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([2600:1700:60ba:9810:cc2e:477b:d336:3346]) by smtp.gmail.com with ESMTPSA id 00721157ae682-708c4033a6bsm28449297b3.38.2025.05.06.12.39.31 (version=TLS1_3 cipher=TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 bits=128/128); Tue, 06 May 2025 12:39:32 -0700 (PDT) Message-ID: <052c534a-c2a4-4ff6-9130-4c1e96e1ef72@gmail.com> Date: Tue, 6 May 2025 15:39:31 -0400 Precedence: bulk X-Mailing-List: git@vger.kernel.org List-Id: List-Subscribe: List-Unsubscribe: MIME-Version: 1.0 User-Agent: Mozilla Thunderbird Subject: Re: [PATCH v2 02/13] pack-objects: add --path-walk option To: Taylor Blau , Derrick Stolee via GitGitGadget Cc: git@vger.kernel.org, christian.couder@gmail.com, gitster@pobox.com, johannes.schindelin@gmx.de, johncai86@gmail.com, jonathantanmy@google.com, karthik.188@gmail.com, kristofferhaugsbakk@fastmail.com, newren@gmail.com, peff@peff.net, ps@pks.im References: Content-Language: en-US From: Derrick Stolee In-Reply-To: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit On 5/2/25 7:21 PM, Taylor Blau wrote: > On Mon, Mar 24, 2025 at 03:22:38PM +0000, Derrick Stolee via GitGitGadget wrote: >> +--path-walk:: >> + By default, `git pack-objects` walks objects in an order that >> + presents trees and blobs in an order unrelated to the path they >> + appear relative to a commit's root tree. The `--path-walk` option >> + enables a different walking algorithm that organizes trees and >> + blobs by path. This has the potential to improve delta compression >> + especially in the presence of filenames that cause collisions in >> + Git's default name-hash algorithm. Due to changing how the objects >> + are walked, this option is not compatible with `--delta-islands`, >> + `--shallow`, or `--filter`. The `--use-bitmap-index` option will >> + be ignored in the presence of `--path-walk.` >> + > > This is perhaps a stylistic difference, but I don't think in general it > is necessary to say "by default [...]" to explain some existing > behavior, unless the alternative behavior enabled by the flag is > impossible to understand without contrasting. > > In this particular instance, I think that "--path-walk" can be > explained in isolation rather than in contrast to the default behavior. > > I would probably write something like: > > --path-walk:: > Walk objects in batches grouped by a common path. This can improve > delta compression, especially in the case where filenames cause > collisions in the default name-hash algorithm. > > Incompatible with `--delta-islands`, `--shallow`, and `--filter`. If > provided, `--use-bitmap-index` will be ignored. Sure. I'll give this a shot. >> +static inline int is_oid_interesting(struct repository *repo, >> + struct object_id *oid) >> +{ >> + struct object *o = lookup_object(repo, oid); > > This function and its caller tripped me up a little bit while reading, > but I was able to un-confuse myself. Here are some notes that I took > while reading, which perhaps you can validate to tell me whether or not > I'm on the right track. > > Here we allow lookup_object() to return NULL, and then immediately > return 0 if it does. But... > >> + return o && !(o->flags & UNINTERESTING); >> +} >> + >> +static int add_objects_by_path(const char *path, >> + struct oid_array *oids, >> + enum object_type type, >> + void *data) >> +{ >> + struct object_entry **delta_list; >> + size_t oe_start = to_pack.nr_objects; >> + size_t oe_end; >> + unsigned int sub_list_size; > > Could you help me understand why sub_list_size is an unsigned int and > not a size_t here? This is based on a similar "list_size" used in ll_find_deltas(), but since we are starting from scratch here it would be better to use size_t. >> + unsigned int *processed = data; >> + >> + /* >> + * First, add all objects to the packing data, including the ones >> + * marked UNINTERESTING (translated to 'exclude') as they can be >> + * used as delta bases. >> + */ >> + for (size_t i = 0; i < oids->nr; i++) { >> + int exclude; >> + struct object_info oi = OBJECT_INFO_INIT; >> + struct object_id *oid = &oids->oid[i]; >> + >> + /* Skip objects that do not exist locally. */ >> + if (exclude_promisor_objects && >> + oid_object_info_extended(the_repository, oid, &oi, >> + OBJECT_INFO_FOR_PREFETCH) < 0) >> + continue; >> + >> + exclude = !is_oid_interesting(the_repository, oid); >> + >> + if (exclude && !thin) >> + continue; > > ...here we only skip calling add_object_entry() if the object is > excluded (which lookup_object() returning NULL would cause above) *and* > we're not using thin packs. That makes sense, since if we have a missing > object, but we're using thin packs, then it's OK to skip. > > So I think all of this looks good. However, I find the interface here a > little awkward. The function is called "is_oid_interesting()", but it > determines that fact by checking whether or not the object has the > UNINTERSTING bit set on its flag, and then negating the result. But then > we negate it again here at the caller to obtain whether or not we should > "exclude" the object. > > I was wondering if there were other callers of is_oid_interesting() that > don't negate its result. But it doesn't look like there are (at least in > this patch). I wonder if it would be cleaner just to inline this instead > of having the result negated at multiple levels. >> + add_object_entry(oid, type, path, exclude); >> + } >> + >> + oe_end = to_pack.nr_objects; >> + >> + /* We can skip delta calculations if it is a no-op. */ >> + if (oe_end == oe_start || !window) >> + return 0; >> + >> + sub_list_size = 0; > > I'm nit-picking, but I would imagine that sub_list_nr is probably more > conventional, but this is textbook bike-shedding ;-). Sure. >> + ALLOC_ARRAY(delta_list, oe_end - oe_start); > > ALLOC_ARRAY() will barf if oe_start > oe_end and we wrap around the > range of size_t, but it might be nice to have a sanity check here just > their equality. I'll look for similar examples. >> + /* >> + * Find delta bases among this list of objects that all match the same >> + * path. This causes the delta compression to be interleaved in the >> + * object walk, which can lead to confusing progress indicators. This is >> + * also incompatible with threaded delta calculations. In the future, >> + * consider creating a list of regions in the full to_pack.objects array >> + * that could be picked up by the threaded delta computation. >> + */ >> + if (sub_list_size && window) { > > Do we need to check that window is non-zero here? It looks like that > check already happens above. If we've already checked, then >> + QSORT(delta_list, sub_list_size, type_size_sort); >> + find_deltas(delta_list, &sub_list_size, window, depth, processed); >> + } >> + >> + free(delta_list); > > Is there a return path through this function that doesn't allocate > delta_list? I think the answer is "no", but it might be a nice guard > against future refactorings to initialize this field to NULL just in > case. OK. >> + return 0; >> +} >> + >> +static void get_object_list_path_walk(struct rev_info *revs) >> +{ >> + struct path_walk_info info = PATH_WALK_INFO_INIT; >> + unsigned int processed = 0; >> + >> + info.revs = revs; >> + info.path_fn = add_objects_by_path; >> + info.path_fn_data = &processed; >> + revs->tag_objects = 1; > > What is the purpose of setting revs->tag_objects to 1 here? Do we need > to restore it back to its original value before returning? A comment > here would be useful, I think. >> @@ -4237,7 +4340,7 @@ static void get_object_list(struct rev_info *revs, int ac, const char **av) >> >> warn_on_object_refname_ambiguity = save_warning; >> >> - if (use_bitmap_index && !get_object_list_from_bitmap(revs)) >> + if (use_bitmap_index && !path_walk && !get_object_list_from_bitmap(revs)) > > I was going to suggest something like: > > if (path_walk && use_bitmap_index) { > warning(_("cannot use --use-bitmap-index with --path-walk, ignoring")); > use_bitmap_index = 0; > } > > , which would avoid the need for this check here and insulate us against > having to make similar changes to future conditionals that care about > use_bitmap_index. > > But it looks like such a check *does* already exist below, so I am not > sure I understand why we need to check for path_walk here. This is probably cruft from an earlier version of the check. Thanks. >> + if (path_walk && filter_options.choice) { >> + warning(_("cannot use --filter with --path-walk")); >> + path_walk = 0; >> + } >> + if (path_walk && use_delta_islands) { >> + warning(_("cannot use delta islands with --path-walk")); >> + path_walk = 0; >> + } >> + if (path_walk && shallow) { >> + warning(_("cannot use --shallow with --path-walk")); >> + path_walk = 0; >> + } > > Here's a tiny idea I had while reading this code. > > if (path_walk) { > const char *option = NULL; > if (filter_options.choice) > option = "--filter"; > else if (use_delta_islands) > option = "--delta-islands"; > else if (shallow) > option = "--shallow"; > > if (option) { > warning(_("cannot use %s with --path-walk"), option); > path_walk = 0; > } > } > > This may be too DRY for your taste, and it does have the disadvantage of > reducing the grep-ability of the error messages. I don't have a strong > feeling about it one way or another, but I figured I'd at least write it > down. I like the reduction of work on the translators. Thanks, -Stolee