##// END OF EJS Templates
util: lower water mark when removing nodes after cost limit reached...
util: lower water mark when removing nodes after cost limit reached See the inline comment for the reasoning here. This is a pretty common strategy for garbage collectors, other cache-like primtives. The performance impact is substantial: $ hg perflrucachedict --size 4 --gets 1000000 --sets 1000000 --mixed 1000000 --costlimit 100 ! inserts w/ cost limit ! wall 1.659181 comb 1.650000 user 1.650000 sys 0.000000 (best of 7) ! wall 1.722122 comb 1.720000 user 1.720000 sys 0.000000 (best of 6) ! mixed w/ cost limit ! wall 1.139955 comb 1.140000 user 1.140000 sys 0.000000 (best of 9) ! wall 1.182513 comb 1.180000 user 1.180000 sys 0.000000 (best of 9) $ hg perflrucachedict --size 1000 --gets 1000000 --sets 1000000 --mixed 1000000 --costlimit 10000 ! inserts ! wall 0.679546 comb 0.680000 user 0.680000 sys 0.000000 (best of 15) ! sets ! wall 0.825147 comb 0.830000 user 0.830000 sys 0.000000 (best of 13) ! inserts w/ cost limit ! wall 25.105273 comb 25.080000 user 25.080000 sys 0.000000 (best of 3) ! wall 1.724397 comb 1.720000 user 1.720000 sys 0.000000 (best of 6) ! mixed ! wall 0.807096 comb 0.810000 user 0.810000 sys 0.000000 (best of 13) ! mixed w/ cost limit ! wall 12.104470 comb 12.070000 user 12.070000 sys 0.000000 (best of 3) ! wall 1.190563 comb 1.190000 user 1.190000 sys 0.000000 (best of 9) $ hg perflrucachedict --size 1000 --gets 1000000 --sets 1000000 --mixed 1000000 --costlimit 10000 --mixedgetfreq 90 ! inserts ! wall 0.711177 comb 0.710000 user 0.710000 sys 0.000000 (best of 14) ! sets ! wall 0.846992 comb 0.850000 user 0.850000 sys 0.000000 (best of 12) ! inserts w/ cost limit ! wall 25.963028 comb 25.960000 user 25.960000 sys 0.000000 (best of 3) ! wall 2.184311 comb 2.180000 user 2.180000 sys 0.000000 (best of 5) ! mixed ! wall 0.728256 comb 0.730000 user 0.730000 sys 0.000000 (best of 14) ! mixed w/ cost limit ! wall 3.174256 comb 3.170000 user 3.170000 sys 0.000000 (best of 4) ! wall 0.773186 comb 0.770000 user 0.770000 sys 0.000000 (best of 13) $ hg perflrucachedict --size 100000 --gets 1000000 --sets 1000000 --mixed 1000000 --mixedgetfreq 90 --costlimit 5000000 ! gets ! wall 1.191368 comb 1.190000 user 1.190000 sys 0.000000 (best of 9) ! wall 1.195304 comb 1.190000 user 1.190000 sys 0.000000 (best of 9) ! inserts ! wall 0.950995 comb 0.950000 user 0.950000 sys 0.000000 (best of 11) ! inserts w/ cost limit ! wall 1.589732 comb 1.590000 user 1.590000 sys 0.000000 (best of 7) ! sets ! wall 1.094941 comb 1.100000 user 1.090000 sys 0.010000 (best of 9) ! mixed ! wall 0.936420 comb 0.940000 user 0.930000 sys 0.010000 (best of 10) ! mixed w/ cost limit ! wall 0.882780 comb 0.870000 user 0.870000 sys 0.000000 (best of 11) This puts us ~2x slower than caches without cost accounting. And for read-heavy workloads (the prime use cases for caches), performance is nearly identical. In the worst case (pure write workloads with cost accounting enabled), we're looking at ~1.5us per insert on large caches. That seems "fast enough." Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4505

File last commit:

r39574:238a1480 default
r39606:f296c0b3 default
Show More
ancestor.py
382 lines | 12.5 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# ancestor.py - generic DAG ancestor algorithm for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# 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
import heapq
from .node import nullrev
from . import (
pycompat,
)
def commonancestorsheads(pfunc, *nodes):
"""Returns a set with the heads of all common ancestors of all nodes,
heads(::nodes[0] and ::nodes[1] and ...) .
pfunc must return a list of parent vertices for a given vertex.
"""
if not isinstance(nodes, set):
nodes = set(nodes)
if nullrev in nodes:
return set()
if len(nodes) <= 1:
return nodes
allseen = (1 << len(nodes)) - 1
seen = [0] * (max(nodes) + 1)
for i, n in enumerate(nodes):
seen[n] = 1 << i
poison = 1 << (i + 1)
gca = set()
interesting = len(nodes)
nv = len(seen) - 1
while nv >= 0 and interesting:
v = nv
nv -= 1
if not seen[v]:
continue
sv = seen[v]
if sv < poison:
interesting -= 1
if sv == allseen:
gca.add(v)
sv |= poison
if v in nodes:
# history is linear
return {v}
if sv < poison:
for p in pfunc(v):
sp = seen[p]
if p == nullrev:
continue
if sp == 0:
seen[p] = sv
interesting += 1
elif sp != sv:
seen[p] |= sv
else:
for p in pfunc(v):
if p == nullrev:
continue
sp = seen[p]
if sp and sp < poison:
interesting -= 1
seen[p] = sv
return gca
def ancestors(pfunc, *orignodes):
"""
Returns the common ancestors of a and b that are furthest from a
root (as measured by longest path).
pfunc must return a list of parent vertices for a given vertex.
"""
def deepest(nodes):
interesting = {}
count = max(nodes) + 1
depth = [0] * count
seen = [0] * count
mapping = []
for (i, n) in enumerate(sorted(nodes)):
depth[n] = 1
b = 1 << i
seen[n] = b
interesting[b] = 1
mapping.append((b, n))
nv = count - 1
while nv >= 0 and len(interesting) > 1:
v = nv
nv -= 1
dv = depth[v]
if dv == 0:
continue
sv = seen[v]
for p in pfunc(v):
if p == nullrev:
continue
dp = depth[p]
nsp = sp = seen[p]
if dp <= dv:
depth[p] = dv + 1
if sp != sv:
interesting[sv] += 1
nsp = seen[p] = sv
if sp:
interesting[sp] -= 1
if interesting[sp] == 0:
del interesting[sp]
elif dv == dp - 1:
nsp = sp | sv
if nsp == sp:
continue
seen[p] = nsp
interesting.setdefault(nsp, 0)
interesting[nsp] += 1
interesting[sp] -= 1
if interesting[sp] == 0:
del interesting[sp]
interesting[sv] -= 1
if interesting[sv] == 0:
del interesting[sv]
if len(interesting) != 1:
return []
k = 0
for i in interesting:
k |= i
return set(n for (i, n) in mapping if k & i)
gca = commonancestorsheads(pfunc, *orignodes)
if len(gca) <= 1:
return gca
return deepest(gca)
class incrementalmissingancestors(object):
'''persistent state used to calculate missing ancestors incrementally
Although similar in spirit to lazyancestors below, this is a separate class
because trying to support contains and missingancestors operations with the
same internal data structures adds needless complexity.'''
def __init__(self, pfunc, bases):
self.bases = set(bases)
if not self.bases:
self.bases.add(nullrev)
self.pfunc = pfunc
def hasbases(self):
'''whether the common set has any non-trivial bases'''
return self.bases and self.bases != {nullrev}
def addbases(self, newbases):
'''grow the ancestor set by adding new bases'''
self.bases.update(newbases)
def removeancestorsfrom(self, revs):
'''remove all ancestors of bases from the set revs (in place)'''
bases = self.bases
pfunc = self.pfunc
revs.difference_update(bases)
# nullrev is always an ancestor
revs.discard(nullrev)
if not revs:
return
# anything in revs > start is definitely not an ancestor of bases
# revs <= start needs to be investigated
start = max(bases)
keepcount = sum(1 for r in revs if r > start)
if len(revs) == keepcount:
# no revs to consider
return
for curr in pycompat.xrange(start, min(revs) - 1, -1):
if curr not in bases:
continue
revs.discard(curr)
bases.update(pfunc(curr))
if len(revs) == keepcount:
# no more potential revs to discard
break
def missingancestors(self, revs):
'''return all the ancestors of revs that are not ancestors of self.bases
This may include elements from revs.
Equivalent to the revset (::revs - ::self.bases). Revs are returned in
revision number order, which is a topological order.'''
revsvisit = set(revs)
basesvisit = self.bases
pfunc = self.pfunc
bothvisit = revsvisit.intersection(basesvisit)
revsvisit.difference_update(bothvisit)
if not revsvisit:
return []
start = max(max(revsvisit), max(basesvisit))
# At this point, we hold the invariants that:
# - revsvisit is the set of nodes we know are an ancestor of at least
# one of the nodes in revs
# - basesvisit is the same for bases
# - bothvisit is the set of nodes we know are ancestors of at least one
# of the nodes in revs and one of the nodes in bases. bothvisit and
# revsvisit are mutually exclusive, but bothvisit is a subset of
# basesvisit.
# Now we walk down in reverse topo order, adding parents of nodes
# already visited to the sets while maintaining the invariants. When a
# node is found in both revsvisit and basesvisit, it is removed from
# revsvisit and added to bothvisit. When revsvisit becomes empty, there
# are no more ancestors of revs that aren't also ancestors of bases, so
# exit.
missing = []
for curr in pycompat.xrange(start, nullrev, -1):
if not revsvisit:
break
if curr in bothvisit:
bothvisit.remove(curr)
# curr's parents might have made it into revsvisit through
# another path
for p in pfunc(curr):
revsvisit.discard(p)
basesvisit.add(p)
bothvisit.add(p)
continue
if curr in revsvisit:
missing.append(curr)
revsvisit.remove(curr)
thisvisit = revsvisit
othervisit = basesvisit
elif curr in basesvisit:
thisvisit = basesvisit
othervisit = revsvisit
else:
# not an ancestor of revs or bases: ignore
continue
for p in pfunc(curr):
if p == nullrev:
pass
elif p in othervisit or p in bothvisit:
# p is implicitly in thisvisit. This means p is or should be
# in bothvisit
revsvisit.discard(p)
basesvisit.add(p)
bothvisit.add(p)
else:
# visit later
thisvisit.add(p)
missing.reverse()
return missing
# Extracted from lazyancestors.__iter__ to avoid a reference cycle
def _lazyancestorsiter(parentrevs, initrevs, stoprev, inclusive):
seen = {nullrev}
heappush = heapq.heappush
heappop = heapq.heappop
heapreplace = heapq.heapreplace
see = seen.add
if inclusive:
visit = [-r for r in initrevs]
seen.update(initrevs)
heapq.heapify(visit)
else:
visit = []
heapq.heapify(visit)
for r in initrevs:
p1, p2 = parentrevs(r)
if p1 not in seen:
heappush(visit, -p1)
see(p1)
if p2 not in seen:
heappush(visit, -p2)
see(p2)
while visit:
current = -visit[0]
if current < stoprev:
break
yield current
# optimize out heapq operation if p1 is known to be the next highest
# revision, which is quite common in linear history.
p1, p2 = parentrevs(current)
if p1 not in seen:
if current - p1 == 1:
visit[0] = -p1
else:
heapreplace(visit, -p1)
see(p1)
else:
heappop(visit)
if p2 not in seen:
heappush(visit, -p2)
see(p2)
class lazyancestors(object):
def __init__(self, pfunc, revs, stoprev=0, inclusive=False):
"""Create a new object generating ancestors for the given revs. Does
not generate revs lower than stoprev.
This is computed lazily starting from revs. The object supports
iteration and membership.
cl should be a changelog and revs should be an iterable. inclusive is
a boolean that indicates whether revs should be included. Revs lower
than stoprev will not be generated.
Result does not include the null revision."""
self._parentrevs = pfunc
self._initrevs = revs = [r for r in revs if r >= stoprev]
self._stoprev = stoprev
self._inclusive = inclusive
self._containsseen = set()
self._containsiter = _lazyancestorsiter(self._parentrevs,
self._initrevs,
self._stoprev,
self._inclusive)
def __nonzero__(self):
"""False if the set is empty, True otherwise."""
try:
next(iter(self))
return True
except StopIteration:
return False
__bool__ = __nonzero__
def __iter__(self):
"""Generate the ancestors of _initrevs in reverse topological order.
If inclusive is False, yield a sequence of revision numbers starting
with the parents of each revision in revs, i.e., each revision is
*not* considered an ancestor of itself. Results are emitted in reverse
revision number order. That order is also topological: a child is
always emitted before its parent.
If inclusive is True, the source revisions are also yielded. The
reverse revision number order is still enforced."""
for rev in _lazyancestorsiter(self._parentrevs, self._initrevs,
self._stoprev, self._inclusive):
yield rev
def __contains__(self, target):
"""Test whether target is an ancestor of self._initrevs."""
seen = self._containsseen
if target in seen:
return True
iter = self._containsiter
if iter is None:
# Iterator exhausted
return False
# Only integer target is valid, but some callers expect 'None in self'
# to be False. So we explicitly allow it.
if target is None:
return False
see = seen.add
try:
while True:
rev = next(iter)
see(rev)
if rev == target:
return True
if rev < target:
return False
except StopIteration:
# Set to None to indicate fast-path can be used next time, and to
# free up memory.
self._containsiter = None
return False