view tests/test-clone-pull-corruption.t @ 22573:f528bfb25b45

revert: special case 'hg revert --all' On large repos, hg revert --all can take over 13 seconds. This is mainly due to it walking the tree three times: once to find the list of files in the dirstate, once to find the list of files in the target, and once to compute the status from the dirstate to the target. This optimizes the hg revert --all case to only require the final status. This speeds it up to 1.3 seconds or so (with hgwatchman enabled). Further optimizations could be done for the -r NODE and pattern cases, but they are significantly more complex.
author Durham Goode <durham@fb.com>
date Fri, 19 Sep 2014 18:43:53 -0700
parents d2fe9aaedcaf
children b2c1ff96c1e1
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Corrupt an hg repo with a pull started during an aborted commit
Create two repos, so that one of them can pull from the other one.

  $ hg init source
  $ cd source
  $ touch foo
  $ hg add foo
  $ hg ci -m 'add foo'
  $ hg clone . ../corrupted
  updating to branch default
  1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ echo >> foo
  $ hg ci -m 'change foo'

Add a hook to wait 5 seconds and then abort the commit

  $ cd ../corrupted
  $ echo "[hooks]" >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo "pretxncommit = sh -c 'sleep 5; exit 1'" >> .hg/hgrc

start a commit...

  $ touch bar
  $ hg add bar
  $ hg ci -m 'add bar' &

... and start a pull while the commit is still running

  $ sleep 1
  $ hg pull ../source 2>/dev/null
  pulling from ../source
  transaction abort!
  rollback completed
  abort: pretxncommit hook exited with status 1
  searching for changes
  adding changesets
  adding manifests
  adding file changes
  added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files
  (run 'hg update' to get a working copy)

see what happened

  $ wait
  $ hg verify
  checking changesets
  checking manifests
  crosschecking files in changesets and manifests
  checking files
  1 files, 2 changesets, 2 total revisions

  $ cd ..