Message ID | 20201102204344.342633-1-newren@gmail.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | fundamentals of merge-ort implementation | expand |
On 11/2/2020 3:43 PM, Elijah Newren wrote: > This series depends on a merge of en/strmap (after updating to v3) and > en/merge-ort-api-null-impl. > > As promised, here's the update of the series due to the strmap > updates...and two other tiny updates. Hi Elijah, I'm sorry that I've been unavailable to read and review your series on this topic. I'm very excited about the opportunities here, and I wanted to take your topic and merge it with our microsoft/git fork so I could test the performance in a Scalar-enabled monorepo. My branch is available in my fork [1] [1] https://github.com/derrickstolee/git/tree/merge-ort-vfs However, I'm unable to discover how to trigger your ort strategy, even for a simple rebase. Perhaps you could supply a recommended command for testing? Thanks, -Stolee
On Tue, Nov 3, 2020 at 6:50 AM Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> wrote: > > On 11/2/2020 3:43 PM, Elijah Newren wrote: > > This series depends on a merge of en/strmap (after updating to v3) and > > en/merge-ort-api-null-impl. > > > > As promised, here's the update of the series due to the strmap > > updates...and two other tiny updates. > > Hi Elijah, > > I'm sorry that I've been unavailable to read and review your series > on this topic. I'm very excited about the opportunities here, and I > wanted to take your topic and merge it with our microsoft/git fork > so I could test the performance in a Scalar-enabled monorepo. My > branch is available in my fork [1] > > [1] https://github.com/derrickstolee/git/tree/merge-ort-vfs > > However, I'm unable to discover how to trigger your ort strategy, > even for a simple rebase. Perhaps you could supply a recommended > command for testing? > > Thanks, > -Stolee If you want to test performance, you shouldn't test this particular submission, you should test the end result which exists as the 'ort' branch of my repo. It actually passes all the tests rather than just trivial cherry-picks and rebases, and has lots (and lots) of performance work that hasn't even begun at the point of the 'ort-basics' branch. (However, it also contains some unrelated memory cleanup in revision.c, chdir-notify.c, and a number of other places because I was annoyed that a rebase wouldn't run valgrind-free and made it harder to spot my memory leaks. And the day I went hunting those memory "leaks", I went and grabbed some unrelated memory leaks too. If it causes you merge conflicts, let me know and I'll try to create a branch for you that hash the minimal changes outside of merge-ort*.[ch] and diffcore*.[ch]) All that said, for testing either branch you just need to first set pull.twohead=ort in your git config (see https://lore.kernel.org/git/61217a83bd7ff0ce9016eb4df9ded4fdf29a506c.1604360734.git.gitgitgadget@gmail.com/), or, if running regression tests, set GIT_TEST_MERGE_ALGORITHM=ort.
Hi Derrick, On Tue, Nov 3, 2020 at 8:36 AM Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> wrote: > > On Tue, Nov 3, 2020 at 6:50 AM Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > On 11/2/2020 3:43 PM, Elijah Newren wrote: > > > This series depends on a merge of en/strmap (after updating to v3) and > > > en/merge-ort-api-null-impl. > > > > > > As promised, here's the update of the series due to the strmap > > > updates...and two other tiny updates. > > > > Hi Elijah, > > > > I'm sorry that I've been unavailable to read and review your series > > on this topic. I'm very excited about the opportunities here, and I > > wanted to take your topic and merge it with our microsoft/git fork > > so I could test the performance in a Scalar-enabled monorepo. My > > branch is available in my fork [1] > > > > [1] https://github.com/derrickstolee/git/tree/merge-ort-vfs > > > > However, I'm unable to discover how to trigger your ort strategy, > > even for a simple rebase. Perhaps you could supply a recommended > > command for testing? > > > > Thanks, > > -Stolee > > If you want to test performance, you shouldn't test this particular > submission, you should test the end result which exists as the 'ort' > branch of my repo. It actually passes all the tests rather than just > trivial cherry-picks and rebases, and has lots (and lots) of > performance work that hasn't even begun at the point of the > 'ort-basics' branch. (However, it also contains some unrelated memory > cleanup in revision.c, chdir-notify.c, and a number of other places > because I was annoyed that a rebase wouldn't run valgrind-free and > made it harder to spot my memory leaks. And the day I went hunting > those memory "leaks", I went and grabbed some unrelated memory leaks > too. If it causes you merge conflicts, let me know and I'll try to > create a branch for you that hash the minimal changes outside of > merge-ort*.[ch] and diffcore*.[ch]) > > All that said, for testing either branch you just need to first set > pull.twohead=ort in your git config (see > https://lore.kernel.org/git/61217a83bd7ff0ce9016eb4df9ded4fdf29a506c.1604360734.git.gitgitgadget@gmail.com/), > or, if running regression tests, set GIT_TEST_MERGE_ALGORITHM=ort. I probably also should have mentioned that merge-ort does not (yet?) heed merge.renames configuration setting; it always detects renames. I know you run with merge.renames=false, so you won't quite get an apples-to-apples comparison. However, part of my point was I wanted to make renames fast enough that they could be left turned on, even for the large scale repos, so I'm very interested in your experience. If you need an escape hatch, though, just put a "return 1" at the top of detect_and_process_renames() to turn it off. Oh, and I went through and re-merged all the merge commits in the linux kernel and found a bug in merge-ort while doing that (causing it to die, not to merge badly). I'm kind of surprised that none of my testcases triggered that failure earlier; if you're testing it out, you might want to update to get the fix (commit 067e5c1a38, "merge-ort: fix bug with cached_target_names not being initialized in redos", 2020-11-06).
On 11/7/20 1:06 AM, Elijah Newren wrote: > Hi Derrick, > > On Tue, Nov 3, 2020 at 8:36 AM Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> wrote: >> All that said, for testing either branch you just need to first set >> pull.twohead=ort in your git config (see >> https://lore.kernel.org/git/61217a83bd7ff0ce9016eb4df9ded4fdf29a506c.1604360734.git.gitgitgadget@gmail.com/), >> or, if running regression tests, set GIT_TEST_MERGE_ALGORITHM=ort. > > I probably also should have mentioned that merge-ort does not (yet?) > heed merge.renames configuration setting; it always detects renames. > I know you run with merge.renames=false, so you won't quite get an > apples-to-apples comparison. However, part of my point was I wanted > to make renames fast enough that they could be left turned on, even > for the large scale repos, so I'm very interested in your experience. > If you need an escape hatch, though, just put a "return 1" at the top > of detect_and_process_renames() to turn it off. > > Oh, and I went through and re-merged all the merge commits in the > linux kernel and found a bug in merge-ort while doing that (causing it > to die, not to merge badly). I'm kind of surprised that none of my > testcases triggered that failure earlier; if you're testing it out, > you might want to update to get the fix (commit 067e5c1a38, > "merge-ort: fix bug with cached_target_names not being initialized in > redos", 2020-11-06). I did manage to do some testing to see what happens with a large repo under a small sparse-checkout. And using trace2, I was able to see that your code is being exercised. Unfortunately, I didn't see any performance improvement, and that is likely due to needing to expand the index entirely when checking out the merge commit. Is there a command to construct a merge commit without actually checking it out? That would reduce the time spent expanding the index, which would allow your algorithm to really show its benefits! Thanks, -Stolee
On Sat, Nov 7, 2020 at 7:02 AM Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> wrote: > > On 11/7/20 1:06 AM, Elijah Newren wrote: > > Hi Derrick, > > > > On Tue, Nov 3, 2020 at 8:36 AM Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> wrote: > >> All that said, for testing either branch you just need to first set > >> pull.twohead=ort in your git config (see > >> https://lore.kernel.org/git/61217a83bd7ff0ce9016eb4df9ded4fdf29a506c.1604360734.git.gitgitgadget@gmail.com/), > >> or, if running regression tests, set GIT_TEST_MERGE_ALGORITHM=ort. > > > > I probably also should have mentioned that merge-ort does not (yet?) > > heed merge.renames configuration setting; it always detects renames. > > I know you run with merge.renames=false, so you won't quite get an > > apples-to-apples comparison. However, part of my point was I wanted > > to make renames fast enough that they could be left turned on, even > > for the large scale repos, so I'm very interested in your experience. > > If you need an escape hatch, though, just put a "return 1" at the top > > of detect_and_process_renames() to turn it off. > > > > Oh, and I went through and re-merged all the merge commits in the > > linux kernel and found a bug in merge-ort while doing that (causing it > > to die, not to merge badly). I'm kind of surprised that none of my > > testcases triggered that failure earlier; if you're testing it out, > > you might want to update to get the fix (commit 067e5c1a38, > > "merge-ort: fix bug with cached_target_names not being initialized in > > redos", 2020-11-06). > > I did manage to do some testing to see what happens with > a large repo under a small sparse-checkout. And using > trace2, I was able to see that your code is being exercised. > Unfortunately, I didn't see any performance improvement, and > that is likely due to needing to expand the index entirely > when checking out the merge commit. > > Is there a command to construct a merge commit without > actually checking it out? That would reduce the time spent > expanding the index, which would allow your algorithm to > really show its benefits! Wow, very interesting. I am working on a --remerge-diff option for log, which implies -p and is similar to -c or --cc in that it makes merge commits show a diff, but which in particular remerges the two parent commits complete with conflict markers and such and then diffs the merge commit against that intermediate remerge. That's a case that constructs a merge commit without ever touching the index (or working tree)...but there's no equivalent comparison point for merge-recursive. So, it doesn't provide something to compare against (and while the code can be used I don't actually have a --remerge-diff option yet -- it just hardcodes the behavior on if wanted or not), so I'm not sure if you'd be interested in it. If you are, let me know though, and I'll send details. However, I'm really surprised here, because merge-recursive always reads and writes the index too (the index is the basis for its whole algorithm). In fact, merge-recursive always reads the index at least *twice* (it unconditionally discards and re-reads the index), so you must have some kind of specialized tweaking of merge-recursive if it somehow avoids a full index read/write. In order to do an apples-to-apples comparison, we'd need to make those same tweaks to merge-ort, but I don't have a clue what kind of tweaks you've made here. So, some investigation points: *1*. Could you give me the accumulated times from the trace2_regions so we can verify where the time is spent? The 'summarize-perf' script at the toplevel of the repo in my ort branch might be helpful for this; just prefix any git command with that script and it accumulates the trace2 region times and prints them out. For example, I could run 'summarize-perf git merge --no-edit B^0' or 'summarize-perf test-tool fast-rebase --onto HEAD ca76bea9 myfeature'. Here's an example: === BEGIN OUTPUT === $ /home/newren/floss/git/summarize-perf test-tool fast-rebase --onto HEAD 4703d9119972bf586d2cca76ec6438f819ffa30e hwmon-updates Rebasing fd8bdb23b91876ac1e624337bb88dc1dcc21d67e... Done. Accumulated times: 0.031 : <unmeasured> ( 3.2%) 0.837 : 35 : label:incore_nonrecursive 0.003 : <unmeasured> ( 0.4%) 0.476 : 41 : ..label:collect_merge_info 0.001 : <unmeasured> ( 0.2%) 0.475 : 41 : ....label:traverse_trees 0.298 : 41 : ..label:renames 0.015 : <unmeasured> ( 5.1%) 0.280 : 41 : ....label:regular renames 0.036 : <unmeasured> (12.7%) 0.244 : 6 : ......label:diffcore_rename 0.001 : <unmeasured> ( 0.4%) 0.078 : 6 : ........label:dir rename setup 0.055 : 6 : ........label:basename matches 0.051 : 6 : ........label:exact renames 0.031 : 6 : ........label:write back to queue 0.017 : 6 : ........label:setup 0.009 : 6 : ........label:cull basename 0.003 : 6 : ........label:cull exact 0.002 : 35 : ....label:directory renames 0.001 : 35 : ....label:process renames 0.052 : 35 : ..label:process_entries 0.001 : <unmeasured> ( 1.7%) 0.033 : 35 : ....label:processing 0.017 : 35 : ....label:process_entries setup 0.001 : <unmeasured> ( 5.8%) 0.008 : 35 : ......label:plist copy 0.008 : 35 : ......label:plist sort 0.000 : 35 : ......label:plist grow 0.001 : 35 : ....label:finalize 0.005 : 35 : ..label:merge_start 0.001 : <unmeasured> (18.8%) 0.004 : 34 : ....label:reset_maps 0.000 : 35 : ....label:sanity checks 0.000 : 1 : ....label:allocate/init 0.003 : 6 : ..label:reset_maps 0.035 : 1 : label:do_write_index /home/newren/floss/linux-stable/.git/index.lock 0.034 : 1 : label:checkout 0.034 : <unmeasured> (99.9%) 0.000 : 1 : ..label:Filtering content 0.009 : 1 : label:do_read_index .git/index 0.000 : 1 : label:write_auto_merge 0.000 : 1 : label:record_unmerged Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 679): 0.006790000000000001 Timing including forking: 0.960 (0.013 additional seconds) === END OUTPUT === This was a run that took just under 1s (and was a hot-cache case; I had just done the same rebase before to warm the caches), and the combination of index/working tree bits (everything at and after do_write_index in the output) was 0.035+0.034+0.009+0+0=0.078 seconds, corresponding to just over 8.1% of overall time. I'm curious where that lands for your repository testcase; if the larger time ends up somewhere under the indented label:incore_nonrecursive region, then it's due to something other than index reading/updating/writing. *2*. If it really is due to index reading/updating/writing, then index handling in merge-ort is confined to two functions: checkout() and record_unmerged_index_entries(). Both functions aren't too long, and neither one calls into any other function within merge-ort.c. (Further, checkout() is a near copy of code from merge_working_tree() in builtin/checkout.c, or at least a copy of that function from a year or so ago.) As such, it's possible you can go in and make whatever special tweaks you have for partial index reading/writing to those functions. I'm curious to hear back more on this. Elijah
On 11/7/2020 2:39 PM, Elijah Newren wrote: > On Sat, Nov 7, 2020 at 7:02 AM Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> On 11/7/20 1:06 AM, Elijah Newren wrote: >>> Hi Derrick, >>> >>> On Tue, Nov 3, 2020 at 8:36 AM Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> All that said, for testing either branch you just need to first set >>>> pull.twohead=ort in your git config (see >>>> https://lore.kernel.org/git/61217a83bd7ff0ce9016eb4df9ded4fdf29a506c.1604360734.git.gitgitgadget@gmail.com/), >>>> or, if running regression tests, set GIT_TEST_MERGE_ALGORITHM=ort. >>> >>> I probably also should have mentioned that merge-ort does not (yet?) >>> heed merge.renames configuration setting; it always detects renames. >>> I know you run with merge.renames=false, so you won't quite get an >>> apples-to-apples comparison. However, part of my point was I wanted >>> to make renames fast enough that they could be left turned on, even >>> for the large scale repos, so I'm very interested in your experience. >>> If you need an escape hatch, though, just put a "return 1" at the top >>> of detect_and_process_renames() to turn it off. >>> >>> Oh, and I went through and re-merged all the merge commits in the >>> linux kernel and found a bug in merge-ort while doing that (causing it >>> to die, not to merge badly). I'm kind of surprised that none of my >>> testcases triggered that failure earlier; if you're testing it out, >>> you might want to update to get the fix (commit 067e5c1a38, >>> "merge-ort: fix bug with cached_target_names not being initialized in >>> redos", 2020-11-06). >> >> I did manage to do some testing to see what happens with >> a large repo under a small sparse-checkout. And using >> trace2, I was able to see that your code is being exercised. >> Unfortunately, I didn't see any performance improvement, and >> that is likely due to needing to expand the index entirely >> when checking out the merge commit. >> >> Is there a command to construct a merge commit without >> actually checking it out? That would reduce the time spent >> expanding the index, which would allow your algorithm to >> really show its benefits! > > Wow, very interesting. I am working on a --remerge-diff option for > log, which implies -p and is similar to -c or --cc in that it makes > merge commits show a diff, but which in particular remerges the two > parent commits complete with conflict markers and such and then diffs > the merge commit against that intermediate remerge. That's a case > that constructs a merge commit without ever touching the index (or > working tree)...but there's no equivalent comparison point for > merge-recursive. So, it doesn't provide something to compare against > (and while the code can be used I don't actually have a --remerge-diff > option yet -- it just hardcodes the behavior on if wanted or not), so > I'm not sure if you'd be interested in it. If you are, let me know > though, and I'll send details. > > However, I'm really surprised here, because merge-recursive always > reads and writes the index too (the index is the basis for its whole > algorithm). In fact, merge-recursive always reads the index at least > *twice* (it unconditionally discards and re-reads the index), so you > must have some kind of specialized tweaking of merge-recursive if it > somehow avoids a full index read/write. In order to do an > apples-to-apples comparison, we'd need to make those same tweaks to > merge-ort, but I don't have a clue what kind of tweaks you've made > here. So, some investigation points: > > *1*. Could you give me the accumulated times from the trace2_regions > so we can verify where the time is spent? The 'summarize-perf' script > at the toplevel of the repo in my ort branch might be helpful for > this; just prefix any git command with that script and it accumulates > the trace2 region times and prints them out. For example, I could run > 'summarize-perf git merge --no-edit B^0' or 'summarize-perf test-tool > fast-rebase --onto HEAD ca76bea9 myfeature'. Here's an example: > > === BEGIN OUTPUT === > $ /home/newren/floss/git/summarize-perf test-tool fast-rebase --onto > HEAD 4703d9119972bf586d2cca76ec6438f819ffa30e hwmon-updates > Rebasing fd8bdb23b91876ac1e624337bb88dc1dcc21d67e... > Done. > Accumulated times: > 0.031 : <unmeasured> ( 3.2%) > 0.837 : 35 : label:incore_nonrecursive > 0.003 : <unmeasured> ( 0.4%) > 0.476 : 41 : ..label:collect_merge_info > 0.001 : <unmeasured> ( 0.2%) > 0.475 : 41 : ....label:traverse_trees > 0.298 : 41 : ..label:renames > 0.015 : <unmeasured> ( 5.1%) > 0.280 : 41 : ....label:regular renames > 0.036 : <unmeasured> (12.7%) > 0.244 : 6 : ......label:diffcore_rename > 0.001 : <unmeasured> ( 0.4%) > 0.078 : 6 : ........label:dir rename setup > 0.055 : 6 : ........label:basename matches > 0.051 : 6 : ........label:exact renames > 0.031 : 6 : ........label:write back to queue > 0.017 : 6 : ........label:setup > 0.009 : 6 : ........label:cull basename > 0.003 : 6 : ........label:cull exact > 0.002 : 35 : ....label:directory renames > 0.001 : 35 : ....label:process renames > 0.052 : 35 : ..label:process_entries > 0.001 : <unmeasured> ( 1.7%) > 0.033 : 35 : ....label:processing > 0.017 : 35 : ....label:process_entries setup > 0.001 : <unmeasured> ( 5.8%) > 0.008 : 35 : ......label:plist copy > 0.008 : 35 : ......label:plist sort > 0.000 : 35 : ......label:plist grow > 0.001 : 35 : ....label:finalize > 0.005 : 35 : ..label:merge_start > 0.001 : <unmeasured> (18.8%) > 0.004 : 34 : ....label:reset_maps > 0.000 : 35 : ....label:sanity checks > 0.000 : 1 : ....label:allocate/init > 0.003 : 6 : ..label:reset_maps > 0.035 : 1 : label:do_write_index > /home/newren/floss/linux-stable/.git/index.lock > 0.034 : 1 : label:checkout > 0.034 : <unmeasured> (99.9%) > 0.000 : 1 : ..label:Filtering content > 0.009 : 1 : label:do_read_index .git/index > 0.000 : 1 : label:write_auto_merge > 0.000 : 1 : label:record_unmerged > Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 679): > 0.006790000000000001 > Timing including forking: 0.960 (0.013 additional seconds) > === END OUTPUT === > This was a run that took just under 1s (and was a hot-cache case; I > had just done the same rebase before to warm the caches), and the > combination of index/working tree bits (everything at and after > do_write_index in the output) was 0.035+0.034+0.009+0+0=0.078 seconds, > corresponding to just over 8.1% of overall time. I'm curious where > that lands for your repository testcase; if the larger time ends up > somewhere under the indented label:incore_nonrecursive region, then > it's due to something other than index reading/updating/writing. > > *2*. If it really is due to index reading/updating/writing, then index > handling in merge-ort is confined to two functions: checkout() and > record_unmerged_index_entries(). Both functions aren't too long, and > neither one calls into any other function within merge-ort.c. > (Further, checkout() is a near copy of code from merge_working_tree() > in builtin/checkout.c, or at least a copy of that function from a year > or so ago.) As such, it's possible you can go in and make whatever > special tweaks you have for partial index reading/writing to those > functions. > > I'm curious to hear back more on this. I don't have a lot of time to dig into this right now, but here are the stats for my rebases and merges with and without your option. The first thing I notice for each is that there is a significant amount of "unmeasured" time at the beginning of each, and that could possibly be improved separately. First, try a rebase forward and backward. $ /_git/git/summarize-perf git rebase --onto to from test Successfully rebased and updated refs/heads/test. Accumulated times: 8.511 : <unmeasured> (74.9%) 1.331 : 1 : ......label:unpack_trees 0.200 : <unmeasured> (15.1%) 0.580 : 1 : ........label:traverse_trees 0.403 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00000000_0x02000000 0.126 : 1 : ........label:check_updates 0.126 : <unmeasured> (100.0%) 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:Filtering content 0.021 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00080000_0x42000000 0.000 : 1 : ........label:fully_valid 1.059 : 1 : ......label:do_write_index /_git/office/src/.git/index.lock 0.930 : <unmeasured> (87.9%) 0.128 : 1 : ........label:write/extension/cache_tree 0.455 : 2 : ......label:fully_valid 0.001 : 1 : ......label:traverse_trees 0.000 : 1 : ......label:check_updates Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 41): 0.00041000000000000005 Timing including forking: 11.382 (0.026 additional seconds) $ /_git/git/summarize-perf git rebase --onto from to test Successfully rebased and updated refs/heads/test. Accumulated times: 8.556 : <unmeasured> (75.2%) 1.315 : 1 : ......label:unpack_trees 0.197 : <unmeasured> (15.0%) 0.580 : 1 : ........label:traverse_trees 0.391 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00000000_0x02000000 0.126 : 1 : ........label:check_updates 0.126 : <unmeasured> (100.0%) 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:Filtering content 0.021 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00080000_0x42000000 0.000 : 1 : ........label:fully_valid 1.071 : 1 : ......label:do_write_index /_git/office/src/.git/index.lock 0.942 : <unmeasured> (88.0%) 0.129 : 1 : ........label:write/extension/cache_tree 0.431 : 2 : ......label:fully_valid 0.001 : 1 : ......label:traverse_trees 0.000 : 1 : ......label:check_updates Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 41): 0.00041000000000000005 Timing including forking: 11.399 (0.026 additional seconds) Then do the same with the ort strategy. $ /_git/git/summarize-perf git -c pull.twohead=ort rebase --onto to from test Successfully rebased and updated refs/heads/test. Accumulated times: 8.350 : <unmeasured> (73.2%) 1.403 : 1 : ....label:checkout 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 0.0%) 1.403 : 1 : ......label:unpack_trees 0.312 : <unmeasured> (22.3%) 0.539 : 1 : ........label:traverse_trees 0.401 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00000000_0x02000000 0.128 : 1 : ........label:check_updates 0.128 : <unmeasured> (100.0%) 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:Filtering content 0.021 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00080000_0x42000000 0.000 : 1 : ........label:fully_valid 1.081 : 1 : ....label:do_write_index /_git/office/src/.git/index.lock 0.951 : <unmeasured> (88.1%) 0.129 : 1 : ......label:write/extension/cache_tree 0.432 : 2 : ....label:fully_valid 0.143 : 1 : ....label:do_read_index .git/index 0.019 : <unmeasured> (13.1%) 0.125 : 1 : label:read/extension/cache_tree 0.004 : 1 : ....label:incore_nonrecursive 0.001 : <unmeasured> (25.8%) 0.002 : 1 : ......label:process_entries 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 2.6%) 0.001 : 1 : ........label:finalize 0.001 : 1 : ........label:process_entries setup 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 6.7%) 0.001 : 1 : ..........label:plist sort 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:plist copy 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:plist grow 0.000 : 1 : ........label:processing 0.001 : 1 : ......label:collect_merge_info 0.000 : <unmeasured> (35.3%) 0.001 : 1 : ........label:traverse_trees 0.000 : 1 : ......label:merge_start 0.000 : <unmeasured> (42.3%) 0.000 : 1 : ........label:allocate/init 0.000 : 1 : ........label:sanity checks 0.000 : 1 : ......label:renames 0.001 : 1 : ....label:traverse_trees 0.000 : 1 : ....label:write_auto_merge 0.000 : 1 : ....label:check_updates 0.000 : 1 : ....label:record_unmerged Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 56): 0.0005600000000000001 Timing including forking: 11.442 (0.027 additional seconds) $ /_git/git/summarize-perf git -c pull.twohead=ort rebase --onto from to test Successfully rebased and updated refs/heads/test. Accumulated times: 8.337 : <unmeasured> (73.2%) 1.395 : 1 : ....label:checkout 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 0.0%) 1.395 : 1 : ......label:unpack_trees 0.309 : <unmeasured> (22.1%) 0.537 : 1 : ........label:traverse_trees 0.403 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00000000_0x02000000 0.124 : 1 : ........label:check_updates 0.124 : <unmeasured> (100.0%) 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:Filtering content 0.021 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00080000_0x42000000 0.000 : 1 : ........label:fully_valid 1.084 : 1 : ....label:do_write_index /_git/office/src/.git/index.lock 0.955 : <unmeasured> (88.1%) 0.129 : 1 : ......label:write/extension/cache_tree 0.436 : 2 : ....label:fully_valid 0.137 : 1 : ....label:do_read_index .git/index 0.013 : <unmeasured> ( 9.3%) 0.125 : 1 : label:read/extension/cache_tree 0.004 : 1 : ....label:incore_nonrecursive 0.001 : <unmeasured> (24.5%) 0.002 : 1 : ......label:process_entries 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 2.5%) 0.001 : 1 : ........label:finalize 0.001 : 1 : ........label:process_entries setup 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 6.5%) 0.001 : 1 : ..........label:plist sort 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:plist copy 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:plist grow 0.000 : 1 : ........label:processing 0.001 : 1 : ......label:collect_merge_info 0.000 : <unmeasured> (26.5%) 0.001 : 1 : ........label:traverse_trees 0.000 : 1 : ......label:merge_start 0.000 : <unmeasured> (43.1%) 0.000 : 1 : ........label:allocate/init 0.000 : 1 : ........label:sanity checks 0.000 : 1 : ......label:renames 0.001 : 1 : ....label:traverse_trees 0.000 : 1 : ....label:write_auto_merge 0.000 : 1 : ....label:check_updates 0.000 : 1 : ....label:record_unmerged Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 56): 0.0005600000000000001 Timing including forking: 11.418 (0.024 additional seconds) And here are timings for a simple merge. Two files at root were changed in the commits I made, but there are also some larger changes from the commit history. These should all be seen as "this tree updated in one of the two, so take that tree". $ git reset --hard test2 && /_git/git/summarize-perf git merge test -m test Merge made by the 'recursive' strategy. Accumulated times: 2.647 : <unmeasured> (48.6%) 1.384 : 1 : ..label:unpack_trees 0.267 : <unmeasured> (19.3%) 0.582 : 1 : ....label:traverse_trees 0.391 : 1 : ....label:clear_ce_flags/0x00000000_0x02000000 0.124 : 1 : ....label:check_updates 0.124 : <unmeasured> (100.0%) 0.000 : 1 : ......label:Filtering content 0.021 : 1 : ....label:clear_ce_flags/0x00080000_0x42000000 0.000 : 1 : ....label:fully_valid 1.060 : 1 : ..label:do_write_index /_git/office/src/.git/index.lock 0.931 : <unmeasured> (87.9%) 0.128 : 1 : ....label:write/extension/cache_tree 0.226 : 1 : ..label:fully_valid 0.134 : 1 : ..label:do_read_index .git/index 0.008 : <unmeasured> ( 5.8%) 0.126 : 1 : label:read/extension/cache_tree 0.001 : 1 : ..label:traverse_trees 0.000 : 1 : ..label:check_updates 0.000 : 1 : ..label:setup 0.000 : 1 : ..label:write back to queue Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 20): 0.0002 Timing including forking: 5.466 (0.015 additional seconds) $ git reset --hard test2 && /_git/git/summarize-perf git -c pull.twohead=ort merge test -m test Merge made by the 'ort' strategy. Accumulated times: 2.531 : <unmeasured> (49.1%) 1.328 : 1 : ..label:checkout 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 0.0%) 1.328 : 1 : ....label:unpack_trees 0.228 : <unmeasured> (17.2%) 0.566 : 1 : ......label:traverse_trees 0.388 : 1 : ......label:clear_ce_flags/0x00000000_0x02000000 0.125 : 1 : ......label:check_updates 0.125 : <unmeasured> (100.0%) 0.000 : 1 : ........label:Filtering content 0.021 : 1 : ......label:clear_ce_flags/0x00080000_0x42000000 0.000 : 1 : ......label:fully_valid 1.067 : 1 : ..label:do_write_index /_git/office/src/.git/index.lock 0.938 : <unmeasured> (87.9%) 0.129 : 1 : ....label:write/extension/cache_tree 0.230 : 1 : ..label:fully_valid 0.002 : 1 : ..label:incore_recursive 0.001 : <unmeasured> (22.3%) 0.001 : 1 : ....label:collect_merge_info 0.001 : <unmeasured> (60.2%) 0.000 : 1 : ......label:traverse_trees 0.001 : 1 : ....label:process_entries 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 2.8%) 0.001 : 1 : ......label:finalize 0.000 : 1 : ......label:process_entries setup 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 6.9%) 0.000 : 1 : ........label:plist sort 0.000 : 1 : ........label:plist copy 0.000 : 1 : ........label:plist grow 0.000 : 1 : ......label:processing 0.000 : 1 : ....label:merge_start 0.000 : <unmeasured> (50.0%) 0.000 : 1 : ......label:allocate/init 0.000 : 1 : ......label:sanity checks 0.000 : 1 : ....label:renames 0.001 : 1 : ..label:traverse_trees 0.000 : 1 : ..label:write_auto_merge 0.000 : 1 : ..label:check_updates 0.000 : 1 : ..label:setup 0.000 : 1 : ..label:display messages 0.000 : 1 : ..label:write back to queue 0.000 : 1 : ..label:record_unmerged Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 36): 0.00036 Timing including forking: 5.174 (0.015 additional seconds) Thanks, -Stolee
Hi Derrick, On Mon, Nov 9, 2020 at 4:30 AM Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> wrote: > > On 11/7/2020 2:39 PM, Elijah Newren wrote: > > *1*. Could you give me the accumulated times from the trace2_regions > > so we can verify where the time is spent? The 'summarize-perf' script > > at the toplevel of the repo in my ort branch might be helpful for > > this; just prefix any git command with that script and it accumulates > > the trace2 region times and prints them out. For example, I could run > > 'summarize-perf git merge --no-edit B^0' or 'summarize-perf test-tool > > fast-rebase --onto HEAD ca76bea9 myfeature'. Here's an example: > > > > === BEGIN OUTPUT === > > $ /home/newren/floss/git/summarize-perf test-tool fast-rebase --onto > > HEAD 4703d9119972bf586d2cca76ec6438f819ffa30e hwmon-updates > > Rebasing fd8bdb23b91876ac1e624337bb88dc1dcc21d67e... > > Done. > > Accumulated times: > > 0.031 : <unmeasured> ( 3.2%) > > 0.837 : 35 : label:incore_nonrecursive > > 0.003 : <unmeasured> ( 0.4%) > > 0.476 : 41 : ..label:collect_merge_info > > 0.001 : <unmeasured> ( 0.2%) > > 0.475 : 41 : ....label:traverse_trees > > 0.298 : 41 : ..label:renames > > 0.015 : <unmeasured> ( 5.1%) > > 0.280 : 41 : ....label:regular renames > > 0.036 : <unmeasured> (12.7%) > > 0.244 : 6 : ......label:diffcore_rename > > 0.001 : <unmeasured> ( 0.4%) > > 0.078 : 6 : ........label:dir rename setup > > 0.055 : 6 : ........label:basename matches > > 0.051 : 6 : ........label:exact renames > > 0.031 : 6 : ........label:write back to queue > > 0.017 : 6 : ........label:setup > > 0.009 : 6 : ........label:cull basename > > 0.003 : 6 : ........label:cull exact > > 0.002 : 35 : ....label:directory renames > > 0.001 : 35 : ....label:process renames > > 0.052 : 35 : ..label:process_entries > > 0.001 : <unmeasured> ( 1.7%) > > 0.033 : 35 : ....label:processing > > 0.017 : 35 : ....label:process_entries setup > > 0.001 : <unmeasured> ( 5.8%) > > 0.008 : 35 : ......label:plist copy > > 0.008 : 35 : ......label:plist sort > > 0.000 : 35 : ......label:plist grow > > 0.001 : 35 : ....label:finalize > > 0.005 : 35 : ..label:merge_start > > 0.001 : <unmeasured> (18.8%) > > 0.004 : 34 : ....label:reset_maps > > 0.000 : 35 : ....label:sanity checks > > 0.000 : 1 : ....label:allocate/init > > 0.003 : 6 : ..label:reset_maps > > 0.035 : 1 : label:do_write_index > > /home/newren/floss/linux-stable/.git/index.lock > > 0.034 : 1 : label:checkout > > 0.034 : <unmeasured> (99.9%) > > 0.000 : 1 : ..label:Filtering content > > 0.009 : 1 : label:do_read_index .git/index > > 0.000 : 1 : label:write_auto_merge > > 0.000 : 1 : label:record_unmerged > > Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 679): > > 0.006790000000000001 > > Timing including forking: 0.960 (0.013 additional seconds) > > === END OUTPUT === > > This was a run that took just under 1s (and was a hot-cache case; I > > had just done the same rebase before to warm the caches), and the > > combination of index/working tree bits (everything at and after > > do_write_index in the output) was 0.035+0.034+0.009+0+0=0.078 seconds, > > corresponding to just over 8.1% of overall time. I'm curious where > > that lands for your repository testcase; if the larger time ends up > > somewhere under the indented label:incore_nonrecursive region, then > > it's due to something other than index reading/updating/writing. > > > > *2*. If it really is due to index reading/updating/writing, then index > > handling in merge-ort is confined to two functions: checkout() and > > record_unmerged_index_entries(). Both functions aren't too long, and > > neither one calls into any other function within merge-ort.c. > > (Further, checkout() is a near copy of code from merge_working_tree() > > in builtin/checkout.c, or at least a copy of that function from a year > > or so ago.) As such, it's possible you can go in and make whatever > > special tweaks you have for partial index reading/writing to those > > functions. > > > > I'm curious to hear back more on this. > > I don't have a lot of time to dig into this right now, but here are > the stats for my rebases and merges with and without your option. Actually, this was pretty enlightening. I think I know about what's happening... First, a few years ago, Ben said that merges in the Microsoft repos took about an hour[1]: "For the repro that I have been using this drops the merge time from ~1 hour to ~5 minutes and the unmerged entries goes down from ~40,000 to 1." The change he made to drop it that far was to turn off rename detection. [1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/20180426205202.23056-1-benpeart@microsoft.com/ Keep that in mind, especially since your times are actually significantly less than 5 minutes... > The first thing I notice for each is that there is a significant > amount of "unmeasured" time at the beginning of each, and that > could possibly be improved separately. > > First, try a rebase forward and backward. > > $ /_git/git/summarize-perf git rebase --onto to from test > Successfully rebased and updated refs/heads/test. > Accumulated times: > 8.511 : <unmeasured> (74.9%) Wild guess: This is setup_git_directory() loading your ~3 million entry index. > 1.331 : 1 : ......label:unpack_trees > 0.200 : <unmeasured> (15.1%) > 0.580 : 1 : ........label:traverse_trees > 0.403 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00000000_0x02000000 > 0.126 : 1 : ........label:check_updates > 0.126 : <unmeasured> (100.0%) > 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:Filtering content > 0.021 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00080000_0x42000000 > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:fully_valid > 1.059 : 1 : ......label:do_write_index /_git/office/src/.git/index.lock > 0.930 : <unmeasured> (87.9%) > 0.128 : 1 : ........label:write/extension/cache_tree > 0.455 : 2 : ......label:fully_valid > 0.001 : 1 : ......label:traverse_trees > 0.000 : 1 : ......label:check_updates > Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 41): 0.00041000000000000005 > Timing including forking: 11.382 (0.026 additional seconds) > > $ /_git/git/summarize-perf git rebase --onto from to test > Successfully rebased and updated refs/heads/test. > Accumulated times: > 8.556 : <unmeasured> (75.2%) > 1.315 : 1 : ......label:unpack_trees > 0.197 : <unmeasured> (15.0%) > 0.580 : 1 : ........label:traverse_trees > 0.391 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00000000_0x02000000 > 0.126 : 1 : ........label:check_updates > 0.126 : <unmeasured> (100.0%) > 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:Filtering content > 0.021 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00080000_0x42000000 > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:fully_valid > 1.071 : 1 : ......label:do_write_index /_git/office/src/.git/index.lock > 0.942 : <unmeasured> (88.0%) > 0.129 : 1 : ........label:write/extension/cache_tree > 0.431 : 2 : ......label:fully_valid > 0.001 : 1 : ......label:traverse_trees > 0.000 : 1 : ......label:check_updates > Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 41): 0.00041000000000000005 > Timing including forking: 11.399 (0.026 additional seconds) Did you include two runs of recursive and two runs of ort just to show that the timings were stable and thus there wasn't warm or cold disk cache issues affecting things? If so, good plan. (If there was another reason, let me know; I missed it.) > Then do the same with the ort strategy. > > $ /_git/git/summarize-perf git -c pull.twohead=ort rebase --onto to from test > Successfully rebased and updated refs/heads/test. > Accumulated times: > 8.350 : <unmeasured> (73.2%) > 1.403 : 1 : ....label:checkout > 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 0.0%) > 1.403 : 1 : ......label:unpack_trees > 0.312 : <unmeasured> (22.3%) > 0.539 : 1 : ........label:traverse_trees > 0.401 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00000000_0x02000000 > 0.128 : 1 : ........label:check_updates > 0.128 : <unmeasured> (100.0%) > 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:Filtering content > 0.021 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00080000_0x42000000 > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:fully_valid > 1.081 : 1 : ....label:do_write_index /_git/office/src/.git/index.lock > 0.951 : <unmeasured> (88.1%) > 0.129 : 1 : ......label:write/extension/cache_tree > 0.432 : 2 : ....label:fully_valid > 0.143 : 1 : ....label:do_read_index .git/index > 0.019 : <unmeasured> (13.1%) > 0.125 : 1 : label:read/extension/cache_tree > 0.004 : 1 : ....label:incore_nonrecursive > 0.001 : <unmeasured> (25.8%) > 0.002 : 1 : ......label:process_entries > 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 2.6%) > 0.001 : 1 : ........label:finalize > 0.001 : 1 : ........label:process_entries setup > 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 6.7%) > 0.001 : 1 : ..........label:plist sort > 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:plist copy > 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:plist grow > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:processing > 0.001 : 1 : ......label:collect_merge_info > 0.000 : <unmeasured> (35.3%) > 0.001 : 1 : ........label:traverse_trees > 0.000 : 1 : ......label:merge_start > 0.000 : <unmeasured> (42.3%) > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:allocate/init > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:sanity checks > 0.000 : 1 : ......label:renames > 0.001 : 1 : ....label:traverse_trees > 0.000 : 1 : ....label:write_auto_merge > 0.000 : 1 : ....label:check_updates > 0.000 : 1 : ....label:record_unmerged > Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 56): 0.0005600000000000001 > Timing including forking: 11.442 (0.027 additional seconds) .004s on label:incore_nonrecursive -- that's the actual merge operation. This was a trivial rebase, and the merging took just 4 milliseconds. But the overall run took 11.442 seconds because working with 3M+ entries in the index just takes forever, and my code didn't touch any on-disk formats, certainly not the index format. _All_ of my optimization work was on the merging piece, not the stuff outside. But for what you're testing here, it appears to be irrelevant compared to the overhead. > $ /_git/git/summarize-perf git -c pull.twohead=ort rebase --onto from to test > Successfully rebased and updated refs/heads/test. > Accumulated times: > 8.337 : <unmeasured> (73.2%) > 1.395 : 1 : ....label:checkout > 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 0.0%) > 1.395 : 1 : ......label:unpack_trees > 0.309 : <unmeasured> (22.1%) > 0.537 : 1 : ........label:traverse_trees > 0.403 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00000000_0x02000000 > 0.124 : 1 : ........label:check_updates > 0.124 : <unmeasured> (100.0%) > 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:Filtering content > 0.021 : 1 : ........label:clear_ce_flags/0x00080000_0x42000000 > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:fully_valid > 1.084 : 1 : ....label:do_write_index /_git/office/src/.git/index.lock > 0.955 : <unmeasured> (88.1%) > 0.129 : 1 : ......label:write/extension/cache_tree > 0.436 : 2 : ....label:fully_valid > 0.137 : 1 : ....label:do_read_index .git/index > 0.013 : <unmeasured> ( 9.3%) > 0.125 : 1 : label:read/extension/cache_tree > 0.004 : 1 : ....label:incore_nonrecursive > 0.001 : <unmeasured> (24.5%) > 0.002 : 1 : ......label:process_entries > 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 2.5%) > 0.001 : 1 : ........label:finalize > 0.001 : 1 : ........label:process_entries setup > 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 6.5%) > 0.001 : 1 : ..........label:plist sort > 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:plist copy > 0.000 : 1 : ..........label:plist grow > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:processing > 0.001 : 1 : ......label:collect_merge_info > 0.000 : <unmeasured> (26.5%) > 0.001 : 1 : ........label:traverse_trees > 0.000 : 1 : ......label:merge_start > 0.000 : <unmeasured> (43.1%) > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:allocate/init > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:sanity checks > 0.000 : 1 : ......label:renames > 0.001 : 1 : ....label:traverse_trees > 0.000 : 1 : ....label:write_auto_merge > 0.000 : 1 : ....label:check_updates > 0.000 : 1 : ....label:record_unmerged > Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 56): 0.0005600000000000001 > Timing including forking: 11.418 (0.024 additional seconds) Ah, you included two copies for merge-ort too. I'm guessing you did that just to show there wasn't some cold cache issues or something and that the runs showed consistent timings? > And here are timings for a simple merge. Two files at root were changed in the > commits I made, but there are also some larger changes from the commit history. > These should all be seen as "this tree updated in one of the two, so take that > tree". Ahah! That's a microsoft-specific optimization you guys made in the recursive strategy, yes? It does NOT exist in upstream git. It's also one that is nearly incompatible with rename detection; it turns out you can only do that optimization in the face of rename detection if you do a HUGE amount of specialized work and tracking in order to determine when it's safe _despite_ needing to detect renames. I thought that optimization was totally incompatible with rename detection for a long time; I tried it a couple times while working on ort and watched it break all kinds of rename tests...but I eventually discovered some tricks involving a lot of work to be able to run that optimization. So, you aren't comparing upstream "recursive" to "ort", you're comparing a tweaked version of recursive, and one that is incompatible with how recursive's rename detection work. In fact, just to be clear in case you go looking, I suspect that this tweak is to be found within unpack_trees.c (which recursive relies on heavily). Further, you've set it up so there are only a few files changed after unpack_trees returns. In total, you have: (1) turned off rename detection (most my optimizations are for improving this factor, meaning I can't show an advantage), (2) you took advantage of no rename detection to implement trivial-tree merges (thus killing the main second advantage my algorithm has), and (3) you are looking at a case with a tiny number of changes for the merge algorithm to process (thus killing a third optimization that removes quadratic performance). Those are my three big optimizations, and you've made them all irrelevant. In fact, you're in an area I would have been worried that ort would do _worse_ than recursive. I track an awful lot of things and there is overhead in checking and filling all that information in; if there are only a few entries to merge, then all that information was a waste to collect and ort might be slower than recursive. But then again, that should be a case where both algorithms are "nearly instantaneous" (or would be if it weren't for your 3M+ index entry repo causing run_builtin()'s call to setup_git_directory() in git.c to take a huge amount of time before the builtin is even called.) > $ git reset --hard test2 && /_git/git/summarize-perf git merge test -m test > Merge made by the 'recursive' strategy. > Accumulated times: > 2.647 : <unmeasured> (48.6%) > 1.384 : 1 : ..label:unpack_trees > 0.267 : <unmeasured> (19.3%) > 0.582 : 1 : ....label:traverse_trees > 0.391 : 1 : ....label:clear_ce_flags/0x00000000_0x02000000 > 0.124 : 1 : ....label:check_updates > 0.124 : <unmeasured> (100.0%) > 0.000 : 1 : ......label:Filtering content > 0.021 : 1 : ....label:clear_ce_flags/0x00080000_0x42000000 > 0.000 : 1 : ....label:fully_valid > 1.060 : 1 : ..label:do_write_index /_git/office/src/.git/index.lock > 0.931 : <unmeasured> (87.9%) > 0.128 : 1 : ....label:write/extension/cache_tree > 0.226 : 1 : ..label:fully_valid > 0.134 : 1 : ..label:do_read_index .git/index > 0.008 : <unmeasured> ( 5.8%) > 0.126 : 1 : label:read/extension/cache_tree > 0.001 : 1 : ..label:traverse_trees > 0.000 : 1 : ..label:check_updates > 0.000 : 1 : ..label:setup > 0.000 : 1 : ..label:write back to queue > Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 20): 0.0002 > Timing including forking: 5.466 (0.015 additional seconds) 5 seconds. I do have to hand it to Ben and anyone else involved, though. From 1 hour down to 5 seconds is pretty good, even if it was done by hacks (turning off rename detection, and then implementing trivial-tree merging that would have broken rename detection). I suspect that whoever did that work might have found the unconditional discarding and re-reading of the index and fixed it as well? > $ git reset --hard test2 && /_git/git/summarize-perf git -c pull.twohead=ort merge test -m test > Merge made by the 'ort' strategy. > Accumulated times: > 2.531 : <unmeasured> (49.1%) > 1.328 : 1 : ..label:checkout > 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 0.0%) > 1.328 : 1 : ....label:unpack_trees > 0.228 : <unmeasured> (17.2%) > 0.566 : 1 : ......label:traverse_trees > 0.388 : 1 : ......label:clear_ce_flags/0x00000000_0x02000000 > 0.125 : 1 : ......label:check_updates > 0.125 : <unmeasured> (100.0%) > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:Filtering content > 0.021 : 1 : ......label:clear_ce_flags/0x00080000_0x42000000 > 0.000 : 1 : ......label:fully_valid > 1.067 : 1 : ..label:do_write_index /_git/office/src/.git/index.lock > 0.938 : <unmeasured> (87.9%) > 0.129 : 1 : ....label:write/extension/cache_tree > 0.230 : 1 : ..label:fully_valid > 0.002 : 1 : ..label:incore_recursive > 0.001 : <unmeasured> (22.3%) > 0.001 : 1 : ....label:collect_merge_info > 0.001 : <unmeasured> (60.2%) > 0.000 : 1 : ......label:traverse_trees > 0.001 : 1 : ....label:process_entries > 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 2.8%) > 0.001 : 1 : ......label:finalize > 0.000 : 1 : ......label:process_entries setup > 0.000 : <unmeasured> ( 6.9%) > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:plist sort > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:plist copy > 0.000 : 1 : ........label:plist grow > 0.000 : 1 : ......label:processing > 0.000 : 1 : ....label:merge_start > 0.000 : <unmeasured> (50.0%) > 0.000 : 1 : ......label:allocate/init > 0.000 : 1 : ......label:sanity checks > 0.000 : 1 : ....label:renames > 0.001 : 1 : ..label:traverse_trees > 0.000 : 1 : ..label:write_auto_merge > 0.000 : 1 : ..label:check_updates > 0.000 : 1 : ..label:setup > 0.000 : 1 : ..label:display messages > 0.000 : 1 : ..label:write back to queue > 0.000 : 1 : ..label:record_unmerged > Estimated measurement overhead (.010 ms/region-measure * 36): 0.00036 > Timing including forking: 5.174 (0.015 additional seconds) Heh, yeah 0.002 seconds for ..label:incore_recursive. Only 2 milliseconds to create the actual merge tree. That does suggest you might have fun with 'git log -p --remerge-diff'; if you can redo merges in 2 milliseconds, showing them in git log output is very reasonable. :-) Could we have some fun, though? What if you have some merge or rebase involving lots of changes, and you turn rename detection back on, and you disable that trivial-tree resolution optimization that breaks recursive's rename detection handling...and then compare recursive and ort? (It might be easiest to just compare upstream recursive rather than the one with all the microsoft changes to make sure you undid whatever trivial tree handling work exists.) For example, my testcase in the linux kernel was finding a series of a few dozen patches I could rebase back to an older version, but tweaking the "older" version by renaming drivers/ -> pilots/ (with about 26K files under that directory, that meant about 26K renames). So, I got to see rebasing of dozens of real changes across a massive rename boundary -- and the massive rename boundary also guaranteed there were lots of entries for the merge algorithm to deal with. In the end, though, 4 milliseconds for the rebase and 2 milliseconds for the merge, with the rest all being overhead of interfacing to the index and working tree actually seems pretty good to me. I'm just curious if we can check how things work for more involved cases.
On 11/9/20 12:13 PM, Elijah Newren wrote:> Actually, this was pretty enlightening. I think I know about what's > happening... > > First, a few years ago, Ben said that merges in the Microsoft repos > took about an hour[1]: > "For the repro that I have been using this drops the merge time from ~1 hour to > ~5 minutes and the unmerged entries goes down from ~40,000 to 1." > The change he made to drop it that far was to turn off rename detection. > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/20180426205202.23056-1-benpeart@microsoft.com/ > > Keep that in mind, especially since your times are actually > significantly less than 5 minutes... Yes, the other thing to keep in mind is that this is a Scalar repo with the default cone-mode sparse-checkout of only the files at root. For this repo, that means that there are only ~10 files actually present. I wanted to remove any working directory updates/checks from the performance check as possible. >> $ /_git/git/summarize-perf git rebase --onto to from test >> Successfully rebased and updated refs/heads/test. >> Accumulated times: >> 8.511 : <unmeasured> (74.9%) > > Wild guess: This is setup_git_directory() loading your ~3 million entry index. I think there is also some commit walking happening, but it shouldn't be too much. 'from' and 'to' are not very far away. > Did you include two runs of recursive and two runs of ort just to show > that the timings were stable and thus there wasn't warm or cold disk > cache issues affecting things? If so, good plan. (If there was > another reason, let me know; I missed it.) For the rebase, I did "--onto to from test" and "--onto from to test" to show both directions of the rebase. The merge I did twice for the cache issues ;) > .004s on label:incore_nonrecursive -- that's the actual merge > operation. This was a trivial rebase, and the merging took just 4 > milliseconds. But the overall run took 11.442 seconds because working > with 3M+ entries in the index just takes forever, and my code didn't > touch any on-disk formats, certainly not the index format. > > _All_ of my optimization work was on the merging piece, not the stuff > outside. But for what you're testing here, it appears to be > irrelevant compared to the overhead. OK, so since we already disable rename detection through config, the machinery that you are changing is already fast with the old algorithm in these trivial cases. To actually show any benefits, we would need to disable rename detection or use a larger change. >> And here are timings for a simple merge. Two files at root were changed in the >> commits I made, but there are also some larger changes from the commit history. >> These should all be seen as "this tree updated in one of the two, so take that >> tree". > > Ahah! That's a microsoft-specific optimization you guys made in the > recursive strategy, yes? I'm not aware of any logic we have that's different from core Git. The config we use [1] includes "merge.stat = false" and "merge.renames = false" but otherwise seems to be using stock Git. [1] https://github.com/microsoft/scalar/blob/1d7938d2df6921f7a3b4f3f1cce56a00929adc40/Scalar.Common/Maintenance/ConfigStep.cs#L100-L127 I'm CC'ing Jeff Hostetler to see if he knows anything about a custom merge algorithm in microsoft/git. > It does NOT exist in upstream git. It's > also one that is nearly incompatible with rename detection; it turns > out you can only do that optimization in the face of rename detection > if you do a HUGE amount of specialized work and tracking in order to > determine when it's safe _despite_ needing to detect renames. Perhaps merge.renames=false is enough to trigger this logic already? > I > thought that optimization was totally incompatible with rename > detection for a long time; I tried it a couple times while working on > ort and watched it break all kinds of rename tests...but I eventually > discovered some tricks involving a lot of work to be able to run that > optimization. I will try to keep this in mind. > So, you aren't comparing upstream "recursive" to "ort", you're > comparing a tweaked version of recursive, and one that is incompatible > with how recursive's rename detection work. In fact, just to be clear > in case you go looking, I suspect that this tweak is to be found > within unpack_trees.c (which recursive relies on heavily). > > Further, you've set it up so there are only a few files changed after > unpack_trees returns. > > In total, you have: (1) turned off rename detection (most my > optimizations are for improving this factor, meaning I can't show an > advantage), (2) you took advantage of no rename detection to implement > trivial-tree merges (thus killing the main second advantage my > algorithm has), and (3) you are looking at a case with a tiny number > of changes for the merge algorithm to process (thus killing a third > optimization that removes quadratic performance). Those are my three > big optimizations, and you've made them all irrelevant. In fact, > you're in an area I would have been worried that ort would do _worse_ > than recursive. I track an awful lot of things and there is overhead > in checking and filling all that information in; if there are only a > few entries to merge, then all that information was a waste to collect > and ort might be slower than recursive. But then again, that should > be a case where both algorithms are "nearly instantaneous" (or would > be if it weren't for your 3M+ index entry repo causing run_builtin()'s > call to setup_git_directory() in git.c to take a huge amount of time > before the builtin is even called.) Thanks for your time isolating this case. I appreciate knowing exactly which portions of the merge algorithm are being touched and which are not. > 5 seconds. I do have to hand it to Ben and anyone else involved, > though. From 1 hour down to 5 seconds is pretty good, even if it was > done by hacks (turning off rename detection, and then implementing > trivial-tree merging that would have broken rename detection). I > suspect that whoever did that work might have found the unconditional > discarding and re-reading of the index and fixed it as well? As you can probably tell from my general confusion, I had nothing to do with it. ;) > Heh, yeah 0.002 seconds for ..label:incore_recursive. Only 2 > milliseconds to create the actual merge tree. That does suggest you > might have fun with 'git log -p --remerge-diff'; if you can redo > merges in 2 milliseconds, showing them in git log output is very > reasonable. :-) Yeah, 'git merge-tree' is very fast for these cases, so I assumed that something else was going on for that command. > Could we have some fun, though? What if you have some merge or rebase > involving lots of changes, and you turn rename detection back on, and > you disable that trivial-tree resolution optimization that breaks > recursive's rename detection handling...and then compare recursive and > ort? (It might be easiest to just compare upstream recursive rather > than the one with all the microsoft changes to make sure you undid > whatever trivial tree handling work exists.) I can try these kinds of cases, but it won't be today. I'm on kid duty today, and answering emails in between running around with them. > For example, my testcase in the linux kernel was finding a series of a > few dozen patches I could rebase back to an older version, but > tweaking the "older" version by renaming drivers/ -> pilots/ (with > about 26K files under that directory, that meant about 26K renames). > So, I got to see rebasing of dozens of real changes across a massive > rename boundary -- and the massive rename boundary also guaranteed > there were lots of entries for the merge algorithm to deal with. > > In the end, though, 4 milliseconds for the rebase and 2 milliseconds > for the merge, with the rest all being overhead of interfacing to the > index and working tree actually seems pretty good to me. I'm just > curious if we can check how things work for more involved cases. I'm definitely interested in identifying how your algorithm improves over the previous cases, and perhaps re-enabling rename detection for merges is enough of a benefit to justify the new one. Eventually, I hope to actually engage with your patches in the form of review. Just trying to build a mental model for what's going on first. Thanks, -Stolee
Hi Derrick, On Mon, Nov 9, 2020 at 11:51 AM Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> wrote: > > On 11/9/20 12:13 PM, Elijah Newren wrote:> Actually, this was pretty enlightening. I think I know about what's > > happening... > > > > First, a few years ago, Ben said that merges in the Microsoft repos > > took about an hour[1]: > > "For the repro that I have been using this drops the merge time from ~1 hour to > > ~5 minutes and the unmerged entries goes down from ~40,000 to 1." > > The change he made to drop it that far was to turn off rename detection. > > > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/20180426205202.23056-1-benpeart@microsoft.com/ > > > > Keep that in mind, especially since your times are actually > > significantly less than 5 minutes... > > Yes, the other thing to keep in mind is that this is > a Scalar repo with the default cone-mode sparse-checkout > of only the files at root. For this repo, that means that > there are only ~10 files actually present. > > I wanted to remove any working directory updates/checks > from the performance check as possible. Ah, that explains how you got under 20s. I remember elsewhere on the list someone (I think it was Ben again) mentioned that a "git checkout -b <newbranch>" took 20s, despite no need to update the working tree or index. I have only done one cursory test of merge-ort with sparse-checkouts; I should do more. There might be a bug somewhere, though it does at least pass the regression tests and I think for the most part it's actually better: there are cases where merge-recursive will vivify files outside the sparse-checkout which were not conflicted (see e.g. https://lore.kernel.org/git/xmqqbmb1a7ga.fsf@gitster-ct.c.googlers.com/); in contrast, merge-ort shouldn't have any such cases -- it'll only add files to the working copy if they match the sparsity patterns or the path has conflicts. > >> $ /_git/git/summarize-perf git rebase --onto to from test > >> Successfully rebased and updated refs/heads/test. > >> Accumulated times: > >> 8.511 : <unmeasured> (74.9%) > > > > Wild guess: This is setup_git_directory() loading your ~3 million entry index. > > I think there is also some commit walking happening, but > it shouldn't be too much. 'from' and 'to' are not very > far away. Makes sense. I suspect that with your commit-graphs this ends up being fast enough that you might have difficulty even measuring it, though. > > Did you include two runs of recursive and two runs of ort just to show > > that the timings were stable and thus there wasn't warm or cold disk > > cache issues affecting things? If so, good plan. (If there was > > another reason, let me know; I missed it.) > > For the rebase, I did "--onto to from test" and "--onto from to test" > to show both directions of the rebase. The merge I did twice for the > cache issues ;) Oh, good call. Thanks for pointing it out, I missed that on first reading. > > .004s on label:incore_nonrecursive -- that's the actual merge > > operation. This was a trivial rebase, and the merging took just 4 > > milliseconds. But the overall run took 11.442 seconds because working > > with 3M+ entries in the index just takes forever, and my code didn't > > touch any on-disk formats, certainly not the index format. > > > > _All_ of my optimization work was on the merging piece, not the stuff > > outside. But for what you're testing here, it appears to be > > irrelevant compared to the overhead. > > OK, so since we already disable rename detection through config, > the machinery that you are changing is already fast with the old > algorithm in these trivial cases. > > To actually show any benefits, we would need to disable rename > detection or use a larger change. ...or both. :-) > >> And here are timings for a simple merge. Two files at root were changed in the > >> commits I made, but there are also some larger changes from the commit history. > >> These should all be seen as "this tree updated in one of the two, so take that > >> tree". > > > > Ahah! That's a microsoft-specific optimization you guys made in the > > recursive strategy, yes? > > I'm not aware of any logic we have that's different from core Git. > The config we use [1] includes "merge.stat = false" and "merge.renames > = false" but otherwise seems to be using stock Git. > > [1] https://github.com/microsoft/scalar/blob/1d7938d2df6921f7a3b4f3f1cce56a00929adc40/Scalar.Common/Maintenance/ConfigStep.cs#L100-L127 > > I'm CC'ing Jeff Hostetler to see if he knows anything about a custom > merge algorithm in microsoft/git. Oh, I took your wording that 'These should all be seen as "this tree updated in one of the two, so take that tree"' as an implication that you had a special merge tweak and wanted to verify it didn't regress. I think I read too much into your wording. Also, thinking over it more, I remember now that Ben also turned on unpack_opts.aggressive when rename detection was turned off -- see commit 6f10a09e0a ("merge: pass aggressive when rename detection is turned off", 2018-05-02). That isn't quite as advantageous as doing a trivial tree merge, but if the algorithm that does the trivial tree merge has to end up updating a complete index later anyway via the checkout logic of unpack_trees, then the differences are basically a wash. > > It does NOT exist in upstream git. It's > > also one that is nearly incompatible with rename detection; it turns > > out you can only do that optimization in the face of rename detection > > if you do a HUGE amount of specialized work and tracking in order to > > determine when it's safe _despite_ needing to detect renames. > > Perhaps merge.renames=false is enough to trigger this logic already? Yeah, since I read too much into what you wrote and know that I remember the "if (no_renames) o.aggressive = 1" bit, then yeah this would be enough. > > I > > thought that optimization was totally incompatible with rename > > detection for a long time; I tried it a couple times while working on > > ort and watched it break all kinds of rename tests...but I eventually > > discovered some tricks involving a lot of work to be able to run that > > optimization. > > I will try to keep this in mind. > > > So, you aren't comparing upstream "recursive" to "ort", you're > > comparing a tweaked version of recursive, and one that is incompatible > > with how recursive's rename detection work. In fact, just to be clear > > in case you go looking, I suspect that this tweak is to be found > > within unpack_trees.c (which recursive relies on heavily). > > > > Further, you've set it up so there are only a few files changed after > > unpack_trees returns. > > > > In total, you have: (1) turned off rename detection (most my > > optimizations are for improving this factor, meaning I can't show an > > advantage), (2) you took advantage of no rename detection to implement > > trivial-tree merges (thus killing the main second advantage my > > algorithm has), and (3) you are looking at a case with a tiny number > > of changes for the merge algorithm to process (thus killing a third > > optimization that removes quadratic performance). Those are my three > > big optimizations, and you've made them all irrelevant. In fact, > > you're in an area I would have been worried that ort would do _worse_ > > than recursive. I track an awful lot of things and there is overhead > > in checking and filling all that information in; if there are only a > > few entries to merge, then all that information was a waste to collect > > and ort might be slower than recursive. But then again, that should > > be a case where both algorithms are "nearly instantaneous" (or would > > be if it weren't for your 3M+ index entry repo causing run_builtin()'s > > call to setup_git_directory() in git.c to take a huge amount of time > > before the builtin is even called.) > > Thanks for your time isolating this case. I appreciate knowing exactly > which portions of the merge algorithm are being touched and which are > not. > > 5 seconds. I do have to hand it to Ben and anyone else involved, > > though. From 1 hour down to 5 seconds is pretty good, even if it was > > done by hacks (turning off rename detection, and then implementing > > trivial-tree merging that would have broken rename detection). I > > suspect that whoever did that work might have found the unconditional > > discarding and re-reading of the index and fixed it as well? > > As you can probably tell from my general confusion, I had nothing > to do with it. ;) > > > Heh, yeah 0.002 seconds for ..label:incore_recursive. Only 2 > > milliseconds to create the actual merge tree. That does suggest you > > might have fun with 'git log -p --remerge-diff'; if you can redo > > merges in 2 milliseconds, showing them in git log output is very > > reasonable. :-) > > Yeah, 'git merge-tree' is very fast for these cases, so I assumed > that something else was going on for that command. Oh, interesting. I forgot about merge-tree. Maybe I should make a version based on merge-ort (and then it'd handle rename detection too, something it doesn't currently do.)? However, that wouldn't be comparing merge algorithms, because builtin/merge-tree.c doesn't use merge-recursive.[ch]. (It would be easy to get confused into thinking it does, since merge-recursive.[ch] defines a function called merge_trees(), but builtin/merge-tree.c doesn't use it despite the name similarity.) > > Could we have some fun, though? What if you have some merge or rebase > > involving lots of changes, and you turn rename detection back on, and > > you disable that trivial-tree resolution optimization that breaks > > recursive's rename detection handling...and then compare recursive and > > ort? (It might be easiest to just compare upstream recursive rather > > than the one with all the microsoft changes to make sure you undid > > whatever trivial tree handling work exists.) > > I can try these kinds of cases, but it won't be today. I'm on kid duty > today, and answering emails in between running around with them. One word of caution: merge.renameLimit may get in your way. The default of 1000 means that you're likely to hit that limit on your first run, and get a warning message like the following printed out: warning: inexact rename detection was skipped due to too many files. warning: you may want to set your merge.renamelimit variable to at least 27328 and retry the command. You then need to undo your rebase or merge, bump the limit, and re-run. Also, you will need a higher limit for merge-recursive than you do for merge-ort. The default of 1000 is enough for merge-ort to detect all the renames in my 26K-files-in-a-directory rename testcase of the linux kernel, but the value needs to be bumped to 27328 for merge-recursive. And if you don't have the limit high enough, then one algorithm is doing the work to detect renames and the other is bailing and skipping it, so it's not an apples-to-apples comparison. If that warning doesn't appear for either backend, then you have an apples-to-apples comparison. > > For example, my testcase in the linux kernel was finding a series of a > > few dozen patches I could rebase back to an older version, but > > tweaking the "older" version by renaming drivers/ -> pilots/ (with > > about 26K files under that directory, that meant about 26K renames). > > So, I got to see rebasing of dozens of real changes across a massive > > rename boundary -- and the massive rename boundary also guaranteed > > there were lots of entries for the merge algorithm to deal with. > > > > In the end, though, 4 milliseconds for the rebase and 2 milliseconds > > for the merge, with the rest all being overhead of interfacing to the > > index and working tree actually seems pretty good to me. I'm just > > curious if we can check how things work for more involved cases. > > I'm definitely interested in identifying how your algorithm improves > over the previous cases, and perhaps re-enabling rename detection for > merges is enough of a benefit to justify the new one. > > Eventually, I hope to actually engage with your patches in the form > of review. Just trying to build a mental model for what's going on > first. Ooh, I can help with that; here's what's going on: *** Magic *** (Black, evil magic in the case of merge-recurisve. Good magic in the case of merge-ort.) Glad I could help clear things up for you. :-)
On 11/2/2020 3:43 PM, Elijah Newren wrote: > Elijah Newren (20): > merge-ort: setup basic internal data structures > merge-ort: add some high-level algorithm structure > merge-ort: port merge_start() from merge-recursive > merge-ort: use histogram diff > merge-ort: add an err() function similar to one from merge-recursive > merge-ort: implement a very basic collect_merge_info() > merge-ort: avoid repeating fill_tree_descriptor() on the same tree > merge-ort: compute a few more useful fields for collect_merge_info > merge-ort: record stage and auxiliary info for every path > merge-ort: avoid recursing into identical trees > merge-ort: add a preliminary simple process_entries() implementation > merge-ort: have process_entries operate in a defined order I got this far before my attention to detail really started slipping. > merge-ort: step 1 of tree writing -- record basenames, modes, and oids > merge-ort: step 2 of tree writing -- function to create tree object > merge-ort: step 3 of tree writing -- handling subdirectories as we go > merge-ort: basic outline for merge_switch_to_result() > merge-ort: add implementation of checkout() > tree: enable cmp_cache_name_compare() to be used elsewhere > merge-ort: add implementation of record_unmerged_index_entries() > merge-ort: free data structures in merge_finalize() I'll try to take another pass on these commits tomorrow. For the series as a whole I'd love to see at least one test that demonstrates that this code does something, if even only for a very narrow case. There's a lot of code being moved here, and it would be nice to have even a very simple test case that can check that we didn't leave any important die("not implemented") calls lying around or worse accessing an uninitialized pointer or something. Thanks, -Stolee
On Wed, Nov 11, 2020 at 9:09 AM Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> wrote: > > On 11/2/2020 3:43 PM, Elijah Newren wrote: > > Elijah Newren (20): > > merge-ort: setup basic internal data structures > > merge-ort: add some high-level algorithm structure > > merge-ort: port merge_start() from merge-recursive > > merge-ort: use histogram diff > > merge-ort: add an err() function similar to one from merge-recursive > > merge-ort: implement a very basic collect_merge_info() > > merge-ort: avoid repeating fill_tree_descriptor() on the same tree > > merge-ort: compute a few more useful fields for collect_merge_info > > merge-ort: record stage and auxiliary info for every path > > merge-ort: avoid recursing into identical trees > > merge-ort: add a preliminary simple process_entries() implementation > > merge-ort: have process_entries operate in a defined order > > I got this far before my attention to detail really started slipping. > > > merge-ort: step 1 of tree writing -- record basenames, modes, and oids > > merge-ort: step 2 of tree writing -- function to create tree object > > merge-ort: step 3 of tree writing -- handling subdirectories as we go > > merge-ort: basic outline for merge_switch_to_result() > > merge-ort: add implementation of checkout() > > tree: enable cmp_cache_name_compare() to be used elsewhere > > merge-ort: add implementation of record_unmerged_index_entries() > > merge-ort: free data structures in merge_finalize() > > I'll try to take another pass on these commits tomorrow. > > For the series as a whole I'd love to see at least one test that > demonstrates that this code does something, if even only for a very > narrow case. > > There's a lot of code being moved here, and it would be nice to have > even a very simple test case that can check that we didn't leave any > important die("not implemented") calls lying around or worse accessing > an uninitialized pointer or something. We absolutely left several die("not implemented") calls lying around. The series was long enough at 20 patches; reviewers lose steam at 10 (at least both you and Jonathan have), so maybe I should have left even more in there as an attempt to split up this series more. However, if you run the testsuite with GIT_TEST_MERGE_ALGORITHM=ort, then this series drops the number of failures in the testsuite from around 2200, down to 1500. So, there's about 700 testcases for you. Also, there were several preparatory series all designed for getting the testsuite in order for this new merge algorithm. See the following currently cooking topics: * en/merge-tests topic * en/dir-rename-tests and the following topics that were previously merged: * 36d225c7d4 ("Merge branch 'en/merge-tests'", 2020-08-19) * cf372dc815 ("Merge branch 'en/test-cleanup'", 2020-03-09) * ac193e0e0a ("Merge branch 'en/merge-path-collision'", 2019-01-04) * c99033060f ("Merge branch 'en/t7405-recursive-submodule-conflicts'", 2018-08-02) * e6da45c7cd ("Merge branch 'en/t6036-merge-recursive-tests'", 2018-08-02) * 84e74c6403 ("Merge branch 'en/t6042-insane-merge-rename-testcases'", 2018-08-02) * bba1a5559c ("Merge branch 'en/t6036-recursive-corner-cases'", 2018-08-02) * 93b74a7cfa ("Merge branch 'en/merge-recursive-tests'", 2018-06-25) and maybe others I missed.
On 11/11/2020 1:35 PM, Elijah Newren wrote: > On Wed, Nov 11, 2020 at 9:09 AM Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> wrote: >> For the series as a whole I'd love to see at least one test that >> demonstrates that this code does something, if even only for a very >> narrow case. >> >> There's a lot of code being moved here, and it would be nice to have >> even a very simple test case that can check that we didn't leave any >> important die("not implemented") calls lying around or worse accessing >> an uninitialized pointer or something. > > We absolutely left several die("not implemented") calls lying around. > The series was long enough at 20 patches; reviewers lose steam at 10 > (at least both you and Jonathan have), so maybe I should have left > even more in there as an attempt to split up this series more. > > However, if you run the testsuite with GIT_TEST_MERGE_ALGORITHM=ort, > then this series drops the number of failures in the testsuite from > around 2200, down to 1500. So, there's about 700 testcases for you. Sorry that I'm jumping in to the series-of-series in the middle, so I am unfamiliar with the previous progress and testing strategy. This "number of test failures" metric is sufficient to demonstrate the progress provided in this series. Perhaps it was even in your v1 cover letter. Thanks, -Stolee
Hi Derrick, On Wed, Nov 11, 2020 at 12:48 PM Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> wrote: > > On 11/11/2020 1:35 PM, Elijah Newren wrote: > > On Wed, Nov 11, 2020 at 9:09 AM Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> wrote: > >> For the series as a whole I'd love to see at least one test that > >> demonstrates that this code does something, if even only for a very > >> narrow case. > >> > >> There's a lot of code being moved here, and it would be nice to have > >> even a very simple test case that can check that we didn't leave any > >> important die("not implemented") calls lying around or worse accessing > >> an uninitialized pointer or something. > > > > We absolutely left several die("not implemented") calls lying around. > > The series was long enough at 20 patches; reviewers lose steam at 10 > > (at least both you and Jonathan have), so maybe I should have left > > even more in there as an attempt to split up this series more. > > > > However, if you run the testsuite with GIT_TEST_MERGE_ALGORITHM=ort, > > then this series drops the number of failures in the testsuite from > > around 2200, down to 1500. So, there's about 700 testcases for you. > > Sorry that I'm jumping in to the series-of-series in the middle, so > I am unfamiliar with the previous progress and testing strategy. This Not a problem at all. Thanks much for jumping in and taking a look! You always provide some good feedback and suggestions. (Besides, those testcase changes have been spread over two and a half years...hard to stay on top of all of them.) > "number of test failures" metric is sufficient to demonstrate the > progress provided in this series. Perhaps it was even in your v1 cover > letter. Um, oops; it's not. I did mention there were still some "not implemented" messages left, but didn't mention the testcase counts. But even that mention is apparently in the v1 cover letter rather than v2, and v2 wasn't sent in-reply-to v1, so it's harder to catch that. Sorry about that; I'll include the testcase counts in the v3 cover letter.