We have a global pointer pack_data pointing to the current
pack we have open. Inside end_packfile we have two new
pointers, old_p and new_p. The latter points to pack_data,
and the former points to the new "installed" version of the
packfile we get when we hand the file off to the regular
sha1_file machinery. When then free old_p.
Presumably the extra old_p pointer was there so that we
could overwrite pack_data with new_p and still free old_p,
but we don't do that. We just leave pack_data pointing to
bogus memory, and don't overwrite it until we call
start_packfile again (if ever).
This can cause problems for our die routine, which calls
end_packfile to clean things up. If we die at the wrong
moment, we can end up looking at invalid memory in
pack_data left after the last end_packfile().
Instead, let's make sure we set pack_data to NULL after we
free it, and make calling endfile() again with a NULL
pack_data a noop (there is nothing to end).
We can further make things less confusing by dropping old_p
entirely, and moving new_p closer to its point of use.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
static void end_packfile(void)
{
- struct packed_git *old_p = pack_data, *new_p;
+ if (!pack_data)
+ return;
clear_delta_base_cache();
if (object_count) {
+ struct packed_git *new_p;
unsigned char cur_pack_sha1[20];
char *idx_name;
int i;
pack_id++;
}
else {
- close(old_p->pack_fd);
- unlink_or_warn(old_p->pack_name);
+ close(pack_data->pack_fd);
+ unlink_or_warn(pack_data->pack_name);
}
- free(old_p);
+ free(pack_data);
+ pack_data = NULL;
/* We can't carry a delta across packfiles. */
strbuf_release(&last_blob.data);