tests/test-dirstate-race2.t
author Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
Sun, 21 Jul 2019 18:04:05 -0700
branchstable
changeset 42641 b5092c23ca35
parent 42456 87a34c767384
child 47129 93eb6c8035a9
permissions -rw-r--r--
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

Checking the size/permissions/file-type of files stored in the
dirstate after an update where the files are changed concurrently
outside of hg's control.

  $ hg init repo
  $ cd repo
  $ echo a > a
  $ hg commit -qAm _
  $ echo aa > a
  $ hg commit -m _

  $ hg debugdirstate --no-dates
  n 644          3 (set  |unset)               a (re)

  $ cat >> $TESTTMP/dirstaterace.py << EOF
  > from mercurial import (
  >     extensions,
  >     merge,
  > )
  > def extsetup(ui):
  >     extensions.wrapfunction(merge, 'applyupdates', wrap)
  > def wrap(orig, *args, **kwargs):
  >     res = orig(*args, **kwargs)
  >     with open("a", "w"):
  >         pass # just truncate the file
  >     return res
  > EOF

Do an update where file 'a' is changed between hg writing it to disk
and hg writing the dirstate. The dirstate is correct nonetheless, and
so hg status correctly shows a as clean.

  $ hg up -r 0 --config extensions.race=$TESTTMP/dirstaterace.py
  1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ hg debugdirstate --no-dates
  n 644          2 (set  |unset)               a (re)
  $ echo a > a; hg status; hg diff