view README @ 29792:58467204cac0

hgweb: tweak zlib chunking behavior When doing streaming compression with zlib, zlib appears to emit chunks with data after ~20-30kb on average is available. In other words, most calls to compress() return an empty string. On the mozilla-unified repo, only 48,433 of 921,167 (5.26%) of calls to compress() returned data. In other words, we were sending hundreds of thousands of empty chunks via a generator where they touched who knows how many frames (my guess is millions). Filtering out the empty chunks from the generator cuts down on overhead. In addition, we were previously feeding 8kb chunks into zlib compression. Since this function tends to emit *compressed* data after 20-30kb is available, it would take several calls before data was produced. We increase the amount of data fed in at a time to 32kb. This reduces the number of calls to compress() from 921,167 to 115,146. It also reduces the number of output chunks from 48,433 to 31,377. This does increase the average output chunk size by a little. But I don't think this will matter in most scenarios. The combination of these 2 changes appears to shave ~6s CPU time or ~3% from a server serving the mozilla-unified repo.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sun, 14 Aug 2016 21:29:46 -0700
parents 4b0fc75f9403
children 76b171209151
line wrap: on
line source

Mercurial
=========

Mercurial is a fast, easy to use, distributed revision control tool
for software developers.

Basic install:

 $ make            # see install targets
 $ make install    # do a system-wide install
 $ hg debuginstall # sanity-check setup
 $ hg              # see help

Running without installing:

 $ make local      # build for inplace usage
 $ ./hg --version  # should show the latest version

See https://mercurial-scm.org/ for detailed installation
instructions, platform-specific notes, and Mercurial user information.