On Sun, Feb 25, 2018 at 08:30:48PM -0500, Jeff King wrote: > > diff --git a/revision.c b/revision.c > > index 5ce9b93..bc7def5 100644 > > --- a/revision.c > > +++ b/revision.c > > @@ -113,7 +113,8 @@ void mark_parents_uninteresting(struct commit *commit) > > * it is popped next time around, we won't be trying > > * to parse it and get an error. > > */ > > - if (!has_object_file(&commit->object.oid)) > > + if (!commit->object.parsed && > > + !has_object_file(&commit->object.oid)) > > commit->object.parsed = 1; > > We don't actually need the object contents at all right here. This is > just faking the "parsed" flag for later so that calls to parse_object() > don't barf. > > This code comes originally form 454fbbcde3 (git-rev-list: allow missing > objects when the parent is marked UNINTERESTING, 2005-07-10). But later, > in aeeae1b771 (revision traversal: allow UNINTERESTING objects to be > missing, 2009-01-27), we marked dealt with calling parse_object() on the > parents more directly. > > So what I wonder is whether this code is simply redundant and can go > away entirely. That would save the has_object_file() call in all cases. There's a similar case for trees. In mark_tree_contents_uninteresting() we do: if (!has_object_file(&obj->oid)) return; if (parse_tree(tree) < 0) die("bad tree %s", oid_to_hex(&obj->oid)); which seems wasteful. Probably this could be: if (parse_tree_gently(tree, 1) < 0) return; /* missing uninteresting trees ok */ though technically the existing code allows _missing_ trees, but not on corrupt ones. I guess this is perhaps less interesting, because we only mark trees directly fed from the pending array, not every tree of commits that we traverse. Though if you had a really gigantic tree, it might be measurable. -Peff