git/t/lib-rebase.sh
Phillip Wood 2be6b6f411 rebase -r: make 'merge -c' behave like reword
If the user runs git log while rewording a commit it is confusing if
sometimes we're amending the commit that's being reworded and at other
times we're creating a new commit depending on whether we could
fast-forward or not[1]. For this reason the reword command ensures
that there are no uncommitted changes when rewording. The reword
command also allows the user to edit the todo list while the rebase is
paused. As 'merge -c' also rewords commits make it behave like reword
and add a test.

[1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/xmqqlfvu4be3.fsf@gitster-ct.c.googlers.com/T/#m133009cb91cf0917bcf667300f061178be56680a

Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2021-08-20 12:54:36 -07:00

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# Helper functions used by interactive rebase tests.
# After setting the fake editor with this function, you can
#
# - override the commit message with $FAKE_COMMIT_MESSAGE
# - amend the commit message with $FAKE_COMMIT_AMEND
# - copy the original commit message to a file with $FAKE_MESSAGE_COPY
# - check that non-commit messages have a certain line count with $EXPECT_COUNT
# - check the commit count in the commit message header with $EXPECT_HEADER_COUNT
# - rewrite a rebase -i script as directed by $FAKE_LINES.
# $FAKE_LINES consists of a sequence of words separated by spaces.
# The following word combinations are possible:
#
# "<lineno>" -- add a "pick" line with the SHA1 taken from the
# specified line.
#
# "<cmd> <lineno>" -- add a line with the specified command
# ("pick", "squash", "fixup"|"fixup_-C"|"fixup_-c", "edit", "reword" or "drop")
# and the SHA1 taken from the specified line.
#
# "_" -- add a space, like "fixup_-C" implies "fixup -C" and
# "exec_cmd_with_args" add an "exec cmd with args" line.
#
# "#" -- Add a comment line.
#
# ">" -- Add a blank line.
set_fake_editor () {
write_script fake-editor.sh <<-\EOF
case "$1" in
*/COMMIT_EDITMSG)
test -z "$EXPECT_HEADER_COUNT" ||
test "$EXPECT_HEADER_COUNT" = "$(sed -n '1s/^# This is a combination of \(.*\) commits\./\1/p' < "$1")" ||
exit
test -z "$FAKE_COMMIT_MESSAGE" || echo "$FAKE_COMMIT_MESSAGE" > "$1"
test -z "$FAKE_COMMIT_AMEND" || echo "$FAKE_COMMIT_AMEND" >> "$1"
test -z "$FAKE_MESSAGE_COPY" || cat "$1" >"$FAKE_MESSAGE_COPY"
exit
;;
esac
test -z "$EXPECT_COUNT" ||
test "$EXPECT_COUNT" = $(sed -e '/^#/d' -e '/^$/d' < "$1" | wc -l) ||
exit
test -z "$FAKE_LINES" && exit
grep -v '^#' < "$1" > "$1".tmp
rm -f "$1"
echo 'rebase -i script before editing:'
cat "$1".tmp
action=\&
for line in $FAKE_LINES; do
case $line in
pick|p|squash|s|fixup|f|edit|e|reword|r|drop|d|label|l|reset|r|merge|m)
action="$line";;
exec_*|x_*|break|b)
echo "$line" | sed 's/_/ /g' >> "$1";;
merge_*|fixup_*)
action=$(echo "$line" | sed 's/_/ /g');;
"#")
echo '# comment' >> "$1";;
">")
echo >> "$1";;
bad)
action="badcmd";;
fakesha)
test \& != "$action" || action=pick
echo "$action XXXXXXX False commit" >> "$1"
action=pick;;
*)
sed -n "${line}s/^[a-z][a-z]*/$action/p" < "$1".tmp >> "$1"
action=\&;;
esac
done
echo 'rebase -i script after editing:'
cat "$1"
EOF
test_set_editor "$(pwd)/fake-editor.sh"
}
# After set_cat_todo_editor, rebase -i will write the todo list (ignoring
# blank lines and comments) to stdout, and exit failure (so you should run
# it with test_must_fail). This can be used to verify the expected user
# experience, for todo list changes that do not affect the outcome of
# rebase; or as an extra check in addition to checking the outcome.
set_cat_todo_editor () {
write_script fake-editor.sh <<-\EOF
grep "^[^#]" "$1"
exit 1
EOF
test_set_editor "$(pwd)/fake-editor.sh"
}
# checks that the revisions in "$2" represent a linear range with the
# subjects in "$1"
test_linear_range () {
revlist_merges=$(git rev-list --merges "$2") &&
test -z "$revlist_merges" &&
expected=$1
set -- $(git log --reverse --format=%s "$2")
test "$expected" = "$*"
}
reset_rebase () {
test_might_fail git rebase --abort &&
git reset --hard &&
git clean -f
}
cherry_pick () {
git cherry-pick -n "$2" &&
git commit -m "$1" &&
git tag "$1"
}
revert () {
git revert -n "$2" &&
git commit -m "$1" &&
git tag "$1"
}
make_empty () {
git commit --allow-empty -m "$1" &&
git tag "$1"
}
# Call this (inside test_expect_success) at the end of a test file to
# check that no tests have changed editor related environment
# variables or config settings
test_editor_unchanged () {
# We're only interested in exported variables hence 'sh -c'
sh -c 'cat >actual <<-EOF
EDITOR=$EDITOR
FAKE_COMMIT_AMEND=$FAKE_COMMIT_AMEND
FAKE_COMMIT_MESSAGE=$FAKE_COMMIT_MESSAGE
FAKE_LINES=$FAKE_LINES
GIT_EDITOR=$GIT_EDITOR
GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR=$GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR
core.editor=$(git config core.editor)
sequence.editor=$(git config sequence.editor)
EOF'
cat >expect <<-\EOF
EDITOR=:
FAKE_COMMIT_AMEND=
FAKE_COMMIT_MESSAGE=
FAKE_LINES=
GIT_EDITOR=
GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR=
core.editor=
sequence.editor=
EOF
test_cmp expect actual
}
# Set up an editor for testing reword commands
# Checks that there are no uncommitted changes when rewording and that the
# todo-list is reread after each
set_reword_editor () {
>reword-actual &&
>reword-oid &&
# Check rewording keeps the original authorship
GIT_AUTHOR_NAME="Reword Author"
GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL="reword.author@example.com"
GIT_AUTHOR_DATE=@123456
write_script reword-sequence-editor.sh <<-\EOF &&
todo="$(cat "$1")" &&
echo "exec git log -1 --pretty=format:'%an <%ae> %at%n%B%n' \
>>reword-actual" >"$1" &&
printf "%s\n" "$todo" >>"$1"
EOF
write_script reword-editor.sh <<-EOF &&
# Save the oid of the first reworded commit so we can check rebase
# fast-forwards to it
if ! test -s reword-oid
then
git rev-parse HEAD >reword-oid
fi &&
# There should be no uncommited changes
git diff --exit-code HEAD &&
# The todo-list should be re-read after a reword
GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR="\"$PWD/reword-sequence-editor.sh\"" \
git rebase --edit-todo &&
echo edited >>"\$1"
EOF
test_set_editor "$PWD/reword-editor.sh"
}
# Check the results of a rebase after calling set_reword_editor
# Pass the commits that were reworded in the order that they were picked
# Expects the first pick to be a fast-forward
check_reworded_commits () {
test_cmp_rev "$(cat reword-oid)" "$1^{commit}" &&
git log --format="%an <%ae> %at%n%B%nedited%n" --no-walk=unsorted "$@" \
>reword-expected &&
test_cmp reword-expected reword-actual &&
git log --format="%an <%ae> %at%n%B" -n $# --first-parent --reverse \
>reword-log &&
test_cmp reword-expected reword-log
}