On Mon, Sep 25, 2017 at 2:54 AM, Derrick Stolee <dstolee@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Create get_hex_char_from_oid() to parse oids one hex character at a > time. This prevents unnecessary copying of hex characters in > extend_abbrev_len() when finding the length of a common prefix. > > p0008.1: find_unique_abbrev() for existing objects > -------------------------------------------------- > > For 10 repeated tests, each checking 100,000 known objects, we find the > following results when running in a Linux VM: > > | | Pack | Packed | Loose | Base | New | | > | Repo | Files | Objects | Objects| Time | Time | Rel% | > |-------|-------|---------|--------|--------|--------|--------| > | Git | 1 | 230078 | 0 | 0.08 s | 0.08 s | 0.0% | > | Git | 5 | 230162 | 0 | 0.17 s | 0.16 s | - 5.9% | > | Git | 4 | 154310 | 75852 | 0.14 s | 0.12 s | -14.3% | > | Linux | 1 | 5606645 | 0 | 0.50 s | 0.25 s | -50.0% | > | Linux | 24 | 5606645 | 0 | 2.41 s | 2.08 s | -13.7% | > | Linux | 23 | 5283204 | 323441 | 1.99 s | 1.69 s | -15.1% | > | VSTS | 1 | 4355923 | 0 | 0.40 s | 0.22 s | -45.0% | > | VSTS | 32 | 4355923 | 0 | 2.09 s | 1.99 s | - 4.8% | > | VSTS | 31 | 4276829 | 79094 | 3.60 s | 3.20 s | -11.1% | > > For the Windows repo running in Windows Subsystem for Linux: > > Pack Files: 50 > Packed Objects: 22,385,898 > Loose Objects: 492 > Base Time: 4.61 s > New Time: 4.61 s > Rel %: 0.0% > > p0008.2: find_unique_abbrev() for missing objects > ------------------------------------------------- > > For 10 repeated tests, each checking 100,000 missing objects, we find > the following results when running in a Linux VM: > > | | Pack | Packed | Loose | Base | New | | > | Repo | Files | Objects | Objects| Time | Time | Rel% | > |-------|-------|---------|--------|--------|--------|--------| > | Git | 1 | 230078 | 0 | 0.06 s | 0.05 s | -16.7% | > | Git | 5 | 230162 | 0 | 0.14 s | 0.15 s | + 7.1% | > | Git | 4 | 154310 | 75852 | 0.12 s | 0.12 s | 0.0% | > | Linux | 1 | 5606645 | 0 | 0.40 s | 0.17 s | -57.5% | > | Linux | 24 | 5606645 | 0 | 1.59 s | 1.30 s | -18.2% | > | Linux | 23 | 5283204 | 323441 | 1.23 s | 1.10 s | -10.6% | > | VSTS | 1 | 4355923 | 0 | 0.25 s | 0.12 s | -52.0% | > | VSTS | 32 | 4355923 | 0 | 1.45 s | 1.34 s | - 7.6% | > | VSTS | 31 | 4276829 | 79094 | 1.59 s | 1.34 s | -15.7% | > > For the Windows repo running in Windows Subsystem for Linux: > > Pack Files: 50 > Packed Objects: 22,385,898 > Loose Objects: 492 > Base Time: 3.91 s > New Time: 3.08 s > Rel %: -21.1% > These number look pretty cool! > Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> double signoff? > --- > sha1_name.c | 13 +++++++++++-- > 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/sha1_name.c b/sha1_name.c > index f2a1ebe49..bb47b6702 100644 > --- a/sha1_name.c > +++ b/sha1_name.c > @@ -480,13 +480,22 @@ struct min_abbrev_data { > char *hex; > }; > > +static inline char get_hex_char_from_oid(const struct object_id *oid, int i) 'i' is not very descriptive, maybe add a comment? (I realize it is just walking through the char*s one by one) Maybe this function (together with the change in the while below) could go into hex.c as "int progressively_cmp_oids" that returns the position at which the given oids differ? > +{ > + static const char hex[] = "0123456789abcdef"; > + > + if ((i & 1) == 0) > + return hex[oid->hash[i >> 1] >> 4]; > + else > + return hex[oid->hash[i >> 1] & 0xf]; > +} sha1_to_hex_r has very similar code, though it iterates less and covers both cases in the loop body. That is the actual reason I propose moving this function (or a variant thereof) to hex.c as there we can share code.