On Thu, Jul 01 2021, Jeff Hostetler wrote: > On 7/1/21 1:40 PM, Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason wrote: >> On Thu, Jul 01 2021, Jeff Hostetler via GitGitGadget wrote: >> >>> Here is V3 of my patch series to add a builtin FSMonitor daemon to Git. I >>> rebased this series onto v2.32.0. >>> >>> V3 addresses most of the previous review comments and things we've learned >>> from our experimental testing of V2. (A version of V2 was shipped as an >>> experimental feature in the v2.32.0-based releases of Git for Windows and >>> VFS for Git.) >>> >>> There are still a few items that I need to address, but that list is getting >>> very short. >> ... >>> fsmonitor-fs-listen-win32: stub in backend for Windows >>> fsmonitor-fs-listen-macos: stub in backend for MacOS >> I left some light comments on the repo-settings.c part of this to >> follow >> up from a previous round. > > Thanks. > >> Any other testing of it is stalled by there being no linux backend >> for >> it as part of this series. I see from spelunking repos that Johannes had >> a WIP compat/fsmonitor/linux.c which looks like it could/should mostly >> work, but the API names all changed since then, and after a short try I >> gave up on trying to rebase it. > > The early Linux version was dropped because inotify does not give > recursive coverage -- only the requested directory. Using inotify > requires adding a watch to each subdirectory (recursively) in the > worktree. There's a system limit on the maximum number of watched > directories (defaults to 8K IIRC) and that limit is system-wide. > > Since the whole point was to support large very large repos, using > inotify was a non-starter, so I removed the Linux version from our > patch series. For example, the first repo I tried it on (outside > of the test suite) had 25K subdirectories. > > I'm told there is a new fanotify API in recent Linux kernels that > is a better fit for what we need, but we haven't had time to investigate > it yet. That default limit is a bit annoying, but I don't see how it's a blocker in any way. You simply adjust the limit. E.g. I deployed and tested the hook version of inotify (using watchman) in a sizable development environment, and written my own code using the API. This was all before fanotify(7) existed. IIRC I set most of the limits to 2^24 or 2^20. I've used it with really large Git repos, including with David Turner's 2015-04-03-1M-git for testing (`git ls-files | wc -l` on that is around a quarter-million). If you have a humongous repository and don't have root on your own machine you're out of luck. But I think most people who'd use this are either using their own laptop, or e.g. in a corporate setting where administrators would tweak the sysctl limits given the performance advantages (as I did). Once you adjust the limits Linux deals with large trees just fine, it just has overly conservative limits for most things in sysctl. The API is a bit annoying, your event loop needs to run around and add watches. AFAICT you need Linux 5.1 for fanotify(7) to be useful, e.g. Debian stable, RHEL etc. aren't using anything that new. So having an inotify backend as well as possibly a fanotify one would be very useful. And linux.git's docs suggest that the default limit was bumped from 8192 to 1M in v5.10, a really recent kernel, so if you've got that you've also got fanotify. In any case, even if Linux's inotify limit was something hardcoded and impossible to change you could still use such an API to test & debug the basics of this feature on that platform. >> I'd really prefer for git not to have features that place free >> platforms >> at a disadvantage against proprietary platforms if it can be avoided, >> and in this case the lack of a Linux backend also means much less >> widespread testing of the feature among the development community / CI. >> > > This feature is always going to have platform-specific components, > so the lack of one platform or another should not stop us from > discussing it for the platforms that can be supported. (I think per the above that's s/can be/are/) > And given the size and complexity of the platform-specific code, > we should not assume that "just test it on Linux" is sufficient. > Yes, there are some common/shared routines/data structures in the > daemon, but hard/tricky parts are in the platform layer. I think we're talking past each other a bit here. I'm not saying that you can get full or meaningful testing for it on Windows if you test it on Linux, or the other way around. Of course there's platform-specific stuff, although there's also a lot of non-platform-specific stuff, so even a very basic implementation of inotify would make reviwing this easier / give access to more reviewers. I'm saying that I prefer that Git as a free software project not be in the situation of saying the best use-case for a given size/shape of repo is to use Git in combination with proprietary operating systems over freely licensed ones. IOW what the FSF has a policy for GNU projects. Now, I think the FSF probably goes too far in that (famously removing rather obscure font rendering features from Emacs on OSX), but "manage lots of data" is a core feature of git.