Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-narrow-archive.t @ 43594:ac140b85aae9
tests: use time.time() for relative start and stop times
os.times() does not work on Windows. This was resulting in the
test start, stop, and duration times being reported as 0.
This commit swaps in time.time() for wall clock measurements.
This isn't ideal, as time.time() is not monotonic. But Python 2.7
does not have a monotonic timer that works on Windows. So it is
the best we have which is trivially usable. And test times aren't
terribly important, so variances due to clock skew are arguably
acceptable.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7126
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 16 Oct 2019 21:31:40 -0700 |
parents | a2a6e724d61a |
children |
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Make a narrow clone then archive it $ . "$TESTDIR/narrow-library.sh" $ hg init master $ cd master $ for x in `$TESTDIR/seq.py 3`; do > echo $x > "f$x" > hg add "f$x" > hg commit -m "Add $x" > done $ hg serve -a localhost -p $HGPORT1 -d --pid-file=hg.pid $ cat hg.pid >> "$DAEMON_PIDS" $ cd .. $ hg clone --narrow --include f1 --include f2 http://localhost:$HGPORT1/ narrowclone1 requesting all changes adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 3 changesets with 2 changes to 2 files new changesets * (glob) updating to branch default 2 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved The tar should only contain f1 and f2 $ cd narrowclone1 $ hg archive -t tgz repo.tgz $ tar tfz repo.tgz repo/f1 repo/f2