Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > fetch-object.h currently provides two functions (fetch_object() and > fetch_objects()) that could be replaced by a single, more flexible > function. Replace those two functions with the more flexible function. The latter half of the first sentence and the second sentence are pretty-much repeating the same thing. I think you wanted to justify two changes: (1) There are two helpers. fetch_object() fetches a single object from a given remote; fetch_objects() fetches a set of objects from a given remote. It is not like the former is implemented as a specialization of the latter (i.e. passing length=1 array), and it is not like the former is optimized specially for a single object fetch that cannot be made into such a thin wrapper. It is not like the latter is implemented as a repeated call to the former in a loop, either. There is no justification to keep two independent implementations, and using a single helper that can be used by all the callers of these two would make sense. (2) The variant that fetches multiple objects takes oid_array. To be used by all the existing callers of these two helpers, it is better to use a different calling convention, namely, a array[] and its length passed as separate parameters. Instead of explaining why the new convention is better to justify (2), the above three lines handwave by saying "more flexible" twice. We should do better. fetch-object: unify fetch_object[s] functions There are fetch_object() and fetch_objects() helpers in fetch-object.h; as the latter takes "struct oid_array", the former cannot be made into a thin wrapper around the latter without an extra allocation and set-up cost. Update fetch_objects() to take an array of "struct object_id" and number of elements in it as separate parameters, remove fetch_object(), and adjust all existing callers of these functions to use the new fetch_objects(). perhaps? > diff --git a/sha1-file.c b/sha1-file.c > index 97b742384..2edf4564f 100644 > --- a/sha1-file.c > +++ b/sha1-file.c > @@ -1317,7 +1317,7 @@ int oid_object_info_extended(struct repository *r, const struct object_id *oid, > * TODO Pass a repository struct through fetch_object, > * such that arbitrary repositories work. > */ > - fetch_object(repository_format_partial_clone, real->hash); > + fetch_objects(repository_format_partial_clone, real, 1); > already_retried = 1; > continue; > } > diff --git a/unpack-trees.c b/unpack-trees.c > index f25089b87..82a83dbc6 100644 > --- a/unpack-trees.c > +++ b/unpack-trees.c > @@ -392,7 +392,7 @@ static int check_updates(struct unpack_trees_options *o) > } > if (to_fetch.nr) > fetch_objects(repository_format_partial_clone, > - &to_fetch); > + to_fetch.oid, to_fetch.nr); > fetch_if_missing = fetch_if_missing_store; > oid_array_clear(&to_fetch); > } Changes to these two callers do explain why <ptr, nr> is an interface that is easier to use. Those who already have an oid_array can pass its fields as separate parameters without too much trouble, and those who only have an oid (or an array of oid and knows how many are in the array) do not have to wrap them into an oid_array. Thanks.