#
# Copyright (c) 2007 Christian Couder
#
-test_description='Tests git-bisect functionality'
+test_description='Tests git bisect functionality'
exec </dev/null
fi
test_tick
- git-commit --quiet -m "$MSG" $_file
+ git commit --quiet -m "$MSG" $_file
}
HASH1=
test_must_fail git bisect start foo $HASH1 -- &&
test_must_fail git bisect start $HASH4 $HASH1 bar -- &&
test -z "$(git for-each-ref "refs/bisect/*")" &&
- test_must_fail ls .git/BISECT_* &&
+ test -z "$(ls .git/BISECT_* 2>/dev/null)" &&
git bisect start &&
test_must_fail git bisect good foo $HASH1 &&
test_must_fail git bisect good $HASH1 bar &&
fi
'
+# $HASH1 is good, $HASH4 is both skipped and bad, we skip $HASH3
+# and $HASH2 is good,
+# so we should not be able to tell the first bad commit
+# among $HASH3 and $HASH4
+test_expect_success 'bisect skip: with commit both bad and skipped' '
+ git bisect start &&
+ git bisect skip &&
+ git bisect bad &&
+ git bisect good $HASH1 &&
+ git bisect skip &&
+ if git bisect good > my_bisect_log.txt
+ then
+ echo Oops, should have failed.
+ false
+ else
+ test $? -eq 2 &&
+ grep "first bad commit could be any of" my_bisect_log.txt &&
+ ! grep $HASH1 my_bisect_log.txt &&
+ ! grep $HASH2 my_bisect_log.txt &&
+ grep $HASH3 my_bisect_log.txt &&
+ grep $HASH4 my_bisect_log.txt &&
+ git bisect reset
+ fi
+'
+
# We want to automatically find the commit that
# introduced "Another" into hello.
test_expect_success \