Summary:
Turned on the auto formatter. Ran `arc lint --apply-patches --take BLACK **/*.py`.
Then run `arc lint` again so some other autofixers like spellchecker etc. looked
at the code base. Manually accept the changes whenever they make sense, or use
a workaround (ex. changing "dict()" to "dict constructor") where autofix is false
positive. Disabled linters on files that are hard (i18n/polib.py) to fix, or less
interesting to fix (hgsubversion tests), or cannot be fixed without breaking
OSS build (FBPYTHON4).
Conflicted linters (test-check-module-imports.t, part of test-check-code.t,
test-check-pyflakes.t) are removed or disabled.
Duplicated linters (test-check-pyflakes.t, test-check-pylint.t) are removed.
An issue of the auto-formatter is lines are no longer guarnateed to be <= 80
chars. But that seems less important comparing with the benefit auto-formatter
provides.
As we're here, also remove test-check-py3-compat.t, as it is currently broken
if `PYTHON3=/bin/python3` is set.
Reviewed By: wez, phillco, simpkins, pkaush, singhsrb
Differential Revision: D8173629
fbshipit-source-id: 90e248ae0c5e6eaadbe25520a6ee42d32005621b
Summary:
This check is useful and detects real errors (ex. fbconduit). Unfortunately
`arc lint` will run it with both py2 and py3 so a lot of py2 builtins will
still be warned.
I didn't find a clean way to disable py3 check. So this diff tries to fix them.
For `xrange`, the change was done by a script:
```
import sys
import redbaron
headertypes = {'comment', 'endl', 'from_import', 'import', 'string',
'assignment', 'atomtrailers'}
xrangefix = '''try:
xrange(0)
except NameError:
xrange = range
'''
def isxrange(x):
try:
return x[0].value == 'xrange'
except Exception:
return False
def main(argv):
for i, path in enumerate(argv):
print('(%d/%d) scanning %s' % (i + 1, len(argv), path))
content = open(path).read()
try:
red = redbaron.RedBaron(content)
except Exception:
print(' warning: failed to parse')
continue
hasxrange = red.find('atomtrailersnode', value=isxrange)
hasxrangefix = 'xrange = range' in content
if hasxrangefix or not hasxrange:
print(' no need to change')
continue
# find a place to insert the compatibility statement
changed = False
for node in red:
if node.type in headertypes:
continue
# node.insert_before is an easier API, but it has bugs changing
# other "finally" and "except" positions. So do the insert
# manually.
# # node.insert_before(xrangefix)
line = node.absolute_bounding_box.top_left.line - 1
lines = content.splitlines(1)
content = ''.join(lines[:line]) + xrangefix + ''.join(lines[line:])
changed = True
break
if changed:
# "content" is faster than "red.dumps()"
open(path, 'w').write(content)
print(' updated')
if __name__ == "__main__":
sys.exit(main(sys.argv[1:]))
```
For other py2 builtins that do not have a py3 equivalent, some `# noqa`
were added as a workaround for now.
Reviewed By: DurhamG
Differential Revision: D6934535
fbshipit-source-id: 546b62830af144bc8b46788d2e0fd00496838939
Summary:
This allows us to specify `-p 0 --port-file X` to get the port assigned in
an atomic way. So there won't be "server failed to start" caused by race
conditions in tests.
Reviewed By: DurhamG
Differential Revision: D6925397
fbshipit-source-id: 5bbb61b7eb2695f0a673afdb0730d2a61827f8b3
I've been using `hg serve --web-conf ...` with a simple '/=projects/**' [paths]
configuration for awhile without issue. Let's ditch the need for the manual
configuration in this case, and limit the repos served to the actual subrepos.
This doesn't attempt to handle the case where a new subrepo appears while the
server is running. That could probably be handled with a hook if somebody wants
it. But it's such a rare case, it probably doesn't matter for the temporary
serves.
The main repo is served at '/', just like a repository without subrepos. I'm
not sure why the duplicate 'adding ...' lines appear on Linux. They don't
appear on Windows (see 3f4ff1bdf101), so they are optional.
Subrepositories that are configured with '../path' or absolute paths are not
cloneable from the server. (They aren't cloneable locally either, unless they
also exist at their configured source, perhaps via the share extension.) They
are still served, so that they can be browsed, or cloned individually. If we
care about that cloning someday, we can probably just add the extra entries to
the webconf dictionary. Even if the entries use '../' to escape the root, only
the related subrepositories would end up in the dictionary.
It was an extension just because there were several dependency cycles I
needed to address.
I don't add 'chgserver' to extensions._builtin since chgserver is considered
an internal extension so nobody should enable it by their config.
This is necessary to solve future dependency cycle between commandserver.py
and chgserver.py.
'cmd' prefix is added to table and function names to avoid conflicts with
hgweb.
And call it runservice() because I'll soon add createservice().
The main reason I'm going to introduce the 'server' module is to solve
future dependency cycle between chgserver.py and commandserver.py.
The 'server' module sits at the same layer as the cmdutil. I believe it's
generally good to get rid of things from the big cmdutil module.