view hgext/clonebundles.py @ 46582:b0a3ca02d17a

copies-rust: implement PartialEqual manually Now that we know that each (dest, rev) pair has at most a unique CopySource, we can simplify comparison a lot. This "simple" step buy a good share of the previous slowdown back in some case: Repo Case Source-Rev Dest-Rev # of revisions old time new time Difference Factor time per rev --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- mozilla-try x00000_revs_x00000_added_x000_copies 9b2a99adc05e 8e29777b48e6 : 382065 revs, 43.304637 s, 34.443661 s, -8.860976 s, × 0.7954, 90 µs/rev Full benchmark: Repo Case Source-Rev Dest-Rev # of revisions old time new time Difference Factor time per rev --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- mercurial x_revs_x_added_0_copies ad6b123de1c7 39cfcef4f463 : 1 revs, 0.000043 s, 0.000043 s, +0.000000 s, × 1.0000, 43 µs/rev mercurial x_revs_x_added_x_copies 2b1c78674230 0c1d10351869 : 6 revs, 0.000114 s, 0.000117 s, +0.000003 s, × 1.0263, 19 µs/rev mercurial x000_revs_x000_added_x_copies 81f8ff2a9bf2 dd3267698d84 : 1032 revs, 0.004937 s, 0.004892 s, -0.000045 s, × 0.9909, 4 µs/rev pypy x_revs_x_added_0_copies aed021ee8ae8 099ed31b181b : 9 revs, 0.000339 s, 0.000196 s, -0.000143 s, × 0.5782, 21 µs/rev pypy x_revs_x000_added_0_copies 4aa4e1f8e19a 359343b9ac0e : 1 revs, 0.000049 s, 0.000050 s, +0.000001 s, × 1.0204, 50 µs/rev pypy x_revs_x_added_x_copies ac52eb7bbbb0 72e022663155 : 7 revs, 0.000202 s, 0.000117 s, -0.000085 s, × 0.5792, 16 µs/rev pypy x_revs_x00_added_x_copies c3b14617fbd7 ace7255d9a26 : 1 revs, 0.000409 s, 0.6f1f4a s, -0.000087 s, × 0.7873, 322 µs/rev pypy x_revs_x000_added_x000_copies df6f7a526b60 a83dc6a2d56f : 6 revs, 0.011984 s, 0.011949 s, -0.000035 s, × 0.9971, 1991 µs/rev pypy x000_revs_xx00_added_0_copies 89a76aede314 2f22446ff07e : 4785 revs, 0.050820 s, 0.050802 s, -0.000018 s, × 0.9996, 10 µs/rev pypy x000_revs_x000_added_x_copies 8a3b5bfd266e 2c68e87c3efe : 6780 revs, 0.087953 s, 0.088090 s, +0.000137 s, × 1.0016, 12 µs/rev pypy x000_revs_x000_added_x000_copies 89a76aede314 7b3dda341c84 : 5441 revs, 0.062902 s, 0.062079 s, -0.000823 s, × 0.9869, 11 µs/rev pypy x0000_revs_x_added_0_copies d1defd0dc478 c9cb1334cc78 : 43645 revs, 0.679234 s, 0.635337 s, -0.043897 s, × 0.9354, 14 µs/rev pypy x0000_revs_xx000_added_0_copies bf2c629d0071 4ffed77c095c : 2 revs, 0.013095 s, 0.013262 s, +0.000167 s, × 1.0128, 6631 µs/rev pypy x0000_revs_xx000_added_x000_copies 08ea3258278e d9fa043f30c0 : 11316 revs, 0.120910 s, 0.120085 s, -0.000825 s, × 0.9932, 10 µs/rev netbeans x_revs_x_added_0_copies fb0955ffcbcd a01e9239f9e7 : 2 revs, 0.000087 s, 0.000085 s, -0.000002 s, × 0.9770, 42 µs/rev netbeans x_revs_x000_added_0_copies 6f360122949f 20eb231cc7d0 : 2 revs, 0.000107 s, 0.000110 s, +0.000003 s, × 1.0280, 55 µs/rev netbeans x_revs_x_added_x_copies 1ada3faf6fb6 5a39d12eecf4 : 3 revs, 0.000186 s, 0.000177 s, -0.000009 s, × 0.9516, 59 µs/rev netbeans x_revs_x00_added_x_copies 35be93ba1e2c 9eec5e90c05f : 9 revs, 0.000754 s, 0.000743 s, -0.000011 s, × 0.9854, 82 µs/rev netbeans x000_revs_xx00_added_0_copies eac3045b4fdd 51d4ae7f1290 : 1421 revs, 0.010443 s, 0.010168 s, -0.000275 s, × 0.9737, 7 µs/rev netbeans x000_revs_x000_added_x_copies e2063d266acd 6081d72689dc : 1533 revs, 0.015697 s, 0.015946 s, +0.000249 s, × 1.0159, 10 µs/rev netbeans x000_revs_x000_added_x000_copies ff453e9fee32 411350406ec2 : 5750 revs, 0.063528 s, 0.062712 s, -0.000816 s, × 0.9872, 10 µs/rev netbeans x0000_revs_xx000_added_x000_copies 588c2d1ced70 1aad62e59ddd : 66949 revs, 0.545515 s, 0.523832 s, -0.021683 s, × 0.9603, 7 µs/rev mozilla-central x_revs_x_added_0_copies 3697f962bb7b 7015fcdd43a2 : 2 revs, 0.000089 s, 0.000090 s, +0.000001 s, × 1.0112, 45 µs/rev mozilla-central x_revs_x000_added_0_copies dd390860c6c9 40d0c5bed75d : 8 revs, 0.000265 s, 0.000264 s, -0.000001 s, × 0.9962, 33 µs/rev mozilla-central x_revs_x_added_x_copies 8d198483ae3b 14207ffc2b2f : 9 revs, 0.000381 s, 0.000187 s, -0.000194 s, × 0.4908, 20 µs/rev mozilla-central x_revs_x00_added_x_copies 98cbc58cc6bc 446a150332c3 : 7 revs, 0.000672 s, 0.000665 s, -0.000007 s, × 0.9896, 95 µs/rev mozilla-central x_revs_x000_added_x000_copies 3c684b4b8f68 0a5e72d1b479 : 3 revs, 0.003497 s, 0.003556 s, +0.000059 s, × 1.0169, 1185 µs/rev mozilla-central x_revs_x0000_added_x0000_copies effb563bb7e5 c07a39dc4e80 : 6 revs, 0.073204 s, 0.071345 s, -0.001859 s, × 0.9746, 11890 µs/rev mozilla-central x000_revs_xx00_added_0_copies 6100d773079a 04a55431795e : 1593 revs, 0.006482 s, 0.006551 s, +0.000069 s, × 1.0106, 4 µs/rev mozilla-central x000_revs_x000_added_x_copies 9f17a6fc04f9 2d37b966abed : 41 revs, 0.005066 s, 0.005078 s, +0.000012 s, × 1.0024, 123 µs/rev mozilla-central x000_revs_x000_added_x000_copies 7c97034feb78 4407bd0c6330 : 7839 revs, 0.065707 s, 0.065823 s, +0.000116 s, × 1.0018, 8 µs/rev mozilla-central x0000_revs_xx000_added_0_copies 9eec5917337d 67118cc6dcad : 615 revs, 0.026800 s, 0.027050 s, +0.000250 s, × 1.0093, 43 µs/rev mozilla-central x0000_revs_xx000_added_x000_copies f78c615a656c 96a38b690156 : 30263 revs, 0.203856 s, 0.202443 s, -0.001413 s, × 0.9931, 6 µs/rev mozilla-central x00000_revs_x0000_added_x0000_copies 6832ae71433c 4c222a1d9a00 : 153721 revs, 1.293394 s, 1.261583 s, -0.031811 s, × 0.9754, 8 µs/rev mozilla-central x00000_revs_x00000_added_x000_copies 76caed42cf7c 1daa622bbe42 : 204976 revs, 1.698239 s, 1.643869 s, -0.054370 s, × 0.9680, 8 µs/rev mozilla-try x_revs_x_added_0_copies aaf6dde0deb8 9790f499805a : 2 revs, 0.000875 s, 0.000868 s, -0.000007 s, × 0.9920, 434 µs/rev mozilla-try x_revs_x000_added_0_copies d8d0222927b4 5bb8ce8c7450 : 2 revs, 0.000891 s, 0.000887 s, -0.000004 s, × 0.9955, 443 µs/rev mozilla-try x_revs_x_added_x_copies 092fcca11bdb 936255a0384a : 4 revs, 0.000292 s, 0.000168 s, -0.000124 s, × 0.5753, 42 µs/rev mozilla-try x_revs_x00_added_x_copies b53d2fadbdb5 017afae788ec : 2 revs, 0.003939 s, 0.001160 s, -0.002779 s, × 0.2945, 580 µs/rev mozilla-try x_revs_x000_added_x000_copies 20408ad61ce5 6f0ee96e21ad : 1 revs, 0.033027 s, 0.033016 s, -0.000011 s, × 0.9997, 33016 µs/rev mozilla-try x_revs_x0000_added_x0000_copies effb563bb7e5 c07a39dc4e80 : 6 revs, 0.073703 s, 0.073312 s, -0.39ae31 s, × 0.9947, 12218 µs/rev mozilla-try x000_revs_xx00_added_0_copies 6100d773079a 04a55431795e : 1593 revs, 0.006469 s, 0.006485 s, +0.000016 s, × 1.0025, 4 µs/rev mozilla-try x000_revs_x000_added_x_copies 9f17a6fc04f9 2d37b966abed : 41 revs, 0.005278 s, 0.005494 s, +0.000216 s, × 1.0409, 134 µs/rev mozilla-try x000_revs_x000_added_x000_copies 1346fd0130e4 4c65cbdabc1f : 6657 revs, 0.064995 s, 0.064879 s, -0.000116 s, × 0.9982, 9 µs/rev mozilla-try x0000_revs_x_added_0_copies 63519bfd42ee a36a2a865d92 : 40314 revs, 0.301041 s, 0.301469 s, +0.000428 s, × 1.0014, 7 µs/rev mozilla-try x0000_revs_x_added_x_copies 9fe69ff0762d bcabf2a78927 : 38690 revs, 0.285575 s, 0.297113 s, +0.011538 s, × 1.0404, 7 µs/rev mozilla-try x0000_revs_xx000_added_x_copies 156f6e2674f2 4d0f2c178e66 : 8598 revs, 0.085597 s, 0.085890 s, +0.000293 s, × 1.0034, 9 µs/rev mozilla-try x0000_revs_xx000_added_0_copies 9eec5917337d 67118cc6dcad : 615 revs, 0.027118 s, 0.027718 s, +0.000600 s, × 1.0221, 45 µs/rev mozilla-try x0000_revs_xx000_added_x000_copies 89294cd501d9 7ccb2fc7ccb5 : 97052 revs, 2.119204 s, 2.048949 s, -0.070255 s, × 0.9668, 21 µs/rev mozilla-try x0000_revs_x0000_added_x0000_copies e928c65095ed e951f4ad123a : 52031 revs, 0.701479 s, 0.685924 s, -0.015555 s, × 0.9778, 13 µs/rev mozilla-try x00000_revs_x_added_0_copies 6a320851d377 1ebb79acd503 : 363753 revs, 4.482399 s, 4.482891 s, +0.000492 s, × 1.0001, 12 µs/rev mozilla-try x00000_revs_x00000_added_0_copies dc8a3ca7010e d16fde900c9c : 34414 revs, 0.574082 s, 0.577633 s, +0.003551 s, × 1.0062, 16 µs/rev mozilla-try x00000_revs_x_added_x_copies 5173c4b6f97c 95d83ee7242d : 362229 revs, 4.480366 s, 4.397816 s, -0.082550 s, × 0.9816, 12 µs/rev mozilla-try x00000_revs_x000_added_x_copies 9126823d0e9c ca82787bb23c : 359344 revs, 4.369070 s, 4.370538 s, +0.001468 s, × 1.0003, 12 µs/rev mozilla-try x00000_revs_x0000_added_x0000_copies 8d3fafa80d4b eb884023b810 : 192665 revs, 1.592506 s, 1.570439 s, -0.022067 s, × 0.9861, 8 µs/rev mozilla-try x00000_revs_x00000_added_x0000_copies 1b661134e2ca 1ae03d022d6d : 228985 revs, 87.824489 s, 88.388512 s, +0.564023 s, × 1.0064, 386 µs/rev mozilla-try x00000_revs_x00000_added_x000_copies 9b2a99adc05e 8e29777b48e6 : 382065 revs, 43.304637 s, 34.443661 s, -8.860976 s, × 0.7954, 90 µs/rev private : 459513 revs, 33.853687 s, 27.370148 s, -6.483539 s, × 0.8085, 59 µs/rev Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9653
author Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net>
date Wed, 16 Dec 2020 11:11:05 +0100
parents 80f32ec8653a
children 6000f5b25c9b
line wrap: on
line source

# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

"""advertise pre-generated bundles to seed clones

"clonebundles" is a server-side extension used to advertise the existence
of pre-generated, externally hosted bundle files to clients that are
cloning so that cloning can be faster, more reliable, and require less
resources on the server. "pullbundles" is a related feature for sending
pre-generated bundle files to clients as part of pull operations.

Cloning can be a CPU and I/O intensive operation on servers. Traditionally,
the server, in response to a client's request to clone, dynamically generates
a bundle containing the entire repository content and sends it to the client.
There is no caching on the server and the server will have to redundantly
generate the same outgoing bundle in response to each clone request. For
servers with large repositories or with high clone volume, the load from
clones can make scaling the server challenging and costly.

This extension provides server operators the ability to offload
potentially expensive clone load to an external service. Pre-generated
bundles also allow using more CPU intensive compression, reducing the
effective bandwidth requirements.

Here's how clone bundles work:

1. A server operator establishes a mechanism for making bundle files available
   on a hosting service where Mercurial clients can fetch them.
2. A manifest file listing available bundle URLs and some optional metadata
   is added to the Mercurial repository on the server.
3. A client initiates a clone against a clone bundles aware server.
4. The client sees the server is advertising clone bundles and fetches the
   manifest listing available bundles.
5. The client filters and sorts the available bundles based on what it
   supports and prefers.
6. The client downloads and applies an available bundle from the
   server-specified URL.
7. The client reconnects to the original server and performs the equivalent
   of :hg:`pull` to retrieve all repository data not in the bundle. (The
   repository could have been updated between when the bundle was created
   and when the client started the clone.) This may use "pullbundles".

Instead of the server generating full repository bundles for every clone
request, it generates full bundles once and they are subsequently reused to
bootstrap new clones. The server may still transfer data at clone time.
However, this is only data that has been added/changed since the bundle was
created. For large, established repositories, this can reduce server load for
clones to less than 1% of original.

Here's how pullbundles work:

1. A manifest file listing available bundles and describing the revisions
   is added to the Mercurial repository on the server.
2. A new-enough client informs the server that it supports partial pulls
   and initiates a pull.
3. If the server has pull bundles enabled and sees the client advertising
   partial pulls, it checks for a matching pull bundle in the manifest.
   A bundle matches if the format is supported by the client, the client
   has the required revisions already and needs something from the bundle.
4. If there is at least one matching bundle, the server sends it to the client.
5. The client applies the bundle and notices that the server reply was
   incomplete. It initiates another pull.

To work, this extension requires the following of server operators:

* Generating bundle files of repository content (typically periodically,
  such as once per day).
* Clone bundles: A file server that clients have network access to and that
  Python knows how to talk to through its normal URL handling facility
  (typically an HTTP/HTTPS server).
* A process for keeping the bundles manifest in sync with available bundle
  files.

Strictly speaking, using a static file hosting server isn't required: a server
operator could use a dynamic service for retrieving bundle data. However,
static file hosting services are simple and scalable and should be sufficient
for most needs.

Bundle files can be generated with the :hg:`bundle` command. Typically
:hg:`bundle --all` is used to produce a bundle of the entire repository.

:hg:`debugcreatestreamclonebundle` can be used to produce a special
*streaming clonebundle*. These are bundle files that are extremely efficient
to produce and consume (read: fast). However, they are larger than
traditional bundle formats and require that clients support the exact set
of repository data store formats in use by the repository that created them.
Typically, a newer server can serve data that is compatible with older clients.
However, *streaming clone bundles* don't have this guarantee. **Server
operators need to be aware that newer versions of Mercurial may produce
streaming clone bundles incompatible with older Mercurial versions.**

A server operator is responsible for creating a ``.hg/clonebundles.manifest``
file containing the list of available bundle files suitable for seeding
clones. If this file does not exist, the repository will not advertise the
existence of clone bundles when clients connect. For pull bundles,
``.hg/pullbundles.manifest`` is used.

The manifest file contains a newline (\\n) delimited list of entries.

Each line in this file defines an available bundle. Lines have the format:

    <URL> [<key>=<value>[ <key>=<value>]]

That is, a URL followed by an optional, space-delimited list of key=value
pairs describing additional properties of this bundle. Both keys and values
are URI encoded.

For pull bundles, the URL is a path under the ``.hg`` directory of the
repository.

Keys in UPPERCASE are reserved for use by Mercurial and are defined below.
All non-uppercase keys can be used by site installations. An example use
for custom properties is to use the *datacenter* attribute to define which
data center a file is hosted in. Clients could then prefer a server in the
data center closest to them.

The following reserved keys are currently defined:

BUNDLESPEC
   A "bundle specification" string that describes the type of the bundle.

   These are string values that are accepted by the "--type" argument of
   :hg:`bundle`.

   The values are parsed in strict mode, which means they must be of the
   "<compression>-<type>" form. See
   mercurial.exchange.parsebundlespec() for more details.

   :hg:`debugbundle --spec` can be used to print the bundle specification
   string for a bundle file. The output of this command can be used verbatim
   for the value of ``BUNDLESPEC`` (it is already escaped).

   Clients will automatically filter out specifications that are unknown or
   unsupported so they won't attempt to download something that likely won't
   apply.

   The actual value doesn't impact client behavior beyond filtering:
   clients will still sniff the bundle type from the header of downloaded
   files.

   **Use of this key is highly recommended**, as it allows clients to
   easily skip unsupported bundles. If this key is not defined, an old
   client may attempt to apply a bundle that it is incapable of reading.

REQUIRESNI
   Whether Server Name Indication (SNI) is required to connect to the URL.
   SNI allows servers to use multiple certificates on the same IP. It is
   somewhat common in CDNs and other hosting providers. Older Python
   versions do not support SNI. Defining this attribute enables clients
   with older Python versions to filter this entry without experiencing
   an opaque SSL failure at connection time.

   If this is defined, it is important to advertise a non-SNI fallback
   URL or clients running old Python releases may not be able to clone
   with the clonebundles facility.

   Value should be "true".

REQUIREDRAM
   Value specifies expected memory requirements to decode the payload.
   Values can have suffixes for common bytes sizes. e.g. "64MB".

   This key is often used with zstd-compressed bundles using a high
   compression level / window size, which can require 100+ MB of memory
   to decode.

heads
   Used for pull bundles. This contains the ``;`` separated changeset
   hashes of the heads of the bundle content.

bases
   Used for pull bundles. This contains the ``;`` separated changeset
   hashes of the roots of the bundle content. This can be skipped if
   the bundle was created without ``--base``.

Manifests can contain multiple entries. Assuming metadata is defined, clients
will filter entries from the manifest that they don't support. The remaining
entries are optionally sorted by client preferences
(``ui.clonebundleprefers`` config option). The client then attempts
to fetch the bundle at the first URL in the remaining list.

**Errors when downloading a bundle will fail the entire clone operation:
clients do not automatically fall back to a traditional clone.** The reason
for this is that if a server is using clone bundles, it is probably doing so
because the feature is necessary to help it scale. In other words, there
is an assumption that clone load will be offloaded to another service and
that the Mercurial server isn't responsible for serving this clone load.
If that other service experiences issues and clients start mass falling back to
the original Mercurial server, the added clone load could overwhelm the server
due to unexpected load and effectively take it offline. Not having clients
automatically fall back to cloning from the original server mitigates this
scenario.

Because there is no automatic Mercurial server fallback on failure of the
bundle hosting service, it is important for server operators to view the bundle
hosting service as an extension of the Mercurial server in terms of
availability and service level agreements: if the bundle hosting service goes
down, so does the ability for clients to clone. Note: clients will see a
message informing them how to bypass the clone bundles facility when a failure
occurs. So server operators should prepare for some people to follow these
instructions when a failure occurs, thus driving more load to the original
Mercurial server when the bundle hosting service fails.
"""

from __future__ import absolute_import

from mercurial import (
    bundlecaches,
    extensions,
    wireprotov1server,
)

testedwith = b'ships-with-hg-core'


def capabilities(orig, repo, proto):
    caps = orig(repo, proto)

    # Only advertise if a manifest exists. This does add some I/O to requests.
    # But this should be cheaper than a wasted network round trip due to
    # missing file.
    if repo.vfs.exists(bundlecaches.CB_MANIFEST_FILE):
        caps.append(b'clonebundles')

    return caps


def extsetup(ui):
    extensions.wrapfunction(wireprotov1server, b'_capabilities', capabilities)