From: Dennis Kaarsemaker <dennis@kaarsemaker.net>
To: "Andres G. Aragoneses" <knocte@gmail.com>
Cc: git@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: RFC: reverse history tree, for faster & background clones
Date: Fri, 12 Jun 2015 14:33:30 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1434112410.5381.8.camel@kaarsemaker.net> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <mlegd8$t71$1@ger.gmane.org>
On vr, 2015-06-12 at 13:39 +0200, Andres G. Aragoneses wrote:
> On 12/06/15 13:33, Dennis Kaarsemaker wrote:
> > On vr, 2015-06-12 at 13:26 +0200, Andres G. Aragoneses wrote:
> >
> >> AFAIU git stores the contents of a repo as a sequence of patches in the
> >> .git metadata folder.
> >
> > It does not, it stores full snapshots of files.
>
> In bare repos too?
Yes. A bare repo is nothing more than the .git dir of a non-bare repo
with the core.bare variable set to True :)
> >> 1. `git clone --depth 1` would be way faster, and without the need of
> >> on-demand compressing of packfiles in the server side, correct me if I'm
> >> wrong?
> >
> > You're wrong due to the misunderstanding of how git works :)
>
> Thanks for pointing this out, do you mind giving me a link of some docs
> where I can correct my knowledge about this?
http://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Internals-Git-Objects should help.
> >> 2. `git clone` would be able to allow a "fast operation, complete in the
> >> background" mode that would allow you to download the first snapshot of
> >> the repo very quickly, so that the user would be able to start working
> >> on his working directory very quickly, while a "background job" keeps
> >> retreiving the history data in the background.
> >
> > This could actually be a good thing, and can be emulated now with git
> > clone --depth=1 and subsequent fetches in the background to deepen the
> > history. I can see some value in clone doing this by itself, first doing
> > a depth=1 fetch, then launching itself into the background, giving you a
> > worktree to play with earlier.
>
> You're right, didn't think about the feature that converts a --depth=1
> repo to a normal one. Then a patch that would create a --progressive
> flag (for instance, didn't think of a better name yet) for the `clone`
> command would actually be trivial to create, I assume, because it would
> just use `depth=1` and then retrieve the rest of the history in the
> background, right?
A naive implementation that does just clone --depth=1 and then fetch
--unshallow would probably not be too hard, no. But whether that would
be the 'right' way of implementing it, I wouldn't know.
--
Dennis Kaarsemaker
http://www.kaarsemaker.net
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2015-06-12 12:33 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2015-06-12 11:26 RFC: reverse history tree, for faster & background clones Andres G. Aragoneses
2015-06-12 11:33 ` Dennis Kaarsemaker
2015-06-12 11:39 ` Andres G. Aragoneses
2015-06-12 12:33 ` Dennis Kaarsemaker [this message]
2015-06-14 14:14 ` Andres G. Aragoneses
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