Note: Results may vary, depending on distance from your Git servers. In my completely unscientific benchmarks using time , after the following steps, git pull went from ~5s, using GitHub, to ~0.1s, using EC2 on AWS Singapore.

Why?

1 2 3 4 $ time git pull Already up-to-date. real 0m5.075s

5 seconds just to tell you that your Git repository is already up-to-date? Unacceptable.

Enable SSH Connection Sharing and Persistence

In Singapore, the round-trip time to github.com is ~250ms. Establishing an SSH connection every time you perform a Git operation costs many round-trips, but you can keep them around and reuse them with the following lines in ~/.ssh/config :

~/.ssh/config 1 2 3 ControlMaster auto ControlPath /tmp/ %r@%h:%p ControlPersist yes

ControlMaster auto enables the sharing of multiple SSH sessions over a single network connection, and auto-creating a master connection if it does not already exist.

ControlPath /tmp/%r@%h:%p specifies the path to the control socket used for connection sharing. %r will be substituted by the remote login username, %h by the target host name and %p by the port.

ControlPersist yes keeps the master connection open in the background indefinitely.

With this, git pull goes down to ~1s, a 5x improvement. Of course, this speeds up your other repeated SSH connections too!

Setup Git Mirror with Automatic Mirroring to GitHub

For sub-second Git remote operations, you’re going to need a server with low latency. (Imagine, when physically working together, you could git pull the very moment someone says “Pushed!”.)

However, you can still have all the niceties GitHub provides, by automatically pushing to GitHub from your server. There are several alternatives for keeping GitHub updated, like using cron jobs or multiple remotes, but I think using a post-receive hook is the most elegant solution.

On your server, set up a GitHub deploy key:

1 2 $ ssh-keygen -t rsa -C "your_email@example.com" $ cat .ssh/id_rsa.pub

Go to your target repository’s Settings –> Deploy Keys –> Add deploy key and paste the public key in and submit. Then you can mirror your repository:

1 $ git clone --mirror git@github.com:ahbeng/example.git

To automatically to mirror to GitHub after you’ve pushed, set up a Git hook at hooks/post-receive :

hooks/post-receive 1 2 #!/bin/bash nohup git push --mirror &>/dev/null &

Your Git client won’t disconnect till the script has completed, so a simple git push --mirror would defeat the purpose of setting this up, since you’d be adding on GitHub’s latency to your pushes again. So, we background the process and keep it running after logging out using nohup, and redirect all I/O streams to /dev/null to prevent SSH from hanging on logout.

Make the hook executable:

1 $ chmod +x hooks/post-receive

Now you can use your new Git mirror locally. Assuming you have added the server’s private key to ssh-agent:

1 $ ssh-add ec2.pem

You could clone it:

1 $ git clone user@hostname:example

Or change your existing repository’s remote:

1 $ git remote set -url origin user@hostname:example

Results

Taken alone, using the Git mirror brings git pull down to ~1.2s. When combined with SSH connection sharing:

1 2 3 4 $ time git pull Already up-to-date. real 0m0.111s

0.1s Git remote operations. Awesome.