commit | cc5e1bf992470e0d514c743e75a0325c8b592f38 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> | Sat Apr 21 13:14:08 2018 +0200 |
committer | Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> | Tue Apr 24 11:12:31 2018 +0900 |
tree | fd7272b20100456d93a4ee728ef477c935a2c0f0 | |
parent | 86e254584bb466aaf1bacbdf4a1ade924c8bdbe9 [diff] |
gettext: avoid initialization if the locale dir is not present The runtime of a simple `git.exe version` call on Windows is currently dominated by the gettext setup, adding a whopping ~150ms to the ~210ms total. Given that this cost is added to each and every git.exe invocation goes through common-main's invocation of git_setup_gettext(), and given that scripts have to call git.exe dozens, if not hundreds, of times, this is a substantial performance penalty. This is particularly pointless when considering that Git for Windows ships without localization (to keep the installer's size to a bearable ~34MB): all that time setting up gettext is for naught. To be clear, Git for Windows *needs* to be compiled with localization, for the following reasons: - to allow users to copy add-on localization in case they want it, and - to fix the nasty error message BUG: your vsnprintf is broken (returned -1) by using libgettext's override of vsnprintf() that does not share the behavior of msvcrt.dll's version of vsnprintf(). So let's be smart about it and skip setting up gettext if the locale directory is not even present. Since localization might be missing for not-yet-supported locales, this will not break anything. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Git is a fast, scalable, distributed revision control system with an unusually rich command set that provides both high-level operations and full access to internals.
Git is an Open Source project covered by the GNU General Public License version 2 (some parts of it are under different licenses, compatible with the GPLv2). It was originally written by Linus Torvalds with help of a group of hackers around the net.
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See Documentation/gittutorial.txt to get started, then see Documentation/giteveryday.txt for a useful minimum set of commands, and Documentation/git-.txt for documentation of each command. If git has been correctly installed, then the tutorial can also be read with man gittutorial
or git help tutorial
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or git help cvs-migration
if git is installed).
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