match: making visitdir() deal with non-recursive entries
Primarily as an optimization to avoid recursing into directories that will
never have a match inside, this classifies each matcher pattern's root as
recursive or non-recursive (erring on the side of keeping it recursive,
which may lead to wasteful directory or manifest walks that yield no matches).
I measured the performance of "rootfilesin" in two repos:
- The Firefox repo with tree manifests, with
"hg files -r . -I rootfilesin:browser".
The browser directory contains about 3K files across 249 subdirectories.
- A specific Google-internal directory which contains 75K files across 19K
subdirectories, with "hg files -r . -I rootfilesin:REDACTED".
I tested with both cold and warm disk caches. Cold cache was produced by
running "sync; echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches". Warm cache was produced
by re-running the same command a few times.
These were the results:
Cold cache Warm cache
Before After Before After
firefox 0m5.1s 0m2.18s 0m0.22s 0m0.14s
google3 dir 2m3.9s 0m1.57s 0m8.12s 0m0.16s
Certain extensions, notably narrowhg, can depend on this for correctness
(not trying to recurse into directories for which it has no information).
#require chg
$ cp $HGRCPATH $HGRCPATH.orig
init repo
$ chg init foo
$ cd foo
ill-formed config
$ chg status
$ echo '=brokenconfig' >> $HGRCPATH
$ chg status
hg: parse error at * (glob)
[255]
$ cp $HGRCPATH.orig $HGRCPATH
long socket path
$ sockpath=$TESTTMP/this/path/should/be/longer/than/one-hundred-and-seven/characters/where/107/is/the/typical/size/limit/of/unix-domain-socket
$ mkdir -p $sockpath
$ bakchgsockname=$CHGSOCKNAME
$ CHGSOCKNAME=$sockpath/server
$ export CHGSOCKNAME
$ chg root
$TESTTMP/foo
$ rm -rf $sockpath
$ CHGSOCKNAME=$bakchgsockname
$ export CHGSOCKNAME
$ cd ..
pager
-----
$ cat >> fakepager.py <<EOF
> import sys
> for line in sys.stdin:
> sys.stdout.write('paged! %r\n' % line)
> EOF
enable pager extension globally, but spawns the master server with no tty:
$ chg init pager
$ cd pager
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF
> [extensions]
> pager =
> [pager]
> pager = python $TESTTMP/fakepager.py
> EOF
$ chg version > /dev/null
$ touch foo
$ chg ci -qAm foo
pager should be enabled if the attached client has a tty:
$ chg log -l1 -q --config ui.formatted=True
paged! '0:1f7b0de80e11\n'
$ chg log -l1 -q --config ui.formatted=False
0:1f7b0de80e11
$ cd ..
server lifecycle
----------------
chg server should be restarted on code change, and old server will shut down
automatically. In this test, we use the following time parameters:
- "sleep 1" to make mtime different
- "sleep 2" to notice mtime change (polling interval is 1 sec)
set up repository with an extension:
$ chg init extreload
$ cd extreload
$ touch dummyext.py
$ cat <<EOF >> .hg/hgrc
> [extensions]
> dummyext = dummyext.py
> EOF
isolate socket directory for stable result:
$ OLDCHGSOCKNAME=$CHGSOCKNAME
$ mkdir chgsock
$ CHGSOCKNAME=`pwd`/chgsock/server
warm up server:
$ CHGDEBUG= chg log 2>&1 | egrep 'instruction|start'
chg: debug: start cmdserver at $TESTTMP/extreload/chgsock/server.* (glob)
new server should be started if extension modified:
$ sleep 1
$ touch dummyext.py
$ CHGDEBUG= chg log 2>&1 | egrep 'instruction|start'
chg: debug: instruction: unlink $TESTTMP/extreload/chgsock/server-* (glob)
chg: debug: instruction: reconnect
chg: debug: start cmdserver at $TESTTMP/extreload/chgsock/server.* (glob)
old server will shut down, while new server should still be reachable:
$ sleep 2
$ CHGDEBUG= chg log 2>&1 | (egrep 'instruction|start' || true)
socket file should never be unlinked by old server:
(simulates unowned socket by updating mtime, which makes sure server exits
at polling cycle)
$ ls chgsock/server-*
chgsock/server-* (glob)
$ touch chgsock/server-*
$ sleep 2
$ ls chgsock/server-*
chgsock/server-* (glob)
since no server is reachable from socket file, new server should be started:
(this test makes sure that old server shut down automatically)
$ CHGDEBUG= chg log 2>&1 | egrep 'instruction|start'
chg: debug: start cmdserver at $TESTTMP/extreload/chgsock/server.* (glob)
shut down servers and restore environment:
$ rm -R chgsock
$ CHGSOCKNAME=$OLDCHGSOCKNAME
$ cd ..