Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-inotify-issue1371.t @ 16749:eab8ca175262
bdiff: use Py_ssize_t instead of int
Reduces the conversion warnings
mercurial/bdiff.c(61) : warning C4244: '=' : conversion from '__int64' to
'int', possible loss of data
mercurial/bdiff.c(307) : warning C4244: 'function' : conversion from
'Py_ssize_t' to 'int', possible loss of data
mercurial/bdiff.c(308) : warning C4244: 'function' : conversion from
'Py_ssize_t' to 'int', possible loss of data
mercurial/bdiff.c(362) : warning C4244: '+=' : conversion from '__int64' to
'int', possible loss of data
mercurial/bdiff.c(380) : warning C4244: '=' : conversion from '__int64' to
'int', possible loss of data
mercurial/bdiff.c(381) : warning C4244: 'function' : conversion from '__int64'
to 'uint32_t', possible loss of data
mercurial/bdiff.c(382) : warning C4244: 'function' : conversion from '__int64'
to 'uint32_t', possible loss of data
mercurial/bdiff.c(416) : warning C4244: '=' : conversion from 'Py_ssize_t' to
'int', possible loss of data
to
mercurial/bdiff.c(383) : warning C4244: 'function' : conversion from '__int64'
to 'uint32_t', possible loss of data
mercurial/bdiff.c(384) : warning C4244: 'function' : conversion from '__int64'
to 'uint32_t', possible loss of data
mercurial/bdiff.c(385) : warning C4244: 'function' : conversion from
'Py_ssize_t' to 'uint32_t', possible loss of data
on the three putbe32() calls in the function bdiff
when compiling for Windows x64 target using the Microsoft compiler.
author | Adrian Buehlmann <adrian@cadifra.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 15 May 2012 22:36:27 +0200 |
parents | 9965b90c7ed7 |
children | 4f8054d3171b |
line wrap: on
line source
$ "$TESTDIR/hghave" inotify || exit 80 $ hg init $ touch a b c d e f $ echo "[extensions]" >> $HGRCPATH $ echo "inotify=" >> $HGRCPATH inserve $ hg inserve -d --pid-file=hg.pid 2>&1 $ cat hg.pid >> "$DAEMON_PIDS" $ hg ci -Am m adding a adding b adding c adding d adding e adding f adding hg.pid let the daemon finish its stuff $ sleep 1 eed to test all file opperations $ hg rm a $ rm b $ echo c >> c $ touch g $ hg add g $ hg mv e h $ hg status M c A g A h R a R e ! b $ sleep 1 Are we able to kill the service? if not, the service died on some error $ kill `cat hg.pid`