On Mon, Sep 02, 2013 at 01:42:31AM -0400, Richard Hansen wrote: > Complete the <rev>^{<type>} family of object specifiers by having > <rev>^{tag} dereference <rev> until a tag object is found (or fail if > unable). > > At first glance this may not seem very useful, as commits, trees, and > blobs cannot be peeled to a tag, and a tag would just peel to itself. > However, this can be used to ensure that <rev> names a tag object: > > $ git rev-parse --verify v1.8.4^{tag} > 04f013dc38d7512eadb915eba22efc414f18b869 > $ git rev-parse --verify master^{tag} > error: master^{tag}: expected tag type, but the object dereferences to tree type > fatal: Needed a single revision > > Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@xxxxxxx> > --- FWIW, this makes sense to me. You can already accomplish the same thing by checking the output of $(git cat-file -t $name), but this is a natural extension of the other ^{} rules, and I can see making some callers more natural. > Documentation/revisions.txt | 3 +++ > sha1_name.c | 2 ++ Can you please add a test (probably in t1511) that checks the behavior, similar to what you wrote in the commit message? > diff --git a/sha1_name.c b/sha1_name.c > index 65ad066..6dc496d 100644 > --- a/sha1_name.c > +++ b/sha1_name.c > @@ -679,6 +679,8 @@ static int peel_onion(const char *name, int len, unsigned char *sha1) > sp++; /* beginning of type name, or closing brace for empty */ > if (!strncmp(commit_type, sp, 6) && sp[6] == '}') > expected_type = OBJ_COMMIT; > + else if (!strncmp(tag_type, sp, 3) && sp[3] == '}') > + expected_type = OBJ_TAG; This is not a problem you are introducing to this code, but the use of opaque constants like commit_type along with the magic number "6" assuming that it contains "commit" seems like a maintenance nightmare (the only thing saving us is that it will almost certainly never change from "commit"; but then why do we have the opaque type in the first place?). I wonder if we could do better with: #define COMMIT_TYPE "commit" ... if (!strncmp(COMMIT_TYPE, sp, strlen(COMMIT_TYPE)) && sp[strlen(COMMIT_TYPE)] == '}') Any compiler worth its salt will optimize the strlen on a string constant into a constant itself. The length makes it a bit less readable, though. I wonder if we could do even better with: const char *x; ... if ((x = skip_prefix(sp, commit_type)) && *x == '}') which avoids the magic lengths altogether (though the compiler cannot optimize out the strlen call inside skip_prefix, because we declare commit_type and friends as an extern. It probably doesn't matter in peel_onion, though, which should not generally be performance critical anyway). -Peff -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html