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README.md | ||
build | ||
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gitstatus.prompt.sh | ||
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mbuild |
README.md
gitstatus
gitstatus is a 10x faster alternative to git status
and git describe
. Its primary use
case is to enable fast git prompt in interactive shells.
Heavy lifting is done by gitstatusd -- a custom binary written in C++. It comes with Zsh and Bash bindings for integration with shell.
Table of Contents
- Using from Zsh
- Using from Bash
- Using from other shells
- How it works
- Benchmarks
- Why fast
- Requirements
- Compiling
- License
Using from Zsh
The easiest way to take advantage of gitstatus from Zsh is to use a theme that's already integrated with it. For example, Powerlevel10k is a flexible and fast theme with first-class gitstatus integration.
For those who wish to use gitstatus without a theme, there is gitstatus.prompt.zsh. Install it as follows:
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/romkatv/gitstatus.git ~/gitstatus
echo 'source ~/gitstatus/gitstatus.prompt.zsh' >>! ~/.zshrc
Users in mainland China can use the official mirror on gitee.com for faster download.
中国大陆用户可以使用 gitee.com 上的官方镜像加速下载.
git clone --depth=1 https://gitee.com/romkatv/gitstatus.git ~/gitstatus
echo 'source ~/gitstatus/gitstatus.prompt.zsh' >>! ~/.zshrc
Alternatively, on macOS you can install with Homebrew:
brew install romkatv/gitstatus/gitstatus
echo 'source /usr/local/opt/gitstatus/gitstatus.prompt.zsh' >>! ~/.zshrc
(If you choose this option, replace ~/gitstatus
with /usr/local/opt/gitstatus
in all code
snippets below.)
Make sure to disable your current theme if you have one.
This will give you a basic yet functional prompt with git status in it. It's
over 10x faster than any alternative that can give you comparable prompt. In order
to customize it, set PROMPT
and/or RPROMPT
at the end of ~/.zshrc
after sourcing
gitstatus.prompt.zsh
. Insert ${GITSTATUS_PROMPT}
where you want git status to go. For example:
source ~/gitstatus/gitstatus.prompt.zsh
PROMPT='%~%# ' # left prompt: directory followed by %/# (normal/root)
RPROMPT='$GITSTATUS_PROMPT' # right prompt: git status
The expansion of ${GITSTATUS_PROMPT}
can contain the following bits:
segment | meaning |
---|---|
master |
current branch |
#v1 |
HEAD is tagged with v1 ; not shown when on a branch |
@5fc6fca4 |
current commit; not shown when on a branch or tag |
⇣1 |
local branch is behind the remote by 1 commit |
⇡2 |
local branch is ahead of the remote by 2 commits |
⇠3 |
local branch is behind the push remote by 3 commits |
⇢4 |
local branch is ahead of the push remote by 4 commits |
*5 |
there are 5 stashes |
merge |
merge is in progress (could be some other action) |
~6 |
there are 6 merge conflicts |
+7 |
there are 7 staged changes |
!8 |
there are 8 unstaged changes |
?9 |
there are 9 untracked files |
$GITSTATUS_PROMPT_LEN
tells you how long $GITSTATUS_PROMPT
is when printed to the console.
gitstatus.prompt.zsh has an example of using it to truncate the current
directory.
If you'd like to change the format of git status, or want to have greater control over the
process of assembling PROMPT
, you can copy and modify parts of
gitstatus.prompt.zsh instead of sourcing the script. Your ~/.zshrc
might look something like this:
source ~/gitstatus/gitstatus.plugin.zsh
function my_set_prompt() {
PROMPT='%~%# '
RPROMPT=''
if gitstatus_query MY && [[ $VCS_STATUS_RESULT == ok-sync ]]; then
RPROMPT=${${VCS_STATUS_LOCAL_BRANCH:-@${VCS_STATUS_COMMIT}}//\%/%%} # escape %
(( VCS_STATUS_NUM_STAGED )) && RPROMPT+='+'
(( VCS_STATUS_NUM_UNSTAGED )) && RPROMPT+='!'
(( VCS_STATUS_NUM_UNTRACKED )) && RPROMPT+='?'
fi
setopt no_prompt_{bang,subst} prompt_percent # enable/disable correct prompt expansions
}
gitstatus_stop 'MY' && gitstatus_start -s -1 -u -1 -c -1 -d -1 'MY'
autoload -Uz add-zsh-hook
add-zsh-hook precmd my_set_prompt
This snippet is sourcing gitstatus.plugin.zsh
rather than gitstatus.prompt.zsh
. The former
defines low-level bindings that communicate with gitstatusd over pipes. The latter is a simple
script that uses these bindings to assemble git prompt.
Unlike Powerlevel10k, code based on
gitstatus.prompt.zsh is communicating with gitstatusd synchronously. This
can make your prompt slow when working in a large git repository or on a slow machine. To avoid
this problem, call gitstatus_query
asynchronously as documented in
gitstatus.plugin.zsh. This can be quite challenging.
Using from Bash
The easiest way to take advantage of gitstatus from Bash is via gitstatus.prompt.sh. Install it as follows:
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/romkatv/gitstatus.git ~/gitstatus
echo 'source ~/gitstatus/gitstatus.prompt.sh' >> ~/.bashrc
Users in mainland China can use the official mirror on gitee.com for faster download.
中国大陆用户可以使用 gitee.com 上的官方镜像加速下载.
git clone --depth=1 https://gitee.com/romkatv/gitstatus.git ~/gitstatus
echo 'source ~/gitstatus/gitstatus.prompt.sh' >> ~/.bashrc
Alternatively, on macOS you can install with Homebrew:
brew install romkatv/gitstatus/gitstatus
echo 'source /usr/local/opt/gitstatus/gitstatus.prompt.sh' >> ~/.bashrc
(If you choose this option, replace ~/gitstatus
with /usr/local/opt/gitstatus
in all code
snippets below.)
This will give you a basic yet functional prompt with git status in it. It's over 10x faster than any alternative that can give you comparable prompt.
In order to customize your prompt, set PS1
at the end of ~/.bashrc
after sourcing
gitstatus.prompt.sh
. Insert ${GITSTATUS_PROMPT}
where you want git status to go. For example:
source ~/gitstatus/gitstatus.prompt.sh
PS1='\w ${GITSTATUS_PROMPT}\n\$ ' # directory followed by git status and $/# (normal/root)
The expansion of ${GITSTATUS_PROMPT}
can contain the following bits:
segment | meaning |
---|---|
master |
current branch |
#v1 |
HEAD is tagged with v1 ; not shown when on a branch |
@5fc6fca4 |
current commit; not shown when on a branch or tag |
⇣1 |
local branch is behind the remote by 1 commit |
⇡2 |
local branch is ahead of the remote by 2 commits |
⇠3 |
local branch is behind the push remote by 3 commits |
⇢4 |
local branch is ahead of the push remote by 4 commits |
*5 |
there are 5 stashes |
merge |
merge is in progress (could be some other action) |
~6 |
there are 6 merge conflicts |
+7 |
there are 7 staged changes |
!8 |
there are 8 unstaged changes |
?9 |
there are 9 untracked files |
If you'd like to change the format of git status, or want to have greater control over the
process of assembling PS1
, you can copy and modify parts of
gitstatus.prompt.sh instead of sourcing the script. Your ~/.bashrc
might
look something like this:
source ~/gitstatus/gitstatus.plugin.sh
function my_set_prompt() {
PS1='\w'
if gitstatus_query && [[ "$VCS_STATUS_RESULT" == ok-sync ]]; then
if [[ -n "$VCS_STATUS_LOCAL_BRANCH" ]]; then
PS1+=" ${VCS_STATUS_LOCAL_BRANCH//\\/\\\\}" # escape backslash
else
PS1+=" @${VCS_STATUS_COMMIT//\\/\\\\}" # escape backslash
fi
(( VCS_STATUS_HAS_STAGED" )) && PS1+='+'
(( VCS_STATUS_HAS_UNSTAGED" )) && PS1+='!'
(( VCS_STATUS_HAS_UNTRACKED" )) && PS1+='?'
fi
PS1+='\n\$ '
shopt -u promptvars # disable expansion of '$(...)' and the like
}
gitstatus_stop && gitstatus_start
PROMPT_COMMAND=my_set_prompt
This snippet is sourcing gitstatus.plugin.sh
rather than gitstatus.prompt.sh
. The former
defines low-level bindings that communicate with gitstatusd over pipes. The latter is a simple
script that uses these bindings to assemble git prompt.
Note: Bash bindings, unlike Zsh bindings, don't support asynchronous calls.
Using from other shells
If there are no gitstatusd bindings for your shell, you'll need to get your hands dirty.
Use the existing bindings for inspiration; run gitstatusd --help
or read the same thing in
options.cc.
How it works
gitstatusd reads requests from stdin and prints responses to stdout. Requests contain an ID and a directory. Responses contain the same ID and machine-readable git status for the directory. gitstatusd keeps some state in memory for the directories it has seen in order to serve future requests faster.
Zsh bindings and Bash bindings start gitstatusd in
the background and communicate with it via pipes. Themes such as
Powerlevel10k use these bindings to put git status in
PROMPT
.
Note that gitstatus cannot be used as a drop-in replacement for git status
command as it doesn't
produce output in the same format. It does perform the same computation though.
Benchmarks
The following benchmark results were obtained on Intel i9-7900X running Ubuntu 18.04 in
a clean chromium repository synced to 9394e49a
. The
repository was checked out to an ext4 filesystem on M.2 SSD.
Three functionally equivalent tools for computing git status were benchmarked:
gitstatusd
git
with untracked cache enabledlg2
-- a demo/example executable from libgit2 that implements a subset ofgit
functionality on top of libgit2 API; for the purposes of this benchmark the subset is sufficient to generate the same data as the other tools
Every tool was benchmark in cold and hot conditions. For git
the first run in a repository was
considered cold, with the following runs considered hot. lg2
was patched to compute results twice
in a single invocation without freeing the repository in between; the second run was considered hot.
The same patching was not done for git
because git
cannot be easily modified to refresh inmemory
index state between invocations; in fact, this limitation is one of the primary reasons developers
use libgit2. gitstatusd
was benchmarked similarly to lg2
with two result computations in the
same invocation.
Two commands were benchmarked: status
and describe
.
Status
In this benchmark all tools were computing the equivalent of git status
. Lower numbers are better.
Tool | Cold | Hot |
---|---|---|
gitstatus | 291 ms | 30.9 ms |
git | 876 ms | 295 ms |
lg2 | 1730 ms | 1310 ms |
gitstatusd is substantially faster than the alternatives, especially on hot runs. Note that hot runs are of primary importance to the main use case of gitstatus in interactive shells.
The performance of git status
fluctuated wildly in this benchmarks for reasons unknown to the
author. Moreover, performance is sticky -- once git status
settles around a number, it stays
there for a long time. Numbers as diverse as 295, 352, 663 and 730 had been observed on hot runs on
the same repository. The number in the table is the lowest (fastest or best) that git status
had
shown.
Describe
In this benchmark all tools were computing the equivalent of git describe --tags --exact-match
to find tags that resolve to the same commit as HEAD
. Lower numbers are better.
Tool | Cold | Hot |
---|---|---|
gitstatus | 4.04 ms | 0.0345 ms |
git | 18.0 ms | 14.5 ms |
lg2 | 185 ms | 45.2 ms |
gitstatusd is once again faster than the alternatives, more so on hot runs.
Why fast
Since gitstatusd doesn't have to print all staged/unstaged/untracked files but only report whether there are any, it can terminate repository scan early. It can also remember which files were dirty on the previous run and check them first on the next run to avoid the scan entirely if the files are still dirty. However, the benchmarks above were performed in a clean repository where these shortcuts do not trigger. All benchmarked tools had to do the same work -- check the status of every file in the index to see if it has changed, check every directory for newly created files, etc. And yet, gitstatusd came ahead by a large margin. This section describes what it does that makes it so fast.
Most of the following comparisons are done against libgit2 rather than git because of the author's familiarity with the former but not the with latter. libgit2 has clean, well-documented APIs and an elegant implementation, which makes it so much easier to work with and to analyze performance bottlenecks.
Summary for the impatient
Under the benchmark conditions described above, the equivalent of libgit2's
git_diff_index_to_workdir
(the most expensive part of status
command) is 46.3 times faster in
gitstatusd. The speedup comes from the following sources.
- gitstatusd uses more efficient data structures and algorithms and employs performance-conscious coding style throughout the codebase. This reduces CPU time in userspace by 32x compared to libgit2.
- gitstatusd uses less expensive system calls and makes fewer of them. This reduces CPU time spent in kernel by 1.9x.
- gitstatusd can utilize multiple cores to scan index and workdir in parallel with almost perfect scaling. This reduces total run time by 12.4x while having virtually no effect on total CPU time.
Problem statement
The most resource-intensive part of the status
command is finding the difference between index
and workdir (git_diff_index_to_workdir
in libgit2). Index is a list of all files in the git
repository with their last modification times. This is an obvious simplification but it suffices for
this exposition. On disk, index is stored sorted by file path. Here's an example of git index:
File | Last modification time |
---|---|
Makefile | 2019-04-01T14:12:32Z |
src/hello.c | 2019-04-01T14:12:00Z |
src/hello.h | 2019-04-01T14:12:32Z |
This list needs to be compared to the list of files in the working directory. If any of the files
listed in the index are missing from the workdir or have different last modification time, they are
"unstaged" in gitstatusd parlance. If you run git status
, they'll be shown as "changes not staged
for commit". Thus, any implementation of status
command has to call stat()
or one of its
variants on every file in the index.
In addition, all files in the working directory for which there is no entry in the index at all are
"untracked". git status
will show them as "untracked files". Finding untracked files requires some
form of work directory traversal.
Single-threaded scan
Let's see how git_diff_index_to_workdir
from libgit2 accomplishes these tasks. Here's its CPU
profile from 200 hot runs over chromium repository.
(The CPU profile was created with gperftools and rendered with pprof).
We can see __GI__lxstat
taking a lot of time. This is the stat()
call for every file in the
index. We can also identify __opendir
, __readdir
and __GI___close_nocancel
-- glibc wrappers
for reading the contents of a directory. This is for finding untracked files. Out of the total 232
seconds, 111 seconds -- or 47.7% -- was spent on these calls. The rest is computation -- comparing
strings, sorting arrays, etc.
Now let's take a look at the CPU profile of gitstatusd on the same task.
The first impression is that this profile looks pruned. This isn't an artifact. The profile was generated with the same tools and the same flags as the profile of libgit2.
Since both profiles were generated from the same workload, absolute numbers can be compared. We can
see that gitstatusd took 62 seconds in total compared to libgit2's 232 seconds. System calls at the
core of the algorithm are cleary visible. __GI___fxstatat
is a flavor of stat()
, and the other
three calls -- __libc_openat64
, __libc_close
and __GI___fxstat
are responsible for opening
directories and finding untracked files. Notice that there is almost nothing else in the profile
apart from these calls. The rest of the code accounts for 3.77 seconds of CPU time -- 32 times less
than in libgit2.
So, one reason gitstatusd is fast is that it has efficient diffing code -- very little time is spent
outside of kernel. However, if we look closely, we can notice that system calls in gitstatusd are
also faster than in libgit2. For example, libgit2 spent 72.07 seconds in __GI__lxstat
while
gitstatusd spent only 48.82 seconds in __GI___fxstatat
. There are two reasons for this difference.
First, libgit2 makes more stat()
calls than is strictly required. It's not necessary to stat
directories because index only has files. There are 25k directories in chromium repository (and 300k
files) -- that's 25k stat()
calls that could be avoided. The second reason is that libgit2 and
gitstatusd use different flavors of stat()
. libgit2 uses lstat()
, which takes a path to the file
as input. Its performance is linear in the number of subdirectories in the path because it needs to
perform a lookup for every one of them and to check permissions. gitstatusd uses fstatat()
, which
takes a file descriptor to the parent directory and a name of the file. Just a single lookup, less
CPU time.
Similarly to lstat()
vs fstatat()
, it's faster to open files and directories with openat()
from the parent directory file descriptor than with regular open()
that accepts full file path.
gitstatusd takes advantage of openat()
to open directories as fast as possible. It opens about 90%
of the directories (this depends on the actual directory structure of the repository) from the
immediate parent -- the most efficient way -- and the remaining 10% it opens from the repository's
root directory. The reason it's done this way is to keep the maximum number of simultaneously open
file descriptors bounded. libgit2 can have O(repository depth) simultaneously open file descriptors,
which may be OK for a single-threaded application but can balloon to a large number when scans are
done by many threads simultaneously, like in gitstatusd.
There is no equivalent to __opendir
or __readdir
in the gitstatusd profile because it uses the
equivalent of untracked cache from
git. On the first scan of the workdir gitstatusd lists all files just like libgit2. But, unlike
libgit2, it remembers the last modification time of every directory along with the list of
untracked files under it. On the next scan, gitstatusd can skip listing files in directories whose
last modification time hasn't changed.
To summarize, here's what gitstatusd was doing when the CPU profile was captured:
__libc_openat64
: Open every directory for which there are files in the index.__GI___fxstat
: Check last modification time of the directory. Since it's the same as on the last scan, this directory has the same list of untracked files as before, which is empty (the repository is clean).__GI___fxstatat
: Check last modification time for every file in the index that belongs to this directory.__libc_close
: Close the file descriptor to the directory.
Here's how the very first scan of a repository looks like in gitstatusd:
(Some glibc functions are mislabel on this profile. explicit_bzero
and __nss_passwd_lookup
are
in reality strcmp
and memcmp
.)
This is a superset of the previous -- hot -- profile, with an extra syscall
and string sorting for
directory listing. gitstatusd uses getdents64
Linux system call directly, bypassing the glibc
wrapper that libgit2 uses. This is 23% faster. The details of this optimization can be found in a
separate document.
Multithreading
The diffing algorithm in gitstatusd was designed from the ground up with the intention of using it
concurrently from multiple threads. With a fast SSD, status
is CPU bound, so taking advantage of
all available CPU cores is an obvious way to yield results faster.
gitstatusd exhibits almost perfect scaling from multithreading. Engaging all cores allows it to produce results 12.4 times faster than in single-threaded execution. This is on Intel i9-7900X with 10 cores (20 with hyperthreading) with single-core frequency of 4.3GHz and all-core frequency of 4.0GHz.
Note: git status
also uses all available cores in some parts of its algorithm while lg2
does
everything in a single thread.
Postprocessing
Once the difference between the index and the workdir is found, we have a list of candidates --
files that may be unstaged or untracked. To make the final judgement, these files need to be checked
against .gitignore
rules and a few other things.
gitstatusd uses patched libgit2 for this step. This fork
adds several optimizations that make libgit2 faster. The patched libgit2 performs more than twice
as fast in the benchmark as the original even without changes in the user code (that is, in the
code that uses the libgit2 APIs). The fork also adds several API extensions, most notable of which
is the support for multi-threaded scans. If lg2 status
is modified to take advantage of these
extensions, it outperforms the original libgit2 by a factor of 18. Lastly, the fork fixes a score of
bugs, most of which become apparent only when using libgit2 from multiple threads.
WARNING: Changes to libgit2 are extensive but the testing they underwent isn't. It is not recommended to use the patched libgit2 in production.
Requirements
- To compile: binutils, cmake, gcc, g++, git and GNU make.
- To run: Linux, macOS, FreeBSD, Android, WSL, Cygwin or MSYS2.
Compiling
There are prebuilt gitstatusd
binaries in releases. When using the official shell bindings
provided by gitstatus, the right binary for your architecture gets downloaded automatically.
If prebuilt binaries don't work for you, you'll need to get your hands dirty.
Compiling for personal use
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/romkatv/gitstatus.git
cd gitstatus
./build -w -s -d docker
Users in mainland China can use the official mirror on gitee.com for faster download.
中国大陆用户可以使用 gitee.com 上的官方镜像加速下载.
git clone --depth=1 https://gitee.com/romkatv/gitstatus.git
cd gitstatus
./build -w -s -d docker
- If it says that
-d docker
is not supported on your OS, remove this flag. - If it says that
-s
is not supported on your OS, remove this flag. - If it tell you to install docker but you cannot or don't want to, remove
-d docker
. - If it says that some command is missing, install it.
If everything goes well, the newly built binary will appear in ./usrbin
. It'll be picked up
by shell bindings automatically.
When you update shell bindings, they may refuse to work with the binary you've built earlier. In this case you'll need to rebuild.
If you are using gitstatus through Powerlevel10k, the
instructions are the same except that you don't need to clone gitstatus. Instead, change your
current directory to /path/to/powerlevel10k/gitstatus
(/path/to/powerlevel10k
is the directory
where you've installed Powerlevel10k) and run ./build -w -s -d docker
from there as described
above.
Compiling for distribution
It's currently neither easy nor recommended to package and distribute gitstatus. There are no instructions you can follow that would allow you to easily update your package when new versions of gitstatus are released. This may change in the future but not soon.
License
GNU General Public License v3.0. See LICENSE. Contributions are covered by the same license.