tests/test-wireproto-command-heads.t
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
Wed, 03 Oct 2018 09:48:22 -0700
changeset 40048 a732d70253b0
parent 40034 393e44324037
permissions -rw-r--r--
tests: don't be as verbose in wireprotov2 tests I don't think that printing low-level I/O and frames is beneficial to testing command-level functionality. Protocol-level testing, yes. But command-level functionality shouldn't care about low-level details in most cases. This output makes tests more verbose and harder to read. It also makes them harder to maintain, as you need to glob over various dynamic width fields. Let's remove these low-level details from many of the wireprotov2 tests. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4861

  $ . $TESTDIR/wireprotohelpers.sh

  $ hg init server
  $ enablehttpv2 server
  $ cd server
  $ hg debugdrawdag << EOF
  > H I J
  > | | |
  > E F G
  > | |/
  > C D
  > |/
  > B
  > |
  > A
  > EOF

  $ hg phase --force --secret J
  $ hg phase --public E

  $ hg log -r 'E + H + I + G + J' -T '{rev}:{node} {desc} {phase}\n'
  4:78d2dca436b2f5b188ac267e29b81e07266d38fc E public
  7:ae492e36b0c8339ffaf328d00b85b4525de1165e H draft
  8:1d6f6b91d44aaba6d5e580bc30a9948530dbe00b I draft
  6:29446d2dc5419c5f97447a8bc062e4cc328bf241 G draft
  9:dec04b246d7cbb670c6689806c05ad17c835284e J secret

  $ hg serve -p $HGPORT -d --pid-file hg.pid -E error.log
  $ cat hg.pid > $DAEMON_PIDS

All non-secret heads returned by default

  $ sendhttpv2peer << EOF
  > command heads
  > EOF
  creating http peer for wire protocol version 2
  sending heads command
  response: [
    b'\x1dok\x91\xd4J\xab\xa6\xd5\xe5\x80\xbc0\xa9\x94\x850\xdb\xe0\x0b',
    b'\xaeI.6\xb0\xc83\x9f\xfa\xf3(\xd0\x0b\x85\xb4R]\xe1\x16^',
    b')Dm-\xc5A\x9c_\x97Dz\x8b\xc0b\xe4\xcc2\x8b\xf2A'
  ]

Requesting just the public heads works

  $ sendhttpv2peer << EOF
  > command heads
  >     publiconly 1
  > EOF
  creating http peer for wire protocol version 2
  sending heads command
  response: [
    b'x\xd2\xdc\xa46\xb2\xf5\xb1\x88\xac&~)\xb8\x1e\x07&m8\xfc'
  ]

  $ cat error.log