Mercurial > hg
view tests/check-perf-code.py @ 39744:52dfa1eb0ad4
shelve: no longer strip internal commit when using internal phase
When the internal phase is used, the internal commits we create during shelve
will be automatically hidden, and we don't need to strip them. Avoiding strips
gives much better performances and is less traumatic for caches.
Test changes are all related to revision numbers increasing more quickly since
we avoid stripping.
At the end of `test-shelve.t` we now need manually strip the shelve-commit in
addition to the x.shelve file deletion. This emulates a preexisting shelve
after a repository upgrade.
Note:
The hidden internal commits confuses rebase a bit as shown by a new test
added. This will happen when the user have shelve commits on top of a
changeset to be rebased.
We'll fix this in the next commit. As we still use a backup bundle, rebase
can just strip the internal changesets and be fine.
author | Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 06 Jun 2018 02:31:46 +0200 |
parents | bd872f64a8ba |
children | eb8a8af4cbd0 |
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#!/usr/bin/env python # # check-perf-code - (historical) portability checker for contrib/perf.py from __future__ import absolute_import import os import sys # write static check patterns here perfpypats = [ [ (r'(branchmap|repoview)\.subsettable', "use getbranchmapsubsettable() for early Mercurial"), (r'\.(vfs|svfs|opener|sopener)', "use getvfs()/getsvfs() for early Mercurial"), (r'ui\.configint', "use getint() instead of ui.configint() for early Mercurial"), ], # warnings [ ] ] def modulewhitelist(names): replacement = [('.py', ''), ('.c', ''), # trim suffix ('mercurial%s' % (os.sep), ''), # trim "mercurial/" path ] ignored = {'__init__'} modules = {} # convert from file name to module name, and count # of appearances for name in names: name = name.strip() for old, new in replacement: name = name.replace(old, new) if name not in ignored: modules[name] = modules.get(name, 0) + 1 # list up module names, which appear multiple times whitelist = [] for name, count in modules.items(): if count > 1: whitelist.append(name) return whitelist if __name__ == "__main__": # in this case, it is assumed that result of "hg files" at # multiple revisions is given via stdin whitelist = modulewhitelist(sys.stdin) assert whitelist, "module whitelist is empty" # build up module whitelist check from file names given at runtime perfpypats[0].append( # this matching pattern assumes importing modules from # "mercurial" package in the current style below, for simplicity # # from mercurial import ( # foo, # bar, # baz # ) ((r'from mercurial import [(][a-z0-9, \n#]*\n(?! *%s,|^[ #]*\n|[)])' % ',| *'.join(whitelist)), "import newer module separately in try clause for early Mercurial" )) # import contrib/check-code.py as checkcode assert 'RUNTESTDIR' in os.environ, "use check-perf-code.py in *.t script" contribpath = os.path.join(os.environ['RUNTESTDIR'], '..', 'contrib') sys.path.insert(0, contribpath) checkcode = __import__('check-code') # register perf.py specific entry with "checks" in check-code.py checkcode.checks.append(('perf.py', r'contrib/perf.py$', '', checkcode.pyfilters, perfpypats)) sys.exit(checkcode.main())