Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-purge.t @ 30764:e75463e3179f
protocol: send application/mercurial-0.2 responses to capable clients
With this commit, the HTTP transport now parses the X-HgProto-<N>
header to determine what media type and compression engine to use for
responses. So far, we only compress responses that are already being
compressed with zlib today (stream response types to specific
commands). We can expand things to cover additional response types
later.
The practical side-effect of this commit is that non-zlib compression
engines will be used if both ends support them. This means if both
ends have zstd support, zstd - not zlib - will be used to compress
data!
When cloning the mozilla-unified repository between a local HTTP
server and client, the benefits of non-zlib compression are quite
noticeable:
engine server CPU (s) client CPU (s) bundle size
zlib (l=6) 174.1 283.2 1,148,547,026
zstd (l=1) 99.2 267.3 1,127,513,841
zstd (l=3) 103.1 266.9 1,018,861,363
zstd (l=7) 128.3 269.7 919,190,278
zstd (l=10) 162.0 - 894,547,179
none 95.3 277.2 4,097,566,064
The default zstd compression level is 3. So if you deploy zstd
capable Mercurial to your clients and servers and CPU time on
your server is dominated by "getbundle" requests (clients cloning
and pulling) - and my experience at Mozilla tells me this is often
the case - this commit could drastically reduce your server-side
CPU usage *and* save on bandwidth costs!
Another benefit of this change is that server operators can install
*any* compression engine. While it isn't enabled by default, the
"none" compression engine can now be used to disable wire protocol
compression completely. Previously, commands like "getbundle" always
zlib compressed output, adding considerable overhead to generating
responses. If you are on a high speed network and your server is under
high load, it might be advantageous to trade bandwidth for CPU.
Although, zstd at level 1 doesn't use that much CPU, so I'm not
convinced that disabling compression wholesale is worthwhile. And, my
data seems to indicate a slow down on the client without compression.
I suspect this is due to a lack of buffering resulting in an increase
in socket read() calls and/or the fact we're transferring an extra 3 GB
of data (parsing HTTP chunked transfer and processing extra TCP packets
can add up). This is definitely worth investigating and optimizing. But
since the "none" compressor isn't enabled by default, I'm inclined to
punt on this issue.
This commit introduces tons of tests. Some of these should arguably
have been implemented on previous commits. But it was difficult to
test without the server functionality in place.
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 24 Dec 2016 15:29:32 -0700 |
parents | 8127b9e798b1 |
children | 8e6f4939a69a |
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$ cat <<EOF >> $HGRCPATH > [extensions] > purge = > EOF init $ hg init t $ cd t setup $ echo r1 > r1 $ hg ci -qAmr1 -d'0 0' $ mkdir directory $ echo r2 > directory/r2 $ hg ci -qAmr2 -d'1 0' $ echo 'ignored' > .hgignore $ hg ci -qAmr3 -d'2 0' delete an empty directory $ mkdir empty_dir $ hg purge -p -v empty_dir $ hg purge -v removing directory empty_dir $ ls directory r1 delete an untracked directory $ mkdir untracked_dir $ touch untracked_dir/untracked_file1 $ touch untracked_dir/untracked_file2 $ hg purge -p untracked_dir/untracked_file1 untracked_dir/untracked_file2 $ hg purge -v removing file untracked_dir/untracked_file1 removing file untracked_dir/untracked_file2 removing directory untracked_dir $ ls directory r1 delete an untracked file $ touch untracked_file $ touch untracked_file_readonly $ python <<EOF > import os, stat > f= 'untracked_file_readonly' > os.chmod(f, stat.S_IMODE(os.stat(f).st_mode) & ~stat.S_IWRITE) > EOF $ hg purge -p untracked_file untracked_file_readonly $ hg purge -v removing file untracked_file removing file untracked_file_readonly $ ls directory r1 delete an untracked file in a tracked directory $ touch directory/untracked_file $ hg purge -p directory/untracked_file $ hg purge -v removing file directory/untracked_file $ ls directory r1 delete nested directories $ mkdir -p untracked_directory/nested_directory $ hg purge -p untracked_directory/nested_directory $ hg purge -v removing directory untracked_directory/nested_directory removing directory untracked_directory $ ls directory r1 delete nested directories from a subdir $ mkdir -p untracked_directory/nested_directory $ cd directory $ hg purge -p untracked_directory/nested_directory $ hg purge -v removing directory untracked_directory/nested_directory removing directory untracked_directory $ cd .. $ ls directory r1 delete only part of the tree $ mkdir -p untracked_directory/nested_directory $ touch directory/untracked_file $ cd directory $ hg purge -p ../untracked_directory untracked_directory/nested_directory $ hg purge -v ../untracked_directory removing directory untracked_directory/nested_directory removing directory untracked_directory $ cd .. $ ls directory r1 $ ls directory/untracked_file directory/untracked_file $ rm directory/untracked_file skip ignored files if --all not specified $ touch ignored $ hg purge -p $ hg purge -v $ ls directory ignored r1 $ hg purge -p --all ignored $ hg purge -v --all removing file ignored $ ls directory r1 abort with missing files until we support name mangling filesystems $ touch untracked_file $ rm r1 hide error messages to avoid changing the output when the text changes $ hg purge -p 2> /dev/null untracked_file $ hg st ! r1 ? untracked_file $ hg purge -p untracked_file $ hg purge -v 2> /dev/null removing file untracked_file $ hg st ! r1 $ hg purge -v $ hg revert --all --quiet $ hg st -a tracked file in ignored directory (issue621) $ echo directory >> .hgignore $ hg ci -m 'ignore directory' $ touch untracked_file $ hg purge -p untracked_file $ hg purge -v removing file untracked_file skip excluded files $ touch excluded_file $ hg purge -p -X excluded_file $ hg purge -v -X excluded_file $ ls directory excluded_file r1 $ rm excluded_file skip files in excluded dirs $ mkdir excluded_dir $ touch excluded_dir/file $ hg purge -p -X excluded_dir $ hg purge -v -X excluded_dir $ ls directory excluded_dir r1 $ ls excluded_dir file $ rm -R excluded_dir skip excluded empty dirs $ mkdir excluded_dir $ hg purge -p -X excluded_dir $ hg purge -v -X excluded_dir $ ls directory excluded_dir r1 $ rmdir excluded_dir skip patterns $ mkdir .svn $ touch .svn/foo $ mkdir directory/.svn $ touch directory/.svn/foo $ hg purge -p -X .svn -X '*/.svn' $ hg purge -p -X re:.*.svn $ rm -R .svn directory r1 only remove files $ mkdir -p empty_dir dir $ touch untracked_file dir/untracked_file $ hg purge -p --files dir/untracked_file untracked_file $ hg purge -v --files removing file dir/untracked_file removing file untracked_file $ ls dir empty_dir $ ls dir only remove dirs $ mkdir -p empty_dir dir $ touch untracked_file dir/untracked_file $ hg purge -p --dirs empty_dir $ hg purge -v --dirs removing directory empty_dir $ ls dir untracked_file $ ls dir untracked_file remove both files and dirs $ mkdir -p empty_dir dir $ touch untracked_file dir/untracked_file $ hg purge -p --files --dirs dir/untracked_file untracked_file empty_dir $ hg purge -v --files --dirs removing file dir/untracked_file removing file untracked_file removing directory empty_dir removing directory dir $ ls $ cd ..