run-tests: update .t reference output after reading the test
The .t file is both test input and reference output. They should always
match. However we have different code paths to read reference output
(Test.__init__ -> Test.readrefout) and test input (TTest._run) so they might
be inconsistent if somethings change the file between those two functions.
This patch assigns "lines" read by "_run" back to "_refout" if "_refout" is
not None (with --debug, see Test.readrefout) so reference output and test
input will always match.
run-tests: do not prompt changes (-i) if a race condition is detected
The race condition is like:
1. run-tests.py reads test-a.t as reference output, content A
2. run-tests.py runs the test (which could be content B, another race
condition fixed by the next patch, but assume it's content A here)
3. something changes test-a.t to content C
4. run-tests.py compares test output (content D) with content A
5. with "-i", run-tests.py prompts diff(A, D), while the file has content
C instead of A at this time
This patch detects the above case and tell the user to rerun the test if
they want to apply test changes.
patch: rewrite reversehunks (
issue5337)
The old reversehunks code accesses "crecord.uihunk._hunk", which is the raw
recordhunk without crecord selection information, therefore "revert -i"
cannot revert individual lines, aka.
issue5337.
The patch rewrites related logic to return the right reverse hunk for
revert. Namely,
1. "fromline" and "toline" are correctly swapped [1]
2. crecord.uihunk generates a correct reverse hunk [2]
Besides, reversehunks(hunks) will no longer modify its input "hunks", which
is more expected.
[1]: To explain why "fromline" and "toline" need to be swapped, take the
following example:
$ cat > a <<EOF
> 1
> 2
> 3
> 4
> EOF
$ cat > b <<EOF
> 2
> 3
> 5
> EOF
$ diff a b
1d0 <---- "1" is "fromline" and "0" is "toline"
< 1 and they are swapped if diff from the reversed direction
4c3 |
< 4 |
--- |
> 5 |
|
$ diff b a |
0a1 <---------+
> 1
3c4 <---- also "4c3" gets swapped to "3c4"
< 5
---
> 4
[2]: This is a bit tricky.
For example, given a file which is empty in working parent but has 3 lines
in working copy, and the user selection:
select hunk to discard
[x] +1
[ ] +2
[x] +3
The user intent is to drop "1" and "3" in working copy but keep "2", so the
reverse patch would be something like:
-1
2 (2 is a "context line")
-3
We cannot just take all selected lines and swap "-" and "+", which will be:
-1
-3
That patch won't apply because of "2". So the correct way is to insert "2"
as a "context line" by inserting it first then deleting it:
-2
+2
Therefore, the correct revert patch is:
-1
-2
+2
-3
It could be reordered to look more like a common diff hunk:
-1
-2
-3
+2
Note: It's possible to return multiple hunks so there won't be lines like
"-2", "+2". But the current implementation is much simpler.
For deletions, like the working parent has "1\n2\n3\n" and it was changed to
empty in working copy:
select hunk to discard
[x] -1
[ ] -2
[x] -3
The user intent is to drop the deletion of 1 and 3 (in other words, keep
those lines), but still delete "2".
The reverse patch is meant to be applied to working copy which is empty.
So the patch would be:
+1
+3
That is to say, there is no need to special handle the unselected "2" like
the above insertion case.
profiling: cope with configwith default value handling changes
Changeset
6ff6eb33f353 change 'configwith' behavior so that the default value is
run through the conversion function. In parallel a new user of 'configwith' got
introduced unaware of this coming behavior change. This broke profiling.
We resolve the situation by having the new conversion function cope with a
default value already using the right type.
py3: catch StopIteration from next() in generatorset
IIUC, letting the StopIteration through would not cause any bugs, but
not doing it makes the test-py3-commands.t pass.
I have also diligently gone through all uses of next() in our code
base. They either:
* are not called from a generator
* pass a default value to next()
* catch StopException
* work on infinite iterators
* request a fixed number of items that matches the generated number
* are about batching in wireproto which I didn't quite follow
I'd appreciate if Augie or someone else could take a look at the
wireproto batching and convince themselves that the next(batchable)
calls there will not raise a StopIteration.
tests: adjust quoting to keep Windows happy with recent $PYTHON change
I tried adding quotes to the $PYTHON variable, and also tried converting the
path from the current 'c:/Python/python.exe' form to '/c/python/python.exe', but
neither worked. I'm not sure why one of these needs '\"' around the variable
and the other doesn't.
py3: use r'' to access values from kwargs where keys are str
These are the cases where either args is again passed as keyword argument or 1
or 2 elements are accessed. So it's better to add an r'' to prevent it
converting to bytes rather than doing the conversion of args.
py3: convert keys of kwargs in template keywords functions to bytes
This patch converts the args argument keys' to bytes wherever necessary as there
are some places where either args is not used or using r'' is better or args is
again passed as keyword arguments.