Fri, 02 Sep 2016 20:15:37 +0000 crecord: properly handle files with No newline at eof (issue5268) stable
timeless <timeless@mozdev.org> [Fri, 02 Sep 2016 20:15:37 +0000] rev 29862
crecord: properly handle files with No newline at eof (issue5268) Yes, this bug was a single character with the wrong case...
Fri, 02 Sep 2016 15:20:59 +0100 annotate: pre-calculate the "needed" dictionary (issue5360) stable
Jun Wu <quark@fb.com> [Fri, 02 Sep 2016 15:20:59 +0100] rev 29861
annotate: pre-calculate the "needed" dictionary (issue5360) The "needed" dict is used as a reference counter to free items in the giant "hist" dict. However, currently it is not very accurate and can lead to dropping "hist" items unnecessarily, for example, with the following DAG, -3- / \ 0--1--2--4-- The current algorithm will visit and calculate rev 1 twice, undesired. And it tries to be smart by clearing rev 1's parents: "pcache[1] = []" at the time hist[1] being accessed (note: hist[1] needs to be used twice, by rev 2 and rev 3). It can result in incorrect results if p1 of rev 4 deletes chunks belonging to rev 0. However, simply removing "needed" is not okay, because it will consume 10x memory: # without any change % HGRCPATH= lrun ./hg annotate mercurial/commands.py -r d130a38 3>&2 [1] MEMORY 49074176 CPUTIME 9.213 REALTIME 9.270 # with "needed" removed MEMORY 637673472 CPUTIME 8.164 REALTIME 8.249 This patch moves "needed" (and "pcache") calculation to a separate DFS to address the issue. It improves perf and fixes issue5360 by correctly reusing hist, while maintaining low memory usage. Some additional attempt has been made to further reduce memory usage, like changing "pcache[f] = []" to "del pcache[f]". Therefore the result can be both faster and lower memory usage: # with this patch applied MEMORY 47575040 CPUTIME 7.870 REALTIME 7.926 [1]: lrun is a lightweight sandbox built on Linux cgroup and namespace. It's used to measure CPU and memory usage here. Source code is available at github.com/quark-zju/lrun.
Mon, 22 Aug 2016 19:47:34 -0700 help: document wire protocol transport protocols
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Mon, 22 Aug 2016 19:47:34 -0700] rev 29860
help: document wire protocol transport protocols The HTTP and SSH transport protocols are documented. This includes how commands and arguments are serialized as well as response types.
(0) -10000 -3000 -1000 -300 -100 -30 -10 -3 +3 +10 +30 +100 +300 +1000 +3000 +10000 tip