Re: [RFC v3] cat-file: add a --stdin-cmd mode
From: Taylor Blau <hidden>
Date: 2022-02-01 20:14:10
Subsystem:
the rest · Maintainer:
Linus Torvalds
On Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 02:27:54PM -0500, John Cai wrote:
On 1 Feb 2022, at 12:52, Taylor Blau wrote:quoted
I'm not sure that I've seen a response along the lines of "we need to control when the output stream is flushed in order to do ..." yet, but I would be interested to see one before moving too much further ahead of where we already are.This would be useful when there is another process A interacting with a long running git cat-file process B that is retrieving object information from the odb interactively but also wants to use --buffer mode.
Let me try and repeat my understanding of what you said to make sure
that I fully grok the use-case you have in mind.
You have a repository and want to have a long-running `git cat-file`
process that can serve multiple requests. Because the processes which
interact with your long-running `cat-file` may ask for many objects, you
don't want to flush the output buffer after each object, and so would
ideally like to use `--buffer`.
But that doesn't quite work, since the `cat-file` process may not have
decided to flush its output buffer even when process A is about to go
away.
I wonder about the viability of accomplishing this via a signal handler,
i.e., that `cat-file` would call fflush(2) whenever it receives e.g.,
SIGUSR1. A couple of possible downsides:
- SIGUSR1 doesn't exist on Windows AFAIK.
- There are definitely going to be synchrony issues to contend with.
What happens if we receive our signal while writing to the output
stream? I think you would just need to mark a variable that
indicates we should flush after finishing serving the current
request, but I haven't thought too hard about it.
So maybe a signal isn't the way to go. But I don't think `--stdin-cmd`
is the simplest approach either. At the very least, I don't totally
understand your plan after implementing a flush command. You mention
that it would be nice to implement other commands, but I'm not totally
convinced by your examples[1].
I wonder if we could strike a middle ground, which might look like `git
cat-file --batch --buffer`, and just feeding it something which we know
for certain isn't an object identifier. In other words, what if we
did something as simple as:
--- >8 ---
diff --git a/builtin/cat-file.c b/builtin/cat-file.c
index d94050e6c1..bae162fc18 100644
--- a/builtin/cat-file.c
+++ b/builtin/cat-file.c@@ -595,6 +595,11 @@ static int batch_objects(struct batch_options *opt) warn_on_object_refname_ambiguity = 0; while (strbuf_getline(&input, stdin) != EOF) { + if (!strcmp("<flush>", input.buf)) { + fflush(stdout); + continue; + } + if (data.split_on_whitespace) { /* * Split at first whitespace, tying off the beginning --- 8< ---
On the other hand, something even hackier than the above is that we
flush stdout whenever we get a request to print an object which could
not be found. So if you feed a single "\n" to your `cat-file` process,
you'll get " missing" on its output, and the buffer will immediately be
flushed.
I'm not sure that I'd recommend relying on that behavior exactly, but if
you're looking for a short-term solution, it might work ;).
Thanks,
Taylor
[1]: One that comes to mind is changing the output format mid-stream.
But how often does it really make sense to change the output
format? I can understand wanting to flush at the end asking
cat-file for a bunch of objects, but I don't see how you would want
to change the output format often enough that shaving off Git's
negligible startup cost is worthwhile (or couldn't be accomplished
by just spawning another cat-file process and using that).