##// 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).

File last commit:

r29166:6359b80f default
r30974:ae5d60bb default
Show More
dumprevlog
31 lines | 757 B | text/plain | TextLexer
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Dump revlogs as raw data stream
# $ find .hg/store/ -name "*.i" | xargs dumprevlog > repo.dump
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import sys
from mercurial import (
node,
revlog,
util,
)
for fp in (sys.stdin, sys.stdout, sys.stderr):
util.setbinary(fp)
for f in sys.argv[1:]:
binopen = lambda fn: open(fn, 'rb')
r = revlog.revlog(binopen, f)
print("file:", f)
for i in r:
n = r.node(i)
p = r.parents(n)
d = r.revision(n)
print("node:", node.hex(n))
print("linkrev:", r.linkrev(i))
print("parents:", node.hex(p[0]), node.hex(p[1]))
print("length:", len(d))
print("-start-")
print(d)
print("-end-")