view tests/test-contrib-check-code.t @ 37212:f09a2eab11cf

server: add an error feedback mechanism for when the daemon fails to launch There's a recurring problem on Windows where `hg serve -d` will randomly fail to spawn a detached process. The reason for the failure is completely hidden, and it takes hours to get a single failure on my laptop. All this does is redirect stdout/stderr of the child to a file until the lock file is freed, and then the parent dumps it out if it fails to spawn. I chose to put the output into the lock file because that is always cleaned up. There's no way to report errors after that anyway. On Windows, killdaemons.py is roughly `kill -9`, so this ensures that junk won't pile up. This may end up being a case of EADDRINUSE. At least that's what I saw spit out a few times (among other odd errors and missing output on Windows). But I also managed to get the same thing on Fedora 26 by running test-hgwebdir.t with --loop -j10 for several hours. Running `netstat` immediately after killing that run printed a wall of sockets in the TIME_WAIT state, which were gone a couple seconds later. I couldn't match up ports that failed, because --loop doesn't print out the message about the port that was used. So maybe the fix is to rotate the use of HGPORT[12] in the tests. But, let's collect some more data first.
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Wed, 28 Mar 2018 00:11:09 -0400
parents e223c0438f89
children ff47ba7a2903
line wrap: on
line source

  $ cat > correct.py <<EOF
  > def toto(arg1, arg2):
  >     del arg2
  >     return (5 + 6, 9)
  > EOF
  $ cat > wrong.py <<EOF
  > def toto( arg1, arg2):
  >     del(arg2)
  >     return ( 5+6, 9)
  > EOF
  $ cat > quote.py <<EOF
  > # let's use quote in comments
  > (''' ( 4x5 )
  > but """\\''' and finally''',
  > """let's fool checkpatch""", '1+2',
  > '"""', 42+1, """and
  > ( 4-1 ) """, "( 1+1 )\" and ")
  > a, '\\\\\\\\', "\\\\\\" x-2", "c-1"
  > EOF
  $ cat > classstyle.py <<EOF
  > class newstyle_class(object):
  >     pass
  > 
  > class oldstyle_class:
  >     pass
  > 
  > class empty():
  >     pass
  > 
  > no_class = 1:
  >     pass
  > EOF
  $ check_code="$TESTDIR"/../contrib/check-code.py
  $ "$check_code" ./wrong.py ./correct.py ./quote.py ./classstyle.py
  ./wrong.py:1:
   > def toto( arg1, arg2):
   gratuitous whitespace in () or []
  ./wrong.py:2:
   >     del(arg2)
   Python keyword is not a function
  ./wrong.py:3:
   >     return ( 5+6, 9)
   gratuitous whitespace in () or []
   missing whitespace in expression
  ./quote.py:5:
   > '"""', 42+1, """and
   missing whitespace in expression
  ./classstyle.py:4:
   > class oldstyle_class:
   old-style class, use class foo(object)
  ./classstyle.py:7:
   > class empty():
   class foo() creates old style object, use class foo(object)
  [1]
  $ cat > python3-compat.py << EOF
  > foo <> bar
  > reduce(lambda a, b: a + b, [1, 2, 3, 4])
  > dict(key=value)
  > EOF
  $ "$check_code" python3-compat.py
  python3-compat.py:1:
   > foo <> bar
   <> operator is not available in Python 3+, use !=
  python3-compat.py:2:
   > reduce(lambda a, b: a + b, [1, 2, 3, 4])
   reduce is not available in Python 3+
  python3-compat.py:3:
   > dict(key=value)
   dict() is different in Py2 and 3 and is slower than {}
  [1]

  $ cat > foo.c <<EOF
  > void narf() {
  > 	strcpy(foo, bar);
  > 	// strcpy_s is okay, but this comment is not
  > 	strcpy_s(foo, bar);
  > }
  > EOF
  $ "$check_code" ./foo.c
  ./foo.c:2:
   > 	strcpy(foo, bar);
   don't use strcpy, use strlcpy or memcpy
  ./foo.c:3:
   > 	// strcpy_s is okay, but this comment is not
   don't use //-style comments
  [1]

  $ cat > is-op.py <<EOF
  > # is-operator comparing number or string literal
  > x = None
  > y = x is 'foo'
  > y = x is "foo"
  > y = x is 5346
  > y = x is -6
  > y = x is not 'foo'
  > y = x is not "foo"
  > y = x is not 5346
  > y = x is not -6
  > EOF

  $ "$check_code" ./is-op.py
  ./is-op.py:3:
   > y = x is 'foo'
   object comparison with literal
  ./is-op.py:4:
   > y = x is "foo"
   object comparison with literal
  ./is-op.py:5:
   > y = x is 5346
   object comparison with literal
  ./is-op.py:6:
   > y = x is -6
   object comparison with literal
  ./is-op.py:7:
   > y = x is not 'foo'
   object comparison with literal
  ./is-op.py:8:
   > y = x is not "foo"
   object comparison with literal
  ./is-op.py:9:
   > y = x is not 5346
   object comparison with literal
  ./is-op.py:10:
   > y = x is not -6
   object comparison with literal
  [1]

  $ cat > for-nolineno.py <<EOF
  > except:
  > EOF
  $ "$check_code" for-nolineno.py --nolineno
  for-nolineno.py:0:
   > except:
   naked except clause
  [1]

  $ cat > warning.t <<EOF
  >   $ function warnonly {
  >   > }
  >   $ diff -N aaa
  >   $ function onwarn {}
  > EOF
  $ "$check_code" warning.t
  $ "$check_code" --warn warning.t
  warning.t:1:
   >   $ function warnonly {
   warning: don't use 'function', use old style
  warning.t:3:
   >   $ diff -N aaa
   warning: don't use 'diff -N'
  warning.t:4:
   >   $ function onwarn {}
   warning: don't use 'function', use old style
  [1]
  $ cat > error.t <<EOF
  >   $ [ foo == bar ]
  > EOF
  $ "$check_code" error.t
  error.t:1:
   >   $ [ foo == bar ]
   [ foo == bar ] is a bashism, use [ foo = bar ] instead
  [1]
  $ rm error.t
  $ cat > raise-format.py <<EOF
  > raise SomeException, message
  > # this next line is okay
  > raise SomeException(arg1, arg2)
  > EOF
  $ "$check_code" not-existing.py raise-format.py
  Skipping*not-existing.py* (glob)
  raise-format.py:1:
   > raise SomeException, message
   don't use old-style two-argument raise, use Exception(message)
  [1]

  $ cat <<EOF > tab.t
  > 	indent
  >   > 	heredoc
  > EOF
  $ "$check_code" tab.t
  tab.t:1:
   > 	indent
   don't use tabs to indent
  [1]
  $ rm tab.t

  $ cat > rst.py <<EOF
  > """problematic rst text
  > 
  > .. note::
  >     wrong
  > """
  > 
  > '''
  > 
  > .. note::
  > 
  >     valid
  > 
  > new text
  > 
  >     .. note::
  > 
  >         also valid
  > '''
  > 
  > """mixed
  > 
  > .. note::
  > 
  >   good
  > 
  >     .. note::
  >         plus bad
  > """
  > EOF
  $ $check_code -w rst.py
  rst.py:3:
   > .. note::
   warning: add two newlines after '.. note::'
  rst.py:26:
   >     .. note::
   warning: add two newlines after '.. note::'
  [1]

  $ cat > ./map-inside-gettext.py <<EOF
  > print(_("map inside gettext %s" % v))
  > 
  > print(_("concatenating " " by " " space %s" % v))
  > print(_("concatenating " + " by " + " '+' %s" % v))
  > 
  > print(_("mapping operation in different line %s"
  >         % v))
  > 
  > print(_(
  >         "leading spaces inside of '(' %s" % v))
  > EOF
  $ "$check_code" ./map-inside-gettext.py
  ./map-inside-gettext.py:1:
   > print(_("map inside gettext %s" % v))
   don't use % inside _()
  ./map-inside-gettext.py:3:
   > print(_("concatenating " " by " " space %s" % v))
   don't use % inside _()
  ./map-inside-gettext.py:4:
   > print(_("concatenating " + " by " + " '+' %s" % v))
   don't use % inside _()
  ./map-inside-gettext.py:6:
   > print(_("mapping operation in different line %s"
   don't use % inside _()
  ./map-inside-gettext.py:9:
   > print(_(
   don't use % inside _()
  [1]

web templates

  $ mkdir -p mercurial/templates
  $ cat > mercurial/templates/example.tmpl <<EOF
  > {desc}
  > {desc|escape}
  > {desc|firstline}
  > {desc|websub}
  > EOF

  $ "$check_code" --warnings mercurial/templates/example.tmpl
  mercurial/templates/example.tmpl:2:
   > {desc|escape}
   warning: follow desc keyword with either firstline or websub
  [1]

'string join across lines with no space' detection

  $ cat > stringjoin.py <<EOF
  > foo = (' foo'
  >        'bar foo.'
  >        'bar foo:'
  >        'bar foo@'
  >        'bar foo%'
  >        'bar foo*'
  >        'bar foo+'
  >        'bar foo-'
  >        'bar')
  > EOF

'missing _() in ui message' detection

  $ cat > uigettext.py <<EOF
  > ui.status("% 10s %05d % -3.2f %*s %%"
  >           # this use '\\\\' instead of '\\', because the latter in
  >           # heredoc on shell becomes just '\'
  >           '\\\\ \n \t \0'
  >           """12345
  >           """
  >           '''.:*+-=
  >           ''' "%-6d \n 123456 .:*+-= foobar")
  > EOF

superfluous pass

  $ cat > superfluous_pass.py <<EOF
  > # correct examples
  > if foo:
  >     pass
  > else:
  >     # comment-only line means still need pass
  >     pass
  > def nothing():
  >     pass
  > class empty(object):
  >     pass
  > if whatever:
  >     passvalue(value)
  > # bad examples
  > if foo:
  >     "foo"
  >     pass
  > else: # trailing comment doesn't fool checker
  >     wat()
  >     pass
  > def nothing():
  >     "docstring means no pass"
  >     pass
  > class empty(object):
  >     """multiline
  >     docstring also
  >     means no pass"""
  >     pass
  > EOF

(Checking multiple invalid files at once examines whether caching
translation table for repquote() works as expected or not. All files
should break rules depending on result of repquote(), in this case)

  $ "$check_code" stringjoin.py uigettext.py superfluous_pass.py
  stringjoin.py:1:
   > foo = (' foo'
   string join across lines with no space
  stringjoin.py:2:
   >        'bar foo.'
   string join across lines with no space
  stringjoin.py:3:
   >        'bar foo:'
   string join across lines with no space
  stringjoin.py:4:
   >        'bar foo@'
   string join across lines with no space
  stringjoin.py:5:
   >        'bar foo%'
   string join across lines with no space
  stringjoin.py:6:
   >        'bar foo*'
   string join across lines with no space
  stringjoin.py:7:
   >        'bar foo+'
   string join across lines with no space
  stringjoin.py:8:
   >        'bar foo-'
   string join across lines with no space
  uigettext.py:1:
   > ui.status("% 10s %05d % -3.2f %*s %%"
   missing _() in ui message (use () to hide false-positives)
  superfluous_pass.py:14:
   > if foo:
   omit superfluous pass
  superfluous_pass.py:17:
   > else: # trailing comment doesn't fool checker
   omit superfluous pass
  superfluous_pass.py:20:
   > def nothing():
   omit superfluous pass
  superfluous_pass.py:23:
   > class empty(object):
   omit superfluous pass
  [1]