Mercurial > hg
view contrib/catapipe.py @ 41247:a89b20a49c13
rust-cpython: using MissingAncestors from Python code
As precedently done with LazyAncestors on cpython.rs, we test for the
presence of the 'rustext' module.
incrementalmissingrevs() has two callers within the Mercurial core:
`setdiscovery.partialdiscovery` and the `only()` revset.
This move shows a significant discovery performance improvement
in cases where the baseline is slow: using perfdiscovery on the PyPy
repos, prepared with `contrib/discovery-helper <repo> 50 100`, we
get averaged medians of 403ms with the Rust version vs 742ms without
(about 45% better).
But there are still indications that performance can be worse in cases
the baseline is fast, possibly due to the conversion from Python to
Rust and back becoming the bottleneck. We could measure this on
mozilla-central in cases were the delta is just a few changesets.
This requires confirmation, but if that's the reason, then an
upcoming `partialdiscovery` fully in Rust should solve the problem.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5551
author | Georges Racinet <georges.racinet@octobus.net> |
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date | Fri, 30 Nov 2018 14:35:57 +0100 |
parents | c311424ea579 |
children | ff562d711919 |
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#!/usr/bin/env python3 # # Copyright 2018 Google LLC. # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. """Tool read primitive events from a pipe to produce a catapult trace. Usage: Terminal 1: $ catapipe.py /tmp/mypipe /tmp/trace.json Terminal 2: $ HGCATAPULTSERVERPIPE=/tmp/mypipe hg root <ctrl-c catapipe.py in Terminal 1> $ catapult/tracing/bin/trace2html /tmp/trace.json # produce /tmp/trace.html <open trace.html in your browser of choice; the WASD keys are very useful> (catapult is located at https://github.com/catapult-project/catapult) For now the event stream supports START $SESSIONID ... and END $SESSIONID ... events. Everything after the SESSIONID (which must not contain spaces) is used as a label for the event. Events are timestamped as of when they arrive in this process and are then used to produce catapult traces that can be loaded in Chrome's about:tracing utility. It's important that the event stream *into* this process stay simple, because we have to emit it from the shell scripts produced by run-tests.py. Typically you'll want to place the path to the named pipe in the HGCATAPULTSERVERPIPE environment variable, which both run-tests and hg understand. To trace *only* run-tests, use HGTESTCATAPULTSERVERPIPE instead. """ from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import argparse import json import os import timeit _TYPEMAP = { 'START': 'B', 'END': 'E', } _threadmap = {} # Timeit already contains the whole logic about which timer to use based on # Python version and OS timer = timeit.default_timer def main(): parser = argparse.ArgumentParser() parser.add_argument('pipe', type=str, nargs=1, help='Path of named pipe to create and listen on.') parser.add_argument('output', default='trace.json', type=str, nargs='?', help='Path of json file to create where the traces ' 'will be stored.') parser.add_argument('--debug', default=False, action='store_true', help='Print useful debug messages') args = parser.parse_args() fn = args.pipe[0] os.mkfifo(fn) try: with open(fn) as f, open(args.output, 'w') as out: out.write('[\n') start = timer() while True: ev = f.readline().strip() if not ev: continue now = timer() if args.debug: print(ev) verb, session, label = ev.split(' ', 2) if session not in _threadmap: _threadmap[session] = len(_threadmap) pid = _threadmap[session] ts_micros = (now - start) * 1000000 out.write(json.dumps( { "name": label, "cat": "misc", "ph": _TYPEMAP[verb], "ts": ts_micros, "pid": pid, "tid": 1, "args": {} })) out.write(',\n') finally: os.unlink(fn) if __name__ == '__main__': main()