Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/pvec.py @ 18792:10669e24eb6c
completion: add a debugpathcomplete command
The bash_completion code uses "hg status" to generate a list of
possible completions for commands that operate on files in the
working directory. In a large working directory, this can result
in a single tab-completion being very slow (several seconds) as a
result of checking the status of every file, even when there is no
need to check status or no possible matches.
The new debugpathcomplete command gains performance in a few simple
ways:
* Allow completion to operate on just a single directory. When used
to complete the right commands, this considerably reduces the
number of completions returned, at no loss in functionality.
* Never check the status of files. For completions that really must
know if a file is modified, it is faster to use status:
hg status -nm 'glob:myprefix**'
Performance:
Here are the commands used by bash_completion to complete, run in
the root of the mozilla-central working dir (~77,000 files) and
another repo (~165,000 files):
All "normal state" files (used by e.g. remove, revert):
mozilla other
status -nmcd 'glob:**' 1.77 4.10 sec
debugpathcomplete -f -n 0.53 1.26
debugpathcomplete -n 0.17 0.41
("-f" means "complete full paths", rather than the current directory)
Tracked files matching "a":
mozilla other
status -nmcd 'glob:a**' 0.26 0.47
debugpathcomplete -f -n a 0.10 0.24
debugpathcomplete -n a 0.10 0.22
We should be able to further improve completion performance once
the critbit work lands. Right now, our performance is limited by
the need to iterate over all keys in the dirstate.
author | Bryan O'Sullivan <bryano@fb.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 21 Mar 2013 16:31:28 -0700 |
parents | e7cfe3587ea4 |
children | 5093d2a87ff6 |
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# pvec.py - probabilistic vector clocks for Mercurial # # Copyright 2012 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. ''' A "pvec" is a changeset property based on the theory of vector clocks that can be compared to discover relatedness without consulting a graph. This can be useful for tasks like determining how a disconnected patch relates to a repository. Currently a pvec consist of 448 bits, of which 24 are 'depth' and the remainder are a bit vector. It is represented as a 70-character base85 string. Construction: - a root changeset has a depth of 0 and a bit vector based on its hash - a normal commit has a changeset where depth is increased by one and one bit vector bit is flipped based on its hash - a merge changeset pvec is constructed by copying changes from one pvec into the other to balance its depth Properties: - for linear changes, difference in depth is always <= hamming distance - otherwise, changes are probably divergent - when hamming distance is < 200, we can reliably detect when pvecs are near Issues: - hamming distance ceases to work over distances of ~ 200 - detecting divergence is less accurate when the common ancestor is very close to either revision or total distance is high - this could probably be improved by modeling the relation between delta and hdist Uses: - a patch pvec can be used to locate the nearest available common ancestor for resolving conflicts - ordering of patches can be established without a DAG - two head pvecs can be compared to determine whether push/pull/merge is needed and approximately how many changesets are involved - can be used to find a heuristic divergence measure between changesets on different branches ''' import base85, util from node import nullrev _size = 448 # 70 chars b85-encoded _bytes = _size / 8 _depthbits = 24 _depthbytes = _depthbits / 8 _vecbytes = _bytes - _depthbytes _vecbits = _vecbytes * 8 _radius = (_vecbits - 30) / 2 # high probability vectors are related def _bin(bs): '''convert a bytestring to a long''' v = 0 for b in bs: v = v * 256 + ord(b) return v def _str(v, l): bs = "" for p in xrange(l): bs = chr(v & 255) + bs v >>= 8 return bs def _split(b): '''depth and bitvec''' return _bin(b[:_depthbytes]), _bin(b[_depthbytes:]) def _join(depth, bitvec): return _str(depth, _depthbytes) + _str(bitvec, _vecbytes) def _hweight(x): c = 0 while x: if x & 1: c += 1 x >>= 1 return c _htab = [_hweight(x) for x in xrange(256)] def _hamming(a, b): '''find the hamming distance between two longs''' d = a ^ b c = 0 while d: c += _htab[d & 0xff] d >>= 8 return c def _mergevec(x, y, c): # Ideally, this function would be x ^ y ^ ancestor, but finding # ancestors is a nuisance. So instead we find the minimal number # of changes to balance the depth and hamming distance d1, v1 = x d2, v2 = y if d1 < d2: d1, d2, v1, v2 = d2, d1, v2, v1 hdist = _hamming(v1, v2) ddist = d1 - d2 v = v1 m = v1 ^ v2 # mask of different bits i = 1 if hdist > ddist: # if delta = 10 and hdist = 100, then we need to go up 55 steps # to the ancestor and down 45 changes = (hdist - ddist + 1) / 2 else: # must make at least one change changes = 1 depth = d1 + changes # copy changes from v2 if m: while changes: if m & i: v ^= i changes -= 1 i <<= 1 else: v = _flipbit(v, c) return depth, v def _flipbit(v, node): # converting bit strings to longs is slow bit = (hash(node) & 0xffffffff) % _vecbits return v ^ (1<<bit) def ctxpvec(ctx): '''construct a pvec for ctx while filling in the cache''' r = ctx._repo if not util.safehasattr(r, "_pveccache"): r._pveccache = {} pvc = r._pveccache if ctx.rev() not in pvc: cl = r.changelog for n in xrange(ctx.rev() + 1): if n not in pvc: node = cl.node(n) p1, p2 = cl.parentrevs(n) if p1 == nullrev: # start with a 'random' vector at root pvc[n] = (0, _bin((node * 3)[:_vecbytes])) elif p2 == nullrev: d, v = pvc[p1] pvc[n] = (d + 1, _flipbit(v, node)) else: pvc[n] = _mergevec(pvc[p1], pvc[p2], node) bs = _join(*pvc[ctx.rev()]) return pvec(base85.b85encode(bs)) class pvec(object): def __init__(self, hashorctx): if isinstance(hashorctx, str): self._bs = hashorctx self._depth, self._vec = _split(base85.b85decode(hashorctx)) else: self._vec = ctxpvec(ctx) def __str__(self): return self._bs def __eq__(self, b): return self._vec == b._vec and self._depth == b._depth def __lt__(self, b): delta = b._depth - self._depth if delta < 0: return False # always correct if _hamming(self._vec, b._vec) > delta: return False return True def __gt__(self, b): return b < self def __or__(self, b): delta = abs(b._depth - self._depth) if _hamming(self._vec, b._vec) <= delta: return False return True def __sub__(self, b): if self | b: raise ValueError("concurrent pvecs") return self._depth - b._depth def distance(self, b): d = abs(b._depth - self._depth) h = _hamming(self._vec, b._vec) return max(d, h) def near(self, b): dist = abs(b.depth - self._depth) if dist > _radius or _hamming(self._vec, b._vec) > _radius: return False