Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/lsprof.py @ 40034:393e44324037
httppeer: report http statistics
Now that keepalive.py records HTTP request count and the
number of bytes sent and received as part of performing those
requests, we can easily print a report on the activity when
closing a peer instance!
Exact byte counts are globbed in tests because they are influenced
by non-deterministic things, such as hostnames and port numbers.
Plus, the exact byte count isn't too important anyway.
I feel obliged to note that printing the byte count could have
security implications. e.g. if sending a password via HTTP basic
auth, the length of that password will influence the byte count
and the reporting of the byte count could be a side-channel leak
of the password length. I /think/ this is beyond our threshold
for concern. But if we think it poses a problem, we can teach the
byte count logging code to e.g. ignore sensitive HTTP request
headers. We could also consider not reporting the byte count of
request headers altogether. But since the wire protocol uses HTTP
headers for sending command arguments, it is kind of important to
report their size.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4858
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
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date | Mon, 01 Oct 2018 13:17:38 -0700 |
parents | d4e5b2653693 |
children | b25fbe7e494e |
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from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import _lsprof import sys Profiler = _lsprof.Profiler # PyPy doesn't expose profiler_entry from the module. profiler_entry = getattr(_lsprof, 'profiler_entry', None) __all__ = ['profile', 'Stats'] def profile(f, *args, **kwds): """XXX docstring""" p = Profiler() p.enable(subcalls=True, builtins=True) try: f(*args, **kwds) finally: p.disable() return Stats(p.getstats()) class Stats(object): """XXX docstring""" def __init__(self, data): self.data = data def sort(self, crit=r"inlinetime"): """XXX docstring""" # profiler_entries isn't defined when running under PyPy. if profiler_entry: if crit not in profiler_entry.__dict__: raise ValueError("Can't sort by %s" % crit) elif self.data and not getattr(self.data[0], crit, None): raise ValueError("Can't sort by %s" % crit) self.data.sort(key=lambda x: getattr(x, crit), reverse=True) for e in self.data: if e.calls: e.calls.sort(key=lambda x: getattr(x, crit), reverse=True) def pprint(self, top=None, file=None, limit=None, climit=None): """XXX docstring""" if file is None: file = sys.stdout d = self.data if top is not None: d = d[:top] cols = "% 12s %12s %11.4f %11.4f %s\n" hcols = "% 12s %12s %12s %12s %s\n" file.write(hcols % ("CallCount", "Recursive", "Total(s)", "Inline(s)", "module:lineno(function)")) count = 0 for e in d: file.write(cols % (e.callcount, e.reccallcount, e.totaltime, e.inlinetime, label(e.code))) count += 1 if limit is not None and count == limit: return ccount = 0 if climit and e.calls: for se in e.calls: file.write(cols % (se.callcount, se.reccallcount, se.totaltime, se.inlinetime, " %s" % label(se.code))) count += 1 ccount += 1 if limit is not None and count == limit: return if climit is not None and ccount == climit: break def freeze(self): """Replace all references to code objects with string descriptions; this makes it possible to pickle the instance.""" # this code is probably rather ickier than it needs to be! for i in range(len(self.data)): e = self.data[i] if not isinstance(e.code, str): self.data[i] = type(e)((label(e.code),) + e[1:]) if e.calls: for j in range(len(e.calls)): se = e.calls[j] if not isinstance(se.code, str): e.calls[j] = type(se)((label(se.code),) + se[1:]) _fn2mod = {} def label(code): if isinstance(code, str): return code try: mname = _fn2mod[code.co_filename] except KeyError: for k, v in list(sys.modules.iteritems()): if v is None: continue if not isinstance(getattr(v, '__file__', None), str): continue if v.__file__.startswith(code.co_filename): mname = _fn2mod[code.co_filename] = k break else: mname = _fn2mod[code.co_filename] = '<%s>' % code.co_filename return '%s:%d(%s)' % (mname, code.co_firstlineno, code.co_name) if __name__ == '__main__': import os sys.argv = sys.argv[1:] if not sys.argv: print("usage: lsprof.py <script> <arguments...>", file=sys.stderr) sys.exit(2) sys.path.insert(0, os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(sys.argv[0]))) stats = profile(execfile, sys.argv[0], globals(), locals()) stats.sort() stats.pprint()