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filemerge: add internal merge tool to dump files forcibly...
filemerge: add internal merge tool to dump files forcibly Internal merge tool :dump implies premerge. Therefore, files aren't dumped, if premerge runs successfully. This undocumented behavior might confuse users, if they want to always dump files. But just making :dump omit premerge might cause backward compatibility issue for existing automation. This patch adds new internal merge tool :forcedump, which works as same as :dump, but omits premerge always. Internal tools annotated with "nomerge" should merge "change and delete" correctly, but _forcedump() can't. Therefore, it is annotated with "mergeonly" to always omit premerge, even though it doesn't merge files actually. This patch also adds explanation about premerge to :dump, to clarify how :dump actually works. BTW, this patch specifies internal tools with "internal:" prefix in newly added test scenario in test-merge-tools.t, even though this prefix is already deprecated. This is only for similarity to other tests in test-merge-tools.t.

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test-logtoprocess.t
73 lines | 1.9 KiB | text/troff | Tads3Lexer
ATTENTION: logtoprocess runs commands asynchronously. Be sure to append "| cat"
to hg commands, to wait for the output, if you want to test its output.
Otherwise the test will be flaky.
Test if logtoprocess correctly captures command-related log calls.
$ hg init
$ cat > $TESTTMP/foocommand.py << EOF
> from mercurial import cmdutil
> from time import sleep
> cmdtable = {}
> command = cmdutil.command(cmdtable)
> @command('foo', [])
> def foo(ui, repo):
> ui.log('foo', 'a message: %(bar)s\n', bar='spam')
> EOF
$ cp $HGRCPATH $HGRCPATH.bak
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
> [extensions]
> logtoprocess=
> foocommand=$TESTTMP/foocommand.py
> [logtoprocess]
> command=echo 'logtoprocess command output:';
> echo "\$EVENT";
> echo "\$MSG1";
> echo "\$MSG2"
> commandfinish=echo 'logtoprocess commandfinish output:';
> echo "\$EVENT";
> echo "\$MSG1";
> echo "\$MSG2";
> echo "\$MSG3"
> foo=echo 'logtoprocess foo output:';
> echo "\$EVENT";
> echo "\$MSG1";
> echo "\$OPT_BAR"
> EOF
Running a command triggers both a ui.log('command') and a
ui.log('commandfinish') call. The foo command also uses ui.log.
Use sort to avoid ordering issues between the various processes we spawn:
$ hg foo | cat | sort
0
a message: spam
command
commandfinish
foo
foo
foo
foo
foo exited 0 after * seconds (glob)
logtoprocess command output:
logtoprocess commandfinish output:
logtoprocess foo output:
spam
Confirm that logging blocked time catches stdio properly:
$ cp $HGRCPATH.bak $HGRCPATH
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
> [extensions]
> logtoprocess=
> pager=
> [logtoprocess]
> uiblocked=echo "\$EVENT stdio \$OPT_STDIO_BLOCKED ms command \$OPT_COMMAND_DURATION ms"
> [ui]
> logblockedtimes=True
> EOF
$ hg log | cat
uiblocked stdio [0-9]+.[0-9]* ms command [0-9]+.[0-9]* ms (re)