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authorLibravatar Jeff King <peff@peff.net>2014-07-14 01:53:54 -0400
committerLibravatar Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2014-07-15 11:02:56 -0700
commit73f43f220f0276012de50c84413fd61bf6aa307b (patch)
tree85fdc5b812e570aad41e942ff110b5f603b047a0 /Documentation/docbook-xsl.css
parentprio-queue: make output stable with respect to insertion (diff)
downloadtgif-73f43f220f0276012de50c84413fd61bf6aa307b.tar.xz
paint_down_to_common: use prio_queue
When we are traversing to find merge bases, we keep our usual commit_list of commits to process, sorted by their commit timestamp. As we add each parent to the list, we have to spend "O(width of history)" to do the insertion, where the width of history is the number of simultaneous lines of development. If we instead use a heap-based priority queue, we can do these insertions in "O(log width)" time. This provides minor speedups to merge-base calculations (timings in linux.git, warm cache, best-of-five): [before] $ git merge-base HEAD v2.6.12 real 0m3.251s user 0m3.148s sys 0m0.104s [after] $ git merge-base HEAD v2.6.12 real 0m3.234s user 0m3.108s sys 0m0.128s That's only an 0.5% speedup, but it does help protect us against pathological cases. While we are munging the "interesting" function, we also take the opportunity to give it a more descriptive name, and convert the return value to an int (we returned the first interesting commit, but nobody ever looked at it). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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