On Sun, Aug 25, 2013 at 05:58:18AM -0400, Jeff King wrote:
> On Sat, Aug 24, 2013 at 11:15:00PM -0700, Jonathan Nieder wrote:

>>> I was tempted to not involve filter-branch in this commit at all, and
>>> instead require the user to manually invoke
>>>
>>>   GIT_ALLOW_NULL_SHA1=1 git filter-branch ...
>>>
>>> to perform such a filter.  That would be slightly safer, but requires
>>> some specialized knowledge from the user (and advice on using
>>> filter-branch to remove such entries already exists on places like
>>> stackoverflow, and this patch makes it Just Work on recent versions of
>>> git).
>>
>> The above few paragraphs explained the most mysterious part of the
>> patch to me.  I think they would be fine to include in the commit
>> message.
>
> I rolled them into the commit message.

Hm --- the most useful part was "advice on using filter-branch to
remove such entries already exists on places like stackoverflow",
which was dropped.  From my point of view, that is exactly the
motivation of the patch.

I also found the "I was tempted to ... That would be slightly safer,
but requires ..." structure easier to read.

In other words, why not use something like this?

        write_index: optionally allow broken null sha1s

        Commit 4337b58 (do not write null sha1s to on-disk index, 2012-07-28)
        added a safety check preventing git from writing null sha1s into the
        index. The intent was to catch errors in other parts of the code that
        might let such an entry slip into the index (or worse, a tree).

        Some existing repositories have some invalid trees that contain null
        sha1s already, though.  Until 4337b58, a common way to clean this up
        would be to use git-filter-branch's index-filter to repair such broken
        entries.  That now fails when filter-branch tries to write out the
        index.

        Introduce a GIT_ALLOW_NULL_SHA1 environment variable to relax this check
        and make it easier to recover from such a history.

        It is tempting to not involve filter-branch in this commit at all, and
        instead require the user to manually invoke

                GIT_ALLOW_NULL_SHA1=1 git filter-branch ...

        to perform an index-filter on a history with trees with null sha1s.
        That would be slightly safer, but requires some specialized knowledge
        from the user.  So let's set the GIT_ALLOW_NULL_SHA1 variable
        automatically when checking out the to-be-filtered trees.  Advice on
        using filter-branch to remove such entries already exists on places like
        stackoverflow, and this patch makes it Just Work again on recent
        versions of git.

        Further commands that touch the index will still notice and fail,       
unless
        they actually remove the broken entries.  A filter-branch whose filters
        do not touch the index at all will not error out (since we complain of
        the null sha1 only on writing, not when making a tree out of the index),
        but this is acceptable, as we still print a loud warning, so the problem
        is unlikely to go unnoticed.

With or without such a change,
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnie...@gmail.com>

After this patch, do you think (in a separate change) it would make
sense for cache-tree.c::update_one() to check for null sha1 and error
out unless GIT_ALLOW_NULL_SHA1 is true?  That would let us get rid of
the caveat from the last paragraph.

[...]
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/t/t7009-filter-branch-null-sha1.sh
> @@ -0,0 +1,52 @@
> +#!/bin/sh
> +
> +test_description='filter-branch removal of trees with null sha1'
> +. ./test-lib.sh
> +
> +test_expect_success 'create base commits' '
> +     test_commit one &&
> +     test_commit two &&
> +     test_commit three
> +'
> +
> +test_expect_success 'create a commit with a bogus null sha1 in the tree' '
> +     {
> +             git ls-tree HEAD &&
> +             printf "160000 commit $_z40\\tbroken\\n"
> +     } >broken-tree
> +     echo "add broken entry" >msg &&
> +
> +     tree=$(git mktree <broken-tree) &&
> +     test_tick &&
> +     commit=$(git commit-tree $tree -p HEAD <msg) &&
> +     git update-ref HEAD "$commit"
> +'
> +
> +# we have to make one more commit on top removing the broken
> +# entry, since otherwise our index does not match HEAD (and filter-branch 
> will
> +# complain). We could make the index match HEAD, but doing so would involve
> +# writing a null sha1 into the index.
> +test_expect_success 'create a commit dropping the broken entry' '
> +     test_tick &&
> +     git commit -a -m "back to normal"
> +'

This is kind of an old-fashioned test, since each step of the setup is
treated as a separate test assertion.  I don't really mind until we
get better automation to make it easy to skip or rearrange tests.
Just for reference, I think the usual way to do this now is

        test_expect_success 'setup' '
                # create base commits
                ...

                # create a commit with bogus null sha1 in the tree
                ...

                # We have to make one more commit on top removing the broken
                # entry, since otherwise our index does not match HEAD and
                # filter-branch will complain. We could make the index match
                # HEAD, but doing so would involve writing a null sha1 into
                # the index.
                ...
        '

        test_expect_success 'nontrivial filter-branch bails out on null sha1' '
                old_head=$(git rev-parse HEAD) &&
                test_must_fail git filter-branch ... &&
                test_cmp_rev "$old_head" HEAD
        '

        test_expect_success 'filter-branch can filter out null sha1' '
                git filter-branch ... &&

                # resulting history is clean
                echo three >expect &&
                git log -1 --format=%s >actual &&
                test_cmp expect actual
        '

Thanks,
Jonathan
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