Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-extensions-wrapfunction.py @ 35012:d80380ba8e7d
changegroup: use any node, not min(), in treemanifest's generatemanifests
This is fixing quadratic behavior, which is probably not noticeable in the
common case, but if a very large directory gets added here, it can get pretty
bad. This was noticed because we had some pushes that spent >25s in changegroup
generation calling min() here, according to profiling.
The original reasoning for min() being used in 829d369fc5a8 was that, at that
point in the series, we were adding almost everything to tmfnodes during the
first iteration through the loop , so we needed to avoid sending child
directories before parents. Later changes made it so that the child directories
were added only when we visited the parent directory (not all of them on the
first iteration), so this is no longer necessary - there won't be any child
directories in tmfnodes before the parents have been sent.
This does mean that the manifests are now exchanged unordered, whereas
previously we would essentially do [a, b, b/c, b/c/d, e], we now can send a, b,
and e in any order; b/c must still follow b, and b/c/d must still follow b/c.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1351
author | Kyle Lippincott <spectral@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 08 Nov 2017 18:24:43 -0800 |
parents | 82bd4c5a81e5 |
children | ac865f020b99 |
line wrap: on
line source
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function from mercurial import extensions def genwrapper(x): def f(orig, *args, **kwds): return [x] + orig(*args, **kwds) f.x = x return f def getid(wrapper): return getattr(wrapper, 'x', '-') wrappers = [genwrapper(i) for i in range(5)] class dummyclass(object): def getstack(self): return ['orig'] dummy = dummyclass() def batchwrap(wrappers): for w in wrappers: extensions.wrapfunction(dummy, 'getstack', w) print('wrap %d: %s' % (getid(w), dummy.getstack())) def batchunwrap(wrappers): for w in wrappers: result = None try: result = extensions.unwrapfunction(dummy, 'getstack', w) msg = str(dummy.getstack()) except (ValueError, IndexError) as e: msg = e.__class__.__name__ print('unwrap %s: %s: %s' % (getid(w), getid(result), msg)) batchwrap(wrappers + [wrappers[0]]) batchunwrap([(wrappers[i] if i >= 0 else None) for i in [3, None, 0, 4, 0, 2, 1, None]]) wrap0 = extensions.wrappedfunction(dummy, 'getstack', wrappers[0]) wrap1 = extensions.wrappedfunction(dummy, 'getstack', wrappers[1]) # Use them in a different order from how they were created to check that # the wrapping happens in __enter__, not in __init__ print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) with wrap1: print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) with wrap0: print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) # Bad programmer forgets to unwrap the function, but the context # managers still unwrap their wrappings. extensions.wrapfunction(dummy, 'getstack', wrappers[2]) print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) # Wrap callable object which has no __name__ class callableobj(object): def __call__(self): return ['orig'] dummy.cobj = callableobj() extensions.wrapfunction(dummy, 'cobj', wrappers[0]) print('wrap callable object', dummy.cobj())