diff mbox series

[v2,08/10] diffcore-rename: add a new idx_possible_rename function

Message ID cbd055ab33998962cb7712906cdad5dff3390660.1614123848.git.gitgitgadget@gmail.com (mailing list archive)
State Superseded
Headers show
Series Optimization batch 8: use file basenames even more | expand

Commit Message

Elijah Newren Feb. 23, 2021, 11:44 p.m. UTC
From: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>

find_basename_matches() is great when both the remaining set of possible
rename sources and the remaining set of possible rename destinations
have exactly one file each with a given basename.  It allows us to match
up files that have been moved to different directories without changing
filenames.

When basenames are not unique, though, we want to be able to guess which
directories the source files have been moved to.  Since this is the job
of directory rename detection, we employ it.  However, since it is a
directory rename detection idea, we also limit it to cases where we know
there could have been a directory rename, i.e. where the source
directory has been removed.  This has to be signalled by dirs_removed
being non-NULL and containing an entry for the relevant directory.
Since merge-ort.c is the only caller that currently does so, this
optimization is only effective for merge-ort right now.  In the future,
this condition could be reconsidered or we could modify other callers to
pass the necessary strset.

Anyway, that's a lot of background so that we can actually describe the
new function.  Add an idx_possible_rename() function which combines the
recently added dir_rename_guess and idx_map fields to provide the index
within rename_dst of a potential match for a given file.

Future commits will add checks after calling this function to compare
the resulting 'likely rename' candidates to see if the two files meet
the elevated min_basename_score threshold for marking them as actual
renames.

Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
---
 diffcore-rename.c | 81 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 1 file changed, 81 insertions(+)

Comments

Derrick Stolee Feb. 24, 2021, 5:35 p.m. UTC | #1
On 2/23/2021 6:44 PM, Elijah Newren via GitGitGadget wrote:> +static char *get_dirname(const char *filename)
> +{
> +	char *slash = strrchr(filename, '/');
> +	return slash ? xstrndup(filename, slash-filename) : xstrdup("");

My brain interpreted "slash-filename" as a single token on first
read, which confused me briefly. Inserting spaces would help
readers like me.

> +	 *   (4) Check if applying that directory rename to the original file
> +	 *       would result in a destination filename that is in the
> +	 *       potential rename set.  If so, return the index of the
> +	 *       destination file (the index within rename_dst).

> +	 * This function, idx_possible_rename(), is only responsible for (4).

This helps isolate the important step to care about for the implementation,
while the rest of the context is important, too.

> +	char *old_dir, *new_dir, *new_path;
> +	int idx;
> +
> +	if (!info->setup)
> +		return -1;
> +
> +	old_dir = get_dirname(filename);
> +	new_dir = strmap_get(&info->dir_rename_guess, old_dir);
> +	free(old_dir);
> +	if (!new_dir)
> +		return -1;
> +
> +	new_path = xstrfmt("%s/%s", new_dir, get_basename(filename));

This is running in a loop, so `xstrfmt()` might be overkill compared
to something like

	strbuf_addstr(&new_path, new_dir);
	strbuf_addch(&new_path, '/');
	strbuf_addstr(&new_path, get_basename(filename));

but maybe the difference is too small to notice. (notice the type
change to "struct strbuf new_path = STRBUF_INIT;")

> +
> +	idx = strintmap_get(&info->idx_map, new_path);
> +	free(new_path);
> +	return idx;
> +}

Does what it says it does.

Thanks,
-Stolee
Elijah Newren Feb. 25, 2021, 1:13 a.m. UTC | #2
On Wed, Feb 24, 2021 at 9:35 AM Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On 2/23/2021 6:44 PM, Elijah Newren via GitGitGadget wrote:> +static char *get_dirname(const char *filename)
> > +{
> > +     char *slash = strrchr(filename, '/');
> > +     return slash ? xstrndup(filename, slash-filename) : xstrdup("");
>
> My brain interpreted "slash-filename" as a single token on first
> read, which confused me briefly. Inserting spaces would help
> readers like me.
>
> > +      *   (4) Check if applying that directory rename to the original file
> > +      *       would result in a destination filename that is in the
> > +      *       potential rename set.  If so, return the index of the
> > +      *       destination file (the index within rename_dst).
>
> > +      * This function, idx_possible_rename(), is only responsible for (4).
>
> This helps isolate the important step to care about for the implementation,
> while the rest of the context is important, too.
>
> > +     char *old_dir, *new_dir, *new_path;
> > +     int idx;
> > +
> > +     if (!info->setup)
> > +             return -1;
> > +
> > +     old_dir = get_dirname(filename);
> > +     new_dir = strmap_get(&info->dir_rename_guess, old_dir);
> > +     free(old_dir);
> > +     if (!new_dir)
> > +             return -1;
> > +
> > +     new_path = xstrfmt("%s/%s", new_dir, get_basename(filename));
>
> This is running in a loop, so `xstrfmt()` might be overkill compared
> to something like
>
>         strbuf_addstr(&new_path, new_dir);
>         strbuf_addch(&new_path, '/');
>         strbuf_addstr(&new_path, get_basename(filename));
>
> but maybe the difference is too small to notice. (notice the type
> change to "struct strbuf new_path = STRBUF_INIT;")

Ooh, nice find.  Since this is in a loop over the renames as you point
out, this is an O(N) improvement (with N = number of renames) rather
than an O(1) improvement.  It does turn out to be hard to notice,
though.  Since we still have some O(N^2) code (all the inexact rename
detection for which our exact- and basename-guided detection
optimizations can't handle), with that N^2 actually being multiplied
by the average number of lines in the given files, this improvement
does seem to mostly get lost in the noise.

I tried a bunch of times to measure the performance with these
changes.  After a bunch of runs, it seems that this optimization saves
somewhere between 3-10ms (depending on which testcase, whether at this
point in the series or at the very end, etc.).  It's hard to pin down,
because the savings is less than the standard deviation of any given
sets of runs.  I don't think it's big enough to warrant restating the
performance measurements, but I'm very happy to include this
suggestion in my reroll.

>
> > +
> > +     idx = strintmap_get(&info->idx_map, new_path);
> > +     free(new_path);
> > +     return idx;
> > +}
>
> Does what it says it does.
>
> Thanks,
> -Stolee
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/diffcore-rename.c b/diffcore-rename.c
index d24f104aa81c..1e4a56adde2c 100644
--- a/diffcore-rename.c
+++ b/diffcore-rename.c
@@ -374,6 +374,12 @@  struct dir_rename_info {
 	unsigned setup;
 };
 
+static char *get_dirname(const char *filename)
+{
+	char *slash = strrchr(filename, '/');
+	return slash ? xstrndup(filename, slash-filename) : xstrdup("");
+}
+
 static void dirname_munge(char *filename)
 {
 	char *slash = strrchr(filename, '/');
@@ -651,6 +657,81 @@  static const char *get_basename(const char *filename)
 	return base ? base + 1 : filename;
 }
 
+MAYBE_UNUSED
+static int idx_possible_rename(char *filename, struct dir_rename_info *info)
+{
+	/*
+	 * Our comparison of files with the same basename (see
+	 * find_basename_matches() below), is only helpful when after exact
+	 * rename detection we have exactly one file with a given basename
+	 * among the rename sources and also only exactly one file with
+	 * that basename among the rename destinations.  When we have
+	 * multiple files with the same basename in either set, we do not
+	 * know which to compare against.  However, there are some
+	 * filenames that occur in large numbers (particularly
+	 * build-related filenames such as 'Makefile', '.gitignore', or
+	 * 'build.gradle' that potentially exist within every single
+	 * subdirectory), and for performance we want to be able to quickly
+	 * find renames for these files too.
+	 *
+	 * The reason basename comparisons are a useful heuristic was that it
+	 * is common for people to move files across directories while keeping
+	 * their filename the same.  If we had a way of determining or even
+	 * making a good educated guess about which directory these non-unique
+	 * basename files had moved the file to, we could check it.
+	 * Luckily...
+	 *
+	 * When an entire directory is in fact renamed, we have two factors
+	 * helping us out:
+	 *   (a) the original directory disappeared giving us a hint
+	 *       about when we can apply an extra heuristic.
+	 *   (a) we often have several files within that directory and
+	 *       subdirectories that are renamed without changes
+	 * So, rules for a heuristic:
+	 *   (0) If there basename matches are non-unique (the condition under
+	 *       which this function is called) AND
+	 *   (1) the directory in which the file was found has disappeared
+	 *       (i.e. dirs_removed is non-NULL and has a relevant entry) THEN
+	 *   (2) use exact renames of files within the directory to determine
+	 *       where the directory is likely to have been renamed to.  IF
+	 *       there is at least one exact rename from within that
+	 *       directory, we can proceed.
+	 *   (3) If there are multiple places the directory could have been
+	 *       renamed to based on exact renames, ignore all but one of them.
+	 *       Just use the destination with the most renames going to it.
+	 *   (4) Check if applying that directory rename to the original file
+	 *       would result in a destination filename that is in the
+	 *       potential rename set.  If so, return the index of the
+	 *       destination file (the index within rename_dst).
+	 *   (5) Compare the original file and returned destination for
+	 *       similarity, and if they are sufficiently similar, record the
+	 *       rename.
+	 *
+	 * This function, idx_possible_rename(), is only responsible for (4).
+	 * The conditions/steps in (1)-(3) are handled via setting up
+	 * dir_rename_count and dir_rename_guess in
+	 * initialize_dir_rename_info().  Steps (0) and (5) are handled by
+	 * the caller of this function.
+	 */
+	char *old_dir, *new_dir, *new_path;
+	int idx;
+
+	if (!info->setup)
+		return -1;
+
+	old_dir = get_dirname(filename);
+	new_dir = strmap_get(&info->dir_rename_guess, old_dir);
+	free(old_dir);
+	if (!new_dir)
+		return -1;
+
+	new_path = xstrfmt("%s/%s", new_dir, get_basename(filename));
+
+	idx = strintmap_get(&info->idx_map, new_path);
+	free(new_path);
+	return idx;
+}
+
 static int find_basename_matches(struct diff_options *options,
 				 int minimum_score,
 				 struct dir_rename_info *info,