1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
|
#ifndef REFS_REFS_INTERNAL_H
#define REFS_REFS_INTERNAL_H
/*
* Data structures and functions for the internal use of the refs
* module. Code outside of the refs module should use only the public
* functions defined in "refs.h", and should *not* include this file.
*/
/*
* Flag passed to lock_ref_sha1_basic() telling it to tolerate broken
* refs (i.e., because the reference is about to be deleted anyway).
*/
#define REF_DELETING 0x02
/*
* Used as a flag in ref_update::flags when a loose ref is being
* pruned. This flag must only be used when REF_NODEREF is set.
*/
#define REF_ISPRUNING 0x04
/*
* Used as a flag in ref_update::flags when the reference should be
* updated to new_sha1.
*/
#define REF_HAVE_NEW 0x08
/*
* Used as a flag in ref_update::flags when old_sha1 should be
* checked.
*/
#define REF_HAVE_OLD 0x10
/*
* Used as a flag in ref_update::flags when the lockfile needs to be
* committed.
*/
#define REF_NEEDS_COMMIT 0x20
/*
* 0x40 is REF_FORCE_CREATE_REFLOG, so skip it if you're adding a
* value to ref_update::flags
*/
/*
* Used as a flag in ref_update::flags when we want to log a ref
* update but not actually perform it. This is used when a symbolic
* ref update is split up.
*/
#define REF_LOG_ONLY 0x80
/*
* Internal flag, meaning that the containing ref_update was via an
* update to HEAD.
*/
#define REF_UPDATE_VIA_HEAD 0x100
/*
* Return true iff refname is minimally safe. "Safe" here means that
* deleting a loose reference by this name will not do any damage, for
* example by causing a file that is not a reference to be deleted.
* This function does not check that the reference name is legal; for
* that, use check_refname_format().
*
* We consider a refname that starts with "refs/" to be safe as long
* as any ".." components that it might contain do not escape "refs/".
* Names that do not start with "refs/" are considered safe iff they
* consist entirely of upper case characters and '_' (like "HEAD" and
* "MERGE_HEAD" but not "config" or "FOO/BAR").
*/
int refname_is_safe(const char *refname);
enum peel_status {
/* object was peeled successfully: */
PEEL_PEELED = 0,
/*
* object cannot be peeled because the named object (or an
* object referred to by a tag in the peel chain), does not
* exist.
*/
PEEL_INVALID = -1,
/* object cannot be peeled because it is not a tag: */
PEEL_NON_TAG = -2,
/* ref_entry contains no peeled value because it is a symref: */
PEEL_IS_SYMREF = -3,
/*
* ref_entry cannot be peeled because it is broken (i.e., the
* symbolic reference cannot even be resolved to an object
* name):
*/
PEEL_BROKEN = -4
};
/*
* Peel the named object; i.e., if the object is a tag, resolve the
* tag recursively until a non-tag is found. If successful, store the
* result to sha1 and return PEEL_PEELED. If the object is not a tag
* or is not valid, return PEEL_NON_TAG or PEEL_INVALID, respectively,
* and leave sha1 unchanged.
*/
enum peel_status peel_object(const unsigned char *name, unsigned char *sha1);
/*
* Return 0 if a reference named refname could be created without
* conflicting with the name of an existing reference. Otherwise,
* return a negative value and write an explanation to err. If extras
* is non-NULL, it is a list of additional refnames with which refname
* is not allowed to conflict. If skip is non-NULL, ignore potential
* conflicts with refs in skip (e.g., because they are scheduled for
* deletion in the same operation). Behavior is undefined if the same
* name is listed in both extras and skip.
*
* Two reference names conflict if one of them exactly matches the
* leading components of the other; e.g., "foo/bar" conflicts with
* both "foo" and with "foo/bar/baz" but not with "foo/bar" or
* "foo/barbados".
*
* extras and skip must be sorted.
*/
int verify_refname_available(const char *newname,
const struct string_list *extras,
const struct string_list *skip,
struct strbuf *err);
/*
* Copy the reflog message msg to buf, which has been allocated sufficiently
* large, while cleaning up the whitespaces. Especially, convert LF to space,
* because reflog file is one line per entry.
*/
int copy_reflog_msg(char *buf, const char *msg);
int should_autocreate_reflog(const char *refname);
/**
* Information needed for a single ref update. Set new_sha1 to the new
* value or to null_sha1 to delete the ref. To check the old value
* while the ref is locked, set (flags & REF_HAVE_OLD) and set
* old_sha1 to the old value, or to null_sha1 to ensure the ref does
* not exist before update.
*/
struct ref_update {
/*
* If (flags & REF_HAVE_NEW), set the reference to this value:
*/
unsigned char new_sha1[20];
/*
* If (flags & REF_HAVE_OLD), check that the reference
* previously had this value:
*/
unsigned char old_sha1[20];
/*
* One or more of REF_HAVE_NEW, REF_HAVE_OLD, REF_NODEREF,
* REF_DELETING, REF_ISPRUNING, REF_LOG_ONLY, and
* REF_UPDATE_VIA_HEAD:
*/
unsigned int flags;
struct ref_lock *lock;
unsigned int type;
char *msg;
/*
* If this ref_update was split off of a symref update via
* split_symref_update(), then this member points at that
* update. This is used for two purposes:
* 1. When reporting errors, we report the refname under which
* the update was originally requested.
* 2. When we read the old value of this reference, we
* propagate it back to its parent update for recording in
* the latter's reflog.
*/
struct ref_update *parent_update;
const char refname[FLEX_ARRAY];
};
/*
* Add a ref_update with the specified properties to transaction, and
* return a pointer to the new object. This function does not verify
* that refname is well-formed. new_sha1 and old_sha1 are only
* dereferenced if the REF_HAVE_NEW and REF_HAVE_OLD bits,
* respectively, are set in flags.
*/
struct ref_update *ref_transaction_add_update(
struct ref_transaction *transaction,
const char *refname, unsigned int flags,
const unsigned char *new_sha1,
const unsigned char *old_sha1,
const char *msg);
/*
* Transaction states.
* OPEN: The transaction is in a valid state and can accept new updates.
* An OPEN transaction can be committed.
* CLOSED: A closed transaction is no longer active and no other operations
* than free can be used on it in this state.
* A transaction can either become closed by successfully committing
* an active transaction or if there is a failure while building
* the transaction thus rendering it failed/inactive.
*/
enum ref_transaction_state {
REF_TRANSACTION_OPEN = 0,
REF_TRANSACTION_CLOSED = 1
};
/*
* Data structure for holding a reference transaction, which can
* consist of checks and updates to multiple references, carried out
* as atomically as possible. This structure is opaque to callers.
*/
struct ref_transaction {
struct ref_update **updates;
size_t alloc;
size_t nr;
enum ref_transaction_state state;
};
int files_log_ref_write(const char *refname, const unsigned char *old_sha1,
const unsigned char *new_sha1, const char *msg,
int flags, struct strbuf *err);
/*
* Check for entries in extras that are within the specified
* directory, where dirname is a reference directory name including
* the trailing slash (e.g., "refs/heads/foo/"). Ignore any
* conflicting references that are found in skip. If there is a
* conflicting reference, return its name.
*
* extras and skip must be sorted lists of reference names. Either one
* can be NULL, signifying the empty list.
*/
const char *find_descendant_ref(const char *dirname,
const struct string_list *extras,
const struct string_list *skip);
/*
* Check whether an attempt to rename old_refname to new_refname would
* cause a D/F conflict with any existing reference (other than
* possibly old_refname). If there would be a conflict, emit an error
* message and return false; otherwise, return true.
*
* Note that this function is not safe against all races with other
* processes (though rename_ref() catches some races that might get by
* this check).
*/
int rename_ref_available(const char *old_refname, const char *new_refname);
/* We allow "recursive" symbolic refs. Only within reason, though */
#define SYMREF_MAXDEPTH 5
/* Include broken references in a do_for_each_ref*() iteration: */
#define DO_FOR_EACH_INCLUDE_BROKEN 0x01
/*
* Reference iterators
*
* A reference iterator encapsulates the state of an in-progress
* iteration over references. Create an instance of `struct
* ref_iterator` via one of the functions in this module.
*
* A freshly-created ref_iterator doesn't yet point at a reference. To
* advance the iterator, call ref_iterator_advance(). If successful,
* this sets the iterator's refname, oid, and flags fields to describe
* the next reference and returns ITER_OK. The data pointed at by
* refname and oid belong to the iterator; if you want to retain them
* after calling ref_iterator_advance() again or calling
* ref_iterator_abort(), you must make a copy. When the iteration has
* been exhausted, ref_iterator_advance() releases any resources
* assocated with the iteration, frees the ref_iterator object, and
* returns ITER_DONE. If you want to abort the iteration early, call
* ref_iterator_abort(), which also frees the ref_iterator object and
* any associated resources. If there was an internal error advancing
* to the next entry, ref_iterator_advance() aborts the iteration,
* frees the ref_iterator, and returns ITER_ERROR.
*
* The reference currently being looked at can be peeled by calling
* ref_iterator_peel(). This function is often faster than peel_ref(),
* so it should be preferred when iterating over references.
*
* Putting it all together, a typical iteration looks like this:
*
* int ok;
* struct ref_iterator *iter = ...;
*
* while ((ok = ref_iterator_advance(iter)) == ITER_OK) {
* if (want_to_stop_iteration()) {
* ok = ref_iterator_abort(iter);
* break;
* }
*
* // Access information about the current reference:
* if (!(iter->flags & REF_ISSYMREF))
* printf("%s is %s\n", iter->refname, oid_to_hex(&iter->oid));
*
* // If you need to peel the reference:
* ref_iterator_peel(iter, &oid);
* }
*
* if (ok != ITER_DONE)
* handle_error();
*/
struct ref_iterator {
struct ref_iterator_vtable *vtable;
const char *refname;
const struct object_id *oid;
unsigned int flags;
};
/*
* Advance the iterator to the first or next item and return ITER_OK.
* If the iteration is exhausted, free the resources associated with
* the ref_iterator and return ITER_DONE. On errors, free the iterator
* resources and return ITER_ERROR. It is a bug to use ref_iterator or
* call this function again after it has returned ITER_DONE or
* ITER_ERROR.
*/
int ref_iterator_advance(struct ref_iterator *ref_iterator);
/*
* If possible, peel the reference currently being viewed by the
* iterator. Return 0 on success.
*/
int ref_iterator_peel(struct ref_iterator *ref_iterator,
struct object_id *peeled);
/*
* End the iteration before it has been exhausted, freeing the
* reference iterator and any associated resources and returning
* ITER_DONE. If the abort itself failed, return ITER_ERROR.
*/
int ref_iterator_abort(struct ref_iterator *ref_iterator);
/*
* An iterator over nothing (its first ref_iterator_advance() call
* returns ITER_DONE).
*/
struct ref_iterator *empty_ref_iterator_begin(void);
/*
* Return true iff ref_iterator is an empty_ref_iterator.
*/
int is_empty_ref_iterator(struct ref_iterator *ref_iterator);
/*
* A callback function used to instruct merge_ref_iterator how to
* interleave the entries from iter0 and iter1. The function should
* return one of the constants defined in enum iterator_selection. It
* must not advance either of the iterators itself.
*
* The function must be prepared to handle the case that iter0 and/or
* iter1 is NULL, which indicates that the corresponding sub-iterator
* has been exhausted. Its return value must be consistent with the
* current states of the iterators; e.g., it must not return
* ITER_SKIP_1 if iter1 has already been exhausted.
*/
typedef enum iterator_selection ref_iterator_select_fn(
struct ref_iterator *iter0, struct ref_iterator *iter1,
void *cb_data);
/*
* Iterate over the entries from iter0 and iter1, with the values
* interleaved as directed by the select function. The iterator takes
* ownership of iter0 and iter1 and frees them when the iteration is
* over.
*/
struct ref_iterator *merge_ref_iterator_begin(
struct ref_iterator *iter0, struct ref_iterator *iter1,
ref_iterator_select_fn *select, void *cb_data);
/*
* An iterator consisting of the union of the entries from front and
* back. If there are entries common to the two sub-iterators, use the
* one from front. Each iterator must iterate over its entries in
* strcmp() order by refname for this to work.
*
* The new iterator takes ownership of its arguments and frees them
* when the iteration is over. As a convenience to callers, if front
* or back is an empty_ref_iterator, then abort that one immediately
* and return the other iterator directly, without wrapping it.
*/
struct ref_iterator *overlay_ref_iterator_begin(
struct ref_iterator *front, struct ref_iterator *back);
/*
* Wrap iter0, only letting through the references whose names start
* with prefix. If trim is set, set iter->refname to the name of the
* reference with that many characters trimmed off the front;
* otherwise set it to the full refname. The new iterator takes over
* ownership of iter0 and frees it when iteration is over. It makes
* its own copy of prefix.
*
* As an convenience to callers, if prefix is the empty string and
* trim is zero, this function returns iter0 directly, without
* wrapping it.
*/
struct ref_iterator *prefix_ref_iterator_begin(struct ref_iterator *iter0,
const char *prefix,
int trim);
/*
* Iterate over the packed and loose references in the specified
* submodule that are within find_containing_dir(prefix). If prefix is
* NULL or the empty string, iterate over all references in the
* submodule.
*/
struct ref_iterator *files_ref_iterator_begin(const char *submodule,
const char *prefix,
unsigned int flags);
/*
* Iterate over the references in the main ref_store that have a
* reflog. The paths within a directory are iterated over in arbitrary
* order.
*/
struct ref_iterator *files_reflog_iterator_begin(void);
/* Internal implementation of reference iteration: */
/*
* Base class constructor for ref_iterators. Initialize the
* ref_iterator part of iter, setting its vtable pointer as specified.
* This is meant to be called only by the initializers of derived
* classes.
*/
void base_ref_iterator_init(struct ref_iterator *iter,
struct ref_iterator_vtable *vtable);
/*
* Base class destructor for ref_iterators. Destroy the ref_iterator
* part of iter and shallow-free the object. This is meant to be
* called only by the destructors of derived classes.
*/
void base_ref_iterator_free(struct ref_iterator *iter);
/* Virtual function declarations for ref_iterators: */
typedef int ref_iterator_advance_fn(struct ref_iterator *ref_iterator);
typedef int ref_iterator_peel_fn(struct ref_iterator *ref_iterator,
struct object_id *peeled);
/*
* Implementations of this function should free any resources specific
* to the derived class, then call base_ref_iterator_free() to clean
* up and free the ref_iterator object.
*/
typedef int ref_iterator_abort_fn(struct ref_iterator *ref_iterator);
struct ref_iterator_vtable {
ref_iterator_advance_fn *advance;
ref_iterator_peel_fn *peel;
ref_iterator_abort_fn *abort;
};
/*
* current_ref_iter is a performance hack: when iterating over
* references using the for_each_ref*() functions, current_ref_iter is
* set to the reference iterator before calling the callback function.
* If the callback function calls peel_ref(), then peel_ref() first
* checks whether the reference to be peeled is the one referred to by
* the iterator (it usually is) and if so, asks the iterator for the
* peeled version of the reference if it is available. This avoids a
* refname lookup in a common case. current_ref_iter is set to NULL
* when the iteration is over.
*/
extern struct ref_iterator *current_ref_iter;
/*
* The common backend for the for_each_*ref* functions. Call fn for
* each reference in iter. If the iterator itself ever returns
* ITER_ERROR, return -1. If fn ever returns a non-zero value, stop
* the iteration and return that value. Otherwise, return 0. In any
* case, free the iterator when done. This function is basically an
* adapter between the callback style of reference iteration and the
* iterator style.
*/
int do_for_each_ref_iterator(struct ref_iterator *iter,
each_ref_fn fn, void *cb_data);
/*
* Read the specified reference from the filesystem or packed refs
* file, non-recursively. Set type to describe the reference, and:
*
* - If refname is the name of a normal reference, fill in sha1
* (leaving referent unchanged).
*
* - If refname is the name of a symbolic reference, write the full
* name of the reference to which it refers (e.g.
* "refs/heads/master") to referent and set the REF_ISSYMREF bit in
* type (leaving sha1 unchanged). The caller is responsible for
* validating that referent is a valid reference name.
*
* WARNING: refname might be used as part of a filename, so it is
* important from a security standpoint that it be safe in the sense
* of refname_is_safe(). Moreover, for symrefs this function sets
* referent to whatever the repository says, which might not be a
* properly-formatted or even safe reference name. NEITHER INPUT NOR
* OUTPUT REFERENCE NAMES ARE VALIDATED WITHIN THIS FUNCTION.
*
* Return 0 on success. If the ref doesn't exist, set errno to ENOENT
* and return -1. If the ref exists but is neither a symbolic ref nor
* a sha1, it is broken; set REF_ISBROKEN in type, set errno to
* EINVAL, and return -1. If there is another error reading the ref,
* set errno appropriately and return -1.
*
* Backend-specific flags might be set in type as well, regardless of
* outcome.
*
* It is OK for refname to point into referent. If so:
*
* - if the function succeeds with REF_ISSYMREF, referent will be
* overwritten and the memory formerly pointed to by it might be
* changed or even freed.
*
* - in all other cases, referent will be untouched, and therefore
* refname will still be valid and unchanged.
*/
int read_raw_ref(const char *refname, unsigned char *sha1,
struct strbuf *referent, unsigned int *type);
#endif /* REFS_REFS_INTERNAL_H */
|