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When we run a test helper function in test_submodule_switch_common(), we sometimes specify a whole helper function as the $command. When we do this, in some test cases, we just mark the whole function with `test_must_fail`. However, it's possible that the helper function might fail earlier or later than expected due to an introduced bug. If this happens, then the test case will still report as passing but it should really be marked as failing since it didn't actually display the intended behaviour. Instead of invoking `test_must_fail $command`, pass the string "test_must_fail" as the second argument in case where the git command is expected to fail. When $command is a helper function, the parent function calling test_submodule_switch_common() is test_submodule_switch_func(). For all test_submodule_switch_func() invocations, increase the granularity of the argument test helper function by prefixing the git invocation which is meant to fail with the second argument like this: $2 git checkout "$1" In the other cases, test_submodule_switch() and test_submodule_forced_switch(), instead of passing in the git command directly, wrap it using the git_test_func() and pass the git arguments using the global variable $gitcmd. Unfortunately, since closures aren't a thing in shell scripts, the global variable is necessary. Another unfortunate result is that the "git_test_func" will used as the test case name when $command is printed but it's worth it for the cleaner code. Finally, as an added bonus, `test_must_fail` will now only run on git commands. Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
36 lines
1 KiB
Bash
Executable file
36 lines
1 KiB
Bash
Executable file
#!/bin/sh
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test_description='revert can handle submodules'
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. ./test-lib.sh
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. "$TEST_DIRECTORY"/lib-submodule-update.sh
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# Create a revert that moves from HEAD (including any test modifications to
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# the work tree) to $1 by first checking out $1 and reverting it. Reverting
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# the revert is the transition we test for. We tar the current work tree
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# first so we can restore the work tree test setup after doing the checkout
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# and revert. We test here that the restored work tree content is identical
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# to that at the beginning. The last revert is then tested by the framework.
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git_revert () {
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git status -su >expect &&
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ls -1pR * >>expect &&
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tar cf "$TRASH_DIRECTORY/tmp.tar" * &&
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may_only_be_test_must_fail "$2" &&
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$2 git checkout "$1" &&
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if test -n "$2"
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then
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return
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fi &&
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git revert HEAD &&
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rm -rf * &&
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tar xf "$TRASH_DIRECTORY/tmp.tar" &&
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git status -su >actual &&
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ls -1pR * >>actual &&
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test_cmp expect actual &&
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git revert HEAD
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}
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KNOWN_FAILURE_NOFF_MERGE_DOESNT_CREATE_EMPTY_SUBMODULE_DIR=1
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test_submodule_switch_func "git_revert"
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test_done
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