view tests/test-verify-repo-operations.py @ 30152:d65e246100ed

help: backout f3c4edfd35e1 (mark boolean flags with [no-] in help) for now The ability to negate any boolean flags itself is great, but I think we are not ready to expose the help side of it yet. First, while there exist a handful of such flags whose default value can be changed (eg: git diff, patchwork confirmation), there is only a few of them. The users who benefit the most from this change are alias users and large installation that can deploy extension to change behavior (eg: facebook tweakdefault). So the majority of user who will be affected by a large change to command help that is not yet relevant to them. (I expect this to become relevant when ui.progressive start to exists). Below is an example of the impact of the new help on 'hg help diff': -r --rev REV [+] revision -c --change REV change made by revision -a --[no-]text treat all files as text -g --[no-]git use git extended diff format --[no-]nodates omit dates from diff headers --[no-]noprefix omit a/ and b/ prefixes from filenames -p --[no-]show-function show which function each change is in --[no-]reverse produce a diff that undoes the changes -w --[no-]ignore-all-space ignore white space when comparing lines -b --[no-]ignore-space-change ignore changes in the amount of white space -B --[no-]ignore-blank-lines ignore changes whose lines are all blank -U --unified NUM number of lines of context to show --[no-]stat output diffstat-style summary of changes --root DIR produce diffs relative to subdirectory -I --include PATTERN [+] include names matching the given patterns -X --exclude PATTERN [+] exclude names matching the given patterns -S --[no-]subrepos recurse into subrepositories Another issue with the current state of help, the default value for the flag is not conveyed to the user. For example in the 'backout' help, there is no real distinction between "--[no-]backup" (default to True) and "--[no-]keep" (default) to False: --[no-]backup no backups --[no-]keep do not modify working directory during strip In addition, I've discussed with Augie Fackler and the last batch of the work on this have burned him out quite some. Therefore he is not intending to perform any more work on this topic. Quoting him, he would rather see the help part backed out than spending more time on it. I do not think we are ready to expose this to users in 4.0 (freeze in a week), especially because we cannot expect quick improvement on these aspect as this topic no longer have an owner. We should be able to reintroduce that change in the future when someone get back on it and the main issues are solves: * Introduction of ui.progressive makes it relevant for a majority of user, * Current default value are efficiently conveyed to the user. (In addition, the excerpt from diff help show that we still have some issue with some negative option like '--nodates' so further improvement are probably welcome there.)
author Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@ens-lyon.org>
date Sun, 09 Oct 2016 03:11:18 +0200
parents 8b90367c4cf3
children 2372284d9457
line wrap: on
line source

from __future__ import print_function, absolute_import

"""Fuzz testing for operations against a Mercurial repository

This uses Hypothesis's stateful testing to generate random repository
operations and test Mercurial using them, both to see if there are any
unexpected errors and to compare different versions of it."""

import os
import subprocess
import sys

# Only run if slow tests are allowed
if subprocess.call(['python', '%s/hghave' % os.environ['TESTDIR'],
                    'slow']):
    sys.exit(80)

# These tests require Hypothesis and pytz to be installed.
# Running 'pip install hypothesis pytz' will achieve that.
# Note: This won't work if you're running Python < 2.7.
try:
    from hypothesis.extra.datetime import datetimes
except ImportError:
    sys.stderr.write("skipped: hypothesis or pytz not installed" + os.linesep)
    sys.exit(80)

# If you are running an old version of pip you may find that the enum34
# backport is not installed automatically. If so 'pip install enum34' will
# fix this problem.
try:
    import enum
    assert enum  # Silence pyflakes
except ImportError:
    sys.stderr.write("skipped: enum34 not installed" + os.linesep)
    sys.exit(80)

import binascii
from contextlib import contextmanager
import errno
import pipes
import shutil
import silenttestrunner
import subprocess

from hypothesis.errors import HypothesisException
from hypothesis.stateful import (
    rule, RuleBasedStateMachine, Bundle, precondition)
from hypothesis import settings, note, strategies as st
from hypothesis.configuration import set_hypothesis_home_dir
from hypothesis.database import ExampleDatabase

testdir = os.path.abspath(os.environ["TESTDIR"])

# We store Hypothesis examples here rather in the temporary test directory
# so that when rerunning a failing test this always results in refinding the
# previous failure. This directory is in .hgignore and should not be checked in
# but is useful to have for development.
set_hypothesis_home_dir(os.path.join(testdir, ".hypothesis"))

runtests = os.path.join(os.environ["RUNTESTDIR"], "run-tests.py")
testtmp = os.environ["TESTTMP"]
assert os.path.isdir(testtmp)

generatedtests = os.path.join(testdir, "hypothesis-generated")

try:
    os.makedirs(generatedtests)
except OSError:
    pass

# We write out generated .t files to a file in order to ease debugging and to
# give a starting point for turning failures Hypothesis finds into normal
# tests. In order to ensure that multiple copies of this test can be run in
# parallel we use atomic file create to ensure that we always get a unique
# name.
file_index = 0
while True:
    file_index += 1
    savefile = os.path.join(generatedtests, "test-generated-%d.t" % (
        file_index,
    ))
    try:
        os.close(os.open(savefile, os.O_CREAT | os.O_EXCL | os.O_WRONLY))
        break
    except OSError as e:
        if e.errno != errno.EEXIST:
            raise
assert os.path.exists(savefile)

hgrc = os.path.join(".hg", "hgrc")

filecharacters = (
    "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0123456789"
    "[]^_`;=@{}~ !#$%&'()+,-"
)

files = st.text(filecharacters, min_size=1).map(lambda x: x.strip()).filter(
    bool).map(lambda s: s.encode('ascii'))

safetext = st.text(st.characters(
    min_codepoint=1, max_codepoint=127,
    blacklist_categories=('Cc', 'Cs')), min_size=1).map(
    lambda s: s.encode('utf-8')
)

extensions = st.sampled_from(('shelve', 'mq', 'blackbox',))

@contextmanager
def acceptableerrors(*args):
    """Sometimes we know an operation we're about to perform might fail, and
    we're OK with some of the failures. In those cases this may be used as a
    context manager and will swallow expected failures, as identified by
    substrings of the error message Mercurial emits."""
    try:
        yield
    except subprocess.CalledProcessError as e:
        if not any(a in e.output for a in args):
            note(e.output)
            raise

reponames = st.text("abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz01234556789", min_size=1).map(
    lambda s: s.encode('ascii')
)

class verifyingstatemachine(RuleBasedStateMachine):
    """This defines the set of acceptable operations on a Mercurial repository
    using Hypothesis's RuleBasedStateMachine.

    The general concept is that we manage multiple repositories inside a
    repos/ directory in our temporary test location. Some of these are freshly
    inited, some are clones of the others. Our current working directory is
    always inside one of these repositories while the tests are running.

    Hypothesis then performs a series of operations against these repositories,
    including hg commands, generating contents and editing the .hgrc file.
    If these operations fail in unexpected ways or behave differently in
    different configurations of Mercurial, the test will fail and a minimized
    .t test file will be written to the hypothesis-generated directory to
    exhibit that failure.

    Operations are defined as methods with @rule() decorators. See the
    Hypothesis documentation at
    http://hypothesis.readthedocs.org/en/release/stateful.html for more
    details."""

    # A bundle is a reusable collection of previously generated data which may
    # be provided as arguments to future operations.
    repos = Bundle('repos')
    paths = Bundle('paths')
    contents = Bundle('contents')
    branches = Bundle('branches')
    committimes = Bundle('committimes')

    def __init__(self):
        super(verifyingstatemachine, self).__init__()
        self.repodir = os.path.join(testtmp, "repos")
        if os.path.exists(self.repodir):
            shutil.rmtree(self.repodir)
        os.chdir(testtmp)
        self.log = []
        self.failed = False
        self.configperrepo = {}
        self.all_extensions = set()
        self.non_skippable_extensions = set()

        self.mkdirp("repos")
        self.cd("repos")
        self.mkdirp("repo1")
        self.cd("repo1")
        self.hg("init")

    def teardown(self):
        """On teardown we clean up after ourselves as usual, but we also
        do some additional testing: We generate a .t file based on our test
        run using run-test.py -i to get the correct output.

        We then test it in a number of other configurations, verifying that
        each passes the same test."""
        super(verifyingstatemachine, self).teardown()
        try:
            shutil.rmtree(self.repodir)
        except OSError:
            pass
        ttest = os.linesep.join("  " + l for l in self.log)
        os.chdir(testtmp)
        path = os.path.join(testtmp, "test-generated.t")
        with open(path, 'w') as o:
            o.write(ttest + os.linesep)
        with open(os.devnull, "w") as devnull:
            rewriter = subprocess.Popen(
                [runtests, "--local", "-i", path], stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
                stdout=devnull, stderr=devnull,
            )
            rewriter.communicate("yes")
            with open(path, 'r') as i:
                ttest = i.read()

        e = None
        if not self.failed:
            try:
                output = subprocess.check_output([
                    runtests, path, "--local", "--pure"
                ], stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
                assert "Ran 1 test" in output, output
                for ext in (
                    self.all_extensions - self.non_skippable_extensions
                ):
                    tf = os.path.join(testtmp, "test-generated-no-%s.t" % (
                        ext,
                    ))
                    with open(tf, 'w') as o:
                        for l in ttest.splitlines():
                            if l.startswith("  $ hg"):
                                l = l.replace(
                                    "--config %s=" % (
                                        extensionconfigkey(ext),), "")
                            o.write(l + os.linesep)
                    with open(tf, 'r') as r:
                        t = r.read()
                        assert ext not in t, t
                    output = subprocess.check_output([
                        runtests, tf, "--local",
                    ], stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
                    assert "Ran 1 test" in output, output
            except subprocess.CalledProcessError as e:
                note(e.output)
        if self.failed or e is not None:
            with open(savefile, "wb") as o:
                o.write(ttest)
        if e is not None:
            raise e

    def execute_step(self, step):
        try:
            return super(verifyingstatemachine, self).execute_step(step)
        except (HypothesisException, KeyboardInterrupt):
            raise
        except Exception:
            self.failed = True
            raise

    # Section: Basic commands.
    def mkdirp(self, path):
        if os.path.exists(path):
            return
        self.log.append(
            "$ mkdir -p -- %s" % (pipes.quote(os.path.relpath(path)),))
        os.makedirs(path)

    def cd(self, path):
        path = os.path.relpath(path)
        if path == ".":
            return
        os.chdir(path)
        self.log.append("$ cd -- %s" % (pipes.quote(path),))

    def hg(self, *args):
        extra_flags = []
        for key, value in self.config.items():
            extra_flags.append("--config")
            extra_flags.append("%s=%s" % (key, value))
        self.command("hg", *(tuple(extra_flags) + args))

    def command(self, *args):
        self.log.append("$ " + ' '.join(map(pipes.quote, args)))
        subprocess.check_output(args, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)

    # Section: Set up basic data
    # This section has no side effects but generates data that we will want
    # to use later.
    @rule(
        target=paths,
        source=st.lists(files, min_size=1).map(lambda l: os.path.join(*l)))
    def genpath(self, source):
        return source

    @rule(
        target=committimes,
        when=datetimes(min_year=1970, max_year=2038) | st.none())
    def gentime(self, when):
        return when

    @rule(
        target=contents,
        content=st.one_of(
            st.binary(),
            st.text().map(lambda x: x.encode('utf-8'))
        ))
    def gencontent(self, content):
        return content

    @rule(
        target=branches,
        name=safetext,
    )
    def genbranch(self, name):
        return name

    @rule(target=paths, source=paths)
    def lowerpath(self, source):
        return source.lower()

    @rule(target=paths, source=paths)
    def upperpath(self, source):
        return source.upper()

    # Section: Basic path operations
    @rule(path=paths, content=contents)
    def writecontent(self, path, content):
        self.unadded_changes = True
        if os.path.isdir(path):
            return
        parent = os.path.dirname(path)
        if parent:
            try:
                self.mkdirp(parent)
            except OSError:
                # It may be the case that there is a regular file that has
                # previously been created that has the same name as an ancestor
                # of the current path. This will cause mkdirp to fail with this
                # error. We just turn this into a no-op in that case.
                return
        with open(path, 'wb') as o:
            o.write(content)
        self.log.append((
            "$ python -c 'import binascii; "
            "print(binascii.unhexlify(\"%s\"))' > %s") % (
                binascii.hexlify(content),
                pipes.quote(path),
            ))

    @rule(path=paths)
    def addpath(self, path):
        if os.path.exists(path):
            self.hg("add", "--", path)

    @rule(path=paths)
    def forgetpath(self, path):
        if os.path.exists(path):
            with acceptableerrors(
                "file is already untracked",
            ):
                self.hg("forget", "--", path)

    @rule(s=st.none() | st.integers(0, 100))
    def addremove(self, s):
        args = ["addremove"]
        if s is not None:
            args.extend(["-s", str(s)])
        self.hg(*args)

    @rule(path=paths)
    def removepath(self, path):
        if os.path.exists(path):
            with acceptableerrors(
                'file is untracked',
                'file has been marked for add',
                'file is modified',
            ):
                self.hg("remove", "--", path)

    @rule(
        message=safetext,
        amend=st.booleans(),
        when=committimes,
        addremove=st.booleans(),
        secret=st.booleans(),
        close_branch=st.booleans(),
    )
    def maybecommit(
        self, message, amend, when, addremove, secret, close_branch
    ):
        command = ["commit"]
        errors = ["nothing changed"]
        if amend:
            errors.append("cannot amend public changesets")
            command.append("--amend")
        command.append("-m" + pipes.quote(message))
        if secret:
            command.append("--secret")
        if close_branch:
            command.append("--close-branch")
            errors.append("can only close branch heads")
        if addremove:
            command.append("--addremove")
        if when is not None:
            if when.year == 1970:
                errors.append('negative date value')
            if when.year == 2038:
                errors.append('exceeds 32 bits')
            command.append("--date=%s" % (
                when.strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %z'),))

        with acceptableerrors(*errors):
            self.hg(*command)

    # Section: Repository management
    @property
    def currentrepo(self):
        return os.path.basename(os.getcwd())

    @property
    def config(self):
        return self.configperrepo.setdefault(self.currentrepo, {})

    @rule(
        target=repos,
        source=repos,
        name=reponames,
    )
    def clone(self, source, name):
        if not os.path.exists(os.path.join("..", name)):
            self.cd("..")
            self.hg("clone", source, name)
            self.cd(name)
        return name

    @rule(
        target=repos,
        name=reponames,
    )
    def fresh(self, name):
        if not os.path.exists(os.path.join("..", name)):
            self.cd("..")
            self.mkdirp(name)
            self.cd(name)
            self.hg("init")
        return name

    @rule(name=repos)
    def switch(self, name):
        self.cd(os.path.join("..", name))
        assert self.currentrepo == name
        assert os.path.exists(".hg")

    @rule(target=repos)
    def origin(self):
        return "repo1"

    @rule()
    def pull(self, repo=repos):
        with acceptableerrors(
            "repository default not found",
            "repository is unrelated",
        ):
            self.hg("pull")

    @rule(newbranch=st.booleans())
    def push(self, newbranch):
        with acceptableerrors(
            "default repository not configured",
            "no changes found",
        ):
            if newbranch:
                self.hg("push", "--new-branch")
            else:
                with acceptableerrors(
                    "creates new branches"
                ):
                    self.hg("push")

    # Section: Simple side effect free "check" operations
    @rule()
    def log(self):
        self.hg("log")

    @rule()
    def verify(self):
        self.hg("verify")

    @rule()
    def diff(self):
        self.hg("diff", "--nodates")

    @rule()
    def status(self):
        self.hg("status")

    @rule()
    def export(self):
        self.hg("export")

    # Section: Branch management
    @rule()
    def checkbranch(self):
        self.hg("branch")

    @rule(branch=branches)
    def switchbranch(self, branch):
        with acceptableerrors(
            'cannot use an integer as a name',
            'cannot be used in a name',
            'a branch of the same name already exists',
            'is reserved',
        ):
            self.hg("branch", "--", branch)

    @rule(branch=branches, clean=st.booleans())
    def update(self, branch, clean):
        with acceptableerrors(
            'unknown revision',
            'parse error',
        ):
            if clean:
                self.hg("update", "-C", "--", branch)
            else:
                self.hg("update", "--", branch)

    # Section: Extension management
    def hasextension(self, extension):
        return extensionconfigkey(extension) in self.config

    def commandused(self, extension):
        assert extension in self.all_extensions
        self.non_skippable_extensions.add(extension)

    @rule(extension=extensions)
    def addextension(self, extension):
        self.all_extensions.add(extension)
        self.config[extensionconfigkey(extension)] = ""

    @rule(extension=extensions)
    def removeextension(self, extension):
        self.config.pop(extensionconfigkey(extension), None)

    # Section: Commands from the shelve extension
    @rule()
    @precondition(lambda self: self.hasextension("shelve"))
    def shelve(self):
        self.commandused("shelve")
        with acceptableerrors("nothing changed"):
            self.hg("shelve")

    @rule()
    @precondition(lambda self: self.hasextension("shelve"))
    def unshelve(self):
        self.commandused("shelve")
        with acceptableerrors("no shelved changes to apply"):
            self.hg("unshelve")

class writeonlydatabase(ExampleDatabase):
    def __init__(self, underlying):
        super(ExampleDatabase, self).__init__()
        self.underlying = underlying

    def fetch(self, key):
        return ()

    def save(self, key, value):
        self.underlying.save(key, value)

    def delete(self, key, value):
        self.underlying.delete(key, value)

    def close(self):
        self.underlying.close()

def extensionconfigkey(extension):
    return "extensions." + extension

settings.register_profile(
    'default',  settings(
        timeout=300,
        stateful_step_count=50,
        max_examples=10,
    )
)

settings.register_profile(
    'fast',  settings(
        timeout=10,
        stateful_step_count=20,
        max_examples=5,
        min_satisfying_examples=1,
        max_shrinks=0,
    )
)

settings.register_profile(
    'continuous', settings(
        timeout=-1,
        stateful_step_count=1000,
        max_examples=10 ** 8,
        max_iterations=10 ** 8,
        database=writeonlydatabase(settings.default.database)
    )
)

settings.load_profile(os.getenv('HYPOTHESIS_PROFILE', 'default'))

verifyingtest = verifyingstatemachine.TestCase

verifyingtest.settings = settings.default

if __name__ == '__main__':
    try:
        silenttestrunner.main(__name__)
    finally:
        # So as to prevent proliferation of useless test files, if we never
        # actually wrote a failing test we clean up after ourselves and delete
        # the file for doing so that we owned.
        if os.path.exists(savefile) and os.path.getsize(savefile) == 0:
            os.unlink(savefile)