Mercurial > hg
view contrib/catapipe.py @ 40589:054d0fcba2c4
commandserver: add experimental option to use separate message channel
This is loosely based on the idea of the TortoiseHg's pipeui extension,
which attaches ui.label to message text so the command-server client can
capture prompt text, for example.
https://bitbucket.org/tortoisehg/thg/src/4.7.2/tortoisehg/util/pipeui.py
I was thinking that this functionality could be generalized to templating,
but changed mind as doing template stuff would be unnecessarily complex.
It's merely a status message, a simple serialization option should suffice.
Since this slightly changes the command-server protocol, it's gated by a
config knob. If the config is enabled, and if it's supported by the server,
"message-encoding: <name>" is advertised so the client can stop parsing
'o'/'e' channel data and read encoded messages from the 'm' channel. As we
might add new message encodings in future releases, client can specify a list
of encoding names in preferred order.
This patch includes 'cbor' encoding as example. Perhaps, 'json' should be
supported as well.
author | Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 18 Jan 2015 18:49:59 +0900 |
parents | c311424ea579 |
children | ff562d711919 |
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#!/usr/bin/env python3 # # Copyright 2018 Google LLC. # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. """Tool read primitive events from a pipe to produce a catapult trace. Usage: Terminal 1: $ catapipe.py /tmp/mypipe /tmp/trace.json Terminal 2: $ HGCATAPULTSERVERPIPE=/tmp/mypipe hg root <ctrl-c catapipe.py in Terminal 1> $ catapult/tracing/bin/trace2html /tmp/trace.json # produce /tmp/trace.html <open trace.html in your browser of choice; the WASD keys are very useful> (catapult is located at https://github.com/catapult-project/catapult) For now the event stream supports START $SESSIONID ... and END $SESSIONID ... events. Everything after the SESSIONID (which must not contain spaces) is used as a label for the event. Events are timestamped as of when they arrive in this process and are then used to produce catapult traces that can be loaded in Chrome's about:tracing utility. It's important that the event stream *into* this process stay simple, because we have to emit it from the shell scripts produced by run-tests.py. Typically you'll want to place the path to the named pipe in the HGCATAPULTSERVERPIPE environment variable, which both run-tests and hg understand. To trace *only* run-tests, use HGTESTCATAPULTSERVERPIPE instead. """ from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import argparse import json import os import timeit _TYPEMAP = { 'START': 'B', 'END': 'E', } _threadmap = {} # Timeit already contains the whole logic about which timer to use based on # Python version and OS timer = timeit.default_timer def main(): parser = argparse.ArgumentParser() parser.add_argument('pipe', type=str, nargs=1, help='Path of named pipe to create and listen on.') parser.add_argument('output', default='trace.json', type=str, nargs='?', help='Path of json file to create where the traces ' 'will be stored.') parser.add_argument('--debug', default=False, action='store_true', help='Print useful debug messages') args = parser.parse_args() fn = args.pipe[0] os.mkfifo(fn) try: with open(fn) as f, open(args.output, 'w') as out: out.write('[\n') start = timer() while True: ev = f.readline().strip() if not ev: continue now = timer() if args.debug: print(ev) verb, session, label = ev.split(' ', 2) if session not in _threadmap: _threadmap[session] = len(_threadmap) pid = _threadmap[session] ts_micros = (now - start) * 1000000 out.write(json.dumps( { "name": label, "cat": "misc", "ph": _TYPEMAP[verb], "ts": ts_micros, "pid": pid, "tid": 1, "args": {} })) out.write(',\n') finally: os.unlink(fn) if __name__ == '__main__': main()