On Mon, Aug 26, 2019 at 10:16:48AM -0400, randall.s.bec...@rogers.com wrote:

> On August 24, 2019 5:00 PM, Bryan Turner wrote:
> > On Fri, Aug 23, 2019 at 6:59 PM <randall.s.bec...@rogers.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > Hi All,
> > >
> > > I'm trying to answer a question for a customer on clone performance.
> > > They are doing at least 2-3 clones a day, of repositories with about
> > > 2500 files and 10Gb of content. This is stressing the file system.
> > 
> > Can you go into a bit more detail about what "stress" means? Using too
> > much disk space? Too many IOPS reading/packing? Since you specifically
> > called out the filesystem, does that mean the CPU/memory usage is
> > acceptable?
> 
> The upstream is BitBucket, which does a gc frequently. I'm not sure
> any of this is relating to the pack structure. Git is spending most of
> its time writing the large number of large files into the working
> directory - it is stress mostly the disk, with a bit on the CPU
> (neither is acceptable to the customer). I am really unsure there is
> any way to make things better. The core issue is that the customer
> insists on doing a clone for every feature branch instead of using
> pull/checkout. I have been unable to change their mind - to this point
> anyway.

Yeah, at the point of checkout there's basically no impact from anything
the server is doing or has done (technically it could make things worse
for you by returning a pack with absurdly long delta chains or
something, but that would be CPU and not disk stress).

I doubt there's much to optimize in Git here. It's literally just
writing files to disk as quickly as it can, and it sounds like disk
performance is your bottleneck.

-Peff

Reply via email to