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bisect: avoid adding irrelevant revisions to bisect state...
bisect: avoid adding irrelevant revisions to bisect state When adding new revisions to the bisect state, it only makes sense to add information about revisions that are under consideration (i.e., those that are topologically between the known good and bad revisions). However, if the user passes in a revset (e.g., '!merge()' to exclude merge commits), hg will resolve the revset first and add all matching revisions to the bisect state (which in this case would likely be the majority of revisions in the repo). To avoid this, revisions should only be added to the bisect state if they are between the good and bad revisions (and therefore relevant to the bisection). -- Here are the results of some performance tests using the `mozilla-central` repo (since it is one of the largest freely-available hg repositories in the wild). These tests compare the performance of a locally-built `hg` before and after application of this series. Note that `--noupdate` is passed to avoid including update time (which should not vary across cases). Setup (run between each test): $ hg bisect --reset $ hg bisect --noupdate --bad 56c3ad4bde5c70714b784ccf15d099e0df0f5bde $ hg bisect --noupdate --good 57426696adaf08298af3027fa77486fee0633b13 Test using a revset that returns a very large number of revisions: $ time hg bisect --noupdate --skip '!merge()' > /dev/null Before: real 0m9.398s user 0m9.233s sys 0m0.120s After: real 0m1.513s user 0m1.425s sys 0m0.052s Test using a revset that is expensive to compute: $ time hg bisect --noupdate --skip 'desc("Bug")' > /dev/null Before: real 0m49.853s user 0m49.580s sys 0m0.243s After: real 0m4.120s user 0m4.036s sys 0m0.048s

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get-with-headers.py
130 lines | 3.4 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
#!/usr/bin/env python
"""This does HTTP GET requests given a host:port and path and returns
a subset of the headers plus the body of the result."""
import argparse
import json
import os
import sys
from mercurial import (
pycompat,
util,
)
httplib = util.httplib
try:
import msvcrt
msvcrt.setmode(sys.stdout.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
msvcrt.setmode(sys.stderr.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
except ImportError:
pass
stdout = getattr(sys.stdout, 'buffer', sys.stdout)
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('--twice', action='store_true')
parser.add_argument('--headeronly', action='store_true')
parser.add_argument('--json', action='store_true')
parser.add_argument('--hgproto')
parser.add_argument(
'--requestheader',
nargs='*',
default=[],
help='Send an additional HTTP request header. Argument '
'value is <header>=<value>',
)
parser.add_argument('--bodyfile', help='Write HTTP response body to a file')
parser.add_argument('host')
parser.add_argument('path')
parser.add_argument('show', nargs='*')
args = parser.parse_args()
twice = args.twice
headeronly = args.headeronly
formatjson = args.json
hgproto = args.hgproto
requestheaders = args.requestheader
tag = None
def request(host, path, show):
assert not path.startswith('/'), path
global tag
headers = {}
if tag:
headers['If-None-Match'] = tag
if hgproto:
headers['X-HgProto-1'] = hgproto
for header in requestheaders:
key, value = header.split('=', 1)
headers[key] = value
conn = httplib.HTTPConnection(host)
conn.request("GET", '/' + path, None, headers)
response = conn.getresponse()
stdout.write(
b'%d %s\n' % (response.status, response.reason.encode('ascii'))
)
if show[:1] == ['-']:
show = sorted(
h for h, v in response.getheaders() if h.lower() not in show
)
for h in [h.lower() for h in show]:
if response.getheader(h, None) is not None:
stdout.write(
b"%s: %s\n"
% (h.encode('ascii'), response.getheader(h).encode('ascii'))
)
if headeronly:
# still read the body to prevent windows to be unhappy about that
# (this might some flakyness in test-hgweb-filelog.t on Windows)
data = response.read()
else:
stdout.write(b'\n')
data = response.read()
if args.bodyfile:
bodyfh = open(args.bodyfile, 'wb')
else:
bodyfh = stdout
# Pretty print JSON. This also has the beneficial side-effect
# of verifying emitted JSON is well-formed.
if formatjson:
# json.dumps() will print trailing newlines. Eliminate them
# to make tests easier to write.
data = pycompat.json_loads(data)
lines = json.dumps(data, sort_keys=True, indent=2).splitlines()
for line in lines:
bodyfh.write(pycompat.sysbytes(line.rstrip()))
bodyfh.write(b'\n')
else:
bodyfh.write(data)
if args.bodyfile:
bodyfh.close()
if twice and response.getheader('ETag', None):
tag = response.getheader('ETag')
# further try to please the windows-flakyness deity
conn.close()
return response.status
status = request(args.host, args.path, args.show)
if twice:
status = request(args.host, args.path, args.show)
if 200 <= status <= 305:
sys.exit(0)
sys.exit(1)