##// END OF EJS Templates
hgweb: profile HTTP requests...
hgweb: profile HTTP requests Currently, running `hg serve --profile` doesn't yield anything useful: when the process is terminated the profiling output displays results from the main thread, which typically spends most of its time in select.select(). Furthermore, it has no meaningful results from mercurial.* modules because the threads serving HTTP requests don't actually get profiled. This patch teaches the hgweb wsgi applications to profile individual requests. If profiling is enabled, the profiler kicks in after HTTP/WSGI environment processing but before Mercurial's main request processing. The profile results are printed to the configured profiling output. If running `hg serve` from a shell, they will be printed to stderr, just before the HTTP request line is logged. If profiling to a file, we only write a single profile to the file because the file is not opened in append mode. We could add support for appending to files in a future patch if someone wants it. Per request profiling doesn't work with the statprof profiler because internally that profiler collects samples from the thread that *initially* requested profiling be enabled. I have plans to address this by vendoring Facebook's customized statprof and then improving it.

File last commit:

r20117:aa9385f9 default
r29787:80df0426 default
Show More
test-bundle-vs-outgoing.t
142 lines | 2.3 KiB | text/troff | Tads3Lexer
/ tests / test-bundle-vs-outgoing.t
this structure seems to tickle a bug in bundle's search for
changesets, so first we have to recreate it
o 8
|
| o 7
| |
| o 6
|/|
o | 5
| |
o | 4
| |
| o 3
| |
| o 2
|/
o 1
|
o 0
$ mkrev()
> {
> revno=$1
> echo "rev $revno"
> echo "rev $revno" > foo.txt
> hg -q ci -m"rev $revno"
> }
setup test repo1
$ hg init repo1
$ cd repo1
$ echo "rev 0" > foo.txt
$ hg ci -Am"rev 0"
adding foo.txt
$ mkrev 1
rev 1
first branch
$ mkrev 2
rev 2
$ mkrev 3
rev 3
back to rev 1 to create second branch
$ hg up -r1
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ mkrev 4
rev 4
$ mkrev 5
rev 5
merge first branch to second branch
$ hg up -C -r5
0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ HGMERGE=internal:local hg merge
0 files updated, 1 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
(branch merge, don't forget to commit)
$ echo "merge rev 5, rev 3" > foo.txt
$ hg ci -m"merge first branch to second branch"
one more commit following the merge
$ mkrev 7
rev 7
back to "second branch" to make another head
$ hg up -r5
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ mkrev 8
rev 8
the story so far
$ hg log -G --template "{rev}\n"
@ 8
|
| o 7
| |
| o 6
|/|
o | 5
| |
o | 4
| |
| o 3
| |
| o 2
|/
o 1
|
o 0
check that "hg outgoing" really does the right thing
sanity check of outgoing: expect revs 4 5 6 7 8
$ hg clone -r3 . ../repo2
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 4 changesets with 4 changes to 1 files
updating to branch default
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
this should (and does) report 5 outgoing revisions: 4 5 6 7 8
$ hg outgoing --template "{rev}\n" ../repo2
comparing with ../repo2
searching for changes
4
5
6
7
8
test bundle (destination repo): expect 5 revisions
this should bundle the same 5 revisions that outgoing reported, but it
actually bundles 7
$ hg bundle foo.bundle ../repo2
searching for changes
5 changesets found
test bundle (base revision): expect 5 revisions
this should (and does) give exactly the same result as bundle
with a destination repo... i.e. it's wrong too
$ hg bundle --base 3 foo.bundle
5 changesets found
$ cd ..