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rust: bump to memmap2 0.5.3, micro-timer 0.4.0, and crossbeam-channel 0.5.0...
rust: bump to memmap2 0.5.3, micro-timer 0.4.0, and crossbeam-channel 0.5.0 The merge in 12adf8c695ed had conflicts in rust/Cargo.lock and rust/hg-core/Cargo.toml . Let's ignore rust/Cargo.lock - it is regenerated. For rust/hg-core/Cargo.toml, stable had dd6b67d5c256 "rust: fix unsound `OwningDirstateMap`" which introduced ouroboros (and dropped stable_deref_trait). Default had ec8d9b5a5e7c "rust-hg-core: upgrade dependencies" which had a lot of churn bumping minimum versions - also patch versions. It is indeed a good idea to bump to *allow* use of latest package. That means that major versions should be bumped for packages after 1.0, and for packages below 1.0 minor versions should be bumped too. But it doesn't work to try enforce a policy of using latest patch by bumping versions at arbitrary times. For good or bad, the merge doesn't seem to have resolved the conflicts correctly, and many of the minor "upgrade dependencies" were lost again. Unfortunately, it also lost the bump of memmap2 to 0.5.3, which is needed for Fedora packaging where 0.4 isn't available. Same with micro-timer bump to 0.4 (which already is used in rhg). crossbeam-channel bump was also lost. This change fixes that regression by redoing these "important" lines of the merge "correctly". I propose this for stable, even though dependency changes on stable branches are annoying.

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r47575:d4ba4d51 default
r50312:1bad05cf stable
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hgperf
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#!/usr/bin/env python3
#
# hgperf - measure performance of Mercurial commands
#
# Copyright 2014 Olivia Mackall <olivia@selenic.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
'''measure performance of Mercurial commands
Using ``hgperf`` instead of ``hg`` measures performance of the target
Mercurial command. For example, the execution below measures
performance of :hg:`heads --topo`::
$ hgperf heads --topo
All command output via ``ui`` is suppressed, and just measurement
result is displayed: see also "perf" extension in "contrib".
Costs of processing before dispatching to the command function like
below are not measured::
- parsing command line (e.g. option validity check)
- reading configuration files in
But ``pre-`` and ``post-`` hook invocation for the target command is
measured, even though these are invoked before or after dispatching to
the command function, because these may be required to repeat
execution of the target command correctly.
'''
import os
import sys
libdir = '@LIBDIR@'
if libdir != '@' 'LIBDIR' '@':
if not os.path.isabs(libdir):
libdir = os.path.join(
os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__)), libdir
)
libdir = os.path.abspath(libdir)
sys.path.insert(0, libdir)
# enable importing on demand to reduce startup time
try:
from mercurial import demandimport
demandimport.enable()
except ImportError:
import sys
sys.stderr.write(
"abort: couldn't find mercurial libraries in [%s]\n"
% ' '.join(sys.path)
)
sys.stderr.write("(check your install and PYTHONPATH)\n")
sys.exit(-1)
from mercurial import (
dispatch,
util,
)
def timer(func, title=None):
results = []
begin = util.timer()
count = 0
while True:
ostart = os.times()
cstart = util.timer()
r = func()
cstop = util.timer()
ostop = os.times()
count += 1
a, b = ostart, ostop
results.append((cstop - cstart, b[0] - a[0], b[1] - a[1]))
if cstop - begin > 3 and count >= 100:
break
if cstop - begin > 10 and count >= 3:
break
if title:
sys.stderr.write("! %s\n" % title)
if r:
sys.stderr.write("! result: %s\n" % r)
m = min(results)
sys.stderr.write(
"! wall %f comb %f user %f sys %f (best of %d)\n"
% (m[0], m[1] + m[2], m[1], m[2], count)
)
orgruncommand = dispatch.runcommand
def runcommand(lui, repo, cmd, fullargs, ui, options, d, cmdpats, cmdoptions):
ui.pushbuffer()
lui.pushbuffer()
timer(
lambda: orgruncommand(
lui, repo, cmd, fullargs, ui, options, d, cmdpats, cmdoptions
)
)
ui.popbuffer()
lui.popbuffer()
dispatch.runcommand = runcommand
dispatch.run()