This greatly speeds up node->rev lookups, with results that are
often user-perceptible: for instance, "hg --time log" of the node
associated with rev 1000 on a linux-2.6 repo improves from 0.3
seconds to 0.03. I have not found any instances of slowdowns.
The new perfnodelookup command in contrib/perf.py demonstrates the
speedup more dramatically, since it performs no I/O. For a single
lookup, the new code is about 40x faster.
These changes also prepare the ground for the possibility of further
improving the performance of prefix-based node lookups.
We only parse entries in a revlog index file when they are actually
needed, and cache them when first requested.
This makes a huge difference to performance on large revlogs when
accessing the tip revision or performing a handful of numeric lookups
(very common cases). For instance, "hg --time tip --template {node}"
on a tree with 300,000 revs takes 0.15 before, 0.02 after.
Even for revlog-intensive operations (e.g. running "hg log" to
completion), the lazy approach is about 1% faster than the eager
parse_index2.