setdiscovery: use a revset for finding DAG heads in a subset
The march towards moving away from dagutil continues.
Like other patches moving us away from dagutil, there is the
potential for regressions to occur because revlogdag's
headsetofconnecteds() uses revlog.index, which doesn't take
filtering into account. The revset layer does. But no tests
fail, so we appear to be in the clear.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4317
# Randomized torture test generation for bdiff
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import random
import sys
from mercurial import (
mdiff,
)
def reducetest(a, b):
tries = 0
reductions = 0
print("reducing...")
while tries < 1000:
a2 = "\n".join(l for l in a.splitlines()
if random.randint(0, 100) > 0) + "\n"
b2 = "\n".join(l for l in b.splitlines()
if random.randint(0, 100) > 0) + "\n"
if a2 == a and b2 == b:
continue
if a2 == b2:
continue
tries += 1
try:
test1(a, b)
except Exception as inst:
reductions += 1
tries = 0
a = a2
b = b2
print("reduced:", reductions, len(a) + len(b),
repr(a), repr(b))
try:
test1(a, b)
except Exception as inst:
print("failed:", inst)
sys.exit(0)
def test1(a, b):
d = mdiff.textdiff(a, b)
if not d:
raise ValueError("empty")
c = mdiff.patches(a, [d])
if c != b:
raise ValueError("bad")
def testwrap(a, b):
try:
test1(a, b)
return
except Exception as inst:
pass
print("exception:", inst)
reducetest(a, b)
def test(a, b):
testwrap(a, b)
testwrap(b, a)
def rndtest(size, noise):
a = []
src = " aaaaaaaabbbbccd"
for x in xrange(size):
a.append(src[random.randint(0, len(src) - 1)])
while True:
b = [c for c in a if random.randint(0, 99) > noise]
b2 = []
for c in b:
b2.append(c)
while random.randint(0, 99) < noise:
b2.append(src[random.randint(0, len(src) - 1)])
if b2 != a:
break
a = "\n".join(a) + "\n"
b = "\n".join(b2) + "\n"
test(a, b)
maxvol = 10000
startsize = 2
while True:
size = startsize
count = 0
while size < maxvol:
print(size)
volume = 0
while volume < maxvol:
rndtest(size, 2)
volume += size
count += 2
size *= 2
maxvol *= 4
startsize *= 4