Mercurial > hg
view tests/generate-working-copy-states.py @ 44943:9e5b4dbe8ff2
localrepo: handle ValueError during repository opening
Python 3.8 can raise ValueError on attempt of an I/O operation
against an illegal path. This was causing test-remotefilelog-gc.t
to fail on Python 3.8.
This commit teaches repository opening to handle ValueError
and re-raise an Abort on failure.
An arguably better solution would be to implement this logic
in the vfs layer. But that seems like a bag of worms and I don't
want to go down that rabbit hole. Until users report uncaught
ValueError exceptions in the wild, I think it is fine to patch
this at the only occurrence our test harness is finding it.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7944
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 18 Jan 2020 10:07:07 -0800 |
parents | 2372284d9457 |
children | 6000f5b25c9b |
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# Helper script used for generating history and working copy files and content. # The file's name corresponds to its history. The number of changesets can # be specified on the command line. With 2 changesets, files with names like # content1_content2_content1-untracked are generated. The first two filename # segments describe the contents in the two changesets. The third segment # ("content1-untracked") describes the state in the working copy, i.e. # the file has content "content1" and is untracked (since it was previously # tracked, it has been forgotten). # # This script generates the filenames and their content, but it's up to the # caller to tell hg about the state. # # There are two subcommands: # filelist <numchangesets> # state <numchangesets> (<changeset>|wc) # # Typical usage: # # $ python $TESTDIR/generate-working-copy-states.py state 2 1 # $ hg addremove --similarity 0 # $ hg commit -m 'first' # # $ python $TESTDIR/generate-working-copy-states.py state 2 1 # $ hg addremove --similarity 0 # $ hg commit -m 'second' # # $ python $TESTDIR/generate-working-copy-states.py state 2 wc # $ hg addremove --similarity 0 # $ hg forget *_*_*-untracked # $ rm *_*_missing-* from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import os import sys # Generates pairs of (filename, contents), where 'contents' is a list # describing the file's content at each revision (or in the working copy). # At each revision, it is either None or the file's actual content. When not # None, it may be either new content or the same content as an earlier # revisions, so all of (modified,clean,added,removed) can be tested. def generatestates(maxchangesets, parentcontents): depth = len(parentcontents) if depth == maxchangesets + 1: for tracked in (b'untracked', b'tracked'): filename = ( b"_".join( [ (content is None and b'missing' or content) for content in parentcontents ] ) + b"-" + tracked ) yield (filename, parentcontents) else: for content in {None, b'content' + (b"%d" % (depth + 1))} | set( parentcontents ): for combination in generatestates( maxchangesets, parentcontents + [content] ): yield combination # retrieve the command line arguments target = sys.argv[1] maxchangesets = int(sys.argv[2]) if target == 'state': depth = sys.argv[3] # sort to make sure we have stable output combinations = sorted(generatestates(maxchangesets, [])) # compute file content content = [] for filename, states in combinations: if target == 'filelist': print(filename.decode('ascii')) elif target == 'state': if depth == 'wc': # Make sure there is content so the file gets written and can be # tracked. It will be deleted outside of this script. content.append((filename, states[maxchangesets] or b'TOBEDELETED')) else: content.append((filename, states[int(depth) - 1])) else: print("unknown target:", target, file=sys.stderr) sys.exit(1) # write actual content for filename, data in content: if data is not None: f = open(filename, 'wb') f.write(data + b'\n') f.close() elif os.path.exists(filename): os.remove(filename)