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git/ls-tree.c
Linus Torvalds 6da4016aea Fix sparse warnings.
Mainly making a lot of local functions and variables be marked "static",
but there was a "zero as NULL" warning in there too.
2005-07-03 10:10:45 -07:00

248 lines
5.6 KiB
C

/*
* GIT - The information manager from hell
*
* Copyright (C) Linus Torvalds, 2005
*/
#include "cache.h"
#include "blob.h"
#include "tree.h"
static int line_termination = '\n';
#define LS_RECURSIVE 1
#define LS_TREE_ONLY 2
static int ls_options = 0;
static struct tree_entry_list root_entry;
static void prepare_root(unsigned char *sha1)
{
unsigned char rsha[20];
unsigned long size;
void *buf;
struct tree *root_tree;
buf = read_object_with_reference(sha1, "tree", &size, rsha);
free(buf);
if (!buf)
die("Could not read %s", sha1_to_hex(sha1));
root_tree = lookup_tree(rsha);
if (!root_tree)
die("Could not read %s", sha1_to_hex(sha1));
/* Prepare a fake entry */
root_entry.directory = 1;
root_entry.executable = root_entry.symlink = 0;
root_entry.mode = S_IFDIR;
root_entry.name = "";
root_entry.item.tree = root_tree;
root_entry.parent = NULL;
}
static int prepare_children(struct tree_entry_list *elem)
{
if (!elem->directory)
return -1;
if (!elem->item.tree->object.parsed) {
struct tree_entry_list *e;
if (parse_tree(elem->item.tree))
return -1;
/* Set up the parent link */
for (e = elem->item.tree->entries; e; e = e->next)
e->parent = elem;
}
return 0;
}
static struct tree_entry_list *find_entry(const char *path)
{
const char *next, *slash;
int len;
struct tree_entry_list *elem = &root_entry;
/* Find tree element, descending from root, that
* corresponds to the named path, lazily expanding
* the tree if possible.
*/
while (path) {
/* The fact we still have path means that the caller
* wants us to make sure that elem at this point is a
* directory, and possibly descend into it. Even what
* is left is just trailing slashes, we loop back to
* here, and this call to prepare_children() will
* catch elem not being a tree. Nice.
*/
if (prepare_children(elem))
return NULL;
slash = strchr(path, '/');
if (!slash) {
len = strlen(path);
next = NULL;
}
else {
next = slash + 1;
len = slash - path;
}
if (len) {
/* (len == 0) if the original path was "drivers/char/"
* and we have run already two rounds, having elem
* pointing at the drivers/char directory.
*/
elem = elem->item.tree->entries;
while (elem) {
if ((strlen(elem->name) == len) &&
!strncmp(elem->name, path, len)) {
/* found */
break;
}
elem = elem->next;
}
if (!elem)
return NULL;
}
path = next;
}
return elem;
}
static void show_entry_name(struct tree_entry_list *e)
{
/* This is yucky. The root level is there for
* our convenience but we really want to do a
* forest.
*/
if (e->parent && e->parent != &root_entry) {
show_entry_name(e->parent);
putchar('/');
}
printf("%s", e->name);
}
static const char *entry_type(struct tree_entry_list *e)
{
return (e->directory ? "tree" : "blob");
}
static const char *entry_hex(struct tree_entry_list *e)
{
return sha1_to_hex(e->directory
? e->item.tree->object.sha1
: e->item.blob->object.sha1);
}
/* forward declaration for mutually recursive routines */
static int show_entry(struct tree_entry_list *, int);
static int show_children(struct tree_entry_list *e, int level)
{
if (prepare_children(e))
die("internal error: ls-tree show_children called with non tree");
e = e->item.tree->entries;
while (e) {
show_entry(e, level);
e = e->next;
}
return 0;
}
static int show_entry(struct tree_entry_list *e, int level)
{
int err = 0;
if (e != &root_entry) {
printf("%06o %s %s ", e->mode, entry_type(e),
entry_hex(e));
show_entry_name(e);
putchar(line_termination);
}
if (e->directory) {
/* If this is a directory, we have the following cases:
* (1) This is the top-level request (explicit path from the
* command line, or "root" if there is no command line).
* a. Without any flag. We show direct children. We do not
* recurse into them.
* b. With -r. We do recurse into children.
* c. With -d. We do not recurse into children.
* (2) We came here because our caller is either (1-a) or
* (1-b).
* a. Without any flag. We do not show our children (which
* are grandchildren for the original request).
* b. With -r. We continue to recurse into our children.
* c. With -d. We should not have come here to begin with.
*/
if (level == 0 && !(ls_options & LS_TREE_ONLY))
/* case (1)-a and (1)-b */
err = err | show_children(e, level+1);
else if (level && ls_options & LS_RECURSIVE)
/* case (2)-b */
err = err | show_children(e, level+1);
}
return err;
}
static int list_one(const char *path)
{
int err = 0;
struct tree_entry_list *e = find_entry(path);
if (!e) {
/* traditionally ls-tree does not complain about
* missing path. We may change this later to match
* what "/bin/ls -a" does, which is to complain.
*/
return err;
}
err = err | show_entry(e, 0);
return err;
}
static int list(char **path)
{
int i;
int err = 0;
for (i = 0; path[i]; i++)
err = err | list_one(path[i]);
return err;
}
static const char *ls_tree_usage =
"git-ls-tree [-d] [-r] [-z] <tree-ish> [path...]";
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
static char *path0[] = { "", NULL };
char **path;
unsigned char sha1[20];
while (1 < argc && argv[1][0] == '-') {
switch (argv[1][1]) {
case 'z':
line_termination = 0;
break;
case 'r':
ls_options |= LS_RECURSIVE;
break;
case 'd':
ls_options |= LS_TREE_ONLY;
break;
default:
usage(ls_tree_usage);
}
argc--; argv++;
}
if (argc < 2)
usage(ls_tree_usage);
if (get_sha1(argv[1], sha1) < 0)
usage(ls_tree_usage);
path = (argc == 2) ? path0 : (argv + 2);
prepare_root(sha1);
if (list(path) < 0)
die("list failed");
return 0;
}