Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > Could be achieved using a simple wrapper around 'filter_refs()' > something like this perhaps. > > int filter_refs_with_pattern(struct ref_array *ref, int > (*for_each_ref_fn)(each_ref_fn, void *), char **patterns) > { > int i; > struct ref_filter_cbdata data; > data.filter.name_patterns = patterns; > filter_refs(for_each_ref_fn, &data); I presume that this is filter_refs(&refs, for_each_ref_fn, &data); as you would need to have some way to get the result back ;-) > refs->nr = data.array.nr; > for(i = 0; i < refs->nr; i++) { > /* copy over the refs */ > } > return 0; > } > > Is this on the lines of what you had in mind? If it is, than I could > just create a new patch which would make ref_filter_handler() private > and introduce filter_refs() as shown. Yeah. Even though I suggested filter_refs(&for_each_ref, ...); I actually would think the external interface should not mention for_each_ref() like I did. The primary reason why I felt that it is bad for the API to export a generic callback function the caller can use to call for_each_ref() or for_each_rawref()" in the longer term is because it forces us to always iterate all refs; for_each_ref() does not know what the callback filter function wants to do. The most common way to filter in the context of your GSoC project is "we limit only to refs/heads/*, and then we may also filter by other criteria" (that is "git branch" "-l" or possibly with "--contains", etc.), and it is very wasteful for that codepath to allow for_each_ref() to even enumerate and feed all refs outside the refs/heads/* area to your callback, which would involve reading all entries in packed-refs (which is a fixed cost so not an overhead) and then reading everything in .git/refs/* (which is an overhead we could and should avoid when we know we are only interested in the branches that live in refs/heads*). Your first implementation of course can just call for_each_ref() or for_each_rawref(), and at the end of GSoC, the code may still do so. But by keeping the external interface free of for_each_ref(), you could later optimize. And your above sample only takes for_each_ref_fn without exposing the internal use of for_each_ref(), which is good. -- 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