Fri, 07 Sep 2018 11:17:33 -0400 snapshot: add refining logic at the findeltainfo level
Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> [Fri, 07 Sep 2018 11:17:33 -0400] rev 39498
snapshot: add refining logic at the findeltainfo level Once we found a delta, we want to have the candidates logic challenge it, searching for a better candidate. The logic at the lower level is still missing. We'll introduce it later. Adding small changes in individual commits make it simpler to explain the code change. This is another small step toward turning `_refinegroups` into a co-routine.
Fri, 07 Sep 2018 11:17:32 -0400 snapshot: use None as a stop value when looking for a good delta
Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> [Fri, 07 Sep 2018 11:17:32 -0400] rev 39497
snapshot: use None as a stop value when looking for a good delta Having clear stop value should help keep clear logic around the co-routine. The alternative of using a StopIteration exception give a messier result. This is one small step toward turning `_refinegroups` into a co-routine.
Fri, 07 Sep 2018 11:17:32 -0400 snapshot: introduce an intermediate `_refinedgroups` generator
Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> [Fri, 07 Sep 2018 11:17:32 -0400] rev 39496
snapshot: introduce an intermediate `_refinedgroups` generator This method will be used to improve the search for a good snapshot base. To keep things simpler, we introduce the necessary function before doing any delta base logic change. The next handful of commits will focus on refactoring the code to let that new logic land as clearly as possible. # General Idea Right now, the search for a good delta base stop whenever we found a good one. However, when using sparse-revlog, we should probably try a bit harder. We do significant effort to increase delta re-use by jumping on "unrelated" delta chains that provide better results. Moving to another chain for a better result is good, but we have no guarantee we jump at a reasonable point in that new chain. When we consider over the chains related to the parents, we start from the higher-level snapshots. This is a way to consider the snapshot closer to the current revision that has the best chance to produce a small delta. We do benefit from this walk order when jumping to a better "unrelated" stack. To counter-balance this, we'll introduce a way to "refine" the result. After a good delta have been found, we'll keep searching for a better delta, using the current best one as a starting point. # Target Setup The `finddeltainfo` method is responsible for the general search for a good delta. It requests candidates base from `_candidategroups` and decides which one are usable. The `_candidategroups` generator act as a top-level filter, it does not care about how we pick candidates, it just does basic filtering, excluding revisions that have been tested already or that are an obvious misfit. The `_rawgroups` generator is the one with the actual ancestors walking logic, It does not care about what would do a good delta and what was already tested, it just issues the initial candidates. We introduce a new `_refinedgroup` function to bridge the gap between `_candidategroups` and `_rawgroups`. It delegates the initial iteration logic and then performing relevant refining of the valid base once found. (This logic is yet to be added to function) All these logics are fairly independent and easier to understand when standing alone, not mixed with each other. It also makes it easy to test and try different approaches for one of those four layers without affecting the other ones. # Technical details To communicate `finddeltainfo` choice of "current best delta base" to the `_refinegroup` logic, we plan to use python co-routine feature. The `_candidategroups` and `_refinegroup` generators will become co-routine. This will allow `_refinegroup` to detect when a good delta have been found and triggers various refining steps. For now, `_candidategroups` will just pass the value down the stack. After poking at various option, the co-routine appears the best to keep each layers focus on its duty, without the need to spread implementation details across layers.
Fri, 07 Sep 2018 11:17:31 -0400 snapshot: consider unrelated snapshots at a similar level first
Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> [Fri, 07 Sep 2018 11:17:31 -0400] rev 39495
snapshot: consider unrelated snapshots at a similar level first This new step is inserted before considering using a level-N snapshot as a base for a level-N+1 snapshot. We first check if existing level-N+1 snapshots using the same base would be a suitable base for a level-N+2 snapshot. This increases snapshot reuse and limits the risk of snapshot explosion in very branchy repositories. Using a "deeper" snapshot as the base also results in a smaller snapshot since it builds a level-N+2 intermediate snapshot instead of an N+1 one. This logic is similar for the one we added in a previous commit. In that previous commit is only applied to level-0 "siblings". We can see this effect in the test repository. Snapshots moved from lower levels to higher levels.
Fri, 07 Sep 2018 11:17:30 -0400 snapshot: consider all snapshots in the parents' chains
Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> [Fri, 07 Sep 2018 11:17:30 -0400] rev 39494
snapshot: consider all snapshots in the parents' chains There are no reasons to only consider full snapshot as a possible base for an intermediate snapshot. Now that the basic principles have been set, we can start adding more levels of snapshots. We now consider all snapshots in the parent's chains (full or intermediate). This creates a chain of intermediate snapshots, each smaller than the previous one. # Effect On The Test Repository In the test repository, we can see a decrease in the revlog size and slightly shorter delta chain. However, that approach creates snapshots more frequently, increasing the risk of ending into problematic cases in very branchy repositories (not triggered by the test repository). The next changesets will remove that risk by adding logic that increases deltas reuse.
Fri, 07 Sep 2018 11:17:30 -0400 snapshot: search for unrelated but reusable full-snapshot
Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> [Fri, 07 Sep 2018 11:17:30 -0400] rev 39493
snapshot: search for unrelated but reusable full-snapshot # New Strategy Step: Reusing Snapshot Outside Of Parents' Chain. If no suitable bases were found in the parent's chains, see if we could reuse a full snapshot not directly related to the current revision. Such search can be expensive, so we only search for snapshots appended to the revlog *after* the bases used by the parents of the current revision (the one we just tested). We assume the parent's bases were created because the previous snapshots were unsuitable, so there are low odds they would be useful now. This search gives a chance to reuse a delta chain unrelated to the current revision. Without this re-use, topological branches would keep reopening new full chains. Creating more and more snapshots as the repository grow. In repositories with many topological branches, the lack of delta reuse can create too many snapshots reducing overall compression to nothing. This results in a very large repository and other usability issues. For now, we still focus on creating level-1 snapshots. However, this principle will play a large part in how we avoid snapshot explosion once we have more snapshot levels. # Effects On The Test Repository In the test repository we created, we can see the beneficial effect of such reuse. We need very few level-0 snapshots and the overall revlog size has decreased. The `hg debugrevlog` call, show a "lvl-2" snapshot. It comes from the existing delta logic using the `prev` revision (revlog's tip) as the base. In this specific case, it turns out the tip was a level-1 snapshot. This is a coincidence that can be ignored. Finding and testing against all these unrelated snapshots can have a performance impact at write time. We currently focus on building good deltas chain we build. Performance concern will be dealt with later in another series.
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