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chg: pass --no-profile to disable profiling when starting hg serve...
chg: pass --no-profile to disable profiling when starting hg serve If profiling is enabled via global/user config (as far as I can tell, this doesn't affect use of the --profile flag, but it probably does affect --config profiling.enabled=1), then the profiling data can be *cumulative* for the lifetime of the chg process. This leads to some "interesting" results where hg claims the walltime is something like 200s on a command that took only a second or two to run. Worse, however, is that with at least some profilers (such as the default "stat" profiler), this can cause a large slowdown while generating the profiler output. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10470

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revlog_corpus.py
25 lines | 852 B | text/x-python | PythonLexer
from __future__ import absolute_import
import argparse
import os
import zipfile
ap = argparse.ArgumentParser()
ap.add_argument("out", metavar="some.zip", type=str, nargs=1)
args = ap.parse_args()
reporoot = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), '..', '..'))
# typically a standalone index
changelog = os.path.join(reporoot, '.hg', 'store', '00changelog.i')
# an inline revlog with only a few revisions
contributing = os.path.join(
reporoot, '.hg', 'store', 'data', 'contrib', 'fuzz', 'mpatch.cc.i'
)
with zipfile.ZipFile(args.out[0], "w", zipfile.ZIP_STORED) as zf:
if os.path.exists(changelog):
with open(changelog, 'rb') as f:
zf.writestr("00changelog.i", f.read())
if os.path.exists(contributing):
with open(contributing, 'rb') as f:
zf.writestr("contributing.i", f.read())