sapling/tests/test-addremove-similar.t
Pierre-Yves David 30913031d4 error: get Abort from 'error' instead of 'util'
The home of 'Abort' is 'error' not 'util' however, a lot of code seems to be
confused about that and gives all the credit to 'util' instead of the
hardworking 'error'. In a spirit of equity, we break the cycle of injustice and
give back to 'error' the respect it deserves. And screw that 'util' poser.

For great justice.
2015-10-08 12:55:45 -07:00

103 lines
2.1 KiB
Perl

$ hg init rep; cd rep
$ touch empty-file
$ $PYTHON -c 'for x in range(10000): print x' > large-file
$ hg addremove
adding empty-file
adding large-file
$ hg commit -m A
$ rm large-file empty-file
$ $PYTHON -c 'for x in range(10,10000): print x' > another-file
$ hg addremove -s50
adding another-file
removing empty-file
removing large-file
recording removal of large-file as rename to another-file (99% similar)
$ hg commit -m B
comparing two empty files caused ZeroDivisionError in the past
$ hg update -C 0
2 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ rm empty-file
$ touch another-empty-file
$ hg addremove -s50
adding another-empty-file
removing empty-file
$ cd ..
$ hg init rep2; cd rep2
$ $PYTHON -c 'for x in range(10000): print x' > large-file
$ $PYTHON -c 'for x in range(50): print x' > tiny-file
$ hg addremove
adding large-file
adding tiny-file
$ hg commit -m A
$ $PYTHON -c 'for x in range(70): print x' > small-file
$ rm tiny-file
$ rm large-file
$ hg addremove -s50
removing large-file
adding small-file
removing tiny-file
recording removal of tiny-file as rename to small-file (82% similar)
$ hg commit -m B
should all fail
$ hg addremove -s foo
abort: similarity must be a number
[255]
$ hg addremove -s -1
abort: similarity must be between 0 and 100
[255]
$ hg addremove -s 1e6
abort: similarity must be between 0 and 100
[255]
$ cd ..
Issue1527: repeated addremove causes Abort
$ hg init rep3; cd rep3
$ mkdir d
$ echo a > d/a
$ hg add d/a
$ hg commit -m 1
$ mv d/a d/b
$ hg addremove -s80
removing d/a
adding d/b
recording removal of d/a as rename to d/b (100% similar) (glob)
$ hg debugstate
r 0 0 1970-01-01 00:00:00 d/a
a 0 -1 unset d/b
copy: d/a -> d/b
$ mv d/b c
no copies found here (since the target isn't in d
$ hg addremove -s80 d
removing d/b (glob)
copies here
$ hg addremove -s80
adding c
recording removal of d/a as rename to c (100% similar) (glob)
$ cd ..