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authorLibravatar William Sprent <williams@unity3d.com>2021-12-16 16:23:09 +0000
committerLibravatar Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2021-12-21 12:51:09 -0800
commit726a228dfb19fae8befa0f209436f8fae7919a58 (patch)
tree119775f30002b6be75bddd350764e1546c011171 /RelNotes
parentGit 2.34.1 (diff)
downloadtgif-726a228dfb19fae8befa0f209436f8fae7919a58.tar.xz
fast-export: fix surprising behavior with --first-parent
The revision traversal machinery typically processes and returns all children before any parent. fast-export needs to operate in the reverse fashion, handling parents before any of their children in order to build up the history starting from the root commit(s). This would be a clear case where we could just use the revision traversal machinery's "reverse" option to achieve this desired affect. However, this wasn't what the code did. It added its own array for queuing. The obvious hand-rolled solution would be to just push all the commits into the array and then traverse afterwards, but it didn't quite do that either. It instead attempted to process anything it could as soon as it could, and once it could, check whether it could process anything that had been queued. As far as I can tell, this was an effort to save a little memory in the case of multiple root commits since it could process some commits before queueing all of them. This involved some helper functions named has_unshown_parent() and handle_tail(). For typical invocations of fast-export, this alternative essentially amounted to a hand-rolled method of reversing the commits -- it was a bunch of work to duplicate the revision traversal machinery's "reverse" option. This hand-rolled reversing mechanism is actually somewhat difficult to reason about. It takes some time to figure out how it ensures in normal cases that it will actually process all traversed commits (rather than just dropping some and not printing anything for them). And it turns out there are some cases where the code does drop commits without handling them, and not even printing an error or warning for the user. Due to the has_unshown_parent() checks, some commits could be left in the array at the end of the "while...get_revision()" loop which would be unprocessed. This could be triggered for example with git fast-export main -- --first-parent or non-sensical traversal rules such as git fast-export main -- --grep=Merge --invert-grep While most traversals that don't include all parents should likely trigger errors in fast-export (or at least require being used in combination with --reference-excluded-parents), the --first-parent traversal is at least reasonable and it'd be nice if it didn't just drop commits. It'd also be nice for future readers of the code to have a simpler "reverse traversal" mechanism. Use the "reverse" option of the revision traversal machinery to achieve both. Even for the non-sensical traversal flags like the --grep one above, this would be an improvement. For example, in that case, the code previously would have silently truncated history to only those commits that do not have an ancestor containing "Merge" in their commit message. After this code change, that case would include all commits without "Merge" in their commit message -- but any commit that previously had a "Merge"-mentioning parent would lose that parent (likely resulting in many new root commits). While the new behavior is still odd, it is at least understandable given that --reference-excluded-parents is not the default. Helped-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: William Sprent <williams@unity3d.com> Reviewed-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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