##// END OF EJS Templates
compression: introduce a `storage.revlog.zlib.level` configuration...
compression: introduce a `storage.revlog.zlib.level` configuration This option control the zlib compression level used when compression revlog chunk. This is also a good excuse to pave the way for a similar configuration option for the zstd compression engine. Having a dedicated option for each compression algorithm is useful because they don't support the same range of values. Using a higher zlib compression impact CPU consumption at compression time, but does not directly affected decompression time. However dealing with small compressed chunk can directly help decompression and indirectly help other revlog logic. I ran some basic test on repositories using different level. I am using the mercurial, pypy, netbeans and mozilla-central clone from our benchmark suite. All tested repository use sparse-revlog and got all their delta recomputed. The different compression level has a small effect on the repository size (about 10% variation in the total range). My quick analysis is that revlog mostly store small delta, that are not affected by the compression level much. So the variation probably mostly comes from better compression of the snapshots revisions, and snapshot revision only represent a small portion of the repository content. I also made some basic timings measurements. The "read" timings are gathered using simple run of `hg perfrevlogrevisions`, the "write" timings using `hg perfrevlogwrite` (restricted to the last 5000 revisions for netbeans and mozilla central). The timings are gathered on a generic machine, (not one of our performance locked machine), so small variation might not be meaningful. However large trend remains relevant. Keep in mind that these numbers are not pure compression/decompression time. They also involve the full revlog logic. In particular the difference in chunk size has an impact on the delta chain structure, affecting performance when writing or reading them. On read/write performance, the compression level has a bigger impact. Counter-intuitively, the higher compression levels improve "write" performance for the large repositories in our tested setting. Maybe because the last 5000 delta chain end up having a very different shape in this specific spot? Or maybe because of a more general trend of better delta chains thanks to the smaller chunk and snapshot. This series does not intend to change the default compression level. However, these result call for a deeper analysis of this performance difference in the future. Full data ========= repo level .hg/store size 00manifest.d read write ---------------------------------------------------------------- mercurial 1 49,402,813 5,963,475 0.170159 53.250304 mercurial 6 47,197,397 5,875,730 0.182820 56.264320 mercurial 9 47,121,596 5,849,781 0.189219 56.293612 pypy 1 370,830,572 28,462,425 2.679217 460.721984 pypy 6 340,112,317 27,648,747 2.768691 467.537158 pypy 9 338,360,736 27,639,003 2.763495 476.589918 netbeans 1 1,281,847,810 165,495,457 122.477027 520.560316 netbeans 6 1,205,284,353 159,161,207 139.876147 715.930400 netbeans 9 1,197,135,671 155,034,586 141.620281 678.297064 mozilla 1 2,775,497,186 298,527,987 147.867662 751.263721 mozilla 6 2,596,856,420 286,597,671 170.572118 987.056093 mozilla 9 2,587,542,494 287,018,264 163.622338 739.803002

File last commit:

r42155:f9344d04 default
r42210:1fac9b93 default
Show More
sparse.py
348 lines | 13.6 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# sparse.py - allow sparse checkouts of the working directory
#
# Copyright 2014 Facebook, Inc.
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
"""allow sparse checkouts of the working directory (EXPERIMENTAL)
(This extension is not yet protected by backwards compatibility
guarantees. Any aspect may break in future releases until this
notice is removed.)
This extension allows the working directory to only consist of a
subset of files for the revision. This allows specific files or
directories to be explicitly included or excluded. Many repository
operations have performance proportional to the number of files in
the working directory. So only realizing a subset of files in the
working directory can improve performance.
Sparse Config Files
-------------------
The set of files that are part of a sparse checkout are defined by
a sparse config file. The file defines 3 things: includes (files to
include in the sparse checkout), excludes (files to exclude from the
sparse checkout), and profiles (links to other config files).
The file format is newline delimited. Empty lines and lines beginning
with ``#`` are ignored.
Lines beginning with ``%include `` denote another sparse config file
to include. e.g. ``%include tests.sparse``. The filename is relative
to the repository root.
The special lines ``[include]`` and ``[exclude]`` denote the section
for includes and excludes that follow, respectively. It is illegal to
have ``[include]`` after ``[exclude]``.
Non-special lines resemble file patterns to be added to either includes
or excludes. The syntax of these lines is documented by :hg:`help patterns`.
Patterns are interpreted as ``glob:`` by default and match against the
root of the repository.
Exclusion patterns take precedence over inclusion patterns. So even
if a file is explicitly included, an ``[exclude]`` entry can remove it.
For example, say you have a repository with 3 directories, ``frontend/``,
``backend/``, and ``tools/``. ``frontend/`` and ``backend/`` correspond
to different projects and it is uncommon for someone working on one
to need the files for the other. But ``tools/`` contains files shared
between both projects. Your sparse config files may resemble::
# frontend.sparse
frontend/**
tools/**
# backend.sparse
backend/**
tools/**
Say the backend grows in size. Or there's a directory with thousands
of files you wish to exclude. You can modify the profile to exclude
certain files::
[include]
backend/**
tools/**
[exclude]
tools/tests/**
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
from mercurial.i18n import _
from mercurial import (
commands,
dirstate,
error,
extensions,
hg,
logcmdutil,
match as matchmod,
pycompat,
registrar,
sparse,
util,
)
# Note for extension authors: ONLY specify testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core' for
# extensions which SHIP WITH MERCURIAL. Non-mainline extensions should
# be specifying the version(s) of Mercurial they are tested with, or
# leave the attribute unspecified.
testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core'
cmdtable = {}
command = registrar.command(cmdtable)
def extsetup(ui):
sparse.enabled = True
_setupclone(ui)
_setuplog(ui)
_setupadd(ui)
_setupdirstate(ui)
def replacefilecache(cls, propname, replacement):
"""Replace a filecache property with a new class. This allows changing the
cache invalidation condition."""
origcls = cls
assert callable(replacement)
while cls is not object:
if propname in cls.__dict__:
orig = cls.__dict__[propname]
setattr(cls, propname, replacement(orig))
break
cls = cls.__bases__[0]
if cls is object:
raise AttributeError(_("type '%s' has no property '%s'") % (origcls,
propname))
def _setuplog(ui):
entry = commands.table['log|history']
entry[1].append(('', 'sparse', None,
"limit to changesets affecting the sparse checkout"))
def _initialrevs(orig, repo, opts):
revs = orig(repo, opts)
if opts.get('sparse'):
sparsematch = sparse.matcher(repo)
def ctxmatch(rev):
ctx = repo[rev]
return any(f for f in ctx.files() if sparsematch(f))
revs = revs.filter(ctxmatch)
return revs
extensions.wrapfunction(logcmdutil, '_initialrevs', _initialrevs)
def _clonesparsecmd(orig, ui, repo, *args, **opts):
include_pat = opts.get(r'include')
exclude_pat = opts.get(r'exclude')
enableprofile_pat = opts.get(r'enable_profile')
narrow_pat = opts.get(r'narrow')
include = exclude = enableprofile = False
if include_pat:
pat = include_pat
include = True
if exclude_pat:
pat = exclude_pat
exclude = True
if enableprofile_pat:
pat = enableprofile_pat
enableprofile = True
if sum([include, exclude, enableprofile]) > 1:
raise error.Abort(_("too many flags specified."))
# if --narrow is passed, it means they are includes and excludes for narrow
# clone
if not narrow_pat and (include or exclude or enableprofile):
def clonesparse(orig, self, node, overwrite, *args, **kwargs):
sparse.updateconfig(self.unfiltered(), pat, {}, include=include,
exclude=exclude, enableprofile=enableprofile,
usereporootpaths=True)
return orig(self, node, overwrite, *args, **kwargs)
extensions.wrapfunction(hg, 'updaterepo', clonesparse)
return orig(ui, repo, *args, **opts)
def _setupclone(ui):
entry = commands.table['clone']
entry[1].append(('', 'enable-profile', [],
'enable a sparse profile'))
entry[1].append(('', 'include', [],
'include sparse pattern'))
entry[1].append(('', 'exclude', [],
'exclude sparse pattern'))
extensions.wrapcommand(commands.table, 'clone', _clonesparsecmd)
def _setupadd(ui):
entry = commands.table['add']
entry[1].append(('s', 'sparse', None,
'also include directories of added files in sparse config'))
def _add(orig, ui, repo, *pats, **opts):
if opts.get(r'sparse'):
dirs = set()
for pat in pats:
dirname, basename = util.split(pat)
dirs.add(dirname)
sparse.updateconfig(repo, list(dirs), opts, include=True)
return orig(ui, repo, *pats, **opts)
extensions.wrapcommand(commands.table, 'add', _add)
def _setupdirstate(ui):
"""Modify the dirstate to prevent stat'ing excluded files,
and to prevent modifications to files outside the checkout.
"""
def walk(orig, self, match, subrepos, unknown, ignored, full=True):
# hack to not exclude explicitly-specified paths so that they can
# be warned later on e.g. dirstate.add()
em = matchmod.exact(match.files())
sm = matchmod.unionmatcher([self._sparsematcher, em])
match = matchmod.intersectmatchers(match, sm)
return orig(self, match, subrepos, unknown, ignored, full)
extensions.wrapfunction(dirstate.dirstate, 'walk', walk)
# dirstate.rebuild should not add non-matching files
def _rebuild(orig, self, parent, allfiles, changedfiles=None):
matcher = self._sparsematcher
if not matcher.always():
allfiles = [f for f in allfiles if matcher(f)]
if changedfiles:
changedfiles = [f for f in changedfiles if matcher(f)]
if changedfiles is not None:
# In _rebuild, these files will be deleted from the dirstate
# when they are not found to be in allfiles
dirstatefilestoremove = set(f for f in self if not matcher(f))
changedfiles = dirstatefilestoremove.union(changedfiles)
return orig(self, parent, allfiles, changedfiles)
extensions.wrapfunction(dirstate.dirstate, 'rebuild', _rebuild)
# Prevent adding files that are outside the sparse checkout
editfuncs = ['normal', 'add', 'normallookup', 'copy', 'remove', 'merge']
hint = _('include file with `hg debugsparse --include <pattern>` or use ' +
'`hg add -s <file>` to include file directory while adding')
for func in editfuncs:
def _wrapper(orig, self, *args):
sparsematch = self._sparsematcher
if not sparsematch.always():
for f in args:
if (f is not None and not sparsematch(f) and
f not in self):
raise error.Abort(_("cannot add '%s' - it is outside "
"the sparse checkout") % f,
hint=hint)
return orig(self, *args)
extensions.wrapfunction(dirstate.dirstate, func, _wrapper)
@command('debugsparse', [
('I', 'include', False, _('include files in the sparse checkout')),
('X', 'exclude', False, _('exclude files in the sparse checkout')),
('d', 'delete', False, _('delete an include/exclude rule')),
('f', 'force', False, _('allow changing rules even with pending changes')),
('', 'enable-profile', False, _('enables the specified profile')),
('', 'disable-profile', False, _('disables the specified profile')),
('', 'import-rules', False, _('imports rules from a file')),
('', 'clear-rules', False, _('clears local include/exclude rules')),
('', 'refresh', False, _('updates the working after sparseness changes')),
('', 'reset', False, _('makes the repo full again')),
] + commands.templateopts,
_('[--OPTION] PATTERN...'),
helpbasic=True)
def debugsparse(ui, repo, *pats, **opts):
"""make the current checkout sparse, or edit the existing checkout
The sparse command is used to make the current checkout sparse.
This means files that don't meet the sparse condition will not be
written to disk, or show up in any working copy operations. It does
not affect files in history in any way.
Passing no arguments prints the currently applied sparse rules.
--include and --exclude are used to add and remove files from the sparse
checkout. The effects of adding an include or exclude rule are applied
immediately. If applying the new rule would cause a file with pending
changes to be added or removed, the command will fail. Pass --force to
force a rule change even with pending changes (the changes on disk will
be preserved).
--delete removes an existing include/exclude rule. The effects are
immediate.
--refresh refreshes the files on disk based on the sparse rules. This is
only necessary if .hg/sparse was changed by hand.
--enable-profile and --disable-profile accept a path to a .hgsparse file.
This allows defining sparse checkouts and tracking them inside the
repository. This is useful for defining commonly used sparse checkouts for
many people to use. As the profile definition changes over time, the sparse
checkout will automatically be updated appropriately, depending on which
changeset is checked out. Changes to .hgsparse are not applied until they
have been committed.
--import-rules accepts a path to a file containing rules in the .hgsparse
format, allowing you to add --include, --exclude and --enable-profile rules
in bulk. Like the --include, --exclude and --enable-profile switches, the
changes are applied immediately.
--clear-rules removes all local include and exclude rules, while leaving
any enabled profiles in place.
Returns 0 if editing the sparse checkout succeeds.
"""
opts = pycompat.byteskwargs(opts)
include = opts.get('include')
exclude = opts.get('exclude')
force = opts.get('force')
enableprofile = opts.get('enable_profile')
disableprofile = opts.get('disable_profile')
importrules = opts.get('import_rules')
clearrules = opts.get('clear_rules')
delete = opts.get('delete')
refresh = opts.get('refresh')
reset = opts.get('reset')
count = sum([include, exclude, enableprofile, disableprofile, delete,
importrules, refresh, clearrules, reset])
if count > 1:
raise error.Abort(_("too many flags specified"))
if count == 0:
if repo.vfs.exists('sparse'):
ui.status(repo.vfs.read("sparse") + "\n")
temporaryincludes = sparse.readtemporaryincludes(repo)
if temporaryincludes:
ui.status(_("Temporarily Included Files (for merge/rebase):\n"))
ui.status(("\n".join(temporaryincludes) + "\n"))
return
else:
raise error.Abort(_('the debugsparse command is only supported on'
' sparse repositories'))
if include or exclude or delete or reset or enableprofile or disableprofile:
sparse.updateconfig(repo, pats, opts, include=include, exclude=exclude,
reset=reset, delete=delete,
enableprofile=enableprofile,
disableprofile=disableprofile, force=force)
if importrules:
sparse.importfromfiles(repo, opts, pats, force=force)
if clearrules:
sparse.clearrules(repo, force=force)
if refresh:
try:
wlock = repo.wlock()
fcounts = map(
len,
sparse.refreshwdir(repo, repo.status(), sparse.matcher(repo),
force=force))
sparse.printchanges(ui, opts, added=fcounts[0], dropped=fcounts[1],
conflicting=fcounts[2])
finally:
wlock.release()