On Tue, Jan 30 2018, Ben Peart jotted:

> While some of these issues have been discussed in other threads, I
> thought I'd summarize my thoughts here.

Thanks for this & your other reply. I'm going to get to testing some of
Duy's patches soon, and if you have some other relevant WIP I'd be happy
to try them, but meanwhile replying to a few of these:

> On 1/26/2018 7:28 PM, Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason wrote:
>> I just got around to testing this since it landed, for context some
>> previous poking of mine in [1].
>>
>> Issues / stuff I've noticed:
>>
>> 1) We end up invalidating the untracked cache because stuff in .git/
>> changed. For example:
>>
>>      01:09:24.975524 fsmonitor.c:173         fsmonitor process 
>> '.git/hooks/fsmonitor-watchman' returned success
>>      01:09:24.975548 fsmonitor.c:138         fsmonitor_refresh_callback 
>> '.git'
>>      01:09:24.975556 fsmonitor.c:138         fsmonitor_refresh_callback 
>> '.git/config'
>>      01:09:24.975568 fsmonitor.c:138         fsmonitor_refresh_callback 
>> '.git/index'
>>      01:09:25.122726 fsmonitor.c:91          write fsmonitor extension 
>> successful
>>
>> Am I missing something or should we do something like:
>>
>>      diff --git a/fsmonitor.c b/fsmonitor.c
>>      index 0af7c4edba..5067b89bda 100644
>>      --- a/fsmonitor.c
>>      +++ b/fsmonitor.c
>>      @@ -118,7 +118,12 @@ static int query_fsmonitor(int version, uint64_t 
>> last_update, struct strbuf *que
>>
>>       static void fsmonitor_refresh_callback(struct index_state *istate, 
>> const char *name)
>>       {
>>      -       int pos = index_name_pos(istate, name, strlen(name));
>>      +       int pos;
>>      +
>>      +       if (!strcmp(name, ".git") || starts_with(name, ".git/"))
>>      +               return;
>>      +
>>      +       pos = index_name_pos(istate, name, strlen(name));
>>
>>              if (pos >= 0) {
>>                      struct cache_entry *ce = istate->cache[pos];
>>
>> With that patch applied status on a large repo[2] goes from a consistent
>> ~180-200ms to ~140-150ms, since we're not invalidating some of the UC
>> structure
>>
>
> I favor making this optimization by updating
> untracked_cache_invalidate_path() so that it ignores paths under
> get_git_dir() and doesn't invalidate the untracked cache or flag the
> index as dirty.

*nod*

>> 2) We re-write out the index even though we know nothing changed
>>
>> When you first run with core.fsmonitor it needs to
>> mark_fsmonitor_clean() for every path, but is there a reason for why we
>> wouldn't supply the equivalent of GIT_OPTIONAL_LOCKS=0 if all paths are
>> marked and we know from the hook that nothing changed? Why write out the
>> index again?
>>
>
> Writing out the index when core.fsmonitor is first turned on is
> necessary to get the index extension added with the current state of
> the dirty flags.  Given it is a one time cost, I don't think we have
> anything worth trying to optimize here.

Indeed, that makes sense. What I was showing here is even after the
initial setup we continue to write it out when we know nothing changed.

We do that anyway without fsmonitor, but this seemed like a worthwhile
thing to optimize.

>> 3) A lot of time spend reading the index (or something..)
>>
>> While the hook itself takes ~20ms (and watchman itself 1/4 of that)
>> status as a whole takes much longer. gprof reveals:
>>
>>      Each sample counts as 0.01 seconds.
>>        %   cumulative   self              self     total
>>       time   seconds   seconds    calls  ms/call  ms/call  name
>>       15.38      0.02     0.02   221690     0.00     0.00  memihash
>>       15.38      0.04     0.02   221689     0.00     0.00  create_from_disk
>>        7.69      0.05     0.01  2216897     0.00     0.00  git_bswap32
>>        7.69      0.06     0.01   222661     0.00     0.00  ce_path_match
>>        7.69      0.07     0.01   221769     0.00     0.00  hashmap_add
>>        7.69      0.08     0.01    39941     0.00     0.00  prep_exclude
>>        7.69      0.09     0.01    39940     0.00     0.00  strbuf_addch
>>        7.69      0.10     0.01        1    10.00    10.00  read_one
>>        7.69      0.11     0.01        1    10.00    10.00  refresh_index
>>        7.69      0.12     0.01        1    10.00    10.00  tweak_fsmonitor
>>        7.69      0.13     0.01                             preload_thread
>>
>> The index is 24M in this case, I guess it's unpacking it, but I wonder
>> if this couldn't be much faster if we saved away the result of the last
>> "status" in something that's quick to access, and then if nothing
>> changed we just report that, and no need to re-write the index (or just
>> write the "it was clean at this time" part).
>
> Yes, reading the index is slow.  We've made some improvements (not
> computing the SHA, not validating the sort order, etc) and have one
> more in progress that will reduce the malloc() cost.  I haven't found
> any other easy optimizations but it would be great if you could find
> more! To make significant improvements, I'm afraid it will take more
> substantial changes to the in memory and on disk formats and updates
> to the code to take advantage of those changes.

What I was wondering (not very clearly) is whether an easier
optimization for now would be to speed up the case where nothing
changed, that would involve just reading some flag in the index (or
elsewhere) saying nothing changed last time, then the timestamp the
fsmonitor writes, and trusting the hook when it says nothing changed
since that timestamp.

>>
>> 4) core.fsmonitor=false behaves unexpectedly
>>
>> The code that reads this variable just treats it as a string, so we do a
>> bunch of work for nothing (and nothing warns) if this is set and 'false'
>> is executed. Any reason we couldn't do our standard boolean parsing
>> here? You couldn't call your hook 0/1/true/false, but that doesn't seem
>> like a big loss.
>>
>> 1. 
>> https://public-inbox.org/git/cacbzzx5a6op7dh_g9wofbnejh2zgnk4b34ygxa8dandqvit...@mail.gmail.com/
>> 2. https://github.com/avar/2015-04-03-1M-git
>>
>
> I'm torn on this one.  The core.fsmontior setting isn't a boolean
> value, its a string that is the command to run when we need file
> system changes.  It would be pretty simple to add a call to
> git_parse_maybe_bool_text() to treat "false," "no," or "off" the same
> as an empty string but that makes it look even more like a boolean
> when it isn't.

Yes, that makes sense. I wonder though if we should warn if the hook is
set and returning non-zero, right now that failure case is silent, maybe
the hook would like to return an exit code for "don't ask me", but it
seems better to make that 125 (like git bisect skip) instead of !0,
since that makes the hook failing completely indistinguishable to the
user from the hook doing its job.

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