158923 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Derrick Stolee
e05e2cdfe7 pack-objects: add GIT_TEST_FULL_NAME_HASH
Add a new environment variable to opt-in to the --full-name-hash option
in 'git pack-objects'. This allows for extra testing of the feature
without repeating all of the test scenarios.

But this option isn't free. There are a few tests that change behavior
with the variable enabled.

First, there are a few tests that are very sensitive to certain delta
bases being picked. These are both involving the generation of thin
bundles and then counting their objects via 'git index-pack --fix-thin'
which pulls the delta base into the new packfile. For these tests,
disable the option as a decent long-term option.

Second, there are two tests in t5616-partial-clone.sh that I believe are
actually broken scenarios. While the client is set up to clone the
'promisor-server' repo via a treeless partial clone filter (tree:0),
that filter does not translate to the 'server' repo. Thus, fetching from
these repos causes the server to think that the client has all reachable
trees and blobs from the commits advertised as 'haves'. This leads the
server to providing a thin pack assuming those objects as delta bases.
Changing the name-hash algorithm presents new delta bases and thus
breaks the expectations of these tests. An alternative could be to set
up 'server' as a promisor server with the correct filter enabled. This
may also point out more issues with partial clone being set up as a
remote-based filtering mechanism and not a repository-wide setting. For
now, do the minimal change to make the test work by disabling the test
variable.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-26 22:11:51 +02:00
Derrick Stolee
3f79411944 repack: test --full-name-hash option
The new '--full-name-hash' option for 'git repack' is a simple
pass-through to the underlying 'git pack-objects' subcommand. However,
this subcommand may have other options and a temporary filename as part
of the subcommand execution that may not be predictable or could change
over time.

The existing test_subcommand method requires an exact list of arguments
for the subcommand. This is too rigid for our needs here, so create a
new method, test_subcommand_flex. Use it to check that the
--full-name-hash option is passing through.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-26 22:11:51 +02:00
Derrick Stolee
0ef4a4e434 pack-objects: add --full-name-hash option
The pack_name_hash() method has not been materially changed since it was
introduced in ce0bd64299a (pack-objects: improve path grouping
heuristics., 2006-06-05). The intention here is to group objects by path
name, but also attempt to group similar file types together by making
the most-significant digits of the hash be focused on the final
characters.

Here's the crux of the implementation:

	/*
	 * This effectively just creates a sortable number from the
	 * last sixteen non-whitespace characters. Last characters
	 * count "most", so things that end in ".c" sort together.
	 */
	while ((c = *name++) != 0) {
		if (isspace(c))
			continue;
		hash = (hash >> 2) + (c << 24);
	}

As the comment mentions, this only cares about the last sixteen
non-whitespace characters. This cause some filenames to collide more
than others. Here are some examples that I've seen while investigating
repositories that are growing more than they should be:

 * "/CHANGELOG.json" is 15 characters, and is created by the beachball
   [1] tool. Only the final character of the parent directory can
   differntiate different versions of this file, but also only the two
   most-significant digits. If that character is a letter, then this is
   always a collision. Similar issues occur with the similar
   "/CHANGELOG.md" path, though there is more opportunity for
   differences in the parent directory.

 * Localization files frequently have common filenames but differentiate
   via parent directories. In C#, the name "/strings.resx.lcl" is used
   for these localization files and they will all collide in name-hash.

[1] https://github.com/microsoft/beachball

I've come across many other examples where some internal tool uses a
common name across multiple directories and is causing Git to repack
poorly due to name-hash collisions.

It is clear that the existing name-hash algorithm is optimized for
repositories with short path names, but also is optimized for packing a
single snapshot of a repository, not a repository with many versions of
the same file. In my testing, this has proven out where the name-hash
algorithm does a good job of finding peer files as delta bases when
unable to use a historical version of that exact file.

However, for repositories that have many versions of most files and
directories, it is more important that the objects that appear at the
same path are grouped together.

Create a new pack_full_name_hash() method and a new --full-name-hash
option for 'git pack-objects' to call that method instead. Add a simple
pass-through for 'git repack --full-name-hash' for additional testing in
the context of a full repack, where I expect this will be most
effective.

The hash algorithm is as simple as possible to be reasonably effective:
for each character of the path string, add a multiple of that character
and a large prime number (chosen arbitrarily, but intended to be large
relative to the size of a uint32_t). Then, shift the current hash value
to the right by 5, with overlap. The addition and shift parameters are
standard mechanisms for creating hard-to-predict behaviors in the bits
of the resulting hash.

This is not meant to be cryptographic at all, but uniformly distributed
across the possible hash values. This creates a hash that appears
pseudorandom. There is no ability to consider similar file types as
being close to each other.

In a later change, a test-tool will be added so the effectiveness of
this hash can be demonstrated directly.

For now, let's consider how effective this mechanism is when repacking a
repository with and without the --full-name-hash option. Specifically,
let's use 'git repack -adf [--full-name-hash]' as our test.

On the Git repository, we do not expect much difference. All path names
are short. This is backed by our results:

| Stage                 | Pack Size | Repack Time |
|-----------------------|-----------|-------------|
| After clone           | 260 MB    | N/A         |
| Standard Repack       | 127MB     | 106s        |
| With --full-name-hash | 126 MB    | 99s         |

This example demonstrates how there is some natural overhead coming from
the cloned copy because the server is hosting many forks and has not
optimized for exactly this set of reachable objects. But the full repack
has similar characteristics with and without --full-name-hash.

However, we can test this in a repository that uses one of the
problematic naming conventions above. The fluentui [2] repo uses
beachball to generate CHANGELOG.json and CHANGELOG.md files, and these
files have very poor delta characteristics when comparing against
versions across parent directories.

| Stage                 | Pack Size | Repack Time |
|-----------------------|-----------|-------------|
| After clone           | 694 MB    | N/A         |
| Standard Repack       | 438 MB    | 728s        |
| With --full-name-hash | 168 MB    | 142s        |

[2] https://github.com/microsoft/fluentui

In this example, we see significant gains in the compressed packfile
size as well as the time taken to compute the packfile.

Using a collection of repositories that use the beachball tool, I was
able to make similar comparisions with dramatic results. While the
fluentui repo is public, the others are private so cannot be shared for
reproduction. The results are so significant that I find it important to
share here:

| Repo     | Standard Repack | With --full-name-hash |
|----------|-----------------|-----------------------|
| fluentui |         438 MB  |               168 MB  |
| Repo B   |       6,255 MB  |               829 MB  |
| Repo C   |      37,737 MB  |             7,125 MB  |
| Repo D   |     130,049 MB  |             6,190 MB  |

Future changes could include making --full-name-hash implied by a config
value or even implied by default during a full repack.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-26 22:11:51 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
f8426a97d6 ci: work around a problem with HTTP/2 vs libcurl v8.10.0
As reported in https://lore.kernel.org/git/ZuPKvYP9ZZ2mhb4m@pks.im/,
libcurl v8.10.0 had a regression that was picked up by Git's t5559.30
"large fetch-pack requests can be sent using chunked encoding".

This bug was fixed in libcurl v8.10.1.

Sadly, the macos-13 runner image was updated in the brief window between
these two libcurl versions, breaking each and every CI build, as
reported at https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/5159.

This would usually not matter, we would just ignore the failing CI
builds until the macos-13 runner image is rebuilt in a couple of days,
and then the CI builds would succeed again.

However.

As has become the custom, a surprise Git version was released, and now
that Git for Windows wants to follow suit, since Git for Windows has
this custom of trying to never release a version with a failing CI
build, we _must_ work around it.

This patch implements this work-around, basically for the sake of Git
for Windows v2.46.2's CI build.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2024-09-26 22:11:41 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
caeb208850 Start the merging-rebase to v2.47.0-rc0
This commit starts the rebase of c71be2941281 to c7a54b1d6984
2024-09-26 22:03:29 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
68f029a146
Add experimental 'git survey' builtin (#5174)
This introduces `git survey` to Git for Windows ahead of upstream for
the express purpose of getting the path-based analysis in the hands of
more folks.

The inspiration of this builtin is
[`git-sizer`](https://github.com/github/git-sizer), but since that
command relies on `git cat-file --batch` to get the contents of objects,
it has limits to how much information it can provide.

This is mostly a rewrite of the `git survey` builtin that was introduced
into the `microsoft/git` fork in microsoft/git#667. That version had a
lot more bells and whistles, including an analysis much closer to what
`git-sizer` provides.

The biggest difference in this version is that this one is focused on
using the path-walk API in order to visit batches of objects based on a
common path. This allows identifying, for instance, the path that is
contributing the most to the on-disk size across all versions at that
path.

For example, here are the top ten paths contributing to my local Git
repository (which includes `microsoft/git` and `gitster/git`):

```
TOP FILES BY DISK SIZE
============================================================================
                                    Path | Count | Disk Size | Inflated Size
-----------------------------------------+-------+-----------+--------------
                       whats-cooking.txt |  1373 |  11637459 |      37226854
             t/helper/test-gvfs-protocol |     2 |   6847105 |      17233072
                      git-rebase--helper |     1 |   6027849 |      15269664
                          compat/mingw.c |  6111 |   5194453 |     463466970
             t/helper/test-parse-options |     1 |   3420385 |       8807968
                  t/helper/test-pkt-line |     1 |   3408661 |       8778960
      t/helper/test-dump-untracked-cache |     1 |   3408645 |       8780816
            t/helper/test-dump-fsmonitor |     1 |   3406639 |       8776656
                                po/vi.po |   104 |   1376337 |      51441603
                                po/de.po |   210 |   1360112 |      71198603
```

This kind of analysis has been helpful in identifying the reasons for
growth in a few internal monorepos. Those findings motivated the changes
in #5157 and #5171.

With this early version in Git for Windows, we can expand the reach of
the experimental tool in advance of it being contributed to the upstream
project.

Unfortunately, this will mean that in the next `microsoft/git` rebase,
@jeffhostetler's version will need to be pulled out since there are
enough conflicts. These conflicts include how tables are stored and
generated, as the version in this PR is slightly more general to allow
for different kinds of data.
2024-09-26 20:32:11 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
d28dc5bbab survey: clearly note the experimental nature in the output
While this command is definitely something we _want_, chances are that
upstreaming this will require substantial changes.

We still want to be able to experiment with this before that, to focus
on what we need out of this command: To assist with diagnosing issues
with large repositories, as well as to help monitoring the growth and
the associated painpoints of such repositories.

To that end, we are about to integrate this command into
`microsoft/git`, to get the tool into the hands of users who need it
most, with the idea to iterate in close collaboration between these
users and the developers familar with Git's internals.

However, we will definitely want to avoid letting anybody have the
impression that this command, its exact inner workings, as well as its
output format, are anywhere close to stable. To make that fact utterly
clear (and thereby protect the freedom to iterate and innovate freely
before upstreaming the command), let's mark its output as experimental
in all-caps, as the first thing we do.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2024-09-26 13:25:49 -04:00
Derrick Stolee
f18c0c215b survey: add --top=<N> option and config
The 'git survey' builtin provides several detail tables, such as "top
files by on-disk size". The size of these tables defaults to 100,
currently.

Allow the user to specify this number via a new --top=<N> option or the
new survey.top config key.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-26 13:25:49 -04:00
Derrick Stolee
af8bd64c1d survey: add report of "largest" paths
Since we are already walking our reachable objects using the path-walk API,
let's now collect lists of the paths that contribute most to different
metrics. Specifically, we care about

 * Number of versions.
 * Total size on disk.
 * Total inflated size (no delta or zlib compression).

This information can be critical to discovering which parts of the
repository are causing the most growth, especially on-disk size. Different
packing strategies might help compress data more efficiently, but the toal
inflated size is a representation of the raw size of all snapshots of those
paths. Even when stored efficiently on disk, that size represents how much
information must be processed to complete a command such as 'git blame'.

Since the on-disk size is likely to be fragile, stop testing the exact
output of 'git survey' and check that the correct set of headers is
output.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-26 13:25:49 -04:00
Derrick Stolee
2a99b7c57c survey: add ability to track prioritized lists
In future changes, we will make use of these methods. The intention is to
keep track of the top contributors according to some metric. We don't want
to store all of the entries and do a sort at the end, so track a
constant-size table and remove rows that get pushed out depending on the
chosen sorting algorithm.

Co-authored-by: Jeff Hostetler <git@jeffhostetler.com>
Signed-off-by; Jeff Hostetler <git@jeffhostetler.com>
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-26 13:25:49 -04:00
Derrick Stolee
4e428263ce survey: show progress during object walk
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-26 13:25:49 -04:00
Derrick Stolee
947c2c5155 survey: summarize total sizes by object type
Now that we have explored objects by count, we can expand that a bit more to
summarize the data for the on-disk and inflated size of those objects. This
information is helpful for diagnosing both why disk space (and perhaps
clone or fetch times) is growing but also why certain operations are slow
because the inflated size of the abstract objects that must be processed is
so large.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-26 13:25:49 -04:00
Derrick Stolee
9e2f0af395 survey: add object count summary
At the moment, nothing is obvious about the reason for the use of the
path-walk API, but this will become more prevelant in future iterations. For
now, use the path-walk API to sum up the counts of each kind of object.

For example, this is the reachable object summary output for my local repo:

REACHABLE OBJECT SUMMARY
========================
Object Type |  Count
------------+-------
       Tags |   1343
    Commits | 179344
      Trees | 314350
      Blobs | 184030

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-26 13:25:49 -04:00
Derrick Stolee
2c0755d9ff survey: start pretty printing data in table form
When 'git survey' provides information to the user, this will be presented
in one of two formats: plaintext and JSON. The JSON implementation will be
delayed until the functionality is complete for the plaintext format.

The most important parts of the plaintext format are headers specifying the
different sections of the report and tables providing concreted data.

Create a custom table data structure that allows specifying a list of
strings for the row values. When printing the table, check each column for
the maximum width so we can create a table of the correct size from the
start.

The table structure is designed to be flexible to the different kinds of
output that will be implemented in future changes.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-26 13:25:49 -04:00
Jeff Hostetler
c08fa91a24 survey: add command line opts to select references
By default we will scan all references in "refs/heads/", "refs/tags/"
and "refs/remotes/".

Add command line opts let the use ask for all refs or a subset of them
and to include a detached HEAD.

Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <git@jeffhostetler.com>
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-26 12:06:02 -04:00
Jeff Hostetler
3a8cd93b06 survey: stub in new experimental 'git-survey' command
Start work on a new 'git survey' command to scan the repository
for monorepo performance and scaling problems.  The goal is to
measure the various known "dimensions of scale" and serve as a
foundation for adding additional measurements as we learn more
about Git monorepo scaling problems.

The initial goal is to complement the scanning and analysis performed
by the GO-based 'git-sizer' (https://github.com/github/git-sizer) tool.
It is hoped that by creating a builtin command, we may be able to take
advantage of internal Git data structures and code that is not
accessible from GO to gain further insight into potential scaling
problems.

Co-authored-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <git@jeffhostetler.com>
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-26 12:06:02 -04:00
Johannes Schindelin
5e2e8b4dba
Introduce 'git backfill' to get missing blobs in a partial clone (#5172)
This change introduces the `git backfill` command which uses the path
walk API to download missing blobs in a blobless partial clone.

By downloading blobs that correspond to the same file path at the same
time, we hope to maximize the potential benefits of delta compression
against multiple versions.

These downloads occur in a configurable batch size, presenting a
mechanism to perform "resumable" clones: `git clone --filter=blob:none`
gets the commits and trees, then `git backfill` will download all
missing blobs. If `git backfill` is interrupted partway through, it can
be restarted and will redownload only the missing objects.

When combining blobless partial clones with sparse-checkout, `git
backfill` will assume its `--sparse` option and download only the blobs
within the sparse-checkout. Users may want to do this as the repo size
will still be smaller than the full repo size, but commands like `git
blame` or `git log -L` will not suffer from many one-by-one blob
downloads.

Future directions should consider adding a pathspec or file prefix to
further focus which paths are being downloaded in a batch.
2024-09-26 13:10:40 +02:00
Junio C Hamano
3857aae53f Git 2.47-rc0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-25 18:24:52 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
1522467d13 Merge branch 'jk/sendemail-mailmap-doc'
Docfix.

* jk/sendemail-mailmap-doc:
  send-email: document --mailmap and associated configuration
2024-09-25 18:24:52 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
f92c61aef0 Merge branch 'rs/diff-exit-code-binary'
"git diff --exit-code" ignored modified binary files, which has
been corrected.

* rs/diff-exit-code-binary:
  diff: report modified binary files as changes in builtin_diff()
2024-09-25 18:24:52 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
cd845c0422 Merge branch 'cb/ci-freebsd-13-4'
CI updates.

* cb/ci-freebsd-13-4:
  ci: update FreeBSD image to 13.4
2024-09-25 18:24:51 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
4f454e14b5 Merge branch 'ak/doc-sparse-co-typofix'
Docfix.

* ak/doc-sparse-co-typofix:
  Documentation/technical: fix a typo
2024-09-25 18:24:51 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
a344b47165 Merge branch 'ak/typofix-builtins'
Typofix.

* ak/typofix-builtins:
  builtin: fix typos
2024-09-25 18:24:50 -07:00
Johannes Schindelin
3793d09c04 backfill: mark it as experimental
This is a highly useful command, and we want it to get some testing "in
the wild". However, the patches have not yet been reviewed on the Git
mailing list, and are therefore subject to change. By marking the
command as experimental, users will be warned to pay attention to those
changes.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2024-09-26 02:51:06 +02:00
Derrick Stolee
275c9dbb34
Add path walk API and its use in 'git pack-objects' (#5171)
This is a follow up to #5157 as well as motivated by the RFC in
gitgitgadget/git#1786.

We have ways of walking all objects, but it is focused on visiting a
single commit and then expanding the new trees and blobs reachable from
that commit that have not been visited yet. This means that objects
arrive without any locality based on their path.

Add a new "path walk API" that focuses on walking objects in batches
according to their type and path. This will walk all annotated tags, all
commits, all root trees, and then start a depth-first search among all
paths in the repo to collect trees and blobs in batches.

The most important application for this is being fast-tracked to Git for
Windows: `git pack-objects --path-walk`. This application of the path
walk API discovers the objects to pack via this batched walk, and
automatically groups objects that appear at a common path so they can be
checked for delta comparisons.

This use completely avoids any name-hash collisions (even the collisions
that sometimes occur with the new `--full-name-hash` option) and can be
much faster to compute since the first pass of delta calculations does
not waste time on objects that are unlikely to be diffable.

Some statistics are available in the commit messages.
2024-09-25 16:48:41 -04:00
Derrick Stolee
d95811ca14 backfill: assume --sparse when sparse-checkout is enabled
The previous change introduced the '--[no-]sparse' option for the 'git
backfill' command, but did not assume it as enabled by default. However,
this is likely the behavior that users will most often want to happen.
Without this default, users with a small sparse-checkout may be confused
when 'git backfill' downloads every version of every object in the full
history.

However, this is left as a separate change so this decision can be reviewed
independently of the value of the '--[no-]sparse' option.

Add a test of adding the '--sparse' option to a repo without sparse-checkout
to make it clear that supplying it without a sparse-checkout is an error.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 14:01:57 -04:00
Derrick Stolee
9dc751af28 backfill: add --sparse option
One way to significantly reduce the cost of a Git clone and later fetches is
to use a blobless partial clone and combine that with a sparse-checkout that
reduces the paths that need to be populated in the working directory. Not
only does this reduce the cost of clones and fetches, the sparse-checkout
reduces the number of objects needed to download from a promisor remote.

However, history investigations can be expensie as computing blob diffs will
trigger promisor remote requests for one object at a time. This can be
avoided by downloading the blobs needed for the given sparse-checkout using
'git backfill' and its new '--sparse' mode, at a time that the user is
willing to pay that extra cost.

Note that this is distinctly different from the '--filter=sparse:<oid>'
option, as this assumes that the partial clone has all reachable trees and
we are using client-side logic to avoid downloading blobs outside of the
sparse-checkout cone. This avoids the server-side cost of walking trees
while also achieving a similar goal. It also downloads in batches based on
similar path names, presenting a resumable download if things are
interrupted.

This augments the path-walk API to have a possibly-NULL 'pl' member that may
point to a 'struct pattern_list'. This could be more general than the
sparse-checkout definition at HEAD, but 'git backfill --sparse' is currently
the only consumer.

Be sure to test this in both cone mode and not cone mode. Cone mode has the
benefit that the path-walk can skip certain paths once they would expand
beyond the sparse-checkout.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 14:01:57 -04:00
Derrick Stolee
bed08eaf55 backfill: add --batch-size=<n> option
Users may want to specify a minimum batch size for their needs. This is only
a minimum: the path-walk API provides a list of OIDs that correspond to the
same path, and thus it is optimal to allow delta compression across those
objects in a single server request.

We could consider limiting the request to have a maximum batch size in the
future.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 14:01:57 -04:00
Derrick Stolee
ad7a519a0c backfill: basic functionality and tests
The default behavior of 'git backfill' is to fetch all missing blobs that
are reachable from HEAD. Document and test this behavior.

The implementation is a very simple use of the path-walk API, initializing
the revision walk at HEAD to start the path-walk from all commits reachable
from HEAD. Ignore the object arrays that correspond to tree entries,
assuming that they are all present already.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 14:01:57 -04:00
Derrick Stolee
ce757fae13 backfill: add builtin boilerplate
In anticipation of implementing 'git backfill', populate the necessary files
with the boilerplate of a new builtin.

RFC TODO: When preparing this for a full implementation, make sure it is
based on the newest standards introduced by [1].

[1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/xmqqjzfq2f0f.fsf@gitster.g/T/#m606036ea2e75a6d6819d6b5c90e729643b0ff7f7
    [PATCH 1/3] builtin: add a repository parameter for builtin functions

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 14:01:56 -04:00
Derrick Stolee
d9fc474a5a pack-objects: thread the path-based compression
Adapting the implementation of ll_find_deltas(), create a threaded
version of the --path-walk compression step in 'git pack-objects'.

This involves adding a 'regions' member to the thread_params struct,
allowing each thread to own a section of paths. We can simplify the way
jobs are split because there is no value in extending the batch based on
name-hash the way sections of the object entry array are attempted to be
grouped. We re-use the 'list_size' and 'remaining' items for the purpose
of borrowing work in progress from other "victim" threads when a thread
has finished its batch of work more quickly.

Using the Git repository as a test repo, the p5313 performance test
shows that the resulting size of the repo is the same, but the threaded
implementation gives gains of varying degrees depending on the number of
objects being packed. (This was tested on a 16-core machine.)

Test                                    HEAD~1    HEAD
-------------------------------------------------------------
5313.6: thin pack with --path-walk        0.01    0.01  +0.0%
5313.7: thin pack size with --path-walk    475     475  +0.0%
5313.12: big pack with --path-walk        1.99    1.87  -6.0%
5313.13: big pack size with --path-walk  14.4M   14.3M  -0.4%
5313.18: repack with --path-walk         98.14   41.46 -57.8%
5313.19: repack size with --path-walk   197.2M  197.3M  +0.0%

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 19:50:28 +02:00
Derrick Stolee
940c8a2153 pack-objects: refactor path-walk delta phase
Previously, the --path-walk option to 'git pack-objects' would compute
deltas inline with the path-walk logic. This would make the progress
indicator look like it is taking a long time to enumerate objects, and
then very quickly computed deltas.

Instead of computing deltas on each region of objects organized by tree,
store a list of regions corresponding to these groups. These can later
be pulled from the list for delta compression before doing the "global"
delta search.

This presents a new progress indicator that can be used in tests to
verify that this stage is happening.

The current implementation is not integrated with threads, but could be
done in a future update.

Since we do not attempt to sort objects by size until after exploring
all trees, we can remove the previous change to t5530 due to a different
error message appearing first.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 19:50:28 +02:00
Derrick Stolee
f3c46f9aa2 scalar: enable path-walk during push via config
Repositories registered with Scalar are expected to be client-only
repositories that are rather large. This means that they are more likely to
be good candidates for using the --path-walk option when running 'git
pack-objects', especially under the hood of 'git push'. Enable this config
in Scalar repositories.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 19:50:28 +02:00
Derrick Stolee
ebc52fc1d0 pack-objects: enable --path-walk via config
Users may want to enable the --path-walk option for 'git pack-objects' by
default, especially underneath commands like 'git push' or 'git repack'.

This should be limited to client repositories, since the --path-walk option
disables bitmap walks, so would be bad to include in Git servers when
serving fetches and clones. There is potential that it may be helpful to
consider when repacking the repository, to take advantage of improved deltas
across historical versions of the same files.

Much like how "pack.useSparse" was introduced and included in
"feature.experimental" before being enabled by default, use the repository
settings infrastructure to make the new "pack.usePathWalk" config enabled by
"feature.experimental" and "feature.manyFiles".

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 19:50:28 +02:00
Derrick Stolee
c417efbbbb repack: add --path-walk option
Since 'git pack-objects' supports a --path-walk option, allow passing it
through in 'git repack'. This presents interesting testing opportunities for
comparing the different repacking strategies against each other.

Add the --path-walk option to the performance tests in p5313.

For the microsoft/fluentui repo [1] checked out at a specific commit [2],
the results are very interesting:

Test                                           this tree
------------------------------------------------------------------
5313.2: thin pack                              0.40(0.47+0.04)
5313.3: thin pack size                                    1.2M
5313.4: thin pack with --full-name-hash        0.09(0.10+0.04)
5313.5: thin pack size with --full-name-hash             22.8K
5313.6: thin pack with --path-walk             0.08(0.06+0.02)
5313.7: thin pack size with --path-walk                  20.8K
5313.8: big pack                               2.16(8.43+0.23)
5313.9: big pack size                                    17.7M
5313.10: big pack with --full-name-hash        1.42(3.06+0.21)
5313.11: big pack size with --full-name-hash             18.0M
5313.12: big pack with --path-walk             2.21(8.39+0.24)
5313.13: big pack size with --path-walk                  17.8M
5313.14: repack                                98.05(662.37+2.64)
5313.15: repack size                                    449.1K
5313.16: repack with --full-name-hash          33.95(129.44+2.63)
5313.17: repack size with --full-name-hash              182.9K
5313.18: repack with --path-walk               106.21(121.58+0.82)
5313.19: repack size with --path-walk                   159.6K

[1] https://github.com/microsoft/fluentui
[2] e70848ebac1cd720875bccaa3026f4a9ed700e08

This repo suffers from having a lot of paths that collide in the name
hash, so examining them in groups by path leads to better deltas. Also,
in this case, the single-threaded implementation is competitive with the
full repack. This is saving time diffing files that have significant
differences from each other.

A similar, but private, repo has even more extremes in the thin packs:

Test                                           this tree
--------------------------------------------------------------
5313.2: thin pack                              2.39(2.91+0.10)
5313.3: thin pack size                                    4.5M
5313.4: thin pack with --full-name-hash        0.29(0.47+0.12)
5313.5: thin pack size with --full-name-hash             15.5K
5313.6: thin pack with --path-walk             0.35(0.31+0.04)
5313.7: thin pack size with --path-walk                  14.2K

Notice, however, that while the --full-name-hash version is working
quite well in these cases for the thin pack, it does poorly for some
other standard cases, such as this test on the Linux kernel repository:

Test                                           this tree
--------------------------------------------------------------
5313.2: thin pack                              0.01(0.00+0.00)
5313.3: thin pack size                                     310
5313.4: thin pack with --full-name-hash        0.00(0.00+0.00)
5313.5: thin pack size with --full-name-hash              1.4K
5313.6: thin pack with --path-walk             0.00(0.00+0.00)
5313.7: thin pack size with --path-walk                    310

Here, the --full-name-hash option does much worse than the default name
hash, but the path-walk option does exactly as well.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 19:50:28 +02:00
Derrick Stolee
9d7c5cbb48 pack-objects: introduce GIT_TEST_PACK_PATH_WALK
There are many tests that validate whether 'git pack-objects' works as
expected. Instead of duplicating these tests, add a new test environment
variable, GIT_TEST_PACK_PATH_WALK, that implies --path-walk by default
when specified.

This was useful in testing the implementation of the --path-walk
implementation, especially in conjunction with test such as:

 - t0411-clone-from-partial.sh : One test fetches from a repo that does
   not have the boundary objects. This causes the path-based walk to
   fail. Disable the variable for this test.

 - t5306-pack-nobase.sh : Similar to t0411, one test fetches from a repo
   without a boundary object.

 - t5310-pack-bitmaps.sh : One test compares the case when packing with
   bitmaps to the case when packing without them. Since we disable the
   test variable when writing bitmaps, this causes a difference in the
   object list (the --path-walk option adds an extra object). Specify
   --no-path-walk in both processes for the comparison. Another test
   checks for a specific delta base, but when computing dynamically
   without using bitmaps, the base object it too small to be considered
   in the delta calculations so no base is used.

 - t5316-pack-delta-depth.sh : This script cares about certain delta
   choices and their chain lengths. The --path-walk option changes how
   these chains are selected, and thus changes the results of this test.

 - t5322-pack-objects-sparse.sh : This demonstrates the effectiveness of
   the --sparse option and how it combines with --path-walk.

 - t5332-multi-pack-reuse.sh : This test verifies that the preferred
   pack is used for delta reuse when possible. The --path-walk option is
   not currently aware of the preferred pack at all, so finds a
   different delta base.

 - t7406-submodule-update.sh : When using the variable, the --depth
   option collides with the --path-walk feature, resulting in a warning
   message. Disable the variable so this warning does not appear.

I want to call out one specific test change that is only temporary:

 - t5530-upload-pack-error.sh : One test cares specifically about an
   "unable to read" error message. Since the current implementation
   performs delta calculations within the path-walk API callback, a
   different "unable to get size" error message appears. When this
   is changed in a future refactoring, this test change can be reverted.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 19:50:28 +02:00
Derrick Stolee
318fd94635 pack-objects: add --path-walk option
In order to more easily compute delta bases among objects that appear at the
exact same path, add a --path-walk option to 'git pack-objects'.

This option will use the path-walk API instead of the object walk given by
the revision machinery. Since objects will be provided in batches
representing a common path, those objects can be tested for delta bases
immediately instead of waiting for a sort of the full object list by
name-hash. This has multiple benefits, including avoiding collisions by
name-hash.

The objects marked as UNINTERESTING are included in these batches, so we
are guaranteeing some locality to find good delta bases.

After the individual passes are done on a per-path basis, the default
name-hash is used to find other opportunistic delta bases that did not
match exactly by the full path name.

RFC TODO: It is important to note that this option is inherently
incompatible with using a bitmap index. This walk probably also does not
work with other advanced features, such as delta islands.

Getting ahead of myself, this option compares well with --full-name-hash
when the packfile is large enough, but also performs at least as well as
the default in all cases that I've seen.

RFC TODO: this should probably be recording the batch locations to another
list so they could be processed in a second phase using threads.

RFC TODO: list some examples of how this outperforms previous pack-objects
strategies. (This is coming in later commits that include performance
test changes.)

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 19:50:28 +02:00
Derrick Stolee
fda0d77755 pack-objects: extract should_attempt_deltas()
This will be helpful in a future change.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 19:50:28 +02:00
Derrick Stolee
ac60e114ea path-walk: add prune_all_uninteresting option
This option causes the path-walk API to act like the sparse tree-walk
algorithm implemented by mark_trees_uninteresting_sparse() in
list-objects.c.

Starting from the commits marked as UNINTERESTING, their root trees and
all objects reachable from those trees are UNINTERSTING, at least as we
walk path-by-path. When we reach a path where all objects associated
with that path are marked UNINTERESTING, then do no continue walking the
children of that path.

We need to be careful to pass the UNINTERESTING flag in a deep way on
the UNINTERESTING objects before we start the path-walk, or else the
depth-first search for the path-walk API may accidentally report some
objects as interesting.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 19:50:28 +02:00
Derrick Stolee
0ab378dce1 revision: create mark_trees_uninteresting_dense()
The sparse tree walk algorithm was created in d5d2e93577e (revision:
implement sparse algorithm, 2019-01-16) and involves using the
mark_trees_uninteresting_sparse() method. This method takes a repository
and an oidset of tree IDs, some of which have the UNINTERESTING flag and
some of which do not.

Create a method that has an equivalent set of preconditions but uses a
"dense" walk (recursively visits all reachable trees, as long as they
have not previously been marked UNINTERESTING). This is an important
difference from mark_tree_uninteresting(), which short-circuits if the
given tree has the UNINTERESTING flag.

A use of this method will be added in a later change, with a condition
set whether the sparse or dense approach should be used.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 19:50:28 +02:00
Derrick Stolee
7a85f9a73c path-walk: allow visiting tags
In anticipation of using the path-walk API to analyze tags or include
them in a pack-file, add the ability to walk the tags that were included
in the revision walk.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 19:50:28 +02:00
Junio C Hamano
a116aba5d5 The 21st batch
This pretty much should match what we would have in the upcoming
preview of 2.47.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-25 10:37:13 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
cbb5b53a9c Merge branch 'jc/cmake-unit-test-updates'
CMake adjustments for recent changes around unit tests.

* jc/cmake-unit-test-updates:
  cmake: generalize the handling of the `UNIT_TEST_OBJS` list
  cmake: stop looking for `REFTABLE_TEST_OBJS` in the Makefile
  cmake: rename clar-related variables to avoid confusion
2024-09-25 10:37:13 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
7644bb0aaa Merge branch 'ps/ci-gitlab-upgrade'
CI updates.

* ps/ci-gitlab-upgrade:
  gitlab-ci: upgrade machine type of Linux runners
2024-09-25 10:37:13 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
7834cc3212 Merge branch 'ak/refs-symref-referent-typofix'
Typofix.

* ak/refs-symref-referent-typofix:
  ref-filter: fix a typo
2024-09-25 10:37:12 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
78ce6660bb Merge branch 'ak/typofix-2.46-maint'
Typofix.

* ak/typofix-2.46-maint:
  upload-pack: fix a typo
  sideband: fix a typo
  setup: fix a typo
  run-command: fix a typo
  revision: fix a typo
  refs: fix typos
  rebase: fix a typo
  read-cache-ll: fix a typo
  pretty: fix a typo
  object-file: fix a typo
  merge-ort: fix typos
  merge-ll: fix a typo
  http: fix a typo
  gpg-interface: fix a typo
  git-p4: fix typos
  git-instaweb: fix a typo
  fsmonitor-settings: fix a typo
  diffcore-rename: fix typos
  config.mak.dev: fix a typo
2024-09-25 10:37:12 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
52f57e94bd Merge branch 'ps/reftable-exclude'
The reftable backend learned to more efficiently handle exclude
patterns while enumerating the refs.

* ps/reftable-exclude:
  refs/reftable: wire up support for exclude patterns
  reftable/reader: make table iterator reseekable
  t/unit-tests: introduce reftable library
  Makefile: stop listing test library objects twice
  builtin/receive-pack: fix exclude patterns when announcing refs
  refs: properly apply exclude patterns to namespaced refs
2024-09-25 10:37:11 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
c639478d79 Merge branch 'ps/apply-leakfix'
"git apply" had custom buffer management code that predated before
use of strbuf got widespread, which has been updated to use strbuf,
which also plugged some memory leaks.

* ps/apply-leakfix:
  apply: refactor `struct image` to use a `struct strbuf`
  apply: rename members that track line count and allocation length
  apply: refactor code to drop `line_allocated`
  apply: introduce macro and function to init images
  apply: rename functions operating on `struct image`
  apply: reorder functions to move image-related things together
2024-09-25 10:37:10 -07:00
Jacob Keller
7ffcbafbf3 send-email: document --mailmap and associated configuration
241499aba007 ("send-email: add mailmap support via sendemail.mailmap and
--mailmap", 2024-08-27) added support for --mailmap, and the associated
sendemail.mailmap.* configuration variables. Add documentation to
reflect this feature.

Fixes: 241499aba007 ("send-email: add mailmap support via sendemail.mailmap and --mailmap")
Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2024-09-25 08:58:38 -07:00
Derrick Stolee
c76e9e7914 path-walk: allow consumer to specify object types
We add the ability to filter the object types in the path-walk API so
the callback function is called fewer times.

This adds the ability to ask for the commits in a list, as well. Future
changes will add the ability to visit annotated tags.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 11:27:57 -04:00