Going into a secondary worktree and asking "is the main worktree
bare?" did not work correctly when per-worktree configuration
option was in use, which has been corrected.
* op/worktree-is-main-bare-fix:
worktree: detect from secondary worktree if main worktree is bare
"git clone" learned to make a shallow clone for a single commit
that is not necessarily be at the tip of any branch.
* tc/clone-single-revision:
builtin/clone: teach git-clone(1) the --revision= option
parse-options: introduce die_for_incompatible_opt2()
clone: introduce struct clone_opts in builtin/clone.c
clone: add tags refspec earlier to fetch refspec
clone: refactor wanted_peer_refs()
clone: make it possible to specify --tags
clone: cut down on global variables in clone.c
All the documentation .txt files have been renamed to .adoc to help
content aware editors.
* bc/doc-adoc-not-txt:
Remove obsolete ".txt" extensions for AsciiDoc files
doc: use .adoc extension for AsciiDoc files
gitattributes: mark AsciiDoc files as LF-only
editorconfig: add .adoc extension
doc: update gitignore for .adoc extension
"git -c help.autocorrect=0 psuh" shows the suggested typofix,
unlike the previous attempt in the base topic.
* da/help-autocorrect-one-fix:
help: add "show" as a valid configuration value
help: show the suggested command when help.autocorrect is false
"[help] autocorrect = 1" used to be a way to say "please wait for
0.1 second after suggesting a typofix of the command name before
running that command"; now it means "yes, if there is a plausible
typofix for the command name, please run it immediately".
* sc/help-autocorrect-one:
help: interpret boolean string values for help.autocorrect
Foreign language interface for Rust into our code base has been added.
* js/libgit-rust:
libgit: add higher-level libgit crate
libgit-sys: also export some config_set functions
libgit-sys: introduce Rust wrapper for libgit.a
common-main: split init and exit code into new files
"git repack --keep-unreachable" to send unreachable objects to the
main pack "git repack -ad" produces did not work when there is no
existing packs, which has been corrected.
* ps/repack-keep-unreachable-in-unpacked-repo:
builtin/repack: fix `--keep-unreachable` when there are no packs
"git pack-objects" and its wrapper "git repack" learned an option
to use an alternative path-hash function to improve delta-base
selection to produce a packfile with deeper history than window
size.
* ds/name-hash-tweaks:
pack-objects: prevent name hash version change
test-tool: add helper for name-hash values
p5313: add size comparison test
pack-objects: add GIT_TEST_NAME_HASH_VERSION
repack: add --name-hash-version option
pack-objects: add --name-hash-version option
pack-objects: create new name-hash function version
Convert a handful of unit tests to work with the clar framework.
* sk/unit-tests-0130:
t/unit-tests: convert strcmp-offset test to use clar test framework
t/unit-tests: convert strbuf test to use clar test framework
t/unit-tests: adapt example decorate test to use clar test framework
t/unit-tests: convert hashmap test to use clar test framework
Further code clean-up on the use of hash functions. Now the
context object knows what hash function it is working with.
* ps/hash-cleanup:
global: adapt callers to use generic hash context helpers
hash: provide generic wrappers to update hash contexts
hash: stop typedeffing the hash context
hash: convert hashing context to a structure
Two CI tasks, whitespace check and style check, work on the
difference from the base version and the version being checked, but
the base was computed incorrectly in GitLab CI in some cases, which
has been corrected.
* jt/gitlab-ci-base-fix:
ci: fix base commit fallback for check-whitespace and check-style
"git apply" internally uses unsigned long for line numbers and uses
strtoul() to parse numbers on the hunk headers. It however forgot
to check parse errors.
* pw/apply-ulong-overflow-check:
apply: detect overflow when parsing hunk header
"git init" to reinitialize a repository that already exists cannot
change the hash function and ref backends; such a request is
silently ignored now.
* ps/setup-reinit-fixes:
setup: fix reinit of repos with incompatible GIT_DEFAULT_HASH
setup: fix reinit of repos with incompatible GIT_DEFAULT_REF_FORMAT
t0001: remove duplicate test
The code paths to interact with zlib has been cleaned up in
preparation for building with zlib-ng.
* ps/zlib-ng:
ci: make "linux-musl" job use zlib-ng
ci: switch linux-musl to use Meson
compat/zlib: allow use of zlib-ng as backend
git-zlib: cast away potential constness of `next_in` pointer
compat/zlib: provide stubs for `deflateSetHeader()`
compat/zlib: provide `deflateBound()` shim centrally
git-compat-util: move include of "compat/zlib.h" into "git-zlib.h"
compat: introduce new "zlib.h" header
git-compat-util: drop `z_const` define
compat: drop `uncompress2()` compatibility shim
The code path used when "git fetch" fetches from a bundle file
closed the same file descriptor twice, which sometimes broke things
unexpectedly when the file descriptor was reused, which has been
corrected.
* js/bundle-unbundle-fd-reuse-fix:
bundle: avoid closing file descriptor twice
CI updates (containerization, dropping stale ones, etc.).
* ps/ci-misc-updates:
ci: remove stale code for Azure Pipelines
ci: use latest Ubuntu release
ci: stop special-casing for Ubuntu 16.04
gitlab-ci: add linux32 job testing against i386
gitlab-ci: remove the "linux-old" job
github: simplify computation of the job's distro
github: convert all Linux jobs to be containerized
github: adapt containerized jobs to be rootless
t7422: fix flaky test caused by buffered stdout
t0060: fix EBUSY in MinGW when setting up runtime prefix
The git-clone(1) command has the option `--branch` that allows the user
to select the branch they want HEAD to point to. In a non-bare
repository this also checks out that branch.
Option `--branch` also accepts a tag. When a tag name is provided, the
commit this tag points to is checked out and HEAD is detached. Thus
`--branch` can be used to clone a repository and check out a ref kept
under `refs/heads` or `refs/tags`. But some other refs might be in use
as well. For example Git forges might use refs like `refs/pull/<id>` and
`refs/merge-requests/<id>` to track pull/merge requests. These refs
cannot be selected upon git-clone(1).
Add option `--revision` to git-clone(1). This option accepts a fully
qualified reference, or a hexadecimal commit ID. This enables the user
to clone and check out any revision they want. `--revision` can be used
in conjunction with `--depth` to do a minimal clone that only contains
the blob and tree for a single revision. This can be useful for
automated tests running in CI systems.
Using option `--branch` and `--single-branch` together is a similar
scenario, but serves a different purpose. Using these two options, a
singlet remote tracking branch is created and the fetch refspec is set
up so git-fetch(1) will receive updates on that branch from the remote.
This allows the user work on that single branch.
Option `--revision` on contrary detaches HEAD, creates no tracking
branches, and writes no fetch refspec.
Signed-off-by: Toon Claes <toon@iotcl.com>
Acked-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
[jc: removed unnecessary TEST_PASSES_SANITIZE_LEAK from the test]
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The functions die_for_incompatible_opt3() and
die_for_incompatible_opt4() already exist to die whenever a user
specifies three or four options respectively that are not compatible.
Introduce die_for_incompatible_opt2() which dies when two options that
are incompatible are set.
Signed-off-by: Toon Claes <toon@iotcl.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There is a lot of state stored in global variables in builtin/clone.c.
In the long run we'd like to remove many of those.
Introduce `struct clone_opts` in this file. This struct will be used to
contain all details needed to perform the clone. The struct object can
be thrown around to all the functions that need these details.
The first field we're adding is `wants_head`. In some scenarios
(specifically when both `--single-branch` and `--branch` are given) we
are not interested in `HEAD` on the remote. The field `wants_head` in
`struct clone_opts` will hold this information. We could have put
`option_branch` and `option_single_branch` into that struct instead, but
in a following commit we'll be using `wants_head` as well.
Signed-off-by: Toon Claes <toon@iotcl.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In clone.c we call refspec_ref_prefixes() to copy the fetch refspecs
from the `remote->fetch` refspec into `ref_prefixes` of
`transport_ls_refs_options`. Afterwards we add the tags prefix
`refs/tags/` prefix as well. At a later point, in wanted_peer_refs() we
process refs using both `remote->fetch` and `TAG_REFSPEC`.
Simplify the code by appending `TAG_REFSPEC` to `remote->fetch` before
calling refspec_ref_prefixes().
To be able to do this, we set `option_tags` to 0 when --mirror is given.
This is because --mirror mirrors (hence the name) all the refs,
including tags and they do not need to be treated separately.
Signed-off-by: Toon Claes <toon@iotcl.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The function wanted_peer_refs() is used to map the refs returned by the
server to refs we will save in our clone.
Over time this function grown to be very complex. Refactor it.
Previously, there was a separate code path for when
`option_single_branch` was set. It resulted in duplicated code and
deeper nested conditions. After this refactor the code path for when
`option_single_branch` is truthy modifies `refs` and then falls through
to the common code path. This approach relies on the `refspec` being set
correctly and thus only mapping refs that are relevant.
Signed-off-by: Toon Claes <toon@iotcl.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Option --no-tags was added in 0dab2468ee (clone: add a --no-tags option
to clone without tags, 2017-04-26). At the time there was no need to
support --tags as well, although there was some conversation about
it[1].
To simplify the code and to prepare for future commits, invert the flag
internally. Functionally there is no change, because the flag is
default-enabled passing `--tags` has no effect, so there's no need to
add tests for this.
[1]: https://lore.kernel.org/git/CAGZ79kbHuMpiavJ90kQLEL_AR0BEyArcZoEWAjPPhOFacN16YQ@mail.gmail.com/
Signed-off-by: Toon Claes <toon@iotcl.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In clone.c the `struct option` which is used to parse the input options
for git-clone(1) is a global variable. Due to this, many variables that
are used to parse the value into, are also global.
Make `builtin_clone_options` a local variable in cmd_clone() and carry
along all variables that are only used in that function.
Signed-off-by: Toon Claes <toon@iotcl.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When extensions.worktreeConfig is true and the main worktree is
bare -- that is, its config.worktree file contains core.bare=true
-- commands run from secondary worktrees incorrectly see the main
worktree as not bare. As such, those commands incorrectly think
that the repository's default branch (typically "main" or
"master") is checked out in the bare repository even though it's
not. This makes it impossible, for instance, to checkout or delete
the default branch from a secondary worktree, among other
shortcomings.
This problem occurs because, when extensions.worktreeConfig is
true, commands run in secondary worktrees only consult
$commondir/config and $commondir/worktrees/<id>/config.worktree,
thus they never see the main worktree's core.bare=true setting in
$commondir/config.worktree.
Fix this problem by consulting the main worktree's config.worktree
file when checking whether it is bare. (This extra work is
performed only when running from a secondary worktree.)
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Olga Pilipenco <olga.pilipenco@shopify.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "--keep-unreachable" flag is supposed to append any unreachable
objects to the newly written pack. This flag is explicitly documented as
appending both packed and loose unreachable objects to the new packfile.
And while this works alright when repacking with preexisting packfiles,
it stops working when the repository does not have any packfiles at all.
The root cause are the conditions used to decide whether or not we want
to append "--pack-loose-unreachable" to git-pack-objects(1). There are
a couple of conditions here:
- `has_existing_non_kept_packs()` checks whether there are existing
packfiles. This condition makes sense to guard "--keep-pack=",
"--unpack-unreachable" and "--keep-unreachable", because all of
these flags only make sense in combination with existing packfiles.
But it does not make sense to disable `--pack-loose-unreachable`
when there aren't any preexisting packfiles, as loose objects can be
packed into the new packfile regardless of that.
- `delete_redundant` checks whether we want to delete any objects or
packs that are about to become redundant. The documentation of
`--keep-unreachable` explicitly says that `git repack -ad` needs to
be executed for the flag to have an effect.
It is not immediately obvious why such redundant objects need to be
deleted in order for "--pack-unreachable-objects" to be effective.
But as things are working as documented this is nothing we'll change
for now.
- `pack_everything & PACK_CRUFT` checks that we're not creating a
cruft pack. This condition makes sense in the context of
"--pack-loose-unreachable", as unreachable objects would end up in
the cruft pack anyway.
So while the second and third condition are sensible, it does not make
any sense to condition `--pack-loose-unreachable` on the existence of
packfiles.
Fix the bug by splitting out the "--pack-loose-unreachable" and only
making it depend on the second and third condition. Like this, loose
unreachable objects will be packed regardless of any preexisting
packfiles.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Move the `valid_remote_name()` function from the refspec subsystem to
the remote subsystem to better align with the separation of concerns.
Signed-off-by: Meet Soni <meetsoni3017@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Move the functions `apply_refspecs()` and `apply_negative_refspecs()`
from `remote.c` to `refspec.c`. These functions focus on applying
refspecs, so centralizing them in `refspec.c` improves code organization
by keeping refspec-related logic in one place.
Signed-off-by: Meet Soni <meetsoni3017@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Move the functions `refspec_find_match()`, `refspec_find_all_matches()`
and `refspec_find_negative_match()` from `remote.c` to `refspec.c`.
These functions focus on matching refspecs, so centralizing them in
`refspec.c` improves code organization by keeping refspec-related logic
in one place.
Signed-off-by: Meet Soni <meetsoni3017@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Rename functions related to handling refspecs in preparation for their
move from `remote.c` to `refspec.c`. Update their names to better
reflect their intent:
- `query_refspecs()` -> `refspec_find_match()` for clarity, as it
finds a single matching refspec.
- `query_refspecs_multiple()` -> `refspec_find_all_matches()` to
better reflect that it collects all matching refspecs instead of
returning just the first match.
- `query_matches_negative_refspec()` ->
`refspec_find_negative_match()` for consistency with the
updated naming convention, even though this static function
didn't strictly require renaming.
Signed-off-by: Meet Soni <meetsoni3017@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Move the functions `refname_matches_negative_refspec_item()`,
`refspec_match()`, and `match_name_with_pattern()` from `remote.c` to
`refspec.c`. These functions focus on refspec matching, so placing them
in `refspec.c` aligns with the separation of concerns. Keep
refspec-related logic in `refspec.c` and remote-specific logic in
`remote.c` for better code organization.
Signed-off-by: Meet Soni <meetsoni3017@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Rename the function `omit_name_by_refspec()` to
`refname_matches_negative_refspec_item()` to provide clearer intent.
The previous function name was vague and did not accurately describe its
purpose. By using `refname_matches_negative_refspec_item`, make the
function's purpose more intuitive, clarifying that it checks if a
reference name matches any negative refspec.
Rename function parameters for consistency with existing naming
conventions. Use `refname` instead of `name` to align with terminology
in `refs.h`.
Remove the redundant doc comment since the function name is now
self-explanatory.
Signed-off-by: Meet Soni <meetsoni3017@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Some test in t6423 supress Git's exit code, which can cause test
failures go unnoticed. Specifically using git <subcommand> |
<other-command> masks potential failures of the Git command.
This commit ensures that Git's exit status is correctly propogated by:
- Avoiding pipes that suppress exit codes.
Signed-off-by: Ayush Chandekar <ayu.chandekar@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add a literal value for showing the suggested autocorrection
for consistency with the rest of the help.autocorrect options.
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Make the handling of false boolean values for help.autocorrect
consistent with the handling of value 0 by showing the suggested
commands but not running them.
Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"test -f" does not provide a nice error message when we hit test
failures, so use test_path_is_file instead.
Signed-off-by: ambar chakravartty <amch9605@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>