We need to fetch our list of tests both outside of our test binary and within. We need
to get the list from within so that we can run the code that drives the test and runs
assertions. To get the list of tests we need to know where the root of the lazygit repo
is, given that the tests live in files under that root.
So far, we've used this GetLazyRootDirectory() function for that, but it assumes that
we're not in a test directory (it just looks for the first .git dir it can find). Because
we didn't want to properly fix this before, we've been setting the working directory of
the test command to the lazygit root, and using the --path CLI arg to override it when
the test itself ran. This was a terrible hack.
Now, we're passing the lazygit root directory as an env var to the integration test, so
that we can set the working directory to the actual path of the test repo; removing the
need to use the --path arg.
We've been sometimes using lo and sometimes using my slices package, and we need to pick one
for consistency. Lo is more extensive and better maintained so we're going with that.
My slices package was a superset of go's own slices package so in some places I've just used
the official one (the methods were just wrappers anyway).
I've also moved the remaining methods into the utils package.
For users who have the rebase.autoSquash git config set to true, any regular
rebase will squash fixups in addition to rebasing. Not good -- we'll fix that in
the next commit.
If the remote name contains special regex-chars,
the compilation of the regex might fail.
Quoting the remoteName ensures that all special chars
in the remoteName are properly escaped before compiling
the regex.
test: add an integration test for checkout branch by name
fix: fix full ref name of detached head
refactor: refactor current branch loader
chore: use field name explicitly
Add Form field to CustomCommandObjects struct
Write user prompts responses to Form field
Ensure that map keys exists
Add form prompts integration test
Remove redundant index