Java GC evicts all SoftReferences when the used heap size comes close to
the maximum heap size. This means peaks in heap memory consumption can
flush the complete WindowCache which was observed to have negative
impact on performance of upload-pack in Gerrit.
Hence add a boolean option core.packedGitUseStrongRefs to allow using
strong references to reference packfile pages cached in the WindowCache.
If this option is set to true Java gc can no longer flush the
WindowCache to free memory if the used heap comes close to the maximum
heap size. On the other hand this provides more predictable performance.
Bug: 553573
Change-Id: I9de406293087ab0fa61130c8e0829775762ece8d
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Using exceptions during normal operations - for example with the
desire of expanding an array in the failure case - can have a
severe performance impact. When exceptions are instantiated,
a stack trace is collected. Generating stack trace can be expensive.
Compared to that, checking an array for length - even if done many
times - is cheap since this is a check that can run in just a
handful of CPU cycles.
Change-Id: Ifaf10623f6a876c9faecfa44654c9296315adfcb
Signed-off-by: Patrick Hiesel <hiesel@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Add the following statistics
- cache hit count and hit ratio
- cache miss count and miss ratio
- count of successful and failed loads
- rate of failed loads
- load, eviction and request count
- average and total load time
Use LongAdder instead of AtomicLong to implement counters in order to
improve scalability.
Optionally expose these metrics via JMX, they are registered with the
platform MBean server if the config option jmx.WindowCacheStats = true
in the user or system level git config.
Bug: 553573
Change-Id: Ia2d5246ef69b9c2bd594a23934424bc5800774aa
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
In the Config#StringReader we relied on ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException
to detect the end of the input. Creation of exception with (deep) stack
trace can significantly degrade performance in case when we read
thousands of config files, like in the case when Gerrit reads all
external ids from the NoteDb.
Use the buf.length to detect the end of the input.
Change-Id: I12266f25751373a870ce3fa623cf2a95d882d521
Older JGit stored only milliseconds timestamps in the index. Newer
JGit may get finer timestamps from the file system. This leads to
slow index diffs when a new JGit runs against an index produced
by older JGit because many timestamps will differ and JGit will
then do many content checks. See [1].
Handle this migration case by only comparing milliseconds if the
index entry has only millisecond precision.
The inverse may also occur; also compare only milliseconds if the
file timestamp has only millisecond precision.
Do the same also for microsecond resolution. On Windows, NTFS may
provide 100ns resolution and may be used by external programs writing
the index, but Java's WindowsFileAttributes may provide only
microseconds.
File timestamp precision in Java depends not only on the Java APIs
used by different JGit versions but may also change when running the
same Java code on different VMs. And of course the resolution may
vary among operating and file systems. Moreover, timestamp precision
in the index depends on the program that wrote the index. Canonical
git may use a different resolution, maybe even different between git
versions.
[1] https://www.eclipse.org/forums/index.php/t/1100344/
Change-Id: Idfd08606c883cb98787b2138f9baf0cc89a57b56
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
If CheckStat is MINIMAL or timestamps have no nanosecond part
WorkingTreeIterator.compareMetaData only checks the second part of
timestamps and ignores nanoseconds which may have ended up in the index
by using native git.
If
fileLastModified.getEpochSecond() == cacheLastModified.getEpochSecond()
we currently proceed comparing fileLastModified and cacheLastModified
with full precision which is wrong since we determined that we detected
reduced timestamp resolution.
Fix this and also handle smudged index entries for CheckStat.MINIMAL.
Change-Id: I6149885903ac63d79b42d234cc02aa4e19578f3c
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
PackedBatchRefUpdate was creating a new packed-refs list that was
potentially unsorted. This would be papered over when the list was
read back from disk in parsePackedRef, which detects unsorted ref
lists on reading, and sorts them. However, the BatchRefUpdate also
installed the new (unsorted) list in-memory in
RefDirectory#packedRefs.
With the timestamp granularity code committed to stable-5.1, we can
more often accurately decide that the packed-refs file is clean, and
will return the erroneous unsorted data more often. Unluckily timed
delays also cause the file to be clean, hence this problem was
exacerbated under load.
The symptom is that refs added by a BatchRefUpdate would stop being
visible directly after they were added. In particular, the Gerrit
integration tests uses BatchRefUpdate in its setup for creating the
Admin group, and then tries to read it out directly afterward.
The tests recreates one failure case. A better approach would be to
revise RefList.Builder, so it detects out-of-order lists and
automatically sorts them.
Fixes https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=548716 and
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/gerrit/issues/detail?id=11373.
Bug: 548716
Change-Id: I613c8059964513ce2370543620725b540b3cb6d1
Signed-off-by: Han-Wen Nienhuys <hanwen@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Move the handling of cached user and system config to getSystemConfig
and getUserConfig methods and revert the implementation of
openSystemConfig and openUserConfig to the old stateless
implementation.
This ensures the open methods respect the passed-in parent config, which
may be different on each invocation. Additionally, returning a new
instance matches the behavior of the previous implementation of the
default system reader, which downstream callers may be depending on.
Move the implementation of the new caching methods getSystemConfig and
getUserConfig up to SystemReader. This avoids that we break the ABI for
subclasses of SystemReader.
Also see [1] which fixed a similar problem with Gerrit's custom
SystemReader.
[1] https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/gerrit/+/225458
Change-Id: If54a2491932d8fc914d4649cb73c9e837c5b8ad0
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
This ensures that only one instance of user and one instance of system
config is set.
Change-Id: Idd00150f91d2d40af79499dd7bf8ad5940f87c4e
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
deleteChildren was called on directory instead of gitDir, leading to a
potential null pointer exception if the git directory existed initially.
Bug: 550340
Change-Id: Iafc3b2961253a99862a59e81c7371f7bc564b412
Signed-off-by: Adrien Bustany <adrien-xx-eclipse@bustany.org>
Ensure we use the same type when comparing seconds since the epoch.
This does not prevent that in 2038 timestamps in seconds since the epoch
stored in a 32 bit integer will overflow. Integer.MAX_VALUE translates
to 2038-01-19T03:14:07Z. After this date we'll have an issue since we
store seconds since the epoch in a 32 bit integer in some places.
Bug: 319142
Change-Id: If0c03003d40b480f044686e2f7a2f62c9f4e2fe1
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Replace the two int variables smudge_s and smudge_ns by an Instant and
use the new method DirCacheEntry.mightBeRacilyClean(Instant).
Change-Id: Id70adbb0856a64909617acf65da1bae8e2ae934a
Signed-off-by: Michael Keppler <Michael.Keppler@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
So far the git configuration and the system wide git configuration were
always reloaded when jgit accessed these global configuration files to
access global configuration options which are not in the context of a
single git repository. Cache these configurations in SystemReader and
only reload them if their file metadata observed using FileSnapshot
indicates a modification.
Change-Id: I092fe11a5d95f1c5799273cacfc7a415d0b7786c
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
The existing javadoc was copied from another method and not adapted.
Change-Id: I39a7e5d719b2c379de9bd1a4710a55a73700c6f0
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
- fix handling of interrupts in FileStoreAttributes#saveToConfig
- increase retry wait time to 100ms
- don't wait after last retry
- dont retry if failure is caused by another exception than
LockFailedException
Change-Id: I108c012717d2bcce71f2c6cb9cf0879de704ebc2
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
The method org.eclipse.jgit.util.FS.supportsAtomicCreateNewFile()
should default to true as mentioned in docs [1]
org.eclipse.jgit.util.FS_POSIX.supportsAtomicCreateNewFile() method
will set the value to false if the git config
core.supportsatomiccreatenewfile is not set.
It should default to true if the configuration is undefined.
[1]
4169a95a65/org.eclipse.jgit/src/org/eclipse/jgit/util/FS_POSIX.java (L372)
Bug: 544164
Change-Id: I16ccf989a89da2cf4975c200b3228b25ba4c0d55
Signed-off-by: Vishal Devgire <vishaldevgire@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
We can't add this method to the super class StoredConfig since that
abstracts from filesystem storage. MockSystemReader.MockConfig is a
StoredConfig and is also used by tests for dfs based storage. Hence
remove this leaky abstraction.
This implies we always use the fallback FileStoreAttributes which means
a config file modification is considered racy within the first 2
seconds. This should not be an issue since typically configs change
rarely and re-reading a config within the racy period is relatively
cheap since configs are small.
Change-Id: Ia2615addc24a7cadf3c566ee842c6f4f07e159a5
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Increase the safety factor to 2.5x for extra safety if max of measured
timestamp resolution and measured minimal racy threshold is < 100ms, use
1.25 otherwise since for large filesystem resolution values the
influence of finite resolution of the system clock should be negligible.
Before, not yet using the newly introduced minRacyThreshold measurement,
the threshold was 1.1x FS resolution, and we could issue the
following sequence of events,
start
create-file
read-file (currentTime)
end
which had the following timestamps:
create-file 1564589081998
start 1564589082002
read 1564589082003
end 1564589082004
In this case, the difference between create-file and read is 5ms,
which exceeded the 4ms FS resolution, even though the events together
took just 2ms of runtime.
Reproduce with:
bazel test --runs_per_test=100 \
//org.eclipse.jgit.test:org_eclipse_jgit_internal_storage_file_FileSnapshotTest
The file system timestamp resolution is 4ms in this case.
This code assumes that the kernel and the JVM use the same clock that
is synchronized with the file system clock. This seems plausible,
given the resolution of System.currentTimeMillis() and the latency for
a gettimeofday system call (typically ~1us), but it would be good to
justify this with specifications.
Also cover a source of flakiness: if the test runs under extreme load,
then we could have
start
create-file
<long delay>
read
end
which would register as an unmodified file. Avoid this by skipping the
test if end-start is too big.
[msohn]:
- downported from master to stable-5.1
- skip test if resolution is below 10ms
- adjust safety factor to 1.25 for resolutions above 100ms
Change-Id: I87d2cf035e01c44b7ba8364c410a860aa8e312ef
Signed-off-by: Han-Wen Nienhuys <hanwen@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Since we now measure file time resolution we can use it to replace the
hard coded wait time of 25ms. FileSnapshot#equals will return true until
the mtime of the old (o) and the new FileSnapshot (n) differ by at least
one file time resolution.
Change-Id: Icb713a80ce9eb929242ed083406bfb6650c72223
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Cache FileStoreAttributeCache entries since looking up FileStore for a
file may be expensive on some platforms.
Implement a simple LRU cache based on ConcurrentHashMap using a simple
long counter to order access to cache entries.
Change-Id: I4881fa938ad2f17712c05da857838073a2fc4ddb
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Marc Strapetz <marc.strapetz@syntevo.com>
Also-By: Marc Strapetz <marc.strapetz@syntevo.com>
Use the fallback timestamp resolution as already described in the
javadoc of these methods. Using zero file timestamp resolution doesn't
make sense.
Change-Id: Iaad2a0f99c3be3678e94980a0a368181b6aed38c
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>