Mercurial > hg > mercurial-source
view tests/test-hghave.t @ 36602:f6ca1e11d8b4 stable
revset: evaluate filesets against each revision for 'file()' (issue5778)
After f2aeff8a87b6, the fileset was evaluated to a set of files against the
working directory, and then those files were applied against each revision. The
result was nonsense. For example, `hg log -r 'file("set:exec()")'` on the
Mercurial repo listed revision 0 because it has the `hg` script, which is
currently +x. But that bit wasn't applied until revision 280 (which
'contains()' properly indicates).
This technique was borrowed from checkstatus(), which services adds(),
modifies(), and removes(), so it seems safe enough. The 'r:' case is explicitly
assigned to wdirrev, freeing up rev=None to mean "re-evaluate at each revision".
The distinction is important to avoid behavior changes with `hg log set:...`
(test-largefiles-misc.t and test-fileset-generated.t drop current log output
without this). I'm not sure what the right behavior for that is (1fd352aa08fc
explicitly enabled this behavior for graphlog), but the day before the release
isn't the time to experiment.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 28 Jan 2018 14:08:59 -0500 |
parents | bb14dbab4df6 |
children | 5abc47d4ca6b |
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$ . "$TESTDIR/helpers-testrepo.sh" Testing that hghave does not crash when checking features $ hghave --test-features 2>/dev/null Testing hghave extensibility for third party tools $ cat > hghaveaddon.py <<EOF > import hghave > @hghave.check("custom", "custom hghave feature") > def has_custom(): > return True > EOF (invocation via run-tests.py) $ cat > test-hghaveaddon.t <<EOF > #require custom > $ echo foo > foo > EOF $ ( \ > testrepohgenv; \ > $PYTHON $TESTDIR/run-tests.py $HGTEST_RUN_TESTS_PURE test-hghaveaddon.t \ > ) . # Ran 1 tests, 0 skipped, 0 failed. (invocation via command line) $ unset TESTDIR $ hghave custom (terminate with exit code 2 at failure of importing hghaveaddon.py) $ rm hghaveaddon.* $ cat > hghaveaddon.py <<EOF > importing this file should cause syntax error > EOF $ hghave custom failed to import hghaveaddon.py from '.': invalid syntax (hghaveaddon.py, line 1) [2]