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authorPatrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>2024-10-21 13:33:23 +0200
committerTaylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>2024-10-21 16:46:03 -0400
commit2e7c6d2f4112dd374f615f4e612e1cebbcb6d431 (patch)
tree8b2ff28f1bce182861e18331364099382bd353f0 /git-gui/lib/commit.tcl
parent15030f9556f545b167b1879b877a5d780252dc16 (diff)
ref-filter: format iteratively with lexicographic refname sorting
In bd98f9774e (ref-filter.c: filter & format refs in the same callback, 2023-11-14), we have introduced logic into the ref-filter subsystem that determines whether or not we can output references iteratively instead of first collecting all references, post-processing them and printing them once done. This has the advantage that we don't have to store all refs in memory and, when used with e.g. `--count=1`, that we don't have to read all refs in the first place. One restriction we have in place for that is that caller must not ask for sorted refs, because there is no way to sort the refs without first reading them all into an array. So the benefits can only be reaped when explicitly asking for output not to be sorted. But there is one exception here where we _can_ get away with sorting refs while streaming: ref backends sort references returned by their iterators in lexicographic order. So if the following conditions are all true we can do iterative streaming: - There must be at most a single sorting specification, as otherwise we're not using plain lexicographic ordering. - The sorting specification must use the "refname". - The sorting specification must not be using any flags, like case-insensitive sorting. Now the resulting logic does feel quite fragile overall, which makes me a bit uneasy. But after thinking about this for a while I couldn't find any obvious gaps in my reasoning. Furthermore, given that lexicographic sorting order is the default in git-for-each-ref(1), this is likely to benefit a whole lot of usecases out there. The following benchmark executes git-for-each-ref(1) in a crafted repo with 1 million references: Benchmark 1: git for-each-ref (revision = HEAD~) Time (mean ± σ): 6.756 s ± 0.014 s [User: 3.004 s, System: 3.541 s] Range (min … max): 6.738 s … 6.784 s 10 runs Benchmark 2: git for-each-ref (revision = HEAD) Time (mean ± σ): 6.479 s ± 0.017 s [User: 2.858 s, System: 3.422 s] Range (min … max): 6.450 s … 6.519 s 10 runs Summary git for-each-ref (revision = HEAD) 1.04 ± 0.00 times faster than git for-each-ref (revision = HEAD~) The change results in a slight performance improvement, but nothing that would really stand out. Something that cannot be seen in the benchmark though is peak memory usage, which went from 404.5MB to 68.96kB. A more interesting benchmark is printing a single referenence with `--count=1`: Benchmark 1: git for-each-ref --count=1 (revision = HEAD~) Time (mean ± σ): 6.655 s ± 0.018 s [User: 2.865 s, System: 3.576 s] Range (min … max): 6.630 s … 6.680 s 10 runs Benchmark 2: git for-each-ref --count=1 (revision = HEAD) Time (mean ± σ): 8.6 ms ± 1.3 ms [User: 2.3 ms, System: 6.1 ms] Range (min … max): 6.7 ms … 14.4 ms 266 runs Summary git git for-each-ref --count=1 (revision = HEAD) 770.58 ± 116.19 times faster than git for-each-ref --count=1 (revision = HEAD~) Whereas we scaled with the number of references before, we now print the first reference and exit immediately, which provides a massive win. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
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