In e704fc7978 (pack-objects: introduce pack.allowPackReuse, 2019-12-18),
the `pack.allowPackReuse` configuration option was introduced, allowing
users to disable the pack reuse mechanism.
To prepare for debugging multi-pack reuse, allow setting configuration
to "single" in addition to the usual bool-or-int values.
"single" implies the same behavior as "true", "1", "yes", and so on. But
it will complement a new "multi" value (to be introduced in a future
commit). When set to "single", we will only perform pack reuse on a
single pack, regardless of whether or not there are multiple MIDX'd
packs.
This requires no code changes (yet), since we only support single pack
reuse.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
As part of the multi-pack reuse effort, we will want to add some tests
that assert that we reused a certain number of objects from a certain
number of packs.
We could do this by grepping through the stderr output of
`pack-objects`, but doing so would be brittle in case the output format
changed.
Instead, let's use the trace2 mechanism to log various pieces of
information about the generated packfile, which we can then use to
compare against desired values.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In addition to including the number of objects reused verbatim from a
reuse-pack, include the number of packs from which objects were reused.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The function `write_reused_pack_verbatim()` within
`builtin/pack-objects.c` is responsible for writing out a continuous
set of objects beginning at the start of the reuse packfile.
In the existing implementation, we did something like:
while (pos < reuse_packfile_bitmap->word_alloc &&
reuse_packfile_bitmap->words[pos] == (eword_t)~0)
pos++;
if (pos)
/* write first `pos * BITS_IN_WORD` objects from pack */
as an optimization to record a single chunk for the longest continuous
prefix of objects wanted out of the reuse pack, instead of having a
chunk for each individual object. For more details, see bb514de356
(pack-objects: improve partial packfile reuse, 2019-12-18).
In order to retain this optimization in a multi-pack reuse world, we can
no longer assume that the first object in a pack is on a word boundary
in the bitmap storing the set of reusable objects.
Assuming that all objects from the beginning of the reuse packfile up to
the object corresponding to the first bit on a word boundary are part of
the result, consume whole words at a time until the last whole word
belonging to the reuse packfile. Copy those objects to the resulting
packfile, and track that we reused them by recording a single chunk.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The function `write_reused_pack()` within `builtin/pack-objects.c` is
responsible for performing pack-reuse on a single pack, and has two main
functions:
- it dispatches a call to `write_reused_pack_verbatim()` to see if we
can reuse portions of the packfile in whole-word chunks
- for any remaining objects (that is, any objects that appear after
the first "gap" in the bitmap), call write_reused_pack_one() on that
object to record it for reuse.
Prepare this function for multi-pack reuse by removing the assumption
that the bit position corresponding to the first object being reused
from a given pack must be at bit position zero.
The changes in this function are mostly straightforward. Initialize `i`
to the position of the first word to contain bits corresponding to that
reuse pack. In most situations, we throw the initialized value away,
since we end up replacing it with the return value from
write_reused_pack_verbatim(), moving us past the section of whole words
that we reused.
Likewise, modify the per-object loop to ignore any bits at the beginning
of the first word that do not belong to the pack currently being reused,
as well as skip to the "done" section once we have processed the last
bit corresponding to this pack.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Further prepare pack-objects to perform verbatim pack-reuse over
multiple packfiles by converting functions that take in a pointer to a
`struct packed_git` to instead take in a pointer to a `struct
bitmapped_pack`.
The additional information found in the bitmapped_pack struct (such as
the bit position corresponding to the beginning of the pack) will be
necessary in order to perform verbatim pack-reuse.
Note that we don't use any of the extra pieces of information contained
in the bitmapped_pack struct, so this step is merely preparatory and
does not introduce any functional changes.
Note further that we do not change the argument type to
write_reused_pack_one(). That function is responsible for copying
sections of the packfile directly and optionally patching any OFS_DELTAs
to account for not reusing sections of the packfile in between a delta
and its base.
As such, that function is (and should remain) oblivious to multi-pack
reuse, and does not require any of the extra pieces of information
stored in the bitmapped_pack struct.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When reusing objects from a pack, we keep track of a set of one or more
`reused_chunk`s, corresponding to sections of one or more object(s) from
a source pack that we are reusing. Each chunk contains two pieces of
information:
- the offset of the first object in the source pack (relative to the
beginning of the source pack)
- the difference between that offset, and the corresponding offset in
the pack we're generating
The purpose of keeping track of these is so that we can patch an
OFS_DELTAs that cross over a section of the reuse pack that we didn't
take.
For instance, consider a hypothetical pack as shown below:
(chunk #2)
__________...
/
/
+--------+---------+-------------------+---------+
... | <base> | <other> | (unused) | <delta> | ...
+--------+---------+-------------------+---------+
\ /
\______________/
(chunk #1)
Suppose that we are sending objects "base", "other", and "delta", and
that the "delta" object is stored as an OFS_DELTA, and that its base is
"base". If we don't send any objects in the "(unused)" range, we can't
copy the delta'd object directly, since its delta offset includes a
range of the pack that we didn't copy, so we have to account for that
difference when patching and reassembling the delta.
In order to compute this value correctly, we need to know not only where
we are in the packfile we're assembling (with `hashfile_total(f)`) but
also the position of the first byte of the packfile that we are
currently reusing. Currently, this works just fine, since when reusing
only a single pack those two values are always identical (because
verbatim reuse is the first thing pack-objects does when enabled after
writing the pack header).
But when reusing multiple packs which have one or more gaps, we'll need
to account for these two values diverging.
Together, these two allow us to compute the reused chunk's offset
difference relative to the start of the reused pack, as desired.
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The routines pack-objects uses to perform verbatim pack-reuse are:
- write_reused_pack_one()
- write_reused_pack_verbatim()
- write_reused_pack()
, all of which assume that there is exactly one packfile being reused:
the global constant `reuse_packfile`.
Prepare for reusing objects from multiple packs by making reuse packfile
a parameter of each of the above functions in preparation for calling
these functions in a loop with multiple packfiles.
Note that we still have the global "reuse_packfile", but pass it through
each of the above function's parameter lists, eliminating all but one
direct access (the top-level caller in `write_pack_file()`). Even after
this series, we will still have a global, but it will hold the array of
reusable packfiles, and we'll pass them one at a time to these functions
in a loop.
Note also that we will eventually need to pass a `bitmapped_pack`
instead of a `packed_git` in order to hold onto additional information
required for reuse (such as the bit position of the first object
belonging to that pack). But that change will be made in a future commit
so as to minimize the noise below as much as possible.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Further prepare for enabling verbatim pack-reuse over multiple packfiles
by changing the signature of reuse_partial_packfile_from_bitmap() to
populate an array of `struct bitmapped_pack *`'s instead of a pointer to
a single packfile.
Since the array we're filling out is sized dynamically[^1], add an
additional `size_t *` parameter which will hold the number of reusable
packs (equal to the number of elements in the array).
Note that since we still have not implemented true multi-pack reuse,
these changes aren't propagated out to the rest of the caller in
builtin/pack-objects.c.
In the interim state, we expect that the array has a single element, and
we use that element to fill out the static `reuse_packfile` variable
(which is a bog-standard `struct packed_git *`). Future commits will
continue to push this change further out through the pack-objects code.
[^1]: That is, even though we know the number of packs which are
candidates for pack-reuse, we do not know how many of those
candidates we can actually reuse.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The signature of `reuse_partial_packfile_from_bitmap()` currently takes
in a bitmap, as well as three output parameters (filled through
pointers, and passed as arguments), and also returns an integer result.
The output parameters are filled out with: (a) the packfile used for
pack-reuse, (b) the number of objects from that pack that we can reuse,
and (c) a bitmap indicating which objects we can reuse. The return value
is either -1 (when there are no objects to reuse), or 0 (when there is
at least one object to reuse).
Some of these parameters are redundant. Notably, we can infer from the
bitmap how many objects are reused by calling bitmap_popcount(). And we
can similar compute the return value based on that number as well.
As such, clean up the signature of this function to drop the "*entries"
parameter, as well as the int return value, since the single caller of
this function can infer these values themself.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The pack-objects internals use a packing_data struct to track what
objects are part of the pack(s) being formed.
Since these structures contain allocated fields, failing to
appropriately free() them results in a leak. Plug that leak by
introducing a clear_packing_data() function, and call it in the
appropriate spots.
This is a fairly straightforward leak to plug, since none of the callers
expect to read any values or have any references to parts of the address
space being freed.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git rebase --autosquash" is now enabled for non-interactive rebase,
but it is still incompatible with the apply backend.
* ak/rebase-autosquash:
rebase: rewrite --(no-)autosquash documentation
rebase: support --autosquash without -i
rebase: fully ignore rebase.autoSquash without -i
"git for-each-ref --no-sort" still sorted the refs alphabetically
which paid non-trivial cost. It has been redefined to show output
in an unspecified order, to allow certain optimizations to take
advantage of.
* vd/for-each-ref-unsorted-optimization:
t/perf: add perf tests for for-each-ref
ref-filter.c: use peeled tag for '*' format fields
for-each-ref: clean up documentation of --format
ref-filter.c: filter & format refs in the same callback
ref-filter.c: refactor to create common helper functions
ref-filter.c: rename 'ref_filter_handler()' to 'filter_one()'
ref-filter.h: add functions for filter/format & format-only
ref-filter.h: move contains caches into filter
ref-filter.h: add max_count and omit_empty to ref_format
ref-filter.c: really don't sort when using --no-sort
"git format-patch --encode-email-headers" ignored the option when
preparing the cover letter, which has been corrected.
* ss/format-patch-use-encode-headers-for-cover-letter:
format-patch: fix ignored encode_email_headers for cover letter
"git add" and "git stash" learned to support the ":(attr:...)"
magic pathspec.
* jw/git-add-attr-pathspec:
attr: enable attr pathspec magic for git-add and git-stash
Add two new public methods to 'ref-filter.h':
* 'print_formatted_ref_array()' which, given a format specification & array
of ref items, formats and prints the items to stdout.
* 'filter_and_format_refs()' which combines 'filter_refs()',
'ref_array_sort()', and 'print_formatted_ref_array()' into a single
function.
This consolidates much of the code used to filter and format refs in
'builtin/for-each-ref.c', 'builtin/tag.c', and 'builtin/branch.c', reducing
duplication and simplifying the future changes needed to optimize the filter
& format process.
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add an internal 'array_opts' struct to 'struct ref_format' containing
formatting options that pertain to the formatting of an entire ref array:
'max_count' and 'omit_empty'. These values are specified by the '--count'
and '--omit-empty' options, respectively, to 'for-each-ref'/'tag'/'branch'.
Storing these values in the 'ref_format' will simplify the consolidation of
ref array formatting logic across builtins in later patches.
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When '--no-sort' is passed to 'for-each-ref', 'tag', and 'branch', the
printed refs are still sorted by ascending refname. Change the handling of
sort options in these commands so that '--no-sort' to truly disables
sorting.
'--no-sort' does not disable sorting in these commands is because their
option parsing does not distinguish between "the absence of '--sort'"
(and/or values for tag.sort & branch.sort) and '--no-sort'. Both result in
an empty 'sorting_options' string list, which is parsed by
'ref_sorting_options()' to create the 'struct ref_sorting *' for the
command. If the string list is empty, 'ref_sorting_options()' interprets
that as "the absence of '--sort'" and returns the default ref sorting
structure (equivalent to "refname" sort).
To handle '--no-sort' properly while preserving the "refname" sort in the
"absence of --sort'" case, first explicitly add "refname" to the string list
*before* parsing options. This alone doesn't actually change any behavior,
since 'compare_refs()' already falls back on comparing refnames if two refs
are equal w.r.t all other sort keys.
Now that the string list is populated by default, '--no-sort' is the only
way to empty the 'sorting_options' string list. Update
'ref_sorting_options()' to return a NULL 'struct ref_sorting *' if the
string list is empty, and add a condition to 'ref_array_sort()' to skip the
sort altogether if the sort structure is NULL. Note that other functions
using 'struct ref_sorting *' do not need any changes because they already
ignore NULL values.
Finally, remove the condition around sorting in 'ls-remote', since it's no
longer necessary. Unlike 'for-each-ref' et. al., it does *not* do any
sorting by default. This default is preserved by simply leaving its sort key
string list empty before parsing options; if no additional sort keys are
set, 'struct ref_sorting *' is NULL and sorting is skipped.
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The rebase --autosquash option is quietly ignored when used without
--interactive (apart from preventing preemptive fast-forwarding and
triggering conflicts with apply backend options).
Change that to support --autosquash without --interactive, by dropping
its restriction to REBASE_INTERACTIVE_EXCPLICIT mode. When used this
way, auto-squashing is done without opening the todo list editor.
Drop the -i requirement from the --autosquash description, and amend
t3415-rebase-autosquash.sh to test the option and the rebase.autoSquash
config variable with and without -i.
Signed-off-by: Andy Koppe <andy.koppe@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Setting the rebase.autoSquash config variable to true implies a couple
of restrictions: it prevents preemptive fast-forwarding and it triggers
conflicts with apply backend options. However, it only actually results
in auto-squashing when combined with the --interactive (or -i) option,
due to code in run_specific_rebase() that disables auto-squashing unless
the REBASE_INTERACTIVE_EXPLICIT flag is set.
Doing autosquashing for rebase.autoSquash without --interactive would be
problematic in terms of backward compatibility, but conversely, there is
no need for the aforementioned restrictions without --interactive.
So drop the options.config_autosquash check from the conditions for
clearing allow_preemptive_ff, as the case where it is combined with
--interactive is already covered by the REBASE_INTERACTIVE_EXPLICIT
flag check above it.
Also drop the "apply options are incompatible with rebase.autoSquash"
error, because it is unreachable if it is restricted to --interactive,
as apply options already cause an error when used with --interactive.
Drop the tests for the error from t3422-rebase-incompatible-options.sh,
which has separate tests for the conflicts of --interactive with apply
options.
When neither --autosquash nor --no-autosquash are given, only set
options.autosquash to true if rebase.autosquash is combined with
--interactive.
Don't initialize options.config_autosquash to -1, as there is no need to
distinguish between rebase.autoSquash being unset or explicitly set to
false.
Finally, amend the rebase.autoSquash documentation to say it only
affects interactive mode.
Signed-off-by: Andy Koppe <andy.koppe@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When writing the cover letter, the encode_email_headers option was
ignored. That is, UTF-8 subject lines and email addresses were
written out as-is, without any Q-encoding, even if
--encode-email-headers was passed on the command line.
This is due to encode_email_headers not being copied over from
struct rev_info to struct pretty_print_context. Fix that and add
a test.
Signed-off-by: Simon Ser <contact@emersion.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git merge-file" learns a mode to read three contents to be merged
from blob objects.
* bc/merge-file-object-input:
merge-file: add an option to process object IDs
git-merge-file doc: drop "-file" from argument placeholders
"git rev-list --missing" did not work for missing commit objects,
which has been corrected.
* kn/rev-list-missing-fix:
rev-list: add commit object support in `--missing` option
rev-list: move `show_commit()` to the bottom
revision: rename bit to `do_not_die_on_missing_objects`
Teach "git show-ref" a mode to check the existence of a ref.
* ps/show-ref:
t: use git-show-ref(1) to check for ref existence
builtin/show-ref: add new mode to check for reference existence
builtin/show-ref: explicitly spell out different modes in synopsis
builtin/show-ref: ensure mutual exclusiveness of subcommands
builtin/show-ref: refactor options for patterns subcommand
builtin/show-ref: stop using global vars for `show_one()`
builtin/show-ref: stop using global variable to count matches
builtin/show-ref: refactor `--exclude-existing` options
builtin/show-ref: fix dead code when passing patterns
builtin/show-ref: fix leaking string buffer
builtin/show-ref: split up different subcommands
builtin/show-ref: convert pattern to a local variable
"git bugreport" learned to complain when it received a command line
argument that it will not use.
* es/bugreport-no-extra-arg:
bugreport: reject positional arguments
t0091-bugreport: stop using i18ngrep
"git reflog expire --single-worktree" has been broken for the past
20 months or so, which has been corrected.
* rs/reflog-expire-single-worktree-fix:
reflog: fix expire --single-worktree
"cd sub && git grep -f patterns" tried to read "patterns" file at
the top level of the working tree; it has been corrected to read
"sub/patterns" instead.
* jc/grep-f-relative-to-cwd:
grep: -f <path> is relative to $cwd
Allow users to limit or exclude files based on file attributes
during git-add and git-stash.
For example, the chromium project would like to use
$ git add . ':(exclude,attr:submodule)'
as submodules are managed by an external tool, forbidding end users
to record changes with "git add". Allowing "git add" to often
records changes that users do not want in their commits.
This commit does not change any attr magic implementation. It is
only adding attr as an allowed pathspec in git-add and git-stash,
which was previously blocked by GUARD_PATHSPEC and a pathspec mask
in parse_pathspec()).
However, we fix a bug in prefix_magic() where attr values were
unintentionally removed. This was triggerable when parse_pathspec()
is called with PATHSPEC_PREFIX_ORIGIN as a flag, which was the case
for git-stash (Bug originally filed here [*])
Furthermore, while other commands hit this code path it did not
result in unexpected behavior because this bug only impacts the
pathspec->items->original field which is NOT used to filter
paths. However, git-stash does use pathspec->items->original when
building args used to call other git commands. (See add_pathspecs()
usage and implementation in stash.c)
It is possible that when the attr pathspec feature was first added
in b0db704652 (pathspec: allow querying for attributes, 2017-03-13),
"PATHSPEC_ATTR" was just unintentionally left out of a few
GUARD_PATHSPEC() invocations.
Later, to get a more user-friendly error message when attr was used
with git-add, PATHSPEC_ATTR was added as a mask to git-add's
invocation of parse_pathspec() 84d938b732 (add: do not accept
pathspec magic 'attr', 2018-09-18). However, this user-friendly
error message was never added for git-stash.
[Reference]
* https://lore.kernel.org/git/CAMmZTi-0QKtj7Q=sbC5qhipGsQxJFOY-Qkk1jfkRYwfF5FcUVg@mail.gmail.com/)
Signed-off-by: Joanna Wang <jojwang@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Update "git maintainance" timers' implementation based on systemd
timers to work with WSL.
* js/systemd-timers-wsl-fix:
maintenance(systemd): support the Windows Subsystem for Linux
"git grep -e A --no-or -e B" is accepted, even though the negation
of "or" did not mean anything, which has been tightened.
* rs/grep-no-no-or:
grep: reject --no-or
"git diff --no-such-option" and other corner cases around the exit
status of the "diff" command has been corrected.
* jk/diff-result-code-cleanup:
diff: drop useless "status" parameter from diff_result_code()
diff: drop useless return values in git-diff helpers
diff: drop useless return from run_diff_{files,index} functions
diff: die when failing to read index in git-diff builtin
diff: show usage for unknown builtin_diff_files() options
diff-files: avoid negative exit value
diff: spell DIFF_INDEX_CACHED out when calling run_diff_index()
transfer.unpackLimit ought to be used as a fallback, but overrode
fetch.unpackLimit and receive.unpackLimit instead.
* ts/unpacklimit-config-fix:
transfer.unpackLimit: fetch/receive.unpackLimit takes precedence
git merge-file knows how to merge files on the file system already. It
would be helpful, however, to allow it to also merge single blobs.
Teach it an `--object-id` option which means that its arguments are
object IDs and not files to allow it to do so.
We handle the empty blob specially since read_mmblob doesn't read it
directly and otherwise users cannot specify an empty ancestor.
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <bk2204@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While we have multiple ways to show the value of a given reference, we
do not have any way to check whether a reference exists at all. While
commands like git-rev-parse(1) or git-show-ref(1) can be used to check
for reference existence in case the reference resolves to something
sane, neither of them can be used to check for existence in some other
scenarios where the reference does not resolve cleanly:
- References which have an invalid name cannot be resolved.
- References to nonexistent objects cannot be resolved.
- Dangling symrefs can be resolved via git-symbolic-ref(1), but this
requires the caller to special case existence checks depending on
whether or not a reference is symbolic or direct.
Furthermore, git-rev-list(1) and other commands do not let the caller
distinguish easily between an actually missing reference and a generic
error.
Taken together, this seems like sufficient motivation to introduce a
separate plumbing command to explicitly check for the existence of a
reference without trying to resolve its contents.
This new command comes in the form of `git show-ref --exists`. This
new mode will exit successfully when the reference exists, with a
specific exit code of 2 when it does not exist, or with 1 when there
has been a generic error.
Note that the only way to properly implement this command is by using
the internal `refs_read_raw_ref()` function. While the public function
`refs_resolve_ref_unsafe()` can be made to behave in the same way by
passing various flags, it does not provide any way to obtain the errno
with which the reference backend failed when reading the reference. As
such, it becomes impossible for us to distinguish generic errors from
the explicit case where the reference wasn't found.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The synopsis treats the `--verify` and the implicit mode the same. They
are slightly different though:
- They accept different sets of flags.
- The implicit mode accepts patterns while the `--verify` mode
accepts references.
Split up the synopsis for these two modes such that we can disambiguate
those differences.
While at it, drop "--quiet" from the pattern mode's synopsis. It does
not make a lot of sense to list patterns, but squelch the listing output
itself. The description for "--quiet" is adapted accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The git-show-ref(1) command has three different modes, of which one is
implicit and the other two can be chosen explicitly by passing a flag.
But while these modes are standalone and cause us to execute completely
separate code paths, we gladly accept the case where a user asks for
both `--exclude-existing` and `--verify` at the same time even though it
is not obvious what will happen. Spoiler: we ignore `--verify` and
execute the `--exclude-existing` mode.
Let's explicitly detect this invalid usage and die in case both modes
were requested.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The patterns subcommand is the last command that still uses global
variables to track its options. Convert it to use a structure instead
with the same motivation as preceding commits.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The `show_one()` function implicitly receives a bunch of options which
are tracked via global variables. This makes it hard to see which
subcommands of git-show-ref(1) actually make use of these options.
Introduce a `show_one_options` structure that gets passed down to this
function. This allows us to get rid of more global state and makes it
more explicit which subcommands use those options.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When passing patterns to git-show-ref(1) we're checking whether any
reference matches -- if none do, we indicate this condition via an
unsuccessful exit code.
We're using a global variable to count these matches, which is required
because the counter is getting incremented in a callback function. But
now that we have the `struct show_ref_data` in place, we can get rid of
the global variable and put the counter in there instead.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>