Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-profile.t @ 44216:281b6690e646
packaging: add support for PyOxidizer
I've successfully built Mercurial on the development tip of
PyOxidizer on Linux and Windows. It mostly "just works" on Linux.
Windows is a bit more finicky.
In-memory resource files are probably not all working correctly
due to bugs in PyOxidizer's naming of modules. PyOxidizer now
now supports installing files next to the produced binary. (We
do this for templates in the added file.) So a workaround
should be available.
Also, since the last time I submitted support for PyOxidizer,
PyOxidizer gained the ability to auto-generate Rust projects
to build executables. So we don't need to worry about vendoring
any Rust code to initially support PyOxidizer. However, at some
point we will likely want to write our own command line driver
that embeds a Python interpreter via PyOxidizer so we can run
Rust code outside the confines of a Python interpreter. But that
will be a follow-up.
I would also like to add packaging.py CLI commands to build
PyOxidizer distributions. This can come later, if ever.
PyOxidizer's new "targets" feature makes it really easy to define
packaging tasks in its Starlark configuration file. While not
much is implemented yet, eventually we should be able to produce
MSIs, etc using a `pyoxidizer build` one-liner. We'll get there...
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7450
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 26 Jan 2020 16:23:57 -0800 |
parents | 437520219e0c |
children | ede4a1bf14bd |
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test --time $ hg --time help -q help 2>&1 | grep time > /dev/null $ hg init a $ cd a Function to check that statprof ran $ statprofran () { > egrep 'Sample count:|No samples recorded' > /dev/null > } test --profile $ hg st --profile 2>&1 | statprofran Abreviated version $ hg st --prof 2>&1 | statprofran In alias $ hg --config "alias.profst=status --profile" profst 2>&1 | statprofran #if lsprof $ prof='hg --config profiling.type=ls --profile' $ $prof st 2>../out $ grep CallCount ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out $ $prof --config profiling.output=../out st $ grep CallCount ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out $ $prof --config profiling.output=blackbox --config extensions.blackbox= st $ grep CallCount .hg/blackbox.log > /dev/null || cat .hg/blackbox.log $ $prof --config profiling.format=text st 2>../out $ grep CallCount ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out $ echo "[profiling]" >> $HGRCPATH $ echo "format=kcachegrind" >> $HGRCPATH $ $prof st 2>../out $ grep 'events: Ticks' ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out $ $prof --config profiling.output=../out st $ grep 'events: Ticks' ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out #endif #if lsprof serve Profiling of HTTP requests works $ $prof --config profiling.format=text --config profiling.output=../profile.log serve -d -p $HGPORT --pid-file ../hg.pid -A ../access.log $ cat ../hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS $ hg -q clone -U http://localhost:$HGPORT ../clone A single profile is logged because file logging doesn't append $ grep CallCount ../profile.log | wc -l \s*1 (re) #endif Install an extension that can sleep and guarantee a profiler has time to run $ cat >> sleepext.py << EOF > import time > from mercurial import registrar > cmdtable = {} > command = registrar.command(cmdtable) > @command(b'sleep', [], b'hg sleep') > def sleep(ui, *args, **kwargs): > time.sleep(0.1) > EOF $ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF > [extensions] > sleep = `pwd`/sleepext.py > EOF statistical profiler works $ hg --profile sleep 2>../out $ cat ../out | statprofran Various statprof formatters work $ hg --profile --config profiling.statformat=byline sleep 2>../out || cat ../out $ head -n 3 ../out % cumulative self time seconds seconds name * sleepext.py:*:sleep (glob) $ cat ../out | statprofran $ hg --profile --config profiling.statformat=bymethod sleep 2>../out || cat ../out $ head -n 1 ../out % cumulative self $ cat ../out | statprofran $ hg --profile --config profiling.statformat=hotpath sleep 2>../out || cat ../out $ cat ../out | statprofran $ hg --profile --config profiling.statformat=json sleep 2>../out || cat ../out $ cat ../out \[\[-?\d+.* (re) statprof can be used as a standalone module $ "$PYTHON" -m mercurial.statprof hotpath must specify --file to load [1] $ cd .. #if no-chg profiler extension could be loaded before other extensions $ cat > fooprof.py <<EOF > from __future__ import absolute_import > import contextlib > import sys > @contextlib.contextmanager > def profile(ui, fp): > print('fooprof: start profile') > sys.stdout.flush() > yield > print('fooprof: end profile') > sys.stdout.flush() > def extsetup(ui): > ui.write(b'fooprof: loaded\n') > EOF $ cat > otherextension.py <<EOF > from __future__ import absolute_import > def extsetup(ui): > ui.write(b'otherextension: loaded\n') > EOF $ hg init b $ cd b $ cat >> .hg/hgrc <<EOF > [extensions] > other = $TESTTMP/otherextension.py > fooprof = $TESTTMP/fooprof.py > EOF $ hg root otherextension: loaded fooprof: loaded $TESTTMP/b $ HGPROF=fooprof hg root --profile fooprof: loaded fooprof: start profile otherextension: loaded $TESTTMP/b fooprof: end profile $ HGPROF=other hg root --profile 2>&1 | head -n 2 otherextension: loaded unrecognized profiler 'other' - ignored $ HGPROF=unknown hg root --profile 2>&1 | head -n 1 unrecognized profiler 'unknown' - ignored $ cd .. #endif