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dockerlib: allow non-unique uid and gid of $DBUILDUSER (issue4657)...
dockerlib: allow non-unique uid and gid of $DBUILDUSER (issue4657) There are make targets for building mercurial packages for various distributions using docker. One of the preparation steps before building is to create inside the docker image a user with the same uid/gid as the current user on the host system, so that the resulting files have appropriate ownership/permissions. It's possible to run `make docker-<distro>` as a user with uid or gid that is already present in a vanilla docker container of that distibution. For example, issue4657 is about failing to build fedora packages as a user with uid=999 and gid=999 because these ids are already used in fedora, and groupadd fails. useradd would fail too, if the flow ever got to it (and there was a user with such uid already). A straightforward (maybe too much) way to fix this is to allow non-unique uid and gid for the new user and group that get created inside the image. I'm not sure of the implications of this, but marmoute encouraged me to try and send this patch for stable.

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test-atomictempfile.py
42 lines | 1.3 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
/ tests / test-atomictempfile.py
import os
import glob
import unittest
import silenttestrunner
from mercurial.util import atomictempfile
class testatomictempfile(unittest.TestCase):
def test1_simple(self):
if os.path.exists('foo'):
os.remove('foo')
file = atomictempfile('foo')
(dir, basename) = os.path.split(file._tempname)
self.assertFalse(os.path.isfile('foo'))
self.assertTrue(basename in glob.glob('.foo-*'))
file.write('argh\n')
file.close()
self.assertTrue(os.path.isfile('foo'))
self.assertTrue(basename not in glob.glob('.foo-*'))
# discard() removes the temp file without making the write permanent
def test2_discard(self):
if os.path.exists('foo'):
os.remove('foo')
file = atomictempfile('foo')
(dir, basename) = os.path.split(file._tempname)
file.write('yo\n')
file.discard()
self.assertFalse(os.path.isfile('foo'))
self.assertTrue(basename not in os.listdir('.'))
# if a programmer screws up and passes bad args to atomictempfile, they
# get a plain ordinary TypeError, not infinite recursion
def test3_oops(self):
self.assertRaises(TypeError, atomictempfile)
if __name__ == '__main__':
silenttestrunner.main(__name__)