@@ -915,7 +915,6 @@ int cmd_blame(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix)
struct range_set ranges;
unsigned int range_i;
long anchor;
- const int hexsz = the_hash_algo->hexsz;
long num_lines = 0;
const char *str_usage = cmd_is_annotate ? annotate_usage : blame_usage;
const char **opt_usage = cmd_is_annotate ? annotate_opt_usage : blame_opt_usage;
@@ -973,11 +972,11 @@ int cmd_blame(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix)
} else if (show_progress < 0)
show_progress = isatty(2);
- if (0 < abbrev && abbrev < hexsz)
+ if (0 < abbrev && abbrev < (int)the_hash_algo->hexsz)
/* one more abbrev length is needed for the boundary commit */
abbrev++;
else if (!abbrev)
- abbrev = hexsz;
+ abbrev = the_hash_algo->hexsz;
if (revs_file && read_ancestry(revs_file))
die_errno("reading graft file '%s' failed", revs_file);
We access `the_hash_algo` in git-blame(1) before we have executed `parse_options_start()`, which may not be properly set up in case we have no repository. This is fine for most of the part because all the call paths that lead to it (git-blame(1), git-annotate(1) as well as git-pick-axe(1)) specify `RUN_SETUP` and thus require a repository. There is one exception though, namely when passing `-h` to print the help. Here we will access `the_hash_algo` even if there is no repo. This works fine right now because `the_hash_algo` gets sets up to point to the SHA1 algorithm via `initialize_repository()`. But we're about to stop doing this, and thus the code would lead to a `NULL` pointer exception. Prepare the code for this and only access `the_hash_algo` after we are sure that there is a proper repository. Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> --- builtin/blame.c | 5 ++--- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)