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core: remove internalization of affinity strings #10904
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LGTM. Good catch!
RTarget: a.RTarget, | ||
Operand: a.Operand, | ||
Weight: a.Weight, | ||
} |
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I'm conflicted about this transition in this PR and the constraints PR. The previous way copes with changes to the structs better and is more common approach in this file; but I like the explicitness here. Would like to know how you view it and whether we should change the rest of Copy functions?
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I think it comes down to which kind of bug(s) do you want to track down in the future. The explicit assignment here implies you'll have a zero-value or a nil-value if you forget to add the new field.
OTOH using the de-reference copy trick creates a shallow copy - which if you add a pointer field and forget to deep copy it, it will now be shared and mutable by either owner.
I my experience NPE's and zero-values have been easier to track down than shared mutable state, which is why I kind of prefer these explicit copies.
Maybe the best thing would actually be to use something like https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/getlantern/deepcopy, or have Go add copy constructors to the language
core: remove internalization of affinity strings
I'm going to lock this pull request because it has been closed for 120 days ⏳. This helps our maintainers find and focus on the active contributions. |
Basically the same as #10896 but with the Affinity struct.
Since we use reflect.DeepEquals for job comparison, there is
risk of false positives for changes due to a job struct with
memoized vs non-memoized strings.
Closes #10897