| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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songvec_for_each() has locking, use it instead of manually iterating
over the songvec items.
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We already know if a song is a URL or not based on whether it
has parentDir defined or not. Hopefully one day in the future
we can drop HTTP support from MPD entirely when an HTTP
filesystem comes along and we can access streams via open(2).
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Reduce the number of allocations we make, so there's less
pressure on the allocator and less overhead to keep track
of the allocations in.
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It didn't save us any lines of code nor did it do anything
useful since we would overwrite everything anyways.
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Any pruned files will be noticed during update and pruned
from the live database, so this inefficient function can
go away and never come back.
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Pruning is very expensive and we won't need it in the future
anyways. This brings startup back to previous speeds (before
songvec changes).
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Our linked-list implementation is wasteful and the
SongList isn't modified enough to benefit from being a linked
list. So use a more compact array of song pointers which
saves ~200K on a library with ~9K songs (on x86-32).
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Currently, when the tag cache is being serialized to hard disk, the
stdio buffer is flushed before every song, because tag_print.c
performs unbuffered writes on the raw file descriptor. Unfortunately,
the fdprintf() API allows buffered I/O only for a client connection by
looking up the client pointer owning the file descriptor - for stdio,
this is not possible. To re-enable proper stdio buffering, we have to
duplicate the tag_print.c code without fprintf() instead of our custom
fdprintf() hack. Add this duplicated code to tag_save.c.
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Move everything which dumps song information (via tag_print.c) to a
separate source file. song_print.c gets code which writes song data
to the client; song_save.c is responsible for serializing songs from
the tag cache.
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