On 09/22, Jonathan Tan wrote:
> Currently, get_remote_heads() parses the ref advertisement in one loop,
> allowing refs and shallow lines to intersperse, despite this not being
> allowed by the specification. Refactor get_remote_heads() to use two
> loops instead, enforcing that refs come first, and then shallows.
>
> This also makes it easier to teach get_remote_heads() to interpret other
> lines in the ref advertisement, which will be done in a subsequent
> patch.
>
> As part of this change, this patch interprets capabilities only on the
> first line in the ref advertisement, ignoring all others.
>
> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan <[email protected]>
> ---
> I've updated state transitions to occur in get_remote_heads() instead,
> as suggested. I didn't want to do that previously because each step in
> the state machine needed to communicate if (i) the line is "consumed"
> and (ii) the state needed to be advanced, but with Junio's suggestion to
> reorganize the methods, that is no longer true.
>
> As Junio said, the free(server_capabilities) can be removed.
>
> As for whether how capabilities on subsequent lines are handled, I think
> it's better to ignore them - they are behind NULs, after all.
>
> Yes, "connect: teach client to recognize v1 server response" will need
> to be modified.
>
> This change does have the side effect that if the server sends a ref
> advertisement with "shallow"s only (and no refs), things will still
> work, and the server can even tuck capabilities on the first "shallow"
> line. I think that's fine, and it does make the client code cleaner.
> ---
> connect.c | 171
> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------------------
> 1 file changed, 105 insertions(+), 66 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/connect.c b/connect.c
> index 49b28b83b..978d01359 100644
> --- a/connect.c
> +++ b/connect.c
> @@ -11,6 +11,7 @@
> #include "string-list.h"
> #include "sha1-array.h"
> #include "transport.h"
> +#include "strbuf.h"
>
> static char *server_capabilities;
> static const char *parse_feature_value(const char *, const char *, int *);
> @@ -107,6 +108,86 @@ static void annotate_refs_with_symref_info(struct ref
> *ref)
> string_list_clear(&symref, 0);
> }
>
> +/*
> + * Read one line of a server's ref advertisement into packet_buffer.
> + */
> +static int read_remote_ref(int in, char **src_buf, size_t *src_len,
> + int *responded)
> +{
> + int len = packet_read(in, src_buf, src_len,
> + packet_buffer, sizeof(packet_buffer),
> + PACKET_READ_GENTLE_ON_EOF |
> + PACKET_READ_CHOMP_NEWLINE);
> + const char *arg;
> + if (len < 0)
> + die_initial_contact(*responded);
> + if (len > 4 && skip_prefix(packet_buffer, "ERR ", &arg))
> + die("remote error: %s", arg);
> +
> + *responded = 1;
> +
> + return len;
> +}
> +
> +#define EXPECTING_FIRST_REF 0
> +#define EXPECTING_REF 1
> +#define EXPECTING_SHALLOW 2
> +
> +static void process_capabilities(int len)
> +{
> + int nul_location = strlen(packet_buffer);
It may make more sense to not rely on accessing a global buffer here
directly and instead pass in the buff you're working on, much like your
are doing with len.
> + if (nul_location == len)
> + return;
> + server_capabilities = xstrdup(packet_buffer + nul_location + 1);
> +}
> +
> +static int process_dummy_ref(void)
> +{
> + static char *template;
> + if (!template)
> + template = xstrfmt("%040d capabilities^{}", 0);
I'm not the biggest fan of dynamically allocating this and then using it
to compare. Maybe we can check to make sure that the oid matches the
null_oid and that the name matches the "capabilities^{}" string? That
way you can avoid the allocation?
> + return !strcmp(packet_buffer, template);
> +}
> +
> +static int process_ref(struct ref ***list, unsigned int flags,
> + struct oid_array *extra_have)
So from comparing this to the current code it doesn't look like there is
a check in 'process_ref' that ensures that a 'capabilities^{}' line
doesn't show up after a normal ref, or am I missing something?
> +{
> + struct object_id old_oid;
> + const char *name;
> +
> + if (parse_oid_hex(packet_buffer, &old_oid, &name))
> + return 0;
> + if (*name != ' ')
> + return 0;
> + name++;
> +
> + if (extra_have && !strcmp(name, ".have")) {
> + oid_array_append(extra_have, &old_oid);
> + } else if (check_ref(name, flags)) {
> + struct ref *ref = alloc_ref(name);
> + oidcpy(&ref->old_oid, &old_oid);
> + **list = ref;
> + *list = &ref->next;
> + }
> + return 1;
> +}
> +
> +static int process_shallow(struct oid_array *shallow_points)
> +{
> + const char *arg;
> + struct object_id old_oid;
> +
> + if (!skip_prefix(packet_buffer, "shallow ", &arg))
> + return 0;
> +
> + if (get_oid_hex(arg, &old_oid))
> + die("protocol error: expected shallow sha-1, got '%s'", arg);
> + if (!shallow_points)
> + die("repository on the other end cannot be shallow");
> + oid_array_append(shallow_points, &old_oid);
> + return 1;
> +}
> +
> /*
> * Read all the refs from the other end
> */
> @@ -123,76 +204,34 @@ struct ref **get_remote_heads(int in, char *src_buf,
> size_t src_len,
> * willing to talk to us. A hang-up before seeing any
> * response does not necessarily mean an ACL problem, though.
> */
> - int saw_response;
> - int got_dummy_ref_with_capabilities_declaration = 0;
> + int responded = 0;
> + int len;
> + int state = EXPECTING_FIRST_REF;
>
> *list = NULL;
> - for (saw_response = 0; ; saw_response = 1) {
> - struct ref *ref;
> - struct object_id old_oid;
> - char *name;
> - int len, name_len;
> - char *buffer = packet_buffer;
> - const char *arg;
> -
> - len = packet_read(in, &src_buf, &src_len,
> - packet_buffer, sizeof(packet_buffer),
> - PACKET_READ_GENTLE_ON_EOF |
> - PACKET_READ_CHOMP_NEWLINE);
> - if (len < 0)
> - die_initial_contact(saw_response);
> -
> - if (!len)
> - break;
>
> - if (len > 4 && skip_prefix(buffer, "ERR ", &arg))
> - die("remote error: %s", arg);
> -
> - if (len == GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ + strlen("shallow ") &&
> - skip_prefix(buffer, "shallow ", &arg)) {
> - if (get_oid_hex(arg, &old_oid))
> - die("protocol error: expected shallow sha-1,
> got '%s'", arg);
> - if (!shallow_points)
> - die("repository on the other end cannot be
> shallow");
> - oid_array_append(shallow_points, &old_oid);
> - continue;
> - }
> -
> - if (len < GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ + 2 || get_oid_hex(buffer, &old_oid) ||
> - buffer[GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ] != ' ')
> - die("protocol error: expected sha/ref, got '%s'",
> buffer);
> - name = buffer + GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ + 1;
> -
> - name_len = strlen(name);
> - if (len != name_len + GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ + 1) {
> - free(server_capabilities);
> - server_capabilities = xstrdup(name + name_len + 1);
> - }
> -
> - if (extra_have && !strcmp(name, ".have")) {
> - oid_array_append(extra_have, &old_oid);
> - continue;
> - }
> -
> - if (!strcmp(name, "capabilities^{}")) {
> - if (saw_response)
> - die("protocol error: unexpected
> capabilities^{}");
> - if (got_dummy_ref_with_capabilities_declaration)
> - die("protocol error: multiple capabilities^{}");
> - got_dummy_ref_with_capabilities_declaration = 1;
> - continue;
> + while ((len = read_remote_ref(in, &src_buf, &src_len, &responded))) {
> + switch (state) {
> + case EXPECTING_FIRST_REF:
> + process_capabilities(len);
> + if (process_dummy_ref()) {
> + state = EXPECTING_SHALLOW;
> + break;
> + }
> + state = EXPECTING_REF;
> + /* fallthrough */
> + case EXPECTING_REF:
> + if (process_ref(&list, flags, extra_have))
> + break;
> + state = EXPECTING_SHALLOW;
> + /* fallthrough */
> + case EXPECTING_SHALLOW:
> + if (process_shallow(shallow_points))
> + break;
> + die("protocol error: unexpected '%s'", packet_buffer);
> + default:
> + die("unexpected state %d", state);
Looks much cleaner, thanks!
> }
> -
> - if (!check_ref(name, flags))
> - continue;
> -
> - if (got_dummy_ref_with_capabilities_declaration)
> - die("protocol error: unexpected ref after
> capabilities^{}");
> -
> - ref = alloc_ref(buffer + GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ + 1);
> - oidcpy(&ref->old_oid, &old_oid);
> - *list = ref;
> - list = &ref->next;
> }
>
> annotate_refs_with_symref_info(*orig_list);
> --
> 2.14.1.728.g20a5b67d5.dirty
>
--
Brandon Williams