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authorLibravatar Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>2021-05-18 18:32:47 +0000
committerLibravatar Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2021-05-19 16:41:21 +0900
commit410334ed5212979a3ff6c8ca119ca14290ee7790 (patch)
tree1bc5e5236d70cbd69357253c66ec290b94c0ab9c /t/t1701-racy-split-index.sh
parentcsum-file.h: increase hashfile buffer size (diff)
downloadtgif-410334ed5212979a3ff6c8ca119ca14290ee7790.tar.xz
read-cache: use hashfile instead of git_hash_ctx
The do_write_index() method in read-cache.c has its own hashing logic and buffering mechanism. Specifically, the ce_write() method was introduced by 4990aadc (Speed up index file writing by chunking it nicely, 2005-04-20) and similar mechanisms were introduced a few months later in c38138cd (git-pack-objects: write the pack files with a SHA1 csum, 2005-06-26). Based on the timing, in the early days of the Git codebase, I figured that these roughly equivalent code paths were never unified only because it got lost in the shuffle. The hashfile API has since been used extensively in other file formats, such as pack-indexes, multi-pack-indexes, and commit-graphs. Therefore, it seems prudent to unify the index writing code to use the same mechanism. I discovered this disparity while trying to create a new index format that uses the chunk-format API. That API uses a hashfile as its base, so it is incompatible with the custom code in read-cache.c. This rewrite is rather straightforward. It replaces all writes to the temporary file with writes to the hashfile struct. This takes care of many of the direct interactions with the_hash_algo. There are still some git_hash_ctx uses remaining: the extension headers are hashed for use in the End of Index Entries (EOIE) extension. This use of the git_hash_ctx is left as-is. There are multiple reasons to not use a hashfile here, including the fact that the data is not actually writing to a file, just a hash computation. These hashes do not block our adoption of the chunk-format API in a future change to the index, so leave it as-is. The internals of the algorithms are mostly identical. Previously, the hashfile API used a smaller 8KB buffer instead of the 128KB buffer from read-cache.c. The previous change already unified these sizes. There is one subtle point: we do not pass the CSUM_FSYNC to the finalize_hashfile() method, which differs from most consumers of the hashfile API. The extra fsync() call indicated by this flag causes a significant peformance degradation that is noticeable for quick commands that write the index, such as "git add". Other consumers can absorb this cost with their more complicated data structure organization, and further writing structures such as pack-files and commit-graphs is rarely in the critical path for common user interactions. Some static methods become orphaned in this diff, so I marked them as MAYBE_UNUSED. The diff is much harder to read if they are deleted during this change. Instead, they will be deleted in the following change. In addition to the test suite passing, I computed indexes using the previous binaries and the binaries compiled after this change, and found the index data to be exactly equal. Finally, I did extensive performance testing of "git update-index --force-write" on repos of various sizes, including one with over 2 million paths at HEAD. These tests demonstrated less than 1% difference in behavior. As expected, the performance should be considered unchanged. The previous changes to increase the hashfile buffer size from 8K to 128K ensured this change would not create a peformance regression. Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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