##// END OF EJS Templates
revset: use changelog's `headrevs` method to compute heads...
revset: use changelog's `headrevs` method to compute heads Instead of implementing our own algorithm, we reuse a more generic one. This previous algorithm did not leave much room for laziness so we do not really regress in that regards. A small impact is visible for first/last value in some of the simpler cases. The time needed to compute all values improves overall. Small optimization in the dagop.headrevs function will help to buy this back in the next changesets. There is room to introduce actual laziness in this algorithm, but this is out of scope for this series. This has no visible effect on expensive cases: revset: heads(matching(tip, "author")) plain min max first last reverse rev..rst rev..ast sort sor..rst sor..ast 0) 7.574666 7.545950 7.570743 7.578697 7.525725 7.509929 7.443854 7.488442 7.452880 7.445411 7.689107 1) 7.549390 7.389162 7.529790 7.536297 7.450467 7.555347 7.404586 7.514948 7.542794 7.524787 7.536918 revset: heads(matching(tip, "author")) and -10000:-1 plain min max first last reverse rev..rst rev..ast sort sor..rst sor..ast 0) 7.512533 7.605877 7.382894 7.462109 7.420086 7.575034 7.448452 7.549374 7.457880 7.450308 7.515019 1) 7.548677 7.551832 7.629598 7.494857 7.550554 7.521838 7.451794 error 7.321781 7.546885 7.557523 revset: (-10000:-1) and heads(matching(tip, "author")) plain min max first last reverse rev..rst rev..ast sort sor..rst sor..ast 0) 7.465419 7.570089 7.439594 7.521221 7.498716 7.492922 7.479108 7.552397 7.407888 error 7.468264 1) 7.539866 7.548045 7.491761 7.517170 7.469824 7.501990 7.579102 7.502568 7.578102 7.555754 7.567622 In simpler cases, we see a 10-15% impact when retrieving a single value, the full computation time is equivalent or improved: revset: (-5000:-1000) and heads(-10000:-1) plain min max first last reverse rev..rst rev..ast sort sor..rst sor..ast 0) 0.004244 0.003368 0.003313 0.003367 0.003327 0.004325 0.003401 0.003379 0.004310 0.003359 0.003396 1) 0.003969 93% 0.003862 114% 0.003834 115% 0.003810 113% 0.003822 114% 0.003940 91% 0.003908 114% 0.003814 112% 0.003986 92% 0.003954 117% 0.003816 112% revset: heads(all()) plain min max first last reverse rev..rst rev..ast sort sor..rst sor..ast 0) 0.036503 0.032564 0.030024 0.032378 0.030887 0.036367 0.031713 0.032205 0.036467 0.032286 0.030300 1) 0.036668 0.035347 108% 0.035611 118% 0.035358 109% 0.035726 115% 0.036411 0.035261 111% 0.036096 112% 0.036052 0.035095 108% 0.035792 118% revset: heads(-10000:-1) plain min max first last reverse rev..rst rev..ast sort sor..rst sor..ast 0) 0.003936 0.003218 0.003227 0.003302 0.003328 0.003848 0.003305 0.003252 0.003839 0.003306 0.003279 1) 0.003870 0.003785 117% 0.003821 118% 0.003780 114% 0.003769 113% 0.003776 0.003792 114% 0.003805 117% 0.003810 0.003798 114% 0.003840 117%
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Mercurial

Mercurial is a fast, easy to use, distributed revision control tool for software developers.

Basic install:

$ make            # see install targets
$ make install    # do a system-wide install
$ hg debuginstall # sanity-check setup
$ hg              # see help

Running without installing:

$ make local      # build for inplace usage
$ ./hg --version  # should show the latest version

See https://mercurial-scm.org/ for detailed installation instructions, platform-specific notes, and Mercurial user information.