mercurial/lsprof.py
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
Fri, 16 Aug 2024 17:58:17 -0400
changeset 51807 0b2c978f595f
parent 50929 18c8c18993f0
child 51789 99632adff795
permissions -rw-r--r--
largefiles: sync up `largefilesdirstate` methods with `dirstate` base class As it currently stands, pytype infers the `dirstate` class (and anything else decorated with `@interfaceutil.implementer`) as `Any`. When that is worked around, it suddenly noticed that most of these methods don't exist in the `dirstate` class anymore. Since they only called into the missing methods and there's no test failures, we can assume these are never called, and they can be dropped. In addition, PyCharm flagged `set_tracked()` and `_ignore()` as not overriding a superclass method with the same arguments. The missing default parameter for the former was the obvious issue. I'm guessing that the latter was named wrong because while there is `_ignore()` in the base class, it takes no arguments and returns a matcher. The `_ignorefiles()` superclass method also takes no args, and returns a list of bytes. The `_ignorefileandline()` superclass method DOES take a file, but returns a tuple. Therefore, the closest match is `_dirignore()`, which takes a file AND returns a bool. No idea why this needs to be overridden though.

import _lsprof
import sys

Profiler = _lsprof.Profiler

# PyPy doesn't expose profiler_entry from the module.
profiler_entry = getattr(_lsprof, 'profiler_entry', None)

__all__ = [b'profile', b'Stats']


def profile(f, *args, **kwds):
    """XXX docstring"""
    p = Profiler()
    p.enable(subcalls=True, builtins=True)
    try:
        f(*args, **kwds)
    finally:
        p.disable()
    return Stats(p.getstats())


class Stats:
    """XXX docstring"""

    def __init__(self, data):
        self.data = data

    def sort(self, crit="inlinetime"):
        """XXX docstring"""
        # profiler_entries isn't defined when running under PyPy.
        if profiler_entry:
            if crit not in profiler_entry.__dict__:
                raise ValueError(b"Can't sort by %s" % crit)
        elif self.data and not getattr(self.data[0], crit, None):
            raise ValueError(b"Can't sort by %s" % crit)

        self.data.sort(key=lambda x: getattr(x, crit), reverse=True)
        for e in self.data:
            if e.calls:
                e.calls.sort(key=lambda x: getattr(x, crit), reverse=True)

    def pprint(self, top=None, file=None, limit=None, climit=None):
        """XXX docstring"""
        if file is None:
            file = sys.stdout
        d = self.data
        if top is not None:
            d = d[:top]
        cols = b"% 12d %12d %11.4f %11.4f   %s\n"
        hcols = b"% 12s %12s %12s %12s %s\n"
        file.write(
            hcols
            % (
                b"CallCount",
                b"Recursive",
                b"Total(s)",
                b"Inline(s)",
                b"module:lineno(function)",
            )
        )
        count = 0
        for e in d:
            file.write(
                cols
                % (
                    e.callcount,
                    e.reccallcount,
                    e.totaltime,
                    e.inlinetime,
                    label(e.code),
                )
            )
            count += 1
            if limit is not None and count == limit:
                return
            ccount = 0
            if climit and e.calls:
                for se in e.calls:
                    file.write(
                        cols
                        % (
                            se.callcount,
                            se.reccallcount,
                            se.totaltime,
                            se.inlinetime,
                            b"    %s" % label(se.code),
                        )
                    )
                    count += 1
                    ccount += 1
                    if limit is not None and count == limit:
                        return
                    if climit is not None and ccount == climit:
                        break

    def freeze(self):
        """Replace all references to code objects with string
        descriptions; this makes it possible to pickle the instance."""

        # this code is probably rather ickier than it needs to be!
        for i in range(len(self.data)):
            e = self.data[i]
            if not isinstance(e.code, str):
                self.data[i] = type(e)((label(e.code),) + e[1:])
            if e.calls:
                for j in range(len(e.calls)):
                    se = e.calls[j]
                    if not isinstance(se.code, str):
                        e.calls[j] = type(se)((label(se.code),) + se[1:])


_fn2mod = {}


def label(code):
    if isinstance(code, str):
        return code.encode('latin-1')
    try:
        mname = _fn2mod[code.co_filename]
    except KeyError:
        for k, v in list(sys.modules.items()):
            if v is None:
                continue
            if not isinstance(getattr(v, '__file__', None), str):
                continue
            if v.__file__.startswith(code.co_filename):
                mname = _fn2mod[code.co_filename] = k
                break
        else:
            mname = _fn2mod[code.co_filename] = '<%s>' % code.co_filename

    res = '%s:%d(%s)' % (mname, code.co_firstlineno, code.co_name)

    return res.encode('latin-1')