view tests/basic_test_result.py @ 45125:f55099982bc5

absorb: make it explicit if empty changeset was created If the config rewrite.empty-successor=skip is set, a message "became empty and was dropped" is shown if the changeset became empty. If the config rewrite.empty-successor=keep is set, absorb may create changesets even if they became empty. It’s probably a good idea to make that explicit. Therefore the message is changed to be a combination of both: "became empty and became ...". Repeating the word "became" is not very elegant. This results from the fact that "became" was and is overloaded to indicate both the change from non-empty to empty and the successor relation. In the combinated message, both meanings are used in one sentence.
author Manuel Jacob <me@manueljacob.de>
date Mon, 01 Jun 2020 09:55:31 +0200
parents 2372284d9457
children 3a95a4e660b9
line wrap: on
line source

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)