view tests/test-run-tests.py @ 38336:bb7e3c6ef592

phabricator: preserve the phase when amending in the Differential fields I have no idea if it's better to change scmutil.cleanupnodes() so that it has the option to either apply a specific phase (e.g. for various --secret switches) or carry over the phase of the old node. The benefit would be that the caller doesn't have to remember to do this. The con is maybe inefficiency? I wrote this up as issue5918. I'm leaving that open since Yuya flagged it as an API bug. Since most other callers already do this, it's the simplest fix. (It's not obvious that `split`, `fix` and `rebase` are doing this, but there is test coverage for `fix` and `rebase`, and experimenting with `split` shows it does the right thing.)
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Thu, 14 Jun 2018 12:35:04 -0400
parents dfae14354660
children f83600efa1ca
line wrap: on
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"""test line matching with some failing examples and some which warn

run-test.t only checks positive matches and can not see warnings
(both by design)
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function

import doctest
import os
import re
# this is hack to make sure no escape characters are inserted into the output
if 'TERM' in os.environ:
    del os.environ['TERM']
run_tests = __import__('run-tests')

def prn(ex):
    m = ex.args[0]
    if isinstance(m, str):
        print(m)
    else:
        print(m.decode('utf-8'))

def lm(expected, output):
    r"""check if output matches expected

    does it generally work?
        >>> lm(b'H*e (glob)\n', b'Here\n')
        True

    fail on bad test data
        >>> try: lm(b'a\n',b'a')
        ... except AssertionError as ex: print(ex)
        missing newline
        >>> try: lm(b'single backslash\n', b'single \backslash\n')
        ... except AssertionError as ex: prn(ex)
        single backslash or unknown char
    """
    assert (expected.endswith(b'\n')
            and output.endswith(b'\n')), 'missing newline'
    assert not re.search(br'[^ \w\\/\r\n()*?]', expected + output), \
           b'single backslash or unknown char'
    test = run_tests.TTest(b'test-run-test.t', b'.', b'.')
    match = test.linematch(expected, output)
    if isinstance(match, str):
        return 'special: ' + match
    elif isinstance(match, bytes):
        return 'special: ' + match.decode('utf-8')
    else:
        return bool(match) # do not return match object

def wintests():
    r"""test matching like running on windows

    enable windows matching on any os
        >>> _osaltsep = os.altsep
        >>> os.altsep = True
        >>> _osname = os.name
        >>> os.name = 'nt'

    valid match on windows
        >>> lm(b'g/a*/d (glob)\n', b'g\\abc/d\n')
        True

    direct matching, glob unnecessary
        >>> lm(b'g/b (glob)\n', b'g/b\n')
        'special: -glob'

    missing glob
        >>> lm(b'/g/c/d/fg\n', b'\\g\\c\\d/fg\n')
        True
        >>> lm(b'/g/c/d/fg\n', b'\\g\\c\\d\\fg\r\n')
        True

    restore os.altsep
        >>> os.altsep = _osaltsep
        >>> os.name = _osname
    """
    pass

def otherostests():
    r"""test matching like running on non-windows os

    disable windows matching on any os
        >>> _osaltsep = os.altsep
        >>> os.altsep = False
        >>> _osname = os.name
        >>> os.name = 'nt'

    backslash does not match slash
        >>> lm(b'h/a* (glob)\n', b'h\\ab\n')
        False

    direct matching glob can not be recognized
        >>> lm(b'h/b (glob)\n', b'h/b\n')
        True

    missing glob can not not be recognized
        >>> lm(b'/h/c/df/g/\n', b'\\h/c\\df/g\\\n')
        False

    restore os.altsep
        >>> os.altsep = _osaltsep
        >>> os.name = _osname
    """
    pass

if __name__ == '__main__':
    doctest.testmod()