view tests/test-flags @ 2734:07026da25ed8

hbisect.py: don't rely on __del__ to write the current state. This is yet another page of the "Thou shalt not do too much inside __del__ methods" book, in the "demandload and __del__ don't go well together" chapter. The bisect extension is broken in 0.9.1: $ hg bisect init $ hg bisect bad Fatal Python error: Interpreter not initialized (version mismatch?) Aborted (yes, I tripled checked my instalation to make sure the problem is not there) It's been broken since revision fe1689273f84 moved the import of the binascii module into a demandload. (In details: the first time that "hg bisect bad" (or good) is called, there are still no revisions saved in .hg/bisect/*, so bisect.__init__ doesn't call hg.bin on anything. So, when we reach __del__, the binascii module still hasn't been imported and we get that "nice" message above.)
author Alexis S. L. Carvalho <alexis@cecm.usp.br>
date Fri, 28 Jul 2006 21:20:41 -0300
parents e506c14382fd
children 455109df3669
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#!/bin/sh -e

umask 027
mkdir test1
cd test1

hg init
touch a b
hg add a b
hg ci -m "added a b" -d "1000000 0"

cd ..
mkdir test2
cd test2

hg init
hg pull ../test1
hg co
chmod +x a
hg ci -m "chmod +x a" -d "1000000 0"

cd ../test1
echo 123 >>a
hg ci -m "a updated" -d "1000000 0"

hg pull ../test2
hg heads
hg history

hg -v merge

ls -l ../test[12]/a > foo
cut -b 1-10 < foo