rev-list: allow cached objects in existence check

This fixes a regression in 7c0fe330d5 (rev-list: handle missing tree
objects properly, 2018-10-05) where rev-list will now complain about the
empty tree when it doesn't physically exist on disk.

Before that commit, we relied on the traversal code in list-objects.c to
walk through the trees. Since it uses parse_tree(), we'd do a normal
object lookup that includes looking in the set of "cached" objects
(which is where our magic internal empty-tree kicks in).

After that commit, we instead tell list-objects.c not to die on any
missing trees, and we check them ourselves using has_object_file(). But
that function uses OBJECT_INFO_SKIP_CACHED, which means we won't use our
internal empty tree.

This normally wouldn't come up. For most operations, Git will try to
write out the empty tree object as it would any other object. And
pack-objects in a push or fetch will send the empty tree (even if it's
virtual on the sending side). However, there are cases where this can
matter. One I found in the wild:

  1. The root tree of a commit became empty by deleting all files,
     without using an index. In this case it was done using libgit2's
     tree builder API, but as the included test shows, it can easily be
     done with regular git using hash-object.

     The resulting repo works OK, as we'd avoid walking over our own
     reachable commits for a connectivity check.

  2. Cloning with --reference pointing to the repository from (1) can
     trigger the problem, because we tell the other side we already have
     that commit (and hence the empty tree), but then walk over it
     during the connectivity check (where we complain about it missing).

Arguably the workflow in step (1) should be more careful about writing
the empty tree object if we're referencing it. But this workflow did
work prior to 7c0fe330d5, so let's restore it.

This patch makes the minimal fix, which is to swap out a direct call to
oid_object_info_extended(), minus the SKIP_CACHED flag, instead of
calling has_object_file(). This is all that has_object_file() is doing
under the hood. And there's little danger of unrelated fallout from
other unexpected "cached" objects, since there's only one call site that
ends such a cached object, and it's in git-blame.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This commit is contained in:
Jeff King 2019-03-04 12:40:54 -05:00 коммит произвёл Junio C Hamano
Родитель 7c0fe330d5
Коммит f06ab027ef
2 изменённых файлов: 11 добавлений и 1 удалений

Просмотреть файл

@ -237,7 +237,7 @@ static inline void finish_object__ma(struct object *obj)
static int finish_object(struct object *obj, const char *name, void *cb_data)
{
struct rev_list_info *info = cb_data;
if (!has_object_file(&obj->oid)) {
if (oid_object_info_extended(the_repository, &obj->oid, NULL, 0) < 0) {
finish_object__ma(obj);
return 1;
}

Просмотреть файл

@ -125,4 +125,14 @@ test_expect_success 'fetch into corrupted repo with index-pack' '
)
'
test_expect_success 'internal tree objects are not "missing"' '
git init missing-empty &&
(
cd missing-empty &&
empty_tree=$(git hash-object -t tree /dev/null) &&
commit=$(echo foo | git commit-tree $empty_tree) &&
git rev-list --objects $commit
)
'
test_done