commit: improve the files field of changelog for merges
Currently, the files list of merge commits repeats all the deletions
(either actual deletions, or files that got renamed) that happened
between base and p2 of the merge. If p2 is the main branch, the list
can easily be much bigger than the change being merged.
This results in various problems worth improving:
- changelog is bigger than necessary
- `hg log directory` lists many unrelated merge commits, and `hg log
-v -r commit` frequently fills multiple screens worth of files
- it possibly slows down adjustlinkrev, by forcing it to read more
manifests, and that function can certainly be a bottleneck
- the server side of pulls can waste a lot of time simply opening the
filelogs for pointless files (the constant factors for opening even
a tiny filelog is apparently pretty bad)
So stop listing such files as described in the code. Impacted merge
commits and their descendants get a different hash than they would
have without this. This doesn't seem problematic, except for
convert. The previous commit helped with that in the hg->hg case (but
if you do svn->hg twice from scratch, hashes can still change).
The rest of the description is numbers. I don't have much to report,
because recreating the files list of existing repositories is not
easy:
- debugupgradeformat and bundle/unbundle don't recreate the list
- export/import tends to choke quickly applying patches or on
description that contain diffs,
- merge commits from the convert extension don't have the right files
list for reasons orthogonal to the current commit
- replaying the merge with hg update/hg merge/hg revert --all/hg
commit can end up failing in hg revert
- I wasn't sure that using debugsetparents + debugrebuilddirstate
would really build the right thing
I measured commit time before and after this change, in a case with no
files filtered out, several files filtered out (no difference) and 5k
files filtered out (+1% time).
Recreating the 100 more recent merges in a private repo, the
concatenated uncompressed files lists goes from 1.12MB to
0.52MB. Excluding 3 merges that are not representative, then the size
goes from 570k to 15k.
I converted part of mozilla-central, and observed file list shrinking
quite a bit too, starting at the very first merge,
733641d9feaf, going
from 550 files to 10 files (although they have relatively few merges,
so they probably wouldn't care).
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6613
# demandimportpy3 - global demand-loading of modules for Mercurial
#
# Copyright 2017 Facebook Inc.
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
"""Lazy loading for Python 3.6 and above.
This uses the new importlib finder/loader functionality available in Python 3.5
and up. The code reuses most of the mechanics implemented inside importlib.util,
but with a few additions:
* Allow excluding certain modules from lazy imports.
* Expose an interface that's substantially the same as demandimport for
Python 2.
This also has some limitations compared to the Python 2 implementation:
* Much of the logic is per-package, not per-module, so any packages loaded
before demandimport is enabled will not be lazily imported in the future. In
practice, we only expect builtins to be loaded before demandimport is
enabled.
"""
# This line is unnecessary, but it satisfies test-check-py3-compat.t.
from __future__ import absolute_import
import contextlib
import importlib.abc
import importlib.machinery
import importlib.util
import sys
from . import tracing
_deactivated = False
class _lazyloaderex(importlib.util.LazyLoader):
"""This is a LazyLoader except it also follows the _deactivated global and
the ignore list.
"""
def exec_module(self, module):
"""Make the module load lazily."""
with tracing.log('demandimport %s', module):
if _deactivated or module.__name__ in ignores:
self.loader.exec_module(module)
else:
super().exec_module(module)
# This is 3.6+ because with Python 3.5 it isn't possible to lazily load
# extensions. See the discussion in https://bugs.python.org/issue26186 for more.
_extensions_loader = _lazyloaderex.factory(
importlib.machinery.ExtensionFileLoader)
_bytecode_loader = _lazyloaderex.factory(
importlib.machinery.SourcelessFileLoader)
_source_loader = _lazyloaderex.factory(importlib.machinery.SourceFileLoader)
def _makefinder(path):
return importlib.machinery.FileFinder(
path,
# This is the order in which loaders are passed in in core Python.
(_extensions_loader, importlib.machinery.EXTENSION_SUFFIXES),
(_source_loader, importlib.machinery.SOURCE_SUFFIXES),
(_bytecode_loader, importlib.machinery.BYTECODE_SUFFIXES),
)
ignores = set()
def init(ignoreset):
global ignores
ignores = ignoreset
def isenabled():
return _makefinder in sys.path_hooks and not _deactivated
def disable():
try:
while True:
sys.path_hooks.remove(_makefinder)
except ValueError:
pass
def enable():
sys.path_hooks.insert(0, _makefinder)
@contextlib.contextmanager
def deactivated():
# This implementation is a bit different from Python 2's. Python 3
# maintains a per-package finder cache in sys.path_importer_cache (see
# PEP 302). This means that we can't just call disable + enable.
# If we do that, in situations like:
#
# demandimport.enable()
# ...
# from foo.bar import mod1
# with demandimport.deactivated():
# from foo.bar import mod2
#
# mod2 will be imported lazily. (The converse also holds -- whatever finder
# first gets cached will be used.)
#
# Instead, have a global flag the LazyLoader can use.
global _deactivated
demandenabled = isenabled()
if demandenabled:
_deactivated = True
try:
yield
finally:
if demandenabled:
_deactivated = False