obsolete: order of magnitude speedup in _computebumpedset
Reminder: a changeset is said "bumped" if it tries to obsolete a immutable
changeset.
The previous algorithm for computing bumped changeset was:
1) Get all public changesets
2) Find all they successors
3) Search for stuff that are eligible for being "bumped"
(mutable and non obsolete)
The entry size of this algorithm is `O(len(public))` which is mostly the same as
`O(len(repo))`. Even this this approach mean fewer obsolescence marker are
traveled, this is not very scalable.
The new algorithm is:
1) For each potential bumped changesets (non obsolete mutable)
2) iterate over precursors
3) if a precursors is public. changeset is bumped
We travel more obsolescence marker, but the entry size is much smaller since
the amount of potential bumped should remains mostly stable with time `O(1)`.
On some confidential gigantic repo this move bumped computation from 15.19s to
0.46s (×33 speedup…). On "smaller" repo (mercurial, cubicweb's review) no
significant gain were seen. The additional traversal of obsolescence marker is
probably probably counter balance the advantage of it.
Other optimisation could be done in the future (eg: sharing precursors cache
for divergence detection)
$ "$TESTDIR/hghave" killdaemons || exit 80
= Test the known() protocol function =
Create a test repository:
$ hg init repo
$ cd repo
$ touch a ; hg add a ; hg ci -ma
$ touch b ; hg add b ; hg ci -mb
$ touch c ; hg add c ; hg ci -mc
$ hg log --template '{node}\n'
991a3460af53952d10ec8a295d3d2cc2e5fa9690
0e067c57feba1a5694ca4844f05588bb1bf82342
3903775176ed42b1458a6281db4a0ccf4d9f287a
$ cd ..
Test locally:
$ hg debugknown repo 991a3460af53952d10ec8a295d3d2cc2e5fa9690 0e067c57feba1a5694ca4844f05588bb1bf82342 3903775176ed42b1458a6281db4a0ccf4d9f287a
111
$ hg debugknown repo 000a3460af53952d10ec8a295d3d2cc2e5fa9690 0e067c57feba1a5694ca4844f05588bb1bf82342 0003775176ed42b1458a6281db4a0ccf4d9f287a
010
$ hg debugknown repo
Test via HTTP:
$ hg serve -R repo -p $HGPORT -d --pid-file=hg.pid -E error.log -A access.log
$ cat hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS
$ hg debugknown http://localhost:$HGPORT/ 991a3460af53952d10ec8a295d3d2cc2e5fa9690 0e067c57feba1a5694ca4844f05588bb1bf82342 3903775176ed42b1458a6281db4a0ccf4d9f287a
111
$ hg debugknown http://localhost:$HGPORT/ 000a3460af53952d10ec8a295d3d2cc2e5fa9690 0e067c57feba1a5694ca4844f05588bb1bf82342 0003775176ed42b1458a6281db4a0ccf4d9f287a
010
$ hg debugknown http://localhost:$HGPORT/
$ cat error.log
$ "$TESTDIR/killdaemons.py" $DAEMON_PIDS