Am 30.06.2014 16:39, schrieb Tanay Abhra: > > On 6/30/2014 7:04 PM, Karsten Blees wrote: >> Am 29.06.2014 13:01, schrieb Eric Sunshine: >>> On Thu, Jun 26, 2014 at 4:19 AM, Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> On 6/25/2014 1:24 PM, Eric Sunshine wrote: >>>>> On Mon, Jun 23, 2014 at 6:41 AM, Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>> Use git_config_get_string instead of git_config to take advantage of >>>>>> the config hash-table api which provides a cleaner control flow. >>>>>> >>>>>> Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@xxxxxxxxx> >>>>>> --- >>>>>> notes-utils.c | 31 +++++++++++++++---------------- >>>>>> 1 file changed, 15 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) >>>>>> >>>>>> diff --git a/notes-utils.c b/notes-utils.c >>>>>> index a0b1d7b..fdc9912 100644 >>>>>> --- a/notes-utils.c >>>>>> +++ b/notes-utils.c >>>>>> @@ -68,22 +68,23 @@ static combine_notes_fn parse_combine_notes_fn(const char *v) >>>>>> return NULL; >>>>>> } >>>>>> >>>>>> -static int notes_rewrite_config(const char *k, const char *v, void *cb) >>>>>> +static void notes_rewrite_config(struct notes_rewrite_cfg *c) >>>>>> { >>>>>> - struct notes_rewrite_cfg *c = cb; >>>>>> - if (starts_with(k, "notes.rewrite.") && !strcmp(k+14, c->cmd)) { >>>>>> - c->enabled = git_config_bool(k, v); >>>>>> - return 0; >>>>>> - } else if (!c->mode_from_env && !strcmp(k, "notes.rewritemode")) { >>>>>> + struct strbuf key = STRBUF_INIT; >>>>>> + const char *v; >>>>>> + strbuf_addf(&key, "notes.rewrite.%s", c->cmd); >>>>>> + >>>>>> + if (!git_config_get_string(key.buf, &v)) >>>>>> + c->enabled = git_config_bool(key.buf, v); >>>>>> + >>>>>> + if (!c->mode_from_env && !git_config_get_string("notes.rewritemode", &v)) { >>>>>> if (!v) >>>>>> - return config_error_nonbool(k); >>>>>> + config_error_nonbool("notes.rewritemode"); >>>>> >>>>> There's a behavior change here. In the original code, the callback >>>>> function would return -1, which would cause the program to die() if >>>>> the config.c:die_on_error flag was set. The new code merely emits an >>>>> error. >>>> >>>> Is this change serious enough? Can I ignore it? >> >> IMO its better to Fail Fast than continue with some invalid config (which >> may lead to more severe errors such as data corruption / data loss). > > Noted but, what I am trying to do with the rewrite is emit an error and > not set the value if the value found is a NULL. If you don't set the value and continue, git will proceed with the variable's default setting. Which may not be too harmful in some cases, but if a user changes: gc.pruneexpire=4.weeks.ago to gc.pruneexpire=4.monhts.ago (note the typo), the next git-gc will warn the user and then happily throw away data that the user intended to keep (default is 2.weeks.ago). Thus I think git should die() if it encounters an invalid config setting. > >> This, however, raises another issue: switching to the config cache looses >> file/line-precise error reporting for semantic errors. I don't know if >> this feature is important enough to do something about it, though. A >> message of the form "Key 'xyz' is bad" should usually enable a user to >> locate the problematic file and line. >> > > Hmn, but during the config cache construction we parse key-value pairs through > git_config() which still warns users about semantic errors. If I'm not mistaken you only detect _syntax_ errors when loading the file (i.e. whether the config file is structurally correct). The semantic value and correctness of a key (e.g. whether its a boolean or an int or a string that denotes a known merge algorithm) is only checked when it is accessed via git_config_get_<type>. And at this point, <file>:<line> information is already lost. With the callback approach, both syntactic (structure) and semantic (meaning) errors were checked at load time, resulting in die("bad config file line %d in %s", cf->linenr, cf->name); if the callback returned -1. -- 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