fast-import: grow tree storage more aggressively

When building up a tree for a commit, fast-import
dynamically allocates memory for the tree entries. When more
space is needed, the allocated memory is increased by a
constant amount. For very large trees, this means
re-allocating and memcpy()ing the memory O(n) times.

To compound this problem, releasing the previous tree
resource does not free the memory; it is kept in a pool
for future trees. This means that each of the O(n)
allocations will consume increasing amounts of memory,
giving O(n^2) memory consumption.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This commit is contained in:
Jeff King 2007-03-10 21:39:17 -05:00 committed by Shawn O. Pearce
parent fc095242b1
commit f022f85f6d

View File

@ -1062,7 +1062,7 @@ static void load_tree(struct tree_entry *root)
struct tree_entry *e = new_tree_entry();
if (t->entry_count == t->entry_capacity)
root->tree = t = grow_tree_content(t, 8);
root->tree = t = grow_tree_content(t, t->entry_count);
t->entries[t->entry_count++] = e;
e->tree = NULL;
@ -1229,7 +1229,7 @@ static int tree_content_set(
}
if (t->entry_count == t->entry_capacity)
root->tree = t = grow_tree_content(t, 8);
root->tree = t = grow_tree_content(t, t->entry_count);
e = new_tree_entry();
e->name = to_atom(p, (unsigned short)n);
e->versions[0].mode = 0;