##// END OF EJS Templates
bdiff: gradually enable the popularity hack...
bdiff: gradually enable the popularity hack Patch from Jason Orendorff The lower the threshold, the stronger the popularity hack's influence. So at 3999 lines, the hack is disabled; and at 4000 lines, the hack is enabled at maximum strength (t=4). No source file in mercurial/crew is over 4000 lines. But there are, oh, a few such files in Mozilla. I can testify that this hack causes hg to generate some correct but eyebrow-raising patches. I think the hack should phase in gradually. The threshold should be high for small files where we don't need it so much. Like this: t = (bn < 31000) ? 1000000 / bn : bn / 1000; That would leave the popularity hack disabled for small files, then gradually phase it in: bn < 1000 -- t > bn (popularity hack is completely disabled) bn == 1000 -- t = 1000 (still effectively disabled) bn == 2000 -- t = 500 (only hits unusual files) bn == 10000 -- t = 100 (only hits especially common lines) bn == 31000 -- t = 31 (hack is at maximum power) bn == 32000 -- t = 32 (hack could backfire, ease off)

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node.py
18 lines | 462 B | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# node.py - basic nodeid manipulation for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2005, 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2, incorporated herein by reference.
import binascii
nullrev = -1
nullid = "\0" * 20
# This ugly style has a noticeable effect in manifest parsing
hex = binascii.hexlify
bin = binascii.unhexlify
def short(node):
return hex(node[:6])