##// END OF EJS Templates
util: introduce timer()...
util: introduce timer() As documented for timeit.default_timer, there are better timers available for performance measures on some platforms. These timers don't have a set epoch, and thus are only useful for interval measurements, but have higher resolution, and thus get you a better measurement overall. Use the same selection logic as Python's timeit.default_timer. This is a platform clock on Python 2 and early Python 3, and time.perf_counter on Python 3.3 and later (where time.perf_counter is introduced as the best timer to use).
Simon Farnsworth -
r30974:ae5d60bb default
Show More
Name Size Modified Last Commit Author
/ contrib / chg
Makefile Loading ...
README Loading ...
chg.1 Loading ...
chg.c Loading ...
hgclient.c Loading ...
hgclient.h Loading ...
procutil.c Loading ...
procutil.h Loading ...
util.c Loading ...
util.h Loading ...

cHg
===

A fast client for Mercurial command server running on Unix.

Install:

$ make
$ make install

Usage:

$ chg help # show help of Mercurial
$ alias hg=chg # replace hg command
$ chg --kill-chg-daemon # terminate background server

Environment variables:

Although cHg tries to update environment variables, some of them cannot be
changed after spawning the server. The following variables are specially
handled:

* configuration files are reloaded automatically by default.
* CHGHG or HG specifies the path to the hg executable spawned as the
background command server.

The following variables are available for testing:

* CHGDEBUG enables debug messages.
* CHGSOCKNAME specifies the socket path of the background cmdserver.
* CHGTIMEOUT specifies how many seconds chg will wait before giving up
connecting to a cmdserver. If it is 0, chg will wait forever. Default: 60