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lfs: check content length after downloading content...
lfs: check content length after downloading content Adapted from the Facebook repo[1]. The intent is to distinguish between the connection dying and getting served a corrupt blob. The original message: HTTP makes no provision to tell your client that you failed halfway through producing your response and won't have the answer they're looking for. So, if a LFS server fails while producing a response, then we'll report an OID mismatch. We can do a little better and disambiguate between "the server sent us the wrong blob" (very scary) and "the server crashed" (merely annoying) by looking at the content length of the response we got back. If it's not what was advertised, we can reasonably safely assume the server crashed. [1] https://github.com/facebookexperimental/eden/commit/2a4a6fab4e882ed89b948bfc1e7d56d7c3c99dd2 Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7881

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lsprofcalltree.py
96 lines | 2.7 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""
lsprofcalltree.py - lsprof output which is readable by kcachegrind
Authors:
* David Allouche <david <at> allouche.net>
* Jp Calderone & Itamar Shtull-Trauring
* Johan Dahlin
This software may be used and distributed according to the terms
of the GNU General Public License, incorporated herein by reference.
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
from . import pycompat
def label(code):
if isinstance(code, str):
# built-in functions ('~' sorts at the end)
return b'~' + pycompat.sysbytes(code)
else:
return b'%s %s:%d' % (
pycompat.sysbytes(code.co_name),
pycompat.sysbytes(code.co_filename),
code.co_firstlineno,
)
class KCacheGrind(object):
def __init__(self, profiler):
self.data = profiler.getstats()
self.out_file = None
def output(self, out_file):
self.out_file = out_file
out_file.write(b'events: Ticks\n')
self._print_summary()
for entry in self.data:
self._entry(entry)
def _print_summary(self):
max_cost = 0
for entry in self.data:
totaltime = int(entry.totaltime * 1000)
max_cost = max(max_cost, totaltime)
self.out_file.write(b'summary: %d\n' % max_cost)
def _entry(self, entry):
out_file = self.out_file
code = entry.code
if isinstance(code, str):
out_file.write(b'fi=~\n')
else:
out_file.write(b'fi=%s\n' % pycompat.sysbytes(code.co_filename))
out_file.write(b'fn=%s\n' % label(code))
inlinetime = int(entry.inlinetime * 1000)
if isinstance(code, str):
out_file.write(b'0 %d\n' % inlinetime)
else:
out_file.write(b'%d %d\n' % (code.co_firstlineno, inlinetime))
# recursive calls are counted in entry.calls
if entry.calls:
calls = entry.calls
else:
calls = []
if isinstance(code, str):
lineno = 0
else:
lineno = code.co_firstlineno
for subentry in calls:
self._subentry(lineno, subentry)
out_file.write(b'\n')
def _subentry(self, lineno, subentry):
out_file = self.out_file
code = subentry.code
out_file.write(b'cfn=%s\n' % label(code))
if isinstance(code, str):
out_file.write(b'cfi=~\n')
out_file.write(b'calls=%d 0\n' % subentry.callcount)
else:
out_file.write(b'cfi=%s\n' % pycompat.sysbytes(code.co_filename))
out_file.write(
b'calls=%d %d\n' % (subentry.callcount, code.co_firstlineno)
)
totaltime = int(subentry.totaltime * 1000)
out_file.write(b'%d %d\n' % (lineno, totaltime))