Mercurial > hg > pyhgsh
view tests/test-merge1 @ 1933:7544700fd931
Use 'hg ci -d "1000000 0"' in tests to circumvent problem with leading zero.
Some systems show "Thu Jan 01" instead of "Thu Jan 1", which breaks tests.
Using "1000000" yields "Mon Jan 12 13:46:40 1970", which looks the same on
all systems.
author | Thomas Arendsen Hein <thomas@intevation.de> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 13 Mar 2006 13:05:41 +0100 |
parents | db10b7114de0 |
children | e506c14382fd |
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#!/bin/sh cat <<'EOF' > merge #!/bin/sh echo merging for `basename $1` EOF chmod +x merge mkdir t cd t hg init echo This is file a1 > a hg add a hg commit -m "commit #0" -d "1000000 0" echo This is file b1 > b hg add b hg commit -m "commit #1" -d "1000000 0" hg update 0 echo This is file c1 > c hg add c hg commit -m "commit #2" -d "1000000 0" echo This is file b1 > b echo %% no merges expected env HGMERGE=../merge hg update -m 1 cd ..; /bin/rm -rf t mkdir t cd t hg init echo This is file a1 > a hg add a hg commit -m "commit #0" -d "1000000 0" echo This is file b1 > b hg add b hg commit -m "commit #1" -d "1000000 0" hg update 0 echo This is file c1 > c hg add c hg commit -m "commit #2" -d "1000000 0" echo This is file b2 > b echo %% merge should fail env HGMERGE=../merge hg update -m 1 echo %% merge of b expected env HGMERGE=../merge hg update -f -m 1 cd ..; /bin/rm -rf t echo %% mkdir t cd t hg init echo This is file a1 > a hg add a hg commit -m "commit #0" -d "1000000 0" echo This is file b1 > b hg add b hg commit -m "commit #1" -d "1000000 0" echo This is file b22 > b hg commit -m "commit #2" -d "1000000 0" hg update 1 echo This is file c1 > c hg add c hg commit -m "commit #3" -d "1000000 0" echo 'Contents of b should be "this is file b1"' cat b echo This is file b22 > b echo %% merge fails env HGMERGE=../merge hg update -m 2 echo %% merge expected! env HGMERGE=../merge hg update -f -m 2 cd ..; /bin/rm -rf t mkdir t cd t hg init echo This is file a1 > a hg add a hg commit -m "commit #0" -d "1000000 0" echo This is file b1 > b hg add b hg commit -m "commit #1" -d "1000000 0" echo This is file b22 > b hg commit -m "commit #2" -d "1000000 0" hg update 1 echo This is file c1 > c hg add c hg commit -m "commit #3" -d "1000000 0" echo This is file b33 > b echo %% merge of b should fail env HGMERGE=../merge hg update -m 2 echo %% merge of b expected env HGMERGE=../merge hg update -f -m 2 cd ..; /bin/rm -rf t