py3: conditionalize cPickle import by adding in util
The cPickle is renamed to _pickle in python3 and this C extension is available
in pickle which was not included in earlier versions. So imports are conditionalized
to import cPickle in py2 and pickle in py3. Moreover the use of pickle in py2 is
switched to cPickle as the C extension is faster. The hack is added in util.py and
the modules import util.pickle
bdiff: remove effectively dead code
Now that we extend matches backwards in the inner loop, the final
adjustment has no effect.
(A similar extension for the forward direction is trickier and has
less benefit.)
bdiff: extend matches across popular lines
For very large diffs that have large numbers of identical lines (JSON
dumps) that also have large blocks of identical text, bdiff could become
confused about which block matches which because it can only match
very limited regions. The result is very large diffs for small sets of edits.
The earlier recursion rebalancing fix made this behavior more frequent because
it's now more prone to match block 1 to block 2. One frequent user of
large JSON files reported being unable to pass the resulting diffs
through their code review system.
Prior to this change, bdiff would calculate the length of a match at
(i, j) as 1 + length found at (i-1, j-1). With large number of popular
(ignored) lines, this often meant matches couldn't be extended
backwards at all and thus all matching regions were very small.
Disabling the popularity threshold is not an option because it brings
back quadratic behavior.
Instead, we extend a match backwards until we either found a previously
discovered match or we find a mismatching line. This thus successfully
bridges over any popular lines inside and before a matching region.
The larger regions then significant reduce the probability of confusion.
test-revset: fix test vector for ordering issue of matching()
592e0beee8b0 fixed matching() to preserve the order of the input set, but
the test was incorrect. Given "A and B", "A" should be the input set to "B".
But thanks to our optimizer, the test expression was rewritten as
"(2 or 3 or 1) and matching(1 or 2 or 3)", therefore it was working well.
Since I'm going to fix the overall ordering issue, the test needs to be
adjusted to do the right thing.