Files
@ 190cb30841de
Branch filter:
Location: kallithea/docs/usage/statistics.rst - annotation
190cb30841de
1.2 KiB
text/prs.fallenstein.rst
branches: fix performance of branch selectors with many branches - only show the first 200 results
The way we use select2, it will cause browser performance problems when a
select list contains thousands of entries. The primary bottleneck is the DOM
creation, secondarily for the query to filter through the entries and decide
what to show. We thus primarily have to limit how many entries we put in the
drop-down, secondarily limit the iteration over data.
One tricky case is where the user specifies a short but full branch name (like
'trunk') but many other branches contains the same string (not necessarily at
the beginning, like 'for-trunk-next-week') which come before the perfect match
in the branch list. It is thus not a solution to just stop searching when a
fixed amount of matches have been found.
Instead, we limit the amount of ordinary query matches, but always show all
prefix matches. We thus always have to iterate through all entries, but we
start using the (presumably) cheaper prefix search when the limit has been
reached.
There is no filtering initially when there is no query term, so that case has
to be handled specially.
Upstream select2 is now at 4.x. Upgrading is not trivial, and getting this
fixed properly upstream is not a short term solution. Instead, we customize our
copy. The benefit from this patch is bigger than the overhead of "maintaining"
it locally.
The way we use select2, it will cause browser performance problems when a
select list contains thousands of entries. The primary bottleneck is the DOM
creation, secondarily for the query to filter through the entries and decide
what to show. We thus primarily have to limit how many entries we put in the
drop-down, secondarily limit the iteration over data.
One tricky case is where the user specifies a short but full branch name (like
'trunk') but many other branches contains the same string (not necessarily at
the beginning, like 'for-trunk-next-week') which come before the perfect match
in the branch list. It is thus not a solution to just stop searching when a
fixed amount of matches have been found.
Instead, we limit the amount of ordinary query matches, but always show all
prefix matches. We thus always have to iterate through all entries, but we
start using the (presumably) cheaper prefix search when the limit has been
reached.
There is no filtering initially when there is no query term, so that case has
to be handled specially.
Upstream select2 is now at 4.x. Upgrading is not trivial, and getting this
fixed properly upstream is not a short term solution. Instead, we customize our
copy. The benefit from this patch is bigger than the overhead of "maintaining"
it locally.
bbd499c7b55e bbd499c7b55e ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 bbd499c7b55e 5ae8e644aa88 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 bbd499c7b55e ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 bbd499c7b55e ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 bbd499c7b55e ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 bbd499c7b55e ac7e43325817 bbd499c7b55e ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 | .. _statistics:
=====================
Repository statistics
=====================
Kallithea has a *repository statistics* feature, disabled by default. When
enabled, the amount of commits per committer is visualized in a timeline. This
feature can be enabled using the ``Enable statistics`` checkbox on the
repository ``Settings`` page.
The statistics system makes heavy demands on the server resources, so
in order to keep a balance between usability and performance, statistics are
cached inside the database and gathered incrementally.
When Celery is disabled:
On each first visit to the summary page a set of 250 commits are parsed and
added to the statistics cache. This incremental gathering also happens on each
visit to the statistics page, until all commits are fetched.
Statistics are kept cached until additional commits are added to the
repository. In such a case Kallithea will only fetch the new commits when
updating its statistics cache.
When Celery is enabled:
On the first visit to the summary page, Kallithea will create tasks that will
execute on Celery workers. These tasks will gather all of the statistics until
all commits are parsed. Each task parses 250 commits, then launches a new
task.
|