| /* |
| * "Ostensibly Recursive's Twin" merge strategy, or "ort" for short. Meant |
| * as a drop-in replacement for the "recursive" merge strategy, allowing one |
| * to replace |
| * |
| * git merge [-s recursive] |
| * |
| * with |
| * |
| * git merge -s ort |
| * |
| * Note: git's parser allows the space between '-s' and its argument to be |
| * missing. (Should I have backronymed "ham", "alsa", "kip", "nap, "alvo", |
| * "cale", "peedy", or "ins" instead of "ort"?) |
| */ |
| |
| #include "cache.h" |
| #include "merge-ort.h" |
| |
| #include "alloc.h" |
| #include "blob.h" |
| #include "cache-tree.h" |
| #include "commit.h" |
| #include "commit-reach.h" |
| #include "diff.h" |
| #include "diffcore.h" |
| #include "dir.h" |
| #include "object-store.h" |
| #include "strmap.h" |
| #include "tree.h" |
| #include "unpack-trees.h" |
| #include "xdiff-interface.h" |
| |
| /* |
| * We have many arrays of size 3. Whenever we have such an array, the |
| * indices refer to one of the sides of the three-way merge. This is so |
| * pervasive that the constants 0, 1, and 2 are used in many places in the |
| * code (especially in arithmetic operations to find the other side's index |
| * or to compute a relevant mask), but sometimes these enum names are used |
| * to aid code clarity. |
| * |
| * See also 'filemask' and 'dirmask' in struct conflict_info; the "ith side" |
| * referred to there is one of these three sides. |
| */ |
| enum merge_side { |
| MERGE_BASE = 0, |
| MERGE_SIDE1 = 1, |
| MERGE_SIDE2 = 2 |
| }; |
| |
| struct merge_options_internal { |
| /* |
| * paths: primary data structure in all of merge ort. |
| * |
| * The keys of paths: |
| * * are full relative paths from the toplevel of the repository |
| * (e.g. "drivers/firmware/raspberrypi.c"). |
| * * store all relevant paths in the repo, both directories and |
| * files (e.g. drivers, drivers/firmware would also be included) |
| * * these keys serve to intern all the path strings, which allows |
| * us to do pointer comparison on directory names instead of |
| * strcmp; we just have to be careful to use the interned strings. |
| * (Technically paths_to_free may track some strings that were |
| * removed from froms paths.) |
| * |
| * The values of paths: |
| * * either a pointer to a merged_info, or a conflict_info struct |
| * * merged_info contains all relevant information for a |
| * non-conflicted entry. |
| * * conflict_info contains a merged_info, plus any additional |
| * information about a conflict such as the higher orders stages |
| * involved and the names of the paths those came from (handy |
| * once renames get involved). |
| * * a path may start "conflicted" (i.e. point to a conflict_info) |
| * and then a later step (e.g. three-way content merge) determines |
| * it can be cleanly merged, at which point it'll be marked clean |
| * and the algorithm will ignore any data outside the contained |
| * merged_info for that entry |
| * * If an entry remains conflicted, the merged_info portion of a |
| * conflict_info will later be filled with whatever version of |
| * the file should be placed in the working directory (e.g. an |
| * as-merged-as-possible variation that contains conflict markers). |
| */ |
| struct strmap paths; |
| |
| /* |
| * conflicted: a subset of keys->values from "paths" |
| * |
| * conflicted is basically an optimization between process_entries() |
| * and record_conflicted_index_entries(); the latter could loop over |
| * ALL the entries in paths AGAIN and look for the ones that are |
| * still conflicted, but since process_entries() has to loop over |
| * all of them, it saves the ones it couldn't resolve in this strmap |
| * so that record_conflicted_index_entries() can iterate just the |
| * relevant entries. |
| */ |
| struct strmap conflicted; |
| |
| /* |
| * paths_to_free: additional list of strings to free |
| * |
| * If keys are removed from "paths", they are added to paths_to_free |
| * to ensure they are later freed. We avoid free'ing immediately since |
| * other places (e.g. conflict_info.pathnames[]) may still be |
| * referencing these paths. |
| */ |
| struct string_list paths_to_free; |
| |
| /* |
| * output: special messages and conflict notices for various paths |
| * |
| * This is a map of pathnames (a subset of the keys in "paths" above) |
| * to strbufs. It gathers various warning/conflict/notice messages |
| * for later processing. |
| */ |
| struct strmap output; |
| |
| /* |
| * current_dir_name: temporary var used in collect_merge_info_callback() |
| * |
| * Used to set merged_info.directory_name; see documentation for that |
| * variable and the requirements placed on that field. |
| */ |
| const char *current_dir_name; |
| |
| /* call_depth: recursion level counter for merging merge bases */ |
| int call_depth; |
| }; |
| |
| struct version_info { |
| struct object_id oid; |
| unsigned short mode; |
| }; |
| |
| struct merged_info { |
| /* if is_null, ignore result. otherwise result has oid & mode */ |
| struct version_info result; |
| unsigned is_null:1; |
| |
| /* |
| * clean: whether the path in question is cleanly merged. |
| * |
| * see conflict_info.merged for more details. |
| */ |
| unsigned clean:1; |
| |
| /* |
| * basename_offset: offset of basename of path. |
| * |
| * perf optimization to avoid recomputing offset of final '/' |
| * character in pathname (0 if no '/' in pathname). |
| */ |
| size_t basename_offset; |
| |
| /* |
| * directory_name: containing directory name. |
| * |
| * Note that we assume directory_name is constructed such that |
| * strcmp(dir1_name, dir2_name) == 0 iff dir1_name == dir2_name, |
| * i.e. string equality is equivalent to pointer equality. For this |
| * to hold, we have to be careful setting directory_name. |
| */ |
| const char *directory_name; |
| }; |
| |
| struct conflict_info { |
| /* |
| * merged: the version of the path that will be written to working tree |
| * |
| * WARNING: It is critical to check merged.clean and ensure it is 0 |
| * before reading any conflict_info fields outside of merged. |
| * Allocated merge_info structs will always have clean set to 1. |
| * Allocated conflict_info structs will have merged.clean set to 0 |
| * initially. The merged.clean field is how we know if it is safe |
| * to access other parts of conflict_info besides merged; if a |
| * conflict_info's merged.clean is changed to 1, the rest of the |
| * algorithm is not allowed to look at anything outside of the |
| * merged member anymore. |
| */ |
| struct merged_info merged; |
| |
| /* oids & modes from each of the three trees for this path */ |
| struct version_info stages[3]; |
| |
| /* pathnames for each stage; may differ due to rename detection */ |
| const char *pathnames[3]; |
| |
| /* Whether this path is/was involved in a directory/file conflict */ |
| unsigned df_conflict:1; |
| |
| /* |
| * Whether this path is/was involved in a non-content conflict other |
| * than a directory/file conflict (e.g. rename/rename, rename/delete, |
| * file location based on possible directory rename). |
| */ |
| unsigned path_conflict:1; |
| |
| /* |
| * For filemask and dirmask, the ith bit corresponds to whether the |
| * ith entry is a file (filemask) or a directory (dirmask). Thus, |
| * filemask & dirmask is always zero, and filemask | dirmask is at |
| * most 7 but can be less when a path does not appear as either a |
| * file or a directory on at least one side of history. |
| * |
| * Note that these masks are related to enum merge_side, as the ith |
| * entry corresponds to side i. |
| * |
| * These values come from a traverse_trees() call; more info may be |
| * found looking at tree-walk.h's struct traverse_info, |
| * particularly the documentation above the "fn" member (note that |
| * filemask = mask & ~dirmask from that documentation). |
| */ |
| unsigned filemask:3; |
| unsigned dirmask:3; |
| |
| /* |
| * Optimization to track which stages match, to avoid the need to |
| * recompute it in multiple steps. Either 0 or at least 2 bits are |
| * set; if at least 2 bits are set, their corresponding stages match. |
| */ |
| unsigned match_mask:3; |
| }; |
| |
| /*** Function Grouping: various utility functions ***/ |
| |
| /* |
| * For the next three macros, see warning for conflict_info.merged. |
| * |
| * In each of the below, mi is a struct merged_info*, and ci was defined |
| * as a struct conflict_info* (but we need to verify ci isn't actually |
| * pointed at a struct merged_info*). |
| * |
| * INITIALIZE_CI: Assign ci to mi but only if it's safe; set to NULL otherwise. |
| * VERIFY_CI: Ensure that something we assigned to a conflict_info* is one. |
| * ASSIGN_AND_VERIFY_CI: Similar to VERIFY_CI but do assignment first. |
| */ |
| #define INITIALIZE_CI(ci, mi) do { \ |
| (ci) = (!(mi) || (mi)->clean) ? NULL : (struct conflict_info *)(mi); \ |
| } while (0) |
| #define VERIFY_CI(ci) assert(ci && !ci->merged.clean); |
| #define ASSIGN_AND_VERIFY_CI(ci, mi) do { \ |
| (ci) = (struct conflict_info *)(mi); \ |
| assert((ci) && !(mi)->clean); \ |
| } while (0) |
| |
| static void free_strmap_strings(struct strmap *map) |
| { |
| struct hashmap_iter iter; |
| struct strmap_entry *entry; |
| |
| strmap_for_each_entry(map, &iter, entry) { |
| free((char*)entry->key); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| static void clear_or_reinit_internal_opts(struct merge_options_internal *opti, |
| int reinitialize) |
| { |
| void (*strmap_func)(struct strmap *, int) = |
| reinitialize ? strmap_partial_clear : strmap_clear; |
| |
| /* |
| * We marked opti->paths with strdup_strings = 0, so that we |
| * wouldn't have to make another copy of the fullpath created by |
| * make_traverse_path from setup_path_info(). But, now that we've |
| * used it and have no other references to these strings, it is time |
| * to deallocate them. |
| */ |
| free_strmap_strings(&opti->paths); |
| strmap_func(&opti->paths, 1); |
| |
| /* |
| * All keys and values in opti->conflicted are a subset of those in |
| * opti->paths. We don't want to deallocate anything twice, so we |
| * don't free the keys and we pass 0 for free_values. |
| */ |
| strmap_func(&opti->conflicted, 0); |
| |
| /* |
| * opti->paths_to_free is similar to opti->paths; we created it with |
| * strdup_strings = 0 to avoid making _another_ copy of the fullpath |
| * but now that we've used it and have no other references to these |
| * strings, it is time to deallocate them. We do so by temporarily |
| * setting strdup_strings to 1. |
| */ |
| opti->paths_to_free.strdup_strings = 1; |
| string_list_clear(&opti->paths_to_free, 0); |
| opti->paths_to_free.strdup_strings = 0; |
| |
| if (!reinitialize) { |
| struct hashmap_iter iter; |
| struct strmap_entry *e; |
| |
| /* Release and free each strbuf found in output */ |
| strmap_for_each_entry(&opti->output, &iter, e) { |
| struct strbuf *sb = e->value; |
| strbuf_release(sb); |
| /* |
| * While strictly speaking we don't need to free(sb) |
| * here because we could pass free_values=1 when |
| * calling strmap_clear() on opti->output, that would |
| * require strmap_clear to do another |
| * strmap_for_each_entry() loop, so we just free it |
| * while we're iterating anyway. |
| */ |
| free(sb); |
| } |
| strmap_clear(&opti->output, 0); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| static int err(struct merge_options *opt, const char *err, ...) |
| { |
| va_list params; |
| struct strbuf sb = STRBUF_INIT; |
| |
| strbuf_addstr(&sb, "error: "); |
| va_start(params, err); |
| strbuf_vaddf(&sb, err, params); |
| va_end(params); |
| |
| error("%s", sb.buf); |
| strbuf_release(&sb); |
| |
| return -1; |
| } |
| |
| __attribute__((format (printf, 4, 5))) |
| static void path_msg(struct merge_options *opt, |
| const char *path, |
| int omittable_hint, /* skippable under --remerge-diff */ |
| const char *fmt, ...) |
| { |
| va_list ap; |
| struct strbuf *sb = strmap_get(&opt->priv->output, path); |
| if (!sb) { |
| sb = xmalloc(sizeof(*sb)); |
| strbuf_init(sb, 0); |
| strmap_put(&opt->priv->output, path, sb); |
| } |
| |
| va_start(ap, fmt); |
| strbuf_vaddf(sb, fmt, ap); |
| va_end(ap); |
| |
| strbuf_addch(sb, '\n'); |
| } |
| |
| /*** Function Grouping: functions related to collect_merge_info() ***/ |
| |
| static void setup_path_info(struct merge_options *opt, |
| struct string_list_item *result, |
| const char *current_dir_name, |
| int current_dir_name_len, |
| char *fullpath, /* we'll take over ownership */ |
| struct name_entry *names, |
| struct name_entry *merged_version, |
| unsigned is_null, /* boolean */ |
| unsigned df_conflict, /* boolean */ |
| unsigned filemask, |
| unsigned dirmask, |
| int resolved /* boolean */) |
| { |
| /* result->util is void*, so mi is a convenience typed variable */ |
| struct merged_info *mi; |
| |
| assert(!is_null || resolved); |
| assert(!df_conflict || !resolved); /* df_conflict implies !resolved */ |
| assert(resolved == (merged_version != NULL)); |
| |
| mi = xcalloc(1, resolved ? sizeof(struct merged_info) : |
| sizeof(struct conflict_info)); |
| mi->directory_name = current_dir_name; |
| mi->basename_offset = current_dir_name_len; |
| mi->clean = !!resolved; |
| if (resolved) { |
| mi->result.mode = merged_version->mode; |
| oidcpy(&mi->result.oid, &merged_version->oid); |
| mi->is_null = !!is_null; |
| } else { |
| int i; |
| struct conflict_info *ci; |
| |
| ASSIGN_AND_VERIFY_CI(ci, mi); |
| for (i = MERGE_BASE; i <= MERGE_SIDE2; i++) { |
| ci->pathnames[i] = fullpath; |
| ci->stages[i].mode = names[i].mode; |
| oidcpy(&ci->stages[i].oid, &names[i].oid); |
| } |
| ci->filemask = filemask; |
| ci->dirmask = dirmask; |
| ci->df_conflict = !!df_conflict; |
| if (dirmask) |
| /* |
| * Assume is_null for now, but if we have entries |
| * under the directory then when it is complete in |
| * write_completed_directory() it'll update this. |
| * Also, for D/F conflicts, we have to handle the |
| * directory first, then clear this bit and process |
| * the file to see how it is handled -- that occurs |
| * near the top of process_entry(). |
| */ |
| mi->is_null = 1; |
| } |
| strmap_put(&opt->priv->paths, fullpath, mi); |
| result->string = fullpath; |
| result->util = mi; |
| } |
| |
| static int collect_merge_info_callback(int n, |
| unsigned long mask, |
| unsigned long dirmask, |
| struct name_entry *names, |
| struct traverse_info *info) |
| { |
| /* |
| * n is 3. Always. |
| * common ancestor (mbase) has mask 1, and stored in index 0 of names |
| * head of side 1 (side1) has mask 2, and stored in index 1 of names |
| * head of side 2 (side2) has mask 4, and stored in index 2 of names |
| */ |
| struct merge_options *opt = info->data; |
| struct merge_options_internal *opti = opt->priv; |
| struct string_list_item pi; /* Path Info */ |
| struct conflict_info *ci; /* typed alias to pi.util (which is void*) */ |
| struct name_entry *p; |
| size_t len; |
| char *fullpath; |
| const char *dirname = opti->current_dir_name; |
| unsigned filemask = mask & ~dirmask; |
| unsigned match_mask = 0; /* will be updated below */ |
| unsigned mbase_null = !(mask & 1); |
| unsigned side1_null = !(mask & 2); |
| unsigned side2_null = !(mask & 4); |
| unsigned side1_matches_mbase = (!side1_null && !mbase_null && |
| names[0].mode == names[1].mode && |
| oideq(&names[0].oid, &names[1].oid)); |
| unsigned side2_matches_mbase = (!side2_null && !mbase_null && |
| names[0].mode == names[2].mode && |
| oideq(&names[0].oid, &names[2].oid)); |
| unsigned sides_match = (!side1_null && !side2_null && |
| names[1].mode == names[2].mode && |
| oideq(&names[1].oid, &names[2].oid)); |
| |
| /* |
| * Note: When a path is a file on one side of history and a directory |
| * in another, we have a directory/file conflict. In such cases, if |
| * the conflict doesn't resolve from renames and deletions, then we |
| * always leave directories where they are and move files out of the |
| * way. Thus, while struct conflict_info has a df_conflict field to |
| * track such conflicts, we ignore that field for any directories at |
| * a path and only pay attention to it for files at the given path. |
| * The fact that we leave directories were they are also means that |
| * we do not need to worry about getting additional df_conflict |
| * information propagated from parent directories down to children |
| * (unlike, say traverse_trees_recursive() in unpack-trees.c, which |
| * sets a newinfo.df_conflicts field specifically to propagate it). |
| */ |
| unsigned df_conflict = (filemask != 0) && (dirmask != 0); |
| |
| /* n = 3 is a fundamental assumption. */ |
| if (n != 3) |
| BUG("Called collect_merge_info_callback wrong"); |
| |
| /* |
| * A bunch of sanity checks verifying that traverse_trees() calls |
| * us the way I expect. Could just remove these at some point, |
| * though maybe they are helpful to future code readers. |
| */ |
| assert(mbase_null == is_null_oid(&names[0].oid)); |
| assert(side1_null == is_null_oid(&names[1].oid)); |
| assert(side2_null == is_null_oid(&names[2].oid)); |
| assert(!mbase_null || !side1_null || !side2_null); |
| assert(mask > 0 && mask < 8); |
| |
| /* Determine match_mask */ |
| if (side1_matches_mbase) |
| match_mask = (side2_matches_mbase ? 7 : 3); |
| else if (side2_matches_mbase) |
| match_mask = 5; |
| else if (sides_match) |
| match_mask = 6; |
| |
| /* |
| * Get the name of the relevant filepath, which we'll pass to |
| * setup_path_info() for tracking. |
| */ |
| p = names; |
| while (!p->mode) |
| p++; |
| len = traverse_path_len(info, p->pathlen); |
| |
| /* +1 in both of the following lines to include the NUL byte */ |
| fullpath = xmalloc(len + 1); |
| make_traverse_path(fullpath, len + 1, info, p->path, p->pathlen); |
| |
| /* |
| * If mbase, side1, and side2 all match, we can resolve early. Even |
| * if these are trees, there will be no renames or anything |
| * underneath. |
| */ |
| if (side1_matches_mbase && side2_matches_mbase) { |
| /* mbase, side1, & side2 all match; use mbase as resolution */ |
| setup_path_info(opt, &pi, dirname, info->pathlen, fullpath, |
| names, names+0, mbase_null, 0, |
| filemask, dirmask, 1); |
| return mask; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Record information about the path so we can resolve later in |
| * process_entries. |
| */ |
| setup_path_info(opt, &pi, dirname, info->pathlen, fullpath, |
| names, NULL, 0, df_conflict, filemask, dirmask, 0); |
| |
| ci = pi.util; |
| VERIFY_CI(ci); |
| ci->match_mask = match_mask; |
| |
| /* If dirmask, recurse into subdirectories */ |
| if (dirmask) { |
| struct traverse_info newinfo; |
| struct tree_desc t[3]; |
| void *buf[3] = {NULL, NULL, NULL}; |
| const char *original_dir_name; |
| int i, ret; |
| |
| ci->match_mask &= filemask; |
| newinfo = *info; |
| newinfo.prev = info; |
| newinfo.name = p->path; |
| newinfo.namelen = p->pathlen; |
| newinfo.pathlen = st_add3(newinfo.pathlen, p->pathlen, 1); |
| /* |
| * If this directory we are about to recurse into cared about |
| * its parent directory (the current directory) having a D/F |
| * conflict, then we'd propagate the masks in this way: |
| * newinfo.df_conflicts |= (mask & ~dirmask); |
| * But we don't worry about propagating D/F conflicts. (See |
| * comment near setting of local df_conflict variable near |
| * the beginning of this function). |
| */ |
| |
| for (i = MERGE_BASE; i <= MERGE_SIDE2; i++) { |
| if (i == 1 && side1_matches_mbase) |
| t[1] = t[0]; |
| else if (i == 2 && side2_matches_mbase) |
| t[2] = t[0]; |
| else if (i == 2 && sides_match) |
| t[2] = t[1]; |
| else { |
| const struct object_id *oid = NULL; |
| if (dirmask & 1) |
| oid = &names[i].oid; |
| buf[i] = fill_tree_descriptor(opt->repo, |
| t + i, oid); |
| } |
| dirmask >>= 1; |
| } |
| |
| original_dir_name = opti->current_dir_name; |
| opti->current_dir_name = pi.string; |
| ret = traverse_trees(NULL, 3, t, &newinfo); |
| opti->current_dir_name = original_dir_name; |
| |
| for (i = MERGE_BASE; i <= MERGE_SIDE2; i++) |
| free(buf[i]); |
| |
| if (ret < 0) |
| return -1; |
| } |
| |
| return mask; |
| } |
| |
| static int collect_merge_info(struct merge_options *opt, |
| struct tree *merge_base, |
| struct tree *side1, |
| struct tree *side2) |
| { |
| int ret; |
| struct tree_desc t[3]; |
| struct traverse_info info; |
| const char *toplevel_dir_placeholder = ""; |
| |
| opt->priv->current_dir_name = toplevel_dir_placeholder; |
| setup_traverse_info(&info, toplevel_dir_placeholder); |
| info.fn = collect_merge_info_callback; |
| info.data = opt; |
| info.show_all_errors = 1; |
| |
| parse_tree(merge_base); |
| parse_tree(side1); |
| parse_tree(side2); |
| init_tree_desc(t + 0, merge_base->buffer, merge_base->size); |
| init_tree_desc(t + 1, side1->buffer, side1->size); |
| init_tree_desc(t + 2, side2->buffer, side2->size); |
| |
| ret = traverse_trees(NULL, 3, t, &info); |
| |
| return ret; |
| } |
| |
| /*** Function Grouping: functions related to threeway content merges ***/ |
| |
| static int handle_content_merge(struct merge_options *opt, |
| const char *path, |
| const struct version_info *o, |
| const struct version_info *a, |
| const struct version_info *b, |
| const char *pathnames[3], |
| const int extra_marker_size, |
| struct version_info *result) |
| { |
| die("Not yet implemented"); |
| } |
| |
| /*** Function Grouping: functions related to detect_and_process_renames(), *** |
| *** which are split into directory and regular rename detection sections. ***/ |
| |
| /*** Function Grouping: functions related to directory rename detection ***/ |
| |
| /*** Function Grouping: functions related to regular rename detection ***/ |
| |
| static int detect_and_process_renames(struct merge_options *opt, |
| struct tree *merge_base, |
| struct tree *side1, |
| struct tree *side2) |
| { |
| int clean = 1; |
| |
| /* |
| * Rename detection works by detecting file similarity. Here we use |
| * a really easy-to-implement scheme: files are similar IFF they have |
| * the same filename. Therefore, by this scheme, there are no renames. |
| * |
| * TODO: Actually implement a real rename detection scheme. |
| */ |
| return clean; |
| } |
| |
| /*** Function Grouping: functions related to process_entries() ***/ |
| |
| static int string_list_df_name_compare(const char *one, const char *two) |
| { |
| int onelen = strlen(one); |
| int twolen = strlen(two); |
| /* |
| * Here we only care that entries for D/F conflicts are |
| * adjacent, in particular with the file of the D/F conflict |
| * appearing before files below the corresponding directory. |
| * The order of the rest of the list is irrelevant for us. |
| * |
| * To achieve this, we sort with df_name_compare and provide |
| * the mode S_IFDIR so that D/F conflicts will sort correctly. |
| * We use the mode S_IFDIR for everything else for simplicity, |
| * since in other cases any changes in their order due to |
| * sorting cause no problems for us. |
| */ |
| int cmp = df_name_compare(one, onelen, S_IFDIR, |
| two, twolen, S_IFDIR); |
| /* |
| * Now that 'foo' and 'foo/bar' compare equal, we have to make sure |
| * that 'foo' comes before 'foo/bar'. |
| */ |
| if (cmp) |
| return cmp; |
| return onelen - twolen; |
| } |
| |
| struct directory_versions { |
| /* |
| * versions: list of (basename -> version_info) |
| * |
| * The basenames are in reverse lexicographic order of full pathnames, |
| * as processed in process_entries(). This puts all entries within |
| * a directory together, and covers the directory itself after |
| * everything within it, allowing us to write subtrees before needing |
| * to record information for the tree itself. |
| */ |
| struct string_list versions; |
| |
| /* |
| * offsets: list of (full relative path directories -> integer offsets) |
| * |
| * Since versions contains basenames from files in multiple different |
| * directories, we need to know which entries in versions correspond |
| * to which directories. Values of e.g. |
| * "" 0 |
| * src 2 |
| * src/moduleA 5 |
| * Would mean that entries 0-1 of versions are files in the toplevel |
| * directory, entries 2-4 are files under src/, and the remaining |
| * entries starting at index 5 are files under src/moduleA/. |
| */ |
| struct string_list offsets; |
| |
| /* |
| * last_directory: directory that previously processed file found in |
| * |
| * last_directory starts NULL, but records the directory in which the |
| * previous file was found within. As soon as |
| * directory(current_file) != last_directory |
| * then we need to start updating accounting in versions & offsets. |
| * Note that last_directory is always the last path in "offsets" (or |
| * NULL if "offsets" is empty) so this exists just for quick access. |
| */ |
| const char *last_directory; |
| |
| /* last_directory_len: cached computation of strlen(last_directory) */ |
| unsigned last_directory_len; |
| }; |
| |
| static int tree_entry_order(const void *a_, const void *b_) |
| { |
| const struct string_list_item *a = a_; |
| const struct string_list_item *b = b_; |
| |
| const struct merged_info *ami = a->util; |
| const struct merged_info *bmi = b->util; |
| return base_name_compare(a->string, strlen(a->string), ami->result.mode, |
| b->string, strlen(b->string), bmi->result.mode); |
| } |
| |
| static void write_tree(struct object_id *result_oid, |
| struct string_list *versions, |
| unsigned int offset, |
| size_t hash_size) |
| { |
| size_t maxlen = 0, extra; |
| unsigned int nr = versions->nr - offset; |
| struct strbuf buf = STRBUF_INIT; |
| struct string_list relevant_entries = STRING_LIST_INIT_NODUP; |
| int i; |
| |
| /* |
| * We want to sort the last (versions->nr-offset) entries in versions. |
| * Do so by abusing the string_list API a bit: make another string_list |
| * that contains just those entries and then sort them. |
| * |
| * We won't use relevant_entries again and will let it just pop off the |
| * stack, so there won't be allocation worries or anything. |
| */ |
| relevant_entries.items = versions->items + offset; |
| relevant_entries.nr = versions->nr - offset; |
| QSORT(relevant_entries.items, relevant_entries.nr, tree_entry_order); |
| |
| /* Pre-allocate some space in buf */ |
| extra = hash_size + 8; /* 8: 6 for mode, 1 for space, 1 for NUL char */ |
| for (i = 0; i < nr; i++) { |
| maxlen += strlen(versions->items[offset+i].string) + extra; |
| } |
| strbuf_grow(&buf, maxlen); |
| |
| /* Write each entry out to buf */ |
| for (i = 0; i < nr; i++) { |
| struct merged_info *mi = versions->items[offset+i].util; |
| struct version_info *ri = &mi->result; |
| strbuf_addf(&buf, "%o %s%c", |
| ri->mode, |
| versions->items[offset+i].string, '\0'); |
| strbuf_add(&buf, ri->oid.hash, hash_size); |
| } |
| |
| /* Write this object file out, and record in result_oid */ |
| write_object_file(buf.buf, buf.len, tree_type, result_oid); |
| strbuf_release(&buf); |
| } |
| |
| static void record_entry_for_tree(struct directory_versions *dir_metadata, |
| const char *path, |
| struct merged_info *mi) |
| { |
| const char *basename; |
| |
| if (mi->is_null) |
| /* nothing to record */ |
| return; |
| |
| basename = path + mi->basename_offset; |
| assert(strchr(basename, '/') == NULL); |
| string_list_append(&dir_metadata->versions, |
| basename)->util = &mi->result; |
| } |
| |
| static void write_completed_directory(struct merge_options *opt, |
| const char *new_directory_name, |
| struct directory_versions *info) |
| { |
| const char *prev_dir; |
| struct merged_info *dir_info = NULL; |
| unsigned int offset; |
| |
| /* |
| * Some explanation of info->versions and info->offsets... |
| * |
| * process_entries() iterates over all relevant files AND |
| * directories in reverse lexicographic order, and calls this |
| * function. Thus, an example of the paths that process_entries() |
| * could operate on (along with the directories for those paths |
| * being shown) is: |
| * |
| * xtract.c "" |
| * tokens.txt "" |
| * src/moduleB/umm.c src/moduleB |
| * src/moduleB/stuff.h src/moduleB |
| * src/moduleB/baz.c src/moduleB |
| * src/moduleB src |
| * src/moduleA/foo.c src/moduleA |
| * src/moduleA/bar.c src/moduleA |
| * src/moduleA src |
| * src "" |
| * Makefile "" |
| * |
| * info->versions: |
| * |
| * always contains the unprocessed entries and their |
| * version_info information. For example, after the first five |
| * entries above, info->versions would be: |
| * |
| * xtract.c <xtract.c's version_info> |
| * token.txt <token.txt's version_info> |
| * umm.c <src/moduleB/umm.c's version_info> |
| * stuff.h <src/moduleB/stuff.h's version_info> |
| * baz.c <src/moduleB/baz.c's version_info> |
| * |
| * Once a subdirectory is completed we remove the entries in |
| * that subdirectory from info->versions, writing it as a tree |
| * (write_tree()). Thus, as soon as we get to src/moduleB, |
| * info->versions would be updated to |
| * |
| * xtract.c <xtract.c's version_info> |
| * token.txt <token.txt's version_info> |
| * moduleB <src/moduleB's version_info> |
| * |
| * info->offsets: |
| * |
| * helps us track which entries in info->versions correspond to |
| * which directories. When we are N directories deep (e.g. 4 |
| * for src/modA/submod/subdir/), we have up to N+1 unprocessed |
| * directories (+1 because of toplevel dir). Corresponding to |
| * the info->versions example above, after processing five entries |
| * info->offsets will be: |
| * |
| * "" 0 |
| * src/moduleB 2 |
| * |
| * which is used to know that xtract.c & token.txt are from the |
| * toplevel dirctory, while umm.c & stuff.h & baz.c are from the |
| * src/moduleB directory. Again, following the example above, |
| * once we need to process src/moduleB, then info->offsets is |
| * updated to |
| * |
| * "" 0 |
| * src 2 |
| * |
| * which says that moduleB (and only moduleB so far) is in the |
| * src directory. |
| * |
| * One unique thing to note about info->offsets here is that |
| * "src" was not added to info->offsets until there was a path |
| * (a file OR directory) immediately below src/ that got |
| * processed. |
| * |
| * Since process_entry() just appends new entries to info->versions, |
| * write_completed_directory() only needs to do work if the next path |
| * is in a directory that is different than the last directory found |
| * in info->offsets. |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * If we are working with the same directory as the last entry, there |
| * is no work to do. (See comments above the directory_name member of |
| * struct merged_info for why we can use pointer comparison instead of |
| * strcmp here.) |
| */ |
| if (new_directory_name == info->last_directory) |
| return; |
| |
| /* |
| * If we are just starting (last_directory is NULL), or last_directory |
| * is a prefix of the current directory, then we can just update |
| * info->offsets to record the offset where we started this directory |
| * and update last_directory to have quick access to it. |
| */ |
| if (info->last_directory == NULL || |
| !strncmp(new_directory_name, info->last_directory, |
| info->last_directory_len)) { |
| uintptr_t offset = info->versions.nr; |
| |
| info->last_directory = new_directory_name; |
| info->last_directory_len = strlen(info->last_directory); |
| /* |
| * Record the offset into info->versions where we will |
| * start recording basenames of paths found within |
| * new_directory_name. |
| */ |
| string_list_append(&info->offsets, |
| info->last_directory)->util = (void*)offset; |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * The next entry that will be processed will be within |
| * new_directory_name. Since at this point we know that |
| * new_directory_name is within a different directory than |
| * info->last_directory, we have all entries for info->last_directory |
| * in info->versions and we need to create a tree object for them. |
| */ |
| dir_info = strmap_get(&opt->priv->paths, info->last_directory); |
| assert(dir_info); |
| offset = (uintptr_t)info->offsets.items[info->offsets.nr-1].util; |
| if (offset == info->versions.nr) { |
| /* |
| * Actually, we don't need to create a tree object in this |
| * case. Whenever all files within a directory disappear |
| * during the merge (e.g. unmodified on one side and |
| * deleted on the other, or files were renamed elsewhere), |
| * then we get here and the directory itself needs to be |
| * omitted from its parent tree as well. |
| */ |
| dir_info->is_null = 1; |
| } else { |
| /* |
| * Write out the tree to the git object directory, and also |
| * record the mode and oid in dir_info->result. |
| */ |
| dir_info->is_null = 0; |
| dir_info->result.mode = S_IFDIR; |
| write_tree(&dir_info->result.oid, &info->versions, offset, |
| opt->repo->hash_algo->rawsz); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * We've now used several entries from info->versions and one entry |
| * from info->offsets, so we get rid of those values. |
| */ |
| info->offsets.nr--; |
| info->versions.nr = offset; |
| |
| /* |
| * Now we've taken care of the completed directory, but we need to |
| * prepare things since future entries will be in |
| * new_directory_name. (In particular, process_entry() will be |
| * appending new entries to info->versions.) So, we need to make |
| * sure new_directory_name is the last entry in info->offsets. |
| */ |
| prev_dir = info->offsets.nr == 0 ? NULL : |
| info->offsets.items[info->offsets.nr-1].string; |
| if (new_directory_name != prev_dir) { |
| uintptr_t c = info->versions.nr; |
| string_list_append(&info->offsets, |
| new_directory_name)->util = (void*)c; |
| } |
| |
| /* And, of course, we need to update last_directory to match. */ |
| info->last_directory = new_directory_name; |
| info->last_directory_len = strlen(info->last_directory); |
| } |
| |
| /* Per entry merge function */ |
| static void process_entry(struct merge_options *opt, |
| const char *path, |
| struct conflict_info *ci, |
| struct directory_versions *dir_metadata) |
| { |
| VERIFY_CI(ci); |
| assert(ci->filemask >= 0 && ci->filemask <= 7); |
| /* ci->match_mask == 7 was handled in collect_merge_info_callback() */ |
| assert(ci->match_mask == 0 || ci->match_mask == 3 || |
| ci->match_mask == 5 || ci->match_mask == 6); |
| |
| if (ci->dirmask) { |
| record_entry_for_tree(dir_metadata, path, &ci->merged); |
| if (ci->filemask == 0) |
| /* nothing else to handle */ |
| return; |
| assert(ci->df_conflict); |
| } |
| |
| if (ci->df_conflict) { |
| die("Not yet implemented."); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * NOTE: Below there is a long switch-like if-elseif-elseif... block |
| * which the code goes through even for the df_conflict cases |
| * above. Well, it will once we don't die-not-implemented above. |
| */ |
| if (ci->match_mask) { |
| ci->merged.clean = 1; |
| if (ci->match_mask == 6) { |
| /* stages[1] == stages[2] */ |
| ci->merged.result.mode = ci->stages[1].mode; |
| oidcpy(&ci->merged.result.oid, &ci->stages[1].oid); |
| } else { |
| /* determine the mask of the side that didn't match */ |
| unsigned int othermask = 7 & ~ci->match_mask; |
| int side = (othermask == 4) ? 2 : 1; |
| |
| ci->merged.result.mode = ci->stages[side].mode; |
| ci->merged.is_null = !ci->merged.result.mode; |
| oidcpy(&ci->merged.result.oid, &ci->stages[side].oid); |
| |
| assert(othermask == 2 || othermask == 4); |
| assert(ci->merged.is_null == |
| (ci->filemask == ci->match_mask)); |
| } |
| } else if (ci->filemask >= 6 && |
| (S_IFMT & ci->stages[1].mode) != |
| (S_IFMT & ci->stages[2].mode)) { |
| /* |
| * Two different items from (file/submodule/symlink) |
| */ |
| die("Not yet implemented."); |
| } else if (ci->filemask >= 6) { |
| /* |
| * TODO: Needs a two-way or three-way content merge, but we're |
| * just being lazy and copying the version from HEAD and |
| * leaving it as conflicted. |
| */ |
| ci->merged.clean = 0; |
| ci->merged.result.mode = ci->stages[1].mode; |
| oidcpy(&ci->merged.result.oid, &ci->stages[1].oid); |
| /* When we fix above, we'll call handle_content_merge() */ |
| (void)handle_content_merge; |
| } else if (ci->filemask == 3 || ci->filemask == 5) { |
| /* Modify/delete */ |
| const char *modify_branch, *delete_branch; |
| int side = (ci->filemask == 5) ? 2 : 1; |
| int index = opt->priv->call_depth ? 0 : side; |
| |
| ci->merged.result.mode = ci->stages[index].mode; |
| oidcpy(&ci->merged.result.oid, &ci->stages[index].oid); |
| ci->merged.clean = 0; |
| |
| modify_branch = (side == 1) ? opt->branch1 : opt->branch2; |
| delete_branch = (side == 1) ? opt->branch2 : opt->branch1; |
| |
| path_msg(opt, path, 0, |
| _("CONFLICT (modify/delete): %s deleted in %s " |
| "and modified in %s. Version %s of %s left " |
| "in tree."), |
| path, delete_branch, modify_branch, |
| modify_branch, path); |
| } else if (ci->filemask == 2 || ci->filemask == 4) { |
| /* Added on one side */ |
| int side = (ci->filemask == 4) ? 2 : 1; |
| ci->merged.result.mode = ci->stages[side].mode; |
| oidcpy(&ci->merged.result.oid, &ci->stages[side].oid); |
| ci->merged.clean = !ci->df_conflict; |
| } else if (ci->filemask == 1) { |
| /* Deleted on both sides */ |
| ci->merged.is_null = 1; |
| ci->merged.result.mode = 0; |
| oidcpy(&ci->merged.result.oid, &null_oid); |
| ci->merged.clean = 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * If still conflicted, record it separately. This allows us to later |
| * iterate over just conflicted entries when updating the index instead |
| * of iterating over all entries. |
| */ |
| if (!ci->merged.clean) |
| strmap_put(&opt->priv->conflicted, path, ci); |
| record_entry_for_tree(dir_metadata, path, &ci->merged); |
| } |
| |
| static void process_entries(struct merge_options *opt, |
| struct object_id *result_oid) |
| { |
| struct hashmap_iter iter; |
| struct strmap_entry *e; |
| struct string_list plist = STRING_LIST_INIT_NODUP; |
| struct string_list_item *entry; |
| struct directory_versions dir_metadata = { STRING_LIST_INIT_NODUP, |
| STRING_LIST_INIT_NODUP, |
| NULL, 0 }; |
| |
| if (strmap_empty(&opt->priv->paths)) { |
| oidcpy(result_oid, opt->repo->hash_algo->empty_tree); |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| /* Hack to pre-allocate plist to the desired size */ |
| ALLOC_GROW(plist.items, strmap_get_size(&opt->priv->paths), plist.alloc); |
| |
| /* Put every entry from paths into plist, then sort */ |
| strmap_for_each_entry(&opt->priv->paths, &iter, e) { |
| string_list_append(&plist, e->key)->util = e->value; |
| } |
| plist.cmp = string_list_df_name_compare; |
| string_list_sort(&plist); |
| |
| /* |
| * Iterate over the items in reverse order, so we can handle paths |
| * below a directory before needing to handle the directory itself. |
| * |
| * This allows us to write subtrees before we need to write trees, |
| * and it also enables sane handling of directory/file conflicts |
| * (because it allows us to know whether the directory is still in |
| * the way when it is time to process the file at the same path). |
| */ |
| for (entry = &plist.items[plist.nr-1]; entry >= plist.items; --entry) { |
| char *path = entry->string; |
| /* |
| * NOTE: mi may actually be a pointer to a conflict_info, but |
| * we have to check mi->clean first to see if it's safe to |
| * reassign to such a pointer type. |
| */ |
| struct merged_info *mi = entry->util; |
| |
| write_completed_directory(opt, mi->directory_name, |
| &dir_metadata); |
| if (mi->clean) |
| record_entry_for_tree(&dir_metadata, path, mi); |
| else { |
| struct conflict_info *ci = (struct conflict_info *)mi; |
| process_entry(opt, path, ci, &dir_metadata); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (dir_metadata.offsets.nr != 1 || |
| (uintptr_t)dir_metadata.offsets.items[0].util != 0) { |
| printf("dir_metadata.offsets.nr = %d (should be 1)\n", |
| dir_metadata.offsets.nr); |
| printf("dir_metadata.offsets.items[0].util = %u (should be 0)\n", |
| (unsigned)(uintptr_t)dir_metadata.offsets.items[0].util); |
| fflush(stdout); |
| BUG("dir_metadata accounting completely off; shouldn't happen"); |
| } |
| write_tree(result_oid, &dir_metadata.versions, 0, |
| opt->repo->hash_algo->rawsz); |
| string_list_clear(&plist, 0); |
| string_list_clear(&dir_metadata.versions, 0); |
| string_list_clear(&dir_metadata.offsets, 0); |
| } |
| |
| /*** Function Grouping: functions related to merge_switch_to_result() ***/ |
| |
| static int checkout(struct merge_options *opt, |
| struct tree *prev, |
| struct tree *next) |
| { |
| /* Switch the index/working copy from old to new */ |
| int ret; |
| struct tree_desc trees[2]; |
| struct unpack_trees_options unpack_opts; |
| |
| memset(&unpack_opts, 0, sizeof(unpack_opts)); |
| unpack_opts.head_idx = -1; |
| unpack_opts.src_index = opt->repo->index; |
| unpack_opts.dst_index = opt->repo->index; |
| |
| setup_unpack_trees_porcelain(&unpack_opts, "merge"); |
| |
| /* |
| * NOTE: if this were just "git checkout" code, we would probably |
| * read or refresh the cache and check for a conflicted index, but |
| * builtin/merge.c or sequencer.c really needs to read the index |
| * and check for conflicted entries before starting merging for a |
| * good user experience (no sense waiting for merges/rebases before |
| * erroring out), so there's no reason to duplicate that work here. |
| */ |
| |
| /* 2-way merge to the new branch */ |
| unpack_opts.update = 1; |
| unpack_opts.merge = 1; |
| unpack_opts.quiet = 0; /* FIXME: sequencer might want quiet? */ |
| unpack_opts.verbose_update = (opt->verbosity > 2); |
| unpack_opts.fn = twoway_merge; |
| if (1/* FIXME: opts->overwrite_ignore*/) { |
| unpack_opts.dir = xcalloc(1, sizeof(*unpack_opts.dir)); |
| unpack_opts.dir->flags |= DIR_SHOW_IGNORED; |
| setup_standard_excludes(unpack_opts.dir); |
| } |
| parse_tree(prev); |
| init_tree_desc(&trees[0], prev->buffer, prev->size); |
| parse_tree(next); |
| init_tree_desc(&trees[1], next->buffer, next->size); |
| |
| ret = unpack_trees(2, trees, &unpack_opts); |
| clear_unpack_trees_porcelain(&unpack_opts); |
| dir_clear(unpack_opts.dir); |
| FREE_AND_NULL(unpack_opts.dir); |
| return ret; |
| } |
| |
| static int record_conflicted_index_entries(struct merge_options *opt, |
| struct index_state *index, |
| struct strmap *paths, |
| struct strmap *conflicted) |
| { |
| struct hashmap_iter iter; |
| struct strmap_entry *e; |
| int errs = 0; |
| int original_cache_nr; |
| |
| if (strmap_empty(conflicted)) |
| return 0; |
| |
| original_cache_nr = index->cache_nr; |
| |
| /* Put every entry from paths into plist, then sort */ |
| strmap_for_each_entry(conflicted, &iter, e) { |
| const char *path = e->key; |
| struct conflict_info *ci = e->value; |
| int pos; |
| struct cache_entry *ce; |
| int i; |
| |
| VERIFY_CI(ci); |
| |
| /* |
| * The index will already have a stage=0 entry for this path, |
| * because we created an as-merged-as-possible version of the |
| * file and checkout() moved the working copy and index over |
| * to that version. |
| * |
| * However, previous iterations through this loop will have |
| * added unstaged entries to the end of the cache which |
| * ignore the standard alphabetical ordering of cache |
| * entries and break invariants needed for index_name_pos() |
| * to work. However, we know the entry we want is before |
| * those appended cache entries, so do a temporary swap on |
| * cache_nr to only look through entries of interest. |
| */ |
| SWAP(index->cache_nr, original_cache_nr); |
| pos = index_name_pos(index, path, strlen(path)); |
| SWAP(index->cache_nr, original_cache_nr); |
| if (pos < 0) { |
| if (ci->filemask != 1) |
| BUG("Conflicted %s but nothing in basic working tree or index; this shouldn't happen", path); |
| cache_tree_invalidate_path(index, path); |
| } else { |
| ce = index->cache[pos]; |
| |
| /* |
| * Clean paths with CE_SKIP_WORKTREE set will not be |
| * written to the working tree by the unpack_trees() |
| * call in checkout(). Our conflicted entries would |
| * have appeared clean to that code since we ignored |
| * the higher order stages. Thus, we need override |
| * the CE_SKIP_WORKTREE bit and manually write those |
| * files to the working disk here. |
| * |
| * TODO: Implement this CE_SKIP_WORKTREE fixup. |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Mark this cache entry for removal and instead add |
| * new stage>0 entries corresponding to the |
| * conflicts. If there are many conflicted entries, we |
| * want to avoid memmove'ing O(NM) entries by |
| * inserting the new entries one at a time. So, |
| * instead, we just add the new cache entries to the |
| * end (ignoring normal index requirements on sort |
| * order) and sort the index once we're all done. |
| */ |
| ce->ce_flags |= CE_REMOVE; |
| } |
| |
| for (i = MERGE_BASE; i <= MERGE_SIDE2; i++) { |
| struct version_info *vi; |
| if (!(ci->filemask & (1ul << i))) |
| continue; |
| vi = &ci->stages[i]; |
| ce = make_cache_entry(index, vi->mode, &vi->oid, |
| path, i+1, 0); |
| add_index_entry(index, ce, ADD_CACHE_JUST_APPEND); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Remove the unused cache entries (and invalidate the relevant |
| * cache-trees), then sort the index entries to get the conflicted |
| * entries we added to the end into their right locations. |
| */ |
| remove_marked_cache_entries(index, 1); |
| QSORT(index->cache, index->cache_nr, cmp_cache_name_compare); |
| |
| return errs; |
| } |
| |
| void merge_switch_to_result(struct merge_options *opt, |
| struct tree *head, |
| struct merge_result *result, |
| int update_worktree_and_index, |
| int display_update_msgs) |
| { |
| assert(opt->priv == NULL); |
| if (result->clean >= 0 && update_worktree_and_index) { |
| struct merge_options_internal *opti = result->priv; |
| |
| if (checkout(opt, head, result->tree)) { |
| /* failure to function */ |
| result->clean = -1; |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| if (record_conflicted_index_entries(opt, opt->repo->index, |
| &opti->paths, |
| &opti->conflicted)) { |
| /* failure to function */ |
| result->clean = -1; |
| return; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (display_update_msgs) { |
| struct merge_options_internal *opti = result->priv; |
| struct hashmap_iter iter; |
| struct strmap_entry *e; |
| struct string_list olist = STRING_LIST_INIT_NODUP; |
| int i; |
| |
| /* Hack to pre-allocate olist to the desired size */ |
| ALLOC_GROW(olist.items, strmap_get_size(&opti->output), |
| olist.alloc); |
| |
| /* Put every entry from output into olist, then sort */ |
| strmap_for_each_entry(&opti->output, &iter, e) { |
| string_list_append(&olist, e->key)->util = e->value; |
| } |
| string_list_sort(&olist); |
| |
| /* Iterate over the items, printing them */ |
| for (i = 0; i < olist.nr; ++i) { |
| struct strbuf *sb = olist.items[i].util; |
| |
| printf("%s", sb->buf); |
| } |
| string_list_clear(&olist, 0); |
| } |
| |
| merge_finalize(opt, result); |
| } |
| |
| void merge_finalize(struct merge_options *opt, |
| struct merge_result *result) |
| { |
| struct merge_options_internal *opti = result->priv; |
| |
| assert(opt->priv == NULL); |
| |
| clear_or_reinit_internal_opts(opti, 0); |
| FREE_AND_NULL(opti); |
| } |
| |
| /*** Function Grouping: helper functions for merge_incore_*() ***/ |
| |
| static inline void set_commit_tree(struct commit *c, struct tree *t) |
| { |
| c->maybe_tree = t; |
| } |
| |
| static struct commit *make_virtual_commit(struct repository *repo, |
| struct tree *tree, |
| const char *comment) |
| { |
| struct commit *commit = alloc_commit_node(repo); |
| |
| set_merge_remote_desc(commit, comment, (struct object *)commit); |
| set_commit_tree(commit, tree); |
| commit->object.parsed = 1; |
| return commit; |
| } |
| |
| static void merge_start(struct merge_options *opt, struct merge_result *result) |
| { |
| /* Sanity checks on opt */ |
| assert(opt->repo); |
| |
| assert(opt->branch1 && opt->branch2); |
| |
| assert(opt->detect_directory_renames >= MERGE_DIRECTORY_RENAMES_NONE && |
| opt->detect_directory_renames <= MERGE_DIRECTORY_RENAMES_TRUE); |
| assert(opt->rename_limit >= -1); |
| assert(opt->rename_score >= 0 && opt->rename_score <= MAX_SCORE); |
| assert(opt->show_rename_progress >= 0 && opt->show_rename_progress <= 1); |
| |
| assert(opt->xdl_opts >= 0); |
| assert(opt->recursive_variant >= MERGE_VARIANT_NORMAL && |
| opt->recursive_variant <= MERGE_VARIANT_THEIRS); |
| |
| /* |
| * detect_renames, verbosity, buffer_output, and obuf are ignored |
| * fields that were used by "recursive" rather than "ort" -- but |
| * sanity check them anyway. |
| */ |
| assert(opt->detect_renames >= -1 && |
| opt->detect_renames <= DIFF_DETECT_COPY); |
| assert(opt->verbosity >= 0 && opt->verbosity <= 5); |
| assert(opt->buffer_output <= 2); |
| assert(opt->obuf.len == 0); |
| |
| assert(opt->priv == NULL); |
| |
| /* Default to histogram diff. Actually, just hardcode it...for now. */ |
| opt->xdl_opts = DIFF_WITH_ALG(opt, HISTOGRAM_DIFF); |
| |
| /* Initialization of opt->priv, our internal merge data */ |
| opt->priv = xcalloc(1, sizeof(*opt->priv)); |
| |
| /* |
| * Although we initialize opt->priv->paths with strdup_strings=0, |
| * that's just to avoid making yet another copy of an allocated |
| * string. Putting the entry into paths means we are taking |
| * ownership, so we will later free it. paths_to_free is similar. |
| * |
| * In contrast, conflicted just has a subset of keys from paths, so |
| * we don't want to free those (it'd be a duplicate free). |
| */ |
| strmap_init_with_options(&opt->priv->paths, NULL, 0); |
| strmap_init_with_options(&opt->priv->conflicted, NULL, 0); |
| string_list_init(&opt->priv->paths_to_free, 0); |
| |
| /* |
| * keys & strbufs in output will sometimes need to outlive "paths", |
| * so it will have a copy of relevant keys. It's probably a small |
| * subset of the overall paths that have special output. |
| */ |
| strmap_init(&opt->priv->output); |
| } |
| |
| /*** Function Grouping: merge_incore_*() and their internal variants ***/ |
| |
| /* |
| * Originally from merge_trees_internal(); heavily adapted, though. |
| */ |
| static void merge_ort_nonrecursive_internal(struct merge_options *opt, |
| struct tree *merge_base, |
| struct tree *side1, |
| struct tree *side2, |
| struct merge_result *result) |
| { |
| struct object_id working_tree_oid; |
| |
| if (collect_merge_info(opt, merge_base, side1, side2) != 0) { |
| /* |
| * TRANSLATORS: The %s arguments are: 1) tree hash of a merge |
| * base, and 2-3) the trees for the two trees we're merging. |
| */ |
| err(opt, _("collecting merge info failed for trees %s, %s, %s"), |
| oid_to_hex(&merge_base->object.oid), |
| oid_to_hex(&side1->object.oid), |
| oid_to_hex(&side2->object.oid)); |
| result->clean = -1; |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| result->clean = detect_and_process_renames(opt, merge_base, |
| side1, side2); |
| process_entries(opt, &working_tree_oid); |
| |
| /* Set return values */ |
| result->tree = parse_tree_indirect(&working_tree_oid); |
| /* existence of conflicted entries implies unclean */ |
| result->clean &= strmap_empty(&opt->priv->conflicted); |
| if (!opt->priv->call_depth) { |
| result->priv = opt->priv; |
| opt->priv = NULL; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Originally from merge_recursive_internal(); somewhat adapted, though. |
| */ |
| static void merge_ort_internal(struct merge_options *opt, |
| struct commit_list *merge_bases, |
| struct commit *h1, |
| struct commit *h2, |
| struct merge_result *result) |
| { |
| struct commit_list *iter; |
| struct commit *merged_merge_bases; |
| const char *ancestor_name; |
| struct strbuf merge_base_abbrev = STRBUF_INIT; |
| |
| if (!merge_bases) { |
| merge_bases = get_merge_bases(h1, h2); |
| /* See merge-ort.h:merge_incore_recursive() declaration NOTE */ |
| merge_bases = reverse_commit_list(merge_bases); |
| } |
| |
| merged_merge_bases = pop_commit(&merge_bases); |
| if (merged_merge_bases == NULL) { |
| /* if there is no common ancestor, use an empty tree */ |
| struct tree *tree; |
| |
| tree = lookup_tree(opt->repo, opt->repo->hash_algo->empty_tree); |
| merged_merge_bases = make_virtual_commit(opt->repo, tree, |
| "ancestor"); |
| ancestor_name = "empty tree"; |
| } else if (merge_bases) { |
| ancestor_name = "merged common ancestors"; |
| } else { |
| strbuf_add_unique_abbrev(&merge_base_abbrev, |
| &merged_merge_bases->object.oid, |
| DEFAULT_ABBREV); |
| ancestor_name = merge_base_abbrev.buf; |
| } |
| |
| for (iter = merge_bases; iter; iter = iter->next) { |
| const char *saved_b1, *saved_b2; |
| struct commit *prev = merged_merge_bases; |
| |
| opt->priv->call_depth++; |
| /* |
| * When the merge fails, the result contains files |
| * with conflict markers. The cleanness flag is |
| * ignored (unless indicating an error), it was never |
| * actually used, as result of merge_trees has always |
| * overwritten it: the committed "conflicts" were |
| * already resolved. |
| */ |
| saved_b1 = opt->branch1; |
| saved_b2 = opt->branch2; |
| opt->branch1 = "Temporary merge branch 1"; |
| opt->branch2 = "Temporary merge branch 2"; |
| merge_ort_internal(opt, NULL, prev, iter->item, result); |
| if (result->clean < 0) |
| return; |
| opt->branch1 = saved_b1; |
| opt->branch2 = saved_b2; |
| opt->priv->call_depth--; |
| |
| merged_merge_bases = make_virtual_commit(opt->repo, |
| result->tree, |
| "merged tree"); |
| commit_list_insert(prev, &merged_merge_bases->parents); |
| commit_list_insert(iter->item, |
| &merged_merge_bases->parents->next); |
| |
| clear_or_reinit_internal_opts(opt->priv, 1); |
| } |
| |
| opt->ancestor = ancestor_name; |
| merge_ort_nonrecursive_internal(opt, |
| repo_get_commit_tree(opt->repo, |
| merged_merge_bases), |
| repo_get_commit_tree(opt->repo, h1), |
| repo_get_commit_tree(opt->repo, h2), |
| result); |
| strbuf_release(&merge_base_abbrev); |
| opt->ancestor = NULL; /* avoid accidental re-use of opt->ancestor */ |
| } |
| |
| void merge_incore_nonrecursive(struct merge_options *opt, |
| struct tree *merge_base, |
| struct tree *side1, |
| struct tree *side2, |
| struct merge_result *result) |
| { |
| assert(opt->ancestor != NULL); |
| merge_start(opt, result); |
| merge_ort_nonrecursive_internal(opt, merge_base, side1, side2, result); |
| } |
| |
| void merge_incore_recursive(struct merge_options *opt, |
| struct commit_list *merge_bases, |
| struct commit *side1, |
| struct commit *side2, |
| struct merge_result *result) |
| { |
| /* We set the ancestor label based on the merge_bases */ |
| assert(opt->ancestor == NULL); |
| |
| merge_start(opt, result); |
| merge_ort_internal(opt, merge_bases, side1, side2, result); |
| } |