On Thu, Oct 19, 2017 at 01:04:59AM -0400, Jeff King wrote:
> So. That leaves me with:
>
> - I'm unclear on whether next_byte() is meant to return that trailing
> NUL or not. I don't think it causes any bugs, but it certainly
> confused me for a function to take a cp/endp pair of pointers, and
> then dereference endp. It might be worth either fixing or clarifying
> with a comment.
>
> - Those loops to eat trailing whitespace are doing nothing. I'm not
> sure if that all works out because next_byte() eats whitespaces or
> not (I think not, because it doesn't eat whitespace for the
> IGNORE_WHITESPACE_AT_EOL case). But I'm not quite sure what a test
> would look like.
I had trouble constructing a test at first, but I think my test lines
just weren't long enough to trigger the movement heuristics. If I switch
to something besides seq, I can do:
# any input that has reasonably sized lines
look e | head -50 >file
git add file
perl -i -ne '
# pick up lines 20-25 to move to line 40, and
# add some trailing whitespace to them
if ($. >= 20 && $. <= 25) {
s/$/ /;
$hold .= $_;
} else {
print $hold if ($. == 40);
print;
}
' file
git diff --color-moved --ignore-space-at-eol
I think that _should_ show the block as moved, but it doesn't. But if I
apply this patch:
diff --git a/diff.c b/diff.c
index 93dccd1817..375d9cf447 100644
--- a/diff.c
+++ b/diff.c
@@ -743,8 +743,8 @@ static int moved_entry_cmp(const struct diff_options
*diffopt,
const struct moved_entry *b,
const void *keydata)
{
- const char *ap = a->es->line, *ae = a->es->line + a->es->len;
- const char *bp = b->es->line, *be = b->es->line + b->es->len;
+ const char *ap = a->es->line, *ae = a->es->line + a->es->len - 1;
+ const char *bp = b->es->line, *be = b->es->line + b->es->len - 1;
if (!(diffopt->xdl_opts & XDF_WHITESPACE_FLAGS))
return a->es->len != b->es->len || memcmp(ap, bp, a->es->len);
@@ -771,7 +771,7 @@ static unsigned get_string_hash(struct emitted_diff_symbol
*es, struct diff_opti
{
if (o->xdl_opts & XDF_WHITESPACE_FLAGS) {
static struct strbuf sb = STRBUF_INIT;
- const char *ap = es->line, *ae = es->line + es->len;
+ const char *ap = es->line, *ae = es->line + es->len - 1;
int c;
strbuf_reset(&sb);
it does. It just adjusts our "end pointer" to point to the last valid
character in the string (rather than one past), which seems to be the
convention that those loops (and next_byte) expect.
-Peff