view mercurial/bitmanipulation.h @ 39594:bdb41eaa8b59

snapshot: fix line order when skipping over empty deltas The code movement in 37957e07138c introduced an error. Since 8f83a953dddf, we discarded some revisions because they are identical to their delta base (and use that delta base instead). That logic is good, however, in 37957e07138c we mixed up the order of two line, adding the "new" revision to the set of already tested one, instead of the discarded one. So in practice, we were never investigating any revisions in a chain starting with an empty delta. Creating significantly worst delta chain (eg: Mercurial's manifest move goes from about 60MB up to about 80MB).
author Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
date Mon, 10 Sep 2018 10:11:21 +0200
parents 1fb2510cf8c8
children eed42f1c22d6
line wrap: on
line source

#ifndef _HG_BITMANIPULATION_H_
#define _HG_BITMANIPULATION_H_

#include <string.h>

#include "compat.h"

static inline uint32_t getbe32(const char *c)
{
	const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c;

	return ((((uint32_t)d[0]) << 24) | (((uint32_t)d[1]) << 16) |
	        (((uint32_t)d[2]) << 8) | (d[3]));
}

static inline int16_t getbeint16(const char *c)
{
	const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c;

	return ((d[0] << 8) | (d[1]));
}

static inline uint16_t getbeuint16(const char *c)
{
	const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c;

	return ((d[0] << 8) | (d[1]));
}

static inline void putbe32(uint32_t x, char *c)
{
	c[0] = (x >> 24) & 0xff;
	c[1] = (x >> 16) & 0xff;
	c[2] = (x >> 8) & 0xff;
	c[3] = (x)&0xff;
}

static inline double getbefloat64(const char *c)
{
	const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c;
	double ret;
	int i;
	uint64_t t = 0;
	for (i = 0; i < 8; i++) {
		t = (t << 8) + d[i];
	}
	memcpy(&ret, &t, sizeof(t));
	return ret;
}

#endif