The way placeholders are to be marked-up in documentation have been
specified; use "_<placeholder>_" to typeset the word inside a pair
of <angle-brakets> emphasized.
* ja/doc-placeholders-markup-rules:
doc: clarify the format of placeholders
"git reflog" learned a "list" subcommand that enumerates known reflogs.
* ps/reflog-list:
builtin/reflog: introduce subcommand to list reflogs
refs: stop resolving ref corresponding to reflogs
refs: drop unused params from the reflog iterator callback
refs: always treat iterators as ordered
refs/files: sort merged worktree and common reflogs
refs/files: sort reflogs returned by the reflog iterator
dir-iterator: support iteration in sorted order
dir-iterator: pass name to `prepare_next_entry_data()` directly
Doc update.
* ja/docfixes:
doc: end sentences with full-stop
doc: close unclosed angle-bracket of a placeholder in git-clone doc
doc: git-rev-parse: enforce command-line description syntax
"git difftool --dir-diff" learned to honor the "--trust-exit-code"
option; it used to always exit with 0 and signalled success.
* ps/difftool-dir-diff-exit-code:
git-difftool--helper: honor `--trust-exit-code` with `--dir-diff`
Git builtins used to be called like e.g. `git-commit`, not `git
commit` (*dashed form* and *non-dashed form*, respectively). The dashed
form was deprecated in version 1.5.4 (2006). Now only a few commands
have an alternative dashed form when `SKIP_DASHED_BUILT_INS` is
active.[1]
The mention here is from 2f7ee089df (parse-options: Add a gitcli(5) man
page., 2007-12-13), back when the deprecation was relatively
recent. These days though it seems like an irrelevant point to make to
budding CLI scripters—you don’t have to warn against a style that
probably doesn’t even work on their git(1) installation.
† 1: 179227d6e2 (Optionally skip linking/copying the built-ins,
2020-09-21)
Signed-off-by: Kristoffer Haugsbakk <code@khaugsbakk.name>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
By and large, variable groupings in Documentation/config.txt are sorted
alphabetically, though a few are not. Those outliers make it more
difficult to find a specific grouping when quickly running an eye over
the list to locate a variable of interest. Address this shortcoming by
sorting the groupings alphabetically.
NOTE: This change only sorts the top-level groupings (i.e. "core.*"
comes after "completion.*"); it does not touch the ordering of variables
within each group since variables within individual groups might
intentionally be ordered in some other fashion (such as
most-common-first or most-important-first).
Reported-by: Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We added an "object-info" capability to the v2 upload-pack protocol in
a2ba162cda (object-info: support for retrieving object info,
2021-04-20). In the almost 3 years since, we have not added any
client-side support, and it does not appear to exist in other
implementations either (JGit understands the verb on the server side,
but not on the client side).
Since this largely unused code is accessible over the network by
default, it increases the attack surface of upload-pack. I don't know of
any particularly severe problem, but one issue is that because of the
request/response nature of the v2 protocol, it will happily read an
unbounded number of packets, adding each one to a string list (without
regard to whether they are objects we know about, duplicates, etc).
This may be something we want to improve in the long run, but in the
short term it makes sense to disable the feature entirely. We'll add a
config option as an escape hatch for anybody who wants to develop the
feature further.
A more gentle option would be to add the config option to let people
disable it manually, but leave it enabled by default. But given that
there's no client side support, that seems like the wrong balance with
security.
Disabling by default will slow adoption a bit once client-side support
does become available (there were some patches[1] in 2022, but nothing
got merged and there's been nothing since). But clients have to deal
with older servers that do not understand the option anyway (and the
capability system handles that), so it will just be a matter of servers
flipping their config at that point (and hopefully once any unbounded
allocations have been addressed).
[jk: this is a patch that GitHub has been running for several years, but
rebased forward and with a new commit message for upstream]
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/20220208231911.725273-1-calvinwan@google.com/
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When we see a packfile-uri line from the client, we use
string_list_split() to split it on commas and store the result in a
string_list. A single packfile-uri line is therefore limited to storing
~64kb, the size of a pkt-line.
But we'll happily accept multiple such lines, and each line appends to
the string list, growing without bound.
In theory this could be useful, making:
0017packfile-uris http
0018packfile-uris https
equivalent to:
001dpackfile-uris http,https
But the protocol documentation doesn't indicate that this should work
(and indeed, refers to this in the singular as "the following argument
can be included in the client's request"). And the client-side
implementation in fetch-pack has always sent a single line (JGit appears
to understand the line on the server side but has no client-side
implementation, and libgit2 understands neither).
If we were worried about compatibility, we could instead just put a
limit on the maximum number of values we'd accept. The current client
implementation limits itself to only two values: "http" and "https", so
something like "256" would be more than enough. But accepting only a
single line seems more in line with the protocol documentation, and
matches other parts of the protocol (e.g., we will not accept a second
"filter" line).
We'll also make this more explicit in the protocol documentation; as
above, I think this was always the intent, but there's no harm in making
it clear.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When the "ref-in-want" capability is advertised (which it is not by
default), then upload-pack processes a "want-ref" line from the client
by checking that the name is a valid ref and recording it in a
string-list.
In theory this list should grow no larger than the number of refs in the
server-side repository. But since we don't do any de-duplication, a
client which sends "want-ref refs/heads/foo" over and over will cause
the array to grow without bound.
We can fix this by switching to strmap, which efficiently detects
duplicates. There are two client-visible changes here:
1. The "wanted-refs" response will now be in an apparently-random
order (based on iterating the hashmap) rather than the order given
by the client. The protocol documentation is quiet on ordering
here. The current fetch-pack implementation is happy with any
order, as it looks up each returned ref using a binary search in
its local sorted list. JGit seems to implement want-ref on the
server side, but has no client-side support. libgit2 doesn't
support either side.
It would obviously be possible to record the original order or to
use the strmap as an auxiliary data structure. But if the client
doesn't care, we may as well do the simplest thing.
2. We'll now reject duplicates explicitly as a protocol error. The
client should never send them (and our current implementation, even
when asked to "git fetch master:one master:two" will de-dup on the
client side).
If we wanted to be more forgiving, we could perhaps just throw away
the duplicates. But then our "wanted-refs" response back to the
client would omit the duplicates, and it's hard to say what a
client that accidentally sent a duplicate would do with that. So I
think we're better off to complain loudly before anybody
accidentally writes such a client.
Let's also add a note to the protocol documentation clarifying that
duplicates are forbidden. As discussed above, this was already the
intent, but it's not very explicit.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
'git log' learned in ae3e5e1ef2 (git log -p --merge [[--] paths...],
2006-07-03) to show commits touching conflicted files in the range
HEAD...MERGE_HEAD, an addition documented in d249b45547 (Document
rev-list's option --merge, 2006-08-04).
It can be useful to look at the commit history to understand what lead
to merge conflicts also for other mergy operations besides merges, like
cherry-pick, revert and rebase.
For rebases and cherry-picks, an interesting range to look at is
HEAD...{REBASE_HEAD,CHERRY_PICK_HEAD}, since even if all the commits
included in that range are not directly part of the 3-way merge,
conflicts encountered during these operations can indeed be caused by
changes introduced in preceding commits on both sides of the history.
For revert, as we are (most likely) reversing changes from a previous
commit, an appropriate range is REVERT_HEAD..HEAD, which is equivalent
to REVERT_HEAD...HEAD and to HEAD...REVERT_HEAD, if we keep HEAD and its
parents on the left side of the range.
As such, adjust the code in prepare_show_merge so it constructs the
range HEAD...$OTHER for OTHER={MERGE_HEAD, CHERRY_PICK_HEAD, REVERT_HEAD
or REBASE_HEAD}. Note that we try these pseudorefs in order, so keep
REBASE_HEAD last since the three other operations can be performed
during a rebase. Note also that in the uncommon case where $OTHER and
HEAD do not share a common ancestor, this will show the complete
histories of both sides since their root commits, which is the same
behaviour as currently happens in that case for HEAD and MERGE_HEAD.
Adjust the documentation of this option accordingly.
Co-authored-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Co-authored-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Lohmann <mi.al.lohmann@gmail.com>
[jc: tweaked in j6t's precedence fix that tries REBASE_HEAD last]
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Variants of vimdiff learned to honor mergetool.<variant>.layout settings.
* km/mergetool-vimdiff-layout-fallback:
mergetools: vimdiff: use correct tool's name when reading mergetool config
"git am --help" now tells readers what actions are available in
"git am --whitespace=<action>", in addition to saying that the
option is passed through to the underlying "git apply".
* jc/am-whitespace-doc:
doc: add shortcut to "am --whitespace=<action>"
Modeling after how the `--no-replace-objects` option is made usable
across subprocess spawning (e.g., cURL based remote helpers are
spawned as a separate process while running "git fetch"), allow the
`--no-lazy-fetch` option to be passed across process boundaries.
Do not model how the value of GIT_NO_REPLACE_OBJECTS environment
variable is ignored, though. Just use the usual git_env_bool() to
allow "export GIT_NO_LAZY_FETCH=0" and "unset GIT_NO_LAZY_FETCH"
to be equivalents.
Also do not model how the request is not propagated to subprocesses
we spawn (e.g. "git clone --local" that spawns a new process to work
in the origin repository, while the original one working in the
newly created one) by the "--no-replace-objects" option, as this "do
not lazily fetch from the promisor" is more about a per-request
debugging aid, not "this repository's promisor should not be relied
upon" property specific to a repository.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The reason why we require the <git-compat-util.h> file to be the
first header file to be included is because it insulates other
header files and source files from platform differences, like which
system header files must be included in what order, and what C
preprocessor feature macros must be defined to trigger certain
features we want out of the system.
We tried to clarify the rule in the coding guidelines document, but
the wording was a bit fuzzy that can lead to misinterpretations like
you can include <xdiff/xinclude.h> only to avoid having to include
<git-compat-util.h> even if you have nothing to do with the xdiff
implementation, for example. "You do not have to include more than
one of these" was also misleading and would have been puzzling if
you _needed_ to depend on more than one of these approved headers
(answer: you are allowed to include them all if you need the
declarations in them for reasons other than that you want to avoid
including compat-util yourself).
Instead of using the phrase "approved headers", enumerate them as
exceptions, each labeled with its intended audiences, to avoid such
misinterpretations. The structure also makes it easier to add new
exceptions, so add the description of "t/unit-tests/test-lib.h"
being an exception only for the unit tests implementation as an
example.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Kyle Lippincott <spectral@google.com>
Acked-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
This is a minor follow-up to cb00f524df (rebase: rewrite
--(no-)autosquash documentation, 2023-11-14) to fix a typo introduced in
that commit.
Signed-off-by: Richard Macklin <code@rmacklin.dev>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This variable is used as the primary way to disable the object
replacement mechanism, with the "--no-replace-objects" command line
option as an end-user visible way to set it, but has not been
documented.
The original reason why it was left undocumented might be because it
was meant as an internal implementation detail, but the thing is,
that our tests use the environment variable directly without the
command line option, and there certainly are folks who learned its
use from there, making it impossible to deprecate or change its
behaviour by now.
Add documentation and note that for this variable, unlike many
boolean-looking environment variables, only the presence matters,
not what value it is set to.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Integrate the reftable code into the refs framework as a backend.
* ps/reftable-backend:
refs/reftable: fix leak when copying reflog fails
ci: add jobs to test with the reftable backend
refs: introduce reftable backend
Add a new advice type 'submoduleMergeConflict' for the error message
shown when a non-trivial submodule conflict is encountered, which
was added in 4057523a40 (submodule merge: update conflict error
message, 2022-08-04). That commit mentions making this message an
advice as possible future work. The message can now be disabled
with the advice mechanism.
Update the tests as the expected message now appears on stderr instead
of stdout.
Signed-off-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In af626ac0e0 (pack-bitmap: enable reuse from all bitmapped packs,
2023-12-14), the documentation for `pack.allowPackReuse` was amended to
include its effect when set to "multi".
This split the documentation into two paragraphs, but did not de-dent
the second paragraph on the right-hand side of a line-continuation
marker. This causes the rendered documentation to appear oddly, where
the second paragraph is treated as a <pre> block when rendered as HTML.
Fix this by correctly removing the indentation on the second paragraph.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The git-for-each-ref(1) command doesn't provide a way to print root refs
i.e pseudorefs and HEAD with the regular "refs/" prefixed refs.
This commit adds a new option "--include-root-refs" to
git-for-each-ref(1). When used this would also print pseudorefs and HEAD
for the current worktree.
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add the new format rule when using placeholders in the description of
commands and options.
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noël Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While the git-reflog(1) command has subcommands to show reflog entries
or check for reflog existence, it does not have any subcommands that
would allow the user to enumerate all existing reflogs. This makes it
quite hard to discover which reflogs a repository has. While this can
be worked around with the "files" backend by enumerating files in the
".git/logs" directory, users of the "reftable" backend don't enjoy such
a luxury.
Introduce a new subcommand `git reflog list` that lists all reflogs the
repository knows of to fill this gap.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git-rev-parse(1) manpage is completely off with respect to the
command-line description syntax with badly formatted placeholders and
malformed alternatives.
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noël Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Correct a few random "sendemail.*" configuration parameter names in the
documentation that, for some unknown reason and contrary to the expected,
didn't use camel case format.
The majority of the corrections are straightforward, by using camel case
to denote boundaries of the individual words that, stringed together, make
up configuration parameter names. A couple of abbreviations found in some
of the corrected configuration parameter names present some exceptions,
which are described in detail below.
First, there's "SSL" as the abbreviation for "Secure Sockets Layer". [1]
As such, it's written using all uppercase letters, which is pretty much the
general rule for making abbreviations, although with certain exceptions.
Second, there's "Cc" as the abbreviation for "carbon copy", which is another
exception. As the acronym for "carbon copy", "cc" (mind the all lowercase
letters) stems from the rather old times when, literally, carbon copies were
made. [2] Therefore, using "CC" (mind the all uppercase letters) or "cc"
(mind the all lowercase letters) would be technically correct in the email
domain, as the abbreviation or as mentioned in RFC2076, [3] respectively, but
the age of email has established "Cc" (mind the mixed uppercase and lowercase
letters) as some kind of de facto standard. [1][4][5] Moreover, some of the
git utilities, primarily git-send-email(1), already refer to making email
carbon copies as specifying "Cc:" email headers. As a result, "Cc" becomes
one of the exceptions to the general rule for making abbreviations.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_Layer_Security
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_copy
[3] https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc2076
[4] https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=212059
[5] https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50826
Signed-off-by: Dragan Simic <dsimic@manjaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The `--trust-exit-code` option for git-diff-tool(1) was introduced via
2b52123fcf (difftool: add support for --trust-exit-code, 2014-10-26).
When set, it makes us return the exit code of the invoked diff tool when
diffing multiple files. This patch didn't change the code path where
`--dir-diff` was passed because we already returned the exit code of the
diff tool unconditionally in that case.
This was changed a month later via c41d3fedd8 (difftool--helper: add
explicit exit statement, 2014-11-20), where an explicit `exit 0` was
added to the end of git-difftool--helper.sh. While the stated intent of
that commit was merely a cleanup, it had the consequence that we now
to ignore the exit code of the diff tool when `--dir-diff` was set. This
change in behaviour is thus very likely an unintended side effect of
this patch.
Now there are two ways to fix this:
- We can either restore the original behaviour, which unconditionally
returned the exit code of the diffing tool when `--dir-diff` is
passed.
- Or we can make the `--dir-diff` case respect the `--trust-exit-code`
flag.
The fact that we have been ignoring exit codes for 7 years by now makes
me rather lean towards the latter option. Furthermore, respecting the
flag in one case but not the other would needlessly make the user
interface more complex.
Fix the bug so that we also honor `--trust-exit-code` for dir diffs and
adjust the documentation accordingly.
Reported-by: Jean-Rémy Falleri <jr.falleri@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The Perl implementation of add --interactive was removed in commit [1].
Additionally, the interactive.singleKey setting is no longer silently
ignored. The internal implementation of ReadKey [2] displays a warning
if the platform is unsupported.
[1] 20b813d7d (add: remove "add.interactive.useBuiltin" & Perl "git add--interactive", 2023-02-06)
[2] a5e46e6b0 (terminal: add a new function to read a single keystroke, 2020-01-14)
Signed-off-by: Julio Bacellari <julio.bacel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* ps/reftable-backend:
refs/reftable: fix leak when copying reflog fails
ci: add jobs to test with the reftable backend
refs: introduce reftable backend
The /mergetools/vimdiff script, which handles both vimdiff, nvimdiff
and gvimdiff mergetools (the latter 2 simply source the vimdiff script), has a
function merge_cmd() which read the layout variable from git config, and it
would always read the value of mergetool.**vimdiff**.layout, instead of the
mergetool being currently used (vimdiff or nvimdiff or gvimdiff).
It looks like in 7b5cf8be18 (vimdiff: add tool documentation, 2022-03-30),
we explained the current behavior in Documentation/config/mergetool.txt:
```
mergetool.vimdiff.layout::
The vimdiff backend uses this variable to control how its split
windows look like. Applies even if you are using Neovim (`nvim`) or
gVim (`gvim`) as the merge tool. See BACKEND SPECIFIC HINTS section
```
which makes sense why it's explained this way - the vimdiff backend is used by
gvim and nvim. But the mergetool's configuration should be separate for each tool,
and indeed that's confirmed in same commit at Documentation/mergetools/vimdiff.txt:
```
Variants
Instead of `--tool=vimdiff`, you can also use one of these other variants:
* `--tool=gvimdiff`, to open gVim instead of Vim.
* `--tool=nvimdiff`, to open Neovim instead of Vim.
When using these variants, in order to specify a custom layout you will have to
set configuration variables `mergetool.gvimdiff.layout` and
`mergetool.nvimdiff.layout` instead of `mergetool.vimdiff.layout`
```
So it looks like we just forgot to update the 1 part of the vimdiff script
that read the config variable. Cheers.
Though, for backward compatibility, I've kept the mergetool.vimdiff
fallback, so that people who unknowingly relied on it, won't have their
setup broken now.
Signed-off-by: Kipras Melnikovas <kipras@kipras.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We refer readers of "git am --help" to "git apply --help" for many
options that are passed through, and most of them are simple
booleans, but --whitespace takes from a set of actions whose names
may slip users' minds. Give a list of them in "git am --help" to
reduce one level of redirection only to find out what they are.
In the helper function to parse the available options, there was a
helpful comment reminding the developer to update list of <action>s
in the completion script. Mention the two documentation pages there
as well.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 9830926c7d (rev-list: add commit object support in `--missing`
option, 2023-10-27) we fixed the `--missing` option in `git rev-list`
so that it works with with missing commits, not just blobs/trees.
Unfortunately, such a command would still fail with a "fatal: bad
object <oid>" if it is passed a missing commit, blob or tree as an
argument (before the rev walking even begins).
When such a command is used to find the dependencies of some objects,
for example the dependencies of quarantined objects (see the
"QUARANTINE ENVIRONMENT" section in the git-receive-pack(1)
documentation), it would be better if the command would instead
consider such missing objects, especially commits, in the same way as
other missing objects.
If, for example `--missing=print` is used, it would be nice for some
use cases if the missing tips passed as arguments were reported in
the same way as other missing objects instead of the command just
failing.
We could introduce a new option to make it work like this, but most
users are likely to prefer the command to have this behavior as the
default one. Introducing a new option would require another dumb loop
to look for that option early, which isn't nice.
Also we made `git rev-list` work with missing commits very recently
and the command is most often passed commits as arguments. So let's
consider this as a bug fix related to these recent changes.
While at it let's add a NEEDSWORK comment to say that we should get
rid of the existing ugly dumb loops that parse the
`--exclude-promisor-objects` and `--missing=...` options early.
Helped-by: Linus Arver <linusa@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>