Mercurial > public > mercurial-scm > hg-stable
view tests/test-dispatch.py @ 48886:b5fe10b3c9f5 stable
py3: don?t subscript socket.error
On Python 2, socket.error was subscriptable. On Python 3, socket.error is an
alias to OSError and is not subscriptable. The except block passes the
exception to self.send_error(). This fails on both Python 2 (if it was
executed) and Python 3, as it expects a string.
Getting the attribute .strerror works on Python 2 and Python 3, and has the
same effect as the previous code on Python 2.
author | Manuel Jacob <me@manueljacob.de> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 02 Jun 2022 04:39:49 +0200 |
parents | 2372284d9457 |
children | 6000f5b25c9b |
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from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import os import sys from mercurial import dispatch def printb(data, end=b'\n'): out = getattr(sys.stdout, 'buffer', sys.stdout) out.write(data + end) out.flush() def testdispatch(cmd): """Simple wrapper around dispatch.dispatch() Prints command and result value, but does not handle quoting. """ printb(b"running: %s" % (cmd,)) req = dispatch.request(cmd.split()) result = dispatch.dispatch(req) printb(b"result: %r" % (result,)) testdispatch(b"init test1") os.chdir('test1') # create file 'foo', add and commit f = open('foo', 'wb') f.write(b'foo\n') f.close() testdispatch(b"add foo") testdispatch(b"commit -m commit1 -d 2000-01-01 foo") # append to file 'foo' and commit f = open('foo', 'ab') f.write(b'bar\n') f.close() testdispatch(b"commit -m commit2 -d 2000-01-02 foo") # check 88803a69b24 (fancyopts modified command table) testdispatch(b"log -r 0") testdispatch(b"log -r tip")