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scmutil: move construction of instability count message to separate fn...
scmutil: move construction of instability count message to separate fn When the commad we are running, introduces new instabilities, we show a message like `5 new orphan changesets`, `2 new content-divergent changesets`, `1 new phase-divergent changesets` etc which is very nice. Now taking a step ahead, we want users to show how to fix them too. Something like: `5 new orphan changesets (run 'hg evolve' to resolve/stabilize them)` `2 new content-divergent changesets (run 'hg evolve --content-divergent' to resolve them)` and maybe telling user a way to understand more about those new instabilities like `hg evolve --list` or `hg log -r 'orphan()'` something like that. The idea came from issue5855 which I want to fix because fixing that will result in a nice UI. Taking the construction logic out will allow extensions like evolve (maybe rebase too) to wrap that and add information about how to resolve and how to understand the instability more. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3734

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test_train_dictionary.py
87 lines | 2.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
import struct
import sys
import unittest
import zstandard as zstd
from . common import (
generate_samples,
make_cffi,
)
if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
int_type = int
else:
int_type = long
@make_cffi
class TestTrainDictionary(unittest.TestCase):
def test_no_args(self):
with self.assertRaises(TypeError):
zstd.train_dictionary()
def test_bad_args(self):
with self.assertRaises(TypeError):
zstd.train_dictionary(8192, u'foo')
with self.assertRaises(ValueError):
zstd.train_dictionary(8192, [u'foo'])
def test_no_params(self):
d = zstd.train_dictionary(8192, generate_samples())
self.assertIsInstance(d.dict_id(), int_type)
# The dictionary ID may be different across platforms.
expected = b'\x37\xa4\x30\xec' + struct.pack('<I', d.dict_id())
data = d.as_bytes()
self.assertEqual(data[0:8], expected)
def test_basic(self):
d = zstd.train_dictionary(8192, generate_samples(), k=64, d=16)
self.assertIsInstance(d.dict_id(), int_type)
data = d.as_bytes()
self.assertEqual(data[0:4], b'\x37\xa4\x30\xec')
self.assertEqual(d.k, 64)
self.assertEqual(d.d, 16)
def test_set_dict_id(self):
d = zstd.train_dictionary(8192, generate_samples(), k=64, d=16,
dict_id=42)
self.assertEqual(d.dict_id(), 42)
def test_optimize(self):
d = zstd.train_dictionary(8192, generate_samples(), threads=-1, steps=1,
d=16)
self.assertEqual(d.k, 50)
self.assertEqual(d.d, 16)
@make_cffi
class TestCompressionDict(unittest.TestCase):
def test_bad_mode(self):
with self.assertRaisesRegexp(ValueError, 'invalid dictionary load mode'):
zstd.ZstdCompressionDict(b'foo', dict_type=42)
def test_bad_precompute_compress(self):
d = zstd.train_dictionary(8192, generate_samples(), k=64, d=16)
with self.assertRaisesRegexp(ValueError, 'must specify one of level or '):
d.precompute_compress()
with self.assertRaisesRegexp(ValueError, 'must only specify one of level or '):
d.precompute_compress(level=3,
compression_params=zstd.CompressionParameters())
def test_precompute_compress_rawcontent(self):
d = zstd.ZstdCompressionDict(b'dictcontent' * 64,
dict_type=zstd.DICT_TYPE_RAWCONTENT)
d.precompute_compress(level=1)
d = zstd.ZstdCompressionDict(b'dictcontent' * 64,
dict_type=zstd.DICT_TYPE_FULLDICT)
with self.assertRaisesRegexp(zstd.ZstdError, 'unable to precompute dictionary'):
d.precompute_compress(level=1)