If obj->type == OBJ_TREE, an invocation of fsck_walk() will invoke
parse_tree() and return quickly if that returns nonzero, so it is of no
use for traverse_one_object() to invoke parse_tree() in this situation
before invoking fsck_walk(). Remove that code.

The behavior of traverse_one_object() is changed slightly in that it now
returns -1 instead of 1 in the case that parse_tree() fails, but this is
not an issue because its only caller (traverse_reachable) does not care
about the value as long as it is nonzero.

This code was introduced in commit 271b8d2 ("builtin-fsck: move away
from object-refs to fsck_walk", 2008-02-25). The same issue existed in
that commit.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathanta...@google.com>
---
Here's a code cleanup. I noticed this while looking at modifying fsck.
---
 builtin/fsck.c | 13 +------------
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 12 deletions(-)

diff --git a/builtin/fsck.c b/builtin/fsck.c
index 99dea7adf..4ba311cda 100644
--- a/builtin/fsck.c
+++ b/builtin/fsck.c
@@ -168,18 +168,7 @@ static void mark_object_reachable(struct object *obj)
 
 static int traverse_one_object(struct object *obj)
 {
-       int result;
-       struct tree *tree = NULL;
-
-       if (obj->type == OBJ_TREE) {
-               tree = (struct tree *)obj;
-               if (parse_tree(tree) < 0)
-                       return 1; /* error already displayed */
-       }
-       result = fsck_walk(obj, obj, &fsck_walk_options);
-       if (tree)
-               free_tree_buffer(tree);
-       return result;
+       return fsck_walk(obj, obj, &fsck_walk_options);
 }
 
 static int traverse_reachable(void)
-- 
2.13.2.932.g7449e964c-goog

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