Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-tools.t @ 45545:e5e1285b6f6f
largefiles: prevent in-memory merge instead of switching to on-disk
I enabled in-memory merge by default while testing some changes. I
spent quite some time troubleshooting why largefiles was still
creating an on-disk mergestate. Then I found out that it ignores the
callers `wc` argument to `mergemod._update()` and always uses on-disk
merge. This patch changes that so we raise an error if largefiles is
used with in-memory merge. That way we'll notice if in-memory merge is
used with largefiles instead of silently replacing ignoring the
`overlayworkingctx` instance and updating the working copy instead.
I felt a little bad that this would break things more for users with
both largefiles and in-memory rebase enabled. So I also added a
higher-level override to make sure that largefiles disables in-memory
rebase. It turns out that that fixes `run-tests.py -k largefiles
--extra-config-opt rebase.experimental.inmemory=1`.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9069
author | Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 22 Sep 2020 23:18:37 -0700 |
parents | 5abc47d4ca6b |
children | 9172bd49cedc |
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Tests of the file helper tool $ f -h ?sage: f [options] [filenames] (glob) ?ptions: (glob) -h, --help show this help message and exit -t, --type show file type (file or directory) -m, --mode show file mode -l, --links show number of links -s, --size show size of file -n NEWER, --newer=NEWER check if file is newer (or same) -r, --recurse recurse into directories -S, --sha1 show sha1 hash of the content --sha256 show sha256 hash of the content -M, --md5 show md5 hash of the content -D, --dump dump file content -H, --hexdump hexdump file content -B BYTES, --bytes=BYTES number of characters to dump -L LINES, --lines=LINES number of lines to dump -q, --quiet no default output $ mkdir dir $ cd dir $ f --size size=0 $ echo hello | f --md5 --size size=6, md5=b1946ac92492d2347c6235b4d2611184 $ f foo foo: file not found $ echo foo > foo $ f foo foo: $ f --sha1 foo foo: sha1=f1d2d2f924e986ac86fdf7b36c94bcdf32beec15 $ f --sha256 foo foo: sha256=b5bb9d8014a0f9b1d61e21e796d78dccdf1352f23cd32812f4850b878ae4944c #if symlink $ f foo --mode foo: mode=644 #endif #if no-windows $ "$PYTHON" $TESTDIR/seq.py 10 > bar #else Convert CRLF -> LF for consistency $ "$PYTHON" $TESTDIR/seq.py 10 | sed "s/$//" > bar #endif #if unix-permissions symlink $ chmod +x bar $ f bar --newer foo --mode --type --size --dump --links --bytes 7 bar: file, size=21, mode=755, links=1, newer than foo >>> 1 2 3 4 <<< no trailing newline #endif #if unix-permissions $ ln bar baz $ f bar -n baz -l --hexdump -t --sha1 --lines=9 -B 20 bar: file, links=2, newer than baz, sha1=612ca68d0305c821750a 0000: 31 0a 32 0a 33 0a 34 0a 35 0a 36 0a 37 0a 38 0a |1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8.| 0010: 39 0a |9.| $ rm baz #endif #if unix-permissions symlink $ ln -s yadda l $ f . --recurse -MStmsB4 .: directory with 3 files, mode=755 ./bar: file, size=21, mode=755, md5=3b03, sha1=612c ./foo: file, size=4, mode=644, md5=d3b0, sha1=f1d2 ./l: link, size=5, md5=2faa, sha1=af93 #endif $ f --quiet bar -DL 3 1 2 3 $ cd .. Yadda is a symlink $ f -qr dir -HB 17 dir: directory with 3 files (symlink !) dir: directory with 2 files (no-symlink !) dir/bar: 0000: 31 0a 32 0a 33 0a 34 0a 35 0a 36 0a 37 0a 38 0a |1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8.| 0010: 39 |9| dir/foo: 0000: 66 6f 6f 0a |foo.| dir/l: (symlink !) 0000: 79 61 64 64 61 |yadda| (symlink !)