Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-ssh @ 8810:ac92775b3b80
Add patch.eol to ignore EOLs when patching (issue1019)
The intent is to fix many issues involving patching when win32ext is enabled.
With win32ext, the working directory and repository files EOLs are not the same
which means that patches made on a non-win32ext host do not apply cleanly
because of EOLs discrepancies. A theorically correct approach would be
transform either the patched file or the patch content with the
encoding/decoding filters used by win32ext. This solution is tricky to
implement and invasive, instead we prefer to address the win32ext case, by
offering a way to ignore input EOLs when patching and rewriting them when
saving the patched result.
author | Patrick Mezard <pmezard@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 15 Jun 2009 00:03:26 +0200 |
parents | 9f76df0edb7d |
children | 4c94b6d0fb1c |
line wrap: on
line source
#!/bin/sh cp "$TESTDIR"/printenv.py . # This test tries to exercise the ssh functionality with a dummy script cat <<EOF > dummyssh import sys import os os.chdir(os.path.dirname(sys.argv[0])) if sys.argv[1] != "user@dummy": sys.exit(-1) if not os.path.exists("dummyssh"): sys.exit(-1) os.environ["SSH_CLIENT"] = "127.0.0.1 1 2" log = open("dummylog", "ab") log.write("Got arguments") for i, arg in enumerate(sys.argv[1:]): log.write(" %d:%s" % (i+1, arg)) log.write("\n") log.close() r = os.system(sys.argv[2]) sys.exit(bool(r)) EOF cat <<EOF > badhook import sys sys.stdout.write("KABOOM\n") EOF echo "# creating 'remote'" hg init remote cd remote echo this > foo echo this > fooO hg ci -A -m "init" -d "1000000 0" foo fooO echo '[server]' > .hg/hgrc echo 'uncompressed = True' >> .hg/hgrc echo '[hooks]' >> .hg/hgrc echo 'changegroup = python ../printenv.py changegroup-in-remote 0 ../dummylog' >> .hg/hgrc cd .. echo "# repo not found error" hg clone -e "python ./dummyssh" ssh://user@dummy/nonexistent local echo "# clone remote via stream" hg clone -e "python ./dummyssh" --uncompressed ssh://user@dummy/remote local-stream 2>&1 | \ sed -e 's/[0-9][0-9.]*/XXX/g' -e 's/[KM]\(B\/sec\)/X\1/' cd local-stream hg verify cd .. echo "# clone remote via pull" hg clone -e "python ./dummyssh" ssh://user@dummy/remote local echo "# verify" cd local hg verify echo '[hooks]' >> .hg/hgrc echo 'changegroup = python ../printenv.py changegroup-in-local 0 ../dummylog' >> .hg/hgrc echo "# empty default pull" hg paths hg pull -e "python ../dummyssh" echo "# local change" echo bleah > foo hg ci -m "add" -d "1000000 0" echo "# updating rc" echo "default-push = ssh://user@dummy/remote" >> .hg/hgrc echo "[ui]" >> .hg/hgrc echo "ssh = python ../dummyssh" >> .hg/hgrc echo "# find outgoing" hg out ssh://user@dummy/remote echo "# find incoming on the remote side" hg incoming -R ../remote -e "python ../dummyssh" ssh://user@dummy/local echo "# push" hg push cd ../remote echo "# check remote tip" hg tip hg verify hg cat -r tip foo echo z > z hg ci -A -m z -d '1000001 0' z # a bad, evil hook that prints to stdout echo 'changegroup.stdout = python ../badhook' >> .hg/hgrc cd ../local echo r > r hg ci -A -m z -d '1000002 0' r echo "# push should succeed even though it has an unexpected response" hg push hg -R ../remote heads cd .. cat dummylog