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Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D35299 --HG-- extra : moz-landing-system : lando
158 lines
6.2 KiB
ReStructuredText
158 lines
6.2 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _build_sparse:
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================
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Sparse Checkouts
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================
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The Firefox repository is large: over 230,000 files. That many files
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can put a lot of strain on machines, tools, and processes.
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Some version control tools have the ability to only populate a
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working directory / checkout with a subset of files in the repository.
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This is called *sparse checkout*.
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Various tools in the Firefox repository are configured to work
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when a sparse checkout is being used.
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Sparse Checkouts in Mercurial
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=============================
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Mercurial 4.3 introduced **experimental** support for sparse checkouts
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in the official distribution (a Facebook-authored extension has
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implemented the feature as a 3rd party extension for years).
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To enable sparse checkout support in Mercurial, enable the ``sparse``
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extension::
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[extensions]
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sparse =
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The *sparseness* of the working directory is managed using
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``hg debugsparse``. Run ``hg help debugsparse`` and ``hg help -e sparse``
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for more info on the feature.
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When a *sparse config* is enabled, the working directory only contains
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files matching that config. You cannot ``hg add`` or ``hg remove`` files
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outside the *sparse config*.
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.. warning::
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Sparse support in Mercurial 4.3 does not have any backwards
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compatibility guarantees. Expect things to change. Scripting against
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commands or relying on behavior is strongly discouraged.
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In-Tree Sparse Profiles
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=======================
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Mercurial supports defining the sparse config using files under version
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control. These are called *sparse profiles*.
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Essentially, the sparse profiles are managed just like any other file in
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the repository. When you ``hg update``, the sparse configuration is
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evaluated against the sparse profile at the revision being updated to.
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From an end-user perspective, you just need to *activate* a profile once
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and files will be added or removed as appropriate whenever the versioned
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profile file updates.
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In the Firefox repository, the ``build/sparse-profiles`` directory
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contains Mercurial *sparse profiles* files.
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Each *sparse profile* essentially defines a list of file patterns
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(see ``hg help patterns``) to include or exclude. See
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``hg help -e sparse`` for more.
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Mach Support for Sparse Checkouts
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=================================
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``mach`` detects when a sparse checkout is being used and its
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behavior may vary to accommodate this.
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By default it is a fatal error if ``mach`` can't load one of the
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``mach_commands.py`` files it was told to. But if a sparse checkout
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is being used, ``mach`` assumes that file isn't part of the sparse
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checkout and to ignore missing file errors. This means that
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running ``mach`` inside a sparse checkout will only have access
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to the commands defined in files in the sparse checkout.
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Sparse Checkouts in Automation
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==============================
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``hg robustcheckout`` (the extension/command used to perform clones
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and working directory operations in automation) supports sparse checkout.
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However, it has a number of limitations over Mercurial's default sparse
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checkout implementation:
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* Only supports 1 profile at a time
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* Does not support non-profile sparse configs
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* Does not allow transitioning from a non-sparse to sparse checkout or
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vice-versa
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These restrictions ensure that any sparse working directory populated by
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``hg robustcheckout`` is as consistent and robust as possible.
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``run-task`` (the low-level script for *bootstrapping* tasks in
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automation) has support for sparse checkouts.
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TaskGraph tasks using ``run-task`` can specify a ``sparse-profile``
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attribute in YAML (or in code) to denote the sparse profile file to
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use. e.g.::
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run:
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using: run-command
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command: <command>
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sparse-profile: taskgraph
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This automagically results in ``run-task`` and ``hg robustcheckout``
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using the sparse profile defined in ``build/sparse-profiles/<value>``.
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Pros and Cons of Sparse Checkouts
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=================================
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The benefits of sparse checkout are that it makes the repository appear
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to be smaller. This means:
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* Less time performing working directory operations -> faster version
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control operations
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* Fewer files to consult -> faster operations
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* Working directories only contain what is needed -> easier to understand
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what everything does
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Fewer files in the working directory also contributes to disadvantages:
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* Searching may not yield hits because a file isn't in the sparse
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checkout. e.g. a *global* search and replace may not actually be
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*global* after all.
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* Tools performing filesystem walking or path globbing (e.g.
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``**/*.js``) may fail to find files because they don't exist.
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* Various tools and processes make assumptions that all files in the
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repository are always available.
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There can also be problems caused by mixing sparse and non-sparse
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checkouts. For example, if a process in automation is using sparse
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and a local developer is not using sparse, things may work for the
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local developer but fail in automation (because a file isn't included
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in the sparse configuration and not available to automation.
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Furthermore, if environments aren't using exactly the same sparse
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configuration, differences can contribute to varying behavior.
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When Should Sparse Checkouts Be Used?
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=====================================
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Developers are discouraged from using sparse checkouts for local work
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until tools for handling sparse checkouts have improved. In particular,
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Mercurial's support for sparse is still experimental and various Firefox
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tools make assumptions that all files are available. Developers should
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use sparse checkout at their own risk.
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The use of sparse checkouts in automation is a performance versus
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robustness trade-off. Use of sparse checkouts will make automation
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faster because machines will only have to manage a few thousand files
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in a checkout instead of a few hundred thousand. This can potentially
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translate to minutes saved per machine day. At the scale of thousands
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of machines, the savings can be significant. But adopting sparse
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checkouts will open up new avenues for failures. (See section above.)
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If a process is isolated (in terms of file access) and well-understood,
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sparse checkout can likely be leveraged with little risk. But if a
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process is doing things like walking the filesystem and performing
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lots of wildcard matching, the dangers are higher.
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