sapling/mercurial/manifest.py

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# manifest.py - manifest revision class for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2005-2007 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
2010-01-20 07:20:08 +03:00
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
2015-12-22 08:35:46 +03:00
from __future__ import absolute_import
import heapq
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import os
import struct
from .i18n import _
from .node import (
bin,
hex,
)
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from . import (
error,
mdiff,
parsers,
revlog,
util,
)
propertycache = util.propertycache
def _parsev1(data):
# This method does a little bit of excessive-looking
# precondition checking. This is so that the behavior of this
# class exactly matches its C counterpart to try and help
# prevent surprise breakage for anyone that develops against
# the pure version.
if data and data[-1] != '\n':
raise ValueError('Manifest did not end in a newline.')
prev = None
for l in data.splitlines():
if prev is not None and prev > l:
raise ValueError('Manifest lines not in sorted order.')
prev = l
f, n = l.split('\0')
if len(n) > 40:
yield f, bin(n[:40]), n[40:]
else:
yield f, bin(n), ''
def _parsev2(data):
metadataend = data.find('\n')
# Just ignore metadata for now
pos = metadataend + 1
prevf = ''
while pos < len(data):
end = data.find('\n', pos + 1) # +1 to skip stem length byte
if end == -1:
raise ValueError('Manifest ended with incomplete file entry.')
stemlen = ord(data[pos])
items = data[pos + 1:end].split('\0')
f = prevf[:stemlen] + items[0]
if prevf > f:
raise ValueError('Manifest entries not in sorted order.')
fl = items[1]
# Just ignore metadata (items[2:] for now)
n = data[end + 1:end + 21]
yield f, n, fl
pos = end + 22
prevf = f
def _parse(data):
"""Generates (path, node, flags) tuples from a manifest text"""
if data.startswith('\0'):
return iter(_parsev2(data))
else:
return iter(_parsev1(data))
def _text(it, usemanifestv2):
"""Given an iterator over (path, node, flags) tuples, returns a manifest
text"""
if usemanifestv2:
return _textv2(it)
else:
return _textv1(it)
def _textv1(it):
files = []
lines = []
_hex = revlog.hex
for f, n, fl in it:
files.append(f)
# if this is changed to support newlines in filenames,
# be sure to check the templates/ dir again (especially *-raw.tmpl)
lines.append("%s\0%s%s\n" % (f, _hex(n), fl))
_checkforbidden(files)
return ''.join(lines)
def _textv2(it):
files = []
lines = ['\0\n']
prevf = ''
for f, n, fl in it:
files.append(f)
stem = os.path.commonprefix([prevf, f])
stemlen = min(len(stem), 255)
lines.append("%c%s\0%s\n%s\n" % (stemlen, f[stemlen:], fl, n))
prevf = f
_checkforbidden(files)
return ''.join(lines)
class lazymanifestiter(object):
def __init__(self, lm):
self.pos = 0
self.lm = lm
def __iter__(self):
return self
def next(self):
try:
data, pos = self.lm._get(self.pos)
except IndexError:
raise StopIteration
if pos == -1:
self.pos += 1
return data[0]
self.pos += 1
zeropos = data.find('\x00', pos)
return data[pos:zeropos]
__next__ = next
class lazymanifestiterentries(object):
def __init__(self, lm):
self.lm = lm
self.pos = 0
def __iter__(self):
return self
def next(self):
try:
data, pos = self.lm._get(self.pos)
except IndexError:
raise StopIteration
if pos == -1:
self.pos += 1
return data
zeropos = data.find('\x00', pos)
hashval = unhexlify(data, self.lm.extrainfo[self.pos],
zeropos + 1, 40)
flags = self.lm._getflags(data, self.pos, zeropos)
self.pos += 1
return (data[pos:zeropos], hashval, flags)
__next__ = next
def unhexlify(data, extra, pos, length):
s = bin(data[pos:pos + length])
if extra:
s += chr(extra & 0xff)
return s
def _cmp(a, b):
return (a > b) - (a < b)
class _lazymanifest(object):
def __init__(self, data, positions=None, extrainfo=None, extradata=None):
if positions is None:
self.positions = self.findlines(data)
self.extrainfo = [0] * len(self.positions)
self.data = data
self.extradata = []
else:
self.positions = positions[:]
self.extrainfo = extrainfo[:]
self.extradata = extradata[:]
self.data = data
def findlines(self, data):
if not data:
return []
pos = data.find("\n")
if pos == -1 or data[-1:] != '\n':
raise ValueError("Manifest did not end in a newline.")
positions = [0]
prev = data[:data.find('\x00')]
while pos < len(data) - 1 and pos != -1:
positions.append(pos + 1)
nexts = data[pos + 1:data.find('\x00', pos + 1)]
if nexts < prev:
raise ValueError("Manifest lines not in sorted order.")
prev = nexts
pos = data.find("\n", pos + 1)
return positions
def _get(self, index):
# get the position encoded in pos:
# positive number is an index in 'data'
# negative number is in extrapieces
pos = self.positions[index]
if pos >= 0:
return self.data, pos
return self.extradata[-pos - 1], -1
def _getkey(self, pos):
if pos >= 0:
return self.data[pos:self.data.find('\x00', pos + 1)]
return self.extradata[-pos - 1][0]
def bsearch(self, key):
first = 0
last = len(self.positions) - 1
while first <= last:
midpoint = (first + last)//2
nextpos = self.positions[midpoint]
candidate = self._getkey(nextpos)
r = _cmp(key, candidate)
if r == 0:
return midpoint
else:
if r < 0:
last = midpoint - 1
else:
first = midpoint + 1
return -1
def bsearch2(self, key):
# same as the above, but will always return the position
# done for performance reasons
first = 0
last = len(self.positions) - 1
while first <= last:
midpoint = (first + last)//2
nextpos = self.positions[midpoint]
candidate = self._getkey(nextpos)
r = _cmp(key, candidate)
if r == 0:
return (midpoint, True)
else:
if r < 0:
last = midpoint - 1
else:
first = midpoint + 1
return (first, False)
def __contains__(self, key):
return self.bsearch(key) != -1
def _getflags(self, data, needle, pos):
start = pos + 41
end = data.find("\n", start)
if end == -1:
end = len(data) - 1
if start == end:
return ''
return self.data[start:end]
def __getitem__(self, key):
if not isinstance(key, bytes):
raise TypeError("getitem: manifest keys must be a bytes.")
needle = self.bsearch(key)
if needle == -1:
raise KeyError
data, pos = self._get(needle)
if pos == -1:
return (data[1], data[2])
zeropos = data.find('\x00', pos)
assert 0 <= needle <= len(self.positions)
assert len(self.extrainfo) == len(self.positions)
hashval = unhexlify(data, self.extrainfo[needle], zeropos + 1, 40)
flags = self._getflags(data, needle, zeropos)
return (hashval, flags)
def __delitem__(self, key):
needle, found = self.bsearch2(key)
if not found:
raise KeyError
cur = self.positions[needle]
self.positions = self.positions[:needle] + self.positions[needle + 1:]
self.extrainfo = self.extrainfo[:needle] + self.extrainfo[needle + 1:]
if cur >= 0:
self.data = self.data[:cur] + '\x00' + self.data[cur + 1:]
def __setitem__(self, key, value):
if not isinstance(key, bytes):
raise TypeError("setitem: manifest keys must be a byte string.")
if not isinstance(value, tuple) or len(value) != 2:
raise TypeError("Manifest values must be a tuple of (node, flags).")
hashval = value[0]
if not isinstance(hashval, bytes) or not 20 <= len(hashval) <= 22:
raise TypeError("node must be a 20-byte byte string")
flags = value[1]
if len(hashval) == 22:
hashval = hashval[:-1]
if not isinstance(flags, bytes) or len(flags) > 1:
raise TypeError("flags must a 0 or 1 byte string, got %r", flags)
needle, found = self.bsearch2(key)
if found:
# put the item
pos = self.positions[needle]
if pos < 0:
self.extradata[-pos - 1] = (key, hashval, value[1])
else:
# just don't bother
self.extradata.append((key, hashval, value[1]))
self.positions[needle] = -len(self.extradata)
else:
# not found, put it in with extra positions
self.extradata.append((key, hashval, value[1]))
self.positions = (self.positions[:needle] + [-len(self.extradata)]
+ self.positions[needle:])
self.extrainfo = (self.extrainfo[:needle] + [0] +
self.extrainfo[needle:])
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def copy(self):
# XXX call _compact like in C?
return _lazymanifest(self.data, self.positions, self.extrainfo,
self.extradata)
def _compact(self):
# hopefully not called TOO often
if len(self.extradata) == 0:
return
l = []
last_cut = 0
i = 0
offset = 0
self.extrainfo = [0] * len(self.positions)
while i < len(self.positions):
if self.positions[i] >= 0:
cur = self.positions[i]
last_cut = cur
while True:
self.positions[i] = offset
i += 1
if i == len(self.positions) or self.positions[i] < 0:
break
offset += self.positions[i] - cur
cur = self.positions[i]
end_cut = self.data.find('\n', cur)
if end_cut != -1:
end_cut += 1
offset += end_cut - cur
l.append(self.data[last_cut:end_cut])
else:
while i < len(self.positions) and self.positions[i] < 0:
cur = self.positions[i]
t = self.extradata[-cur - 1]
l.append(self._pack(t))
self.positions[i] = offset
if len(t[1]) > 20:
self.extrainfo[i] = ord(t[1][21])
offset += len(l[-1])
i += 1
self.data = ''.join(l)
self.extradata = []
def _pack(self, d):
return d[0] + '\x00' + hex(d[1][:20]) + d[2] + '\n'
def text(self):
self._compact()
return self.data
def diff(self, m2, clean=False):
'''Finds changes between the current manifest and m2.'''
# XXX think whether efficiency matters here
diff = {}
for fn, e1, flags in self.iterentries():
if fn not in m2:
diff[fn] = (e1, flags), (None, '')
else:
e2 = m2[fn]
if (e1, flags) != e2:
diff[fn] = (e1, flags), e2
elif clean:
diff[fn] = None
for fn, e2, flags in m2.iterentries():
if fn not in self:
diff[fn] = (None, ''), (e2, flags)
return diff
def iterentries(self):
return lazymanifestiterentries(self)
def iterkeys(self):
return lazymanifestiter(self)
def __iter__(self):
return lazymanifestiter(self)
def __len__(self):
return len(self.positions)
def filtercopy(self, filterfn):
# XXX should be optimized
c = _lazymanifest('')
for f, n, fl in self.iterentries():
if filterfn(f):
c[f] = n, fl
return c
try:
_lazymanifest = parsers.lazymanifest
except AttributeError:
pass
class manifestdict(object):
def __init__(self, data=''):
if data.startswith('\0'):
#_lazymanifest can not parse v2
self._lm = _lazymanifest('')
for f, n, fl in _parsev2(data):
self._lm[f] = n, fl
else:
self._lm = _lazymanifest(data)
def __getitem__(self, key):
return self._lm[key][0]
def find(self, key):
return self._lm[key]
def __len__(self):
return len(self._lm)
def __nonzero__(self):
# nonzero is covered by the __len__ function, but implementing it here
# makes it easier for extensions to override.
return len(self._lm) != 0
__bool__ = __nonzero__
def __setitem__(self, key, node):
self._lm[key] = node, self.flags(key, '')
def __contains__(self, key):
return key in self._lm
def __delitem__(self, key):
del self._lm[key]
def __iter__(self):
return self._lm.__iter__()
def iterkeys(self):
return self._lm.iterkeys()
def keys(self):
return list(self.iterkeys())
def filesnotin(self, m2, match=None):
'''Set of files in this manifest that are not in the other'''
if match:
m1 = self.matches(match)
m2 = m2.matches(match)
return m1.filesnotin(m2)
diff = self.diff(m2)
files = set(filepath
for filepath, hashflags in diff.iteritems()
if hashflags[1][0] is None)
return files
@propertycache
def _dirs(self):
return util.dirs(self)
def dirs(self):
return self._dirs
def hasdir(self, dir):
return dir in self._dirs
def _filesfastpath(self, match):
'''Checks whether we can correctly and quickly iterate over matcher
files instead of over manifest files.'''
files = match.files()
return (len(files) < 100 and (match.isexact() or
(match.prefix() and all(fn in self for fn in files))))
def walk(self, match):
'''Generates matching file names.
Equivalent to manifest.matches(match).iterkeys(), but without creating
an entirely new manifest.
It also reports nonexistent files by marking them bad with match.bad().
'''
if match.always():
for f in iter(self):
yield f
return
fset = set(match.files())
# avoid the entire walk if we're only looking for specific files
if self._filesfastpath(match):
for fn in sorted(fset):
yield fn
return
for fn in self:
if fn in fset:
# specified pattern is the exact name
fset.remove(fn)
if match(fn):
yield fn
# for dirstate.walk, files=['.'] means "walk the whole tree".
# follow that here, too
fset.discard('.')
for fn in sorted(fset):
if not self.hasdir(fn):
match.bad(fn, None)
def matches(self, match):
'''generate a new manifest filtered by the match argument'''
if match.always():
return self.copy()
if self._filesfastpath(match):
m = manifestdict()
lm = self._lm
for fn in match.files():
if fn in lm:
m._lm[fn] = lm[fn]
return m
m = manifestdict()
m._lm = self._lm.filtercopy(match)
return m
def diff(self, m2, match=None, clean=False):
'''Finds changes between the current manifest and m2.
Args:
m2: the manifest to which this manifest should be compared.
clean: if true, include files unchanged between these manifests
with a None value in the returned dictionary.
The result is returned as a dict with filename as key and
values of the form ((n1,fl1),(n2,fl2)), where n1/n2 is the
nodeid in the current/other manifest and fl1/fl2 is the flag
in the current/other manifest. Where the file does not exist,
the nodeid will be None and the flags will be the empty
string.
'''
if match:
m1 = self.matches(match)
m2 = m2.matches(match)
return m1.diff(m2, clean=clean)
return self._lm.diff(m2._lm, clean)
def setflag(self, key, flag):
self._lm[key] = self[key], flag
def get(self, key, default=None):
try:
return self._lm[key][0]
except KeyError:
return default
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def flags(self, key, default=''):
try:
return self._lm[key][1]
except KeyError:
return default
def copy(self):
c = manifestdict()
c._lm = self._lm.copy()
return c
def iteritems(self):
return (x[:2] for x in self._lm.iterentries())
def iterentries(self):
return self._lm.iterentries()
def text(self, usemanifestv2=False):
if usemanifestv2:
return _textv2(self._lm.iterentries())
else:
# use (probably) native version for v1
return self._lm.text()
def fastdelta(self, base, changes):
"""Given a base manifest text as an array.array and a list of changes
relative to that text, compute a delta that can be used by revlog.
"""
delta = []
dstart = None
dend = None
dline = [""]
start = 0
# zero copy representation of base as a buffer
addbuf = util.buffer(base)
changes = list(changes)
if len(changes) < 1000:
# start with a readonly loop that finds the offset of
# each line and creates the deltas
for f, todelete in changes:
# bs will either be the index of the item or the insert point
start, end = _msearch(addbuf, f, start)
if not todelete:
h, fl = self._lm[f]
l = "%s\0%s%s\n" % (f, revlog.hex(h), fl)
else:
if start == end:
# item we want to delete was not found, error out
raise AssertionError(
_("failed to remove %s from manifest") % f)
l = ""
if dstart is not None and dstart <= start and dend >= start:
if dend < end:
dend = end
if l:
dline.append(l)
else:
if dstart is not None:
delta.append([dstart, dend, "".join(dline)])
dstart = start
dend = end
dline = [l]
if dstart is not None:
delta.append([dstart, dend, "".join(dline)])
# apply the delta to the base, and get a delta for addrevision
deltatext, arraytext = _addlistdelta(base, delta)
else:
# For large changes, it's much cheaper to just build the text and
# diff it.
arraytext = bytearray(self.text())
deltatext = mdiff.textdiff(
util.buffer(base), util.buffer(arraytext))
return arraytext, deltatext
def _msearch(m, s, lo=0, hi=None):
'''return a tuple (start, end) that says where to find s within m.
If the string is found m[start:end] are the line containing
that string. If start == end the string was not found and
they indicate the proper sorted insertion point.
m should be a buffer, a memoryview or a byte string.
s is a byte string'''
def advance(i, c):
while i < lenm and m[i:i + 1] != c:
i += 1
return i
if not s:
return (lo, lo)
lenm = len(m)
if not hi:
hi = lenm
while lo < hi:
mid = (lo + hi) // 2
start = mid
while start > 0 and m[start - 1:start] != '\n':
start -= 1
end = advance(start, '\0')
if bytes(m[start:end]) < s:
# we know that after the null there are 40 bytes of sha1
# this translates to the bisect lo = mid + 1
lo = advance(end + 40, '\n') + 1
else:
# this translates to the bisect hi = mid
hi = start
end = advance(lo, '\0')
found = m[lo:end]
if s == found:
# we know that after the null there are 40 bytes of sha1
end = advance(end + 40, '\n')
return (lo, end + 1)
else:
return (lo, lo)
def _checkforbidden(l):
"""Check filenames for illegal characters."""
for f in l:
if '\n' in f or '\r' in f:
raise error.RevlogError(
_("'\\n' and '\\r' disallowed in filenames: %r") % f)
# apply the changes collected during the bisect loop to our addlist
# return a delta suitable for addrevision
def _addlistdelta(addlist, x):
# for large addlist arrays, building a new array is cheaper
# than repeatedly modifying the existing one
currentposition = 0
newaddlist = bytearray()
for start, end, content in x:
newaddlist += addlist[currentposition:start]
if content:
newaddlist += bytearray(content)
currentposition = end
newaddlist += addlist[currentposition:]
deltatext = "".join(struct.pack(">lll", start, end, len(content))
+ content for start, end, content in x)
return deltatext, newaddlist
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def _splittopdir(f):
if '/' in f:
dir, subpath = f.split('/', 1)
return dir + '/', subpath
else:
return '', f
_noop = lambda s: None
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
class treemanifest(object):
def __init__(self, dir='', text=''):
self._dir = dir
self._node = revlog.nullid
self._loadfunc = _noop
self._copyfunc = _noop
self._dirty = False
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
self._dirs = {}
# Using _lazymanifest here is a little slower than plain old dicts
self._files = {}
self._flags = {}
if text:
def readsubtree(subdir, subm):
raise AssertionError('treemanifest constructor only accepts '
'flat manifests')
self.parse(text, readsubtree)
self._dirty = True # Mark flat manifest dirty after parsing
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def _subpath(self, path):
return self._dir + path
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def __len__(self):
self._load()
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
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size = len(self._files)
for m in self._dirs.values():
size += m.__len__()
return size
def _isempty(self):
self._load() # for consistency; already loaded by all callers
return (not self._files and (not self._dirs or
all(m._isempty() for m in self._dirs.values())))
def __repr__(self):
return ('<treemanifest dir=%s, node=%s, loaded=%s, dirty=%s at 0x%x>' %
(self._dir, revlog.hex(self._node),
bool(self._loadfunc is _noop),
self._dirty, id(self)))
def dir(self):
'''The directory that this tree manifest represents, including a
trailing '/'. Empty string for the repo root directory.'''
return self._dir
def node(self):
'''This node of this instance. nullid for unsaved instances. Should
be updated when the instance is read or written from a revlog.
'''
assert not self._dirty
return self._node
def setnode(self, node):
self._node = node
self._dirty = False
def iterentries(self):
self._load()
for p, n in sorted(self._dirs.items() + self._files.items()):
if p in self._files:
yield self._subpath(p), n, self._flags.get(p, '')
else:
for x in n.iterentries():
yield x
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def iteritems(self):
self._load()
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
for p, n in sorted(self._dirs.items() + self._files.items()):
if p in self._files:
yield self._subpath(p), n
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
else:
for f, sn in n.iteritems():
yield f, sn
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def iterkeys(self):
self._load()
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
for p in sorted(self._dirs.keys() + self._files.keys()):
if p in self._files:
yield self._subpath(p)
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
else:
for f in self._dirs[p].iterkeys():
yield f
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def keys(self):
return list(self.iterkeys())
def __iter__(self):
return self.iterkeys()
def __contains__(self, f):
if f is None:
return False
self._load()
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
dir, subpath = _splittopdir(f)
if dir:
if dir not in self._dirs:
return False
return self._dirs[dir].__contains__(subpath)
else:
return f in self._files
def get(self, f, default=None):
self._load()
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
dir, subpath = _splittopdir(f)
if dir:
if dir not in self._dirs:
return default
return self._dirs[dir].get(subpath, default)
else:
return self._files.get(f, default)
def __getitem__(self, f):
self._load()
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
dir, subpath = _splittopdir(f)
if dir:
return self._dirs[dir].__getitem__(subpath)
else:
return self._files[f]
def flags(self, f):
self._load()
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
dir, subpath = _splittopdir(f)
if dir:
if dir not in self._dirs:
return ''
return self._dirs[dir].flags(subpath)
else:
if f in self._dirs:
return ''
return self._flags.get(f, '')
def find(self, f):
self._load()
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
dir, subpath = _splittopdir(f)
if dir:
return self._dirs[dir].find(subpath)
else:
return self._files[f], self._flags.get(f, '')
def __delitem__(self, f):
self._load()
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
dir, subpath = _splittopdir(f)
if dir:
self._dirs[dir].__delitem__(subpath)
# If the directory is now empty, remove it
if self._dirs[dir]._isempty():
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
del self._dirs[dir]
else:
del self._files[f]
if f in self._flags:
del self._flags[f]
self._dirty = True
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def __setitem__(self, f, n):
assert n is not None
self._load()
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
dir, subpath = _splittopdir(f)
if dir:
if dir not in self._dirs:
self._dirs[dir] = treemanifest(self._subpath(dir))
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
self._dirs[dir].__setitem__(subpath, n)
else:
self._files[f] = n[:21] # to match manifestdict's behavior
self._dirty = True
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
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def _load(self):
if self._loadfunc is not _noop:
lf, self._loadfunc = self._loadfunc, _noop
lf(self)
elif self._copyfunc is not _noop:
cf, self._copyfunc = self._copyfunc, _noop
cf(self)
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def setflag(self, f, flags):
"""Set the flags (symlink, executable) for path f."""
self._load()
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
dir, subpath = _splittopdir(f)
if dir:
if dir not in self._dirs:
self._dirs[dir] = treemanifest(self._subpath(dir))
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
self._dirs[dir].setflag(subpath, flags)
else:
self._flags[f] = flags
self._dirty = True
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def copy(self):
copy = treemanifest(self._dir)
copy._node = self._node
copy._dirty = self._dirty
if self._copyfunc is _noop:
def _copyfunc(s):
self._load()
for d in self._dirs:
s._dirs[d] = self._dirs[d].copy()
s._files = dict.copy(self._files)
s._flags = dict.copy(self._flags)
if self._loadfunc is _noop:
_copyfunc(copy)
else:
copy._copyfunc = _copyfunc
else:
copy._copyfunc = self._copyfunc
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
return copy
def filesnotin(self, m2, match=None):
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
'''Set of files in this manifest that are not in the other'''
if match:
m1 = self.matches(match)
m2 = m2.matches(match)
return m1.filesnotin(m2)
files = set()
def _filesnotin(t1, t2):
if t1._node == t2._node and not t1._dirty and not t2._dirty:
return
t1._load()
t2._load()
for d, m1 in t1._dirs.iteritems():
if d in t2._dirs:
m2 = t2._dirs[d]
_filesnotin(m1, m2)
else:
files.update(m1.iterkeys())
for fn in t1._files.iterkeys():
if fn not in t2._files:
files.add(t1._subpath(fn))
_filesnotin(self, m2)
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
return files
@propertycache
def _alldirs(self):
return util.dirs(self)
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def dirs(self):
return self._alldirs
def hasdir(self, dir):
self._load()
topdir, subdir = _splittopdir(dir)
if topdir:
if topdir in self._dirs:
return self._dirs[topdir].hasdir(subdir)
return False
return (dir + '/') in self._dirs
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def walk(self, match):
'''Generates matching file names.
Equivalent to manifest.matches(match).iterkeys(), but without creating
an entirely new manifest.
It also reports nonexistent files by marking them bad with match.bad().
'''
if match.always():
for f in iter(self):
yield f
return
fset = set(match.files())
for fn in self._walk(match):
if fn in fset:
# specified pattern is the exact name
fset.remove(fn)
yield fn
# for dirstate.walk, files=['.'] means "walk the whole tree".
# follow that here, too
fset.discard('.')
for fn in sorted(fset):
if not self.hasdir(fn):
match.bad(fn, None)
def _walk(self, match):
'''Recursively generates matching file names for walk().'''
if not match.visitdir(self._dir[:-1] or '.'):
return
# yield this dir's files and walk its submanifests
self._load()
for p in sorted(self._dirs.keys() + self._files.keys()):
if p in self._files:
fullp = self._subpath(p)
if match(fullp):
yield fullp
else:
for f in self._dirs[p]._walk(match):
yield f
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def matches(self, match):
'''generate a new manifest filtered by the match argument'''
if match.always():
return self.copy()
return self._matches(match)
def _matches(self, match):
'''recursively generate a new manifest filtered by the match argument.
'''
treemanifest: don't iterate entire matching submanifests on match() Before a4236180df5e (match: remove unnecessary optimization where visitdir() returns 'all', 2015-05-06), match.visitdir() used to return the special value 'all' to indicate that it was known that all subdirectories would also be included in the match. The purpose for that value was to avoid calling the matcher on all the paths. It turned out that calling the matcher was not a problem, so the special return value was removed and the code was simplified. However, if we use the same special value for not just avoiding calling the matcher on each file, but to avoid iterating over each file, it's a much bigger win. On commands like hg st --rev .^ --rev . dom/ we run the matcher (dom/) on the two manifests, then diff the narrowed manifest. If the size of the match is much larger than the size of the diff, this is wasteful. In the above case, we would end up iterating over the 15k-or-so files in dom/ for each of the manifests, only to later discover that they are mostly the same. This means that runningt the command above is usually slower than getting the status for the entire repo, because that code avoids calling treemanifest.match() and only calls treemanifest.diff(), which loads only what's needed for the diff. Let's fix this by reintroducing the 'all' value in match.visitdir() and making treemanifest.match() return a lazy copy of the manifest from dom/ and down (in the above case). This speeds up the above command on the Firefox repo from 0.357s to 0.137s (best of 5). The wider the match, the bigger the speedup.
2015-12-12 20:57:05 +03:00
visit = match.visitdir(self._dir[:-1] or '.')
if visit == 'all':
return self.copy()
ret = treemanifest(self._dir)
if not visit:
return ret
self._load()
for fn in self._files:
fullp = self._subpath(fn)
if not match(fullp):
continue
ret._files[fn] = self._files[fn]
if fn in self._flags:
ret._flags[fn] = self._flags[fn]
for dir, subm in self._dirs.iteritems():
m = subm._matches(match)
if not m._isempty():
ret._dirs[dir] = m
if not ret._isempty():
ret._dirty = True
return ret
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def diff(self, m2, match=None, clean=False):
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
'''Finds changes between the current manifest and m2.
Args:
m2: the manifest to which this manifest should be compared.
clean: if true, include files unchanged between these manifests
with a None value in the returned dictionary.
The result is returned as a dict with filename as key and
values of the form ((n1,fl1),(n2,fl2)), where n1/n2 is the
nodeid in the current/other manifest and fl1/fl2 is the flag
in the current/other manifest. Where the file does not exist,
the nodeid will be None and the flags will be the empty
string.
'''
if match:
m1 = self.matches(match)
m2 = m2.matches(match)
return m1.diff(m2, clean=clean)
result = {}
emptytree = treemanifest()
def _diff(t1, t2):
if t1._node == t2._node and not t1._dirty and not t2._dirty:
return
t1._load()
t2._load()
for d, m1 in t1._dirs.iteritems():
m2 = t2._dirs.get(d, emptytree)
_diff(m1, m2)
for d, m2 in t2._dirs.iteritems():
if d not in t1._dirs:
_diff(emptytree, m2)
for fn, n1 in t1._files.iteritems():
fl1 = t1._flags.get(fn, '')
n2 = t2._files.get(fn, None)
fl2 = t2._flags.get(fn, '')
if n1 != n2 or fl1 != fl2:
result[t1._subpath(fn)] = ((n1, fl1), (n2, fl2))
elif clean:
result[t1._subpath(fn)] = None
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
for fn, n2 in t2._files.iteritems():
if fn not in t1._files:
fl2 = t2._flags.get(fn, '')
result[t2._subpath(fn)] = ((None, ''), (n2, fl2))
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
_diff(self, m2)
return result
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def unmodifiedsince(self, m2):
return not self._dirty and not m2._dirty and self._node == m2._node
def parse(self, text, readsubtree):
for f, n, fl in _parse(text):
if fl == 't':
f = f + '/'
self._dirs[f] = readsubtree(self._subpath(f), n)
elif '/' in f:
# This is a flat manifest, so use __setitem__ and setflag rather
# than assigning directly to _files and _flags, so we can
# assign a path in a subdirectory, and to mark dirty (compared
# to nullid).
self[f] = n
if fl:
self.setflag(f, fl)
else:
# Assigning to _files and _flags avoids marking as dirty,
# and should be a little faster.
self._files[f] = n
if fl:
self._flags[f] = fl
def text(self, usemanifestv2=False):
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
"""Get the full data of this manifest as a bytestring."""
self._load()
return _text(self.iterentries(), usemanifestv2)
treemanifest: create treemanifest class There are a number of problems with large and flat manifests. Copying from http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/ManifestShardingPlan: * manifest too large for RAM * manifest resolution too much CPU (long delta chains) * committing is slow because entire manifest has to be hashed * impossible for narrow clone to leave out part of manifest as all is needed to calculate new hash * diffing two revisions involves traversing entire subdirectories even if identical This is a first step in a series introducing a manifest revlog per directory. This change adds a new manifest class: treemanifest, which is a tree where each node has a dict of files (nodeids), a dict of flags, and a dict of subdirectories (treemanifests). So far, it behaves just like manifestdict, but it will later help us write one manifest revlog per directory. The new class is still unused; it will be used after the next change. The code is not yet optimized. Running with it (see below) makes most or all operations slower. Once we start storing manifest revlogs for every directory, it should be possible to make many of these operations much faster. The fastdelta() optimization has been intentionally not implemented for the treemanifests. We can implement it later if necessary. All tests pass when run with the following patch (and without, of couse): --- a/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:08:42 2015 -0700 +++ b/mercurial/manifest.py Thu Mar 19 11:15:50 2015 -0700 @@ -596,7 +596,7 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): return None, None def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed): - if p1 in self._mancache: + if False and p1 in self._mancache: # If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can # compute a delta here using properties we know about the # manifest up-front, which may save time later for the @@ -626,3 +626,5 @@ class manifest(revlog.revlog): self._mancache[n] = (m, arraytext) return n + +manifestdict = treemanifest
2015-03-19 21:08:42 +03:00
def dirtext(self, usemanifestv2=False):
"""Get the full data of this directory as a bytestring. Make sure that
any submanifests have been written first, so their nodeids are correct.
"""
self._load()
flags = self.flags
dirs = [(d[:-1], self._dirs[d]._node, 't') for d in self._dirs]
files = [(f, self._files[f], flags(f)) for f in self._files]
return _text(sorted(dirs + files), usemanifestv2)
def read(self, gettext, readsubtree):
def _load_for_read(s):
s.parse(gettext(), readsubtree)
s._dirty = False
self._loadfunc = _load_for_read
def writesubtrees(self, m1, m2, writesubtree):
self._load() # for consistency; should never have any effect here
m1._load()
m2._load()
emptytree = treemanifest()
for d, subm in self._dirs.iteritems():
subp1 = m1._dirs.get(d, emptytree)._node
subp2 = m2._dirs.get(d, emptytree)._node
if subp1 == revlog.nullid:
subp1, subp2 = subp2, subp1
writesubtree(subm, subp1, subp2)
class manifestrevlog(revlog.revlog):
'''A revlog that stores manifest texts. This is responsible for caching the
full-text manifest contents.
'''
def __init__(self, opener, dir='', dirlogcache=None, indexfile=None):
"""Constructs a new manifest revlog
`indexfile` - used by extensions to have two manifests at once, like
when transitioning between flatmanifeset and treemanifests.
"""
# During normal operations, we expect to deal with not more than four
# revs at a time (such as during commit --amend). When rebasing large
# stacks of commits, the number can go up, hence the config knob below.
cachesize = 4
usetreemanifest = False
usemanifestv2 = False
opts = getattr(opener, 'options', None)
if opts is not None:
cachesize = opts.get('manifestcachesize', cachesize)
usetreemanifest = opts.get('treemanifest', usetreemanifest)
usemanifestv2 = opts.get('manifestv2', usemanifestv2)
self._treeondisk = usetreemanifest
self._usemanifestv2 = usemanifestv2
self._fulltextcache = util.lrucachedict(cachesize)
if dir:
assert self._treeondisk, 'opts is %r' % opts
if not dir.endswith('/'):
dir = dir + '/'
if indexfile is None:
indexfile = '00manifest.i'
if dir:
indexfile = "meta/" + dir + indexfile
self._dir = dir
# The dirlogcache is kept on the root manifest log
if dir:
self._dirlogcache = dirlogcache
else:
self._dirlogcache = {'': self}
super(manifestrevlog, self).__init__(opener, indexfile,
checkambig=bool(dir))
@property
def fulltextcache(self):
return self._fulltextcache
def clearcaches(self):
super(manifestrevlog, self).clearcaches()
self._fulltextcache.clear()
self._dirlogcache = {'': self}
def dirlog(self, dir):
if dir:
assert self._treeondisk
if dir not in self._dirlogcache:
self._dirlogcache[dir] = manifestrevlog(self.opener, dir,
self._dirlogcache)
return self._dirlogcache[dir]
def add(self, m, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed, readtree=None):
if (p1 in self.fulltextcache and util.safehasattr(m, 'fastdelta')
and not self._usemanifestv2):
# If our first parent is in the manifest cache, we can
# compute a delta here using properties we know about the
# manifest up-front, which may save time later for the
# revlog layer.
_checkforbidden(added)
# combine the changed lists into one sorted iterator
work = heapq.merge([(x, False) for x in added],
[(x, True) for x in removed])
arraytext, deltatext = m.fastdelta(self.fulltextcache[p1], work)
cachedelta = self.rev(p1), deltatext
text = util.buffer(arraytext)
n = self.addrevision(text, transaction, link, p1, p2, cachedelta)
else:
# The first parent manifest isn't already loaded, so we'll
# just encode a fulltext of the manifest and pass that
# through to the revlog layer, and let it handle the delta
# process.
if self._treeondisk:
assert readtree, "readtree must be set for treemanifest writes"
m1 = readtree(self._dir, p1)
m2 = readtree(self._dir, p2)
n = self._addtree(m, transaction, link, m1, m2, readtree)
arraytext = None
else:
text = m.text(self._usemanifestv2)
n = self.addrevision(text, transaction, link, p1, p2)
arraytext = bytearray(text)
if arraytext is not None:
self.fulltextcache[n] = arraytext
return n
def _addtree(self, m, transaction, link, m1, m2, readtree):
# If the manifest is unchanged compared to one parent,
# don't write a new revision
if self._dir != '' and (m.unmodifiedsince(m1) or m.unmodifiedsince(m2)):
return m.node()
def writesubtree(subm, subp1, subp2):
sublog = self.dirlog(subm.dir())
sublog.add(subm, transaction, link, subp1, subp2, None, None,
readtree=readtree)
m.writesubtrees(m1, m2, writesubtree)
text = m.dirtext(self._usemanifestv2)
n = None
if self._dir != '':
# Double-check whether contents are unchanged to one parent
if text == m1.dirtext(self._usemanifestv2):
n = m1.node()
elif text == m2.dirtext(self._usemanifestv2):
n = m2.node()
if not n:
n = self.addrevision(text, transaction, link, m1.node(), m2.node())
# Save nodeid so parent manifest can calculate its nodeid
m.setnode(n)
return n
class manifestlog(object):
"""A collection class representing the collection of manifest snapshots
referenced by commits in the repository.
In this situation, 'manifest' refers to the abstract concept of a snapshot
of the list of files in the given commit. Consumers of the output of this
class do not care about the implementation details of the actual manifests
they receive (i.e. tree or flat or lazily loaded, etc)."""
def __init__(self, opener, repo):
usetreemanifest = False
cachesize = 4
opts = getattr(opener, 'options', None)
if opts is not None:
usetreemanifest = opts.get('treemanifest', usetreemanifest)
cachesize = opts.get('manifestcachesize', cachesize)
self._treeinmem = usetreemanifest
self._oldmanifest = repo._constructmanifest()
self._revlog = self._oldmanifest
# A cache of the manifestctx or treemanifestctx for each directory
self._dirmancache = {}
self._dirmancache[''] = util.lrucachedict(cachesize)
self.cachesize = cachesize
def __getitem__(self, node):
"""Retrieves the manifest instance for the given node. Throws a
LookupError if not found.
"""
return self.get('', node)
def get(self, dir, node, verify=True):
"""Retrieves the manifest instance for the given node. Throws a
LookupError if not found.
`verify` - if True an exception will be thrown if the node is not in
the revlog
"""
if node in self._dirmancache.get(dir, ()):
cachemf = self._dirmancache[dir][node]
# The old manifest may put non-ctx manifests in the cache, so
# skip those since they don't implement the full api.
if (isinstance(cachemf, manifestctx) or
isinstance(cachemf, treemanifestctx)):
return cachemf
if dir:
if self._revlog._treeondisk:
if verify:
dirlog = self._revlog.dirlog(dir)
if node not in dirlog.nodemap:
raise LookupError(node, dirlog.indexfile,
_('no node'))
m = treemanifestctx(self, dir, node)
else:
raise error.Abort(
_("cannot ask for manifest directory '%s' in a flat "
"manifest") % dir)
else:
if verify:
if node not in self._revlog.nodemap:
raise LookupError(node, self._revlog.indexfile,
_('no node'))
if self._treeinmem:
m = treemanifestctx(self, '', node)
else:
m = manifestctx(self, node)
if node != revlog.nullid:
mancache = self._dirmancache.get(dir)
if not mancache:
mancache = util.lrucachedict(self.cachesize)
self._dirmancache[dir] = mancache
mancache[node] = m
return m
def clearcaches(self):
self._dirmancache.clear()
self._revlog.clearcaches()
class memmanifestctx(object):
def __init__(self, manifestlog):
self._manifestlog = manifestlog
self._manifestdict = manifestdict()
def _revlog(self):
return self._manifestlog._revlog
def new(self):
return memmanifestctx(self._manifestlog)
def copy(self):
memmf = memmanifestctx(self._manifestlog)
memmf._manifestdict = self.read().copy()
return memmf
def read(self):
return self._manifestdict
def write(self, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed):
return self._revlog().add(self._manifestdict, transaction, link, p1, p2,
added, removed)
class manifestctx(object):
"""A class representing a single revision of a manifest, including its
contents, its parent revs, and its linkrev.
"""
def __init__(self, manifestlog, node):
self._manifestlog = manifestlog
self._data = None
self._node = node
# TODO: We eventually want p1, p2, and linkrev exposed on this class,
# but let's add it later when something needs it and we can load it
# lazily.
#self.p1, self.p2 = revlog.parents(node)
#rev = revlog.rev(node)
#self.linkrev = revlog.linkrev(rev)
def _revlog(self):
return self._manifestlog._revlog
def node(self):
return self._node
def new(self):
return memmanifestctx(self._manifestlog)
def copy(self):
memmf = memmanifestctx(self._manifestlog)
memmf._manifestdict = self.read().copy()
return memmf
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@propertycache
def parents(self):
return self._revlog().parents(self._node)
def read(self):
if self._data is None:
if self._node == revlog.nullid:
self._data = manifestdict()
else:
rl = self._revlog()
text = rl.revision(self._node)
arraytext = bytearray(text)
rl._fulltextcache[self._node] = arraytext
self._data = manifestdict(text)
return self._data
def readfast(self, shallow=False):
'''Calls either readdelta or read, based on which would be less work.
readdelta is called if the delta is against the p1, and therefore can be
read quickly.
If `shallow` is True, nothing changes since this is a flat manifest.
'''
rl = self._revlog()
r = rl.rev(self._node)
deltaparent = rl.deltaparent(r)
if deltaparent != revlog.nullrev and deltaparent in rl.parentrevs(r):
return self.readdelta()
return self.read()
def readdelta(self, shallow=False):
'''Returns a manifest containing just the entries that are present
in this manifest, but not in its p1 manifest. This is efficient to read
if the revlog delta is already p1.
Changing the value of `shallow` has no effect on flat manifests.
'''
revlog = self._revlog()
if revlog._usemanifestv2:
# Need to perform a slow delta
r0 = revlog.deltaparent(revlog.rev(self._node))
m0 = self._manifestlog[revlog.node(r0)].read()
m1 = self.read()
md = manifestdict()
for f, ((n0, fl0), (n1, fl1)) in m0.diff(m1).iteritems():
if n1:
md[f] = n1
if fl1:
md.setflag(f, fl1)
return md
r = revlog.rev(self._node)
d = mdiff.patchtext(revlog.revdiff(revlog.deltaparent(r), r))
return manifestdict(d)
def find(self, key):
return self.read().find(key)
class memtreemanifestctx(object):
def __init__(self, manifestlog, dir=''):
self._manifestlog = manifestlog
self._dir = dir
self._treemanifest = treemanifest()
def _revlog(self):
return self._manifestlog._revlog
def new(self, dir=''):
return memtreemanifestctx(self._manifestlog, dir=dir)
def copy(self):
memmf = memtreemanifestctx(self._manifestlog, dir=self._dir)
memmf._treemanifest = self._treemanifest.copy()
return memmf
def read(self):
return self._treemanifest
def write(self, transaction, link, p1, p2, added, removed):
def readtree(dir, node):
return self._manifestlog.get(dir, node).read()
return self._revlog().add(self._treemanifest, transaction, link, p1, p2,
added, removed, readtree=readtree)
class treemanifestctx(object):
def __init__(self, manifestlog, dir, node):
self._manifestlog = manifestlog
self._dir = dir
self._data = None
self._node = node
# TODO: Load p1/p2/linkrev lazily. They need to be lazily loaded so that
# we can instantiate treemanifestctx objects for directories we don't
# have on disk.
#self.p1, self.p2 = revlog.parents(node)
#rev = revlog.rev(node)
#self.linkrev = revlog.linkrev(rev)
def _revlog(self):
return self._manifestlog._revlog.dirlog(self._dir)
def read(self):
if self._data is None:
rl = self._revlog()
if self._node == revlog.nullid:
self._data = treemanifest()
elif rl._treeondisk:
m = treemanifest(dir=self._dir)
def gettext():
return rl.revision(self._node)
def readsubtree(dir, subm):
# Set verify to False since we need to be able to create
# subtrees for trees that don't exist on disk.
return self._manifestlog.get(dir, subm, verify=False).read()
m.read(gettext, readsubtree)
m.setnode(self._node)
self._data = m
else:
text = rl.revision(self._node)
arraytext = bytearray(text)
rl.fulltextcache[self._node] = arraytext
self._data = treemanifest(dir=self._dir, text=text)
return self._data
def node(self):
return self._node
def new(self, dir=''):
return memtreemanifestctx(self._manifestlog, dir=dir)
def copy(self):
memmf = memtreemanifestctx(self._manifestlog, dir=self._dir)
memmf._treemanifest = self.read().copy()
return memmf
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@propertycache
def parents(self):
return self._revlog().parents(self._node)
def readdelta(self, shallow=False):
'''Returns a manifest containing just the entries that are present
in this manifest, but not in its p1 manifest. This is efficient to read
if the revlog delta is already p1.
If `shallow` is True, this will read the delta for this directory,
without recursively reading subdirectory manifests. Instead, any
subdirectory entry will be reported as it appears in the manifest, i.e.
the subdirectory will be reported among files and distinguished only by
its 't' flag.
'''
revlog = self._revlog()
if shallow and not revlog._usemanifestv2:
r = revlog.rev(self._node)
d = mdiff.patchtext(revlog.revdiff(revlog.deltaparent(r), r))
return manifestdict(d)
else:
# Need to perform a slow delta
r0 = revlog.deltaparent(revlog.rev(self._node))
m0 = self._manifestlog.get(self._dir, revlog.node(r0)).read()
m1 = self.read()
md = treemanifest(dir=self._dir)
for f, ((n0, fl0), (n1, fl1)) in m0.diff(m1).iteritems():
if n1:
md[f] = n1
if fl1:
md.setflag(f, fl1)
return md
def readfast(self, shallow=False):
'''Calls either readdelta or read, based on which would be less work.
readdelta is called if the delta is against the p1, and therefore can be
read quickly.
If `shallow` is True, it only returns the entries from this manifest,
and not any submanifests.
'''
rl = self._revlog()
r = rl.rev(self._node)
deltaparent = rl.deltaparent(r)
if (deltaparent != revlog.nullrev and
deltaparent in rl.parentrevs(r)):
return self.readdelta(shallow=shallow)
if shallow:
return manifestdict(rl.revision(self._node))
else:
return self.read()
def find(self, key):
return self.read().find(key)