view tests/test-manifestv2.t @ 26457:7e81305092a0

demandimport: replace more references to _demandmod instances _demandmod instances may be referenced by multiple importing modules. Before this patch, the _demandmod instance only maintained a reference to its first consumer when using the "from X import Y" syntax. This is because we only created a single _demandmod instance (attached to the parent X module). If multiple modules A and B performed "from X import Y", we'd produce a single _demandmod instance "demandmod" with the following references: X.Y = <demandmod> A.Y = <demandmod> B.Y = <demandmod> The locals from the first consumer (A) would be stored in <demandmod1>. When <demandmod1> was loaded, we'd look at the locals for the first consumer and replace the symbol, if necessary. This resulted in state: X.Y = <module> A.Y = <module> B.Y = <demandmod> B's reference to Y wasn't updated and was still using the proxy object because we just didn't record that B had a reference to <demandmod> that needed updating! With this patch, we add support for tracking which modules in addition to the initial importer have a reference to the _demandmod instance and we replace those references at module load time. In the case of posix.py, this fixes an issue where the "encoding" module was being proxied, resulting in hundreds of thousands of __getattribute__ lookups on the _demandmod instance during dirstate operations on mozilla-central, speeding up execution by many milliseconds. There are likely several other operation that benefit from this change as well. The new mechanism isn't perfect: references in locals (not globals) may likely linger. So, if there is an import inside a function and a symbol from that module is used in a hot loop, we could have unwanted overhead from proxying through _demandmod. Non-global imports are discouraged anyway. So hopefully this isn't a big deal in practice. We could potentially deploy a code checker that bans use of attribute lookups of function-level-imported modules inside loops. This deficiency in theory could be avoided by storing the set of globals and locals dicts to update in the _demandmod instance. However, I tried this and it didn't work. One reason is that some globals are _demandmod instances. We could work around this, but it's a bit more work. There also might be other module import foo at play. The solution as implemented is better than what we had and IMO is good enough for the time being. It's worth noting that this sub-optimal behavior was made worse by the introduction of absolute_import and its recommended "from . import X" syntax for importing modules from the "mercurial" package. If we ever wrote performance tests, measuring the amount of module imports and __getattribute__ proxy calls through _demandmod instances would be something I'd have it check.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sun, 04 Oct 2015 11:17:43 -0700
parents 3035b75cd594
children 2329ca3ebc7a
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Create repo with old manifest

  $ hg init existing
  $ cd existing
  $ echo footext > foo
  $ hg add foo
  $ hg commit -m initial

We're using v1, so no manifestv2 entry is in requires yet.

  $ grep manifestv2 .hg/requires
  [1]

Let's clone this with manifestv2 enabled to switch to the new format for
future commits.

  $ cd ..
  $ hg clone --pull existing new --config experimental.manifestv2=1
  requesting all changes
  adding changesets
  adding manifests
  adding file changes
  added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files
  updating to branch default
  1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ cd new

Check that entry was added to .hg/requires.

  $ grep manifestv2 .hg/requires
  manifestv2

Make a new commit.

  $ echo newfootext > foo
  $ hg commit -m new

Check that the manifest actually switched to v2.

  $ hg debugdata -m 0
  foo\x0021e958b1dca695a60ee2e9cf151753204ee0f9e9 (esc)

  $ hg debugdata -m 1
  \x00 (esc)
  \x00foo\x00 (esc)
  I\xab\x7f\xb8(\x83\xcas\x15\x9d\xc2\xd3\xd3:5\x08\xbad5_ (esc)

Check that manifestv2 is used if the requirement is present, even if it's
disabled in the config.

  $ echo newerfootext > foo
  $ hg --config experimental.manifestv2=False commit -m newer

  $ hg debugdata -m 2
  \x00 (esc)
  \x00foo\x00 (esc)
  \xa6\xb1\xfb\xef]\x91\xa1\x19`\xf3.#\x90S\xf8\x06 \xe2\x19\x00 (esc)

Check that we can still read v1 manifests.

  $ hg files -r 0
  foo

  $ cd ..

Check that entry is added to .hg/requires on repo creation

  $ hg --config experimental.manifestv2=True init repo
  $ cd repo
  $ grep manifestv2 .hg/requires
  manifestv2

Set up simple repo

  $ echo a > file1
  $ echo b > file2
  $ echo c > file3
  $ hg ci -Aqm 'initial'
  $ echo d > file2
  $ hg ci -m 'modify file2'

Check that 'hg verify', which uses manifest.readdelta(), works

  $ hg verify
  checking changesets
  checking manifests
  crosschecking files in changesets and manifests
  checking files
  3 files, 2 changesets, 4 total revisions

Check that manifest revlog is smaller than for v1

  $ hg debugindex -m
     rev    offset  length   base linkrev nodeid       p1           p2
       0         0      81      0       0 57361477c778 000000000000 000000000000
       1        81      33      0       1 aeaab5a2ef74 57361477c778 000000000000