##// END OF EJS Templates
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

File last commit:

r16556:f9262456 stable
r47798:8fcc0a82 default
Show More
9diff
42 lines | 1.0 KiB | text/plain | TextLexer
#!/bin/rc
# 9diff - Mercurial extdiff wrapper for diff(1)
rfork e
fn getfiles {
cd $1 &&
for(f in `{du -as | awk '{print $2}'})
test -f $f && echo `{cleanname $f}
}
fn usage {
echo >[1=2] usage: 9diff [diff options] parent child root
exit usage
}
opts=()
while(~ $1 -*){
opts=($opts $1)
shift
}
if(! ~ $#* 3)
usage
# extdiff will set the parent and child to a single file if there is
# only one change. If there are multiple changes, directories will be
# set. diff(1) does not cope particularly with directories; instead we
# do the recursion ourselves and diff each file individually.
if(test -f $1)
diff $opts $1 $2
if not{
# extdiff will create a snapshot of the working copy to prevent
# conflicts during the diff. We circumvent this behavior by
# diffing against the repository root to produce plumbable
# output. This is antisocial.
for(f in `{sort -u <{getfiles $1} <{getfiles $2}}){
file1=$1/$f; test -f $file1 || file1=/dev/null
file2=$3/$f; test -f $file2 || file2=/dev/null
diff $opts $file1 $file2
}
}
exit ''