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authorJeff King <peff@peff.net>2013-12-05 20:28:07 (GMT)
committerJunio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2013-12-05 23:40:11 (GMT)
commit1190a1acf800acdcfd7569f87ac1560e2d077414 (patch)
tree6870ff8f5238d694fa70ebf3f9b6b54993dc0c54 /t/t5302-pack-index.sh
parente74435a5169b56be901196ad172b4dbda124254d (diff)
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pack-objects: name pack files after trailer hash
Our current scheme for naming packfiles is to calculate the sha1 hash of the sorted list of objects contained in the packfile. This gives us a unique name, so we are reasonably sure that two packs with the same name will contain the same objects. It does not, however, tell us that two such packs have the exact same bytes. This makes things awkward if we repack the same set of objects. Due to run-to-run variations, the bytes may not be identical (e.g., changed zlib or git versions, different source object reuse due to new packs in the repository, or even different deltas due to races during a multi-threaded delta search). In theory, this could be helpful to a program that cares that the packfile contains a certain set of objects, but does not care about the particular representation. In practice, no part of git makes use of that, and in many cases it is potentially harmful. For example, if a dumb http client fetches the .idx file, it must be sure to get the exact .pack that matches it. Similarly, a partial transfer of a .pack file cannot be safely resumed, as the actual bytes may have changed. This could also affect a local client which opened the .idx and .pack files, closes the .pack file (due to memory or file descriptor limits), and then re-opens a changed packfile. In all of these cases, git can detect the problem, as we have the sha1 of the bytes themselves in the pack trailer (which we verify on transfer), and the .idx file references the trailer from the matching packfile. But it would be simpler and more efficient to actually get the correct bytes, rather than noticing the problem and having to restart the operation. This patch simply uses the pack trailer sha1 as the pack name. It should be similarly unique, but covers the exact representation of the objects. Other parts of git should not care, as the pack name is returned by pack-objects and is essentially opaque. One test needs to be updated, because it actually corrupts a pack and expects that re-packing the corrupted bytes will use the same name. It won't anymore, but we can easily just use the name that pack-objects hands back. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Diffstat (limited to 't/t5302-pack-index.sh')
-rwxr-xr-xt/t5302-pack-index.sh4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/t/t5302-pack-index.sh b/t/t5302-pack-index.sh
index fe82025..4bbb718 100755
--- a/t/t5302-pack-index.sh
+++ b/t/t5302-pack-index.sh
@@ -174,11 +174,11 @@ test_expect_success \
test_expect_success \
'[index v1] 5) pack-objects happily reuses corrupted data' \
'pack4=$(git pack-objects test-4 <obj-list) &&
- test -f "test-4-${pack1}.pack"'
+ test -f "test-4-${pack4}.pack"'
test_expect_success \
'[index v1] 6) newly created pack is BAD !' \
- 'test_must_fail git verify-pack -v "test-4-${pack1}.pack"'
+ 'test_must_fail git verify-pack -v "test-4-${pack4}.pack"'
test_expect_success \
'[index v2] 1) stream pack to repository' \