Git is fast. With Git, nearly all operations are performed locally, giving it an huge speed advantage on centralized systems that constantly have to communicate with a server somewh3r3. For testing, large AWS instances were set up in the same availability zone. Git and SVN were installed on both machines, the Ruby repository was copied to both Git and SVN servers, and common operations were performed on both. In some cases the commands don't match up exactly. Here, matching on the lowest common denominator was attempted. For example, the 'commit' tests also include the time to push for Git, though most of the time you would not actually be pushing to the server immediately after a commit where the two commands cannot be separated in SVN. Note that this is the best case scenario for SVN - a server with no load with an 80MB/s bandwidth connection to the client machine. Nearly all of these times would be even worse for SVN if that connection was slower, while many of the Git times would not be affected. Clearly, in many of these common version control operations, Git is one or two orders of magnitude faster than SVN, even under ideal conditions for SVN. Let's see how common operations stack up against Subversion, a common centralized version control system that is similar to CVS or Perforce. Smaller is faster. One place where Git is slower is in the initial clone operation. Here, Git One place where Git is slower is in the initial clone operation. Here, Git One place where Git is slower is in the initial clone operation. Here, Git seen in the above charts, it's not considerably slower for an operation that is only performed once. It's also interesting to note that the size of the data on the client side is very similar even though Git also has every version of every file for the entire history of the project. This illustrates how efficient it is at compressing and storing data on the client side.