On Tue, Nov 25, 2014 at 08:24:48PM -0500, Jeff King wrote:

> However, this is not what trees created by git-notes look like. It
> shards the object sha1s into subtrees (1a/2b/{36}), and I think does so
> dynamically in a way that keeps each individual tree size low. The
> in-memory data structure then only "faults in" tree objects as they are
> needed. So a single lookup should only hit a small part of the total
> tree.
> 
> Doing a single "git notes edit HEAD" in my case caused the notes code to
> write the result using its sharding algorithm. Subsequent "git notes
> show" invocations were only 14ms.
> 
> Did you use something besides git-notes to create the tree? From your
> examples, it looks like you were accounting for the sharding during
> lookup, so maybe this is leading in the wrong direction (but if so, I
> could not reproduce your times at all even with a much larger case).

Hmph. Having just written all that, I looked at your example again, and
you are running "git ls-tree -r", which would read the whole tree
anyway. So "git notes" should be _faster_ for a single lookup.

Something weird is definitely going on. Can you use "strace" or "perf"
to get a sense of where the time is going? Has your repository been
packed recently?

-Peff
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