%25.txt;style=raw HTTP/1.1" 200 - (glob) $ cd ..