What’s an Object Walk?
The object walk is a key concept in Git - this is the process that underpins
operations like object transfer and fsck. Beginning from a given commit, the
list of objects is found by walking parent relationships between commits (commit
X based on commit W) and containment relationships between objects (tree Y is
contained within commit X, and blob Z is located within tree Y, giving our
working tree for commit X something like y/z.txt
).
A related concept is the revision walk, which is focused on commit objects and
their parent relationships and does not delve into other object types. The
revision walk is used for operations like git log
.
Related Reading
-
Documentation/user-manual.txt
under "Hacking Git" contains some coverage of the revision walker in its various incarnations. -
revision.h
-
Git for Computer Scientists gives a good overview of the types of objects in Git and what your object walk is really describing.
Setting Up
Create a new branch from master
.
git checkout -b revwalk origin/master
We’ll put our fiddling into a new command. For fun, let’s name it git walken
.
Open up a new file builtin/walken.c
and set up the command handler:
/* * "git walken" * * Part of the "My First Object Walk" tutorial. */ #include "builtin.h" #include "trace.h" int cmd_walken(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) { trace_printf(_("cmd_walken incoming...\n")); return 0; }
Note
|
trace_printf() , defined in trace.h , differs from printf() in
that it can be turned on or off at runtime. For the purposes of this
tutorial, we will write walken as though it is intended for use as
a "plumbing" command: that is, a command which is used primarily in
scripts, rather than interactively by humans (a "porcelain" command).
So we will send our debug output to trace_printf() instead.
When running, enable trace output by setting the environment variable GIT_TRACE .
|
Add usage text and -h
handling, like all subcommands should consistently do
(our test suite will notice and complain if you fail to do so).
We’ll need to include the parse-options.h
header.
#include "parse-options.h" ... int cmd_walken(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) { const char * const walken_usage[] = { N_("git walken"), NULL, }; struct option options[] = { OPT_END() }; argc = parse_options(argc, argv, prefix, options, walken_usage, 0); ... }
Also add the relevant line in builtin.h
near cmd_whatchanged()
:
int cmd_walken(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix);
Include the command in git.c
in commands[]
near the entry for whatchanged
,
maintaining alphabetical ordering:
{ "walken", cmd_walken, RUN_SETUP },
Add it to the Makefile
near the line for builtin/worktree.o
:
BUILTIN_OBJS += builtin/walken.o
Build and test out your command, without forgetting to ensure the DEVELOPER
flag is set, and with GIT_TRACE
enabled so the debug output can be seen:
$ echo DEVELOPER=1 >>config.mak $ make $ GIT_TRACE=1 ./bin-wrappers/git walken
Note
|
For a more exhaustive overview of the new command process, take a look at
Documentation/MyFirstContribution.txt .
|
Note
|
A reference implementation can be found at https://github.com/nasamuffin/git/tree/revwalk. |
struct rev_cmdline_info
The definition of struct rev_cmdline_info
can be found in revision.h
.
This struct is contained within the rev_info
struct and is used to reflect
parameters provided by the user over the CLI.
nr
represents the number of rev_cmdline_entry
present in the array.
alloc
is used by the ALLOC_GROW
macro. Check alloc.h
- this variable is
used to track the allocated size of the list.
Per entry, we find:
item
is the object provided upon which to base the object walk. Items in Git
can be blobs, trees, commits, or tags. (See Documentation/gittutorial-2.txt
.)
name
is the object ID (OID) of the object - a hex string you may be familiar
with from using Git to organize your source in the past. Check the tutorial
mentioned above towards the top for a discussion of where the OID can come
from.
whence
indicates some information about what to do with the parents of the
specified object. We’ll explore this flag more later on; take a look at
Documentation/revisions.txt
to get an idea of what could set the whence
value.
flags
are used to hint the beginning of the revision walk and are the first
block under the #include`s in `revision.h
. The most likely ones to be set in
the rev_cmdline_info
are UNINTERESTING
and BOTTOM
, but these same flags
can be used during the walk, as well.
struct rev_info
This one is quite a bit longer, and many fields are only used during the walk
by revision.c
- not configuration options. Most of the configurable flags in
struct rev_info
have a mirror in Documentation/rev-list-options.txt
. It’s a
good idea to take some time and read through that document.
Basic Commit Walk
First, let’s see if we can replicate the output of git log --oneline
. We’ll
refer back to the implementation frequently to discover norms when performing
an object walk of our own.
To do so, we’ll first find all the commits, in order, which preceded the current commit. We’ll extract the name and subject of the commit from each.
Ideally, we will also be able to find out which ones are currently at the tip of various branches.
Setting Up
Preparing for your object walk has some distinct stages.
-
Perform default setup for this mode, and others which may be invoked.
-
Check configuration files for relevant settings.
-
Set up the
rev_info
struct. -
Tweak the initialized
rev_info
to suit the current walk. -
Prepare the
rev_info
for the walk. -
Iterate over the objects, processing each one.
Default Setups
Before examining configuration files which may modify command behavior, set up
default state for switches or options your command may have. If your command
utilizes other Git components, ask them to set up their default states as well.
For instance, git log
takes advantage of grep
and diff
functionality, so
its init_log_defaults()
sets its own state (decoration_style
) and asks
grep
and diff
to initialize themselves by calling each of their
initialization functions.
Configuring From .gitconfig
Next, we should have a look at any relevant configuration settings (i.e.,
settings readable and settable from git config
). This is done by providing a
callback to git_config()
; within that callback, you can also invoke methods
from other components you may need that need to intercept these options. Your
callback will be invoked once per each configuration value which Git knows about
(global, local, worktree, etc.).
Similarly to the default values, we don’t have anything to do here yet
ourselves; however, we should call git_default_config()
if we aren’t calling
any other existing config callbacks.
Add a new function to builtin/walken.c
.
We’ll also need to include the config.h
header:
#include "config.h" ... static int git_walken_config(const char *var, const char *value, const struct config_context *ctx, void *cb) { /* * For now, we don't have any custom configuration, so fall back to * the default config. */ return git_default_config(var, value, ctx, cb); }
Make sure to invoke git_config()
with it in your cmd_walken()
:
int cmd_walken(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) { ... git_config(git_walken_config, NULL); ... }
Setting Up rev_info
Now that we’ve gathered external configuration and options, it’s time to
initialize the rev_info
object which we will use to perform the walk. This is
typically done by calling repo_init_revisions()
with the repository you intend
to target, as well as the prefix
argument of cmd_walken
and your rev_info
struct.
Add the struct rev_info
and the repo_init_revisions()
call.
We’ll also need to include the revision.h
header:
#include "revision.h" ... int cmd_walken(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) { /* This can go wherever you like in your declarations.*/ struct rev_info rev; ... /* This should go after the git_config() call. */ repo_init_revisions(the_repository, &rev, prefix); ... }
Tweaking rev_info
For the Walk
We’re getting close, but we’re still not quite ready to go. Now that rev
is
initialized, we can modify it to fit our needs. This is usually done within a
helper for clarity, so let’s add one:
static void final_rev_info_setup(struct rev_info *rev) { /* * We want to mimic the appearance of `git log --oneline`, so let's * force oneline format. */ get_commit_format("oneline", rev); /* Start our object walk at HEAD. */ add_head_to_pending(rev); }
Note
|
Instead of using the shorthand struct setup_revision_opt opt; memset(&opt, 0, sizeof(opt)); opt.def = "HEAD"; opt.revarg_opt = REVARG_COMMITTISH; setup_revisions(argc, argv, rev, &opt); Using a |
Then let’s invoke final_rev_info_setup()
after the call to
repo_init_revisions()
:
int cmd_walken(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix) { ... final_rev_info_setup(&rev); ... }
Later, we may wish to add more arguments to final_rev_info_setup()
. But for
now, this is all we need.
Preparing rev_info
For the Walk
Now that rev
is all initialized and configured, we’ve got one more setup step
before we get rolling. We can do this in a helper, which will both prepare the
rev_info
for the walk, and perform the walk itself. Let’s start the helper
with the call to prepare_revision_walk()
, which can return an error without
dying on its own:
static void walken_commit_walk(struct rev_info *rev) { if (prepare_revision_walk(rev)) die(_("revision walk setup failed")); }
Note
|
die() prints to stderr and exits the program. Since it will print to
stderr it’s likely to be seen by a human, so we will localize it.
|
Performing the Walk!
Finally! We are ready to begin the walk itself. Now we can see that rev_info
can also be used as an iterator; we move to the next item in the walk by using
get_revision()
repeatedly. Add the listed variable declarations at the top and
the walk loop below the prepare_revision_walk()
call within your
walken_commit_walk()
:
#include "pretty.h" ... static void walken_commit_walk(struct rev_info *rev) { struct commit *commit; struct strbuf prettybuf = STRBUF_INIT; ... while ((commit = get_revision(rev))) { strbuf_reset(&prettybuf); pp_commit_easy(CMIT_FMT_ONELINE, commit, &prettybuf); puts(prettybuf.buf); } strbuf_release(&prettybuf); }
Note
|
puts() prints a char* to stdout . Since this is the part of the
command we expect to be machine-parsed, we’re sending it directly to stdout.
|
Give it a shot.
$ make $ ./bin-wrappers/git walken
You should see all of the subject lines of all the commits in
your tree’s history, in order, ending with the initial commit, "Initial revision
of "git", the information manager from hell". Congratulations! You’ve written
your first revision walk. You can play with printing some additional fields
from each commit if you’re curious; have a look at the functions available in
commit.h
.
Adding a Filter
Next, let’s try to filter the commits we see based on their author. This is
equivalent to running git log --author=<pattern>
. We can add a filter by
modifying rev_info.grep_filter
, which is a struct grep_opt
.
First some setup. Add grep_config()
to git_walken_config()
:
static int git_walken_config(const char *var, const char *value, const struct config_context *ctx, void *cb) { grep_config(var, value, ctx, cb); return git_default_config(var, value, ctx, cb); }
Next, we can modify the grep_filter
. This is done with convenience functions
found in grep.h
. For fun, we’re filtering to only commits from folks using a
gmail.com
email address - a not-very-precise guess at who may be working on
Git as a hobby. Since we’re checking the author, which is a specific line in the
header, we’ll use the append_header_grep_pattern()
helper. We can use
the enum grep_header_field
to indicate which part of the commit header we want
to search.
In final_rev_info_setup()
, add your filter line:
static void final_rev_info_setup(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix, struct rev_info *rev) { ... append_header_grep_pattern(&rev->grep_filter, GREP_HEADER_AUTHOR, "gmail"); compile_grep_patterns(&rev->grep_filter); ... }
append_header_grep_pattern()
adds your new "gmail" pattern to rev_info
, but
it won’t work unless we compile it with compile_grep_patterns()
.
Note
|
If you are using setup_revisions() (for example, if you are passing a
setup_revision_opt instead of using add_head_to_pending() ), you don’t need
to call compile_grep_patterns() because setup_revisions() calls it for you.
|
Note
|
We could add the same filter via the append_grep_pattern() helper if we
wanted to, but append_header_grep_pattern() adds the enum grep_context and
enum grep_pat_token for us.
|
Changing the Order
There are a few ways that we can change the order of the commits during a
revision walk. Firstly, we can use the enum rev_sort_order
to choose from some
typical orderings.
topo_order
is the same as git log --topo-order
: we avoid showing a parent
before all of its children have been shown, and we avoid mixing commits which
are in different lines of history. (git help log
's section on --topo-order
has a very nice diagram to illustrate this.)
Let’s see what happens when we run with REV_SORT_BY_COMMIT_DATE
as opposed to
REV_SORT_BY_AUTHOR_DATE
. Add the following:
static void final_rev_info_setup(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix, struct rev_info *rev) { ... rev->topo_order = 1; rev->sort_order = REV_SORT_BY_COMMIT_DATE; ... }
Let’s output this into a file so we can easily diff it with the walk sorted by author date.
$ make $ ./bin-wrappers/git walken > commit-date.txt
Then, let’s sort by author date and run it again.
static void final_rev_info_setup(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix, struct rev_info *rev) { ... rev->topo_order = 1; rev->sort_order = REV_SORT_BY_AUTHOR_DATE; ... }
$ make $ ./bin-wrappers/git walken > author-date.txt
Finally, compare the two. This is a little less helpful without object names or dates, but hopefully we get the idea.
$ diff -u commit-date.txt author-date.txt
This display indicates that commits can be reordered after they’re written, for
example with git rebase
.
Let’s try one more reordering of commits. rev_info
exposes a reverse
flag.
Set that flag somewhere inside of final_rev_info_setup()
:
static void final_rev_info_setup(int argc, const char **argv, const char *prefix, struct rev_info *rev) { ... rev->reverse = 1; ... }
Run your walk again and note the difference in order. (If you remove the grep pattern, you should see the last commit this call gives you as your current HEAD.)
Basic Object Walk
So far we’ve been walking only commits. But Git has more types of objects than that! Let’s see if we can walk all objects, and find out some information about each one.
We can base our work on an example. git pack-objects
prepares all kinds of
objects for packing into a bitmap or packfile. The work we are interested in
resides in builtin/pack-objects.c:get_object_list()
; examination of that
function shows that the all-object walk is being performed by
traverse_commit_list()
or traverse_commit_list_filtered()
. Those two
functions reside in list-objects.c
; examining the source shows that, despite
the name, these functions traverse all kinds of objects. Let’s have a look at
the arguments to traverse_commit_list()
.
-
struct rev_info *revs
: This is therev_info
used for the walk. If itsfilter
member is notNULL
, thenfilter
contains information for how to filter the object list. -
show_commit_fn show_commit
: A callback which will be used to handle each individual commit object. -
show_object_fn show_object
: A callback which will be used to handle each non-commit object (so each blob, tree, or tag). -
void *show_data
: A context buffer which is passed in turn toshow_commit
andshow_object
.
In addition, traverse_commit_list_filtered()
has an additional parameter:
-
struct oidset *omitted
: A linked-list of object IDs which the provided filter caused to be omitted.
It looks like these methods use callbacks we provide instead of needing us to call it repeatedly ourselves. Cool! Let’s add the callbacks first.
For the sake of this tutorial, we’ll simply keep track of how many of each kind
of object we find. At file scope in builtin/walken.c
add the following
tracking variables:
static int commit_count; static int tag_count; static int blob_count; static int tree_count;
Commits are handled by a different callback than other objects; let’s do that one first:
static void walken_show_commit(struct commit *cmt, void *buf) { commit_count++; }
The cmt
argument is fairly self-explanatory. But it’s worth mentioning that
the buf
argument is actually the context buffer that we can provide to the
traversal calls - show_data
, which we mentioned a moment ago.
Since we have the struct commit
object, we can look at all the same parts that
we looked at in our earlier commit-only walk. For the sake of this tutorial,
though, we’ll just increment the commit counter and move on.
The callback for non-commits is a little different, as we’ll need to check which kind of object we’re dealing with:
static void walken_show_object(struct object *obj, const char *str, void *buf) { switch (obj->type) { case OBJ_TREE: tree_count++; break; case OBJ_BLOB: blob_count++; break; case OBJ_TAG: tag_count++; break; case OBJ_COMMIT: BUG("unexpected commit object in walken_show_object\n"); default: BUG("unexpected object type %s in walken_show_object\n", type_name(obj->type)); } }
Again, obj
is fairly self-explanatory, and we can guess that buf
is the same
context pointer that walken_show_commit()
receives: the show_data
argument
to traverse_commit_list()
and traverse_commit_list_filtered()
. Finally,
str
contains the name of the object, which ends up being something like
foo.txt
(blob), bar/baz
(tree), or v1.2.3
(tag).
To help assure us that we aren’t double-counting commits, we’ll include some
complaining if a commit object is routed through our non-commit callback; we’ll
also complain if we see an invalid object type. Since those two cases should be
unreachable, and would only change in the event of a semantic change to the Git
codebase, we complain by using BUG()
- which is a signal to a developer that
the change they made caused unintended consequences, and the rest of the
codebase needs to be updated to understand that change. BUG()
is not intended
to be seen by the public, so it is not localized.
Our main object walk implementation is substantially different from our commit walk implementation, so let’s make a new function to perform the object walk. We can perform setup which is applicable to all objects here, too, to keep separate from setup which is applicable to commit-only walks.
We’ll start by enabling all types of objects in the struct rev_info
. We’ll
also turn on tree_blobs_in_commit_order
, which means that we will walk a
commit’s tree and everything it points to immediately after we find each commit,
as opposed to waiting for the end and walking through all trees after the commit
history has been discovered. With the appropriate settings configured, we are
ready to call prepare_revision_walk()
.
static void walken_object_walk(struct rev_info *rev) { rev->tree_objects = 1; rev->blob_objects = 1; rev->tag_objects = 1; rev->tree_blobs_in_commit_order = 1; if (prepare_revision_walk(rev)) die(_("revision walk setup failed")); commit_count = 0; tag_count = 0; blob_count = 0; tree_count = 0;
Let’s start by calling just the unfiltered walk and reporting our counts.
Complete your implementation of walken_object_walk()
.
We’ll also need to include the list-objects.h
header.
#include "list-objects.h" ... traverse_commit_list(rev, walken_show_commit, walken_show_object, NULL); printf("commits %d\nblobs %d\ntags %d\ntrees %d\n", commit_count, blob_count, tag_count, tree_count); }
Note
|
This output is intended to be machine-parsed. Therefore, we are not
sending it to trace_printf() , and we are not localizing it - we need scripts
to be able to count on the formatting to be exactly the way it is shown here.
If we were intending this output to be read by humans, we would need to localize
it with _() .
|
Finally, we’ll ask cmd_walken()
to use the object walk instead. Discussing
command line options is out of scope for this tutorial, so we’ll just hardcode
a branch we can change at compile time. Where you call final_rev_info_setup()
and walken_commit_walk()
, instead branch like so:
if (1) { add_head_to_pending(&rev); walken_object_walk(&rev); } else { final_rev_info_setup(argc, argv, prefix, &rev); walken_commit_walk(&rev); }
Note
|
For simplicity, we’ve avoided all the filters and sorts we applied in
final_rev_info_setup() and simply added HEAD to our pending queue. If you
want, you can certainly use the filters we added before by moving
final_rev_info_setup() out of the conditional and removing the call to
add_head_to_pending() .
|
Now we can try to run our command! It should take noticeably longer than the commit walk, but an examination of the output will give you an idea why. Your output should look similar to this example, but with different counts:
Object walk completed. Found 55733 commits, 100274 blobs, 0 tags, and 104210 trees.
This makes sense. We have more trees than commits because the Git project has
lots of subdirectories which can change, plus at least one tree per commit. We
have no tags because we started on a commit (HEAD
) and while tags can point to
commits, commits can’t point to tags.
Note
|
You will have different counts when you run this yourself! The number of objects grows along with the Git project. |
Adding a Filter
There are a handful of filters that we can apply to the object walk laid out in
Documentation/rev-list-options.txt
. These filters are typically useful for
operations such as creating packfiles or performing a partial clone. They are
defined in list-objects-filter-options.h
. For the purposes of this tutorial we
will use the "tree:1" filter, which causes the walk to omit all trees and blobs
which are not directly referenced by commits reachable from the commit in
pending
when the walk begins. (pending
is the list of objects which need to
be traversed during a walk; you can imagine a breadth-first tree traversal to
help understand. In our case, that means we omit trees and blobs not directly
referenced by HEAD
or HEAD
's history, because we begin the walk with only
HEAD
in the pending
list.)
For now, we are not going to track the omitted objects, so we’ll replace those
parameters with NULL
. For the sake of simplicity, we’ll add a simple
build-time branch to use our filter or not. Preface the line calling
traverse_commit_list()
with the following, which will remind us which kind of
walk we’ve just performed:
if (0) { /* Unfiltered: */ trace_printf(_("Unfiltered object walk.\n")); } else { trace_printf( _("Filtered object walk with filterspec 'tree:1'.\n")); parse_list_objects_filter(&rev->filter, "tree:1"); } traverse_commit_list(rev, walken_show_commit, walken_show_object, NULL);
The rev->filter
member is usually built directly from a command
line argument, so the module provides an easy way to build one from a string.
Even though we aren’t taking user input right now, we can still build one with
a hardcoded string using parse_list_objects_filter()
.
With the filter spec "tree:1", we are expecting to see only the root tree for
each commit; therefore, the tree object count should be less than or equal to
the number of commits. (For an example of why that’s true: git commit --revert
points to the same tree object as its grandparent.)
Counting Omitted Objects
We also have the capability to enumerate all objects which were omitted by a
filter, like with git log --filter=<spec> --filter-print-omitted
. To do this,
change traverse_commit_list()
to traverse_commit_list_filtered()
, which is
able to populate an omitted
list. Asking for this list of filtered objects
may cause performance degradations, however, because in this case, despite
filtering objects, the possibly much larger set of all reachable objects must
be processed in order to populate that list.
First, add the struct oidset
and related items we will use to iterate it:
#include "oidset.h" ... static void walken_object_walk( ... struct oidset omitted; struct oidset_iter oit; struct object_id *oid = NULL; int omitted_count = 0; oidset_init(&omitted, 0); ...
Replace the call to traverse_commit_list()
with
traverse_commit_list_filtered()
and pass a pointer to the omitted
oidset
defined and initialized above:
... traverse_commit_list_filtered(rev, walken_show_commit, walken_show_object, NULL, &omitted); ...
Then, after your traversal, the oidset
traversal is pretty straightforward.
Count all the objects within and modify the print statement:
/* Count the omitted objects. */ oidset_iter_init(&omitted, &oit); while ((oid = oidset_iter_next(&oit))) omitted_count++; printf("commits %d\nblobs %d\ntags %d\ntrees %d\nomitted %d\n", commit_count, blob_count, tag_count, tree_count, omitted_count);
By running your walk with and without the filter, you should find that the total
object count in each case is identical. You can also time each invocation of
the walken
subcommand, with and without omitted
being passed in, to confirm
to yourself the runtime impact of tracking all omitted objects.
Changing the Order
Finally, let’s demonstrate that you can also reorder walks of all objects, not
just walks of commits. First, we’ll make our handlers chattier - modify
walken_show_commit()
and walken_show_object()
to print the object as they
go:
#include "hex.h" ... static void walken_show_commit(struct commit *cmt, void *buf) { trace_printf("commit: %s\n", oid_to_hex(&cmt->object.oid)); commit_count++; } static void walken_show_object(struct object *obj, const char *str, void *buf) { trace_printf("%s: %s\n", type_name(obj->type), oid_to_hex(&obj->oid)); ... }
Note
|
Since we will be examining this output directly as humans, we’ll use
trace_printf() here. Additionally, since this change introduces a significant
number of printed lines, using trace_printf() will allow us to easily silence
those lines without having to recompile.
|
(Leave the counter increment logic in place.)
With only that change, run again (but save yourself some scrollback):
$ GIT_TRACE=1 ./bin-wrappers/git walken 2>&1 | head -n 10
Take a look at the top commit with git show
and the object ID you printed; it
should be the same as the output of git show HEAD
.
Next, let’s change a setting on our struct rev_info
within
walken_object_walk()
. Find where you’re changing the other settings on rev
,
such as rev->tree_objects
and rev->tree_blobs_in_commit_order
, and add the
reverse
setting at the bottom:
... rev->tree_objects = 1; rev->blob_objects = 1; rev->tag_objects = 1; rev->tree_blobs_in_commit_order = 1; rev->reverse = 1; ...
Now, run again, but this time, let’s grab the last handful of objects instead of the first handful:
$ make $ GIT_TRACE=1 ./bin-wrappers/git walken 2>&1 | tail -n 10
The last commit object given should have the same OID as the one we saw at the
top before, and running git show <oid>
with that OID should give you again
the same results as git show HEAD
. Furthermore, if you run and examine the
first ten lines again (with head
instead of tail
like we did before applying
the reverse
setting), you should see that now the first commit printed is the
initial commit, e83c5163
.
Wrapping Up
Let’s review. In this tutorial, we:
-
Built a commit walk from the ground up
-
Enabled a grep filter for that commit walk
-
Changed the sort order of that filtered commit walk
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Built an object walk (tags, commits, trees, and blobs) from the ground up
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Learned how to add a filter-spec to an object walk
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Changed the display order of the filtered object walk