view tests/dummyssh @ 30646:ea3540e66fd8

convert: config option for git rename limit By default, Git applies rename and copy detection to 400 files. The diff.renamelimit config option and -l argument to diff commands can override this. As part of converting some repositories in the wild, I was hitting the default limit. Unfortunately, the warnings that Git prints in this scenario are swallowed because the process running functionality in common.py redirects stderr to /dev/null by default. This seems like a bug, but a bug for another day. This commit establishes a config option to send the rename limit through to `git diff-tree`. The added tests demonstrate a too-low rename limit doesn't result in copy metadata being recorded.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sun, 18 Dec 2016 12:53:20 -0800
parents 26d4ce8ca2bd
children bfdb0741f9f2
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#!/usr/bin/env python

from __future__ import absolute_import

import os
import sys

os.chdir(os.getenv('TESTTMP'))

if sys.argv[1] != "user@dummy":
    sys.exit(-1)

os.environ["SSH_CLIENT"] = "127.0.0.1 1 2"

log = open("dummylog", "ab")
log.write("Got arguments")
for i, arg in enumerate(sys.argv[1:]):
    log.write(" %d:%s" % (i + 1, arg))
log.write("\n")
log.close()
hgcmd = sys.argv[2]
if os.name == 'nt':
    # hack to make simple unix single quote quoting work on windows
    hgcmd = hgcmd.replace("'", '"')
r = os.system(hgcmd)
sys.exit(bool(r))