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-rwxr-xr-xthird_party/git/t/t5316-pack-delta-depth.sh97
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 97 deletions
diff --git a/third_party/git/t/t5316-pack-delta-depth.sh b/third_party/git/t/t5316-pack-delta-depth.sh
deleted file mode 100755
index 0f06c40eb1..0000000000
--- a/third_party/git/t/t5316-pack-delta-depth.sh
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,97 +0,0 @@
-#!/bin/sh
-
-test_description='pack-objects breaks long cross-pack delta chains'
-. ./test-lib.sh
-
-# This mirrors a repeated push setup:
-#
-# 1. A client repeatedly modifies some files, makes a
-#      commit, and pushes the result. It does this N times
-#      before we get around to repacking.
-#
-# 2. Each push generates a thin pack with the new version of
-#    various objects. Let's consider some file in the root tree
-#    which is updated in each commit.
-#
-#    When generating push number X, we feed commit X-1 (and
-#    thus blob X-1) as a preferred base. The resulting pack has
-#    blob X as a thin delta against blob X-1.
-#
-#    On the receiving end, "index-pack --fix-thin" will
-#    complete the pack with a base copy of blob X-1.
-#
-# 3. In older versions of git, if we used the delta from
-#    pack X, then we'd always find blob X-1 as a base in the
-#    same pack (and generate a fresh delta).
-#
-#    But with the pack mru, we jump from delta to delta
-#    following the traversal order:
-#
-#      a. We grab blob X from pack X as a delta, putting it at
-#         the tip of our mru list.
-#
-#      b. Eventually we move onto commit X-1. We need other
-#         objects which are only in pack X-1 (in the test code
-#         below, it's the containing tree). That puts pack X-1
-#         at the tip of our mru list.
-#
-#      c. Eventually we look for blob X-1, and we find the
-#         version in pack X-1 (because it's the mru tip).
-#
-# Now we have blob X as a delta against X-1, which is a delta
-# against X-2, and so forth.
-#
-# In the real world, these small pushes would get exploded by
-# unpack-objects rather than "index-pack --fix-thin", but the
-# same principle applies to larger pushes (they only need one
-# repeatedly-modified file to generate the delta chain).
-
-test_expect_success 'create series of packs' '
-	test-tool genrandom foo 4096 >content &&
-	prev= &&
-	for i in $(test_seq 1 10)
-	do
-		cat content >file &&
-		echo $i >>file &&
-		git add file &&
-		git commit -m $i &&
-		cur=$(git rev-parse HEAD^{tree}) &&
-		{
-			test -n "$prev" && echo "-$prev"
-			echo $cur
-			echo "$(git rev-parse :file) file"
-		} | git pack-objects --stdout >tmp &&
-		git index-pack --stdin --fix-thin <tmp || return 1
-		prev=$cur
-	done
-'
-
-max_chain() {
-	git index-pack --verify-stat-only "$1" >output &&
-	perl -lne '
-	  /chain length = (\d+)/ and $len = $1;
-	  END { print $len }
-	' output
-}
-
-# Note that this whole setup is pretty reliant on the current
-# packing heuristics. We double-check that our test case
-# actually produces a long chain. If it doesn't, it should be
-# adjusted (or scrapped if the heuristics have become too unreliable)
-test_expect_success 'packing produces a long delta' '
-	# Use --window=0 to make sure we are seeing reused deltas,
-	# not computing a new long chain.
-	pack=$(git pack-objects --all --window=0 </dev/null pack) &&
-	echo 9 >expect &&
-	max_chain pack-$pack.pack >actual &&
-	test_i18ncmp expect actual
-'
-
-test_expect_success '--depth limits depth' '
-	pack=$(git pack-objects --all --depth=5 </dev/null pack) &&
-	echo 5 >expect &&
-	max_chain pack-$pack.pack >actual &&
-	test_i18ncmp expect actual
-'
-
-test_done