On Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 11:39 PM, Jim Kinsman wrote:
> git status takes 30 seconds on Windows 7. Here are some stats:
> git ls-files | wc -l
> 27330
>
> git ls-files -o | wc -l
> 4
>
> $ git diff --name-only | xargs du -chs
> 68K update_import_contacts.php
> 68K total
>
> What can I do???
On Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 1:00 PM, Junio C Hamano wrote:
>
> Given that we haven't tweaked the parallelism or thread-cost
> parameters since the inception of the mechanism in Nov 2008, I
> suspect that we would see praises from some and grievances from
> other corners of the user base for a while un
Linus Torvalds writes:
> On Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 12:04 PM, Jeff King wrote:
>>
>> Yes, I think that's pretty much the case (though most of my
>> Git-on-Windows experience is from cygwin long ago, where the stat
>> performance was truly horrendous). Have you tried setting
>> core.preloadindex, wh
On Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 12:04 PM, Jeff King wrote:
>
> Yes, I think that's pretty much the case (though most of my
> Git-on-Windows experience is from cygwin long ago, where the stat
> performance was truly horrendous). Have you tried setting
> core.preloadindex, which should run the stats in para
On Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 06:46:57PM +, John Keeping wrote:
> I think the simple reality is that Git was written with the assumption
> that stat is cheap and that isn't really the case on Windows, where the
> filesystem cache doesn't seem to do that well with this.
Yes, I think that's pretty mu
On Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 01:15:43PM -0500, Jim Kinsman wrote:
> The only anti-virus I have installed is Microsoft Security Essentials
> I turned off and it was still the same:
> $ cat /usr/bin/gitstatus
> start_time=`date +%s`
> git status && echo run time is $(expr `date +%s` - $start_time) s
>
>
The only anti-virus I have installed is Microsoft Security Essentials
I turned off and it was still the same:
$ cat /usr/bin/gitstatus
start_time=`date +%s`
git status && echo run time is $(expr `date +%s` - $start_time) s
$ gitstatus
# On branch test
# Changes not staged for commit:
# (use "gi
On Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 11:39:31AM -0500, Jim Kinsman wrote:
> git status takes 30 seconds on Windows 7. Here are some stats:
> git ls-files | wc -l
> 27330
>
> git ls-files -o | wc -l
> 4
>
> $ git diff --name-only | xargs du -chs
> 68K update_import_contacts.php
> 68K total
>
> What ca
Jim Kinsman writes:
> git status takes 30 seconds on Windows 7.
Any anti-virus installed? They can interfer badly with disk-intensive
tasks ...
--
Matthieu Moy
http://www-verimag.imag.fr/~moy/
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On Wed, 27 Mar 2013 11:39:31 -0500
Jim Kinsman wrote:
> git status takes 30 seconds on Windows 7. Here are some stats:
[...]
> What can I do??? This is so slow it is unbearable.
> By the way i've done git gc several times and nothing changed.
You could try some voodoo [1] or experimental caching
On 03/27/2013 05:39 PM, Jim Kinsman wrote:
> git status takes 30 seconds on Windows 7. Here are some stats:
> git ls-files | wc -l
> 27330
>
> git ls-files -o | wc -l
> 4
>
> $ git diff --name-only | xargs du -chs
> 68K update_import_contacts.php
> 68K total
>
> What can I do??? This is
git status takes 30 seconds on Windows 7. Here are some stats:
git ls-files | wc -l
27330
git ls-files -o | wc -l
4
$ git diff --name-only | xargs du -chs
68K update_import_contacts.php
68K total
What can I do??? This is so slow it is unbearable.
By the way i've done git gc several times
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