Tamas Csabina <tcsabina@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > I am using Git bash from version 1.8.3.msysgit.0, on a Windows 7x64 PC. > I have an issue with executing git push if I have a post-receive > script configured. > The content of the script is not really important, as if I have a > script that contains only commented out lines (around 70 lines), my > git push command is delayed with around 5 seconds. > > > I`ve tested the script on another PC and it is working fine. No delay > at all. So there are some issues on my PC regarding how git processes > remote scripts. > > I took a wireshark trace with 2 scenarios on my PC: > > 1. just execute `cat <path_to_the_script>\post-receive` command in the git bash > 2. did a `real` git push > > Results of the wireshark traces shows: > > 1. Read AndX Request, FID: 0x228f, 1024 bytes at offset 0 (1024 bytes > at time, always) > 2. Read AndX Request, FID: 0x21c9, 1 byte at offset 0 (1 byte, always) > > Conclusion: > git push command reads the post-receive script in 1 byte chunks, which > dramatically slows down the execution process. git doesn't read the script; the interpreter does. In the case of a script, the interpreter is specified in the #! line at the top; in the case of a binary executable, it is specified within the executable (and for linux, is usually /lib/ld-linux.so.2). Exactly the same should happen if you run the hook manually, so you can try that to debug it. Note also that Weird Things(tm) relating to SIGPIPE may happen if you don't read your input. Even if you are only fooling around for testing, a post-receive hook must consume its input, e.g., by discarding it with 'cat >/dev/null'. -- Thomas Rast trast@{inf,student}.ethz.ch -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html