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worker: change partition strategy to every Nth element The only consumer of the worker pool code today is `hg update`. Previously, the algorithm to partition work to each worker process preserved input list ordering. We'd take the first N elements, then the next N elements, etc. Measurements on mozilla-central demonstrate this isn't an optimal partitioning strategy. I added debug code to print when workers were exiting. When performing a working copy update on a previously empty working copy of mozilla-central, I noticed that process lifetimes were all over the map. One worker would complete after 7s. Many would complete after 12s. And another worker would often take >16s. This behavior occurred for many worker process counts and was more pronounced on some than others. What I suspect is happening is some workers end up with lots of small files and others with large files. This is because the update code passes in actions according to sorted filenames. And, directories under tend to accumulate similar files. For example, test directories often consist of many small test files and media directories contain binary (often larger) media files. This patch changes the partitioning algorithm to select every Nth element from the input list. Each worker thus has a similar composition of files to operate on. The result of this change is that worker processes now all tend to exit around the same time. The possibility of a long pole due to being unlucky and receiving all the large files has been mitigated. Overall execution time seems to drop, but not by a statistically significant amount on mozilla-central. However, repositories with directories containing many large files will likely show a drop. There shouldn't be any regressions due to partial manifest decoding because the update code already iterates the manifest to determine what files to operate on, so the manifest should already be decoded.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sat, 20 Feb 2016 15:56:44 -0800
parents 4b0fc75f9403
children 76b171209151
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Mercurial
=========

Mercurial is a fast, easy to use, distributed revision control tool
for software developers.

Basic install:

 $ make            # see install targets
 $ make install    # do a system-wide install
 $ hg debuginstall # sanity-check setup
 $ hg              # see help

Running without installing:

 $ make local      # build for inplace usage
 $ ./hg --version  # should show the latest version

See https://mercurial-scm.org/ for detailed installation
instructions, platform-specific notes, and Mercurial user information.