view tests/basic_test_result.py @ 39110:f0c2653ca706

merge: add tests for commit with no content change It isn't easy to say when to reuse the p1 manifest. Basically, that's only when wctx.files() is empty, but we need to know that wctx.files() is not the same as repo['.'].files() after the commit. This patch adds several examples of commits with empty ctx/wctx.files(). I don't think this is exhaustive, but it contains at least one failure mode in which a converted repo result in a different hash. I also note that the manifest revlog does NOT follow the DAG shape of the changelog since p1 manifest is reused if wctx.files() is empty even at merge. I don't know whether it is intentional or not, but it's the behavior since 2011, 301725c3df9a "localrepo: reuse parent manifest in commitctx if no files have changed."
author Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org>
date Sun, 12 Aug 2018 18:44:42 +0900
parents f4a214300957
children 2372284d9457
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from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function

import unittest

class TestResult(unittest._TextTestResult):

    def __init__(self, options, *args, **kwargs):
        super(TestResult, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
        self._options = options

        # unittest.TestResult didn't have skipped until 2.7. We need to
        # polyfill it.
        self.skipped = []

        # We have a custom "ignored" result that isn't present in any Python
        # unittest implementation. It is very similar to skipped. It may make
        # sense to map it into skip some day.
        self.ignored = []

        self.times = []
        self._firststarttime = None
        # Data stored for the benefit of generating xunit reports.
        self.successes = []
        self.faildata = {}

    def addFailure(self, test, reason):
        print("FAILURE!", test, reason)

    def addSuccess(self, test):
        print("SUCCESS!", test)

    def addError(self, test, err):
        print("ERR!", test, err)

    # Polyfill.
    def addSkip(self, test, reason):
        print("SKIP!", test, reason)

    def addIgnore(self, test, reason):
        print("IGNORE!", test, reason)

    def onStart(self, test):
        print("ON_START!", test)

    def onEnd(self):
        print("ON_END!")

    def addOutputMismatch(self, test, ret, got, expected):
        return False

    def stopTest(self, test, interrupted=False):
        super(TestResult, self).stopTest(test)