If I have to walk through the debugger and inspect the values found in here in order to figure out their meaning, despite having known these things inside and out some years back, then they probably need a comment for the casual reader to explain their purpose. Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@xxxxxxxxx> --- merge-recursive.c | 22 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 22 insertions(+) diff --git a/merge-recursive.c b/merge-recursive.c index 52521faf09..3526c8d0b8 100644 --- a/merge-recursive.c +++ b/merge-recursive.c @@ -513,6 +513,28 @@ static void record_df_conflict_files(struct merge_options *o, struct rename { struct diff_filepair *pair; + /* + * Because I keep forgetting every few years what src_entry and + * dst_entry are and have to walk through a debugger and puzzle + * through it to remind myself... + * + * If 'before' is renamed to 'after' then src_entry will contain + * the versions of 'before' from the merge_base, HEAD, and MERGE in + * stages 1, 2, and 3; dst_entry will contain the versions of + * 'after' from the merge_base, HEAD, and MERGE in stages 1, 2, and + * 3. Thus, we have a total of six modes and oids, though some + * will be null. (Stage 0 is ignored; we're interested in handling + * conflicts.) + * + * Since we don't turn on break-rewrites by default, neither + * src_entry nor dst_entry can have all three of their stages have + * non-null oids, meaning at most four of the six will be non-null. + * Also, since this is a rename, both src_entry and dst_entry will + * have at least one non-null oid, meaning at least two will be + * non-null. Of the six oids, a typical rename will have three be + * non-null. Only two implies a rename/delete, and four implies a + * rename/add. + */ struct stage_data *src_entry; struct stage_data *dst_entry; unsigned processed:1; -- 2.15.0.5.g9567be9905