made the pack completely portable and wrote relevent bat files to go with it
This commit is contained in:
@@ -0,0 +1,671 @@
|
||||
Rebases and cherry-picks involve a sequence of merges whose results are
|
||||
recorded as new single-parent commits. The first parent side of those
|
||||
merges represent the "upstream" side, and often include a far larger set of
|
||||
changes than the second parent side. Traditionally, the renames on the
|
||||
first-parent side of that sequence of merges were repeatedly re-detected
|
||||
for every merge. This file explains why it is safe and effective during
|
||||
rebases and cherry-picks to remember renames on the upstream side of
|
||||
history as an optimization, assuming all merges are automatic and clean
|
||||
(i.e. no conflicts and not interrupted for user input or editing).
|
||||
|
||||
Outline:
|
||||
|
||||
0. Assumptions
|
||||
|
||||
1. How rebasing and cherry-picking work
|
||||
|
||||
2. Why the renames on MERGE_SIDE1 in any given pick are *always* a
|
||||
superset of the renames on MERGE_SIDE1 for the next pick.
|
||||
|
||||
3. Why any rename on MERGE_SIDE1 in any given pick is _almost_ always also
|
||||
a rename on MERGE_SIDE1 for the next pick
|
||||
|
||||
4. A detailed description of the counter-examples to #3.
|
||||
|
||||
5. Why the special cases in #4 are still fully reasonable to use to pair
|
||||
up files for three-way content merging in the merge machinery, and why
|
||||
they do not affect the correctness of the merge.
|
||||
|
||||
6. Interaction with skipping of "irrelevant" renames
|
||||
|
||||
7. Additional items that need to be cached
|
||||
|
||||
8. How directory rename detection interacts with the above and why this
|
||||
optimization is still safe even if merge.directoryRenames is set to
|
||||
"true".
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
=== 0. Assumptions ===
|
||||
|
||||
There are two assumptions that will hold throughout this document:
|
||||
|
||||
* The upstream side where commits are transplanted to is treated as the
|
||||
first parent side when rebase/cherry-pick call the merge machinery
|
||||
|
||||
* All merges are fully automatic
|
||||
|
||||
and a third that will hold in sections 2-5 for simplicity, that I'll later
|
||||
address in section 8:
|
||||
|
||||
* No directory renames occur
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Let me explain more about each assumption and why I include it:
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
The first assumption is merely for the purposes of making this document
|
||||
clearer; the optimization implementation does not actually depend upon it.
|
||||
However, the assumption does hold in all cases because it reflects the way
|
||||
that both rebase and cherry-pick were implemented; and the implementation
|
||||
of cherry-pick and rebase are not readily changeable for backwards
|
||||
compatibility reasons (see for example the discussion of the --ours and
|
||||
--theirs flag in the documentation of `git checkout`, particularly the
|
||||
comments about how they behave with rebase). The optimization avoids
|
||||
checking first-parent-ness, though. It checks the conditions that make the
|
||||
optimization valid instead, so it would still continue working if someone
|
||||
changed the parent ordering that cherry-pick and rebase use. But making
|
||||
this assumption does make this document much clearer and prevents me from
|
||||
having to repeat every example twice.
|
||||
|
||||
If the second assumption is violated, then the optimization simply is
|
||||
turned off and thus isn't relevant to consider. The second assumption can
|
||||
also be stated as "there is no interruption for a user to resolve conflicts
|
||||
or to just further edit or tweak files". While real rebases and
|
||||
cherry-picks are often interrupted (either because it's an interactive
|
||||
rebase where the user requested to stop and edit, or because there were
|
||||
conflicts that the user needs to resolve), the cache of renames is not
|
||||
stored on disk, and thus is thrown away as soon as the rebase or cherry
|
||||
pick stops for the user to resolve the operation.
|
||||
|
||||
The third assumption makes sections 2-5 simpler, and allows people to
|
||||
understand the basics of why this optimization is safe and effective, and
|
||||
then I can go back and address the specifics in section 8. It is probably
|
||||
also worth noting that if directory renames do occur, then the default of
|
||||
merge.directoryRenames being set to "conflict" means that the operation
|
||||
will stop for users to resolve the conflicts and the cache will be thrown
|
||||
away, and thus that there won't be an optimization to apply. So, the only
|
||||
reason we need to address directory renames specifically, is that some
|
||||
users will have set merge.directoryRenames to "true" to allow the merges to
|
||||
continue to proceed automatically. The optimization is still safe with
|
||||
this config setting, but we have to discuss a few more cases to show why;
|
||||
this discussion is deferred until section 8.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
=== 1. How rebasing and cherry-picking work ===
|
||||
|
||||
Consider the following setup (from the git-rebase manpage):
|
||||
|
||||
A---B---C topic
|
||||
/
|
||||
D---E---F---G main
|
||||
|
||||
After rebasing or cherry-picking topic onto main, this will appear as:
|
||||
|
||||
A'--B'--C' topic
|
||||
/
|
||||
D---E---F---G main
|
||||
|
||||
The way the commits A', B', and C' are created is through a series of
|
||||
merges, where rebase or cherry-pick sequentially uses each of the three
|
||||
A-B-C commits in a special merge operation. Let's label the three commits
|
||||
in the merge operation as MERGE_BASE, MERGE_SIDE1, and MERGE_SIDE2. For
|
||||
this picture, the three commits for each of the three merges would be:
|
||||
|
||||
To create A':
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: E
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: G
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: A
|
||||
|
||||
To create B':
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: A
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: A'
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: B
|
||||
|
||||
To create C':
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: B
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: B'
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: C
|
||||
|
||||
Sometimes, folks are surprised that these three-way merges are done. It
|
||||
can be useful in understanding these three-way merges to view them in a
|
||||
slightly different light. For example, in creating C', you can view it as
|
||||
either:
|
||||
|
||||
* Apply the changes between B & C to B'
|
||||
* Apply the changes between B & B' to C
|
||||
|
||||
Conceptually the two statements above are the same as a three-way merge of
|
||||
B, B', and C, at least the parts before you decide to record a commit.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
=== 2. Why the renames on MERGE_SIDE1 in any given pick are always a ===
|
||||
=== superset of the renames on MERGE_SIDE1 for the next pick. ===
|
||||
|
||||
The merge machinery uses the filenames it is fed from MERGE_BASE,
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1, and MERGE_SIDE2. It will only move content to a different
|
||||
filename under one of three conditions:
|
||||
|
||||
* To make both pieces of a conflict available to a user during conflict
|
||||
resolution (examples: directory/file conflict, add/add type conflict
|
||||
such as symlink vs. regular file)
|
||||
|
||||
* When MERGE_SIDE1 renames the file.
|
||||
|
||||
* When MERGE_SIDE2 renames the file.
|
||||
|
||||
First, let's remember what commits are involved in the first and second
|
||||
picks of the cherry-pick or rebase sequence:
|
||||
|
||||
To create A':
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: E
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: G
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: A
|
||||
|
||||
To create B':
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: A
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: A'
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: B
|
||||
|
||||
So, in particular, we need to show that the renames between E and G are a
|
||||
superset of those between A and A'.
|
||||
|
||||
A' is created by the first merge. A' will only have renames for one of the
|
||||
three reasons listed above. The first case, a conflict, results in a
|
||||
situation where the cache is dropped and thus this optimization doesn't
|
||||
take effect, so we need not consider that case. The third case, a rename
|
||||
on MERGE_SIDE2 (i.e. from G to A), will show up in A' but it also shows up
|
||||
in A -- therefore when diffing A and A' that path does not show up as a
|
||||
rename. The only remaining way for renames to show up in A' is for the
|
||||
rename to come from MERGE_SIDE1. Therefore, all renames between A and A'
|
||||
are a subset of those between E and G. Equivalently, all renames between E
|
||||
and G are a superset of those between A and A'.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
=== 3. Why any rename on MERGE_SIDE1 in any given pick is _almost_ ===
|
||||
=== always also a rename on MERGE_SIDE1 for the next pick. ===
|
||||
|
||||
Let's again look at the first two picks:
|
||||
|
||||
To create A':
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: E
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: G
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: A
|
||||
|
||||
To create B':
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: A
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: A'
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: B
|
||||
|
||||
Now let's look at any given rename from MERGE_SIDE1 of the first pick, i.e.
|
||||
any given rename from E to G. Let's use the filenames 'oldfile' and
|
||||
'newfile' for demonstration purposes. That first pick will function as
|
||||
follows; when the rename is detected, the merge machinery will do a
|
||||
three-way content merge of the following:
|
||||
E:oldfile
|
||||
G:newfile
|
||||
A:oldfile
|
||||
and produce a new result:
|
||||
A':newfile
|
||||
|
||||
Note above that I've assumed that E->A did not rename oldfile. If that
|
||||
side did rename, then we most likely have a rename/rename(1to2) conflict
|
||||
that will cause the rebase or cherry-pick operation to halt and drop the
|
||||
in-memory cache of renames and thus doesn't need to be considered further.
|
||||
In the special case that E->A does rename the file but also renames it to
|
||||
newfile, then there is no conflict from the renaming and the merge can
|
||||
succeed. In this special case, the rename is not valid to cache because
|
||||
the second merge will find A:newfile in the MERGE_BASE (see also the new
|
||||
testcases in t6429 with "rename same file identically" in their
|
||||
description). So a rename/rename(1to1) needs to be specially handled by
|
||||
pruning renames from the cache and decrementing the dir_rename_counts in
|
||||
the current and leading directories associated with those renames. Or,
|
||||
since these are really rare, one could just take the easy way out and
|
||||
disable the remembering renames optimization when a rename/rename(1to1)
|
||||
happens.
|
||||
|
||||
The previous paragraph handled the cases for E->A renaming oldfile, let's
|
||||
continue assuming that oldfile is not renamed in A.
|
||||
|
||||
As per the diagram for creating B', MERGE_SIDE1 involves the changes from A
|
||||
to A'. So, we are curious whether A:oldfile and A':newfile will be viewed
|
||||
as renames. Note that:
|
||||
|
||||
* There will be no A':oldfile (because there could not have been a
|
||||
G:oldfile as we do not do break detection in the merge machinery and
|
||||
G:newfile was detected as a rename, and by the construction of the
|
||||
rename above that merged cleanly, the merge machinery will ensure there
|
||||
is no 'oldfile' in the result).
|
||||
|
||||
* There will be no A:newfile (if there had been, we would have had a
|
||||
rename/add conflict).
|
||||
|
||||
* Clearly A:oldfile and A':newfile are "related" (A':newfile came from a
|
||||
clean three-way content merge involving A:oldfile).
|
||||
|
||||
We can also expound on the third point above, by noting that three-way
|
||||
content merges can also be viewed as applying the differences between the
|
||||
base and one side to the other side. Thus we can view A':newfile as
|
||||
having been created by taking the changes between E:oldfile and G:newfile
|
||||
(which were detected as being related, i.e. <50% changed) to A:oldfile.
|
||||
|
||||
Thus A:oldfile and A':newfile are just as related as E:oldfile and
|
||||
G:newfile are -- they have exactly identical differences. Since the latter
|
||||
were detected as renames, A:oldfile and A':newfile should also be
|
||||
detectable as renames almost always.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
=== 4. A detailed description of the counter-examples to #3. ===
|
||||
|
||||
We already noted in section 3 that rename/rename(1to1) (i.e. both sides
|
||||
renaming a file the same way) was one counter-example. The more
|
||||
interesting bit, though, is why did we need to use the "almost" qualifier
|
||||
when stating that A:oldfile and A':newfile are "almost" always detectable
|
||||
as renames?
|
||||
|
||||
Let's repeat an earlier point that section 3 made:
|
||||
|
||||
A':newfile was created by applying the changes between E:oldfile and
|
||||
G:newfile to A:oldfile. The changes between E:oldfile and G:newfile were
|
||||
<50% of the size of E:oldfile.
|
||||
|
||||
If those changes that were <50% of the size of E:oldfile are also <50% of
|
||||
the size of A:oldfile, then A:oldfile and A':newfile will be detectable as
|
||||
renames. However, if there is a dramatic size reduction between E:oldfile
|
||||
and A:oldfile (but the changes between E:oldfile, G:newfile, and A:oldfile
|
||||
still somehow merge cleanly), then traditional rename detection would not
|
||||
detect A:oldfile and A':newfile as renames.
|
||||
|
||||
Here's an example where that can happen:
|
||||
* E:oldfile had 20 lines
|
||||
* G:newfile added 10 new lines at the beginning of the file
|
||||
* A:oldfile kept the first 3 lines of the file, and deleted all the rest
|
||||
then
|
||||
=> A':newfile would have 13 lines, 3 of which matches those in A:oldfile.
|
||||
E:oldfile -> G:newfile would be detected as a rename, but A:oldfile and
|
||||
A':newfile would not be.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
=== 5. Why the special cases in #4 are still fully reasonable to use to ===
|
||||
=== pair up files for three-way content merging in the merge machinery, ===
|
||||
=== and why they do not affect the correctness of the merge. ===
|
||||
|
||||
In the rename/rename(1to1) case, A:newfile and A':newfile are not renames
|
||||
since they use the *same* filename. However, files with the same filename
|
||||
are obviously fine to pair up for three-way content merging (the merge
|
||||
machinery has never employed break detection). The interesting
|
||||
counter-example case is thus not the rename/rename(1to1) case, but the case
|
||||
where A did not rename oldfile. That was the case that we spent most of
|
||||
the time discussing in sections 3 and 4. The remainder of this section
|
||||
will be devoted to that case as well.
|
||||
|
||||
So, even if A:oldfile and A':newfile aren't detectable as renames, why is
|
||||
it still reasonable to pair them up for three-way content merging in the
|
||||
merge machinery? There are multiple reasons:
|
||||
|
||||
* As noted in sections 3 and 4, the diff between A:oldfile and A':newfile
|
||||
is *exactly* the same as the diff between E:oldfile and G:newfile. The
|
||||
latter pair were detected as renames, so it seems unlikely to surprise
|
||||
users for us to treat A:oldfile and A':newfile as renames.
|
||||
|
||||
* In fact, "oldfile" and "newfile" were at one point detected as renames
|
||||
due to how they were constructed in the E..G chain. And we used that
|
||||
information once already in this rebase/cherry-pick. I think users
|
||||
would be unlikely to be surprised at us continuing to treat the files
|
||||
as renames and would quickly understand why we had done so.
|
||||
|
||||
* Marking or declaring files as renames is *not* the end goal for merges.
|
||||
Merges use renames to determine which files make sense to be paired up
|
||||
for three-way content merges.
|
||||
|
||||
* A:oldfile and A':newfile were _already_ paired up in a three-way
|
||||
content merge; that is how A':newfile was created. In fact, that
|
||||
three-way content merge was clean. So using them again in a later
|
||||
three-way content merge seems very reasonable.
|
||||
|
||||
However, the above is focusing on the common scenarios. Let's try to look
|
||||
at all possible unusual scenarios and compare without the optimization to
|
||||
with the optimization. Consider the following theoretical cases; we will
|
||||
then dive into each to determine which of them are possible,
|
||||
and if so, what they mean:
|
||||
|
||||
1. Without the optimization, the second merge results in a conflict.
|
||||
With the optimization, the second merge also results in a conflict.
|
||||
Questions: Are the conflicts confusingly different? Better in one case?
|
||||
|
||||
2. Without the optimization, the second merge results in NO conflict.
|
||||
With the optimization, the second merge also results in NO conflict.
|
||||
Questions: Are the merges the same?
|
||||
|
||||
3. Without the optimization, the second merge results in a conflict.
|
||||
With the optimization, the second merge results in NO conflict.
|
||||
Questions: Possible? Bug, bugfix, or something else?
|
||||
|
||||
4. Without the optimization, the second merge results in NO conflict.
|
||||
With the optimization, the second merge results in a conflict.
|
||||
Questions: Possible? Bug, bugfix, or something else?
|
||||
|
||||
I'll consider all four cases, but out of order.
|
||||
|
||||
The fourth case is impossible. For the code without the remembering
|
||||
renames optimization to not get a conflict, B:oldfile would need to exactly
|
||||
match A:oldfile -- if it doesn't, there would be a modify/delete conflict.
|
||||
If A:oldfile matches B:oldfile exactly, then a three-way content merge
|
||||
between A:oldfile, A':newfile, and B:oldfile would have no conflict and
|
||||
just give us the version of newfile from A' as the result.
|
||||
|
||||
From the same logic as the above paragraph, the second case would indeed
|
||||
result in identical merges. When A:oldfile exactly matches B:oldfile, an
|
||||
undetected rename would say, "Oh, I see one side didn't modify 'oldfile'
|
||||
and the other side deleted it. I'll delete it. And I see you have this
|
||||
brand new file named 'newfile' in A', so I'll keep it." That gives the
|
||||
same results as three-way content merging A:oldfile, A':newfile, and
|
||||
B:oldfile -- a removal of oldfile with the version of newfile from A'
|
||||
showing up in the result.
|
||||
|
||||
The third case is interesting. It means that A:oldfile and A':newfile were
|
||||
not just similar enough, but that the changes between them did not conflict
|
||||
with the changes between A:oldfile and B:oldfile. This would validate our
|
||||
hunch that the files were similar enough to be used in a three-way content
|
||||
merge, and thus seems entirely correct for us to have used them that way.
|
||||
(Sidenote: One particular example here may be enlightening. Let's say that
|
||||
B was an immediate revert of A. B clearly would have been a clean revert
|
||||
of A, since A was B's immediate parent. One would assume that if you can
|
||||
pick a commit, you should also be able to cherry-pick its immediate revert.
|
||||
However, this is one of those funny corner cases; without this
|
||||
optimization, we just successfully picked a commit cleanly, but we are
|
||||
unable to cherry-pick its immediate revert due to the size differences
|
||||
between E:oldfile and A:oldfile.)
|
||||
|
||||
That leaves only the first case to consider -- when we get conflicts both
|
||||
with or without the optimization. Without the optimization, we'll have a
|
||||
modify/delete conflict, where both A':newfile and B:oldfile are left in the
|
||||
tree for the user to deal with and no hints about the potential similarity
|
||||
between the two. With the optimization, we'll have a three-way content
|
||||
merged A:oldfile, A':newfile, and B:oldfile with conflict markers
|
||||
suggesting we thought the files were related but giving the user the chance
|
||||
to resolve. As noted above, I don't think users will find us treating
|
||||
'oldfile' and 'newfile' as related as a surprise since they were between E
|
||||
and G. In any event, though, this case shouldn't be concerning since we
|
||||
hit a conflict in both cases, told the user what we know, and asked them to
|
||||
resolve it.
|
||||
|
||||
So, in summary, case 4 is impossible, case 2 yields the same behavior, and
|
||||
cases 1 and 3 seem to provide as good or better behavior with the
|
||||
optimization than without.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
=== 6. Interaction with skipping of "irrelevant" renames ===
|
||||
|
||||
Previous optimizations involved skipping rename detection for paths
|
||||
considered to be "irrelevant". See for example the following commits:
|
||||
|
||||
* 32a56dfb99 ("merge-ort: precompute subset of sources for which we
|
||||
need rename detection", 2021-03-11)
|
||||
* 2fd9eda462 ("merge-ort: precompute whether directory rename
|
||||
detection is needed", 2021-03-11)
|
||||
* 9bd342137e ("diffcore-rename: determine which relevant_sources are
|
||||
no longer relevant", 2021-03-13)
|
||||
|
||||
Relevance is always determined by what the _other_ side of history has
|
||||
done, in terms of modifying a file that our side renamed, or adding a
|
||||
file to a directory which our side renamed. This means that a path
|
||||
that is "irrelevant" when picking the first commit of a series in a
|
||||
rebase or cherry-pick, may suddenly become "relevant" when picking the
|
||||
next commit.
|
||||
|
||||
The upshot of this is that we can only cache rename detection results
|
||||
for relevant paths, and need to re-check relevance in subsequent
|
||||
commits. If those subsequent commits have additional paths that are
|
||||
relevant for rename detection, then we will need to redo rename
|
||||
detection -- though we can limit it to the paths for which we have not
|
||||
already detected renames.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
=== 7. Additional items that need to be cached ===
|
||||
|
||||
It turns out we have to cache more than just renames; we also cache:
|
||||
|
||||
A) non-renames (i.e. unpaired deletes)
|
||||
B) counts of renames within directories
|
||||
C) sources that were marked as RELEVANT_LOCATION, but which were
|
||||
downgraded to RELEVANT_NO_MORE
|
||||
D) the toplevel trees involved in the merge
|
||||
|
||||
These are all stored in struct rename_info, and respectively appear in
|
||||
* cached_pairs (along side actual renames, just with a value of NULL)
|
||||
* dir_rename_counts
|
||||
* cached_irrelevant
|
||||
* merge_trees
|
||||
|
||||
The reason for (A) comes from the irrelevant renames skipping
|
||||
optimization discussed in section 6. The fact that irrelevant renames
|
||||
are skipped means we only get a subset of the potential renames
|
||||
detected and subsequent commits may need to run rename detection on
|
||||
the upstream side on a subset of the remaining renames (to get the
|
||||
renames that are relevant for that later commit). Since unpaired
|
||||
deletes are involved in rename detection too, we don't want to
|
||||
repeatedly check that those paths remain unpaired on the upstream side
|
||||
with every commit we are transplanting.
|
||||
|
||||
The reason for (B) is that diffcore_rename_extended() is what
|
||||
generates the counts of renames by directory which is needed in
|
||||
directory rename detection, and if we don't run
|
||||
diffcore_rename_extended() again then we need to have the output from
|
||||
it, including dir_rename_counts, from the previous run.
|
||||
|
||||
The reason for (C) is that merge-ort's tree traversal will again think
|
||||
those paths are relevant (marking them as RELEVANT_LOCATION), but the
|
||||
fact that they were downgraded to RELEVANT_NO_MORE means that
|
||||
dir_rename_counts already has the information we need for directory
|
||||
rename detection. (A path which becomes RELEVANT_CONTENT in a
|
||||
subsequent commit will be removed from cached_irrelevant.)
|
||||
|
||||
The reason for (D) is that is how we determine whether the remember
|
||||
renames optimization can be used. In particular, remembering that our
|
||||
sequence of merges looks like:
|
||||
|
||||
Merge 1:
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: E
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: G
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: A
|
||||
=> Creates A'
|
||||
|
||||
Merge 2:
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: A
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: A'
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: B
|
||||
=> Creates B'
|
||||
|
||||
It is the fact that the trees A and A' appear both in Merge 1 and in
|
||||
Merge 2, with A as a parent of A' that allows this optimization. So
|
||||
we store the trees to compare with what we are asked to merge next
|
||||
time.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
=== 8. How directory rename detection interacts with the above and ===
|
||||
=== why this optimization is still safe even if ===
|
||||
=== merge.directoryRenames is set to "true". ===
|
||||
|
||||
As noted in the assumptions section:
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
...if directory renames do occur, then the default of
|
||||
merge.directoryRenames being set to "conflict" means that the operation
|
||||
will stop for users to resolve the conflicts and the cache will be
|
||||
thrown away, and thus that there won't be an optimization to apply.
|
||||
So, the only reason we need to address directory renames specifically,
|
||||
is that some users will have set merge.directoryRenames to "true" to
|
||||
allow the merges to continue to proceed automatically.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
Let's remember that we need to look at how any given pick affects the next
|
||||
one. So let's again use the first two picks from the diagram in section
|
||||
one:
|
||||
|
||||
First pick does this three-way merge:
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: E
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: G
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: A
|
||||
=> creates A'
|
||||
|
||||
Second pick does this three-way merge:
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: A
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: A'
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: B
|
||||
=> creates B'
|
||||
|
||||
Now, directory rename detection exists so that if one side of history
|
||||
renames a directory, and the other side adds a new file to the old
|
||||
directory, then the merge (with merge.directoryRenames=true) can move the
|
||||
file into the new directory. There are two qualitatively different ways to
|
||||
add a new file to an old directory: create a new file, or rename a file
|
||||
into that directory. Also, directory renames can be done on either side of
|
||||
history, so there are four cases to consider:
|
||||
|
||||
* MERGE_SIDE1 renames old dir, MERGE_SIDE2 adds new file to old dir
|
||||
* MERGE_SIDE1 renames old dir, MERGE_SIDE2 renames file into old dir
|
||||
* MERGE_SIDE1 adds new file to old dir, MERGE_SIDE2 renames old dir
|
||||
* MERGE_SIDE1 renames file into old dir, MERGE_SIDE2 renames old dir
|
||||
|
||||
One last note before we consider these four cases: There are some
|
||||
important properties about how we implement this optimization with
|
||||
respect to directory rename detection that we need to bear in mind
|
||||
while considering all of these cases:
|
||||
|
||||
* rename caching occurs *after* applying directory renames
|
||||
|
||||
* a rename created by directory rename detection is recorded for the side
|
||||
of history that did the directory rename.
|
||||
|
||||
* dir_rename_counts, the nested map of
|
||||
{oldname => {newname => count}},
|
||||
is cached between runs as well. This basically means that directory
|
||||
rename detection is also cached, though only on the side of history
|
||||
that we cache renames for (MERGE_SIDE1 as far as this document is
|
||||
concerned; see the assumptions section). Two interesting sub-notes
|
||||
about these counts:
|
||||
|
||||
* If we need to perform rename-detection again on the given side (e.g.
|
||||
some paths are relevant for rename detection that weren't before),
|
||||
then we clear dir_rename_counts and recompute it, making use of
|
||||
cached_pairs. The reason it is important to do this is optimizations
|
||||
around RELEVANT_LOCATION exist to prevent us from computing
|
||||
unnecessary renames for directory rename detection and from computing
|
||||
dir_rename_counts for irrelevant directories; but those same renames
|
||||
or directories may become necessary for subsequent merges. The
|
||||
easiest way to "fix up" dir_rename_counts in such cases is to just
|
||||
recompute it.
|
||||
|
||||
* If we prune rename/rename(1to1) entries from the cache, then we also
|
||||
need to update dir_rename_counts to decrement the counts for the
|
||||
involved directory and any relevant parent directories (to undo what
|
||||
update_dir_rename_counts() in diffcore-rename.c incremented when the
|
||||
rename was initially found). If we instead just disable the
|
||||
remembering renames optimization when the exceedingly rare
|
||||
rename/rename(1to1) cases occur, then dir_rename_counts will get
|
||||
re-computed the next time rename detection occurs, as noted above.
|
||||
|
||||
* the side with multiple commits to pick, is the side of history that we
|
||||
do NOT cache renames for. Thus, there are no additional commits to
|
||||
change the number of renames in a directory, except for those done by
|
||||
directory rename detection (which always pad the majority).
|
||||
|
||||
* the "renames" we cache are modified slightly by any directory rename,
|
||||
as noted below.
|
||||
|
||||
Now, with those notes out of the way, let's go through the four cases
|
||||
in order:
|
||||
|
||||
Case 1: MERGE_SIDE1 renames old dir, MERGE_SIDE2 adds new file to old dir
|
||||
|
||||
This case looks like this:
|
||||
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: E, Has olddir/
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: G, Renames olddir/ -> newdir/
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: A, Adds olddir/newfile
|
||||
=> creates A', With newdir/newfile
|
||||
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: A, Has olddir/newfile
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: A', Has newdir/newfile
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: B, Modifies olddir/newfile
|
||||
=> expected B', with threeway-merged newdir/newfile from above
|
||||
|
||||
In this case, with the optimization, note that after the first commit:
|
||||
* MERGE_SIDE1 remembers olddir/ -> newdir/
|
||||
* MERGE_SIDE1 has cached olddir/newfile -> newdir/newfile
|
||||
Given the cached rename noted above, the second merge can proceed as
|
||||
expected without needing to perform rename detection from A -> A'.
|
||||
|
||||
Case 2: MERGE_SIDE1 renames old dir, MERGE_SIDE2 renames file into old dir
|
||||
|
||||
This case looks like this:
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: E oldfile, olddir/
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: G oldfile, olddir/ -> newdir/
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: A oldfile -> olddir/newfile
|
||||
=> creates A', With newdir/newfile representing original oldfile
|
||||
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: A olddir/newfile
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: A' newdir/newfile
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: B modify olddir/newfile
|
||||
=> expected B', with threeway-merged newdir/newfile from above
|
||||
|
||||
In this case, with the optimization, note that after the first commit:
|
||||
* MERGE_SIDE1 remembers olddir/ -> newdir/
|
||||
* MERGE_SIDE1 has cached olddir/newfile -> newdir/newfile
|
||||
(NOT oldfile -> newdir/newfile; compare to case with
|
||||
(p->status == 'R' && new_path) in possibly_cache_new_pair())
|
||||
|
||||
Given the cached rename noted above, the second merge can proceed as
|
||||
expected without needing to perform rename detection from A -> A'.
|
||||
|
||||
Case 3: MERGE_SIDE1 adds new file to old dir, MERGE_SIDE2 renames old dir
|
||||
|
||||
This case looks like this:
|
||||
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: E, Has olddir/
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: G, Adds olddir/newfile
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: A, Renames olddir/ -> newdir/
|
||||
=> creates A', With newdir/newfile
|
||||
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: A, Has newdir/, but no notion of newdir/newfile
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: A', Has newdir/newfile
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: B, Has newdir/, but no notion of newdir/newfile
|
||||
=> expected B', with newdir/newfile from A'
|
||||
|
||||
In this case, with the optimization, note that after the first commit there
|
||||
were no renames on MERGE_SIDE1, and any renames on MERGE_SIDE2 are tossed.
|
||||
But the second merge didn't need any renames so this is fine.
|
||||
|
||||
Case 4: MERGE_SIDE1 renames file into old dir, MERGE_SIDE2 renames old dir
|
||||
|
||||
This case looks like this:
|
||||
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: E, Has olddir/
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: G, Renames oldfile -> olddir/newfile
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: A, Renames olddir/ -> newdir/
|
||||
=> creates A', With newdir/newfile representing original oldfile
|
||||
|
||||
MERGE_BASE: A, Has oldfile
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE1: A', Has newdir/newfile
|
||||
MERGE_SIDE2: B, Modifies oldfile
|
||||
=> expected B', with threeway-merged newdir/newfile from above
|
||||
|
||||
In this case, with the optimization, note that after the first commit:
|
||||
* MERGE_SIDE1 remembers oldfile -> newdir/newfile
|
||||
(NOT oldfile -> olddir/newfile; compare to case of second
|
||||
block under p->status == 'R' in possibly_cache_new_pair())
|
||||
* MERGE_SIDE2 renames are tossed because only MERGE_SIDE1 is remembered
|
||||
|
||||
Given the cached rename noted above, the second merge can proceed as
|
||||
expected without needing to perform rename detection from A -> A'.
|
||||
|
||||
Finally, I'll just note here that interactions with the
|
||||
skip-irrelevant-renames optimization means we sometimes don't detect
|
||||
renames for any files within a directory that was renamed, in which
|
||||
case we will not have been able to detect any rename for the directory
|
||||
itself. In such a case, we do not know whether the directory was
|
||||
renamed; we want to be careful to avoid caching some kind of "this
|
||||
directory was not renamed" statement. If we did, then a subsequent
|
||||
commit being rebased could add a file to the old directory, and the
|
||||
user would expect it to end up in the correct directory -- something
|
||||
our erroneous "this directory was not renamed" cache would preclude.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user