chg: pass --no-profile to disable profiling when starting hg serve
If profiling is enabled via global/user config (as far as I can tell, this
doesn't affect use of the --profile flag, but it probably does affect --config
profiling.enabled=1), then the profiling data can be *cumulative* for the
lifetime of the chg process.
This leads to some "interesting" results where hg claims the walltime is
something like 200s on a command that took only a second or two to run. Worse,
however, is that with at least some profilers (such as the default "stat"
profiler), this can cause a large slowdown while generating the profiler output.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10470
Mercurial
=========
Mercurial is a fast, easy to use, distributed revision control tool
for software developers.
Basic install::
$ make # see install targets
$ make install # do a system-wide install
$ hg debuginstall # sanity-check setup
$ hg # see help
Running without installing::
$ make local # build for inplace usage
$ ./hg --version # should show the latest version
See https://mercurial-scm.org/ for detailed installation
instructions, platform-specific notes, and Mercurial user information.
Notes for packagers
===================
Mercurial ships a copy of the python-zstandard sources. This is used to
provide support for zstd compression and decompression functionality. The
module is not intended to be replaced by the plain python-zstandard nor
is it intended to use a system zstd library. Patches can result in hard
to diagnose errors and are explicitly discouraged as unsupported
configuration.