view tests/test-ctxmanager.py @ 30212:260af19891f2

changegroup: increase write buffer size to 128k By default, Python defers to the operating system for choosing the default buffer size on opened files. On my Linux machine, the default is 4k, which is really small for 2016. This patch bumps the write buffer size when writing changegroups/bundles to 128k. This matches the 128k read buffer we already use on revlogs. It's worth noting that this only impacts when writing to an explicit file (such as during `hg bundle`). Buffers when writing to bundle files via the repo vfs or to a temporary file are not impacted. When producing a none-v2 bundle file of the mozilla-unified repository, this change caused the number of write() system calls to drop from 952,449 to 29,788. After this change, the most frequent system calls are fstat(), read(), lseek(), and open(). There were 2,523,672 system calls after this patch (so a net decrease of ~950k is statistically significant). This change shows no performance change on my system. But I have a high-end system with a fast SSD. It is quite possible this change will have a significant impact on network file systems, where extra network round trips due to excessive I/O system calls could introduce significant latency.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sun, 16 Oct 2016 13:35:23 -0700
parents 441491aba8c3
children 68c43a416585
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from __future__ import absolute_import

import silenttestrunner
import unittest

from mercurial import util

class contextmanager(object):
    def __init__(self, name, trace):
        self.name = name
        self.entered = False
        self.exited = False
        self.trace = trace

    def __enter__(self):
        self.entered = True
        self.trace(('enter', self.name))
        return self

    def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb):
        self.exited = exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb
        self.trace(('exit', self.name))

    def __repr__(self):
        return '<ctx %r>' % self.name

class ctxerror(Exception):
    pass

class raise_on_enter(contextmanager):
    def __enter__(self):
        self.trace(('raise', self.name))
        raise ctxerror(self.name)

class raise_on_exit(contextmanager):
    def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb):
        self.trace(('raise', self.name))
        raise ctxerror(self.name)

def ctxmgr(name, trace):
    return lambda: contextmanager(name, trace)

class test_ctxmanager(unittest.TestCase):
    def test_basics(self):
        trace = []
        addtrace = trace.append
        with util.ctxmanager(ctxmgr('a', addtrace), ctxmgr('b', addtrace)) as c:
            a, b = c.enter()
            c.atexit(addtrace, ('atexit', 'x'))
            c.atexit(addtrace, ('atexit', 'y'))
        self.assertEqual(trace, [('enter', 'a'), ('enter', 'b'),
                                 ('atexit', 'y'), ('atexit', 'x'),
                                 ('exit', 'b'), ('exit', 'a')])

    def test_raise_on_enter(self):
        trace = []
        addtrace = trace.append
        def go():
            with util.ctxmanager(ctxmgr('a', addtrace),
                                 lambda: raise_on_enter('b', addtrace)) as c:
                c.enter()
                addtrace('unreachable')
        self.assertRaises(ctxerror, go)
        self.assertEqual(trace, [('enter', 'a'), ('raise', 'b'), ('exit', 'a')])

    def test_raise_on_exit(self):
        trace = []
        addtrace = trace.append
        def go():
            with util.ctxmanager(ctxmgr('a', addtrace),
                                 lambda: raise_on_exit('b', addtrace)) as c:
                c.enter()
                addtrace('running')
        self.assertRaises(ctxerror, go)
        self.assertEqual(trace, [('enter', 'a'), ('enter', 'b'), 'running',
                                 ('raise', 'b'), ('exit', 'a')])

if __name__ == '__main__':
    silenttestrunner.main(__name__)