Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-remotefilelog-pull-noshallow.t @ 48598:a6f16ec07ed7
stream-clone: add a explicit test for format change during stream clone
They are different kind of requirements, the one which impact the data storage
and are relevant to the files being streamed and the one which does not. For
example some requirements are only relevant to the working copy, like sparse, or
dirstate-v2.
Since they are irrelevant to the content being streamed, they do not prevent the
receiving side to use streaming clone and mercurial skip adverting them over
the wire and, ideally, within the bundle.
In addition, this let the client decide to use whichever format it desire for
the part that does not affect the store itself. So the configuration related to
these format are used as normal when doing a streaming clone.
In practice, the feature was not really tested and is badly broken with bundle-2,
since the requirements are not filtered out from the stream bundle.
So we start with adding simple tests as a good base before the fix and adjust
the feature.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D12029
author | Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> |
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date | Mon, 17 Jan 2022 18:51:47 +0100 |
parents | 52fbf8a9907c |
children |
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#require no-windows $ . "$TESTDIR/remotefilelog-library.sh" Set up an extension to make sure remotefilelog clientsetup() runs unconditionally even if we have never used a local shallow repo. This mimics behavior when using remotefilelog with chg. clientsetup() can be triggered due to a shallow repo, and then the code can later interact with non-shallow repositories. $ cat > setupremotefilelog.py << EOF > from mercurial import extensions > def extsetup(ui): > remotefilelog = extensions.find(b'remotefilelog') > remotefilelog.onetimeclientsetup(ui) > EOF Set up the master repository to pull from. $ hg init master $ cd master $ cat >> .hg/hgrc <<EOF > [remotefilelog] > server=True > EOF $ echo x > x $ hg commit -qAm x $ cd .. $ hg clone ssh://user@dummy/master child -q We should see the remotefilelog capability here, which advertises that the server supports our custom getfiles method. $ cd master $ echo 'hello' | hg -R . serve --stdio | grep capa | identifyrflcaps exp-remotefilelog-ssh-getfiles-1 x_rfl_getfile x_rfl_getflogheads $ echo 'capabilities' | hg -R . serve --stdio | identifyrflcaps ; echo exp-remotefilelog-ssh-getfiles-1 x_rfl_getfile x_rfl_getflogheads Pull to the child repository. Use our custom setupremotefilelog extension to ensure that remotefilelog.onetimeclientsetup() gets triggered. (Without using chg it normally would not be run in this case since the local repository is not shallow.) $ echo y > y $ hg commit -qAm y $ cd ../child $ hg pull --config extensions.setuprfl=$TESTTMP/setupremotefilelog.py pulling from ssh://user@dummy/master searching for changes adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files new changesets d34c38483be9 (run 'hg update' to get a working copy) $ hg up 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ cat y y Test that bundle works in a non-remotefilelog repo w/ remotefilelog loaded $ echo y >> y $ hg commit -qAm "modify y" $ hg bundle --base ".^" --rev . mybundle.hg --config extensions.setuprfl=$TESTTMP/setupremotefilelog.py 1 changesets found $ cd ..