Rather nasty things happen when a mutex is not initialized but locked
nevertheless. Now, when we're not running in a threaded manner, the mutex
is not initialized, which is correct. But then we went and used the mutex
anyway, which -- at least on Windows -- leads to a hard crash (ordinarily
it would be called a segmentation fault, but in Windows speak it is an
access violation).
This problem was identified by our faithful tests when run in the msysGit
environment.
To avoid having to wrap the line due to the 80 column limit, we use
the name "WHEN_THREADED" instead of "IF_USE_THREADS" because it is one
character shorter. Which is all we need in this case.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
/* Used to serialize calls to read_sha1_file. */
static pthread_mutex_t read_sha1_mutex;
-#define grep_lock() pthread_mutex_lock(&grep_mutex)
-#define grep_unlock() pthread_mutex_unlock(&grep_mutex)
-#define read_sha1_lock() pthread_mutex_lock(&read_sha1_mutex)
-#define read_sha1_unlock() pthread_mutex_unlock(&read_sha1_mutex)
+#define WHEN_THREADED(x) do { if (use_threads) (x); } while (0)
+#define grep_lock() WHEN_THREADED(pthread_mutex_lock(&grep_mutex))
+#define grep_unlock() WHEN_THREADED(pthread_mutex_unlock(&grep_mutex))
+#define read_sha1_lock() WHEN_THREADED(pthread_mutex_lock(&read_sha1_mutex))
+#define read_sha1_unlock() WHEN_THREADED(pthread_mutex_unlock(&read_sha1_mutex))
/* Signalled when a new work_item is added to todo. */
static pthread_cond_t cond_add;