tests: fix glob pattern for dynamic timer alignment
The number of space characters varies depending on the number of digits of the
timer, making some tests fail on slow machines in an unintended way:
```diff
--- /build/mercurial-6.1/tests/test-merge-halt.t
+++ /build/mercurial-6.1/tests/test-merge-halt.t.err
@@ -210,6 +210,6 @@
merge halted after failed merge (see hg resolve)
[240]
$ hg shelve --list
- default (* ago) changes to: foo (glob)
+ default (11s ago) changes to: foo
$ hg unshelve --abort
unshelve of 'default' aborted
ERROR: test-merge-halt.t output changed
```
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D12381
#!/usr/bin/env python
"""
Tests the behavior of filelog w.r.t. data starting with '\1\n'
"""
from mercurial.node import hex
from mercurial import (
hg,
ui as uimod,
)
myui = uimod.ui.load()
repo = hg.repository(myui, path=b'.', create=True)
fl = repo.file(b'foobar')
def addrev(text, renamed=False):
if renamed:
# data doesn't matter. Just make sure filelog.renamed() returns True
meta = {b'copyrev': hex(repo.nullid), b'copy': b'bar'}
else:
meta = {}
lock = t = None
try:
lock = repo.lock()
t = repo.transaction(b'commit')
node = fl.add(text, meta, t, 0, repo.nullid, repo.nullid)
return node
finally:
if t:
t.close()
if lock:
lock.release()
def error(text):
print('ERROR: ' + text)
textwith = b'\1\nfoo'
without = b'foo'
node = addrev(textwith)
if not textwith == fl.read(node):
error('filelog.read for data starting with \\1\\n')
if fl.cmp(node, textwith) or not fl.cmp(node, without):
error('filelog.cmp for data starting with \\1\\n')
if fl.size(0) != len(textwith):
error(
'FIXME: This is a known failure of filelog.size for data starting '
'with \\1\\n'
)
node = addrev(textwith, renamed=True)
if not textwith == fl.read(node):
error('filelog.read for a renaming + data starting with \\1\\n')
if fl.cmp(node, textwith) or not fl.cmp(node, without):
error('filelog.cmp for a renaming + data starting with \\1\\n')
if fl.size(1) != len(textwith):
error('filelog.size for a renaming + data starting with \\1\\n')
print('OK.')