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authorLibravatar Nicolas Pitre <nico@cam.org>2007-05-30 22:48:13 -0400
committerLibravatar Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>2007-05-30 23:35:07 -0700
commitf7c22cc68ccba0cb5bbd43177507795c48afb1f5 (patch)
tree4b6ad9c7c2714fd17753f626816ec2d672e1dc91 /git-gui/lib/shortcut.tcl
parentMakefile: Use generic rule to build test programs (diff)
downloadtgif-f7c22cc68ccba0cb5bbd43177507795c48afb1f5.tar.xz
always start looking up objects in the last used pack first
Jon Smirl said: | Once an object reference hits a pack file it is very likely that | following references will hit the same pack file. So first place to | look for an object is the same place the previous object was found. This is indeed a good heuristic so here it is. The search always start with the pack where the last object lookup succeeded. If the wanted object is not available there then the search continues with the normal pack ordering. To test this I split the Linux repository into 66 packs and performed a "time git-rev-list --objects --all > /dev/null". Best results are as follows: Pack Sort w/o this patch w/ this patch ------------------------------------------------------------- recent objects last 26.4s 20.9s recent objects first 24.9s 18.4s This shows that the pack order based on object age has some influence, but that the last-used-pack heuristic is even more significant in reducing object lookup. Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@cam.org> --- Note: the --max-pack-size to git-repack currently produces packs with old objects after those containing recent objects. The pack sort based on filesystem timestamp is therefore backward for those. This needs to be fixed of course, but at least it made me think about this variable for the test. Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
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