This implementation is derived straight from the description written
in RFC 3174. On Mac OS X with Java 1.8.0_91 it offers similar
throughput as MessageDigest SHA-1:
system 239.75 MiB/s
system 244.71 MiB/s
system 245.00 MiB/s
system 244.92 MiB/s
sha1 234.08 MiB/s
sha1 244.50 MiB/s
sha1 242.99 MiB/s
sha1 241.73 MiB/s
This is the fastest implementation I could come up with. Common SHA-1
implementation tricks such as unrolling loops creates a method too
large for the JIT to effectively optimize, resulting in lower overall
hashing throughput. Using a preprocessor to perform the register
renaming of A-E also didn't help, as again the method was too large
for the JIT to effectively optimize.
Fortunately the fastest version is a naive, straight-forward
implementation very close to the description in RFC 3174.
Change-Id: I228b05c4a294ca2ad51386cf0e47978c68e1aa42
Use Oxygen M3 Orbit repository which provides the bundles built using
the new orbit-recipe based build.
CQ: 11658
Change-Id: I7f3dcc966732b32830c75d5daa55383bd028d182
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Adds a JGit built-in implementation of the "git lfs clean" filter. This
filter should do the same as the one described in [1]. But since this
filter is written in Java and can be called by JGit without forking new
processes it should be much faster
[1]
https://github.com/github/git-lfs/blob/master/docs/man/git-lfs-clean.1.ronn
Change-Id: If60e387e97870245b4bd765eda6717eb84cffb1d
As per [1], but limited to absolute paths indeed. No support yet for
tilde or $HOME expansion. Support for the --[no-]includes options
([1]) is not part of this commit scope either, but those options'
defaults are in effect as described in [1].
[1] https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config
Included path can be a config file that includes other path-s in turn.
An exception is thrown if too many recursions (circular includes)
happen because of ill-specified config files.
Change-Id: I700bd7b7e1625eb7de0180f220c707d8e7b0930b
Signed-off-by: Marco Miller <marco.miller@ericsson.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
A group of updates can be applied by updating the tree in one step,
writing out a new root tree, and storing its SHA-1. If references
are stored in RefTrees, comparing two repositories is a matter of
checking if two SHA-1s are identical. Without RefTrees comparing two
repositories requires listing all references and comparing the sets.
Track the "refs/" directory as a root tree by storing references
that point directly at an object as a GITLINK entry in the tree.
For example "refs/heads/master" is written as "heads/master".
Annotated tags also store their peeled value with ^{} suffix, using
"tags/v1.0" and "tags/v1.0^{}" GITLINK entries.
Symbolic references are written as SYMLINK entries with the blob of
the symlink carrying the name of the symbolic reference target.
HEAD is outside of "refs/" namespace so it is stored as a special
"..HEAD" entry. This name is chosen because ".." is not valid in
a reference name and it almost looks like "../HEAD" which names
HEAD if the reader was inside of the "refs/" directory.
A new Command type is required to handle symbolic references and
peeled references.
Change-Id: Id47e5d4d32149a9e500854147edd7d93c1041a39