view tests/test-issue4074.t @ 36523:e7411fb7ba7f

wireprotoserver: ability to run an SSH server until an event is set It seems useful to be able to start an SSH protocol server that won't run forever and won't call sys.exit() when it stops. This could be used to facilitate intra-process testing of the SSH protocol, for example. We teach the server function to loop until a threading.Event is set and invent a new API to run the server until an event is set. It also won't sys.exit() afterwards. There aren't many callers of serve_forever(). So we could refactor them relatively easily. But I was lazy. threading.Event might be a bit heavyweight. An alternative would be a list whose only elements is changed. We can't use a simple scalar value like a bool or int because those types are immutable. Events are what you use in systems programming for this use case, so the use of threading.Event seems justified. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2461
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sat, 24 Feb 2018 12:07:21 -0800
parents 57c671cf7a69
children 5abc47d4ca6b
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#require no-pure

A script to generate nasty diff worst-case scenarios:

  $ cat > s.py <<EOF
  > import random
  > for x in range(100000):
  >     print
  >     if random.randint(0, 100) >= 50:
  >         x += 1
  >     print(hex(x))
  > EOF

  $ hg init a
  $ cd a

Check in a big file:

  $ $PYTHON ../s.py > a
  $ hg ci -qAm0

Modify it:

  $ $PYTHON ../s.py > a

Time a check-in, should never take more than 10 seconds user time:

  $ hg ci --time -m1
  time: real .* secs .user [0-9][.].* sys .* (re)