view en/hgext.tex @ 231:28ddbf9f3729

Use new \hgxcmd and \hgxopt commands in a few places.
author Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
date Sun, 27 May 2007 09:39:58 -0700
parents eef2171243e8
children 2469608b4a08
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\chapter{Adding functionality with extensions}
\label{chap:hgext}

While the core of Mercurial is quite complete from a functionality
standpoint, it's deliberately shorn of fancy features.  This approach
of preserving simplicity keeps the software easy to deal with for both
maintainers and users.

However, Mercurial doesn't box you in with an inflexible command set:
you can add features to it as \emph{extensions} (sometimes known as
\emph{plugins}).  We've already discussed a few of these extensions in
earlier chapters.
\begin{itemize}
\item Section~\ref{sec:tour-merge:fetch} covers the \hgext{fetch}
  extension; this combines pulling new changes and merging them with
  local changes into a single command, \hgxcmd{fetch}{fetch}.
\item The \hgext{bisect} extension adds an efficient pruning search
  for changes that introduced bugs, and we documented it in
  chapter~\ref{sec:undo:bisect}.
\item In chapter~\ref{chap:hook}, we covered several extensions that
  are useful for hook-related functionality: \hgext{acl} adds access
  control lists; \hgext{bugzilla} adds integration with the Bugzilla
  bug tracking system; and \hgext{notify} sends notification emails on
  new changes.
\item The Mercurial Queues patch management extension is so invaluable
  that it merits two chapters and an appendix all to itself.
  Chapter~\ref{chap:mq} covers the basics;
  chapter~\ref{chap:mq-collab} discusses advanced topics; and
  appendix~\ref{chap:mqref} goes into detail on each command.
\end{itemize}

In this chapter, we'll cover some of the other extensions that are
available for Mercurial, and briefly touch on some of the machinery
you'll need to know about if you want to write an extension of your
own.
\begin{itemize}
\item In section~\ref{sec:hgext:inotify}, we'll discuss the
  possibility of \emph{huge} performance improvements using the
  \hgext{inotify} extension.
\end{itemize}

\section{Improve performance with the \hgext{inotify} extension}
\label{sec:hgext:inotify}

Are you interested in having some of the most common Mercurial
operations run as much as a hundred times faster?  Read on!

Mercurial has great performance under normal circumstances.  For
example, when you run the \hgcmd{status} command, Mercurial has to
scan almost every directory and file in your repository so that it can
display file status.  Many other Mercurial commands need to do the
same work behind the scenes; for example, the \hgcmd{diff} command
uses the status machinery to avoid doing an expensive comparison
operation on files that obviously haven't changed.

Because obtaining file status is crucial to good performance, the
authors of Mercurial have optimised this code to within an inch of its
life.  However, there's no avoiding the fact that when you run
\hgcmd{status}, Mercurial is going to have to perform at least one
expensive system call for each managed file to determine whether it's
changed since the last time Mercurial checked.  For a sufficiently
large repository, this can take a long time.

To put a number on the magnitude of this effect, I created a
repository containing 150,000 managed files.  I timed \hgcmd{status}
as taking ten seconds to run, even when \emph{none} of those files had
been modified.

Many modern operating systems contain a file notification facility.
If a program signs up to an appropriate service, the operating system
will notify it every time a file of interest is created, modified, or
deleted.  On Linux systems, the kernel component that does this is
called \texttt{inotify}.

Mercurial's \hgext{inotify} extension talks to the kernel's
\texttt{inotify} component to optimise \hgcmd{status} commands.  The
extension has two components.  A daemon sits in the background and
receives notifications from the \texttt{inotify} subsystem.  It also
listens for connections from a regular Mercurial command.  The
extension modifies Mercurial's behaviour so that instead of scanning
the filesystem, it queries the daemon.  Since the daemon has perfect
information about the state of the repository, it can respond with a
result instantaneously, avoiding the need to scan every directory and
file in the repository.

Recall the ten seconds that I measured plain Mercurial as taking to
run \hgcmd{status} on a 150,000 file repository.  With the
\hgext{inotify} extension enabled, the time dropped to 0.1~seconds, a
factor of \emph{one hundred} faster.

Before we continue, please pay attention to some caveats.
\begin{itemize}
\item The \hgext{inotify} extension is Linux-specific.  Because it
  interfaces directly to the Linux kernel's \texttt{inotify}
  subsystem, it does not work on other operating systems.
\item It should work on any Linux distribution that was released after
  early~2005.  Older distributions are likely to have a kernel that
  lacks \texttt{inotify}, or a version of \texttt{glibc} that does not
  have the necessary interfacing support.
\item Not all filesystems are suitable for use with the
  \hgext{inotify} extension.  Network filesystems such as NFS are a
  non-starter, for example, particularly if you're running Mercurial
  on several systems, all mounting the same network filesystem.  The
  kernel's \texttt{inotify} system has no way of knowing about changes
  made on another system.  Most local filesystems (e.g.~ext3, XFS,
  ReiserFS) should work fine.
\end{itemize}

The \hgext{inotify} extension is not yet shipped with Mercurial as of
May~2007, so it's a little more involved to set up than other
extensions.  But the performance improvement is worth it!

The extension currently comes in two parts: a set of patches to the
Mercurial source code, and a library of Python bindings to the
\texttt{inotify} subsystem.
\begin{note}
  There are \emph{two} Python \texttt{inotify} binding libraries.  One
  of them is called \texttt{pyinotify}, and is packaged by some Linux
  distributions as \texttt{python-inotify}.  This is \emph{not} the
  one you'll need, as it is too buggy and inefficient to be practical.
\end{note}
To get going, it's best to already have a functioning copy of
Mercurial installed.
\begin{note}
  If you follow the instructions below, you'll be \emph{replacing} and
  overwriting any existing installation of Mercurial that you might
  already have, using the latest ``bleeding edge'' Mercurial code.
  Don't say you weren't warned!
\end{note}
\begin{enumerate}
\item Clone the Python \texttt{inotify} binding repository.  Build and
  install it.
  \begin{codesample4}
    hg clone http://hg.kublai.com/python/inotify
    cd inotify
    python setup.py build --force
    sudo python setup.py install --skip-build
  \end{codesample4}
\item Clone the \dirname{crew} Mercurial repository.  Clone the
  \hgext{inotify} patch repository so that Mercurial Queues will be
  able to apply patches to your cope of the \dirname{crew} repository.
  \begin{codesample4}
    hg clone http://hg.intevation.org/mercurial/crew
    hg clone crew inotify
    hg clone http://hg.kublai.com/mercurial/patches/inotify inotify/.hg/patches
  \end{codesample4}
\item Make sure that you have the Mercurial Queues extension,
  \hgext{mq}, enabled.  If you've never used MQ, read
  section~\ref{sec:mq:start} to get started quickly.
\item Go into the \dirname{inotify} repo, and apply all of the
  \hgext{inotify} patches using the \hgxopt{mq}{qpush}{-a} option to
  the \hgxcmd{mq}{qpush} command.
  \begin{codesample4}
    cd inotify
    hg qpush -a
  \end{codesample4}
  If you get an error message from \hgxcmd{mq}{qpush}, you should not
  continue.  Instead, ask for help.
\item Build and install the patched version of Mercurial.
  \begin{codesample4}
    python setup.py build --force
    sudo python setup.py install --skip-build
  \end{codesample4}
\end{enumerate}
Once you've build a suitably patched version of Mercurial, all you
need to do to enable the \hgext{inotify} extension is add an entry to
your \hgrc.
\begin{codesample2}
  [extensions]
  inotify =
\end{codesample2}
When the \hgext{inotify} extension is enabled, Mercurial will
automatically and transparently start the status daemon the first time
you run a command that needs status in a repository.  It runs one
status daemon per repository.

The status daemon is started silently, and runs in the background.  If
you look at a list of running processes after you've enabled the
\hgext{inotify} extension and run a few commands in different
repositories, you'll thus see a few \texttt{hg} processes sitting
around, waiting for updates from the kernel and queries from
Mercurial.

The first time you run a Mercurial command in a repository when you
have the \hgext{inotify} extension enabled, it will run with about the
same performance as a normal Mercurial command.  This is because the
status daemon needs to perform a normal status scan so that it has a
baseline against which to apply later updates from the kernel.
However, \emph{every} subsequent command that does any kind of status
check should be noticeably faster on repositories of even fairly
modest size.  Better yet, the bigger your repository is, the greater a
performance advantage you'll see.  The \hgext{inotify} daemon makes
status operations almost instantaneous on repositories of all sizes!

If you like, you can manually start a status daemon using the
\hgxcmd{inotify}{inserve} command.  This gives you slightly finer
control over how the daemon ought to run.  This command will of course
only be available when the \hgext{inotify} extension is enabled.

When you're using the \hgext{inotify} extension, you should notice
\emph{no difference at all} in Mercurial's behaviour, with the sole
exception of status-related commands running a whole lot faster than
they used to.  You should specifically expect that commands will not
print different output; neither should they give different results.
If either of these situations occurs, please report a bug.

\section{Flexible diff support with the \hgext{extdiff} extension}
\label{sec:hgext:extdiff}

Mercurial's built-in \hgcmd{diff} command outputs plaintext unified
diffs.
\interaction{extdiff.diff}
If you would like to use an external tool to display modifications,
you'll want to use the \hgext{extdiff} extension.  This will let you
use, for example, a graphical diff tool.

The \hgext{extdiff} extension is bundled with Mercurial, so it's easy
to set up.  In the \rcsection{extensions} section of your \hgrc,
simply add a one-line entry to enable the extension.
\begin{codesample2}
  [extensions]
  extdiff =
\end{codesample2}
This introduces a command named \hgxcmd{extdiff}{extdiff}, which by
default uses your system's \command{diff} command to generate a
unified diff in the same form as the built-in \hgcmd{diff} command.
\interaction{extdiff.extdiff}
The result won't be exactly the same as with the built-in \hgcmd{diff}
variations, because the output of \command{diff} varies from one
system to another, even when passed the same options.

As the ``\texttt{making snapshot}'' lines of output above imply, the
\hgxcmd{extdiff}{extdiff} command works by creating two snapshots of
your source tree.  The first snapshot is of the source revision; the
second, of the target revision or working directory.  The
\hgxcmd{extdiff}{extdiff} command generates these snapshots in a
temporary directory, passes the name of each directory to an external
diff viewer, then deletes the temporary directory.  For efficiency, it
only snapshots the directories and files that have changed between the
two revisions.

Snapshot directory names have the same base name as your repository.
If your repository path is \dirname{/quux/bar/foo}, then \dirname{foo}
will be the name of each snapshot directory.  Each snapshot directory
name has its changeset ID appended, if appropriate.  If a snapshot is
of revision \texttt{a631aca1083f}, the directory will be named
\dirname{foo.a631aca1083f}.  A snapshot of the working directory won't
have a changeset ID appended, so it would just be \dirname{foo} in
this example.  To see what this looks like in practice, look again at
the \hgxcmd{extdiff}{extdiff} example above.  Notice that the diff has
the snapshot directory names embedded in its header.

The \hgxcmd{extdiff}{extdiff} command accepts two important options.
The \hgxopt{extdiff}{extdiff}{-p} option lets you choose a program to
view differences with, instead of \command{diff}.  With the
\hgxopt{extdiff}{extdiff}{-o} option, you can change the options that
\hgxcmd{extdiff}{extdiff} passes to the program (by default, these
options are ``\texttt{-Npru}'', which only make sense if you're
running \command{diff}).  In other respects, the
\hgxcmd{extdiff}{extdiff} command acts similarly to the built-in
\hgcmd{diff} command: you use the same option names, syntax, and
arguments to specify the revisions you want, the files you want, and
so on.

As an example, here's how to run the normal system \command{diff}
command, getting it to generate context diffs (using the
\cmdopt{diff}{-c} option) instead of unified diffs, and five lines of
context instead of the default three (passing \texttt{5} as the
argument to the \cmdopt{diff}{-C} option).
\interaction{extdiff.extdiff-ctx}

Launching a visual diff tool is just as easy.  Here's how to launch
the \command{kdiff3} viewer.
\begin{codesample2}
  hg extdiff -p kdiff3 -o ''
\end{codesample2}

If your diff viewing command can't deal with directories, you can
easily work around this with a little scripting.  For an example of
such scripting in action with the \hgext{mq} extension and the
\command{interdiff} command, see
section~\ref{mq-collab:tips:interdiff}.

\subsection{Defining command aliases}

It can be cumbersome to remember the options to both the
\hgxcmd{extdiff}{extdiff} command and the diff viewer you want to use,
so the \hgext{extdiff} extension lets you define \emph{new} commands
that will invoke your diff viewer with exactly the right options.

All you need to do is edit your \hgrc, and add a section named
\rcsection{extdiff}.  Inside this section, you can define multiple
commands.  Here's how to add a \texttt{kdiff3} command.  Once you've
defined this, you can type ``\texttt{hg kdiff3}'' and the
\hgext{extdiff} extension will run \command{kdiff3} for you.
\begin{codesample2}
  [extdiff]
  cmd.kdiff3 =
\end{codesample2}
If you leave the right hand side of the definition empty, as above,
the \hgext{extdiff} extension uses the name of the command you defined
as the name of the external program to run.  But these names don't
have to be the same.  Here, we define a command named ``\texttt{hg
  wibble}'', which runs \command{kdiff3}.
\begin{codesample2}
  [extdiff]
  cmd.wibble = kdiff3
\end{codesample2}

You can also specify the default options that you want to invoke your
diff viewing program with.  The prefix to use is ``\texttt{opts.}'',
followed by the name of the command to which the options apply.  This
example defines a ``\texttt{hg vimdiff}'' command that runs the
\command{vim} editor's \texttt{DirDiff} extension.
\begin{codesample2}
  [extdiff]  
  cmd.vimdiff = vim
  opts.vimdiff = -f '+next' '+execute "DirDiff" argv(0) argv(1)'
\end{codesample2}


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