##// END OF EJS Templates
worker: avoid reading 1 byte at a time from the OS pipe...
worker: avoid reading 1 byte at a time from the OS pipe Apparently `pickle.load` does a lot of small reads, many of them literally 1-byte, so it benefits greatly from buffering. This change enables the buffering, at the cost of more complicated interaction with the `selector` API. On one repository with ~400k files this reduces the time by about ~30s, from ~60 to ~30s. The difference is so large because the actual updating work is parallellized, while these small reads are bottlenecking the central hg process.

File last commit:

r46195:426294d0 default
r50794:3eef8baf default
Show More
main.rs
39 lines | 1.4 KiB | application/rls-services+xml | RustLexer
use pyembed::MainPythonInterpreter;
// Include an auto-generated file containing the default
// `pyembed::PythonConfig` derived by the PyOxidizer configuration file.
//
// If you do not want to use PyOxidizer to generate this file, simply
// remove this line and instantiate your own instance of
// `pyembed::PythonConfig`.
include!(env!("PYOXIDIZER_DEFAULT_PYTHON_CONFIG_RS"));
fn main() {
// The following code is in a block so the MainPythonInterpreter is
// destroyed in an orderly manner, before process exit.
let code = {
// Load the default Python configuration as derived by the PyOxidizer
// config file used at build time.
let config = default_python_config();
// Construct a new Python interpreter using that config, handling any
// errors from construction.
match MainPythonInterpreter::new(config) {
Ok(mut interp) => {
// And run it using the default run configuration as specified
// by the configuration. If an uncaught Python
// exception is raised, handle it.
// This includes the special SystemExit, which is a request to
// terminate the process.
interp.run_as_main()
}
Err(msg) => {
eprintln!("{}", msg);
1
}
}
};
// And exit the process according to code execution results.
std::process::exit(code);
}