On Wed, Sep 15, 2021 at 10:50:57PM -0700, Matt Roper wrote: > What did you do before the bug happened? (Steps to reproduce your issue) > > I activated split index mode on a repo ("git config core.splitIndex > true"), performed an interactive rebase, modified a commit earlier in > the history. > > The steps can be reproduced via a sequence of: > $ mkdir tmp && cd tmp && git init > $ git config core.splitIndex true > $ for x in `seq 20`; do echo $x >> count; git add count; git commit -m "Commit $x"; done It's important to note that this test repository has only a single tracked file in it. > $ git rebase -i HEAD~10 > > ## Add "x git commit --amend --no-edit" as the first command of > ## the todo list. > > What did you expect to happen? (Expected behavior) > > My expectation was that there would still only be a single shared index > file in the .git directory upon completion of the rebase. > > What happened instead? (Actual behavior) > > A large number of distinct sharedindex.* files were generated in the .git > directory during the rebase. I think this works as intended. A new shared index is written when the number of index entries that would be writen to '.git/index' is higher than a given percentage of the total number of index entries. This percentage can be specified with the 'splitIndex.maxPercentChange' configuration variable and it defaults to 20%. In your test repository above there is only a single file and it is modified in every commit, so when switching from one commit to the other 100% of the index entries would be written to '.git/index', resulting in a new shared index file written for each rebase step. > What's different between what you expected and what actually happened? > > Rather than a single shared index file, I wound up with a huge number of > large shared index files. The real repository I was working with (a Linux > kernel source tree) had a shared index file size of about 7MB, and I was > modifying a commit several hundred back in history (in case it > matters, these were all linear commits, no merges), so the resulting > collection of shared index files consumed a surprising amount of disk > space. The last commit in my somewhat outdated linux repo contains ~71k files, the 20% of that is ~14k. Does that linear string of "several hundred" commits modify that many files? > Anything else you want to add: > > As an experiment, I tried setting splitIndex.sharedIndexExpire=now I would advise against that, it's potentially dangerous, because it can remove shared index files that are still in use by other git processes. > to see > if it would avoid the explosion of shared index files, but it appears the > stale index files are still not being removed during the rebase, and I > still wind up with a huge number at the end of the rebase. If I manually > run "git update-index --split-index" after the rebase completes it will > properly delete all of the stale ones at that point. > > Rebases that do not actually modify the history do _not_ trigger the > explosion of shared index files (e.g., "git rebase -i HEAD~10 --exec 'echo > foo'"). > > If I do not set the core.splitIndex setting on the repository, but only > activate split index manually via "git update-index --split-index" there > is only one shared index file at the end of the rebase, but based on the > file size it appears the repository is no longer operating in split index > mode. > > Before: > $ ll .git | grep index > -rw-rw-r-- 1 mdroper mdroper 149165 Sep 15 22:21 index > -rw-rw-r-- 1 mdroper mdroper 7296080 Sep 15 22:21 sharedindex.f916dd59ccc22ca34298f557a4659aca2767dae4 > > After (just amending HEAD~1 in this case): > $ ls -l .git | grep index > -rw-rw-r-- 1 mdroper mdroper 7445145 Sep 15 22:22 index > -rw-rw-r-- 1 mdroper mdroper 7296080 Sep 15 22:22 sharedindex.f916dd59ccc22ca34298f557a4659aca2767dae4 > git version 2.33.0 I could reproduce all this with v2.33.0 (except that I saw the split index being turned off even with core.splitIndex enabled), but was unable to do so with current master. I think that this is a bug in the interaction between the split index feature and 'git rebase' when using the recursive merge strategy and when a couple of other, more subtle conditions are met. It seems that with the right conditions rebase only writes regular index files, and by not entering the split index code paths it doesn't look for old shared index files to expire. After v2.33.0 we switched the default merge strategy from recursive to 'ort', and with that these cases appear to work as intended, i.e. old shared index files are expired and the split index feature doesn't get turned off. Since the 'ort' strategy is in many ways better (faster, more correct, etc.) than the recursive, I don't think it's worth the effort to try to fix this issue with split index, rebase and the recursive strategy.