view hgext/narrow/__init__.py @ 40021:c537144fdbef

wireprotov2: support response caching One of the things I've learned from managing VCS servers over the years is that they are hard to scale. It is well known that some companies have very beefy (read: very expensive) servers to power their VCS needs. It is also known that specialized servers for various VCS exist in order to facilitate scaling servers. (Mercurial is in this boat.) One of the aspects that make a VCS server hard to scale is the high CPU load incurred by constant client clone/pull operations. To alleviate the scaling pain associated with data retrieval operations, I want to integrate caching into the Mercurial wire protocol server as robustly as possible such that servers can aggressively cache responses and defer as much server load as possible. This commit represents the initial implementation of a general caching layer in wire protocol version 2. We define a new interface and behavior for a wire protocol cacher in repository.py. (This is probably where a reviewer should look first to understand what is going on.) The bulk of the added code is in wireprotov2server.py, where we define how a command can opt in to being cached and integrate caching into command dispatching. From a very high-level: * A command can declare itself as cacheable by providing a callable that can be used to derive a cache key. * At dispatch time, if a command is cacheable, we attempt to construct a cacher and use it for serving the request and/or caching the request. * The dispatch layer handles the bulk of the business logic for caching, making cachers mostly "dumb content stores." * The mechanism for invalidating cached entries (one of the harder parts about caching in general) is by varying the cache key when state changes. As such, cachers don't need to be concerned with cache invalidation. Initially, we've hooked up support for caching "manifestdata" and "filedata" commands. These are the simplest to cache, as they should be immutable over time. Caching of commands related to changeset data is a bit harder (because cache validation is impacted by changes to bookmarks, phases, etc). This will be implemented later. (Strictly speaking, censoring a file should invalidate caches. I've added an inline TODO to track this edge case.) To prove it works, this commit implements a test-only extension providing in-memory caching backed by an lrucachedict. A new test showing this extension behaving properly is added. FWIW, the cacher is ~50 lines of code, demonstrating the relative ease with which a cache can be added to a server. While the test cacher is not suitable for production workloads, just for kicks I performed a clone of just the changeset and manifest data for the mozilla-unified repository. With a fully warmed cache (of just the manifest data since changeset data is not cached), server-side CPU usage dropped from ~73s to ~28s. That's pretty significant and demonstrates the potential that response caching has on server scalability! Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4773
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Wed, 26 Sep 2018 17:16:56 -0700
parents 707c3804e607
children e92454e69dc3
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# __init__.py - narrowhg extension
#
# Copyright 2017 Google, Inc.
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
'''create clones which fetch history data for subset of files (EXPERIMENTAL)'''

from __future__ import absolute_import

# Note for extension authors: ONLY specify testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core' for
# extensions which SHIP WITH MERCURIAL. Non-mainline extensions should
# be specifying the version(s) of Mercurial they are tested with, or
# leave the attribute unspecified.
testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core'

from mercurial import (
    localrepo,
    registrar,
    repository,
)

from . import (
    narrowbundle2,
    narrowcommands,
    narrowrepo,
    narrowtemplates,
    narrowwirepeer,
)

configtable = {}
configitem = registrar.configitem(configtable)
# Narrowhg *has* support for serving ellipsis nodes (which are used at
# least by Google's internal server), but that support is pretty
# fragile and has a lot of problems on real-world repositories that
# have complex graph topologies. This could probably be corrected, but
# absent someone needing the full support for ellipsis nodes in
# repositories with merges, it's unlikely this work will get done. As
# of this writining in late 2017, all repositories large enough for
# ellipsis nodes to be a hard requirement also enforce strictly linear
# history for other scaling reasons.
configitem('experimental', 'narrowservebrokenellipses',
           default=False,
           alias=[('narrow', 'serveellipses')],
)

# Export the commands table for Mercurial to see.
cmdtable = narrowcommands.table

def featuresetup(ui, features):
    features.add(repository.NARROW_REQUIREMENT)

def uisetup(ui):
    """Wraps user-facing mercurial commands with narrow-aware versions."""
    localrepo.featuresetupfuncs.add(featuresetup)
    narrowbundle2.setup()
    narrowcommands.setup()
    narrowwirepeer.uisetup()

def reposetup(ui, repo):
    """Wraps local repositories with narrow repo support."""
    if not repo.local():
        return

    if repository.NARROW_REQUIREMENT in repo.requirements:
        narrowrepo.wraprepo(repo)
        narrowwirepeer.reposetup(repo)

templatekeyword = narrowtemplates.templatekeyword
revsetpredicate = narrowtemplates.revsetpredicate