view tests/test-filelog.py @ 50174:eedbf8256263

dirstate: use `cachestat` object for dirstatemap identity There is a class dedicated to this kind of cache check, let us use it. We will generalize this code in the next changesets, but we do the "behavior changing" pass on our own.
author Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net>
date Wed, 22 Feb 2023 00:53:51 +0100
parents 6000f5b25c9b
children f8f14e6d032b
line wrap: on
line source

#!/usr/bin/env python
"""
Tests the behavior of filelog w.r.t. data starting with '\1\n'
"""

from mercurial.node import hex
from mercurial import (
    hg,
    ui as uimod,
)

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

fl = repo.file(b'foobar')


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

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


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


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