Paul Tan <[email protected]> writes:
> +enum rebase_type {
> + REBASE_INVALID = -1,
> + REBASE_FALSE = 0,
> + REBASE_TRUE,
> + REBASE_PRESERVE
> +};
> +
> +/**
> + * Parses the value of --rebase, branch.*.rebase or pull.rebase. If value is
> a
> + * false value, returns REBASE_FALSE. If value is a true value, returns
> + * REBASE_TRUE. If value is "preserve", returns REBASE_PRESERVE. Otherwise,
> + * returns -1 to signify an invalid value.
> + */
> +static enum rebase_type parse_config_rebase(const char *value)
> +{
> + int v = git_config_maybe_bool("pull.rebase", value);
> + if (!v)
> + return REBASE_FALSE;
> + else if (v >= 0)
> + return REBASE_TRUE;
It is somewhat misleading to say "v >= 0" when you already use !v to
signal something else. Perhaps "else if (v > 0)" is better?
> +/**
> + * Returns remote's upstream branch for the current branch. If remote is
> NULL,
> + * the current branch's configured default remote is used. Returns NULL if
> + * `remote` does not name a valid remote, HEAD does not point to a branch,
> + * remote is not the branch's configured remote or the branch does not have
> any
> + * configured upstream branch.
> + */
> +static char *get_upstream_branch(const char *remote)
> +{
> + struct remote *rm;
> + struct branch *curr_branch;
> +
> + rm = remote_get(remote);
> + if (!rm)
> + return NULL;
> +
> + curr_branch = branch_get("HEAD");
> + if (!curr_branch)
> + return NULL;
> +
> + if (curr_branch->remote != rm)
> + return NULL;
> +
> + if (!curr_branch->merge_nr)
> + return NULL;
> +
> + return xstrdup(curr_branch->merge[0]->dst);
> +}
Hmph, it is somewhat surprising that we do not have such a helper
already. Wouldn't we need this logic to implement $branch@{upstream}
syntax?
> +/**
> + * Derives the remote tracking branch from the remote and refspec.
> + *
> + * FIXME: The current implementation assumes the default mapping of
> + * refs/heads/<branch_name> to refs/remotes/<remote_name>/<branch_name>.
> + */
> +static char *get_tracking_branch(const char *remote, const char *refspec)
> +{
This does smell like an incomplete reimplementation of what
get_fetch_map() knows how to do.
> +/**
> + * Given the repo and refspecs, sets fork_point to the point at which the
> + * current branch forked from its remote tracking branch. Returns 0 on
> success,
> + * -1 on failure.
> + */
> +static int get_rebase_fork_point(unsigned char fork_point[GIT_SHA1_RAWSZ],
> + const char *repo, const char *refspec)
> +{
> +...
> +}
This function looks OK (the two get_*_branch() helpers it uses I am
not sure about though).
Same comment on "fork_point[]" parameter's type applies here,
though. While I do not mind if you used "struct object_id" to
represent these object names, if you are sticking to the traditional
"unsigned char [20]", then these should be "unsigned char *" to be
consistent with others.
> +/**
> + * Sets merge_base to the octopus merge base of curr_head, merge_head and
> + * fork_point. Returns 0 if a merge base is found, 1 otherwise.
> + */
> +static int get_octopus_merge_base(unsigned char merge_base[GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ],
> + unsigned char curr_head[GIT_SHA1_RAWSZ],
> + unsigned char merge_head[GIT_SHA1_RAWSZ],
> + unsigned char fork_point[GIT_SHA1_RAWSZ])
> +{
> +...
> +}
OK (and everything after this point looks good).
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in
the body of a message to [email protected]
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html