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author | Jeff King <peff@peff.net> | 2019-11-12 21:07:19 -0500 |
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committer | Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> | 2019-11-13 16:13:03 +0900 |
commit | ad7a403268735b98566cff4b082710bbb0d9f417 (patch) | |
tree | c2d0c08361b8292fbde420b3ed5bbd312967a33a /t/t4018/perl-skip-end-of-heredoc | |
parent | Git 2.23 (diff) | |
download | tgif-ad7a403268735b98566cff4b082710bbb0d9f417.tar.xz |
send-pack: check remote ref status on pack-objects failure
When we're pushing a pack and our local pack-objects fails, we enter an
error code path that does a few things:
1. Set the status of every ref to REF_STATUS_NONE
2. Call receive_unpack_status() to try to get an error report from
the other side
3. Return an error to the caller
If pack-objects failed because the connection to the server dropped,
there's not much more we can do than report the hangup. And indeed, step
2 will try to read a packet from the other side, which will die() in the
packet-reading code with "the remote end hung up unexpectedly".
But if the connection _didn't_ die, then the most common issue is that
the remote index-pack or unpack-objects complained about our pack (we
could also have a local pack-objects error, but this ends up being the
same; we'd send an incomplete pack and the remote side would complain).
In that case we do report the error from the other side (because of step
2), but we fail to say anything further about the refs. The issue is
two-fold:
- in step 1, the "NONE" status is not "we saw an error, so we have no
status". It generally means "this ref did not match our refspecs, so
we didn't try to push it". So when we print out the push status
table, we won't mention any refs at all!
But even if we had a status enum for "pack-objects error", we
wouldn't want to blindly set it for every ref. For example, in a
non-atomic push we might have rejected some refs already on the
client side (e.g., REF_STATUS_REJECT_NODELETE) and we'd want to
report that.
- in step 2, we read just the unpack status. But receive-pack will
also tell us about each ref (usually that it rejected them because
of the unpacker error).
So a much better strategy is to leave the ref status fields as they are
(usually EXPECTING_REPORT) and then actually receive (and print) the
full per-ref status.
This case is actually covered in the test suite, as t5504.8, which
writes a pack that will be rejected by the remote unpack-objects. But
it's racy. Because our pack is small, most of the time pack-objects
manages to write the whole thing before the remote rejects it, and so it
returns success and we print out the errors from the remote. But very
occasionally (or when run under --stress) it goes slow enough to see a
failure in writing, and git-push reports nothing for the refs.
With this patch, the test should behave consistently.
There shouldn't be any downside to this approach. If we really did see
the connection drop, we'd already die in receive_unpack_status(), and
we'll continue to do so. If the connection drops _after_ we get the
unpack status but before we see any ref status, we'll still print the
remote unpacker error, but will now say "remote end hung up" instead of
returning the error up the call-stack. But as discussed, we weren't
showing anything more useful than that with the current code. And
anyway, that case is quite unlikely (the connection dropping at that
point would have to be unrelated to the pack-objects error, because of
the ordering of events).
In the future we might want to handle packet-read errors ourself instead
of dying, which would print a full ref status table even for hangups.
But in the meantime, this patch should be a strict improvement.
Helped-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Diffstat (limited to 't/t4018/perl-skip-end-of-heredoc')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions