Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Junio C Hamano
a48e1d67e1 [PATCH] pull: gracefully recover from delta retrieval failure.
This addresses a concern raised by Jason McMullan in the mailing
list discussion.  After retrieving and storing a potentially
deltified object, pull logic tries to check and fulfil its delta
dependency.  When the pull procedure is killed at this point,
however, there was no easy way to recover by re-running pull,
since next run would have found that we already have that
deltified object and happily reported success, without really
checking its delta dependency is satisfied.

This patch introduces --recover option to git-*-pull family
which causes them to re-validate dependency of deltified objects
we are fetching.  A new test t5100-delta-pull.sh covers such a
failure mode.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
2005-06-05 14:18:00 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
4a62b61939 [PATCH] Handle deltified object correctly in git-*-pull family.
When a remote repository is deltified, we need to get the
objects that a deltified object we want to obtain is based upon.
The initial parts of each retrieved SHA1 file is inflated and
inspected to see if it is deltified, and its base object is
asked from the remote side when it is.  Since this partial
inflation and inspection has a small performance hit, it can
optionally be skipped by giving -d flag to git-*-pull commands.
This flag should be used only when the remote repository is
known to have no deltified objects.

Rsync transport does not have this problem since it fetches
everything the remote side has.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
2005-06-02 15:48:33 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
e78d97723c Implement -v (verbose) option for pull methods other than local transport.
This moves the private "say()" function to pull.c, renames it to
"pull_say()", and introduces a global variable "get_verbosely" that
makes the pull backends report what they fetch.  The -v option is
added to git-rpull and git-http-pull to match git-local-pull.

The documentation is updated to describe these pull commands.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
2005-05-06 01:37:21 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
b2d62f161e Make git-*-pull say who wants them for missing objects.
This patch updates pull.c, the engine that decides which objects are
needed, given a commit to traverse from, to report which commit was
calling for the object that cannot be retrieved from the remote side.
This complements git-fsck-cache in that it checks the consistency of
the remote repository for reachability.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
2005-05-04 01:26:24 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
ee4f439fea [PATCH] Do not call fetch() when we have it.
Currently pull() calls fetch() without checking whether we have
the wanted object but all of the existing fetch()
implementations perform this check and return success
themselves.  This patch moves the check to the caller.

I will be sending a trivial git-local-pull which depends on
this in the next message.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
2005-05-01 21:07:40 -07:00
Daniel Barkalow
4250a5e5b1 [PATCH] Split out "pull" from particular methods
The method for deciding what to pull is useful separately from any of the
ways of actually fetching the objects.

So split out "pull" functionality from http-pull and rpull

Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
2005-04-30 16:53:56 -07:00