view hgdemandimport/demandimportpy3.py @ 39862:5a9ab91e0a45

revlog: new API to emit revision data I recently refactored changegroup generation code to make it more storage agnostic. I made significant progress. But there is still a bit of work to be done. Specifically: * Changegroup code is looking at low-level storage attributes to influence sorting. Sorting should be done at the storage layer. * The linknode lookup and sorting code for ellipsis is very complicated. * Linknodes are just generally wonky because e.g. file storage doesn't know how to translate a linkrev to a changelog node. * We regressed performance when introducing the request-response objects. Having thought about this problem a bit, I think I've come up with a better interface for emitting revision deltas. This commit defines and implements that interface. See the docstring in repository.py for more info. This API adds 3 notable features over the previous one. First, it defers node ordering to the storage implementation in the common case but allows overriding as necessary. We have a facility for requesting an exact ordering (used in ellipsis mode). We have another facility for storage order (used for changelog). Second, we have an argument specifying assumptions about parents revisions. This can be used to force a fulltext revision when we don't know the receiver has a parent revision to delta against. Third, we can control whether revision data is emitted. This makes the API suitable as a generic "index data retrieval" API as well as for producing revision deltas - possibly in the same operation! The new API is much simpler: we no longer need a complicated "request" object to encapsulate the delta generation request. I'm optimistic this will restore performance loss associated with emitrevisiondeltas(). Storage unit tests for the new API have been implemented. Future commits will port existing consumers of emitrevisiondeltas() to the new API then remove emitrevisiondeltas(). Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4722
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Fri, 21 Sep 2018 14:28:21 -0700
parents 670eb4fa1b86
children adb636392b3f
line wrap: on
line source

# demandimportpy3 - global demand-loading of modules for Mercurial
#
# Copyright 2017 Facebook Inc.
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

"""Lazy loading for Python 3.6 and above.

This uses the new importlib finder/loader functionality available in Python 3.5
and up. The code reuses most of the mechanics implemented inside importlib.util,
but with a few additions:

* Allow excluding certain modules from lazy imports.
* Expose an interface that's substantially the same as demandimport for
  Python 2.

This also has some limitations compared to the Python 2 implementation:

* Much of the logic is per-package, not per-module, so any packages loaded
  before demandimport is enabled will not be lazily imported in the future. In
  practice, we only expect builtins to be loaded before demandimport is
  enabled.
"""

# This line is unnecessary, but it satisfies test-check-py3-compat.t.
from __future__ import absolute_import

import contextlib
import importlib.abc
import importlib.machinery
import importlib.util
import sys

_deactivated = False

class _lazyloaderex(importlib.util.LazyLoader):
    """This is a LazyLoader except it also follows the _deactivated global and
    the ignore list.
    """
    def exec_module(self, module):
        """Make the module load lazily."""
        if _deactivated or module.__name__ in ignores:
            self.loader.exec_module(module)
        else:
            super().exec_module(module)

# This is 3.6+ because with Python 3.5 it isn't possible to lazily load
# extensions. See the discussion in https://bugs.python.org/issue26186 for more.
_extensions_loader = _lazyloaderex.factory(
    importlib.machinery.ExtensionFileLoader)
_bytecode_loader = _lazyloaderex.factory(
    importlib.machinery.SourcelessFileLoader)
_source_loader = _lazyloaderex.factory(importlib.machinery.SourceFileLoader)

def _makefinder(path):
    return importlib.machinery.FileFinder(
        path,
        # This is the order in which loaders are passed in in core Python.
        (_extensions_loader, importlib.machinery.EXTENSION_SUFFIXES),
        (_source_loader, importlib.machinery.SOURCE_SUFFIXES),
        (_bytecode_loader, importlib.machinery.BYTECODE_SUFFIXES),
    )

ignores = set()

def init(ignoreset):
    global ignores
    ignores = ignoreset

def isenabled():
    return _makefinder in sys.path_hooks and not _deactivated

def disable():
    try:
        while True:
            sys.path_hooks.remove(_makefinder)
    except ValueError:
        pass

def enable():
    sys.path_hooks.insert(0, _makefinder)

@contextlib.contextmanager
def deactivated():
    # This implementation is a bit different from Python 2's. Python 3
    # maintains a per-package finder cache in sys.path_importer_cache (see
    # PEP 302). This means that we can't just call disable + enable.
    # If we do that, in situations like:
    #
    #   demandimport.enable()
    #   ...
    #   from foo.bar import mod1
    #   with demandimport.deactivated():
    #       from foo.bar import mod2
    #
    # mod2 will be imported lazily. (The converse also holds -- whatever finder
    # first gets cached will be used.)
    #
    # Instead, have a global flag the LazyLoader can use.
    global _deactivated
    demandenabled = isenabled()
    if demandenabled:
        _deactivated = True
    try:
        yield
    finally:
        if demandenabled:
            _deactivated = False