We'll need the same logic in forthcoming changeset to handle --line-range
option in 'hg log' command.
The function lives in scmutil.py (rather than util.py) as it uses match and
pathutil modules.
This is minimal and non-controversial implementation of extdata() revset.
Originally extdata sources were exposed to the symbol namespace, but I've
changed it to a plain function for simplicity.
Previously revset weight is hardcoded and cannot be modified. This patch
moves it to predicate so newly registered revsets could define their weight
to properly give static optimization some hint.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D657
The `draft() & ::x` type query could be common for selecting one or more
draft feature branches being worked on.
Before this patch, `::x` may travel through the changelog DAG for a long
distance until it gets a smaller revision number than `min(draft())`. It
could be very slow on long changelog with distant (in terms of revision
numbers) drafts.
This patch adds a fast path for this situation, and will stop traveling the
changelog DAG once `::x` hits a non-draft revision.
The fast path also works for `secret()` and `not public()`.
To measure the performance difference, I used drawdag to create a repo that
emulates distant drafts:
DRAFT4
|
DRAFT3 # draft
/
PUBLIC9999 # public
|
PUBLIC9998
|
. DRAFT2
. |
. DRAFT1 # draft
| /
PUBLIC0001 # public
And measured the performance using the repo:
(BEFORE)
$ hg perfrevset 'draft() & ::(DRAFT2+DRAFT4)'
! wall 0.017132 comb 0.010000 user 0.010000 sys 0.000000 (best of 156)
$ hg perfrevset 'draft() & ::(all())'
! wall 0.024221 comb 0.030000 user 0.030000 sys 0.000000 (best of 113)
(AFTER)
$ hg perfrevset 'draft() & ::(DRAFT2+DRAFT4)'
! wall 0.000243 comb 0.000000 user 0.000000 sys 0.000000 (best of 9303)
$ hg perfrevset 'draft() & ::(all())'
! wall 0.004319 comb 0.000000 user 0.000000 sys 0.000000 (best of 655)
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D441
Rewrite `flipand(y, x)` to `andsmally(x, y)` so the AST order is unchanged,
which could be more friendly to developers.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D579
This should be sensible default since mfunc(subset) is roughly equivalent
to 'subset & mfunc'. The order argument is still there so we can specify
'anyorder' if the order doesn't really matter.
Keeping `order` in tree makes AST operation harder. And there could be
invalid cases if trees could be generated and compounded freely, like:
SetA(order=define) & SetB(order=define)
^^^^^^ couldn't be satisfied
This patch changes the code to calculate order on the fly, during tree
traversal. Optimization of reordering `and` arguments is preserved by
introducing a new internal operation `flipand`.
.. api::
revset.stringset() now takes 'order' as the last argument.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D451
The proposed syntax [1] was originally 'set{n rel}', but it seemed slightly
confusing if template is involved. On the other hand, we want to keep 'set[n]'
for future extension. So this patch introduces 'set#rel[n]' ternary operator.
I chose '#' just because it looks like applying an attribute.
This also adds stubs for 'set[n]' and 'set#rel' operators since these syntax
elements are fundamental for constructing 'set#rel[n]'.
[1]: https://www.mercurial-scm.org/wiki/RevsetOperatorPlan#ideas_from_mpm
This revset returns all successors, including transit nodes and the source
nodes (to be consistent with existing revsets like "ancestors").
To filter out transit nodes, use `successors(X)-obsolete()`.
To filter out divergent case, use `successors(X)-divergent()-obsolete()`.
The revset could be useful to define rebase destination, like:
`max(successors(BASE)-divergent()-obsolete())`. The `max` is to deal with
splits.
There are other implementations where `successors` returns just one level of
successors, and `allsuccessors` returns everything. I think `successors`
returning all successors by default is more user friendly. We have seen
cases in production where people use 1-level `successors` while they really
want `allsuccessors`. So it seems better to just have one single revset
returning all successors by default to avoid user errors.
In the future we might want to add `depth` keyword argument to it and for
other revsets like `ancestors` etc. Or even build some flexible indexing
syntax [1] to satisfy people having the depth limit requirement.
[1]: https://www.mercurial-scm.org/pipermail/mercurial-devel/2017-July/101140.html
Previously repo.anyrevs only expand aliases in [revsetalias] config. This
patch makes it more flexible to accept a customized dict defining aliases
without having to couple with ui.
revsetlang.expandaliases now has the signature (tree, aliases, warn=None)
which is more consistent with templater.expandaliases. revsetlang.py is now
free from "ui", which seems to be a good thing.
This is naive implementation using two-pass scanning. Tracking descendants
isn't an easy problem if both start and stop depths are specified. It's
impractical to remember all possible depths of each node while scanning from
roots to descendants because the number of depths explodes. Instead, we could
cache (min, max) depths as a good approximation and track ancestors back when
needed, but that's likely to have off-by-one bug.
Since this implementation appears not significantly slower, and is quite
straightforward, I think it's good enough for practical use cases. The time
and space complexity is O(n) ish.
revisions:
0) 1-pass scanning with (min, max)-depth cache (worst-case quadratic)
1) 2-pass scanning (this version)
repository:
mozilla-central
# descendants(0) (for reference)
*) 0.430353
# descendants(0, depth=1000)
0) 0.264889
1) 0.398289
# descendants(limit(tip:0, 1, offset=10000), depth=1000)
0) 0.025478
1) 0.029099
# descendants(0, depth=2000, startdepth=1000)
0) painfully slow (due to quadratic backtracking of ancestors)
1) 1.531138
Prepares for adding depth support. I want to process depth=0 in
revdescendants() to make things simpler.
only() also calls dagop.revdescendants(), but it filters out root revisions
explicitly. So this should cause no problem.
# descendants(0) using hg repo
0) 0.052380
1) 0.051226
# only(tip) using hg repo
0) 0.001433
1) 0.001425
This is necessary to implement the set{gen} (set subscript) operator. For
example, set{-n} will be translated to ancestors(set, depth=n, startdepth=n).
https://www.mercurial-scm.org/wiki/RevsetOperatorPlan#ideas_from_mpm
The UI is undecided and I doubt if the startdepth option would be actually
useful, so the option is hidden for now. 'depth' could be extended to take
min:max range, in which case, integer depth should select a single generation.
ancestors(set, depth=:y) # scan up to y-th generation
ancestors(set, depth=x:) # skip until (x-1)-th generation
ancestors(set, depth=x) # select only x-th generation
Any ideas are welcomed.
# reverse(ancestors(tip)) using hg repo
3) 0.075951
4) 0.076175
context.py seems not a good place to host these functions.
% wc -l mercurial/context.py mercurial/dagop.py
2306 mercurial/context.py
424 mercurial/dagop.py
2730 total
This module hosts the following functions. They are somewhat similar (e.g.
scanning revisions using heap queue or stack) and seem non-trivial in
algorithmic point of view.
- _revancestors()
- _revdescendants()
- reachableroots()
- _toposort()
I was thinking of adding revset._fileancestors() generator for better follow()
implementation, but it would be called from context.py as well. So I decided
to create new module.
Naming is hard. I couldn't come up with any better module name, so it's called
"dag operation" now. I rejected the following candidates:
- ancestor.py - existing, revlog-level DAG algorithm
- ancestorset.py - doesn't always return a set
- dagalgorithm.py - hard to type
- dagutil.py - existing
- revancestor.py - I want to add fileancestors()
% wc -l mercurial/dagop.py mercurial/revset.py
339 mercurial/dagop.py
2020 mercurial/revset.py
2359 total
This replaces 'if y in subset' with '& subset'. first(null) and last(wdir())
are fixed thanks to fullreposet.__and__.
This also revealed that first() and last() don't follow the order of the
input set. 'ls & subset' is valid only if the ordering requirement is 'define'
or 'any'.
No performance regression observed:
revset #0: limit(0:9999, 100, 9000)
0) 0.001164
1) 0.001135
revset #2: 9000 & limit(0:9999, 100, 9000)
0) 0.001224
1) 0.001181
revset #3: last(0:9999, 100)
0) 0.000237
1) 0.000199
last() is implemented using a reversed iterator, so the result should be
reversed again.
I've marked this as BC since it's quite old bug seen in 3.0. The first bad
revision is 1ef0875a62f8 "revset: changed last implementation to use lazy
classes."
Negative offsets to the `~` operator now search for descendents. The search is
aborted when a node has more than one child as we do not have a definition for
'nth child'. Optionally we can introduce such a notion and take the nth child
ordered by rev number.
The current revset language does provides a short operator for ancestor lookup
but not for descendents. This gives user a simple revset to move to the previous
changeset, e.g. `hg up '.~1'` but not to the 'next' changeset. With this change
userse can now use `.~-1` as a shortcut to move to the next changeset.
This fits better into allowing users to specify revisions via revsets and
avoiding the need for special `hg next` and `hg prev` operations.
The alternative to negative offsets is adding a new operator. We do not have
many operators in ascii left that do not require bash escaping (',', '_', and
'/' come to mind). If we decide that we should add a more convenient short
operator such as ('/', e.g. './1') we can later add it and allow ascendents
lookup via negative numbers.
The idea is simple. If the given node id prefix is 'ff...f', add +1 to the
number of matches (e.g. ambiguous if partial + maybewdir > 1).
This patch also fixes id() revset and shortest() template since _partialmatch()
can raise WdirUnsupported exception.
For wdir(), we now raises an exception which will be raised when wdir() will be
passed, so catching that exception is better checking for wdir() using if-else.
We parse "descend" symbol as a Boolean using getboolean (prior extraction by
getargsdict already checked that it is a symbol).
In tests, check for error cases and vary Boolean values here and there.