view contrib/memory.py @ 45551:4c8d9b53b1c7

chg: make is possible to call by default an hg binary located next to chg When a single version of hg is in use and it's in the PATH, using chg is just a matter of calling chg. But when there are multiple installations of hg+chg around, and hg is referred to with an absolute path, using chg is more annoying because it requires both changing the invocation to hg to use chg, but also setting CHGHG. Currently, we set HGPATH when we build chg to remove the need to set CHGHG in the previous paragraph. But that means chg now hardcodes its installation path, which makes the installation not relocatable. Hence this proposal to make chg find ./hg relative to itself (as opposed to CHGHG=./hg which find hg relative to cwd). This only works on linux as written, but since it's opt-in, it sounds fine. Tested by hand, as I'm not sure how else to test this. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9006
author Valentin Gatien-Baron <vgatien-baron@janestreet.com>
date Thu, 03 Sep 2020 11:07:47 -0400
parents 2372284d9457
children d4ba4d51f85f
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# memory.py - track memory usage
#
# Copyright 2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

'''helper extension to measure memory usage

Reads current and peak memory usage from ``/proc/self/status`` and
prints it to ``stderr`` on exit.
'''

from __future__ import absolute_import


def memusage(ui):
    """Report memory usage of the current process."""
    result = {'peak': 0, 'rss': 0}
    with open('/proc/self/status', 'r') as status:
        # This will only work on systems with a /proc file system
        # (like Linux).
        for line in status:
            parts = line.split()
            key = parts[0][2:-1].lower()
            if key in result:
                result[key] = int(parts[1])
    ui.write_err(
        ", ".join(
            ["%s: %.1f MiB" % (k, v / 1024.0) for k, v in result.iteritems()]
        )
        + "\n"
    )


def extsetup(ui):
    ui.atexit(memusage, ui)