0b179f3175
Further code clean-up to allow the lowest level of name-to-object mapping layer to work with a passed-in repository other than the default one. * nd/sha1-name-c-wo-the-repository: (34 commits) sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_oid_mb() sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from other get_oid_* sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from maybe_die_on_misspelt_object_name submodule-config.c: use repo_get_oid for reading .gitmodules sha1-name.c: add repo_get_oid() sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_oid_with_context_1() sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from resolve_relative_path() sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from diagnose_invalid_index_path() sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from handle_one_ref() sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_oid_1() sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_oid_basic() sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_describe_name() sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_oid_oneline() sha1-name.c: add repo_interpret_branch_name() sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from interpret_branch_mark() sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from interpret_nth_prior_checkout() sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_short_oid() sha1-name.c: add repo_for_each_abbrev() sha1-name.c: store and use repo in struct disambiguate_state sha1-name.c: add repo_find_unique_abbrev_r() ... |
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.. | ||
.gitignore | ||
array.cocci | ||
commit.cocci | ||
flex_alloc.cocci | ||
free.cocci | ||
object_id.cocci | ||
preincr.cocci | ||
qsort.cocci | ||
README | ||
strbuf.cocci | ||
swap.cocci | ||
the_repository.pending.cocci | ||
xstrdup_or_null.cocci |
This directory provides examples of Coccinelle (http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/) semantic patches that might be useful to developers. There are two types of semantic patches: * Using the semantic transformation to check for bad patterns in the code; The target 'make coccicheck' is designed to check for these patterns and it is expected that any resulting patch indicates a regression. The patches resulting from 'make coccicheck' are small and infrequent, so once they are found, they can be sent to the mailing list as per usual. Example for introducing new patterns: 67947c34ae (convert "hashcmp() != 0" to "!hasheq()", 2018-08-28) b84c783882 (fsck: s/++i > 1/i++/, 2018-10-24) Example of fixes using this approach: 248f66ed8e (run-command: use strbuf_addstr() for adding a string to a strbuf, 2018-03-25) f919ffebed (Use MOVE_ARRAY, 2018-01-22) These types of semantic patches are usually part of testing, c.f. 0860a7641b (travis-ci: fail if Coccinelle static analysis found something to transform, 2018-07-23) * Using semantic transformations in large scale refactorings throughout the code base. When applying the semantic patch into a real patch, sending it to the mailing list in the usual way, such a patch would be expected to have a lot of textual and semantic conflicts as such large scale refactorings change function signatures that are used widely in the code base. A textual conflict would arise if surrounding code near any call of such function changes. A semantic conflict arises when other patch series in flight introduce calls to such functions. So to aid these large scale refactorings, semantic patches can be used. However we do not want to store them in the same place as the checks for bad patterns, as then automated builds would fail. That is why semantic patches 'contrib/coccinelle/*.pending.cocci' are ignored for checks, and can be applied using 'make coccicheck-pending'. This allows to expose plans of pending large scale refactorings without impacting the bad pattern checks.