view mercurial/utils/memorytop.py @ 47072:4c041c71ec01

revlog: introduce an explicit tracking of what the revlog is about Since the dawn of time, people have been forced to rely to lossy introspection of the index filename to determine what the purpose and role of the revlog they encounter is. This is hacky, error prone, inflexible, abstraction-leaky, <insert-your-own-complaints-here>. In f63299ee7e4d Raphaël introduced a new attribute to track this information: `revlog_kind`. However it is initialized in an odd place and various instances end up not having it set. In addition is only tracking some of the information we end up having to introspect in various pieces of code. So we add a new attribute that holds more data and is more strictly enforced. This work is done in collaboration with Raphaël. The `revlog_kind` one will be removed/adapted in the next changeset. We expect to be able to clean up various existing piece of code and to simplify coming work around the newer revlog format. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10352
author Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net>
date Tue, 06 Apr 2021 05:20:24 +0200
parents 5b6c0af021da
children
line wrap: on
line source

# memorytop requires Python 3.4
#
# Usage: set PYTHONTRACEMALLOC=n in the environment of the hg invocation,
# where n>= is the number of frames to show in the backtrace. Put calls to
# memorytop in strategic places to show the current memory use by allocation
# site.

import gc
import tracemalloc


def memorytop(limit=10):
    gc.collect()
    snapshot = tracemalloc.take_snapshot()

    snapshot = snapshot.filter_traces(
        (
            tracemalloc.Filter(False, "<frozen importlib._bootstrap>"),
            tracemalloc.Filter(False, "<frozen importlib._bootstrap_external>"),
            tracemalloc.Filter(False, "<unknown>"),
        )
    )
    stats = snapshot.statistics('traceback')

    total = sum(stat.size for stat in stats)
    print("\nTotal allocated size: %.1f KiB\n" % (total / 1024))
    print("Lines with the biggest net allocations")
    for index, stat in enumerate(stats[:limit], 1):
        print(
            "#%d: %d objects using %.1f KiB"
            % (index, stat.count, stat.size / 1024)
        )
        for line in stat.traceback.format(most_recent_first=True):
            print('    ', line)

    other = stats[limit:]
    if other:
        size = sum(stat.size for stat in other)
        count = sum(stat.count for stat in other)
        print(
            "%s other: %d objects using %.1f KiB"
            % (len(other), count, size / 1024)
        )
    print()