view tests/test-mactext.t @ 23934:975c4fc4a512 stable

hg.bat: return exit code explicitly for indirect invocation When "hg.bat" is invoked via interactive shell "cmd.exe" on Windows, it can store own exit code into ERRORLEVEL correctly, regardless of explicit "exit" statement in it: "cmd.exe" seems to hold ERRORLEVEL updated by the last command in the batch file (= "python hg", in "hg.bat" case). On the other hand, "hg.bat" is invoked indirectly via "subprocess.Popen" (e.g. shell alias, hooks, hgclient and so on), the parent process always receives exit code 0 from spawned "hg.bat": batch files on Windows seem not to be really spawned like as shell scripts on UNIX, but to be executed in the "cmd.exe" process. This patch returns exit code explicitly for indirect invocation. "/b" should be specified for "exit" to prevent "cmd.exe" from being terminated when "hg.bat" is invoked interactively from it.
author FUJIWARA Katsunori <foozy@lares.dti.ne.jp>
date Thu, 22 Jan 2015 00:07:06 +0900
parents 7985a9e2ddce
children 75be14993fda
line wrap: on
line source


  $ cat > unix2mac.py <<EOF
  > import sys
  > 
  > for path in sys.argv[1:]:
  >     data = file(path, 'rb').read()
  >     data = data.replace('\n', '\r')
  >     file(path, 'wb').write(data)
  > EOF
  $ cat > print.py <<EOF
  > import sys
  > print(sys.stdin.read().replace('\n', '<LF>').replace('\r', '<CR>').replace('\0', '<NUL>'))
  > EOF
  $ hg init
  $ echo '[hooks]' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo 'pretxncommit.cr = python:hgext.win32text.forbidcr' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo 'pretxnchangegroup.cr = python:hgext.win32text.forbidcr' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ cat .hg/hgrc
  [hooks]
  pretxncommit.cr = python:hgext.win32text.forbidcr
  pretxnchangegroup.cr = python:hgext.win32text.forbidcr

  $ echo hello > f
  $ hg add f
  $ hg ci -m 1

  $ python unix2mac.py f
  $ hg ci -m 2
  attempt to commit or push text file(s) using CR line endings
  in dea860dc51ec: f
  transaction abort!
  rollback completed
  abort: pretxncommit.cr hook failed
  [255]
  $ hg cat f | python print.py
  hello<LF>
  $ cat f | python print.py
  hello<CR>