Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-dispatch.py @ 35230:feecfefeba25
tests: add a substitution for ENOENT/ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND messages
Automatic replacement seems better than trying to figure out a check-code rule.
I didn't bother looking to see why the error message and file name is reversed
in the annotate and histedit tests, based on Windows or not.
I originally had this as a list of tuples, conditional on the platform. But
there are a couple of 'No such file or directory' messages emitted by Mercurial
itself, so unconditional is required for stability. There are also several
variants of what I assume is 'connection refused' and 'unknown host' in
test-clone.t and test-clonebundles.t for Docker, FreeBSD jails, etc. Yes, these
are handled by (re) tags, but maybe it would be better to capture those strings
in order to avoid whack-a-mole in future tests. All of this points to using a
dictionary containing one or more strings-to-be-replaced values.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 02 Dec 2017 19:33:34 -0500 |
parents | 1d9d29d4813a |
children | f0c94af0d70d |
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from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import os from mercurial import ( dispatch, ) def testdispatch(cmd): """Simple wrapper around dispatch.dispatch() Prints command and result value, but does not handle quoting. """ print("running: %s" % (cmd,)) req = dispatch.request(cmd.split()) result = dispatch.dispatch(req) print("result: %r" % (result,)) testdispatch("init test1") os.chdir('test1') # create file 'foo', add and commit f = open('foo', 'wb') f.write('foo\n') f.close() testdispatch("add foo") testdispatch("commit -m commit1 -d 2000-01-01 foo") # append to file 'foo' and commit f = open('foo', 'ab') f.write('bar\n') f.close() testdispatch("commit -m commit2 -d 2000-01-02 foo") # check 88803a69b24 (fancyopts modified command table) testdispatch("log -r 0") testdispatch("log -r tip")