Mercurial > hg
view tests/fakepatchtime.py @ 46325:e5e6282fa66a
hghave: split apart testing for the curses module and `tic` executable
ef771d329961 skipped the check for the `tic` executable, because the curses
module alone on Windows is enough to pass the `test-*-curses.t` tests. However,
`test-status-color.t` uses this same check and explicitly invoked the
executable, which fails on Windows. From the cursory searching I did, curses on
unix requires `tic`, which I assume is why they were tied together in the first
place. So this continues to require both to get past the curses guards on non
Windows platforms.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9814
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 17 Jan 2021 22:25:15 -0500 |
parents | 89a2afe31e82 |
children | 6000f5b25c9b |
line wrap: on
line source
# extension to emulate invoking 'patch.internalpatch()' at the time # specified by '[fakepatchtime] fakenow' from __future__ import absolute_import from mercurial import ( extensions, patch as patchmod, registrar, ) from mercurial.utils import dateutil configtable = {} configitem = registrar.configitem(configtable) configitem( b'fakepatchtime', b'fakenow', default=None, ) def internalpatch( orig, ui, repo, patchobj, strip, prefix=b'', files=None, eolmode=b'strict', similarity=0, ): if files is None: files = set() r = orig( ui, repo, patchobj, strip, prefix=prefix, files=files, eolmode=eolmode, similarity=similarity, ) fakenow = ui.config(b'fakepatchtime', b'fakenow') if fakenow: # parsing 'fakenow' in YYYYmmddHHMM format makes comparison between # 'fakenow' value and 'touch -t YYYYmmddHHMM' argument easy fakenow = dateutil.parsedate(fakenow, [b'%Y%m%d%H%M'])[0] for f in files: repo.wvfs.utime(f, (fakenow, fakenow)) return r def extsetup(ui): extensions.wrapfunction(patchmod, 'internalpatch', internalpatch)