Eric Ju 60d8c1e97d refs: add 'preparing' phase to the reference-transaction hook
The "reference-transaction" hook is invoked multiple times during a ref
transaction. Each invocation corresponds to a different phase:

- The "prepared" phase indicates that references have been locked.
- The "committed" phase indicates that all updates have been written to disk.
- The "aborted" phase indicates that the transaction has been aborted and that
  all changes have been rolled back.

This hook can be used to learn about the updates that Git wants to perform.
For example, forges use it to coordinate reference updates across multiple
nodes.

However, the phases are insufficient for some specific use cases. The earliest
observable phase in the "reference-transaction" hook is "prepared", at which
point Git has already taken exclusive locks on every affected reference. This
makes it suitable for last-chance validation, but not for serialization. So by
the time a hook sees the "prepared" phase, it has no way to defer locking, and
thus it cannot rearrange multiple concurrent ref transactions relative to one
another.

Introduce a new "preparing" phase that runs before the "prepared" phase, that
is before Git acquires any reference lock on disk. This gives callers a
well-defined window to perform validation, enable higher-level ordering of
concurrent transactions, or reject the transaction entirely, all without
interfering with the locking state.

This change is strictly speaking not backwards compatible. Existing hook
scripts that do not know how to handle unknown phases may treat 'preparing'
as an error and return non-zero. But the hook is considered to expose
internal implementation details of how Git works, and as such we have
been a bit more lenient with changing its exact semantics, like for example
in a8ae923f85 (refs: support symrefs in 'reference-transaction' hook, 2024-05-07).

An alternative would be to introduce a "reference-transaction-v2" hook that
knows about the new phase. This feels like a rather heavy-weight option though,
and was thus discarded.

Helped-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Helped-by: Justin Tobler <jltobler@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Ju <eric.peijian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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