Message ID | d4e73aad14189a00621da9e000d2c6a5fe776d84.1605552016.git.me@ttaylorr.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
Series | repack: don't move existing packs out of the way | expand |
Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> writes: > This behavior dates all the way back to 2ad47d6 (git-repack: Be > careful when updating the same pack as an existing one., 2006-06-25). > 2ad47d6 is mainly concerned about a case where a newly written pack > would have a different structure than its index. This used to be > possible when the pack name was a hash of the set of objects. Under this > naming scheme, two packs that store the same set of objects could differ > in delta selection, object positioning, or both. If this happened, then > any such packs would be unreadable in the instant between copying the > new pack and new index (i.e., either the index or pack will be stale > depending on the order that they were copied). True. So the idea is that we can now pretend that we never wrote the new packfile and leave the existing one as-is? > This patch is mostly limited to removing code paths that deal with the > 'old' prefixing, with the exception of pack metadata. ... "pack metadata" meaning? We do not remove and replace the file, but we update their mtime to keep these packfiles more fresh than other packfiles, or something? > t7700.14 ensures > that 'git repack' will, for example, remove existing bitmaps even if the > pack written is verbatim the same (when repacking without '-b' in a > repository unchanged from the time 'git repack -b' was run). So, we have > to handle metadata that we didn't write, by unlinking any existing > metadata that our invocation of pack-objects didn't generate itself. Hmph, t7700.14 wants it that way because? If we were told to generate a packfile, and we ended up regenerating the exactly the same one, it appears to me that we can just pretend nothing happened and leave things as they were? Puzzled... > @@ -463,109 +463,34 @@ int cmd_repack(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) > > /* > * Ok we have prepared all new packfiles. > */ > for_each_string_list_item(item, &names) { > for (ext = 0; ext < ARRAY_SIZE(exts); ext++) { > char *fname, *fname_old; > > fname = mkpathdup("%s/pack-%s%s", > packdir, item->string, exts[ext].name); > fname_old = mkpathdup("%s-%s%s", > packtmp, item->string, exts[ext].name); > + > + if (((uintptr_t)item->util) & (1 << ext)) { > + struct stat statbuffer; > + if (!stat(fname_old, &statbuffer)) { > + statbuffer.st_mode &= ~(S_IWUSR | S_IWGRP | S_IWOTH); > + chmod(fname_old, statbuffer.st_mode); > + } > + > if (rename(fname_old, fname)) > die_errno(_("renaming '%s' failed"), fname_old); OK, so this is where the previous step matters. We do the same as before (i.e. stat+chmod and rename) only for paths we have created. We don't reuse the old one because we have already written a new file so we won't save anything by doing so, and checking if the target of rename exists already before deciding not to rename cannot be made atomic, so just relying on rename() to do the right thing is a good idea anyway. > + } else if (!exts[ext].optional) > + die(_("missing required file: %s"), fname_old); If one branch of if/else if.../else requires multi-statement block, use {} on all of them, for consistency. So, if we wrote a few .$ext for a packfile but not some .$ext, if the one we didn't write is among the necessary one, we are in trouble? OK. > + else if (unlink(fname) < 0 && errno != ENOENT) > + die_errno(_("could not unlink: %s"), fname); And if we wrote .pack and .idx but not .bitmap, the old .bitmpa that has the same pack hash may be stale and we discard it for safety? That sounds "prudent" but it is not immdiately clear from what danger we are protecting ourselves. In any case, much of what I speculated while reading the proposed log message turned out to be false, which may be a sign that the log message did not explain the approach clearly enough. I thought that a newly created file that happened to be identical to existing ones would be discarded without getting renamed to their final location, but the code does not do such special casing. I thought the 'metadata' it talks about were to compensate for side effects of reusing the old files, but that was not what the 'metadata' was even about. Other than that, the change in [2/3] and [3/3] look quite sensible (I am not saying [1/3] is bad---I haven't looked at it yet). Thanks. > free(fname); > free(fname_old); > } > } > /* End of pack replacement. */ > > reprepare_packed_git(the_repository);
On Mon, Nov 16, 2020 at 03:29:05PM -0800, Junio C Hamano wrote: > > t7700.14 ensures > > that 'git repack' will, for example, remove existing bitmaps even if the > > pack written is verbatim the same (when repacking without '-b' in a > > repository unchanged from the time 'git repack -b' was run). So, we have > > to handle metadata that we didn't write, by unlinking any existing > > metadata that our invocation of pack-objects didn't generate itself. > > Hmph, t7700.14 wants it that way because? > > If we were told to generate a packfile, and we ended up regenerating > the exactly the same one, it appears to me that we can just pretend > nothing happened and leave things as they were? Puzzled... We definitely could, and the outcome would be correct in the sense that the bitmap would still work. I'm not sure that the test in t7700 cares particularly about this "making the same pack" case. It only wants to know that if we disable bitmaps and repack, we end up without a bitmap. And normally, if you added in even a single extra object, you'd get a new pack and that would happen. But of course the test just repacks back-to-back, so it does trigger the "making the same pack" case. I think you could make an argument either way: - we have an existing bitmap for free, and bitmaps make things faster, so why not keep it? - the user did not ask for bitmaps, so we should make the outcome consistent whether a pack of the exact name existed before or not The second one seems less surprising to me. But I think if we did the first, the code would be shorter (it would not need any of this "keep track of what pack-objects generated" stuff at all, but would just copy whatever files we see into place). > > if (rename(fname_old, fname)) > > die_errno(_("renaming '%s' failed"), fname_old); > > OK, so this is where the previous step matters. We do the same as > before (i.e. stat+chmod and rename) only for paths we have created. > > We don't reuse the old one because we have already written a new > file so we won't save anything by doing so, and checking if the > target of rename exists already before deciding not to rename cannot > be made atomic, so just relying on rename() to do the right thing is > a good idea anyway. Even though the pack is byte-for-byte identical, the new .idx, etc, might not be. And those could be affected by options. E.g.: git -c pack.writeBitmapHashCache=false repack -adb git -c pack.writeBitmapHashCache=true repack -adb should probably end up with a bitmap file that contains a hash cache. -Peff
On Mon, Nov 16, 2020 at 03:29:05PM -0800, Junio C Hamano wrote: > Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> writes: > > > This behavior dates all the way back to 2ad47d6 (git-repack: Be > > careful when updating the same pack as an existing one., 2006-06-25). > > 2ad47d6 is mainly concerned about a case where a newly written pack > > would have a different structure than its index. This used to be > > possible when the pack name was a hash of the set of objects. Under this > > naming scheme, two packs that store the same set of objects could differ > > in delta selection, object positioning, or both. If this happened, then > > any such packs would be unreadable in the instant between copying the > > new pack and new index (i.e., either the index or pack will be stale > > depending on the order that they were copied). > > True. So the idea is that we can now pretend that we never wrote > the new packfile and leave the existing one as-is? True for packs, which are guaranteed to be unchanged by having the same checksum in their filename. For other files that use their pack's checksum in their filename, we want to overwrite the existing copy with the one we just wrote. > > This patch is mostly limited to removing code paths that deal with the > > 'old' prefixing, with the exception of pack metadata. > > ... "pack metadata" meaning? We do not remove and replace the file, > but we update their mtime to keep these packfiles more fresh than > other packfiles, or something? Meaning: .idx, .bitmap, .promisor files. I probably ought to be more clear in what "metadata" means, since it could easily be confused with mtime and others. > > @@ -463,109 +463,34 @@ int cmd_repack(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) > > > > /* > > * Ok we have prepared all new packfiles. > > */ > > for_each_string_list_item(item, &names) { > > for (ext = 0; ext < ARRAY_SIZE(exts); ext++) { > > char *fname, *fname_old; > > > > fname = mkpathdup("%s/pack-%s%s", > > packdir, item->string, exts[ext].name); > > fname_old = mkpathdup("%s-%s%s", > > packtmp, item->string, exts[ext].name); > > + > > + if (((uintptr_t)item->util) & (1 << ext)) { > > + struct stat statbuffer; > > + if (!stat(fname_old, &statbuffer)) { > > + statbuffer.st_mode &= ~(S_IWUSR | S_IWGRP | S_IWOTH); > > + chmod(fname_old, statbuffer.st_mode); > > + } > > + > > if (rename(fname_old, fname)) > > die_errno(_("renaming '%s' failed"), fname_old); > > OK, so this is where the previous step matters. We do the same as > before (i.e. stat+chmod and rename) only for paths we have created. > > We don't reuse the old one because we have already written a new > file so we won't save anything by doing so, and checking if the > target of rename exists already before deciding not to rename cannot > be made atomic, so just relying on rename() to do the right thing is > a good idea anyway. > > > + } else if (!exts[ext].optional) > > + die(_("missing required file: %s"), fname_old); > > If one branch of if/else if.../else requires multi-statement block, > use {} on all of them, for consistency. Thanks. > So, if we wrote a few .$ext for a packfile but not some .$ext, if > the one we didn't write is among the necessary one, we are in > trouble? OK. Yes, exactly. > > + else if (unlink(fname) < 0 && errno != ENOENT) > > + die_errno(_("could not unlink: %s"), fname); > > And if we wrote .pack and .idx but not .bitmap, the old .bitmpa that > has the same pack hash may be stale and we discard it for safety? > That sounds "prudent" but it is not immdiately clear from what > danger we are protecting ourselves. > > In any case, much of what I speculated while reading the proposed > log message turned out to be false, which may be a sign that the log > message did not explain the approach clearly enough. I thought that > a newly created file that happened to be identical to existing ones > would be discarded without getting renamed to their final location, > but the code does not do such special casing. I thought the > 'metadata' it talks about were to compensate for side effects of > reusing the old files, but that was not what the 'metadata' was even > about. It's more about: we trust what pack-objects wrote to be the current state of things. So, if a bitmap already exists, but the caller did a back-to-back repack and this time generates their bitmap with the hash cache extension, we prefer the newer bitmap to the one that already existed. That goes both ways: if pack-objects _didn't_ write a file that already exists, we want to drop the existing file. Peff seems to talk more about this in his email, which I'll respond to now... > Other than that, the change in [2/3] and [3/3] look quite sensible > (I am not saying [1/3] is bad---I haven't looked at it yet). > > Thanks. Thanks, Taylor
On Mon, Nov 16, 2020 at 07:02:52PM -0500, Jeff King wrote: > I think you could make an argument either way: > > - we have an existing bitmap for free, and bitmaps make things faster, > so why not keep it? > > - the user did not ask for bitmaps, so we should make the outcome > consistent whether a pack of the exact name existed before or not > > The second one seems less surprising to me. But I think if we did the > first, the code would be shorter (it would not need any of this "keep > track of what pack-objects generated" stuff at all, but would just copy > whatever files we see into place). I think that the second one is _far_ less surprising to me, so I'd prefer that we did that instead of keeping the .bitmap from the last run regardless of whether or not the user asked for it. > > > if (rename(fname_old, fname)) > > > die_errno(_("renaming '%s' failed"), fname_old); > > > > OK, so this is where the previous step matters. We do the same as > > before (i.e. stat+chmod and rename) only for paths we have created. > > > > We don't reuse the old one because we have already written a new > > file so we won't save anything by doing so, and checking if the > > target of rename exists already before deciding not to rename cannot > > be made atomic, so just relying on rename() to do the right thing is > > a good idea anyway. > > Even though the pack is byte-for-byte identical, the new .idx, etc, > might not be. And those could be affected by options. E.g.: > > git -c pack.writeBitmapHashCache=false repack -adb > git -c pack.writeBitmapHashCache=true repack -adb > > should probably end up with a bitmap file that contains a hash cache. Agreed completely. > -Peff Thanks, Taylor
Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> writes: >> In any case, much of what I speculated while reading the proposed >> log message turned out to be false, which may be a sign that the log >> message did not explain the approach clearly enough. I thought that >> a newly created file that happened to be identical to existing ones >> would be discarded without getting renamed to their final location, >> but the code does not do such special casing. I thought the >> 'metadata' it talks about were to compensate for side effects of >> reusing the old files, but that was not what the 'metadata' was even >> about. > > It's more about: ... You do not have to explain that to me here. Instead explain that to future readers of our history in the commit log message. Thanks.
On Mon, Nov 16, 2020 at 04:46:06PM -0800, Junio C Hamano wrote: > Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> writes: > > It's more about: ... > > You do not have to explain that to me here. Instead explain that to > future readers of our history in the commit log message. > > Thanks. Understood. Here's a replacement for the final patch (the log message is updated, but the patch contents are not): --- >8 --- Subject: [PATCH] builtin/repack.c: don't move existing packs out of the way When 'git repack' creates a pack with the same name as any existing pack, it moves the existing one to 'old-pack-xxx.{pack,idx,...}' and then renames the new one into place. Eventually, it would be nice to have 'git repack' allow for writing a multi-pack index at the critical time (after the new packs have been written / moved into place, but before the old ones have been deleted). Guessing that this option might be called '--write-midx', this makes the following situation (where repacks are issued back-to-back without any new objects) impossible: $ git repack -adb $ git repack -adb --write-midx In the second repack, the existing packs are overwritten verbatim with the same rename-to-old sequence. At that point, the current MIDX is invalidated, since it refers to now-missing packs. So that code wants to be run after the MIDX is re-written. But (prior to this patch) the new MIDX can't be written until the new packs are moved into place. So, we have a circular dependency. This is all hypothetical, since no code currently exists to write a MIDX safely during a 'git repack' (the 'GIT_TEST_MULTI_PACK_INDEX' does so unsafely). Putting hypothetical aside, though: why do we need to rename existing packs to be prefixed with 'old-' anyway? This behavior dates all the way back to 2ad47d6 (git-repack: Be careful when updating the same pack as an existing one., 2006-06-25). 2ad47d6 is mainly concerned about a case where a newly written pack would have a different structure than its index. This used to be possible when the pack name was a hash of the set of objects. Under this naming scheme, two packs that store the same set of objects could differ in delta selection, object positioning, or both. If this happened, then any such packs would be unreadable in the instant between copying the new pack and new index (i.e., either the index or pack will be stale depending on the order that they were copied). But since 1190a1a (pack-objects: name pack files after trailer hash, 2013-12-05), this is no longer possible, since pack files are named not after their logical contents (i.e., the set of objects), but by the actual checksum of their contents. So, this old- behavior can safely go, which allows us to avoid our circular dependency above. In addition to avoiding the circular dependency, this patch also makes 'git repack' a lot simpler, since we don't have to deal with failures encountered when renaming existing packs to be prefixed with 'old-'. This patch is mostly limited to removing code paths that deal with the 'old' prefixing, with the exception of files that include the pack's name in their own filename, like .idx, .bitmap, and related files. The exception is that we want to continue to trust what pack-objects wrote. That is, it is not the case that we pretend as if pack-objects didn't write files identical to ones that already exist, but rather that we respect what pack-objects wrote as the source of truth. That cuts two ways: - If pack-objects produced an identical pack to one that already exists with a bitmap, but did not produce a bitmap, we remove the bitmap that already exists. (This behavior is codified in t7700.14). - If pack-objects produced an identical pack to one that already exists, we trust the just-written version of the coresponding .idx, .promisor, and other files over the ones that already exist. This ensures that we use the most up-to-date versions of this files, which is safe even in the face of format changes in, say, the .idx file (which would not be reflected in the .idx file's name). Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> --- builtin/repack.c | 103 +++++++---------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+), 89 deletions(-) diff --git a/builtin/repack.c b/builtin/repack.c index bb839180da..279be11a16 100644 --- a/builtin/repack.c +++ b/builtin/repack.c @@ -306,7 +306,7 @@ int cmd_repack(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) struct string_list rollback = STRING_LIST_INIT_NODUP; struct string_list existing_packs = STRING_LIST_INIT_DUP; struct strbuf line = STRBUF_INIT; - int i, ext, ret, failed; + int i, ext, ret; FILE *out; /* variables to be filled by option parsing */ @@ -463,109 +463,34 @@ int cmd_repack(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) /* * Ok we have prepared all new packfiles. - * First see if there are packs of the same name and if so - * if we can move them out of the way (this can happen if we - * repacked immediately after packing fully. */ - failed = 0; for_each_string_list_item(item, &names) { for (ext = 0; ext < ARRAY_SIZE(exts); ext++) { char *fname, *fname_old; - fname = mkpathdup("%s/pack-%s%s", packdir, - item->string, exts[ext].name); - if (!file_exists(fname)) { - free(fname); - continue; - } - - fname_old = mkpathdup("%s/old-%s%s", packdir, - item->string, exts[ext].name); - if (file_exists(fname_old)) - if (unlink(fname_old)) - failed = 1; - - if (!failed && rename(fname, fname_old)) { - free(fname); - free(fname_old); - failed = 1; - break; - } else { - string_list_append(&rollback, fname); - free(fname_old); - } - } - if (failed) - break; - } - if (failed) { - struct string_list rollback_failure = STRING_LIST_INIT_DUP; - for_each_string_list_item(item, &rollback) { - char *fname, *fname_old; - fname = mkpathdup("%s/%s", packdir, item->string); - fname_old = mkpathdup("%s/old-%s", packdir, item->string); - if (rename(fname_old, fname)) - string_list_append(&rollback_failure, fname); - free(fname); - free(fname_old); - } - - if (rollback_failure.nr) { - int i; - fprintf(stderr, - _("WARNING: Some packs in use have been renamed by\n" - "WARNING: prefixing old- to their name, in order to\n" - "WARNING: replace them with the new version of the\n" - "WARNING: file. But the operation failed, and the\n" - "WARNING: attempt to rename them back to their\n" - "WARNING: original names also failed.\n" - "WARNING: Please rename them in %s manually:\n"), packdir); - for (i = 0; i < rollback_failure.nr; i++) - fprintf(stderr, "WARNING: old-%s -> %s\n", - rollback_failure.items[i].string, - rollback_failure.items[i].string); - } - exit(1); - } - - /* Now the ones with the same name are out of the way... */ - for_each_string_list_item(item, &names) { - for (ext = 0; ext < ARRAY_SIZE(exts); ext++) { - char *fname, *fname_old; - struct stat statbuffer; - int exists = 0; fname = mkpathdup("%s/pack-%s%s", packdir, item->string, exts[ext].name); fname_old = mkpathdup("%s-%s%s", packtmp, item->string, exts[ext].name); - if (!stat(fname_old, &statbuffer)) { - statbuffer.st_mode &= ~(S_IWUSR | S_IWGRP | S_IWOTH); - chmod(fname_old, statbuffer.st_mode); - exists = 1; - } - if (exists || !exts[ext].optional) { + + if (((uintptr_t)item->util) & (1 << ext)) { + struct stat statbuffer; + if (!stat(fname_old, &statbuffer)) { + statbuffer.st_mode &= ~(S_IWUSR | S_IWGRP | S_IWOTH); + chmod(fname_old, statbuffer.st_mode); + } + if (rename(fname_old, fname)) die_errno(_("renaming '%s' failed"), fname_old); - } + } else if (!exts[ext].optional) + die(_("missing required file: %s"), fname_old); + else if (unlink(fname) < 0 && errno != ENOENT) + die_errno(_("could not unlink: %s"), fname); + free(fname); free(fname_old); } } - - /* Remove the "old-" files */ - for_each_string_list_item(item, &names) { - for (ext = 0; ext < ARRAY_SIZE(exts); ext++) { - char *fname; - fname = mkpathdup("%s/old-%s%s", - packdir, - item->string, - exts[ext].name); - if (remove_path(fname)) - warning(_("failed to remove '%s'"), fname); - free(fname); - } - } - /* End of pack replacement. */ reprepare_packed_git(the_repository); -- 2.29.2.312.gabc4d358d8
Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> writes: > That is, it is not the case that we pretend as if pack-objects didn't > write files identical to ones that already exist, but rather that we > respect what pack-objects wrote as the source of truth. That cuts two > ways: > > - If pack-objects produced an identical pack to one that already > exists with a bitmap, but did not produce a bitmap, we remove the > bitmap that already exists. (This behavior is codified in t7700.14). > > - If pack-objects produced an identical pack to one that already > exists, we trust the just-written version of the coresponding .idx, > .promisor, and other files over the ones that already exist. This > ensures that we use the most up-to-date versions of this files, > which is safe even in the face of format changes in, say, the .idx > file (which would not be reflected in the .idx file's name). Very clearly written. I see no room for confusion, unlike the original one. Thanks, will replace. > > Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> > Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> > --- > builtin/repack.c | 103 +++++++---------------------------------------- > 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+), 89 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/builtin/repack.c b/builtin/repack.c > index bb839180da..279be11a16 100644 > --- a/builtin/repack.c > +++ b/builtin/repack.c > @@ -306,7 +306,7 @@ int cmd_repack(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) > struct string_list rollback = STRING_LIST_INIT_NODUP; > struct string_list existing_packs = STRING_LIST_INIT_DUP; > struct strbuf line = STRBUF_INIT; > - int i, ext, ret, failed; > + int i, ext, ret; > FILE *out; > > /* variables to be filled by option parsing */ > @@ -463,109 +463,34 @@ int cmd_repack(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) > > /* > * Ok we have prepared all new packfiles. > - * First see if there are packs of the same name and if so > - * if we can move them out of the way (this can happen if we > - * repacked immediately after packing fully. > */ > - failed = 0; > for_each_string_list_item(item, &names) { > for (ext = 0; ext < ARRAY_SIZE(exts); ext++) { > char *fname, *fname_old; > > - fname = mkpathdup("%s/pack-%s%s", packdir, > - item->string, exts[ext].name); > - if (!file_exists(fname)) { > - free(fname); > - continue; > - } > - > - fname_old = mkpathdup("%s/old-%s%s", packdir, > - item->string, exts[ext].name); > - if (file_exists(fname_old)) > - if (unlink(fname_old)) > - failed = 1; > - > - if (!failed && rename(fname, fname_old)) { > - free(fname); > - free(fname_old); > - failed = 1; > - break; > - } else { > - string_list_append(&rollback, fname); > - free(fname_old); > - } > - } > - if (failed) > - break; > - } > - if (failed) { > - struct string_list rollback_failure = STRING_LIST_INIT_DUP; > - for_each_string_list_item(item, &rollback) { > - char *fname, *fname_old; > - fname = mkpathdup("%s/%s", packdir, item->string); > - fname_old = mkpathdup("%s/old-%s", packdir, item->string); > - if (rename(fname_old, fname)) > - string_list_append(&rollback_failure, fname); > - free(fname); > - free(fname_old); > - } > - > - if (rollback_failure.nr) { > - int i; > - fprintf(stderr, > - _("WARNING: Some packs in use have been renamed by\n" > - "WARNING: prefixing old- to their name, in order to\n" > - "WARNING: replace them with the new version of the\n" > - "WARNING: file. But the operation failed, and the\n" > - "WARNING: attempt to rename them back to their\n" > - "WARNING: original names also failed.\n" > - "WARNING: Please rename them in %s manually:\n"), packdir); > - for (i = 0; i < rollback_failure.nr; i++) > - fprintf(stderr, "WARNING: old-%s -> %s\n", > - rollback_failure.items[i].string, > - rollback_failure.items[i].string); > - } > - exit(1); > - } > - > - /* Now the ones with the same name are out of the way... */ > - for_each_string_list_item(item, &names) { > - for (ext = 0; ext < ARRAY_SIZE(exts); ext++) { > - char *fname, *fname_old; > - struct stat statbuffer; > - int exists = 0; > fname = mkpathdup("%s/pack-%s%s", > packdir, item->string, exts[ext].name); > fname_old = mkpathdup("%s-%s%s", > packtmp, item->string, exts[ext].name); > - if (!stat(fname_old, &statbuffer)) { > - statbuffer.st_mode &= ~(S_IWUSR | S_IWGRP | S_IWOTH); > - chmod(fname_old, statbuffer.st_mode); > - exists = 1; > - } > - if (exists || !exts[ext].optional) { > + > + if (((uintptr_t)item->util) & (1 << ext)) { > + struct stat statbuffer; > + if (!stat(fname_old, &statbuffer)) { > + statbuffer.st_mode &= ~(S_IWUSR | S_IWGRP | S_IWOTH); > + chmod(fname_old, statbuffer.st_mode); > + } > + > if (rename(fname_old, fname)) > die_errno(_("renaming '%s' failed"), fname_old); > - } > + } else if (!exts[ext].optional) > + die(_("missing required file: %s"), fname_old); > + else if (unlink(fname) < 0 && errno != ENOENT) > + die_errno(_("could not unlink: %s"), fname); > + > free(fname); > free(fname_old); > } > } > - > - /* Remove the "old-" files */ > - for_each_string_list_item(item, &names) { > - for (ext = 0; ext < ARRAY_SIZE(exts); ext++) { > - char *fname; > - fname = mkpathdup("%s/old-%s%s", > - packdir, > - item->string, > - exts[ext].name); > - if (remove_path(fname)) > - warning(_("failed to remove '%s'"), fname); > - free(fname); > - } > - } > - > /* End of pack replacement. */ > > reprepare_packed_git(the_repository); > -- > 2.29.2.312.gabc4d358d8
diff --git a/builtin/repack.c b/builtin/repack.c index bb839180da..279be11a16 100644 --- a/builtin/repack.c +++ b/builtin/repack.c @@ -306,7 +306,7 @@ int cmd_repack(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) struct string_list rollback = STRING_LIST_INIT_NODUP; struct string_list existing_packs = STRING_LIST_INIT_DUP; struct strbuf line = STRBUF_INIT; - int i, ext, ret, failed; + int i, ext, ret; FILE *out; /* variables to be filled by option parsing */ @@ -463,109 +463,34 @@ int cmd_repack(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) /* * Ok we have prepared all new packfiles. - * First see if there are packs of the same name and if so - * if we can move them out of the way (this can happen if we - * repacked immediately after packing fully. */ - failed = 0; for_each_string_list_item(item, &names) { for (ext = 0; ext < ARRAY_SIZE(exts); ext++) { char *fname, *fname_old; - fname = mkpathdup("%s/pack-%s%s", packdir, - item->string, exts[ext].name); - if (!file_exists(fname)) { - free(fname); - continue; - } - - fname_old = mkpathdup("%s/old-%s%s", packdir, - item->string, exts[ext].name); - if (file_exists(fname_old)) - if (unlink(fname_old)) - failed = 1; - - if (!failed && rename(fname, fname_old)) { - free(fname); - free(fname_old); - failed = 1; - break; - } else { - string_list_append(&rollback, fname); - free(fname_old); - } - } - if (failed) - break; - } - if (failed) { - struct string_list rollback_failure = STRING_LIST_INIT_DUP; - for_each_string_list_item(item, &rollback) { - char *fname, *fname_old; - fname = mkpathdup("%s/%s", packdir, item->string); - fname_old = mkpathdup("%s/old-%s", packdir, item->string); - if (rename(fname_old, fname)) - string_list_append(&rollback_failure, fname); - free(fname); - free(fname_old); - } - - if (rollback_failure.nr) { - int i; - fprintf(stderr, - _("WARNING: Some packs in use have been renamed by\n" - "WARNING: prefixing old- to their name, in order to\n" - "WARNING: replace them with the new version of the\n" - "WARNING: file. But the operation failed, and the\n" - "WARNING: attempt to rename them back to their\n" - "WARNING: original names also failed.\n" - "WARNING: Please rename them in %s manually:\n"), packdir); - for (i = 0; i < rollback_failure.nr; i++) - fprintf(stderr, "WARNING: old-%s -> %s\n", - rollback_failure.items[i].string, - rollback_failure.items[i].string); - } - exit(1); - } - - /* Now the ones with the same name are out of the way... */ - for_each_string_list_item(item, &names) { - for (ext = 0; ext < ARRAY_SIZE(exts); ext++) { - char *fname, *fname_old; - struct stat statbuffer; - int exists = 0; fname = mkpathdup("%s/pack-%s%s", packdir, item->string, exts[ext].name); fname_old = mkpathdup("%s-%s%s", packtmp, item->string, exts[ext].name); - if (!stat(fname_old, &statbuffer)) { - statbuffer.st_mode &= ~(S_IWUSR | S_IWGRP | S_IWOTH); - chmod(fname_old, statbuffer.st_mode); - exists = 1; - } - if (exists || !exts[ext].optional) { + + if (((uintptr_t)item->util) & (1 << ext)) { + struct stat statbuffer; + if (!stat(fname_old, &statbuffer)) { + statbuffer.st_mode &= ~(S_IWUSR | S_IWGRP | S_IWOTH); + chmod(fname_old, statbuffer.st_mode); + } + if (rename(fname_old, fname)) die_errno(_("renaming '%s' failed"), fname_old); - } + } else if (!exts[ext].optional) + die(_("missing required file: %s"), fname_old); + else if (unlink(fname) < 0 && errno != ENOENT) + die_errno(_("could not unlink: %s"), fname); + free(fname); free(fname_old); } } - - /* Remove the "old-" files */ - for_each_string_list_item(item, &names) { - for (ext = 0; ext < ARRAY_SIZE(exts); ext++) { - char *fname; - fname = mkpathdup("%s/old-%s%s", - packdir, - item->string, - exts[ext].name); - if (remove_path(fname)) - warning(_("failed to remove '%s'"), fname); - free(fname); - } - } - /* End of pack replacement. */ reprepare_packed_git(the_repository);
When 'git repack' creates a pack with the same name as any existing pack, it moves the existing one to 'old-pack-xxx.{pack,idx,...}' and then renames the new one into place. Eventually, it would be nice to have 'git repack' allow for writing a multi-pack index at the critical time (after the new packs have been written / moved into place, but before the old ones have been deleted). Guessing that this option might be called '--write-midx', this makes the following situation (where repacks are issued back-to-back without any new objects) impossible: $ git repack -adb $ git repack -adb --write-midx In the second repack, the existing packs are overwritten verbatim with the same rename-to-old sequence. At that point, the current MIDX is invalidated, since it refers to now-missing packs. So that code wants to be run after the MIDX is re-written. But (prior to this patch) the new MIDX can't be written until the new packs are moved into place. So, we have a circular dependency. This is all hypothetical, since no code currently exists to write a MIDX safely during a 'git repack' (the 'GIT_TEST_MULTI_PACK_INDEX' does so unsafely). Putting hypothetical aside, though: why do we need to rename existing packs to be prefixed with 'old-' anyway? This behavior dates all the way back to 2ad47d6 (git-repack: Be careful when updating the same pack as an existing one., 2006-06-25). 2ad47d6 is mainly concerned about a case where a newly written pack would have a different structure than its index. This used to be possible when the pack name was a hash of the set of objects. Under this naming scheme, two packs that store the same set of objects could differ in delta selection, object positioning, or both. If this happened, then any such packs would be unreadable in the instant between copying the new pack and new index (i.e., either the index or pack will be stale depending on the order that they were copied). But since 1190a1a (pack-objects: name pack files after trailer hash, 2013-12-05), this is no longer possible, since pack files are named not after their logical contents (i.e., the set of objects), but by the actual checksum of their contents. So, this old- behavior can safely go, which allows us to avoid our circular dependency above. In addition to avoiding the circular dependency, this patch also makes 'git repack' a lot simpler, since we don't have to deal with failures encountered when renaming existing packs to be prefixed with 'old-'. This patch is mostly limited to removing code paths that deal with the 'old' prefixing, with the exception of pack metadata. t7700.14 ensures that 'git repack' will, for example, remove existing bitmaps even if the pack written is verbatim the same (when repacking without '-b' in a repository unchanged from the time 'git repack -b' was run). So, we have to handle metadata that we didn't write, by unlinking any existing metadata that our invocation of pack-objects didn't generate itself. Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> --- builtin/repack.c | 103 +++++++---------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+), 89 deletions(-)