view tests/check-perf-code.py @ 40923:3ed77780f4a6

wireprotov2: send linknodes to emitfilerevisions() Previously, linknodes were calculated within emitfilerevisions() by using filectx.introrev(), which would always use the linkrev/linknode as recorded by storage. This is wrong for cases where the receiver doesn't have the changeset the linknode refers to. This commit changes the logic for linknode emission so the mapping of filenode to linknode is computed by the caller and passed into emitfilerevisions(). As part of the change, linknodes for "filesdata" in the haveparents=False case are now correct: the existing code performed a manifest walk and it was trivial to plug in the correct linknode. However, behavior for the haveparents=True case is still wrong because it relies on filtering linkrevs against the outgoing set in order to determine what to send. This will be fixed in a subsequent commit. The change test test-wireproto-exchangev2-shallow.t is a bit wonky. The test repo has 6 revisions. The changed test is performing a shallow clone with depth=1. So, only file data for revision 5 is present locally. So, the new behavior of associating the linknode with revision 5 for every file revision seems correct. Of course, when backfilling old revisions, we'll want to update the linknode. But this problem requires wire protocol support and we'll cross that bridge later. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5405
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Mon, 10 Dec 2018 18:04:12 +0000
parents bd872f64a8ba
children eb8a8af4cbd0
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#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# check-perf-code - (historical) portability checker for contrib/perf.py

from __future__ import absolute_import

import os
import sys

# write static check patterns here
perfpypats = [
  [
    (r'(branchmap|repoview)\.subsettable',
     "use getbranchmapsubsettable() for early Mercurial"),
    (r'\.(vfs|svfs|opener|sopener)',
     "use getvfs()/getsvfs() for early Mercurial"),
    (r'ui\.configint',
     "use getint() instead of ui.configint() for early Mercurial"),
  ],
  # warnings
  [
  ]
]

def modulewhitelist(names):
    replacement = [('.py', ''), ('.c', ''), # trim suffix
                   ('mercurial%s' % (os.sep), ''), # trim "mercurial/" path
                  ]
    ignored = {'__init__'}
    modules = {}

    # convert from file name to module name, and count # of appearances
    for name in names:
        name = name.strip()
        for old, new in replacement:
            name = name.replace(old, new)
        if name not in ignored:
            modules[name] = modules.get(name, 0) + 1

    # list up module names, which appear multiple times
    whitelist = []
    for name, count in modules.items():
        if count > 1:
            whitelist.append(name)

    return whitelist

if __name__ == "__main__":
    # in this case, it is assumed that result of "hg files" at
    # multiple revisions is given via stdin
    whitelist = modulewhitelist(sys.stdin)
    assert whitelist, "module whitelist is empty"

    # build up module whitelist check from file names given at runtime
    perfpypats[0].append(
        # this matching pattern assumes importing modules from
        # "mercurial" package in the current style below, for simplicity
        #
        #    from mercurial import (
        #        foo,
        #        bar,
        #        baz
        #    )
        ((r'from mercurial import [(][a-z0-9, \n#]*\n(?! *%s,|^[ #]*\n|[)])'
          % ',| *'.join(whitelist)),
         "import newer module separately in try clause for early Mercurial"
         ))

    # import contrib/check-code.py as checkcode
    assert 'RUNTESTDIR' in os.environ, "use check-perf-code.py in *.t script"
    contribpath = os.path.join(os.environ['RUNTESTDIR'], '..', 'contrib')
    sys.path.insert(0, contribpath)
    checkcode = __import__('check-code')

    # register perf.py specific entry with "checks" in check-code.py
    checkcode.checks.append(('perf.py', r'contrib/perf.py$', '',
                             checkcode.pyfilters, perfpypats))

    sys.exit(checkcode.main())