diff options
author | Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net> | 2005-06-11 02:50:51 -0700 |
---|---|---|
committer | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org> | 2005-06-12 20:40:20 -0700 |
commit | 32192e6622d78347448cfc0572827d6e64e0de28 (patch) | |
tree | 460a1aa7e3734888a6e25721c11e39deede40084 /read-tree.c | |
parent | e7f9bc411c8519468c33e1d882fb02cbe9c1ea55 (diff) | |
download | git-32192e6622d78347448cfc0572827d6e64e0de28.tar.gz git-32192e6622d78347448cfc0572827d6e64e0de28.tar.xz |
[PATCH] Finish making --emu23 equivalent to pure 2-way merge.
This adds #3ALT rule (and #2ALT rule for symmetry) to the
read-tree 3-way merge logic that collapses paths that are added
only in one branch and not in the other internally.
This makes --emu23 to succeed in the last remaining case where
the pure 2-way merge succeeded and earlier one failed. Running
diff between t1001 and t1005 test scripts shows that the only
difference between the two is that --emu23 can leave the states
into separate stages so that the user can use usual 3-way merge
resolution techniques to carry forward the local changes when
pure 2-way merge would have refused to run.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'read-tree.c')
-rw-r--r-- | read-tree.c | 137 |
1 files changed, 132 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/read-tree.c b/read-tree.c index ecd40cc39..d86cc0263 100644 --- a/read-tree.c +++ b/read-tree.c @@ -143,7 +143,72 @@ static int deleted_entry(struct cache_entry *ce, struct cache_entry *old, struct return 1; } -static int threeway_merge(struct cache_entry *stages[4], struct cache_entry **dst) +static int causes_df_conflict(struct cache_entry *ce, int stage, + struct cache_entry **dst_, + struct cache_entry **next_, + int tail) +{ + /* This is called during the merge operation and walking + * the active_cache[] array is messy, because it is in the + * middle of overlapping copy operation. The invariants + * are: + * (1) active_cache points at the first (zeroth) entry. + * (2) up to dst pointer are resolved entries. + * (3) from the next pointer (head-inclusive) to the tail + * of the active_cache array have the remaining paths + * to be processed. There can be a gap between dst + * and next. Note that next is called "src" in the + * merge_cache() function, and tail is the original + * end of active_cache array when merge_cache() started. + * (4) the path corresponding to *ce is not found in (2) + * or (3). It is in the gap. + * + * active_cache -----......+++++++++++++. + * ^dst ^next ^tail + */ + int i, next, dst; + const char *path = ce->name; + int namelen = ce_namelen(ce); + + next = next_ - active_cache; + dst = dst_ - active_cache; + + for (i = 0; i < tail; i++) { + int entlen, len; + const char *one, *two; + if (dst <= i && i < next) + continue; + ce = active_cache[i]; + if (ce_stage(ce) != stage) + continue; + /* If ce->name is a prefix of path, then path is a file + * that hangs underneath ce->name, which is bad. + * If path is a prefix of ce->name, then it is the + * other way around which also is bad. + */ + entlen = ce_namelen(ce); + if (namelen == entlen) + continue; + if (namelen < entlen) { + len = namelen; + one = path; + two = ce->name; + } else { + len = entlen; + one = ce->name; + two = path; + } + if (memcmp(one, two, len)) + continue; + if (two[len] == '/') + return 1; + } + return 0; +} + +static int threeway_merge(struct cache_entry *stages[4], + struct cache_entry **dst, + struct cache_entry **next, int tail) { struct cache_entry *old = stages[0]; struct cache_entry *a = stages[1], *b = stages[2], *c = stages[3]; @@ -156,6 +221,65 @@ static int threeway_merge(struct cache_entry *stages[4], struct cache_entry **ds return -1; return merged_entry_allow_dirty(b, old, dst); } + /* #2ALT and #3ALT */ + if (!a && (!!b != !!c)) { + /* + * The reason we need to worry about directory/file + * conflicts only in #2ALT and #3ALT case is this: + * + * (1) For all other cases that read-tree internally + * resolves a path, we always have such a path in + * *both* stage2 and stage3 when we begin. + * Traditionally, the behaviour has been even + * stricter and we did not resolve a path without + * initially being in all of stage1, 2, and 3. + * + * (2) When read-tree finishes, all resolved paths (i.e. + * the paths that are in stage0) must have come from + * either stage2 or stage3. It is not possible to + * have a stage0 path as a result of a merge if + * neither stage2 nor stage3 had that path. + * + * (3) It is guaranteed that just after reading the + * stages, each stage cannot have directory/file + * conflicts on its own, because they are populated + * by reading hierarchy of a tree. Combined with + * (1) and (2) above, this means that no matter what + * combination of paths we take from stage2 and + * stage3 as a result of a merge, they cannot cause + * a directory/file conflict situation (otherwise + * the "guilty" path would have already had such a + * conflict in the original stage, either stage2 + * or stage3). Although its stage2 is synthesized + * by overlaying the current index on top of "our + * head" tree, --emu23 case also has this guarantee, + * by calling add_cache_entry() to create such stage2 + * entries. + * + * (4) Only #2ALT and #3ALT lack the guarantee (1). + * They resolve paths that exist only in stage2 + * or stage3. The stage2 tree may have a file DF + * while stage3 tree may have a file DF/DF. If + * #2ALT and #3ALT rules happen to apply to both + * of them, we would end up having DF (coming from + * stage2) and DF/DF (from stage3) in the result. + * When we attempt to resolve a path that exists + * only in stage2, we need to make sure there is + * no path that would conflict with it in stage3 + * and vice versa. + */ + if (c) { /* #2ALT */ + if (!causes_df_conflict(c, 2, dst, next, tail) && + (!old || same(c, old))) + return merged_entry_allow_dirty(c, old, dst); + } + else { /* #3ALT */ + if (!causes_df_conflict(b, 3, dst, next, tail) && + (!old || same(b, old))) + return merged_entry_allow_dirty(b, old, dst); + } + /* otherwise we will apply the original rule */ + } /* * If we have an entry in the index cache ("old"), then we want * to make sure that it matches any entries in stage 2 ("first @@ -186,7 +310,8 @@ static int threeway_merge(struct cache_entry *stages[4], struct cache_entry **ds * "carry forward" rule, please see <Documentation/git-read-tree.txt>. * */ -static int twoway_merge(struct cache_entry **src, struct cache_entry **dst) +static int twoway_merge(struct cache_entry **src, struct cache_entry **dst, + struct cache_entry **next, int tail) { struct cache_entry *current = src[0]; struct cache_entry *oldtree = src[1], *newtree = src[2]; @@ -283,7 +408,8 @@ static void setup_emu23(void) * The rule is: * - take the stat information from stage0, take the data from stage1 */ -static int oneway_merge(struct cache_entry **src, struct cache_entry **dst) +static int oneway_merge(struct cache_entry **src, struct cache_entry **dst, + struct cache_entry **next, int tail) { struct cache_entry *old = src[0]; struct cache_entry *a = src[1]; @@ -324,11 +450,12 @@ static void check_updates(struct cache_entry **src, int nr) } } -typedef int (*merge_fn_t)(struct cache_entry **, struct cache_entry **); +typedef int (*merge_fn_t)(struct cache_entry **, struct cache_entry **, struct cache_entry **, int); static void merge_cache(struct cache_entry **src, int nr, merge_fn_t fn) { struct cache_entry **dst = src; + int tail = nr; while (nr) { int entries; @@ -346,7 +473,7 @@ static void merge_cache(struct cache_entry **src, int nr, merge_fn_t fn) break; } - entries = fn(stages, dst); + entries = fn(stages, dst, src, tail); if (entries < 0) reject_merge(name); dst += entries; |