As I mentioned in "What are git's thin packs?"
Git does deltification only in packfiles
I detailed the delta encoding used for pack files in "Is the git binary diff algorithm (delta storage) standardized?".
See also "When and how does git use deltas for storage?".
Note that the core.deltaBaseCacheLimit
config which controls the default size for the pack file will soon be bumped from 16MB to 96MB, for Git 2.0.x/2.1 (Q3 2014).
See commit 4874f54 by David Kastrup (May 2014):
Bump core.deltaBaseCacheLimit to 96m
The default of 16m causes serious thrashing for large delta chains combined with large files.
Here are some benchmarks (pu variant of git blame
):
time git blame -C src/xdisp.c >/dev/null
for a repository of Emacs repacked with git gc --aggressive
(v1.9, resulting in a window size of 250) located on an SSD drive.
The file in question has about 30000 lines, 1Mb of size, and a history with about
2500 commits.
16m (previous default):
real 3m33.936s
user 2m15.396s
sys 1m17.352s
96m:
real 2m5.668s
user 1m50.784s
sys 0m14.288s
This is further optimized with Git 2.29 (Q4 2020), where "git index-pack
"(man) learned to resolve deltified objects with greater parallelism.
See commit f08cbf6 (08 Sep 2020), and commit ee6f058, commit b4718ca, commit a7f7e84, commit 46e6fb1, commit fc968e2, commit 009be0d (24 Aug 2020) by Jonathan Tan (jhowtan
).
(Merged by Junio C Hamano -- gitster
-- in commit b7e65b5, 22 Sep 2020)
index-pack
: make quantum of work smaller
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan
Currently, when index-pack resolves deltas, it does not split up delta trees into threads: each delta base root (an object that is not a REF_DELTA
or OFS_DELTA)
can go into its own thread, but all deltas on that root (direct or indirect) are processed in the same thread.
This is a problem when a repository contains a large text file (thus, delta-able) that is modified many times - delta resolution time during fetching is dominated by processing the deltas corresponding to that text file.
This patch contains a solution to that.
When cloning using
git -c core.deltabasecachelimit=1g clone \
https://fuchsia.googlesource.com/third_party/vulkan-cts
on my laptop, clone time improved from 3m2s to 2m5s (using 3 threads, which is the default).
The solution is to have a global work stack. This stack contains delta bases (objects, whether appearing directly in the packfile or generated by delta resolution, that themselves have delta children) that need to be processed; whenever a thread needs work, it peeks at the top of the stack and processes its next unprocessed child. If a thread finds the stack empty, it will look for more delta base roots to push on the stack instead.
The main weakness of having a global work stack is that more time is spent in the mutex, but profiling has shown that most time is spent in the resolution of the deltas themselves, so this shouldn't be an issue in practice. In any case, experimentation (as described in the clone command above) shows that this patch is a net improvement.
With Git 2.31 (Q1 2021), you have more details about the format.
See commit 7b77f5a (29 Dec 2020) by Martin Ågren (none
).
(Merged by Junio C Hamano -- gitster
-- in commit 16a8055, 15 Jan 2021)
pack-format.txt
: document sizes at start of delta data
Reported-by: Ross Light
Signed-off-by: Martin Ågren
We document the delta data as a set of instructions, but forget to document the two sizes that precede those instructions: the size of the base object and the size of the object to be reconstructed.
Fix this omission.
Rather than cramming all the details about the encoding into the running text, introduce a separate section detailing our "size encoding" and refer to it.
technical/pack-format
now includes in its man page:
Size encoding
This document uses the following "size encoding" of non-negative
integers: From each byte, the seven least significant bits are
used to form the resulting integer.
As long as the most significant
bit is 1, this process continues; the byte with MSB 0 provides the
last seven bits.
The seven-bit chunks are concatenated.
Later
values are more significant.
This size encoding should not be confused with the "offset encoding",
which is also used in this document.
technical/pack-format
now includes in its man page:
The delta data starts with the size of the base object and the
size of the object to be reconstructed. These sizes are
encoded using the size encoding from above.
The remainder of
the delta data is a sequence of instructions to reconstruct the object