git-commit-vandalism/midx.h

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#ifndef MIDX_H
#define MIDX_H
#include "repository.h"
#include "string-list.h"
struct object_id;
struct pack_entry;
struct repository;
#define GIT_TEST_MULTI_PACK_INDEX "GIT_TEST_MULTI_PACK_INDEX"
#define GIT_TEST_MULTI_PACK_INDEX_WRITE_BITMAP \
"GIT_TEST_MULTI_PACK_INDEX_WRITE_BITMAP"
struct multi_pack_index {
struct multi_pack_index *next;
const unsigned char *data;
size_t data_len;
pack-revindex: read multi-pack reverse indexes Implement reading for multi-pack reverse indexes, as described in the previous patch. Note that these functions don't yet have any callers, and won't until multi-pack reachability bitmaps are introduced in a later patch series. In the meantime, this patch implements some of the infrastructure necessary to support multi-pack bitmaps. There are three new functions exposed by the revindex API: - load_midx_revindex(): loads the reverse index corresponding to the given multi-pack index. - midx_to_pack_pos() and pack_pos_to_midx(): these convert between the multi-pack index and pseudo-pack order. load_midx_revindex() and pack_pos_to_midx() are both relatively straightforward. load_midx_revindex() needs a few functions to be exposed from the midx API. One to get the checksum of a midx, and another to get the .rev's filename. Similar to recent changes in the packed_git struct, three new fields are added to the multi_pack_index struct: one to keep track of the size, one to keep track of the mmap'd pointer, and another to point past the header and at the reverse index's data. pack_pos_to_midx() simply reads the corresponding entry out of the table. midx_to_pack_pos() is the trickiest, since it needs to find an object's position in the psuedo-pack order, but that order can only be recovered in the .rev file itself. This mapping can be implemented with a binary search, but note that the thing we're binary searching over isn't an array of values, but rather a permuted order of those values. So, when comparing two items, it's helpful to keep in mind the difference. Instead of a traditional binary search, where you are comparing two things directly, here we're comparing a (pack, offset) tuple with an index into the multi-pack index. That index describes another (pack, offset) tuple, and it is _those_ two tuples that are compared. Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2021-03-30 17:04:26 +02:00
const uint32_t *revindex_data;
const uint32_t *revindex_map;
size_t revindex_len;
uint32_t signature;
unsigned char version;
unsigned char hash_len;
unsigned char num_chunks;
uint32_t num_packs;
uint32_t num_objects;
int local;
const unsigned char *chunk_pack_names;
const uint32_t *chunk_oid_fanout;
const unsigned char *chunk_oid_lookup;
const unsigned char *chunk_object_offsets;
const unsigned char *chunk_large_offsets;
const char **pack_names;
struct packed_git **packs;
char object_dir[FLEX_ARRAY];
};
#define MIDX_PROGRESS (1 << 0)
#define MIDX_WRITE_REV_INDEX (1 << 1)
#define MIDX_WRITE_BITMAP (1 << 2)
#define MIDX_WRITE_BITMAP_HASH_CACHE (1 << 3)
const unsigned char *get_midx_checksum(struct multi_pack_index *m);
char *get_midx_filename(const char *object_dir);
pack-revindex: read multi-pack reverse indexes Implement reading for multi-pack reverse indexes, as described in the previous patch. Note that these functions don't yet have any callers, and won't until multi-pack reachability bitmaps are introduced in a later patch series. In the meantime, this patch implements some of the infrastructure necessary to support multi-pack bitmaps. There are three new functions exposed by the revindex API: - load_midx_revindex(): loads the reverse index corresponding to the given multi-pack index. - midx_to_pack_pos() and pack_pos_to_midx(): these convert between the multi-pack index and pseudo-pack order. load_midx_revindex() and pack_pos_to_midx() are both relatively straightforward. load_midx_revindex() needs a few functions to be exposed from the midx API. One to get the checksum of a midx, and another to get the .rev's filename. Similar to recent changes in the packed_git struct, three new fields are added to the multi_pack_index struct: one to keep track of the size, one to keep track of the mmap'd pointer, and another to point past the header and at the reverse index's data. pack_pos_to_midx() simply reads the corresponding entry out of the table. midx_to_pack_pos() is the trickiest, since it needs to find an object's position in the psuedo-pack order, but that order can only be recovered in the .rev file itself. This mapping can be implemented with a binary search, but note that the thing we're binary searching over isn't an array of values, but rather a permuted order of those values. So, when comparing two items, it's helpful to keep in mind the difference. Instead of a traditional binary search, where you are comparing two things directly, here we're comparing a (pack, offset) tuple with an index into the multi-pack index. That index describes another (pack, offset) tuple, and it is _those_ two tuples that are compared. Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2021-03-30 17:04:26 +02:00
char *get_midx_rev_filename(struct multi_pack_index *m);
struct multi_pack_index *load_multi_pack_index(const char *object_dir, int local);
int prepare_midx_pack(struct repository *r, struct multi_pack_index *m, uint32_t pack_int_id);
int bsearch_midx(const struct object_id *oid, struct multi_pack_index *m, uint32_t *result);
off_t nth_midxed_offset(struct multi_pack_index *m, uint32_t pos);
uint32_t nth_midxed_pack_int_id(struct multi_pack_index *m, uint32_t pos);
struct object_id *nth_midxed_object_oid(struct object_id *oid,
struct multi_pack_index *m,
uint32_t n);
int fill_midx_entry(struct repository *r, const struct object_id *oid, struct pack_entry *e, struct multi_pack_index *m);
int midx_contains_pack(struct multi_pack_index *m, const char *idx_or_pack_name);
int prepare_multi_pack_index_one(struct repository *r, const char *object_dir, int local);
/*
* Variant of write_midx_file which writes a MIDX containing only the packs
* specified in packs_to_include.
*/
midx: preliminary support for `--refs-snapshot` To figure out which commits we can write a bitmap for, the multi-pack index/bitmap code does a reachability traversal, marking any commit which can be found in the MIDX as eligible to receive a bitmap. This approach will cause a problem when multi-pack bitmaps are able to be generated from `git repack`, since the reference tips can change during the repack. Even though we ignore commits that don't exist in the MIDX (when doing a scan of the ref tips), it's possible that a commit in the MIDX reaches something that isn't. This can happen when a multi-pack index contains some pack which refers to loose objects (e.g., if a pack was pushed after starting the repack but before generating the MIDX which depends on an object which is stored as loose in the repository, and by definition isn't included in the multi-pack index). By taking a snapshot of the references before we start repacking, we can close that race window. In the above scenario (where we have a packed object pointing at a loose one), we'll either (a) take a snapshot of the references before seeing the packed one, or (b) take it after, at which point we can guarantee that the loose object will be packed and included in the MIDX. This patch does just that. It writes a temporary "reference snapshot", which is a list of OIDs that are at the ref tips before writing a multi-pack bitmap. References that are "preferred" (i.e,. are a suffix of at least one value of the 'pack.preferBitmapTips' configuration) are marked with a special '+'. The format is simple: one line per commit at each tip, with an optional '+' at the beginning (for preferred references, as described above). When provided, the reference snapshot is used to drive bitmap selection instead of the MIDX code doing its own traversal. When it isn't provided, the usual traversal takes place instead. Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2021-09-29 03:55:07 +02:00
int write_midx_file(const char *object_dir,
const char *preferred_pack_name,
const char *refs_snapshot,
unsigned flags);
int write_midx_file_only(const char *object_dir,
struct string_list *packs_to_include,
const char *preferred_pack_name,
midx: preliminary support for `--refs-snapshot` To figure out which commits we can write a bitmap for, the multi-pack index/bitmap code does a reachability traversal, marking any commit which can be found in the MIDX as eligible to receive a bitmap. This approach will cause a problem when multi-pack bitmaps are able to be generated from `git repack`, since the reference tips can change during the repack. Even though we ignore commits that don't exist in the MIDX (when doing a scan of the ref tips), it's possible that a commit in the MIDX reaches something that isn't. This can happen when a multi-pack index contains some pack which refers to loose objects (e.g., if a pack was pushed after starting the repack but before generating the MIDX which depends on an object which is stored as loose in the repository, and by definition isn't included in the multi-pack index). By taking a snapshot of the references before we start repacking, we can close that race window. In the above scenario (where we have a packed object pointing at a loose one), we'll either (a) take a snapshot of the references before seeing the packed one, or (b) take it after, at which point we can guarantee that the loose object will be packed and included in the MIDX. This patch does just that. It writes a temporary "reference snapshot", which is a list of OIDs that are at the ref tips before writing a multi-pack bitmap. References that are "preferred" (i.e,. are a suffix of at least one value of the 'pack.preferBitmapTips' configuration) are marked with a special '+'. The format is simple: one line per commit at each tip, with an optional '+' at the beginning (for preferred references, as described above). When provided, the reference snapshot is used to drive bitmap selection instead of the MIDX code doing its own traversal. When it isn't provided, the usual traversal takes place instead. Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2021-09-29 03:55:07 +02:00
const char *refs_snapshot,
unsigned flags);
void clear_midx_file(struct repository *r);
int verify_midx_file(struct repository *r, const char *object_dir, unsigned flags);
int expire_midx_packs(struct repository *r, const char *object_dir, unsigned flags);
int midx_repack(struct repository *r, const char *object_dir, size_t batch_size, unsigned flags);
void close_midx(struct multi_pack_index *m);
#endif