windows: removed duplicate termwidth definition
Changeset
dbf91976f900 caused this when the "from win32 import *" line
was replaced with explicit import statements: the wildcard import was
at the bottom of the file and so windows.termwidth was overwritten by
win32.termwidth as indented, but the new explicit import statements
were at the top and so win32.termwidth got lost.
With the switch to ctypes, win32 can always be imported and so the
fallback termwidth in windows is no longer needed.
$ "$TESTDIR/hghave" serve || exit 80
$ hgserve()
> {
> hg serve -a localhost -d --pid-file=hg.pid -E errors.log -v $@ \
> | sed -e "s/:$HGPORT1\\([^0-9]\\)/:HGPORT1\1/g" \
> -e "s/:$HGPORT2\\([^0-9]\\)/:HGPORT2\1/g" \
> -e 's/http:\/\/[^/]*\//http:\/\/localhost\//'
> cat hg.pid >> "$DAEMON_PIDS"
> echo % errors
> cat errors.log
> if [ "$KILLQUIETLY" = "Y" ]; then
> kill `cat hg.pid` 2>/dev/null
> else
> kill `cat hg.pid`
> fi
> while kill -0 `cat hg.pid` 2>/dev/null; do sleep 0; done
> }
$ hg init test
$ cd test
$ echo '[web]' > .hg/hgrc
$ echo 'accesslog = access.log' >> .hg/hgrc
$ echo "port = $HGPORT1" >> .hg/hgrc
Without -v
$ hg serve -a localhost -p $HGPORT -d --pid-file=hg.pid -E errors.log
$ cat hg.pid >> "$DAEMON_PIDS"
$ if [ -f access.log ]; then
> echo 'access log created - .hg/hgrc respected'
> fi
access log created - .hg/hgrc respected
errors
$ cat errors.log
With -v
$ hgserve
listening at http://localhost/ (bound to 127.0.0.1:HGPORT1)
% errors
With -v and -p HGPORT2
$ hgserve -p "$HGPORT2"
listening at http://localhost/ (bound to 127.0.0.1:HGPORT2)
% errors
With -v and -p daytime (should fail because low port)
$ KILLQUIETLY=Y
$ hgserve -p daytime
abort: cannot start server at 'localhost:13': Permission denied
abort: child process failed to start
% errors
$ KILLQUIETLY=N
With --prefix foo
$ hgserve --prefix foo
listening at http://localhost/foo/ (bound to 127.0.0.1:HGPORT1)
% errors
With --prefix /foo
$ hgserve --prefix /foo
listening at http://localhost/foo/ (bound to 127.0.0.1:HGPORT1)
% errors
With --prefix foo/
$ hgserve --prefix foo/
listening at http://localhost/foo/ (bound to 127.0.0.1:HGPORT1)
% errors
With --prefix /foo/
$ hgserve --prefix /foo/
listening at http://localhost/foo/ (bound to 127.0.0.1:HGPORT1)
% errors