tests/test-filelog.py
author Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@fb.com>
Thu, 15 Oct 2015 01:35:44 +0100
changeset 26713 a271925699d6
parent 26098 ce26928cbe41
child 28743 83373fc2b287
permissions -rwxr-xr-x
revset: reintroduce and experimental revset for update destination The revset is not ready for prime time yet. However it is useful to have some version of it exposed to help candidate users to play with it and provide feedback on what we should aim at. We add a small test to make sure the code runs.

#!/usr/bin/env python
"""
Tests the behavior of filelog w.r.t. data starting with '\1\n'
"""
from mercurial import ui, hg
from mercurial.node import nullid, hex

myui = ui.ui()
repo = hg.repository(myui, path='.', create=True)

fl = repo.file('foobar')

def addrev(text, renamed=False):
    if renamed:
        # data doesn't matter. Just make sure filelog.renamed() returns True
        meta = {'copyrev': hex(nullid), 'copy': 'bar'}
    else:
        meta = {}

    lock = t = None
    try:
        lock = repo.lock()
        t = repo.transaction('commit')
        node = fl.add(text, meta, t, 0, nullid, nullid)
        return node
    finally:
        if t:
            t.close()
        if lock:
            lock.release()

def error(text):
    print 'ERROR: ' + text

textwith = '\1\nfoo'
without = '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.'