Comment by nullnix
10 years ago
I'd do that if I was still working there. I can probably still get hold of a horror case but it'll take negotiation :)
(And yes, optimizing merge matters too, indeed it was a huge part of git's raison d'etre -- but, again, one usually merges with the stuff at the tip of tree: merging against something you did five years ago is rare, even if it's at a branch tip, and even rarer otherwise. Having to rewrite all the unmodified ancient stuff in the weave merely because of a merge at the tip seems wrong.)
(Now I'm tempted to go and import the Linux kernel or all of the GCC SVN repo into SCCS just to see how big the largest weave is. I have clearly gone insane from the summer heat. Stop me before I ci again!)
Our busiest file is 400K checked out and about 1MB for the history file lz4 compressed. Uncompressed is 2.2M and the weave is 1.7M of that.
Doesn't seem bad to me. The weave is big for binaries, we imported 20 years of Solaris stuff once and the history was 1.1x the size of the checked out files.