##// END OF EJS Templates
lfs: add the 'lfs' requirement in the changegroup transaction introducing lfs...
lfs: add the 'lfs' requirement in the changegroup transaction introducing lfs A hook like this is how largefiles manages to do the same. Largefiles uses a changegroup hook, but this uses pretxnchangegroup because that actually causes the transaction to rollback in the unlikely event that writing the requirements out fails. Sadly, the requires file itself isn't rolled back if a subsequent hook fails, but that seems trivial. Now that commit, changegroup and convert are covered, I don't think there's any way to get an lfs repo without the requirement. The grep exit code is blotted out of some test-lfs-serve.t tests now showing the requirement, because run-tests.py doesn't support conditionalizing the exit code.

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test-simplekeyvaluefile.py
84 lines | 2.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
/ tests / test-simplekeyvaluefile.py
from __future__ import absolute_import
import unittest
import silenttestrunner
from mercurial import (
error,
scmutil,
)
class mockfile(object):
def __init__(self, name, fs):
self.name = name
self.fs = fs
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, *args, **kwargs):
pass
def write(self, text):
self.fs.contents[self.name] = text
def read(self):
return self.fs.contents[self.name]
class mockvfs(object):
def __init__(self):
self.contents = {}
def read(self, path):
return mockfile(path, self).read()
def readlines(self, path):
# lines need to contain the trailing '\n' to mock the real readlines
return [l for l in mockfile(path, self).read().splitlines(True)]
def __call__(self, path, mode, atomictemp):
return mockfile(path, self)
class testsimplekeyvaluefile(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
self.vfs = mockvfs()
def testbasicwritingiandreading(self):
dw = {'key1': 'value1', 'Key2': 'value2'}
scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, 'kvfile').write(dw)
self.assertEqual(sorted(self.vfs.read('kvfile').split('\n')),
['', 'Key2=value2', 'key1=value1'])
dr = scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, 'kvfile').read()
self.assertEqual(dr, dw)
def testinvalidkeys(self):
d = {'0key1': 'value1', 'Key2': 'value2'}
with self.assertRaisesRegexp(error.ProgrammingError,
'keys must start with a letter.*'):
scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, 'kvfile').write(d)
d = {'key1@': 'value1', 'Key2': 'value2'}
with self.assertRaisesRegexp(error.ProgrammingError, 'invalid key.*'):
scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, 'kvfile').write(d)
def testinvalidvalues(self):
d = {'key1': 'value1', 'Key2': 'value2\n'}
with self.assertRaisesRegexp(error.ProgrammingError, 'invalid val.*'):
scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, 'kvfile').write(d)
def testcorruptedfile(self):
self.vfs.contents['badfile'] = 'ababagalamaga\n'
with self.assertRaisesRegexp(error.CorruptedState,
'dictionary.*element.*'):
scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, 'badfile').read()
def testfirstline(self):
dw = {'key1': 'value1'}
scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, 'fl').write(dw, firstline='1.0')
self.assertEqual(self.vfs.read('fl'), '1.0\nkey1=value1\n')
dr = scmutil.simplekeyvaluefile(self.vfs, 'fl')\
.read(firstlinenonkeyval=True)
self.assertEqual(dr, {'__firstline': '1.0', 'key1': 'value1'})
if __name__ == "__main__":
silenttestrunner.main(__name__)