revsetbenchmarks: allow running multiple variants per revset
The current benchmarks were only testing the whole iteration. This is suboptimal
because some changes are meaningful for things like first result, minimum or
sorting.
We introduce a "variants" feature that let you systematically add some variants
to all revsets tested.
A typical variants value would be 'plain,min,last,sort'. When testing 'all()' it
will also provide testing for:
- all()
- min(all())
- last(all())
- sort(sort)
and output:
plain min last sort
0) 0.034568 0.037857 0.000074 0.034238
1) 0.011358 32% 0.020181 53% 0.000080 108% 0.011405 33%
Using revsets (who hit the API) instead of the internal API add some overhead,
but the overhead should be the same everywhere so it still allow comparison.
This is is more simple to implement and allows comparison with older versions
who do not have the same API.
$ hg init t
$ cd t
$ echo 1 > a
$ hg ci -qAm "first"
$ hg cp a b
$ hg mv a c
$ echo 2 >> b
$ echo 2 >> c
$ hg ci -qAm "second"
$ hg co -C 0
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 2 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ echo 0 > a
$ echo 1 >> a
$ hg ci -qAm "other"
$ hg merge --debug
searching for copies back to rev 1
unmatched files in other:
b
c
all copies found (* = to merge, ! = divergent, % = renamed and deleted):
src: 'a' -> dst: 'b' *
src: 'a' -> dst: 'c' *
checking for directory renames
resolving manifests
branchmerge: True, force: False, partial: False
ancestor: b8bf91eeebbc, local: add3f11052fa+, remote: 17c05bb7fcb6
preserving a for resolve of b
preserving a for resolve of c
removing a
b: remote moved from a -> m
picked tool 'internal:merge' for b (binary False symlink False)
merging a and b to b
my b@add3f11052fa+ other b@17c05bb7fcb6 ancestor a@b8bf91eeebbc
premerge successful
c: remote moved from a -> m
picked tool 'internal:merge' for c (binary False symlink False)
merging a and c to c
my c@add3f11052fa+ other c@17c05bb7fcb6 ancestor a@b8bf91eeebbc
premerge successful
0 files updated, 2 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
(branch merge, don't forget to commit)
file b
$ cat b
0
1
2
file c
$ cat c
0
1
2
$ cd ..