##// END OF EJS Templates
interfaces: make the `peer` mixin not a Protocol to fix Python 3.10 failures...
interfaces: make the `peer` mixin not a Protocol to fix Python 3.10 failures I can't find any documentation on this, but it appears that Protocol class attributes don't get inherited in subclasses that explicitly subclass a Protocol until Python 3.11, which caused a ton of failures in CI on macOS and Windows (which both test using Python 3.9). The problem started with 1df97507c6b8, and typically manifested as most tests failing to access `ui` on various `peer` classes. Here's a short proof of concept: from __future__ import annotations from typing import ( Protocol, ) class peer(Protocol): limitedarguments: bool = False def __init__(self, arg1, arg2, remotehidden: bool = False) -> None: self.arg1 = arg1 self.arg2 = arg2 class subclass(peer): def __init__(self, arg1, arg2): super(subclass, self).__init__(arg1, arg2, False) sub = subclass(1, 2) print("sub.arg1 is %r" % sub.arg1) When run with Python 3.8.10, 3.9.13, and 3.10.11, the result is: $ py -3.8 prot-test.py Traceback (most recent call last): File "prot-test.py", line 20, in <module> print("sub.arg1 is %r" % sub.arg1) AttributeError: 'subclass' object has no attribute 'arg1' On Python 3.11.9, 3.12.7, and 3.13.0, the result is: $ py -3.11 ../prot-test.py sub.arg1 is 1 Explicitly adding annotations to `peer` like `limitedarguments` didn't help.

File last commit:

r49730:6000f5b2 default
r53403:199b0e62 default
Show More
perf-revlog-write-plot.py
125 lines | 3.2 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
/ contrib / perf-utils / perf-revlog-write-plot.py
#!/usr/bin/env python3
#
# Copyright 2018 Paul Morelle <Paul.Morelle@octobus.net>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
#
# This script use the output of `hg perfrevlogwrite -T json --details` to draw
# various plot related to write performance in a revlog
#
# usage: perf-revlog-write-plot.py details.json
import json
import re
import numpy as np
import scipy.signal
from matplotlib import (
pyplot as plt,
ticker as mticker,
)
def plot(data, title=None):
items = {}
re_title = re.compile(r'^revisions #\d+ of \d+, rev (\d+)$')
for item in data:
m = re_title.match(item['title'])
if m is None:
continue
rev = int(m.group(1))
items[rev] = item
min_rev = min(items.keys())
max_rev = max(items.keys())
ary = np.empty((2, max_rev - min_rev + 1))
for rev, item in items.items():
ary[0][rev - min_rev] = rev
ary[1][rev - min_rev] = item['wall']
fig = plt.figure()
comb_plt = fig.add_subplot(211)
other_plt = fig.add_subplot(212)
comb_plt.plot(
ary[0], np.cumsum(ary[1]), color='red', linewidth=1, label='comb'
)
plots = []
p = other_plt.plot(ary[0], ary[1], color='red', linewidth=1, label='wall')
plots.append(p)
colors = {
10: ('green', 'xkcd:grass green'),
100: ('blue', 'xkcd:bright blue'),
1000: ('purple', 'xkcd:dark pink'),
}
for n, color in colors.items():
avg_n = np.convolve(ary[1], np.full(n, 1.0 / n), 'valid')
p = other_plt.plot(
ary[0][n - 1 :],
avg_n,
color=color[0],
linewidth=1,
label='avg time last %d' % n,
)
plots.append(p)
med_n = scipy.signal.medfilt(ary[1], n + 1)
p = other_plt.plot(
ary[0],
med_n,
color=color[1],
linewidth=1,
label='median time last %d' % n,
)
plots.append(p)
formatter = mticker.ScalarFormatter()
formatter.set_scientific(False)
formatter.set_useOffset(False)
comb_plt.grid()
comb_plt.xaxis.set_major_formatter(formatter)
comb_plt.legend()
other_plt.grid()
other_plt.xaxis.set_major_formatter(formatter)
leg = other_plt.legend()
leg2plot = {}
for legline, plot in zip(leg.get_lines(), plots):
legline.set_picker(5)
leg2plot[legline] = plot
def onpick(event):
legline = event.artist
plot = leg2plot[legline]
visible = not plot[0].get_visible()
for l in plot:
l.set_visible(visible)
if visible:
legline.set_alpha(1.0)
else:
legline.set_alpha(0.2)
fig.canvas.draw()
if title is not None:
fig.canvas.set_window_title(title)
fig.canvas.mpl_connect('pick_event', onpick)
plt.show()
if __name__ == '__main__':
import sys
if len(sys.argv) > 1:
print('reading from %r' % sys.argv[1])
with open(sys.argv[1], 'r') as fp:
plot(json.load(fp), title=sys.argv[1])
else:
print('reading from stdin')
plot(json.load(sys.stdin))