On 12/02, Jacob Keller wrote: > On Fri, Dec 2, 2016 at 10:36 AM, Brandon Williams <bmwill@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 12/01, Jeff King wrote: > >> On Thu, Dec 01, 2016 at 01:56:32PM -0800, Stefan Beller wrote: > >> > >> > > Bleh. Looks like it happens as part of the recently-added > >> > > get_common_dir(). I'm not sure if that is ever relevant for submodules, > >> > > but I guess in theory you could have a submodule clone that is part of a > >> > > worktree? > >> > > >> > Sure we can, for a test that we don't have that, see the embedgitdirs series. ;) > >> > > >> > For now each submodule has its own complete git dir, but the vision > >> > would be to have a common git dir for submodules in the common > >> > superprojects git dir as well, such that objects are shared actually. :) > >> > >> Fair enough. Given that it seems to behave OK even in error cases, the > >> simple stat() test may be the best option, then. I do think we should > >> consider adding a few test cases to make sure it continues to behave in > >> the error cases (just because we are relying partially on what git's > >> setup code happens to do currently, and we'd want to protect ourselves > >> against regressions). > > > > For the naive (ie me), is there a reason why real_path() couldn't be > > re-implemented to avoid using chdir? I tried looking into the history of > > the function but couldn't find anything explaining why it was done that > > way. I assume it has to do with symlinks, but I thought there was a > > syscall (readlink?) that could do the resolution. > > > > -- > > Brandon Williams > > The reason as far as I understand it, is that it uses chdir() to > guarantee that it follows symlinks correctly and then looks up the > resulting path after the chdir(). I do not think there is a syscall > that actually correctly works like real_path() does. You *could* > re-write real_path() to do the symlink lookups itself, but as Jeff > recently pointed out, that way lies madness. So is there a reason why the library function realpath() can't be used? >From a cursory look at its man page it seems to do the symlink resolution. -- Brandon Williams