tests: run some largefiles and lfs tests with simple store
Now that the simple store handles flags properly, a handful of
the largefiles and lfs tests pass!
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3147
commands: don't violate storage abstractions in `manifest --all`
Previously, we asked the store to emit its data files. For modern
repos, this would use fncache to resolve the set of files then would
stat() each file. For my copy of the mozilla-unified repository, this
took 3.3-10s depending on the state of my filesystem cache to render
449,790 items.
The previous behavior was a massive layering violation because it
assumed tracked files would have specific filenames in specific
directories. Alternate storage backends would violate this assumption.
The new behavior scans the changelog entries for the set of files
changed by each commit. It aggregates them into a set and then
sorts and prints the result. This reliably takes ~16.3s on my
machine. ~80% of the time is spent in zlib decompression.
The performance regression is unfortunate. If we want to claw it
back, we can create a proper storage API to query for the set of
tracked files. I'm not opposed to doing that. But I'm in no hurry
because I suspect ~0 people care about the performance of
`hg manifest --all`.
.. perf::
`hg manifest --all` is likely slower due to changing its
implementation to respect storage interface boundaries. If you
are impacted by this regression in a meaningful way, please make
noise on the development mailing list and it can be dealt with.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3119
commands: document the layering violation in `manifest --all`
This commit fixes the last test failures when using the simple
store extension!
It turns out that `hg manifest --all` locks the repo and scans for
revlogs. This feature was added by
71938479eff9 in 2011. I am
debating changing the behavior. But that can occur in another
commit.
As part of debugging this, I realized that test-manifest.t is the
only meaningful tester of `hg manifest --all` and that test was
improperly disabled when bundlerepos aren't supported. The test is
testing manifest behavior, not whether you can `hg pull` from a
bundle. So I changed the test to `hg unbundle` instead.
FWIW, I wasted a non-trivial amount of time tracking down this
failure. I thought the issue involved Git, which is why I refactored
the test to be more deterministic. Never in my mind would I have
guessed that code in `hg manifest` would scan revlogs. I should have
looked there to begin with. Doh.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3118