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Mercurial Rust Code

This directory contains various Rust code for the Mercurial project. Rust is not required to use (or build) Mercurial, but using it improves performance in some areas.

There are currently three independent rust projects: - chg. An implementation of chg, in rust instead of C. - hgcli. A experiment for starting hg in rust rather than in python,

by linking with the python runtime. Probably meant to be replaced by PyOxidizer at some point.
  • hg-core (and hg-cpython): implementation of some functionality of mercurial in rust, e.g. ancestry computations in revision graphs, status or pull discovery. The top-level Cargo.toml file defines a workspace containing these crates.

Using Rust code

Local use (you need to clean previous build artifacts if you have built without rust previously):

$ make PURE=--rust local # to use ./hg
$ ./tests/run-tests.py --rust # to run all tests
$ ./hg debuginstall | grep -i rust # to validate rust is in use
checking Rust extensions (installed)
checking module policy (rust+c-allow)
checking "re2" regexp engine Rust bindings (installed)

If the environment variable HGWITHRUSTEXT=cpython is set, the Rust extension will be used by default unless --no-rust.

One day we may use this environment variable to switch to new experimental binding crates like a hypothetical HGWITHRUSTEXT=hpy.

Using the fastest hg status

The code for hg status needs to conform to .hgignore rules, which are all translated into regex.

In the first version, for compatibility and ease of development reasons, the Re2 regex engine was chosen until we figured out if the regex crate had similar enough behavior.

Now that that work has been done, the default behavior is to use the regex crate, that provides a significant performance boost compared to the standard Python + C path in many commands such as status, diff and commit,

However, the Re2 path remains slightly faster for our use cases and remains a better option for getting the most speed out of your Mercurial.

If you want to use Re2, you need to install Re2 following Google's guidelines: https://github.com/google/re2/wiki/Install. Then, use HG_RUST_FEATURES=with-re2 and HG_RE2_PATH=system|<path to your re2 install> when building hg to signal the use of Re2. Using the local path instead of the "system" RE2 links it statically.

For example:

$ HG_RUST_FEATURES=with-re2 HG_RE2_PATH=system make PURE=--rust
$ # OR
$ HG_RUST_FEATURES=with-re2 HG_RE2_PATH=/path/to/re2 make PURE=--rust

Developing Rust

The current version of Rust in use is 1.34.2, because it's what Debian stable has. You can use rustup override set 1.34.2 at the root of the repo to make it easier on you.

Go to the hg-cpython folder:

$ cd rust/hg-cpython

Or, only the hg-core folder. Be careful not to break compatibility:

$ cd rust/hg-core

Simply run:

$ cargo build --release

It is possible to build without --release, but it is not recommended if performance is of any interest: there can be an order of magnitude of degradation when removing --release.

For faster builds, you may want to skip code generation:

$ cargo check

For even faster typing:

$ cargo c

You can run only the rust-specific tests (as opposed to tests of mercurial as a whole) with:

$ cargo test --all

Formatting the code

We use rustfmt to keep the code formatted at all times. For now, we are using the nightly version because it has been stable enough and provides comment folding.

To format the entire Rust workspace:

$ cargo +nightly fmt

This requires you to have the nightly toolchain installed.

Additional features

As mentioned in the section about hg status, code paths using re2 are opt-in.

For example:

$ cargo check --features with-re2