Mercurial > hg
changeset 30686:8352c42a0a0d
keepalive: don't concatenate strings when reading chunked transfer
Surprisingly, this didn't appear to speed up HTTP-based stream cloning
on my machine. I suspect this has more to do with the fact we're using
small HTTP chunks and string concatenation overhead isn't so bad.
However, the reasons for this change are solid: we know string
concatenation can be a performance sink.
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 07 Oct 2015 15:33:52 -0700 |
parents | 95325386cd1a |
children | 5d06f6b73a57 |
files | mercurial/keepalive.py |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 9 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/mercurial/keepalive.py Mon Dec 26 12:11:29 2016 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/keepalive.py Wed Oct 07 15:33:52 2015 -0700 @@ -399,10 +399,8 @@ # stolen from Python SVN #68532 to fix issue1088 def _read_chunked(self, amt): chunk_left = self.chunk_left - value = '' + parts = [] - # XXX This accumulates chunks by repeated string concatenation, - # which is not efficient as the number or size of chunks gets big. while True: if chunk_left is None: line = self.fp.readline() @@ -415,22 +413,22 @@ # close the connection as protocol synchronization is # probably lost self.close() - raise httplib.IncompleteRead(value) + raise httplib.IncompleteRead(''.join(parts)) if chunk_left == 0: break if amt is None: - value += self._safe_read(chunk_left) + parts.append(self._safe_read(chunk_left)) elif amt < chunk_left: - value += self._safe_read(amt) + parts.append(self._safe_read(amt)) self.chunk_left = chunk_left - amt - return value + return ''.join(parts) elif amt == chunk_left: - value += self._safe_read(amt) + parts.append(self._safe_read(amt)) self._safe_read(2) # toss the CRLF at the end of the chunk self.chunk_left = None - return value + return ''.join(parts) else: - value += self._safe_read(chunk_left) + parts.append(self._safe_read(chunk_left)) amt -= chunk_left # we read the whole chunk, get another @@ -451,7 +449,7 @@ # we read everything; close the "file" self.close() - return value + return ''.join(parts) def readline(self, limit=-1): i = self._rbuf.find('\n')