##// END OF EJS Templates
copy: add flag for disabling copy tracing...
copy: add flag for disabling copy tracing Copy tracing can be up to 80% of rebase time when rebasing stacks of commits in large repos (hundreds of thousands of files). This provides the option of turning off the majority of copy tracing. It does not turn off _forwardcopies() since that is used to carry copy information inside a commit across a rebase. This will affect the situation where a user edits a file, then rebases on top of commits that have moved that file. The move will not be detected and the user will have to manually resolve the issue (possibly by redoing the rebase with this flag off). The reason to have a flag instead of trying to fix the actual copy tracing performance is that copy tracing is fundamentally an O(number of files in the repo) operation. In order to know if file X in the rebase source was copied anywhere, we have to walk the filelog for every new file that exists in the rebase destination (i.e. a file in the destination that is not in the common ancestor). Without an index that lets us trace forward (i.e. from file Y in the common ancestor forward to the rebase destination), it will never be an O(number of changes in my branch) operation. In mozilla-central, rebasing a 3 commit stack across 20,000 revs goes from 39s to 11s.

File last commit:

r25943:3beed01d default
r26013:38f92d12 default
Show More
demandimport.py
230 lines | 7.6 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# demandimport.py - global demand-loading of modules for Mercurial
#
# Copyright 2006, 2007 Matt Mackall <mpm@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.
'''
demandimport - automatic demandloading of modules
To enable this module, do:
import demandimport; demandimport.enable()
Imports of the following forms will be demand-loaded:
import a, b.c
import a.b as c
from a import b,c # a will be loaded immediately
These imports will not be delayed:
from a import *
b = __import__(a)
'''
from __future__ import absolute_import
import contextlib
import os
import sys
# __builtin__ in Python 2, builtins in Python 3.
try:
import __builtin__ as builtins
except ImportError:
import builtins
contextmanager = contextlib.contextmanager
_origimport = __import__
nothing = object()
# Python 3 doesn't have relative imports nor level -1.
level = -1
if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
level = 0
_import = _origimport
def _hgextimport(importfunc, name, globals, *args, **kwargs):
try:
return importfunc(name, globals, *args, **kwargs)
except ImportError:
if not globals:
raise
# extensions are loaded with "hgext_" prefix
hgextname = 'hgext_%s' % name
nameroot = hgextname.split('.', 1)[0]
contextroot = globals.get('__name__', '').split('.', 1)[0]
if nameroot != contextroot:
raise
# retry to import with "hgext_" prefix
return importfunc(hgextname, globals, *args, **kwargs)
class _demandmod(object):
"""module demand-loader and proxy"""
def __init__(self, name, globals, locals, level=level):
if '.' in name:
head, rest = name.split('.', 1)
after = [rest]
else:
head = name
after = []
object.__setattr__(self, "_data",
(head, globals, locals, after, level))
object.__setattr__(self, "_module", None)
def _extend(self, name):
"""add to the list of submodules to load"""
self._data[3].append(name)
def _load(self):
if not self._module:
head, globals, locals, after, level = self._data
mod = _hgextimport(_import, head, globals, locals, None, level)
# load submodules
def subload(mod, p):
h, t = p, None
if '.' in p:
h, t = p.split('.', 1)
if getattr(mod, h, nothing) is nothing:
setattr(mod, h, _demandmod(p, mod.__dict__, mod.__dict__))
elif t:
subload(getattr(mod, h), t)
for x in after:
subload(mod, x)
# are we in the locals dictionary still?
if locals and locals.get(head) == self:
locals[head] = mod
object.__setattr__(self, "_module", mod)
def __repr__(self):
if self._module:
return "<proxied module '%s'>" % self._data[0]
return "<unloaded module '%s'>" % self._data[0]
def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
raise TypeError("%s object is not callable" % repr(self))
def __getattribute__(self, attr):
if attr in ('_data', '_extend', '_load', '_module'):
return object.__getattribute__(self, attr)
self._load()
return getattr(self._module, attr)
def __setattr__(self, attr, val):
self._load()
setattr(self._module, attr, val)
def _demandimport(name, globals=None, locals=None, fromlist=None, level=level):
if not locals or name in ignore or fromlist == ('*',):
# these cases we can't really delay
return _hgextimport(_import, name, globals, locals, fromlist, level)
elif not fromlist:
# import a [as b]
if '.' in name: # a.b
base, rest = name.split('.', 1)
# email.__init__ loading email.mime
if globals and globals.get('__name__', None) == base:
return _import(name, globals, locals, fromlist, level)
# if a is already demand-loaded, add b to its submodule list
if base in locals:
if isinstance(locals[base], _demandmod):
locals[base]._extend(rest)
return locals[base]
return _demandmod(name, globals, locals, level)
else:
# There is a fromlist.
# from a import b,c,d
# from . import b,c,d
# from .a import b,c,d
# level == -1: relative and absolute attempted (Python 2 only).
# level >= 0: absolute only (Python 2 w/ absolute_import and Python 3).
# The modern Mercurial convention is to use absolute_import everywhere,
# so modern Mercurial code will have level >= 0.
if level >= 0:
# Mercurial's enforced import style does not use
# "from a import b,c,d" or "from .a import b,c,d" syntax. In
# addition, this appears to be giving errors with some modules
# for unknown reasons. Since we shouldn't be using this syntax
# much, work around the problems.
if name:
return _hgextimport(_origimport, name, globals, locals,
fromlist, level)
mod = _hgextimport(_origimport, name, globals, locals, level=level)
for x in fromlist:
# Missing symbols mean they weren't defined in the module
# itself which means they are sub-modules.
if getattr(mod, x, nothing) is nothing:
setattr(mod, x,
_demandmod(x, mod.__dict__, locals, level=level))
return mod
# But, we still need to support lazy loading of standard library and 3rd
# party modules. So handle level == -1.
mod = _hgextimport(_origimport, name, globals, locals)
# recurse down the module chain
for comp in name.split('.')[1:]:
if getattr(mod, comp, nothing) is nothing:
setattr(mod, comp,
_demandmod(comp, mod.__dict__, mod.__dict__))
mod = getattr(mod, comp)
for x in fromlist:
# set requested submodules for demand load
if getattr(mod, x, nothing) is nothing:
setattr(mod, x, _demandmod(x, mod.__dict__, locals))
return mod
ignore = [
'__future__',
'_hashlib',
'_xmlplus',
'fcntl',
'win32com.gen_py',
'_winreg', # 2.7 mimetypes needs immediate ImportError
'pythoncom',
# imported by tarfile, not available under Windows
'pwd',
'grp',
# imported by profile, itself imported by hotshot.stats,
# not available under Windows
'resource',
# this trips up many extension authors
'gtk',
# setuptools' pkg_resources.py expects "from __main__ import x" to
# raise ImportError if x not defined
'__main__',
'_ssl', # conditional imports in the stdlib, issue1964
'rfc822',
'mimetools',
# setuptools 8 expects this module to explode early when not on windows
'distutils.msvc9compiler'
]
def isenabled():
return builtins.__import__ == _demandimport
def enable():
"enable global demand-loading of modules"
if os.environ.get('HGDEMANDIMPORT') != 'disable':
builtins.__import__ = _demandimport
def disable():
"disable global demand-loading of modules"
builtins.__import__ = _origimport
@contextmanager
def deactivated():
"context manager for disabling demandimport in 'with' blocks"
demandenabled = isenabled()
if demandenabled:
disable()
try:
yield
finally:
if demandenabled:
enable()