From 4981fe750b1fc58bfdf5b9ca9843f4f505b9bb4d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jeff King Date: Sat, 23 Feb 2013 17:31:34 -0500 Subject: pkt-line: share buffer/descriptor reading implementation The packet_read function reads from a descriptor. The packet_get_line function is similar, but reads from an in-memory buffer, and uses a completely separate implementation. This patch teaches the generic packet_read function to accept either source, and we can do away with packet_get_line's implementation. There are two other differences to account for between the old and new functions. The first is that we used to read into a strbuf, but now read into a fixed size buffer. The only two callers are fine with that, and in fact it simplifies their code, since they can use the same static-buffer interface as the rest of the packet_read_line callers (and we provide a similar convenience wrapper for reading from a buffer rather than a descriptor). This is technically an externally-visible behavior change in that we used to accept arbitrary sized packets up to 65532 bytes, and now cap out at LARGE_PACKET_MAX, 65520. In practice this doesn't matter, as we use it only for parsing smart-http headers (of which there is exactly one defined, and it is small and fixed-size). And any extension headers would be breaking the protocol to go over LARGE_PACKET_MAX anyway. The other difference is that packet_get_line would return on error rather than dying. However, both callers of packet_get_line are actually improved by dying. The first caller does its own error checking, but we can drop that; as a result, we'll actually get more specific reporting about protocol breakage when packet_read dies internally. The only downside is that packet_read will not print the smart-http URL that failed, but that's not a big deal; anybody not debugging can already see the remote's URL already, and anybody debugging would want to run with GIT_CURL_VERBOSE anyway to see way more information. The second caller, which is just trying to skip past any extra smart-http headers (of which there are none defined, but which we allow to keep room for future expansion), did not error check at all. As a result, it would treat an error just like a flush packet. The resulting mess would generally cause an error later in get_remote_heads, but now we get error reporting much closer to the source of the problem. Brown-paper-bag-fixes-by: Ramsay Jones Signed-off-by: Jeff King Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano --- remote-curl.c | 22 ++++++++++------------ 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) (limited to 'remote-curl.c') diff --git a/remote-curl.c b/remote-curl.c index b28f965048..c8379a53f0 100644 --- a/remote-curl.c +++ b/remote-curl.c @@ -138,28 +138,26 @@ static struct discovery* discover_refs(const char *service) if (maybe_smart && (5 <= last->len && last->buf[4] == '#') && !strbuf_cmp(&exp, &type)) { + char *line; + /* * smart HTTP response; validate that the service * pkt-line matches our request. */ - if (packet_get_line(&buffer, &last->buf, &last->len) <= 0) - die("%s has invalid packet header", refs_url); - if (buffer.len && buffer.buf[buffer.len - 1] == '\n') - strbuf_setlen(&buffer, buffer.len - 1); + line = packet_read_line_buf(&last->buf, &last->len, NULL); strbuf_reset(&exp); strbuf_addf(&exp, "# service=%s", service); - if (strbuf_cmp(&exp, &buffer)) - die("invalid server response; got '%s'", buffer.buf); + if (strcmp(line, exp.buf)) + die("invalid server response; got '%s'", line); strbuf_release(&exp); /* The header can include additional metadata lines, up * until a packet flush marker. Ignore these now, but * in the future we might start to scan them. */ - strbuf_reset(&buffer); - while (packet_get_line(&buffer, &last->buf, &last->len) > 0) - strbuf_reset(&buffer); + while (packet_read_line_buf(&last->buf, &last->len, NULL)) + ; last->proto_git = 1; } @@ -308,7 +306,7 @@ static size_t rpc_out(void *ptr, size_t eltsize, if (!avail) { rpc->initial_buffer = 0; - avail = packet_read(rpc->out, rpc->buf, rpc->alloc, 0); + avail = packet_read(rpc->out, NULL, NULL, rpc->buf, rpc->alloc, 0); if (!avail) return 0; rpc->pos = 0; @@ -425,7 +423,7 @@ static int post_rpc(struct rpc_state *rpc) break; } - n = packet_read(rpc->out, buf, left, 0); + n = packet_read(rpc->out, NULL, NULL, buf, left, 0); if (!n) break; rpc->len += n; @@ -579,7 +577,7 @@ static int rpc_service(struct rpc_state *rpc, struct discovery *heads) rpc->hdr_accept = strbuf_detach(&buf, NULL); while (!err) { - int n = packet_read(rpc->out, rpc->buf, rpc->alloc, 0); + int n = packet_read(rpc->out, NULL, NULL, rpc->buf, rpc->alloc, 0); if (!n) break; rpc->pos = 0; -- cgit v1.2.1