On 08/05/2014 02:40 PM, Ronnie Sahlberg wrote: > Please see > https://github.com/rsahlberg/git/tree/backend-struct-db-2 > for an example of a pluggable backend for refs storage. > > This series contain changes to make it possible to add new backends > for handling/storage of refs and implements one new backend : > refs-be-be.c . > > This new backend offloads the actual refs handling to a small database > daemon with which ita talks via a very simple rpc protocol. That > daemon in turn then connects to the datastore and read/writes the > values to it. > [...] Ronnie, This is awesome! Congratulations on your progress. I'm still on vacation and haven't yet looked at the code. I will be back next week and hope to find time to check it out, and also to do some more review of the code that you have already submitted to git core. Have you thought about how to test alternate reference backends? This will be very important to getting one or more of them accepted into git core (not to mention giving people confidence to actually *use* them!) It seems to me that a few steps are needed: * Each backend would need a suite of backend-aware tests that verify proper operation *within* the backend. These tests would mostly use low-level plumbing commands like update-refs to create/modify/delete references, and would be allowed to grub around in the filesystem, talk directly with the database, etc. to make sure that the commands have the correct effects. For example, for the traditional filesystem backend, these tests would be the ones to check that creating a reference causes a file to spring into existence under $GIT_DIR/refs. The tests for pack-refs, and all tests that care about the distinction between packed and loose refs, would become part of the backend-aware tests for the filesystem backend. All of the backend-aware tests should be run every time the test suite is run (provided, of course, that the correct prerequisites are available, and subject to being turned off manually). * The rest of the test suite has to be made backend-agnostic. For example, such tests should *not* be allowed to look under $GIT_DIR for the existence/absence of loose reference files [1] but would rather have to inquire about references via git commands. * It should be possible for the developer to choose easily which reference backend to use when running the agnostic part of the test suite. The chosen backend should be used to run *all* backend-agnostic tests. A database-backed backend might even want to be testable in two modes: one with the DB daemon running constantly, and one where the daemon is stopped and started between each pair of Git commands. So after the changes, a single run of the test suite should run the backend-aware tests for *all* known backends followed by the backend-agnostic tests for a single selected backend. Michael [1] When I was working on my quagga-reference spike [2] I found that a lot of the test suite uses knowledge about how references and reflogs are stored by the filesystem backend and just grabs at the files rather than accessing the references using git commands. It will take some work to clean this up. [2] http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/243726 -- Michael Haggerty mhagger@xxxxxxxxxxxx -- 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