view contrib/hgperf @ 37721:f7673845b167

wireprotov2: decode responses to their expected types Callers of established wire protocol commands expect the response from that command to be decoded into a data structure. It's not very useful if callers get back a stream of bytes and don't know how they should be interpreted - especially since that stream of bytes varies by wire protocol and even the transport within that protocol version. This commit establishes decoding functions for various command responses so callers of those commands get the response type they expect. In theory, this should make the version 2 HTTP peer usable for various operations. But I haven't tested to confirm. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3381
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sat, 14 Apr 2018 11:49:06 -0700
parents 163fa0aea71e
children 99e231afc29c
line wrap: on
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#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# hgperf - measure performance of Mercurial commands
#
# Copyright 2014 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

'''measure performance of Mercurial commands

Using ``hgperf`` instead of ``hg`` measures performance of the target
Mercurial command. For example, the execution below measures
performance of :hg:`heads --topo`::

    $ hgperf heads --topo

All command output via ``ui`` is suppressed, and just measurement
result is displayed: see also "perf" extension in "contrib".

Costs of processing before dispatching to the command function like
below are not measured::

    - parsing command line (e.g. option validity check)
    - reading configuration files in

But ``pre-`` and ``post-`` hook invocation for the target command is
measured, even though these are invoked before or after dispatching to
the command function, because these may be required to repeat
execution of the target command correctly.
'''

import os
import sys

libdir = '@LIBDIR@'

if libdir != '@' 'LIBDIR' '@':
    if not os.path.isabs(libdir):
        libdir = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__)),
                              libdir)
        libdir = os.path.abspath(libdir)
    sys.path.insert(0, libdir)

# enable importing on demand to reduce startup time
try:
    from mercurial import demandimport; demandimport.enable()
except ImportError:
    import sys
    sys.stderr.write("abort: couldn't find mercurial libraries in [%s]\n" %
                     ' '.join(sys.path))
    sys.stderr.write("(check your install and PYTHONPATH)\n")
    sys.exit(-1)

from mercurial import (
    dispatch,
    util,
)

def timer(func, title=None):
    results = []
    begin = util.timer()
    count = 0
    while True:
        ostart = os.times()
        cstart = util.timer()
        r = func()
        cstop = util.timer()
        ostop = os.times()
        count += 1
        a, b = ostart, ostop
        results.append((cstop - cstart, b[0] - a[0], b[1]-a[1]))
        if cstop - begin > 3 and count >= 100:
            break
        if cstop - begin > 10 and count >= 3:
            break
    if title:
        sys.stderr.write("! %s\n" % title)
    if r:
        sys.stderr.write("! result: %s\n" % r)
    m = min(results)
    sys.stderr.write("! wall %f comb %f user %f sys %f (best of %d)\n"
                     % (m[0], m[1] + m[2], m[1], m[2], count))

orgruncommand = dispatch.runcommand

def runcommand(lui, repo, cmd, fullargs, ui, options, d, cmdpats, cmdoptions):
    ui.pushbuffer()
    lui.pushbuffer()
    timer(lambda : orgruncommand(lui, repo, cmd, fullargs, ui,
                                 options, d, cmdpats, cmdoptions))
    ui.popbuffer()
    lui.popbuffer()

dispatch.runcommand = runcommand

dispatch.run()