Jeff King <[email protected]> writes:
> ...
> We could do analysis on any cycles that we find to
> distinguish the two cases (i.e., it is a bogus pack if and
> only if every delta in the cycle is in the same pack), but
> we don't need to. If there is a cycle inside a pack, we'll
> run into problems not only reusing the delta, but accessing
> the object data at all. So when we try to dig up the actual
> size of the object, we'll hit that same cycle and kick in
> our usual complain-and-try-another-source code.
I agree with all of the above reasoning.
> Actually, skimming the sha1_file code, I am not 100% sure that we detect
> cycles in OBJ_REF_DELTA (you cannot have cycles in OBJ_OFS_DELTA since
> they always point backwards in the pack). But if that is the case, then
> I think we should fix that, not worry about special-casing it here.
Yes, but sha1_file.c? It is the reading side and it is too late if
we notice a problem, I would think.
> +/*
> + * Drop an on-disk delta we were planning to reuse. Naively, this would
> + * just involve blanking out the "delta" field, but we have to deal
> + * with two extra pieces of book-keeping:
> + *
> + * 1. Removing ourselves from the delta_sibling linked list.
> + *
> + * 2. Updating our size; check_object() will have filled in the size of our
> + * delta, but a non-delta object needs it true size.
Excellent point.
> +/*
> + * Follow the chain of deltas from this entry onward, throwing away any links
> + * that cause us to hit a cycle (as determined by the DFS state flags in
> + * the entries).
> + */
> +static void break_delta_cycles(struct object_entry *entry)
> +{
> + /* If it's not a delta, it can't be part of a cycle. */
> + if (!entry->delta) {
> + entry->dfs_state = DFS_DONE;
> + return;
> + }
> +
> + switch (entry->dfs_state) {
> + case DFS_NONE:
> + /*
> + * This is the first time we've seen the object. We mark it as
> + * part of the active potential cycle and recurse.
> + */
> + entry->dfs_state = DFS_ACTIVE;
> + break_delta_cycles(entry->delta);
> + entry->dfs_state = DFS_DONE;
> + break;
> +
> + case DFS_DONE:
> + /* object already examined, and not part of a cycle */
> + break;
> +
> + case DFS_ACTIVE:
> + /*
> + * We found a cycle that needs broken. It would be correct to
> + * break any link in the chain, but it's convenient to
> + * break this one.
> + */
> + drop_reused_delta(entry);
> + break;
> + }
> +}
Do we need to do anything to the DFS state of an entry when
drop_reused_delta() resets its other fields? If we had this and
started from A (read "A--->B" as "A is based on B"):
A--->B--->C--->A
we paint A as ACTIVE, visit B and then C and paint them as active,
and when we visit A for the second time, we drop it (i.e. break the
link between A and B), return and paint C as DONE, return and paint
B as DONE, and leaving A painted as ACTIVE, while the chain is now
B--->C--->A
If we later find D that is directly based on A, wouldn't we end up
visiting A and attempt to drop it again? drop_reused_delta() is
idempotent so there will be no data structure corruption, I think,
but we can safely declare that the entry is now DONE after calling
drop_reused_delta() on it (either in the function or in the caller
after it calls the function), no?
> + 2. Picking the next pack to examine based on locality (i.e., where we found
> + something else recently).
> +
> + In this case, we want to make sure that we find the delta versions of A
> and
> + B and not their base versions. We can do this by putting two blobs in
> each
> + pack. The first is a "dummy" blob that can only be found in the pack in
> + question. And then the second is the actual delta we want to find.
> +
> + The two blobs must be present in the same tree, not present in other
> trees,
> + and the dummy pathname must sort before the delta path.
> +# Create a pack containing the the tree $1 and blob $1:file, with
> +# the latter stored as a delta against $2:file.
> +#
> +# We convince pack-objects to make the delta in the direction of our choosing
> +# by marking $2 as a preferred-base edge. That results in $1:file as a thin
> +# delta, and index-pack completes it by adding $2:file as a base.
Tricky but clever and correct ;-)
> +make_pack () {
> + {
> + echo "-$(git rev-parse $2)"
Is everybody's 'echo' happy with dash followed by unknown string?
> + echo "$(git rev-parse $1:dummy) dummy"
> + echo "$(git rev-parse $1:file) file"
> + } |
> + git pack-objects --stdout |
> + git index-pack --stdin --fix-thin
An alternative
git pack-objects --stdout <<-EOF |
-$(git rev-parse $2)
$(git rev-parse $1:dummy) dummy
$(git rev-parse $1:file) file
EOF
git index-pack --stdin --fix-thin
looks somewhat ugly, though.
> +}
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