view mercurial/pure/mpatch.py @ 38513:6db38c9d7e00

revlog: efficient implementation of 'descendant' Iterating over descendants is costly, because there are no "parent -> children" pointers. Walking the other way around is much more efficient, especially on large repositories, where descendant walks can cost seconds. And the other hand, common ancestors code follows links in the right direction and has a compiled implementation. In real life usage, this saved up to 80s during some pull operations, where descendant test happens in extension code.
author Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
date Fri, 22 Jun 2018 00:05:20 +0100
parents 644a02f6b34f
children 2372284d9457
line wrap: on
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# mpatch.py - Python implementation of mpatch.c
#
# Copyright 2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

from __future__ import absolute_import

import struct

from .. import pycompat
stringio = pycompat.bytesio

class mpatchError(Exception):
    """error raised when a delta cannot be decoded
    """

# This attempts to apply a series of patches in time proportional to
# the total size of the patches, rather than patches * len(text). This
# means rather than shuffling strings around, we shuffle around
# pointers to fragments with fragment lists.
#
# When the fragment lists get too long, we collapse them. To do this
# efficiently, we do all our operations inside a buffer created by
# mmap and simply use memmove. This avoids creating a bunch of large
# temporary string buffers.

def _pull(dst, src, l): # pull l bytes from src
    while l:
        f = src.pop()
        if f[0] > l: # do we need to split?
            src.append((f[0] - l, f[1] + l))
            dst.append((l, f[1]))
            return
        dst.append(f)
        l -= f[0]

def _move(m, dest, src, count):
    """move count bytes from src to dest

    The file pointer is left at the end of dest.
    """
    m.seek(src)
    buf = m.read(count)
    m.seek(dest)
    m.write(buf)

def _collect(m, buf, list):
    start = buf
    for l, p in reversed(list):
        _move(m, buf, p, l)
        buf += l
    return (buf - start, start)

def patches(a, bins):
    if not bins:
        return a

    plens = [len(x) for x in bins]
    pl = sum(plens)
    bl = len(a) + pl
    tl = bl + bl + pl # enough for the patches and two working texts
    b1, b2 = 0, bl

    if not tl:
        return a

    m = stringio()

    # load our original text
    m.write(a)
    frags = [(len(a), b1)]

    # copy all the patches into our segment so we can memmove from them
    pos = b2 + bl
    m.seek(pos)
    for p in bins:
        m.write(p)

    for plen in plens:
        # if our list gets too long, execute it
        if len(frags) > 128:
            b2, b1 = b1, b2
            frags = [_collect(m, b1, frags)]

        new = []
        end = pos + plen
        last = 0
        while pos < end:
            m.seek(pos)
            try:
                p1, p2, l = struct.unpack(">lll", m.read(12))
            except struct.error:
                raise mpatchError("patch cannot be decoded")
            _pull(new, frags, p1 - last) # what didn't change
            _pull([], frags, p2 - p1)    # what got deleted
            new.append((l, pos + 12))   # what got added
            pos += l + 12
            last = p2
        frags.extend(reversed(new))     # what was left at the end

    t = _collect(m, b2, frags)

    m.seek(t[1])
    return m.read(t[0])

def patchedsize(orig, delta):
    outlen, last, bin = 0, 0, 0
    binend = len(delta)
    data = 12

    while data <= binend:
        decode = delta[bin:bin + 12]
        start, end, length = struct.unpack(">lll", decode)
        if start > end:
            break
        bin = data + length
        data = bin + 12
        outlen += start - last
        last = end
        outlen += length

    if bin != binend:
        raise mpatchError("patch cannot be decoded")

    outlen += orig - last
    return outlen