Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-simplekeyvaluefile.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 | 6000f5b25c9b |
line wrap: on
line source
from __future__ import absolute_import import unittest import silenttestrunner from mercurial import ( error, scmutil, ) class mockfile(object): def __init__(self, name, fs): self.name = name self.fs = fs def __enter__(self): return self def __exit__(self, *args, **kwargs): pass def write(self, text): self.fs.contents[self.name] = text def read(self): return self.fs.contents[self.name] class mockvfs(object): def __init__(self): self.contents = {} def read(self, path): return mockfile(path, self).read() def readlines(self, path): # lines need to contain the trailing '\n' to mock the real readlines return [l for l in mockfile(path, self).read().splitlines(True)] def __call__(self, path, mode, atomictemp): return mockfile(path, self) class testsimplekeyvaluefile(unittest.TestCase): def setUp(self): self.vfs = mockvfs() def testbasicwritingiandreading(self): dw = {b'key1': b'value1', b'Key2': b'value2'} scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, b'kvfile').write(dw) self.assertEqual( sorted(self.vfs.read(b'kvfile').split(b'\n')), [b'', b'Key2=value2', b'key1=value1'], ) dr = scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, b'kvfile').read() self.assertEqual(dr, dw) if not getattr(unittest.TestCase, 'assertRaisesRegex', False): # Python 3.7 deprecates the regex*p* version, but 2.7 lacks # the regex version. assertRaisesRegex = ( # camelcase-required unittest.TestCase.assertRaisesRegexp ) def testinvalidkeys(self): d = {b'0key1': b'value1', b'Key2': b'value2'} with self.assertRaisesRegex( error.ProgrammingError, 'keys must start with a letter.*' ): scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, b'kvfile').write(d) d = {b'key1@': b'value1', b'Key2': b'value2'} with self.assertRaisesRegex(error.ProgrammingError, 'invalid key.*'): scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, b'kvfile').write(d) def testinvalidvalues(self): d = {b'key1': b'value1', b'Key2': b'value2\n'} with self.assertRaisesRegex(error.ProgrammingError, 'invalid val.*'): scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, b'kvfile').write(d) def testcorruptedfile(self): self.vfs.contents[b'badfile'] = b'ababagalamaga\n' with self.assertRaisesRegex( error.CorruptedState, 'dictionary.*element.*' ): scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, b'badfile').read() def testfirstline(self): dw = {b'key1': b'value1'} scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, b'fl').write(dw, firstline=b'1.0') self.assertEqual(self.vfs.read(b'fl'), b'1.0\nkey1=value1\n') dr = scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, b'fl').read( firstlinenonkeyval=True ) self.assertEqual(dr, {b'__firstline': b'1.0', b'key1': b'value1'}) if __name__ == "__main__": silenttestrunner.main(__name__)