Move the 'git_attr_set_direction()' up to be closer to the variables
that it modifies as well as a small formatting by renaming the variable
'new' to 'new_direction' so that it is more descriptive.

Update the comment about how 'direction' is used to read the state of
the world.  It should be noted that callers of
'git_attr_set_direction()' should ensure that other threads are not
making calls into the attribute system until after the call to
'git_attr_set_direction()' completes.  This function essentially acts as
reset button for the attribute system and should be handled with care.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Williams <bmw...@google.com>
---
 attr.c | 49 ++++++++++++++++++++-----------------------------
 attr.h |  3 ++-
 2 files changed, 22 insertions(+), 30 deletions(-)

diff --git a/attr.c b/attr.c
index c2ea5cb29..f35c1107f 100644
--- a/attr.c
+++ b/attr.c
@@ -578,26 +578,30 @@ static struct attr_stack *read_attr_from_array(const char 
**list)
 }
 
 /*
- * NEEDSWORK: these two are tricky.  The callers assume there is a
- * single, system-wide global state "where we read attributes from?"
- * and when the state is flipped by calling git_attr_set_direction(),
- * attr_stack is discarded so that subsequent attr_check will lazily
- * read from the right place.  And they do not know or care who called
- * by them uses the attribute subsystem, hence have no knowledge of
- * existing git_attr_check instances or future ones that will be
- * created).
- *
- * Probably we need a thread_local that holds these two variables,
- * and a list of git_attr_check instances (which need to be maintained
- * by hooking into git_attr_check_alloc(), git_attr_check_initl(), and
- * git_attr_check_clear().  Then git_attr_set_direction() updates the
- * fields in that thread_local for these two variables, iterate over
- * all the active git_attr_check instances and discard the attr_stack
- * they hold.  Yuck, but it sounds doable.
+ * Callers into the attribute system assume there is a single, system-wide
+ * global state where attributes are read from and when the state is flipped by
+ * calling git_attr_set_direction(), the stack frames that have been
+ * constructed need to be discarded so so that subsequent calls into the
+ * attribute system will lazily read from the right place.  Since changing
+ * direction causes a global paradigm shift, it should not ever be called while
+ * another thread could potentially be calling into the attribute system.
  */
 static enum git_attr_direction direction;
 static struct index_state *use_index;
 
+void git_attr_set_direction(enum git_attr_direction new_direction,
+                           struct index_state *istate)
+{
+       if (is_bare_repository() && new_direction != GIT_ATTR_INDEX)
+               die("BUG: non-INDEX attr direction in a bare repo");
+
+       if (new_direction != direction)
+               drop_attr_stack();
+
+       direction = new_direction;
+       use_index = istate;
+}
+
 static struct attr_stack *read_attr_from_file(const char *path, int macro_ok)
 {
        FILE *fp = fopen(path, "r");
@@ -1132,19 +1136,6 @@ void attr_check_free(struct attr_check *check)
        }
 }
 
-void git_attr_set_direction(enum git_attr_direction new, struct index_state 
*istate)
-{
-       enum git_attr_direction old = direction;
-
-       if (is_bare_repository() && new != GIT_ATTR_INDEX)
-               die("BUG: non-INDEX attr direction in a bare repo");
-
-       direction = new;
-       if (new != old)
-               drop_attr_stack();
-       use_index = istate;
-}
-
 void attr_start(void)
 {
 #ifndef NO_PTHREADS
diff --git a/attr.h b/attr.h
index da7c3a229..62dbcb6b8 100644
--- a/attr.h
+++ b/attr.h
@@ -76,7 +76,8 @@ enum git_attr_direction {
        GIT_ATTR_CHECKOUT,
        GIT_ATTR_INDEX
 };
-void git_attr_set_direction(enum git_attr_direction, struct index_state *);
+void git_attr_set_direction(enum git_attr_direction new_direction,
+                           struct index_state *istate);
 
 extern void attr_start(void);
 
-- 
2.11.0.483.g087da7b7c-goog

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