This commit implements multiple performance improvements
to the transaction code:
- Don't process xbps_pkg_name() N times each time we access
its package dictionary (via pkgdb or rpool), just do it once
at xbps_pkgdb_init() time. At pkgdb init time, it just creates
a property in pkgdb, "pkgname". At rpool time, each time a
package is accessed, the "pkgname" string property is added.
- The package transaction dictionary contains the "transaction"
object to know what's the pkg type. This has been changed to an
uint8, this simplifies the logic and it's faster than checking
a string object. See xbps_trans_type_t and xbps_transaction_pkg_type().
- Fixed the issue that was marked with XXX in transaction shlibs
checking code. This has been fixed and improved and resources are
now just freed as expected.
- Simplified random code all over the place, avoiding unnecessary
allocations or operations.
- Rename some transaction files to have a better description.
This is my first rototill to the code in 2020.
The funcs xbps_pkg_name() and xbps_pkgpattern_name() were
using malloc(3) to return the result, until now.
They now have been changed to not allocate the result
via malloc, the caller is responsible to provide a buffer
at least of XBPS_NAME_SIZE (64).
If for whatever reason the pkgname can't be guessed,
returns false. This should avoid lots of small allocs
around libxbps.
New functions have the following prototype:
bool xbps_pkg_name(char *dst, size_t len, const char *pkg)
bool xbps_pkgpattern_name(char *dst, size_t len, const char *pkg)
as suggested by @duncaen.
xbps_get_pkg_fulldeptree() now returns NULL and sets errno to ENODEV
when there are missing dependencies, rather than assert()ing.
Added another test case to check returned error codes.
Signed-off-by: Juan RP <xtraeme@gmail.com>
faster: use a hash table with pkg names on the transaction dict,
the process of collecting and sorting is now 50x faster or
even more (kde5).
bugs: this now detects cyclic deps and returns with an appropropiate
return value: ELOOP and ENOENT in xbps-query(1) --fulldeptree.
Ping me if you need more details :-)
Close https://github.com/void-linux/xbps/issues/16
Close https://github.com/void-linux/xbps/issues/5
These routines return a xbps_array_t with a full sorted dependency graph
for the target pkg, by querying pkgdb or rpool.
Update xbps-query(8) to use the new libxbps API.