obsolete: use parsers.fm1readmarker if it exists for a ~38% perf win
This moves perfloadmarkers on my linux workstation (63494 markers from
mpm, crew, and myself) performance from
! wall 0.357657 comb 0.360000 user 0.350000 sys 0.010000 (best of 28)
to
! wall 0.222345 comb 0.220000 user 0.210000 sys 0.010000 (best of 41)
which is a pretty good improvement.
On my BSD machine, which is ancient and slow, before:
! wall 3.584964 comb 3.578125 user 3.539062 sys 0.039062 (best of 3)
after:
! wall 2.267974 comb 2.265625 user 2.195312 sys 0.070312 (best of 5)
I feel like we could do better by moving the whole generator function
into C, but I didn't want to tackle that right away.
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF
> [extensions]
> rebase=
>
> [phases]
> publish=False
>
> [alias]
> tglog = log -G --template "{rev}: '{desc}' {branches}\n"
> EOF
$ hg init a
$ cd a
$ echo c1 > c1
$ hg ci -Am c1
adding c1
$ echo c2 > c2
$ hg ci -Am c2
adding c2
$ echo l1 > l1
$ hg ci -Am l1
adding l1
$ hg up -q -C 1
$ echo r1 > r1
$ hg ci -Am r1
adding r1
created new head
$ echo r2 > r2
$ hg ci -Am r2
adding r2
$ hg tglog
@ 4: 'r2'
|
o 3: 'r1'
|
| o 2: 'l1'
|/
o 1: 'c2'
|
o 0: 'c1'
Rebase with no arguments - single revision in source branch:
$ hg up -q -C 2
$ hg rebase
rebasing 2:87c180a611f2 "l1"
saved backup bundle to $TESTTMP/a/.hg/strip-backup/87c180a611f2-a5be192d-backup.hg (glob)
$ hg tglog
@ 4: 'l1'
|
o 3: 'r2'
|
o 2: 'r1'
|
o 1: 'c2'
|
o 0: 'c1'
$ cd ..
$ hg init b
$ cd b
$ echo c1 > c1
$ hg ci -Am c1
adding c1
$ echo c2 > c2
$ hg ci -Am c2
adding c2
$ echo l1 > l1
$ hg ci -Am l1
adding l1
$ echo l2 > l2
$ hg ci -Am l2
adding l2
$ hg up -q -C 1
$ echo r1 > r1
$ hg ci -Am r1
adding r1
created new head
$ hg tglog
@ 4: 'r1'
|
| o 3: 'l2'
| |
| o 2: 'l1'
|/
o 1: 'c2'
|
o 0: 'c1'
Rebase with no arguments - single revision in target branch:
$ hg up -q -C 3
$ hg rebase
rebasing 2:87c180a611f2 "l1"
rebasing 3:1ac923b736ef "l2"
saved backup bundle to $TESTTMP/b/.hg/strip-backup/87c180a611f2-b980535c-backup.hg (glob)
$ hg tglog
@ 4: 'l2'
|
o 3: 'l1'
|
o 2: 'r1'
|
o 1: 'c2'
|
o 0: 'c1'
$ cd ..