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rust-dirstatemap: cache non normal and other parent set...
rust-dirstatemap: cache non normal and other parent set Performance of `hg update` was significantly worse since the introduction of the Rust `dirstatemap`. This regression was noticed by Valentin Gatien-Baron when working on a large repository, as it goes unnoticed for smaller repositories like Mercurial itself. This fix introduces the same getter/setter mechanism at `hg-core` level as for `set/get_dirs`. While this technique is, as previously discussed, quite suboptimal, it fixes an important enough problem. Refactoring `hg-core` to use the typestate pattern could be a good approach to improving code quality in a future patch. This is a graft of stable of 83b2b829c94e Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D8110
Raphaël Gomès -
r44835:58c74a51 stable
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Features

The following Cargo features are available:

localdev (default)

Produce files that work with an in-source-tree build.

In this mode, the build finds and uses a python2.7 binary from PATH. The hg binary assumes it runs from rust/target/<target>hg and it finds Mercurial files at dirname($0)/../../../.

Build Mechanism

The produced hg binary is bound to a CPython installation. The binary links against and loads a CPython library that is discovered at build time (by a build.rs Cargo build script). The Python standard library defined by this CPython installation is also used.

Finding the appropriate CPython installation to use is done by the python27-sys crate's build.rs. Its search order is:

  1. PYTHON_SYS_EXECUTABLE environment variable.
  2. python executable on PATH
  3. python2 executable on PATH
  4. python2.7 executable on PATH

Additional verification of the found Python will be performed by our build.rs to ensure it meets Mercurial's requirements.

Details about the build-time configured Python are built into the produced hg binary. This means that a built hg binary is only suitable for a specific, well-defined role. These roles are controlled by Cargo features (see above).

Running

The hgcli crate produces an hg binary. You can run this binary via cargo run:

$ cargo run --manifest-path hgcli/Cargo.toml

Or directly:

$ target/debug/hg
$ target/release/hg

You can also run the test harness with this binary:

$ ./run-tests.py --with-hg ../rust/target/debug/hg

Note

Integration with the test harness is still preliminary. Remember to cargo build after changes because the test harness doesn't yet automatically build Rust code.