##// END OF EJS Templates
copies: do copy tracing based on ctx.p[12]copies() if configured...
copies: do copy tracing based on ctx.p[12]copies() if configured This adds an option to do copy tracing in a changeset-optimized way. If the metadata is stored in filelogs, this is obviously going to be suboptimal. The point is that it provides a way of transitioning to changeset-stored metadata. Some of the tests behave a little differently, but they all seem resonable to me. The config option may very well be renamed later when it's clearer what options we want and how they will behave. When the test suite is run with --extra-config-opt to use the new copy tracing, all tests pass, besides test-copies.t (which fails in the same way as you can see in this patch). `hg debugpathcopies 4.0 4.8` reports 82 copies. With this option enabled, the only difference is this: -mercurial/pure/bdiff.py -> mercurial/cffi/bdiff.py +setup_bdiff_cffi.py -> mercurial/cffi/bdiff.py I believe that happened because it was renamed in different ways on different sides of a merge and the new algorithm arbitrarily prefers copies that happened on p1. The runtime is about 0.85 seconds with the old copy tracing and 5.7 seconds with the new copy tracing. That's kind of slow, but actually better than I had expected. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5991

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compat.py
101 lines | 2.5 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
from math import ldexp
import struct
import sys
if sys.version_info.major < 3:
from datetime import tzinfo, timedelta
class timezone(tzinfo):
def __init__(self, offset):
self.offset = offset
def utcoffset(self, dt):
return self.offset
def dst(self, dt):
return timedelta(0)
def tzname(self, dt):
return 'UTC+00:00'
def as_unicode(string):
return string.decode('utf-8')
def iteritems(self):
return self.iteritems()
def bytes_from_list(values):
return bytes(bytearray(values))
byte_as_integer = ord
timezone.utc = timezone(timedelta(0))
xrange = xrange # noqa: F821
long = long # noqa: F821
unicode = unicode # noqa: F821
else:
from datetime import timezone
def byte_as_integer(bytestr):
return bytestr[0]
def as_unicode(string):
return string
def iteritems(self):
return self.items()
xrange = range
long = int
unicode = str
bytes_from_list = bytes
if sys.version_info.major >= 3 and sys.version_info.minor >= 6:
# Python 3.6 added 16 bit floating point to struct
def pack_float16(value):
try:
return struct.pack('>Be', 0xf9, value)
except OverflowError:
return False
def unpack_float16(payload):
return struct.unpack('>e', payload)[0]
else:
def pack_float16(value):
# Based on node-cbor by hildjj
# which was based in turn on Carsten Borman's cn-cbor
u32 = struct.pack('>f', value)
u = struct.unpack('>I', u32)[0]
if u & 0x1FFF != 0:
return False
s16 = (u >> 16) & 0x8000
exponent = (u >> 23) & 0xff
mantissa = u & 0x7fffff
if 113 <= exponent <= 142:
s16 += ((exponent - 112) << 10) + (mantissa >> 13)
elif 103 <= exponent < 113:
if mantissa & ((1 << (126 - exponent)) - 1):
return False
s16 += ((mantissa + 0x800000) >> (126 - exponent))
else:
return False
return struct.pack('>BH', 0xf9, s16)
def unpack_float16(payload):
# Code adapted from RFC 7049, appendix D
def decode_single(single):
return struct.unpack("!f", struct.pack("!I", single))[0]
payload = struct.unpack('>H', payload)[0]
value = (payload & 0x7fff) << 13 | (payload & 0x8000) << 16
if payload & 0x7c00 != 0x7c00:
return ldexp(decode_single(value), 112)
return decode_single(value | 0x7f800000)