Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-rust-revlog.py @ 49986:dbcc45221c1f
test: explicitly "add" file before some commit in test-rollback.t
`hg commit -A` will revert the `hg addremove` step if the commit fails. However
`hg rollback` currently does not.
We are about to improve internal consistency around transaction and dirstate and the behavior of `hg rollback` will align on the other behavior in the process.
Before doing so, we make sure the test is using a separate call to `hg add` to
avoid the test scenario to be affected by that future change.
note: the behavior change for `hg rollback` seems fine as it affect a niche
usecase and `hg rollback` usage have been strongly discouraged for a while.
author | Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> |
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date | Mon, 13 Feb 2023 17:42:32 +0100 |
parents | 6000f5b25c9b |
children | 6ec8387eb0be |
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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__)