Jonathan Tan <[email protected]> writes:
> Teach fsck to not treat refs with missing targets as an error when
> extensions.lazyobject is set.
>
> For the purposes of warning about no default refs, such refs are still
> treated as legitimate refs.
>
> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan <[email protected]>
> ---
> builtin/fsck.c | 8 ++++++++
> t/t0410-lazy-object.sh | 20 ++++++++++++++++++++
> 2 files changed, 28 insertions(+)
>
> diff --git a/builtin/fsck.c b/builtin/fsck.c
> index 1cfb8d98c..e29ff760b 100644
> --- a/builtin/fsck.c
> +++ b/builtin/fsck.c
> @@ -438,6 +438,14 @@ static int fsck_handle_ref(const char *refname, const
> struct object_id *oid,
>
> obj = parse_object(oid);
> if (!obj) {
> + if (repository_format_lazy_object) {
> + /*
> + * Increment default_refs anyway, because this is a
> + * valid ref.
> + */
> + default_refs++;
> + return 0;
> + }
> error("%s: invalid sha1 pointer %s", refname, oid_to_hex(oid));
> errors_found |= ERROR_REACHABLE;
At this point, do we know (or can we tell) if this is a missing
object or a file exists as a loose object but is corrupt? If we
could, it would be nice to do this only for the former to avoid
sweeping a real corruption that is unrelated to the lazy fetch under
the rug.
> +test_expect_success 'fsck fails on lazy object pointed to by ref' '
> + rm -rf repo &&
> + test_create_repo repo &&
> + test_commit -C repo 1 &&
> +
> + A=$(git -C repo commit-tree -m a HEAD^{tree}) &&
> +
> + # Reference $A only from ref, and delete it
> + git -C repo branch mybranch "$A" &&
> + delete_object repo "$A" &&
> +
> + test_must_fail git -C repo fsck
> +'
And a new test that uses a helper different from delete_object
(perhaps call it corrupt_object?) can be used to make sure that we
complain in that case here.
> +test_expect_success '...but succeeds if lazyobject is set' '
> + git -C repo config core.repositoryformatversion 1 &&
> + git -C repo config extensions.lazyobject "arbitrary string" &&
> + git -C repo fsck
> +'
> +
> test_done