Re: [RFC PATCH] git.txt: document limitations on non-typical repos (and hints)

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On 05/10/10 06:00, Nguyán ThÃi Ngác Duy wrote:
> 
> Signed-off-by: Nguyán ThÃi Ngác Duy <pclouds@xxxxxxxxx>
> ---
>  I wanted to make a more detailed description, per command. It would
>  serve as guidance for people on special repos, also as TODOs for Git
>  developers. But that seems a lot of work on analyzing each commands.
> 
>  Instead I made this text to warn users where performance may decrease,
>  and to hint them features that might help. Do I miss anything?
> 
>  There were discussions in the past on maintaining large files out-of-repo,
>  and symlinks to them in-repo. That sounds like a good advice, doesn't it?
> 
>  Documentation/git.txt |   46 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>  1 files changed, 46 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/Documentation/git.txt b/Documentation/git.txt
> index dd57bdc..8408923 100644
> --- a/Documentation/git.txt
> +++ b/Documentation/git.txt
> @@ -729,6 +729,52 @@ The index is also capable of storing multiple entries (called "stages")
>  for a given pathname.  These stages are used to hold the various
>  unmerged version of a file when a merge is in progress.
>  
> +Performance concerns
> +--------------------
> +
> +Git is written with performance in mind and it works extremely well
> +with its typical repositories (i.e. source code repositories, with
> +a moderate number of small text files, possibly with long history).
> +Non-typical repositories (huge number of files, or very large
> +files...) may experience performance degradation. This section describes
> +how Git behaves in such repositories and how to reduce impact.

How huge is "huge" and how large is "large". From previous threads on
this list I'm guessing "large" is files bigger than physical RAM. I've
not really run into a situation where a huge number of files causes
performance problems.

Maybe there should be a distinction of where a user might see
performance problems e.g. initial clone, subsequent fetches, commit,
checkout or diff.

> +
> +For repositories with really long history, you may want to work on
> +a shallow clone of it (see linkgit:git-clone[1], option '--depth').
> +A shallow repository does not contain full history, so it may consume
> +less disk space and network bandwidth. On the other hand, you cannot
> +fetch from it. And obviously you cannot look further back than what
> +it has in history (you can deepen history though).

You might want to mention git clone --reference and the
.git/objects/info/alternates for those concerned with disk usage.

> +
> +For repositories with a large number of files, but you only need
> +a few of them present in working tree, you can use sparse checkout
> +(see linkgit:git-read-tree[1], section 'Sparse checkout'). Sparse
> +checkout can be used with either a normal repository, or a shallow
> +one.
> +
> +Git uses lstat(3) to detect changes in working tree. A huge number
> +of lstat(3) calls may impact performance, especially on systems with
> +slow lstat(3). In some cases you can reduce the number of lstat(3)
> +calls by specifying what directories you are interested in, so no
> +lstat(3) outside is needed.
> +
> +For repositories with a large number of files, you need all of them
> +present in working tree, but you know in advance only a few of them
> +may be modified, please consider using assume-unchanged bit (see
> +linkgit:git-update-index[1]). This helps reduce the number of lstat(3)
> +calls.
> +
> +Some Git commands need entire file content in memory to process.
> +You may want to avoid using them if possible on large files. Those
> +commands include:
> +
> +* All checkout commands (linkgit:git-checkout[1],
> +  linkgit:git-checkout-index[1], linkgit:git-read-tree[1],
> +  linkgit:git-clone[1]...)
> +* All diff-related commands (linkgit:git-diff[1],
> +  linkgit:git-log[1] with diff, linkgit:git-show[1] on commits...)
> +* All commands that need file conversion processing
> +

This addresses one of my comments above. It might be worth talking about
using git bundles as an alternative to cloning over unreliable connections.

>  Authors
>  -------
>  * git's founding father is Linus Torvalds <torvalds@xxxxxxxx>.

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