cmt...@gmail.com wrote on Fri, 06 Sep 2013 15:03 -0400:
Finally, I claim success! Unfortunately I did not try either of the OOM
score or strace suggestions - sorry! After spending so much time on
this, I've gotten to the point that I'm more interested in getting it to
work than in figuring
On Mon, Sep 02, 2013 at 08:42:36PM +0100, Luke Diamand wrote:
I guess you could try changing the OOM score for git-fast-import.
change /proc/pid/oomadj.
I think a value of -31 would make it very unlikely to be killed.
On 29/08/13 23:46, Pete Wyckoff wrote:
I usually just do git p4 sync
I guess you could try changing the OOM score for git-fast-import.
change /proc/pid/oomadj.
I think a value of -31 would make it very unlikely to be killed.
On 29/08/13 23:46, Pete Wyckoff wrote:
cmt...@gmail.com wrote on Wed, 28 Aug 2013 11:41 -0400:
On Mon, Aug 26, 2013 at 09:47:56AM -0400,
cmt...@gmail.com wrote on Wed, 28 Aug 2013 11:41 -0400:
On Mon, Aug 26, 2013 at 09:47:56AM -0400, Corey Thompson wrote:
You are correct that git-fast-import is killed by the OOM killer, but I
was unclear about which process was malloc()ing so much memory that the
OOM killer got invoked (as
On Mon, Aug 26, 2013 at 09:47:56AM -0400, Corey Thompson wrote:
You are correct that git-fast-import is killed by the OOM killer, but I
was unclear about which process was malloc()ing so much memory that the
OOM killer got invoked (as other completely unrelated processes usually
also get
On Sun, Aug 25, 2013 at 11:50:01AM -0400, Pete Wyckoff wrote:
Modern git, including your version, do streaming reads from p4,
so the git-p4 python process never even holds a whole file's
worth of data. You're seeing git-fast-import die, it seems. It
will hold onto the entire file contents.
cmt...@gmail.com wrote on Fri, 23 Aug 2013 07:48 -0400:
On Fri, Aug 23, 2013 at 08:16:58AM +0100, Luke Diamand wrote:
On 23/08/13 02:12, Corey Thompson wrote:
Hello,
Has anyone actually gotten git-p4 to clone a large Perforce repository?
Yes. I've cloned repos with a couple of Gig
On 23/08/13 02:12, Corey Thompson wrote:
Hello,
Has anyone actually gotten git-p4 to clone a large Perforce repository?
Yes. I've cloned repos with a couple of Gig of files.
I have one codebase in particular that gets to about 67%, then
consistently gets get-fast-import (and often times a
On Fri, Aug 23, 2013 at 08:16:58AM +0100, Luke Diamand wrote:
On 23/08/13 02:12, Corey Thompson wrote:
Hello,
Has anyone actually gotten git-p4 to clone a large Perforce repository?
Yes. I've cloned repos with a couple of Gig of files.
I have one codebase in particular that gets to
On Fri, Aug 23, 2013 at 07:48:56AM -0400, Corey Thompson wrote:
Sorry, I guess I could have included more details in my original post.
Since then, I have also made an attempt to clone another (slightly more
recent) branch, and at last had success. So I see this does indeed
work, it just seems
I think I've cloned files as large as that or larger. If you just want to
clone this and move on, perhaps you just need a bit more memory? What's the
size of your physical memory and swap partition? Per process memory limit?
On 23 Aug 2013 12:59, Corey Thompson cmt...@gmail.com wrote:
On
On Fri, Aug 23, 2013 at 08:42:44PM +0100, Luke Diamand wrote:
I think I've cloned files as large as that or larger. If you just want to
clone this and move on, perhaps you just need a bit more memory? What's the
size of your physical memory and swap partition? Per process memory limit?
The
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