git/Documentation/technical/api-diff.txt
Daniel Barkalow a6f13ccf24 Correct name of diff_flush() in API documentation
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2008-02-28 13:35:09 -08:00

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diff API
========
The diff API is for programs that compare two sets of files (e.g. two
trees, one tree and the index) and present the found difference in
various ways. The calling program is responsible for feeding the API
pairs of files, one from the "old" set and the corresponding one from
"new" set, that are different. The library called through this API is
called diffcore, and is responsible for two things.
* finding total rewrites (`-B`), renames (`-M`) and copies (`-C`), and
changes that touch a string (`-S`), as specified by the caller.
* outputting the differences in various formats, as specified by the
caller.
Calling sequence
----------------
* Prepare `struct diff_options` to record the set of diff options, and
then call `diff_setup()` to initialize this structure. This sets up
the vanilla default.
* Fill in the options structure to specify desired output format, rename
detection, etc. `diff_opt_parse()` can be used to parse options given
from the command line in a way consistent with existing git-diff
family of programs.
* Call `diff_setup_done()`; this inspects the options set up so far for
internal consistency and make necessary tweaking to it (e.g. if
textual patch output was asked, recursive behaviour is turned on).
* As you find different pairs of files, call `diff_change()` to feed
modified files, `diff_addremove()` to feed created or deleted files,
or `diff_unmerged()` to feed a file whose state is 'unmerged' to the
API. These are thin wrappers to a lower-level `diff_queue()` function
that is flexible enough to record any of these kinds of changes.
* Once you finish feeding the pairs of files, call `diffcore_std()`.
This will tell the diffcore library to go ahead and do its work.
* Calling `diff_flush()` will produce the output.
Data structures
---------------
* `struct diff_filespec`
This is the internal representation for a single file (blob). It
records the blob object name (if known -- for a work tree file it
typically is a NUL SHA-1), filemode and pathname. This is what the
`diff_addremove()`, `diff_change()` and `diff_unmerged()` synthesize and
feed `diff_queue()` function with.
* `struct diff_filepair`
This records a pair of `struct diff_filespec`; the filespec for a file
in the "old" set (i.e. preimage) is called `one`, and the filespec for a
file in the "new" set (i.e. postimage) is called `two`. A change that
represents file creation has NULL in `one`, and file deletion has NULL
in `two`.
A `filepair` starts pointing at `one` and `two` that are from the same
filename, but `diffcore_std()` can break pairs and match component
filespecs with other filespecs from a different filepair to form new
filepair. This is called 'rename detection'.
* `struct diff_queue`
This is a collection of filepairs. Notable members are:
`queue`::
An array of pointers to `struct diff_filepair`. This
dynamically grows as you add filepairs;
`alloc`::
The allocated size of the `queue` array;
`nr`::
The number of elements in the `queue` array.
* `struct diff_options`
This describes the set of options the calling program wants to affect
the operation of diffcore library with.
Notable members are:
`output_format`::
The output format used when `diff_flush()` is run.
`context`::
Number of context lines to generate in patch output.
`break_opt`, `detect_rename`, `rename-score`, `rename_limit`::
Affects the way detection logic for complete rewrites, renames
and copies.
`abbrev`::
Number of hexdigits to abbreviate raw format output to.
`pickaxe`::
A constant string (can and typically does contain newlines to
look for a block of text, not just a single line) to filter out
the filepairs that do not change the number of strings contained
in its preimage and postimage of the diff_queue.
`flags`::
This is mostly a collection of boolean options that affects the
operation, but some do not have anything to do with the diffcore
library.
BINARY, TEXT;;
Affects the way how a file that is seemingly binary is treated.
FULL_INDEX;;
Tells the patch output format not to use abbreviated object
names on the "index" lines.
FIND_COPIES_HARDER;;
Tells the diffcore library that the caller is feeding unchanged
filepairs to allow copies from unmodified files be detected.
COLOR_DIFF;;
Output should be colored.
COLOR_DIFF_WORDS;;
Output is a colored word-diff.
NO_INDEX;;
Tells diff-files that the input is not tracked files but files
in random locations on the filesystem.
ALLOW_EXTERNAL;;
Tells output routine that it is Ok to call user specified patch
output routine. Plumbing disables this to ensure stable output.
QUIET;;
Do not show any output.
REVERSE_DIFF;;
Tells the library that the calling program is feeding the
filepairs reversed; `one` is two, and `two` is one.
EXIT_WITH_STATUS;;
For communication between the calling program and the options
parser; tell the calling program to signal the presence of
difference using program exit code.
HAS_CHANGES;;
Internal; used for optimization to see if there is any change.
SILENT_ON_REMOVE;;
Affects if diff-files shows removed files.
RECURSIVE, TREE_IN_RECURSIVE;;
Tells if tree traversal done by tree-diff should recursively
descend into a tree object pair that are different in preimage
and postimage set.
(JC)