Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-pull-pull-corruption.t @ 44363:f7459da77f23
nodemap: introduce an option to use mmap to read the nodemap mapping
The performance and memory benefit is much greater if we don't have to copy all
the data in memory for each information. So we introduce an option (on by
default) to read the data using mmap.
This changeset is the last one definition the API for index support nodemap
data. (they have to be able to use the mmaping).
Below are some benchmark comparing the best we currently have in 5.3 with the
final step of this series (using the persistent nodemap implementation in
Rust). The benchmark run `hg perfindex` with various revset and the following
variants:
Before:
* do not use the persistent nodemap
* use the CPython implementation of the index for nodemap
* use mmapping of the changelog index
After:
* use the MixedIndex Rust code, with the NodeTree object for nodemap access
(still in review)
* use the persistent nodemap data from disk
* access the persistent nodemap data through mmap
* use mmapping of the changelog index
The persistent nodemap greatly speed up most operation on very large
repositories. Some of the previously very fast lookup end up a bit slower because
the persistent nodemap has to be setup. However the absolute slowdown is very
small and won't matters in the big picture.
Here are some numbers (in seconds) for the reference copy of mozilla-try:
Revset Before After abs-change speedup
-10000: 0.004622 0.005532 0.000910 × 0.83
-10: 0.000050 0.000132 0.000082 × 0.37
tip 0.000052 0.000085 0.000033 × 0.61
0 + (-10000:) 0.028222 0.005337 -0.022885 × 5.29
0 0.023521 0.000084 -0.023437 × 280.01
(-10000:) + 0 0.235539 0.005308 -0.230231 × 44.37
(-10:) + :9 0.232883 0.000180 -0.232703 ×1293.79
(-10000:) + (:99) 0.238735 0.005358 -0.233377 × 44.55
:99 + (-10000:) 0.317942 0.005593 -0.312349 × 56.84
:9 + (-10:) 0.313372 0.000179 -0.313193 ×1750.68
:9 0.316450 0.000143 -0.316307 ×2212.93
On smaller repositories, the cost of nodemap related operation is not as big, so
the win is much more modest. Yet it helps shaving a handful of millisecond here
and there.
Here are some numbers (in seconds) for the reference copy of mercurial:
Revset Before After abs-change speedup
-10: 0.000065 0.000097 0.000032 × 0.67
tip 0.000063 0.000078 0.000015 × 0.80
0 0.000561 0.000079 -0.000482 × 7.10
-10000: 0.004609 0.003648 -0.000961 × 1.26
0 + (-10000:) 0.005023 0.003715 -0.001307 × 1.35
(-10:) + :9 0.002187 0.000108 -0.002079 ×20.25
(-10000:) + 0 0.006252 0.003716 -0.002536 × 1.68
(-10000:) + (:99) 0.006367 0.003707 -0.002660 × 1.71
:9 + (-10:) 0.003846 0.000110 -0.003736 ×34.96
:9 0.003854 0.000099 -0.003755 ×38.92
:99 + (-10000:) 0.007644 0.003778 -0.003866 × 2.02
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7894
author | Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 11 Feb 2020 11:18:52 +0100 |
parents | f1186c292d03 |
children | 2f2682f40ea0 |
line wrap: on
line source
Corrupt an hg repo with two pulls. create one repo with a long history $ hg init source1 $ cd source1 $ touch foo $ hg add foo $ for i in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10; do > echo $i >> foo > hg ci -m $i > done $ cd .. create one repo with a shorter history $ hg clone -r 0 source1 source2 adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files new changesets 495a0ec48aaf updating to branch default 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ cd source2 $ echo a >> foo $ hg ci -m a $ cd .. create a third repo to pull both other repos into it $ hg init corrupted $ cd corrupted use a hook to make the second pull start while the first one is still running $ echo '[hooks]' >> .hg/hgrc $ echo 'prechangegroup = sleep 5' >> .hg/hgrc start a pull... $ hg pull ../source1 > pull.out 2>&1 & ... and start another pull before the first one has finished $ sleep 1 $ hg pull ../source2 2>/dev/null pulling from ../source2 searching for changes adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files (+1 heads) new changesets ca3c05af513e (run 'hg heads' to see heads, 'hg merge' to merge) $ cat pull.out pulling from ../source1 requesting all changes adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 10 changesets with 10 changes to 1 files new changesets 495a0ec48aaf:1e7b6c812ca8 (run 'hg update' to get a working copy) see the result $ wait $ hg verify checking changesets checking manifests crosschecking files in changesets and manifests checking files checked 11 changesets with 11 changes to 1 files $ cd ..