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authorLibravatar Andi Kleen <ak@linux.intel.com>2011-06-18 18:07:05 -0700
committerLibravatar Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2011-06-20 14:17:57 -0700
commit7ddc2710b97f223a13d9ff757948cdf9c8a22f66 (patch)
tree7969d3f06521ccf0a7ae22c92496d5085b52b0f1 /compat/win32
parentAdd option to disable NORETURN (diff)
downloadtgif-7ddc2710b97f223a13d9ff757948cdf9c8a22f66.tar.xz
Add profile feedback build to git
Add a gcc profile feedback build option "profile-all" to the main Makefile. It simply runs the test suite to generate feedback data and the recompiles the main executables with that. The basic structure is similar to the existing gcov code. gcc is often able to generate better code with profile feedback data. The training load also doesn't need to be too similar to the actual load, it still gives benefits. The test suite run is unfortunately quite long. It would be good to find a suitable subset that runs faster and still gives reasonable feedback. For now the test suite runs single threaded (I had some trouble running the test suite with -jX) I tested it with git gc and git blame kernel/sched.c on a Linux kernel tree. For gc I get about 2.7% improvement in wall clock time by using the feedback build, for blame about 2.4%. That's not gigantic, but not shabby either for a very small patch. If anyone has any favourite CPU intensive git benchmarks feel free to try them too. I hope distributors will switch to use a feedback build in their packages. Signed-off-by: Andi Kleen <ak@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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