changeset 26457:7e81305092a0

demandimport: replace more references to _demandmod instances _demandmod instances may be referenced by multiple importing modules. Before this patch, the _demandmod instance only maintained a reference to its first consumer when using the "from X import Y" syntax. This is because we only created a single _demandmod instance (attached to the parent X module). If multiple modules A and B performed "from X import Y", we'd produce a single _demandmod instance "demandmod" with the following references: X.Y = <demandmod> A.Y = <demandmod> B.Y = <demandmod> The locals from the first consumer (A) would be stored in <demandmod1>. When <demandmod1> was loaded, we'd look at the locals for the first consumer and replace the symbol, if necessary. This resulted in state: X.Y = <module> A.Y = <module> B.Y = <demandmod> B's reference to Y wasn't updated and was still using the proxy object because we just didn't record that B had a reference to <demandmod> that needed updating! With this patch, we add support for tracking which modules in addition to the initial importer have a reference to the _demandmod instance and we replace those references at module load time. In the case of posix.py, this fixes an issue where the "encoding" module was being proxied, resulting in hundreds of thousands of __getattribute__ lookups on the _demandmod instance during dirstate operations on mozilla-central, speeding up execution by many milliseconds. There are likely several other operation that benefit from this change as well. The new mechanism isn't perfect: references in locals (not globals) may likely linger. So, if there is an import inside a function and a symbol from that module is used in a hot loop, we could have unwanted overhead from proxying through _demandmod. Non-global imports are discouraged anyway. So hopefully this isn't a big deal in practice. We could potentially deploy a code checker that bans use of attribute lookups of function-level-imported modules inside loops. This deficiency in theory could be avoided by storing the set of globals and locals dicts to update in the _demandmod instance. However, I tried this and it didn't work. One reason is that some globals are _demandmod instances. We could work around this, but it's a bit more work. There also might be other module import foo at play. The solution as implemented is better than what we had and IMO is good enough for the time being. It's worth noting that this sub-optimal behavior was made worse by the introduction of absolute_import and its recommended "from . import X" syntax for importing modules from the "mercurial" package. If we ever wrote performance tests, measuring the amount of module imports and __getattribute__ proxy calls through _demandmod instances would be something I'd have it check.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sun, 04 Oct 2015 11:17:43 -0700
parents 86fc4a2863ff
children 362793295640
files mercurial/demandimport.py
diffstat 1 files changed, 31 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) [+]
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/mercurial/demandimport.py	Sun Oct 04 10:36:54 2015 -0700
+++ b/mercurial/demandimport.py	Sun Oct 04 11:17:43 2015 -0700
@@ -73,14 +73,26 @@
             head = name
             after = []
         object.__setattr__(self, "_data",
-                           (head, globals, locals, after, level))
+                           (head, globals, locals, after, level, set()))
         object.__setattr__(self, "_module", None)
     def _extend(self, name):
         """add to the list of submodules to load"""
         self._data[3].append(name)
+
+    def _addref(self, name):
+        """Record that the named module ``name`` imports this module.
+
+        References to this proxy class having the name of this module will be
+        replaced at module load time. We assume the symbol inside the importing
+        module is identical to the "head" name of this module. We don't
+        actually know if "as X" syntax is being used to change the symbol name
+        because this information isn't exposed to __import__.
+        """
+        self._data[5].add(name)
+
     def _load(self):
         if not self._module:
-            head, globals, locals, after, level = self._data
+            head, globals, locals, after, level, modrefs = self._data
             mod = _hgextimport(_import, head, globals, locals, None, level)
             # load submodules
             def subload(mod, p):
@@ -95,9 +107,15 @@
             for x in after:
                 subload(mod, x)
 
-            # are we in the locals dictionary still?
+            # Replace references to this proxy instance with the actual module.
             if locals and locals.get(head) == self:
                 locals[head] = mod
+
+            for modname in modrefs:
+                modref = sys.modules.get(modname, None)
+                if modref and getattr(modref, head, None) == self:
+                    setattr(modref, head, mod)
+
             object.__setattr__(self, "_module", mod)
 
     def __repr__(self):
@@ -107,7 +125,7 @@
     def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
         raise TypeError("%s object is not callable" % repr(self))
     def __getattribute__(self, attr):
-        if attr in ('_data', '_extend', '_load', '_module'):
+        if attr in ('_data', '_extend', '_load', '_module', '_addref'):
             return object.__getattribute__(self, attr)
         self._load()
         return getattr(self._module, attr)
@@ -143,6 +161,9 @@
         # The modern Mercurial convention is to use absolute_import everywhere,
         # so modern Mercurial code will have level >= 0.
 
+        # The name of the module the import statement is located in.
+        globalname = globals.get('__name__')
+
         def processfromitem(mod, attr, **kwargs):
             """Process an imported symbol in the import statement.
 
@@ -154,6 +175,12 @@
                 symbol = _demandmod(attr, mod.__dict__, locals, **kwargs)
                 setattr(mod, attr, symbol)
 
+            # Record the importing module references this symbol so we can
+            # replace the symbol with the actual module instance at load
+            # time.
+            if globalname and isinstance(symbol, _demandmod):
+                symbol._addref(globalname)
+
         if level >= 0:
             # Mercurial's enforced import style does not use
             # "from a import b,c,d" or "from .a import b,c,d" syntax. In