##// END OF EJS Templates
rust: peek_mut optim for lazy ancestors...
rust: peek_mut optim for lazy ancestors This is one of the two optimizations that are also present in the Python code: replacing pairs of pop/push on the BinaryHeap by single updates, hence having it under the hood maintain its consistency (sift) only once. On Mozilla central, the measured gain (see details below) is around 7%. Creating the PeekMut object by calling peek_mut() right away instead of peek() first is less efficient (gain is only 4%, stats not included). Our interpretation is that its creation has a cost which is vasted in the cases where it ends by droping the value (Peekmut::pop() just does self.heap.pop() anyway). On the other hand, the immutable peek() is very fast: it's just taking a reference in the underlying vector. The Python version still has another optimization: if parent(current) == current-1, then the heap doesn't need to maintain its consistency, since we already know that it's bigger than all the others in the heap. Rust's BinaryHeap doesn't allow us to mutate its biggest element with no housekeeping, but we tried it anyway, with a copy of the BinaryHeap implementation with a dedicaded added method: it's not worth the technical debt in our opinion (we measured only a further 1.6% improvement). One possible explanation would be that the sift is really fast anyway in that case, whereas it's not in the case of Python, because it's at least partly done in slow Python code. Still it's possible that replacing BinaryHeap by something more dedicated to discrete ordered types could be faster. Measurements on mozilla-central: Three runs of 'hg perfancestors' on the parent changeset: Moyenne des médianes: 0.100587 ! wall 0.100062 comb 0.100000 user 0.100000 sys 0.000000 (best of 98) ! wall 0.135804 comb 0.130000 user 0.130000 sys 0.000000 (max of 98) ! wall 0.102864 comb 0.102755 user 0.099286 sys 0.003469 (avg of 98) ! wall 0.101486 comb 0.110000 user 0.110000 sys 0.000000 (median of 98) ! wall 0.096804 comb 0.090000 user 0.090000 sys 0.000000 (best of 100) ! wall 0.132235 comb 0.130000 user 0.120000 sys 0.010000 (max of 100) ! wall 0.100258 comb 0.100300 user 0.096000 sys 0.004300 (avg of 100) ! wall 0.098384 comb 0.100000 user 0.100000 sys 0.000000 (median of 100) ! wall 0.099925 comb 0.100000 user 0.100000 sys 0.000000 (best of 98) ! wall 0.133518 comb 0.140000 user 0.130000 sys 0.010000 (max of 98) ! wall 0.102381 comb 0.102449 user 0.098265 sys 0.004184 (avg of 98) ! wall 0.101891 comb 0.090000 user 0.090000 sys 0.000000 (median of 98) Mean of the medians: 0.100587 On the present changeset: ! wall 0.091344 comb 0.090000 user 0.090000 sys 0.000000 (best of 100) ! wall 0.122728 comb 0.120000 user 0.110000 sys 0.010000 (max of 100) ! wall 0.093268 comb 0.093300 user 0.089300 sys 0.004000 (avg of 100) ! wall 0.092567 comb 0.100000 user 0.090000 sys 0.010000 (median of 100) ! wall 0.093294 comb 0.080000 user 0.080000 sys 0.000000 (best of 100) ! wall 0.144887 comb 0.150000 user 0.140000 sys 0.010000 (max of 100) ! wall 0.097708 comb 0.097700 user 0.093400 sys 0.004300 (avg of 100) ! wall 0.094980 comb 0.100000 user 0.090000 sys 0.010000 (median of 100) ! wall 0.091262 comb 0.090000 user 0.080000 sys 0.010000 (best of 100) ! wall 0.123772 comb 0.130000 user 0.120000 sys 0.010000 (max of 100) ! wall 0.093188 comb 0.093200 user 0.089300 sys 0.003900 (avg of 100) ! wall 0.092364 comb 0.100000 user 0.090000 sys 0.010000 (median of 100) Mean of the medians is 0.0933 Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5358

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show.py
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# show.py - Extension implementing `hg show`
#
# Copyright 2017 Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
"""unified command to show various repository information (EXPERIMENTAL)
This extension provides the :hg:`show` command, which provides a central
command for displaying commonly-accessed repository data and views of that
data.
The following config options can influence operation.
``commands``
------------
``show.aliasprefix``
List of strings that will register aliases for views. e.g. ``s`` will
effectively set config options ``alias.s<view> = show <view>`` for all
views. i.e. `hg swork` would execute `hg show work`.
Aliases that would conflict with existing registrations will not be
performed.
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
from mercurial.i18n import _
from mercurial.node import (
nullrev,
)
from mercurial import (
cmdutil,
commands,
destutil,
error,
formatter,
graphmod,
logcmdutil,
phases,
pycompat,
registrar,
revset,
revsetlang,
scmutil,
)
# Note for extension authors: ONLY specify testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core' for
# extensions which SHIP WITH MERCURIAL. Non-mainline extensions should
# be specifying the version(s) of Mercurial they are tested with, or
# leave the attribute unspecified.
testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core'
cmdtable = {}
command = registrar.command(cmdtable)
revsetpredicate = registrar.revsetpredicate()
class showcmdfunc(registrar._funcregistrarbase):
"""Register a function to be invoked for an `hg show <thing>`."""
# Used by _formatdoc().
_docformat = '%s -- %s'
def _extrasetup(self, name, func, fmtopic=None, csettopic=None):
"""Called with decorator arguments to register a show view.
``name`` is the sub-command name.
``func`` is the function being decorated.
``fmtopic`` is the topic in the style that will be rendered for
this view.
``csettopic`` is the topic in the style to be used for a changeset
printer.
If ``fmtopic`` is specified, the view function will receive a
formatter instance. If ``csettopic`` is specified, the view
function will receive a changeset printer.
"""
func._fmtopic = fmtopic
func._csettopic = csettopic
showview = showcmdfunc()
@command('show', [
# TODO: Switch this template flag to use cmdutil.formatteropts if
# 'hg show' becomes stable before --template/-T is stable. For now,
# we are putting it here without the '(EXPERIMENTAL)' flag because it
# is an important part of the 'hg show' user experience and the entire
# 'hg show' experience is experimental.
('T', 'template', '', ('display with template'), _('TEMPLATE')),
], _('VIEW'),
helpcategory=command.CATEGORY_CHANGE_NAVIGATION)
def show(ui, repo, view=None, template=None):
"""show various repository information
A requested view of repository data is displayed.
If no view is requested, the list of available views is shown and the
command aborts.
.. note::
There are no backwards compatibility guarantees for the output of this
command. Output may change in any future Mercurial release.
Consumers wanting stable command output should specify a template via
``-T/--template``.
List of available views:
"""
if ui.plain() and not template:
hint = _('invoke with -T/--template to control output format')
raise error.Abort(_('must specify a template in plain mode'), hint=hint)
views = showview._table
if not view:
ui.pager('show')
# TODO consider using formatter here so available views can be
# rendered to custom format.
ui.write(_('available views:\n'))
ui.write('\n')
for name, func in sorted(views.items()):
ui.write(('%s\n') % pycompat.sysbytes(func.__doc__))
ui.write('\n')
raise error.Abort(_('no view requested'),
hint=_('use "hg show VIEW" to choose a view'))
# TODO use same logic as dispatch to perform prefix matching.
if view not in views:
raise error.Abort(_('unknown view: %s') % view,
hint=_('run "hg show" to see available views'))
template = template or 'show'
fn = views[view]
ui.pager('show')
if fn._fmtopic:
fmtopic = 'show%s' % fn._fmtopic
with ui.formatter(fmtopic, {'template': template}) as fm:
return fn(ui, repo, fm)
elif fn._csettopic:
ref = 'show%s' % fn._csettopic
spec = formatter.lookuptemplate(ui, ref, template)
displayer = logcmdutil.changesettemplater(ui, repo, spec, buffered=True)
return fn(ui, repo, displayer)
else:
return fn(ui, repo)
@showview('bookmarks', fmtopic='bookmarks')
def showbookmarks(ui, repo, fm):
"""bookmarks and their associated changeset"""
marks = repo._bookmarks
if not len(marks):
# This is a bit hacky. Ideally, templates would have a way to
# specify an empty output, but we shouldn't corrupt JSON while
# waiting for this functionality.
if not isinstance(fm, formatter.jsonformatter):
ui.write(_('(no bookmarks set)\n'))
return
revs = [repo[node].rev() for node in marks.values()]
active = repo._activebookmark
longestname = max(len(b) for b in marks)
nodelen = longestshortest(repo, revs)
for bm, node in sorted(marks.items()):
fm.startitem()
fm.context(ctx=repo[node])
fm.write('bookmark', '%s', bm)
fm.write('node', fm.hexfunc(node), fm.hexfunc(node))
fm.data(active=bm == active,
longestbookmarklen=longestname,
nodelen=nodelen)
@showview('stack', csettopic='stack')
def showstack(ui, repo, displayer):
"""current line of work"""
wdirctx = repo['.']
if wdirctx.rev() == nullrev:
raise error.Abort(_('stack view only available when there is a '
'working directory'))
if wdirctx.phase() == phases.public:
ui.write(_('(empty stack; working directory parent is a published '
'changeset)\n'))
return
# TODO extract "find stack" into a function to facilitate
# customization and reuse.
baserev = destutil.stackbase(ui, repo)
basectx = None
if baserev is None:
baserev = wdirctx.rev()
stackrevs = {wdirctx.rev()}
else:
stackrevs = set(repo.revs('%d::.', baserev))
ctx = repo[baserev]
if ctx.p1().rev() != nullrev:
basectx = ctx.p1()
# And relevant descendants.
branchpointattip = False
cl = repo.changelog
for rev in cl.descendants([wdirctx.rev()]):
ctx = repo[rev]
# Will only happen if . is public.
if ctx.phase() == phases.public:
break
stackrevs.add(ctx.rev())
# ctx.children() within a function iterating on descandants
# potentially has severe performance concerns because revlog.children()
# iterates over all revisions after ctx's node. However, the number of
# draft changesets should be a reasonably small number. So even if
# this is quadratic, the perf impact should be minimal.
if len(ctx.children()) > 1:
branchpointattip = True
break
stackrevs = list(sorted(stackrevs, reverse=True))
# Find likely target heads for the current stack. These are likely
# merge or rebase targets.
if basectx:
# TODO make this customizable?
newheads = set(repo.revs('heads(%d::) - %ld - not public()',
basectx.rev(), stackrevs))
else:
newheads = set()
allrevs = set(stackrevs) | newheads | set([baserev])
nodelen = longestshortest(repo, allrevs)
try:
cmdutil.findcmd('rebase', commands.table)
haverebase = True
except (error.AmbiguousCommand, error.UnknownCommand):
haverebase = False
# TODO use templating.
# TODO consider using graphmod. But it may not be necessary given
# our simplicity and the customizations required.
# TODO use proper graph symbols from graphmod
tres = formatter.templateresources(ui, repo)
shortesttmpl = formatter.maketemplater(ui, '{shortest(node, %d)}' % nodelen,
resources=tres)
def shortest(ctx):
return shortesttmpl.renderdefault({'ctx': ctx, 'node': ctx.hex()})
# We write out new heads to aid in DAG awareness and to help with decision
# making on how the stack should be reconciled with commits made since the
# branch point.
if newheads:
# Calculate distance from base so we can render the count and so we can
# sort display order by commit distance.
revdistance = {}
for head in newheads:
# There is some redundancy in DAG traversal here and therefore
# room to optimize.
ancestors = cl.ancestors([head], stoprev=basectx.rev())
revdistance[head] = len(list(ancestors))
sourcectx = repo[stackrevs[-1]]
sortedheads = sorted(newheads, key=lambda x: revdistance[x],
reverse=True)
for i, rev in enumerate(sortedheads):
ctx = repo[rev]
if i:
ui.write(': ')
else:
ui.write(' ')
ui.write(('o '))
displayer.show(ctx, nodelen=nodelen)
displayer.flush(ctx)
ui.write('\n')
if i:
ui.write(':/')
else:
ui.write(' /')
ui.write(' (')
ui.write(_('%d commits ahead') % revdistance[rev],
label='stack.commitdistance')
if haverebase:
# TODO may be able to omit --source in some scenarios
ui.write('; ')
ui.write(('hg rebase --source %s --dest %s' % (
shortest(sourcectx), shortest(ctx))),
label='stack.rebasehint')
ui.write(')\n')
ui.write(':\n: ')
ui.write(_('(stack head)\n'), label='stack.label')
if branchpointattip:
ui.write(' \\ / ')
ui.write(_('(multiple children)\n'), label='stack.label')
ui.write(' |\n')
for rev in stackrevs:
ctx = repo[rev]
symbol = '@' if rev == wdirctx.rev() else 'o'
if newheads:
ui.write(': ')
else:
ui.write(' ')
ui.write(symbol, ' ')
displayer.show(ctx, nodelen=nodelen)
displayer.flush(ctx)
ui.write('\n')
# TODO display histedit hint?
if basectx:
# Vertically and horizontally separate stack base from parent
# to reinforce stack boundary.
if newheads:
ui.write(':/ ')
else:
ui.write(' / ')
ui.write(_('(stack base)'), '\n', label='stack.label')
ui.write(('o '))
displayer.show(basectx, nodelen=nodelen)
displayer.flush(basectx)
ui.write('\n')
@revsetpredicate('_underway([commitage[, headage]])')
def underwayrevset(repo, subset, x):
args = revset.getargsdict(x, 'underway', 'commitage headage')
if 'commitage' not in args:
args['commitage'] = None
if 'headage' not in args:
args['headage'] = None
# We assume callers of this revset add a topographical sort on the
# result. This means there is no benefit to making the revset lazy
# since the topographical sort needs to consume all revs.
#
# With this in mind, we build up the set manually instead of constructing
# a complex revset. This enables faster execution.
# Mutable changesets (non-public) are the most important changesets
# to return. ``not public()`` will also pull in obsolete changesets if
# there is a non-obsolete changeset with obsolete ancestors. This is
# why we exclude obsolete changesets from this query.
rs = 'not public() and not obsolete()'
rsargs = []
if args['commitage']:
rs += ' and date(%s)'
rsargs.append(revsetlang.getstring(args['commitage'],
_('commitage requires a string')))
mutable = repo.revs(rs, *rsargs)
relevant = revset.baseset(mutable)
# Add parents of mutable changesets to provide context.
relevant += repo.revs('parents(%ld)', mutable)
# We also pull in (public) heads if they a) aren't closing a branch
# b) are recent.
rs = 'head() and not closed()'
rsargs = []
if args['headage']:
rs += ' and date(%s)'
rsargs.append(revsetlang.getstring(args['headage'],
_('headage requires a string')))
relevant += repo.revs(rs, *rsargs)
# Add working directory parent.
wdirrev = repo['.'].rev()
if wdirrev != nullrev:
relevant += revset.baseset({wdirrev})
return subset & relevant
@showview('work', csettopic='work')
def showwork(ui, repo, displayer):
"""changesets that aren't finished"""
# TODO support date-based limiting when calling revset.
revs = repo.revs('sort(_underway(), topo)')
nodelen = longestshortest(repo, revs)
revdag = graphmod.dagwalker(repo, revs)
ui.setconfig('experimental', 'graphshorten', True)
logcmdutil.displaygraph(ui, repo, revdag, displayer, graphmod.asciiedges,
props={'nodelen': nodelen})
def extsetup(ui):
# Alias `hg <prefix><view>` to `hg show <view>`.
for prefix in ui.configlist('commands', 'show.aliasprefix'):
for view in showview._table:
name = '%s%s' % (prefix, view)
choice, allcommands = cmdutil.findpossible(name, commands.table,
strict=True)
# This alias is already a command name. Don't set it.
if name in choice:
continue
# Same for aliases.
if ui.config('alias', name, None):
continue
ui.setconfig('alias', name, 'show %s' % view, source='show')
def longestshortest(repo, revs, minlen=4):
"""Return the length of the longest shortest node to identify revisions.
The result of this function can be used with the ``shortest()`` template
function to ensure that a value is unique and unambiguous for a given
set of nodes.
The number of revisions in the repo is taken into account to prevent
a numeric node prefix from conflicting with an integer revision number.
If we fail to do this, a value of e.g. ``10023`` could mean either
revision 10023 or node ``10023abc...``.
"""
if not revs:
return minlen
cl = repo.changelog
return max(len(scmutil.shortesthexnodeidprefix(repo, cl.node(r), minlen))
for r in revs)
# Adjust the docstring of the show command so it shows all registered views.
# This is a bit hacky because it runs at the end of module load. When moved
# into core or when another extension wants to provide a view, we'll need
# to do this more robustly.
# TODO make this more robust.
def _updatedocstring():
longest = max(map(len, showview._table.keys()))
entries = []
for key in sorted(showview._table.keys()):
entries.append(pycompat.sysstr(' %s %s' % (
key.ljust(longest), showview._table[key]._origdoc)))
cmdtable['show'][0].__doc__ = pycompat.sysstr('%s\n\n%s\n ') % (
cmdtable['show'][0].__doc__.rstrip(),
pycompat.sysstr('\n\n').join(entries))
_updatedocstring()