interfaces: introduce and use a protocol class for the `mpatch` module
See
f2832de2a46c for details when this was done for the `bdiff` module.
Two things worth pointing out-
1) The `cffi` module "inherits" the `pure` implementation of `patchedsize()`
because of its wildcard import.
2) It's odd that the `mpatchError` lives in both `pure` and `cext` modules.
I initially thought to move the exception into the new class, and make the
existing class name an alias to the class in the new location, but the exception
is created in C code by the `cext` module, so that won't work. I don't think a
protocol class is approriate, because there's nothing special about the class to
distinguish from any other `Exception`. Fortunately, nobody is catching this
exception in core, so we can kick the can down the road.
#require no-windows
ATTENTION: logtoprocess runs commands asynchronously. Be sure to append "| cat"
to hg commands, to wait for the output, if you want to test its output.
Otherwise the test will be flaky.
Test if logtoprocess correctly captures command-related log calls.
$ hg init
$ cat > $TESTTMP/foocommand.py << EOF
> from mercurial import registrar
> cmdtable = {}
> command = registrar.command(cmdtable)
> configtable = {}
> configitem = registrar.configitem(configtable)
> configitem(b'logtoprocess', b'foo',
> default=None,
> )
> @command(b'foobar', [])
> def foo(ui, repo):
> ui.log(b'foo', b'a message: %s\n', b'spam')
> EOF
$ cp $HGRCPATH $HGRCPATH.bak
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
> [extensions]
> logtoprocess=
> foocommand=$TESTTMP/foocommand.py
> [logtoprocess]
> command=(echo 'logtoprocess command output:';
> echo "\$EVENT";
> echo "\$MSG1") > $TESTTMP/command.log
> commandfinish=(echo 'logtoprocess commandfinish output:';
> echo "\$EVENT";
> echo "\$MSG1";
> echo "canonical: \$OPT_CANONICAL_COMMAND") > $TESTTMP/commandfinish.log
> foo=(echo 'logtoprocess foo output:';
> echo "\$EVENT";
> echo "\$MSG1") > $TESTTMP/foo.log
> EOF
Running a command triggers both a ui.log('command') and a
ui.log('commandfinish') call. The foo command also uses ui.log.
Use sort to avoid ordering issues between the various processes we spawn:
$ hg fooba
$ sleep 1
$ cat $TESTTMP/command.log | sort
command
fooba
logtoprocess command output:
#if no-chg
$ cat $TESTTMP/commandfinish.log | sort
canonical: foobar
commandfinish
fooba exited 0 after * seconds (glob)
logtoprocess commandfinish output:
$ cat $TESTTMP/foo.log | sort
a message: spam
foo
logtoprocess foo output:
#endif
Confirm that logging blocked time catches stdio properly:
$ cp $HGRCPATH.bak $HGRCPATH
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
> [extensions]
> logtoprocess=
> pager=
> [logtoprocess]
> uiblocked=echo "\$EVENT stdio \$OPT_STDIO_BLOCKED ms command \$OPT_COMMAND_DURATION ms" > $TESTTMP/uiblocked.log
> [ui]
> logblockedtimes=True
> EOF
$ hg log
$ sleep 1
$ cat $TESTTMP/uiblocked.log
uiblocked stdio [0-9]+.[0-9]* ms command [0-9]+.[0-9]* ms (re)
Try to confirm that pager wait on logtoprocess:
Add a script that waits on a file to appear. If the script is awaited by hg,
the script will die after the timeout before we could touch the file and the
resulting file will not exist. If not, we will touch the file and see it.
$ cat >> fakepager.py <<EOF
> import sys
> printed = False
> for line in sys.stdin:
> sys.stdout.write(line)
> printed = True
> if not printed:
> sys.stdout.write('paged empty output!\n')
> EOF
$ cat > $TESTTMP/wait-output.sh << EOF
> #!/bin/sh
> set -eu
> "$RUNTESTDIR/testlib/wait-on-file" 10 "$TESTTMP/wait-for-touched"
> touch "$TESTTMP/touched"
> EOF
$ chmod +x $TESTTMP/wait-output.sh
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
> [extensions]
> logtoprocess=
> pager=
> [pager]
> pager = "$PYTHON" $TESTTMP/fakepager.py
> [logtoprocess]
> commandfinish=$TESTTMP/wait-output.sh
> EOF
$ hg version -q --pager=always
Mercurial Distributed SCM (version *) (glob)
$ touch $TESTTMP/wait-for-touched
$ "$RUNTESTDIR/testlib/wait-on-file" 5 "$TESTTMP/touched"
$ test -f $TESTTMP/touched && echo "SUCCESS Pager is not waiting on ltp" || echo "FAIL Pager is waiting on ltp"
SUCCESS Pager is not waiting on ltp