c74c72034f
A #! line in these files is misleading, since these scriptlets are meant to be sourced with '.' (using whatever shell sources them) instead of run directly using the interpreter named on the #! line. Removing the #! line shouldn't hurt syntax highlighting since these files have filenames ending with '.sh'. For documentation, add a brief description of how the files are meant to be used in place of the shebang line. Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
115 lines
3.0 KiB
Bash
115 lines
3.0 KiB
Bash
# Helper functions used by interactive rebase tests.
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# After setting the fake editor with this function, you can
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#
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# - override the commit message with $FAKE_COMMIT_MESSAGE
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# - amend the commit message with $FAKE_COMMIT_AMEND
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# - check that non-commit messages have a certain line count with $EXPECT_COUNT
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# - check the commit count in the commit message header with $EXPECT_HEADER_COUNT
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# - rewrite a rebase -i script as directed by $FAKE_LINES.
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# $FAKE_LINES consists of a sequence of words separated by spaces.
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# The following word combinations are possible:
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#
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# "<lineno>" -- add a "pick" line with the SHA1 taken from the
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# specified line.
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#
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# "<cmd> <lineno>" -- add a line with the specified command
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# ("squash", "fixup", "edit", or "reword") and the SHA1 taken
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# from the specified line.
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#
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# "exec_cmd_with_args" -- add an "exec cmd with args" line.
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#
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# "#" -- Add a comment line.
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#
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# ">" -- Add a blank line.
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set_fake_editor () {
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write_script fake-editor.sh <<-\EOF
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case "$1" in
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*/COMMIT_EDITMSG)
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test -z "$EXPECT_HEADER_COUNT" ||
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test "$EXPECT_HEADER_COUNT" = "$(sed -n '1s/^# This is a combination of \(.*\) commits\./\1/p' < "$1")" ||
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exit
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test -z "$FAKE_COMMIT_MESSAGE" || echo "$FAKE_COMMIT_MESSAGE" > "$1"
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test -z "$FAKE_COMMIT_AMEND" || echo "$FAKE_COMMIT_AMEND" >> "$1"
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exit
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;;
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esac
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test -z "$EXPECT_COUNT" ||
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test "$EXPECT_COUNT" = $(sed -e '/^#/d' -e '/^$/d' < "$1" | wc -l) ||
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exit
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test -z "$FAKE_LINES" && exit
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grep -v '^#' < "$1" > "$1".tmp
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rm -f "$1"
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echo 'rebase -i script before editing:'
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cat "$1".tmp
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action=pick
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for line in $FAKE_LINES; do
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case $line in
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squash|fixup|edit|reword)
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action="$line";;
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exec*)
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echo "$line" | sed 's/_/ /g' >> "$1";;
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"#")
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echo '# comment' >> "$1";;
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">")
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echo >> "$1";;
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*)
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sed -n "${line}s/^pick/$action/p" < "$1".tmp >> "$1"
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action=pick;;
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esac
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done
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echo 'rebase -i script after editing:'
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cat "$1"
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EOF
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test_set_editor "$(pwd)/fake-editor.sh"
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}
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# After set_cat_todo_editor, rebase -i will write the todo list (ignoring
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# blank lines and comments) to stdout, and exit failure (so you should run
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# it with test_must_fail). This can be used to verify the expected user
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# experience, for todo list changes that do not affect the outcome of
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# rebase; or as an extra check in addition to checking the outcome.
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set_cat_todo_editor () {
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write_script fake-editor.sh <<-\EOF
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grep "^[^#]" "$1"
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exit 1
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EOF
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test_set_editor "$(pwd)/fake-editor.sh"
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}
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# checks that the revisions in "$2" represent a linear range with the
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# subjects in "$1"
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test_linear_range () {
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revlist_merges=$(git rev-list --merges "$2") &&
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test -z "$revlist_merges" &&
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expected=$1
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set -- $(git log --reverse --format=%s "$2")
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test "$expected" = "$*"
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}
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reset_rebase () {
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test_might_fail git rebase --abort &&
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git reset --hard &&
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git clean -f
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}
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cherry_pick () {
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git cherry-pick -n "$2" &&
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git commit -m "$1" &&
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git tag "$1"
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}
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revert () {
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git revert -n "$2" &&
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git commit -m "$1" &&
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git tag "$1"
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}
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make_empty () {
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git commit --allow-empty -m "$1" &&
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git tag "$1"
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}
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