summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/bloom.c
AgeCommit message (Collapse)Author
2022-07-15commit-graph: fix corrupt upgrade from generation v1 to v2Taylor Blau
The previous commit demonstrates a bug where a commit-graph using generation v2 could enter a state where one of the GDA2 values has its most-significant bit set (indicating that its value should be read from the extended offset table in the GDO2 chunk) without having a GDO2 chunk to read from. This results in the following error message being displayed to the caller: fatal: commit-graph requires overflow generation data but has none This bug arises in the following scenario: - We decide to write a commit-graph using generation number v2, and decide (correctly) that no GDO2 chunk is necessary (e.g., because all of the commiter date offsets are no larger than 2^31-1). - The v2 generation numbers are stored in the `->generation` member of the commit slab holding `struct commit_graph_data`'s. - Later on, `load_commit_graph_info()` is called, overwriting the v2 generation data in the aforementioned slab with any existing v1 generation data. Then, when the commit-graph code goes to write the GDA2 chunk via `write_graph_chunk_generation_data()`, we use the overwritten generation v1 data in a place where we expect to use a v2 generation number: offset = commit_graph_data_at(c)->generation - c->date; ...because `commit_graph_data_at(c)->generation` used to hold the v2 generation data, but it was overwritten to contain the v1 generation number via `load_commit_graph_info()`. If the `offset` computation above overflows the v2 generation number max, then `write_graph_chunk_generation_data()` will update its count of large offsets and write the marker accordingly: if (offset > GENERATION_NUMBER_V2_OFFSET_MAX) { offset = CORRECTED_COMMIT_DATE_OFFSET_OVERFLOW | num_generation_data_overflows; num_generation_data_overflows++; } and reads will look for the GDO2 chunk containing the overflowing v2 generation number, *after* the commit-graph code decided that no such chunk was necessary. The main problem is that the slab containing `struct commit_graph_data` has a dual purpose. It is used to hold data that we are about to write to disk while generating a commit-graph, as well as hold data that was read from an existing commit-graph. When the two mix, namely when the result of reading the commit-graph has a side-effect that mixes poorly with an in-progress commit-graph write, we end up with corrupt data. A complete fix might be to introduce a new slab that is used exclusively for writing, and gate access between the two slabs based on context provided by the caller (e.g., whether this computation is part of a "read" or "write" operation). But a more minimal fix addresses the only known path which overwrites the slab data, which is `compute_bloom_filters()` -> `get_or_compute_bloom_filter()` -> `load_commit_graph_info()` -> `fill_commit_graph_info()` by avoiding the last call which clobbers the data altogether. This path only needs to learn the graph position of a given commit so that it can be used in `load_bloom_filter_from_graph()`. By replacing the last steps of the above with one that records the graph position into a temporary variable which is then used to load the existing Bloom data, we eliminate the clobbering, removing the corruption. Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2021-05-07Merge branch 'ah/plugleaks'Junio C Hamano
Plug various leans reported by LSAN. * ah/plugleaks: builtin/rm: avoid leaking pathspec and seen builtin/rebase: release git_format_patch_opt too builtin/for-each-ref: free filter and UNLEAK sorting. mailinfo: also free strbuf lists when clearing mailinfo builtin/checkout: clear pending objects after diffing builtin/check-ignore: clear_pathspec before returning builtin/bugreport: don't leak prefixed filename branch: FREE_AND_NULL instead of NULL'ing real_ref bloom: clear each bloom_key after use ls-files: free max_prefix when done wt-status: fix multiple small leaks revision: free remainder of old commit list in limit_list
2021-04-28bloom: clear each bloom_key after useAndrzej Hunt
fill_bloom_key() allocates memory into bloom_key, we need to clean that up once the key is no longer needed. This leak was found while running t0002-t0099. Although this leak is happening in code being called from a test-helper, the same code is also used in various locations around git, and can therefore happen during normal usage too. Gabor's analysis shows that peak-memory usage during 'git commit-graph write' is reduced on the order of 10% for a selection of larger repos (along with an even larger reduction if we override modified path bloom filter limits): https://lore.kernel.org/git/20210411072651.GF2947267@szeder.dev/ LSAN output: Direct leak of 308 byte(s) in 11 object(s) allocated from: #0 0x49a5e2 in calloc ../projects/compiler-rt/lib/asan/asan_malloc_linux.cpp:154:3 #1 0x6f4032 in xcalloc wrapper.c:140:8 #2 0x4f2905 in fill_bloom_key bloom.c:137:28 #3 0x4f34c1 in get_or_compute_bloom_filter bloom.c:284:4 #4 0x4cb484 in get_bloom_filter_for_commit t/helper/test-bloom.c:43:11 #5 0x4cb072 in cmd__bloom t/helper/test-bloom.c:97:3 #6 0x4ca7ef in cmd_main t/helper/test-tool.c:121:11 #7 0x4caace in main common-main.c:52:11 #8 0x7f798af95349 in __libc_start_main (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x24349) SUMMARY: AddressSanitizer: 308 byte(s) leaked in 11 allocation(s). Signed-off-by: Andrzej Hunt <ajrhunt@google.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2021-03-14use CALLOC_ARRAYRené Scharfe
Add and apply a semantic patch for converting code that open-codes CALLOC_ARRAY to use it instead. It shortens the code and infers the element size automatically. Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-11-11Use new HASHMAP_INIT macro to simplify hashmap initializationElijah Newren
Now that hashamp has lazy initialization and a HASHMAP_INIT macro, hashmaps allocated on the stack can be initialized without a call to hashmap_init() and in some cases makes the code a bit shorter. Convert some callsites over to take advantage of this. Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-11-02hashmap: provide deallocation function namesElijah Newren
hashmap_free(), hashmap_free_entries(), and hashmap_free_() have existed for a while, but aren't necessarily the clearest names, especially with hashmap_partial_clear() being added to the mix and lazy-initialization now being supported. Peff suggested we adopt the following names[1]: - hashmap_clear() - remove all entries and de-allocate any hashmap-specific data, but be ready for reuse - hashmap_clear_and_free() - ditto, but free the entries themselves - hashmap_partial_clear() - remove all entries but don't deallocate table - hashmap_partial_clear_and_free() - ditto, but free the entries This patch provides the new names and converts all existing callers over to the new naming scheme. [1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/20201030125059.GA3277724@coredump.intra.peff.net/ Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-09-18builtin/commit-graph.c: introduce '--max-new-filters=<n>'Taylor Blau
Introduce a command-line flag to specify the maximum number of new Bloom filters that a 'git commit-graph write' is willing to compute from scratch. Prior to this patch, a commit-graph write with '--changed-paths' would compute Bloom filters for all selected commits which haven't already been computed (i.e., by a previous commit-graph write with '--split' such that a roll-up or replacement is performed). This behavior can cause prohibitively-long commit-graph writes for a variety of reasons: * There may be lots of filters whose diffs take a long time to generate (for example, they have close to the maximum number of changes, diffing itself takes a long time, etc). * Old-style commit-graphs (which encode filters with too many entries as not having been computed at all) cause us to waste time recomputing filters that appear to have not been computed only to discover that they are too-large. This can make the upper-bound of the time it takes for 'git commit-graph write --changed-paths' to be rather unpredictable. To make this command behave more predictably, introduce '--max-new-filters=<n>' to allow computing at most '<n>' Bloom filters from scratch. This lets "computing" already-known filters proceed quickly, while bounding the number of slow tasks that Git is willing to do. Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-09-18bloom: encode out-of-bounds filters as non-emptyTaylor Blau
When a changed-path Bloom filter has either zero, or more than a certain number (commonly 512) of entries, the commit-graph machinery encodes it as "missing". More specifically, it sets the indices adjacent in the BIDX chunk as equal to each other to indicate a "length 0" filter; that is, that the filter occupies zero bytes on disk. This has heretofore been fine, since the commit-graph machinery has no need to care about these filters with too few or too many changed paths. Both cases act like no filter has been generated at all, and so there is no need to store them. In a subsequent commit, however, the commit-graph machinery will learn to only compute Bloom filters for some commits in the current commit-graph layer. This is a change from the current implementation which computes Bloom filters for all commits that are in the layer being written. Critically for this patch, only computing some of the Bloom filters means adding a third state for length 0 Bloom filters: zero entries, too many entries, or "hasn't been computed". It will be important for that future patch to distinguish between "not representable" (i.e., zero or too-many changed paths), and "hasn't been computed". In particular, we don't want to waste time recomputing filters that have already been computed. To that end, change how we store Bloom filters in the "computed but not representable" category: - Bloom filters with no entries are stored as a single byte with all bits low (i.e., all queries to that Bloom filter will return "definitely not") - Bloom filters with too many entries are stored as a single byte with all bits set high (i.e., all queries to that Bloom filter will return "maybe"). These rules are sufficient to not incur a behavior change by changing the on-disk representation of these two classes. Likewise, no specification changes are necessary for the commit-graph format, either: - Filters that were previously empty will be recomputed and stored according to the new rules, and - old clients reading filters generated by new clients will interpret the filters correctly and be none the wiser to how they were generated. Clients will invoke the Bloom machinery in more cases than before, but this can be addressed by returning a NULL filter when all bits are set high. This can be addressed in a future patch. Note that this does increase the size of on-disk commit-graphs, but far less than other proposals. In particular, this is generally more efficient than storing a bitmap for which commits haven't computed their Bloom filters. Storing a bitmap incurs a penalty of one bit per commit, whereas storing explicit filters as above incurs a penalty of one byte per too-large or empty commit. In practice, these boundary commits likely occupy a small proportion of the overall number of commits, and so the size penalty is likely smaller than storing a bitmap for all commits. See, for example, these relative proportions of such boundary commits (collected by SZEDER Gábor): | Percentage of | commit-graph | | | commits modifying | file size | | ├────────┬──────────────┼───────────────────┤ pct. | | 0 path | >= 512 paths | before | after | change | ┌────────────────┼────────┼──────────────┼─────────┼─────────┼───────────┤ | android-base | 13.20% | 0.13% | 37.468M | 37.534M | +0.1741 % | | cmssw | 0.15% | 0.23% | 17.118M | 17.119M | +0.0091 % | | cpython | 3.07% | 0.01% | 7.967M | 7.971M | +0.0423 % | | elasticsearch | 0.70% | 1.00% | 8.833M | 8.835M | +0.0128 % | | gcc | 0.00% | 0.08% | 16.073M | 16.074M | +0.0030 % | | gecko-dev | 0.14% | 0.64% | 59.868M | 59.874M | +0.0105 % | | git | 0.11% | 0.02% | 3.895M | 3.895M | +0.0020 % | | glibc | 0.02% | 0.10% | 3.555M | 3.555M | +0.0021 % | | go | 0.00% | 0.07% | 3.186M | 3.186M | +0.0018 % | | homebrew-cask | 0.40% | 0.02% | 7.035M | 7.035M | +0.0065 % | | homebrew-core | 0.01% | 0.01% | 11.611M | 11.611M | +0.0002 % | | jdk | 0.26% | 5.64% | 5.537M | 5.540M | +0.0590 % | | linux | 0.01% | 0.51% | 63.735M | 63.740M | +0.0073 % | | llvm-project | 0.12% | 0.03% | 25.515M | 25.516M | +0.0050 % | | rails | 0.10% | 0.10% | 6.252M | 6.252M | +0.0027 % | | rust | 0.07% | 0.17% | 9.364M | 9.364M | +0.0033 % | | tensorflow | 0.09% | 1.02% | 7.009M | 7.010M | +0.0158 % | | webkit | 0.05% | 0.31% | 17.405M | 17.406M | +0.0047 % | (where the above increase is determined by computing a non-split commit-graph before and after this patch). Given that these projects are all "large" by commit count, the storage cost by writing these filters explicitly is negligible. In the most extreme example, android-base (which has 494,848 commits at the time of writing) would have its commit-graph increase by a modest 68.4 KB. Finally, a test to exercise filters which contain too many changed path entries will be introduced in a subsequent patch. Suggested-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Suggested-by: Jakub Narębski <jnareb@gmail.com> Helped-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Helped-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-09-17bloom/diff: properly short-circuit on max_changesDerrick Stolee
Commit e3696980 (diff: halt tree-diff early after max_changes, 2020-03-30) intended to create a mechanism to short-circuit a diff calculation after a certain number of paths were modified. By incrementing a "num_changes" counter throughout the recursive ll_diff_tree_paths(), this was supposed to match the number of changes that would be written into the changed-path Bloom filters. Unfortunately, this was not implemented correctly and instead misses simple cases like file modifications. This then does not stop very large changed-path filters from being written (unless they add or remove many files). To start, change the implementation in ll_diff_tree_paths() to instead use the global diff_queue_diff struct's 'nr' member as the count. This is a way to simplify the logic instead of making more mistakes in the complicated diff code. This has a drawback: the diff_queue_diff struct only lists the paths corresponding to blob changes, not their leading directories. Thus, get_or_compute_bloom_filter() needs an additional check to see if the hashmap with the leading directories becomes too large. One reason why this was not caught by test cases was that the test in t4216-log-bloom.sh that was supposed to check this "too many changes" condition only checked this on the initial commit of a repository. The old logic counted these values correctly. Update this test in a few ways: 1. Use GIT_TEST_BLOOM_SETTINGS_MAX_CHANGED_PATHS to reduce the limit, allowing smaller commits to engage with this logic. 2. Create several interesting cases of edits, adds, removes, and mode changes (in the second commit). By testing both sides of the inequality with the *_MAX_CHANGED_PATHS variable, we can see that the count is exactly correct, so none of these changes are missed or over-counted. 3. Use the trace2 data value filter_found_large to verify that these commits are on the correct side of the limit. Another way to verify the behavior is correct is through performance tests. By testing on my local copies of the Git repository and the Linux kernel repository, I could measure the effect of these short-circuits when computing a fresh commit-graph file with changed-path Bloom filters using the command GIT_TEST_BLOOM_SETTINGS_MAX_CHANGED_PATHS=N time \ git commit-graph write --reachable --changed-paths and reporting the wall time and resulting commit-graph size. For Git, the results are | | N=1 | N=10 | N=512 | |--------|----------------|----------------|----------------| | HEAD~1 | 10.90s 9.18MB | 11.11s 9.34MB | 11.31s 9.35MB | | HEAD | 9.21s 8.62MB | 11.11s 9.29MB | 11.29s 9.34MB | For Linux, the results are | | N=1 | N=20 | N=512 | |--------|----------------|---------------|---------------| | HEAD~1 | 61.28s 64.3MB | 76.9s 72.6MB | 77.6s 72.6MB | | HEAD | 49.44s 56.3MB | 68.7s 65.9MB | 69.2s 65.9MB | Naturally, the improvement becomes much less as the limit grows, as fewer commits satisfy the short-circuit. Reported-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-09-17bloom: use provided 'struct bloom_filter_settings'Taylor Blau
When 'get_or_compute_bloom_filter()' needs to compute a Bloom filter from scratch, it looks to the default 'struct bloom_filter_settings' in order to determine the maximum number of changed paths, number of bits per entry, and so on. All of these values have so far been constant, and so there was no need to pass in a pointer from the caller (eg., the one that is stored in the 'struct write_commit_graph_context'). Start passing in a 'struct bloom_filter_settings *' instead of using the default values to respect graph-specific settings (eg., in the case of setting 'GIT_TEST_BLOOM_SETTINGS_MAX_CHANGED_PATHS'). In order to have an initialized value for these settings, move its initialization to earlier in the commit-graph write. Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-09-17bloom: split 'get_bloom_filter()' in twoTaylor Blau
'get_bloom_filter' takes a flag to control whether it will compute a Bloom filter if the requested one is missing. In the next patch, we'll add yet another parameter to this method, which would force all but one caller to specify an extra 'NULL' parameter at the end. Instead of doing this, split 'get_bloom_filter' into two functions: 'get_bloom_filter' and 'get_or_compute_bloom_filter'. The former only looks up a Bloom filter (and does not compute one if it's missing, thus dropping the 'compute_if_not_present' flag). The latter does compute missing Bloom filters, with an additional parameter to store whether or not it needed to do so. This simplifies many call-sites, since the majority of existing callers to 'get_bloom_filter' do not want missing Bloom filters to be computed (so they can drop the parameter entirely and use the simpler version of the function). While we're at it, instrument the new 'get_or_compute_bloom_filter()' with counters in the 'write_commit_graph_context' struct which store the number of filters that we did and didn't compute, as well as filters that were truncated. It would be nice to drop the 'compute_if_not_present' flag entirely, since all remaining callers of 'get_or_compute_bloom_filter' pass it as '1', but this will change in a future patch and hence cannot be removed. Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-09-09commit-graph: introduce 'get_bloom_filter_settings()'Taylor Blau
Many places in the code often need a pointer to the commit-graph's 'struct bloom_filter_settings', in which case they often take the value from the top-most commit-graph. In the non-split case, this works as expected. In the split case, however, things get a little tricky. Not all layers in a chain of incremental commit-graphs are required to themselves have Bloom data, and so whether or not some part of the code uses Bloom filters depends entirely on whether or not the top-most level of the commit-graph chain has Bloom filters. This has been the behavior since Bloom filters were introduced, and has been codified into the tests since a759bfa9ee (t4216: add end to end tests for git log with Bloom filters, 2020-04-06). In fact, t4216.130 requires that Bloom filters are not used in exactly the case described earlier. There is no reason that this needs to be the case, since it is perfectly valid for commits in an earlier layer to have Bloom filters when commits in a newer layer do not. Since Bloom settings are guaranteed in practice to be the same for any layer in a chain that has Bloom data, it is sufficient to traverse the '->base_graph' pointer until either (1) a non-null 'struct bloom_filter_settings *' is found, or (2) until we are at the root of the commit-graph chain. Introduce a 'get_bloom_filter_settings()' function that does just this, and use it instead of purely dereferencing the top-most graph's '->bloom_filter_settings' pointer. While we're at it, add an additional test in t5324 to guard against code in the commit-graph writing machinery that doesn't correctly handle a NULL 'struct bloom_filter *'. Co-authored-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-07-30Merge branch 'ds/commit-graph-bloom-updates' into masterJunio C Hamano
Updates to the changed-paths bloom filter. * ds/commit-graph-bloom-updates: commit-graph: check all leading directories in changed path Bloom filters revision: empty pathspecs should not use Bloom filters revision.c: fix whitespace commit-graph: check chunk sizes after writing commit-graph: simplify chunk writes into loop commit-graph: unify the signatures of all write_graph_chunk_*() functions commit-graph: persist existence of changed-paths bloom: fix logic in get_bloom_filter() commit-graph: change test to die on parse, not load commit-graph: place bloom_settings in context
2020-07-01bloom: fix logic in get_bloom_filter()Derrick Stolee
The get_bloom_filter() method is a bit complicated in some parts where it does not need to be. In particular, it needs to return a NULL filter only when compute_if_not_present is zero AND the filter data cannot be loaded from a commit-graph file. This currently happens by accident because the commit-graph does not load changed-path Bloom filters from an existing commit-graph when writing a new one. This will change in a later patch. Also clean up some style issues while we are here. One side-effect of returning a NULL filter is that the filters that are reported as "too large" will now be reported as NULL insead of length zero. This case was not properly covered before, so add a test. Further, remote the counting of the zero-length filters from revision.c and the trace2 logs. Helped-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de> Helped-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-06-17commit-graph: minimize commit_graph_data_slab accessAbhishek Kumar
In an earlier patch, multiple struct acccesses to `graph_pos` and `generation` were auto-converted to multiple method calls. Since the values are fixed and commit-slab access costly, we would be better off with storing the values as a local variable and reusing it. Signed-off-by: Abhishek Kumar <abhishekkumar8222@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-06-17commit: move members graph_pos, generation to a slabAbhishek Kumar
We remove members `graph_pos` and `generation` from the struct commit. The default assignments in init_commit_node() are no longer valid, which is fine as the slab helpers return appropriate default values and the assignments are removed. We will replace existing use of commit->generation and commit->graph_pos by commit_graph_data_slab helpers using `contrib/coccinelle/commit.cocci'. Signed-off-by: Abhishek Kumar <abhishekkumar8222@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-06-09Merge branch 'ds/line-log-on-bloom'Junio C Hamano
"git log -L..." now takes advantage of the "which paths are touched by this commit?" info stored in the commit-graph system. * ds/line-log-on-bloom: line-log: integrate with changed-path Bloom filters line-log: try to use generation number-based topo-ordering line-log: more responsive, incremental 'git log -L' t4211-line-log: add tests for parent oids line-log: remove unused fields from 'struct line_log_data'
2020-05-14Merge branch 'ds/bloom-cleanup'Junio C Hamano
Code cleanup and typofixes * ds/bloom-cleanup: completion: offer '--(no-)patch' among 'git log' options bloom: use num_changes not nr for limit detection bloom: de-duplicate directory entries Documentation: changed-path Bloom filters use byte words bloom: parse commit before computing filters test-bloom: fix usage typo bloom: fix whitespace around tab length
2020-05-11line-log: integrate with changed-path Bloom filtersDerrick Stolee
The previous changes to the line-log machinery focused on making the first result appear faster. This was achieved by no longer walking the entire commit history before returning the early results. There is still another way to improve the performance: walk most commits much faster. Let's use the changed-path Bloom filters to reduce time spent computing diffs. Since the line-log computation requires opening blobs and checking the content-diff, there is still a lot of necessary computation that cannot be replaced with changed-path Bloom filters. The part that we can reduce is most effective when checking the history of a file that is deep in several directories and those directories are modified frequently. In this case, the computation to check if a commit is TREESAME to its first parent takes a large fraction of the time. That is ripe for improvement with changed-path Bloom filters. We must ensure that prepare_to_use_bloom_filters() is called in revision.c so that the bloom_filter_settings are loaded into the struct rev_info from the commit-graph. Of course, some cases are still forbidden, but in the line-log case the pathspec is provided in a different way than normal. Since multiple paths and segments could be requested, we compute the struct bloom_key data dynamically during the commit walk. This could likely be improved, but adds code complexity that is not valuable at this time. There are two cases to care about: merge commits and "ordinary" commits. Merge commits have multiple parents, but if we are TREESAME to our first parent in every range, then pass the blame for all ranges to the first parent. Ordinary commits have the same condition, but each is done slightly differently in the process_ranges_[merge|ordinary]_commit() methods. By checking if the changed-path Bloom filter can guarantee TREESAME, we can avoid that tree-diff cost. If the filter says "probably changed", then we need to run the tree-diff and then the blob-diff if there was a real edit. The Linux kernel repository is a good testing ground for the performance improvements claimed here. There are two different cases to test. The first is the "entire history" case, where we output the entire history to /dev/null to see how long it would take to compute the full line-log history. The second is the "first result" case, where we find how long it takes to show the first value, which is an indicator of how quickly a user would see responses when waiting at a terminal. To test, I selected the paths that were changed most frequently in the top 10,000 commits using this command (stolen from StackOverflow [1]): git log --pretty=format: --name-only -n 10000 | sort | \ uniq -c | sort -rg | head -10 which results in 121 MAINTAINERS 63 fs/namei.c 60 arch/x86/kvm/cpuid.c 59 fs/io_uring.c 58 arch/x86/kvm/vmx/vmx.c 51 arch/x86/kvm/x86.c 45 arch/x86/kvm/svm.c 42 fs/btrfs/disk-io.c 42 Documentation/scsi/index.rst (along with a bogus first result). It appears that the path arch/x86/kvm/svm.c was renamed, so we ignore that entry. This leaves the following results for the real command time: | | Entire History | First Result | | Path | Before | After | Before | After | |------------------------------|--------|--------|--------|--------| | MAINTAINERS | 4.26 s | 3.87 s | 0.41 s | 0.39 s | | fs/namei.c | 1.99 s | 0.99 s | 0.42 s | 0.21 s | | arch/x86/kvm/cpuid.c | 5.28 s | 1.12 s | 0.16 s | 0.09 s | | fs/io_uring.c | 4.34 s | 0.99 s | 0.94 s | 0.27 s | | arch/x86/kvm/vmx/vmx.c | 5.01 s | 1.34 s | 0.21 s | 0.12 s | | arch/x86/kvm/x86.c | 2.24 s | 1.18 s | 0.21 s | 0.14 s | | fs/btrfs/disk-io.c | 1.82 s | 1.01 s | 0.06 s | 0.05 s | | Documentation/scsi/index.rst | 3.30 s | 0.89 s | 1.46 s | 0.03 s | It is worth noting that the least speedup comes for the MAINTAINERS file which is * edited frequently, * low in the directory heirarchy, and * quite a large file. All of those points lead to spending more time doing the blob diff and less time doing the tree diff. Still, we see some improvement in that case and significant improvement in other cases. A 2-4x speedup is likely the more typical case as opposed to the small 5% change for that file. Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-05-11bloom: use num_changes not nr for limit detectionDerrick Stolee
As diff_tree_oid() computes a diff, it will terminate early if the total number of changed paths is strictly larger than max_changes. This includes the directories that changed, not just the file paths. However, only the file paths are reflected in the resulting diff queue's "nr" value. Use the "num_changes" from diffopt to check if the diff terminated early. This is incredibly important, as it can result in incorrect filters! For example, the first commit in the Linux kernel repo reports only 471 changes, but since these are nested inside several directories they expand to 513 "real" changes, and in fact the total list of changes is not reported. Thus, the computed filter for this commit is incorrect. Demonstrate the subtle difference by using one fewer file change in the 'get bloom filter for commit with 513 changes' test. Before, this edited 513 files inside "bigDir" which hit this inequality. However, dropping the file count by one demonstrates how the previous inequality was incorrect but the new one is correct. Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-05-11bloom: de-duplicate directory entriesDerrick Stolee
When computing a changed-path Bloom filter, we need to take the files that changed from the diff computation and extract the parent directories. That way, a directory pathspec such as "Documentation" could match commits that change "Documentation/git.txt". However, the current code does a poor job of this process. The paths are added to a hashmap, but we do not check if an entry already exists with that path. This can create many duplicate entries and cause the filter to have a much larger length than it should. This means that the filter is more sparse than intended, which helps the false positive rate, but wastes a lot of space. Properly use hashmap_get() before hashmap_add(). Also be sure to include a comparison function so these can be matched correctly. This has an effect on a test in t0095-bloom.sh. This makes sense, there are ten changes inside "smallDir" so the total number of paths in the filter should be 11. This would result in 11 * 10 bits required, and with 8 bits per byte, this results in 14 bytes. Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-05-11bloom: parse commit before computing filtersDerrick Stolee
When computing changed-path Bloom filters for a commit, we need to know if the commit has a parent or not. If the commit is not parsed, then its parent pointer will be NULL. As far as I can tell, the only opportunity to reach this code without parsing the commit is inside "test-tool bloom get_filter_for_commit" but it is best to be safe. Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-05-08bloom: fix `make sparse` warningĐoàn Trần Công Danh
* We need a `final_new_line` to make our source code as text file, per POSIX and C specification. * `bloom_filters` should be limited to interal linkage only Signed-off-by: Đoàn Trần Công Danh <congdanhqx@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-05-01bloom: fix whitespace around tab lengthDerrick Stolee
Fix alignment issues that were likely introduced due to an editor using tab lengths of 4 instead of 8. Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-04-09bloom: ignore renames when computing changed pathsDerrick Stolee
The changed-path Bloom filters record an entry in the filter for every path that was changed. This includes every add and delete, regardless of whether a rename was detected. Detecting renames causes significant performance issues, but also will trigger downloading missing blobs in partial clone. The simple fix is to disable rename detection when computing a changed-path Bloom filter. This should already be disabled by default, but it is good to explicitly enforce the intended behavior. Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-04-06revision.c: use Bloom filters to speed up path based revision walksGarima Singh
Revision walk will now use Bloom filters for commits to speed up revision walks for a particular path (for computing history for that path), if they are present in the commit-graph file. We load the Bloom filters during the prepare_revision_walk step, currently only when dealing with a single pathspec. Extending it to work with multiple pathspecs can be explored and built on top of this series in the future. While comparing trees in rev_compare_trees(), if the Bloom filter says that the file is not different between the two trees, we don't need to compute the expensive diff. This is where we get our performance gains. The other response of the Bloom filter is '`:maybe', in which case we fall back to the full diff calculation to determine if the path was changed in the commit. We do not try to use Bloom filters when the '--walk-reflogs' option is specified. The '--walk-reflogs' option does not walk the commit ancestry chain like the rest of the options. Incorporating the performance gains when walking reflog entries would add more complexity, and can be explored in a later series. Performance Gains: We tested the performance of `git log -- <path>` on the git repo, the linux and some internal large repos, with a variety of paths of varying depths. On the git and linux repos: - we observed a 2x to 5x speed up. On a large internal repo with files seated 6-10 levels deep in the tree: - we observed 10x to 20x speed ups, with some paths going up to 28 times faster. Helped-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com Helped-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Helped-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com> Signed-off-by: Garima Singh <garima.singh@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-04-06commit-graph: reuse existing Bloom filters during writeGarima Singh
Add logic to a) parse Bloom filter information from the commit graph file and, b) re-use existing Bloom filters. See Documentation/technical/commit-graph-format for the format in which the Bloom filter information is written to the commit graph file. To read Bloom filter for a given commit with lexicographic position 'i' we need to: 1. Read BIDX[i] which essentially gives us the starting index in BDAT for filter of commit i+1. It is essentially the index past the end of the filter of commit i. It is called end_index in the code. 2. For i>0, read BIDX[i-1] which will give us the starting index in BDAT for filter of commit i. It is called the start_index in the code. For the first commit, where i = 0, Bloom filter data starts at the beginning, just past the header in the BDAT chunk. Hence, start_index will be 0. 3. The length of the filter will be end_index - start_index, because BIDX[i] gives the cumulative 8-byte words including the ith commit's filter. We toggle whether Bloom filters should be recomputed based on the compute_if_not_present flag. Helped-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Garima Singh <garima.singh@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-30diff: halt tree-diff early after max_changesDerrick Stolee
When computing the changed-paths bloom filters for the commit-graph, we limit the size of the filter by restricting the number of paths in the diff. Instead of computing a large diff and then ignoring the result, it is better to halt the diff computation early. Create a new "max_changes" option in struct diff_options. If non-zero, then halt the diff computation after discovering strictly more changed paths. This includes paths corresponding to trees that change. Use this max_changes option in the bloom filter calculations. This reduces the time taken to compute the filters for the Linux kernel repo from 2m50s to 2m35s. On a large internal repository with ~500 commits that perform tree-wide changes, the time reduced from 6m15s to 3m48s. Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Garima Singh <garima.singh@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-30bloom.c: core Bloom filter implementation for changed paths.Garima Singh
Add the core implementation for computing Bloom filters for the paths changed between a commit and it's first parent. We fill the Bloom filters as (const char *data, int len) pairs as `struct bloom_filters" within a commit slab. Filters for commits with no changes and more than 512 changes, is represented with a filter of length zero. There is no gain in distinguishing between a computed filter of length zero for a commit with no changes, and an uncomputed filter for new commits or for commits with more than 512 changes. The effect on `git log -- path` is the same in both cases. We will fall back to the normal diffing algorithm when we can't benefit from the existence of Bloom filters. Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Helped-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Reviewed-by: Jakub Narębski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Garima Singh <garima.singh@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-30bloom.c: introduce core Bloom filter constructsGarima Singh
Introduce the constructs for Bloom filters, Bloom filter keys and Bloom filter settings. For details on what Bloom filters are and how they work, refer to Dr. Derrick Stolee's blog post [1]. It provides a concise explanation of the adoption of Bloom filters as described in [2] and [3]. Implementation specifics: 1. We currently use 7 and 10 for the number of hashes and the size of each entry respectively. They served as great starting values, the mathematical details behind this choice are described in [1] and [4]. The implementation, while not completely open to it at the moment, is flexible enough to allow for tweaking these settings in the future. Note: The performance gains we have observed with these values are significant enough that we did not need to tweak these settings. The performance numbers are included in the cover letter of this series and in the commit message of the subsequent commit where we use Bloom filters to speed up `git log -- path`. 2. As described in [1] and [3], we do not need 7 independent hashing functions. We use the Murmur3 hashing scheme, seed it twice and then combine those to procure an arbitrary number of hash values. 3. The filters will be sized according to the number of changes in each commit, in multiples of 8 bit words. [1] Derrick Stolee "Supercharging the Git Commit Graph IV: Bloom Filters" https://devblogs.microsoft.com/devops/super-charging-the-git-commit-graph-iv-Bloom-filters/ [2] Flavio Bonomi, Michael Mitzenmacher, Rina Panigrahy, Sushil Singh, George Varghese "An Improved Construction for Counting Bloom Filters" http://theory.stanford.edu/~rinap/papers/esa2006b.pdf https://doi.org/10.1007/11841036_61 [3] Peter C. Dillinger and Panagiotis Manolios "Bloom Filters in Probabilistic Verification" http://www.ccs.neu.edu/home/pete/pub/Bloom-filters-verification.pdf https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-30494-4_26 [4] Thomas Mueller Graf, Daniel Lemire "Xor Filters: Faster and Smaller Than Bloom and Cuckoo Filters" https://arxiv.org/abs/1912.08258 Helped-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Reviewed-by: Jakub Narębski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Garima Singh <garima.singh@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-30bloom.c: add the murmur3 hash implementationGarima Singh
In preparation for computing changed paths Bloom filters, implement the Murmur3 hash algorithm as described in [1]. It hashes the given data using the given seed and produces a uniformly distributed hash value. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MurmurHash#Algorithm Helped-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com> Helped-by: Szeder Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Jakub Narębski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Garima Singh <garima.singh@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>