Hi Stefan, On Thu, Sep 20, 2018 at 11:35:23AM -0700, Stefan Beller wrote: > > To make the reference advertisement manageable even with a large number > > of references, let's allow the fork to select which ones it thinks might > > be "interesting", and only advertise those. This makes the advertisement > > much smaller, and lets us take advantage of the ".have" references, even > > when the upstream contains more references than we're advertising. > > > > This series implements the above functionality by means of > > "core.alternateRefsCommand", and "core.alternateRefsPrefixes", either a > > command to run in place of "git for-each-ref", or arguments to be > > appended to "git for-each-ref". > > > > The order of precedence when listing references from an alternate is as > > follows: > > > > 1. If the fork configures "core.alternateRefsCommand", run that. > > > > 2. If the fork configures "core.alternateRefsPrefixes", run 'git > > for-each-ref', limiting results to references that have any of the > > given values as a prefix. > > > > 3. Otherwise, run 'git for-each-ref' in the alternate. > > > > In a previous version of this series, I taught the configuration > > property to the alternate, as in "these are the references that _I_ > > think _you_ will find interesting," rather than the other way around. I > > ultimately decided on what is attached here so that the fork does not > > have to trust the upstream to run arbitrary shell commands. > > Would it make sense to estimate the value of each .have before > advertising them and then advertise only the <n> most valuable > .haves ? > (e.g. if a .have is only one small commit ahead of origin/master, > it may not bring a lot of value as the potential savings are small, > but if that .have contains history between master..TIP that has lots > of big blobs or objects in general, this may be valuable to know) I think that this sort of filtering should be theoretically possible by configuring "core.alternateRefsCommand", perhaps to execute a script like: cd "$1" && git for-each-ref --format="%(objectname) %(refname)" | while read objectname refname; do total_size="$(git rev-list --objects master...$objectname \ | awk '{ print $1 }' \ | git cat-file --batch-check='%(objectsize)' \ | awk '{ sum+=$1 } END { print $sum }')" if [ "$total_size" -gt "$minimum_size" ]; then echo "$objectname $refname" fi done But that's quite inefficient to compute, since you're walking the same parts of the graph over and over again. Perhaps we could teach Git to do something better? I suppose that just "core.alternateRefPrefixes" could do this by default (or with another knob) to further optimize the simpler case. But I think that we'd be equally OK without it, since push over V2 obviates the need for this sort of optimization (as you noted in the unquoted part of this response). My inclination is to avoid teaching this to Git, and let callers script it into their "core.alternateRefsCommand" if they really desire it. Does that seem OK? Thanks, Taylor