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We assumed that the sha1 of the tree of the commit of the ref we care
about was sufficient to cache, but `git replace` means that you need to
know the state of other branches too, since anything in refs/replace can
completely change what the tree you check-out is.
This behaviour can be disabled globally by setting
GIT_NO_REPLACE_OBJECTS, so we're going to do that.
If we need to integrate a project that uses git-replace to change the
contents of their git trees then we could support that by:
if any(refs/replace/*):
potentially_replacable_objects = [
`git rev-parse HEAD`,
`git rev-parse HEAD^{commit}`,
`git rev-parse HEAD^{tree}`]
potentially_replacable_objects.extend(
`git ls-tree -r HEAD | awk '{print $3}'`)
# NOTE: doesn't handle submodules, and you'd need to expand this
# set whenever you process a replacement
for object in refs/replace/*:
if basename(object) not in potentially_replacable_objects: continue
cache_key['replacements'][basename(object)] = `git rev-parse $object`
If we were to support this would need to traverse the tree anyway, doing
replacements, so we may as well use libgit to do the checkout anyway,
and list which replacements were used.
However, since the expected use-case of `git replace` is as a better way
to do history grafting, we're unlikely to need it, as it would only have
any effect if it replaced the commit we were using with a different one.
Rubber-stamped-by: Daniel Silverstone
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The workspace needs to be able to list all its system branches, and the
system branches need to be able to list all their git repositories.
This is broadly the same thing, just with a different directory to look
out for, so provide that utility in morphlib.util.
find_leaf() is rewritten to use find_leaves(), this is less efficient
since it waits until every leaf is found.
I felt it was better to reduce the code than maintain a slightly more
optimal algorithm.
The find_leaf() algorithm could become more optimal if it could lazily
check for at least one result in a generator.
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