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run-tests: mechanism to report exceptions during test execution...
run-tests: mechanism to report exceptions during test execution Sometimes when running tests you introduce a ton of exceptions. The most extreme example of this is running Mercurial with Python 3, which currently spews thousands of exceptions when running the test harness. This commit adds an opt-in feature to run-tests.py to aggregate exceptions encountered by `hg` when running tests. When --exceptions is used, the test harness enables the "logexceptions" extension in the test environment. This extension wraps the Mercurial function to handle exceptions and writes information about the exception to a random filename in a directory defined by the test harness via an environment variable. At the end of the test harness, these files are parsed, aggregated, and a list of all unique Mercurial frames triggering exceptions is printed in order of frequency. This feature is intended to aid Python 3 development. I've only really tested it on Python 3. There is no shortage of improvements that could be made. e.g. we could write a separate file containing the exception report - maybe even an HTML report. We also don't capture which tests demonstrate the exceptions, so there's no turnkey way to test whether a code change made an exception disappear. Perfect is the enemy of good. I think the current patch is useful enough to land. Whoever uses it can send patches to imprve its usefulness. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1477

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test-convert-cvs-synthetic.t
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/ tests / test-convert-cvs-synthetic.t
#require cvs112
This feature requires use of builtin cvsps!
$ echo "[extensions]" >> $HGRCPATH
$ echo "convert = " >> $HGRCPATH
create cvs repository with one project
$ mkdir cvsrepo
$ cd cvsrepo
$ CVSROOT=`pwd`
$ export CVSROOT
$ CVS_OPTIONS=-f
$ export CVS_OPTIONS
$ cd ..
$ rmdir cvsrepo
$ cvscall()
> {
> cvs -f "$@"
> }
output of 'cvs ci' varies unpredictably, so just discard it
$ cvsci()
> {
> sleep 1
> cvs -f ci "$@" >/dev/null
> }
$ cvscall -d "$CVSROOT" init
$ mkdir cvsrepo/proj
$ cvscall -q co proj
create file1 on the trunk
$ cd proj
$ touch file1
$ cvscall -Q add file1
$ cvsci -m"add file1 on trunk" file1
create two branches
$ cvscall -q tag -b v1_0
T file1
$ cvscall -q tag -b v1_1
T file1
create file2 on branch v1_0
$ cvscall -Q up -rv1_0
$ touch file2
$ cvscall -Q add file2
$ cvsci -m"add file2" file2
create file3, file4 on branch v1_1
$ cvscall -Q up -rv1_1
$ touch file3
$ touch file4
$ cvscall -Q add file3 file4
$ cvsci -m"add file3, file4 on branch v1_1" file3 file4
merge file2 from v1_0 to v1_1
$ cvscall -Q up -jv1_0
$ cvsci -m"MERGE from v1_0: add file2"
cvs commit: Examining .
Step things up a notch: now we make the history really hairy, with
changes bouncing back and forth between trunk and v1_2 and merges
going both ways. (I.e., try to model the real world.)
create branch v1_2
$ cvscall -Q up -A
$ cvscall -q tag -b v1_2
T file1
create file5 on branch v1_2
$ cvscall -Q up -rv1_2
$ touch file5
$ cvs -Q add file5
$ cvsci -m"add file5 on v1_2"
cvs commit: Examining .
create file6 on trunk post-v1_2
$ cvscall -Q up -A
$ touch file6
$ cvscall -Q add file6
$ cvsci -m"add file6 on trunk post-v1_2"
cvs commit: Examining .
merge file5 from v1_2 to trunk
$ cvscall -Q up -A
$ cvscall -Q up -jv1_2 file5
$ cvsci -m"MERGE from v1_2: add file5"
cvs commit: Examining .
merge file6 from trunk to v1_2
$ cvscall -Q up -rv1_2
$ cvscall up -jHEAD file6
U file6
$ cvsci -m"MERGE from HEAD: add file6"
cvs commit: Examining .
cvs rlog output
$ cvscall -q rlog proj | egrep '^(RCS file|revision)'
RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file1,v
revision 1.1
RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/Attic/file2,v
revision 1.1
revision 1.1.4.2
revision 1.1.4.1
revision 1.1.2.1
RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/Attic/file3,v
revision 1.1
revision 1.1.2.1
RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/Attic/file4,v
revision 1.1
revision 1.1.2.1
RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file5,v
revision 1.2
revision 1.1
revision 1.1.2.1
RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file6,v
revision 1.1
revision 1.1.2.2
revision 1.1.2.1
convert to hg (#1)
$ cd ..
$ hg convert --datesort proj proj.hg
initializing destination proj.hg repository
connecting to $TESTTMP/cvsrepo
scanning source...
collecting CVS rlog
15 log entries
creating changesets
9 changeset entries
sorting...
converting...
8 add file1 on trunk
7 add file2
6 MERGE from v1_0: add file2
5 file file3 was initially added on branch v1_1.
4 add file3, file4 on branch v1_1
3 add file5 on v1_2
2 add file6 on trunk post-v1_2
1 MERGE from HEAD: add file6
0 MERGE from v1_2: add file5
hg log -G output (#1)
$ hg -R proj.hg log -G --template "{rev} {desc}\n"
o 8 MERGE from v1_2: add file5
|
| o 7 MERGE from HEAD: add file6
| |
o | 6 add file6 on trunk post-v1_2
| |
| o 5 add file5 on v1_2
| |
| | o 4 add file3, file4 on branch v1_1
| | |
o | | 3 file file3 was initially added on branch v1_1.
|/ /
| o 2 MERGE from v1_0: add file2
|/
| o 1 add file2
|/
o 0 add file1 on trunk
convert to hg (#2: with merge detection)
$ hg convert \
> --config convert.cvsps.mergefrom='"^MERGE from (\S+):"' \
> --datesort \
> proj proj.hg2
initializing destination proj.hg2 repository
connecting to $TESTTMP/cvsrepo
scanning source...
collecting CVS rlog
15 log entries
creating changesets
9 changeset entries
sorting...
converting...
8 add file1 on trunk
7 add file2
6 MERGE from v1_0: add file2
5 file file3 was initially added on branch v1_1.
4 add file3, file4 on branch v1_1
3 add file5 on v1_2
2 add file6 on trunk post-v1_2
1 MERGE from HEAD: add file6
0 MERGE from v1_2: add file5
hg log -G output (#2)
$ hg -R proj.hg2 log -G --template "{rev} {desc}\n"
o 8 MERGE from v1_2: add file5
|
| o 7 MERGE from HEAD: add file6
| |
o | 6 add file6 on trunk post-v1_2
| |
| o 5 add file5 on v1_2
| |
| | o 4 add file3, file4 on branch v1_1
| | |
o | | 3 file file3 was initially added on branch v1_1.
|/ /
| o 2 MERGE from v1_0: add file2
|/
| o 1 add file2
|/
o 0 add file1 on trunk