Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-remotefilelog-pull-noshallow.t @ 44412:edc8504bc26b
exchange: turn on option that makes concurrent pushes work better
The motivation is simply to make hg work better out of the box.
This is a slight backwards compatibility break, because client
extensions could have assumed that the list of heads the client sees
during discovery will be the list of heads during the entirety of the
push. It seems unlikely to matter, and not worth mentioning.
There's a fair amount of diff in tests, but this is just due to
sending a few more bytes on the wire, except for test-acl.t.
The extra "invalid branch cache" lines in test-acl.t don't seem to
indicate a problem: the branchcache now get computed during the bundle
application (because of the check:updated-heads bundle part), but
doesn't get rolled back when transactions rollback, thus causing a
message in the next operation computing the branch cache. Before this
change, I assume the branchcache was only computed on transaction
commit, so not computed at all when the transactions roll back, thus
no messages.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D8202
author | Valentin Gatien-Baron <valentin.gatienbaron@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 25 Feb 2020 20:27:39 -0500 |
parents | 52fbf8a9907c |
children |
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#require no-windows $ . "$TESTDIR/remotefilelog-library.sh" Set up an extension to make sure remotefilelog clientsetup() runs unconditionally even if we have never used a local shallow repo. This mimics behavior when using remotefilelog with chg. clientsetup() can be triggered due to a shallow repo, and then the code can later interact with non-shallow repositories. $ cat > setupremotefilelog.py << EOF > from mercurial import extensions > def extsetup(ui): > remotefilelog = extensions.find(b'remotefilelog') > remotefilelog.onetimeclientsetup(ui) > EOF Set up the master repository to pull from. $ hg init master $ cd master $ cat >> .hg/hgrc <<EOF > [remotefilelog] > server=True > EOF $ echo x > x $ hg commit -qAm x $ cd .. $ hg clone ssh://user@dummy/master child -q We should see the remotefilelog capability here, which advertises that the server supports our custom getfiles method. $ cd master $ echo 'hello' | hg -R . serve --stdio | grep capa | identifyrflcaps exp-remotefilelog-ssh-getfiles-1 x_rfl_getfile x_rfl_getflogheads $ echo 'capabilities' | hg -R . serve --stdio | identifyrflcaps ; echo exp-remotefilelog-ssh-getfiles-1 x_rfl_getfile x_rfl_getflogheads Pull to the child repository. Use our custom setupremotefilelog extension to ensure that remotefilelog.onetimeclientsetup() gets triggered. (Without using chg it normally would not be run in this case since the local repository is not shallow.) $ echo y > y $ hg commit -qAm y $ cd ../child $ hg pull --config extensions.setuprfl=$TESTTMP/setupremotefilelog.py pulling from ssh://user@dummy/master searching for changes adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files new changesets d34c38483be9 (run 'hg update' to get a working copy) $ hg up 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ cat y y Test that bundle works in a non-remotefilelog repo w/ remotefilelog loaded $ echo y >> y $ hg commit -qAm "modify y" $ hg bundle --base ".^" --rev . mybundle.hg --config extensions.setuprfl=$TESTTMP/setupremotefilelog.py 1 changesets found $ cd ..