Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-issue660.t @ 14369:f8932d540088
patch: handle binary copies as regular ones
This introduces a performance regression for large files, as they will be
copied just to be clobbered afterwards since binary patching does not use
deltas. But it simplifies the code and the previous optimization will be
reintroduced later in a better way.
author | Patrick Mezard <pmezard@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 18 May 2011 23:48:13 +0200 |
parents | 3956ea942492 |
children | 9910f60a37ee |
line wrap: on
line source
http://mercurial.selenic.com/bts/issue660 and: http://mercurial.selenic.com/bts/issue322 $ hg init $ echo a > a $ mkdir b $ echo b > b/b $ hg commit -A -m "a is file, b is dir" adding a adding b/b File replaced with directory: $ rm a $ mkdir a $ echo a > a/a Should fail - would corrupt dirstate: $ hg add a/a abort: file 'a' in dirstate clashes with 'a/a' [255] Removing shadow: $ hg rm --after a Should succeed - shadow removed: $ hg add a/a Directory replaced with file: $ rm -r b $ echo b > b Should fail - would corrupt dirstate: $ hg add b abort: directory 'b' already in dirstate [255] Removing shadow: $ hg rm --after b/b Should succeed - shadow removed: $ hg add b Look what we got: $ hg st A a/a A b R a R b/b Revert reintroducing shadow - should fail: $ rm -r a b $ hg revert b/b abort: file 'b' in dirstate clashes with 'b/b' [255] Revert all - should succeed: $ hg revert --all undeleting a forgetting a/a forgetting b undeleting b/b $ hg st addremove: $ rm -r a b $ mkdir a $ echo a > a/a $ echo b > b $ hg addremove -s 0 removing a adding a/a adding b removing b/b $ hg st A a/a A b R a R b/b commit: $ hg ci -A -m "a is dir, b is file" $ hg st --all C a/a C b Long directory replaced with file: $ mkdir d $ mkdir d/d $ echo d > d/d/d $ hg commit -A -m "d is long directory" adding d/d/d $ rm -r d $ echo d > d Should fail - would corrupt dirstate: $ hg add d abort: directory 'd' already in dirstate [255] Removing shadow: $ hg rm --after d/d/d Should succeed - shadow removed: $ hg add d $ hg ci -md Update should work at least with clean working directory: $ rm -r a b d $ hg up -r 0 2 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ hg st --all C a C b/b $ rm -r a b $ hg up -r 1 2 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ hg st --all C a/a C b