hgbook

annotate en/concepts.tex @ 113:a0f57b3e677e

More concepts, this time working directory stuff.
author Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
date Mon Nov 13 14:32:16 2006 -0800 (2006-11-13)
parents 2fcead053b7a
children b74102b56df5
rev   line source
bos@108 1 \chapter{Behind the scenes}
jeffpc@56 2 \label{chap:concepts}
jeffpc@56 3
bos@108 4 Unlike many revision control systems, the concepts upon which
bos@108 5 Mercurial is built are simple enough that it's easy to understand how
bos@108 6 the software really works. Knowing this certainly isn't necessary,
bos@108 7 but I find it useful to have a ``mental model'' of what's going on.
jeffpc@56 8
bos@109 9 This understanding gives me confidence that Mercurial has been
bos@109 10 carefully designed to be both \emph{safe} and \emph{efficient}. And
bos@111 11 just as importantly, if it's easy for me to retain a good idea of what
bos@111 12 the software is doing when I perform a revision control task, I'm less
bos@111 13 likely to be surprised by its behaviour.
bos@109 14
bos@112 15 In this chapter, we'll initially cover the core concepts behind
bos@112 16 Mercurial's design, then continue to discuss some of the interesting
bos@112 17 details of its implementation.
bos@112 18
bos@109 19 \section{Mercurial's historical record}
bos@109 20
bos@109 21 \subsection{Tracking the history of a single file}
jeffpc@56 22
bos@108 23 When Mercurial tracks modifications to a file, it stores the history
bos@108 24 of that file in a metadata object called a \emph{filelog}. Each entry
bos@108 25 in the filelog contains enough information to reconstruct one revision
bos@108 26 of the file that is being tracked. Filelogs are stored as files in
bos@108 27 the \sdirname{.hg/data} directory. A filelog contains two kinds of
bos@108 28 information: revision data, and an index to help Mercurial to find a
bos@108 29 revision efficiently.
jeffpc@56 30
bos@109 31 A file that is large, or has a lot of history, has its filelog stored
bos@109 32 in separate data (``\texttt{.d}'' suffix) and index (``\texttt{.i}''
bos@109 33 suffix) files. For small files without much history, the revision
bos@109 34 data and index are combined in a single ``\texttt{.i}'' file. The
bos@109 35 correspondence between a file in the working directory and the filelog
bos@109 36 that tracks its history in the repository is illustrated in
bos@109 37 figure~\ref{fig:concepts:filelog}.
jeffpc@56 38
jeffpc@56 39 \begin{figure}[ht]
bos@108 40 \centering
bos@108 41 \grafix{filelog}
bos@108 42 \caption{Relationships between files in working directory and
bos@108 43 filelogs in repository}
bos@108 44 \label{fig:concepts:filelog}
jeffpc@56 45 \end{figure}
jeffpc@56 46
bos@109 47 \subsection{Managing tracked files}
bos@109 48
bos@109 49 Mercurial uses a structure called a \emph{manifest} to collect
bos@109 50 together information about the files that it tracks. Each entry in
bos@109 51 the manifest contains information about the files present in a single
bos@109 52 changeset. An entry records which files are present in the changeset,
bos@109 53 the revision of each file, and a few other pieces of file metadata.
bos@109 54
bos@109 55 \subsection{Recording changeset information}
bos@109 56
bos@109 57 The \emph{changelog} contains information about each changeset. Each
bos@109 58 revision records who committed a change, the changeset comment, other
bos@109 59 pieces of changeset-related information, and the revision of the
bos@109 60 manifest to use.
bos@109 61
bos@109 62 \subsection{Relationships between revisions}
bos@109 63
bos@109 64 Within a changelog, a manifest, or a filelog, each revision stores a
bos@109 65 pointer to its immediate parent (or to its two parents, if it's a
bos@109 66 merge revision). As I mentioned above, there are also relationships
bos@109 67 between revisions \emph{across} these structures, and they are
bos@109 68 hierarchical in nature.
bos@109 69
bos@109 70 For every changeset in a repository, there is exactly one revision
bos@109 71 stored in the changelog. Each revision of the changelog contains a
bos@109 72 pointer to a single revision of the manifest. A revision of the
bos@109 73 manifest stores a pointer to a single revision of each filelog tracked
bos@109 74 when that changeset was created. These relationships are illustrated
bos@109 75 in figure~\ref{fig:concepts:metadata}.
bos@109 76
bos@109 77 \begin{figure}[ht]
bos@109 78 \centering
bos@109 79 \grafix{metadata}
bos@109 80 \caption{Metadata relationships}
bos@109 81 \label{fig:concepts:metadata}
bos@109 82 \end{figure}
bos@109 83
bos@110 84 As the illustration shows, there is \emph{not} a ``one to one''
bos@110 85 relationship between revisions in the changelog, manifest, or filelog.
bos@110 86 If the manifest hasn't changed between two changesets, the changelog
bos@110 87 entries for those changesets will point to the same revision of the
bos@110 88 manifest. If a file that Mercurial tracks hasn't changed between two
bos@110 89 changesets, the entry for that file in the two revisions of the
bos@110 90 manifest will point to the same revision of its filelog.
bos@110 91
bos@110 92 \section{Safe, efficient storage}
bos@109 93
bos@109 94 The underpinnings of changelogs, manifests, and filelogs are provided
bos@109 95 by a single structure called the \emph{revlog}.
bos@109 96
bos@109 97 \subsection{Efficient storage}
bos@109 98
bos@109 99 The revlog provides efficient storage of revisions using a
bos@109 100 \emph{delta} mechanism. Instead of storing a complete copy of a file
bos@109 101 for each revision, it stores the changes needed to transform an older
bos@109 102 revision into the new revision. For many kinds of file data, these
bos@109 103 deltas are typically a fraction of a percent of the size of a full
bos@109 104 copy of a file.
bos@109 105
bos@109 106 Some obsolete revision control systems can only work with deltas of
bos@109 107 text files. They must either store binary files as complete snapshots
bos@109 108 or encoded into a text representation, both of which are wasteful
bos@109 109 approaches. Mercurial can efficiently handle deltas of files with
bos@109 110 arbitrary binary contents; it doesn't need to treat text as special.
bos@109 111
bos@109 112 \subsection{Safe operation}
bos@109 113
bos@109 114 Mercurial only ever \emph{appends} data to the end of a revlog file.
bos@109 115 It never modifies a section of a file after it has written it. This
bos@109 116 is both more robust and efficient than schemes that need to modify or
bos@109 117 rewrite data.
bos@109 118
bos@109 119 In addition, Mercurial treats every write as part of a
bos@109 120 \emph{transaction} that can span a number of files. A transaction is
bos@109 121 \emph{atomic}: either the entire transaction succeeds and its effects
bos@109 122 are all visible to readers in one go, or the whole thing is undone.
bos@109 123 This guarantee of atomicity means that if you're running two copies of
bos@109 124 Mercurial, where one is reading data and one is writing it, the reader
bos@109 125 will never see a partially written result that might confuse it.
bos@109 126
bos@109 127 The fact that Mercurial only appends to files makes it easier to
bos@109 128 provide this transactional guarantee. The easier it is to do stuff
bos@109 129 like this, the more confident you should be that it's done correctly.
bos@109 130
bos@109 131 \subsection{Fast retrieval}
bos@109 132
bos@109 133 Mercurial cleverly avoids a pitfall common to all earlier
bos@109 134 revision control systems: the problem of \emph{inefficient retrieval}.
bos@109 135 Most revision control systems store the contents of a revision as an
bos@109 136 incremental series of modifications against a ``snapshot''. To
bos@109 137 reconstruct a specific revision, you must first read the snapshot, and
bos@109 138 then every one of the revisions between the snapshot and your target
bos@109 139 revision. The more history that a file accumulates, the more
bos@109 140 revisions you must read, hence the longer it takes to reconstruct a
bos@109 141 particular revision.
bos@109 142
bos@110 143 \begin{figure}[ht]
bos@110 144 \centering
bos@110 145 \grafix{snapshot}
bos@110 146 \caption{Snapshot of a revlog, with incremental deltas}
bos@110 147 \label{fig:concepts:snapshot}
bos@110 148 \end{figure}
bos@110 149
bos@109 150 The innovation that Mercurial applies to this problem is simple but
bos@109 151 effective. Once the cumulative amount of delta information stored
bos@109 152 since the last snapshot exceeds a fixed threshold, it stores a new
bos@109 153 snapshot (compressed, of course), instead of another delta. This
bos@109 154 makes it possible to reconstruct \emph{any} revision of a file
bos@110 155 quickly. This approach works so well that it has since been copied by
bos@110 156 several other revision control systems.
bos@110 157
bos@110 158 Figure~\ref{fig:concepts:snapshot} illustrates the idea. In an entry
bos@110 159 in a revlog's index file, Mercurial stores the range of entries from
bos@110 160 the data file that it must read to reconstruct a particular revision.
bos@109 161
bos@109 162 \subsubsection{Aside: the influence of video compression}
bos@109 163
bos@109 164 If you're familiar with video compression or have ever watched a TV
bos@109 165 feed through a digital cable or satellite service, you may know that
bos@109 166 most video compression schemes store each frame of video as a delta
bos@109 167 against its predecessor frame. In addition, these schemes use
bos@109 168 ``lossy'' compression techniques to increase the compression ratio, so
bos@109 169 visual errors accumulate over the course of a number of inter-frame
bos@109 170 deltas.
bos@109 171
bos@109 172 Because it's possible for a video stream to ``drop out'' occasionally
bos@109 173 due to signal glitches, and to limit the accumulation of artefacts
bos@109 174 introduced by the lossy compression process, video encoders
bos@109 175 periodically insert a complete frame (called a ``key frame'') into the
bos@109 176 video stream; the next delta is generated against that frame. This
bos@109 177 means that if the video signal gets interrupted, it will resume once
bos@109 178 the next key frame is received. Also, the accumulation of encoding
bos@109 179 errors restarts anew with each key frame.
bos@109 180
bos@112 181 \subsection{Identification and strong integrity}
bos@109 182
bos@109 183 Along with delta or snapshot information, a revlog entry contains a
bos@109 184 cryptographic hash of the data that it represents. This makes it
bos@109 185 difficult to forge the contents of a revision, and easy to detect
bos@112 186 accidental corruption.
bos@112 187
bos@112 188 Hashes provide more than a mere check against corruption; they are
bos@112 189 used as the identifiers for revisions. The changeset identification
bos@111 190 hashes that you see as an end user are from revisions of the
bos@112 191 changelog. Although filelogs and the manifest also use hashes,
bos@112 192 Mercurial only uses these behind the scenes.
bos@112 193
bos@112 194 Mercurial verifies that hashes are correct when it retrieves file
bos@112 195 revisions and when it pulls changes from another repository. If it
bos@112 196 encounters an integrity problem, it will complain and stop whatever
bos@112 197 it's doing.
bos@109 198
bos@109 199 In addition to the effect it has on retrieval efficiency, Mercurial's
bos@109 200 use of periodic snapshots makes it more robust against partial data
bos@109 201 corruption. If a revlog becomes partly corrupted due to a hardware
bos@109 202 error or system bug, it's often possible to reconstruct some or most
bos@109 203 revisions from the uncorrupted sections of the revlog, both before and
bos@109 204 after the corrupted section. This would not be possible with a
bos@109 205 delta-only storage model.
bos@109 206
bos@110 207 \section{The working directory}
bos@110 208
bos@113 209 In the working directory, Mercurial stores a snapshot of the files
bos@113 210 from the repository as of a particular changeset.
bos@113 211
bos@113 212 The working directory ``knows'' which changeset it contains. When you
bos@113 213 update the working directory to contain a particular changeset,
bos@113 214 Mercurial looks up the appropriate revision of the manifest to find
bos@113 215 out which files it was tracking at the time that changeset was
bos@113 216 committed, and which revision of each file was then current. It then
bos@113 217 recreates a copy of each of those files, with the same contents it had
bos@113 218 when the changeset was committed.
bos@113 219
bos@113 220 The \emph{dirstate} contains Mercurial's knowledge of the working
bos@113 221 directory. This details which changeset the working directory is
bos@113 222 updated to, and all of the files that Mercurial is tracking in the
bos@113 223 working directory.
bos@113 224
bos@113 225 Just as a revision of a revlog has room for two parents, so that it
bos@113 226 can represent either a normal revision (with one parent) or a merge of
bos@113 227 two earlier revisions, the dirstate has slots for two parents. When
bos@113 228 you use the \hgcmd{update} command, the changeset that you update to
bos@113 229 is stored in the ``first parent'' slot, and the null ID in the second.
bos@113 230 When you \hgcmd{merge} with another changeset, the first parent
bos@113 231 remains unchanged, and the second parent is filled in with the
bos@113 232 changeset you're merging with. The \hgcmd{parents} command tells you
bos@113 233 what the parents of the dirstate are.
bos@113 234
bos@113 235 \subsection{What happens when you commit}
bos@113 236
bos@113 237 The dirstate stores parent information for more than just book-keeping
bos@113 238 purposes. Mercurial uses the parents of the dirstate as \emph{the
bos@113 239 parents of a new changeset} when you perform a commit.
bos@113 240
bos@113 241 \begin{figure}[ht]
bos@113 242 \centering
bos@113 243 \grafix{wdir}
bos@113 244 \caption{The working directory can have two parents}
bos@113 245 \label{fig:concepts:wdir}
bos@113 246 \end{figure}
bos@113 247
bos@113 248 Figure~\ref{fig:concepts:wdir} shows the normal state of the working
bos@113 249 directory, where it has a single changeset as parent. That changeset
bos@113 250 is the \emph{tip}, the newest changeset in the repository that has no
bos@113 251 children.
bos@113 252
bos@113 253 \begin{figure}[ht]
bos@113 254 \centering
bos@113 255 \grafix{wdir-after-commit}
bos@113 256 \caption{The working directory gains new parents after a commit}
bos@113 257 \label{fig:concepts:wdir-after-commit}
bos@113 258 \end{figure}
bos@113 259
bos@113 260 It's useful to think of the working directory as ``the changeset I'm
bos@113 261 about to commit''. Any files that you tell Mercurial that you've
bos@113 262 added, removed, renamed, or copied will be reflected in that
bos@113 263 changeset, as will modifications to any files that Mercurial is
bos@113 264 already tracking; the new changeset will have the parents of the
bos@113 265 working directory as its parents.
bos@113 266
bos@113 267 After a commit, Mercurial will update the parents of the working
bos@113 268 directory, so that the first parent is the ID of the new changeset,
bos@113 269 and the second is the null ID. This is illustrated in
bos@113 270 figure~\ref{fig:concepts:wdir-after-commit}.
bos@113 271
bos@113 272 \subsection{Other contents of the dirstate}
bos@110 273
bos@110 274 Because Mercurial doesn't force you to tell it when you're modifying a
bos@110 275 file, it uses the dirstate to store some extra information so it can
bos@110 276 determine efficiently whether you have modified a file. For each file
bos@110 277 in the working directory, it stores the time that it last modified the
bos@110 278 file itself, and the size of the file at that time.
bos@110 279
bos@113 280 When you explicitly \hgcmd{add}, \hgcmd{remove}, \hgcmd{rename} or
bos@113 281 \hgcmd{copy} files, the dirstate is updated each time.
bos@113 282
bos@110 283 When Mercurial is checking the states of files in the working
bos@110 284 directory, it first checks a file's modification time. If that has
bos@110 285 not changed, the file must not have been modified. If the file's size
bos@110 286 has changed, the file must have been modified. If the modification
bos@110 287 time has changed, but the size has not, only then does Mercurial need
bos@110 288 to read the actual contents of the file to see if they've changed.
bos@110 289 Storing these few extra pieces of information dramatically reduces the
bos@110 290 amount of data that Mercurial needs to read, which yields large
bos@110 291 performance improvements compared to other revision control systems.
bos@110 292
bos@112 293 \section{Revision history, branching,
bos@112 294 and merging}
bos@112 295
bos@112 296 Every entry in a Mercurial revlog knows the identity of its immediate
bos@112 297 ancestor revision, usually referred to as its \emph{parent}. In fact,
bos@112 298 a revision contains room for not one parent, but two. Mercurial uses
bos@112 299 a special hash, called the ``null ID'', to represent the idea ``there
bos@112 300 is no parent here''. This hash is simply a string of zeroes.
bos@112 301
bos@112 302 In figure~\ref{fig:concepts:revlog}, you can see an example of the
bos@112 303 conceptual structure of a revlog. Filelogs, manifests, and changelogs
bos@112 304 all have this same structure; they differ only in the kind of data
bos@112 305 stored in each delta or snapshot.
bos@112 306
bos@112 307 The first revision in a revlog (at the bottom of the image) has the
bos@112 308 null ID in both of its parent slots. For a ``normal'' revision, its
bos@112 309 first parent slot contains the ID of its parent revision, and its
bos@112 310 second contains the null ID, indicating that the revision has only one
bos@112 311 real parent. Any two revisions that have the same parent ID are
bos@112 312 branches. A revision that represents a merge between branches has two
bos@112 313 normal revision IDs in its parent slots.
bos@112 314
bos@112 315 \begin{figure}[ht]
bos@112 316 \centering
bos@112 317 \grafix{revlog}
bos@112 318 \caption{}
bos@112 319 \label{fig:concepts:revlog}
bos@112 320 \end{figure}
bos@112 321
bos@110 322 \section{Other interesting design features}
bos@110 323
bos@110 324 In the sections above, I've tried to highlight some of the most
bos@110 325 important aspects of Mercurial's design, to illustrate that it pays
bos@110 326 careful attention to reliability and performance. However, the
bos@110 327 attention to detail doesn't stop there. There are a number of other
bos@110 328 aspects of Mercurial's construction that I personally find
bos@110 329 interesting. I'll detail a few of them here, separate from the ``big
bos@110 330 ticket'' items above, so that if you're interested, you can gain a
bos@110 331 better idea of the amount of thinking that goes into a well-designed
bos@110 332 system.
bos@110 333
bos@110 334 \subsection{Clever compression}
bos@110 335
bos@110 336 When appropriate, Mercurial will store both snapshots and deltas in
bos@110 337 compressed form. It does this by always \emph{trying to} compress a
bos@110 338 snapshot or delta, but only storing the compressed version if it's
bos@110 339 smaller than the uncompressed version.
bos@110 340
bos@110 341 This means that Mercurial does ``the right thing'' when storing a file
bos@110 342 whose native form is compressed, such as a \texttt{zip} archive or a
bos@110 343 JPEG image. When these types of files are compressed a second time,
bos@110 344 the resulting file is usually bigger than the once-compressed form,
bos@110 345 and so Mercurial will store the plain \texttt{zip} or JPEG.
bos@110 346
bos@110 347 Deltas between revisions of a compressed file are usually larger than
bos@110 348 snapshots of the file, and Mercurial again does ``the right thing'' in
bos@110 349 these cases. It finds that such a delta exceeds the threshold at
bos@110 350 which it should store a complete snapshot of the file, so it stores
bos@110 351 the snapshot, again saving space compared to a naive delta-only
bos@110 352 approach.
bos@110 353
bos@110 354 \subsubsection{Network recompression}
bos@110 355
bos@110 356 When storing revisions on disk, Mercurial uses the ``deflate''
bos@110 357 compression algorithm (the same one used by the popular \texttt{zip}
bos@110 358 archive format), which balances good speed with a respectable
bos@110 359 compression ratio. However, when transmitting revision data over a
bos@110 360 network connection, Mercurial uncompresses the compressed revision
bos@110 361 data.
bos@110 362
bos@110 363 If the connection is over HTTP, Mercurial recompresses the entire
bos@110 364 stream of data using a compression algorithm that gives a etter
bos@110 365 compression ratio (the Burrows-Wheeler algorithm from the widely used
bos@110 366 \texttt{bzip2} compression package). This combination of algorithm
bos@110 367 and compression of the entire stream (instead of a revision at a time)
bos@110 368 substantially reduces the number of bytes to be transferred, yielding
bos@110 369 better network performance over almost all kinds of network.
bos@110 370
bos@110 371 (If the connection is over \command{ssh}, Mercurial \emph{doesn't}
bos@110 372 recompress the stream, because \command{ssh} can already do this
bos@110 373 itself.)
bos@110 374
bos@109 375 \subsection{Read/write ordering and atomicity}
bos@109 376
bos@109 377 Appending to files isn't the whole story when it comes to guaranteeing
bos@109 378 that a reader won't see a partial write. If you recall
bos@109 379 figure~\ref{fig:concepts:metadata}, revisions in the changelog point to
bos@109 380 revisions in the manifest, and revisions in the manifest point to
bos@109 381 revisions in filelogs. This hierarchy is deliberate.
bos@109 382
bos@109 383 A writer starts a transaction by writing filelog and manifest data,
bos@109 384 and doesn't write any changelog data until those are finished. A
bos@109 385 reader starts by reading changelog data, then manifest data, followed
bos@109 386 by filelog data.
bos@109 387
bos@109 388 Since the writer has always finished writing filelog and manifest data
bos@109 389 before it writes to the changelog, a reader will never read a pointer
bos@109 390 to a partially written manifest revision from the changelog, and it will
bos@109 391 never read a pointer to a partially written filelog revision from the
bos@109 392 manifest.
bos@109 393
bos@109 394 \subsection{Concurrent access}
bos@109 395
bos@109 396 The read/write ordering and atomicity guarantees mean that Mercurial
bos@109 397 never needs to \emph{lock} a repository when it's reading data, even
bos@109 398 if the repository is being written to while the read is occurring.
bos@109 399 This has a big effect on scalability; you can have an arbitrary number
bos@109 400 of Mercurial processes safely reading data from a repository safely
bos@109 401 all at once, no matter whether it's being written to or not.
bos@109 402
bos@109 403 The lockless nature of reading means that if you're sharing a
bos@109 404 repository on a multi-user system, you don't need to grant other local
bos@109 405 users permission to \emph{write} to your repository in order for them
bos@109 406 to be able to clone it or pull changes from it; they only need
bos@109 407 \emph{read} permission. (This is \emph{not} a common feature among
bos@109 408 revision control systems, so don't take it for granted! Most require
bos@109 409 readers to be able to lock a repository to access it safely, and this
bos@109 410 requires write permission on at least one directory, which of course
bos@109 411 makes for all kinds of nasty and annoying security and administrative
bos@109 412 problems.)
bos@109 413
bos@110 414 Mercurial uses locks to ensure that only one process can write to a
bos@110 415 repository at a time (the locking mechanism is safe even over
bos@110 416 filesystems that are notoriously hostile to locking, such as NFS). If
bos@110 417 a repository is locked, a writer will wait for a while to retry if the
bos@110 418 repository becomes unlocked, but if the repository remains locked for
bos@110 419 too long, the process attempting to write will time out after a while.
bos@110 420 This means that your daily automated scripts won't get stuck forever
bos@110 421 and pile up if a system crashes unnoticed, for example. (Yes, the
bos@110 422 timeout is configurable, from zero to infinity.)
bos@110 423
bos@110 424 \subsubsection{Safe dirstate access}
bos@110 425
bos@110 426 As with revision data, Mercurial doesn't take a lock to read the
bos@110 427 dirstate file; it does acquire a lock to write it. To avoid the
bos@110 428 possibility of reading a partially written copy of the dirstate file,
bos@110 429 Mercurial writes to a file with a unique name in the same directory as
bos@110 430 the dirstate file, then renames the temporary file atomically to
bos@110 431 \filename{dirstate}. The file named \filename{dirstate} is thus
bos@110 432 guaranteed to be complete, not partially written.
bos@109 433
bos@111 434 \subsection{Avoiding seeks}
bos@111 435
bos@111 436 Critical to Mercurial's performance is the avoidance of seeks of the
bos@111 437 disk head, since any seek is far more expensive than even a
bos@111 438 comparatively large read operation.
bos@111 439
bos@111 440 This is why, for example, the dirstate is stored in a single file. If
bos@111 441 there were a dirstate file per directory that Mercurial tracked, the
bos@111 442 disk would seek once per directory. Instead, Mercurial reads the
bos@111 443 entire single dirstate file in one step.
bos@111 444
bos@111 445 Mercurial also uses a ``copy on write'' scheme when cloning a
bos@111 446 repository on local storage. Instead of copying every revlog file
bos@111 447 from the old repository into the new repository, it makes a ``hard
bos@111 448 link'', which is a shorthand way to say ``these two names point to the
bos@111 449 same file''. When Mercurial is about to write to one of a revlog's
bos@111 450 files, it checks to see if the number of names pointing at the file is
bos@111 451 greater than one. If it is, more than one repository is using the
bos@111 452 file, so Mercurial makes a new copy of the file that is private to
bos@111 453 this repository.
bos@111 454
bos@111 455 A few revision control developers have pointed out that this idea of
bos@111 456 making a complete private copy of a file is not very efficient in its
bos@111 457 use of storage. While this is true, storage is cheap, and this method
bos@111 458 gives the highest performance while deferring most book-keeping to the
bos@111 459 operating system. An alternative scheme would most likely reduce
bos@111 460 performance and increase the complexity of the software, each of which
bos@111 461 is much more important to the ``feel'' of day-to-day use.
bos@109 462
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