diff --git a/doc/todo/headless_git_branches.mdwn b/doc/todo/headless_git_branches.mdwn index bedf21d0c..d9bb38099 100644 --- a/doc/todo/headless_git_branches.mdwn +++ b/doc/todo/headless_git_branches.mdwn @@ -77,6 +77,55 @@ at git show-ref to deduce whether to throw an error or not. > Ah, but then git-log would still complain "bad revision 'HEAD'" > --[[Joey]] + jrayhawk@piny:/srv/git/jrayhawk.git$ time perl -e 'for( $i = 1; $i < 10000; $i++) { system("git", "show-ref", "--quiet", "--verify", "--", "refs/heads/master"); }' + + real 0m10.988s + user 0m0.120s + sys 0m1.210s + +> FWIW, "an extra millisecond per edit" vs "full git coverage" is no +> contest for me; I use that patch on seven different systems, including +> freedesktop.org, because I've spent more time explaining to users either +> why Ikiwiki won't work on their empty repositories or why their +> repositories need useless initial commits (a la Branchable) that make +> pushing not work and why denyNonFastForwards=0 and git push -f are +> necessary than all the milliseconds that could've been saved in the +> world. +> +> But, since we're having fun rearranging deck chairs on the RMS Perl +> (toot toot)... +> +> There's some discrepency here I wasn't expecting: + + jrayhawk@piny:/srv/git/jrayhawk.git$ time dash -c 'i=0; while [ $i -lt 10000 ]; do i=$((i+1)); git show-ref --quiet --verify -- refs/heads/master; done' + + real 0m9.986s + user 0m0.170s + sys 0m0.940s + +> While looking around in the straces, I notice Perl, unlike {b,d}ash +> appears to do PATH lookup on every invocation of git, adding up to +> around 110 microseconds apiece on a post-2.6.38 16-thread QPI system: + + 29699 0.000112 execve("/home/jrayhawk/bin/git", ["git", "show-ref", "--quiet", "--verify", "--", "refs/heads/master"], [/* 17 vars */]) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory) + 29699 0.000116 execve("/usr/local/bin/git", ["git", "show-ref", "--quiet", "--verify", "--", "refs/heads/master"], [/* 17 vars */]) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory) + 29699 0.000084 execve("/usr/bin/git", ["git", "show-ref", "--quiet", "--verify", "--", "refs/heads/master"], [/* 17 vars */]) = 0 + +> You can probably save a reasonable number of context switches and +> RCU-heavy (or, previously, lock-heavy) dentry lookups by doing a Perl +> equivalent of `which git` and using the result. It might even add up to +> a whole millisecond in some circumstances! +> +> No idea where the rest of that time is going. Probably cache misses +> on the giant Perl runtime or something. +> +> ... +> +> Now I feel dirty for having spent more time talking about optimization +> than that optimization is likely to save. This must be what being an +> engineer feels like. +> --jrayhawk +
@@ -474,7 +478,10 @@ sub rcs_update () { # Update working directory. @@ -98,6 +147,19 @@ called on every refresh. Probably could be dealt with similarly as above. Also, is there any point in breaking the pull up into a fetch followed by a merge? --[[Joey]] +> The same benchmarking applies, at least. +> +> Re: fetch/merge: We can't test for the nonexistence of the origin branch +> without fetching it, and we can't merge it if it is, indeed, +> nonexistant. +> +> Unless you're implying that it would be better to just spam stderr with +> unnecessary scary messages and/or ignore/suppress them and lose the +> ability to respond appropriately to every other error condition. As +> maintainer, you deal with a disproportionate amount of the resulting +> support fallout, so I'm perfectly satisfied letting you make that call. +> --jrayhawk +@@ -559,7 +566,7 @@ sub rcs_commit_helper (@) { # So we should ignore its exit status (hence run_or_non). @@ -111,3 +173,6 @@ fetch followed by a merge? --[[Joey]]This seems fine to apply. --[[Joey]] + +> Hooray! +> --jrayhawk