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nodemap: also use persistent nodemap for manifest...
nodemap: also use persistent nodemap for manifest The manifest as a different usage pattern than the changelog. First, while the lookup in changelog are not garanteed to match, the lookup in the manifest nodemap come from changelog and will exist in the manifest. In addition, looking up a manifest almost always result in unpacking a manifest an operation that rarely come cheap. Nevertheless, using a persistent nodemap provide a significant gain for some operations. For our measurementw, we use `hg cat --rev REV FILE` on the our reference mozilla-try. On this repository the persistent nodemap cache is about 29 MB in side for a total store side of 11,988 MB File with large history (file: b2g/config/gaia.json, revision: 195a1146daa0) no optimisation: 0.358s using mmap for index: 0.297s (-0.061s) persistent nodemap for changelog only: 0.275s (-0.024s) persistent nodemap for manifest too: 0.258s (-0.017s) File with small history (file: .hgignore, revision: 195a1146daa0) no optimisation: 0.377s using mmap for index: 0.296s (-0.061s) persistent nodemap for changelog only: 0.274s (-0.022s) persistent nodemap for manifest too: 0.257s (-0.017s) Same file but using a revision (8ba995b74e18) with a smaller manifest (3944829 bytes vs 10 bytes) no optimisation: 0.192s (-0.185s) using mmap for index: 0.131s (-0.061s) persistent nodemap for changelog only: 0.106s (-0.025s) persistent nodemap for manifest too: 0.087s (-0.019s) Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D8410

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validators.py
166 lines | 4.9 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""
Commonly useful validators.
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
from ._make import attr, attributes, and_, _AndValidator
__all__ = [
"and_",
"in_",
"instance_of",
"optional",
"provides",
]
@attributes(repr=False, slots=True, hash=True)
class _InstanceOfValidator(object):
type = attr()
def __call__(self, inst, attr, value):
"""
We use a callable class to be able to change the ``__repr__``.
"""
if not isinstance(value, self.type):
raise TypeError(
"'{name}' must be {type!r} (got {value!r} that is a "
"{actual!r})."
.format(name=attr.name, type=self.type,
actual=value.__class__, value=value),
attr, self.type, value,
)
def __repr__(self):
return (
"<instance_of validator for type {type!r}>"
.format(type=self.type)
)
def instance_of(type):
"""
A validator that raises a :exc:`TypeError` if the initializer is called
with a wrong type for this particular attribute (checks are perfomed using
:func:`isinstance` therefore it's also valid to pass a tuple of types).
:param type: The type to check for.
:type type: type or tuple of types
:raises TypeError: With a human readable error message, the attribute
(of type :class:`attr.Attribute`), the expected type, and the value it
got.
"""
return _InstanceOfValidator(type)
@attributes(repr=False, slots=True, hash=True)
class _ProvidesValidator(object):
interface = attr()
def __call__(self, inst, attr, value):
"""
We use a callable class to be able to change the ``__repr__``.
"""
if not self.interface.providedBy(value):
raise TypeError(
"'{name}' must provide {interface!r} which {value!r} "
"doesn't."
.format(name=attr.name, interface=self.interface, value=value),
attr, self.interface, value,
)
def __repr__(self):
return (
"<provides validator for interface {interface!r}>"
.format(interface=self.interface)
)
def provides(interface):
"""
A validator that raises a :exc:`TypeError` if the initializer is called
with an object that does not provide the requested *interface* (checks are
performed using ``interface.providedBy(value)`` (see `zope.interface
<https://zopeinterface.readthedocs.io/en/latest/>`_).
:param zope.interface.Interface interface: The interface to check for.
:raises TypeError: With a human readable error message, the attribute
(of type :class:`attr.Attribute`), the expected interface, and the
value it got.
"""
return _ProvidesValidator(interface)
@attributes(repr=False, slots=True, hash=True)
class _OptionalValidator(object):
validator = attr()
def __call__(self, inst, attr, value):
if value is None:
return
self.validator(inst, attr, value)
def __repr__(self):
return (
"<optional validator for {what} or None>"
.format(what=repr(self.validator))
)
def optional(validator):
"""
A validator that makes an attribute optional. An optional attribute is one
which can be set to ``None`` in addition to satisfying the requirements of
the sub-validator.
:param validator: A validator (or a list of validators) that is used for
non-``None`` values.
:type validator: callable or :class:`list` of callables.
.. versionadded:: 15.1.0
.. versionchanged:: 17.1.0 *validator* can be a list of validators.
"""
if isinstance(validator, list):
return _OptionalValidator(_AndValidator(validator))
return _OptionalValidator(validator)
@attributes(repr=False, slots=True, hash=True)
class _InValidator(object):
options = attr()
def __call__(self, inst, attr, value):
if value not in self.options:
raise ValueError(
"'{name}' must be in {options!r} (got {value!r})"
.format(name=attr.name, options=self.options, value=value)
)
def __repr__(self):
return (
"<in_ validator with options {options!r}>"
.format(options=self.options)
)
def in_(options):
"""
A validator that raises a :exc:`ValueError` if the initializer is called
with a value that does not belong in the options provided. The check is
performed using ``value in options``.
:param options: Allowed options.
:type options: list, tuple, :class:`enum.Enum`, ...
:raises ValueError: With a human readable error message, the attribute (of
type :class:`attr.Attribute`), the expected options, and the value it
got.
.. versionadded:: 17.1.0
"""
return _InValidator(options)