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stream-clone: filter possible missing requirements using all supported one...
stream-clone: filter possible missing requirements using all supported one The `supportedformat` requirements is missing some important requirements and it seems better to filter out with all requirements we know, not just an "arbitrary" subset. The `supportedformat` set is lacking some important requirements (for example `revlog-compression-zstd`). This is getting fixed on default (for Mercurial 6.1) However, fixing that in 6.1 means the stream requirements sent over the wire will contains more items. And if we don't apply this fix on older version, they might end up complaining about lacking support for feature they actually support for years. This patch does not fix the deeper problem (advertised stream requirement lacking some of them), but focus on the trivial part : Lets use the full set of supported requirement for looking for unsupported ones. This patch should be simple to backport to older version of Mercurial and packager should be encouraged to do so. This is a graft of d9017df70135 from default. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D12091

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memorytop.py
44 lines | 1.4 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# memorytop requires Python 3.4
#
# Usage: set PYTHONTRACEMALLOC=n in the environment of the hg invocation,
# where n>= is the number of frames to show in the backtrace. Put calls to
# memorytop in strategic places to show the current memory use by allocation
# site.
import gc
import tracemalloc
def memorytop(limit=10):
gc.collect()
snapshot = tracemalloc.take_snapshot()
snapshot = snapshot.filter_traces(
(
tracemalloc.Filter(False, "<frozen importlib._bootstrap>"),
tracemalloc.Filter(False, "<frozen importlib._bootstrap_external>"),
tracemalloc.Filter(False, "<unknown>"),
)
)
stats = snapshot.statistics('traceback')
total = sum(stat.size for stat in stats)
print("\nTotal allocated size: %.1f KiB\n" % (total / 1024))
print("Lines with the biggest net allocations")
for index, stat in enumerate(stats[:limit], 1):
print(
"#%d: %d objects using %.1f KiB"
% (index, stat.count, stat.size / 1024)
)
for line in stat.traceback.format(most_recent_first=True):
print(' ', line)
other = stats[limit:]
if other:
size = sum(stat.size for stat in other)
count = sum(stat.count for stat in other)
print(
"%s other: %d objects using %.1f KiB"
% (len(other), count, size / 1024)
)
print()