sapling/tests/test-hg-parseurl.py
Jun Wu 9dc21f8d0b codemod: import from the edenscm package
Summary:
D13853115 adds `edenscm/` to `sys.path` and code still uses `import mercurial`.
That has nasty problems if both `import mercurial` and
`import edenscm.mercurial` are used, because Python would think `mercurial.foo`
and `edenscm.mercurial.foo` are different modules so code like
`try: ... except mercurial.error.Foo: ...`, or `isinstance(x, mercurial.foo.Bar)`
would fail to handle the `edenscm.mercurial` version. There are also some
module-level states (ex. `extensions._extensions`) that would cause trouble if
they have multiple versions in a single process.

Change imports to use the `edenscm` so ideally the `mercurial` is no longer
imported at all. Add checks in extensions.py to catch unexpected extensions
importing modules from the old (wrong) locations when running tests.

Reviewed By: phillco

Differential Revision: D13868981

fbshipit-source-id: f4e2513766957fd81d85407994f7521a08e4de48
2019-01-29 17:25:32 -08:00

18 lines
581 B
Python

from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
from edenscm.mercurial import hg
def testparse(url, branch=[]):
print("%s, branches: %r" % hg.parseurl(url, branch))
testparse("http://example.com/no/anchor")
testparse("http://example.com/an/anchor#foo")
testparse("http://example.com/no/anchor/branches", branch=["foo"])
testparse("http://example.com/an/anchor/branches#bar", branch=["foo"])
testparse("http://example.com/an/anchor/branches-None#foo", branch=None)
testparse("http://example.com/")
testparse("http://example.com")
testparse("http://example.com#foo")