view tests/test-extensions-afterloaded.t @ 51681:522b4d729e89

mmap: populate the mapping by default Without pre-population, accessing all data through a mmap can result in many pagefault, reducing performance significantly. If the mmap is prepopulated, the performance can no longer get slower than a full read. (See benchmark number below) In some cases were very few data is read, prepopulating can be overkill and slower than populating on access (through page fault). So that behavior can be controlled when the caller can pre-determine the best behavior. (See benchmark number below) In addition, testing with populating in a secondary thread yield great result combining the best of each approach. This might be implemented in later changesets. In all cases, using mmap has a great effect on memory usage when many processes run in parallel on the same machine. ### Benchmarks # What did I run A couple of month back I ran a large benchmark campaign to assess the impact of various approach for using mmap with the revlog (and other files), it highlighted a few benchmarks that capture the impact of the changes well. So to validate this change I checked the following: - log command displaying various revisions (read the changelog index) - log command displaying the patch of listed revisions (read the changelog index, the manifest index and a few files indexes) - unbundling a few revisions (read and write changelog, manifest and few files indexes, and walk the graph to update some cache) - pushing a few revisions (read and write changelog, manifest and few files indexes, walk the graph to update some cache, performs various accesses locally and remotely during discovery) Benchmarks were run using the default module policy (c+py) and the rust one. No significant difference were found between the two implementation, so we will present result using the default policy (unless otherwise specified). I ran them on a few repositories : - mercurial: a "public changeset only" copy of mercurial from 2018-08-01 using zstd compression and sparse-revlog - pypy: a copy of pypy from 2018-08-01 using zstd compression and sparse-revlog - netbeans: a copy of netbeans from 2018-08-01 using zstd compression and sparse-revlog - mozilla-try: a copy of mozilla-try from 2019-02-18 using zstd compression and sparse-revlog - mozilla-try persistent-nodemap: Same as the above but with a persistent nodemap. Used for the log --patch benchmark only # Results For the smaller repositories (mercurial, pypy), the impact of mmap is almost imperceptible, other cost dominating the operation. The impact of prepopulating is undiscernible in the benchmark we ran. For larger repositories the benchmark support explanation given above: On netbeans, the log can be about 1% faster without repopulation (for a difference < 100ms) but unbundle becomes a bit slower, even when small. ### data-env-vars.name = netbeans-2018-08-01-zstd-sparse-revlog # benchmark.name = hg.command.unbundle # benchmark.variants.issue6528 = disabled # benchmark.variants.reuse-external-delta-parent = yes # benchmark.variants.revs = any-1-extra-rev # benchmark.variants.source = unbundle # benchmark.variants.verbosity = quiet with-populate: 0.240157 no-populate: 0.265087 (+10.38%, +0.02) # benchmark.variants.revs = any-100-extra-rev with-populate: 1.459518 no-populate: 1.481290 (+1.49%, +0.02) ## benchmark.name = hg.command.push # benchmark.variants.explicit-rev = none # benchmark.variants.issue6528 = disabled # benchmark.variants.protocol = ssh # benchmark.variants.reuse-external-delta-parent = yes # benchmark.variants.revs = any-1-extra-rev with-populate: 0.771919 no-populate: 0.792025 (+2.60%, +0.02) # benchmark.variants.revs = any-100-extra-rev with-populate: 1.459518 no-populate: 1.481290 (+1.49%, +0.02) For mozilla-try, the "slow down" from pre-populate for small `hg log` is more visible, but still small in absolute time. (using rust value for the persistent nodemap value to be relevant). ### data-env-vars.name = mozilla-try-2019-02-18-ds2-pnm # benchmark.name = hg.command.log # bin-env-vars.hg.flavor = rust # benchmark.variants.patch = yes # benchmark.variants.limit-rev = 1 with-populate: 0.237813 no-populate: 0.229452 (-3.52%, -0.01) # benchmark.variants.limit-rev = 10 # benchmark.variants.patch = yes with-populate: 1.213578 no-populate: 1.205189 ### data-env-vars.name = mozilla-try-2019-02-18-zstd-sparse-revlog # benchmark.variants.limit-rev = 1000 # benchmark.variants.patch = no # benchmark.variants.rev = tip with-populate: 0.198607 no-populate: 0.195038 (-1.80%, -0.00) However pre-populating provide a significant boost on more complex operations like unbundle or push: ### data-env-vars.name = mozilla-try-2019-02-18-zstd-sparse-revlog # benchmark.name = hg.command.push # benchmark.variants.explicit-rev = none # benchmark.variants.issue6528 = disabled # benchmark.variants.protocol = ssh # benchmark.variants.reuse-external-delta-parent = yes # benchmark.variants.revs = any-1-extra-rev with-populate: 4.798632 no-populate: 4.953295 (+3.22%, +0.15) # benchmark.variants.revs = any-100-extra-rev with-populate: 4.903618 no-populate: 5.014963 (+2.27%, +0.11) ## benchmark.name = hg.command.unbundle # benchmark.variants.revs = any-1-extra-rev with-populate: 1.423411 no-populate: 1.585365 (+11.38%, +0.16) # benchmark.variants.revs = any-100-extra-rev with-populate: 1.537909 no-populate: 1.688489 (+9.79%, +0.15)
author Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net>
date Thu, 11 Apr 2024 00:02:07 +0200
parents cfa564037789
children
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Test the extensions.afterloaded() function

  $ cat > foo.py <<EOF
  > from mercurial import extensions
  > def uisetup(ui):
  >     ui.write(b"foo.uisetup\\n")
  >     ui.flush()
  >     def bar_loaded(loaded):
  >         ui.write(b"foo: bar loaded: %r\\n" % (loaded,))
  >         ui.flush()
  >     extensions.afterloaded(b'bar', bar_loaded)
  > EOF
  $ cat > bar.py <<EOF
  > def uisetup(ui):
  >     ui.write(b"bar.uisetup\\n")
  >     ui.flush()
  > EOF
  $ basepath=`pwd`

  $ hg init basic
  $ cd basic
  $ echo foo > file
  $ hg add file
  $ hg commit -m 'add file'

  $ echo '[extensions]' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo "foo = $basepath/foo.py" >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo "bar = $basepath/bar.py" >> .hg/hgrc
  $ hg log -r. -T'{rev}\n'
  foo.uisetup
  foo: bar loaded: True
  bar.uisetup
  0

Test afterloaded with the opposite extension load order

  $ cd ..
  $ hg init basic_reverse
  $ cd basic_reverse
  $ echo foo > file
  $ hg add file
  $ hg commit -m 'add file'

  $ echo '[extensions]' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo "bar = $basepath/bar.py" >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo "foo = $basepath/foo.py" >> .hg/hgrc
  $ hg log -r. -T'{rev}\n'
  bar.uisetup
  foo.uisetup
  foo: bar loaded: True
  0

Test the extensions.afterloaded() function when the requested extension is not
loaded

  $ cd ..
  $ hg init notloaded
  $ cd notloaded
  $ echo foo > file
  $ hg add file
  $ hg commit -m 'add file'

  $ echo '[extensions]' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo "foo = $basepath/foo.py" >> .hg/hgrc
  $ hg log -r. -T'{rev}\n'
  foo.uisetup
  foo: bar loaded: False
  0

Test the extensions.afterloaded() function when the requested extension is not
configured but fails the minimum version check

  $ cd ..
  $ cat > minvers.py <<EOF
  > minimumhgversion = b'9999.9999'
  > def uisetup(ui):
  >     ui.write(b"minvers.uisetup\\n")
  >     ui.flush()
  > EOF
  $ hg init minversion
  $ cd minversion
  $ echo foo > file
  $ hg add file
  $ hg commit -m 'add file'

  $ echo '[extensions]' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo "foo = $basepath/foo.py" >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo "bar = $basepath/minvers.py" >> .hg/hgrc
  $ hg log -r. -T'{rev}\n'
  (third party extension bar requires version 9999.9999 or newer of Mercurial (current: *); disabling) (glob)
  foo.uisetup
  foo: bar loaded: False
  0

Test the extensions.afterloaded() function when the requested extension is not
configured but fails the minimum version check, using the opposite load order
for the two extensions.

  $ cd ..
  $ hg init minversion_reverse
  $ cd minversion_reverse
  $ echo foo > file
  $ hg add file
  $ hg commit -m 'add file'

  $ echo '[extensions]' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo "bar = $basepath/minvers.py" >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo "foo = $basepath/foo.py" >> .hg/hgrc
  $ hg log -r. -T'{rev}\n'
  (third party extension bar requires version 9999.9999 or newer of Mercurial (current: *); disabling) (glob)
  foo.uisetup
  foo: bar loaded: False
  0