Commit graph

10 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
jenkins-bot 53cf713cdb Merge "Add test cases for impossible follow vs. rollback edge case" 2020-05-12 02:03:35 +00:00
Bartosz Dziewoński 3678215a77 Add a newline in wikitext before autogenerated reflist
Previously the reflist was added at the end of the last line of text,
which messes up paragraph wrapping (as seen in many test cases), and
generated invalid HTML when the last line was a list item (T148701).

(second try, previously reverted in 8c933d03c5)

Note this affects only pages where the <references /> tag is missing,
and the references section is auto-generated at the very end of the page.

Bug: T148701
Change-Id: Ib2101346434a4e317b5fc7379215b60c7020cb2b
2020-05-06 20:51:25 +02:00
C. Scott Ananian 376c0418d3 Update parser tests to v2 (tidy by default)
The most common cleanup required by switching to tidy output was adding
missing <p>-wrappers to the last item before <references/>.

Bug: T246285
Change-Id: I7c8a08c4e6eff7caf4539a26fae475a4133f9a0c
2020-04-01 11:11:13 -04:00
Thiemo Kreuz a00b8d990d Add test cases for impossible follow vs. rollback edge case
While working on the patch I4303642 I was worried about the line

array_pop( $this->refCallStack )

in the rollback code. Since the patch changed the position of follow
elements in the stack, an array_pop() would pop different elements.

It turns out this is impossible. Rollbacks are only done for <ref>
elements inside a <references> tag, immediatelly after reaching the
closing </references>. It's impossible to use follow="…" inside
<references>. It will not be added to the stack, and therefore not
rolled back.

Even if the edge case would be possible, the *old* code that placed
follow elements on the *other* side of the stack would have been
wrong then.

The test cases in this patch try to hit this edge case, and are
expected to not be able to do so.

Change-Id: I4380bf443db17c6214dbfa2cbda62b46db04258a
2020-04-01 09:03:19 +00:00
Awight 8c933d03c5 Revert "Add a newline in wikitext before autogenerated reflist"
This reverts commit 90697ffe43.

Change-Id: I659ce1689603fd16e378fb8d3d5bd6d1089342b2
2020-04-01 08:03:55 +00:00
Bartosz Dziewoński 90697ffe43 Add a newline in wikitext before autogenerated reflist
Previously the reflist was added at the end of the last line of text,
which messes up paragraph wrapping (as seen in many test cases), and
generated invalid HTML when the last line was a list item (T148701).

Bug: T148701
Change-Id: Ifc873fc913e717026d80d54b570c594d1073fb42
2020-03-31 19:00:51 +00:00
Thiemo Kreuz 0dc6f37785 Replace now unused native cloning feature
Since I3db5175 the ParserCloned hook handler does not rely on cloning
the Cite object any more. There is no cloning any more. This is dead
code and we could remove it. Just to be sure I propose to keep the
method, but let it throw an exception.

Bug: T240248
Change-Id: I2057ea652ca25f4c7031c28a6e713671738f5e22
2019-12-20 20:07:59 +01:00
Adam Wight 084ca6b3d4 Integration parser test for ParserFunctions
Depends-On: I09844079f163e583d3b1e941c701f8cda5029a0a
Bug: T240345
Change-Id: I86c55ff88d9f4b800e8868728dfec6b4ceda82c2
2019-12-11 08:58:58 +01:00
Thiemo Kreuz 54333c9bd6 Stop formatting "1.2" as "1,2" in languages like German
The new extends="…" feature is using numbers like "1.2". These should be
localized in languages like Hebrew that uses other symbols for the digits.
But the "." should not change.

The existing feature when a <ref> is reused multiple times does have the
same "issue". But it seems this is intentional, because it is covered by
a test. Note this is not visible in German, because German uses custom
labels "a", "b", and so on.

This patch also improves the so called "smoke" tests and makes one cover
numbers up to "1,10" for a <ref> that is reused that often.

Bug: T239725
Change-Id: Iffcb56e1c7be09cefed9dabb1d6391eb6ad995ce
2019-12-04 09:43:04 +01:00
Thiemo Kreuz 38a38ae472 Add smoke tests for previously uncovered combinations
I noticed a possible issue related to the $this->refSequence counter
in the patch Ida9612d. Some of these counters might get messes up, but
there was never a test that checked what will happen to the *next*
reference then.

I checked the test cases in this patch with a very old version of the
codebase.

Change-Id: If6e56f727dce5d0e5e38e048e602437597248a42
2019-11-27 16:34:46 +01:00