![Sip for mac git](https://cdn-ak.f.st-hatena.com/images/fotolife/g/greathigh-power/20200126/20200126193926.jpg)
![sip for mac git sip for mac git](https://rcmdnk.com/images/post/thumbnail/20151004_liteiconsipdisabled_200_200.jpg)
And it was even sluggish on tiny git repos with less than 100 files, so either something was seriously wrong with my filesystem-which should've shown problems elsewhere-or Git was being funny.
![sip for mac git sip for mac git](http://twinkle.dolezel.info/img/twinkle-screenshot.png)
Later in the day when I was doing some heavy Git activity, I noticed everything felt.
#Sip for mac git upgrade#
But as Apple's evolved macOS, they've done a pretty good job of keeping the system versions relatively up-to-date, and unless you need bleeding edge features, the version of Git that's installed on macOS Mojave (2.17.x) is probably adequate for now.īut back to Homebrew-recently I ran brew upgrade to upgrade a bunch of packages, and it happened to upgrade Git to 2.20.1. In the past, it was necessary to use Homebrew to get a much newer version of Git than was available at the time on macOS. I regularly use Homebrew to switch to more recent versions of CLI utilities and other packages I use in my day-to-day software and infrastructure development.
![sip for mac git sip for mac git](http://i.stack.imgur.com/JfkTS.png)
Maybe some of the 'spyware-ish' software that's installed on the work mark is making calls like lstat() super slow? Looks like I might be profiling some things on that machine anyways :) Update: I just upgraded my personal mac to 2.20.1, and am experiencing none of the slowdown I had on my work Mac.
![Sip for mac git](https://cdn-ak.f.st-hatena.com/images/fotolife/g/greathigh-power/20200126/20200126193926.jpg)