On Mon, 2015-10-05 at 10:22 -0700, Junio C Hamano wrote: > Michael Haggerty <mhagger@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > For this particular application, where we only have 19 strings to store, > > I suppose we could tolerate the use of approximately 64k of RAM to store > > 174 characters worth of strings *if* it would bring us big time savings. > > But I think we need some evidence of the time savings. > > > > If this lookup is really a bottleneck, I bet there are other > > alternatives that are just as fast as this trie and use less code, > > especially given that there are only 19 strings that need checking. > > Very good point. I agree that we need to know that the dumb linear > scan in the original is on the bottleneck and that any replacement > is an improvement. Just did a tiny bit of microbenchmarking: The trie code is indeed somewhat faster, but it's not the bottleneck in the git_path family of functions. The sprintf stuff takes way more time. Most callers don't need this functionality (an append would do). But this is a benchmark of just git_path. I don't happen to see any cases where git_path is taking up an appreciable amount of runtime. I only added this because Junio requested a speedup. So I am perfectly happy to drop this patch from the series. -- 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