hgweb: move some config options to requestcontext
Various config options from the repository were stored on the
hgweb instance. While unlikely, there could be race conditions between
a new request updating these values and an in-flight request seeing both
old and new values, leading to weird results.
We move some of options/attributes from hgweb to requestcontext.
As part of this, we establish config* helpers on requestcontext. As
part of the move, we changed int() casts to configint() calls. The
int() usage likely predates the existence of configint().
We also removed config option updating from once every refresh to every
request. I don't believe obtaining config options is expensive enough to
warrant only doing when the repository has changed.
The excessive use of object.__setattr__ is unfortunate. But it will
eventually disappear once the proxy is no longer necessary.
# worker.py - master-slave parallelism support
#
# Copyright 2013 Facebook, Inc.
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
from __future__ import absolute_import
import errno
import multiprocessing
import os
import signal
import sys
import threading
from .i18n import _
from . import util
def countcpus():
'''try to count the number of CPUs on the system'''
try:
return multiprocessing.cpu_count()
except NotImplementedError:
return 1
def _numworkers(ui):
s = ui.config('worker', 'numcpus')
if s:
try:
n = int(s)
if n >= 1:
return n
except ValueError:
raise util.Abort(_('number of cpus must be an integer'))
return min(max(countcpus(), 4), 32)
if os.name == 'posix':
_startupcost = 0.01
else:
_startupcost = 1e30
def worthwhile(ui, costperop, nops):
'''try to determine whether the benefit of multiple processes can
outweigh the cost of starting them'''
linear = costperop * nops
workers = _numworkers(ui)
benefit = linear - (_startupcost * workers + linear / workers)
return benefit >= 0.15
def worker(ui, costperarg, func, staticargs, args):
'''run a function, possibly in parallel in multiple worker
processes.
returns a progress iterator
costperarg - cost of a single task
func - function to run
staticargs - arguments to pass to every invocation of the function
args - arguments to split into chunks, to pass to individual
workers
'''
if worthwhile(ui, costperarg, len(args)):
return _platformworker(ui, func, staticargs, args)
return func(*staticargs + (args,))
def _posixworker(ui, func, staticargs, args):
rfd, wfd = os.pipe()
workers = _numworkers(ui)
oldhandler = signal.getsignal(signal.SIGINT)
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, signal.SIG_IGN)
pids, problem = [], [0]
for pargs in partition(args, workers):
pid = os.fork()
if pid == 0:
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, oldhandler)
try:
os.close(rfd)
for i, item in func(*(staticargs + (pargs,))):
os.write(wfd, '%d %s\n' % (i, item))
os._exit(0)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
os._exit(255)
# other exceptions are allowed to propagate, we rely
# on lock.py's pid checks to avoid release callbacks
pids.append(pid)
pids.reverse()
os.close(wfd)
fp = os.fdopen(rfd, 'rb', 0)
def killworkers():
# if one worker bails, there's no good reason to wait for the rest
for p in pids:
try:
os.kill(p, signal.SIGTERM)
except OSError as err:
if err.errno != errno.ESRCH:
raise
def waitforworkers():
for _pid in pids:
st = _exitstatus(os.wait()[1])
if st and not problem[0]:
problem[0] = st
killworkers()
t = threading.Thread(target=waitforworkers)
t.start()
def cleanup():
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, oldhandler)
t.join()
status = problem[0]
if status:
if status < 0:
os.kill(os.getpid(), -status)
sys.exit(status)
try:
for line in fp:
l = line.split(' ', 1)
yield int(l[0]), l[1][:-1]
except: # re-raises
killworkers()
cleanup()
raise
cleanup()
def _posixexitstatus(code):
'''convert a posix exit status into the same form returned by
os.spawnv
returns None if the process was stopped instead of exiting'''
if os.WIFEXITED(code):
return os.WEXITSTATUS(code)
elif os.WIFSIGNALED(code):
return -os.WTERMSIG(code)
if os.name != 'nt':
_platformworker = _posixworker
_exitstatus = _posixexitstatus
def partition(lst, nslices):
'''partition a list into N slices of equal size'''
n = len(lst)
chunk, slop = n / nslices, n % nslices
end = 0
for i in xrange(nslices):
start = end
end = start + chunk
if slop:
end += 1
slop -= 1
yield lst[start:end]