tests/ls-l.py
author Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
Sun, 21 Jul 2019 18:04:05 -0700
branchstable
changeset 42641 b5092c23ca35
parent 40495 3a333a582d7b
child 43076 2372284d9457
permissions -rwxr-xr-x
py: error out if a "skip" character was given with non-dict to util.dirs() util.dirs() keeps track of the directories in its input collection. If a "skip" character is given to it, it will assume the input is a dirstate map and it will skip entries that are in the given "skip" state. I think this is used only for skipping removed entries ("r") in the dirtate. The C implementation of util.dirs() errors out if it was given a skip character and a non-dict was passed. The pure implementation simply ignored the request skip state. Let's make it easier to discover bugs here by erroring out in the pure implementation too. Let's also switch to checking for the dict-ness, to make the C implementation (since that's clearly been sufficient for many years). This last change makes test-issue660.t pass on py3 in pure mode, since the old check was for existence of iteritems(), which doesn't exist on py3. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6669

#!/usr/bin/env python

# like ls -l, but do not print date, user, or non-common mode bit, to avoid
# using globs in tests.
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function

import os
import stat
import sys

def modestr(st):
    mode = st.st_mode
    result = ''
    if mode & stat.S_IFDIR:
        result += 'd'
    else:
        result += '-'
    for owner in ['USR', 'GRP', 'OTH']:
        for action in ['R', 'W', 'X']:
            if mode & getattr(stat, 'S_I%s%s' % (action, owner)):
                result += action.lower()
            else:
                result += '-'
    return result

def sizestr(st):
    if st.st_mode & stat.S_IFREG:
        return '%7d' % st.st_size
    else:
        # do not show size for non regular files
        return ' ' * 7

os.chdir((sys.argv[1:] + ['.'])[0])

for name in sorted(os.listdir('.')):
    st = os.stat(name)
    print('%s %s %s' % (modestr(st), sizestr(st), name))