On 02/08/2016 07:27 PM, Junio C Hamano wrote:
> [email protected] writes:
>
>> From: Torsten Bögershausen <[email protected]>
>>
>> When core.autocrlf is set to false, and no attributes are set, the file
>> is treated as binary.
> This, and also on the title, I know by "binary" you mean "no
> conversion is attempted", and it is the word used in the code around
> there, but it still makes my heart skip a beat every time I read
> this sentence--it is not like we do not treat the contents as text
> after all.
>
> In any case, I take the above sentence the statement of the fact,
> describing how the world currently is, not declaring a new world
> order.
The word binary is indeed not ideal here: no eol conversion is done.
(And the commit message could use "-text")
>> Simplify the logic and remove duplicated code when dealing with
>> (crlf_action == CRLF_GUESS && auto_crlf == AUTO_CRLF_FALSE) by
>> setting crlf_action=CRLF_BINARY already in convert_attrs().
> I looked at all the places where CRLF_BINARY is checked. The ones
> that are in this patch are clearly where "Is it BINARY?" and "Is
> AUTO_CRLF_FALSE and CRLF_GUESS both true?" mean the same thing, so
> this is a correct simplification to these places.
>
> It is not easy to see what the effect of this change to the other
> places that use CRLF_BINARY, though.
>
> * output_eol() used to return EOL_UNSET when auto_crlf is not in
> effect and CRLF_GUESS is. The function will see CRLF_BINARY with
> this patch in such a case, and returns EOL_UNSET. So there is no
> change to the function and its callers.
OK
> * convert_attrs() has "If BINARY don't do anything and return".
> Will the patch change behaviour for the "not-autocrlf,
> CRLF_GUESS" case in this codepath? I think ca->crlf_action used
> to be left as CRLF_GUESS here before the patch, and now by the
> time the control flow reaches here it is already CRLF_BINARY.
> Would it affect the callers, and if so how?
Not sure if I fully understand the question:
The old CRLF_GUESS could mean (a) core.autocrlf=true,
(b) core.autocrlf=input or (c) core.autocrlf=false.
The callers had to look at the core.autocrlf them self.
This patch removes (c), the next (or over next) (a) and (b)
if (ca->crlf_action == CRLF_GUESS && auto_crlf == AUTO_CRLF_FALSE)
ca->crlf_action = CRLF_BINARY;
}
The next patch 6/7 removes "GUESS" completely.
> * get_convert_attr_ascii() would change the behaviour, right? It
> runs convert_attrs(), and with this change a path without
> attribute when autocrlf is not in effect would get BINARY and
> would show "-text", while the code before this change would give
> an empty string. Am I misreading the code, or is the change
> intended?
>
> Thanks.
(That happened in my first (not published) version,
today we have this:)
struct conv_attrs {
struct convert_driver *drv;
enum crlf_action attr_action; /* What attr says */
enum crlf_action crlf_action; /* When no attr is set, use core.autocrlf */
int ident;
};
The idea is (after this and the next commit 6/7) is
that once we had run convert_attrs() there is a clear picture
what should be done with the eols, and it is stored in crlf_action.
No further check with core.autocrlf in any calling party should be needed.
In a future series it should be possible to set
*text=auto
*eol=clrf
to behave exactly as if core.autocrlf=true.
But that is a change in behavior, and needs a separate series.
This series should not change the behavior, so a critical review is appreciated.
Does this answers the questions ?
Is a local amend possible ?
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