##// END OF EJS Templates
dispatch: change cwd when loading local config...
dispatch: change cwd when loading local config Previously, the `_getlocal` function would not correctly load the repo config when given a relative `rpath` and an alternate cwd via the `wd` parameter. Normally when `--cwd` is specified, hg changes to the given directory before attempting to load the local config (and therefore does not specify a `wd`). The only time the function is called with `wd` set is when hg is running as a command server (e.g., with chg), in which case each forked worker process will attempt to configure itself via `_getlocal` before responding to the client. When given a relative repo path, the worker fails to load the repo config, detects a config mismatch with the client, and enters a redirect/respawn loop. To fix this, we can simply change to the desired working directory during config loading. (Note that simply concatenating `wd` and `rpath` won't work in all cases. The repo path could be something more complicated than a simple relative path, such as a `union:` repo.)

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memorytop.py
44 lines | 1.4 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# memorytop requires Python 3.4
#
# Usage: set PYTHONTRACEMALLOC=n in the environment of the hg invocation,
# where n>= is the number of frames to show in the backtrace. Put calls to
# memorytop in strategic places to show the current memory use by allocation
# site.
import gc
import tracemalloc
def memorytop(limit=10):
gc.collect()
snapshot = tracemalloc.take_snapshot()
snapshot = snapshot.filter_traces(
(
tracemalloc.Filter(False, "<frozen importlib._bootstrap>"),
tracemalloc.Filter(False, "<frozen importlib._bootstrap_external>"),
tracemalloc.Filter(False, "<unknown>"),
)
)
stats = snapshot.statistics('traceback')
total = sum(stat.size for stat in stats)
print("\nTotal allocated size: %.1f KiB\n" % (total / 1024))
print("Lines with the biggest net allocations")
for index, stat in enumerate(stats[:limit], 1):
print(
"#%d: %d objects using %.1f KiB"
% (index, stat.count, stat.size / 1024)
)
for line in stat.traceback.format(most_recent_first=True):
print(' ', line)
other = stats[limit:]
if other:
size = sum(stat.size for stat in other)
count = sum(stat.count for stat in other)
print(
"%s other: %d objects using %.1f KiB"
% (len(other), count, size / 1024)
)
print()