Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-rust-revlog.py @ 46067:cc0b332ab9fc
run-tests: stuff a `python3.exe` into the test bin directory on Windows
Windows doesn't have `python3.exe` as part of the python.org distribution, and
that broke every script with a shebang after c102b704edb5. Windows itself
provides a `python3.exe` app execution alias[1], but it is some sort of reparse
point that MSYS is incapable of handling[2]. When run by MSYS, it simply prints
$ python3 -V
- Cannot open
That in turn caused every `hghave` check, and test that invokes shebang scripts
directly, to fail. Rather than try to patch up every script call to be invoked
with `$PYTHON` (and regress when non Windows developers forget), copying the
executable into the test binary directory with the new name just works. Since
this directory is prepended to the system PATH value, it also overrides the
broken execution alias. (The `_tmpbindir` is used instead of `_bindir` because
the latter causes python3.exe to be copied into the repo next to hg.exe when
`test-run-tests.t` runs. Something runs with this version of the executable and
subsequent runs of `run-tests.py` inside `test-run-tests.t` try to copy over it
while it is in use, and fail. This avoids the failures and the clutter.)
I didn't conditionalize this on py3 because `python3.exe` needs to be present
(for the shebangs) even when running py2 tests. It shouldn't matter to these
simple scripts, and I think the intention is to make the test runner use py3
always, even if testing a py2 build. For now, still supporting py2 is helping
to clean up the mess that is py3 tests.
[1] https://stackoverflow.com/a/57168165
[2] https://stackoverflow.com/questions/59148628/solved-unable-to-run-python-3-7-on-windows-10-permission-denied#comment104524397_59148666
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9543
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 07 Dec 2020 16:18:28 -0500 |
parents | 89a2afe31e82 |
children | 6000f5b25c9b |
line wrap: on
line source
from __future__ import absolute_import import unittest try: from mercurial import rustext rustext.__name__ # trigger immediate actual import except ImportError: rustext = None else: from mercurial.rustext import revlog # this would fail already without appropriate ancestor.__package__ from mercurial.rustext.ancestor import LazyAncestors from mercurial.testing import revlog as revlogtesting @unittest.skipIf( rustext is None, "rustext module revlog relies on is not available", ) class RustRevlogIndexTest(revlogtesting.RevlogBasedTestBase): def test_heads(self): idx = self.parseindex() rustidx = revlog.MixedIndex(idx) self.assertEqual(rustidx.headrevs(), idx.headrevs()) def test_get_cindex(self): # drop me once we no longer need the method for shortest node idx = self.parseindex() rustidx = revlog.MixedIndex(idx) cidx = rustidx.get_cindex() self.assertTrue(idx is cidx) def test_len(self): idx = self.parseindex() rustidx = revlog.MixedIndex(idx) self.assertEqual(len(rustidx), len(idx)) def test_ancestors(self): idx = self.parseindex() rustidx = revlog.MixedIndex(idx) lazy = LazyAncestors(rustidx, [3], 0, True) # we have two more references to the index: # - in its inner iterator for __contains__ and __bool__ # - in the LazyAncestors instance itself (to spawn new iterators) self.assertTrue(2 in lazy) self.assertTrue(bool(lazy)) self.assertEqual(list(lazy), [3, 2, 1, 0]) # a second time to validate that we spawn new iterators self.assertEqual(list(lazy), [3, 2, 1, 0]) # let's check bool for an empty one self.assertFalse(LazyAncestors(idx, [0], 0, False)) if __name__ == '__main__': import silenttestrunner silenttestrunner.main(__name__)