tests/test-basic.t
author Siddharth Agarwal <sid0@fb.com>
Tue, 31 Mar 2015 19:29:39 -0700
changeset 24560 b38bcf18993c
parent 23388 42ed0780ec4b
child 24751 dc4daf028f9c
permissions -rw-r--r--
dirstate.walk: don't keep track of normalized files in parallel Rev 2bb13f2b778c changed the semantics of the work list to store (normalized, non-normalized) pairs. All the tuple creation and destruction hurts perf: on a large repo on OS X, 'hg status' went from 3.62 seconds to 3.78. It also is unnecessary in most cases: - it is clearly unnecessary on case-sensitive filesystems. - it is also unnecessary when filenames have been read off of disk rather than being supplied by the user. The only case where the non-normalized case is required at all is when the file is unknown. To eliminate most of the perf cost, keep trace of whether the directory needs to be normalized at all with a boolean called 'alreadynormed'. Pay the cost of directory normalization only when necessary. For the above large repo, 'hg status' goes to 3.63 seconds.

Create a repository:

  $ hg config
  defaults.backout=-d "0 0"
  defaults.commit=-d "0 0"
  defaults.shelve=--date "0 0"
  defaults.tag=-d "0 0"
  largefiles.usercache=$TESTTMP/.cache/largefiles (glob)
  ui.slash=True
  ui.interactive=False
  ui.mergemarkers=detailed
  ui.promptecho=True
  $ hg init t
  $ cd t

Make a changeset:

  $ echo a > a
  $ hg add a
  $ hg commit -m test

This command is ancient:

  $ hg history
  changeset:   0:acb14030fe0a
  tag:         tip
  user:        test
  date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
  summary:     test
  

Verify that updating to revision 0 via commands.update() works properly

  $ cat <<EOF > update_to_rev0.py
  > from mercurial import ui, hg, commands
  > myui = ui.ui()
  > repo = hg.repository(myui, path='.')
  > commands.update(myui, repo, rev=0)
  > EOF
  $ hg up null
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ python ./update_to_rev0.py
  1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ hg identify -n
  0


Poke around at hashes:

  $ hg manifest --debug
  b789fdd96dc2f3bd229c1dd8eedf0fc60e2b68e3 644   a

  $ hg cat a
  a

Verify should succeed:

  $ hg verify
  checking changesets
  checking manifests
  crosschecking files in changesets and manifests
  checking files
  1 files, 1 changesets, 1 total revisions

At the end...

  $ cd ..