Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-atomictempfile.py @ 29218:fd288d118074
largefiles: send statlfile remote calls only for nonexisting locally files
Files that are already in local store should be checked locally. The problem
with this implementation is how difference in messages between local and remote
checks should look like. For now local errors for file missing and content
corrupted looks like this:
'changeset cset: filename references missing storepath\n'
'changeset cset: filename references corrupted storepath\n'
for remote it looks like:
'changeset cset: filename missing\n'
'changeset cset: filename: contents differ\n'
Contents differ error for remote calls is never raised currently - for now
statlfile implementation lacks checking file content.
author | liscju <piotr.listkiewicz@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 09 May 2016 10:05:32 +0200 |
parents | a109bf7e0dc2 |
children | 1acf654f0985 |
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from __future__ import absolute_import import glob import os import unittest from mercurial import ( util, ) atomictempfile = util.atomictempfile class testatomictempfile(unittest.TestCase): def test1_simple(self): if os.path.exists('foo'): os.remove('foo') file = atomictempfile('foo') (dir, basename) = os.path.split(file._tempname) self.assertFalse(os.path.isfile('foo')) self.assertTrue(basename in glob.glob('.foo-*')) file.write(b'argh\n') file.close() self.assertTrue(os.path.isfile('foo')) self.assertTrue(basename not in glob.glob('.foo-*')) # discard() removes the temp file without making the write permanent def test2_discard(self): if os.path.exists('foo'): os.remove('foo') file = atomictempfile('foo') (dir, basename) = os.path.split(file._tempname) file.write(b'yo\n') file.discard() self.assertFalse(os.path.isfile('foo')) self.assertTrue(basename not in os.listdir('.')) # if a programmer screws up and passes bad args to atomictempfile, they # get a plain ordinary TypeError, not infinite recursion def test3_oops(self): self.assertRaises(TypeError, atomictempfile) # checkambig=True avoids ambiguity of timestamp def test4_checkambig(self): def atomicwrite(checkambig): f = atomictempfile('foo', checkambig=checkambig) f.write('FOO') f.close() # try some times, because reproduction of ambiguity depends on # "filesystem time" for i in xrange(5): atomicwrite(False) oldstat = os.stat('foo') if oldstat.st_ctime != oldstat.st_mtime: # subsequent changing never causes ambiguity continue repetition = 3 # repeat atomic write with checkambig=True, to examine # whether st_mtime is advanced multiple times as expecetd for j in xrange(repetition): atomicwrite(True) newstat = os.stat('foo') if oldstat.st_ctime != newstat.st_ctime: # timestamp ambiguity was naturally avoided while repetition continue # st_mtime should be advanced "repetition" times, because # all atomicwrite() occured at same time (in sec) self.assertTrue(newstat.st_mtime == ((oldstat.st_mtime + repetition) & 0x7fffffff)) # no more examination is needed, if assumption above is true break else: # This platform seems too slow to examine anti-ambiguity # of file timestamp (or test happened to be executed at # bad timing). Exit silently in this case, because running # on other faster platforms can detect problems pass if __name__ == '__main__': import silenttestrunner silenttestrunner.main(__name__)