##// END OF EJS Templates
setdiscovery: precompute children revisions to avoid quadratic lookup...
setdiscovery: precompute children revisions to avoid quadratic lookup Moving away from dagutil a few commits ago introduced quadratic behavior when resolving children revisions during discovery. This commit introduces a precompute step of the children revisions to avoid the bad behavior. I believe the new code should have near identical performance to what dagutil was doing before. Behavior is still slightly different because we take into account filtered revisions. But this change was made when we moved off dagutil. I added a comment about multiple invocations of this function redundantly calculating the children revisions. I believe this potentially undesirable behavior was present when we used dagutil, as the call to inverse() previously in this function created a new object and required computing children on every invocation. I thought we should document the potential for a performance issue rather than let it go undocumented. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4326

File last commit:

r38162:6f67bfe4 default
r39214:274acf37 default
Show More
state.py
84 lines | 2.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# state.py - writing and reading state files in Mercurial
#
# Copyright 2018 Pulkit Goyal <pulkitmgoyal@gmail.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
"""
This file contains class to wrap the state for commands and other
related logic.
All the data related to the command state is stored as dictionary in the object.
The class has methods using which the data can be stored to disk in a file under
.hg/ directory.
We store the data on disk in cbor, for which we use the third party cbor library
to serialize and deserialize data.
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
from .thirdparty import cbor
from . import (
error,
util,
)
class cmdstate(object):
"""a wrapper class to store the state of commands like `rebase`, `graft`,
`histedit`, `shelve` etc. Extensions can also use this to write state files.
All the data for the state is stored in the form of key-value pairs in a
dictionary.
The class object can write all the data to a file in .hg/ directory and
can populate the object data reading that file.
Uses cbor to serialize and deserialize data while writing and reading from
disk.
"""
def __init__(self, repo, fname):
""" repo is the repo object
fname is the file name in which data should be stored in .hg directory
"""
self._repo = repo
self.fname = fname
def read(self):
"""read the existing state file and return a dict of data stored"""
return self._read()
def save(self, version, data):
"""write all the state data stored to .hg/<filename> file
we use third-party library cbor to serialize data to write in the file.
"""
if not isinstance(version, int):
raise error.ProgrammingError("version of state file should be"
" an integer")
with self._repo.vfs(self.fname, 'wb', atomictemp=True) as fp:
fp.write('%d\n' % version)
cbor.dump(data, fp, canonical=True)
def _read(self):
"""reads the state file and returns a dictionary which contain
data in the same format as it was before storing"""
with self._repo.vfs(self.fname, 'rb') as fp:
try:
int(fp.readline())
except ValueError:
raise error.CorruptedState("unknown version of state file"
" found")
return cbor.load(fp)
def delete(self):
"""drop the state file if exists"""
util.unlinkpath(self._repo.vfs.join(self.fname), ignoremissing=True)
def exists(self):
"""check whether the state file exists or not"""
return self._repo.vfs.exists(self.fname)