Christian Couder <christian.couder@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Tue, Feb 13, 2024 at 10:02 PM Linus Arver <linusa@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Christian Couder <christian.couder@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >> > In a following commit, we will need to add all the oids from a set into >> > another set. In "list-objects-filter.c", there is already a static >> > function called add_all() to do that. >> >> Nice find. >> >> > Let's rename this function oidset_insert_from_set() and move it into >> > oidset.{c,h} to make it generally available. >> >> At some point (I don't ask for it in this series) we should add unit >> tests for this newly-exposed function. Presumably the stuff around >> object/oid handling is stable enough to receive unit tests. > > Yeah, ideally there should be unit tests for oidset and all its > features, but it seems to me that there aren't any. Also oidset is > based on khash.h which was originally imported from > https://github.com/attractivechaos/klib/ without tests. So I think > it's a different topic to add tests from scratch to oidset, khash.h or > both. > > Actually after taking another look, it looks like khash.h or some of > its features are tested through "helper/test-oidmap.c" and > "t0016-oidmap.sh". I still think it's another topic to test oidset. Agreed. >> > +void oidset_insert_from_set(struct oidset *dest, struct oidset *src) >> > +{ >> > + struct oidset_iter iter; >> > + struct object_id *src_oid; >> > + >> > + oidset_iter_init(src, &iter); >> > + while ((src_oid = oidset_iter_next(&iter))) >> >> Are the extra parentheses necessary? > > Yes. Without them gcc errors out with: > > oidset.c: In function ‘oidset_insert_from_set’: > oidset.c:32:16: error: suggest parentheses around assignment used as > truth value [-Werror=parentheses] > 32 | while (src_oid = oidset_iter_next(&iter)) > | ^~~~~~~ > > Having extra parentheses is a way to tell the compiler that we do want > to use '=' and not '=='. This helps avoid the very common mistake of > using '=' where '==' was intended. Ah, so it is a "please trust me gcc, I know what I am doing" thing and not a "this is required in C" thing. Makes sense, thanks for clarifying. Sorry for the noise. >> > +/** >> > + * Insert all the oids that are in set 'src' into set 'dest'; a copy >> > + * is made of each oid inserted into set 'dest'. >> > + */ >> >> Just above in oid_insert() there is already a comment about needing to >> copy each oid. > > (It's "oidset_insert()" not "oid_insert()".) Oops, yes, sorry for the typo. >> /** >> * Insert the oid into the set; a copy is made, so "oid" does not need >> * to persist after this function is called. >> * >> * Returns 1 if the oid was already in the set, 0 otherwise. This can be used >> * to perform an efficient check-and-add. >> */ >> >> so perhaps the following wording is simpler? >> >> Like oid_insert(), but insert all oids found in 'src'. Calls >> oid_insert() internally. > > (What you suggest would need s/oid_insert/oidset_insert/) > > Yeah, it's a bit simpler and shorter, but on the other hand a reader > might have to read both this and the oidset_insert() doc, so in the > end I am not sure it's a big win for readability. And if they don't > read the oidset_insert() doc, they might miss the fact that we are > copying the oids we insert, which might result in a bug. When functions are built on top of other functions, I think it is good practice to point readers to those underlying functions. In this case the new function is a wrapper around oidset_insert() which does all the real work. Plus the helper function already has some documentation about copying behavior that we already thought was important enough to call out explicitly. So, tying this definition to that (foundational) helper function sounds like a good idea to me in terms of readability. IOW we can inform readers "hey, we're just a wrapper around this other important function --- go there if you're curious about internals" and emphasizing that sort of relationship which may not be immediately obvious to those not familiar with this area would be nice. Alternatively, we could repeat the same comment WRT copying here but that seems redundant and prone to maintenance burdens down the road (if we ever change this behavior we have to change the comment in multiple functions, possibly). > Also your wording ties the implementation with oidset_insert(), which > we might not want if we could find something more performant. See > Junio's comment on this patch saying his initial reaction was that > copying underlying bits may even be more efficient. > > So I prefer not to change this. OK. >> > +void oidset_insert_from_set(struct oidset *dest, struct oidset *src); >> >> Perhaps "oidset_insert_all" would be a simpler name? I generally prefer >> to reuse any descriptors in comments to guide the names. Plus this >> function used to be called "add_all()" so keeping the "all" naming style >> feels right. > > We already have other related types like 'struct oid-array' and > 'struct oidmap' to store oids, as well as code that inserts many oids > into an oidset from a 'struct ref *' linked list or array in a tight > loop. Thank you for the additional context I was not aware of. > So if we want to add functions inserting all the oids from > instances of such types, how should we call them? > > I would say we should use suffixes like: "_from_set", "_from_map", > "from_array", "_from_ref_list", "_from_ref_array", etc. I agree. However, I would like to point out that the function being added in this patch is a bit special: it is inserting from one "oidset" into another "oidset". IOW the both the dest and src types are the same. For the cases where the types are different, I totally agree that using the suffixes (to encode the type information of the src into the function name itself) is a good idea. So I think it's still fine to use "oidset_insert_all" because the only type in the parameter list is an oidset. BUT, maybe in our codebase we already use suffixes like this even for cases where the types are the same? I don't know the answer to this question. However if we really wanted to be consistent then maybe we should be using the name oidset_insert_from_oidset() and not oidset_insert_from_set(). > If we start using just "_all" for oidset, then what should we use for > the other types? I don't see a good answer to that, so I prefer to > stick with "_from_set" for oidset. > > Thanks.