The "Counting objects" phase of packing is the most time consuming
part for any server providing access to Git repositories. Scanning
through the entire project history, including every revision of
every tree that has ever existed is expensive and takes an incredible
amount of CPU time.
Inline the tree parsing logic, unroll a number of loops, and setup
to better handle the common case of seeing another occurrence of
an object that was already marked SEEN.
This change boosts the "Counting objects" phase when JGit is acting
as a server and is packing the linux-2.6 repository for its client.
Compared to CGit on the same hardware, a JGit daemon server is now
21883 objects/sec faster:
CGit:
Counted 2058062 objects in 38981 ms at 52796.54 objects/sec
Counted 2058062 objects in 38920 ms at 52879.29 objects/sec
Counted 2058062 objects in 39059 ms at 52691.11 objects/sec
JGit (before):
Counted 2058062 objects in 31529 ms at 65275.21 objects/sec
Counted 2058062 objects in 30359 ms at 67790.84 objects/sec
Counted 2058062 objects in 30033 ms at 68526.69 objects/sec
JGit (this commit):
Counted 2058062 objects in 28726 ms at 71644.57 objects/sec
Counted 2058062 objects in 27652 ms at 74427.24 objects/sec
Counted 2058062 objects in 27528 ms at 74762.50 objects/sec
Above the first run was a "cold server". For JGit the JVM had just
started up with `jgit daemon`, and for CGit we hadn't touched the
repository "recently" (but it was certainly in kernel buffer cache).
The second and third runs were against the running JGit JVM, allowing
timing tests to better reflect the benefits of JGit's pack and index
caching, as well as any optimizations the JIT may have performed.
The timings are fair. CGit is opening, checking and mmap'ing both
the pack and index during the timer. JGit is opening, checking
and malloc+read'ing the pack and index data into its Java heap
during the timer. Both processes are walking the same graph space,
and are computing the "path hash" necessary to sort objects in the
object table for delta compression. Since this commit only impacts
the "Counting objects" phase, delta compression was obviously not
included in the timings and JGit may still be performing delta
compression slower than CGit, resulting in an overall slower server
experience for clients.
Change-Id: Ieb184bfaed8475d6960a494b1f3c870e0382164a
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Command line options match the C implementation of `git blame` as
closely as possible, making for a pretty complete tool.
Change-Id: Ie1bd172ad9de586c3b60f0ee4a77a8f047364882
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This is useful when the result needs to be displayed and it's only of
interest if the operation was successful or not (in egit, it could be
used in MultiPullResultDialog).
Change-Id: Icfc9a9c76763f8a777087a1262c8d6ad251a9068
Signed-off-by: Robin Stocker <robin@nibor.org>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
The offset32 format is used for objects <= 2^31-1, while the offset64
format is used for all other objects. This condition was missing
the = needed to ensure an object placed exactly at 2^31 would have
its 64 bit offset in the index.
Change-Id: I293fac0e829c9baa12cb59411dffde666051d6c5
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
A non-thin pack does not need to worry about preferred bases, the pack
will be self-contained and all required delta base objects will appear
within the pack itself. Obtaining the path buffer and length from the
ObjectWalk to build the preferred base table is "expensive", so avoid
the cost unless a thin pack is being constructed.
Change-Id: I16e30cd864f4189d4304e7957a7cd5bdb9e84528
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This flag was not being honored due to a bug in createWalk().
argWalk is always non-null when there are commits passed in
on the command line. If --objects was specified, always make
a new ObjectWalk for the actual execution.
Change-Id: I6e1a1636f2634605d86671a83766cc1c42939821
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
* changes:
PackWriter: Skip progress messages on fast operations
IndexPack: Defer the "Resolving deltas" progress meter
IndexPack: Fix "Resolving deltas" progress meter
The previous comment stated that the value set was used
to keep track of the branch in the remote repository
which was incorrect.
Updated the method comment to match the format used
for the PushCommand.setRemote and FetchCommand.setRemote
methods.
Change-Id: I11b81eb3125958af29247b485da56fd88c3bfdf5
Signed-off-by: Kevin Sawicki <kevin@github.com>
If the "Finding sources" phase will complete in <1 second with no
delta compression enabled, don't bother showing the progress meter for
this phase. Small repositories on the local filesystem tend to rip
through this phase always subsecond and the ProgressMonitor display
can actually slow the operation down.
If delta compression is enabled, there are two phases that may run
very quickly. Set the timer to 500 milliseconds instead, reducing the
risk that the user has to wait longer than 1 second before any sort of
output from the packer occurs.
Change-Id: I58110f17e2a5ffa0134f9768b94804d16bbb8399
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
If delta resolution completes in < 1000 milliseconds, don't bother
showing the progress meter. This is actually very common for a Gerrit
Code Review server, where the client is probably sending 1 commit and
only a few trees/blobs modified... and the base objects are hot in the
process buffer cache.
The 1000 millisecond delay is just a guess at a reasonable time to wait.
Change-Id: I440baa64ab0dfa21be61deae8dcd3ca061bed8ce
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This progress meter never reached 100% as it did not update while
resolving the external bases in thin packs.
Instead of updating in batches at the top level, update once per delta
that is resolved. The batching progress meter type should smooth out
the frequent updates to an update rate that is more reasonable to send
to the UI, while also ensuring a successful pack parse always reaches
100% deltas resolved.
Change-Id: Ic77dcac542cfa97213a6b0194708f9d3c256d223
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Repository inspection tools may find building a reverse index on a
pack useful, as they can then locate an object by offset. As both
C Git and JGit sometimes produce error messages with the offset
rather than the SHA-1, it may be useful to expose this type.
Change-Id: I487bf32e85a8985cf8ab382d4c82fcbe1fc7da6c
There isn't a good reason to hide all of these as package-private.
Make them public so applications can inspect pack files.
Change-Id: Ia418daf65d63e9e015b8dafdf3d06a1ed91d190b
Some embeddings of UploadPack (e.g. Gerrit Code Review) set their own
PackConfig from a server-wide configuration, overriding any JGit
defaults or settings that may exist at the local repository level.
Make a copy constructor form of PackConfig so this server-wide
configuration object can be copied and then merged with repository
specific configuration data.
Change-Id: I4463c95aeaf7d6536c3ab132dec9c50ee528d9e0
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
The cached object databases should not require a close to release
their cached resources. Most object databases just return their
own reference for newCachedDatabase(), so a close() here kills
the real database's internal caches, and possibly underlying files,
resulting in poor performance for the callers of PackParser like
ReceivePack or FetchProcess trying to then go look up objects that
were just parsed, or that current references point to.
Change-Id: Ia4a239093866e5b9faf82744f729fb73f4373f1a
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
A set of ref names like ('a/b' and 'a+b') would cause the RefDirectory
to think that the set of refs have changed because it traversed the
'a' directory in the subtree before looking at 'a+b', but it then
compared with the know refs which are sorted with 'a+b' first.
Fix this by traversing the refs tree in another order. Treat a directory
as if they ends with a '/' before deciding on the order to traverse
the refs tree.
Bug: 348834
Change-Id: I23377f8df00c7252bf27dbcfba5da193c5403917
Signed-off-by: Robin Rosenberg <robin.rosenberg@dewire.com>
Repository.writeMergeCommitMsg(null) no longer fails if the MERGE_MSG
file is missing. This was done to avoid CommitCommand to fail in case of
a missing MERGE_MSG file.
Bug: 352243
Change-Id: Iddf43533d133f8f22199ed6e2393a552670e7d1f
Signed-off-by: Jens Baumgart <jens.baumgart@sap.com>
Reset command should works recursively and allows reset all changed
files in given directory.
Bug: 348524
Change-Id: I441db34f226be36548c61cef77958995971498de
Signed-off-by: Dariusz Luksza <dariusz@luksza.org>
Signed-off-by: Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@gmail.com>
Creation of a branch X from an annotated tag, as the starting point,
resulted into .git/refs/heads/X containing the ID of the annotated tag
instead of the ID of the tagged commit.
This fix peels the tag ref before using it as the starting point for
the newly created branch.
Bug: 340836
Change-Id: I01c7325770ecb37f5bf8ddb2a22f802466524f24
Signed-off-by: Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@gmail.com>
Use the temporary file management from superclass.
Change-Id: I3042951dc21860b4b85dd72a6bf41ee7cfe2aba4
Signed-off-by: Adrian Goerler <adrian.goerler@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
When trying to clone into a folder that already contains a cloned
repository native git will fail with a message "fatal: destination path
'folder' already exists and is not an empty directory.". Now JGit will
also fail in this situation throwing a JGitInternalException.
The test case was provided by Tomasz Zarna.
Bug: 347852
Change-Id: If9e9919a5f92d13cf038dc470c21ee5967322dac
Also-by: Tomasz Zarna <Tomasz.Zarna@pl.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Goerler <adrian.goerler@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
If no refSpec is explicitly set, the PushCommand should first check the
remote config and then as a fallback use the current behavior.
Change-Id: I2bc648abc517b1d01b2de15d383423ace2081e72
Signed-off-by: Stefan Lay <stefan.lay@sap.com>
DirCacheCheckout did not unlock the index if e.g. an IOException occured
during checkout.
Bug: 350677
Change-Id: Ie9fa09f7a404080da7cdccafb9be3a8c845e4869
Signed-off-by: Jens Baumgart <jens.baumgart@sap.com>
ObjectDirectoryInserter was always creating a temporary file,
writing the complete compressed contents of a tree, fsync()'ing
that to stable storage, and only then checking to see if there
was already an object with the same SHA-1 in the repository.
For commits this strategy makes some sense, the commit is very
unlikely to exist in the repository, as there are embedded times
and these change with each commit.
However for trees coming out of DirCache, it is more common for the
tree to already exist in the repository. Most subdirectories are
not modified in any given commit. Doing all of this local file IO
for things that already exist is very slow.
Try to detect cases where the object is "small enough" that it can
be processed entirely in memory, and avoid doing disk IO entirely
if the object already exists.
Also increase the size of the output buffer for the deflation.
This should boost the average write(2) syscall size from 512 bytes
to 8192 bytes, making streaming of large compressed contents to
disk slightly more efficient.
Change-Id: I1d40364e8725468522435814631916d73174c92b
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>