Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-addremove-similar.t @ 37533:df4985497986
wireproto: implement capabilities for wire protocol v2
The capabilities mechanism for wire protocol version 2 represents a
clean break from version 1.
Instead of effectively exchanging a set of capabilities, we're
exchanging a rich data structure.
This data structure currently contains information about
every available command, including its accepted arguments. It also
contains information about supported compression formats.
Exposing information about supported commands will allow clients
to automatically generate bindings to the server. Clients will be
able to do things like detect when they are attempting to run a
command that isn't known to the server. Exposing the required
permissions to run a command can be used by clients to determine if
they have privileges to call a command before actually calling it.
We could potentially even have clients send credentials
preemptively without waiting for the server to deny the command
request. Lots of potential here.
The data returned by this command will likely evolve heavily. So we
shouldn't bikeshed the implementation just yet.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3200
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 09 Apr 2018 11:52:31 -0700 |
parents | 4441705b7111 |
children | 5abc47d4ca6b |
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$ hg init rep; cd rep $ touch empty-file $ $PYTHON -c 'for x in range(10000): print(x)' > large-file $ hg addremove adding empty-file adding large-file $ hg commit -m A $ rm large-file empty-file $ $PYTHON -c 'for x in range(10,10000): print(x)' > another-file $ hg addremove -s50 adding another-file removing empty-file removing large-file recording removal of large-file as rename to another-file (99% similar) $ hg commit -m B comparing two empty files caused ZeroDivisionError in the past $ hg update -C 0 2 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ rm empty-file $ touch another-empty-file $ hg addremove -s50 adding another-empty-file removing empty-file $ cd .. $ hg init rep2; cd rep2 $ $PYTHON -c 'for x in range(10000): print(x)' > large-file $ $PYTHON -c 'for x in range(50): print(x)' > tiny-file $ hg addremove adding large-file adding tiny-file $ hg commit -m A $ $PYTHON -c 'for x in range(70): print(x)' > small-file $ rm tiny-file $ rm large-file $ hg addremove -s50 removing large-file adding small-file removing tiny-file recording removal of tiny-file as rename to small-file (82% similar) $ hg commit -m B should be sorted by path for stable result $ for i in `$PYTHON $TESTDIR/seq.py 0 9`; do > cp small-file $i > done $ rm small-file $ hg addremove adding 0 adding 1 adding 2 adding 3 adding 4 adding 5 adding 6 adding 7 adding 8 adding 9 removing small-file recording removal of small-file as rename to 0 (100% similar) recording removal of small-file as rename to 1 (100% similar) recording removal of small-file as rename to 2 (100% similar) recording removal of small-file as rename to 3 (100% similar) recording removal of small-file as rename to 4 (100% similar) recording removal of small-file as rename to 5 (100% similar) recording removal of small-file as rename to 6 (100% similar) recording removal of small-file as rename to 7 (100% similar) recording removal of small-file as rename to 8 (100% similar) recording removal of small-file as rename to 9 (100% similar) $ hg commit -m '10 same files' pick one from many identical files $ cp 0 a $ rm `$PYTHON $TESTDIR/seq.py 0 9` $ hg addremove removing 0 removing 1 removing 2 removing 3 removing 4 removing 5 removing 6 removing 7 removing 8 removing 9 adding a recording removal of 0 as rename to a (100% similar) $ hg revert -aq pick one from many similar files $ cp 0 a $ for i in `$PYTHON $TESTDIR/seq.py 0 9`; do > echo $i >> $i > done $ hg commit -m 'make them slightly different' $ rm `$PYTHON $TESTDIR/seq.py 0 9` $ hg addremove -s50 removing 0 removing 1 removing 2 removing 3 removing 4 removing 5 removing 6 removing 7 removing 8 removing 9 adding a recording removal of 0 as rename to a (99% similar) $ hg commit -m 'always the same file should be selected' should all fail $ hg addremove -s foo abort: similarity must be a number [255] $ hg addremove -s -1 abort: similarity must be between 0 and 100 [255] $ hg addremove -s 1e6 abort: similarity must be between 0 and 100 [255] $ cd .. Issue1527: repeated addremove causes Abort $ hg init rep3; cd rep3 $ mkdir d $ echo a > d/a $ hg add d/a $ hg commit -m 1 $ mv d/a d/b $ hg addremove -s80 removing d/a adding d/b recording removal of d/a as rename to d/b (100% similar) $ hg debugstate r 0 0 1970-01-01 00:00:00 d/a a 0 -1 unset d/b copy: d/a -> d/b $ mv d/b c no copies found here (since the target isn't in d $ hg addremove -s80 d removing d/b copies here $ hg addremove -s80 adding c recording removal of d/a as rename to c (100% similar) $ cd ..