view tests/test-cat.t @ 40337:cb516a854bc7

narrow: only send the narrowspecs back if ACL in play I am unable to think why we need to send narrowspecs back from the server. The current state adds a 'narrow:spec' part to each changegroup which is generated when narrow extension is enabled. So we are sending narrowspecs on pull also. There is a problem with sending the narrowspecs the way we are doing it right now. We add include and exclude as parameter of the 'narrow:spec' bundle2 part. The the len of include or exclude string increase 255 which is obvious while working on large repos, bundle2 generation code breaks. For more on that refer issue5952 on bugzilla. I was thinking why we need to send the narrowspecs back, and deleted the 'narrow:spec' bundle2 part generation code and found that only narrow-acl test has some failure. With this patch, we will only send the 'narrow:spec' bundle2 part if ACL is enabled because the original narrowspecs in those cases can be a subset of narrowspecs user requested. There are phase related output change in couple of tests. The output change shows that we are now dealing in public phases completely. So maybe sending the narrow:spec bundle2 part was preventing phases being exchanged or phase bundle2 data being applied. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4931
author Pulkit Goyal <pulkit@yandex-team.ru>
date Wed, 10 Oct 2018 17:36:59 +0300
parents 34ba47117164
children 55c6ebd11cb9
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  $ hg init
  $ echo 0 > a
  $ echo 0 > b
  $ hg ci -A -m m
  adding a
  adding b
  $ hg rm a
  $ hg cat a
  0
  $ hg cat --decode a # more tests in test-encode
  0
  $ echo 1 > b
  $ hg ci -m m
  $ echo 2 > b
  $ hg cat -r 0 a
  0
  $ hg cat -r 0 b
  0
  $ hg cat -r 1 a
  a: no such file in rev 7040230c159c
  [1]
  $ hg cat -r 1 b
  1

Test multiple files

  $ echo 3 > c
  $ hg ci -Am addmore c
  $ hg cat b c
  1
  3
  $ hg cat .
  1
  3
  $ hg cat . c
  1
  3

Test fileset

  $ hg cat 'set:not(b) or a'
  3
  $ hg cat 'set:c or b'
  1
  3

  $ mkdir tmp
  $ hg cat --output tmp/HH_%H c
  $ hg cat --output tmp/RR_%R c
  $ hg cat --output tmp/h_%h c
  $ hg cat --output tmp/r_%r c
  $ hg cat --output tmp/%s_s c
  $ hg cat --output tmp/%d%%_d c
  $ hg cat --output tmp/%p_p c
  $ hg log -r . --template "{rev}: {node|short}\n"
  2: 45116003780e
  $ find tmp -type f | sort
  tmp/.%_d
  tmp/HH_45116003780e3678b333fb2c99fa7d559c8457e9
  tmp/RR_2
  tmp/c_p
  tmp/c_s
  tmp/h_45116003780e
  tmp/r_2

Test template output

  $ hg --cwd tmp cat ../b ../c -T '== {path|relpath} ({path}) r{rev} ==\n{data}'
  == ../b (b) r2 ==
  1
  == ../c (c) r2 ==
  3

  $ hg cat b c -Tjson --output -
  [
   {
    "data": "1\n",
    "path": "b"
   },
   {
    "data": "3\n",
    "path": "c"
   }
  ]

  $ hg cat b c -Tjson --output 'tmp/%p.json'
  $ cat tmp/b.json
  [
   {
    "data": "1\n",
    "path": "b"
   }
  ]
  $ cat tmp/c.json
  [
   {
    "data": "3\n",
    "path": "c"
   }
  ]

Test working directory

  $ echo b-wdir > b
  $ hg cat -r 'wdir()' b
  b-wdir

Environment variables are not visible by default

  $ PATTERN='t4' hg log -r '.' -T "{ifcontains('PATTERN', envvars, 'yes', 'no')}\n"
  no

Environment variable visibility can be explicit

  $ PATTERN='t4' hg log -r '.' -T "{envvars % '{key} -> {value}\n'}" \
  >                 --config "experimental.exportableenviron=PATTERN"
  PATTERN -> t4

Test behavior of output when directory structure does not already exist

  $ mkdir foo
  $ echo a > foo/a
  $ hg add foo/a
  $ hg commit -qm "add foo/a"
  $ hg cat --output "output/%p" foo/a
  $ cat output/foo/a
  a