Hi Jonathan, On Tue, Jun 02, 2020 at 08:42:13PM -0700, Jonathan Nieder wrote: > Hi, > > Taylor Blau wrote: > > > Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > > --- > > builtin/receive-pack.c | 4 ++-- > > commit.h | 2 ++ > > fetch-pack.c | 10 +++++----- > > shallow.c | 30 +++++++++++++++++++++--------- > > t/t5537-fetch-shallow.sh | 29 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > > 5 files changed, 59 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) > > I haven't investigated the cause yet, but I've run into an interesting > bug that bisects to this commit. Jay Conrod (cc-ed) reports: > > | I believe this is also the cause of Go toolchain test failures we've > | been seeing. Go uses git to fetch dependencies. > | > | The problem we're seeing can be reproduced with the script below. It > | should print "success". Instead, the git merge-base command fails > | because the commit 7303f77963648d5f1ec5e55eccfad8e14035866c > | (origin/master) has no history. > > -- 8< -- > #!/bin/bash > > set -euxo pipefail > if [ -d legacytest ]; then > echo "legacytest directory already exists" >&2 > exit 1 > fi > mkdir legacytest > cd legacytest > git init --bare > git config protocol.version 2 > git config fetch.writeCommitGraph true > git remote add origin -- https://github.com/rsc/legacytest > git fetch -f --depth=1 origin refs/heads/master:refs/heads/master > git fetch -f origin 'refs/heads/*:refs/heads/*' 'refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*' > git fetch --unshallow -f origin > git merge-base --is-ancestor -- v2.0.0 7303f77963648d5f1ec5e55eccfad8e14035866c > echo success > -- >8 -- Thanks to you and Jay for the report and reproduction script. Indeed, I can reproduce this on the tip of master (which is equivalent to v2.27.0 at the time of writing). > The fetch.writeCommitGraph part is interesting. When does a commit > graph file get written in this sequence of operations? In an > unshallow operation, does the usual guard against writing a commit > graph in a shallow repo get missed? The last 'git fetch' is the one that writes the commit-graph. You can verify this by sticking a 'ls objects/info' after each 'git' invocation in your script. Here's where things get weird, though. Prior to this patch, Git would pick up that the repository is shallow before unshallowing, but never invalidate this fact after unshallowing. That means that once we got to 'write_commit_graph', we'd exit immediately since it appears as if the repository is shallow. In this patch, we don't do that anymore, since we rightly unset the fact that we are (were) shallow. In a debugger, I ran your script and a 'git commit-graph write --split --reachable' side-by-side, and found an interesting discrepancy: some commits (loaded from 'copy_oids_to_commits') *don't* have their parents set when invoked from 'git fetch', but *do* when invoked as 'git commit-graph write ...'. I'm not an expert in the object cache, but my hunch is that when we fetch these objects they're marked as parsed without having loaded their parents. When we load them again via 'lookup_object', we get objects that look parsed, but don't have parents where they otherwise should. I'm going to CC Stolee to see if he has any thoughts on how to handle this and/or if my idea is on the right track. > "rm -fr objects/info/commit-graphs" recovers the full history in the > repo, so this is not a case of writing the wrong shallows --- it's > only a commit graph issue. > > I'll take a closer look, but thought I'd give others a chance to look > to in case there's something obvious. :) > > Thanks, > Jonathan Thanks, Taylor