mercurial/setdiscovery.py
author Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
Tue, 26 Jun 2018 10:02:01 -0700
changeset 38490 4c0683655599
parent 38379 ef692614e601
child 39192 5b32b3c618b2
permissions -rw-r--r--
namespaces: let namespaces override singlenode() definition Some namespaces have multiple nodes per name (meaning that their namemap() returns multiple nodes). One such namespace is the "topics" namespace (from the evolve repo). We also have our own internal namespace at Google (for review units) that has multiple nodes per name. These namespaces may not want to use the default "pick highest revnum" resolution that we currently use when resolving a name to a single node. As an example, they may decide that `hg co <name>` should check out a commit that's last in some sense even if an earlier commit had just been amended and thus had a higher revnum [1]. This patch gives the namespace the option to continue to return multiple nodes and to override how the best node is picked. Allowing namespaces to override that may also be useful as an optimization (it may be cheaper for the namespace to find just that node). I have been arguing (in D3715) for using all the nodes returned from namemap() when resolving the symbol to a revset, so e.g. `hg log -r stable` would resolve to *all* nodes on stable, not just the one with the highest revnum (except that I don't actually think we should change it for the branch namespace because of BC). Most people seem opposed to that. If we decide not to do it, I think we can deprecate the namemap() function in favor of the new singlenode() (I find it weird to have namespaces, like the branch namespace, where namemap() isn't nodemap()'s inverse). I therefore think this patch makes sense regardless of what we decide on that issue. [1] Actually, even the branch namespace would have wanted to override singlenode() if it had supported multiple nodes. That's because closes branch heads are mostly ignored, so "hg co default" will not check out the highest-revnum node if that's a closed head. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3852

# setdiscovery.py - improved discovery of common nodeset for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2010 Benoit Boissinot <bboissin@gmail.com>
# and Peter Arrenbrecht <peter@arrenbrecht.ch>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
"""
Algorithm works in the following way. You have two repository: local and
remote. They both contains a DAG of changelists.

The goal of the discovery protocol is to find one set of node *common*,
the set of nodes shared by local and remote.

One of the issue with the original protocol was latency, it could
potentially require lots of roundtrips to discover that the local repo was a
subset of remote (which is a very common case, you usually have few changes
compared to upstream, while upstream probably had lots of development).

The new protocol only requires one interface for the remote repo: `known()`,
which given a set of changelists tells you if they are present in the DAG.

The algorithm then works as follow:

 - We will be using three sets, `common`, `missing`, `unknown`. Originally
 all nodes are in `unknown`.
 - Take a sample from `unknown`, call `remote.known(sample)`
   - For each node that remote knows, move it and all its ancestors to `common`
   - For each node that remote doesn't know, move it and all its descendants
   to `missing`
 - Iterate until `unknown` is empty

There are a couple optimizations, first is instead of starting with a random
sample of missing, start by sending all heads, in the case where the local
repo is a subset, you computed the answer in one round trip.

Then you can do something similar to the bisecting strategy used when
finding faulty changesets. Instead of random samples, you can try picking
nodes that will maximize the number of nodes that will be
classified with it (since all ancestors or descendants will be marked as well).
"""

from __future__ import absolute_import

import collections
import random

from .i18n import _
from .node import (
    nullid,
    nullrev,
)
from . import (
    dagutil,
    error,
    util,
)

def _updatesample(dag, nodes, sample, quicksamplesize=0):
    """update an existing sample to match the expected size

    The sample is updated with nodes exponentially distant from each head of the
    <nodes> set. (H~1, H~2, H~4, H~8, etc).

    If a target size is specified, the sampling will stop once this size is
    reached. Otherwise sampling will happen until roots of the <nodes> set are
    reached.

    :dag: a dag object from dagutil
    :nodes:  set of nodes we want to discover (if None, assume the whole dag)
    :sample: a sample to update
    :quicksamplesize: optional target size of the sample"""
    # if nodes is empty we scan the entire graph
    if nodes:
        heads = dag.headsetofconnecteds(nodes)
    else:
        heads = dag.heads()
    dist = {}
    visit = collections.deque(heads)
    seen = set()
    factor = 1
    while visit:
        curr = visit.popleft()
        if curr in seen:
            continue
        d = dist.setdefault(curr, 1)
        if d > factor:
            factor *= 2
        if d == factor:
            sample.add(curr)
            if quicksamplesize and (len(sample) >= quicksamplesize):
                return
        seen.add(curr)
        for p in dag.parents(curr):
            if not nodes or p in nodes:
                dist.setdefault(p, d + 1)
                visit.append(p)

def _takequicksample(dag, nodes, size):
    """takes a quick sample of size <size>

    It is meant for initial sampling and focuses on querying heads and close
    ancestors of heads.

    :dag: a dag object
    :nodes: set of nodes to discover
    :size: the maximum size of the sample"""
    sample = dag.headsetofconnecteds(nodes)
    if len(sample) >= size:
        return _limitsample(sample, size)
    _updatesample(dag, None, sample, quicksamplesize=size)
    return sample

def _takefullsample(dag, nodes, size):
    sample = dag.headsetofconnecteds(nodes)
    # update from heads
    _updatesample(dag, nodes, sample)
    # update from roots
    _updatesample(dag.inverse(), nodes, sample)
    assert sample
    sample = _limitsample(sample, size)
    if len(sample) < size:
        more = size - len(sample)
        sample.update(random.sample(list(nodes - sample), more))
    return sample

def _limitsample(sample, desiredlen):
    """return a random subset of sample of at most desiredlen item"""
    if len(sample) > desiredlen:
        sample = set(random.sample(sample, desiredlen))
    return sample

def findcommonheads(ui, local, remote,
                    initialsamplesize=100,
                    fullsamplesize=200,
                    abortwhenunrelated=True,
                    ancestorsof=None):
    '''Return a tuple (common, anyincoming, remoteheads) used to identify
    missing nodes from or in remote.
    '''
    start = util.timer()

    roundtrips = 0
    cl = local.changelog
    localsubset = None
    if ancestorsof is not None:
        rev = local.changelog.rev
        localsubset = [rev(n) for n in ancestorsof]
    dag = dagutil.revlogdag(cl, localsubset=localsubset)

    # early exit if we know all the specified remote heads already
    ui.debug("query 1; heads\n")
    roundtrips += 1
    ownheads = dag.heads()
    sample = _limitsample(ownheads, initialsamplesize)
    # indices between sample and externalized version must match
    sample = list(sample)

    with remote.commandexecutor() as e:
        fheads = e.callcommand('heads', {})
        fknown = e.callcommand('known', {
            'nodes': dag.externalizeall(sample),
        })

    srvheadhashes, yesno = fheads.result(), fknown.result()

    if cl.tip() == nullid:
        if srvheadhashes != [nullid]:
            return [nullid], True, srvheadhashes
        return [nullid], False, []

    # start actual discovery (we note this before the next "if" for
    # compatibility reasons)
    ui.status(_("searching for changes\n"))

    srvheads = dag.internalizeall(srvheadhashes, filterunknown=True)
    if len(srvheads) == len(srvheadhashes):
        ui.debug("all remote heads known locally\n")
        return (srvheadhashes, False, srvheadhashes,)

    if len(sample) == len(ownheads) and all(yesno):
        ui.note(_("all local heads known remotely\n"))
        ownheadhashes = dag.externalizeall(ownheads)
        return (ownheadhashes, True, srvheadhashes,)

    # full blown discovery

    # own nodes I know we both know
    # treat remote heads (and maybe own heads) as a first implicit sample
    # response
    common = cl.incrementalmissingrevs(srvheads)
    commoninsample = set(n for i, n in enumerate(sample) if yesno[i])
    common.addbases(commoninsample)
    # own nodes where I don't know if remote knows them
    undecided = set(common.missingancestors(ownheads))
    # own nodes I know remote lacks
    missing = set()

    full = False
    progress = ui.makeprogress(_('searching'), unit=_('queries'))
    while undecided:

        if sample:
            missinginsample = [n for i, n in enumerate(sample) if not yesno[i]]
            missing.update(dag.descendantset(missinginsample, missing))

            undecided.difference_update(missing)

        if not undecided:
            break

        if full or common.hasbases():
            if full:
                ui.note(_("sampling from both directions\n"))
            else:
                ui.debug("taking initial sample\n")
            samplefunc = _takefullsample
            targetsize = fullsamplesize
        else:
            # use even cheaper initial sample
            ui.debug("taking quick initial sample\n")
            samplefunc = _takequicksample
            targetsize = initialsamplesize
        if len(undecided) < targetsize:
            sample = list(undecided)
        else:
            sample = samplefunc(dag, undecided, targetsize)

        roundtrips += 1
        progress.update(roundtrips)
        ui.debug("query %i; still undecided: %i, sample size is: %i\n"
                 % (roundtrips, len(undecided), len(sample)))
        # indices between sample and externalized version must match
        sample = list(sample)

        with remote.commandexecutor() as e:
            yesno = e.callcommand('known', {
                'nodes': dag.externalizeall(sample),
            }).result()

        full = True

        if sample:
            commoninsample = set(n for i, n in enumerate(sample) if yesno[i])
            common.addbases(commoninsample)
            common.removeancestorsfrom(undecided)

    # heads(common) == heads(common.bases) since common represents common.bases
    # and all its ancestors
    result = dag.headsetofconnecteds(common.bases)
    # common.bases can include nullrev, but our contract requires us to not
    # return any heads in that case, so discard that
    result.discard(nullrev)
    elapsed = util.timer() - start
    progress.complete()
    ui.debug("%d total queries in %.4fs\n" % (roundtrips, elapsed))
    msg = ('found %d common and %d unknown server heads,'
           ' %d roundtrips in %.4fs\n')
    missing = set(result) - set(srvheads)
    ui.log('discovery', msg, len(result), len(missing), roundtrips,
           elapsed)

    if not result and srvheadhashes != [nullid]:
        if abortwhenunrelated:
            raise error.Abort(_("repository is unrelated"))
        else:
            ui.warn(_("warning: repository is unrelated\n"))
        return ({nullid}, True, srvheadhashes,)

    anyincoming = (srvheadhashes != [nullid])
    return dag.externalizeall(result), anyincoming, srvheadhashes