for_each_reflog_ent_reverse: fix newlines on block boundaries

When we read a reflog file in reverse, we read whole chunks
of BUFSIZ bytes, then loop over the buffer, parsing any
lines we find. We find the beginning of each line by looking
for the newline from the previous line. If we don't find
one, we know that we are either at the beginning of
the file, or that we have to read another block.

In the latter case, we stuff away what we have into a
strbuf, read another block, and continue our parse. But we
missed one case here. If we did find a newline, and it is at
the beginning of the block, we must also stuff that newline
into the strbuf, as it belongs to the block we are about to
read.

The minimal fix here would be to add this special case to
the conditional that checks whether we found a newline.
But we can make the flow a little clearer by rearranging a
bit: we first handle lines that we are going to show, and
then at the end of each loop, stuff away any leftovers if
necessary. That lets us fold this special-case in with the
more common "we ended in the middle of a line" case.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This commit is contained in:
Jeff King 2014-12-04 20:28:54 -05:00 committed by Junio C Hamano
parent eeff891ac7
commit e5e73ff20b
2 changed files with 67 additions and 12 deletions

49
refs.c
View file

@ -3089,24 +3089,49 @@ int for_each_reflog_ent_reverse(const char *refname, each_reflog_ent_fn fn, void
bp = find_beginning_of_line(buf, scanp);
if (*bp != '\n') {
strbuf_splice(&sb, 0, 0, buf, endp - buf);
if (pos)
break; /* need to fill another block */
scanp = buf - 1; /* leave loop */
} else {
if (*bp == '\n') {
/*
* (bp + 1) thru endp is the beginning of the
* current line we have in sb
* The newline is the end of the previous line,
* so we know we have complete line starting
* at (bp + 1). Prefix it onto any prior data
* we collected for the line and process it.
*/
strbuf_splice(&sb, 0, 0, bp + 1, endp - (bp + 1));
scanp = bp;
endp = bp + 1;
}
ret = show_one_reflog_ent(&sb, fn, cb_data);
strbuf_reset(&sb);
if (ret)
ret = show_one_reflog_ent(&sb, fn, cb_data);
strbuf_reset(&sb);
if (ret)
break;
} else if (!pos) {
/*
* We are at the start of the buffer, and the
* start of the file; there is no previous
* line, and we have everything for this one.
* Process it, and we can end the loop.
*/
strbuf_splice(&sb, 0, 0, buf, endp - buf);
ret = show_one_reflog_ent(&sb, fn, cb_data);
strbuf_reset(&sb);
break;
}
if (bp == buf) {
/*
* We are at the start of the buffer, and there
* is more file to read backwards. Which means
* we are in the middle of a line. Note that we
* may get here even if *bp was a newline; that
* just means we are at the exact end of the
* previous line, rather than some spot in the
* middle.
*
* Save away what we have to be combined with
* the data from the next read.
*/
strbuf_splice(&sb, 0, 0, buf, endp - buf);
break;
}
}
}

View file

@ -245,4 +245,34 @@ test_expect_success 'gc.reflogexpire=false' '
'
# Triggering the bug detected by this test requires a newline to fall
# exactly BUFSIZ-1 bytes from the end of the file. We don't know
# what that value is, since it's platform dependent. However, if
# we choose some value N, we also catch any D which divides N evenly
# (since we will read backwards in chunks of D). So we choose 8K,
# which catches glibc (with an 8K BUFSIZ) and *BSD (1K).
#
# Each line is 114 characters, so we need 75 to still have a few before the
# last 8K. The 89-character padding on the final entry lines up our
# newline exactly.
test_expect_success 'parsing reverse reflogs at BUFSIZ boundaries' '
git checkout -b reflogskip &&
z38=00000000000000000000000000000000000000 &&
ident="abc <xyz> 0000000001 +0000" &&
for i in $(test_seq 1 75); do
printf "$z38%02d $z38%02d %s\t" $i $(($i+1)) "$ident" &&
if test $i = 75; then
for j in $(test_seq 1 89); do
printf X
done
else
printf X
fi &&
printf "\n"
done >.git/logs/refs/heads/reflogskip &&
git rev-parse reflogskip@{73} >actual &&
echo ${z38}03 >expect &&
test_cmp expect actual
'
test_done