Jakub Narebski | 8 Jul 2010 13:12
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Re: Why is "git tag --contains" so slow?

Theodore Tso <tytso <at> MIT.EDU> writes:
> On Jul 7, 2010, at 1:45 PM, Jeff King wrote:
> 
> >     And of course it's just complex, and I tend to shy away from
> >     complexity when I can. The question to me comes back to (1) above.
> >     Is massive clock skew a breakage that should produce a few
> >     incorrect results, or is it something we should always handle?
> 
> Going back to the question that kicked off this thread, I wonder if there
> is some way that cacheing could be used to speed up the all cases,
> or at lest the edge cases, without imposing as much latency as tracking
> the max skew?   i.e., some thing like gitk's gitk.cache file.  For bonus
> points, it could be a cache file that is used by both gitk and git tag
> --contains, git branch --contains, and git name-rev.
> 
> Does that sound like reasonable idea?

By the way, what had happened to the rev-cache project from GSoC 2009?

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Jakub Narebski
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