Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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In the change to the backing structure of attribute sets, the
requirement to manually balance the capacity of the structure went
away.
This is a) because Abseil's data structures manage this on their own,
and b) because the new Bindings class is allocated using `new (GC)`
rather than writing into a predefined memory area.
As part of this change functions related to the capacity were
deprecated and set to 0 values, which in turn caused the creation of
new attribute sets to return the same (mutable!) default value in
various cases, leading to "side effects" that caused evaluation
failures.
FWIW, I'm not sure if this optimisation had noticeable performance
impact, but while untangling libexpr it definitely doesn't help trying
to follow what it's doing - so bye, bye!
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Reading more through the old code, it seems like the intention
/sometimes/ is to replace values.
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This is closer to bug-for-bug compatibility with the previous version,
which would put new elements at the end of the array and (due to the
linear scan) return previous ones.
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EvalState::allocBindings had little to do with Bindings, other than
returning them, and didn't belong in that class.
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This function does nothing anymore since the attributes are always
in-order.
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The new attribute set API uses the iterators of the btree_map
directly. This requires changes in various files because the internals
of libexpr are very entangled.
This code runs and compiles, but there is a bug causing empty
attribute sets to be assigned incorrectly.
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Instead of using a custom Args* iterator, use the one belonging to the
map type directly.
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Instead of doing some sort of inline merge-sort of the two attribute
sets, use the attribute sets merge function.
This commit alone does not build and is not supposed to.
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This is the first step towards replacing the implementation of
attribute sets with an absl::btree_map.
Currently many access are done using array offsets and pointer
arithmetic, so this change is currently causing Nix to fail in various
ways.
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This last change set was generated by a full clang-tidy run (including
compilation):
clang-tidy -p ~/projects/nix-build/ \
-checks=-*,readability-braces-around-statements -fix src/*/*.cc
Actually running clang-tidy requires some massaging to make it play
nice with Nix + meson, I'll be adding a wrapper or something for that soon.
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Reformatted with:
fd . -e hh -e cc | xargs clang-format -i
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git-subtree-dir: third_party/nix
git-subtree-mainline: cf8cd640c1adf74a3706efbcb0ea4625da106fb2
git-subtree-split: be66c7a6b24e3c3c6157fd37b86c7203d14acf10
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