hgweb.cgi
author Durham Goode <durham@fb.com>
Wed, 06 Mar 2013 20:13:09 -0800
changeset 18760 e74704c33e24
parent 15475 85cba926cb59
child 26421 4b0fc75f9403
permissions -rwxr-xr-x
strip: make --keep option not set all dirstate times to 0 hg strip -k was using dirstate.rebuild() which reset all the dirstate entries timestamps to 0. This meant that the next time hg status was run every file was considered to be 'unsure', which caused it to do expensive read operations on every filelog. On a repo with >150,000 files it took 70 seconds when everything was in memory. From a cold cache it took several minutes. The fix is to only reset files that have changed between the working context and the destination context. For reference, --keep means the working directory is left alone during the strip. We have users wanting to use this operation to store their work-in-progress as a commit on a branch while they go work on another branch, then come back later and be able to uncommit that work and continue working. They currently use 'git reset HARD^' to accomplish this in git.

#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# An example hgweb CGI script, edit as necessary
# See also http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/PublishingRepositories

# Path to repo or hgweb config to serve (see 'hg help hgweb')
config = "/path/to/repo/or/config"

# Uncomment and adjust if Mercurial is not installed system-wide
# (consult "installed modules" path from 'hg debuginstall'):
#import sys; sys.path.insert(0, "/path/to/python/lib")

# Uncomment to send python tracebacks to the browser if an error occurs:
#import cgitb; cgitb.enable()

from mercurial import demandimport; demandimport.enable()
from mercurial.hgweb import hgweb, wsgicgi
application = hgweb(config)
wsgicgi.launch(application)