From: Jim Meyering Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2006 20:15:44 +0000 (+0100) Subject: Run "git repack -a -d" once more at end, if there's 1MB or more of not-packed data. X-Git-Tag: v1.4.4.1~19 X-Git-Url: http://git.tremily.us/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=efe4abd14c75834d30e3e521b3597eb07ea9271b;p=git.git Run "git repack -a -d" once more at end, if there's 1MB or more of not-packed data. Although I converted upstream coreutils to git last month, I just reconverted coreutils once again, as a test, and ended up with a git repository of about 130MB (contrast with my packed git repo of size 52MB). That was because there were a lot of commits (but < 1024) after the final automatic "git-repack -a -d". Running a final git-repack -a -d && git-prune-packed cut the final repository size down to the expected size. So this looks like an easy way to improve git-cvsimport. Just run "git repack ..." at the end if there's more than some reasonable amount of not-packed data. My choice of 1MB is a little arbitrarily. I wouldn't mind missing the minimal repo size by 1MB. At the other end of the spectrum, it's probably not worthwhile to pack everything when the total repository size is less than 1MB. Here's the patch: Signed-off-by: Jim Meyering Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano --- diff --git a/git-cvsimport.perl b/git-cvsimport.perl index 14e2c6131..b54a9486d 100755 --- a/git-cvsimport.perl +++ b/git-cvsimport.perl @@ -876,6 +876,16 @@ while() { } commit() if $branch and $state != 11; +# The heuristic of repacking every 1024 commits can leave a +# lot of unpacked data. If there is more than 1MB worth of +# not-packed objects, repack once more. +my $line = `git-count-objects`; +if ($line =~ /^(\d+) objects, (\d+) kilobytes$/) { + my ($n_objects, $kb) = ($1, $2); + 1024 < $kb + and system("git repack -a -d"); +} + foreach my $git_index (values %index) { if ($git_index ne '.git/index') { unlink($git_index);