##// END OF EJS Templates
dispatch: don't show list of commands on bogus command...
dispatch: don't show list of commands on bogus command If a command is ambiguous, you get this: $ hg ve hg: command 've' is ambiguous: verify version [255] If you typo a command, you get this: $ hg comit hg: unknown command 'comit' (did you mean one of commit, incoming, mycommit?) [255] But if you completely mistype a command so it no longer looks like any existing commands, you get a full list of commands. That might be useful the first time you use Mercurial, but after that it's probably more annoying than help, especially if you have the pager enabled and have a short terminal. Let's instead give a short hint telling the user to run `hg help` for more help. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4024

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basic_test_result.py
52 lines | 1.4 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
/ tests / basic_test_result.py
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import unittest
class TestResult(unittest._TextTestResult):
def __init__(self, options, *args, **kwargs):
super(TestResult, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
self._options = options
# unittest.TestResult didn't have skipped until 2.7. We need to
# polyfill it.
self.skipped = []
# We have a custom "ignored" result that isn't present in any Python
# unittest implementation. It is very similar to skipped. It may make
# sense to map it into skip some day.
self.ignored = []
self.times = []
self._firststarttime = None
# Data stored for the benefit of generating xunit reports.
self.successes = []
self.faildata = {}
def addFailure(self, test, reason):
print("FAILURE!", test, reason)
def addSuccess(self, test):
print("SUCCESS!", test)
def addError(self, test, err):
print("ERR!", test, err)
# Polyfill.
def addSkip(self, test, reason):
print("SKIP!", test, reason)
def addIgnore(self, test, reason):
print("IGNORE!", test, reason)
def onStart(self, test):
print("ON_START!", test)
def onEnd(self):
print("ON_END!")
def addOutputMismatch(self, test, ret, got, expected):
return False
def stopTest(self, test, interrupted=False):
super(TestResult, self).stopTest(test)