view tests/test-profile.t @ 49010:681b25ea579e

contrib: add a partial-merge tool for sorted lists (such as Python imports) This is a pretty naive tool that uses a regular expression for matching lines. It is based on a Google-internal tool that worked in a similar way. For now, the regular expression is hard-coded to attempt to match single-line Python imports. The only commit I've found in the hg core repo where the tool helped was commit 9cd6292abfdf. I think that's because we often use multiple imports per import statement. I think this tool is still a decent first step (especially once the regex is made configurable in the next patch). The merging should ideally use a proper Python parser and do the merge at the AST (or CST?) level, but that's significantly harder, especially if you want to preserve comments and whitespace. It's also less generic. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D12380
author Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
date Fri, 04 Mar 2022 16:12:56 -0800
parents 42d2b31cee0b
children 7e5be4a7cda7
line wrap: on
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test --time

  $ hg --time help -q help 2>&1 | grep time > /dev/null
  $ hg init a
  $ cd a

Function to check that statprof ran
  $ statprofran () {
  >   egrep 'Sample count:|No samples recorded' > /dev/null
  > }

test --profile

  $ hg st --profile 2>&1 | statprofran

Abreviated version

  $ hg st --prof 2>&1 | statprofran

In alias

  $ hg --config "alias.profst=status --profile" profst 2>&1 | statprofran

#if lsprof

  $ prof () {
  >   hg --config profiling.type=ls --profile $@
  > }

  $ prof st 2>../out
  $ grep CallCount ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out

  $ prof --config profiling.output=../out st
  $ grep CallCount ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out

  $ prof --config profiling.output=blackbox --config extensions.blackbox= st
  $ grep CallCount .hg/blackbox.log > /dev/null || cat .hg/blackbox.log

  $ prof --config profiling.format=text st 2>../out
  $ grep CallCount ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out

  $ echo "[profiling]" >> $HGRCPATH
  $ echo "format=kcachegrind" >> $HGRCPATH

  $ prof st 2>../out
  $ grep 'events: Ticks' ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out

  $ prof --config profiling.output=../out st
  $ grep 'events: Ticks' ../out > /dev/null || cat ../out

#endif

#if lsprof serve

Profiling of HTTP requests works

  $ prof --config profiling.format=text --config profiling.output=../profile.log serve -d -p $HGPORT --pid-file ../hg.pid -A ../access.log
  $ cat ../hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS
  $ hg -q clone -U http://localhost:$HGPORT ../clone

A single profile is logged because file logging doesn't append
  $ grep CallCount ../profile.log | wc -l
  \s*1 (re)

#endif

Install an extension that can sleep and guarantee a profiler has time to run

  $ cat >> sleepext_with_a_long_filename.py << EOF
  > import time
  > from mercurial import registrar
  > cmdtable = {}
  > command = registrar.command(cmdtable)
  > @command(b'sleep', [], b'hg sleep')
  > def sleep_for_at_least_one_stat_cycle(ui, *args, **kwargs):
  >     t = time.time()  # don't use time.sleep because we need CPU time
  >     while time.time() - t < 0.5:
  >         pass
  > EOF

  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
  > [extensions]
  > sleep = `pwd`/sleepext_with_a_long_filename.py
  > EOF

statistical profiler works

  $ hg --profile sleep 2>../out
  $ cat ../out | statprofran

Various statprof formatters work

  $ hg --profile --config profiling.statformat=byline sleep 2>../out || cat ../out
  $ grep -v _path_stat ../out | head -n 3
    %   cumulative      self          
   time    seconds   seconds  name    
  * sleepext_with_a_long_filename.py:*:sleep_for_at_least_one_stat_cycle (glob)
  $ cat ../out | statprofran

  $ hg --profile --config profiling.statformat=bymethod sleep 2>../out || cat ../out
  $ head -n 1 ../out
    %   cumulative      self          
  $ cat ../out | statprofran

Windows real time tracking is broken, only use CPU

#if no-windows
  $ hg --profile --config profiling.time-track=real --config profiling.statformat=hotpath sleep 2>../out || cat ../out
  $ cat ../out | statprofran
  $ grep sleepext_with_a_long_filename.py ../out | head -n 1
  .* [0-9.]+%  [0-9.]+s  sleepext_with_a_long_filename.py:\s*sleep_for_at_least_one_stat_cycle, line \d+:\s+(while|pass).* (re)
#endif

  $ hg --profile --config profiling.time-track=cpu --config profiling.statformat=hotpath sleep 2>../out || cat ../out
  $ cat ../out | statprofran
  $ grep sleepext_with_a_long_filename.py ../out | head -n 1
  .* [0-9.]+%  [0-9.]+s  sleepext_with_a_long_filename.py:\s*sleep_for_at_least_one_stat_cycle, line \d+:\s+(while|pass).* (re)

  $ hg --profile --config profiling.statformat=json sleep 2>../out || cat ../out
  $ cat ../out
  \[\[-?\d+.* (re)

statprof can be used as a standalone module

  $ "$PYTHON" -m mercurial.statprof hotpath
  must specify --file to load
  [1]

  $ cd ..

#if no-chg
profiler extension could be loaded before other extensions

  $ cat > fooprof.py <<EOF
  > import contextlib
  > import sys
  > @contextlib.contextmanager
  > def profile(ui, fp):
  >     print('fooprof: start profile')
  >     sys.stdout.flush()
  >     yield
  >     print('fooprof: end profile')
  >     sys.stdout.flush()
  > def extsetup(ui):
  >     ui.write(b'fooprof: loaded\n')
  > EOF

  $ cat > otherextension.py <<EOF
  > def extsetup(ui):
  >     ui.write(b'otherextension: loaded\n')
  > EOF

  $ hg init b
  $ cd b
  $ cat >> .hg/hgrc <<EOF
  > [extensions]
  > other = $TESTTMP/otherextension.py
  > fooprof = $TESTTMP/fooprof.py
  > EOF

  $ hg root
  otherextension: loaded
  fooprof: loaded
  $TESTTMP/b
  $ HGPROF=fooprof hg root --profile
  fooprof: loaded
  fooprof: start profile
  otherextension: loaded
  $TESTTMP/b
  fooprof: end profile

  $ HGPROF=other hg root --profile 2>&1 | head -n 2
  otherextension: loaded
  unrecognized profiler 'other' - ignored

  $ HGPROF=unknown hg root --profile 2>&1 | head -n 1
  unrecognized profiler 'unknown' - ignored

  $ cd ..
#endif