Mercurial > hg
view hgext/logtoprocess.py @ 51409:2f39c7aeb549
phases: large rewrite on retract boundary
The new code is still pure Python, so we still have room to going significantly
faster. However its complexity of the complex part is `O(|[min_new_draft, tip]|)` instead of
`O(|[min_draft, tip]|` which should help tremendously one repository with old
draft (like mercurial-devel or mozilla-try).
This is especially useful as the most common "retract boundary" operation
happens when we commit/rewrite new drafts or when we push new draft to a
non-publishing server. In this case, the smallest new_revs is very close to the
tip and there is very few work to do.
A few smaller optimisation could be done for these cases and will be introduced in
later changesets.
We still have iterate over large sets of roots, but this is already a great
improvement for a very small amount of work. We gather information on the
affected changeset as we go as we can put it to use in the next changesets.
This extra data collection might slowdown the `register_new` case a bit, however
for register_new, it should not really matters. The set of new nodes is either
small, so the impact is negligible, or the set of new nodes is large, and the
amount of work to do to had them will dominate the overhead the collecting
information in `changed_revs`.
As this new code compute the changes on the fly, it unlock other interesting
improvement to be done in later changeset.
author | Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 21 Feb 2024 10:41:09 +0100 |
parents | 642e31cb55f0 |
children | f4733654f144 |
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# logtoprocess.py - send ui.log() data to a subprocess # # Copyright 2016 Facebook, Inc. # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. """send ui.log() data to a subprocess (EXPERIMENTAL) This extension lets you specify a shell command per ui.log() event, sending all remaining arguments to as environment variables to that command. Positional arguments construct a log message, which is passed in the `MSG1` environment variables. Each keyword argument is set as a `OPT_UPPERCASE_KEY` variable (so the key is uppercased, and prefixed with `OPT_`). The original event name is passed in the `EVENT` environment variable, and the process ID of mercurial is given in `HGPID`. So given a call `ui.log('foo', 'bar %s\n', 'baz', spam='eggs'), a script configured for the `foo` event can expect an environment with `MSG1=bar baz`, and `OPT_SPAM=eggs`. Scripts are configured in the `[logtoprocess]` section, each key an event name. For example:: [logtoprocess] commandexception = echo "$MSG1" > /var/log/mercurial_exceptions.log would log the warning message and traceback of any failed command dispatch. Scripts are run asynchronously as detached daemon processes; mercurial will not ensure that they exit cleanly. """ import os from mercurial.utils import procutil # Note for extension authors: ONLY specify testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core' for # extensions which SHIP WITH MERCURIAL. Non-mainline extensions should # be specifying the version(s) of Mercurial they are tested with, or # leave the attribute unspecified. testedwith = b'ships-with-hg-core' class processlogger: """Map log events to external commands Arguments are passed on as environment variables. """ def __init__(self, ui): self._scripts = dict(ui.configitems(b'logtoprocess')) def tracked(self, event): return bool(self._scripts.get(event)) def log(self, ui, event, msg, opts): script = self._scripts[event] maxmsg = 100000 if len(msg) > maxmsg: # Each env var has a 128KiB limit on linux. msg can be long, in # particular for command event, where it's the full command line. # Prefer truncating the message than raising "Argument list too # long" error. msg = msg[:maxmsg] + b' (truncated)' env = { b'EVENT': event, b'HGPID': os.getpid(), b'MSG1': msg, } # keyword arguments get prefixed with OPT_ and uppercased env.update( (b'OPT_%s' % key.upper(), value) for key, value in opts.items() ) fullenv = procutil.shellenviron(env) procutil.runbgcommand(script, fullenv, shell=True) def uipopulate(ui): ui.setlogger(b'logtoprocess', processlogger(ui))