@@ -177,14 +177,12 @@ static struct combine_diff_path *emit_path(struct combine_diff_path *tail,
if (emitthis) {
int keep;
- struct combine_diff_path *pprev = tail, *p;
+ struct combine_diff_path *p;
strbuf_add(base, path, pathlen);
p = combine_diff_path_new(base->buf, base->len, mode,
oid ? oid : null_oid(),
nparent);
- tail->next = p;
- tail = p;
strbuf_setlen(base, old_baselen);
for (i = 0; i < nparent; ++i) {
@@ -220,10 +218,11 @@ static struct combine_diff_path *emit_path(struct combine_diff_path *tail,
if (opt->pathchange)
keep = opt->pathchange(opt, p);
- if (!keep) {
+ if (keep) {
+ tail->next = p;
+ tail = p;
+ } else {
free(p);
- pprev->next = NULL;
- tail = pprev;
}
}
In emit_path() we may append a new combine_diff_path entry to our list, decide that we don't want it (because opt->pathchange() told us so) and then roll it back. Between the addition and the rollback, it doesn't matter if it's in the list or not (no functions can even tell, since it's a singly-linked list and we pass around just the tail entry). So it's much simpler to just wait until opt->pathchange() tells us whether to keep it, and either attach it (or free it) then. We do still have to allocate it up front since it's that struct itself which is passed to the pathchange callback. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> --- tree-diff.c | 11 +++++------ 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)