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worker: Use buffered input from the pickle stream...
worker: Use buffered input from the pickle stream On Python 3, "pickle.load" will raise an exception ("_pickle.UnpicklingError: pickle data was truncated") when it gets a short read, i.e. it receives fewer bytes than it requested. On our build machine, Mercurial seems to frequently hit this problem while updating a mozilla-central clone iff it gets scheduled in batch mode. It is easy to trigger with: #wipe the workdir rm -rf * hg update null chrt -b 0 hg update default I've also written the following program, which demonstrates the core problem: from __future__ import print_function import io import os import pickle import time obj = {"a": 1, "b": 2} obj_data = pickle.dumps(obj) assert len(obj_data) > 10 rfd, wfd = os.pipe() pid = os.fork() if pid == 0: os.close(rfd) for _ in range(4): time.sleep(0.5) print("First write") os.write(wfd, obj_data[:10]) time.sleep(0.5) print("Second write") os.write(wfd, obj_data[10:]) os._exit(0) try: os.close(wfd) rfile = os.fdopen(rfd, "rb", 0) print("Reading") while True: try: obj_copy = pickle.load(rfile) assert obj == obj_copy except EOFError: break print("Success") finally: os.kill(pid, 15) The program reliably fails with Python 3.8 and succeeds with Python 2.7. Providing the unpickler with a buffered reader fixes the issue, so let "os.fdopen" create one. https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1604486 Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D8051

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perf.py
30 lines | 653 B | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# perf.py - asv benchmarks using contrib/perf.py extension
#
# Copyright 2016 Logilab SA <contact@logilab.fr>
#
# 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
from . import perfbench
@perfbench()
def track_tags(perf):
return perf("perftags")
@perfbench()
def track_status(perf):
return perf("perfstatus", unknown=False)
@perfbench(params=[('rev', ['1000', '10000', 'tip'])])
def track_manifest(perf, rev):
return perf("perfmanifest", rev)
@perfbench()
def track_heads(perf):
return perf("perfheads")