##// END OF EJS Templates
changelog: add class to represent parsed changelog revisions...
changelog: add class to represent parsed changelog revisions Currently, changelog entries are parsed into their respective components at read time. Many operations are only interested in a subset of fields of a changelog entry. The parsing and storing of all the fields adds avoidable overhead. This patch introduces the "changelogrevision" class. It takes changelog raw text and exposes the parsed results as attributes. The code for parsing changelog entries has been moved into its construction function. changelog.read() has been modified to use the new class internally while maintaining its existing API. Future patches will make revision parsing lazy. We implement the construction function of the new class with __new__ instead of __init__ so we can use a named tuple to represent the empty revision. This saves overhead and complexity of coercing later versions of this class to represent an empty instance. While we are here, we add a method on changelog to obtain an instance of the new type. The overhead of constructing the new class regresses performance of revsets accessing this data: author(mpm) 0.896565 0.929984 desc(bug) 0.887169 0.935642 105% date(2015) 0.878797 0.908094 extra(rebase_source) 0.865446 0.922624 106% author(mpm) or author(greg) 1.801832 1.902112 105% author(mpm) or desc(bug) 1.812438 1.860977 date(2015) or branch(default) 0.968276 1.005824 author(mpm) or desc(bug) or date(2015) or extra(rebase_source) 3.656193 3.743381 Once lazy parsing is implemented, these revsets will all be faster than before. There is no performance change on revsets that do not access this data. There /could/ be a performance regression on operations that perform several changelog reads. However, I can't think of anything outside of revsets and `hg log` (basically the same as a revset) that would be impacted.

File last commit:

r26587:56b2bcea default
r28487:98d98a64 default
Show More
treediscovery.py
159 lines | 5.2 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# discovery.py - protocol changeset discovery functions
#
# Copyright 2010 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
from __future__ import absolute_import
import collections
from .i18n import _
from .node import (
nullid,
short,
)
from . import (
error,
)
def findcommonincoming(repo, remote, heads=None, force=False):
"""Return a tuple (common, fetch, heads) used to identify the common
subset of nodes between repo and remote.
"common" is a list of (at least) the heads of the common subset.
"fetch" is a list of roots of the nodes that would be incoming, to be
supplied to changegroupsubset.
"heads" is either the supplied heads, or else the remote's heads.
"""
knownnode = repo.changelog.hasnode
search = []
fetch = set()
seen = set()
seenbranch = set()
base = set()
if not heads:
heads = remote.heads()
if repo.changelog.tip() == nullid:
base.add(nullid)
if heads != [nullid]:
return [nullid], [nullid], list(heads)
return [nullid], [], heads
# assume we're closer to the tip than the root
# and start by examining the heads
repo.ui.status(_("searching for changes\n"))
unknown = []
for h in heads:
if not knownnode(h):
unknown.append(h)
else:
base.add(h)
if not unknown:
return list(base), [], list(heads)
req = set(unknown)
reqcnt = 0
# search through remote branches
# a 'branch' here is a linear segment of history, with four parts:
# head, root, first parent, second parent
# (a branch always has two parents (or none) by definition)
unknown = collections.deque(remote.branches(unknown))
while unknown:
r = []
while unknown:
n = unknown.popleft()
if n[0] in seen:
continue
repo.ui.debug("examining %s:%s\n"
% (short(n[0]), short(n[1])))
if n[0] == nullid: # found the end of the branch
pass
elif n in seenbranch:
repo.ui.debug("branch already found\n")
continue
elif n[1] and knownnode(n[1]): # do we know the base?
repo.ui.debug("found incomplete branch %s:%s\n"
% (short(n[0]), short(n[1])))
search.append(n[0:2]) # schedule branch range for scanning
seenbranch.add(n)
else:
if n[1] not in seen and n[1] not in fetch:
if knownnode(n[2]) and knownnode(n[3]):
repo.ui.debug("found new changeset %s\n" %
short(n[1]))
fetch.add(n[1]) # earliest unknown
for p in n[2:4]:
if knownnode(p):
base.add(p) # latest known
for p in n[2:4]:
if p not in req and not knownnode(p):
r.append(p)
req.add(p)
seen.add(n[0])
if r:
reqcnt += 1
repo.ui.progress(_('searching'), reqcnt, unit=_('queries'))
repo.ui.debug("request %d: %s\n" %
(reqcnt, " ".join(map(short, r))))
for p in xrange(0, len(r), 10):
for b in remote.branches(r[p:p + 10]):
repo.ui.debug("received %s:%s\n" %
(short(b[0]), short(b[1])))
unknown.append(b)
# do binary search on the branches we found
while search:
newsearch = []
reqcnt += 1
repo.ui.progress(_('searching'), reqcnt, unit=_('queries'))
for n, l in zip(search, remote.between(search)):
l.append(n[1])
p = n[0]
f = 1
for i in l:
repo.ui.debug("narrowing %d:%d %s\n" % (f, len(l), short(i)))
if knownnode(i):
if f <= 2:
repo.ui.debug("found new branch changeset %s\n" %
short(p))
fetch.add(p)
base.add(i)
else:
repo.ui.debug("narrowed branch search to %s:%s\n"
% (short(p), short(i)))
newsearch.append((p, i))
break
p, f = i, f * 2
search = newsearch
# sanity check our fetch list
for f in fetch:
if knownnode(f):
raise error.RepoError(_("already have changeset ")
+ short(f[:4]))
base = list(base)
if base == [nullid]:
if force:
repo.ui.warn(_("warning: repository is unrelated\n"))
else:
raise error.Abort(_("repository is unrelated"))
repo.ui.debug("found new changesets starting at " +
" ".join([short(f) for f in fetch]) + "\n")
repo.ui.progress(_('searching'), None)
repo.ui.debug("%d total queries\n" % reqcnt)
return base, list(fetch), heads