cheat/internal/repo/gitdir.go

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3.9 KiB
Go
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package repo
import (
"fmt"
"os"
"strings"
)
// GitDir returns `true` if we are iterating over a directory contained within
// a repositories `.git` directory.
func GitDir(path string) (bool, error) {
/*
A bit of context is called for here, because this functionality has
previously caused a number of tricky, subtle bugs.
Fundamentally, here we are simply trying to avoid walking over the
contents of the `.git` directory. Doing so potentially makes
hundreds/thousands of needless syscalls, and can noticeably harm
performance on machines with slow disks.
The earliest effort to solve this problem involved simply returning
`fs.SkipDir` when the cheatsheet file path began with `.`, signifying a
hidden directory. This, however, caused two problems:
1. The `.cheat` directory was ignored
2. Cheatsheets installed by `brew` (which were by default installed to
`~/.config/cheat`) were ignored
See: https://github.com/cheat/cheat/issues/690
To remedy this, the exclusion criteria were narrowed, and the search
for a literal `.` was replaced with a search for a literal `.git`.
This, however, broke user installations that stored cheatsheets in
`git` submodules, because such an installation would contain a `.git`
file that pointed to the upstream repository.
See: https://github.com/cheat/cheat/issues/694
The next attempt at solving this was to search for a `.git` literal
string in the cheatsheet file path. If a match was not found, we would
continue to walk the directory, as before.
If a match *was* found, we determined whether `.git` referred to a file
or directory, and would only stop walking the path in the latter case.
This, however, caused crashes if a cheatpath contained a `.gitignore`
file. (Presumably, a crash would likewise occur on the presence of
`.gitattributes`, `.gitmodules`, etc.)
See: https://github.com/cheat/cheat/issues/699
Accounting for all of the above (hopefully?), the current solution is
not to search for `.git`, but `.git/` (including the directory
separator), and then only ceasing to walk the directory on a match.
To summarize, this code must account for the following possibilities:
1. A cheatpath is not a repository
2. A cheatpath is a repository
3. A cheatpath is a repository, and contains a `.git*` file
4. A cheatpath is a submodule
5. A cheatpath is a hidden directory
Care must be taken to support the above on both Unix and Windows
systems, which have different directory separators and line-endings.
There is a lot of nuance to all of this, and it would be worthwhile to
do two things to stop writing bugs here:
1. Build integration tests around all of this
2. Discard string-matching solutions entirely, and use `go-git` instead
NB: A reasonable smoke-test for ensuring that skipping is being applied
correctly is to run the following command:
make && strace ./dist/cheat -l | wc -l
That check should be run twice: once normally, and once after
commenting out the "skip" check in `sheets.Load`.
The specific line counts don't matter; what matters is that the number
of syscalls should be significantly lower with the skip check enabled.
*/
// determine if the literal string `.git` appears within `path`
pos := strings.Index(path, fmt.Sprintf(".git%s", string(os.PathSeparator)))
// if it does not, we know for certain that we are not within a `.git`
// directory.
if pos == -1 {
return false, nil
}
// If `path` does contain the string `.git`, we need to determine if we're
// inside of a `.git` directory, or if `path` points to a cheatsheet that's
// stored within a `git` submodule.
//
// See: https://github.com/cheat/cheat/issues/694
// truncate `path` to the occurrence of `.git`
f, err := os.Stat(path[:pos+5])
if err != nil {
return false, fmt.Errorf("failed to stat path %s: %v", path, err)
}
// return true or false depending on whether the truncated path is a
// directory
return f.Mode().IsDir(), nil
}