##// END OF EJS Templates
match: convert O(n) to O(log n) in exactmatcher.visitchildrenset...
match: convert O(n) to O(log n) in exactmatcher.visitchildrenset When using narrow, during rebase this is called (at least) once per directory in the set of files in the commit being rebased. Every time it's called, we did the set arithmetic (now extracted and cached), which was probably pretty cheap but not necessary to repeat each time, looped over every item in the matcher and kept things that started with the directory we were querying. With very large narrowspecs, and a commit that touched a file in a large number of directories, this was slow. In a pathological repo, the rebase of a single commit (that touched over 17k files, I believe in approximately as many directories) with a narrowspec that had >32k entries took 8,246s of profiled time, with 5,007s of that spent in visitchildrenset (transitively). With this change, the time spent in visitchildrenset is less than 34s (which is where my profile cut off). Most of the remaining time was network access due to our custom remotefilelog-based setup not properly prefetching. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10294

File last commit:

r46195:426294d0 default
r47634:8bca353b default
Show More
main.rs
39 lines | 1.4 KiB | application/rls-services+xml | RustLexer
use pyembed::MainPythonInterpreter;
// Include an auto-generated file containing the default
// `pyembed::PythonConfig` derived by the PyOxidizer configuration file.
//
// If you do not want to use PyOxidizer to generate this file, simply
// remove this line and instantiate your own instance of
// `pyembed::PythonConfig`.
include!(env!("PYOXIDIZER_DEFAULT_PYTHON_CONFIG_RS"));
fn main() {
// The following code is in a block so the MainPythonInterpreter is
// destroyed in an orderly manner, before process exit.
let code = {
// Load the default Python configuration as derived by the PyOxidizer
// config file used at build time.
let config = default_python_config();
// Construct a new Python interpreter using that config, handling any
// errors from construction.
match MainPythonInterpreter::new(config) {
Ok(mut interp) => {
// And run it using the default run configuration as specified
// by the configuration. If an uncaught Python
// exception is raised, handle it.
// This includes the special SystemExit, which is a request to
// terminate the process.
interp.run_as_main()
}
Err(msg) => {
eprintln!("{}", msg);
1
}
}
};
// And exit the process according to code execution results.
std::process::exit(code);
}