Denis Laxalde <denis.laxalde@logilab.fr> [Thu, 04 Apr 2019 11:35:18 +0200] rev 42071
interactive: do not prompt about files given in command line
For commit and revert commands with --interactive and explicit files
given in the command line, we now skip the invite to "examine changes to
<file> ? [Ynesfdaq?]". The reason for this is that, if <file> is
specified by the user, asking for confirmation is redundant.
In patch.filterpatch(), we now use an optional "match" argument to
conditionally call the prompt() function when entering a new "header"
item. We use .exact() method to compare with files from the "header" in
order to only consider (rel)path patterns.
Add tests with glob patterns for commit and revert, to make sure we
still ask to examine files in these cases.
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Thu, 04 Apr 2019 17:34:43 -0700] rev 42070
zstandard: vendor python-zstandard 0.11
The upstream source distribution from PyPI was extracted. Unwanted
files were removed.
The clang-format ignore list was updated to reflect the new source
of files.
The project contains a vendored copy of zstandard 1.3.8. The old
version was 1.3.6. This should result in some minor performance wins.
test-check-py3-compat.t was updated to reflect now-passing tests on
Python 3.8.
Some HTTP tests were updated to reflect new zstd compression output.
# no-check-commit because 3rd party code has different style guidelines
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6199
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Thu, 04 Apr 2019 15:24:03 -0700] rev 42069
cext: make osutil.c PY_SSIZE_T_CLEAN
This is needed to avoid a deprecation warning on Python 3.8.
With this change, we no longer see deprecation warnings for
this issue on Python 3.8.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6198
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Thu, 04 Apr 2019 15:21:30 -0700] rev 42068
cext: make parsers.c PY_SSIZE_T_CLEAN
This is needed to avoid a deprecation warning in Python 3.8. I believe
the conversion of int to Py_ssize_t is harmless in the changed
locations. But this being C code, it should be audited with care.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6197
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Thu, 04 Apr 2019 15:18:06 -0700] rev 42067
cext: make revlog.c PY_SSIZE_T_CLEAN
Without this, Python 3.8 emits a deprecation warning, as using
int for # values is deprecated. Many existing modules use
PY_SSIZE_T_CLEAN, so this shouldn't be contentious.
I audited the file for all # formatters and verified we are
using Py_ssize_t everywhere now.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6196
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Thu, 04 Apr 2019 18:20:36 -0700] rev 42066
tests: add optional output for Python 2.7 deprecation
We already had one of these a few lines above. We need it here as
well.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6203
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Thu, 04 Apr 2019 18:01:48 -0700] rev 42065
setup: use raw string for regular expression
Otherwise Python 3.8 complains about the backslash.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6202
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Thu, 04 Apr 2019 18:01:02 -0700] rev 42064
automation: use raw strings when there are backslashes
Otherwise Python 3.8 complains.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6201
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Thu, 04 Apr 2019 17:47:25 -0700] rev 42063
perf: make perf.run-limits code work with Python 3
We need b'' because perf.py isn't run through the source
transformer.
We need to cast the exception to bytes using pycompat.bytestr()
because ValueError can't be %s formatted due to built-in exceptions
lacking __bytes__.
We need to pycompat.sysstr() before the float() and int() cast
so the ValueError message doesn't have b'' in it.
Even with that, it looks like the error message for the ValueError
for float casts added quotes, so we need to account for that in test
output.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6200
Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> [Mon, 25 Dec 2017 05:55:50 -0800] rev 42062
localrepo: rename crev in _filecommit() to cnode, since it's a node
I know we often use "rev" generically, but here's it always a node, so
it helps to be specific.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6181
Jerry Montfort <jerry.montfort@fake-box.com> [Fri, 05 Apr 2019 04:09:41 +0530] rev 42061
tests: unset environment variable P in test-revset2.t (issue6109)
The test tests/test-revset2.t fails the test case
"Test repo.anyrevs with customized revset overrides" (line 1609)
if the environment variable P is set. The test implicitly expects that the
environment, in which it is started, does not export the variable 'P'.
To solve this issue, unset 'P' right before the test commands are run.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6195
Philippe Pepiot <philippe.pepiot@logilab.fr> [Thu, 04 Apr 2019 19:08:37 +0200] rev 42060
hgmanpage: use a py2 and py3 compatible iterable protocol
Philippe Pepiot <philippe.pepiot@logilab.fr> [Thu, 04 Apr 2019 19:08:05 +0200] rev 42059
hgmanpage: use range instead of xrange
Philippe Pepiot <philippe.pepiot@logilab.fr> [Thu, 04 Apr 2019 19:06:48 +0200] rev 42058
packaging: allow to run make with python3
Use "?=", otherwise the variable cannot be set from environment.
Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> [Wed, 03 Apr 2019 11:21:27 -0700] rev 42057
cleanup: use set literals where possible
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6192
Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> [Wed, 19 Jul 2017 13:17:49 -0700] rev 42056
tests: rename "u" to more usual "ui" in test-context.py
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6191
Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> [Wed, 03 Apr 2019 09:38:08 -0700] rev 42055
tests: better document the graft copy case
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6190
Augie Fackler <augie@google.com> [Wed, 03 Apr 2019 11:46:29 -0400] rev 42054
py2exe: add workaround to allow bundling of hgext3rd.* extensions
py2exe doesn't know how to handle namespace packages *at all*, so it treats
them like normal packages. As a result, if we try and bundle hgext3rd.evolve
in a py2exe build, it won't work if we install evolve into the virtualenv. In
order to work around this, tortoisehg installs hgext3rd.evolve etc into its
staged hg directory, since it doesn't use a virtualenv. As a workaround for us,
we'll just allow any extra packages users want bundled are part of hg during
the pseudo-install phase that py2exe uses. I'm not happy about this, but it
*works*.
As a sample of how you'd make an MSI with evolve bundled:
import os
import shutil
import subprocess
import tempfile
def stage_evolve(version):
"""Stage evolve for inclusion in py2exe binary."""
with tempfile.TemporaryDirectory() as temp:
evolve = os.path.join(temp, "evolve")
subprocess.check_call([
"hg.exe",
"clone",
"https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/evolve/",
"--update",
version,
evolve,
])
dest = os.path.join('..', 'hgext3rd', 'evolve')
if os.path.exists(dest):
shutil.rmtree(dest)
shutil.copytree(os.path.join(evolve, "hgext3rd", "evolve"), dest)
def main():
stage_evolve('tip')
print("\0")
print("hgext3rd")
print("hgext3rd.evolve")
print("hgext3rd.evolve.hack")
print("hgext3rd.evolve.thirdparty")
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
is a script you can pass to the wix/build.py as --extra-packages-script,
and the resulting .msi will have an hg binary with evolve baked in. users
will still need to enable evolve in their hgrc, so you'd probably also
want to bundle configs in your msi for an enterprise environment, but that's
already easy to do with the support for extra features and wxs files in the
wix build process.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6189
Augie Fackler <augie@google.com> [Tue, 02 Apr 2019 23:38:54 -0400] rev 42053
wix: fix the package build when not adding features
Should have used ifdef, not if. Sigh.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6187
Rodrigo Damazio Bovendorp <rdamazio@google.com> [Mon, 01 Apr 2019 19:02:24 -0700] rev 42052
histedit: narrow the scope of discarded ui output
In 34165875fa5df813bec3a0cd348932b304d44efb, a lot of the output from
histedit was excluded. This slightly adjusts the scope of that exclusion,
to both discard more uninsteresting messages, and ensure that pre-merge-tool
output gets shown before the external merge tool is executed.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6177
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Fri, 29 Mar 2019 21:53:15 -0400] rev 42051
uncommit: abort if an explicitly given file cannot be uncommitted (BC)
I've gotten burned several times by this in the last few days. The former tests
look simple enough, but if a good file and a bad file are given, the bad files
are silently ignored. Some commands like `forget` will warn about bogus files,
but that would likely get lost in the noise of an interactive uncommit. The
commit command aborts if a bad file is given, so this seems more consistent for
commands that alter the repository.
Navaneeth Suresh <navaneeths1998@gmail.com> [Mon, 25 Mar 2019 12:33:41 +0530] rev 42050
unshelve: disable unshelve during merge (issue5123)
As stated in the issue5123, unshelve can destroy the second parent of
the context when tried to unshelve with an uncommitted merge. This
patch makes unshelve to abort when called with an uncommitted merge.
See how shelve.mergefiles works. Commit structure looks like this:
```
... -> pctx -> tmpwctx -> shelvectx
/
/
second
merge parent
pctx = parent before merging working context(first merge parent)
tmpwctx = commited working directory after merge(with two parents)
shelvectx = shelved context
```
shelve.mergefiles first updates to pctx then it reverts shelvectx to pctx with:
```
cmdutil.revert(ui, repo, shelvectx, repo.dirstate.parents(),
*pathtofiles(repo, files),
**{'no_backup': True})
```
Reverting tmpwctx files that were merged from second parent to pctx makes them
added because they are not in pctx.
Changing this revert operation is crucial to restore parents after unshelve.
This is a complicated issue as this is not fixing a regression. Thus, for the
time being, unshelve during an uncommitted merge can be aborted.
(Details taken from http://mercurial.808500.n3.nabble.com/PATCH-V3-shelve-restore-parents-after-unshelve-issue5123-tt4036858.html#a4037408)
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6169
Augie Fackler <raf@durin42.com> [Mon, 01 Apr 2019 20:01:48 -0400] rev 42049
wix: add functionality to inject additional Features into installer
This is the last bit required to be able to glue extra configs etc into
the installer.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6180
Augie Fackler <raf@durin42.com> [Mon, 01 Apr 2019 16:21:47 -0400] rev 42048
wix: add support for additional wxs files
As with my previous change for an --extra-prebuiild-script, I'm
assuming this is predominantly useful in an enterprise environment
and am only adding this to wix and not also to inno install scripts.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6179
Augie Fackler <augie@google.com> [Wed, 20 Mar 2019 13:18:37 -0400] rev 42047
wix: add a hook for a prebuild script to inject extra libraries
I need this to build packages for Google so we can bundle some
extensions in the installed image. My assumption is that this is most
interesting for the .msi images so I only wired it up there. I'm not
thrilled with the interface this provides, but it was an easy way to
retain debug messages on Windows while also having enough structure to
know what lines are actually module names for py2exe.
Still pending on my end: I need to bundle a couple of config files,
and at least one data file. I'm open to advice on how to do those
things, and how to do this better.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6164
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Wed, 27 Mar 2019 18:26:54 +0100] rev 42046
compression: introduce an official `format.revlog-compression` option
This option supersedes the `experiment.format.compression` option. The value
currently supported are zlib (default) and zstd (if Mercurial was compiled with
zstd support).
The option gained an explicit reference to `revlog` since this is the target
usage here. Different storage methods might require different compression
strategies.
In our tests, using zstd give a significant CPU usage improvement (both
compression and decompressing) while keeping similar repository size.
Zstd as other interresting mode (dictionnary, pre-text, etc…) that are probably
worth exploring. However, just plain switching from zlib to zstd provide a large
benefit.
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Tue, 02 Apr 2019 11:03:46 -0700] rev 42045
compression: display compression level in debugformat
Now that we have options to control the compression level, we teach `hg
debugformat` about them. This is a useful information when comparing
repositories.
Note that we have no trace of the compression level used to store existing
deltas. Actually, it would even varies from one delta to another. So we display
the currently set value.
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Wed, 27 Mar 2019 18:35:59 +0100] rev 42044
compression: introduce a `storage.revlog.zstd.level` configuration
This option control the zstd compression level used when compressing revlog
chunk. The usage of zstd for revlog compression has not graduated from
experimental yet, but we intend to fix that soon.
The option name for the compression level is more straight forward to pick, so
this changesets comes first. Having a dedicated option for each compression
engine is useful because they don't support the same range of values.
I ran the same measurement as for the zlib compression level (in the parent
changesets). The variation in repository size is stay mostly in the same (small)
range. The "read/write" performance see smallish variation, but are overall much
better than zlib. Write performance show the same tend of having better write
performance for when reaching high-end compression.
Again, we don't intend to change the default zstd compression level (currently:
3) in this series. However this is worth investigating in the future.
The Performance comparison of zlib vs zstd is quite impressive. The repository
size stay in the same range, but the performance are much better in all
situations.
Comparison summary
==================
We are looking at:
- performance range for zlib
- performance range for zstd
- comparison of default zstd (level-3) to default zlib (level 6)
- comparison of the slowest zstd time to the fastest zlib time
Read performance:
-----------------
| zlib | zstd | cmp | f2s
mercurial | 0.170159 - 0.189219 | 0.144127 - 0.149624 | 80% | 88%
pypy | 2.679217 - 2.768691 | 1.532317 - 1.705044 | 60% | 63%
netbeans | 122.477027 - 141.620281 | 72.996346 - 89.731560 | 58% | 73%
mozilla | 147.867662 - 170.572118 | 91.700995 - 105.853099 | 56% | 71%
Write performance:
------------------
| zlib | zstd | cmp | f2s
mercurial | 53.250304 - 56.2936129 | 40.877025 - 45.677286 | 75% | 86%
pypy | 460.721984 - 476.589918 | 270.545409 - 301.002219 | 63% | 65%
netbeans | 520.560316 - 715.930400 | 370.356311 - 428.329652 | 55% | 82%
mozilla | 739.803002 - 987.056093 | 505.152906 - 591.930683 | 57% | 80%
Raw data
--------
repo alg lvl .hg/store size 00manifest.d read write
mercurial zlib 1 49,402,813 5,963,475 0.170159 53.250304
mercurial zlib 6 47,197,397 5,875,730 0.182820 56.264320
mercurial zlib 9 47,121,596 5,849,781 0.189219 56.293612
mercurial zstd 1 49,737,084 5,966,355 0.144127 40.877025
mercurial zstd 3 48,961,867 5,895,208 0.146376 42.268142
mercurial zstd 5 48,200,592 5,938,676 0.149624 43.162875
mercurial zstd 10 47,833,520 5,913,353 0.145185 44.012489
mercurial zstd 15 47,314,604 5,728,679 0.147686 45.677286
mercurial zstd 20 47,330,502 5,830,539 0.145789 45.025407
mercurial zstd 22 47,330,076 5,830,539 0.143996 44.690460
pypy zlib 1 370,830,572 28,462,425 2.679217 460.721984
pypy zlib 6 340,112,317 27,648,747 2.768691 467.537158
pypy zlib 9 338,360,736 27,639,003 2.763495 476.589918
pypy zstd 1 362,377,479 27,916,214 1.532317 270.545409
pypy zstd 3 354,137,693 27,905,988 1.686718 294.951509
pypy zstd 5 342,640,043 27,655,774 1.705044 301.002219
pypy zstd 10 334,224,327 27,164,493 1.567287 285.186239
pypy zstd 15 329,000,363 26,645,965 1.637729 299.561332
pypy zstd 20 324,534,039 26,199,547 1.526813 302.149827
pypy zstd 22 324,530,595 26,198,932 1.525718 307.821218
netbeans zlib 1 1,281,847,810 165,495,457 122.477027 520.560316
netbeans zlib 6 1,205,284,353 159,161,207 139.876147 715.930400
netbeans zlib 9 1,197,135,671 155,034,586 141.620281 678.297064
netbeans zstd 1 1,259,581,737 160,840,613 72.996346 370.356311
netbeans zstd 3 1,232,978,122 157,691,551 81.622317 396.733087
netbeans zstd 5 1,208,034,075 160,246,880 83.080549 364.342626
netbeans zstd 10 1,188,624,176 156,083,417 79.323935 403.594602
netbeans zstd 15 1,176,973,589 153,859,477 89.731560 428.329652
netbeans zstd 20 1,162,958,258 151,147,535 82.842667 392.335349
netbeans zstd 22 1,162,707,029 151,150,220 82.565695 402.840655
mozilla zlib 1 2,775,497,186 298,527,987 147.867662 751.263721
mozilla zlib 6 2,596,856,420 286,597,671 170.572118 987.056093
mozilla zlib 9 2,587,542,494 287,018,264 163.622338 739.803002
mozilla zstd 1 2,723,159,348 286,617,532 91.700995 570.042751
mozilla zstd 3 2,665,055,001 286,152,013 95.240155 561.412805
mozilla zstd 5 2,607,819,817 288,060,030 101.978048 505.152906
mozilla zstd 10 2,558,761,085 283,967,648 104.113481 497.771202
mozilla zstd 15 2,526,216,060 275,581,300 105.853099 591.930683
mozilla zstd 20 2,485,114,806 266,478,859 95.268795 576.515389
mozilla zstd 22 2,484,869,080 266,456,505 94.429282 572.785537
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Wed, 27 Mar 2019 18:35:27 +0100] rev 42043
compression: introduce a `storage.revlog.zlib.level` configuration
This option control the zlib compression level used when compression revlog
chunk.
This is also a good excuse to pave the way for a similar configuration option
for the zstd compression engine. Having a dedicated option for each compression
algorithm is useful because they don't support the same range of values.
Using a higher zlib compression impact CPU consumption at compression time, but
does not directly affected decompression time. However dealing with small
compressed chunk can directly help decompression and indirectly help other
revlog logic.
I ran some basic test on repositories using different level. I am using the
mercurial, pypy, netbeans and mozilla-central clone from our benchmark suite.
All tested repository use sparse-revlog and got all their delta recomputed.
The different compression level has a small effect on the repository size
(about 10% variation in the total range). My quick analysis is that revlog
mostly store small delta, that are not affected by the compression level much.
So the variation probably mostly comes from better compression of the snapshots
revisions, and snapshot revision only represent a small portion of the
repository content.
I also made some basic timings measurements. The "read" timings are gathered using
simple run of `hg perfrevlogrevisions`, the "write" timings using `hg
perfrevlogwrite` (restricted to the last 5000 revisions for netbeans and
mozilla central). The timings are gathered on a generic machine, (not one of
our performance locked machine), so small variation might not be meaningful.
However large trend remains relevant.
Keep in mind that these numbers are not pure compression/decompression time.
They also involve the full revlog logic. In particular the difference in chunk
size has an impact on the delta chain structure, affecting performance when
writing or reading them.
On read/write performance, the compression level has a bigger impact.
Counter-intuitively, the higher compression levels improve "write" performance
for the large repositories in our tested setting. Maybe because the last 5000
delta chain end up having a very different shape in this specific spot? Or maybe
because of a more general trend of better delta chains thanks to the smaller
chunk and snapshot.
This series does not intend to change the default compression level. However,
these result call for a deeper analysis of this performance difference in the
future.
Full data
=========
repo level .hg/store size 00manifest.d read write
----------------------------------------------------------------
mercurial 1 49,402,813 5,963,475 0.170159 53.250304
mercurial 6 47,197,397 5,875,730 0.182820 56.264320
mercurial 9 47,121,596 5,849,781 0.189219 56.293612
pypy 1 370,830,572 28,462,425 2.679217 460.721984
pypy 6 340,112,317 27,648,747 2.768691 467.537158
pypy 9 338,360,736 27,639,003 2.763495 476.589918
netbeans 1 1,281,847,810 165,495,457 122.477027 520.560316
netbeans 6 1,205,284,353 159,161,207 139.876147 715.930400
netbeans 9 1,197,135,671 155,034,586 141.620281 678.297064
mozilla 1 2,775,497,186 298,527,987 147.867662 751.263721
mozilla 6 2,596,856,420 286,597,671 170.572118 987.056093
mozilla 9 2,587,542,494 287,018,264 163.622338 739.803002
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Wed, 27 Mar 2019 19:34:10 +0100] rev 42042
compression: accept level management for zlib compression
We update the zlib related class to be support setting the compression level.
This changeset focus on updating the internal only. A way to configure this
level will be introduced in the next changeset.