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perf: call _generatechangelog() instead of group()...
perf: call _generatechangelog() instead of group() Now that we have a separate function for generating just the changelog bits, the perf command should call it so it gets more accurate behavior. This changes the results of this command on my hg repo significantly: ! wall 1.390502 comb 1.390000 user 1.370000 sys 0.020000 (best of 8) ! wall 1.768750 comb 1.760000 user 1.760000 sys 0.000000 (best of 6) Profiling seems to reveal that ~20% of execution time is spent in progress bar accounting and printing! If we run with progress.disable=true: ! wall 1.639134 comb 1.650000 user 1.630000 sys 0.020000 (best of 7) A nice speedup. But profiling still shows a good chunk of time being spent in progress bar accounting code. The reason is that the progress bar is conditionally enabled via an argument to cgpacker.group(). The previous code in perf.py calling into group() did not enable the progress bar but _generatechangelog() always does. I think it is important for the perf* commands to capture real-world use cases. And this code always runs with an active progress bar. So the regression is acceptable. That being said, terminal printing performance can vary substantially. I don't think perf* commands should test terminal printing unless explicitly desired. So I've disabled progress bar printing in this command. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4134
Gregory Szorc -
r39013:a1f69477 default
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This library provides encoding and decoding for the Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) (RFC 7049) serialization format.

There exists another Python CBOR implementation (cbor) which is faster on CPython due to its C extensions. On PyPy, cbor2 and cbor are almost identical in performance. The other implementation also lacks documentation and a comprehensive test suite, does not support most standard extension tags and is known to crash (segfault) when passed a cyclic structure (say, a list containing itself).