Jon Smirl <jonsmirl@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 8/13/07, Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On 32b there's windowing code for accessing the packfile since we can > > > run out of address space, does this code get turned off for 64b? > > > > The windowing code you are talking about defaults as follows: > > > > Parameter 32b 64b > > ----------------------------------------- > > core.packedGitWindowSize 32M 1G > > core.packedGitLimit 256M 8G > > > > So I doubt you are having issues with the windowing code on a 64b > > system, unless your repository is just *huge*. I did not think that > > anyone had a Git repository that exceeded 8G, though the window > > size of 1G might be a tad too small if there are many packfiles > > and they are each larger than 1G. > > Why use windows on 64b? Default core.packedGitWindowSize equal to > core.packedGitLimit That's *not* a good idea when you have more than one packfile. The limit is for the sum of all packfiles. The settings above allow up to 8 packfiles to be opened and mapped at once on 64b systems, with each packfile being up to 1G in size before we start shifting the window(s) around. Doing as you suggest would reduce the number of open packfiles to 1, which would severely hurt performance when there is more than one packfile and Git keeps bouncing around between them to satisfy the current process' demands. One could probably argue that the defaults for 64b are too small; perhaps they should be closer to 4G/24G seeing as how the 64b address space is so huge that we're unlikely to run into issues with being able to use >24G of virtual address at once. > I haven't measured it but I suspect the OS calls for moving the > windows are are quite slow on a relative basis since they have to > rewrite a bunch of page tables. Maybe. Add a call to pack_report() at the end of the program you are interested in and run it. We keep track of how often we move windows around; you may find that we don't move them often enough (or at all) to cause problems here. Or just run it under strace and watch mmap() activity, filtering out the uninteresting bits. > Why is the window so small on 32b? I > thought we were up to about a 1GB packfile before running out of > address space with Mozilla. Shouldn't the window simply be set as > large as possible on 32b, this size being a function of the available > address space, not the amount of physical memory? Because programs need to malloc() stuff to work. And we need stack space. And we need to let the runtime linker mmap() in the shared libraries we are linked to. All in all we do get tight in some 32b cases. The above defaults for 32b were chosen based on the Linux kernel repository (its under 256M) and based on some (crude) performance testing on Linux (which seemed to say the 32M packedGitWindowSize wasn't really hurting us). They were basically set to give us maximum address space for working heap and yet not have a negative impact on one of our (at the time) largest user groups. In particular repack (aka git-pack-objects) is a real memory pig, especially now with its various caches. The more address space we can let it use in a 32b case the better off we probably are. If someone can show that increasing these 32b defaults is the right thing to do even in very large repositories, *especially* with something really brutal like `git-blame` on a very busy file or `git repack -f -a` then please submit a patch to boost them. ;-) -- Shawn. - 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