[PATCH 0/7] Optimization batch 14: trivial directory resolution

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This series depends textually on ort-perf-batch-12, but is semantically
independent. (It is both semantically and textually independent of
ort-perf-batch-13.)

Most of my previous series dramatically accelerated cases with lots of
renames, while providing comparatively minor benefits for cases with few or
no renames. This series is the opposite; it provides huge benefits when
there are few or no renames, and comparatively smaller (though still quite
decent) benefits for cases with many uncached renames.

=== Basic Optimization idea ===

unpack_trees has had a concept of trivial merges for individual files (see
Documentation/technical/trivial-merge.txt). The same idea can be applied in
merge-ort. It'd be really nice to extend that idea to trees as well, as it
could provide a huge performance boost; sadly however, applying it in
general would wreck both regular rename detection (the unmatched side can
have new files that serve as potential destinations in rename detection) and
directory rename detection (the unmatched side could have a new directory
that was moved into it).

If we somehow knew rename detection wasn't needed, we could do trivial
directory resolution. In the past, this wasn't possible. However...

With recent optimizations we have created a possibility to do trivial
directory resolutions in some cases. These came from the addition of the
"skipping irrelevant renames" optimizations (from ort-perf-batch-9 and
ort-perf-batch-10), and in particular noting that we added an ability to
entirely skip rename detection in commit f89b4f2bee ("merge-ort: skip rename
detection entirely if possible", 2021-03-11) when there are no relevant
sources. We can detect if there are no relevant sources without recursing
into the directories in question.

As a cherry on top, the caching of renames (from ort-perf-batch-11) allows
us to cover additional cases.

This series is all about adding all the special checks needed to safely
perform trival directory resolutions.

=== Results ===

For the testcases mentioned in commit 557ac0350d ("merge-ort: begin
performance work; instrument with trace2_region_* calls", 2020-10-28), the
changes in just this series improves the performance as follows:

                     Before Series           After Series
no-renames:        5.235 s ±  0.042 s   204.2  ms ±  3.0  ms
mega-renames:      9.419 s ±  0.107 s     1.076 s ±  0.015 s
just-one-mega:   480.1  ms ±  3.9  ms   364.1  ms ±  7.0  ms


As a reminder, before any merge-ort/diffcore-rename performance work, the
performance results we started with were:

no-renames-am:      6.940 s ±  0.485 s
no-renames:        18.912 s ±  0.174 s
mega-renames:    5964.031 s ± 10.459 s
just-one-mega:    149.583 s ±  0.751 s


Elijah Newren (7):
  merge-ort: resolve paths early when we have sufficient information
  merge-ort: add some more explanations in collect_merge_info_callback()
  merge-ort: add data structures for allowable trivial directory
    resolves
  merge-ort: add a handle_deferred_entries() helper function
  merge-ort: defer recursing into directories when merge base is matched
  merge-ort: avoid recursing into directories when we don't need to
  merge-ort: restart merge with cached renames to reduce process entry
    cost

 merge-ort.c                         | 403 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
 t/t6423-merge-rename-directories.sh |   2 +-
 2 files changed, 393 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-)


base-commit: 2eeee12b02e441ac05054a5a5ecbcea6964a1e6b
Published-As: https://github.com/gitgitgadget/git/releases/tag/pr-988%2Fnewren%2Fort-perf-batch-14-v1
Fetch-It-Via: git fetch https://github.com/gitgitgadget/git pr-988/newren/ort-perf-batch-14-v1
Pull-Request: https://github.com/gitgitgadget/git/pull/988
-- 
gitgitgadget



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