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From: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
To: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Cc: "D. Ben Knoble" <ben.knoble+github@gmail.com>,
	git@vger.kernel.org,
	"brian m . carlson" <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>,
	Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>,
	Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] meson: wire up USE_NSEC build knob
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2026 08:08:42 +0200	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <akIL6oJgUv8J8SB2@pks.im> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20260628081806.GA3594700@coredump.intra.peff.net>

On Sun, Jun 28, 2026 at 04:18:06AM -0400, Jeff King wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 22, 2026 at 10:13:21AM +0200, Patrick Steinhardt wrote:
> 
> > > So I guess if we wanted to go further it would take some digging as to
> > > how each platform behaves, and then flipping the config.make.uname knob
> > > for ones where it can be argued that the behavior is always reasonable.
> > 
> > Yeah, it would be nice indeed to figure out whether these concerns still
> > apply. If they do, I would argue that it might even make sense to remove
> > the build option completely. It doesn't really make sense in my opinion
> > to have a build option that nobody uses and that is subtly broken when
> > enabled.
> 
> I suspect it works just fine on some platforms and some filesystems
> (i.e., those that actually store nanoseconds on disk). So probably Linux
> with ext4 is OK. That's just guessing, though.
> 
> If I understand the original problem correctly, then doing this:
> 
>   touch foo
>   ls --full-time foo
>   echo 3 | sudo tee /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
>   ls --full-time foo
> 
> should be instructive. If it shows the same time for both "ls" calls,
> then USE_NSEC would be fine. If it doesn't, then the system is losing
> the nanosecond information when it drops the cache and has to reload
> from disk (and thus USE_NSEC would cause spurious stat mismatches).
> 
> On my ext4 system, I get the same answers. So far so good.
> 
> I get the same answers with a loopback-mounted ext2 system. Which
> surprised me a bit, but even unmounting and remounting the filesystem,
> the nanosecond times are still there. So...I guess ext2 supports
> nanoseconds.
> 
> I tried with a vfat mount, and it also works: we don't have nanoseconds
> either before or after. That makes sense, and implies that modern Linux
> will always be OK (because it limits the cached VFS response to what the
> underlying filesystem can handle).
> 
> So...maybe this is just a non-issue these days, at least on Linux?
> 
> > > But that's all outside the scope of your patch here.
> > 
> > Kind of, I guess. If we figure that this mechanism is still subtly broken
> > then I'd argue that it doesn't make sense to expose the option via
> > Meson.
> 
> True, but AFAICT it probably is safe these days, at least one some
> platforms.

Hm. That makes me wonder whether it is the completely wrong approach to
make this a build option then. If it works on some systems and only on
some filesystems, then a build option is just too coarse-grained. A
distro wouldn't really be able to ever enable the option, unless it knew
that repositories will only ever exist on a filesystem that works. Which
I guess is an assumption that no distro can make.

So instead, I wonder whether we should treat this the same as for
example "core.ignoreCase", where we only use nanosecond resolution when
opted in by the user. Ideally, if we had a way to detect brokenness, we
could even make git-init(1) set it automatically.

If so, we could unconditionally enable nanoseconds on platforms that
support them, but still have a runtime toggle for filesystems that
don't.

Patrick

      parent reply	other threads:[~2026-06-29  6:08 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 10+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2026-06-20 16:00 [PATCH] meson: wire up USE_NSEC build knob D. Ben Knoble
2026-06-21  1:01 ` Junio C Hamano
2026-06-21 16:41   ` D. Ben Knoble
2026-06-22  8:13   ` Patrick Steinhardt
2026-06-21 17:49 ` Jeff King
2026-06-22  8:13   ` Patrick Steinhardt
2026-06-28  8:18     ` Jeff King
2026-06-28  8:48       ` Jeff King
2026-06-29  0:23         ` brian m. carlson
2026-06-29  6:08       ` Patrick Steinhardt [this message]

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