Mercurial > hg
view tests/pdiff @ 46095:93e09d370003
treemanifest: stop storing full path for each item in manifest._lazydirs
This information is obtainable, if needed, based on the lazydirs key (which is
the entry name) and the manifest's `dir()` method.
### Performance
This is actually both a memory and a performance improvement, but it's likely to
be a very small one in most situations. In the pathological repo I've been using
for testing other performance work I've done recently, this reduced the time for
a rebase operation (rebasing two commits across a public-phase change that
touches a sibling of one of my tracked directories where the common parent is
massive (>>10k entries)):
#### Before
```
Time (mean ± σ): 4.059 s ± 0.121 s [User: 0.9 ms, System: 0.6 ms]
Range (min … max): 3.941 s … 4.352 s 10 runs
```
#### After
```
Time (mean ± σ): 3.707 s ± 0.060 s [User: 0.8 ms, System: 0.8 ms]
Range (min … max): 3.648 s … 3.818 s 10 runs
```
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9553
author | Kyle Lippincott <spectral@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 03 Dec 2020 14:39:39 -0800 |
parents | a2b55ee62803 |
children |
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#!/bin/sh # Script to get stable diff output on any platform. # # Output of this script is almost equivalent to GNU diff with "-Nru". # # Use this script as "hg pdiff" via extdiff extension with preparation # below in test scripts: # # $ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF # > [extdiff] # > pdiff = sh "$RUNTESTDIR/pdiff" # > EOF filediff(){ # USAGE: filediff file1 file2 [header] # compare with /dev/null if file doesn't exist (as "-N" option) file1="$1" if test ! -f "$file1"; then file1=/dev/null fi file2="$2" if test ! -f "$file2"; then file2=/dev/null fi if cmp -s "$file1" "$file2" 2> /dev/null; then # Return immediately, because comparison isn't needed. This # also avoids redundant message of diff like "No differences # encountered" (on Solaris) return fi if test -n "$3"; then # show header only in recursive case echo "$3" fi # replace "/dev/null" by corresponded filename (as "-N" option) diff -u "$file1" "$file2" | sed "s@^--- /dev/null\(.*\)\$@--- $1\1@" | sed "s@^\+\+\+ /dev/null\(.*\)\$@+++ $2\1@" # in this case, files differ from each other return 1 } if test -d "$1" -o -d "$2"; then # ensure comparison in dictionary order ( if test -d "$1"; then (cd "$1" && find . -type f); fi if test -d "$2"; then (cd "$2" && find . -type f); fi ) | sed 's@^\./@@g' | sort | uniq | while read file; do filediff "$1/$file" "$2/$file" "diff -Nru $1/$file $2/$file" done # TODO: there is no portable way for current while-read based # implementation to return 1 at detecting changes. # # On bash and dash, assignment to variable inside while-block # doesn't affect outside, because inside while-block is executed # in sub-shell. BTW, it affects outside while-block on ksh (as sh # on Solaris). else filediff "$1" "$2" fi