run-tests: handle windows crlf in .py tests again
Before af7c6bc48d8d all crlf occurrences in test output on Windows were simply
changed to lf. In af7c6bc48d8d it was replaced by more clever handling in the
.t test runner ... but the .py runner was forgotten and many .py tests were
failing on Windows.
The crlf/lf replacement is now reintroduced in the py test runner.
[ original upstream message ]
#!/usr/bin/env python
"""Test the running system for features availability. Exit with zero
if all features are there, non-zero otherwise. If a feature name is
prefixed with "no-", the absence of feature is tested.
"""
import optparse
import sys
import hghave
checks = hghave.checks
def list_features():
for name, feature in checks.iteritems():
desc = feature[1]
print name + ':', desc
def test_features():
failed = 0
for name, feature in checks.iteritems():
check, _ = feature
try:
check()
except Exception, e:
print "feature %s failed: %s" % (name, e)
failed += 1
return failed
parser = optparse.OptionParser("%prog [options] [features]")
parser.add_option("--test-features", action="store_true",
help="test available features")
parser.add_option("--list-features", action="store_true",
help="list available features")
parser.add_option("-q", "--quiet", action="store_true",
help="check features silently")
if __name__ == '__main__':
options, args = parser.parse_args()
if options.list_features:
list_features()
sys.exit(0)
if options.test_features:
sys.exit(test_features())
quiet = options.quiet
failures = 0
def error(msg):
global failures
if not quiet:
sys.stderr.write(msg + '\n')
failures += 1
for feature in args:
negate = feature.startswith('no-')
if negate:
feature = feature[3:]
if feature not in checks:
error('skipped: unknown feature: ' + feature)
continue
check, desc = checks[feature]
try:
available = check()
except Exception, e:
error('hghave check failed: ' + feature)
continue
if not negate and not available:
error('skipped: missing feature: ' + desc)
elif negate and available:
error('skipped: system supports %s' % desc)
if failures != 0:
sys.exit(1)