##// END OF EJS Templates
interfaces: introduce and use a protocol class for the `mpatch` module...
interfaces: introduce and use a protocol class for the `mpatch` module See f2832de2a46c for details when this was done for the `bdiff` module. Two things worth pointing out- 1) The `cffi` module "inherits" the `pure` implementation of `patchedsize()` because of its wildcard import. 2) It's odd that the `mpatchError` lives in both `pure` and `cext` modules. I initially thought to move the exception into the new class, and make the existing class name an alias to the class in the new location, but the exception is created in C code by the `cext` module, so that won't work. I don't think a protocol class is approriate, because there's nothing special about the class to distinguish from any other `Exception`. Fortunately, nobody is catching this exception in core, so we can kick the can down the road.

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memorytop.py
46 lines | 1.4 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# memorytop requires Python 3.4
#
# Usage: set PYTHONTRACEMALLOC=n in the environment of the hg invocation,
# where n>= is the number of frames to show in the backtrace. Put calls to
# memorytop in strategic places to show the current memory use by allocation
# site.
from __future__ import annotations
import gc
import tracemalloc
def memorytop(limit=10):
gc.collect()
snapshot = tracemalloc.take_snapshot()
snapshot = snapshot.filter_traces(
(
tracemalloc.Filter(False, "<frozen importlib._bootstrap>"),
tracemalloc.Filter(False, "<frozen importlib._bootstrap_external>"),
tracemalloc.Filter(False, "<unknown>"),
)
)
stats = snapshot.statistics('traceback')
total = sum(stat.size for stat in stats)
print("\nTotal allocated size: %.1f KiB\n" % (total / 1024))
print("Lines with the biggest net allocations")
for index, stat in enumerate(stats[:limit], 1):
print(
"#%d: %d objects using %.1f KiB"
% (index, stat.count, stat.size / 1024)
)
for line in stat.traceback.format(most_recent_first=True):
print(' ', line)
other = stats[limit:]
if other:
size = sum(stat.size for stat in other)
count = sum(stat.count for stat in other)
print(
"%s other: %d objects using %.1f KiB"
% (len(other), count, size / 1024)
)
print()