contrib/simplemerge
author Georges Racinet <georges.racinet@octobus.net>
Wed, 20 Feb 2019 09:04:54 +0100
changeset 42745 4d20b1fe8a72
parent 40265 d6b7c4e77bb4
child 43367 3c2799cbace4
permissions -rw-r--r--
rust-discovery: using from Python code As previously done in other topics, the Rust version is used if it's been built. The version fully in Rust of the partialdiscovery class has the performance advantage over the Python version (actually using the Rust MissingAncestor) if the undecided set is big enough. Otherwise no sampling occurs, and the discovery is reasonably fast anyway. Note: it's hard to predict the size of the initial undecided set, it can depend on the kind of topological changes between the local and remote graphs. The point of the Rust version is to make the bad cases acceptable. More specifically, the performance advantages are: - faster sampling, especially takefullsample() - much faster addmissings() in almost all cases (see commit message in grandparent of the present changeset) - no conversion cost of the undecided set at the interface between Rust and Python == Measurements with big undecided sets For an extreme example, discovery between mozilla-try and mozilla-unified (over one million undecided revisions, same case as in dbd0fcca6dfc), we get roughly a x2.5/x3 better performance: Growing sample size (5% starting with 200): time goes down from 210 to 72 seconds. Constant sample size of 200: time down from 1853 to 659 seconds. With a sample size computed from number of roots and heads of the undecided set (`respectsize` is `False`), here are perfdiscovery results: Before ! wall 9.358729 comb 9.360000 user 9.310000 sys 0.050000 (median of 50) After ! wall 3.793819 comb 3.790000 user 3.750000 sys 0.040000 (median of 50) In that later case, the sample sizes are routinely in the hundreds of thousands of revisions. While still faster, the Rust iteration in addmissings has less of an advantage than with smaller sample sizes, but one sees addcommons becoming faster, probably a consequence of not having to copy big sets back and forth. This example is not a goal in itself, but it showcases several different areas in which the process can become slow, due to different factors, and how this full Rust version can help. == Measurements with small undecided sets In cases the undecided set is small enough than no sampling occurs, the Rust version has a disadvantage at init if `targetheads` is really big (some time is lost in the translation to Rust data structures), and that is compensated by the faster `addmissings()`. On a private repository with over one million commits, we still get a minor improvement, of 6.8%: Before ! wall 0.593585 comb 0.590000 user 0.550000 sys 0.040000 (median of 50) After ! wall 0.553035 comb 0.550000 user 0.520000 sys 0.030000 (median of 50) What's interesting in that case is the first addinfo() at 180ms for Rust and 233ms for Python+C, mostly due to add_missings and the children cache computation being done in less than 0.2ms on the Rust side vs over 40ms on the Python side. The worst case we have on hand is with mozilla-try, prepared with discovery-helper.sh for 10 heads and depth 10, time goes up 2.2% on the median. In this case `targetheads` is really huge with 165842 server heads. Before ! wall 0.823884 comb 0.810000 user 0.790000 sys 0.020000 (median of 50) After ! wall 0.842607 comb 0.840000 user 0.800000 sys 0.040000 (median of 50) If that would be considered a problem, more adjustments can be made, which are prematurate at this stage: cooking special variants of methods of the inner MissingAncestors object, retrieving local heads directly from Rust to avoid the cost of conversion. Effort would probably be better spent at this point improving the surroundings if needed. Here's another data point with a smaller repository, pypy, where performance is almost identical Before ! wall 0.015121 comb 0.030000 user 0.020000 sys 0.010000 (median of 186) After ! wall 0.015009 comb 0.010000 user 0.010000 sys 0.000000 (median of 184) Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6430

#!/usr/bin/env python
from __future__ import absolute_import

import getopt
import sys

import hgdemandimport
hgdemandimport.enable()

from mercurial.i18n import _
from mercurial import (
    context,
    error,
    fancyopts,
    pycompat,
    simplemerge,
    ui as uimod,
)
from mercurial.utils import (
    procutil,
)

options = [(b'L', b'label', [], _(b'labels to use on conflict markers')),
           (b'a', b'text', None, _(b'treat all files as text')),
           (b'p', b'print', None,
            _(b'print results instead of overwriting LOCAL')),
           (b'', b'no-minimal', None, _(b'no effect (DEPRECATED)')),
           (b'h', b'help', None, _(b'display help and exit')),
           (b'q', b'quiet', None, _(b'suppress output'))]

usage = _(b'''simplemerge [OPTS] LOCAL BASE OTHER

    Simple three-way file merge utility with a minimal feature set.

    Apply to LOCAL the changes necessary to go from BASE to OTHER.

    By default, LOCAL is overwritten with the results of this operation.
''')

class ParseError(Exception):
    """Exception raised on errors in parsing the command line."""

def showhelp():
    pycompat.stdout.write(usage)
    pycompat.stdout.write(b'\noptions:\n')

    out_opts = []
    for shortopt, longopt, default, desc in options:
        out_opts.append((b'%2s%s' % (shortopt and b'-%s' % shortopt,
                                     longopt and b' --%s' % longopt),
                         b'%s' % desc))
    opts_len = max([len(opt[0]) for opt in out_opts])
    for first, second in out_opts:
        pycompat.stdout.write(b' %-*s  %s\n' % (opts_len, first, second))

try:
    for fp in (sys.stdin, pycompat.stdout, sys.stderr):
        procutil.setbinary(fp)

    opts = {}
    try:
        bargv = [a.encode('utf8') for a in sys.argv[1:]]
        args = fancyopts.fancyopts(bargv, options, opts)
    except getopt.GetoptError as e:
        raise ParseError(e)
    if opts[b'help']:
        showhelp()
        sys.exit(0)
    if len(args) != 3:
            raise ParseError(_(b'wrong number of arguments').decode('utf8'))
    local, base, other = args
    sys.exit(simplemerge.simplemerge(uimod.ui.load(),
                                     context.arbitraryfilectx(local),
                                     context.arbitraryfilectx(base),
                                     context.arbitraryfilectx(other),
                                     **pycompat.strkwargs(opts)))
except ParseError as e:
    if pycompat.ispy3:
        e = str(e).encode('utf8')
    pycompat.stdout.write(b"%s: %s\n" % (sys.argv[0].encode('utf8'), e))
    showhelp()
    sys.exit(1)
except error.Abort as e:
    pycompat.stderr.write(b"abort: %s\n" % e)
    sys.exit(255)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
    sys.exit(255)