##// END OF EJS Templates
color: add a 'ui.color' option to control color behavior...
color: add a 'ui.color' option to control color behavior This new option control whether or not color will be used. It mirror the behavior of '--color'. I usually avoid adding new option to '[ui]' as the section is already filled with many option. However, I feel like 'color' is central enough to deserves a spot in this '[ui]' section. For now the option is not documented so it is still marked as experimental. Once it get documented and official, we should be able to deprecate the color extensions. There is more cleanup to do before that documentation is written, but we need this option early to made them. Having that option will allow for more cleanup of the initialisation process and proper separation between color configuration.

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profiling.py
192 lines | 5.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# profiling.py - profiling functions
#
# Copyright 2016 Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import contextlib
from .i18n import _
from . import (
encoding,
error,
util,
)
@contextlib.contextmanager
def lsprofile(ui, fp):
format = ui.config('profiling', 'format', default='text')
field = ui.config('profiling', 'sort', default='inlinetime')
limit = ui.configint('profiling', 'limit', default=30)
climit = ui.configint('profiling', 'nested', default=0)
if format not in ['text', 'kcachegrind']:
ui.warn(_("unrecognized profiling format '%s'"
" - Ignored\n") % format)
format = 'text'
try:
from . import lsprof
except ImportError:
raise error.Abort(_(
'lsprof not available - install from '
'http://codespeak.net/svn/user/arigo/hack/misc/lsprof/'))
p = lsprof.Profiler()
p.enable(subcalls=True)
try:
yield
finally:
p.disable()
if format == 'kcachegrind':
from . import lsprofcalltree
calltree = lsprofcalltree.KCacheGrind(p)
calltree.output(fp)
else:
# format == 'text'
stats = lsprof.Stats(p.getstats())
stats.sort(field)
stats.pprint(limit=limit, file=fp, climit=climit)
@contextlib.contextmanager
def flameprofile(ui, fp):
try:
from flamegraph import flamegraph
except ImportError:
raise error.Abort(_(
'flamegraph not available - install from '
'https://github.com/evanhempel/python-flamegraph'))
# developer config: profiling.freq
freq = ui.configint('profiling', 'freq', default=1000)
filter_ = None
collapse_recursion = True
thread = flamegraph.ProfileThread(fp, 1.0 / freq,
filter_, collapse_recursion)
start_time = util.timer()
try:
thread.start()
yield
finally:
thread.stop()
thread.join()
print('Collected %d stack frames (%d unique) in %2.2f seconds.' % (
util.timer() - start_time, thread.num_frames(),
thread.num_frames(unique=True)))
@contextlib.contextmanager
def statprofile(ui, fp):
from . import statprof
freq = ui.configint('profiling', 'freq', default=1000)
if freq > 0:
# Cannot reset when profiler is already active. So silently no-op.
if statprof.state.profile_level == 0:
statprof.reset(freq)
else:
ui.warn(_("invalid sampling frequency '%s' - ignoring\n") % freq)
statprof.start(mechanism='thread')
try:
yield
finally:
data = statprof.stop()
profformat = ui.config('profiling', 'statformat', 'hotpath')
formats = {
'byline': statprof.DisplayFormats.ByLine,
'bymethod': statprof.DisplayFormats.ByMethod,
'hotpath': statprof.DisplayFormats.Hotpath,
'json': statprof.DisplayFormats.Json,
'chrome': statprof.DisplayFormats.Chrome,
}
if profformat in formats:
displayformat = formats[profformat]
else:
ui.warn(_('unknown profiler output format: %s\n') % profformat)
displayformat = statprof.DisplayFormats.Hotpath
kwargs = {}
def fraction(s):
if s.endswith('%'):
v = float(s[:-1]) / 100
else:
v = float(s)
if 0 <= v <= 1:
return v
raise ValueError(s)
if profformat == 'chrome':
showmin = ui.configwith(fraction, 'profiling', 'showmin', 0.005)
showmax = ui.configwith(fraction, 'profiling', 'showmax', 0.999)
kwargs.update(minthreshold=showmin, maxthreshold=showmax)
statprof.display(fp, data=data, format=displayformat, **kwargs)
@contextlib.contextmanager
def profile(ui):
"""Start profiling.
Profiling is active when the context manager is active. When the context
manager exits, profiling results will be written to the configured output.
"""
profiler = encoding.environ.get('HGPROF')
if profiler is None:
profiler = ui.config('profiling', 'type', default='stat')
if profiler not in ('ls', 'stat', 'flame'):
ui.warn(_("unrecognized profiler '%s' - ignored\n") % profiler)
profiler = 'stat'
output = ui.config('profiling', 'output')
if output == 'blackbox':
fp = util.stringio()
elif output:
path = ui.expandpath(output)
fp = open(path, 'wb')
else:
fp = ui.ferr
try:
if profiler == 'ls':
proffn = lsprofile
elif profiler == 'flame':
proffn = flameprofile
else:
proffn = statprofile
with proffn(ui, fp):
yield
finally:
if output:
if output == 'blackbox':
val = 'Profile:\n%s' % fp.getvalue()
# ui.log treats the input as a format string,
# so we need to escape any % signs.
val = val.replace('%', '%%')
ui.log('profile', val)
fp.close()
@contextlib.contextmanager
def maybeprofile(ui):
"""Profile if enabled, else do nothing.
This context manager can be used to optionally profile if profiling
is enabled. Otherwise, it does nothing.
The purpose of this context manager is to make calling code simpler:
just use a single code path for calling into code you may want to profile
and this function determines whether to start profiling.
"""
if ui.configbool('profiling', 'enabled'):
with profile(ui):
yield
else:
yield