Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/graphmod.py @ 28444:12fdf49fa4dd
hook: filter out unstable output in tests
This output is different between Python 2.6 and Python 2.7. It's also pretty
irrelevant, so just filter it out.
author | Siddharth Agarwal <sid0@fb.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 10 Mar 2016 10:12:23 -0800 |
parents | fa2cd0c9a567 |
children | 0d6137891114 |
line wrap: on
line source
# Revision graph generator for Mercurial # # Copyright 2008 Dirkjan Ochtman <dirkjan@ochtman.nl> # Copyright 2007 Joel Rosdahl <joel@rosdahl.net> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. """supports walking the history as DAGs suitable for graphical output The most basic format we use is that of:: (id, type, data, [parentids]) The node and parent ids are arbitrary integers which identify a node in the context of the graph returned. Type is a constant specifying the node type. Data depends on type. """ from __future__ import absolute_import import heapq from .node import nullrev from . import ( revset, util, ) CHANGESET = 'C' PARENT = 'P' GRANDPARENT = 'G' MISSINGPARENT = 'M' def groupbranchiter(revs, parentsfunc, firstbranch=()): """Yield revisions from heads to roots one (topo) branch at a time. This function aims to be used by a graph generator that wishes to minimize the number of parallel branches and their interleaving. Example iteration order (numbers show the "true" order in a changelog): o 4 | o 1 | | o 3 | | | o 2 |/ o 0 Note that the ancestors of merges are understood by the current algorithm to be on the same branch. This means no reordering will occur behind a merge. """ ### Quick summary of the algorithm # # This function is based around a "retention" principle. We keep revisions # in memory until we are ready to emit a whole branch that immediately # "merges" into an existing one. This reduces the number of parallel # branches with interleaved revisions. # # During iteration revs are split into two groups: # A) revision already emitted # B) revision in "retention". They are stored as different subgroups. # # for each REV, we do the following logic: # # 1) if REV is a parent of (A), we will emit it. If there is a # retention group ((B) above) that is blocked on REV being # available, we emit all the revisions out of that retention # group first. # # 2) else, we'll search for a subgroup in (B) awaiting for REV to be # available, if such subgroup exist, we add REV to it and the subgroup is # now awaiting for REV.parents() to be available. # # 3) finally if no such group existed in (B), we create a new subgroup. # # # To bootstrap the algorithm, we emit the tipmost revision (which # puts it in group (A) from above). revs.sort(reverse=True) # Set of parents of revision that have been emitted. They can be considered # unblocked as the graph generator is already aware of them so there is no # need to delay the revisions that reference them. # # If someone wants to prioritize a branch over the others, pre-filling this # set will force all other branches to wait until this branch is ready to be # emitted. unblocked = set(firstbranch) # list of groups waiting to be displayed, each group is defined by: # # (revs: lists of revs waiting to be displayed, # blocked: set of that cannot be displayed before those in 'revs') # # The second value ('blocked') correspond to parents of any revision in the # group ('revs') that is not itself contained in the group. The main idea # of this algorithm is to delay as much as possible the emission of any # revision. This means waiting for the moment we are about to display # these parents to display the revs in a group. # # This first implementation is smart until it encounters a merge: it will # emit revs as soon as any parent is about to be emitted and can grow an # arbitrary number of revs in 'blocked'. In practice this mean we properly # retains new branches but gives up on any special ordering for ancestors # of merges. The implementation can be improved to handle this better. # # The first subgroup is special. It corresponds to all the revision that # were already emitted. The 'revs' lists is expected to be empty and the # 'blocked' set contains the parents revisions of already emitted revision. # # You could pre-seed the <parents> set of groups[0] to a specific # changesets to select what the first emitted branch should be. groups = [([], unblocked)] pendingheap = [] pendingset = set() heapq.heapify(pendingheap) heappop = heapq.heappop heappush = heapq.heappush for currentrev in revs: # Heap works with smallest element, we want highest so we invert if currentrev not in pendingset: heappush(pendingheap, -currentrev) pendingset.add(currentrev) # iterates on pending rev until after the current rev have been # processed. rev = None while rev != currentrev: rev = -heappop(pendingheap) pendingset.remove(rev) # Seek for a subgroup blocked, waiting for the current revision. matching = [i for i, g in enumerate(groups) if rev in g[1]] if matching: # The main idea is to gather together all sets that are blocked # on the same revision. # # Groups are merged when a common blocking ancestor is # observed. For example, given two groups: # # revs [5, 4] waiting for 1 # revs [3, 2] waiting for 1 # # These two groups will be merged when we process # 1. In theory, we could have merged the groups when # we added 2 to the group it is now in (we could have # noticed the groups were both blocked on 1 then), but # the way it works now makes the algorithm simpler. # # We also always keep the oldest subgroup first. We can # probably improve the behavior by having the longest set # first. That way, graph algorithms could minimise the length # of parallel lines their drawing. This is currently not done. targetidx = matching.pop(0) trevs, tparents = groups[targetidx] for i in matching: gr = groups[i] trevs.extend(gr[0]) tparents |= gr[1] # delete all merged subgroups (except the one we kept) # (starting from the last subgroup for performance and # sanity reasons) for i in reversed(matching): del groups[i] else: # This is a new head. We create a new subgroup for it. targetidx = len(groups) groups.append(([], set([rev]))) gr = groups[targetidx] # We now add the current nodes to this subgroups. This is done # after the subgroup merging because all elements from a subgroup # that relied on this rev must precede it. # # we also update the <parents> set to include the parents of the # new nodes. if rev == currentrev: # only display stuff in rev gr[0].append(rev) gr[1].remove(rev) parents = [p for p in parentsfunc(rev) if p > nullrev] gr[1].update(parents) for p in parents: if p not in pendingset: pendingset.add(p) heappush(pendingheap, -p) # Look for a subgroup to display # # When unblocked is empty (if clause), we were not waiting for any # revisions during the first iteration (if no priority was given) or # if we emitted a whole disconnected set of the graph (reached a # root). In that case we arbitrarily take the oldest known # subgroup. The heuristic could probably be better. # # Otherwise (elif clause) if the subgroup is blocked on # a revision we just emitted, we can safely emit it as # well. if not unblocked: if len(groups) > 1: # display other subset targetidx = 1 gr = groups[1] elif not gr[1] & unblocked: gr = None if gr is not None: # update the set of awaited revisions with the one from the # subgroup unblocked |= gr[1] # output all revisions in the subgroup for r in gr[0]: yield r # delete the subgroup that you just output # unless it is groups[0] in which case you just empty it. if targetidx: del groups[targetidx] else: gr[0][:] = [] # Check if we have some subgroup waiting for revisions we are not going to # iterate over for g in groups: for r in g[0]: yield r def dagwalker(repo, revs): """cset DAG generator yielding (id, CHANGESET, ctx, [parentinfo]) tuples This generator function walks through revisions (which should be ordered from bigger to lower). It returns a tuple for each node. Each parentinfo entry is a tuple with (edgetype, parentid), where edgetype is one of PARENT, GRANDPARENT or MISSINGPARENT. The node and parent ids are arbitrary integers which identify a node in the context of the graph returned. """ if not revs: return gpcache = {} if repo.ui.configbool('experimental', 'graph-group-branches', False): firstbranch = () firstbranchrevset = repo.ui.config( 'experimental', 'graph-group-branches.firstbranch', '') if firstbranchrevset: firstbranch = repo.revs(firstbranchrevset) parentrevs = repo.changelog.parentrevs revs = groupbranchiter(revs, parentrevs, firstbranch) revs = revset.baseset(revs) for rev in revs: ctx = repo[rev] # partition into parents in the rev set and missing parents, then # augment the lists with markers, to inform graph drawing code about # what kind of edge to draw between nodes. pset = set(p.rev() for p in ctx.parents() if p.rev() in revs) mpars = [p.rev() for p in ctx.parents() if p.rev() != nullrev and p.rev() not in pset] parents = [(PARENT, p) for p in sorted(pset)] for mpar in mpars: gp = gpcache.get(mpar) if gp is None: # precompute slow query as we know reachableroots() goes # through all revs (issue4782) if not isinstance(revs, revset.baseset): revs = revset.baseset(revs) gp = gpcache[mpar] = sorted(set(revset.reachableroots( repo, revs, [mpar]))) if not gp: parents.append((MISSINGPARENT, mpar)) pset.add(mpar) else: parents.extend((GRANDPARENT, g) for g in gp if g not in pset) pset.update(gp) yield (ctx.rev(), CHANGESET, ctx, parents) def nodes(repo, nodes): """cset DAG generator yielding (id, CHANGESET, ctx, [parentids]) tuples This generator function walks the given nodes. It only returns parents that are in nodes, too. """ include = set(nodes) for node in nodes: ctx = repo[node] parents = set((PARENT, p.rev()) for p in ctx.parents() if p.node() in include) yield (ctx.rev(), CHANGESET, ctx, sorted(parents)) def colored(dag, repo): """annotates a DAG with colored edge information For each DAG node this function emits tuples:: (id, type, data, (col, color), [(col, nextcol, color)]) with the following new elements: - Tuple (col, color) with column and color index for the current node - A list of tuples indicating the edges between the current node and its parents. """ seen = [] colors = {} newcolor = 1 config = {} for key, val in repo.ui.configitems('graph'): if '.' in key: branch, setting = key.rsplit('.', 1) # Validation if setting == "width" and val.isdigit(): config.setdefault(branch, {})[setting] = int(val) elif setting == "color" and val.isalnum(): config.setdefault(branch, {})[setting] = val if config: getconf = util.lrucachefunc( lambda rev: config.get(repo[rev].branch(), {})) else: getconf = lambda rev: {} for (cur, type, data, parents) in dag: # Compute seen and next if cur not in seen: seen.append(cur) # new head colors[cur] = newcolor newcolor += 1 col = seen.index(cur) color = colors.pop(cur) next = seen[:] # Add parents to next addparents = [p for pt, p in parents if p not in next] next[col:col + 1] = addparents # Set colors for the parents for i, p in enumerate(addparents): if not i: colors[p] = color else: colors[p] = newcolor newcolor += 1 # Add edges to the graph edges = [] for ecol, eid in enumerate(seen): if eid in next: bconf = getconf(eid) edges.append(( ecol, next.index(eid), colors[eid], bconf.get('width', -1), bconf.get('color', ''))) elif eid == cur: for ptype, p in parents: bconf = getconf(p) edges.append(( ecol, next.index(p), color, bconf.get('width', -1), bconf.get('color', ''))) # Yield and move on yield (cur, type, data, (col, color), edges) seen = next def asciiedges(type, char, lines, state, rev, parents): """adds edge info to changelog DAG walk suitable for ascii()""" seen = state['seen'] if rev not in seen: seen.append(rev) nodeidx = seen.index(rev) knownparents = [] newparents = [] for ptype, parent in parents: if parent in seen: knownparents.append(parent) else: newparents.append(parent) ncols = len(seen) nextseen = seen[:] nextseen[nodeidx:nodeidx + 1] = newparents edges = [(nodeidx, nextseen.index(p)) for p in knownparents if p != nullrev] while len(newparents) > 2: # ascii() only knows how to add or remove a single column between two # calls. Nodes with more than two parents break this constraint so we # introduce intermediate expansion lines to grow the active node list # slowly. edges.append((nodeidx, nodeidx)) edges.append((nodeidx, nodeidx + 1)) nmorecols = 1 yield (type, char, lines, (nodeidx, edges, ncols, nmorecols)) char = '\\' lines = [] nodeidx += 1 ncols += 1 edges = [] del newparents[0] if len(newparents) > 0: edges.append((nodeidx, nodeidx)) if len(newparents) > 1: edges.append((nodeidx, nodeidx + 1)) nmorecols = len(nextseen) - ncols seen[:] = nextseen yield (type, char, lines, (nodeidx, edges, ncols, nmorecols)) def _fixlongrightedges(edges): for (i, (start, end)) in enumerate(edges): if end > start: edges[i] = (start, end + 1) def _getnodelineedgestail( node_index, p_node_index, n_columns, n_columns_diff, p_diff, fix_tail): if fix_tail and n_columns_diff == p_diff and n_columns_diff != 0: # Still going in the same non-vertical direction. if n_columns_diff == -1: start = max(node_index + 1, p_node_index) tail = ["|", " "] * (start - node_index - 1) tail.extend(["/", " "] * (n_columns - start)) return tail else: return ["\\", " "] * (n_columns - node_index - 1) else: return ["|", " "] * (n_columns - node_index - 1) def _drawedges(edges, nodeline, interline): for (start, end) in edges: if start == end + 1: interline[2 * end + 1] = "/" elif start == end - 1: interline[2 * start + 1] = "\\" elif start == end: interline[2 * start] = "|" else: if 2 * end >= len(nodeline): continue nodeline[2 * end] = "+" if start > end: (start, end) = (end, start) for i in range(2 * start + 1, 2 * end): if nodeline[i] != "+": nodeline[i] = "-" def _getpaddingline(ni, n_columns, edges): line = [] line.extend(["|", " "] * ni) if (ni, ni - 1) in edges or (ni, ni) in edges: # (ni, ni - 1) (ni, ni) # | | | | | | | | # +---o | | o---+ # | | c | | c | | # | |/ / | |/ / # | | | | | | c = "|" else: c = " " line.extend([c, " "]) line.extend(["|", " "] * (n_columns - ni - 1)) return line def asciistate(): """returns the initial value for the "state" argument to ascii()""" return {'seen': [], 'lastcoldiff': 0, 'lastindex': 0} def ascii(ui, state, type, char, text, coldata): """prints an ASCII graph of the DAG takes the following arguments (one call per node in the graph): - ui to write to - Somewhere to keep the needed state in (init to asciistate()) - Column of the current node in the set of ongoing edges. - Type indicator of node data, usually 'C' for changesets. - Payload: (char, lines): - Character to use as node's symbol. - List of lines to display as the node's text. - Edges; a list of (col, next_col) indicating the edges between the current node and its parents. - Number of columns (ongoing edges) in the current revision. - The difference between the number of columns (ongoing edges) in the next revision and the number of columns (ongoing edges) in the current revision. That is: -1 means one column removed; 0 means no columns added or removed; 1 means one column added. """ idx, edges, ncols, coldiff = coldata assert -2 < coldiff < 2 if coldiff == -1: # Transform # # | | | | | | # o | | into o---+ # |X / |/ / # | | | | _fixlongrightedges(edges) # add_padding_line says whether to rewrite # # | | | | | | | | # | o---+ into | o---+ # | / / | | | # <--- padding line # o | | | / / # o | | add_padding_line = (len(text) > 2 and coldiff == -1 and [x for (x, y) in edges if x + 1 < y]) # fix_nodeline_tail says whether to rewrite # # | | o | | | | o | | # | | |/ / | | |/ / # | o | | into | o / / # <--- fixed nodeline tail # | |/ / | |/ / # o | | o | | fix_nodeline_tail = len(text) <= 2 and not add_padding_line # nodeline is the line containing the node character (typically o) nodeline = ["|", " "] * idx nodeline.extend([char, " "]) nodeline.extend( _getnodelineedgestail(idx, state['lastindex'], ncols, coldiff, state['lastcoldiff'], fix_nodeline_tail)) # shift_interline is the line containing the non-vertical # edges between this entry and the next shift_interline = ["|", " "] * idx if coldiff == -1: n_spaces = 1 edge_ch = "/" elif coldiff == 0: n_spaces = 2 edge_ch = "|" else: n_spaces = 3 edge_ch = "\\" shift_interline.extend(n_spaces * [" "]) shift_interline.extend([edge_ch, " "] * (ncols - idx - 1)) # draw edges from the current node to its parents _drawedges(edges, nodeline, shift_interline) # lines is the list of all graph lines to print lines = [nodeline] if add_padding_line: lines.append(_getpaddingline(idx, ncols, edges)) lines.append(shift_interline) # make sure that there are as many graph lines as there are # log strings while len(text) < len(lines): text.append("") if len(lines) < len(text): extra_interline = ["|", " "] * (ncols + coldiff) while len(lines) < len(text): lines.append(extra_interline) # print lines indentation_level = max(ncols, ncols + coldiff) for (line, logstr) in zip(lines, text): ln = "%-*s %s" % (2 * indentation_level, "".join(line), logstr) ui.write(ln.rstrip() + '\n') # ... and start over state['lastcoldiff'] = coldiff state['lastindex'] = idx