ref: 4a08059f07e43ed881c7665ec404251ae63adc3d
dir: /furgit.go/
// Package furgit provides low-level Git operations. // // Git libraries often center on a repository type that owns objects, refs, // worktree state, and configuration behind a single facade. Furgit inverts // that: objects are plain values, stored objects are separate types that // associate objects with their object IDs, object storage and ref storage // are sets of narrow interfaces consisting only of things that are truly // reasonable for all implementations to satisfy, and every higher-level // operation, such as commit traversal, reachability analysis, and // recursive peeling, is built over those interfaces. // // While the [codeberg.org/lindenii/furgit/repository] package is where // most users should begin, it only exists as one convenient composition of // those pieces for the standard on-disk repository layout. Nothing should // depend on it. // // # Contract labels // // Many furgit APIs document concurrency, dependency ownership, value lifetime, // and close behavior using short labels. // These labels summarize the API contract, but they do not replace the full // doc comment on a package, type, function, method, constant, or variable. // // When both a type and one of its methods specify labels, the method-level // labels take precedence for that operation. // // Concurrency labels: // // - MT-Safe: safe for concurrent use. // - MT-ReadSafe: safe for concurrent read-only use. // - MT-Unsafe: not safe for concurrent use without external synchronization. // // Dependency labels: // // - Deps-Owned: the receiver takes ownership of all supplied dependencies // where ownership is a reasonable concept. // - Deps-Borrowed: the value borrows supplied dependencies. Also Life-Parent // in most cases, unless those dependencies are not retained past // construction. // - Deps-Mixed: some supplied dependencies are owned and others are borrowed. // // Lifetime labels: // // - Life-Independent: returned values remain valid independently of the // parent or provider. // - Life-Parent: returned values are only valid while the parent or provider // remains valid. // - Life-Call: returned values are only valid for the duration of the // current call, callback, or hook invocation. // // Close labels: // // - Close-Caller: the caller must close the returned value. // - Close-No: the caller must not close the returned value directly. // - Close-Idem: repeated Close calls are safe. // // Unless Close-Idem is specified, repeated Close calls are undefined behavior. // // Unless a doc comment explicitly states otherwise, these labels describe the // API contract only. They do not imply any specific implementation strategy. package furgit