Hey,
On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 7:20 PM, John Smith <lbalba...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 6:53 PM, Markus Mohrhard > <markus.mohrh...@googlemail.com> wrote: > > > > I already mentioned on IRC that this means it just did not find any test > > files. The connection is working otherwise the NoConnectException would > be > > repeated. You need to make sure that you point to the correct directory > and > > otherwise debug why the script is not finding the files in your case. It > > works for me so I can't tell you what is wrong in your setup. > > > > Hi, > > I think I got it. When I remove the comments before 'print(files)' and > 'print( dirs )', I only see the subdirs below > /usr/local/src/libreofficedocs/, but not the files located in those > subdirs. When I copy a file directly in libreofficedocs, the script > does find it. Looks like test-bugzilla-files.py doesnt descend into > the subdirectory's. Since > 'dev-tools/test-bugzilla-files/test-bugzilla-files.py' created this > directory structure, I assumed that test-bugzilla-files.py would be > able to parse that. > > I know next time nothing about python, but would it be possible and > reasonably easy/quick to make test-bugzilla-files.py look in all > subdirectory's you point it at too ? > > > It is a feature that it does not look in sub directories. That allows me some freedom in organizing documents and moving broken documents around without too much work. So I would be a bit reluctant to change that behavior as it will break the script on the server. You can just use a script similar to the one that I posted for you that iterates over all directories and inspects each one. Regards, Markus
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