Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> [Sat, 18 Aug 2018 01:44:38 +0200] rev 40400
profiling: move default mode to "real" time
Mercurial operations involve a lot of disks or network access. These impact
command runtime significantly and it seems important to report them in our
default profiling output.
Having the right default means that we don't forget them when asking people to
produces profiling traces or when doing profiling ourselves.
Moving to "real time" by default will remove the need to think about
activating it on most occasions. The "CPU" time-based profiling is still
accessible when necessary.
Anton Shestakov <av6@dwimlabs.net> [Fri, 05 Oct 2018 23:40:12 +0800] rev 40399
streamclone: abort when client needs to handle obsmarkers, but doesn't
When client doesn't have any of obsolescence markers exchange capabilities,
then it's safe to say it can't handle obsmarkers. However, if it understands
even one format version, then stream clones are fine -- client can use
"obsmarkers" bundle2 part.
Anton Shestakov <av6@dwimlabs.net> [Fri, 05 Oct 2018 23:27:17 +0800] rev 40398
streamclone: include obsstore file into stream bundle if client can read it
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Fri, 19 Oct 2018 18:34:42 -0400] rev 40397
setup: build exewrapper with Unicode support on py3
I didn't see a compiler switch documented anywhere, but I diffed the command
line for full VC++ project when toggling between MBCS and Unicode. This is all
they do.
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Fri, 19 Oct 2018 18:32:13 -0400] rev 40396
exewrapper: convert to _tcsxxx functions for Unicode compatability
This fixes more than 50 tests on py3 on Windows when enabled, mostly hooks and
such that invoked `hg` directly. 187 left to go.
I skipped doing the abort printing with Unicode because of apparent issues with
MinGW [1]. It may be moot though, as MinGW isn't listed as a supported compiler
after 3.4 [2].
[1] https://stackoverflow.com/questions/17700797/printf-wprintf-s-s-ls-char-and-wchar-errors-not-announced-by-a-compil
[2] https://wiki.python.org/moin/WindowsCompilers
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Fri, 19 Oct 2018 18:23:14 -0400] rev 40395
exewrapper: drop an unused variable
Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Thu, 18 Oct 2018 21:14:22 +0900] rev 40394
commands: restore compatibility for "^cmd" registration (issue6005)
This is done at loading time, where ui is available.
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Fri, 19 Oct 2018 12:30:49 +0200] rev 40393
exchangev2: support fetching shallow files history
This commit teaches the exchangev2 client code to handle fetching shallow
files data.
Only shallow fetching of files data is supported: shallow fetching of
changeset and manifest data is explicitly not yet supported.
Previously, we would fetch file revisions for changesets that were received
by the current pull operation. In the new model, we calculate the set of
"relevant" changesets given the pull depth and only fetch files data for
those changesets.
We also teach the "filesdata" command invocation to vary parameters as needed.
The implementation here is far from complete or optimal. Subsequent pulls will
end up re-fetching a lot of files data. But the application of this data should
mostly be a no-op on the client, so it isn't a big deal.
Depending on the order file revisions are fetched in, revisions could get
inserted with the wrong revision number relationships. I think the best way
to deal with this is to remove revision numbers from storage and to either
dynamically derive them (by reconstructing a DAG from nodes/parents) or remove
revision numbers from the file storage interface completely.
A missing API that we'll likely want to write pretty soon is "ensure files
for revision(s) are present." We can kind of cajole exchangev2.pull() to do
this. But it isn't very efficient. For example, in simple cases like
widening the store to obtain data for a single revision, it is probably
more efficient to walk the manifest and find exactly which file revisions
are missing and to make explicit requests for just their data. In more
advanced cases, asking the server for all files data may be more efficient,
even though it requires sending data the client already has. There is tons
of room for future experimentation here. And TBH I'm not sure what the
final state will be.
Anyway, this commit gets us pretty close to being able to have shallow
and narrow checkouts with exchangev2/sqlite storage. Close enough that a
minimal extension should be able to provide fill in the gaps until the code
in core stabilizes and there is a user-facing way to trigger the
narrow/shallow bits from `hg clone` without also implying using of the
narrow extension...
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5169
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Wed, 17 Oct 2018 17:32:15 +0200] rev 40392
sqlitestore: support for storing revisions without their parents
This commit kinda/sorta implements the equivalent of ellipsis nodes for
the SQLite storage backend.
Without implementing full blown ellipsis nodes (and the necessary support for
them in the wire protocol), we instead teach the store to rewrite the p1 and
p2 nodes to nullid when the incoming parent isn't in the local store. This allows
servers to remain dumb and send the real parent and have the clients deal
with the missing parent problem.
This obviously isn't ideal because a benefit of ellipsis nodes is we can
insert a fake parent to ellide missing changesets. But neither solution is
ideal because it drops the original parent from storage. We could probably
teach the SQLite store to retain the original parent and handle missing
parents at read time. However, parent revisions are stored as integers and
it isn't trivial to store an "empty" revision in the store yet, which would
be necessary to represent the "missing" parent.
The store is somewhat intelligent in trying to remove the missing parents
metadata when the revision is re-added. But, revision numbers will be all
messed up in that case, so I'm not sure it is worth it. At some point we'll
likely want to remove the concept of revision numbers from the database and
have the store invent them at index generation time. Or even better, we can
do away with revision numbers from the file storage interface completely.
We'll get there eventually...
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5168
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Fri, 19 Oct 2018 15:38:25 +0200] rev 40391
wireprotov2: support exposing linknode of file revisions
When supporting shallow file storage, clients may fetch file revisions
by changeset. But they may not readily know which changeset introduced a
specific file revision. The "linknode" is used to record which changeset
introduces which file revision.
This commit teaches the "filedata" and "filesdata" wire protocol commands
to expose the linknode for file revisions. The implementation is likely
wrong when hidden changesets are in play, since the linknode may refer to
a hidden changeset. We can deal with this problem later.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5167
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Fri, 19 Oct 2018 14:59:03 +0200] rev 40390
localrepo: support marking repos as having shallow file storage
Various operations against repositories need to know if repository
storage is full or partial. For example, a checkout (including possibly
a widening of a sparse checkout), needs to know if it can assume all file
revisions are available or whether to look for missing revisions first.
This commit lays the plumbing for doing that.
We define a repo creation option that indicates that shallow file storage
is desired.
The SQLite store uses this creation option to add an extra repo requirement
indicating file storage is shallow.
A new repository feature has been added to indicate that file storage is
shallow. The SQLite store adds this feature when the shallow file store
requirement is present.
Code can now look at repo.features to determine if repo file storage may
be shallow and take additional actions if so.
While we're here, we also teach the SQLite store to handle the narrow repo
requirement, which gets added when making narrow clones.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5166
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Wed, 26 Sep 2018 14:41:15 -0700] rev 40389
repository: teach addgroup() to receive data with missing parents
The way the narrow extension works today, the server rewrites
outgoing changegroup data to lie about parents when the parents
data is missing. It adds the ellipsis flag to the revision so
it can be recorded as such in the revlog.
In the new wire protocol, such rewriting does not occur on
the server (at least not yet anyway). Instead, it is up to the
client to recognize when it has received a revision without its
parents. This means rewriting will be performed on the client.
Furthermore, the mechanism for storing a shallow revision may
differ from store to store. For example, the revlog store uses
the ellipsis flag to denote a revision's parents have been
rewritten. But a non-revlog store may wish to store things
differently. And, some stores may not even support receiving
shallow revision data!
Therefore, it makes sense for the store itself to be making
decisions about what to do when they receive revision data
without their parents.
This commit teaches the addgroup() bulk insert method to accept
a boolean argument that indicates whether the incoming data may
lack parent revisions. This flag can be set when receiving
"shallow" data from a remote.
The revlog implementation of this method has been taught to rewrite
the missing parent(s) to nullid and to add the ellipsis flag to
the revision when a missing parent is encountered. But it only
does this if ellipsis flags are enabled on the repo and the
incoming data is marked as possibly shallow. An error occurs
otherwise.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5165