On Wed, Oct 17, 2018 at 3:58 PM Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > This patch started as a refactoring to make 'get_next_submodule' more > > readable, but upon doing so, I realized that "git fetch" of the submodule > > actually doesn't need to be run in the submodules worktree. So let's run > > it in its git dir instead. > > The commit message needs to be updated, I think - this patch does > significantly more than fetching in the gitdir. >From my point of view, it is not significant, but refactoring. I'll think how to write a better commit message. > > This patch leaks the cp->dir in get_next_submodule, as any further > > callback in run_processes_parallel doesn't have access to the child > > process any more. > > The cp->dir is already leaked - probably better to write "cp->dir in > get_next_submodule() is still leaked, but this will be fixed in a > subsequent patch". ... which fails to mention the reason why (as it is hard to do given the current design) but is more concise. > > +static void prepare_submodule_repo_env_in_gitdir(struct argv_array *out) > > +{ > > + prepare_submodule_repo_env_no_git_dir(out); > > + argv_array_pushf(out, "%s=.", GIT_DIR_ENVIRONMENT); > > Why does GIT_DIR need to be set? Is it to avoid subcommands recursively > checking the parent directories in case the CWD is a malformed Git > repository? If yes, maybe it's worth adding a comment. It is copying the structure from prepare_submodule_repo_env, specifically 10f5c52656 (submodule: avoid auto-discovery in prepare_submodule_repo_env(), 2016-09-01), which sounds appealing (and brings real benefits for the working directory), but I have not thought about this protection for the git dir. Maybe another approach is to not set the cwd for the child process and instead point GIT_DIR_ENVIRONMENT only to the right directory. Then the use of GIT_DIR_ENVIRONMENT is obvious and is not just for protection of corner cases. However I think this protection is really valuable for the .git dir as well as the submodule may be broken and we do not want to end up in an infinite loop (as the discovery would find the superproject which then tries to recurse, again, into the submodule with the broken git dir) When adding the comment here, we'd also want to have the comment in prepare_submodule_repo_env, which could be its own preparation commit. > > +static struct repository *get_submodule_repo_for(struct repository *r, > > + const struct submodule *sub) > > +{ > > + struct repository *ret = xmalloc(sizeof(*ret)); > > + > > + if (repo_submodule_init(ret, r, sub)) { > > + /* > > + * No entry in .gitmodules? Technically not a submodule, > > + * but historically we supported repositories that happen to be > > + * in-place where a gitlink is. Keep supporting them. > > + */ > > + struct strbuf gitdir = STRBUF_INIT; > > + strbuf_repo_worktree_path(&gitdir, r, "%s/.git", sub->path); > > + if (repo_init(ret, gitdir.buf, NULL)) { > > + strbuf_release(&gitdir); > > + return NULL; > > + } > > + strbuf_release(&gitdir); > > + } > > + > > + return ret; > > +} > > This is the significant thing that this patch does more - an unskipped > submodule is now something that either passes the checks in > repo_submodule_init() or the checks in repo_init(), which seems to be > stricter than the current check that ".git" points to a directory or is > one. This means that we skip certain broken repositories, and this > necessitates a change in the test. I see. However there is no change in function, the check in repo_init (or repo_submodule_init) is less strict than the check in the child process. So if there are broken submodule repositories, the difference of this patch is the layer at which it is caught, i.e. we would not spawn a child that fails, but skip the submodule. Thinking of that, maybe we need to announce that in get_next_submodule > > I think we should be more particular about what we're allowed to skip - > in particular, maybe if we're planning to skip this submodule, its > corresponding directory in the worktree (if one exists) needs to be > empty. If the working tree directory is empty for that submodule, it means it is likely not initialized. But why would we use that as a signal to skip the submodule? > > - cp->dir = strbuf_detach(&submodule_path, NULL); > > - prepare_submodule_repo_env(&cp->env_array); > > + prepare_submodule_repo_env_in_gitdir(&cp->env_array); > > + cp->dir = xstrdup(repo->gitdir); > > Here is where the functionality change (fetch in ".git") described in > the commit message occurs. True. Thanks for the review, I'll try to split up this commit a bit more and explain each part on its own.