On Fri, May 24, 2019 at 05:01:15PM -0400, Jeff Hostetler wrote: > We are allowing an unlimited number of filters in the composition. > In the code, the compose filter data has space for a LHS and RHS, so > I'm assuming we're mapping > > --filter=f1 --filter=f2 --filter=f3 --filter=f4 > or --filter=combine:f1+f2+f3+f4 > into basically > (compose f1 (compose f2 (compose (f3 f4))) > > I wonder if it would be easier to understand if we just built an array > or linked list, but I'll read on. As I mentioned in earlier messages, I have changed this to use an array. It's nicer now. (nit: the filters were left-associative rather than right-associative) > Should we swap the order of the terms in the || so that we always > clear the d->sub[i].is_skipping_tree on LOFS_END_TREE ? > Done, and added a comment: /* * Check should_delegate before oidset_contains so that * is_skipping_tree gets unset even when the object is marked as seen. * As of this writing, no filter uses LOFR_MARK_SEEN on trees that also * uses LOFR_SKIP_TREE, so the ordering is only theoretically * important. Be cautious if you change the order of the below checks * and more filters have been added! */ > > > + result[i] = LOFR_ZERO; > > + continue; > > + } > > + > > + result[i] = d->sub[i].ctx.filter_fn( > > + r, filter_situation, obj, pathname, filename, > > + &d->sub[i].ctx); > > + > > + if (result[i] & LOFR_MARK_SEEN) > > + oidset_insert(&d->sub[i].seen, &obj->oid); > > So filter[i] has said it never wants to show this object (hard omit). > And the guard at the top of the loop will prevent future invocations > from checking it again if the object is revisited. > Yes. > > + > > + if (result[i] & LOFR_SKIP_TREE) { > > + d->sub[i].is_skipping_tree = 1; > > + d->sub[i].skip_tree = obj->oid; > > So this marks the tree object at the top of the skip as far as > filter[i] is concerned. > Yes. > > + } > > + } > > + > > + if ((result[0] & LOFR_DO_SHOW) && (result[1] & LOFR_DO_SHOW)) > > + combined_result |= LOFR_DO_SHOW; > > + if (d->sub[0].is_skipping_tree && d->sub[1].is_skipping_tree) > > + combined_result |= LOFR_SKIP_TREE; > > Something about the above bothers me, but I can't quite say what > it is. > It looks nicer now that it's array-based. Let me know what you think after I send the next roll-up. > Do we need to do: > if ((result[0] & LOFR_MARK_SEEN) && (result[1] & LOFR_MARK_SEEN)) > combined_result |= LOFR_MARK_SEEN; This should be a O(1) sort of optimization, since if we don't set it, the top filter will still be called, but won't delegate to any sub-filters. It doesn't complicate the code much, so it seems worth it to add. Done. > I'm out of time now, will pick this up again next week. Thank you for taking a look and for your patience so far.