subrepo: make 'in subrepo' string easier to find by external tools
This patch is meant to make it easier for tools that wrap the mercurial
output (such as TortoiseHg) to find the "in subrepo MYSUBREPO" string that
(since
9e3910db4e78) is appended after subrepo error messages, particularly when
the mercurial output is translated to a non-English language.
The message remains the same but the '%s' that was used to prepend the original
error message in front of the 'in subrepo' string has been moved out of the
translatable string.
As an example of the usefulness of making it easy to look for "in subrepo
MYSUBREPO" strings, TortoiseHg looks for these strings in error messages in
order to "linkify them" (i.e. convert "MYSUBREPO" into alink to the
corresponding subrepo).
The original string made it hard for a tool such as TortoiseHg to look for the
translated string on mercurial's output because the translated string contained
the error message itself. This meant that a regular expression was required to
ignore the error message part. With this change TortoiseHg can just get the
translated "(in subrepo %s)" string, substitute %s for the subrepo path (which
it gets from the subrepo exception) and simply search for the resulting string
(no regular expression needed, or at least a much simpler regular expression
could be used).
Additionaly, the existing string could lead a translator mistakenly assume that
it was possible invert the order of the %s (error and subrepo path) fields,
which would not work because the string interpolation was position based.
# memory.py - track memory usage
#
# 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.
'''helper extension to measure memory usage
Reads current and peak memory usage from ``/proc/self/status`` and
prints it to ``stderr`` on exit.
'''
import atexit
def memusage(ui):
"""Report memory usage of the current process."""
status = None
result = {'peak': 0, 'rss': 0}
try:
# This will only work on systems with a /proc file system
# (like Linux).
status = open('/proc/self/status', 'r')
for line in status:
parts = line.split()
key = parts[0][2:-1].lower()
if key in result:
result[key] = int(parts[1])
finally:
if status is not None:
status.close()
ui.write_err(", ".join(["%s: %.1f MiB" % (key, value / 1024.0)
for key, value in result.iteritems()]) + "\n")
def extsetup(ui):
atexit.register(memusage, ui)