On 2018.11.16 11:45, Junio C Hamano wrote:
> Josh Steadmon <stead...@google.com> writes:
> 
> >> What I was alludding to was a lot simpler, though.  An advert string
> >> "version=0:version=1" from a client that prefers version 0 won't be
> >> !strcmp("version=0", advert) but seeing many strcmp() in the patch
> >> made me wonder.
> >
> > Ah I see. The strcmp()s against "version=0" are special cases for where
> > it looks like the client does not understand any sort of version
> > negotiation. If we see multiple versions listed in the advert, then the
> > rest of the selection logic should do the right thing.
> 
> OK, let me try to see if I understand correctly by rephrasing.
> 
> If the client does not say anything about which version it prefers
> (because it only knows about version 0 without even realizing that
> there is a version negotiation exchange), we substitute the lack of
> proposed versions with string "version=0", and the strcmp()s I saw
> and was puzzled by are all about special casing such a client.  But
> we would end up behaving the same way (at least when judged only by
> externally visible effects) to a client that is aware of version
> negotiation and tells us it prefers version 0 (and nothing else)
> with the selection logic anyway.
> 
> Did I get it right?  If so, yeah, I think it makes sense to avoid
> two codepaths that ends up doing the same thing by removing the
> special case.

Yes, that is correct. The next version will remove the special cases
here.

> > However, I think that it might work to remove the special cases. In the
> > event that the client is so old that it doesn't understand any form of
> > version negotiation, it should just ignore the version fields /
> > environment vars. If you think it's cleaner to remove the special cases,
> > let me know.

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