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authorLibravatar Jeff King <peff@peff.net>2021-09-24 14:46:13 -0400
committerLibravatar Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2021-09-27 12:36:45 -0700
commit968f12fdac2601086dea7e10db17f1c50d704a07 (patch)
tree27bf6c9898917f7ce069bb9e38519485909243c2 /http-walker.c
parentrefs: omit dangling symrefs when using GIT_REF_PARANOIA (diff)
downloadtgif-968f12fdac2601086dea7e10db17f1c50d704a07.tar.xz
refs: turn on GIT_REF_PARANOIA by default
The original point of the GIT_REF_PARANOIA flag was to include broken refs in iterations, so that possibly-destructive operations would not silently ignore them (and would generally instead try to operate on the oids and fail when the objects could not be accessed). We already turned this on by default for some dangerous operations, like "repack -ad" (where missing a reachability tip would mean dropping the associated history). But it was not on for general use, even though it could easily result in the spreading of corruption (e.g., imagine cloning a repository which simply omits some of its refs because their objects are missing; the result quietly succeeds even though you did not clone everything!). This patch turns on GIT_REF_PARANOIA by default. So a clone as mentioned above would actually fail (upload-pack tells us about the broken ref, and when we ask for the objects, pack-objects fails to deliver them). This may be inconvenient when working with a corrupted repository, but: - we are better off to err on the side of complaining about corruption, and then provide mechanisms for explicitly loosening safety. - this is only one type of corruption anyway. If we are missing any other objects in the history that _aren't_ ref tips, then we'd behave similarly (happily show the ref, but then barf when we started traversing). We retain the GIT_REF_PARANOIA variable, but simply default it to "1" instead of "0". That gives the user an escape hatch for loosening this when working with a corrupt repository. It won't work across a remote connection to upload-pack (because we can't necessarily set environment variables on the remote), but there the client has other options (e.g., choosing which refs to fetch). As a bonus, this also makes ref iteration faster in general (because we don't have to call has_object_file() for each ref), though probably not noticeably so in the general case. In a repo with a million refs, it shaved a few hundred milliseconds off of upload-pack's advertisement; that's noticeable, but most repos are not nearly that large. The possible downside here is that any operation which iterates refs but doesn't ever open their objects may now quietly claim to have X when the object is corrupted (e.g., "git rev-list new-branch --not --all" will treat a broken ref as uninteresting). But again, that's not really any different than corruption below the ref level. We might have refs/heads/old-branch as non-corrupt, but we are not actively checking that we have the entire reachable history. Or the pointed-to object could even be corrupted on-disk (but our "do we have it" check would still succeed). In that sense, this is merely bringing ref-corruption in line with general object corruption. One alternative implementation would be to actually check for broken refs, and then _immediately die_ if we see any. That would cause the "rev-list --not --all" case above to abort immediately. But in many ways that's the worst of all worlds: - it still spends time looking up the objects an extra time - it still doesn't catch corruption below the ref level - it's even more inconvenient; with the current implementation of GIT_REF_PARANOIA for something like upload-pack, we can make the advertisement and let the client choose a non-broken piece of history. If we bail as soon as we see a broken ref, they cannot even see the advertisement. The test changes here show some of the fallout. A non-destructive "git repack -adk" now fails by default (but we can override it). Deleting a broken ref now actually tells the hooks the correct "before" state, rather than a confusing null oid. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Reviewed-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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