diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'refs/packed-backend.c')
-rw-r--r-- | refs/packed-backend.c | 94 |
1 files changed, 94 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/refs/packed-backend.c b/refs/packed-backend.c index 0279aeceea..0b0a17ca8e 100644 --- a/refs/packed-backend.c +++ b/refs/packed-backend.c @@ -754,6 +754,100 @@ error: return -1; } +int is_packed_transaction_needed(struct ref_store *ref_store, + struct ref_transaction *transaction) +{ + struct packed_ref_store *refs = packed_downcast( + ref_store, + REF_STORE_READ, + "is_packed_transaction_needed"); + struct strbuf referent = STRBUF_INIT; + size_t i; + int ret; + + if (!is_lock_file_locked(&refs->lock)) + BUG("is_packed_transaction_needed() called while unlocked"); + + /* + * We're only going to bother returning false for the common, + * trivial case that references are only being deleted, their + * old values are not being checked, and the old `packed-refs` + * file doesn't contain any of those reference(s). This gives + * false positives for some other cases that could + * theoretically be optimized away: + * + * 1. It could be that the old value is being verified without + * setting a new value. In this case, we could verify the + * old value here and skip the update if it agrees. If it + * disagrees, we could either let the update go through + * (the actual commit would re-detect and report the + * problem), or come up with a way of reporting such an + * error to *our* caller. + * + * 2. It could be that a new value is being set, but that it + * is identical to the current packed value of the + * reference. + * + * Neither of these cases will come up in the current code, + * because the only caller of this function passes to it a + * transaction that only includes `delete` updates with no + * `old_id`. Even if that ever changes, false positives only + * cause an optimization to be missed; they do not affect + * correctness. + */ + + /* + * Start with the cheap checks that don't require old + * reference values to be read: + */ + for (i = 0; i < transaction->nr; i++) { + struct ref_update *update = transaction->updates[i]; + + if (update->flags & REF_HAVE_OLD) + /* Have to check the old value -> needed. */ + return 1; + + if ((update->flags & REF_HAVE_NEW) && !is_null_oid(&update->new_oid)) + /* Have to set a new value -> needed. */ + return 1; + } + + /* + * The transaction isn't checking any old values nor is it + * setting any nonzero new values, so it still might be able + * to be skipped. Now do the more expensive check: the update + * is needed if any of the updates is a delete, and the old + * `packed-refs` file contains a value for that reference. + */ + ret = 0; + for (i = 0; i < transaction->nr; i++) { + struct ref_update *update = transaction->updates[i]; + unsigned int type; + struct object_id oid; + + if (!(update->flags & REF_HAVE_NEW)) + /* + * This reference isn't being deleted -> not + * needed. + */ + continue; + + if (!refs_read_raw_ref(ref_store, update->refname, + oid.hash, &referent, &type) || + errno != ENOENT) { + /* + * We have to actually delete that reference + * -> this transaction is needed. + */ + ret = 1; + break; + } + } + + strbuf_release(&referent); + return ret; +} + struct packed_transaction_backend_data { /* True iff the transaction owns the packed-refs lock. */ int own_lock; |