Collaborative Text Editing with Eg-walker: Better, Faster, Smaller
Joseph Gentle and Martin Kleppmann
20th European Conference on Computer Systems (EuroSys),
Rotterdam, Netherlands,
March 2025.
Abstract
Collaborative text editing algorithms allow several users to concurrently modify a text file, and
automatically merge concurrent edits into a consistent state. Existing algorithms fall in two
categories: Operational Transformation (OT) algorithms are slow to merge files that have diverged
substantially due to offline editing; CRDTs are slow to load and consume a lot of memory. We
introduce Eg-walker, a collaboration algorithm for text that avoids these weaknesses. Compared to
existing CRDTs, it consumes an order of magnitude less memory in the steady state, and loading
a document from disk is orders of magnitude faster. Compared to OT, merging long-running branches is
orders of magnitude faster. In the worst case, the merging performance of Eg-walker is comparable
with existing CRDT algorithms. Eg-walker can be used everywhere CRDTs are used, including
peer-to-peer systems without a central server. By offering performance that is competitive with
centralised algorithms, our result paves the way towards the widespread adoption of peer-to-peer
collaboration software.