##// END OF EJS Templates
changegroup: introduce requests to define delta generation...
changegroup: introduce requests to define delta generation Currently, we iterate through each revision we will be producing a delta for then call into 1 of 2 functions for generating that delta. Deltas are emitted as we iterate. A problem with this model is that revision generation is tightly coupled to the changegroup code. And the storage layer needs to expose APIs like deltaparent() so changegroup delta generation can produce a delta with that knowledge. Another problem is that in this model, deltas can only be produced sequentially after the previous delta was produced and emitted. Some storage backends might be capable of producing deltas in parallel (e.g. if the changegroup deltas are cached somewhere). This commit aims to solve these problems by turning delta generation into a 2 phase implementation where the first phase determines info about all the deltas that need to be generated and the 2nd phase resolves those deltas. We introduce a "revisiondeltarequest" object that holds data about a to-be-generated delta. We perform a full pass over all revisions whose delta is to be generated and generate a "revisiondeltarequest" for each. Then we iterate over the "revisiondeltarequest" instances and derive a "revisiondelta" for each. This patch was quite large. In order to avoid even more churn, aspects of the implementation are less than ideal. e.g. we're recording revision numbers instead of nodes in a few places and we don't yet have a formal API for resolving an iterable of revisiondeltarequest instances. Things will be improved in subsequent commits. Unfortunately, this commit reduces performance substantially. For `hg perfchangegroupchangelog` on my hg repo: ! wall 1.512607 comb 1.510000 user 1.490000 sys 0.020000 (best of 7) ! wall 2.150863 comb 2.150000 user 2.150000 sys 0.000000 (best of 5) And for `hg bundle -t none-v2 -a` for the mozilla-unified repo: 178.32user 4.22system 3:02.59elapsed 190.97user 4.17system 3:15.19elapsed Some of this was attributed to changelog slowdown. `hg perfchangegroupchangelog` on mozilla-unified: ! wall 21.688715 comb 21.690000 user 21.570000 sys 0.120000 (best of 3) ! wall 25.683659 comb 25.680000 user 25.540000 sys 0.140000 (best of 3) Profiling seems to reveal that the changelog slowdown is due to reading changelog revisions multiple times. First in the linknode callback to resolve the set of files changed. Second in the delta generation. Before, we likely had hit the last revision cache in the revlog when doing delta generation since we performed that immediately after performing the linknode callback. I'm not exactly sure where the other ~8s are being spent. It might be from overhead of constructing a few million revisiondeltarequest objects. I'm OK with the regression for now because it is in service of a larger cause (storage abstraction). I'll try to profile later and claw back the performance. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4215
Gregory Szorc -
r39054:e793e11e default
Show More
Name Size Modified Last Commit Author
/ contrib / wix
COPYING.rtf Loading ...
README.txt Loading ...
contrib.wxs Loading ...
defines.wxi Loading ...
dist.wxs Loading ...
doc.wxs Loading ...
guids.wxi Loading ...
help.wxs Loading ...
hg.cmd Loading ...
i18n.wxs Loading ...
locale.wxs Loading ...
mercurial.wxs Loading ...
templates.wxs Loading ...

WiX installer source files
==========================

The files in this folder are used by the thg-winbuild [1] package
building architecture to create a Mercurial MSI installer. These files
are versioned within the Mercurial source tree because the WXS files
must kept up to date with distribution changes within their branch. In
other words, the default branch WXS files are expected to diverge from
the stable branch WXS files. Storing them within the same repository is
the only sane way to keep the source tree and the installer in sync.

The MSI installer builder uses only the mercurial.ini file from the
contrib/win32 folder, the contents of which have been historically used
to create an InnoSetup based installer. The rest of the files there are
ignored.

The MSI packages built by thg-winbuild require elevated (admin)
privileges to be installed due to the installation of MSVC CRT libraries
under the C:\WINDOWS\WinSxS folder. Thus the InnoSetup installers may
still be useful to some users.

To build your own MSI packages, clone the thg-winbuild [1] repository
and follow the README.txt [2] instructions closely. There are fewer
prerequisites for a WiX [3] installer than an InnoSetup installer, but
they are more specific.

Direct questions or comments to Steve Borho <steve@borho.org>

[1] http://bitbucket.org/tortoisehg/thg-winbuild
[2] http://bitbucket.org/tortoisehg/thg-winbuild/src/tip/README.txt
[3] http://wix.sourceforge.net/