e967ca3847
Move the definition of the transport-specific functions provided by
transports, whether declared in transport.c or transport-helper.c, into
an internal header. This means that transport-using code (as opposed to
transport-declaring code) can no longer access these functions (without
importing the internal header themselves), making it clear that they
should use the transport_*() functions instead, and also allowing the
interface between the transport mechanism and an individual transport to
independently evolve.
This is superficially a reversal of commit 824d5776c3
("Refactor
struct transport_ops inlined into struct transport", 2007-09-19).
However, the scope of the involved variables was neither affected nor
discussed in that commit, and I think that the advantages in making
those functions more private outweigh the advantages described in that
commit's commit message. A minor additional point is that the code has
gotten more complicated since then, in that the function-pointer
variables are potentially mutated twice (once initially and once if
transport_take_over() is invoked), increasing the value of corralling
them into their own struct.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
62 lines
2.1 KiB
C
62 lines
2.1 KiB
C
#ifndef TRANSPORT_INTERNAL_H
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#define TRANSPORT_INTERNAL_H
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struct ref;
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struct transport;
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struct transport_vtable {
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/**
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* Returns 0 if successful, positive if the option is not
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* recognized or is inapplicable, and negative if the option
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* is applicable but the value is invalid.
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**/
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int (*set_option)(struct transport *connection, const char *name,
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const char *value);
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/**
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* Returns a list of the remote side's refs. In order to allow
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* the transport to try to share connections, for_push is a
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* hint as to whether the ultimate operation is a push or a fetch.
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*
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* If the transport is able to determine the remote hash for
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* the ref without a huge amount of effort, it should store it
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* in the ref's old_sha1 field; otherwise it should be all 0.
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**/
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struct ref *(*get_refs_list)(struct transport *transport, int for_push);
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/**
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* Fetch the objects for the given refs. Note that this gets
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* an array, and should ignore the list structure.
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*
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* If the transport did not get hashes for refs in
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* get_refs_list(), it should set the old_sha1 fields in the
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* provided refs now.
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**/
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int (*fetch)(struct transport *transport, int refs_nr, struct ref **refs);
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/**
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* Push the objects and refs. Send the necessary objects, and
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* then, for any refs where peer_ref is set and
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* peer_ref->new_oid is different from old_oid, tell the
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* remote side to update each ref in the list from old_oid to
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* peer_ref->new_oid.
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*
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* Where possible, set the status for each ref appropriately.
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*
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* The transport must modify new_sha1 in the ref to the new
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* value if the remote accepted the change. Note that this
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* could be a different value from peer_ref->new_oid if the
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* process involved generating new commits.
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**/
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int (*push_refs)(struct transport *transport, struct ref *refs, int flags);
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int (*connect)(struct transport *connection, const char *name,
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const char *executable, int fd[2]);
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/** get_refs_list(), fetch(), and push_refs() can keep
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* resources (such as a connection) reserved for further
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* use. disconnect() releases these resources.
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**/
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int (*disconnect)(struct transport *connection);
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};
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#endif
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