match: convert O(n) to O(log n) in exactmatcher.visitchildrenset
When using narrow, during rebase this is called (at least) once per directory in
the set of files in the commit being rebased. Every time it's called, we did the
set arithmetic (now extracted and cached), which was probably pretty cheap but
not necessary to repeat each time, looped over every item in the matcher and
kept things that started with the directory we were querying.
With very large narrowspecs, and a commit that touched a file in a large number
of directories, this was slow. In a pathological repo, the rebase of a single
commit (that touched over 17k files, I believe in approximately as many
directories) with a narrowspec that had >32k entries took 8,246s of profiled
time, with 5,007s of that spent in visitchildrenset (transitively). With this
change, the time spent in visitchildrenset is less than 34s (which is where my
profile cut off). Most of the remaining time was network access due to our
custom remotefilelog-based setup not properly prefetching.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10294
Test that the syntax of "unified tests" is properly processed
==============================================================
Simple commands:
$ echo foo
foo
$ printf 'oh no'
oh no (no-eol)
$ printf 'bar\nbaz\n' | cat
bar
baz
Multi-line command:
$ foo() {
> echo bar
> }
$ foo
bar
Return codes before inline python:
$ sh -c 'exit 1'
[1]
Doctest commands:
>>> from __future__ import print_function
>>> print('foo')
foo
$ echo interleaved
interleaved
>>> for c in 'xyz':
... print(c)
x
y
z
>>> print()
>>> foo = 'global name'
>>> def func():
... print(foo, 'should be visible in func()')
>>> func()
global name should be visible in func()
>>> print('''multiline
... string''')
multiline
string
Regular expressions:
$ echo foobarbaz
foobar.* (re)
$ echo barbazquux
.*quux.* (re)
Globs:
$ printf '* \\foobarbaz {10}\n'
\* \\fo?bar* {10} (glob)
Literal match ending in " (re)":
$ echo 'foo (re)'
foo (re)
Windows: \r\n is handled like \n and can be escaped:
#if windows
$ printf 'crlf\r\ncr\r\tcrlf\r\ncrlf\r\n'
crlf
cr\r (no-eol) (esc)
\tcrlf (esc)
crlf\r (esc)
#endif
Escapes:
$ $PYTHON -c 'from mercurial.utils.procutil import stdout; stdout.write(b"\xff")'
\xff (no-eol) (esc)
Escapes with conditions:
$ $PYTHON -c 'from mercurial.utils.procutil import stdout; stdout.write(b"\xff")'
\xff (no-eol) (esc) (true !)
Combining esc with other markups - and handling lines ending with \r instead of \n:
$ printf 'foo/bar\r'
fo?/bar\r (no-eol) (glob) (esc)
#if windows
$ printf 'foo\\bar\r'
foo/bar\r (no-eol) (esc)
#endif
$ printf 'foo/bar\rfoo/bar\r'
foo.bar\r [(]no-eol[)] (re) (esc)
foo.bar\r \(no-eol\) (re)
testing hghave
$ hghave true
$ hghave false
skipped: missing feature: nail clipper
[1]
$ hghave no-true
skipped: system supports yak shaving
[1]
$ hghave no-false
Conditional sections based on hghave:
#if true
$ echo tested
tested
#else
$ echo skipped
#endif
#if false
$ echo skipped
#else
$ echo tested
tested
#endif
#if no-false
$ echo tested
tested
#else
$ echo skipped
#endif
#if no-true
$ echo skipped
#else
$ echo tested
tested
#endif
Exit code:
$ (exit 1)
[1]