view tests/test-narrow-commit.t @ 49777:e1953a34c110

bundle: emit full snapshot as is, without doing a redelta With the new `forced` delta-reused policy, it become important to be able to send full snapshot where full snapshot are needed. Otherwise, the fallback delta will simply be used on the client sideā€¦ creating monstrous delta chain, since revision that are meant as a reset of delta-chain chain becoming too complex are simply adding a new full delta-tree on the leaf of another one. In the `non-forced` cases, client process full snapshot from the bundle differently from deltas, so client will still try to convert the full snapshot into a delta if possible. So this will no lead to pathological storage explosion. I have considered making this configurable, but the impact seems limited enough that it does not seems to be worth it. Especially with the current sparse-revlog format that use "delta-tree" with multiple level snapshots, full snapshot are much less frequent and not that different from other intermediate snapshot that we are already sending over the wire anyway. CPU wise, this will help the bundling side a little as it will not need to reconstruct revisions and compute deltas. The unbundling side might save a tiny amount of CPU as it won't need to reconstruct the delta-base to reconstruct the revision full text. This only slightly visible in some of the benchmarks. And have no real impact on most of them. ### data-env-vars.name = pypy-2018-08-01-zstd-sparse-revlog # benchmark.name = perf-bundle # benchmark.variants.revs = last-40000 before: 11.467186 seconds just-emit-full: 11.190576 seconds (-2.41%) with-pull-force: 11.041091 seconds (-3.72%) # benchmark.name = perf-unbundle # benchmark.variants.revs = last-40000 before: 16.744862 just-emit-full:: 16.561036 seconds (-1.10%) with-pull-force: 16.389344 seconds (-2.12%) # benchmark.name = pull # benchmark.variants.revs = last-40000 before: 26.870569 just-emit-full: 26.391188 seconds (-1.78%) with-pull-force: 25.633184 seconds (-4.60%) Space wise (so network-wise) the impact is fairly small. When taking compression into account. Below are tests the size of `hg bundle --all` for a handful of benchmark repositories (with bzip, zstd compression and without it) This show a small increase in the bundle size, but nothing really significant except maybe for mozilla-try (+12%) that nobody really pulls large chunk of anyway. Mozilla-try is also the repository that benefit the most for not having to recompute deltas client size. ### mercurial: bzip-before: 26 406 342 bytes bzip-after: 26 691 543 bytes +1.08% zstd-before: 27 918 645 bytes zstd-after: 28 075 896 bytes +0.56% none-before: 98 675 601 bytes none-after: 100 411 237 bytes +1.76% ### pypy bzip-before: 201 295 752 bytes bzip-after: 209 780 282 bytes +4.21% zstd-before: 202 974 795 bytes zstd-after: 205 165 780 bytes +1.08% none-before: 871 070 261 bytes none-after: 993 595 057 bytes +14.07% ### netbeans bzip-before: 601 314 330 bytes bzip-after: 614 246 241 bytes +2.15% zstd-before: 604 745 136 bytes zstd-after: 615 497 705 bytes +1.78% none-before: 3 338 238 571 bytes none-after: 3 439 422 535 bytes +3.03% ### mozilla-central bzip-before: 1 493 006 921 bytes bzip-after: 1 549 650 570 bytes +3.79% zstd-before: 1 481 910 102 bytes zstd-after: 1 513 052 415 bytes +2.10% none-before: 6 535 929 910 bytes none-after: 7 010 191 342 bytes +7.26% ### mozilla-try bzip-before: 6 583 425 999 bytes bzip-after: 7 423 536 928 bytes +12.76% zstd-before: 6 021 009 212 bytes zstd-after: 6 674 922 420 bytes +10.86% none-before: 22 954 739 558 bytes none-after: 26 013 854 771 bytes +13.32%
author Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net>
date Wed, 07 Dec 2022 20:12:23 +0100
parents 5b9de38a0356
children
line wrap: on
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#testcases flat tree

  $ . "$TESTDIR/narrow-library.sh"

#if tree
  $ cat << EOF >> $HGRCPATH
  > [experimental]
  > treemanifest = 1
  > EOF
#endif

create full repo

  $ hg init master
  $ cd master

  $ mkdir inside
  $ echo inside > inside/f1
  $ mkdir outside
  $ echo outside > outside/f1
  $ hg ci -Aqm 'initial'

  $ echo modified > inside/f1
  $ hg ci -qm 'modify inside'

  $ echo modified > outside/f1
  $ hg ci -qm 'modify outside'

  $ cd ..

(The lfs extension does nothing here, but this test ensures that its hook that
determines whether to add the lfs requirement, respects the narrow boundaries.)

  $ hg --config extensions.lfs= clone --narrow ssh://user@dummy/master narrow \
  >    --include inside
  requesting all changes
  adding changesets
  adding manifests
  adding file changes
  added 3 changesets with 2 changes to 1 files
  new changesets *:* (glob)
  updating to branch default
  1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ cd narrow

  $ hg update -q 0

Can not modify dirstate outside

  $ mkdir outside
  $ touch outside/f1
  $ hg debugwalk -v -I 'relglob:f1'
  * matcher:
  <includematcher includes='(?:|.*/)f1(?:/|$)'>
  f  inside/f1  inside/f1
  $ hg add .
  $ hg add outside/f1
  abort: cannot track 'outside/f1' - it is outside the narrow clone
  [255]
  $ touch outside/f3
  $ hg add outside/f3
  abort: cannot track 'outside/f3' - it is outside the narrow clone
  [255]

But adding a truly excluded file shouldn't count

  $ hg add outside/f3 -X outside/f3

  $ rm -r outside

Can modify dirstate inside

  $ echo modified > inside/f1
  $ touch inside/f3
  $ hg add inside/f3
  $ hg status
  M inside/f1
  A inside/f3
  $ hg revert -qC .
  $ rm inside/f3

Can commit changes inside. Leaves outside unchanged.

  $ hg update -q 'desc("initial")'
  $ echo modified2 > inside/f1
  $ hg manifest --debug
  4d6a634d5ba06331a60c29ee0db8412490a54fcd 644   inside/f1
  7fb3bb6356d28d4dc352c5ba52d7350a81b6bd46 644   outside/f1 (flat !)
  d0f2f706468ab0e8bec7af87446835fb1b13511b 755 d outside/ (tree !)
  $ hg commit -m 'modify inside/f1'
  created new head
  $ hg files -r .
  inside/f1
  $ hg manifest --debug
  3f4197b4a11b9016e77ebc47fe566944885fd11b 644   inside/f1
  7fb3bb6356d28d4dc352c5ba52d7350a81b6bd46 644   outside/f1 (flat !)
  d0f2f706468ab0e8bec7af87446835fb1b13511b 755 d outside/ (tree !)
Some filesystems (notably FAT/exFAT only store timestamps with 2
seconds of precision, so by sleeping for 3 seconds, we can ensure that
the timestamps of files stored by dirstate will appear older than the
dirstate file, and therefore we'll be able to get stable output from
debugdirstate. If we don't do this, the test can be slightly flaky.
  $ sleep 3
  $ hg status
  $ hg debugdirstate --no-dates
  n 644         10 set                 inside/f1

Can commit empty files

  $ touch inside/c; hg add inside/c; hg commit -qm _; hg verify -q
  $ hg cat -r . inside/c