On Wed, Jan 10, 2018 at 01:31:22PM -0800, Junio C Hamano wrote: > > +# Read from stdin into the variable given in $1. > > +test_read_to_eof () { > > + # Bash's "read" is sufficiently flexible that we can skip the extra > > + # process. > > + if test -n "$BASH_VERSION" > > + then > > + # 64k should be enough for anyone... > > + read -N 65536 -r "$1" > > + else > > + # command substitution eats trailing whitespace, so we add > > + # and then remove a non-whitespace character. > > + eval "$1=\$(cat; printf x)" > > + eval "$1=\${$1%x}" > > + fi > > +} > > Yuck. Hacky but nice. > > I think this will make it easier to read but I suspect here text > would use temporary files and may slow things down a bit? I do not > know if it is even measurable, though. Yeah, since I was able to contain the horrible-ness in this function, I think the overall readability/portability is probably OK. My main concern was that it would be slower (hence the bash hackery). I applied the patch below on top to see what kind of impact we could measure across the whole suite: diff --git a/t/test-lib-functions.sh b/t/test-lib-functions.sh index be8a47d304..6f2e6e7560 100644 --- a/t/test-lib-functions.sh +++ b/t/test-lib-functions.sh @@ -441,6 +441,15 @@ test_expect_success () { then test_read_to_eof test_block set -- "$1" "$test_block" + else + # this is obviously a dumb thing to do, but it's just + # a performance-testing hack. + test_read_to_eof test_block <<EOF +$2 +EOF + # our here-doc hackery added an extra newline + set -- "$1" "${test_block% +}" fi test_verify_prereq export test_prereq After doing five trial timings each of "make test" on: - stock git with dash - this patch with dash (so using "cat" to read the here-doc) - stock git with bash - this patch with bash (so using an internal "read") I couldn't come up with any definitive slowdown. In the first two, there's a fair bit of run-to-run noise (easily 10%), and my best run was actually _with_ the patch (by only 3%, but still the opposite of what you'd expect). Running the (stock) suite with bash is definitively slower than with dash (by about 20%). Adding in this patch didn't seem to make it any slower. So I dunno. Maybe it's not so crazy an idea. -Peff