Mercurial > hg
changeset 25937:4f1144c3c72b
demandimport: support lazy loading for absolute_import
Before, we didn't support lazy loading if absolute_import was in
effect and a fromlist was used. This meant that "from . import X"
wasn't lazy and performance could suffer as a result.
With this patch, we now support lazy loading for this scenario.
As part of developing this, I discovered issues when module names
are defined. Since the enforced import style only allows
"from X import Y" or "from .X import Y" in very few scenarios
when absolute_import is enabled - scenarios where Y is not a
module and thus there is nothing to lazy load - I decided to drop
support for this case instead of chasing down the errors. I don't
think much harm will come from this. But I'd like to take another
look once all modules are using absolute_import and I can see the
full extent of what is using names in absolute_import mode.
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 08 Aug 2015 16:13:27 -0700 |
parents | f90bb2002bcf |
children | e194ada8d45f |
files | mercurial/demandimport.py |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 18 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/mercurial/demandimport.py Sat Aug 08 17:07:34 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/demandimport.py Sat Aug 08 16:13:27 2015 -0700 @@ -139,7 +139,24 @@ # so modern Mercurial code will have level >= 0. if level >= 0: - return _origimport(name, globals, locals, fromlist, level) + # Mercurial's enforced import style does not use + # "from a import b,c,d" or "from .a import b,c,d" syntax. In + # addition, this appears to be giving errors with some modules + # for unknown reasons. Since we shouldn't be using this syntax + # much, work around the problems. + if name: + return _hgextimport(_origimport, name, globals, locals, + fromlist, level) + + mod = _hgextimport(_origimport, name, globals, locals, level=level) + for x in fromlist: + # Missing symbols mean they weren't defined in the module + # itself which means they are sub-modules. + if getattr(mod, x, nothing) is nothing: + setattr(mod, x, + _demandmod(x, mod.__dict__, locals, level=level)) + + return mod # But, we still need to support lazy loading of standard library and 3rd # party modules. So handle level == -1.