зеркало из https://github.com/microsoft/git.git
rerere: add documentation for conflict normalization
Add some documentation for the logic behind the conflict normalization in rerere. Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This commit is contained in:
Родитель
2373b65059
Коммит
fb90dca34c
|
@ -0,0 +1,140 @@
|
|||
Rerere
|
||||
======
|
||||
|
||||
This document describes the rerere logic.
|
||||
|
||||
Conflict normalization
|
||||
----------------------
|
||||
|
||||
To ensure recorded conflict resolutions can be looked up in the rerere
|
||||
database, even when branches are merged in a different order,
|
||||
different branches are merged that result in the same conflict, or
|
||||
when different conflict style settings are used, rerere normalizes the
|
||||
conflicts before writing them to the rerere database.
|
||||
|
||||
Different conflict styles and branch names are normalized by stripping
|
||||
the labels from the conflict markers, and removing the common ancestor
|
||||
version from the `diff3` conflict style. Branches that are merged
|
||||
in different order are normalized by sorting the conflict hunks. More
|
||||
on each of those steps in the following sections.
|
||||
|
||||
Once these two normalization operations are applied, a conflict ID is
|
||||
calculated based on the normalized conflict, which is later used by
|
||||
rerere to look up the conflict in the rerere database.
|
||||
|
||||
Removing the common ancestor version
|
||||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
Say we have three branches AB, AC and AC2. The common ancestor of
|
||||
these branches has a file with a line containing the string "A" (for
|
||||
brevity this is called "line A" in the rest of the document). In
|
||||
branch AB this line is changed to "B", in AC, this line is changed to
|
||||
"C", and branch AC2 is forked off of AC, after the line was changed to
|
||||
"C".
|
||||
|
||||
Forking a branch ABAC off of branch AB and then merging AC into it, we
|
||||
get a conflict like the following:
|
||||
|
||||
<<<<<<< HEAD
|
||||
B
|
||||
=======
|
||||
C
|
||||
>>>>>>> AC
|
||||
|
||||
Doing the analogous with AC2 (forking a branch ABAC2 off of branch AB
|
||||
and then merging branch AC2 into it), using the diff3 conflict style,
|
||||
we get a conflict like the following:
|
||||
|
||||
<<<<<<< HEAD
|
||||
B
|
||||
||||||| merged common ancestors
|
||||
A
|
||||
=======
|
||||
C
|
||||
>>>>>>> AC2
|
||||
|
||||
By resolving this conflict, to leave line D, the user declares:
|
||||
|
||||
After examining what branches AB and AC did, I believe that making
|
||||
line A into line D is the best thing to do that is compatible with
|
||||
what AB and AC wanted to do.
|
||||
|
||||
As branch AC2 refers to the same commit as AC, the above implies that
|
||||
this is also compatible what AB and AC2 wanted to do.
|
||||
|
||||
By extension, this means that rerere should recognize that the above
|
||||
conflicts are the same. To do this, the labels on the conflict
|
||||
markers are stripped, and the common ancestor version is removed. The above
|
||||
examples would both result in the following normalized conflict:
|
||||
|
||||
<<<<<<<
|
||||
B
|
||||
=======
|
||||
C
|
||||
>>>>>>>
|
||||
|
||||
Sorting hunks
|
||||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
As before, lets imagine that a common ancestor had a file with line A
|
||||
its early part, and line X in its late part. And then four branches
|
||||
are forked that do these things:
|
||||
|
||||
- AB: changes A to B
|
||||
- AC: changes A to C
|
||||
- XY: changes X to Y
|
||||
- XZ: changes X to Z
|
||||
|
||||
Now, forking a branch ABAC off of branch AB and then merging AC into
|
||||
it, and forking a branch ACAB off of branch AC and then merging AB
|
||||
into it, would yield the conflict in a different order. The former
|
||||
would say "A became B or C, what now?" while the latter would say "A
|
||||
became C or B, what now?"
|
||||
|
||||
As a reminder, the act of merging AC into ABAC and resolving the
|
||||
conflict to leave line D means that the user declares:
|
||||
|
||||
After examining what branches AB and AC did, I believe that
|
||||
making line A into line D is the best thing to do that is
|
||||
compatible with what AB and AC wanted to do.
|
||||
|
||||
So the conflict we would see when merging AB into ACAB should be
|
||||
resolved the same way---it is the resolution that is in line with that
|
||||
declaration.
|
||||
|
||||
Imagine that similarly previously a branch XYXZ was forked from XY,
|
||||
and XZ was merged into it, and resolved "X became Y or Z" into "X
|
||||
became W".
|
||||
|
||||
Now, if a branch ABXY was forked from AB and then merged XY, then ABXY
|
||||
would have line B in its early part and line Y in its later part.
|
||||
Such a merge would be quite clean. We can construct 4 combinations
|
||||
using these four branches ((AB, AC) x (XY, XZ)).
|
||||
|
||||
Merging ABXY and ACXZ would make "an early A became B or C, a late X
|
||||
became Y or Z" conflict, while merging ACXY and ABXZ would make "an
|
||||
early A became C or B, a late X became Y or Z". We can see there are
|
||||
4 combinations of ("B or C", "C or B") x ("X or Y", "Y or X").
|
||||
|
||||
By sorting, the conflict is given its canonical name, namely, "an
|
||||
early part became B or C, a late part becames X or Y", and whenever
|
||||
any of these four patterns appear, and we can get to the same conflict
|
||||
and resolution that we saw earlier.
|
||||
|
||||
Without the sorting, we'd have to somehow find a previous resolution
|
||||
from combinatorial explosion.
|
||||
|
||||
Conflict ID calculation
|
||||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
Once the conflict normalization is done, the conflict ID is calculated
|
||||
as the sha1 hash of the conflict hunks appended to each other,
|
||||
separated by <NUL> characters. The conflict markers are stripped out
|
||||
before the sha1 is calculated. So in the example above, where we
|
||||
merge branch AC which changes line A to line C, into branch AB, which
|
||||
changes line A to line C, the conflict ID would be
|
||||
SHA1('B<NUL>C<NUL>').
|
||||
|
||||
If there are multiple conflicts in one file, the sha1 is calculated
|
||||
the same way with all hunks appended to each other, in the order in
|
||||
which they appear in the file, separated by a <NUL> character.
|
4
rerere.c
4
rerere.c
|
@ -394,10 +394,6 @@ static int is_cmarker(char *buf, int marker_char, int marker_size)
|
|||
* and NUL concatenated together.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* Return the number of conflict hunks found.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* NEEDSWORK: the logic and theory of operation behind this conflict
|
||||
* normalization may deserve to be documented somewhere, perhaps in
|
||||
* Documentation/technical/rerere.txt.
|
||||
*/
|
||||
static int handle_path(unsigned char *sha1, struct rerere_io *io, int marker_size)
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
|
Загрузка…
Ссылка в новой задаче