wireproto: implement capabilities for wire protocol v2
The capabilities mechanism for wire protocol version 2 represents a
clean break from version 1.
Instead of effectively exchanging a set of capabilities, we're
exchanging a rich data structure.
This data structure currently contains information about
every available command, including its accepted arguments. It also
contains information about supported compression formats.
Exposing information about supported commands will allow clients
to automatically generate bindings to the server. Clients will be
able to do things like detect when they are attempting to run a
command that isn't known to the server. Exposing the required
permissions to run a command can be used by clients to determine if
they have privileges to call a command before actually calling it.
We could potentially even have clients send credentials
preemptively without waiting for the server to deny the command
request. Lots of potential here.
The data returned by this command will likely evolve heavily. So we
shouldn't bikeshed the implementation just yet.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3200
#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# hgperf - measure performance of Mercurial commands
#
# Copyright 2014 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.
'''measure performance of Mercurial commands
Using ``hgperf`` instead of ``hg`` measures performance of the target
Mercurial command. For example, the execution below measures
performance of :hg:`heads --topo`::
$ hgperf heads --topo
All command output via ``ui`` is suppressed, and just measurement
result is displayed: see also "perf" extension in "contrib".
Costs of processing before dispatching to the command function like
below are not measured::
- parsing command line (e.g. option validity check)
- reading configuration files in
But ``pre-`` and ``post-`` hook invocation for the target command is
measured, even though these are invoked before or after dispatching to
the command function, because these may be required to repeat
execution of the target command correctly.
'''
import os
import sys
libdir = '@LIBDIR@'
if libdir != '@' 'LIBDIR' '@':
if not os.path.isabs(libdir):
libdir = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__)),
libdir)
libdir = os.path.abspath(libdir)
sys.path.insert(0, libdir)
# enable importing on demand to reduce startup time
try:
from mercurial import demandimport; demandimport.enable()
except ImportError:
import sys
sys.stderr.write("abort: couldn't find mercurial libraries in [%s]\n" %
' '.join(sys.path))
sys.stderr.write("(check your install and PYTHONPATH)\n")
sys.exit(-1)
from mercurial import (
dispatch,
util,
)
def timer(func, title=None):
results = []
begin = util.timer()
count = 0
while True:
ostart = os.times()
cstart = util.timer()
r = func()
cstop = util.timer()
ostop = os.times()
count += 1
a, b = ostart, ostop
results.append((cstop - cstart, b[0] - a[0], b[1]-a[1]))
if cstop - begin > 3 and count >= 100:
break
if cstop - begin > 10 and count >= 3:
break
if title:
sys.stderr.write("! %s\n" % title)
if r:
sys.stderr.write("! result: %s\n" % r)
m = min(results)
sys.stderr.write("! wall %f comb %f user %f sys %f (best of %d)\n"
% (m[0], m[1] + m[2], m[1], m[2], count))
orgruncommand = dispatch.runcommand
def runcommand(lui, repo, cmd, fullargs, ui, options, d, cmdpats, cmdoptions):
ui.pushbuffer()
lui.pushbuffer()
timer(lambda : orgruncommand(lui, repo, cmd, fullargs, ui,
options, d, cmdpats, cmdoptions))
ui.popbuffer()
lui.popbuffer()
dispatch.runcommand = runcommand
dispatch.run()