git-repo/progress.py
Gavin Mak 551285fa35 sync: Show elapsed time for the longest syncing project
"Last synced: X" is printed only after a project finishes syncing.
Replace that with a message that shows the longest actively syncing
project.

Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11293
Change-Id: I84c7873539d84999772cd554f426b44921521e85
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/372674
Reviewed-by: Josip Sokcevic <sokcevic@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Gavin Mak <gavinmak@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Joanna Wang <jojwang@google.com>
Tested-by: Gavin Mak <gavinmak@google.com>
2023-05-18 18:10:24 +00:00

225 lines
6.5 KiB
Python

# Copyright (C) 2009 The Android Open Source Project
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
import os
import sys
import time
try:
import threading as _threading
except ImportError:
import dummy_threading as _threading
from repo_trace import IsTraceToStderr
_NOT_TTY = not os.isatty(2)
# This will erase all content in the current line (wherever the cursor is).
# It does not move the cursor, so this is usually followed by \r to move to
# column 0.
CSI_ERASE_LINE = "\x1b[2K"
# This will erase all content in the current line after the cursor. This is
# useful for partial updates & progress messages as the terminal can display
# it better.
CSI_ERASE_LINE_AFTER = "\x1b[K"
def convert_to_hms(total):
"""Converts a period of seconds to hours, minutes, and seconds."""
hours, rem = divmod(total, 3600)
mins, secs = divmod(rem, 60)
return int(hours), int(mins), secs
def duration_str(total):
"""A less noisy timedelta.__str__.
The default timedelta stringification contains a lot of leading zeros and
uses microsecond resolution. This makes for noisy output.
"""
hours, mins, secs = convert_to_hms(total)
ret = "%.3fs" % (secs,)
if mins:
ret = "%im%s" % (mins, ret)
if hours:
ret = "%ih%s" % (hours, ret)
return ret
def elapsed_str(total):
"""Returns seconds in the format [H:]MM:SS.
Does not display a leading zero for minutes if under 10 minutes. This should
be used when displaying elapsed time in a progress indicator.
"""
hours, mins, secs = convert_to_hms(total)
ret = f"{int(secs):>02d}"
if total >= 3600:
# Show leading zeroes if over an hour.
ret = f"{mins:>02d}:{ret}"
else:
ret = f"{mins}:{ret}"
if hours:
ret = f"{hours}:{ret}"
return ret
class Progress(object):
def __init__(
self,
title,
total=0,
units="",
delay=True,
quiet=False,
show_elapsed=False,
elide=False,
):
self._title = title
self._total = total
self._done = 0
self._start = time.time()
self._show = not delay
self._units = units
self._elide = elide
# Only show the active jobs section if we run more than one in parallel.
self._show_jobs = False
self._active = 0
# Save the last message for displaying on refresh.
self._last_msg = None
self._show_elapsed = show_elapsed
self._update_event = _threading.Event()
self._update_thread = _threading.Thread(
target=self._update_loop,
)
self._update_thread.daemon = True
# When quiet, never show any output. It's a bit hacky, but reusing the
# existing logic that delays initial output keeps the rest of the class
# clean. Basically we set the start time to years in the future.
if quiet:
self._show = False
self._start += 2**32
elif show_elapsed:
self._update_thread.start()
def _update_loop(self):
while True:
self.update(inc=0)
if self._update_event.wait(timeout=1):
return
def _write(self, s):
s = "\r" + s
if self._elide:
col = os.get_terminal_size().columns
if len(s) > col:
s = s[: col - 1] + ".."
sys.stderr.write(s)
sys.stderr.flush()
def start(self, name):
self._active += 1
if not self._show_jobs:
self._show_jobs = self._active > 1
self.update(inc=0, msg="started " + name)
def finish(self, name):
self.update(msg="finished " + name)
self._active -= 1
def update(self, inc=1, msg=None):
"""Updates the progress indicator.
Args:
inc: The number of items completed.
msg: The message to display. If None, use the last message.
"""
self._done += inc
if msg is None:
msg = self._last_msg
self._last_msg = msg
if _NOT_TTY or IsTraceToStderr():
return
elapsed_sec = time.time() - self._start
if not self._show:
if 0.5 <= elapsed_sec:
self._show = True
else:
return
if self._total <= 0:
self._write(
"%s: %d,%s" % (self._title, self._done, CSI_ERASE_LINE_AFTER)
)
else:
p = (100 * self._done) / self._total
if self._show_jobs:
jobs = "[%d job%s] " % (
self._active,
"s" if self._active > 1 else "",
)
else:
jobs = ""
if self._show_elapsed:
elapsed = f" {elapsed_str(elapsed_sec)} |"
else:
elapsed = ""
self._write(
"%s: %2d%% %s(%d%s/%d%s)%s %s%s"
% (
self._title,
p,
jobs,
self._done,
self._units,
self._total,
self._units,
elapsed,
msg,
CSI_ERASE_LINE_AFTER,
)
)
def end(self):
self._update_event.set()
if _NOT_TTY or IsTraceToStderr() or not self._show:
return
duration = duration_str(time.time() - self._start)
if self._total <= 0:
self._write(
"%s: %d, done in %s%s\n"
% (self._title, self._done, duration, CSI_ERASE_LINE_AFTER)
)
else:
p = (100 * self._done) / self._total
self._write(
"%s: %3d%% (%d%s/%d%s), done in %s%s\n"
% (
self._title,
p,
self._done,
self._units,
self._total,
self._units,
duration,
CSI_ERASE_LINE_AFTER,
)
)