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phases: large rewrite on retract boundary...
phases: large rewrite on retract boundary The new code is still pure Python, so we still have room to going significantly faster. However its complexity of the complex part is `O(|[min_new_draft, tip]|)` instead of `O(|[min_draft, tip]|` which should help tremendously one repository with old draft (like mercurial-devel or mozilla-try). This is especially useful as the most common "retract boundary" operation happens when we commit/rewrite new drafts or when we push new draft to a non-publishing server. In this case, the smallest new_revs is very close to the tip and there is very few work to do. A few smaller optimisation could be done for these cases and will be introduced in later changesets. We still have iterate over large sets of roots, but this is already a great improvement for a very small amount of work. We gather information on the affected changeset as we go as we can put it to use in the next changesets. This extra data collection might slowdown the `register_new` case a bit, however for register_new, it should not really matters. The set of new nodes is either small, so the impact is negligible, or the set of new nodes is large, and the amount of work to do to had them will dominate the overhead the collecting information in `changed_revs`. As this new code compute the changes on the fly, it unlock other interesting improvement to be done in later changeset.

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rust.txt
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Mercurial can be augmented with Rust extensions for speeding up certain
operations.
Compatibility
=============
Though the Rust extensions are only tested by the project under Linux, users of
MacOS, FreeBSD and other UNIX-likes have been using the Rust extensions. Your
mileage may vary, but by all means do give us feedback or signal your interest
for better support.
No Rust extensions are available for Windows at this time.
Features
========
The following operations are sped up when using Rust:
- discovery of differences between repositories (pull/push)
- nodemap (see :hg:`help config.format.use-persistent-nodemap`)
- all commands using the dirstate (status, commit, diff, add, update, etc.)
- dirstate-v2 (see :hg:`help config.format.use-dirstate-v2`)
- iteration over ancestors in a graph
More features are in the works, and improvements on the above listed are still
in progress. For more experimental work see the "rhg" section.
Checking for Rust
=================
You may already have the Rust extensions depending on how you install
Mercurial::
$ hg debuginstall | grep -i rust
checking Rust extensions (installed)
checking module policy (rust+c-allow)
If those lines don't even exist, you're using an old version of `hg` which does
not have any Rust extensions yet.
Installing
==========
You will need `cargo` to be in your `$PATH`. See the "MSRV" section for which
version to use.
Using pip
---------
Users of `pip` can install the Rust extensions with the following command::
$ pip install mercurial --global-option --rust --no-use-pep517
`--no-use-pep517` is here to tell `pip` to preserve backwards compatibility with
the legacy `setup.py` system. Mercurial has not yet migrated its complex setup
to the new system, so we still need this to add compiled extensions.
This might take a couple of minutes because you're compiling everything.
See the "Checking for Rust" section to see if the install succeeded.
From your distribution
----------------------
Some distributions are shipping Mercurial with Rust extensions enabled and
pre-compiled (meaning you won't have to install `cargo`), or allow you to
specify an install flag. Check with your specific distribution for how to do
that, or ask their team to add support for hg+Rust!
From source
-----------
Please refer to the `rust/README.rst` file in the Mercurial repository for
instructions on how to install from source.
MSRV
====
The minimum supported Rust version is defined in `rust/clippy.toml`.
The project's policy is to keep it at or below the version from Debian testing,
to make the distributions' job easier.
rhg
===
There exists an experimental pure-Rust version of Mercurial called `rhg` with a
fallback mechanism for unsupported invocations. It allows for much faster
execution of certain commands while adding no discernable overhead for the rest.
The only way of trying it out is by building it from source. Please refer to
`rust/README.rst` in the Mercurial repository.
See `hg help config.rhg` for configuration options.
Contributing
============
If you would like to help the Rust endeavor, please refer to `rust/README.rst`
in the Mercurial repository.