view mercurial/policy.py @ 32151:4d504e541d3d

rebase: use matcher to optimize manifestmerge The old merge code would call manifestmerge and calculate the complete diff between the source to the destination. In many cases, like rebase, the vast majority of differences between the source and destination are irrelevant because they are differences between the destination and the common ancestor only, and therefore don't affect the merge. Since most actions are 'keep', all the effort to compute them is wasted. Instead, let's compute the difference between the source and the common ancestor and only perform the diff of those files against the merge destination. When using treemanifest, this lets us avoid loading almost the entire tree when rebasing from a very old ancestor. This speeds up rebase of an old stack of 27 commits by 20x. In mozilla-central, without treemanifest, when rebasing a commit from default~100000 to default, this speeds up the manifestmerge step from 2.6s to 1.2s. However, the additional diff adds an overhead to all manifestmerge calls, especially for flat manifests. When rebasing a commit from default~1 to default it appears to add 100ms in mozilla-central. While we could put this optimization behind a flag, I think the fact that it makes merge O(number of changes being applied) instead of O(number of changes between X and Y) justifies it.
author Durham Goode <durham@fb.com>
date Wed, 03 May 2017 10:43:59 -0700
parents 8a17c541177f
children 56148133ef36
line wrap: on
line source

# policy.py - module policy logic for Mercurial.
#
# Copyright 2015 Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

from __future__ import absolute_import

import os
import sys

# Rules for how modules can be loaded. Values are:
#
#    c - require C extensions
#    allow - allow pure Python implementation when C loading fails
#    cffi - required cffi versions (implemented within pure module)
#    cffi-allow - allow pure Python implementation if cffi version is missing
#    py - only load pure Python modules
#
# By default, require the C extensions for performance reasons.
policy = b'c'
policynoc = (b'cffi', b'cffi-allow', b'py')
policynocffi = (b'c', b'py')

try:
    from . import __modulepolicy__
    policy = __modulepolicy__.modulepolicy
except ImportError:
    pass

# PyPy doesn't load C extensions.
#
# The canonical way to do this is to test platform.python_implementation().
# But we don't import platform and don't bloat for it here.
if '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names:
    policy = 'cffi'

# Our C extensions aren't yet compatible with Python 3. So use pure Python
# on Python 3 for now.
if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
    policy = b'py'

# Environment variable can always force settings.
if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
    if 'HGMODULEPOLICY' in os.environ:
        policy = os.environ['HGMODULEPOLICY'].encode('utf-8')
else:
    policy = os.environ.get('HGMODULEPOLICY', policy)