Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-sparse-fsmonitor.t @ 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 | abd7dedbaa36 |
children |
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This test doesn't yet work due to the way fsmonitor is integrated with test runner $ exit 80 test sparse interaction with other extensions $ hg init myrepo $ cd myrepo $ cat > .hg/hgrc <<EOF > [extensions] > sparse= > strip= > EOF Test fsmonitor integration (if available) TODO: make fully isolated integration test a'la https://github.com/facebook/watchman/blob/master/tests/integration/WatchmanInstance.py (this one is using the systemwide watchman instance) $ touch .watchmanconfig $ echo "ignoredir1/" >> .hgignore $ hg commit -Am ignoredir1 adding .hgignore $ echo "ignoredir2/" >> .hgignore $ hg commit -m ignoredir2 $ hg sparse --reset $ hg sparse -I ignoredir1 -I ignoredir2 -I dir1 $ mkdir ignoredir1 ignoredir2 dir1 $ touch ignoredir1/file ignoredir2/file dir1/file Run status twice to compensate for a condition in fsmonitor where it will check ignored files the second time it runs, regardless of previous state (ask @sid0) $ hg status --config extensions.fsmonitor= ? dir1/file $ hg status --config extensions.fsmonitor= ? dir1/file Test that fsmonitor ignore hash check updates when .hgignore changes $ hg up -q ".^" $ hg status --config extensions.fsmonitor= ? dir1/file ? ignoredir2/file