Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-lock.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 |
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from __future__ import absolute_import import copy import errno import tempfile import types import unittest import silenttestrunner from mercurial import ( encoding, error, lock, vfs as vfsmod, ) testlockname = b'testlock' # work around http://bugs.python.org/issue1515 if types.MethodType not in copy._deepcopy_dispatch: def _deepcopy_method(x, memo): return type(x)(x.__func__, copy.deepcopy(x.__self__, memo), x.im_class) copy._deepcopy_dispatch[types.MethodType] = _deepcopy_method class lockwrapper(lock.lock): def __init__(self, pidoffset, *args, **kwargs): # lock.lock.__init__() calls lock(), so the pidoffset assignment needs # to be earlier self._pidoffset = pidoffset super(lockwrapper, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) def _getpid(self): return super(lockwrapper, self)._getpid() + self._pidoffset class teststate(object): def __init__(self, testcase, dir, pidoffset=0): self._testcase = testcase self._acquirecalled = False self._releasecalled = False self._postreleasecalled = False self.vfs = vfsmod.vfs(dir, audit=False) self._pidoffset = pidoffset def makelock(self, *args, **kwargs): l = lockwrapper( self._pidoffset, self.vfs, testlockname, releasefn=self.releasefn, acquirefn=self.acquirefn, *args, **kwargs ) l.postrelease.append(self.postreleasefn) return l def acquirefn(self): self._acquirecalled = True def releasefn(self): self._releasecalled = True def postreleasefn(self, success): self._postreleasecalled = True def assertacquirecalled(self, called): self._testcase.assertEqual( self._acquirecalled, called, 'expected acquire to be %s but was actually %s' % ( self._tocalled(called), self._tocalled(self._acquirecalled), ), ) def resetacquirefn(self): self._acquirecalled = False def assertreleasecalled(self, called): self._testcase.assertEqual( self._releasecalled, called, 'expected release to be %s but was actually %s' % ( self._tocalled(called), self._tocalled(self._releasecalled), ), ) def assertpostreleasecalled(self, called): self._testcase.assertEqual( self._postreleasecalled, called, 'expected postrelease to be %s but was actually %s' % ( self._tocalled(called), self._tocalled(self._postreleasecalled), ), ) def assertlockexists(self, exists): actual = self.vfs.lexists(testlockname) self._testcase.assertEqual( actual, exists, 'expected lock to %s but actually did %s' % ( self._toexists(exists), self._toexists(actual), ), ) def _tocalled(self, called): if called: return 'called' else: return 'not called' def _toexists(self, exists): if exists: return 'exist' else: return 'not exist' class testlock(unittest.TestCase): def testlock(self): state = teststate(self, tempfile.mkdtemp(dir=encoding.getcwd())) lock = state.makelock() state.assertacquirecalled(True) lock.release() state.assertreleasecalled(True) state.assertpostreleasecalled(True) state.assertlockexists(False) def testrecursivelock(self): state = teststate(self, tempfile.mkdtemp(dir=encoding.getcwd())) lock = state.makelock() state.assertacquirecalled(True) state.resetacquirefn() lock.lock() # recursive lock should not call acquirefn again state.assertacquirecalled(False) lock.release() # brings lock refcount down from 2 to 1 state.assertreleasecalled(False) state.assertpostreleasecalled(False) state.assertlockexists(True) lock.release() # releases the lock state.assertreleasecalled(True) state.assertpostreleasecalled(True) state.assertlockexists(False) def testlockfork(self): state = teststate(self, tempfile.mkdtemp(dir=encoding.getcwd())) lock = state.makelock() state.assertacquirecalled(True) # fake a fork forklock = copy.copy(lock) forklock._pidoffset = 1 forklock.release() state.assertreleasecalled(False) state.assertpostreleasecalled(False) state.assertlockexists(True) # release the actual lock lock.release() state.assertreleasecalled(True) state.assertpostreleasecalled(True) state.assertlockexists(False) def testfrequentlockunlock(self): """This tests whether lock acquisition fails as expected, even if (1) lock can't be acquired (makelock fails by EEXIST), and (2) locker info can't be read in (readlock fails by ENOENT) while retrying 5 times. """ d = tempfile.mkdtemp(dir=encoding.getcwd()) state = teststate(self, d) def emulatefrequentlock(*args): raise OSError(errno.EEXIST, "File exists") def emulatefrequentunlock(*args): raise OSError(errno.ENOENT, "No such file or directory") state.vfs.makelock = emulatefrequentlock state.vfs.readlock = emulatefrequentunlock try: state.makelock(timeout=0) self.fail("unexpected lock acquisition") except error.LockHeld as why: self.assertTrue(why.errno == errno.ETIMEDOUT) self.assertTrue(why.locker == b"") state.assertlockexists(False) if __name__ == '__main__': silenttestrunner.main(__name__)