view tests/notcapable @ 31467:08ecec297521

bdiff: use Python memory allocator in fixws Python has its own memory allocation APIs. For allocations <= 512 bytes, it allocates memory from arenas. This means that average small allocations don't call the system allocator, which makes them faster. Also, arena allocations cut down on memory fragmentation, which can matter for performance in long-running processes. Another advantage of using the Python memory allocator is that allocations are tracked by Python. This is a bigger deal in Python 3, as modern versions of Python have some decent built-in tools for examining memory usage, leaks, etc. This patch converts a trivial malloc() + free() in the bdiff code to use the Python allocator APIs. Since the object being operated on is a line, chances are it will use an arena. So, this could have a net positive impact on performance (although I didn't measure it).
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Thu, 09 Mar 2017 11:54:25 -0800
parents 1ac628cd7113
children dedab036215d
line wrap: on
line source

# Disable the $CAP wire protocol capability.

if test -z "$CAP"
then
    echo "CAP environment variable not set."
fi

cat > notcapable-$CAP.py << EOF
from mercurial import extensions, peer, localrepo
def extsetup():
    extensions.wrapfunction(peer.peerrepository, 'capable', wrapcapable)
    extensions.wrapfunction(localrepo.localrepository, 'peer', wrappeer)
def wrapcapable(orig, self, name, *args, **kwargs):
    if name in '$CAP'.split(' '):
        return False
    return orig(self, name, *args, **kwargs)
def wrappeer(orig, self):
    # Since we're disabling some newer features, we need to make sure local
    # repos add in the legacy features again.
    return localrepo.locallegacypeer(self)
EOF

echo '[extensions]' >> $HGRCPATH
echo "notcapable-$CAP = `pwd`/notcapable-$CAP.py" >> $HGRCPATH