Commit graph

8 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Thomas de Zeeuw
e3c12764f8
Only use a single cache file per Python package (#5117)
## Summary

This changes the caching design from one cache file per source file, to
one cache file per package. This greatly reduces the amount of cache
files that are opened and written, while maintaining roughly the same
(combined) size as bincode is very compact.

Below are some very much not scientific performance tests. It uses
projects/sources to check:

* small.py: single, 31 bytes Python file with 2 errors.
* test.py: single, 43k Python file with 8 errors.
* fastapi: FastAPI repo, 1134 files checked, 0 errors.

Source   | Before # files | After # files | Before size | After size
-------|-------|-------|-------|-------
small.py | 1              | 1             | 20 K        | 20 K
test.py  | 1              | 1             | 60 K        | 60 K
fastapi  | 1134           | 518           | 4.5 M       | 2.3 M

One question that might come up is why fastapi still has 518 cache files
and not 1? That is because this is using the existing package
resolution, which sees examples, docs, etc. as separate from the "main"
source code (in the fastapi directory in the repo). In this future it
might be worth consider switching to a one cache file per repo strategy.

This new design is not perfect and does have a number of known issues.
First, like the old design it doesn't remove the cache for a source file
that has been (re)moved until `ruff clean` is called.

Second, this currently uses a large mutex around the mutation of the
package cache (e.g. inserting result). This could be (or become) a
bottleneck. It's future work to test and improve this (if needed).

Third, currently the packages and opened and stored in a sequential
loop, this could be done parallel. This is also future work.


## Test Plan

Run `ruff check` (with caching enabled) twice on any Python source code
and it should produce the same results.
2023-06-19 17:46:13 +02:00
Charlie Marsh
716cab2f19
Run rustfmt on nightly to clean up erroneous comments (#5106)
## Summary

This PR runs `rustfmt` with a few nightly options as a one-time fix to
catch some malformatted comments. I ended up just running with:

```toml
condense_wildcard_suffixes = true
edition = "2021"
max_width = 100
normalize_comments = true
normalize_doc_attributes = true
reorder_impl_items = true
unstable_features = true
use_field_init_shorthand = true
```

Since these all seem like reasonable things to fix, so may as well while
I'm here.
2023-06-15 00:19:05 +00:00
Thomas de Zeeuw
b0f89fa814
Support glob patterns in pep8_naming ignore-names (#5024)
## Summary

 Support glob patterns in pep8_naming ignore-names.

Closes #2787

## Test Plan

Added new tests.
2023-06-13 17:37:13 +02:00
Charlie Marsh
68b6d30c46
Use consistent Cargo.toml metadata in all crates (#5015) 2023-06-12 00:02:40 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
19c4b7bee6
Rename ruff_python_semantic's Context struct to SemanticModel (#4565) 2023-05-22 02:35:03 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
e8e66f3824
Remove unnecessary path prefixes (#4492) 2023-05-18 10:19:09 -04:00
Jonathan Plasse
8828e12283
Bump dependencies and move more shared dependencies into workspace (#3340) 2023-03-04 12:36:26 -05:00
Micha Reiser
cdbe2ee496
refactor: Introduce CacheKey trait (#3323)
This PR introduces a new `CacheKey` trait for types that can be used as a cache key.

I'm not entirely sure if this is worth the "overhead", but I was surprised to find `HashableHashSet` and got scared when I looked at the time complexity of the `hash` function. These implementations must be extremely slow in hashed collections.

I then searched for usages and quickly realized that only the cache uses these `Hash` implementations, where performance is less sensitive.

This PR introduces a new `CacheKey` trait to communicate the difference between a hash and computing a key for the cache. The new trait can be implemented for types that don't implement `Hash` for performance reasons, and we can define additional constraints on the implementation:  For example, we'll want to enforce portability when we add remote caching support. Using a different trait further allows us not to implement it for types without stable identities (e.g. pointers) or use other implementations than the standard hash function.
2023-03-03 18:29:49 +00:00