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Author SHA1 Message Date
1165ae6f3d Git 2.3.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-06 14:58:14 -08:00
f69f5f19cf Merge branch 'rj/no-xopen-source-for-cygwin' into maint
Code cleanups.

* rj/no-xopen-source-for-cygwin:
  git-compat-util.h: remove redundant code
2015-03-06 14:57:58 -08:00
f56a5f4fed Merge branch 'rs/simple-cleanups' into maint
Code cleanups.

* rs/simple-cleanups:
  sha1_name: use strlcpy() to copy strings
  pretty: use starts_with() to check for a prefix
  for-each-ref: use skip_prefix() to avoid duplicate string comparison
  connect: use strcmp() for string comparison
2015-03-06 14:57:57 -08:00
d86679fa06 Merge branch 'mm/am-c-doc' into maint
The configuration variable 'mailinfo.scissors' was hard to
discover in the documentation.

* mm/am-c-doc:
  Documentation/git-am.txt: mention mailinfo.scissors config variable
  Documentation/config.txt: document mailinfo.scissors
2015-03-06 14:57:56 -08:00
2e7ca2745b Merge branch 'ew/svn-maint-fixes' into maint
Correct a breakage to git-svn around v2.2 era that triggers
premature closing of FileHandle.

* ew/svn-maint-fixes:
  Git::SVN::*: avoid premature FileHandle closure
  git-svn: fix localtime=true on non-glibc environments
2015-03-06 14:57:55 -08:00
e1db59e179 Merge branch 'km/send-email-getopt-long-workarounds' into maint
Even though we officially haven't dropped Perl 5.8 support, the
Getopt::Long package that came with it does not support "--no-"
prefix to negate a boolean option; manually add support to help
people with older Getopt::Long package.

* km/send-email-getopt-long-workarounds:
  git-send-email.perl: support no- prefix with older GetOptions
2015-03-06 14:57:54 -08:00
3ebda3e9f5 Prepare for 2.3.2 2015-03-05 13:15:53 -08:00
1e299f5286 Merge branch 'sb/plug-leak-in-make-cache-entry' into maint
"update-index --refresh" used to leak when an entry cannot be
refreshed for whatever reason.

* sb/plug-leak-in-make-cache-entry:
  read-cache.c: free cache entry when refreshing fails
2015-03-05 13:13:14 -08:00
4e0d6207e5 Merge branch 'jk/fast-import-die-nicely-fix' into maint
"git fast-import" used to crash when it could not close and
conclude the resulting packfile cleanly.

* jk/fast-import-die-nicely-fix:
  fast-import: avoid running end_packfile recursively
2015-03-05 13:13:13 -08:00
007f7f6e54 Merge branch 'es/blame-commit-info-fix' into maint
"git blame" died, trying to free an uninitialized piece of memory.

* es/blame-commit-info-fix:
  builtin/blame: destroy initialized commit_info only
2015-03-05 13:13:12 -08:00
33367575b8 Merge branch 'ab/merge-file-prefix' into maint
"git merge-file" did not work correctly in a subdirectory.

* ab/merge-file-prefix:
  merge-file: correctly open files when in a subdir
2015-03-05 13:13:11 -08:00
3630be2749 Merge branch 'ps/submodule-sanitize-path-upon-add' into maint
"git submodule add" failed to squash "path/to/././submodule" to
"path/to/submodule".

* ps/submodule-sanitize-path-upon-add:
  git-submodule.sh: fix '/././' path normalization
2015-03-05 13:13:10 -08:00
cbc8d6d8f8 Merge branch 'jk/prune-mtime' into maint
In v2.2.0, we broke "git prune" that runs in a repository that
borrows from an alternate object store.

* jk/prune-mtime:
  sha1_file: fix iterating loose alternate objects
  for_each_loose_file_in_objdir: take an optional strbuf path
2015-03-05 13:13:08 -08:00
f5a191d3dc Merge branch 'tc/curl-vernum-output-broken-in-7.11' into maint
Certain older vintages of cURL give irregular output from
"curl-config --vernum", which confused our build system.

* tc/curl-vernum-output-broken-in-7.11:
  Makefile: handle broken curl version number in version check
2015-03-05 13:13:07 -08:00
e591339ce7 Merge branch 'es/squelch-openssl-warnings-on-macosx' into maint
An earlier workaround to squelch unhelpful deprecation warnings
from the complier on Mac OSX unnecessarily set minimum required
version of the OS, which the user might want to raise (or lower)
for other reasons.

* es/squelch-openssl-warnings-on-macosx:
  git-compat-util: do not step on MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED
2015-03-05 13:13:07 -08:00
c11c154f42 Merge branch 'jc/conf-var-doc' into maint
Longstanding configuration variable naming rules has been added to
the documentation.

* jc/conf-var-doc:
  CodingGuidelines: describe naming rules for configuration variables
  config.txt: mark deprecated variables more prominently
  config.txt: clarify that add.ignore-errors is deprecated
2015-03-05 13:13:05 -08:00
518d1c349b Merge branch 'av/wincred-with-at-in-username-fix' into maint
The credential helper for Windows (in contrib/) used to mishandle
a user name with an at-sign in it.

* av/wincred-with-at-in-username-fix:
  wincred: fix get credential if username has "@"
2015-03-05 13:13:04 -08:00
ab09f58e8c Merge branch 'ch/new-gpg-drops-rfc-1991' into maint
Older GnuPG implementations may not correctly import the keyring
material we prepare for the tests to use.

* ch/new-gpg-drops-rfc-1991:
  t/lib-gpg: sanity-check that we can actually sign
  t/lib-gpg: include separate public keys in keyring.gpg
2015-03-05 13:13:04 -08:00
069dea89cf Merge branch 'jc/remote-set-url-doc' into maint
Clarify in the documentation that "remote.<nick>.pushURL" and
"remote.<nick>.URL" are there to name the same repository accessed
via different transports, not two separate repositories.

* jc/remote-set-url-doc:
  Documentation/git-remote.txt: stress that set-url is not for triangular
2015-03-05 13:13:03 -08:00
abfed73ce8 Merge branch 'jk/pack-bitmap' into maint
The pack bitmap support did not build with older versions of GCC.

* jk/pack-bitmap:
  ewah: fix building with gcc < 3.4.0
2015-03-05 13:13:02 -08:00
2250406bfd Merge branch 'jk/config-no-ungetc-eof' into maint
Reading configuration from a blob object, when it ends with a lone
CR, use to confuse the configuration parser.

* jk/config-no-ungetc-eof:
  config_buf_ungetc: warn when pushing back a random character
  config: do not ungetc EOF
2015-03-05 13:13:00 -08:00
3bef3c12d6 Merge branch 'jk/decimal-width-for-uintmax' into maint
We didn't format an integer that wouldn't fit in "int" but in
"uintmax_t" correctly.

* jk/decimal-width-for-uintmax:
  decimal_width: avoid integer overflow
2015-03-05 13:12:59 -08:00
b1cffbfcfc Merge branch 'jc/push-cert' into maint
"git push --signed" gave an incorrectly worded error message when
the other side did not support the capability.

* jc/push-cert:
  transport-helper: fix typo in error message when --signed is not supported
2015-03-05 13:12:58 -08:00
6db0497e1a Merge branch 'mh/deref-symref-over-helper-transport' into maint
"git fetch" over a remote-helper that cannot respond to "list"
command could not fetch from a symbolic reference e.g. HEAD.

* mh/deref-symref-over-helper-transport:
  transport-helper: do not request symbolic refs to remote helpers
2015-03-05 13:12:57 -08:00
aaa90f5f07 Merge branch 'ks/rebase-i-abbrev' into maint
The insn sheet "git rebase -i" creates did not fully honor
core.abbrev settings.

* ks/rebase-i-abbrev:
  rebase -i: use full object name internally throughout the script
2015-03-05 13:12:56 -08:00
be2804c49e Merge branch 'dp/remove-duplicated-header-inclusion' into maint
Code clean-up.

* dp/remove-duplicated-header-inclusion:
  do not include the same header twice
2015-03-05 13:12:55 -08:00
552f6994d2 Merge branch 'sb/hex-object-name-is-at-most-41-bytes-long' into maint
Code clean-up.

* sb/hex-object-name-is-at-most-41-bytes-long:
  hex.c: reduce memory footprint of sha1_to_hex static buffers
2015-03-05 13:12:55 -08:00
a628d50575 Merge branch 'ak/git-pm-typofix' into maint
Typofix in comments.

* ak/git-pm-typofix:
  Git.pm: two minor typo fixes
2015-03-05 13:12:53 -08:00
8fd37b3862 Merge branch 'jk/sanity' into maint
The tests that wanted to see that file becomes unreadable after
running "chmod a-r file", and the tests that wanted to make sure it
is not run as root, we used "can we write into the / directory?" as
a cheap substitute, but on some platforms that is not a good
heuristics.  The tests and their prerequisites have been updated to
check what they really require.

* jk/sanity:
  test-lib.sh: set prerequisite SANITY by testing what we really need
  tests: correct misuses of POSIXPERM
  t/lib-httpd: switch SANITY check for NOT_ROOT
2015-03-05 13:12:52 -08:00
e426311bef Git::SVN::*: avoid premature FileHandle closure
Since b19138b (git-svn: Make it incrementally faster by minimizing temp
files, v1.6.0), git-svn has been using the Git.pm temp_acquire and
temp_release mechanism to avoid unnecessary temp file churn and provide
a speed boost.

However, that change introduced a call to temp_acquire inside the
Git::SVN::Fetcher::close_file function for an 'svn_hash' temp file.
Because an SVN::Pool is active at the time this function is called, if
the Git::temp_acquire function ends up actually creating a new
FileHandle for the temp file (which it will the first time it's called
with the name 'svn_hash') that FileHandle will end up in the SVN::Pool
and should that pool have SVN::Pool::clear called on it that FileHandle
will be closed out from under Git::temp_acquire.

Since the only call site to Git::temp_acquire with the name 'svn_hash'
is inside the close_file function, if an 'svn_hash' temp file is ever
created its FileHandle is guaranteed to be created in the active
SVN::Pool.

This has not been a problem in the past because the SVN::Pool was not
being cleared.  However, since dfa72fdb (git-svn: reload RA every
log-window-size, v2.2.0) the pool has been getting cleared periodically
at which point the FileHandle for the 'svn_hash' temp file gets closed.
Any subsequent calls to Git::temp_acquire for 'svn_hash', however,
succeed without creating/opening a new temporary file since it still has
the now invalid FileHandle in its cache.  Callers that then attempt to
use that FileHandle fail with an error.

We avoid this problem by making sure the 'svn_hash' temp file is created
in the same place the 'svn_delta_...' and 'git_blob_...' temp files are
(and then temp_release'd) so that it can be safely used inside the
close_file function without having its FileHandle end up in an SVN::Pool
that gets cleared.

Additionally the Git.pm cat_blob function creates a bidirectional pipe
FileHandle using the IPC::Open2::open2 function.  If that handle is
created too late, it also gets caught up in the SVN::Pool and incorrectly
closed by the SVN::Pool::clear call.  But this only seems to happen with
more recent versions of Perl and svn.

To avoid this problem we add an explicit call to _open_cat_blob_if_needed
before the first call to SVN::Pool->new_default to make sure the open2
handle does not end up in the SVN::Pool.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-26 14:02:34 -08:00
45c956b357 git-svn: fix localtime=true on non-glibc environments
git svn uses POSIX::strftime('%s', $sec, $min, ...) to make unix epoch time.
But lowercase %s formatting character is a GNU extention. This causes problem
in git svn fetch --localtime on non-glibc systems, such as msys or cygwin.
Using Time::Local::timelocal($sec, $min, ...) fixes it.

Signed-off-by: Ryuichi Kokubo <ryu1kkb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>

Notes:
    lowercase %s format character in strftime is a GNU extension and not widely supported.
    POSIX::strftime affected by underlying crt's strftime because POSIX::strftime just calls crt's one.
    Time::Local is good function to replace POSIX::strftime because it's a perl core module function.

    Document about Time::Local.
     http://perldoc.perl.org/Time/Local.html

    These are specifications of strftime.

    The GNU C Library Reference Manual.
     http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Formatting-Calendar-Time.html

    perl POSIX module's strftime document. It does not have '%s'.
     http://perldoc.perl.org/POSIX.html

    strftime document of Microsort Windows C Run-Time library.
     https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/fe06s4ak.aspx

    The Open Group's old specification does not have '%s' too.
     http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007908799/xsh/strftime.html

    On my environment, following problems happened.
    - msys   : git svn fetch does not progress at all with perl.exe consuming CPU.
    - cygwin : git svn fetch progresses but time stamp information is dropped.
       Every commits have unix epoch timestamp.

    I would like to thank git developer and contibutors.
    git helps me so much everyday.
    Thank you.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-26 14:02:34 -08:00
8004647a21 Git 2.3.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-24 22:14:42 -08:00
7bc4c01d9b Merge branch 'ak/add-i-empty-candidates' into maint
The interactive "show a list and let the user choose from it"
interface "add -i" used showed and prompted to the user even when
the candidate list was empty, against which the only "choice" the
user could have made was to choose nothing.

* ak/add-i-empty-candidates:
  add -i: return from list_and_choose if there is no candidate
2015-02-24 22:10:42 -08:00
2764442ac9 Merge branch 'jc/apply-ws-fix-expands' into maint
"git apply --whitespace=fix" used to under-allocate the memory
when the fix resulted in a longer text than the original patch.

* jc/apply-ws-fix-expands:
  apply: count the size of postimage correctly
  apply: make update_pre_post_images() sanity check the given postlen
  apply.c: typofix
2015-02-24 22:10:41 -08:00
254a3ebfe8 Merge branch 'jc/doc-log-rev-list-options' into maint
"git log --help" used to show rev-list options that are irrelevant
to the "log" command.

* jc/doc-log-rev-list-options:
  Documentation: what does "git log --indexed-objects" even mean?
2015-02-24 22:10:40 -08:00
7070c03d51 Merge branch 'mg/commit-author-no-match-malformed-message' into maint
The error message from "git commit", when a non-existing author
name was given as value to the "--author=" parameter, has been
reworded to avoid misunderstanding.

* mg/commit-author-no-match-malformed-message:
  commit: reword --author error message
2015-02-24 22:10:38 -08:00
117c1b333d Merge branch 'jk/dumb-http-idx-fetch-fix' into maint
A broken pack .idx file in the receiving repository prevented the
dumb http transport from fetching a good copy of it from the other
side.

* jk/dumb-http-idx-fetch-fix:
  dumb-http: do not pass NULL path to parse_pack_index
2015-02-24 22:10:37 -08:00
9f8410b941 Merge branch 'jc/diff-format-doc' into maint
The documentation incorrectly said that C(opy) and R(ename) are the
only ones that can be followed by the score number in the output in
the --raw format.

* jc/diff-format-doc:
  diff-format doc: a score can follow M for rewrite
2015-02-24 22:10:36 -08:00
b9efce10c2 Merge branch 'jk/remote-curl-an-array-in-struct-cannot-be-null' into maint
Fix a misspelled conditional that is always true.

* jk/remote-curl-an-array-in-struct-cannot-be-null:
  do not check truth value of flex arrays
2015-02-24 22:10:35 -08:00
93baadb138 Merge branch 'jk/status-read-branch-name-fix' into maint
Code to read branch name from various files in .git/ directory
would have misbehaved if the code to write them left an empty file.

* jk/status-read-branch-name-fix:
  read_and_strip_branch: fix typo'd address-of operator
2015-02-24 22:10:22 -08:00
2fc85f0545 Merge branch 'mg/push-repo-option-doc' into maint
The "git push" documentation made the "--repo=<there>" option
easily misunderstood.

* mg/push-repo-option-doc:
  git-push.txt: document the behavior of --repo
2015-02-24 22:10:19 -08:00
8f3d03d81e Merge branch 'bc/http-fallback-to-password-after-krb-fails' into maint
After attempting and failing a password-less authentication
(e.g. kerberos), libcURL refuses to fall back to password based
Basic authentication without a bit of help/encouragement.

* bc/http-fallback-to-password-after-krb-fails:
  remote-curl: fall back to Basic auth if Negotiate fails
2015-02-24 22:10:17 -08:00
6606129491 Merge branch 'dk/format-patch-ignore-diff-submodule' into maint
Setting diff.submodule to 'log' made "git format-patch" produce
broken patches.

* dk/format-patch-ignore-diff-submodule:
  format-patch: ignore diff.submodule setting
  t4255: test am submodule with diff.submodule
2015-02-24 22:10:15 -08:00
74419c29df Merge branch 'jn/rerere-fail-on-auto-update-failure' into maint
"git rerere" (invoked internally from many mergy operations) did
not correctly signal errors when told to update the working tree
files and failed to do so for whatever reason.

* jn/rerere-fail-on-auto-update-failure:
  rerere: error out on autoupdate failure
2015-02-24 22:10:13 -08:00
faf723a631 Merge branch 'jk/blame-commit-label' into maint
"git blame HEAD -- missing" failed to correctly say "HEAD" when it
tried to say "No such path 'missing' in HEAD".

* jk/blame-commit-label:
  blame.c: fix garbled error message
  use xstrdup_or_null to replace ternary conditionals
  builtin/commit.c: use xstrdup_or_null instead of envdup
  builtin/apply.c: use xstrdup_or_null instead of null_strdup
  git-compat-util: add xstrdup_or_null helper
2015-02-24 22:09:54 -08:00
33baa6983d git-compat-util.h: remove redundant code
Since commit 3a0a3a89 ("git-compat-util.h: don't define _XOPEN_SOURCE
on cygwin", 23-11-2014) removed the definition of _XOPEN_SOURCE on
cygwin, the code within a pre-processor conditional further down the
file became redundant. Remove the redundant code.

This effectively reverts commit 41b20017 ("Fix an "implicit function
definition" warning", 03-03-2007).

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-22 18:56:23 -08:00
2ce63e9fac sha1_name: use strlcpy() to copy strings
Use strlcpy() instead of calling strncpy() and then setting the last
byte of the target buffer to NUL explicitly.  This shortens and
simplifies the code a bit.

Signed-of-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-22 12:01:38 -08:00
68d6d6eb40 pretty: use starts_with() to check for a prefix
Simplify the code and avoid duplication by using starts_with() instead
of strlen() and strncmp() to check if a line starts with "encoding ".

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-22 12:01:37 -08:00
008d5d005d for-each-ref: use skip_prefix() to avoid duplicate string comparison
Use skip_prefix() to get the part after "color:" (if present) and only
compare it with "reset" instead of comparing the whole string again.
This gets rid of the duplicate "color:" part of the string constant.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-22 12:01:37 -08:00
2ae7f90f26 connect: use strcmp() for string comparison
Get rid of magic string length constants and simply compare the strings
using strcmp().  This makes the intent of the code a bit clearer.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-22 12:01:37 -08:00
afb5de7f8d Documentation/git-am.txt: mention mailinfo.scissors config variable
It was already documented, but the user had to follow the link to
git-mailinfo.txt to find it.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-20 15:09:23 -08:00
d5c4b1855d Documentation/config.txt: document mailinfo.scissors
The variable was documented in git-mailinfo.txt, but not in config.txt.
The detailed documentation is still the one of --scissors in
git-mailinfo.txt, but we give enough information here to let the user
understand what it is about, and to make it easy to find it (e.g.
searching ">8" and "8<" finds it).

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-20 15:07:19 -08:00
ef2956a5e2 Git.pm: two minor typo fixes
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kuleshov <kuleshovmail@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-18 12:29:00 -08:00
bc1c2caa73 read-cache.c: free cache entry when refreshing fails
This fixes a memory leak when building the cache entries as
refresh_cache_entry may decide to return NULL, but it does not
free the cache entry structure which was passed in as an argument.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-17 10:42:43 -08:00
f471494303 git-send-email.perl: support no- prefix with older GetOptions
Only Perl version 5.8.0 or later is required, but that comes with
an older Getopt::Long (2.32) that does not support the 'no-'
prefix.  Support for that was added in Getopt::Long version 2.33.

Since the help only mentions the 'no-' prefix and not the 'no'
prefix, add explicit support for the 'no-' prefix to support
older GetOptions versions.

Reported-by: Tom G. Christensen <tgc@statsbiblioteket.dk>
Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Tom G. Christensen <tgc@statsbiblioteket.dk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-16 13:26:51 -08:00
f400e51c13 test-lib.sh: set prerequisite SANITY by testing what we really need
What we wanted out of the SANITY precondition is that the filesystem
behaves sensibly with permission bits settings.

 - You should not be able to remove a file in a read-only directory,

 - You should not be able to tell if a file in a directory exists if
   the directory lacks read or execute permission bits.

We used to cheat by approximating that condition with "is the /
writable?" test and/or "are we running as root?" test.  Neither test
is sufficient or appropriate in environments like Cygwin.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-15 15:48:38 -08:00
0b868f0eec hex.c: reduce memory footprint of sha1_to_hex static buffers
41 bytes is the exact number of bytes needed for having the returned
hex string represented. 50 seems to be an arbitrary number, such
that there are no benefits from alignment to certain address boundaries.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-13 13:42:17 -08:00
5d308512ff do not include the same header twice
A few files include the same header file directly more than once.

As all these headers protect themselves against repeated inclusion
by the "#ifndef FOO_H / #define FOO_H / ... / #endif" idiom, leave
only the first inclusion and remove the later inclusion as a no-op
clean-up.

Signed-off-by: Дилян Палаузов <git-dpa@aegee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-13 13:16:12 -08:00
45917f0f99 transport-helper: fix typo in error message when --signed is not supported
Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-12 12:31:28 -08:00
204a8ffe67 merge-file: correctly open files when in a subdir
run_setup_gently() is called before merge-file. This may result in changing
current working directory, which wasn't taken into account when opening a file
for writing.

Fix by prepending the passed prefix. Previous var is left so that error
messages keep referring to the file from the user's working directory
perspective.

Signed-off-by: Aleksander Boruch-Gruszecki <aleksander.boruchgruszecki@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-11 11:01:50 -08:00
5e915f3085 fast-import: avoid running end_packfile recursively
When an import has finished, we run end_packfile() to
finalize the data and move the packfile into place. If this
process fails, we call die() and end up in our die_nicely()
handler.  Which unfortunately includes running end_packfile
to save any progress we made. We enter the function again,
and start operating on the pack_data struct while it is in
an inconsistent state, leading to a segfault.

One way to trigger this is to simply start two identical
fast-imports at the same time. They will both create the
same packfiles, which will then try to create identically
named ".keep" files. One will win the race, and the other
will die(), and end up with the segfault.

Since 3c078b9, we already reset the pack_data pointer to
NULL at the end of end_packfile. That covers the case of us
calling die() right after end_packfile, before we have
reinitialized the pack_data pointer. This new problem is
quite similar, except that we are worried about calling
die() _during_ end_packfile, not right after. Ideally we
would simply set pack_data to NULL as soon as we enter the
function, and operate on a copy of the pointer.

Unfortunately, it is not so easy. pack_data is a global, and
end_packfile calls into other functions which operate on the
global directly. We would have to teach each of these to
take an argument, and there is no guarantee that we would
catch all of the spots.

Instead, we can simply use a static flag to avoid
recursively entering the function. This is a little less
elegant, but it's short and fool-proof.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-10 10:35:32 -08:00
e60059276b builtin/blame: destroy initialized commit_info only
Since ea02ffa3 (mailmap: simplify map_user() interface, 2013-01-05),
find_alignment() has been invoking commit_info_destroy() on an
uninitialized auto 'struct commit_info' (when METAINFO_SHOWN is not
set). commit_info_destroy() calls strbuf_release() for each
'commit_info' strbuf member, which randomly invokes free() on
whatever random stack value happens to reside in strbuf.buf, thus
leading to periodic crashes.

Reported-by: Dilyan Palauzov <dilyan.palauzov@aegee.org>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-10 10:31:48 -08:00
b0a4264277 sha1_file: fix iterating loose alternate objects
The string in 'base' contains a path suffix to a specific object;
when its value is used, the suffix must either be filled (as in
stat_sha1_file, open_sha1_file, check_and_freshen_nonlocal) or
cleared (as in prepare_packed_git) to avoid junk at the end.

660c889e (sha1_file: add for_each iterators for loose and packed
objects, 2014-10-15) introduced loose_from_alt_odb(), but this did
neither and treated 'base' as a complete path to the "base" object
directory, instead of a pointer to the "base" of the full path
string.

The trailing path after 'base' is still initialized to NUL, hiding
the bug in some common cases.  Additionally the descendent
for_each_file_in_obj_subdir() function swallows ENOENT, so an error
only shows if the alternate's path was last filled with a valid
object (where statting /path/to/existing/00/0bjectfile/00 fails).

Signed-off-by: Jonathon Mah <me@JonathonMah.com>
Helped-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-09 14:14:56 -08:00
e6f875e052 for_each_loose_file_in_objdir: take an optional strbuf path
We feed a root "objdir" path to this iterator function,
which then copies the result into a strbuf, so that it can
repeatedly append the object sub-directories to it. Let's
make it easy for callers to just pass us a strbuf in the
first place.

We leave the original interface as a convenience for callers
who want to just pass a const string like the result of
get_object_directory().

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-09 14:14:53 -08:00
88c03eb577 git-compat-util: do not step on MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED
MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED may be defined by the builder to a
specific version in order to produce compatible binaries for a
particular system.  Blindly defining it to MAC_OS_X_VERSION_10_6
is bad.

Additionally MAC_OS_X_VERSION_10_6 will not be defined on older
systems and should AvailabilityMacros.h be included on such as
system an error will result.  However, using the explicit value
of 1060 (which is what MAC_OS_X_VERSION_10_6 is defined to) does
not solve the problem.

The changes that introduced stepping on MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN were
made in b195aa00 (git-compat-util: suppress unavoidable
Apple-specific deprecation warnings) to avoid deprecation
warnings.

Instead of blindly setting MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN to 1060 change
the definition of DEPRECATED_ATTRIBUTE to empty to avoid the
warnings.  This preserves any MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED
setting while avoiding the warnings as intended by b195aa00.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-09 14:09:21 -08:00
9874fca712 Git 2.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-05 13:23:56 -08:00
1d0655c15e config_buf_ungetc: warn when pushing back a random character
Our config code simulates a stdio stream around a buffer,
but our fake ungetc() does not behave quite like the real
one. In particular, we only rewind the position by one
character, but do _not_ actually put the character from the
caller into position.

It turns out that this does not matter, because we only ever
push back the character we just read. In other words, such
an assignment would be a noop. But because the function is
called ungetc, and because it takes a character parameter,
it is a mistake waiting to happen.

Actually assigning the character into the buffer would be
ideal, but our pointer is actually a "const" copy of the
buffer. We do not know who the real owner of the buffer is
in this code, and would not want to munge their contents.

Instead, we can simply add an assertion that matches what
the current caller does, and will let us know if new callers
are added that violate the contract.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-05 13:16:55 -08:00
d306f3d351 decimal_width: avoid integer overflow
The decimal_width function originally appeared in blame.c as
"lineno_width", and was designed for calculating the
print-width of small-ish integer values (line numbers in
text files). In ec7ff5b, it was made into a reusable
function, and in dc801e7, we started using it to align
diffstats.

Binary files in a diffstat show byte counts rather than line
numbers, meaning they can be quite large (e.g., consider
adding or removing a 2GB file). decimal_width is not up to
the challenge for two reasons:

  1. It takes the value as an "int", whereas large files may
     easily surpass this. The value may be truncated, in
     which case we will produce an incorrect value.

  2. It counts "up" by repeatedly multiplying another
     integer by 10 until it surpasses the value.  This can
     cause an infinite loop when the value is close to the
     largest representable integer.

     For example, consider using a 32-bit signed integer,
     and a value of 2,140,000,000 (just shy of 2^31-1).
     We will count up and eventually see that 1,000,000,000
     is smaller than our value. The next step would be to
     multiply by 10 and see that 10,000,000,000 is too
     large, ending the loop. But we can't represent that
     value, and we have signed overflow.

     This is technically undefined behavior, but a common
     behavior is to lose the high bits, in which case our
     iterator will certainly be less than the number. So
     we'll keep multiplying, overflow again, and so on.

This patch changes the argument to a uintmax_t (the same
type we use to store the diffstat information for binary
filese), and counts "down" by repeatedly dividing our value
by 10.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-05 12:38:35 -08:00
5e0be134d3 config: do not ungetc EOF
When we are parsing a config value, if we see a carriage
return, we fgetc the next character to see if it is a
line feed (in which case we silently drop the CR). If it
isn't, we then ungetc the character, and take the literal
CR.

But we never check whether we in fact got a character at
all. If the config file ends in CR, we will get EOF here,
and try to ungetc EOF. This works OK for a real stdio
stream. The ungetc returns an error, and the next fgetc will
then return EOF again.

However, our custom buffer-based stream is not so fortunate.
It happily rewinds the position of the stream by one
character, ignoring the fact that we fed it EOF. The next
fgetc call returns the final CR again, over and over, and we
end up in an infinite loop.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-05 12:37:36 -08:00
bd4e8822da ewah: fix building with gcc < 3.4.0
The __builtin_ctzll function was added in gcc 3.4.0.
This extends the check for gcc so that use of __builtin_ctzll is only
enabled if gcc >= 3.4.0.

Signed-off-by: Tom G. Christensen <tgc@statsbiblioteket.dk>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-04 10:45:31 -08:00
3af67924e0 Makefile: handle broken curl version number in version check
curl 7.11.0 through 7.12.2 when built from their official release
archives will present a 5 digit version number instead of the documented
6 digits which breaks the version check in the Makefile.
Correct these broken version numbers on the fly when extracting them to
ensure the comparison works correctly.

[jc: shortened the new sed scripts a bit]

Signed-off-by: Tom G. Christensen <tgc@statsbiblioteket.dk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-03 18:30:24 -08:00
8196e72895 git-submodule.sh: fix '/././' path normalization
When we add a new submodule the path of the submodule is being
normalized. We fail to normalize multiple adjacent '/./', though.
Thus 'path/to/././submodule' will become 'path/to/./submodule' where
it should be 'path/to/submodule' instead.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Acked-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-02 12:35:16 -08:00
0d1c285af2 Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: ca.po: Fix trailing whitespace
2015-02-02 12:05:56 -08:00
35840a3e78 CodingGuidelines: describe naming rules for configuration variables
We may want to say something about command line option names in the
new section as well, but for now, let's make sure everybody is clear
on how to structure and name their configuration variables.

The text for the rules are partly taken from the log message of
Jonathan's 6b3020a2 (add: introduce add.ignoreerrors synonym for
add.ignore-errors, 2010-12-01).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-02 11:28:55 -08:00
7471cf88f5 l10n: ca.po: Fix trailing whitespace
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
2015-01-30 15:02:34 -07:00
697f652818 Documentation/git-remote.txt: stress that set-url is not for triangular
It seems to be a common mistake to try using a single remote
(e.g. 'origin') to fetch from one place (i.e. upstream) while
pushing to another (i.e. your publishing point).

That will never work satisfactorily, and it is easy to understand
why if you think about what refs/remotes/origin/* would mean in such
a world.  It fundamentally cannot reflect the reality.  If it
follows the state of your upstream, it cannot match what you have
published, and vice versa.

It may be that misinformation is spread by some people.  Let's
counter them by adding a few words to our documentation.

 - The description was referring to <oldurl> and <newurl>, but never
   mentioned <name> argument you give from the command line.  By
   mentioning "remote <name>", stress the fact that it is configuring
   a single remote.

 - Add a reminder that explicitly states that this is about a single
   remote, which the triangular workflow is not about.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-29 14:07:13 -08:00
1f985d60ef t/lib-gpg: sanity-check that we can actually sign
Some older versions of gpg (reportedly v1.2.6 from RHEL4) cannot
import the keyrings found in our test suite, and thus cannot even
make a signature.  The previous change works it around, but we
cannot anticipate breakages update to GPG would cause in the future.

Do a test-sign before declaring the GPG prerequisite fulfilled
to future-proof our tests.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-29 12:35:05 -08:00
830ff021aa t/lib-gpg: include separate public keys in keyring.gpg
Since 1e3eefb (tests: replace binary GPG keyrings with
ASCII-armored keys, 2014-12-12), we import our test GPG keys
from a single file. Each keypair in the import stream
contains both the secret and public keys. However, older
versions of gpg reportedly fail to import the public half of
the key. We can solve this by including duplicates of the
public keys separately. The duplicates are ignored by modern
gpg, and this makes older versions work.

Reported by Tom G. Christensen <tgc@statsbiblioteket.dk> on
gpg 1.2.6 (from RHEL4).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-29 11:56:19 -08:00
ac1c2d9a21 diff-format doc: a score can follow M for rewrite
b6d8f309 (diff-raw format update take #2., 2005-05-23) started
documenting the diff format, and it said

 ...
 (8) sha1 for "dst"; 0{40} if creation, unmerged or "look at work tree".
 (9) status, followed by similarlity index number only for C and R.
 (10) a tab or a NUL when '-z' option is used.
 ...

because C and R _were_ the only ones that came with a number back
then.  This was corrected by ddafa7e9 (diff-helper: Fix R/C score
parsing under -z flag., 2005-05-29) and we started saying "score"
instead of "similarlity index" (because we can have other kind of
score there), and stopped saying "only for C and R" (because Git is
an ever evolving system).  Later f345b0a0 (Add -B flag to diff-*
brothers., 2005-05-30) introduced a new concept, "dissimilarity"
score; it did not have to fix any documentation.

The current text that says only C and R can have scores came
independently from a5a323f3 (Add reference for status letters in
documentation., 2008-11-02) and it was wrong from the day one.

Noticed-by: Mike Hommey
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-28 22:22:03 -08:00
57b92a77a0 git-push.txt: document the behavior of --repo
As per the code, the --repo <repo> option is equivalent to the
<repo> argument to 'git push', but somehow it was documented as
something that is more than that.  [It exists for historical
reasons, back from the time when options had to come before
arguments.]

Say so. [But not that.]

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-28 12:56:06 -08:00
94ee8e2c98 do not check truth value of flex arrays
There is no point in checking "!ref->name" when ref is a
"struct ref". The name field is a flex-array, and there
always has a non-zero address. This is almost certainly not
hurting anything, but it does cause clang-3.6 to complain.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-28 12:46:07 -08:00
66ec904b4e read_and_strip_branch: fix typo'd address-of operator
When we are chomping newlines from the end of a strbuf, we
must check "sb.len != 0" before accessing "sb.buf[sb.len - 1]".
However, this code mistakenly checks "&sb.len", which is
always true (it is a part of an auto struct, so the address
is always non-zero). This could lead to us accessing memory
outside the strbuf when we read an empty file.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-28 12:42:44 -08:00
502e7f9851 config.txt: mark deprecated variables more prominently
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-28 12:22:01 -08:00
394e1505b8 config.txt: clarify that add.ignore-errors is deprecated
The old text gave an impression that even in a new repository using
old form might be safer.  Only Git from pre 1.7.0 days choke on the
correctly named variable, which is ancient by today's standard.

We have no intention to remove the support for deprecated ones, but
let's make sure that we do not give room for confused questions such
as "why does core.sparse-checkout not work, when add.ignore-errors
does?"

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-28 12:21:12 -08:00
15598cf41b Git 2.3.0-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-27 14:39:53 -08:00
8b9c2dd4de dumb-http: do not pass NULL path to parse_pack_index
Once upon a time, dumb http always fetched .idx files
directly into their final location, and then checked their
validity with parse_pack_index. This was refactored in
commit 750ef42 (http-fetch: Use temporary files for
pack-*.idx until verified, 2010-04-19), which uses the
following logic:

  1. If we have the idx already in place, see if it's
     valid (using parse_pack_index). If so, use it.

  2. Otherwise, fetch the .idx to a tempfile, check
     that, and if so move it into place.

  3. Either way, fetch the pack itself if necessary.

However, it got step 1 wrong. We pass a NULL path parameter
to parse_pack_index, so an existing .idx file always looks
broken. Worse, we do not treat this broken .idx as an
opportunity to re-fetch, but instead return an error,
ignoring the pack entirely. This can lead to a dumb-http
fetch failing to retrieve the necessary objects.

This doesn't come up much in practice, because it must be a
packfile that we found out about (and whose .idx we stored)
during an earlier dumb-http fetch, but whose packfile we
_didn't_ fetch. I.e., we did a partial clone of a
repository, didn't need some packfiles, and now a followup
fetch needs them.

Discovery and tests by Charles Bailey <charles@hashpling.org>.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-27 12:41:45 -08:00
ff76d36b35 Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: correct singular form
  l10n: de.po: translate "leave behind" correctly
  l10n: de.po: fix typo
  l10n: ca.po: update translation
2015-01-27 11:01:05 -08:00
b4fde1e37d Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/alexhenrie/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/alexhenrie/git-po:
  l10n: ca.po: update translation
2015-01-27 15:00:48 +08:00
1044b1f6a1 commit: reword --author error message
If an --author argument is specified but does not contain a '>' then git tries
to find the argument within the existing authors; and gives the error
message "No existing author found with '%s'" if there is no match.

This is confusing for users who try to specify a valid complete author
name.

Rename the error message to make it clearer that the failure has two
reasons in this case.

(This codepath is touched only when we know already that the argument
cannot be a completely wellformed author ident.)

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-26 19:57:12 -08:00
07586ebd4f l10n: de.po: correct singular form
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-01-26 19:36:04 +01:00
2f334c6461 l10n: de.po: translate "leave behind" correctly
This message is about leaving orphaned commits behind, not about
behind an upstream branch. Try to make this clear.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-01-26 19:36:04 +01:00
3b36ef9188 l10n: de.po: fix typo
Signed-off-by: Benedikt Heine <bebe@bebehei.de>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-01-26 19:36:04 +01:00
573ed5e147 l10n: ca.po: update translation
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
2015-01-26 10:12:50 -07:00
13d261e53a wincred: fix get credential if username has "@"
Such a username with "@" in it isn't all that unusual these days.

cf. https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/msysgit/YVuCqmwwRyY/HULHj5OoE88J

Signed-off-by: Aleksey Vasenev <margtu-fivt@ya.ru>
Acked-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-25 20:08:56 -08:00
3cab02de50 Documentation: what does "git log --indexed-objects" even mean?
4fe10219 (rev-list: add --indexed-objects option, 2014-10-16) adds
"--indexed-objects" option to "rev-list", and it is only useful in
the context of "git rev-list" and not "git log".  There are other
object traversal options that do not make sense for "git log" that
are shown in the manual page.

Move the description of "--indexed-objects" to the object traversal
section so that it sits together with its friends "--objects",
"--objects-edge", etc. and then show them only in "git rev-list"
documentation.

Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-23 15:06:24 -08:00
a9c4641df7 add -i: return from list_and_choose if there is no candidate
The list_and_choose() helper is given a prompt and a list, asks the
user to make selection from the list, and then returns a list of
items chosen.  Even when it is given an empty list as the original
candidate set to choose from, it gave a prompt to the user, who can
only say "I am done choosing".

Return an empty result when the input is an empty list without
bothering the user.  The existing caller must already have a logic
to say "Nothing to do" or an equivalent when the returned list is
empty (i.e. the user chose to select nothing) if it is necessary, so
no change to the callers is necessary.

This fixes the case where "add untracked" is asked in "git add -i"
and there is no untracked files in the working tree.  We used to give
an empty list of files to choose from with a prompt, but with this
change, we no longer do.

Signed-off-by: Alexander Kuleshov <kuleshovmail@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-22 14:44:36 -08:00
76afe74b10 Merge branch 'js/t1050'
* js/t1050:
  t1050-large: generate large files without dd
2015-01-22 13:46:45 -08:00
67b5440d0d Merge branch 'ak/cat-file-clean-up'
* ak/cat-file-clean-up:
  cat-file: use "type" and "size" from outer scope
2015-01-22 13:46:38 -08:00
d588d4d940 Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: correct indentation of show-branch usage
  l10n: de.po: translate 3 messages
  l10n: zh_CN: various fixes on command arguments
  l10n: vi.po(2298t): Updated 3 new strings
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2298t0f0u)
  l10n: fr.po v2.3.0 round 2
  l10n: git.pot: v2.3.0 round 2 (3 updated)
  l10n: de.po: translate 13 new messages
  l10n: de.po: fix typo
  l10n: de.po: translate "track" as "versionieren"
  l10n: zh_CN: translations for git v2.3.0-rc0
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2298t0f0u)
  l10n: fr.po v2.3.0 round 1
  l10n: vi.po(2298t): Updated and change Plural-Forms
  l10n: git.pot: v2.3.0 round 1 (13 new, 11 removed)
  l10n: ca.po: various fixes
2015-01-22 13:45:07 -08:00
ab9432d375 Merge branch 'sh/asciidoc-git-version-fix'
* sh/asciidoc-git-version-fix:
  Documentation: fix version numbering
2015-01-22 13:44:47 -08:00
a4c044484e Documentation: fix version numbering
Version numbers in asciidoc-generated content (such as man pages)
went missing as of da8a366 (Documentation: refactor common operations
into variables).  Fix by putting the underscore back in the variable
name.

Signed-off-by: Sven van Haastregt <svenvh@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-22 13:44:14 -08:00
ee443cf236 Merge branch 'jh/empty-notes'
* jh/empty-notes:
  Fix unclosed here document in t3301.sh
2015-01-22 13:42:37 -08:00
407a792ef7 apply: count the size of postimage correctly
Under --whitespace=fix option, match_fragment() function examines
the preimage (the common context and the removed lines in the patch)
and the file being patched and checks if they match after correcting
all whitespace errors.  When they are found to match, the common
context lines in the preimage is replaced with the fixed copy,
because these lines will then be copied to the corresponding place
in the postimage by a later call to update_pre_post_images().  Lines
that are added in the postimage, under --whitespace=fix, have their
whitespace errors already fixed when apply_one_fragment() prepares
the preimage and the postimage, so in the end, application of the
patch can be done by replacing the block of text in the file being
patched that matched the preimage with what is in the postimage that
was updated by update_pre_post_images().

In the earlier days, fixing whitespace errors always resulted in
reduction of size, either collapsing runs of spaces in the indent to
a tab or removing the trailing whitespaces.  These days, however,
some whitespace error fix results in extending the size.

250b3c6c (apply --whitespace=fix: avoid running over the postimage
buffer, 2013-03-22) tried to compute the final postimage size but
its math was flawed.  It counted the size of the block of text in
the original being patched after fixing the whitespace errors on its
lines that correspond to the preimage.  That number does not have
much to do with how big the final postimage would be.

Instead count (1) the added lines in the postimage, whose size is
the same as in the final patch result because their whitespace
errors have already been corrected, and (2) the fixed size of the
lines that are common.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-22 12:57:24 -08:00
2988289f2c apply: make update_pre_post_images() sanity check the given postlen
"git apply --whitespace=fix" used to be able to assume that fixing
errors will always reduce the size by e.g. stripping whitespaces at
the end of lines or collapsing runs of spaces into tabs at the
beginning of lines.  An update to accomodate fixes that lengthens
the result by e.g. expanding leading tabs into spaces were made long
time ago but the logic miscounted the necessary space after such
whitespace fixes, leading to either under-allocation or over-usage
of already allocated space.

Illustrate this with a runtime sanity-check to protect us from
future breakage.  The test was stolen from Kyle McKay who helped
to identify the problem.

Helped-by: "Kyle J. McKay" <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-22 12:57:24 -08:00
923fc5ab40 apply.c: typofix
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-22 12:57:23 -08:00
85cb1d0ba8 Fix unclosed here document in t3301.sh
Commit 908a320363 introduced  indentation
to here documents in t3301.sh. However in one place <<-EOF was missing
-, which broke this test when run with mksh-50d. This commit fixes it.

Signed-off-by: Kacper Kornet <draenog@pld-linux.org>
Acked-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-22 12:23:42 -08:00
edb72d5511 rebase -i: use full object name internally throughout the script
In earlier days, the abbreviated commit object name shown to the end
users were generated with hardcoded --abbrev=7; 56895038 (rebase
-i: respect core.abbrev, 2013-09-28) tried to make it honor the user
specified core.abbrev, but it missed the very initial invocation of
the editor.

These days, we try to use the full 40-hex object names internally to
avoid ambiguity that can arise after rebase starts running.  Newly
created objects during the rebase may share the same prefix with
existing commits listed in the insn sheet.  These object names are
shortened just before invoking the sequence editor to present the
insn sheet to the end user, and then expanded back to full object
names when the editor returns.

But the code still used the shortened names when preparing the insn
sheet for the very first time, resulting "7 hexdigits or more"
output to the user.  Change the code to use full 40-hex commit
object names from the very beginning to make things more uniform.

Signed-off-by: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-22 12:19:47 -08:00
33cae5428a transport-helper: do not request symbolic refs to remote helpers
A typical remote helper will return a `list` of refs containing a symbolic
ref HEAD, pointing to, e.g. refs/heads/master. In the case of a clone, all
the refs are being requested through `fetch` or `import`, including the
symbolic ref.

While this works properly, in some cases of a fetch, like `git fetch url`
or `git fetch origin HEAD`, or any fetch command involving a symbolic ref
without also fetching the corresponding ref it points to, the fetch command
fails with:

  fatal: bad object 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
  error: <remote> did not send all necessary objects

(in the case the remote helper returned '?' values to the `list` command).

This is because there is only one ref given to fetch(), and it's not
further resolved to something at the end of fetch_with_import().

While this can be somehow handled in the remote helper itself, by adding
a refspec for the symbolic ref, and storing an explicit ref in a private
namespace, and then handling the `import` for that symbolic ref
specifically, very few existing remote helpers are actually doing that.

So, instead of requesting the exact list of wanted refs to remote helpers,
treat symbolic refs differently and request the ref they point to instead.
Then, resolve the symbolic refs values based on the pointed ref.
This assumes there is no more than one level of indirection (a symbolic
ref doesn't point to another symbolic ref).

Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-21 22:46:59 -08:00
1e60744913 l10n: correct indentation of show-branch usage
An indentation error was found right after we started l10n round 2, and
commit d6589d1 (show-branch: fix indentation of usage string) and this
update would fix it.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-01-21 15:35:37 +08:00
54d80a9343 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: translate 3 messages
  l10n: zh_CN: various fixes on command arguments
  l10n: vi.po(2298t): Updated 3 new strings
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2298t0f0u)
  l10n: fr.po v2.3.0 round 2
  l10n: git.pot: v2.3.0 round 2 (3 updated)
  l10n: de.po: translate 13 new messages
  l10n: de.po: fix typo
  l10n: de.po: translate "track" as "versionieren"
  l10n: zh_CN: translations for git v2.3.0-rc0
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2298t0f0u)
  l10n: fr.po v2.3.0 round 1
  l10n: vi.po(2298t): Updated and change Plural-Forms
  l10n: git.pot: v2.3.0 round 1 (13 new, 11 removed)
  l10n: ca.po: various fixes
2015-01-21 14:20:53 +08:00
627736ca79 Git 2.3.0-rc1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-20 17:35:41 -08:00
ea6e82c875 Merge branch 'jk/http-push-symref-fix'
* jk/http-push-symref-fix:
  http-push: trim trailing newline from remote symref
2015-01-20 17:31:50 -08:00
17ad37112d Merge branch 'ak/show-branch-usage-string'
* ak/show-branch-usage-string:
  show-branch: fix indentation of usage string
2015-01-20 16:16:09 -08:00
d6589d1ba4 show-branch: fix indentation of usage string
Noticed-by: Jean-Noël Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-20 16:12:54 -08:00
d06ce4a508 Merge branch 'jk/colors'
* jk/colors:
  parse_color: fix return value for numeric color values 0-8
2015-01-20 15:57:22 -08:00
3759d27aca parse_color: fix return value for numeric color values 0-8
When commit 695d95d refactored the color parsing, it missed
a "return 0" when parsing literal numbers 0-8 (which
represent basic ANSI colors), leading us to report these
colors as an error.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-20 15:56:03 -08:00
a235de4bd2 l10n: de.po: translate 3 messages
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-01-20 19:23:57 +01:00
d9d56b2357 l10n: zh_CN: various fixes on command arguments
Updated translations for Git 2.3.0 l10n round 2, and fixed various
translations for command arguments.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-01-19 10:23:53 +08:00
07361f12ab Merge branch 'v2.3.0' of git://github.com/jnavila/git
* 'v2.3.0' of git://github.com/jnavila/git:
  l10n: fr.po v2.3.0 round 2
2015-01-19 10:12:46 +08:00
482f68e741 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/nafmo/git-l10n-sv
* 'master' of git://github.com/nafmo/git-l10n-sv:
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2298t0f0u)
2015-01-19 10:10:57 +08:00
d1f9c7b77e l10n: vi.po(2298t): Updated 3 new strings
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2015-01-19 07:20:28 +07:00
0ef279509b l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2298t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2015-01-18 20:30:18 +01:00
bf41b712c7 l10n: fr.po v2.3.0 round 2
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2015-01-18 17:03:27 +01:00
105979f71c l10n: git.pot: v2.3.0 round 2 (3 updated)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.3.0-rc0-44-ga94655d for git v2.3.0 l10n
round 2.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-01-18 11:26:57 +08:00
48a9a6b5eb Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: translate 13 new messages
  l10n: de.po: fix typo
  l10n: de.po: translate "track" as "versionieren"
  l10n: zh_CN: translations for git v2.3.0-rc0
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2298t0f0u)
  l10n: fr.po v2.3.0 round 1
  l10n: vi.po(2298t): Updated and change Plural-Forms
  l10n: git.pot: v2.3.0 round 1 (13 new, 11 removed)
  l10n: ca.po: various fixes
2015-01-18 11:24:00 +08:00
124d80928d l10n: de.po: translate 13 new messages
Translate 13 new messages came from git.pot update in
beb691f (l10n: git.pot: v2.3.0 round 1 (13 new, 11 removed)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-01-17 18:10:46 +01:00
e1a05ad851 l10n: de.po: fix typo
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-01-17 18:10:02 +01:00
463243d49c l10n: de.po: translate "track" as "versionieren"
Suggested-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-01-17 18:09:56 +01:00
04cb2f28cc l10n: zh_CN: translations for git v2.3.0-rc0
Translate 13 new messages (2298t0f0u) for git v2.3.0-rc0.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-01-17 15:28:36 +08:00
eae69530ae tests: correct misuses of POSIXPERM
POSIXPERM requires that a later call to stat(2) (hence "ls -l")
faithfully reproduces what an earlier chmod(2) did.  Some
filesystems cannot satisify this.

SANITY requires that a file or a directory is indeed accessible (or
inaccessible) when its permission bits would say it ought to be
accessible (or inaccessible).  Running tests as root would lose this
prerequisite for obvious reasons.

Fix a few tests that misuse POSIXPERM.

t0061-run-command.sh has two uses of POSIXPERM.

 - One checks that an attempt to execute a file that is marked as
   unexecutable results in a failure with EACCES; I do not think
   having root-ness or any other capability that busts the
   filesystem permission mode bits will make you run an unexecutable
   file, so this should be left as-is.  The test does not have
   anything to do with SANITY.

 - The other one expects 'git nitfol' runs the alias when an
   alias.nitfol is defined and a directory on the PATH is marked as
   unreadable and unsearchable.  I _think_ the test tries to reject
   the alternative expectation that we want to refuse to run the
   alias because it would break "no alias may mask a command" rule
   if a file 'git-nitfol' exists in the unreadable directory but we
   cannot even determine if that is the case.  Under !SANITY that
   busts the permission bits, this test no longer checks that, so it
   must be protected with SANITY.

t1509-root-worktree.sh expects to be run on a / that is writable by
the user and sees if Git behaves "sensibly" when /.git is the
repository to govern a worktree that is the whole filesystem, and
also if Git behaves "sensibly" when / itself is a bare repository
with refs, objects, and friends (I find the definition of "behaves
sensibly" under these conditions hard to fathom, but it is a
different matter).

The implementation of the test is very much problematic.

 - It requires POSIXPERM, but it does not do chmod or checks modes
   in any way.

 - It runs "rm /*" and "rm -fr /refs /objects ..." in one of the
   tests, and also does "cd / && git init --bare".  If done on a
   live system that takes advantages of the "feature" being tested,
   these obviously will clobber the system.  But there is no guard
   against such a breakage.

 - It uses "test $UID = 0" to see rootness, which now should be
   spelled "! test_have_prereq NOT_ROOT"

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-16 10:36:15 -08:00
1767c51787 t/lib-httpd: switch SANITY check for NOT_ROOT
The SANITY prerequisite is really about whether the
filesystem will respect the permissions we set, and being
root is only one part of that. But the httpd tests really
just care about not being root, as they are trying to avoid
weirdness in apache (see a1a3011 for details).

Let's switch out SANITY for a new NOT_ROOT prerequisite,
which will let us tweak SANITY more freely.

We implement NOT_ROOT by checking `id -u`, which is in POSIX
and seems to be available even on MSYS.  Note that we cannot
just call this "ROOT" and ask for "!ROOT". The possible
outcomes are:

  1. we know we are root

  2. we know we are not root

  3. we could not tell, because `id` was not available

We should conservatively treat (3) as "does not have the
prerequisite", which means that a naive negation would not
work.

Helped-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-16 09:33:46 -08:00
a94655dcfe git-svn: make it play nicely with submodules
It's a simple matter of opening the directory specified in the gitfile.

[ew: tweaked check to avoid open() on directories]

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2015-01-15 08:35:55 +00:00
9a2bb059e7 Git::SVN: handle missing ref_id case correctly
ref_id should not match "refs/remotes/".

[ew: dropped initial hunk for GIT_SVN_ID at Ramkumar's request]

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2015-01-15 08:35:55 +00:00
2a26377047 l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2298t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2015-01-14 22:55:49 +01:00
d0a042a186 t1050-large: generate large files without dd
For some unknown reason, the dd on my Windows box segfaults randomly,
but since recently, it does so much more often than it used to, which
makes running the test suite burdensome.

Use printf to write large files instead of dd. To emphasize that three
of the large blobs are exact copies, use cp to allocate them.

The new code makes the files a bit smaller, and they are not sparse
anymore, but the tests do not depend on these properties. We do not want
to use test-genrandom here (which is used to generate large files
elsewhere in t1050), so that the files can be compressed well (which
keeps the run-time short).

The files are now large text files, not binary files. But since they
are larger than core.bigfilethreshold they are diagnosed as binary
by Git. For this reason, the 'git diff' tests that check the output
for "Binary files differ" still pass.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-14 13:08:12 -08:00
563d4e59bd Fifth batch for 2.3 cycle
Hopefully this will be the final feature update for 2.3-rc1

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-14 12:44:03 -08:00
670f6a72b8 Merge branch 'po/doc-core-ignorestat'
* po/doc-core-ignorestat:
  doc: core.ignoreStat update, and clarify the --assume-unchanged effect
  doc: core.ignoreStat clarify the --assume-unchanged effect
2015-01-14 12:41:38 -08:00
401a317aae Merge branch 'rc/for-each-ref-tracking'
* rc/for-each-ref-tracking:
  for-each-ref: always check stat_tracking_info()'s return value
2015-01-14 12:39:02 -08:00
63a0e83ea6 Merge branch 'rh/autoconf-rhel3'
Build update for older RHEL.

* rh/autoconf-rhel3:
  configure.ac: check for HMAC_CTX_cleanup
  configure.ac: check for clock_gettime and CLOCK_MONOTONIC
  configure.ac: check 'tv_nsec' field in 'struct stat'
2015-01-14 12:37:21 -08:00
09deda3746 Merge branch 'ak/fewer-includes'
* ak/fewer-includes:
  cat-file: remove unused includes
  git.c: remove unnecessary #includes
2015-01-14 12:37:19 -08:00
ce8e4e3e57 Merge branch 'ak/doc-add-v-n-options'
* ak/doc-add-v-n-options:
  Documentation: list long options for -v and -n
2015-01-14 12:37:14 -08:00
d62078e910 Merge branch 'ak/show-branch-usage-string'
* ak/show-branch-usage-string:
  show-branch: line-wrap show-branch usage
2015-01-14 12:37:07 -08:00
601ca9287d Merge branch 'rh/test-color-avoid-terminfo-in-original-home'
We try to see if "tput" gives a useful result before switching TERM
to dumb and moving HOME to point to our fake location for stability
of the tests, and then use the command when coloring the output
from the tests, but there is no guarantee "tput" works after
switching HOME.

* rh/test-color-avoid-terminfo-in-original-home:
  test-lib.sh: do tests for color support after changing HOME
  test-lib: use 'test ...' instead of '[ ... ]'
2015-01-14 12:36:45 -08:00
9920c71825 Merge branch 'tf/prompt-preserve-exit-status'
Using the exit status of the last command in the prompt, e.g.
PS1='$(__git_ps1) $? ', did not work well because the helper
function stomped on the exit status.

* tf/prompt-preserve-exit-status:
  git-prompt: preserve value of $? in all cases
2015-01-14 12:35:49 -08:00
e1ef7d177c Merge branch 'rh/hide-prompt-in-ignored-directory'
* rh/hide-prompt-in-ignored-directory:
  git-prompt.sh: allow to hide prompt for ignored pwd
  git-prompt.sh: if pc mode, immediately set PS1 to a plain prompt
2015-01-14 12:34:01 -08:00
1e7ef5d9bf Merge branch 'mm/complete-rebase-autostash'
* mm/complete-rebase-autostash:
  git-completion: add --autostash for 'git rebase'
2015-01-14 12:33:57 -08:00
8128835f91 Merge branch 'aw/doc-smtp-ssl-cert-path'
A long overdue documentation update to match an age-old code
update.

* aw/doc-smtp-ssl-cert-path:
  correct smtp-ssl-cert-path description
2015-01-14 12:33:50 -08:00
41753312e1 Merge branch 'sp/subtree-doc'
* sp/subtree-doc:
  subtree: fix AsciiDoc list item continuation
2015-01-14 12:33:46 -08:00
e9f91191cc Merge branch 'km/log-usage-string-i18n'
* km/log-usage-string-i18n:
  log.c: fix translation markings
2015-01-14 12:32:39 -08:00
2202ab1931 Merge branch 'km/imap-send-libcurl-options'
Now imap-send learned to talk to the server using cURL library,
allow the same GIT_CURL_VERBOSE environment variable to control the
verbosity of the chattering.

* km/imap-send-libcurl-options:
  imap-send.c: set CURLOPT_USE_SSL to CURLUSESSL_TRY
  imap-send.c: support GIT_CURL_VERBOSE
2015-01-14 12:31:50 -08:00
6d9f0c7c0d Merge branch 'jk/prune-packed-server-info'
Fix recent breakage in Git 2.2 that started creating info/refs and
objects/info/packs files with permission bits tighter than user's
umask.

* jk/prune-packed-server-info:
  update-server-info: create info/* with mode 0666
  t1301: set umask in reflog sharedrepository=group test
2015-01-14 12:30:27 -08:00
7fd92d9ed0 Merge branch 'js/remote-add-with-insteadof'
"git remote add $name $URL" is now allowed when "url.$URL.insteadOf"
is already defined.

* js/remote-add-with-insteadof:
  Add a regression test for 'git remote add <existing> <same-url>'
  git remote: allow adding remotes agreeing with url.<...>.insteadOf
2015-01-14 12:29:47 -08:00
f6786c8dcb http-push: trim trailing newline from remote symref
When we fetch a symbolic ref file from the remote, we get
the whole string "ref: refs/heads/master\n", recognize it by
skipping past the "ref: ", and store the rest. We should
chomp the trailing newline.

This bug was introduced in ae021d8 (use skip_prefix to avoid
magic numbers, 2014-06-18), which did not notice that the
length computation fed to xmemdupz was quietly tweaked by 1
to account for this.

We can solve it by explicitly trimming the newline, which is
more obvious. Note that we use strbuf_rtrim here, which will
actually cut off any trailing whitespace, not just a single
newline. This is a good thing, though, as it makes our
parsing more liberal (and spaces are not valid in refnames
anyway).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Tested-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-14 10:28:02 -08:00
6babe76496 git-prompt: preserve value of $? in all cases
Signed-off-by: Tony Finch <dot@dotat.at>
Reviewed-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-14 10:11:49 -08:00
331004836b cat-file: use "type" and "size" from outer scope
In cat_one_file(), "type" and "size" variables are defined in the
function scope, and then two variables of the same name are defined
in a block in one of the if/else statement, hiding the definitions
in the outer scope.

Because the values of the outer variables before the control enters
this scope, however, do not have to be preserved, we can remove
useless definitions of variables from the inner scope safely without
breaking anything.

Signed-off-by: Alexander Kuleshov <kuleshovmail@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-13 12:36:04 -08:00
9905988a57 l10n: fr.po v2.3.0 round 1
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2015-01-13 20:23:41 +01:00
a46442f167 blame.c: fix garbled error message
The helper functions prepare_final() and prepare_initial() return a
pointer to a string that is a member of an object in the revs->pending
array. This array is later rebuilt when running prepare_revision_walk()
which potentially transforms the pointer target into a bogus string. Fix
this by maintaining a copy of the original string.

Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <git@cryptocrack.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-13 10:05:53 -08:00
8c53f0719b use xstrdup_or_null to replace ternary conditionals
This replaces "x ? xstrdup(x) : NULL" with xstrdup_or_null(x).
The change is fairly mechanical, with the exception of
resolve_refdup, which can eliminate a temporary variable.

There are still a few hits grepping for "?.*xstrdup", but
these are of slightly different forms and cannot be
converted (e.g., "x ? xstrdup(x->foo) : NULL").

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-13 10:05:48 -08:00
eaa541eb59 builtin/commit.c: use xstrdup_or_null instead of envdup
The only reason for envdup to be its own function is that we
have to save the result in a temporary string. With
xstrdup_or_null, we can feed the result of getenv()
directly.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-13 10:03:40 -08:00
4440690786 builtin/apply.c: use xstrdup_or_null instead of null_strdup
This file had its own identical helper that predates
xstrdup_or_null. Let's use the global one to avoid
repetition.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-13 10:03:38 -08:00
d64ea0f83b git-compat-util: add xstrdup_or_null helper
It's a common idiom to duplicate a string if it is non-NULL,
or pass a literal NULL through. This is already a one-liner
in C, but you do have to repeat the name of the string
twice. So if there's a function call, you must write:

  const char *x = some_fun(...);
  return x ? xstrdup(x) : NULL;

instead of (with this patch) just:

  return xstrdup_or_null(some_fun(...));

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-13 10:03:30 -08:00
fbf5d8c3d0 l10n: vi.po(2298t): Updated and change Plural-Forms
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2015-01-13 14:23:12 +07:00
beb691f770 l10n: git.pot: v2.3.0 round 1 (13 new, 11 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.3.0-rc0 for git v2.3.0 l10n round 1.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-01-13 14:05:57 +08:00
7695982c20 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/alexhenrie/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/alexhenrie/git-po:
  l10n: ca.po: various fixes
2015-01-13 14:04:57 +08:00
92be938e96 doc: core.ignoreStat update, and clarify the --assume-unchanged effect
The assume-unchanged bit, and consequently core.ignoreStat, can be
misunderstood. Be assertive about the expectation that file changes should
notified to Git.

Overhaul the general wording thus:
    1. direct description of what is ignored given first.
    2. example instruction of the user manual action required.
    3. use sideways indirection for assume-unchanged and update-index
       references.
    4. add a 'normally' to give leeway for the change detection.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-12 15:12:05 -08:00
b6160d950c for-each-ref: always check stat_tracking_info()'s return value
The code handling %(upstream:track) and %(upstream:trackshort)
assumed that it always had a valid branch that had been sanitized
earlier in populate_value(), and thus did not check the return value
of the call to stat_tracking_info().

While there is indeed some sanitization code that basically
corresponds to stat_tracking_info() returning 0 (no base branch
set), the function can also return -1 when the base branch did exist
but has since then been deleted.

In this case, num_ours and num_theirs had undefined values and a
call to `git for-each-ref --format="%(upstream:track)"` could print
spurious values such as

  [behind -111794512]
  [ahead 38881640, behind 5103867]

even for repositories with one single commit.

Verify stat_tracking_info()'s return value and do not print anything
if it returns -1. This behavior also matches the documentation ("has
no effect if the ref does not have tracking information associated
with it").

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Raphael Kubo da Costa <raphael.kubo.da.costa@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-12 15:10:46 -08:00
addfb21a94 Git 2.3.0-rc0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-12 14:12:42 -08:00
def6dd9bc6 Sync with 2.2.2 2015-01-12 14:08:42 -08:00
fdf96a20ac Git 2.2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-12 14:06:12 -08:00
9f16184af5 Merge branch 'jk/read-packed-refs-without-path-max' into maint
* jk/read-packed-refs-without-path-max:
  read_packed_refs: use skip_prefix instead of static array
  read_packed_refs: pass strbuf to parse_ref_line
  read_packed_refs: use a strbuf for reading lines
2015-01-12 14:02:54 -08:00
d0879b33a6 Merge branch 'mg/add-ignore-errors' into maint
* mg/add-ignore-errors:
  add: ignore only ignored files
2015-01-12 14:02:19 -08:00
efc028b1f2 Merge branch 'mh/find-uniq-abbrev' into maint
* mh/find-uniq-abbrev:
  sha1_name: avoid unnecessary sha1 lookup in find_unique_abbrev
2015-01-12 14:02:05 -08:00
9ea21fa89c Merge branch 'jk/approxidate-avoid-y-d-m-over-future-dates' into maint
* jk/approxidate-avoid-y-d-m-over-future-dates:
  approxidate: allow ISO-like dates far in the future
  pass TIME_DATE_NOW to approxidate future-check
2015-01-12 14:01:18 -08:00
ba1edc9264 Merge branch 'rw/apply-does-not-take-ignore-date' into maint
* rw/apply-does-not-take-ignore-date:
  git-am.txt: --ignore-date flag is not passed to git-apply
2015-01-12 14:00:16 -08:00
417a5b226c Merge branch 'jk/for-each-reflog-ent-reverse' into maint
* jk/for-each-reflog-ent-reverse:
  for_each_reflog_ent_reverse: turn leftover check into assertion
  for_each_reflog_ent_reverse: fix newlines on block boundaries
2015-01-12 12:19:17 -08:00
832258da96 Merge branch 'bc/fetch-thin-less-aggressive-in-normal-repository'
Earlier we made "rev-list --object-edge" more aggressively list the
objects at the edge commits, in order to reduce number of objects
fetched into a shallow repository, but the change affected cases
other than "fetching into a shallow repository" and made it
unusably slow (e.g. fetching into a normal repository should not
have to suffer the overhead from extra processing).  Limit it to a
more specific case by introducing --objects-edge-aggressive, a new
option to rev-list.

* bc/fetch-thin-less-aggressive-in-normal-repository:
  pack-objects: use --objects-edge-aggressive for shallow repos
  rev-list: add an option to mark fewer edges as uninteresting
  Documentation: add missing article in rev-list-options.txt
2015-01-12 11:38:57 -08:00
e20d5a2c44 Merge branch 'sb/doc-submitting-patches-keep-notes'
* sb/doc-submitting-patches-keep-notes:
  SubmittingPatches: explain rationale for using --notes with format-patch
2015-01-12 11:38:55 -08:00
7a353ec965 Merge branch 'rs/simplify-transport-get'
* rs/simplify-transport-get:
  transport: simplify duplicating a substring in transport_get() using xmemdupz()
2015-01-12 11:38:53 -08:00
acddf49432 Merge branch 'rs/simplify-parsing-commit-tree-S'
* rs/simplify-parsing-commit-tree-S:
  commit-tree: simplify parsing of option -S using skip_prefix()
2015-01-12 11:38:48 -08:00
d61e79050c Merge branch 'rs/plug-strbuf-leak-in-merge'
* rs/plug-strbuf-leak-in-merge:
  merge: release strbuf after use in suggest_conflicts()
2015-01-12 11:38:37 -08:00
97488abc91 Merge branch 'rs/plug-strbuf-leak-in-lock-ref'
* rs/plug-strbuf-leak-in-lock-ref:
  refs: plug strbuf leak in lock_ref_sha1_basic()
2015-01-12 11:38:31 -08:00
c00e1c59d8 Merge branch 'es/checkout-index-temp'
"git checkout-index --temp=$target $path" did not work correctly
for paths outside the current subdirectory in the project.

* es/checkout-index-temp:
  checkout-index: fix --temp relative path mangling
  t2004: demonstrate broken relative path printing
  t2004: standardize file naming in symlink test
  t2004: drop unnecessary write-tree/read-tree
  t2004: modernize style
2015-01-12 11:38:28 -08:00
42618bc34e Merge branch 'cc/bisect-rev-parsing'
The logic in "git bisect bad HEAD" etc. to avoid forcing the test
of the common ancestor of bad and good commits was broken.

* cc/bisect-rev-parsing:
  bisect: add test to check that revs are properly parsed
  bisect: parse revs before passing them to check_expected_revs()
2015-01-12 11:38:19 -08:00
a2681d2bac Documentation: list long options for -v and -n
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kuleshov <kuleshovmail@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-09 16:23:41 -08:00
10aff315f6 cat-file: remove unused includes
- "exec_cmd.h" became unnecessary at b931aa5a (Call builtin ls-tree
   in git-cat-file -p, 2006-05-26), when it changed an earlier code
   that delegated tree display to "ls-tree" via the run_command()
   API (hence needing "exec_cmd.h") to call cmd_ls_tree() directly.
   We should have removed the include in the same commit, but we
   forgot to do so.

 - "diff.h" was added at e5fba602 (textconv: support for cat_file,
   2010-06-15), together with "userdiff.h", but "userdiff.h" can be
   included without including "diff.h"; the header was unnecessary
   from the beginning.

 - "tag.h" and "tree.h" were necessary since 8e440259 (Use blob_,
   commit_, tag_, and tree_type throughout., 2006-04-02) to check
   the type of object by comparing typename with tree_type and
   tag_type (pointers to extern strings).

   21666f1a (convert object type handling from a string to a number,
   2007-02-26) made these <type>_type strings unnecessary, and it
   could have switched to include "object.h", which is necessary to
   use typename(), but it forgot to do so.  Because "tag.h" and
   "tree.h" include "object.h", it did not need to explicitly
   include "object.h" in order to start using typename() itself.

   We do not even have to include "object.h" after removing these
   two #includes, because "builtin.h" includes "commit.h" which in
   turn includes "object.h" these days.  This happened at 7b9c0a69
   (git-commit-tree: make it usable from other builtins,
   2008-07-01).

Signed-off-by: Alexander Kuleshov <kuleshovmail@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-09 16:18:35 -08:00
50fea42ef5 git.c: remove unnecessary #includes
"cache.h" and "commit.h" are already included via "builtin.h".

We started to include "quote.h" at 575ba9d6 (GIT_TRACE: show which
built-in/external commands are executed, 2006-06-25) that wanted to
use sq_quote_print().

When 6ce4e61f (Trace into a file or an open fd and refactor tracing
code., 2006-09-02) introduced trace.c API, the calls this file makes
to sq_quote_print() were replaced by calls to trace_argv_printf()
that are declared in "cache.h", which this file already includes.
We should have stopped including "quote.h" in that commit, but
forgot to do so.

Signed-off-by: Alexander Kuleshov <kuleshovmail@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-09 16:16:56 -08:00
88e011814b configure.ac: check for HMAC_CTX_cleanup
OpenSSL version 0.9.6b and before defined the function HMAC_cleanup.
Newer versions define HMAC_CTX_cleanup.  Check for HMAC_CTX_cleanup and
fall back to HMAC_cleanup when the newer function is missing.

Signed-off-by: Reuben Hawkins <reubenhwk@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-09 15:33:57 -08:00
a6c3c638ac configure.ac: check for clock_gettime and CLOCK_MONOTONIC
Set or clear Makefile variables HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME and
HAVE_CLOCK_MONOTONIC based upon results of the checks (overriding
default values from config.mak.uname).

CLOCK_MONOTONIC isn't available on RHEL3, but there are still RHEL3
systems being used in production.

Signed-off-by: Reuben Hawkins <reubenhwk@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-09 15:33:39 -08:00
8bd2c972b1 configure.ac: check 'tv_nsec' field in 'struct stat'
Detect 'tv_nsec' field in 'struct stat' and set Makefile variable
NO_NSEC appropriately.

A side-effect of the above detection is that we also determine
whether 'stat.st_mtimespec' is available, so, as a bonus, set the
Makefile variable USE_ST_TIMESPEC, as well.

Signed-off-by: Reuben Hawkins <reubenhwk@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-09 15:33:39 -08:00
89ea90351d rerere: error out on autoupdate failure
We have been silently tolerating errors by returning early with an
error that the caller ignores since rerere.autoupdate was introduced
in v1.6.0-rc0~120^2 (2008-06-22).  So on error (for example if the
index is already locked), rerere can return success silently without
updating the index or with only some items in the index updated.

Better to treat such failures as a fatal error so the operator can
figure out what is wrong and fix it.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-08 13:55:10 -08:00
9990273917 show-branch: line-wrap show-branch usage
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kuleshov <kuleshovmail@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-08 12:08:06 -08:00
4dbe66464b remote-curl: fall back to Basic auth if Negotiate fails
Apache servers using mod_auth_kerb can be configured to allow the user
to authenticate either using Negotiate (using the Kerberos ticket) or
Basic authentication (using the Kerberos password).  Often, one will
want to use Negotiate authentication if it is available, but fall back
to Basic authentication if the ticket is missing or expired.

However, libcurl will try very hard to use something other than Basic
auth, even over HTTPS.  If Basic and something else are offered, libcurl
will never attempt to use Basic, even if the other option fails.
Teach the HTTP client code to stop trying authentication mechanisms that
don't use a password (currently Negotiate) after the first failure,
since if they failed the first time, they will never succeed.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 19:48:19 -08:00
339de50891 format-patch: ignore diff.submodule setting
diff.submodule when set to log produces output which git-am cannot
handle. Ignore this setting when generating patch output.

Signed-off-by: Doug Kelly <dougk.ff7@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 19:45:05 -08:00
fe7611c46f t4255: test am submodule with diff.submodule
git am will break when using diff.submodule=log; add some test cases
to illustrate this breakage as simply as possible.  There are
currently two ways this can fail:

* With errors ("unrecognized input"), if only change
* Silently (no submodule change), if other files change

Test for both conditions and ensure without diff.submodule this works.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Doug Kelly <dougk.ff7@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 19:45:05 -08:00
1e6f5b22ad Fourth batch for 2.3 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 13:28:37 -08:00
ee6e4c70f1 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  is_hfs_dotgit: loosen over-eager match of \u{..47}
2015-01-07 13:28:29 -08:00
7ba46269a0 Merge branch 'maint-2.1' into maint
* maint-2.1:
  is_hfs_dotgit: loosen over-eager match of \u{..47}
2015-01-07 13:28:10 -08:00
3c84ac86fc Merge branch 'maint-2.0' into maint-2.1
* maint-2.0:
  is_hfs_dotgit: loosen over-eager match of \u{..47}
2015-01-07 13:27:56 -08:00
282616c72d Merge branch 'maint-1.9' into maint-2.0
* maint-1.9:
  is_hfs_dotgit: loosen over-eager match of \u{..47}
2015-01-07 13:27:19 -08:00
64a03e970a Merge branch 'maint-1.8.5' into maint-1.9
* maint-1.8.5:
  is_hfs_dotgit: loosen over-eager match of \u{..47}
2015-01-07 13:27:13 -08:00
3d8a54eb37 Merge branch 'jk/dotgit-case-maint-1.8.5' into maint-1.8.5
* jk/dotgit-case-maint-1.8.5:
  is_hfs_dotgit: loosen over-eager match of \u{..47}
2015-01-07 13:26:35 -08:00
40d2f38635 Merge branch 'bw/maint-0090-awk-tweak'
* bw/maint-0090-awk-tweak:
  t0090: tweak awk statement for Solaris /usr/xpg4/bin/awk
2015-01-07 13:10:44 -08:00
06a8bbb41d Merge branch 'jh/pre-push-sample-no-custom-ifs'
The sample pre-push hook used customized IFS=' ' for no good reason.

* jh/pre-push-sample-no-custom-ifs:
  pre-push.sample: remove unnecessary and misleading IFS=' '
2015-01-07 13:10:40 -08:00
487b17de3e Merge branch 'tf/prompt-preserve-exit-status'
Using the exit status of the last command in the prompt, e.g.
PS1='$(__git_ps1) $? ', did not work well because the helper
function stomped on the exit status.

* tf/prompt-preserve-exit-status:
  git-prompt: preserve value of $? inside shell prompt
2015-01-07 13:09:35 -08:00
7938918e9f Merge branch 'sb/dco-indentation-fix'
* sb/dco-indentation-fix:
  Documentation/SubmittingPatches: unify whitespace/tabs for the DCO
2015-01-07 13:09:32 -08:00
c0cf6866fc Merge branch 'bb/update-unicode-table'
Simplify the procedure to generate unicode table.

* bb/update-unicode-table:
  update_unicode.sh: delete the command group
  update_unicode.sh: make the output structure visible
  update_unicode.sh: shorten uniset invocation path
  update_unicode.sh: set UNICODE_DIR only once
  update_unicode.sh: simplify output capture
2015-01-07 13:09:04 -08:00
74a101eb48 Merge branch 'es/squelch-openssl-warnings-on-macosx'
Squelch useless compiler warnings on Mac OS X.

* es/squelch-openssl-warnings-on-macosx:
  git-compat-util: suppress unavoidable Apple-specific deprecation warnings
2015-01-07 13:08:30 -08:00
3d2c1bf2d4 Merge branch 'sb/t5400-remove-unused'
* sb/t5400-remove-unused:
  t5400: remove dead code
2015-01-07 13:08:27 -08:00
5095fa61e3 Merge branch 'lh/send-email-hide-x-mailer'
"git send-email" normally identifies itself via X-Mailer: header
in the message it sends out.  A new command line flag allows the
user to squelch the header.

* lh/send-email-hide-x-mailer:
  test/send-email: --[no-]xmailer tests
  send-email: add --[no-]xmailer option
2015-01-07 13:07:27 -08:00
948e81408d Merge branch 'rd/send-email-2047-fix'
"git send-email" did not handle RFC 2047 encoded headers quite
right.

* rd/send-email-2047-fix:
  send-email: handle adjacent RFC 2047-encoded words properly
  send-email: align RFC 2047 decoding more closely with the spec
2015-01-07 13:06:47 -08:00
e82f629cf4 Merge branch 'pd/completion-filenames-fix'
The top-of-the-file instruction for completion scripts (in contrib/)
did not name the files correctly.

* pd/completion-filenames-fix:
  Update documentation occurrences of filename .sh
2015-01-07 13:06:37 -08:00
abac75c207 Merge branch 'jk/add-i-read-error'
"git add -i" did not notice when the interactive command input
stream went away and kept asking.

* jk/add-i-read-error:
  add--interactive: leave main loop on read error
2015-01-07 13:05:58 -08:00
04950c7141 Merge branch 'jk/approxidate-avoid-y-d-m-over-future-dates'
Traditionally we tried to avoid interpreting date strings given by
the user as future dates, e.g. GIT_COMMITTER_DATE=2014-12-10 when
used early November 2014 was taken as "October 12, 2014" because it
is likely that a date in the future, December 10, is a mistake.

Loosen this and do not tiebreak by future-ness of the date when

(1) ISO-like format is used, and
(2) the string can make sense interpreted as both y-m-d and y-d-m.

* jk/approxidate-avoid-y-d-m-over-future-dates:
  approxidate: allow ISO-like dates far in the future
  pass TIME_DATE_NOW to approxidate future-check
2015-01-07 13:01:16 -08:00
c5cb52fd7c Merge branch 'br/imap-send-via-libcurl'
Newer libCurl knows how to talk IMAP; "git imap-send" has been
updated to use this instead of a hand-rolled OpenSSL calls.

* br/imap-send-via-libcurl:
  git-imap-send: use libcurl for implementation
2015-01-07 12:58:05 -08:00
08db3b6392 Merge branch 'br/imap-send-verbosity'
* br/imap-send-verbosity:
  imap-send: use parse options API to determine verbosity
2015-01-07 12:57:03 -08:00
bb86a40e06 Merge branch 'nd/lockfile-absolute'
The lockfile API can get confused which file to clean up when the
process moved the $cwd after creating a lockfile.

* nd/lockfile-absolute:
  lockfile.c: store absolute path
2015-01-07 12:56:01 -08:00
098501527f Merge branch 'jc/merge-bases'
The get_merge_bases*() API was easy to misuse by careless
copy&paste coders, leaving object flags tainted in the commits that
needed to be traversed.

* jc/merge-bases:
  get_merge_bases(): always clean-up object flags
  bisect: clean flags after checking merge bases
2015-01-07 12:55:05 -08:00
58e0362edd Merge branch 'jc/strbuf-add-lines-avoid-sp-ht-sequence'
The commented output used to blindly add a SP before the payload
line, resulting in "# \t<indented text>\n" when the payload began
with a HT.  Instead, produce "#\t<indented text>\n".

* jc/strbuf-add-lines-avoid-sp-ht-sequence:
  strbuf_add_commented_lines(): avoid SP-HT sequence in commented lines
2015-01-07 12:49:19 -08:00
f41157e649 Merge branch 'jc/diff-b-m'
Fix long-standing bug in "diff -B -M" output.

* jc/diff-b-m:
  diff -B -M: fix output for "copy and then rewrite" case
2015-01-07 12:44:42 -08:00
d35c802793 Merge branch 'jc/clone-borrow'
Allow "git clone --reference" to be used more safely.

* jc/clone-borrow:
  clone: --dissociate option to mark that reference is only temporary
2015-01-07 12:42:13 -08:00
da178ac793 Merge branch 'jc/checkout-local-track-report'
The report from "git checkout" on a branch that builds on another
local branch by setting its branch.*.merge to branch name (not a
full refname) incorrectly said that the upstream is gone.

* jc/checkout-local-track-report:
  checkout: report upstream correctly even with loosely defined branch.*.merge
2015-01-07 12:41:00 -08:00
d89ad9c1b8 git-completion: add --autostash for 'git rebase'
This option was added in 58794775 (rebase: implement
--[no-]autostash and rebase.autostash, 2013-05-12).

Completion of "--autosquash" has been there, but this was not;
addition of this would require people completing "--autosquash" to
type a bit more than before.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 10:42:53 -08:00
bcfe6f327d correct smtp-ssl-cert-path description
The git-send-email documentation was never updated to reflect
the change made in 01645b74 to use the SSL library's default
CA trust store rather than /etc/ssl/certs as a hardcoded
default CApath. This corrects that, and also tweaks the rest
of the text a bit to explain more accurately what is required
for a valid CApath / CAfile.

Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 10:39:49 -08:00
102fc80d32 test-lib.sh: do tests for color support after changing HOME
If ncurses needs ~/.terminfo for the current $TERM, then tput will
succeed before changing HOME to $TRASH_DIRECTORY but fail afterward.
Move the tests that determine whether there is color support after
changing HOME so that color=t is set if and only if tput would succeed
when say_color() is run.

Note that color=t is now set after --no-color is processed, so the
condition to set color=t has changed:  it is now set only if
color has not already been set to the empty string by --no-color.

This disables color support for those that need ~/.terminfo for
their TERM, but it's better than filling the screen with:

    tput: unknown terminal "custom-terminal-name-here"

An alternative would be to symlink or copy the user's terminfo
database into $TRASH_DIRECTORY, but this is tricky due to the lack of
a standard name for the terminfo database (for example, instead of a
~/.terminfo directory, NetBSD uses a ~/.terminfo.cdb database file).

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 10:38:01 -08:00
46f32a99b8 test-lib: use 'test ...' instead of '[ ... ]'
(see Documentation/CodingGuidelines)

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 10:36:42 -08:00
0120b8c85c git-prompt.sh: allow to hide prompt for ignored pwd
Optionally set __git_ps1 to display nothing when present working
directory is ignored, triggered by the new environment variable
GIT_PS1_HIDE_IF_PWD_IGNORED. This environment variable may be
overridden on any repository by setting bash.hideIfPwdIgnored to
"false". In the absence of GIT_PS1_HIDE_IF_PWD_IGNORED this change
has no effect.

Many people manage e.g. dotfiles in their home directory with git.
This causes the prompt generated by __git_ps1 to refer to that "top
level" repo while working in any descendant directory. That can be
distracting, so this patch helps one shut off that noise.

Signed-off-by: Jess Austin <jess.austin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Reviewed-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 10:30:30 -08:00
76b4309400 git-prompt.sh: if pc mode, immediately set PS1 to a plain prompt
At the beginning of __git_ps1, right after determining that the
function is running in pc mode, set PS1 to a plain (undecorated)
prompt.  This makes it possible to simply return early without having
to set PS1 if the prompt should not be decorated.

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 10:27:53 -08:00
8601099373 SubmittingPatches: explain rationale for using --notes with format-patch
While here, also change grammatically poor "three dash lines" to
"three-dash line".

Suggested-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 10:21:17 -08:00
e0a1f09313 subtree: fix AsciiDoc list item continuation
List items must be continued with '+' (see [asciidoc]).

[asciidoc] AsciiDoc user guide 17.7. List Item Continuation
    <http://www.methods.co.nz/asciidoc/userguide.html#X15>

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-06 15:03:52 -08:00
d91175b212 update-server-info: create info/* with mode 0666
Prior to d38379e (make update-server-info more robust, 2014-09-13),
we used a straight "fopen" to create the info/refs and
objects/info/packs files, which creates the file using mode 0666
(less the default umask).

In d38379e, we switched to creating the file with mkstemp to get a
unique filename. But mkstemp also uses the more restrictive 0600
mode to create the file. This was an unintended side effect that we
did not want, and causes problems when the repository is served by a
different user than the one running update-server-info (it is not
readable by a dumb http server running as `www`, for example).

We can fix this by using git_mkstemp_mode and specifying 0666 to
make sure that the umask is honored.

Note that we could also say "just use core.sharedrepository", as we
do call adjust_shared_perm on the result before renaming it into
place.  But that should not be necessary as long as everybody
involved is using permissive umask to allow HTTP server to read
necessary files.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-06 13:46:52 -08:00
230c09c06a imap-send.c: set CURLOPT_USE_SSL to CURLUSESSL_TRY
According to the cURL documentation for the CURLOPT_USE_SSL option,
it is only used with plain text protocols that get upgraded to SSL
using the STARTTLS command.

The server.use_ssl variable is only set when we are using a protocol
that is already SSL/TLS (i.e. imaps), so setting CURLOPT_USE_SSL
when the server.use_ssl variable is set has no effect whatsoever.

Instead, set CURLOPT_USE_SSL to CURLUSESSL_TRY when the server.use_ssl
variable is NOT set so that cURL will attempt to upgrade the plain
text connection to SSL/TLS using STARTTLS in that case.

This much more closely matches the behavior of the non-cURL code path.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-06 12:18:32 -08:00
d47e55da92 imap-send.c: support GIT_CURL_VERBOSE
When using git-imap-send to send via cURL, support setting
the GIT_CURL_VERBOSE environment variable to enable cURL's
verbose mode.

The existing http.c code already supports this and does
it by simply checking to see whether or not the environment
variable exists -- it does not examine the value at all.

For consistency, enable CURLOPT_VERBOSE when GIT_CURL_VERBOSE
is set by using the exact same test that http.c does.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-06 12:17:37 -08:00
e66dc0cc4b log.c: fix translation markings
The parse_options API expects an array of alternative usage lines
to which it automatically ads the language-appropriate "or" when
displaying.  Each of these options is marked for translation with N_
and then later translated when gettext is called on each element
of the array.

Since the N_ macro just expands to its argument, if two N_-marked
strings appear next to each other without being separated by anything
else such as a comma, the preprocessor will join them into one string.

In that case two separate strings get marked for translation, but at
runtime they have been joined into a single string passed to gettext
which then fails to get translated because the combined string was
never marked for translation.

Fix this by properly separating the two N_ marked strings with
a comma and removing the embedded "\n" and "   or:" that are
properly supplied by the parse_options API.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-06 11:30:42 -08:00
d05c77cca2 t1301: set umask in reflog sharedrepository=group test
The t1301 script sets the umask globally before many of the
tests. Most of the tests that care about the umask then set
it explicitly at the start of the test. However, one test
does not, and relies on the 077 umask setting from earlier
tests. This is fragile and can break if another test is
added in between. Let's be more explicit.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-06 11:20:45 -08:00
33adc83ddb refs: plug strbuf leak in lock_ref_sha1_basic()
Don't just reset, but release the resource held by the local
variable that is about to go out of scope.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 13:14:16 -08:00
6aaf956b08 is_hfs_dotgit: loosen over-eager match of \u{..47}
Our is_hfs_dotgit function relies on the hackily-implemented
next_hfs_char to give us the next character that an HFS+
filename comparison would look at. It's hacky because it
doesn't implement the full case-folding table of HFS+; it
gives us just enough to see if the path matches ".git".

At the end of next_hfs_char, we use tolower() to convert our
32-bit code point to lowercase. Our tolower() implementation
only takes an 8-bit char, though; it throws away the upper
24 bits. This means we can't have any false negatives for
is_hfs_dotgit. We only care about matching 7-bit ASCII
characters in ".git", and we will correctly process 'G' or
'g'.

However, we _can_ have false positives. Because we throw
away the upper bits, code point \u{0147} (for example) will
look like 'G' and get downcased to 'g'. It's not known
whether a sequence of code points whose truncation ends up
as ".git" is meaningful in any language, but it does not
hurt to be more accurate here. We can just pass out the full
32-bit code point, and compare it manually to the upper and
lowercase characters we care about.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 12:06:27 -08:00
07913d5ae1 bisect: add test to check that revs are properly parsed
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 11:34:05 -08:00
6bc02d5627 bisect: parse revs before passing them to check_expected_revs()
When running for example "git bisect bad HEAD" or
"git bisect good master", the parameter passed to
"git bisect (bad|good)" has to be parsed into a
commit hash before checking if it is the expected
commit or not.

We could do that in is_expected_rev() or in
check_expected_revs(), but it is already done in
bisect_state(). Let's just store the hash values
that result from this parsing, and then reuse
them after all the parsing is done.

This way we can also use a for loop over these
values to call bisect_write() on them, instead of
using eval.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 11:19:55 -08:00
74c4de5832 checkout-index: fix --temp relative path mangling
checkout-index --temp only properly prints relative paths which are
descendants of the current directory. Paths in ancestor or sibling
directories (or their children) are often printed in mangled form. For
example:

    mkdir a bbb &&
    >file &&
    >bbb/file &&
    git update-index --add file bbb/file &&
    cd a &&
    git checkout-index --temp ../file ../bbb/file

prints:

    .merge_file_ooblek  le
    .merge_file_igloo0  b/file

rather than the correct:

    .merge_file_ooblek  ../file
    .merge_file_igloo0  ../bbb/file

Internally, given the above example, checkout-index prefixes each input
argument with the name of the current directory ("a/", in this case),
and then assumes that it can simply skip forward by strlen("a/") bytes
to recover the original name. This works for files in the current
directory or its descendants, but fails for files in ancestors or
siblings (or their children) due to path normalization.

For instance, given "../file", "a/" is prepended, giving "a/../file".
Path normalization folds out "a/../", resulting in "file". Attempting
to recover the original name by skipping strlen("a/") bytes gives the
incorrect "le" rather than the desired "../file".

Fix this by taking advantage of write_name_quoted_relative() to recover
the original name properly, rather than assuming that it can be
recovered by skipping strlen(prefix) bytes.

As a bonus, this also fixes a bug in which checkout-index --temp
accessed and printed memory beyond the end-of-string. For instance,
within a subdirectory named "subdirectory", and given argument
"../file", prefixing would give "subdirectory/../file", which would
become "file" after normalization. checkout-index would then attempt to
recover the original name by skipping strlen("subdirectory/") bytes of
"file", which placed it well beyond end-of-string. Despite this error,
it often appeared to give the correct result, but only due to an
accident of implementation which left an apparently correct copy of the
path in memory following the normalized value. In particular, handed
"subdirectory/../file", in-place processing by normalize_path_copy_len()
resulted in "file\0rectory/../file". When checkout-index skipped
strlen("subdirectory/") bytes, it ended up back at "../file" and thus
appeared to give the correct answer, despite being past end-of-string.

Reported-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 10:58:45 -08:00
052b2551ad t2004: demonstrate broken relative path printing
checkout-index --temp only properly prints relative paths which are
descendants of the current directory. Paths in ancestor or sibling
directories (or their children) are often printed in mangled form. For
example:

    mkdir a bbb &&
    >file &&
    >bbb/file &&
    git update-index --add file bbb/file &&
    cd a &&
    git checkout-index --temp ../file ../bbb/file

prints:

    .merge_file_ooblek  le
    .merge_file_igloo0  b/file

rather than the correct:

    .merge_file_ooblek  ../file
    .merge_file_igloo0  ../bbb/file

Unfortunately, testing is complicated slightly by relative paths
sometimes _appearing_ to be printed correctly, but this is an accident
of implementation in which a "correct" copy of the string exists in
memory beyond the end of the real string, and that "correct" copy gets
printed. This test takes care to avoid the accidentally "correct"
behavior by testing with a filename longer than the directory name in
which checkout-index is invoked.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 10:56:14 -08:00
66e28e93bb t2004: standardize file naming in symlink test
Update "symlink" test to use the common file naming scheme so that its
temporary files can be cleaned up by the "rm -f path*" idiom employed by
other tests in this script.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 10:54:42 -08:00
0bbc971ab5 t2004: drop unnecessary write-tree/read-tree
Unlike earlier tests which reference several trees prepared by "setup",
no other tests utilize the tree from the "symlink" test, so there is no
need to write it (or read it back immediately).

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 10:54:20 -08:00
9fb7b57f82 t2004: modernize style
In particular:

* indent test body
* place test description on same line as test_expect_*
* place closing quote on its own line
* name output file "actual" rather than "out"
* name setup test "setup" rather than "preparation"

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 10:52:43 -08:00
c5b9256360 Merge branch 'for-junio' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn
* 'for-junio' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn:
  git-svn: support for git-svn propset
2014-12-29 10:15:22 -08:00
2dacf26d09 pack-objects: use --objects-edge-aggressive for shallow repos
When fetching into or pushing from a shallow repository, we want to
aggressively mark edges as uninteresting, since this decreases the pack
size.  However, aggressively marking edges can negatively affect
performance on large non-shallow repositories with lots of refs.

Teach pack-objects a --shallow option to indicate that we're pushing
from or fetching into a shallow repository.  Use
--objects-edge-aggressive only for shallow repositories and otherwise
use --objects-edge, which performs better in the general case.  Update
the callers to pass the --shallow option when they are dealing with a
shallow repository.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 09:58:25 -08:00
1684c1b219 rev-list: add an option to mark fewer edges as uninteresting
In commit fbd4a70 (list-objects: mark more commits as edges in
mark_edges_uninteresting - 2013-08-16), we marked an increasing number
of edges uninteresting.  This change, and the subsequent change to make
this conditional on --objects-edge, are used by --thin to make much
smaller packs for shallow clones.

Unfortunately, they cause a significant performance regression when
pushing non-shallow clones with lots of refs (23.322 seconds vs.
4.785 seconds with 22400 refs).  Add an option to git rev-list,
--objects-edge-aggressive, that preserves this more aggressive behavior,
while leaving --objects-edge to provide more performant behavior.
Preserve the current behavior for the moment by using the aggressive
option.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 09:57:55 -08:00
6b33894f99 transport: simplify duplicating a substring in transport_get() using xmemdupz()
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 09:39:23 -08:00
8d025b7caf merge: release strbuf after use in suggest_conflicts()
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 09:33:25 -08:00
8547e0f176 commit-tree: simplify parsing of option -S using skip_prefix()
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-29 09:32:45 -08:00
4395b21424 Merge branch 'jc/t9001-modernise'
* jc/t9001-modernise:
  t9001: style modernisation phase #5
  t9001: style modernisation phase #4
  t9001: style modernisation phase #3
  t9001: style modernisation phase #2
  t9001: style modernisation phase #1
2014-12-29 09:32:07 -08:00
cb71e73ade Merge branch 'mh/update-ref-verify'
"git update-ref --stdin"'s verify command did not work well when
<oldvalue>, which is documented as optional, was missing.

* mh/update-ref-verify:
  update-ref: fix "verify" command with missing <oldvalue>
  t1400: add some more tests of "update-ref --stdin"'s verify command
2014-12-29 09:30:56 -08:00
47103bd6b3 l10n: ca.po: various fixes
Signed-off-by: Joan Perals Tresserra <j.pertres@gmail.com>
2014-12-23 21:22:04 -07:00
b90c95d90e Add a regression test for 'git remote add <existing> <same-url>'
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-23 12:42:37 -08:00
fb86e32dcc git remote: allow adding remotes agreeing with url.<...>.insteadOf
When adding a remote, we make sure that the remote does not exist
already. However, this test was not quite correct: when the
url.<...>.insteadOf config variable was set to the remote name to be
added, the code would assume that the remote exists already.

Let's allow adding remotes when there is a url.<...>.insteadOf setting
when both the name and the URL agree with the remote to be added.

It might seem like a mistake to compare against remote->url[0] without
verifying that remote->url_nr >=1, but at this point a missing URL has
been filled by the name already, therefore url_nr cannot be zero.

Noticed by Anastas Dancha.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-23 12:42:36 -08:00
d69360c6b1 t0090: tweak awk statement for Solaris /usr/xpg4/bin/awk
The awk statements previously used in this test weren't compatible
with the native versions of awk on Solaris:

    echo "dir" | /bin/awk -v c=0 '$1 {++c} END {print c}'
    awk: syntax error near line 1
    awk: bailing out near line 1

    echo "dir" | /usr/xpg4/bin/awk -v c=0 '$1 {++c} END {print c}'
    0

Even though we do not cater to tools in /usr/bin on Solaris that
have and are overridden by corresponding ones in /usr/xpg?/bin,
in this case, even the XPG version does not work correctly.

With GNU awk for comparison:

    echo "dir" | /opt/csw/gnu/awk -v c=0 '$1 {++c} END {print c}'
    1

which is what this test expects (and is in line with POSIX; non-empty
string is true and an empty string is false).

Work this issue around by using $1 != "" to state more explicitly
that we are skipping empty lines.

Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ben Walton <bdwalton@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-23 07:34:19 -08:00
bbcefffcea Sync with maint
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-22 12:43:48 -08:00
2c380e7a8d Third batch for 2.3 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-22 12:43:16 -08:00
a305b15f82 Merge branch 'rs/use-strbuf-complete-line'
* rs/use-strbuf-complete-line:
  use strbuf_complete_line() for adding a newline if needed
2014-12-22 12:28:22 -08:00
35b5a8b769 Merge branch 'jg/prompt-localize-temporary'
"git-prompt" (in contrib/) used a variable from the global scope,
possibly contaminating end-user's namespace.

* jg/prompt-localize-temporary:
  git-prompt.sh: make $f local to __git_eread()
2014-12-22 12:28:20 -08:00
3d4eecc871 Merge branch 'ch/new-gpg-drops-rfc-1991'
Recent GPG changes the keyring format and drops support for RFC1991
formatted signatures, breaking our existing tests.

* ch/new-gpg-drops-rfc-1991:
  tests: make comment on GPG keyring match the code
  tests: squelch noise from GPG machinery set-up
  tests: replace binary GPG keyrings with ASCII-armored keys
  tests: skip RFC1991 tests for gnupg 2.1
  tests: create gpg homedir on the fly
2014-12-22 12:28:17 -08:00
2df39733e5 Merge branch 'jk/commit-date-approxidate'
Recent update to "git commit" broke amending an existing commit
with bogus author/committer lines without a valid e-mail address.

* jk/commit-date-approxidate:
  commit: always populate GIT_AUTHOR_* variables
  commit: loosen ident checks when generating template
2014-12-22 12:28:14 -08:00
63903d0e4e Merge branch 'nd/split-index'
A typofix to the documentation of a feature already in the release.

* nd/split-index:
  index-format.txt: add a missing closing quote
2014-12-22 12:28:11 -08:00
9f240ec60f Merge branch 'jk/test-asan'
* jk/test-asan:
  t: support clang/gcc AddressSanitizer
2014-12-22 12:28:08 -08:00
3701aa093e Merge branch 'ok/rebase-i-count-todo'
* ok/rebase-i-count-todo:
  Show number of TODO items for interactive rebase
2014-12-22 12:28:06 -08:00
aa9066fccd Merge branch 'jk/read-packed-refs-without-path-max'
Git did not correctly read an overlong refname from a packed refs
file.

* jk/read-packed-refs-without-path-max:
  read_packed_refs: use skip_prefix instead of static array
  read_packed_refs: pass strbuf to parse_ref_line
  read_packed_refs: use a strbuf for reading lines
2014-12-22 12:28:04 -08:00
8ada1d8e9c Merge branch 'jk/always-allow-large-packets'
"git push" and "git fetch" did not communicate an overlong refname
correctly.

* jk/always-allow-large-packets:
  pkt-line: allow writing of LARGE_PACKET_MAX buffers
2014-12-22 12:28:02 -08:00
3dadfc7e17 Merge branch 'jk/colors'
"diff-highlight" filter (in contrib/) allows its color output
to be customized via configuration variables.

* jk/colors:
  parse_color: drop COLOR_BACKGROUND macro
  diff-highlight: allow configurable colors
  parse_color: recognize "no$foo" to clear the $foo attribute
  parse_color: support 24-bit RGB values
  parse_color: refactor color storage
2014-12-22 12:27:58 -08:00
d539eb9d25 Merge branch 'rw/apply-does-not-take-ignore-date'
* rw/apply-does-not-take-ignore-date:
  git-am.txt: --ignore-date flag is not passed to git-apply
2014-12-22 12:27:55 -08:00
6d43519a8e Merge branch 'js/test-hashmap-squelch-gcc'
* js/test-hashmap-squelch-gcc:
  test-hashmap: squelch gcc compiler warning
2014-12-22 12:27:46 -08:00
1cb4b3d380 Merge branch 'js/fsck-tag-validation'
New tag object format validation added in 2.2 showed garbage
after a tagname it reported in its error message.

* js/fsck-tag-validation:
  index-pack: terminate object buffers with NUL
  fsck: properly bound "invalid tag name" error message
2014-12-22 12:27:41 -08:00
14d4aab3bb Merge branch 'po/doc-assume-unchanged'
Fixes long-standing misunderstanding of what assume-unchanged is
about.  Some text near what is removed by the bottom patch may also
have to be removed.

* po/doc-assume-unchanged:
  gitignore.txt: do not suggest assume-unchanged
  doc: make clear --assume-unchanged's user contract
2014-12-22 12:27:38 -08:00
15a171f6eb Merge branch 'mg/branch-d-m-f'
"git branch -d" (delete) and "git branch -m" (move) learned to
honor "-f" (force) flag; unlike many other subcommands, the way to
force these have been with separate "-D/-M" options, which was
inconsistent.

* mg/branch-d-m-f:
  branch: allow -f with -m and -d
  t3200-branch: test -M
2014-12-22 12:27:36 -08:00
00c194a819 Merge branch 'tb/t0027-eol-conversion'
* tb/t0027-eol-conversion:
  t0027: check the eol conversion warnings
2014-12-22 12:27:34 -08:00
6f3abb7a87 Merge branch 'jk/for-each-reflog-ent-reverse'
The code that reads the reflog from the newer to the older entries
did not handle an entry that crosses a boundary of block it uses to
read them correctly.

* jk/for-each-reflog-ent-reverse:
  for_each_reflog_ent_reverse: turn leftover check into assertion
  for_each_reflog_ent_reverse: fix newlines on block boundaries
2014-12-22 12:27:32 -08:00
12b9f08953 Merge branch 'sb/string-list'
API simplification.

* sb/string-list:
  string_list: remove string_list_insert_at_index() from its API
  mailmap: use higher level string list functions
  string_list: document string_list_(insert,lookup)
2014-12-22 12:27:30 -08:00
53c3692eac Merge branch 'sv/doc-stripspace'
* sv/doc-stripspace:
  Documentation/git-stripspace: add synopsis for --comment-lines
2014-12-22 12:27:27 -08:00
2cd20dc3d4 Merge branch 'rt/completion-tag'
* rt/completion-tag:
  completion: add git-tag options
2014-12-22 12:27:24 -08:00
3ab00292fc Merge branch 'mg/doc-check-ignore-tracked-are-not-ignored'
* mg/doc-check-ignore-tracked-are-not-ignored:
  check-ignore: clarify treatment of tracked files
2014-12-22 12:27:22 -08:00
86362f7205 Merge branch 'jk/credential-quit'
Credential helpers are asked in turn until one of them give
positive response, which is cumbersome to turn off when you need to
run Git in an automated setting.  The credential helper interface
learned to allow a helper to say "stop, don't ask other helpers."
Also GIT_TERMINAL_PROMPT environment can be set to false to disable
our built-in prompt mechanism for passwords.

* jk/credential-quit:
  prompt: respect GIT_TERMINAL_PROMPT to disable terminal prompts
  credential: let helpers tell us to quit
2014-12-22 12:27:20 -08:00
2f17ecbd8d Merge branch 'dm/compat-s-ifmt-for-zos'
Long overdue departure from the assumption that S_IFMT is shared by
everybody made in 2005.

* dm/compat-s-ifmt-for-zos:
  compat: convert modes to use portable file type values
2014-12-22 12:27:16 -08:00
0b5ae7ba68 Merge branch 'ps/new-workdir-into-empty-directory'
"git new-workdir" (in contrib/) can be used to populate an empty
and existing directory now.

* ps/new-workdir-into-empty-directory:
  git-new-workdir: don't fail if the target directory is empty
2014-12-22 12:27:14 -08:00
570077231f Merge branch 'nd/ls-tree-pathspec'
"git ls-tree" does not support path selection based on negative
pathspecs, but did not error out when negative pathspecs are given.

* nd/ls-tree-pathspec:
  t3102: style modernization
  t3102: document that ls-tree does not yet support negated pathspec
  ls-tree: disable negative pathspec because it's not supported
  ls-tree: remove path filtering logic in show_tree
  tree.c: update read_tree_recursive callback to pass strbuf as base
2014-12-22 12:27:12 -08:00
77a801d237 Merge branch 'jc/hook-cleanup'
Remove unused code.

* jc/hook-cleanup:
  run-command.c: retire unused run_hook_with_custom_index()
2014-12-22 12:27:10 -08:00
a558344c11 Merge branch 'rt/for-each-ref-spell-tcl-as-Tcl'
* rt/for-each-ref-spell-tcl-as-Tcl:
  for-each-ref: correct spelling of Tcl in option description
2014-12-22 12:27:08 -08:00
08884f57f3 Merge branch 'rj/t0050-passes'
* rj/t0050-passes:
  t0050-*.sh: mark the rename (case change) test as passing
2014-12-22 12:27:06 -08:00
72ecc6ef53 Merge branch 'js/push-to-deploy'
"git push" into a repository with a working tree normally refuses
to modify the branch that is checked out.  The command learned to
optionally do an equivalent of "git reset --hard" only when there
is no change to the working tree and the index instead, which would
be useful to "deploy" by pushing into a repository.

* js/push-to-deploy:
  t5516: more tests for receive.denyCurrentBranch=updateInstead
  receive-pack: add another option for receive.denyCurrentBranch
2014-12-22 12:27:04 -08:00
6bcaff1a4f Merge branch 'jc/exec-cmd-system-path-leak-fix'
The function sometimes returned a non-freeable memory and some
other times returned a piece of memory that must be freed.

* jc/exec-cmd-system-path-leak-fix:
  system_path(): always return free'able memory to the caller
2014-12-22 12:27:01 -08:00
5109f2aaab Merge branch 'mh/find-uniq-abbrev'
The code to abbreviate an object name to its short unique prefix
has been optimized when no abbreviation was requested.

* mh/find-uniq-abbrev:
  sha1_name: avoid unnecessary sha1 lookup in find_unique_abbrev
2014-12-22 12:26:58 -08:00
2374f1dfd1 Merge branch 'pb/send-email-te'
"git send-email" learned "--transfer-encoding" option to force
a non-fault Content-Transfer-Encoding header (e.g. base64).

* pb/send-email-te:
  git-send-email: add --transfer-encoding option
  git-send-email: delay creation of MIME headers
2014-12-22 12:26:54 -08:00
fa7f51d533 Merge branch 'pb/am-message-id-footer'
"git am" learned "--message-id" option to copy the message ID of
the incoming e-mail to the log message of resulting commit.

* pb/am-message-id-footer:
  git-am: add --message-id/--no-message-id
  git-mailinfo: add --message-id
2014-12-22 12:26:52 -08:00
a7ddaa8eac Merge branch 'mh/simplify-repack-without-refs'
"git remote update --prune" to drop many refs has been optimized.

* mh/simplify-repack-without-refs:
  sort_string_list(): rename to string_list_sort()
  prune_remote(): iterate using for_each_string_list_item()
  prune_remote(): rename local variable
  repack_without_refs(): make the refnames argument a string_list
  prune_remote(): sort delete_refs_list references en masse
  prune_remote(): initialize both delete_refs lists in a single loop
  prune_remote(): exit early if there are no stale references
2014-12-22 12:26:50 -08:00
8e606f97f8 Merge branch 'dw/shell-basename-dashdash-before-stripping-leading-dash-from-login'
* dw/shell-basename-dashdash-before-stripping-leading-dash-from-login:
  git-sh-setup.sh: use dashdash with basename call
2014-12-22 12:26:48 -08:00
7665d9c3a6 Merge branch 'rj/no-xopen-source-for-cygwin'
Avoid compilation warnings on recent gcc toolchain on Cygwin.

* rj/no-xopen-source-for-cygwin:
  git-compat-util.h: don't define _XOPEN_SOURCE on cygwin
2014-12-22 12:26:46 -08:00
4762c7b42a Merge branch 'js/t5000-dont-copy-bin-sh'
* js/t5000-dont-copy-bin-sh:
  t5000 on Windows: do not mistake "sh.exe" as "sh"
2014-12-22 12:26:43 -08:00
63296d583c Merge branch 'jc/refer-to-t-readme-from-submitting-patches'
* jc/refer-to-t-readme-from-submitting-patches:
  t/README: justify why "! grep foo" is sufficient
  SubmittingPatches: refer to t/README for tests
2014-12-22 12:26:38 -08:00
168ab99d4c Merge branch 'tb/config-core-filemode-check-on-broken-fs'
Some filesystems assign filemodes in a strange way, fooling then
automatic "filemode trustability" check done during a new
repository creation.

* tb/config-core-filemode-check-on-broken-fs:
  init-db: improve the filemode trustability check
2014-12-22 12:26:34 -08:00
0178207021 Merge branch 'mg/add-ignore-errors'
"git add --ignore-errors ..." did not ignore an error to
give a file that did not exist.

* mg/add-ignore-errors:
  add: ignore only ignored files
2014-12-22 12:26:30 -08:00
3cdb0cb610 Merge branch 'jk/lock-ref-sha1-basic-return-errors'
Correct an API anomaly.

* jk/lock-ref-sha1-basic-return-errors:
  lock_ref_sha1_basic: do not die on locking errors
2014-12-22 12:26:27 -08:00
0ed8a4e161 Merge branch 'cc/interpret-trailers-more'
"git interpret-trailers" learned to properly handle the
"Conflicts:" block at the end.

* cc/interpret-trailers-more:
  trailer: add test with an old style conflict block
  trailer: reuse ignore_non_trailer() to ignore conflict lines
  commit: make ignore_non_trailer() non static
  merge & sequencer: turn "Conflicts:" hint into a comment
  builtin/commit.c: extract ignore_non_trailer() helper function
  merge & sequencer: unify codepaths that write "Conflicts:" hint
  builtin/merge.c: drop a parameter that is never used
2014-12-22 12:26:24 -08:00
c2e8e4b9da Prepare for 2.2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-22 12:20:38 -08:00
57815a4f56 Merge branch 'jk/rebuild-perl-scripts-with-no-perl-seting-change' into maint
The build procedure did not bother fixing perl and python scripts
when NO_PERL and NO_PYTHON build-time configuration changed.

* jk/rebuild-perl-scripts-with-no-perl-seting-change:
  Makefile: have python scripts depend on NO_PYTHON setting
  Makefile: simplify by using SCRIPT_{PERL,SH}_GEN macros
  Makefile: have perl scripts depend on NO_PERL setting
2014-12-22 12:18:35 -08:00
7d37ed1382 Merge branch 'jk/no-perl-tests' into maint
Some tests that depend on perl lacked PERL prerequisite to protect
them, breaking build with NO_PERL configuration.

* jk/no-perl-tests:
  t960[34]: mark cvsimport tests as requiring perl
  t0090: mark add-interactive test with PERL prerequisite
2014-12-22 12:18:26 -08:00
ebae81e96d Merge branch 'po/everyday-doc' into maint
"Everyday" document had a broken link.

* po/everyday-doc:
  Documentation: change "gitlink" typo in git-push
2014-12-22 12:18:17 -08:00
0eeb9b86d6 Merge branch 'jk/push-simple' into maint
Git 2.0 was supposed to make the "simple" mode for the default of
"git push", but it didn't.

* jk/push-simple:
  push: truly use "simple" as default, not "upstream"
2014-12-22 12:18:08 -08:00
e524fb497a Merge branch 'mh/config-flip-xbit-back-after-checking' into maint
"git init" (hence "git clone") initialized the per-repository
configuration file .git/config with x-bit by mistake.

* mh/config-flip-xbit-back-after-checking:
  create_default_files(): don't set u+x bit on $GIT_DIR/config
2014-12-22 12:18:00 -08:00
0b5c641490 Merge branch 'jk/gitweb-with-newer-cgi-multi-param' into maint
"gitweb" used to depend on a behaviour that was deprecated by recent
CGI.pm.

* jk/gitweb-with-newer-cgi-multi-param:
  gitweb: hack around CGI's list-context param() handling
2014-12-22 12:17:34 -08:00
8d5134399c Merge branch 'rs/receive-pack-use-labs' into maint
* rs/receive-pack-use-labs:
  use labs() for variables of type long instead of abs()
2014-12-22 12:17:32 -08:00
e8c2351157 Merge branch 'rs/maint-config-use-labs' into maint
* rs/maint-config-use-labs:
  use labs() for variables of type long instead of abs()
2014-12-22 12:17:23 -08:00
8390d5cda9 Merge branch 'js/windows-open-eisdir-error' into maint
open() emulated on Windows platforms did not give EISDIR upon an
attempt to open a directory for writing.

* js/windows-open-eisdir-error:
  Windows: correct detection of EISDIR in mingw_open()
2014-12-22 12:17:13 -08:00
5d509d5e1c Merge branch 'jk/colors-fix' into maint
"git config --get-color" did not parse its command line arguments
carefully.

* jk/colors-fix:
  t4026: test "normal" color
  config: fix parsing of "git config --get-color some.key -1"
  docs: describe ANSI 256-color mode
2014-12-22 12:16:58 -08:00
447c39a9b2 Merge branch 'jk/checkout-from-tree' into maint
"git checkout $treeish $path", when $path in the index and the
working tree already matched what is in $treeish at the $path,
still overwrote the $path unnecessarily.

* jk/checkout-from-tree:
  checkout $tree: do not throw away unchanged index entries
2014-12-22 12:16:30 -08:00
8297643fcd Documentation: add missing article in rev-list-options.txt
Add the missing article "a".

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-22 12:08:46 -08:00
eb443e3b39 git-prompt: preserve value of $? inside shell prompt
If you have a prompt which displays the command exit status,
__git_ps1 without this change corrupts it, although it has
the correct value in the parent shell:

	~/src/git (master) 0 $ set | grep ^PS1
	PS1='\w$(__git_ps1) $? \$ '
	~/src/git (master) 0 $ false
	~/src/git (master) 0 $ echo $?
	1
	~/src/git (master) 0 $

There is a slightly ugly workaround:

	~/src/git (master) 0 $ set | grep ^PS1
	PS1='\w$(x=$?; __git_ps1; exit $x) $? \$ '
	~/src/git (master) 0 $ false
	~/src/git (master) 1 $

This change makes the workaround unnecessary.

Signed-off-by: Tony Finch <dot@dotat.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-22 11:58:56 -08:00
3af74cfb15 pre-push.sample: remove unnecessary and misleading IFS=' '
The sample hook explicitly sets IFS to SP and nothing else so that
the "read" used in the per-ref while loop that iterates over
"<localref> SP <localsha1> SP <remoteref> SP <remotesha>" records,
where we know refs and sha1s will not have SPs, would split them
correctly.

While this is not wrong per-se, it is not necessary; because we know
these fields do not contain HT or LF, either, we can simply leave
IFS the default.

This will also prevent those who cut and paste from this sample from
getting bitten when they write things in the per-ref loop that need
splitting with the default $IFS (e.g. use $(git rev-list ...) to
produce one-record-per-line output).

Signed-off-by: Jim Hill <gjthill@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-22 10:27:42 -08:00
32c239d1fb update_unicode.sh: delete the command group
Now that the whole file is generated by one single command, the
command group is no longer needed.

Signed-off-by: Beat Bolli <dev+git@drbeat.li>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-22 10:03:37 -08:00
1679acdbff update_unicode.sh: make the output structure visible
By using a here document instead of the echo/uniset sequence, the
final structure of the generated file becomes obvious.

Signed-off-by: Beat Bolli <dev+git@drbeat.li>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-22 10:03:37 -08:00
3a77c2096d update_unicode.sh: shorten uniset invocation path
"uniset/uniset" is a relative path; there's no need to prefix it
with "./".

Signed-off-by: Beat Bolli <dev+git@drbeat.li>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-22 10:03:24 -08:00
69d84a3b58 update_unicode.sh: set UNICODE_DIR only once
The value is the same on both uniset invocations, so "Don't Repeat
Yourself" applies.

Since this is done as the last command in the sequence, there's no
need to unset UNICODE_DIR at the end.

Signed-off-by: Beat Bolli <dev+git@drbeat.li>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-22 10:02:46 -08:00
2aa590cb07 update_unicode.sh: simplify output capture
Instead of capturing the output of each echo and uniset invocation,
wrap the whole section in a group command and redirect its output
all at once.

Signed-off-by: Beat Bolli <dev+git@drbeat.li>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-22 10:02:38 -08:00
bef111d0a5 clean: typofix
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kuleshov <kuleshovmail@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-22 09:57:42 -08:00
c376d96825 Documentation/SubmittingPatches: unify whitespace/tabs for the DCO
The Developers Certificate of Origin has a mixture of tabs and white
spaces which is annoying to view if your editor explicitly views white
space characters.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-22 09:56:25 -08:00
3f1509809e Sync with v2.2.1
* maint:
  Git 2.2.1
  Git 2.1.4
  Git 2.0.5
  Git 1.9.5
  Git 1.8.5.6
  fsck: complain about NTFS ".git" aliases in trees
  read-cache: optionally disallow NTFS .git variants
  path: add is_ntfs_dotgit() helper
  fsck: complain about HFS+ ".git" aliases in trees
  read-cache: optionally disallow HFS+ .git variants
  utf8: add is_hfs_dotgit() helper
  fsck: notice .git case-insensitively
  t1450: refactor ".", "..", and ".git" fsck tests
  verify_dotfile(): reject .git case-insensitively
  read-tree: add tests for confusing paths like ".." and ".git"
  unpack-trees: propagate errors adding entries to the index
2014-12-18 12:30:53 -08:00
b195aa00c1 git-compat-util: suppress unavoidable Apple-specific deprecation warnings
With the release of Mac OS X 10.7 in July 2011, Apple deprecated all
openssl.h functionality due to OpenSSL ABI (application binary
interface) instability, resulting in an explosion of compilation
warnings about deprecated SSL, SHA1, and X509 functions (among others).

61067954ce (cache.h: eliminate SHA-1 deprecation warnings on Mac OS X;
2013-05-19) and be4c828b76 (imap-send: eliminate HMAC deprecation
warnings on Mac OS X; 2013-05-19) attempted to ameliorate the situation
by taking advantage of drop-in replacement functionality provided by
Apple's (ABI-stable) CommonCrypto facility, however CommonCrypto
supplies only a subset of deprecated OpenSSL functionality, thus a host
of warnings remain.

Despite this shortcoming, it was hoped that Apple would ultimately
provide CommonCrypto replacements for all deprecated OpenSSL
functionality, and that the effort started by 61067954ce and be4c828b76
would be continued and eventually eliminate all deprecation warnings.
However, now 3.5 years later, and with Mac OS X at 10.10, the hoped-for
CommonCrypto replacements have not yet materialized, nor is there any
indication that they will be forthcoming.

These Apple-specific warnings are pure noise: they don't tell us
anything useful and we have no control over them, nor is Apple likely to
provide replacements any time soon. Such noise may obscure other
legitimate warnings, therefore silence them.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-18 11:01:30 -08:00
9b7cbb3159 Git 2.2.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:49:34 -08:00
77933f4449 Sync with v2.1.4
* maint-2.1:
  Git 2.1.4
  Git 2.0.5
  Git 1.9.5
  Git 1.8.5.6
  fsck: complain about NTFS ".git" aliases in trees
  read-cache: optionally disallow NTFS .git variants
  path: add is_ntfs_dotgit() helper
  fsck: complain about HFS+ ".git" aliases in trees
  read-cache: optionally disallow HFS+ .git variants
  utf8: add is_hfs_dotgit() helper
  fsck: notice .git case-insensitively
  t1450: refactor ".", "..", and ".git" fsck tests
  verify_dotfile(): reject .git case-insensitively
  read-tree: add tests for confusing paths like ".." and ".git"
  unpack-trees: propagate errors adding entries to the index
2014-12-17 11:46:57 -08:00
8e36a6d575 Git 2.1.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:44:59 -08:00
58f1d950e3 Sync with v2.0.5
* maint-2.0:
  Git 2.0.5
  Git 1.9.5
  Git 1.8.5.6
  fsck: complain about NTFS ".git" aliases in trees
  read-cache: optionally disallow NTFS .git variants
  path: add is_ntfs_dotgit() helper
  fsck: complain about HFS+ ".git" aliases in trees
  read-cache: optionally disallow HFS+ .git variants
  utf8: add is_hfs_dotgit() helper
  fsck: notice .git case-insensitively
  t1450: refactor ".", "..", and ".git" fsck tests
  verify_dotfile(): reject .git case-insensitively
  read-tree: add tests for confusing paths like ".." and ".git"
  unpack-trees: propagate errors adding entries to the index
2014-12-17 11:42:28 -08:00
9a8c2b67cd Git 2.0.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:30:46 -08:00
5e519fb8b0 Sync with v1.9.5
* maint-1.9:
  Git 1.9.5
  Git 1.8.5.6
  fsck: complain about NTFS ".git" aliases in trees
  read-cache: optionally disallow NTFS .git variants
  path: add is_ntfs_dotgit() helper
  fsck: complain about HFS+ ".git" aliases in trees
  read-cache: optionally disallow HFS+ .git variants
  utf8: add is_hfs_dotgit() helper
  fsck: notice .git case-insensitively
  t1450: refactor ".", "..", and ".git" fsck tests
  verify_dotfile(): reject .git case-insensitively
  read-tree: add tests for confusing paths like ".." and ".git"
  unpack-trees: propagate errors adding entries to the index
2014-12-17 11:28:54 -08:00
83332636f5 Git 1.9.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:22:32 -08:00
6898b79721 Sync with v1.8.5.6
* maint-1.8.5:
  Git 1.8.5.6
  fsck: complain about NTFS ".git" aliases in trees
  read-cache: optionally disallow NTFS .git variants
  path: add is_ntfs_dotgit() helper
  fsck: complain about HFS+ ".git" aliases in trees
  read-cache: optionally disallow HFS+ .git variants
  utf8: add is_hfs_dotgit() helper
  fsck: notice .git case-insensitively
  t1450: refactor ".", "..", and ".git" fsck tests
  verify_dotfile(): reject .git case-insensitively
  read-tree: add tests for confusing paths like ".." and ".git"
  unpack-trees: propagate errors adding entries to the index
2014-12-17 11:20:31 -08:00
5c8213a769 Git 1.8.5.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:18:45 -08:00
2aa9100846 Merge branch 'dotgit-case-maint-1.8.5' into maint-1.8.5
* dotgit-case-maint-1.8.5:
  fsck: complain about NTFS ".git" aliases in trees
  read-cache: optionally disallow NTFS .git variants
  path: add is_ntfs_dotgit() helper
  fsck: complain about HFS+ ".git" aliases in trees
  read-cache: optionally disallow HFS+ .git variants
  utf8: add is_hfs_dotgit() helper
  fsck: notice .git case-insensitively
  t1450: refactor ".", "..", and ".git" fsck tests
  verify_dotfile(): reject .git case-insensitively
  read-tree: add tests for confusing paths like ".." and ".git"
  unpack-trees: propagate errors adding entries to the index
2014-12-17 11:11:15 -08:00
d08c13b947 fsck: complain about NTFS ".git" aliases in trees
Now that the index can block pathnames that can be mistaken
to mean ".git" on NTFS and FAT32, it would be helpful for
fsck to notice such problematic paths. This lets servers
which use receive.fsckObjects block them before the damage
spreads.

Note that the fsck check is always on, even for systems
without core.protectNTFS set. This is technically more
restrictive than we need to be, as a set of users on ext4
could happily use these odd filenames without caring about
NTFS.

However, on balance, it's helpful for all servers to block
these (because the paths can be used for mischief, and
servers which bother to fsck would want to stop the spread
whether they are on NTFS themselves or not), and hardly
anybody will be affected (because the blocked names are
variants of .git or git~1, meaning mischief is almost
certainly what the tree author had in mind).

Ideally these would be controlled by a separate
"fsck.protectNTFS" flag. However, it would be much nicer to
be able to enable/disable _any_ fsck flag individually, and
any scheme we choose should match such a system. Given the
likelihood of anybody using such a path in practice, it is
not unreasonable to wait until such a system materializes.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:04:45 -08:00
2b4c6efc82 read-cache: optionally disallow NTFS .git variants
The point of disallowing ".git" in the index is that we
would never want to accidentally overwrite files in the
repository directory. But this means we need to respect the
filesystem's idea of when two paths are equal. The prior
commit added a helper to make such a comparison for NTFS
and FAT32; let's use it in verify_path().

We make this check optional for two reasons:

  1. It restricts the set of allowable filenames, which is
     unnecessary for people who are not on NTFS nor FAT32.
     In practice this probably doesn't matter, though, as
     the restricted names are rather obscure and almost
     certainly would never come up in practice.

  2. It has a minor performance penalty for every path we
     insert into the index.

This patch ties the check to the core.protectNTFS config
option. Though this is expected to be most useful on Windows,
we allow it to be set everywhere, as NTFS may be mounted on
other platforms. The variable does default to on for Windows,
though.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:04:45 -08:00
1d1d69bc52 path: add is_ntfs_dotgit() helper
We do not allow paths with a ".git" component to be added to
the index, as that would mean repository contents could
overwrite our repository files. However, asking "is this
path the same as .git" is not as simple as strcmp() on some
filesystems.

On NTFS (and FAT32), there exist so-called "short names" for
backwards-compatibility: 8.3 compliant names that refer to the same files
as their long names. As ".git" is not an 8.3 compliant name, a short name
is generated automatically, typically "git~1".

Depending on the Windows version, any combination of trailing spaces and
periods are ignored, too, so that both "git~1." and ".git." still refer
to the Git directory. The reason is that 8.3 stores file names shorter
than 8 characters with trailing spaces. So literally, it does not matter
for the short name whether it is padded with spaces or whether it is
shorter than 8 characters, it is considered to be the exact same.

The period is the separator between file name and file extension, and
again, an empty extension consists just of spaces in 8.3 format. So
technically, we would need only take care of the equivalent of this
regex:
        (\.git {0,4}|git~1 {0,3})\. {0,3}

However, there are indications that at least some Windows versions might
be more lenient and accept arbitrary combinations of trailing spaces and
periods and strip them out. So we're playing it real safe here. Besides,
there can be little doubt about the intention behind using file names
matching even the more lenient pattern specified above, therefore we
should be fine with disallowing such patterns.

Extra care is taken to catch names such as '.\\.git\\booh' because the
backslash is marked as a directory separator only on Windows, and we want
to use this new helper function also in fsck on other platforms.

A big thank you goes to Ed Thomson and an unnamed Microsoft engineer for
the detailed analysis performed to come up with the corresponding fixes
for libgit2.

This commit adds a function to detect whether a given file name can refer
to the Git directory by mistake.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:04:45 -08:00
a18fcc9ff2 fsck: complain about HFS+ ".git" aliases in trees
Now that the index can block pathnames that case-fold to
".git" on HFS+, it would be helpful for fsck to notice such
problematic paths. This lets servers which use
receive.fsckObjects block them before the damage spreads.

Note that the fsck check is always on, even for systems
without core.protectHFS set. This is technically more
restrictive than we need to be, as a set of users on ext4
could happily use these odd filenames without caring about
HFS+.

However, on balance, it's helpful for all servers to block
these (because the paths can be used for mischief, and
servers which bother to fsck would want to stop the spread
whether they are on HFS+ themselves or not), and hardly
anybody will be affected (because the blocked names are
variants of .git with invisible Unicode code-points mixed
in, meaning mischief is almost certainly what the tree
author had in mind).

Ideally these would be controlled by a separate
"fsck.protectHFS" flag. However, it would be much nicer to
be able to enable/disable _any_ fsck flag individually, and
any scheme we choose should match such a system. Given the
likelihood of anybody using such a path in practice, it is
not unreasonable to wait until such a system materializes.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:04:45 -08:00
a42643aa8d read-cache: optionally disallow HFS+ .git variants
The point of disallowing ".git" in the index is that we
would never want to accidentally overwrite files in the
repository directory. But this means we need to respect the
filesystem's idea of when two paths are equal. The prior
commit added a helper to make such a comparison for HFS+;
let's use it in verify_path.

We make this check optional for two reasons:

  1. It restricts the set of allowable filenames, which is
     unnecessary for people who are not on HFS+. In practice
     this probably doesn't matter, though, as the restricted
     names are rather obscure and almost certainly would
     never come up in practice.

  2. It has a minor performance penalty for every path we
     insert into the index.

This patch ties the check to the core.protectHFS config
option. Though this is expected to be most useful on OS X,
we allow it to be set everywhere, as HFS+ may be mounted on
other platforms. The variable does default to on for OS X,
though.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:04:44 -08:00
6162a1d323 utf8: add is_hfs_dotgit() helper
We do not allow paths with a ".git" component to be added to
the index, as that would mean repository contents could
overwrite our repository files. However, asking "is this
path the same as .git" is not as simple as strcmp() on some
filesystems.

HFS+'s case-folding does more than just fold uppercase into
lowercase (which we already handle with strcasecmp). It may
also skip past certain "ignored" Unicode code points, so
that (for example) ".gi\u200ct" is mapped ot ".git".

The full list of folds can be found in the tables at:

  https://www.opensource.apple.com/source/xnu/xnu-1504.15.3/bsd/hfs/hfscommon/Unicode/UCStringCompareData.h

Implementing a full "is this path the same as that path"
comparison would require us importing the whole set of
tables.  However, what we want to do is much simpler: we
only care about checking ".git". We know that 'G' is the
only thing that folds to 'g', and so on, so we really only
need to deal with the set of ignored code points, which is
much smaller.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:04:39 -08:00
76e86fc6e3 fsck: notice .git case-insensitively
We complain about ".git" in a tree because it cannot be
loaded into the index or checked out. Since we now also
reject ".GIT" case-insensitively, fsck should notice the
same, so that errors do not propagate.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:04:39 -08:00
450870cba7 t1450: refactor ".", "..", and ".git" fsck tests
We check that fsck notices and complains about confusing
paths in trees. However, there are a few shortcomings:

  1. We check only for these paths as file entries, not as
     intermediate paths (so ".git" and not ".git/foo").

  2. We check "." and ".." together, so it is possible that
     we notice only one and not the other.

  3. We repeat a lot of boilerplate.

Let's use some loops to be more thorough in our testing, and
still end up with shorter code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:04:39 -08:00
cc2fc7c2f0 verify_dotfile(): reject .git case-insensitively
We do not allow ".git" to enter into the index as a path
component, because checking out the result to the working
tree may causes confusion for subsequent git commands.
However, on case-insensitive file systems, ".Git" or ".GIT"
is the same. We should catch and prevent those, too.

Note that technically we could allow this for repos on
case-sensitive filesystems. But there's not much point. It's
unlikely that anybody cares, and it creates a repository
that is unexpectedly non-portable to other systems.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:04:31 -08:00
96b50cc190 read-tree: add tests for confusing paths like ".." and ".git"
We should prevent nonsense paths from entering the index in
the first place, as they can cause confusing results if they
are ever checked out into the working tree. We already do
so, but we never tested it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 11:00:37 -08:00
4616918013 unpack-trees: propagate errors adding entries to the index
When unpack_trees tries to write an entry to the index,
add_index_entry may report an error to stderr, but we ignore
its return value. This leads to us returning a successful
exit code for an operation that partially failed. Let's make
sure to propagate this code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-17 10:57:53 -08:00
6fb5df6c77 tests: make comment on GPG keyring match the code
GnuPG homedir is generated on the fly and keys are imported from
armored key file. Make comment match available key info and new key
generation procedure.

Signed-off-by: Christian Hesse <mail@eworm.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-16 12:37:43 -08:00
0e18a5b428 t5400: remove dead code
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-16 10:58:13 -08:00
2cf770f501 test/send-email: --[no-]xmailer tests
Add tests for the --[no-]xmailer option.

Signed-off-by: Luis Henriques <henrix@camandro.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-15 15:18:24 -08:00
ac1596a684 send-email: add --[no-]xmailer option
Add --[no-]xmailer that allows a user to disable adding the 'X-Mailer:'
header to the email being sent.

Signed-off-by: Luis Henriques <henrix@camandro.org>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-15 15:17:25 -08:00
a8bec7abcc add--interactive: leave main loop on read error
The main hunk loop for add--interactive will loop if it does
not get a known input. This is a good thing if the user
typed some invalid input. However, if we have an
uncorrectable read error, we'll end up looping infinitely.
We can fix this by noticing read errors (i.e., <STDIN>
returns undef) and breaking out of the loop.

One easy way to trigger this is if you have an editor that
does not take over the terminal (e.g., one that spawns a
window in an existing process and waits), start the editor
with the hunk-edit command, and hit ^C to send SIGINT. The
editor process dies due to SIGINT, but the perl
add--interactive process does not (perl suspends SIGINT for
the duration of our system() call).

We return to the main loop, but further reads from stdin
don't work. The SIGINT _also_ killed our parent git process,
which orphans our process group, meaning that further reads
from the terminal will always fail. We loop infinitely,
getting EIO on each read.

Note that there are several other spots where we read from
stdin, too. However, in each of those cases, we do something
sane when the read returns undef (breaking out of the loop,
taking the input as "no", etc). They don't need similar
treatment.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-15 10:12:20 -08:00
0e5ed7cca3 Update documentation occurrences of filename .sh
Documentation in the completion scripts for Bash and Zsh state the wrong filenames.

Signed-off-by: Peter van der Does <peter@avirtualhome.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-15 09:37:14 -08:00
ab47e2a583 send-email: handle adjacent RFC 2047-encoded words properly
The RFC says that they are to be concatenated after decoding (i.e. the
intervening whitespace is ignored).

Signed-off-by: Роман Донченко <dpb@corrigendum.ru>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-15 09:06:40 -08:00
11f70a7e29 send-email: align RFC 2047 decoding more closely with the spec
More specifically:

* Add "\" to the list of characters not allowed in a token (see RFC 2047
  errata).

* Share regexes between unquote_rfc2047 and is_rfc2047_quoted. Besides
  removing duplication, this also makes unquote_rfc2047 more stringent.

* Allow both "q" and "Q" to identify the encoding.

* Allow lowercase hexadecimal digits in the "Q" encoding.

And, more on the cosmetic side:

* Change the "encoded-text" regex to exclude rather than include characters,
  for clarity and consistency with "token".

Signed-off-by: Роман Донченко <dpb@corrigendum.ru>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-15 09:06:39 -08:00
1be976eeb4 doc: core.ignoreStat clarify the --assume-unchanged effect
The assume-unchanged bit can be misunderstood. Be assertive about
the expectation that file changes should update that flag.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-12 15:23:08 -08:00
9dd70e0a0d git-prompt.sh: make $f local to __git_eread()
This function uses (non-local) $f to store the value of its first parameter.
This can interfere with the user's environment.

Signed-off-by: Justin Guenther <jguenther@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-12 15:13:37 -08:00
9abc44b681 Second batch for 2.3 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-12 14:37:33 -08:00
3889e7a60c Merge branch 'jk/pack-bitmap'
* jk/pack-bitmap:
  pack-bitmap: do not use gcc packed attribute
2014-12-12 14:31:42 -08:00
23c0956441 Merge branch 'jk/push-simple'
Git 2.0 was supposed to make the "simple" mode for the default of
"git push", but it didn't.

* jk/push-simple:
  push: truly use "simple" as default, not "upstream"
2014-12-12 14:31:40 -08:00
0ddedd4d6b Merge branch 'da/difftool-mergetool-simplify-reporting-status'
Code simplification.

* da/difftool-mergetool-simplify-reporting-status:
  mergetools: stop setting $status in merge_cmd()
  mergetool: simplify conditionals
  difftool--helper: add explicit exit statement
  mergetool--lib: remove use of $status global
  mergetool--lib: remove no-op assignment to $status from setup_user_tool
2014-12-12 14:31:39 -08:00
e886efdb34 Merge branch 'jk/colors-fix'
* jk/colors-fix:
  t4026: test "normal" color
  config: fix parsing of "git config --get-color some.key -1"
  docs: describe ANSI 256-color mode
2014-12-12 14:31:39 -08:00
bb87344a74 Merge branch 'rt/push-recurse-submodule-usage-string'
* rt/push-recurse-submodule-usage-string:
  builtin/push.c: fix description of --recurse-submodules option
2014-12-12 14:31:38 -08:00
974df59986 Merge branch 'jk/rebuild-perl-scripts-with-no-perl-seting-change'
The build procedure did not bother fixing perl and python scripts
when NO_PERL and NO_PYTHON build-time configuration changed.

* jk/rebuild-perl-scripts-with-no-perl-seting-change:
  Makefile: have python scripts depend on NO_PYTHON setting
  Makefile: simplify by using SCRIPT_{PERL,SH}_GEN macros
  Makefile: have perl scripts depend on NO_PERL setting
2014-12-12 14:31:37 -08:00
f54629e7b6 Merge branch 'jk/no-perl-tests'
Some tests that depend on perl lacked PERL prerequisite to protect
them, breaking build with NO_PERL configuration.

* jk/no-perl-tests:
  t960[34]: mark cvsimport tests as requiring perl
  t0090: mark add-interactive test with PERL prerequisite
2014-12-12 14:31:36 -08:00
aa6bdbb62f Merge branch 'sv/typofix-apply-error-message'
* sv/typofix-apply-error-message:
  apply: fix typo in an error message
2014-12-12 14:31:35 -08:00
b690b87ce3 Merge branch 'po/everyday-doc'
* po/everyday-doc:
  Documentation: change "gitlink" typo in git-push
2014-12-12 14:31:34 -08:00
11078d66d9 Merge branch 'mh/config-copy-string-from-git-path'
* mh/config-copy-string-from-git-path:
  cmd_config(): make a copy of path obtained from git_path()
2014-12-12 14:31:33 -08:00
c09988ad94 Merge branch 'jc/unpack-trees-plug-leak'
* jc/unpack-trees-plug-leak:
  unpack_trees: plug leakage of o->result
2014-12-12 14:31:33 -08:00
4b0bf39dd5 tests: squelch noise from GPG machinery set-up
It is distracting to let the GPG message while setting up the test
gpghome leak into the test output, especially without running these
tests with "-v" option.

The splitting of RFC1991 prerequiste part is about future-proofing.
When we want to define other kinds of specific prerequisites in the
future, we'd prefer to see it done separately from the basic set-up
code.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-12 13:54:05 -08:00
1e3eefbc8d tests: replace binary GPG keyrings with ASCII-armored keys
Importing PGP key public and security ring works, but we do not have
all secret keys in one binary blob and all public keys in another.
Instead import public and secret keys for one key pair from a text
file that holds ASCII-armored export of them.

Signed-off-by: Christian Hesse <mail@eworm.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-12 13:51:54 -08:00
a0d4923ddf use strbuf_complete_line() for adding a newline if needed
Call strbuf_complete_line() instead of open-coding it.  Also remove
surrounding comments indicating the intent to complete a line since
this information is already included in the function name.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-12 11:23:45 -08:00
c0e0ed6efe tests: skip RFC1991 tests for gnupg 2.1
GnuPG >= 2.1.0 no longer supports RFC1991, so skip these tests.

Signed-off-by: Christian Hesse <mail@eworm.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-12 10:26:08 -08:00
b41a36e635 tests: create gpg homedir on the fly
GnuPG 2.1 homedir looks different, so just create it on the fly by
importing needed private and public keys and ownertrust.

This solves an issue with gnupg 2.1 running interactive pinentry
when old secret key is present.

Signed-off-by: Christian Hesse <mail@eworm.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-12 10:23:36 -08:00
c83a5099c8 commit: always populate GIT_AUTHOR_* variables
To figure out the author ident for a commit, we call
determine_author_info(). This function collects information
from the environment, other commits (in the case of
"--amend" or "-c/-C"), and the "--author" option. It then
uses fmt_ident to generate the final ident string that goes
into the commit object. fmt_ident is therefore responsible
for any quality or validation checks on what is allowed to
go into a commit.

Before returning, though, we call split_ident_line on the
result, and feed the individual components to hooks via the
GIT_AUTHOR_* variables. Furthermore, we do extra validation
by feeding the split to sane_ident_split(), which is pickier
than fmt_ident (in particular, it will complain about an empty
email field).  If this parsing or validation fails, we skip
updating the environment variables.

This is bad, because it means that hooks may silently see a
different ident than what we are putting into the commit. We
should drop the extra sane_ident_split checks entirely, and
take whatever fmt_ident has fed us (and what will go into
the commit object).

If parsing fails, we should actually abort here rather than
continuing (and feeding the hooks bogus data). However,
split_ident_line should never fail here. The ident was just
generated by fmt_ident, so we know that it's sane. We can
use assert_split_ident to double-check this.

Note that we also teach that assertion to check that we
found a date (it always should, but until now, no caller
cared whether we found a date or not). Checking the return
value of sane_ident_split is enough to ensure we have the
name/email pointers set, and checking date_begin is enough
to know that all of the date/tz variables are set.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-11 15:34:37 -08:00
fac908389d commit: loosen ident checks when generating template
When we generate the commit-message template, we try to
report an author or committer ident that will be of interest
to the user: an author that does not match the committer, or
a committer that was auto-configured.

When doing so, if we encounter what we consider to be a
bogus ident, we immediately die. This is a bad idea, because
our use of the idents here is purely informational.  Any
ident rules should be enforced elsewhere, because commits
that do not invoke the editor will not even hit this code
path (e.g., "git commit -mfoo" would work, but "git commit"
would not). So at best, we are redundant with other checks,
and at worse, we actively prevent commits that should
otherwise be allowed.

We should therefore do the minimal parsing we can to get a
value and not do any validation (i.e., drop the call to
sane_ident_split()).

In theory we could notice when even our minimal parsing
fails to work, and do the sane thing for each check (e.g.,
if we have an author but can't parse the committer, assume
they are different and print the author). But we can
actually simplify this even further.

We know that the author and committer strings we are parsing
have been generated by us earlier in the program, and
therefore they must be parseable. We could just call
split_ident_line without even checking its return value,
knowing that it will put _something_ in the name/mail
fields. Of course, to protect ourselves against future
changes to the code, it makes sense to turn this into an
assert, so we are not surprised if our assumption fails.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-11 15:34:35 -08:00
f2667a8330 index-format.txt: add a missing closing quote
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-11 14:24:37 -08:00
b0f4c9087e t: support clang/gcc AddressSanitizer
When git is compiled with "-fsanitize=address" (using clang
or gcc >= 4.8), all invocations of git will check for buffer
overflows. This is similar to running with valgrind, except
that it is more thorough (because of the compiler support,
function-local buffers can be checked, too) and runs much
faster (making it much less painful to run the whole test
suite with the checks turned on).

Unlike valgrind, the magic happens at compile-time, so we
don't need the same infrastructure in the test suite that we
did to support --valgrind. But there are two things we can
help with:

  1. On some platforms, the leak-detector is on by default,
     and causes every invocation of "git init" (and thus
     every test script) to fail. Since running git with
     the leak detector is pointless, let's shut it off
     automatically in the tests, unless the user has already
     configured it.

  2. When apache runs a CGI, it clears the environment of
     unknown variables. This means that the $ASAN_OPTIONS
     config doesn't make it to git-http-backend, and it
     dies due to the leak detector. Let's mark the variable
     as OK for apache to pass.

With these two changes, running

    make CC=clang CFLAGS=-fsanitize=address test

works out of the box.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-11 14:13:17 -08:00
0e729c7ed5 update-ref: fix "verify" command with missing <oldvalue>
If "git update-ref --stdin" was given a "verify" command with no
"<newvalue>" at all (not even zeros), the code was mistakenly setting
have_old=0 (and leaving old_sha1 uninitialized). But this is
incorrect: this command is supposed to verify that the reference
doesn't exist. So in this case we really need old_sha1 to be set to
null_sha1 and have_old to be set to 1.

Moreover, since have_old was being set to zero, *no* check of the old
value was being done, so the new value of the reference was being set
unconditionally to the value in new_sha1. new_sha1, in turn, was set
to null_sha1 in the expectation that that was the old value and it
shouldn't be changed. But because the precondition was not being
checked, the result was that the reference was being deleted
unconditionally.

So, if <oldvalue> is missing, set have_old unconditionally and set
old_sha1 to null_sha1.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Acked-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-11 11:56:53 -08:00
a46e41fca3 t1400: add some more tests of "update-ref --stdin"'s verify command
Two of the tests fail because

    verify refs/heads/foo

with no argument (not even zeros) actually *deletes* refs/heads/foo.
This problem will be fixed in the next commit.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-11 11:56:26 -08:00
97f05f43dc Show number of TODO items for interactive rebase
During 'rebase -i', one wrong edit in a long rebase session
might inadvertently drop commits/items. This change shows
the total number of TODO items in the comments after the
list. After performing the rebase edit, total item counts
can be compared to make sure that no changes have been lost
in the edit.

Signed-off-by: Onno Kortmann <onno@gmx.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-10 13:17:38 -08:00
8e9faf27c1 pkt-line: allow writing of LARGE_PACKET_MAX buffers
When we send out pkt-lines with refnames, we use a static
1000-byte buffer. This means that the maximum size of a ref
over the git protocol is around 950 bytes (the exact size
depends on the protocol line being written, but figure on a sha1
plus some boilerplate).

This is enough for any sane workflow, but occasionally odd
things happen (e.g., a bug may create a ref "foo/foo/foo/..."
accidentally).  With the current code, you cannot even use
"push" to delete such a ref from a remote.

Let's switch to using a strbuf, with a hard-limit of
LARGE_PACKET_MAX (which is specified by the protocol).  This
matches the size of the readers, as of 74543a0 (pkt-line:
provide a LARGE_PACKET_MAX static buffer, 2013-02-20).
Versions of git older than that will complain about our
large packets, but it's really no worse than the current
behavior. Right now the sender barfs with "impossibly long
line" trying to send the packet, and afterwards the reader
will barf with "protocol error: bad line length %d", which
is arguably better anyway.

Note that we're not really _solving_ the problem here, but
just bumping the limits. In theory, the length of a ref is
unbounded, and pkt-line can only represent sizes up to
65531 bytes. So we are just bumping the limit, not removing
it.  But hopefully 64K should be enough for anyone.

As a bonus, by using a strbuf for the formatting we can
eliminate an unnecessary copy in format_buf_write.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-10 13:09:21 -08:00
ea417833ea read_packed_refs: use skip_prefix instead of static array
We want to recognize the packed-refs header and skip to the
"traits" part of the line. We currently do it by feeding
sizeof() a static const array to strncmp. However, it's a
bit simpler to just skip_prefix, which expresses the
intention more directly, and without remembering to account
for the NUL-terminator in each sizeof() call.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-10 09:40:33 -08:00
6a49870a72 read_packed_refs: pass strbuf to parse_ref_line
Now that we have a strbuf in read_packed_refs, we can pass
it straight to the line parser, which saves us an extra
strlen.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-10 09:28:54 -08:00
10c497aa0c read_packed_refs: use a strbuf for reading lines
Current code uses a fixed PATH_MAX-sized buffer for reading
packed-refs lines. This is a reasonable guess, in the sense
that git generally cannot work with refs larger than
PATH_MAX.  However, there are a few cases where it is not
great:

  1. Some systems may have a low value of PATH_MAX, but can
     actually handle larger paths in practice. Fixing this
     code path probably isn't enough to make them work
     completely with long refs, but it is a step in the
     right direction.

  2. We use fgets, which will happily give us half a line on
     the first read, and then the rest of the line on the
     second. This is probably OK in practice, because our
     refline parser is careful enough to look for the
     trailing newline on the first line. The second line may
     look like a peeled line to us, but since "^" is illegal
     in refnames, it is not likely to come up.

     Still, it does not hurt to be more careful.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-10 09:27:24 -08:00
356e91f2ec branch: allow -f with -m and -d
-f/--force is the standard way to force an action, and is used by branch
for the recreation of existing branches, but not for deleting unmerged
branches nor for renaming to an existing branch.

Make "-m -f" equivalent to "-M" and "-d -f" equivalent to" -D", i.e.
allow -f/--force to be used with -m/-d also.

For the list modes, "-f" is simply ignored.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-09 16:27:47 -08:00
71b5984975 parse_color: drop COLOR_BACKGROUND macro
Commit 695d95d (parse_color: refactor color storage,
2014-11-20) introduced two macros, COLOR_FOREGROUND and
COLOR_BACKGROUND. The latter conflicts with a system macro
defined on Windows, breaking compilation there.

The simplest solution is to just get rid of these macros
entirely. They are constants that are only used in one place
(since the whole point of 695d95d was to avoid repeating
ourselves). Their main function is to make the magic
character constants more readable, but we can do the same
thing with a comment.

Reported-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-09 14:51:31 -08:00
0cef4e765c git-am.txt: --ignore-date flag is not passed to git-apply
Signed-off-by: Ronald Wampler <rdwampler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-09 14:25:53 -08:00
936d2c9301 gitignore.txt: do not suggest assume-unchanged
git-update-index --assume-unchanged was never meant to ignore changes
to tracked files (only to spare some stats). So do not suggest it
as a means to achieve that.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-09 14:24:14 -08:00
ccadb25f73 doc: make clear --assume-unchanged's user contract
Many users misunderstand the --assume-unchanged contract, believing
it means Git won't look at the flagged file.

Be explicit that the --assume-unchanged contract is by the user that
they will NOT change the file so that Git does not need to look (and
expend, for example, lstat(2) cycles)

Mentioning "Git stops checking" does not help the reader, as it is
only one possible consequence of what that assumption allows Git to
do, but

   (1) there are things other than "stop checking" that Git can do
       based on that assumption; and
   (2) Git is not obliged to stop checking; it merely is allowed to.

Also, this is a single flag bit, correct the plural to singular, and
the verb, accordingly.

Drop the stale and incorrect information about "poor-man's ignore",
which is not what this flag bit is about at all.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-09 14:23:29 -08:00
83c9433e67 git-svn: support for git-svn propset
This change allows git-svn to support setting subversion properties.

It is useful for manually setting properties when committing to a
subversion repo that *requires* properties to be set without requiring
moving your changeset to separate subversion checkout in order to
set props.

This change is initially from David Fraser, appearing at:

  http://mid.gmane.org/1927112650.1281253084529659.JavaMail.root@klofta.sjsoft.com>

They are now forward-ported to most recent git along with fixes to
deal with files in subdirectories.

Style and functional changes from Eric Wong have been taken
in their entirety from:

  http://mid.gmane.org/20141201094911.GA13931@dcvr.yhbt.net

There is a nit to point out: the code does not support
adding props unless there are also content changes to the files as
well.  This is demonstrated in the testcase.

[ew - simplify Git.pm usage for check-attr
    - improve shell portability for tests
    - minor phrasing changes in commit message]

Signed-off-by: David Fraser <davidf@sjsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Alfred Perlstein <alfred@freebsd.org>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-12-09 22:03:15 +00:00
3b9a2b07ef test-hashmap: squelch gcc compiler warning
At least on this developer's MacOSX (Snow Leopard, gcc-4.2.1), GCC
prints a warning that 'hash' may be used uninitialized when
compiling test-hashmap that 'hash' may be used uninitialized (but
GCC 4.6.3 on this developer's Ubuntu server does not report this
problem).

The old compiler is wrong, of course, as the switch (method & 3)
statement already handles all the possible cases, but that does not
help in a scenario where it is hard or impossible to upgrade to a
newer compiler (e.g. being stuck on an older MacOSX and having to
rely on Xcode).

So let's just initialize the variable and be done with it, it is
hardly a crucial part of the code because it is only used by the
test suite and invisible to the end users.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-09 13:50:15 -08:00
a1e920a0a7 index-pack: terminate object buffers with NUL
We have some tricky checks in fsck that rely on a side effect of
require_end_of_header(), and would otherwise easily run outside
non-NUL-terminated buffers. This is a bit brittle, so let's make sure
that only NUL-terminated buffers are passed around to begin with.

Jeff "Peff" King contributed the detailed analysis which call paths are
involved and pointed out that we also have to patch the get_data()
function in unpack-objects.c, which is what Johannes "Dscho" Schindelin
implemented.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Analyzed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-09 11:56:37 -08:00
7add441984 fsck: properly bound "invalid tag name" error message
When we detect an invalid tag-name header in a tag object,
like, "tag foo bar\n", we feed the pointer starting at "foo
bar" to a printf "%s" formatter. This shows the name, as we
want, but then it keeps printing the rest of the tag buffer,
rather than stopping at the end of the line.

Our tests did not notice because they look only for the
matching line, but the bug is that we print much more than
we wanted to. So we also adjust the test to be more exact.

Note that when fscking tags with "index-pack --strict", this
is even worse. index-pack does not add a trailing
NUL-terminator after the object, so we may actually read
past the buffer and print uninitialized memory. Running
t5302 with valgrind does notice the bug for that reason.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-09 11:54:25 -08:00
0291973b36 t0027: check the eol conversion warnings
Depending on the file content, eol parameters and .gitattributes
"git add" may give a warning when the eol of a file will change when
the file is checked out again.

There are 2 different warnings, either "CRLF will be replaced..." or
"LF will be replaced...".  Let t0027 check for these warnings by
adding new parameters to create_file_in_repo(), which tells what
warnings are expected.

When a file has eol=lf or eol=crlf in .gitattributes, it is handled
as text and should be normalized.  Add tests for these cases that
were not covered.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-05 15:16:25 -08:00
c18b867341 First batch for 2.3 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-05 12:03:57 -08:00
a633732440 Merge branch 'mh/config-flip-xbit-back-after-checking'
* mh/config-flip-xbit-back-after-checking:
  create_default_files(): don't set u+x bit on $GIT_DIR/config
2014-12-05 11:43:10 -08:00
0b0cd37920 Merge branch 'jk/gitweb-with-newer-cgi-multi-param'
* jk/gitweb-with-newer-cgi-multi-param:
  gitweb: hack around CGI's list-context param() handling
2014-12-05 11:42:56 -08:00
0e0252b755 Merge branch 'rs/receive-pack-use-labs'
* rs/receive-pack-use-labs:
  use labs() for variables of type long instead of abs()
2014-12-05 11:42:54 -08:00
8aae35f658 Merge branch 'rs/maint-config-use-labs'
* rs/maint-config-use-labs:
  use labs() for variables of type long instead of abs()
2014-12-05 11:42:50 -08:00
2528ff079c Merge branch 'js/windows-open-eisdir-error'
* js/windows-open-eisdir-error:
  Windows: correct detection of EISDIR in mingw_open()
2014-12-05 11:42:35 -08:00
9b144d869f Merge branch 'jh/empty-notes'
A request to store an empty note via "git notes" meant to remove
note from the object but with --allow-empty we will store a (surprise!)
note that is empty.  In the longer run, we might want to deprecate
the somewhat unintuitive "emptying means deletion" behaviour.

* jh/empty-notes:
  t3301: modernize style
  notes: empty notes should be shown by 'git log'
  builtin/notes: add --allow-empty, to allow storing empty notes
  builtin/notes: split create_note() to clarify add vs. remove logic
  builtin/notes: simplify early exit code in add()
  builtin/notes: refactor note file path into struct note_data
  builtin/notes: improve naming
  t3301: verify that 'git notes' removes empty notes by default
  builtin/notes: fix premature failure when trying to add the empty blob
2014-12-05 11:42:29 -08:00
7f2186cadf Merge branch 'sv/get-builtin'
* sv/get-builtin:
  builtin: move builtin retrieval to get_builtin()
2014-12-05 11:42:26 -08:00
c21df07886 Merge branch 'jk/checkout-from-tree'
"git checkout $treeish $path", when $path in the index and the
working tree already matched what is in $treeish at the $path,
still overwrote the $path unnecessarily.

* jk/checkout-from-tree:
  checkout $tree: do not throw away unchanged index entries
2014-12-05 11:41:33 -08:00
09d60d785c Merge branch 'tq/git-ssh-command'
Allow passing extra set of arguments when ssh is invoked to create
an encrypted & authenticated connection by introducing a new environment
variable GIT_SSH_COMMAND, whose contents is interpreted by shells.

This is not possible with existing GIT_SSH mechanism whose
invocation bypasses shells, which was designed more to match what
other programs with similar variables did, not necessarily to be
more useful.

* tq/git-ssh-command:
  git_connect: set ssh shell command in GIT_SSH_COMMAND
2014-12-05 11:39:25 -08:00
05d7fb6290 Merge branch 'rs/env-array-in-child-process'
* rs/env-array-in-child-process:
  use args member of struct child_process
2014-12-05 11:39:21 -08:00
8213d87a83 Merge branch 'maint' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po into maint
* 'maint' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: fix typos
2014-12-05 11:38:24 -08:00
1b74f643f6 Start post 2.2 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-05 11:38:19 -08:00
69216bf72b for_each_reflog_ent_reverse: turn leftover check into assertion
Our loop should always process all lines, even if we hit the
beginning of the file. We have a conditional after the loop
ends to double-check that there is nothing left and to
process it. But this should never happen, and is a sign of a
logic bug in the loop. Let's turn it into a BUG assertion.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-05 11:11:52 -08:00
e5e73ff20b for_each_reflog_ent_reverse: fix newlines on block boundaries
When we read a reflog file in reverse, we read whole chunks
of BUFSIZ bytes, then loop over the buffer, parsing any
lines we find. We find the beginning of each line by looking
for the newline from the previous line. If we don't find
one, we know that we are either at the beginning of
the file, or that we have to read another block.

In the latter case, we stuff away what we have into a
strbuf, read another block, and continue our parse. But we
missed one case here. If we did find a newline, and it is at
the beginning of the block, we must also stuff that newline
into the strbuf, as it belongs to the block we are about to
read.

The minimal fix here would be to add this special case to
the conditional that checks whether we found a newline.
But we can make the flow a little clearer by rearranging a
bit: we first handle lines that we are going to show, and
then at the end of each loop, stuff away any leftovers if
necessary. That lets us fold this special-case in with the
more common "we ended in the middle of a line" case.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-05 11:11:35 -08:00
f8c4ab611a string_list: remove string_list_insert_at_index() from its API
There no longer is a caller to this function.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-04 15:10:27 -08:00
63226218ba mailmap: use higher level string list functions
No functional changes intended. This commit makes use of higher level
and better documented functions of the string list API, so the code is
more understandable.

Note that also the required computational amount should not change
in principal as we need to look up the item no matter if it is already
part of the list or not. Once looked up, insertion comes for free.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-04 15:10:21 -08:00
608758d5ce Documentation/git-stripspace: add synopsis for --comment-lines
Signed-off-by: Slavomir Vlcek <svlc@inventati.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-04 14:18:30 -08:00
27234a2ef3 check-ignore: clarify treatment of tracked files
By default, check-ignore does not list tracked files at all since
they are not subject to ignore patterns.

Make this clearer in the man page.

Reported-by: Guilherme <guibufolo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-04 12:16:04 -08:00
ff7aa81f89 t3200-branch: test -M
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-04 12:10:52 -08:00
85ed2f3206 completion: add git-tag options
Add completion for git-tag options including
all options that are currently shown in "git tag -h".

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-04 12:10:26 -08:00
d543d9c0f4 compat: convert modes to use portable file type values
This adds simple wrapper functions around calls to stat(), fstat(),
and lstat() that translate the operating system's native file type
bits to those used by most operating systems.  It also rewrites the
S_IF* macros to the common values, so all file type processing is
performed using the translated modes.  This makes projects portable
across operating systems that use different file type definitions.

Only the file type bits may be affected by these compatibility
functions; the file permission bits are assumed to be 07777 and are
passed through unchanged.

Signed-off-by: David Michael <fedora.dm0@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-04 11:58:36 -08:00
e652c0eb5d prompt: respect GIT_TERMINAL_PROMPT to disable terminal prompts
If you run git as part of an automated system, you might
prefer git to die rather than try to issue a prompt on the
terminal (because there would be nobody to see it and
respond, and the process would hang forever).

This usually works out of the box because getpass() (and our
more featureful replacements) will fail when there is no
tty, but this does not cover all cases. For example, a batch
system run via ssh might have a tty, even when the user does
not expect it.

Let's provide an environment variable the user can set to
avoid even trying to touch the tty at all.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-04 10:22:42 -08:00
59b386526a credential: let helpers tell us to quit
When we are trying to fill a credential, we loop over the
set of defined credential-helpers, then fall back to running
askpass, and then finally prompt on the terminal. Helpers
which cannot find a credential are free to tell us nothing,
but they cannot currently ask us to stop prompting.

This patch lets them provide a "quit" attribute, which asks
us to stop the process entirely (avoiding running more
helpers, as well as the askpass/terminal prompt).

This has a few possible uses:

  1. A helper which prompts the user itself (e.g., in a
     dialog) can provide a "cancel" button to the user to
     stop further prompts.

  2. Some helpers may know that prompting cannot possibly
     work. For example, if their role is to broker a ticket
     from an external auth system and that auth system
     cannot be contacted, there is no point in continuing
     (we need a ticket to authenticate, and the user cannot
     provide one by typing it in).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-04 10:11:12 -08:00
e32afab7b0 git-new-workdir: don't fail if the target directory is empty
Allow new workdirs to be created in an empty directory (similar to "git
clone").  Provide more error checking and clean up on failure.

Signed-off-by: Paul Smith <paul@mad-scientist.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-03 12:49:24 -08:00
f1f6224c72 t3102: style modernization
Use <<-\END_OF_HERE_DOCUMENT to allow indenting the HERE document to
make it clear where each test begins and ends, and relieve readers
from having to worry about variable substitution.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:49:53 -08:00
4be4f71f55 t3102: document that ls-tree does not yet support negated pathspec
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:49:53 -08:00
5c6cb9888d ls-tree: disable negative pathspec because it's not supported
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:33:45 -08:00
1cf9952db2 ls-tree: remove path filtering logic in show_tree
ls-tree uses read_tree_recursive() which already does path filtering
using pathspec. No need to filter one more time based on prefix
only. "ls-tree ../somewhere" does not work because of
this. write_name_quotedpfx() can now be retired because nobody else
uses it.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:32:34 -08:00
6a0b0b6de9 tree.c: update read_tree_recursive callback to pass strbuf as base
This allows the callback to use 'base' as a temporary buffer to
quickly assemble full path "without" extra allocation. The callback
has to restore it afterwards of course.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:32:29 -08:00
814dd8e078 run-command.c: retire unused run_hook_with_custom_index()
This was originally meant to be used to rewrite run_commit_hook()
that only special cases the GIT_INDEX_FILE environment, but the
run_hook_ve() refactoring done earlier made the implementation of
run_commit_hook() thin and clean enough.

Nobody uses this, so retire it as an unfinished clean-up made
unnecessary.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 08:39:43 -08:00
b799a696b2 for-each-ref: correct spelling of Tcl in option description
Tcl is conventionally spelled "Tcl". The description of
option "--tcl", however, spells it "tcl". Let's follow
the convention.

Reported-by: Hartmut Henkel <hartmut_henkel@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-30 18:50:35 -08:00
decd3c0c28 t0050-*.sh: mark the rename (case change) test as passing
Since commit baa37bff ("mv: allow renaming to fix case on case
insensitive filesystems", 08-05-2014), the 'git mv' command has
been able to rename a file, to one which differs only in case,
on a case insensitive filesystem.

This results in the 'rename (case change)' test, which used to fail
prior to this commit, to now (unexpectedly) pass. Mark this test as
passing.

[jc: Ramsay's tests on Cygwin, Eric's on Mac OS X]

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Tested-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-30 18:13:42 -08:00
00a6fa0720 push: truly use "simple" as default, not "upstream"
The plan for the push.default transition had all along been
to use the "simple" method rather than "upstream" as a
default if the user did not specify their own push.default
value. Commit 11037ee (push: switch default from "matching"
to "simple", 2013-01-04) tried to implement that by moving
PUSH_DEFAULT_UNSPECIFIED in our switch statement to
fall-through to the PUSH_DEFAULT_SIMPLE case.

When the commit that became 11037ee was originally written,
that would have been enough. We would fall through to
calling setup_push_upstream() with the "simple" parameter
set to 1. However, it was delayed for a while until we were
ready to make the transition in Git 2.0.

And in the meantime, commit ed2b182 (push: change `simple`
to accommodate triangular workflows, 2013-06-19) threw a
monkey wrench into the works. That commit drops the "simple"
parameter to setup_push_upstream, and instead checks whether
the global "push_default" is PUSH_DEFAULT_SIMPLE. This is
right when the user has explicitly configured push.default
to simple, but wrong when we are a fall-through for the
"unspecified" case.

We never noticed because our push.default tests do not cover
the case of the variable being totally unset; they only
check the "simple" behavior itself.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-30 18:11:25 -08:00
b5007211b6 pack-bitmap: do not use gcc packed attribute
The "__attribute__" flag may be a noop on some compilers.
That's OK as long as the code is correct without the
attribute, but in this case it is not. We would typically
end up with a struct that is 2 bytes too long due to struct
padding, breaking both reading and writing of bitmaps.

Instead of marshalling the data in a struct, let's just
provide helpers for reading and writing the appropriate
types. Besides being correct on all platforms, the result is
more efficient and simpler to read.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-30 18:07:34 -08:00
4d7a5ceacc t5516: more tests for receive.denyCurrentBranch=updateInstead
The previous one tests only the case where a path to be updated by
the push-to-deploy has an incompatible change in the target's
working tree that has already been added to the index, but the
feature itself wants to require the working tree to be a lot cleaner
than what is tested.  Add a handful more tests to protect the
feature from future changes that mistakenly (from the viewpoint of
the inventor of the feature) loosens the cleanliness requirement,
namely:

 - A change only to the working tree but not to the index is still a
   change to be protected;

 - An untracked file in the working tree that would be overwritten
   by a push-to-deploy needs to be protected;

 - A change that happens to make a file identical to what is being
   pushed is still a change to be protected (i.e. the feature's
   cleanliness requirement is more strict than that of checkout).

Also, test that a stat-only change to the working tree is not a
reason to reject a push-to-deploy.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-30 17:54:30 -08:00
1404bcbb6b receive-pack: add another option for receive.denyCurrentBranch
When synchronizing between working directories, it can be handy to update
the current branch via 'push' rather than 'pull', e.g. when pushing a fix
from inside a VM, or when pushing a fix made on a user's machine (where
the developer is not at liberty to install an ssh daemon let alone know
the user's password).

The common workaround – pushing into a temporary branch and then merging
on the other machine – is no longer necessary with this patch.

The new option is:

'updateInstead':
	Update the working tree accordingly, but refuse to do so if there
	are any uncommitted changes.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-30 17:15:13 -08:00
59362e560d system_path(): always return free'able memory to the caller
The function sometimes returns a newly allocated string and
sometimes returns a borrowed string, the latter of which the callers
must not free().  The existing callers all assume that the return
value belongs to the callee and most of them copy it with strdup()
when they want to keep it around.  They end up leaking the returned
copy when the callee returned a new string because they cannot tell
if they should free it.

Change the contract between the callers and system_path() to make
the returned string owned by the callers; they are responsible for
freeing it when done, but they do not have to make their own copy to
store it away.

Adjust the callers to make sure they do not leak the returned string
once they are done, but do not bother freeing it just before dying,
exiting or exec'ing other program to avoid unnecessary churn.

Reported-by: Alexander Kuleshov <kuleshovmail@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-30 16:39:47 -08:00
ff51f5619d Merge branch 'master' of https://github.com/ralfth/git-po-de
* 'master' of https://github.com/ralfth/git-po-de:
  l10n: de.po: fix typos
2014-11-29 10:44:48 +08:00
ae1dcc52c1 l10n: de.po: fix typos
Signed-off-by: Hartmut Henkel <hartmut_henkel@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-11-28 19:08:50 +01:00
b260d265e1 Git 2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-26 13:18:34 -08:00
a2b450d6fd RelNotes: spelling & grammar tweaks
Signed-off-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-26 13:18:04 -08:00
61e704e38a sha1_name: avoid unnecessary sha1 lookup in find_unique_abbrev
An example where this happens is when doing an ls-tree on a tree that
contains a commit link. In that case, find_unique_abbrev is called
to get a non-abbreviated hex sha1, but still, a lookup is done as
to whether the sha1 is in the repository (which ends up looking for
a loose object in .git/objects), while the result of that lookup is
not used when returning a non-abbreviated hex sha1.

Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-26 10:51:05 -08:00
a078f7321b git-am: add --message-id/--no-message-id
Parse the option and pass it directly to git-mailinfo.

Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 15:27:01 -08:00
452dfbed1a git-mailinfo: add --message-id
This option adds the content of the Message-Id header at the end of the
commit message prepared by git-mailinfo.  This is useful in order to
associate commit messages automatically with mailing list discussions.

Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 15:24:55 -08:00
0720a51b29 t9001: style modernisation phase #5
Two general shell script codingstyles around here-text.

 - Quote the <<\END_OF_HERE_TEXT string when there is no parameter
   substitution going on to reduce cognitive load of the reader.

 - Indent the text with <<-\END_OF_HERE_TEXT when able to make it
   easier to spot boundaries of the tests.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 15:22:31 -08:00
ee756a8161 t9001: style modernisation phase #4
Two general shell script codingstyles.

 - No SP between redirection operator and its target
 - One SP on both sides of () in "name () {" that begins a shell function

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 15:22:31 -08:00
acd72b5636 t9001: style modernisation phase #3
Use write_script.  The resulting patch makes it a lot easier
to understand what the written script is doing.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 15:22:29 -08:00
03335f2295 t9001: style modernisation phase #2
Indent is done with HTs, not a run of SPs.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 15:20:25 -08:00
aca56064f4 t9001: style modernisation phase #1
Don't chop test_expect_success line into pieces and concatenate with
'\'.  That's so 2005.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 14:11:39 -08:00
8d81408435 git-send-email: add --transfer-encoding option
The thread at http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/257392
details problems when applying patches with "git am" in a repository with
CRLF line endings.  In the example in the thread, the repository originated
from "git-svn" so it is not possible to use core.eol and friends on it.

Right now, the best option is to use "git am --keep-cr".  However, when
a patch create new files, the patch application process will reject the
new file because it finds a "/dev/null\r" string instead of "/dev/null".

The problem is that SMTP transport is CRLF-unsafe.  Sending a patch by
email is the same as passing it through "dos2unix | unix2dos".  The newly
introduced CRLFs are normally transparent because git-am strips them. The
keepcr=true setting preserves them, but it is mostly working by chance
and it would be very problematic to have a "git am" workflow in a
repository with mixed LF and CRLF line endings.

The MIME solution to this is the quoted-printable transfer enconding.
This is not something that we want to enable by default, since it makes
received emails horrible to look at.  However, it is a very good match
for projects that store CRLF line endings in the repository.

The only disadvantage of quoted-printable is that quoted-printable
patches fail to apply if the maintainer uses "git am --keep-cr".  This
is because the decoded patch will have two carriage returns at the end
of the line.  Therefore, add support for base64 transfer encoding too,
which makes received emails downright impossible to look at outside
a MUA, but really just works.

The patch covers all bases, including users that still live in the late
80s, by also providing a 7bit content transfer encoding that refuses
to send emails with non-ASCII character in them.  And finally, "8bit"
will add a Content-Transfer-Encoding header but otherwise do nothing.

Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 14:00:15 -08:00
bb29456c89 git-send-email: delay creation of MIME headers
After the next patch, git-send-email will sometimes modify
existing Content-Transfer-Encoding headers.  Delay the addition
of the header to @xh until just before sending.  Do the same
for MIME-Version, to avoid adding it twice.

Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 14:00:14 -08:00
3383e19984 sort_string_list(): rename to string_list_sort()
The new name is more consistent with the names of other
string_list-related functions.

Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 10:11:34 -08:00
8552943f41 prune_remote(): iterate using for_each_string_list_item()
Iterate over refs_to_prune using for_each_string_list_item() rather
than writing out the loop in longhand.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 10:10:52 -08:00
fcce0da975 prune_remote(): rename local variable
Rename "delete_refs_list" to "refs_to_prune". The new name is more
self-explanatory.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 10:10:31 -08:00
4a45b2f347 repack_without_refs(): make the refnames argument a string_list
Most of the callers have string_lists available already, whereas two
of them had to read data out of a string_list into an array of strings
just to call this function. So change repack_without_refs() to take
the list of refnames to omit as a string_list, and change the callers
accordingly.

Suggested-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 10:09:58 -08:00
6d6d06c901 prune_remote(): sort delete_refs_list references en masse
Inserting items into a list in sorted order is O(N^2) whereas
appending them unsorted and then sorting the list all at once is
O(N lg N).

string_list_insert() also removes duplicates, and this change loses
that functionality. But the strings in this list, which ultimately
come from a for_each_ref() iteration, cannot contain duplicates.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 10:09:49 -08:00
28d3f214d1 prune_remote(): initialize both delete_refs lists in a single loop
Also free them together at the end of the function.

In a moment, the array version will become redundant. Managing them
together makes later steps more obvious.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 10:09:45 -08:00
16d4fa3d96 prune_remote(): exit early if there are no stale references
Aside from making the logic clearer, this avoids a call to
warn_dangling_symrefs(), which always does a for_each_rawref()
iteration.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 10:07:45 -08:00
7d665f3584 git-sh-setup.sh: use dashdash with basename call
Calling basename on a argument that starts with a dash, like a login
shell, will result in an error. Add '--' before the argument so that
the argument is interpreted properly.

Signed-off-by: Dan Wyand <danwyand@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-25 10:06:08 -08:00
fc66505c53 string_list: document string_list_(insert,lookup)
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-24 16:04:12 -08:00
3a0a3a8972 git-compat-util.h: don't define _XOPEN_SOURCE on cygwin
A recent update to the gcc compiler (v4.8.3-5 x86_64) on 64-bit
cygwin leads to several new warnings about the implicit declaration
of the memmem(), strlcpy() and strcasestr() functions. For example:

  CC archive.o
  archive.c: In function 'format_subst':
  archive.c:44:3: warning: implicit declaration of function 'memmem' \
    [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
     b = memmem(src, len, "$Format:", 8);
       ^
  archive.c:44:5: warning: assignment makes pointer from integer \
    without a cast [enabled by default]
     b = memmem(src, len, "$Format:", 8);
       ^

This is because <string.h> on Cygwin used to always declare the
above functions, but a recent version of it no longer make them
visible when _XOPEN_SOURCE is set (even if _GNU_SOURCE and
_BSD_SOURCE is set).

In order to suppress the warnings, don't define the _XOPEN_SOURCE
macro on cygwin.

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-24 16:02:38 -08:00
bba5fccc03 t5000 on Windows: do not mistake "sh.exe" as "sh"
In their effort to emulate POSIX as close as possible, the MSYS tools
and Cygwin treat the file name "foo.exe" as "foo" when the latter is
asked for, but not present, but the former is present.

Following this rule, 'cp /bin/sh a/bin' actually copies the file
/bin/sh.exe, so that we now have a/bin/sh.exe in the repository. This
difference did not matter in the tests in the past because we were only
interested in the equality of contents generated in various ways. But
recently added tests check file names, in particular, the presence of
"a/bin/sh". This test fails on Windows, as we do not have a file by this
name, but "a/bin/sh.exe".

Use test-genrandom to generate the large binary file in the repository
under the expected name.

We could change the guilty line to 'cat /bin/sh >a/bin/sh', but it is
better for test reproducibility to ensure that the test data is the same
across platforms, which test-genrandom can guarantee.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-24 11:34:32 -08:00
53de742470 t/README: justify why "! grep foo" is sufficient
We require use of test_must_fail to check expected non-zero exit by
Git itself, but discourage test_must_fail to be used for checking
exit status of non Git commands that are supplied by the system.
The current text explains the reason for the former but not the
latter.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-24 09:47:07 -08:00
54cc5d29a0 SubmittingPatches: refer to t/README for tests
There are general guidelines for writing good tests in t/README
but neither SubmittingPatches nor CodingGuidelines refers to it,
which makes the document easy to be missed.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-24 09:43:29 -08:00
652e759330 Git 2.2.0-rc3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-21 12:10:56 -08:00
1e86d5b11d mergetools: stop setting $status in merge_cmd()
No callers rely on $status so there's don't need to set
it during merge_cmd() for diffmerge, emerge, and kdiff3.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-21 11:27:53 -08:00
98a260220c mergetool: simplify conditionals
Combine the $last_status checks into a single conditional.
Replace $last_status and $rollup_status with a single variable.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-21 11:27:53 -08:00
c41d3fedd8 difftool--helper: add explicit exit statement
git-difftool--helper returns a zero exit status unless
--trust-exit-code is in effect.  Add an explicit exit statement
to make this clearer.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-21 11:27:53 -08:00
1b6a53431c mergetool--lib: remove use of $status global
Remove return statements and rework check_unchanged() so that the exit
status from the last evaluated expression bubbles up to the callers.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-21 11:27:53 -08:00
e00e13e2aa mergetool--lib: remove no-op assignment to $status from setup_user_tool
Even though setup_user_tool assigns the exit status from "eval
$merge_tool_cmd" to $status, the variable is overwritten by the
function it calls next, check_unchanged, without ever getting looked
at by anybody.  And "return $status" at the end of this function
returns the value check_unchanged assigned to it (which is the same
as the value the function returns).  Which makes the assignment a
no-op.

Remove it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-21 11:27:37 -08:00
c7bf68d6b4 init-db: improve the filemode trustability check
Some file systems do not support the executable bit:

  a) The user executable bit is always 0, e.g. VFAT mounted with
     -onoexec

  b) The user executable bit is always 1, e.g. cifs mounted with
     -ofile_mode=0755

  c) There are system where user executable bit is 1 even if it
     should be 0 like b), but the file mode can be maintained
     locally. chmod -x changes the file mode from 0766 to 0666,
     until the file system is unmounted and remounted and the file
     mode is 0766 again.

     This been observed when a Windows machine with NTFS exports a share to
     Mac OS X via smb or afp.

Case a) and b) are handled by the current code.  Case c) qualifies
as "non trustable executable bit" and core.filemode should be false,
but this is currently not done.

Detect when ".git/config" has the user executable bit set after
creat(".git/config", 0666) and set core.filemode to false.  Because
the permission bits on the file is whatever the end user already had
when we are asked to reinitialise an existing repository, and do not
give any information on the filesystem behaviour, do this only when
running "git init" to create a new repository.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-21 11:06:25 -08:00
1d31e5a2cd add: ignore only ignored files
"git add foo bar" adds neither foo nor bar when bar is ignored, but dies
to let the user recheck their command invocation. This becomes less
helpful when "git add foo.*" is subject to shell expansion and some of
the expanded files are ignored.

"git add --ignore-errors" is supposed to ignore errors when indexing
some files and adds the others. It does ignore errors from actual
indexing attempts, but does not ignore the error "file is ignored" as
outlined above. This is unexpected.

Change "git add foo bar" to add foo when bar is ignored, but issue
a warning and return a failure code as before the change.

That is, in the case of trying to add ignored files we now act the same
way (with or without "--ignore-errors") in which we act for more
severe indexing errors when "--ignore-errors" is specified.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-21 10:19:14 -08:00
bca45fbc1f diff-highlight: allow configurable colors
Until now, the highlighting colors were hard-coded in the
script (as "reverse" and "noreverse"), and you had to edit
the script to change them. This patch teaches diff-highlight
to read from color.diff-highlight.* to set them.

In addition, it expands the possiblities considerably by
adding two features:

  1. Old/new lines can be colored independently (so you can
     use a color scheme that complements existing line
     coloring).

  2. Normal, unhighlighted parts of the lines can be colored,
     too. Technically this can be done by separately
     configuring color.diff.old/new and matching it to your
     diff-highlight colors. But you may want a different
     look for your highlighted diffs versus your regular
     diffs.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-20 12:43:16 -08:00
ff40d185d2 parse_color: recognize "no$foo" to clear the $foo attribute
You can turn on ANSI text attributes like "reverse" by
putting "reverse" in your color spec. However, you cannot
ask to turn reverse off.

For common cases, this does not matter. You would turn on
"reverse" at the start of a colored section, and then clear
all attributes with a "reset". However, you may wish to turn
on some attributes, then selectively disable others. For
example:

  git log --format="%C(bold ul yellow)%h%C(noul) %s"

underlines just the hash, but without the need to re-specify
the rest of the attributes. This can also help third-party
programs, like contrib/diff-highlight, that want to turn
some attribute on/off without disrupting existing coloring.

Note that some attribute specifications are probably
nonsensical (e.g., "bold nobold"). We do not bother to flag
such constructs, and instead let the terminal sort it out.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-20 12:42:55 -08:00
17a4be2606 parse_color: support 24-bit RGB values
Some terminals (like XTerm) allow full 24-bit RGB color
specifications using an extension to the regular ANSI color
scheme. Let's allow users to specify hex RGB colors,
enabling the all-important feature of hot pink ref
decorations:

  git log --format="%h%C(#ff69b4)%d%C(reset) %s"

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-20 12:42:49 -08:00
695d95df19 parse_color: refactor color storage
When we parse a color name like "red" into its ANSI color
value, we pack the storage into a single int that may take
on many values:

  1. If it's "-2", no value has been specified.

  2. If it's "-1", the value is "normal" (i.e., no color).

  3. If it's 0 through 7, the value is a standard ANSI
     color.

  4. If it's larger (up to 255), it is a 256-color extended
     value.

Given these magic numbers, it is often hard to see what is
going on in the code. Let's refactor this into a struct with
a flag that tells which scheme we are using, along with a
numeric value. This is more verbose, but should hopefully be
simpler to follow. It will also allow us to easily add
support for more schemes, like 24-bit RGB values.

The result is also slightly less efficient to store, but
that's OK; we only store this intermediate state during the
parse, after which we write out the actual ANSI bytes.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-20 12:41:07 -08:00
62ce40d933 Merge branch 'jn/parse-config-slot' into jk/colors
* jn/parse-config-slot:
  color_parse: do not mention variable name in error message
  pass config slots as pointers instead of offsets
2014-11-20 11:40:29 -08:00
cb357221a4 t4026: test "normal" color
If the user specifiers "normal" for a foreground color, this
should be a noop (while this may sound useless, it is the
only way to specify an unchanged foreground color followed
by a specific background color).

We also check that color "-1" does the same thing. This is
not documented, but has worked forever, so let's make sure
we keep supporting it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-20 10:54:10 -08:00
d0e08d6233 config: fix parsing of "git config --get-color some.key -1"
Most of git-config's command line options use OPT_BIT to
choose an action, and then parse the non-option arguments
in a context-dependent way. However, --get-color and
--get-colorbool are unlike the rest of the options, in that
they are OPT_STRING, taking the option name as a parameter.

This generally works, because we then use the presence of
those strings to set an action bit anyway. But it does mean
that the option-parser will continue looking for options
even after the key (because it is not a non-option; it is an
argument to an option). And running:

  git config --get-color some.key -1

(to use "-1" as the default color spec) will barf, claiming
that "-1" is not an option. Instead, we should treat
--get-color and --get-colorbool as action bits, just like
--add, --get, and all the other actions, and then check that
the non-option arguments we got are sane. This fixes the
weirdness above, and makes those two options like all the
others.

This "fixes" a test in t4026, which checked that feeding
"-2" as a color should fail (it does fail, but prior to this
patch, because parseopt barfed, not because we actually ever
tried to parse the color).

This also catches other errors, like:

  git config --get-color some.key black blue

which previously silently ignored "blue" (and now will
complain that you gave too many arguments).

There are some possible regressions, though. We now disallow
these, which currently do what you would expect:

  # specifying other options after the action
  git config --get-color some.key --file whatever

  # using long-arg syntax
  git config --get-color=some.key

However, we have never advertised these in the
documentation, and in fact they did not work in some older
versions of git. The behavior was apparently switched as an
accidental side effect of d64ec16 (git config: reorganize to
use parseopt, 2009-02-21).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-20 10:52:23 -08:00
0edad17d67 docs: describe ANSI 256-color mode
Our color specifications have supported the 256-color ANSI
extension for years, but we never documented it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-20 10:13:25 -08:00
068395150b lock_ref_sha1_basic: do not die on locking errors
lock_ref_sha1_basic is inconsistent about when it calls
die() and when it returns NULL to signal an error. This is
annoying to any callers that want to recover from a locking
error.

This seems to be mostly historical accident. It was added in
4bd18c4 (Improve abstraction of ref lock/write.,
2006-05-17), which returned an error in all cases except
calling safe_create_leading_directories, in which case it
died.  Later, 40aaae8 (Better error message when we are
unable to lock the index file, 2006-08-12) asked
hold_lock_file_for_update to die for us, leaving the
resolve_ref code-path the only one which returned NULL.

We tried to correct that in 5cc3cef (lock_ref_sha1(): do not
sometimes error() and sometimes die()., 2006-09-30),
by converting all of the die() calls into returns. But we
missed the "die" flag passed to the lock code, leaving us
inconsistent. This state persisted until e5c223e
(lock_ref_sha1_basic(): if locking fails with ENOENT, retry,
2014-01-18). Because of its retry scheme, it does not ask
the lock code to die, but instead manually dies with
unable_to_lock_die().

We can make this consistent with the other return paths by
converting this to use unable_to_lock_message(), and
returning NULL. This is safe to do because all callers
already needed to check the return value of the function,
since it could fail (and return NULL) for other reasons.

[jk: Added excessive history explanation]

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-20 08:25:03 -08:00
7ba2ba7d12 l10n: remove a superfluous translation for push.c
Ralf reported that '--recurse-submodules' option in push.c should not be
translated [1].  Before his commit is merged, remove superfluous
translations for push.c.

[1] http://www.spinics.net/lists/git/msg241964.html

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-11-20 16:23:43 +08:00
e6c1c391a8 l10n: de.po: translate 2 messages
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-11-20 07:16:18 +01:00
388a439ca9 l10n: de.po: translate 2 new messages
Signed-off-by: Phillip Sz <phillip.szelat@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-11-20 07:16:18 +01:00
9aeb4c2b57 l10n: batch updates for one trivial change
In order to catch up with the release of Git 2.2.0 final, make a batch
l10n update for the new l10n change brought by commit d52adf1 (trailer:
display a trailer without its trailing newline).

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-11-20 10:53:48 +08:00
e3f9cab742 l10n: git.pot: v2.2.0 round 2 (1 updated)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.2.0-rc2-23-gca0107e for git v2.2.0 l10n
round 2.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-11-20 10:03:10 +08:00
ca0107e279 Merge branch 'sv/submitting-final-patch'
* sv/submitting-final-patch:
  SubmittingPatches: final submission is To: maintainer and CC: list
2014-11-19 13:48:01 -08:00
eeb92d7e60 Merge branch 'sn/tutorial-status-output-example'
* sn/tutorial-status-output-example:
  gittutorial: fix output of 'git status'
2014-11-19 13:47:59 -08:00
bfd6b53aab Merge branch 'mh/doc-remote-helper-xref'
* mh/doc-remote-helper-xref:
  doc: add some crossrefs between manual pages
2014-11-19 13:47:56 -08:00
f00e081a9a Merge branch 'tb/no-relative-file-url'
* tb/no-relative-file-url:
  t5705: the file:// URL should be absolute
2014-11-19 13:47:53 -08:00
d4c4f18090 Merge branch 'cc/interpret-trailers'
Small fixes to a new experimental command already in 'master'.

* cc/interpret-trailers:
  trailer: display a trailer without its trailing newline
  trailer: ignore comment lines inside the trailers
2014-11-19 13:47:52 -08:00
13dbf46a39 gitweb: hack around CGI's list-context param() handling
As of CGI.pm's 4.08 release, the behavior to call
CGI::param() in a list context is deprecated (because it can
be potentially unsafe if called inside a hash constructor).
This causes gitweb to issue a warning for some of our code,
which in turn causes the tests to fail.

Our use is in fact _not_ one of the dangerous cases, as we
are intentionally using a list context. The recommended
route by 4.08 is to use the new CGI::multi_param() call to
make it explicit that we know what we are doing.
However, that function is only available in 4.08, which is
about a month old; we cannot rely on having it.

One option would be to set $CGI::LIST_CONTEXT_WARN globally,
which turns off the warning. However, that would eliminate
the protection these newer releases are trying to provide.
We want to annotate each site as OK using the new function.

So instead, let's check whether CGI provides the
multi_param() function, and if not, provide an
implementation that just wraps param(). That will work on
both old and new versions of CGI. Sadly, we cannot just
check defined(\&CGI::multi_param), because CGI uses the
autoload feature, which claims that all functions are
defined. Instead, we just do a version check.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-18 11:23:10 -08:00
eedc4be54f builtin/push.c: fix description of --recurse-submodules option
The description of the option for argument "recurse-submodules"
is marked for translation even if it expects the untranslated
string and it's missing the option "on-demand" which was introduced
in eb21c73 (2014-03-29, push: teach --recurse-submodules the on-demand
option). Fix this by unmark the string for translation and add the
missing option.

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-18 11:19:16 -08:00
ca2051d6e3 Makefile: have python scripts depend on NO_PYTHON setting
Like the perl scripts, python scripts need a dependency to ensure they
are rebuilt when switching between the "dummy" versions that run
without Python and the real thing.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-18 11:15:50 -08:00
64c07db9ad Makefile: simplify by using SCRIPT_{PERL,SH}_GEN macros
SCRIPT_PERL_GEN is defined as $(patsubst %.perl,%,$(SCRIPT_PERL))
for use in targets like build-perl-script used by makefiles in
subdirectories that override SCRIPT_PERL (see v1.8.2-rc0~17^2,
"git-remote-mediawiki: use toplevel's Makefile", 2013-02-08).

The same expression is used in the rules that actually write the
generated perl scripts, and since these rules were introduced before
SCRIPT_PERL_GEN, they use the longhand instead of that macro.  Use the
macro to make reading easier.

Likewise for SCRIPT_SH_GEN.  The Python rules already got the same
simplification in v1.8.4-rc0~162^2~8 (2013-05-24).

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-18 11:15:04 -08:00
e69b1ce000 Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: Update Catalan translation
2014-11-18 10:27:46 -08:00
0cfd333d0b Merge branch 'jc/doc-commit-only'
* jc/doc-commit-only:
  Documentation/git-commit: clarify that --only/--include records the working tree contents
2014-11-18 10:19:42 -08:00
4d86216f5b Merge branch 'ta/tutorial-modernize'
* ta/tutorial-modernize:
  gittutorial.txt: remove reference to ancient Git version
2014-11-18 10:18:28 -08:00
3f78278beb Merge branch 'da/difftool'
Fix-up to a new feature in 'master'.

* da/difftool:
  difftool: honor --trust-exit-code for builtin tools
2014-11-18 10:16:55 -08:00
880ef58b3d t960[34]: mark cvsimport tests as requiring perl
Git-cvsimport is written in perl, which understandably
causes the tests to fail if you build with NO_PERL (which
will avoid building cvsimport at all). The earlier cvsimport
tests in t9600-t9602 are all marked with a PERL
prerequisite, but these ones are not.

The one in t9603 was likely not noticed because it is an
expected failure anyway.

The ones in t9604 have been around for a long time, but it
is likely that the combination of NO_PERL and having cvsps
installed is rare enough that nobody noticed.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-18 10:16:09 -08:00
5a97639b39 t0090: mark add-interactive test with PERL prerequisite
The add-interactive system is built in perl. If you build
with NO_PERL, running "git commit --interactive" will exit
with an error and the test will fail.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-18 10:16:06 -08:00
e204b001cf Makefile: have perl scripts depend on NO_PERL setting
If NO_PERL is not set, our perl scripts are built as
usual. If it is set, then we build "dummy" versions that
tell you git was built without perl support and exit
gracefully.

However, if you switch to NO_PERL in a directory with
existing build artifacts, we do not notice that the files
need rebuilt. We see only that they are newer than the
"unimplemented.sh" wrapper and assume they are done. So
doing:

  make
  make NO_PERL=Nope

would result in a git-add--interactive script that uses perl
(and running the test suite would make use of it).

Instead, we should trigger a rebuild of the perl scripts
anytime NO_PERL changes.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-18 10:15:14 -08:00
1f32ecffd8 create_default_files(): don't set u+x bit on $GIT_DIR/config
Since time immemorial, the test of whether to set "core.filemode"
has been done by trying to toggle the u+x bit on $GIT_DIR/config,
which we know always exists, and then testing whether the change
"took".  I find it somewhat odd to use the config file for this
test, but whatever.

The test code didn't set the u+x bit back to its original state
itself, instead relying on the subsequent call to git_config_set()
to re-write the config file with correct permissions.

But ever since

    daa22c6f8d config: preserve config file permissions on edits (2014-05-06)

git_config_set() copies the permissions from the old config file to
the new one.  This is a good change in and of itself, but it
invalidates the create_default_files()'s assumption, causing "git
init" to leave the executable bit set on $GIT_DIR/config.

Reset the permissions on $GIT_DIR/config when we are done with the
test in create_default_files().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-18 10:10:54 -08:00
b3e4c47565 l10n: Update Catalan translation
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
2014-11-17 20:22:48 -07:00
a16cc8b247 unpack_trees: plug leakage of o->result
Most of the time the caller specifies to which destination variable
the resulting index_state should be assigned by passing a non-NULL
pointer in o->dst_index to receive that state, but for a caller that
gives a NULL o->dst_index, the resulting index simply leaked.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-17 13:34:07 -08:00
ea4f93eb99 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: translate 62 new messages
  l10n: de.po: Fixup one translation
  l10n: de.po: use imperative form for command options
2014-11-17 09:28:23 -08:00
366c8d4ca3 Documentation: change "gitlink" typo in git-push
The git-push manual page used "gitlink" in one place instead of
"linkgit".  Fix this so the link renders correctly.

Noticed-by: Dan Allen <dan.j.allen@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-17 09:27:47 -08:00
bcd46becbc apply: fix typo in an error message
s/submoule/submodule

Signed-off-by: Slavomir Vlcek <svlc@inventati.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-17 09:26:24 -08:00
3696a7c2d9 cmd_config(): make a copy of path obtained from git_path()
The strings returned by git_path() are recycled after a while.  Make
a copy of the config filename rather than holding onto the return
value from git_path().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-17 09:24:35 -08:00
31a8aa1ee8 use labs() for variables of type long instead of abs()
Using abs() on long values can cause truncation, so use labs() instead.
Reported by Clang 3.5 (-Wabsolute-value, enabled by -Wall).

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-17 08:57:07 -08:00
83915ba521 use labs() for variables of type long instead of abs()
Using abs() on long values can cause truncation, so use labs() instead.
Reported by Clang 3.5 (-Wabsolute-value, enabled by -Wall).

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-17 08:54:34 -08:00
ba6fad02b6 Windows: correct detection of EISDIR in mingw_open()
According to the Linux open(2) man page, open() must return EISDIR
if a directory was attempted to be opened for writing. Our emulation
in mingw_open() does not get this right: it checks only for O_CREAT.

Fix it to check for a write request.

This fixes a failure in reflog handling, which opens files with
O_APPEND|O_WRONLY, but without O_CREAT, and expects EISDIR when the
named file happens to be a directory.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-17 08:45:50 -08:00
d544b2d495 l10n: de.po: translate 62 new messages
Translate 62 new messages came from git.pot update in 16742b0
(l10n: git.pot: proposed updates for v2.2.0 (+62)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-11-15 18:22:05 +01:00
744437f8e6 l10n: de.po: Fixup one translation
English grammar with German words doesn't make it a German translation. ;)

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-11-15 18:21:58 +01:00
99474b6340 difftool: honor --trust-exit-code for builtin tools
run_merge_tool() was not setting $status, which prevented the
exit code for builtin tools from being forwarded to the caller.

Capture the exit status and add a test to guarantee the behavior.

Reported-by: Adria Farres <14farresa@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-14 13:40:38 -08:00
908a320363 t3301: modernize style
Make this test script appear somewhat less old-fashioned:

 - Use test helper functions:
    - write_script
    - test_commit
    - test_write_lines
    - test_line_count
    - test_config
    - test_unconfig
    - test_path_is_missing

 - Remove whitespace between redirection operators and their targets.

 - Move preparation of "expect" files into tests.

 - Rename "output" files to "actual".

 - More consistent quoting, especially around commands that might
   expand to nothing.

 - More visibility of important whitespace with ${indent}.

 - Combine pairs of tests that unnecessarily split setup and verification.

Improved-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Improved-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Improved-by: Michael Blume <blume.mike@gmail.com>
Improved-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-14 13:33:09 -08:00
49e0c5ad0a Git 2.2.0-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-14 13:31:15 -08:00
c616d845b5 l10n: de.po: use imperative form for command options
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-11-14 19:21:52 +01:00
d37239536c approxidate: allow ISO-like dates far in the future
When we are parsing approxidate strings and we find three
numbers separate by one of ":/-.", we guess that it may be a
date. We feed the numbers to match_multi_number, which
checks whether it makes sense as a date in various orderings
(e.g., dd/mm/yy or mm/dd/yy, etc).

One of the checks we do is to see whether it is a date more
than 10 days in the future. This was added in 38035cf (date
parsing: be friendlier to our European friends.,
2006-04-05), and lets us guess that if it is currently April
2014, then "10/03/2014" is probably March 10th, not October
3rd.

This has a downside, though; if you want to be overly
generous with your "--until" date specification, we may
wrongly parse "2014-12-01" as "2014-01-12" (because the
latter is an in-the-past date). If the year is a future year
(i.e., both are future dates), it gets even weirder. Due to
the vagaries of approxidate, months _after_ the current date
(no matter the year) get flipped, but ones before do not.

This patch drops the "in the future" check for dates of this
form, letting us treat them always as yyyy-mm-dd, even if
they are in the future. This does not affect the normal
dd/mm/yyyy versus mm/dd/yyyy lookup, because this code path
only kicks in when the first number is greater than 70
(i.e., it must be a year, and cannot be either a date or a
month).

The one possible casualty is that "yyyy-dd-mm" is less
likely to be chosen over "yyyy-mm-dd". That's probably OK,
though because:

  1. The difference happens only when the date is in the
     future. Already we prefer yyyy-mm-dd for dates in the
     past.

  2. It's unclear whether anybody even uses yyyy-dd-mm
     regularly. It does not appear in lists of common date
     formats in Wikipedia[1,2].

  3. Even if (2) is wrong, it is better to prefer ISO-like
     dates, as that is consistent with what we use elsewhere
     in git.

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Date_and_time_representation_by_country
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calendar_date

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-13 14:40:47 -08:00
c5326bd62b checkout $tree: do not throw away unchanged index entries
When we "git checkout $tree", we pull paths from $tree into
the index, and then check the resulting entries out to the
worktree. Our method for the first step is rather
heavy-handed, though; it clobbers the entire existing index
entry, even if the content is the same. This means we lose
our stat information, leading checkout_entry to later
rewrite the entire file with identical content.

Instead, let's see if we have the identical entry already in
the index, in which case we leave it in place. That lets
checkout_entry do the right thing. Our tests cover two
interesting cases:

  1. We make sure that a file which has no changes is not
     rewritten.

  2. We make sure that we do update a file that is unchanged
     in the index (versus $tree), but has working tree
     changes. We keep the old index entry, and
     checkout_entry is able to realize that our stat
     information is out of date.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-13 14:35:41 -08:00
073281e2ae pass TIME_DATE_NOW to approxidate future-check
The approxidate functions accept an extra "now" parameter to
avoid calling time() themselves. We use this in our test
suite to make sure we have a consistent time for computing
relative dates. However, deep in the bowels of approxidate,
we also call time() to check whether possible dates are far
in the future. Let's make sure that the "now" override makes
it to that spot, too, so we can consistently test that
feature.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-13 12:57:28 -08:00
8942821ec0 gittutorial: fix output of 'git status'
'git status' doesn't output leading '#'s these days.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Naewe <stefan.naewe@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-13 10:53:50 -08:00
f904f6603a t5705: the file:// URL should be absolute
The test misused a URL "file://." to mean "relative to here",
which we no longer accept.

In a file:// URL, typically there is no host, and RFC1738 says that
file:///<path> should be used.

Update t5705 to use a working URL.

Reported-by: Michael Blume <blume.mike@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-13 10:41:56 -08:00
c4f901d159 builtin: move builtin retrieval to get_builtin()
There was a redundant code for a builtin command retrieval in
'handle_builtin()' and 'is_builtin()'.

Introduce a new function 'get_builtin()' and using it from
both of these places to reduce the redundancy.

Signed-off-by: Slavomir Vlcek <svlc@inventati.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-13 10:40:41 -08:00
faa8fac1ec SubmittingPatches: final submission is To: maintainer and CC: list
In an earlier part there is:

  "re-send it with "To:" set to the maintainer [*1*] and "cc:" the list [*2*]"

for the final submission, but later we see

  "Send it to the list and cc the maintainer."

Fix the later one to match the previous.

Signed-off-by: Slavomir Vlcek <svlc@inventati.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-13 10:39:24 -08:00
f5709437d9 Update draft release notes to 2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-12 12:13:39 -08:00
9c70e2c105 Sync with 'maint' 2014-11-12 12:13:25 -08:00
7fa1365c54 Merge branch 'nd/gitignore-trailing-whitespace' into maint
* nd/gitignore-trailing-whitespace:
  gitignore.txt: fix spelling of "backslash"
2014-11-12 12:13:12 -08:00
bbebdc1dca Merge branch 'jk/fetch-reflog-df-conflict'
Fix-up a test for portability.

* jk/fetch-reflog-df-conflict:
  t1410: fix breakage on case-insensitive filesystems
2014-11-12 11:59:58 -08:00
8a4acd6995 notes: empty notes should be shown by 'git log'
If the user has gone through the trouble of explicitly adding an empty
note, then "git log" should not silently skip it (as if it didn't exist).

Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-12 11:00:22 -08:00
d73a5b933d builtin/notes: add --allow-empty, to allow storing empty notes
Although the "git notes" man page advertises that we support binary-safe
notes addition (using the -C option), we currently do not support adding
the empty note (i.e. using the empty blob to annotate an object). Instead,
an empty note is always treated as an intent to remove the note
altogether.

Introduce the --allow-empty option to the add/append/edit subcommands,
to explicitly allow an empty note to be stored into the notes tree.

Also update the documentation, and add test cases for the new option.

Reported-by: James H. Fisher <jhf@trifork.com>
Improved-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Improved-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-12 11:00:11 -08:00
52694cdabb builtin/notes: split create_note() to clarify add vs. remove logic
create_note() has a non-trivial interface, and comprises three loosely
related parts:

 1. launching the editor with the note contents, if needed
 2. appending to an existing note, if append_only was given
 3. adding or removing the resulting note, based on whether it's non-empty

Split it along those lines to make the logic clearer: The first part
goes into a new function - prepare_note_data(), with a simpler interface.
The second part is moved into append_edit(), which is the only user of
this code. Finally, the add vs. remove decision is moved into the callers
(add() and append_edit()), keeping the logic for writing the actual note
object in a separate function: write_note_data().

Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-12 10:59:50 -08:00
b0de56c6a5 builtin/notes: simplify early exit code in add()
Remove the need for 'retval' and the unnecessary goto. Also reorganize
to only call free_note_data() is actually needed.

Improved-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-12 10:58:09 -08:00
2672671872 doc: add some crossrefs between manual pages
In particular, git-fast-import and -export link to each
other, and gitremote-helpers links to existing remote
helpers, and vice versa. Also link to fast-import from the
remote helper spec, as this is relevant for remote helpers
using the fast-import format.

Signed-off-by: Max Horn <max@quendi.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-11 14:47:04 -08:00
022cf2bf88 gittutorial.txt: remove reference to ancient Git version
Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-11 14:46:08 -08:00
f6f61cbbad Sync with maint
* maint:
2014-11-11 12:45:48 -08:00
caea1a2bb5 Merge branch 'rs/clean-menu-item-defn' into maint
* rs/clean-menu-item-defn:
  clean: use f(void) instead of f() to declare a pointer to a function without arguments
2014-11-11 10:20:13 -08:00
6066a7eac4 run-command: use void to declare that functions take no parameters
Explicitly declare that git_atexit_dispatch() and git_atexit_clear()
take no parameters instead of leaving their parameter list empty and
thus unspecified.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 14:43:19 -08:00
4282af0fc9 builtin/notes: refactor note file path into struct note_data
Move the 'path' variable from create_note() and into the
note_data struct. Unify cleanup of note_data objects with
a free_note_data() function.

This might not make too much sense on its own, but it makes the
future refactoring of create_note() considerably cleaner.

Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 12:08:21 -08:00
bebf5c0476 builtin/notes: improve naming
In preparation for some needed refactoring, rename struct msg_arg to
struct note_data, and rename its instances from "msg" to "d" (also
removing some unnecessary parentheses). The 'msg_arg' name was
inherited from tag.c, but is not really a good name for the contents
of a note.

Also rename write_note_data() to copy_obj_to_fd(), which more aptly
describes what it actually does: Copying the contents of a git object
(given by its SHA1) into a given file descriptor.

Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 12:08:21 -08:00
d0923b6d4c t3301: verify that 'git notes' removes empty notes by default
Add test cases documenting the current behavior when trying to
add/append/edit empty notes. This is in preparation for adding
--allow-empty; to allow empty notes to be stored.

Improved-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Improved-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 12:08:21 -08:00
511726e4b1 builtin/notes: fix premature failure when trying to add the empty blob
This fixes a small buglet when trying to explicitly add the empty blob
as a note object using the -c or -C option to git notes add/append.
Instead of failing with a nonsensical error message indicating that the
empty blob does not exist, we should rather behave as if an empty notes
message was given (e.g. using -m "" or -F /dev/null).

The next patch contains a test that verifies the fixed behavior.

Found-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 12:08:20 -08:00
80b581dd09 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2296t,0f,0u)
  l10n: zh_CN: translations for git v2.2.0-rc0
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2296t0f0u)
  l10n: fr.po (2296t) update for version 2.2.0
  l10n: vi.po: Update new message strings
  l10n: git.pot: v2.2.0 round 1 (62 new, 23 removed)
2014-11-10 11:59:30 -08:00
a4c4708fe6 Sync with maint
* maint:
  Documentation/config.txt: fix minor typo
  config.txt: fix typo
2014-11-10 11:26:18 -08:00
bd51886f30 Merge branch 'js/diff-highlight-avoid-sigpipe'
* js/diff-highlight-avoid-sigpipe:
  diff-highlight: exit when a pipe is broken
2014-11-10 11:26:09 -08:00
a79c3a1b81 Documentation/config.txt: fix minor typo
Add a missing article at the beginning of a sentence, and rephrase
slightly.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Quinot <thomas@quinot.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 11:25:26 -08:00
71069cdfc7 config.txt: fix typo
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Dermine <nicolas.dermine@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 10:06:25 -08:00
a2bae2dce1 use args member of struct child_process
Convert users of struct child_process to using the managed argv_array
args instead of providing their own.  This shortens the code a bit and
ensures that the allocated memory is released automatically after use.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 10:04:13 -08:00
b226293b44 trailer: use CHILD_PROCESS_INIT in apply_command()
Initialize the struct child_process variable cp at declaration time.
This is shorter, saves a function call and prevents using the variable
before initialization by mistake.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 10:03:39 -08:00
3d24a7267d trailer: add test with an old style conflict block
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 10:00:07 -08:00
61cfef4ca4 trailer: reuse ignore_non_trailer() to ignore conflict lines
Make sure we look for trailers before any conflict line
by reusing the ignore_non_trailer() function.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 10:00:02 -08:00
8c38458923 commit: make ignore_non_trailer() non static
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 09:59:19 -08:00
216d29ef25 Merge branch 'jc/conflict-hint' into cc/interpret-trailers-more
* jc/conflict-hint:
  merge & sequencer: turn "Conflicts:" hint into a comment
  builtin/commit.c: extract ignore_non_trailer() helper function
  merge & sequencer: unify codepaths that write "Conflicts:" hint
  builtin/merge.c: drop a parameter that is never used
  git-tag.txt: Add a missing hyphen to `-s`
2014-11-10 09:56:39 -08:00
d52adf1f32 trailer: display a trailer without its trailing newline
Trailers passed to the parse_trailer() function often have
a trailing newline. When erroring out, we should display
the invalid trailer properly, that means without any
trailing newline.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 09:43:59 -08:00
2887103b35 trailer: ignore comment lines inside the trailers
Otherwise trailers that are commented out might be
processed. We would also error out if the comment line
char is also a separator.

This means that comments inside a trailer block will
disappear, but that was already the case anyway.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 09:43:16 -08:00
aae828b911 t1410: fix breakage on case-insensitive filesystems
Two tests recently added to t1410 create branches "a" and
"a/b" to test d/f conflicts on reflogs. Earlier, unrelated
tests in that script create the path "A/B" in the working
tree.  There's no conflict on a case-sensitive filesystem,
but on a case-insensitive one, "git log" will complain that
"a/b" is both a revision and a working tree path.

We could fix this by using a "--" to disambiguate, but we
are probably better off using names that are less confusing
to make it more clear that they are unrelated to the working
tree files.  This patch turns "a/b" into "one/two".

Reported-by: Michael Blume <blume.mike@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 09:38:53 -08:00
1e16b255b9 git-imap-send: use libcurl for implementation
Use libcurl's high-level API functions to implement git-imap-send
instead of the previous low-level OpenSSL-based functions.

Since version 7.30.0, libcurl's API has been able to communicate with
IMAP servers. Using those high-level functions instead of the current
ones would reduce imap-send.c by some 1200 lines of code. For now,
the old ones are wrapped in #ifdefs, and the new functions are enabled
by make if curl's version is >= 7.34.0, from which version on curl's
CURLOPT_LOGIN_OPTIONS (enabling IMAP authentication) parameter has been
available. The low-level functions will still be used for tunneling
into the server for now.

As I don't have access to that many IMAP servers, I haven't been able to
test the new code with a wide variety of parameter combinations. I did
test both secure and insecure (imaps:// and imap://) connections and
values of "PLAIN" and "LOGIN" for the authMethod.

In order to suppress a sparse warning about "using sizeof on a
function", we use the same solution used in commit 9371322a6
("sparse: suppress some "using sizeof on a function" warnings",
06-10-2013) which solved exactly this problem for the other commands
using libcurl.

Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Bernhard Reiter <ockham@raz.or.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 09:17:27 -08:00
39942766ab git_connect: set ssh shell command in GIT_SSH_COMMAND
It may be impractical to install a wrapper script for GIT_SSH
when additional parameters need to be passed. Provide an alternative
way of specifying a shell command to be run, including command line
arguments, by means of the GIT_SSH_COMMAND environment variable,
which behaves like GIT_SSH but is passed to the shell.

The special circuitry to modify parameters in the case of using
PuTTY's plink/tortoiseplink is activated only when using GIT_SSH;
in the case of using GIT_SSH_COMMAND, it is deliberately left up to
the user to make any required parameters adaptation before calling
the underlying ssh implementation.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Quinot <thomas@quinot.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-10 08:55:10 -08:00
66edfe9ddc Git 2.2.0-rc1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-07 12:01:01 -08:00
d956a20a69 Documentation/git-commit: clarify that --only/--include records the working tree contents
With the original phrasing, it is possible to misunderstand as if
the contents in the index for only the specified paths are made into
the new commit.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-07 11:57:57 -08:00
a1ad2475a7 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  docs/credential-store: s/--store/--file/
2014-11-06 10:52:51 -08:00
32da67bf22 Merge branch 'nd/gitignore-trailing-whitespace'
Documentation update.

* nd/gitignore-trailing-whitespace:
  gitignore.txt: fix spelling of "backslash"
2014-11-06 10:52:40 -08:00
64b9326460 Merge branch 'tm/line-log-first-parent'
"git log --first-parent -L..." used to crash.

* tm/line-log-first-parent:
  line-log: fix crash when --first-parent is used
2014-11-06 10:52:37 -08:00
a1671dd82b Merge branch 'jk/fetch-reflog-df-conflict'
Corner-case bugfixes for "git fetch" around reflog handling.

* jk/fetch-reflog-df-conflict:
  ignore stale directories when checking reflog existence
  fetch: load all default config at startup
2014-11-06 10:52:32 -08:00
6b55f8b546 Merge branch 'rs/use-child-process-init-more'
* rs/use-child-process-init-more:
  bundle: split out ref writing from bundle_create
  bundle: split out a helper function to compute and write prerequisites
  bundle: split out a helper function to create pack data
  use child_process_init() to initialize struct child_process variables
2014-11-06 10:52:23 -08:00
e44da1bbb8 Merge branch 'jk/cache-tree-protect-from-broken-libgit2'
The code to use cache-tree trusted the on-disk data too much
and fell into an infinite loop.

* jk/cache-tree-protect-from-broken-libgit2:
  cache-tree: avoid infinite loop on zero-entry tree
2014-11-06 10:51:35 -08:00
e50cd67ba4 docs/credential-store: s/--store/--file/
The option name "--store" was used early in development, but
never even made it into an applied patch, let alone a
released version of git. I forgot to update the matching
documentation at the time, though.

Noticed-by: Jesse Hopkins <jesse.hopkins@lmco.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-06 09:51:08 -08:00
f1a35295c2 imap-send: use parse options API to determine verbosity
The -v/-q options were sort-of supported but without using the
parse-options API, and were not documented.

Signed-off-by: Bernhard Reiter <ockham@raz.or.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-05 16:24:27 -08:00
03af7cd158 gitignore.txt: fix spelling of "backslash"
Signed-off-by: Ben North <ben@redfrontdoor.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-04 14:44:47 -08:00
251e7dad51 diff-highlight: exit when a pipe is broken
While using diff-highlight with other tools, I have discovered that Python
ignores SIGPIPE by default.  Unfortunately, this also means that tools
attempting to launch a pager under Python--and don't realize this is
happening--means that the subprocess inherits this setting.  In this case, it
means diff-highlight will be launched with SIGPIPE being ignored.  Let's work
with those broken scripts by restoring the default SIGPIPE handler.

Signed-off-by: John Szakmeister <john@szakmeister.net>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-04 13:18:35 -08:00
f745acb028 Documentation: typofixes
In addition to fixing trivial and obvious typos, be careful about
the following points:

 - Spell ASCII, URL and CRC in ALL CAPS;
 - Spell Linux as Capitalized;
 - Do not omit periods in "i.e." and "e.g.".

Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-04 13:14:44 -08:00
a8787c5c1c line-log: fix crash when --first-parent is used
line-log tries to access all parents of a commit, but only the first
parent has been loaded if "--first-parent" is specified, resulting
in a crash.

Limit the number of parents to one if "--first-parent" is specified.

Reported-by: Eric N. Vander Weele <ericvw@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Tzvetan Mikov <tmikov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-04 12:47:35 -08:00
9233887cce ignore stale directories when checking reflog existence
When we update a ref, we have two rules for whether or not
we actually update the reflog:

  1. If the reflog already exists, we will always append to
     it.

  2. If log_all_ref_updates is set, we will create a new
     reflog file if necessary.

We do the existence check by trying to open the reflog file,
either with or without O_CREAT (depending on log_all_ref_updates).
If it fails, then we check errno to see what happened.

If we were not using O_CREAT and we got ENOENT, the file
doesn't exist, and we return success (there isn't a reflog
already, and we were not told to make a new one).

If we get EISDIR, then there is likely a stale directory
that needs to be removed (e.g., there used to be "foo/bar",
it was deleted, and the directory "foo" was left. Now we
want to create the ref "foo"). If O_CREAT is set, then we
catch this case, try to remove the directory, and retry our
open. So far so good.

But if we get EISDIR and O_CREAT is not set, then we treat
this as any other error, which is not right. Like ENOENT,
EISDIR is an indication that we do not have a reflog, and we
should silently return success (we were not told to create
it). Instead, the current code reports this as an error, and
we fail to update the ref at all.

Note that this is relatively unlikely to happen, as you
would have to have had reflogs turned on, and then later
turned them off (it could also happen due to a bug in fetch,
but that was fixed in the previous commit). However, it's
quite easy to fix: we just need to treat EISDIR like ENOENT
for the non-O_CREAT case, and silently return (note that
this early return means we can also simplify the O_CREAT
case).

Our new tests cover both cases (O_CREAT and non-O_CREAT).
The first one already worked, of course.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-04 12:18:44 -08:00
72549dfd5d fetch: load all default config at startup
When we start the git-fetch program, we call git_config to
load all config, but our callback only processes the
fetch.prune option; we do not chain to git_default_config at
all.

This means that we may not load some core configuration
which will have an effect. For instance, we do not load
core.logAllRefUpdates, which impacts whether or not we
create reflogs in a bare repository.

Note that I said "may" above. It gets even more exciting. If
we have to transfer actual objects as part of the fetch,
then we call fetch_pack as part of the same process. That
function loads its own config, which does chain to
git_default_config, impacting global variables which are
used by the rest of fetch. But if the fetch is a pure ref
update (e.g., a new ref which is a copy of an old one), we
skip fetch_pack entirely. So we get inconsistent results
depending on whether or not we have actual objects to
transfer or not!

Let's just load the core config at the start of fetch, so we
know we have it (we may also load it again as part of
fetch_pack, but that's OK; it's designed to be idempotent).

Our tests check both cases (with and without a pack). We
also check similar behavior for push for good measure, but
it already works as expected.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-04 12:13:46 -08:00
dd83521629 RelNotes/2.2.0.txt: fix minor typos
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-03 11:29:10 -08:00
fa137f67a4 lockfile.c: store absolute path
Locked paths can be saved in a linked list so that if something wrong
happens, *.lock are removed. For relative paths, this works fine if we
keep cwd the same, which is true 99% of time except:

- update-index and read-tree hold the lock on $GIT_DIR/index really
  early, then later on may call setup_work_tree() to move cwd.

- Suppose a lock is being held (e.g. by "git add") then somewhere
  down the line, somebody calls real_path (e.g. "link_alt_odb_entry"),
  which temporarily moves cwd away and back.

During that time when cwd is moved (either permanently or temporarily)
and we decide to die(), attempts to remove relative *.lock will fail,
and the next operation will complain that some files are still locked.

Avoid this case by turning relative paths to absolute before storing
the path in "filename" field.

Reported-by: Yue Lin Ho <yuelinho777@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Helped-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Adapted-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-11-03 11:00:28 -08:00
6c31a5e94a l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2296t,0f,0u)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2014-11-02 19:11:08 +02:00
220c313cc3 l10n: zh_CN: translations for git v2.2.0-rc0
Translate 62 new messages (2296t0f0u) for git v2.2.0-rc0.  Also changed
the translation of bare (repository).

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-11-02 10:59:00 +08:00
94dd79e9fe Merge branch 'fr_2.2.0' of git://github.com/jnavila/git
* 'fr_2.2.0' of git://github.com/jnavila/git:
  l10n: fr.po (2296t) update for version 2.2.0
2014-11-02 10:12:29 +08:00
ac4a73dd25 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/nafmo/git-l10n-sv
* 'master' of git://github.com/nafmo/git-l10n-sv:
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2296t0f0u)
2014-11-02 10:11:27 +08:00
5331bfd785 l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2296t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2014-11-01 20:17:37 +01:00
f507e5dd62 l10n: fr.po (2296t) update for version 2.2.0
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Grégoire Paris <gparis@universcine.com>
2014-11-01 16:51:49 +01:00
4dcd03eaee l10n: vi.po: Update new message strings
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2014-11-01 09:07:24 +07:00
d07a63e47c l10n: git.pot: v2.2.0 round 1 (62 new, 23 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.2.0-rc0 for git v2.2.0 l10n round 1.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-11-01 07:47:46 +08:00
4ace7ff455 Git 2.2.0-rc0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-31 11:57:23 -07:00
ef59f324b0 Merge branch 'for-junio' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn
* 'for-junio' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn:
  git-svn: use SVN::Ra::get_dir2 when possible
  git-svn: add space after "W:" prefix in warning
  git-svn: (cleanup) remove editor param passing
  git-svn: prepare SVN::Ra config pieces once
  Git.pm: add specified name to tempfile template
  git-svn: disable _rev_list memoization
  git-svn: save a little memory as fetch progresses
  git-svn: remove unnecessary DESTROY override
  git-svn: reload RA every log-window-size
  git-svn.txt: advertise pushurl with dcommit
  git-svn: remove mergeinfo rev caching
  git-svn: cache only mergeinfo revisions
  git-svn: reduce check_cherry_pick cache overhead
  git-svn: only look at the root path for svn:mergeinfo
  git-svn: only look at the new parts of svn:mergeinfo
2014-10-31 11:50:20 -07:00
1d42cf3c6c Merge branch 'jc/push-cert'
* jc/push-cert:
  receive-pack: avoid minor leak in case start_async() fails
2014-10-31 11:49:55 -07:00
598d7eb160 Merge branch 'rs/child-process-init'
* rs/child-process-init:
  api-run-command: add missing list item marker
2014-10-31 11:49:49 -07:00
bf1f639ea2 Merge branch 'rs/grep-color-words'
Allow painting or not painting (partial) matches in context lines
when showing "grep -C<num>" output in color.

* rs/grep-color-words:
  grep: add color.grep.matchcontext and color.grep.matchselected
2014-10-31 11:49:47 -07:00
7ffa35b047 git-svn: use SVN::Ra::get_dir2 when possible
This avoids the following failure with normal "get_dir" on newer
versions of SVN (tested with SVN 1.8.8-1ubuntu3.1):

  Incorrect parameters given: Could not convert '%ld' into a number

get_dir2 also has the potential to be more efficient by requesting
less data.

ref: <1414636504.45506.YahooMailBasic@web172304.mail.ir2.yahoo.com>
ref: <1414722617.89476.YahooMailBasic@web172305.mail.ir2.yahoo.com>

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Cc: Hin-Tak Leung <htl10@users.sourceforge.net>
2014-10-31 10:34:54 +00:00
d9362ef9b9 bundle: split out ref writing from bundle_create
The bundle_create() function has a number of logical steps:
process the input, write the refs, and write the packfile.
Recent commits split the first and third into separate
sub-functions. It's worth splitting the middle step out,
too, if only because it makes the progression of the steps
more obvious.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-30 14:52:45 -07:00
e8eb25122e bundle: split out a helper function to compute and write prerequisites
The new helper compute_and_write_prerequistes() is ugly, but it
cannot be avoided.  Ideally we should avoid a function that computes
and does I/O at the same time, but the prerequisites lines in the
output needs the human readable title only to help the recipient of
the bundle.  The code copies them straight from the rev-list output
and immediately discards as no other internal computation needs that
information.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-30 14:51:47 -07:00
5e626b91d4 bundle: split out a helper function to create pack data
The create_bundle() function, while it does one single logical
thing, takes a rather large implementation to do so.

Let's start separating what it does into smaller steps to make it
easier to see what is going on.  This is a first step to separate
out the actual pack-data generation, after the earlier part of the
function figures out which part of the history to place in the
bundle.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-30 14:45:52 -07:00
2ce406ccb8 get_merge_bases(): always clean-up object flags
The callers of get_merge_bases() can choose to leave object flags
used during the merge-base traversal by passing cleanup=0 as a
parameter, but in practice a very few callers can afford to do so
(namely, "git merge-base"), as they need to compute merge base in
preparation for other processing of their own and they need to see
the object without contaminate flags.

Change the function signature of get_merge_bases_many() and
get_merge_bases() to drop the cleanup parameter, so that the
majority of the callers do not have to say ", 1" at the end.

Give a new get_merge_bases_many_dirty() API to support only a few
callers that know they do not need to spend cycles cleaning up the
object flags.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-30 12:51:10 -07:00
d76c9e95b4 bisect: clean flags after checking merge bases
Unless there is a good reason to belieave that a particular
invocation of a get_merge_bases*() is the last one that cares about
the object flags the computation of merge bases leaves on the
objects, the "cleanup" parameter should always be true, and I do not
think there is one in this codepath.

Found by code inspection.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-30 12:51:10 -07:00
729dbbd9fc cache-tree: avoid infinite loop on zero-entry tree
The loop in cache-tree's update_one iterates over all the
entries in the index. For each one, we find the cache-tree
subtree which represents our path (creating it if
necessary), and then recurse into update_one again. The
return value we get is the number of index entries that
belonged in that subtree. So for example, with entries:

    a/one
    a/two
    b/one

We start by processing the first entry, "a/one".  We would
find the subtree for "a" and recurse into update_one. That
would then handle "a/one" and "a/two", and return the value
2. The parent function then skips past the 2 handled
entries, and we continue by processing "b/one".

If the recursed-into update_one ever returns 0, then we make
no forward progress in our loop. We would process "a/one"
over and over, infinitely.

This should not happen normally. Any subtree we create must
have at least one path in it (the one that we are
processing!). However, we may also reuse a cache-tree entry
we found in the on-disk index. For the same reason, this
should also never have zero entries. However, certain buggy
versions of libgit2 could produce such bogus cache-tree
records. The libgit2 bug has since been fixed, but it does
not hurt to protect ourselves against bogus input coming
from the on-disk data structures.

Note that this is not a die("BUG") or assert, because it is
not an internal bug, but rather a corrupted on-disk
structure. It's possible that we could even recover from it
(by throwing out the bogus cache-tree entry), but it is not
worth the effort; the important thing is that we report an
error instead of looping infinitely.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-30 11:17:51 -07:00
81d645d1a1 Merge git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk
* git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk:
  gitk: Remove boilerplate for configuration variables
  gitk: Show detached HEAD if --all is specified
  gitk: Do not depend on Cygwin's "kill" command on Windows
2014-10-30 10:07:33 -07:00
da0bc948ac git-svn: add space after "W:" prefix in warning
And minor reformatting while we're in the area.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-10-30 08:31:28 +00:00
4ae9a7b966 git-svn: (cleanup) remove editor param passing
Neither find_extra_svk_parents or find_extra_svn_parents ever
used the `$ed' parameter.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-10-30 08:29:43 +00:00
9fabefb1f3 gitk: Remove boilerplate for configuration variables
Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-10-30 09:43:15 +11:00
4d5e1b1319 gitk: Show detached HEAD if --all is specified
If HEAD is detached, 'gitk --all' does not show it. This is inconvenient
for frontend program, and for example git log does show the detached HEAD.

gitk uses git rev-parse to find a list of branches to show.
Apparently, the command does not include detached HEAD to output if
--all argument is specified. This has been discussed in [1] and stated
as expected behavior. So rev-parse's parameters should be tuned in gitk.

[1] http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/255996

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-10-30 09:43:15 +11:00
7b68b0eebf gitk: Do not depend on Cygwin's "kill" command on Windows
Windows does not necessarily mean Cygwin, it could also be MSYS. The
latter ships with a version of "kill" that does not understand "-f".
In msysgit this was addressed by shipping Cygwin's version of kill.

Properly fix this by using the stock Windows "taskkill" command instead,
which is available since Windows XP Professional.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-10-30 09:43:11 +11:00
835e3ddeff git-svn: prepare SVN::Ra config pieces once
Memoizing these initialization functions saves some memory for
long fetches which require scanning many unwanted revisions
before any wanted revisions happen.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-10-29 19:59:25 +00:00
822aaf0f08 Git.pm: add specified name to tempfile template
This should help me track down errors in git-svn more easily:

	write .git/Git_XXXXXX: Bad file descriptor
	 at /usr/lib/perl5/SVN/Ra.pm line 623

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-10-29 19:59:23 +00:00
36666ce4da Sync with Git 2.1.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-29 10:50:17 -07:00
49c3e92634 Git 2.1.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-29 10:48:45 -07:00
ebc2e5a593 Merge branch 'jk/pack-objects-no-bitmap-when-splitting' into maint
* jk/pack-objects-no-bitmap-when-splitting:
  pack-objects: turn off bitmaps when we split packs
2014-10-29 10:35:17 -07:00
9db1838705 Merge branch 'da/mergetool-meld' into maint
* da/mergetool-meld:
  mergetools/meld: make usage of `--output` configurable and more robust
2014-10-29 10:35:16 -07:00
af1b4e350f Merge branch 'rm/gitweb-start-form' into maint
* rm/gitweb-start-form:
  gitweb: use start_form, not startform that was removed in CGI.pm 4.04
2014-10-29 10:35:16 -07:00
27c31d2088 Merge branch 'bc/asciidoc-pretty-formats-fix' into maint
* bc/asciidoc-pretty-formats-fix:
  Documentation: fix misrender of pretty-formats in Asciidoctor
2014-10-29 10:35:10 -07:00
a8f01f87d0 Merge branch 'rs/daemon-fixes' into maint
* rs/daemon-fixes:
  daemon: remove write-only variable maxfd
  daemon: fix error message after bind()
  daemon: handle gethostbyname() error
2014-10-29 10:35:09 -07:00
5b509df0c3 Update draft release notes to 2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-29 10:18:31 -07:00
9ce57f1228 Merge branch 'da/difftool'
Allow diff tool backend to stop early by exiting with a non-zero
status.

* da/difftool:
  difftool: add support for --trust-exit-code
  difftool--helper: exit when reading a prompt answer fails
2014-10-29 10:09:35 -07:00
e82935d917 Merge branch 'rb/pack-window-memory-config-doc'
* rb/pack-window-memory-config-doc:
  config.txt: pack.windowmemory limit applies per-thread
2014-10-29 10:09:31 -07:00
7654ca6963 Merge branch 'mg/lib-gpg-ro-safety'
In a tarball extract whose files are all read-only, running GPG
tests would have failed due to unwritable files.

* mg/lib-gpg-ro-safety:
  t/lib-gpg: make gpghome files writable
2014-10-29 10:08:16 -07:00
ce71c1f339 Merge branch 'dm/port2zos'
z/OS port

* dm/port2zos:
  compat/bswap.h: detect endianness from XL C compiler macros
  Makefile: reorder linker flags in the git executable rule
  git-compat-util.h: support variadic macros with the XL C compiler
2014-10-29 10:08:07 -07:00
c1777a2970 Merge branch 'oc/mergetools-beyondcompare'
* oc/mergetools-beyondcompare:
  mergetool: rename bc3 to bc
2014-10-29 10:08:04 -07:00
d70e331c0e Merge branch 'jk/prune-mtime'
Tighten the logic to decide that an unreachable cruft is
sufficiently old by covering corner cases such as an ancient object
becoming reachable and then going unreachable again, in which case
its retention period should be prolonged.

* jk/prune-mtime: (28 commits)
  drop add_object_array_with_mode
  revision: remove definition of unused 'add_object' function
  pack-objects: double-check options before discarding objects
  repack: pack objects mentioned by the index
  pack-objects: use argv_array
  reachable: use revision machinery's --indexed-objects code
  rev-list: add --indexed-objects option
  rev-list: document --reflog option
  t5516: test pushing a tag of an otherwise unreferenced blob
  traverse_commit_list: support pending blobs/trees with paths
  make add_object_array_with_context interface more sane
  write_sha1_file: freshen existing objects
  pack-objects: match prune logic for discarding objects
  pack-objects: refactor unpack-unreachable expiration check
  prune: keep objects reachable from recent objects
  sha1_file: add for_each iterators for loose and packed objects
  count-objects: use for_each_loose_file_in_objdir
  count-objects: do not use xsize_t when counting object size
  prune-packed: use for_each_loose_file_in_objdir
  reachable: mark index blobs as SEEN
  ...
2014-10-29 10:07:56 -07:00
853878d520 Merge branch 'bc/asciidoctor'
Add machinery to alternatively use AsciiDoctor to format our
documentation.

* bc/asciidoctor:
  Documentation: remove Asciidoctor linkgit macro
  Documentation: refactor common operations into variables
  Documentation: implement linkgit macro for Asciidoctor
  Documentation: move some AsciiDoc parameters into variables
2014-10-29 10:07:40 -07:00
96ef1bdc65 api-run-command: add missing list item marker
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-28 15:25:25 -07:00
8828f2985f use child_process_init() to initialize struct child_process variables
Call child_process_init() instead of zeroing the memory of variables of
type struct child_process by hand before use because the former is both
clearer and shorter.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-28 14:56:17 -07:00
5d222c099e receive-pack: avoid minor leak in case start_async() fails
If the asynchronous start of copy_to_sideband() fails, then any
env_array entries added to struct child_process proc by
prepare_push_cert_sha1() are leaked.  Call the latter function only
after start_async() succeeded so that the allocated entries are
cleaned up automatically by start_command() or finish_command().

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-28 14:55:15 -07:00
261f315beb merge & sequencer: turn "Conflicts:" hint into a comment
Just like other hints such as "Changes to be committed" we show in
the editor to remind the committer what paths were involved in the
resulting commit to help improving their log message, this section
is merely a reminder.

Traditionally, it was not made into comments primarily because it
has to be generated outside the wt-status infrastructure, and also
because it was meant as a bit stronger reminder than the others
(i.e. explaining how you resolved conflicts is much more important
than mentioning what you did to every paths involved in the commit).

But that still does not make this hint a part of the log message
proper, and not showing it as a comment is inviting mistakes.

Note that we still notice "Conflicts:" followed by list of indented
pathnames as an old-style cruft and insert a new Signed-off-by:
before it.  This is so that "commit --amend -s" adds the new S-o-b
at the right place when used on an older commit.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-28 14:04:28 -07:00
073bd75e17 builtin/commit.c: extract ignore_non_trailer() helper function
Extract a helper function from prepare_to_commit() to determine
where to place a new Signed-off-by: line, which is essentially the
true "end" of the log message, ignoring the trailing "Conflicts:"
line and everything below it.

The detection _should_ make sure the "Conflicts:" line it finds is
truly the conflict hint block by checking everything that follows is
a HT indented pathname to avoid false positive, but this logic will
be revamped in a later patch to ignore comments and blanks anyway,
so it is left as-is in this step.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-28 12:44:09 -07:00
2b52123fcf difftool: add support for --trust-exit-code
Teach difftool to exit when a diff tool returns a non-zero exit
code when either --trust-exit-code is specified or
difftool.trustExitCode is true.

Forward exit codes from invoked diff tools to the caller when
--trust-exit-code is used.

Suggested-by: Adri Farr <14farresa@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-28 10:36:57 -07:00
79a77109d3 grep: add color.grep.matchcontext and color.grep.matchselected
The config option color.grep.match can be used to specify the highlighting
color for matching strings.  Add the options matchContext and matchSelected
to allow different colors to be specified for matching strings in the
context vs. in selected lines.  This is similar to the ms and mc specifiers
in GNU grep's environment variable GREP_COLORS.

Tests are from Zoltan Klinger's earlier attempt to solve the same
issue in a different way.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-28 10:33:50 -07:00
f4694a8c08 config.txt: pack.windowmemory limit applies per-thread
It took me a long time to notice the rider on the pack.threads
configuration option that it would multiple the memory consumption
by the number of CPUs in the machine.  Clarify that the limit
applies per-thread.

Signed-off-by: Robert de Bath <rdebath@tvisiontech.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-28 09:59:41 -07:00
d55aeb7687 strbuf_add_commented_lines(): avoid SP-HT sequence in commented lines
The strbuf_add_commented_lines() function passes a pair of prefixes,
one to be used for a non-empty line, and the other for an empty
line, to underlying add_lines().  The former is set to a comment
char followed by a SP, while the latter is set to just the comment
char.  This is designed to give a SP after the comment character,
e.g. "# <user text>\n", on a line with some text, and to avoid
emitting an unsightly "# \n" for an empty line.

Teach this machinery to also use the latter space-less prefix when
the payload line begins with a tab, to show e.g. "#\t<user text>\n";
otherwise we will end up showing "# \t<user text>\n" which is
similarly unsightly.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-27 14:13:59 -07:00
e7f224f780 t/lib-gpg: make gpghome files writable
t/lib-gpg.sh copies the test environment's gpg home to the trash
directory and makes sure the directoty is writable.

Make sure the copied files are writable, too.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-27 12:09:36 -07:00
c6c3e0db84 Documentation: remove Asciidoctor linkgit macro
Asciidoctor provides an extension implementing a backend-independent
macro for dealing with manpage links just like the linkgit macro.  As
this is more likely to be up-to-date with future changes in Asciidoctor,
prefer using it over reimplementing in Git.

This reverts commit 773ee47c2b.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-27 11:52:29 -07:00
da8a3664b1 Documentation: refactor common operations into variables
The Makefile performs several very similar tasks to convert AsciiDoc
files into either HTML or DocBook.  Move these items into variables to
reduce the duplication.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-27 11:52:27 -07:00
bfb0e6fcd2 compat/bswap.h: detect endianness from XL C compiler macros
There is no /usr/include/endian.h equivalent on z/OS, but the
compiler will define macros to indicate endianness on host and
target hardware.  This adds a test for these macros as a last
resort for determining byte order.

Signed-off-by: David Michael <fedora.dm0@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-27 11:51:12 -07:00
48a031af3c Makefile: reorder linker flags in the git executable rule
The XL C compiler can fail due to mixing library path and object
file arguments, for example when linking git while building with
"gmake LDFLAGS=-L$prefix/lib".

Move the ALL_LDFLAGS variable expansion in the git executable rule
to be consistent with all the other linking rules, namely to have
LDFLAGS such as -L$where before the object files *.o being linked
together.

Signed-off-by: David Michael <fedora.dm0@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-27 11:49:18 -07:00
f51140c247 git-compat-util.h: support variadic macros with the XL C compiler
When the XL C compiler is run with an appropriate language level or
suboption, it defines a feature test macro to indicate support for
variadic macros by defining __C99_MACRO_WITH_VA_ARGS C preprocessor
macro.

This was tested on z/OS, but it should also work on AIX according
to IBM documentation.

Signed-off-by: David Michael <fedora.dm0@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-27 11:48:37 -07:00
25098690a0 difftool--helper: exit when reading a prompt answer fails
An attempt to quit difftool by hitting Ctrl-D (EOF) at its prompt does
not quit it, but is treated as if 'yes' was answered to the prompt and
all following prompts, which is contrary to the user's intent. Fix the
error check.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-27 11:17:56 -07:00
7676aff709 git-svn: disable _rev_list memoization
This memoization appears unneeded as the check_cherry_pick2 cache is
in front of it does enough.

With this change applied, importing from local svn+ssh and http copies
of the R repo[1] takes only 2:00 (2 hours) on my system and the git-svn
process never uses more than 60MB RSS on my x86-64 GNU/Linux system[2].
This 60M measurement is only for the git-svn Perl process itself and
does not include memory used by git subprocesses accessing large packs
(subprocess memory usage _is_ measured by my time(1) tool).

Before this change, an import took longer (2:20) on svn+ssh:// but
git-svn used around 240MB during the imports.  Worse yet, git-svn
ballooned to over 400M when writing out the cache to the filesystem.

I also tried removing memoization for `has_no_changes', too, but a
local copy of the R repository(*) was not close to finishing within
10 hours on my system.

[1] http://svn.r-project.org/R
[2] file:// repos causes libsvn to use more memory internally

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Cc: Hin-Tak Leung <htl10@users.sourceforge.net>
2014-10-27 01:39:39 +00:00
aee7d04c12 git-svn: save a little memory as fetch progresses
There is no reason to keep entries in the %revs hash after we're
done processing a revision, so allow entries become freed as
processing continues.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-10-25 07:56:33 +00:00
6725ecaba7 git-svn: remove unnecessary DESTROY override
This override was probably never necessary, but most likely a no-op
as it does not appear to do anything in SVN::Ra itself.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-10-25 07:56:28 +00:00
dfa72fdb96 git-svn: reload RA every log-window-size
Despite attempting to use local memory pools everywhere we can,
(including our call to SVN::Ra::do_update and all subsequent reporter
calls), there does not appear to be a way to force the Git::SVN::Fetcher
callbacks to use a pool other than the per-SVN::Ra pool.
Git::SVN::Fetcher ends up using the main RA pool which grows
monotonically in size for the lifetime of the RA object.

Thus the only way to free that memory appears to be to destroy and
recreate the RA connection for at every --log-window-size interval.

This reduces memory usage over the course of fetching 10K revisions
using a test repository created with the script at the end of this
commit message.

As reported by time(1) on my x86-64 system:

	before: 54024k
	 after: 28680k

Unfortunately, there remains some yet-to-be-tracked-down slow memory
growth which would be evident as the `nr' parameter increases in
the repository generation script:
-----------------------------8<------------------------------
set -e
tmp=$(mktemp -d svntestrepo-XXXXXXXX)
svnadmin create "$tmp"
repo=file://"$(cd $tmp && pwd)"
svn co "$repo" "$tmp/wd"
cd "$tmp/wd"
if ! test -f a
then
	> a
	svn add a
	svn commit -m 'A'
fi

nr=10000
while test $nr -gt 0
do
	echo $nr > a
	svn commit -q -m A
	nr=$((nr - 1))
done
echo "repository created in $repo"
-----------------------------8<------------------------------

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-10-24 22:56:06 +00:00
f947ae4b65 git-svn.txt: advertise pushurl with dcommit
Advertise that the svn-remote.<name>.pushurl config key allows specifying
the commit URL for the entire SVN repository in the documentation of the
git svn dcommit command.

Signed-off-by: Sveinung Kvilhaugsvik <sveinung84@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-10-24 22:55:48 +00:00
2b6c613f1a git-svn: remove mergeinfo rev caching
This should further reduce memory usage from the new mergeinfo
speedups without hurting performance too much, assuming
reasonable latency to the SVN server.

Cc: Hin-Tak Leung <htl10@users.sourceforge.net>
Suggested-by: Jakob Stoklund Olesen <stoklund@2pi.dk>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-10-24 22:55:43 +00:00
54b95346c1 git-svn: cache only mergeinfo revisions
This should reduce excessive memory usage from the new mergeinfo
caches without hurting performance too much, assuming reasonable
latency to the SVN server.

Cc: Hin-Tak Leung <htl10@users.sourceforge.net>
Suggested-by: Jakob Stoklund Olesen <stoklund@2pi.dk>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-10-24 22:55:39 +00:00
d0b34f241d git-svn: reduce check_cherry_pick cache overhead
We do not need to store entire lists of commits, only the
number of incomplete and the first commit for reference.
This reduces the amount of data we need to store in memory
and on disk stores.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-10-24 22:55:35 +00:00
9ee13a934e git-svn: only look at the root path for svn:mergeinfo
Subversion can put mergeinfo on any sub-directory to track cherry-picks.
Since cherry-picks are not represented explicitly in git, git-svn should
just ignore it.

Signed-off-by: Jakob Stoklund Olesen <stoklund@2pi.dk>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-10-24 22:55:29 +00:00
abfef3bbf5 git-svn: only look at the new parts of svn:mergeinfo
In a Subversion repository where many feature branches are merged into a
trunk, the svn:mergeinfo property can grow very large. This severely
slows down git-svn's make_log_entry() because it is checking all
mergeinfo entries every time the property changes.

In most cases, the additions to svn:mergeinfo since the last commit are
pretty small, and there is nothing to gain by checking merges that were
already checked for the last commit in the branch.

Add a mergeinfo_changes() function which computes the set of interesting
changes to svn:mergeinfo since the last commit. Filter out merged
branches whose ranges haven't changed, and remove a common prefix of
ranges from other merged branches.

This speeds up "git svn fetch" by several orders of magnitude on a large
repository where thousands of feature branches have been merged.

Signed-off-by: Jakob Stoklund Olesen <stoklund@2pi.dk>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-10-24 22:55:26 +00:00
fbecd99861 Update draft release notes to 2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-24 15:02:17 -07:00
a33043f639 Merge branch 'jc/push-cert'
* jc/push-cert:
  push: heed user.signingkey for signed pushes
2014-10-24 15:01:32 -07:00
95d2255bfe Merge branch 'sb/plug-transport-leak'
Code clean-up.

* sb/plug-transport-leak:
  .mailmap: add Stefan Bellers corporate mail address
  transport: free leaking head in transport_print_push_status()
2014-10-24 15:00:09 -07:00
1758d236a2 Merge branch 'nd/dir-prep-exclude-cleanup'
Code clean-up.

* nd/dir-prep-exclude-cleanup:
  dir.c: remove the second declaration of "stk" in prep_exclude()
2014-10-24 15:00:05 -07:00
e4da4fbe0e Merge branch 'eb/no-pthreads'
Allow us build with NO_PTHREADS=NoThanks compilation option.

* eb/no-pthreads:
  Handle atexit list internaly for unthreaded builds
  pack-objects: set number of threads before checking and warning
  index-pack: fix compilation with NO_PTHREADS
2014-10-24 14:59:10 -07:00
bb8caad381 Merge branch 'wk/t1304-wo-USER'
* wk/t1304-wo-USER:
  t1304: Set LOGNAME even if USER is unset or null
2014-10-24 14:59:02 -07:00
7fc311d5ff Merge branch 'tb/core-filemode-doc'
Doc update.

* tb/core-filemode-doc:
  core.filemode may need manual action
2014-10-24 14:57:57 -07:00
217610d7d6 Merge branch 'rs/run-command-env-array'
Add managed "env" array to child_process to clarify the lifetime
rules.

* rs/run-command-env-array:
  use env_array member of struct child_process
  run-command: add env_array, an optional argv_array for env
2014-10-24 14:57:54 -07:00
f35a02b15d Merge branch 'po/doc-status-markup'
Update documentation mark-up.

* po/doc-status-markup:
  doc: fix 'git status --help' character quoting
2014-10-24 14:57:51 -07:00
26a22d8d00 Merge branch 'jk/pack-objects-no-bitmap-when-splitting'
Splitting pack-objects output into multiple packs is incompatible
with the use of reachability bitmap.

* jk/pack-objects-no-bitmap-when-splitting:
  pack-objects: turn off bitmaps when we split packs
2014-10-24 14:56:10 -07:00
75c961b767 merge & sequencer: unify codepaths that write "Conflicts:" hint
Two identical loops in suggest_conflicts() in merge, and
do_recursive_merge() in sequencer, can use a single helper function
extracted from the latter that prepares the "Conflicts:" hint that
is meant to remind the user the paths for which merge conflicts had
to be resolved to write a better commit log message.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-24 11:34:59 -07:00
08e3ce5a20 builtin/merge.c: drop a parameter that is never used
Since the very beginning when we added the "renormalizing" parameter
to this function with 7610fa57 (merge-recursive --renormalize,
2010-08-05), nobody seems to have ever referenced it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-24 11:28:30 -07:00
b9459019bb push: heed user.signingkey for signed pushes
push --signed promises to take user.signingkey as the signing key but
fails to read the config.

Make it do so.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-24 10:50:05 -07:00
6936b5859c diff -B -M: fix output for "copy and then rewrite" case
Starting from a single file, A, if you create B as a copy of A (and
possibly make some edit) and then make extensive change to A, you
will see:

    $ git diff -C --name-status
    C89    A    B
    M      A

which is expected.  However, if you ask the same question in a
different way, you see this:

    $ git diff -B -M --name-status
    R89    A    B
    M100   A

telling us that A was rename-edited into B (as if "A will no longer
exist as the result") and at the same time A itself was extensively
edited.

In this case, because the resulting tree still does have file A
(even if it has contents vastly different from the original), we
should use "C"opy, not "R"ename, to avoid hinting that A somehow
goes away.

Two existing tests were depending on the wrong behaviour, and fixed.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-23 16:17:09 -07:00
19b5d50cb1 Update draft release notes to 2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-21 13:35:44 -07:00
693f62ff68 Merge branch 'js/completion-hide-not-a-repo'
Some internal error messages leaked out of the bash completion when
typing "git cmd <TAB>" and the machinery tried to complete
refnames.

* js/completion-hide-not-a-repo:
  completion: silence "fatal: Not a git repository" error
2014-10-21 13:28:50 -07:00
48f662dd74 Merge branch 'da/mergetool-meld'
Newer versions of 'meld' breaks the auto-detection we use to see if
they are new enough to support the `--output` option.

* da/mergetool-meld:
  mergetools/meld: make usage of `--output` configurable and more robust
2014-10-21 13:28:48 -07:00
a46af5946c Merge branch 'da/mergetool-temporary-directory'
Allow a temporary directory specified to be used while running "git
mergetool" backend.

* da/mergetool-temporary-directory:
  t7610-mergetool: add test cases for mergetool.writeToTemp
  mergetool: add an option for writing to a temporary directory
2014-10-21 13:28:42 -07:00
e96e98b339 Merge branch 'da/mergetool-tool-help'
Allow "git mergetool --help" to run outside a Git repository.

* da/mergetool-tool-help:
  difftool: don't assume that default sh is sane
  mergetool: don't require a work tree for --tool-help
  git-sh-setup: move GIT_DIR initialization into a function
  mergetool: use more conservative temporary filenames
  test-lib-functions: adjust style to match CodingGuidelines
  t7610-mergetool: prefer test_config over git config
2014-10-21 13:28:37 -07:00
02f4db83bd Merge branch 'da/mergetool-temporary-filename'
Tweak the names of the three throw-away files "git mergetool" comes
up with to feed the merge tool backend, so that a file with a
single dot in its name in the original (e.g. "hello.c") will have
only one dot in these variants (e.g. "hello_BASE_4321.c").

* da/mergetool-temporary-filename:
  mergetool: use more conservative temporary filenames
2014-10-21 13:28:20 -07:00
64bff25f78 Merge branch 'da/mergetool-tests'
The clean-up of this test script was long overdue and is a very
welcome change.

* da/mergetool-tests:
  test-lib-functions: adjust style to match CodingGuidelines
  t7610-mergetool: use test_config to isolate tests
  t7610-mergetool: add missing && and remove commented-out code
  t7610-mergetool: use tabs instead of a mix of tabs and spaces
2014-10-21 13:28:14 -07:00
3c85452bb0 Merge branch 'rs/ref-transaction'
The API to update refs have been restructured to allow introducing
a true transactional updates later.  We would even allow storing
refs in backends other than the traditional filesystem-based one.

* rs/ref-transaction: (25 commits)
  ref_transaction_commit: bail out on failure to remove a ref
  lockfile: remove unable_to_lock_error
  refs.c: do not permit err == NULL
  remote rm/prune: print a message when writing packed-refs fails
  for-each-ref: skip and warn about broken ref names
  refs.c: allow listing and deleting badly named refs
  test: put tests for handling of bad ref names in one place
  packed-ref cache: forbid dot-components in refnames
  branch -d: simplify by using RESOLVE_REF_READING
  branch -d: avoid repeated symref resolution
  reflog test: test interaction with detached HEAD
  refs.c: change resolve_ref_unsafe reading argument to be a flags field
  refs.c: make write_ref_sha1 static
  fetch.c: change s_update_ref to use a ref transaction
  refs.c: ref_transaction_commit: distinguish name conflicts from other errors
  refs.c: pass a list of names to skip to is_refname_available
  refs.c: call lock_ref_sha1_basic directly from commit
  refs.c: refuse to lock badly named refs in lock_ref_sha1_basic
  rename_ref: don't ask read_ref_full where the ref came from
  refs.c: pass the ref log message to _create/delete/update instead of _commit
  ...
2014-10-21 13:28:10 -07:00
f13f9b0eab mergetool: rename bc3 to bc
Beyond Compare version 4 works the same way as version 3, so rename
the existing "bc3" adaptor to just "bc", while keeping "bc3" as a
backward compatible wrapper.

Noticed-by: Olivier Croquette <ocroquette@free.fr>
Helped-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-21 11:25:30 -07:00
03e11a715b dir.c: remove the second declaration of "stk" in prep_exclude()
This "stk" shadows the first declaration at the top. There's currently
no bad effect. But let's avoid it.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-21 11:22:00 -07:00
8b148bf085 .mailmap: add Stefan Bellers corporate mail address
Note that despite the private address being first and primary,
Google owns the copyright on this patch as any other patch I'll be
sending signed off by the sbeller@google.com address.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-21 11:01:27 -07:00
dc76c7f783 transport: free leaking head in transport_print_push_status()
Found by scan.coverity.com (ID: 1248110)

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-21 11:01:18 -07:00
13da0fc092 Update draft release notes to 2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-20 13:07:32 -07:00
9d04401ffe Merge branch 'cc/interpret-trailers'
A new filter to programatically edit the tail end of the commit log
messages.

* cc/interpret-trailers:
  Documentation: add documentation for 'git interpret-trailers'
  trailer: add tests for commands in config file
  trailer: execute command from 'trailer.<name>.command'
  trailer: add tests for "git interpret-trailers"
  trailer: add interpret-trailers command
  trailer: put all the processing together and print
  trailer: parse trailers from file or stdin
  trailer: process command line trailer arguments
  trailer: read and process config information
  trailer: process trailers from input message and arguments
  trailer: add data structures and basic functions
2014-10-20 12:25:32 -07:00
7df3b072a9 Merge branch 'rm/gitweb-start-form'
* rm/gitweb-start-form:
  gitweb: use start_form, not startform that was removed in CGI.pm 4.04
2014-10-20 12:25:27 -07:00
9c6be8b5ab Merge branch 'ss/contrib-subtree-contacts'
* ss/contrib-subtree-contacts:
  contacts: add a Makefile to generate docs and install
  subtree: add an install-html target
2014-10-20 12:25:16 -07:00
b946576839 Merge branch 'jn/parse-config-slot'
Code cleanup.

* jn/parse-config-slot:
  color_parse: do not mention variable name in error message
  pass config slots as pointers instead of offsets
2014-10-20 12:23:48 -07:00
b67588d018 Merge branch 'rs/receive-pack-argv-leak-fix'
* rs/receive-pack-argv-leak-fix:
  receive-pack: plug minor memory leak in unpack()
2014-10-20 12:23:45 -07:00
713ee7fe46 Merge branch 'ta/config-set'
* ta/config-set:
  t1308: fix broken here document in test script
2014-10-20 12:23:43 -07:00
f9a2fd3616 Merge branch 'jk/test-shell-trace'
Test scripts were taught to notice "-x" option to show shell trace,
as if the tests were run under "sh -x".

* jk/test-shell-trace:
  test-lib.sh: support -x option for shell-tracing
  t5304: use helper to report failure of "test foo = bar"
  t5304: use test_path_is_* instead of "test -f"
2014-10-20 12:23:40 -07:00
6459cf8cdf Merge branch 'bc/asciidoc'
Formatting nitpicks to help a (pickier) reimplementation of
AsciiDoc to grok our documentation.

* bc/asciidoc:
  Documentation: fix mismatched delimiters in git-imap-send
  Documentation: adjust document title underlining
2014-10-20 12:23:30 -07:00
15c6ef7b06 Revert "archive: honor tar.umask even for pax headers"
This reverts commit 10f343ea81, whose
output is no longer bit-for-bit equivalent from the older versions
of Git, which the infrastructure to (pretend to) upload tarballs
kernel.org uses depends on.
2014-10-20 12:04:46 -07:00
ecdab41267 core.filemode may need manual action
core.filemode is set automatically when a repo is created.
But when a repo is exported via CIFS or cygwin is mixed with Git for Windows
or Eclipse core.filemode may better be set manually to false.
Update and improve the documentation

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 20:47:40 -07:00
7c45cee6bb doc: fix 'git status --help' character quoting
Correct backtick quoting for some of the modification states to give
consistent web rendering.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 20:45:16 -07:00
7544b2e2da t1304: Set LOGNAME even if USER is unset or null
Avoid:

  # ./t1304-default-acl.sh
  ok 1 - checking for a working acl setup
  ok 2 - Setup test repo
  not ok 3 - Objects creation does not break ACLs with restrictive umask
  #
  #               # SHA1 for empty blob
  #               check_perms_and_acl .git/objects/e6/9de29bb2d1d6434b8b29ae775ad8c2e48c5391
  #
  not ok 4 - git gc does not break ACLs with restrictive umask
  #
  #               git gc &&
  #               check_perms_and_acl .git/objects/pack/*.pack
  #
  # failed 2 among 4 test(s)
  1..4

on systems where USER isn't set.  It's usually set by the login
process, but it isn't set when launching some Docker images.  For
example:

  $ docker run --rm debian env
  HOME=/
  PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin
  HOSTNAME=b2dfdfe797ed

'id -u -n' has been in POSIX from Issue 2 through 2013 [1], so I don't
expect compatibility issues.

[1]: http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/id.html

Signed-off-by: W. Trevor King <wking@tremily.us>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:47:20 -07:00
0f4b6db3ba Handle atexit list internaly for unthreaded builds
Wrap atexit()s calls on unthreaded builds to handle callback list
internally.

This is needed because on unthreaded builds, asyncs inherits parent's
atexit() list, that gets run as soon as the async exit()s (and again at
the end of async's parent process). That led to remove temporary files
too early.

Also remove a by-atexit-callback guard against this kind of issue in
clone.c, as this patch makes it redundant.

Fixes test 5537 (temporary shallow file vanished before unpack-objects
could open it)

BTW remove an unused variable in shallow.c.

Helped-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Etienne Buira <etienne.buira@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:38:30 -07:00
189a122249 drop add_object_array_with_mode
This is a thin compatibility wrapper around
add_pending_object_with_path. But the only caller is
add_object_array, which is itself just a thin compatibility
wrapper. There are no external callers, so we can just
remove this middle wrapper.

Noticed-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:28:30 -07:00
d7702be1e1 revision: remove definition of unused 'add_object' function
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:27:24 -07:00
a915459097 use env_array member of struct child_process
Convert users of struct child_process to using the managed env_array for
specifying environment variables instead of supplying an array on the
stack or bringing their own argv_array.  This shortens and simplifies
the code and ensures automatically that the allocated memory is freed
after use.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:26:34 -07:00
19a583dc39 run-command: add env_array, an optional argv_array for env
Similar to args, add a struct argv_array member to struct child_process
that simplifies specifying the environment for children.  It is freed
automatically by finish_command() or if start_command() encounters an
error.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:26:31 -07:00
2113471478 pack-objects: turn off bitmaps when we split packs
If a pack.packSizeLimit is set, we may split the pack data
across multiple packfiles. This means we cannot generate
.bitmap files, as they require that all of the reachable
objects are in the same pack. We check that condition when
we are generating the list of objects to pack (and disable
bitmaps if we are not packing everything), but we forgot to
update it when we notice that we needed to split (which
doesn't happen until the actual write phase).

The resulting bitmaps are quite bogus (they mention entries
that do not exist in the pack!) and can cause a fetch or
push to send insufficient objects.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:08:38 -07:00
4fe10219bc rev-list: add --indexed-objects option
There is currently no easy way to ask the revision traversal
machinery to include objects reachable from the index (e.g.,
blobs and trees that have not yet been committed). This
patch adds an option to do so.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:07:07 -07:00
b1e757f363 pack-objects: double-check options before discarding objects
When we are given an expiration time like
--unpack-unreachable=2.weeks.ago, we avoid writing out old,
unreachable loose objects entirely, under the assumption
that running "prune" would simply delete them immediately
anyway. However, this is only valid if we computed the same
set of reachable objects as prune would.

In practice, this is the case, because only git-repack uses
the --unpack-unreachable option with an expiration, and it
always feeds as many objects into the pack as possible. But
we can double-check at runtime just to be sure.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:07:07 -07:00
41d018d146 rev-list: document --reflog option
This is mostly used internally, but it does not hurt to
explain it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:07:07 -07:00
c90f9e13ab repack: pack objects mentioned by the index
When we pack all objects, we use only the objects reachable
from references and reflogs. This misses any objects which
are reachable from the index, but not yet referenced.

By itself this isn't a big deal; the objects can remain
loose until they are actually used in a commit. However, it
does create a problem when we drop packed but unreachable
objects. We try to optimize out the writing of objects that
we will immediately prune, which means we must follow the
same rules as prune in determining what is reachable. And
prune uses the index for this purpose.

This is rather uncommon in practice, as objects in the index
would not usually have been packed in the first place. But
it could happen in a sequence like:

  1. You make a commit on a branch that references blob X.

  2. You repack, moving X into the pack.

  3. You delete the branch (and its reflog), so that X is
     unreferenced.

  4. You "git add" blob X so that it is now referenced only
     by the index.

  5. You repack again with git-gc. The pack-objects we
     invoke will see that X is neither referenced nor
     recent and not bother loosening it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:07:07 -07:00
edfbb2aa53 pack-objects: use argv_array
This saves us from having to bump the rp_av count when we
add new traversal options.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:07:07 -07:00
1be111d88f reachable: use revision machinery's --indexed-objects code
This does the same thing as our custom code, so let's not
repeat ourselves.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:07:07 -07:00
458a7e508c t5516: test pushing a tag of an otherwise unreferenced blob
It's not unreasonable to have a tag that points to a blob
that is not part of the normal history. We do this in
git.git to distribute gpg keys. However, we never explicitly
checked in our test suite that this actually works (i.e.,
that pack-objects actually sends the blob because of the tag
mentioning it).

It does in fact work fine, but a recent patch under
discussion broke this, and the test suite didn't notice.
Let's make the test suite more complete.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:07:06 -07:00
207394908e traverse_commit_list: support pending blobs/trees with paths
When we call traverse_commit_list, we may have trees and
blobs in the pending array. As we process these, we pass the
"name" field from the pending entry as the path of the
object within the tree (which then becomes the root path if
we recurse into subtrees).

When we set up the traversal in prepare_revision_walk,
though, the "name" field of any pending trees and blobs is
likely to be the ref at which we found the object. We would
not want to make this part of the path (e.g., doing so would
make "git rev-list --objects v2.6.11-tree" in linux.git show
paths like "v2.6.11-tree/Makefile", which is nonsensical).
Therefore prepare_revision_walk sets the name field of each
pending tree and blobs to the empty string.

However, this leaves no room for a caller who does know the
correct path of a pending object to propagate that
information to the revision walker. We can fix this by
making two related changes:

  1. Use the "path" field as the path instead of the "name"
     field in traverse_commit_list. If the path is not set,
     default to "" (which is what we always ended up with in
     the current code, because of prepare_revision_walk).

  2. In prepare_revision_walk, make a complete copy of the
     entry. This makes the path field available to the
     walker (if there is one), solving our problem.
     Leaving the name field intact is now OK, as we do not
     use it as a path due to point (1) above (and we can use
     it to make more meaningful error messages if we want).
     We also make the original "mode" field available to the
     walker, though it does not actually use it.

Note that we still re-add the pending objects and free the
old ones (so we may strdup the path and name only to free
the old ones). This could be made more efficient by simply
copying the object_array entries that we are keeping.
However, that would require more restructuring of the code,
and is not done here.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-19 15:06:31 -07:00
98349e5364 Merge branch 'jc/completion-no-chdir'
* jc/completion-no-chdir:
  completion: use "git -C $there" instead of (cd $there && git ...)
2014-10-16 14:16:49 -07:00
c11dc64722 Merge branch 'bw/trace-no-inline-getnanotime'
No file-scope static variables in an inlined function, please.

* bw/trace-no-inline-getnanotime:
  trace.c: do not mark getnanotime() as "inline"
2014-10-16 14:16:45 -07:00
1cb3324e61 Merge branch 'po/everyday-doc'
"git help everyday" to show the Everyday Git document.

* po/everyday-doc:
  doc: add 'everyday' to 'git help'
  doc: Makefile regularise OBSOLETE_HTML list building
  doc: modernise everyday.txt wording and format in man page style
2014-10-16 14:16:42 -07:00
4750f4b962 gitweb: use start_form, not startform that was removed in CGI.pm 4.04
CGI.pm 4.04 removed the startform method, which had previously been
deprecated in favour of start_form.  Changes file for CGI.pm says:

    4.04 2014-09-04
     [ REMOVED / DEPRECATIONS ]
	- startform and endform methods removed (previously deprecated,
	  you should be using the start_form and end_form methods)

Signed-off-by: Roland Mas <lolando@debian.org>
Reviewed-by: Jakub Narębski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 13:12:34 -07:00
688684eba4 t7610-mergetool: add test cases for mergetool.writeToTemp
Add tests to ensure that filenames start with "./" when
mergetool.writeToTemp is false and do not start with "./" when
mergetool.writeToTemp is true.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 12:09:51 -07:00
8f0cb41da2 mergetool: add an option for writing to a temporary directory
Teach mergetool to write files in a temporary directory when
'mergetool.writeToTemp' is true.

This is helpful for tools such as Eclipse which cannot cope with
multiple copies of the same file in the worktree.

Suggested-by: Charles Bailey <charles@hashpling.org>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 12:09:51 -07:00
eab335c46d mergetool: use more conservative temporary filenames
Avoid filenames with multiple dots so that overly-picky tools do
not misinterpret their extension.

Previously, foo/bar.ext in the worktree would result in e.g.

	./foo/bar.ext.BASE.1234.ext

This can be improved by having only a single .ext and using
underscore instead of dot so that the extension cannot be
misinterpreted.  The resulting path becomes:

	./foo/bar_BASE_1234.ext

Suggested-by: Sergio Ferrero <sferrero@ensoftcorp.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 12:07:48 -07:00
9e8f8dea46 test-lib-functions: adjust style to match CodingGuidelines
Prefer "test" over "[ ]" for conditionals.
Prefer "$()" over backticks for command substitutions.
Avoid control structures on a single line with semicolons.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 12:04:05 -07:00
d7d300ea59 t7610-mergetool: use test_config to isolate tests
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 12:03:21 -07:00
b12d04503b mergetools/meld: make usage of --output configurable and more robust
Older versions of meld listed --output in `meld --help`.
Newer versions only mention `meld [OPTIONS...]`.
Improve the checks to catch these newer versions.

Add a `mergetool.meld.hasOutput` configuration to allow
overriding the heuristic.

Reported-by: Andrey Novoseltsev <novoselt@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 11:58:11 -07:00
9e0c3c4fcd make add_object_array_with_context interface more sane
When you resolve a sha1, you can optionally keep any context
found during the resolution, including the path and mode of
a tree entry (e.g., when looking up "HEAD:subdir/file.c").

The add_object_array_with_context function lets you then
attach that context to an entry in a list. Unfortunately,
the interface for doing so is horrible. The object_context
structure is large and most object_array users do not use
it. Therefore we keep a pointer to the structure to avoid
burdening other users too much. But that means when we do
use it that we must allocate the struct ourselves. And the
struct contains a fixed PATH_MAX-sized buffer, which makes
this wholly unsuitable for any large arrays.

We can observe that there is only a single user of the
"with_context" variant: builtin/grep.c. And in that use
case, the only element we care about is the path. We can
therefore store only the path as a pointer (the context's
mode field was redundant with the object_array_entry itself,
and nobody actually cared about the surrounding tree). This
still requires a strdup of the pathname, but at least we are
only consuming the minimum amount of memory for each string.

We can also handle the copying ourselves in
add_object_array_*, and free it as appropriate in
object_array_release_entry.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:44 -07:00
33d4221c79 write_sha1_file: freshen existing objects
When we try to write a loose object file, we first check
whether that object already exists. If so, we skip the
write as an optimization. However, this can interfere with
prune's strategy of using mtimes to mark files in progress.

For example, if a branch contains a particular tree object
and is deleted, that tree object may become unreachable, and
have an old mtime. If a new operation then tries to write
the same tree, this ends up as a noop; we notice we
already have the object and do nothing. A prune running
simultaneously with this operation will see the object as
old, and may delete it.

We can solve this by "freshening" objects that we avoid
writing by updating their mtime. The algorithm for doing so
is essentially the same as that of has_sha1_file. Therefore
we provide a new (static) interface "check_and_freshen",
which finds and optionally freshens the object. It's trivial
to implement freshening and simple checking by tweaking a
single parameter.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:43 -07:00
abcb86553d pack-objects: match prune logic for discarding objects
A recent commit taught git-prune to keep non-recent objects
that are reachable from recent ones. However, pack-objects,
when loosening unreachable objects, tries to optimize out
the write in the case that the object will be immediately
pruned. It now gets this wrong, since its rule does not
reflect the new prune code (and this can be seen by running
t6501 with a strategically placed repack).

Let's teach pack-objects similar logic.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:43 -07:00
d0d46abc16 pack-objects: refactor unpack-unreachable expiration check
When we are loosening unreachable packed objects, we do not
bother to process objects that would simply be pruned
immediately anyway. The "would be pruned" check is a simple
comparison, but is about to get more complicated. Let's pull
it out into a separate function.

Note that this is slightly less efficient than the original,
which avoided even opening old packs, since no object in
them could pass the current check, which cares only about
the pack mtime.  But the new rules will depend on the exact
object, so we need to perform the check even for old packs.

Note also that we fix a minor buglet when the pack mtime is
exactly the same as the expiration time. The prune code
considers that worth pruning, whereas our check here
considered it worth keeping. This wasn't a big deal. Besides
being unlikely to happen, the result was simply that the
object was loosened and then pruned, missing the
optimization. Still, we can easily fix it while we are here.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:42 -07:00
d3038d22f9 prune: keep objects reachable from recent objects
Our current strategy with prune is that an object falls into
one of three categories:

  1. Reachable (from ref tips, reflogs, index, etc).

  2. Not reachable, but recent (based on the --expire time).

  3. Not reachable and not recent.

We keep objects from (1) and (2), but prune objects in (3).
The point of (2) is that these objects may be part of an
in-progress operation that has not yet updated any refs.

However, it is not always the case that objects for an
in-progress operation will have a recent mtime. For example,
the object database may have an old copy of a blob (from an
abandoned operation, a branch that was deleted, etc). If we
create a new tree that points to it, a simultaneous prune
will leave our tree, but delete the blob. Referencing that
tree with a commit will then work (we check that the tree is
in the object database, but not that all of its referred
objects are), as will mentioning the commit in a ref. But
the resulting repo is corrupt; we are missing the blob
reachable from a ref.

One way to solve this is to be more thorough when
referencing a sha1: make sure that not only do we have that
sha1, but that we have objects it refers to, and so forth
recursively. The problem is that this is very expensive.
Creating a parent link would require traversing the entire
object graph!

Instead, this patch pushes the extra work onto prune, which
runs less frequently (and has to look at the whole object
graph anyway). It creates a new category of objects: objects
which are not recent, but which are reachable from a recent
object. We do not prune these objects, just like the
reachable and recent ones.

This lets us avoid the recursive check above, because if we
have an object, even if it is unreachable, we should have
its referent. We can make a simple inductive argument that
with this patch, this property holds (that there are no
objects with missing referents in the repository):

  0. When we have no objects, we have nothing to refer or be
     referred to, so the property holds.

  1. If we add objects to the repository, their direct
     referents must generally exist (e.g., if you create a
     tree, the blobs it references must exist; if you create
     a commit to point at the tree, the tree must exist).
     This is already the case before this patch. And it is
     not 100% foolproof (you can make bogus objects using
     `git hash-object`, for example), but it should be the
     case for normal usage.

     Therefore for any sequence of object additions, the
     property will continue to hold.

  2. If we remove objects from the repository, then we will
     not remove a child object (like a blob) if an object
     that refers to it is being kept. That is the part
     implemented by this patch.

     Note, however, that our reachability check and the
     actual pruning are not atomic. So it _is_ still
     possible to violate the property (e.g., an object
     becomes referenced just as we are deleting it). This
     patch is shooting for eliminating problems where the
     mtimes of dependent objects differ by hours or days,
     and one is dropped without the other. It does nothing
     to help with short races.

Naively, the simplest way to implement this would be to add
all recent objects as tips to the reachability traversal.
However, this does not perform well. In a recently-packed
repository, all reachable objects will also be recent, and
therefore we have to look at each object twice. This patch
instead performs the reachability traversal, then follows up
with a second traversal for recent objects, skipping any
that have already been marked.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:42 -07:00
660c889e46 sha1_file: add for_each iterators for loose and packed objects
We typically iterate over the reachable objects in a
repository by starting at the tips and walking the graph.
There's no easy way to iterate over all of the objects,
including unreachable ones. Let's provide a way of doing so.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:41 -07:00
4a1e693a30 count-objects: use for_each_loose_file_in_objdir
This drops our line count considerably, and should make
things more readable by keeping the counting logic separate
from the traversal.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:41 -07:00
cac05d4dfd count-objects: do not use xsize_t when counting object size
The point of xsize_t is to safely cast an off_t into a size_t
(because we are about to mmap). But in count-objects, we are
summing the sizes in an off_t. Using xsize_t means that
count-objects could fail on a 32-bit system with a 4G
object (not likely, as other parts of git would fail, but
we should at least be correct here).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:41 -07:00
0d3b729680 prune-packed: use for_each_loose_file_in_objdir
This saves us from manually traversing the directory
structure ourselves.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:40 -07:00
3725427945 reachable: mark index blobs as SEEN
When we mark all reachable objects for pruning, that
includes blobs mentioned by the index. However, we do not
mark these with the SEEN flag, as we do for objects that we
find by traversing (we also do not add them to the pending
list, but that is because there is nothing further to
traverse with them).

This doesn't cause any problems with prune, because it
checks only that the object exists in the global object
hash, and not its flags. However, let's mark these objects
to be consistent and avoid any later surprises.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:40 -07:00
27e1e22d5e prune: factor out loose-object directory traversal
Prune has to walk $GIT_DIR/objects/?? in order to find the
set of loose objects to prune. Other parts of the code
(e.g., count-objects) want to do the same. Let's factor it
out into a reusable for_each-style function.

Note that this is not quite a straight code movement. The
original code had strange behavior when it found a file of
the form "[0-9a-f]{2}/.{38}" that did _not_ contain all hex
digits. It executed a "break" from the loop, meaning that we
stopped pruning in that directory (but still pruned other
directories!). This was probably a bug; we do not want to
process the file as an object, but we should keep going
otherwise (and that is how the new code handles it).

We are also a little more careful with loose object
directories which fail to open. The original code silently
ignored any failures, but the new code will complain about
any problems besides ENOENT.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:39 -07:00
718ccc9731 reachable: reuse revision.c "add all reflogs" code
We want to add all reflog entries as tips for finding
reachable objects. The revision machinery can already do
this (to support "rev-list --reflog"); we can reuse that
code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:38 -07:00
5f78a431ab reachable: use traverse_commit_list instead of custom walk
To find the set of reachable objects, we add a bunch of
possible sources to our rev_info, call prepare_revision_walk,
and then launch into a custom walker that handles each
object top. This is a subset of what traverse_commit_list
does, so we can just reuse that code (it can also handle
more complex cases like UNINTERESTING commits and pathspecs,
but we don't use those features).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:38 -07:00
1da1e07c83 clean up name allocation in prepare_revision_walk
When we enter prepare_revision_walk, we have zero or more
entries in our "pending" array. We disconnect that array
from the rev_info, and then process each entry:

  1. If the entry is a commit and the --source option is in
     effect, we keep a pointer to the object name.

  2. Otherwise, we re-add the item to the pending list with
     a blank name.

We then throw away the old array by freeing the array
itself, but do not touch the "name" field of each entry. For
any items of type (2), we leak the memory associated with
the name. This commit fixes that by calling object_array_clear,
which handles the cleanup for us.

That breaks (1), though, because it depends on the memory
pointed to by the name to last forever. We can solve that by
making a copy of the name. This is slightly less efficient,
but it shouldn't matter in practice, as we do it only for
the tip commits of the traversal.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:37 -07:00
46be823124 object_array: add a "clear" function
There's currently no easy way to free the memory associated
with an object_array (and in most cases, we simply leak the
memory in a rev_info's pending array). Let's provide a
helper to make this easier to handle.

We can make use of it in list-objects.c, which does the same
thing by hand (but fails to free the "name" field of each
entry, potentially leaking memory).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:37 -07:00
68f492359e object_array: factor out slopbuf-freeing logic
This is not a lot of code, but it's a logical construct that
should not need to be repeated (and we are about to add a
third repetition).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:36 -07:00
50a71776ab isxdigit: cast input to unsigned char
Otherwise, callers must do so or risk triggering warnings
-Wchar-subscript (and rightfully so; a signed char might
cause us to use a bogus negative index into the
hexval_table).

While we are dropping the now-unnecessary casts from the
caller in urlmatch.c, we can get rid of similar casts in
actually parsing the hex by using the hexval() helper, which
implicitly casts to unsigned (but note that we cannot
implement isxdigit in terms of hexval(), as it also casts
its return value to unsigned).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:36 -07:00
fe1b22686f foreach_alt_odb: propagate return value from callback
We check the return value of the callback and stop iterating
if it is non-zero. However, we do not make the non-zero
return value available to the caller, so they have no way of
knowing whether the operation succeeded or not (technically
they can keep their own error flag in the callback data, but
that is unlike our other for_each functions).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-16 10:10:35 -07:00
2ea40f01c5 contacts: add a Makefile to generate docs and install
Also add a gitignore file for generated files.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 15:18:27 -07:00
4d24d5202c subtree: add an install-html target
Also adjust ignore rules accordingly.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 15:17:08 -07:00
fb1d6dabce clone: --dissociate option to mark that reference is only temporary
While use of the --reference option to borrow objects from an
existing local repository of the same project is an effective way to
reduce traffic when cloning a project over the network, it makes the
resulting "borrowing" repository dependent on the "borrowed"
repository.  After running

	git clone --reference=P $URL Q

the resulting repository Q will be broken if the borrowed repository
P disappears.

The way to allow the borrowed repository to be removed is to repack
the borrowing repository (i.e. run "git repack -a -d" in Q); while
power users may know it very well, it is not easily discoverable.

Teach a new "--dissociate" option to "git clone" to run this
repacking for the user.

Helped-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 14:34:45 -07:00
4fb4b02d98 difftool: don't assume that default sh is sane
git-difftool used to create a command list script containing $( ... )
and explicitly calls "sh -c" with this list.

Instead, allow mergetool --tool-help to take a mode parameter and call
mergetool directly to invoke the show_tool_help function. This mode
parameter is intented for use solely by difftool.

Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Helped-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 14:12:20 -07:00
7bfb7c357c mergetool: don't require a work tree for --tool-help
Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 14:12:20 -07:00
1c7e2d23e4 git-sh-setup: move GIT_DIR initialization into a function
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 14:12:20 -07:00
9c66cd3bd0 mergetool: use more conservative temporary filenames
Avoid filenames with multiple dots so that overly-picky tools do
not misinterpret their extension.

Previously, foo/bar.ext in the worktree would result in e.g.

	./foo/bar.ext.BASE.1234.ext

This can be improved by having only a single .ext and using
underscore instead of dot so that the extension cannot be
misinterpreted.  The resulting path becomes:

	./foo/bar_BASE_1234.ext

Suggested-by: Sergio Ferrero <sferrero@ensoftcorp.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 14:10:52 -07:00
76ee96a9b6 test-lib-functions: adjust style to match CodingGuidelines
Prefer "test" over "[ ]" for conditionals.
Prefer "$()" over backticks for command substitutions.
Avoid control structures on a single line with semicolons.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 14:09:15 -07:00
f9e43085bb t7610-mergetool: prefer test_config over git config
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 13:49:11 -07:00
4756c05741 t7610-mergetool: add missing && and remove commented-out code
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 13:48:15 -07:00
74578618a0 t7610-mergetool: use tabs instead of a mix of tabs and spaces
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 13:47:51 -07:00
773ee47c2b Documentation: implement linkgit macro for Asciidoctor
AsciiDoc uses a configuration file to implement macros like linkgit,
while Asciidoctor uses Ruby extensions.  Implement a Ruby extension that
implements the linkgit macro for Asciidoctor in the same way that
asciidoc.conf does for AsciiDoc.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 13:44:08 -07:00
7d61547db8 Documentation: move some AsciiDoc parameters into variables
Asciidoctor takes slightly different arguments from AsciiDoc in some
cases.  It has a different name for the HTML backend and the "docbook"
backend produces DocBook 5, not DocBook 4.5.  Also, Asciidoctor does not
accept the -f option.  Move these values into variables so that they can
be overridden by users wishing to use Asciidoctor instead of Asciidoc.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 13:44:07 -07:00
65732845e8 ref_transaction_commit: bail out on failure to remove a ref
When removal of a loose or packed ref fails, bail out instead of
trying to finish the transaction.  This way, a single error message
can be printed (instead of multiple messages being concatenated by
mistake) and the operator can try to solve the underlying problem
before there is a chance to muck things up even more.

In particular, when git fails to remove a ref, git goes on to try to
delete the reflog.  Exiting early lets us keep the reflog.

When git succeeds in deleting a ref A and fails to remove a ref B, it
goes on to try to delete both reflogs.  It would be better to just
remove the reflog for A, but that would be a more invasive change.
Failing early means we keep both reflogs, which puts the operator in a
good position to understand the problem and recover.

A long term goal is to avoid these problems altogether and roll back
the transaction on failure.  That kind of transactionality will have
to wait for a later series (the plan for which is to make all
destructive work happen in a single update of the packed-refs file).

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:27 -07:00
fb43bd1cd1 lockfile: remove unable_to_lock_error
The former caller uses unable_to_lock_message now.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:27 -07:00
5a603b0463 refs.c: do not permit err == NULL
Some functions that take a strbuf argument to append an error treat
!err as an indication that the message should be suppressed (e.g.,
ref_update_reject_duplicates).  Others write the message to stderr on
!err (e.g., repack_without_refs).  Others crash (e.g.,
ref_transaction_update).

Some of these behaviors are for historical reasons and others were
accidents.  Luckily no callers pass err == NULL any more.  Simplify
by consistently requiring the strbuf argument.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:26 -07:00
2ebb49ca8a remote rm/prune: print a message when writing packed-refs fails
Until v2.1.0-rc0~22^2~11 (refs.c: add an err argument to
repack_without_refs, 2014-06-20), repack_without_refs forgot to
provide an error message when commit_packed_refs fails.  Even today,
it only provides a message for callers that pass a non-NULL err
parameter.  Internal callers in refs.c pass non-NULL err but
"git remote" does not.

That means that "git remote rm" and "git remote prune" can fail
without printing a message about why.  Fix them by passing in a
non-NULL err parameter and printing the returned message.

This is the last caller to a ref handling function passing err ==
NULL.  A later patch can drop support for err == NULL, avoiding such
problems in the future.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:26 -07:00
971c41c717 for-each-ref: skip and warn about broken ref names
Print a warning message for any bad ref names we find in the repo and
skip them so callers don't have to deal with parsing them.

It might be useful in the future to have a flag where we would not
skip these refs for those callers that want to and are prepared (for
example by using a --format argument with %0 as a delimiter after the
ref name).

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:26 -07:00
d0f810f0bc refs.c: allow listing and deleting badly named refs
We currently do not handle badly named refs well:

  $ cp .git/refs/heads/master .git/refs/heads/master.....@\*@\\.
  $ git branch
    fatal: Reference has invalid format: 'refs/heads/master.....@*@\.'
  $ git branch -D master.....@\*@\\.
    error: branch 'master.....@*@\.' not found.

Users cannot recover from a badly named ref without manually finding
and deleting the loose ref file or appropriate line in packed-refs.
Making that easier will make it easier to tweak the ref naming rules
in the future, for example to forbid shell metacharacters like '`'
and '"', without putting people in a state that is hard to get out of.

So allow "branch --list" to show these refs and allow "branch -d/-D"
and "update-ref -d" to delete them.  Other commands (for example to
rename refs) will continue to not handle these refs but can be changed
in later patches.

Details:

In resolving functions, refuse to resolve refs that don't pass the
git-check-ref-format(1) check unless the new RESOLVE_REF_ALLOW_BAD_NAME
flag is passed.  Even with RESOLVE_REF_ALLOW_BAD_NAME, refuse to
resolve refs that escape the refs/ directory and do not match the
pattern [A-Z_]* (think "HEAD" and "MERGE_HEAD").

In locking functions, refuse to act on badly named refs unless they
are being deleted and either are in the refs/ directory or match [A-Z_]*.

Just like other invalid refs, flag resolved, badly named refs with the
REF_ISBROKEN flag, treat them as resolving to null_sha1, and skip them
in all iteration functions except for for_each_rawref.

Flag badly named refs (but not symrefs pointing to badly named refs)
with a REF_BAD_NAME flag to make it easier for future callers to
notice and handle them specially.  For example, in a later patch
for-each-ref will use this flag to detect refs whose names can confuse
callers parsing for-each-ref output.

In the transaction API, refuse to create or update badly named refs,
but allow deleting them (unless they try to escape refs/ and don't match
[A-Z_]*).

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:26 -07:00
8159f4af7d test: put tests for handling of bad ref names in one place
There's no straightforward way to grep for all tests dealing with
invalid refs.  Put them in a single test script so it is easy to see
what functionality has not been exercised with bad ref names yet.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:25 -07:00
f3cc52d840 packed-ref cache: forbid dot-components in refnames
Since v1.7.9-rc1~10^2 (write_head_info(): handle "extra refs" locally,
2012-01-06), this trick to keep track of ".have" refs that are only
valid on the wire and not on the filesystem is not needed any more.

Simplify by removing support for the REFNAME_DOT_COMPONENT flag.

This means we'll be slightly stricter with invalid refs found in a
packed-refs file or during clone.  read_loose_refs() already checks
for and skips refnames with .components so it is not affected.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:25 -07:00
18f29fc61e branch -d: simplify by using RESOLVE_REF_READING
When "git branch -d" reads the branch it is about to delete, it used
to avoid passing the RESOLVE_REF_READING ('treat missing ref as
error') flag because a symref pointing to a nonexistent ref would show
up as missing instead of as something that could be deleted.  To check
if a ref is actually missing, we then check

 - is it a symref?
 - if not, did it resolve to null_sha1?

Now we pass RESOLVE_REF_NO_RECURSE and the correct information is
returned for a symref even when it points to a missing ref.  Simplify
by relying on RESOLVE_REF_READING.

No functional change intended.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:25 -07:00
62a2d52514 branch -d: avoid repeated symref resolution
If a repository gets in a broken state with too much symref nesting,
it cannot be repaired with "git branch -d":

 $ git symbolic-ref refs/heads/nonsense refs/heads/nonsense
 $ git branch -d nonsense
 error: branch 'nonsense' not found.

Worse, "git update-ref --no-deref -d" doesn't work for such repairs
either:

 $ git update-ref -d refs/heads/nonsense
 error: unable to resolve reference refs/heads/nonsense: Too many levels of symbolic links

Fix both by teaching resolve_ref_unsafe a new RESOLVE_REF_NO_RECURSE
flag and passing it when appropriate.

Callers can still read the value of a symref (for example to print a
message about it) with that flag set --- resolve_ref_unsafe will
resolve one level of symrefs and stop there.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:25 -07:00
014e7db3f5 reflog test: test interaction with detached HEAD
A proposed patch produced broken HEAD reflog entries when checking out
anything other than a branch.  The testsuite still passed, so it took
a few days for the bug to be noticed.

Add tests checking the content of the reflog after detaching and
reattaching HEAD so we don't have to rely on manual testing to catch
such problems in the future.

[jn: using 'log -g --format=%H' instead of parsing --oneline output,
 resetting state in each test so they can be safely reordered or
 skipped]

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:24 -07:00
7695d118e5 refs.c: change resolve_ref_unsafe reading argument to be a flags field
resolve_ref_unsafe takes a boolean argument for reading (a nonexistent ref
resolves successfully for writing but not for reading).  Change this to be
a flags field instead, and pass the new constant RESOLVE_REF_READING when
we want this behaviour.

While at it, swap two of the arguments in the function to put output
arguments at the end.  As a nice side effect, this ensures that we can
catch callers that were unaware of the new API so they can be audited.

Give the wrapper functions resolve_refdup and read_ref_full the same
treatment for consistency.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:24 -07:00
aae383db8c refs.c: make write_ref_sha1 static
No external users call write_ref_sha1 any more so let's declare it static.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:23 -07:00
cd94f76572 fetch.c: change s_update_ref to use a ref transaction
Change s_update_ref to use a ref transaction for the ref update.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:23 -07:00
28e6a97e39 refs.c: ref_transaction_commit: distinguish name conflicts from other errors
In _commit, ENOTDIR can happen in the call to lock_ref_sha1_basic, either
when we lstat the new refname or if the name checking function reports that
the same type of conflict happened.  In both cases, it means that we can not
create the new ref due to a name conflict.

Start defining specific return codes for _commit.  TRANSACTION_NAME_CONFLICT
refers to a failure to create a ref due to a name conflict with another ref.
TRANSACTION_GENERIC_ERROR is for all other errors.

When "git fetch" is creating refs, name conflicts differ from other errors in
that they are likely to be resolved by running "git remote prune <remote>".
"git fetch" currently inspects errno to decide whether to give that advice.
Once it switches to the transaction API, it can check for
TRANSACTION_NAME_CONFLICT instead.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:23 -07:00
5fe7d825da refs.c: pass a list of names to skip to is_refname_available
Change is_refname_available to take a list of strings to exclude when
checking for conflicts instead of just one single name. We can already
exclude a single name for the sake of renames. This generalizes that support.

ref_transaction_commit already tracks a set of refs that are being deleted
in an array.  This array is then used to exclude refs from being written to
the packed-refs file.  At some stage we will want to change this array to a
struct string_list and then we can pass it to is_refname_available via the
call to lock_ref_sha1_basic.  That will allow us to perform transactions
that perform multiple renames as long as there are no conflicts within the
starting or ending state.

For example, that would allow a single transaction that contains two
renames that are both individually conflicting:

   m -> n/n
   n -> m/m

No functional change intended yet.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:23 -07:00
5d94a1b033 refs.c: call lock_ref_sha1_basic directly from commit
Skip using the lock_any_ref_for_update wrapper and call lock_ref_sha1_basic
directly from the commit function.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:23 -07:00
8a9df90d9a refs.c: refuse to lock badly named refs in lock_ref_sha1_basic
Move the check for check_refname_format from lock_any_ref_for_update to
lock_ref_sha1_basic.  At some later stage we will get rid of
lock_any_ref_for_update completely.  This has no visible impact to callers
except for the inability to lock badly named refs, which is not possible
today already for other reasons.(*)

Keep lock_any_ref_for_update as a no-op wrapper.  It is the public facing
version of this interface and keeping it as a separate function will make
it easier to experiment with the internal lock_ref_sha1_basic signature.

(*) For example, if lock_ref_sha1_basic checks the refname format and
refuses to lock badly named refs, it will not be possible to delete
such refs because the first step of deletion is to lock the ref.  We
currently already fail in that case because these refs are not recognized
to exist:

 $ cp .git/refs/heads/master .git/refs/heads/echo...\*\*
 $ git branch -D .git/refs/heads/echo...\*\*
 error: branch '.git/refs/heads/echo...**' not found.

This has been broken for a while.  Later patches in the series will start
repairing the handling of badly named refs.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:22 -07:00
7522e3dbcc rename_ref: don't ask read_ref_full where the ref came from
We call read_ref_full with a pointer to flags from rename_ref but since
we never actually use the returned flags we can just pass NULL here instead.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:22 -07:00
db7516ab9f refs.c: pass the ref log message to _create/delete/update instead of _commit
Change the ref transaction API so that we pass the reflog message to the
create/delete/update functions instead of to ref_transaction_commit.
This allows different reflog messages for each ref update in a multi-ref
transaction.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:22 -07:00
dbdcac7d5c refs.c: add an err argument to delete_ref_loose
Add an err argument to delete_ref_loose so that we can pass a descriptive
error string back to the caller. Pass the err argument from transaction
commit to this function so that transaction users will have a nice error
string if the transaction failed due to delete_ref_loose.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:21 -07:00
9ccc0c0896 wrapper.c: add a new function unlink_or_msg
This behaves like unlink_or_warn except that on failure it writes the message
to its 'err' argument, which the caller can display in an appropriate way or
ignore.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:21 -07:00
3c93c847ca refs.c: lock_ref_sha1_basic is used for all refs
lock_ref_sha1_basic is used to lock refs that sit directly in the .git
dir such as HEAD and MERGE_HEAD in addition to the more ordinary refs
under "refs/".  Remove the note claiming otherwise.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:21 -07:00
1054af7d04 wrapper.c: remove/unlink_or_warn: simplify, treat ENOENT as success
Simplify the function warn_if_unremovable slightly. Additionally, change
behaviour slightly. If we failed to remove the object because the object
does not exist, we can still return success back to the caller since none of
the callers depend on "fail if the file did not exist".

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:20 -07:00
2b2b1e4d27 mv test: recreate mod/ directory instead of relying on stale copy
The tests for 'git mv moves a submodule' functionality often run
commands like

	git mv sub mod/sub

to move a submodule into a subdirectory.  Just like plain /bin/mv,
this is supposed to succeed if the mod/ parent directory exists
and fail if it doesn't exist.

Usually these tests mkdir the parent directory beforehand, but some
instead rely on it being left behind by previous tests.

More precisely, when 'git reset --hard' tries to move to a state where
mod/sub is not present any more, it would perform the following
operations:

	rmdir("mod/sub")
	rmdir("mod")

The first fails with ENOENT because the test script removed mod/sub
with "rm -rf" already, so 'reset --hard' doesn't bother to move on to
the second, and the mod/ directory is kept around.

Better to explicitly remove and re-create the mod/ directory so later
tests don't have to depend on the directory left behind by the earlier
ones at all (making it easier to rearrange or skip some tests in the
file or to tweak 'reset --hard' behavior without breaking unrelated
tests).

Noticed while testing a patch that fixes the reset --hard behavior
described above.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-15 10:47:20 -07:00
05e73682cd checkout: report upstream correctly even with loosely defined branch.*.merge
When checking out a branch that is set to build on top of another
branch (often, a remote-tracking branch), "git checkout" reports how
your work relates to the other branch, e.g.

    Your branch is behind 'origin/master', and can be fast-forwarded.

Back when this feature was introduced, this was only done for
branches that build on remote-tracking branches, but 5e6e2b48 (Make
local branches behave like remote branches when --tracked,
2009-04-01) added support to give the same report for branches that
build on other local branches (i.e. branches whose branch.*.remote
variables are set to '.').  Unlike the support for the branches
building on remote-tracking branches, however, this did not take
into account the fact that branch.*.merge configuration is allowed
to record a shortened branch name.

When branch.*.merge is set to 'master' (not 'refs/heads/master'),
i.e. "my branch builds on the local 'master' branch", this caused
"git checkout" to report:

    Your branch is based on 'master', but the upstream is gone.

The upstream is our repository and is definitely not gone, so this
output is nonsense.

The fix is fairly obvious; just like the branch name is DWIMed when
"git pull" merges from the 'master' branch without complaint on such
a branch, the name of the branch the current branch builds upon
needs to be DWIMed the same way.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-14 15:12:07 -07:00
8f7ff5b2fe completion: silence "fatal: Not a git repository" error
It is possible that a user is trying to run a git command and fail
to realize that they are not in a git repository or working tree.
When trying to complete an operation, __git_refs would fall to a
degenerate case and attempt to use "git for-each-ref", which would
emit the error.

Hide this error message coming from "git for-each-ref".

Signed-off-by: John Szakmeister <john@szakmeister.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-14 13:06:13 -07:00
f6c5a2968c color_parse: do not mention variable name in error message
Originally the color-parsing function was used only for
config variables. It made sense to pass the variable name so
that the die() message could be something like:

  $ git -c color.branch.plain=bogus branch
  fatal: bad color value 'bogus' for variable 'color.branch.plain'

These days we call it in other contexts, and the resulting
error messages are a little confusing:

  $ git log --pretty='%C(bogus)'
  fatal: bad color value 'bogus' for variable '--pretty format'

  $ git config --get-color foo.bar bogus
  fatal: bad color value 'bogus' for variable 'command line'

This patch teaches color_parse to complain only about the
value, and then return an error code. Config callers can
then propagate that up to the config parser, which mentions
the variable name. Other callers can provide a custom
message. After this patch these three cases now look like:

  $ git -c color.branch.plain=bogus branch
  error: invalid color value: bogus
  fatal: unable to parse 'color.branch.plain' from command-line config

  $ git log --pretty='%C(bogus)'
  error: invalid color value: bogus
  fatal: unable to parse --pretty format

  $ git config --get-color foo.bar bogus
  error: invalid color value: bogus
  fatal: unable to parse default color value

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-14 11:01:21 -07:00
8852117a60 pass config slots as pointers instead of offsets
Many config-parsing helpers, like parse_branch_color_slot,
take the name of a config variable and an offset to the
"slot" name (e.g., "color.branch.plain" is passed along with
"13" to effectively pass "plain"). This is leftover from the
time that these functions would die() on error, and would
want the full variable name for error reporting.

These days they do not use the full variable name at all.
Passing a single pointer to the slot name is more natural,
and lets us more easily adjust the callers to use skip_prefix
to avoid manually writing offset numbers.

This is effectively a continuation of 9e1a5eb, which did the
same for parse_diff_color_slot. This patch covers all of the
remaining similar constructs.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-14 11:01:05 -07:00
670a3c1d5a Update draft release notes to 2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-14 10:59:04 -07:00
337233c502 Merge branch 'bc/asciidoc-pretty-formats-fix'
* bc/asciidoc-pretty-formats-fix:
  Documentation: fix misrender of pretty-formats in Asciidoctor
2014-10-14 10:50:21 -07:00
0189df3161 Merge branch 'rs/plug-leak-in-bundle'
* rs/plug-leak-in-bundle:
  bundle: plug minor memory leak in is_tag_in_date_range()
2014-10-14 10:50:10 -07:00
145c590df8 Merge branch 'rs/more-uses-of-skip-prefix'
* rs/more-uses-of-skip-prefix:
  use skip_prefix() to avoid more magic numbers
2014-10-14 10:50:07 -07:00
63434da0b4 Merge branch 'rs/mailsplit'
* rs/mailsplit:
  mailsplit: remove unnecessary unlink(2) call
2014-10-14 10:50:02 -07:00
40e2d8dbaf Merge branch 'rs/sha1-array-test'
* rs/sha1-array-test:
  sha1-lookup: handle duplicates in sha1_pos()
  sha1-array: add test-sha1-array and basic tests
2014-10-14 10:49:56 -07:00
11cb3130d5 Merge branch 'mh/lockfile-stdio'
* mh/lockfile-stdio:
  commit_packed_refs(): reimplement using fdopen_lock_file()
  dump_marks(): reimplement using fdopen_lock_file()
  fdopen_lock_file(): access a lockfile using stdio
2014-10-14 10:49:52 -07:00
bd107e1052 Merge branch 'mh/lockfile'
The lockfile API and its users have been cleaned up.

* mh/lockfile: (38 commits)
  lockfile.h: extract new header file for the functions in lockfile.c
  hold_locked_index(): move from lockfile.c to read-cache.c
  hold_lock_file_for_append(): restore errno before returning
  get_locked_file_path(): new function
  lockfile.c: rename static functions
  lockfile: rename LOCK_NODEREF to LOCK_NO_DEREF
  commit_lock_file_to(): refactor a helper out of commit_lock_file()
  trim_last_path_component(): replace last_path_elm()
  resolve_symlink(): take a strbuf parameter
  resolve_symlink(): use a strbuf for internal scratch space
  lockfile: change lock_file::filename into a strbuf
  commit_lock_file(): use a strbuf to manage temporary space
  try_merge_strategy(): use a statically-allocated lock_file object
  try_merge_strategy(): remove redundant lock_file allocation
  struct lock_file: declare some fields volatile
  lockfile: avoid transitory invalid states
  git_config_set_multivar_in_file(): avoid call to rollback_lock_file()
  dump_marks(): remove a redundant call to rollback_lock_file()
  api-lockfile: document edge cases
  commit_lock_file(): rollback lock file on failure to rename
  ...
2014-10-14 10:49:45 -07:00
7543dea8b2 Merge branch 'sk/tag-contains-wo-recursion'
* sk/tag-contains-wo-recursion:
  t7004: give the test a bit more stack space
2014-10-14 10:49:41 -07:00
cc7b2f8281 Merge branch 'da/completion-show-signature'
* da/completion-show-signature:
  completion: add --show-signature for log and show
2014-10-14 10:49:36 -07:00
dc11fc2de8 Merge branch 'rs/daemon-fixes'
"git daemon" (with NO_IPV6 build configuration) used to incorrectly
use the hostname even when gethostbyname() reported that the given
hostname is not found.

* rs/daemon-fixes:
  daemon: remove write-only variable maxfd
  daemon: fix error message after bind()
  daemon: handle gethostbyname() error
2014-10-14 10:49:23 -07:00
e2ebb5c433 Merge branch 'dt/cache-tree-repair'
This fixes a topic that has graduated to 'master'.

* dt/cache-tree-repair:
  t0090: avoid passing empty string to printf %d
2014-10-14 10:49:12 -07:00
792a572320 Merge branch 'so/rebase-doc-fork-point'
* so/rebase-doc-fork-point:
  Documentation/git-rebase.txt: document when --fork-point is auto-enabled
2014-10-14 10:49:07 -07:00
211836f77b Merge branch 'da/include-compat-util-first-in-c'
Code clean-up.

* da/include-compat-util-first-in-c:
  cleanups: ensure that git-compat-util.h is included first
2014-10-14 10:49:01 -07:00
a136f6d8ff test-lib.sh: support -x option for shell-tracing
Usually running a test under "-v" makes it clear which
command is failing. However, sometimes it can be useful to
also see a complete trace of the shell commands being run in
the test. You can do so without any support from the test
suite by running "sh -x tXXXX-foo.sh". However, this
produces quite a large bit of output, as we see a trace of
the entire test suite.

This patch instead introduces a "-x" option to the test
scripts (i.e., "./tXXXX-foo.sh -x"). When enabled, this
turns on "set -x" only for the tests themselves. This can
still be a bit verbose, but should keep things to a more
manageable level. You can even use "--verbose-only" to see
the trace only for a specific test.

The implementation is a little invasive. We turn on the "set
-x" inside the "eval" of the test code. This lets the eval
itself avoid being reported in the trace (which would be
long, and redundant with the verbose listing we already
showed). And then after the eval runs, we do some trickery
with stderr to avoid showing the "set +x" to the user.

We also show traces for test_cleanup functions (since they
can impact the test outcome, too). However, we do avoid
running the noop ":" cleanup (the default if the test does
not use test_cleanup at all), as it creates unnecessary
noise in the "set -x" output.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 15:39:57 -07:00
dc05179b5a t1308: fix broken here document in test script
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 15:25:42 -07:00
dfd66ddf5a Documentation: add documentation for 'git interpret-trailers'
While at it add git-interpret-trailers to "command-list.txt".

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 13:59:49 -07:00
b9384ff34e trailer: add tests for commands in config file
And add a few other tests for some special cases.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 13:59:48 -07:00
85039fb6e4 trailer: execute command from 'trailer.<name>.command'
Let the user specify a command that will give on its standard output
the value to use for the specified trailer.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 13:59:48 -07:00
76bed78a58 trailer: add tests for "git interpret-trailers"
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 13:59:45 -07:00
6634f05454 trailer: add interpret-trailers command
This patch adds the "git interpret-trailers" command.
This command uses the previously added process_trailers()
function in trailer.c.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 13:55:27 -07:00
b1d78d77bf trailer: put all the processing together and print
This patch adds the process_trailers() function that
calls all the previously added processing functions
and then prints the results on the standard output.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 13:55:27 -07:00
2013d8505d trailer: parse trailers from file or stdin
Read trailers from a file or from stdin, parse the trailers and then
put the result into a doubly linked list.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 13:55:27 -07:00
f0a90b4edf trailer: process command line trailer arguments
Parse the trailer command line arguments and put
the result into an arg_tok doubly linked list.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 13:55:27 -07:00
46a0613f00 trailer: read and process config information
Read the configuration to get trailer information, and then process
it and store it in a doubly linked list.

The config information is stored in the list whose first item is
pointed to by:

static struct trailer_item *first_conf_item;

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 13:55:26 -07:00
4103818d20 trailer: process trailers from input message and arguments
Implement the logic to process trailers from the input message
and from arguments.

At the beginning trailers from the input message are in their
own "in_tok" doubly linked list, and trailers from arguments
are in their own "arg_tok" doubly linked list.

The lists are traversed and when an "arg_tok" should be "applied",
it is removed from its list and inserted into the "in_tok" list.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 13:55:26 -07:00
9385b5d706 trailer: add data structures and basic functions
We will use a doubly linked list to store all information
about trailers and their configuration.

This way we can easily remove or add trailers to or from
trailer lists while traversing the lists in either direction.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 13:55:26 -07:00
f8a48affbb Documentation: fix mismatched delimiters in git-imap-send
The documentation for git-imap-send uses block delimiters with
mismatched lengths, which Asciidoctor doesn't support.  As a result, the
page is misrendered.  Adjust the delimiters so that they are of the same
length.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 13:35:37 -07:00
c9a5172fdf Documentation: adjust document title underlining
AsciiDoc specification states that in two-line titles, the title
underline has to be the same length as the title text, plus or minus two
characters.  Asciidoctor, however, requires that this must be plus or
minus one character.  Adjust the underlines to be the same length as the
title text to improve compatibility.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 13:35:18 -07:00
0c45d258ec pack-objects: set number of threads before checking and warning
Under NO_PTHREADS build, we warn when delta_search_threads is not
set to 1, because that is the only sensible value on a single
threaded build.

However, the auto detection that kicks in when that variable is set
to 0 (e.g. there is no configuration variable or command line option,
or an explicit --threads=0 is given from the command line to override
the pack.threads configuration to force auto-detection) was not done
before the condition to issue this warning was tested.

Move the auto-detection code and place it at an appropriate spot.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 12:53:46 -07:00
e0e21283b6 index-pack: fix compilation with NO_PTHREADS
type_cas_lock/unlock() should be defined as no-op for NO_PTHREADS
build, just like all the other locking primitives.

Signed-off-by: Etienne Buira <etienne.buira@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 12:33:30 -07:00
64a7e92f28 receive-pack: plug minor memory leak in unpack()
The argv_array used in unpack() is never freed.  Instead of adding
explicit calls to argv_array_clear() use the args member of struct
child_process and let run_command() and friends clean up for us.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 11:50:20 -07:00
8ad1652418 t5304: use helper to report failure of "test foo = bar"
For small outputs, we sometimes use:

  test "$(some_cmd)" = "something we expect"

instead of a full test_cmp. The downside of this is that
when it fails, there is no output at all from the script.
Let's introduce a small helper to make tests easier to
debug.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 11:27:40 -07:00
f1dd90bd19 t5304: use test_path_is_* instead of "test -f"
This is slightly more robust (checking "! test -f" would not
notice a directory of the same name, though that is not
likely to happen here). It also makes debugging easier, as
the test script will output a message on failure.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-13 11:27:07 -07:00
673151a9bb doc: add 'everyday' to 'git help'
The "Everyday GIT With 20 Commands Or So" is not accessible via the
Git help system.  Move everyday.txt to giteveryday.txt so that "git
help everyday" works, and create a new placeholder file everyday.html
to refer people who follow existing URLs to the updated location.

giteveryday.txt now formats well with AsciiDoc as a man page and
refreshed content to a more command modern style.

Add 'everyday' to the help --guides list and update git(1) and 5
other links to giteveryday.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-10 16:02:26 -07:00
5a568ea050 doc: Makefile regularise OBSOLETE_HTML list building
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-10 15:59:41 -07:00
992cb20688 doc: modernise everyday.txt wording and format in man page style
Refresh the contents of everyday.txt contents to a more modern
command style. Also update the mark-up so that it can be formatted
as a man page with AsciiDoc ready for transfer to the Git guides.
The transfer is in subsequent commits.

Guidance on modernising the command style provided by Junio at [1],
[2] and [3].

[1] Individual Developer, both Standalone and Participant
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/254269
[2] Integrator
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/254502
[3] Administrator
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/254824

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-10 15:59:40 -07:00
fca416a41e completion: use "git -C $there" instead of (cd $there && git ...)
We have had "git -C $there" to first go to a different directory
and run a Git command without changing the arguments for quite some
time.  Use it instead of (cd $there && git ...) in the completion
script.

This allows us to lose the work-around for misfeatures of modern
interactive-minded shells that make "cd" unusable in scripts (e.g.
end users' $CDPATH taking us to unexpected places in any POSIX
shell, and chpwd functions spewing unwanted output in zsh).

Based on Øystein Walle's idea, which was raised during the
discussion on the solution by Brandon Turner for a problem zsh users
had with RVM which mucks with chpwd_functions in users' environments
(https://github.com/wayneeseguin/rvm/issues/3076).

As $root variable, which is used to direct where to chdir to, is set
to "." based on if $2 to __git_index_files is set (not if it is empty),
the only caller of the function is fixed not to pass the optional $2
when it does not want us to switch to a different directory.  Otherwise
we would end up doing "git -C '' command...", which would not work.

Maybe we would want "git -C '' command..." to mean "do not chdir
anywhere", but that is a spearate topic.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-09 15:06:08 -07:00
c30c43c07d Documentation: fix misrender of pretty-formats in Asciidoctor
Neither the AsciiDoc nor the Asciidoctor documentation specify whether
the same number of delimiter characters must be used to end a block as
to begin it, although both sets of documentation show exactly matching
pairs.  AsciiDoc allows mismatches, but AsciiDoctor apparently does not.
Adjust the pretty formats documentation to use matching pairs to prevent
a misrendering where the remainder of the document was rendered as a
listing block.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-08 13:51:46 -07:00
63a45136a3 Update draft release notes to 2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-08 13:08:55 -07:00
f0d8900175 Merge branch 'sp/stream-clean-filter'
When running a required clean filter, we do not have to mmap the
original before feeding the filter.  Instead, stream the file
contents directly to the filter and process its output.

* sp/stream-clean-filter:
  sha1_file: don't convert off_t to size_t too early to avoid potential die()
  convert: stream from fd to required clean filter to reduce used address space
  copy_fd(): do not close the input file descriptor
  mmap_limit: introduce GIT_MMAP_LIMIT to allow testing expected mmap size
  memory_limit: use git_env_ulong() to parse GIT_ALLOC_LIMIT
  config.c: add git_env_ulong() to parse environment variable
  convert: drop arguments other than 'path' from would_convert_to_git()
2014-10-08 13:05:32 -07:00
9342f49738 Merge branch 'bw/use-write-script-in-tests'
* bw/use-write-script-in-tests:
  t/lib-credential: use write_script
2014-10-08 13:05:29 -07:00
b2c45f5b96 Merge branch 'nd/archive-pathspec'
"git archive" learned to filter what gets archived with pathspec.

* nd/archive-pathspec:
  archive: support filtering paths with glob
2014-10-08 13:05:26 -07:00
fb06b5280e Merge branch 'jc/push-cert'
Allow "git push" request to be signed, so that it can be verified and
audited, using the GPG signature of the person who pushed, that the
tips of branches at a public repository really point the commits
the pusher wanted to, without having to "trust" the server.

* jc/push-cert: (24 commits)
  receive-pack::hmac_sha1(): copy the entire SHA-1 hash out
  signed push: allow stale nonce in stateless mode
  signed push: teach smart-HTTP to pass "git push --signed" around
  signed push: fortify against replay attacks
  signed push: add "pushee" header to push certificate
  signed push: remove duplicated protocol info
  send-pack: send feature request on push-cert packet
  receive-pack: GPG-validate push certificates
  push: the beginning of "git push --signed"
  pack-protocol doc: typofix for PKT-LINE
  gpg-interface: move parse_signature() to where it should be
  gpg-interface: move parse_gpg_output() to where it should be
  send-pack: clarify that cmds_sent is a boolean
  send-pack: refactor inspecting and resetting status and sending commands
  send-pack: rename "new_refs" to "need_pack_data"
  receive-pack: factor out capability string generation
  send-pack: factor out capability string generation
  send-pack: always send capabilities
  send-pack: refactor decision to send update per ref
  send-pack: move REF_STATUS_REJECT_NODELETE logic a bit higher
  ...
2014-10-08 13:05:25 -07:00
325602ce12 Sync with maint
* maint:
  git-tag.txt: Add a missing hyphen to `-s`
2014-10-07 13:41:03 -07:00
3c2dc76f01 Merge branch 'maint-2.0' into maint
* maint-2.0:
  git-tag.txt: Add a missing hyphen to `-s`
2014-10-07 13:40:51 -07:00
76f8611a5f Merge branch 'maint-1.9' into maint-2.0
* maint-1.9:
  git-tag.txt: Add a missing hyphen to `-s`
2014-10-07 13:40:39 -07:00
9181365b85 Merge branch 'maint-1.8.5' into maint-1.9
* maint-1.8.5:
  git-tag.txt: Add a missing hyphen to `-s`
2014-10-07 13:40:19 -07:00
b6e8269e9b Merge branch 'jk/mbox-from-line' into maint
Some MUAs mangled a line in a message that begins with "From " to
">From " when writing to a mailbox file and feeding such an input to
"git am" used to lose such a line.

* jk/mbox-from-line:
  mailinfo: work around -Wstring-plus-int warning
  mailinfo: make ">From" in-body header check more robust
2014-10-07 13:39:27 -07:00
2ca0b197b8 completion: add --show-signature for log and show
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-07 12:00:48 -07:00
e3f1da982e use skip_prefix() to avoid more magic numbers
Continue where ae021d87 (use skip_prefix to avoid magic numbers) left off
and use skip_prefix() in more places for determining the lengths of prefix
strings to avoid using dependent constants and other indirect methods.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-07 11:09:16 -07:00
eeff891ac7 git-tag.txt: Add a missing hyphen to -s
Signed-off-by: Wieland Hoffmann <themineo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-07 11:08:06 -07:00
db7879438f mailsplit: remove unnecessary unlink(2) call
The output file hasn't been created at this point, yet, so there is no
need to delete it when exiting early.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-07 10:49:57 -07:00
64045940af bundle: plug minor memory leak in is_tag_in_date_range()
Free the buffer returned by read_sha1_file() even if no valid tagger
line is found.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-07 10:48:09 -07:00
6e578a31e6 commit_packed_refs(): reimplement using fdopen_lock_file()
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 14:20:25 -07:00
f70f0565b3 dump_marks(): reimplement using fdopen_lock_file()
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 14:20:22 -07:00
013870cd2c fdopen_lock_file(): access a lockfile using stdio
Add a new function, fdopen_lock_file(), which returns a FILE pointer
open to the lockfile. If a stream is open on a lock_file object, it is
closed using fclose() on commit, rollback, or close_lock_file().

This change will allow callers to use stdio to write to a lockfile
without having to muck around in the internal representation of the
lock_file object (callers will be rewritten in upcoming commits).

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 14:08:10 -07:00
697cc8efd9 lockfile.h: extract new header file for the functions in lockfile.c
Move the interface declaration for the functions in lockfile.c from
cache.h to a new file, lockfile.h. Add #includes where necessary (and
remove some redundant includes of cache.h by files that already
include builtin.h).

Move the documentation of the lock_file state diagram from lockfile.c
to the new header file.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:56:14 -07:00
216aab1e3d hold_locked_index(): move from lockfile.c to read-cache.c
lockfile.c contains the general API for locking any file. Code
specifically about the index file doesn't belong here.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:54:31 -07:00
4d423a3e62 hold_lock_file_for_append(): restore errno before returning
Callers who don't pass LOCK_DIE_ON_ERROR might want to examine errno
to see what went wrong, so restore errno before returning.

In fact this function only has one caller, add_to_alternates_file(),
and it *does* use LOCK_DIE_ON_ERROR, but, you know, think of future
generations.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:53:54 -07:00
ec38b4e482 get_locked_file_path(): new function
Add a function to return the path of the file that is locked by a
lock_file object. This reduces the knowledge that callers have to have
about the lock_file layout.

Suggested-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:53:54 -07:00
316683bd37 lockfile.c: rename static functions
* remove_lock_file() -> remove_lock_files()
* remove_lock_file_on_signal() -> remove_lock_files_on_signal()

Suggested-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:53:53 -07:00
47ba4662bf lockfile: rename LOCK_NODEREF to LOCK_NO_DEREF
This makes it harder to misread the name as LOCK_NODE_REF.

Suggested-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:53:28 -07:00
751bacedaa commit_lock_file_to(): refactor a helper out of commit_lock_file()
commit_locked_index(), when writing to an alternate index file,
duplicates (poorly) the code in commit_lock_file(). And anyway, it
shouldn't have to know so much about the internal workings of lockfile
objects. So extract a new function commit_lock_file_to() that does the
work common to the two functions, and call it from both
commit_lock_file() and commit_locked_index().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:52:06 -07:00
0c0d6e8601 trim_last_path_component(): replace last_path_elm()
Rewrite last_path_elm() to take a strbuf parameter and to trim off the
last path name element in place rather than returning a pointer to the
beginning of the last path name element. This simplifies the function
a bit and makes it integrate better with its caller, which is now also
strbuf-based. Rename the function accordingly and a bit less tersely.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:51:30 -07:00
6cad805332 resolve_symlink(): take a strbuf parameter
Change resolve_symlink() to take a strbuf rather than a string as
parameter.  This simplifies the code and removes an arbitrary pathname
length restriction.  It also means that lock_file's filename field no
longer needs to be initialized to a large size.

Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:51:29 -07:00
5025d8450a resolve_symlink(): use a strbuf for internal scratch space
Aside from shortening and simplifying the code, this removes another
place where the path name length is arbitrarily limited.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:51:29 -07:00
cf6950d3bf lockfile: change lock_file::filename into a strbuf
For now, we still make sure to allocate at least PATH_MAX characters
for the strbuf because resolve_symlink() doesn't know how to expand
the space for its return value.  (That will be fixed in a moment.)

Another alternative would be to just use a strbuf as scratch space in
lock_file() but then store a pointer to the naked string in struct
lock_file.  But lock_file objects are often reused.  By reusing the
same strbuf, we can avoid having to reallocate the string most times
when a lock_file object is reused.

Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:50:01 -07:00
3e88e8fc08 commit_lock_file(): use a strbuf to manage temporary space
Avoid relying on the filename length restrictions that are currently
checked by lock_file().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:49:01 -07:00
daccee387a try_merge_strategy(): use a statically-allocated lock_file object
Even the one lockfile object needn't be allocated each time the
function is called.  Instead, define one statically-allocated
lock_file object and reuse it for every call.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:49:01 -07:00
1fef4b5041 try_merge_strategy(): remove redundant lock_file allocation
By the time the "if" block is entered, the lock_file instance from the
main function block is no longer in use, so re-use that one instead of
allocating a second one.

Note that the "lock" variable in the "if" block shadowed the "lock"
variable at function scope, so the only change needed is to remove the
inner definition.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:49:00 -07:00
2091c5062c struct lock_file: declare some fields volatile
The function remove_lock_file_on_signal() is used as a signal handler.
It is not realistic to make the signal handler conform strictly to the
C standard, which is very restrictive about what a signal handler is
allowed to do.  But let's increase the likelihood that it will work:

The lock_file_list global variable and several fields from struct
lock_file are used by the signal handler.  Declare those values
"volatile" to (1) force the main process to write the values to RAM
promptly, and (2) prevent updates to these fields from being reordered
in a way that leaves an opportunity for a jump to the signal handler
while the object is in an inconsistent state.

We don't mark the filename field volatile because that would prevent
the use of strcpy(), and it is anyway unlikely that a compiler
re-orders a strcpy() call across other expressions.  So in practice it
should be possible to get away without "volatile" in the "filename"
case.

Suggested-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:49:00 -07:00
707103fdfd lockfile: avoid transitory invalid states
Because remove_lock_file() can be called any time by the signal
handler, it is important that any lock_file objects that are in the
lock_file_list are always in a valid state.  And since lock_file
objects are often reused (but are never removed from lock_file_list),
that means we have to be careful whenever mutating a lock_file object
to always keep it in a well-defined state.

This was formerly not the case, because part of the state was encoded
by setting lk->filename to the empty string vs. a valid filename.  It
is wrong to assume that this string can be updated atomically; for
example, even

    strcpy(lk->filename, value)

is unsafe.  But the old code was even more reckless; for example,

    strcpy(lk->filename, path);
    if (!(flags & LOCK_NODEREF))
            resolve_symlink(lk->filename, max_path_len);
    strcat(lk->filename, ".lock");

During the call to resolve_symlink(), lk->filename contained the name
of the file that was being locked, not the name of the lockfile.  If a
signal were raised during that interval, then the signal handler would
have deleted the valuable file!

We could probably continue to use the filename field to encode the
state by being careful to write characters 1..N-1 of the filename
first, and then overwrite the NUL at filename[0] with the first
character of the filename, but that would be awkward and error-prone.

So, instead of using the filename field to determine whether the
lock_file object is active, add a new field "lock_file::active" for
this purpose.  Be careful to set this field only when filename really
contains the name of a file that should be deleted on cleanup.

Helped-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:48:59 -07:00
e831855ecc git_config_set_multivar_in_file(): avoid call to rollback_lock_file()
After commit_lock_file() is called, then the lock_file object is
necessarily either committed or rolled back.  So there is no need to
call rollback_lock_file() again in either of these cases.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:48:59 -07:00
32c3ec258e dump_marks(): remove a redundant call to rollback_lock_file()
When commit_lock_file() fails, it now always calls
rollback_lock_file() internally, so there is no need to call that
function here.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:48:59 -07:00
d75145acf6 api-lockfile: document edge cases
* Document the behavior of commit_lock_file() when it fails, namely
  that it rolls back the lock_file object and sets errno
  appropriately.

* Document the behavior of rollback_lock_file() when called for a
  lock_file object that has already been committed or rolled back,
  namely that it is a NOOP.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:45:14 -07:00
1b1648f46b commit_lock_file(): rollback lock file on failure to rename
If rename() fails, call rollback_lock_file() to delete the lock file
(in case it is still present) and reset the filename field to the
empty string so that the lockfile object is left in a valid state.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:45:14 -07:00
8e86c155d2 close_lock_file(): if close fails, roll back
If closing an open lockfile fails, then we cannot be sure of the
contents of the lockfile, so there is nothing sensible to do but
delete it. This change also insures that the lock_file object is left
in a defined state in this error path (namely, unlocked).

The only caller that is ultimately affected by this change is
try_merge_strategy() -> write_locked_index(), which can call
close_lock_file() via various execution paths. This caller uses a
static lock_file object which previously could have been reused after
a failed close_lock_file() even though it was still in locked state.
This change causes the lock_file object to be unlocked on failure,
thus fixing this error-handling path.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:45:13 -07:00
8a1c7533e2 commit_lock_file(): die() if called for unlocked lockfile object
It was previously a bug to call commit_lock_file() with a lock_file
object that was not active (an illegal access would happen within the
function).  It was presumably never done, but this would be an easy
programming error to overlook.  So before continuing, do a consistency
check that the lock_file object really is locked.

Helped-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:45:13 -07:00
4f4713df94 commit_lock_file(): inline temporary variable
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:45:13 -07:00
a1754bcce9 remove_lock_file(): call rollback_lock_file()
It does just what we need.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:45:12 -07:00
e31e949b9f lock_file(): exit early if lockfile cannot be opened
This is a bit easier to read than the old version, which nested part
of the non-error code in an "if" block.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:45:12 -07:00
35ff08be09 prepare_index(): declare return value to be (const char *)
Declare the return value to be const to make it clear that we aren't
giving callers permission to write over the string that it points at.
(The return value is the filename field of a struct lock_file, which
can be used by a signal handler at any time and therefore shouldn't be
tampered with.)

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:45:12 -07:00
91f1f19184 delete_ref_loose(): don't muck around in the lock_file's filename
It's bad manners. Especially since there could be a signal during the
call to unlink_or_warn(), in which case the signal handler will see
the wrong filename and delete the reference file, leaving the lockfile
behind.

So make our own copy to work with.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:45:11 -07:00
7108ad232f cache.h: define constants LOCK_SUFFIX and LOCK_SUFFIX_LEN
There are a few places that use these values, so define constants for
them.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:45:11 -07:00
0a06f14837 lockfile.c: document the various states of lock_file objects
Document the valid states of lock_file objects, how they get into each
state, and how the state is encoded in the object's fields.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:45:11 -07:00
04e57d4d32 lock_file(): always initialize and register lock_file object
The purpose of this change is to make the state diagram for
lock_file objects simpler and deterministic.

If locking fails, lock_file() sometimes leaves the lock_file object
partly initialized, but sometimes not. It sometimes registers the
object in lock_file_list, but sometimes not. This makes the state
diagram for lock_file objects effectively indeterministic and hard
to reason about. A future patch will also change the filename field
into a strbuf, which needs more involved initialization, so it will
become even more important that the state of a lock_file object is
well-defined after a failed attempt to lock.

The ambiguity doesn't currently have any ill effects, because
lock_file objects cannot be removed from the lock_file_list anyway.
But to make it easier to document and reason about the code, make
this behavior consistent: *always* initialize the lock_file object
and *always* register it in lock_file_list the first time it is
used, regardless of whether an error occurs.

While we're at it, make sure that all of the lock_file fields are
initialized to values appropriate for an unlocked object; the caller
is only responsible for making sure that on_list is set to zero before
the first time it is used.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:43:50 -07:00
ebb8e380e9 hold_lock_file_for_append(): release lock on errors
If there is an error copying the old contents to the lockfile, roll
back the lockfile before exiting so that the lockfile is not held
until process cleanup.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:38:42 -07:00
41dd4ffaf9 lockfile: unlock file if lockfile permissions cannot be adjusted
If the call to adjust_shared_perm() fails, lock_file returns -1, which
to the caller looks like any other failure to lock the file.  So in
this case, roll back the lockfile before returning so that the lock
file is deleted immediately and the lockfile object is left in a
predictable state (namely, unlocked).  Previously, the lockfile was
retained until process cleanup in this situation.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:38:41 -07:00
26f5d3b65f rollback_lock_file(): set fd to -1
When rolling back the lockfile, call close_lock_file() so that the
lock_file's fd field gets set back to -1. This keeps the lock_file
object in a valid state, which is important because these objects are
allowed to be reused. It also makes it unnecessary to check whether
the file has already been closed, because close_lock_file() takes care
of that.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:38:41 -07:00
9085f8e279 rollback_lock_file(): exit early if lock is not active
Eliminate a layer of nesting.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:38:40 -07:00
5527d5349b rollback_lock_file(): do not clear filename redundantly
It is only necessary to clear the lock_file's filename field if it was
not already clear.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:38:39 -07:00
419f0c0f68 close_lock_file(): exit (successfully) if file is already closed
Suggested-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:38:39 -07:00
a5e48669a2 api-lockfile: revise and expand the documentation
Document a couple more functions and the flags argument as used by
hold_lock_file_for_update() and hold_lock_file_for_append().
Reorganize the document to make it more accessible.

Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Junio Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:38:38 -07:00
e197c21807 unable_to_lock_die(): rename function from unable_to_lock_index_die()
This function is used for other things besides the index, so rename it
accordingly.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:38:38 -07:00
107efbeb24 daemon: remove write-only variable maxfd
It became unused when 6573faff (NO_IPV6 support for git daemon) replaced
select() with poll().

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:34:56 -07:00
9d1b9aa9e1 daemon: fix error message after bind()
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:34:54 -07:00
eb6c403500 daemon: handle gethostbyname() error
If the user-supplied hostname can't be found then we should not use it.
We already avoid doing that in the non-NO_IPV6 case by checking if the
return value of getaddrinfo() is zero (success).  Do the same in the
NO_IPV6 case and make sure the return value of gethostbyname() isn't
NULL before dereferencing this pointer.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:34:53 -07:00
0eb0fb889e sha1-lookup: handle duplicates in sha1_pos()
If the first 18 bytes of the SHA1's of all entries are the same then
sha1_pos() dies and reports that the lower and upper limits of the
binary search were the same that this wasn't supposed to happen.  This
is wrong because the remaining two bytes could still differ.

Furthermore: It wouldn't be a problem if they actually were the same,
i.e. if all entries have the same SHA1.  The code already handles
duplicates just fine.  Simply remove the erroneous check.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:32:19 -07:00
38d905bf58 sha1-array: add test-sha1-array and basic tests
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-10-01 13:32:10 -07:00
c8db708d5d t0090: avoid passing empty string to printf %d
FreeBSD's printf(1) doesn't accept empty strings for numerical format
specifiers:

	$ printf "%d\n" "" >/dev/null; echo $?
	printf: : expected numeric value
	1

Initialize the AWK variable c to make sure the shell variable
subtree_count always contains a numerical value, in order to keep the
subsequently called printf happy.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-30 11:53:23 -07:00
565301e416 Sync with 2.1.2
* maint:
  Git 2.1.2
2014-09-29 22:17:57 -07:00
7dded6610e Merge branch 'jt/itimer-autoconf'
setitmer(2) and related API elements can be configured from
Makefile but autoconf did not know about it.

* jt/itimer-autoconf:
  autoconf: check for setitimer()
  autoconf: check for struct itimerval
  git-compat-util.h: add missing semicolon after struct itimerval
2014-09-29 22:17:24 -07:00
0ba92ef338 Merge branch 'jc/test-lazy-prereq'
Test-script clean-up.

* jc/test-lazy-prereq:
  tests: drop GIT_*_TIMING_TESTS environment variable support
2014-09-29 22:17:23 -07:00
ab9bc95d53 Merge branch 'sb/merge-recursive-copy-paste-fix'
"git merge-recursive" had a small bug that could have made it
mishandle "one side deleted, the other side did not touch it" in a
rare corner case, where the other side actually did touch to cause
the blob object names to be different but both blobs before and
after the change normalize to the same (e.g. correcting mistake to
check in a blob with CRLF line endings by replacing it with another
blob that records the same contents with LF line endings).

* sb/merge-recursive-copy-paste-fix:
  merge-recursive: remove stale commented debugging code
  merge-recursive: fix copy-paste mistake
2014-09-29 22:17:22 -07:00
131f0315c4 Merge branch 'pr/use-default-sigpipe-setting'
We used to get confused when a process called us with SIGPIPE
ignored; we do want to die with SIGPIPE when the output is not
read by default, and do ignore the signal when appropriate.

* pr/use-default-sigpipe-setting:
  mingw.h: add dummy functions for sigset_t operations
  unblock and unignore SIGPIPE
2014-09-29 22:17:20 -07:00
80b616d04b Git 2.1.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-29 22:15:00 -07:00
46c8f859b7 Merge branch 'jk/fsck-exit-code-fix' into maint
"git fsck" failed to report that it found corrupt objects via its
exit status in some cases.

* jk/fsck-exit-code-fix:
  fsck: return non-zero status on missing ref tips
  fsck: exit with non-zero status upon error from fsck_obj()
2014-09-29 22:10:55 -07:00
102edda4df Merge branch 'ta/config-add-to-empty-or-true-fix' into maint
"git config --add section.var val" used to lose existing
section.var whose value was an empty string.

* ta/config-add-to-empty-or-true-fix:
  config: avoid a funny sentinel value "a^"
  make config --add behave correctly for empty and NULL values
2014-09-29 22:10:25 -07:00
421ec4f8d1 Merge branch 'mk/reachable-protect-detached-head' into maint
Reachability check (used in "git prune" and friends) did not add a
detached HEAD as a starting point to traverse objects still in use.

* mk/reachable-protect-detached-head:
  reachable.c: add HEAD to reachability starting commits
2014-09-29 22:10:04 -07:00
5b830a8588 Merge branch 'mb/fast-import-delete-root' into maint
An attempt to remove the entire tree in the "git fast-import" input
stream caused it to misbehave.

* mb/fast-import-delete-root:
  fast-import: fix segfault in store_tree()
  t9300: test filedelete command
2014-09-29 22:09:48 -07:00
46092ebf22 Merge branch 'jk/index-pack-threading-races' into maint
When receiving an invalid pack stream that records the same object
twice, multiple threads got confused due to a race.

* jk/index-pack-threading-races:
  index-pack: fix race condition with duplicate bases
2014-09-29 22:09:24 -07:00
060517093e Merge branch 'jk/send-pack-many-refspecs' into maint
"git push" over HTTP transport had an artificial limit on number of
refs that can be pushed imposed by the command line length.

* jk/send-pack-many-refspecs:
  send-pack: take refspecs over stdin
2014-09-29 22:08:17 -07:00
e7867e80f0 Merge branch 'so/rebase-doc' into maint
* so/rebase-doc:
  Documentation/git-rebase.txt: <upstream> must be given to specify <branch>
  Documentation/git-rebase.txt: -f forces a rebase that would otherwise be a no-op
2014-09-29 22:08:12 -07:00
6433d56975 trace.c: do not mark getnanotime() as "inline"
Oracle Studio compilers don't allow for static variables in
functions that are defined to be inline. GNU C does permit this.

Let's reference the C99 standard though, which doesn't allow for
inline functions to contain modifiable static variables.

Signed-off-by: Ben Walton <bdwalton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-29 16:13:58 -07:00
0bf7dd652c Update draft release notes to 2.2 2014-09-29 12:44:43 -07:00
26d0587389 Merge branch 'jk/mbox-from-line'
Some MUAs mangled a line in a message that begins with "From " to
">From " when writing to a mailbox file and feeding such an input
to "git am" used to lose such a line.

* jk/mbox-from-line:
  mailinfo: work around -Wstring-plus-int warning
  mailinfo: make ">From" in-body header check more robust
2014-09-29 12:36:15 -07:00
12ba0e771c Merge branch 'sb/t6031-typofix'
* sb/t6031-typofix:
  t6031-test-merge-recursive: do not forget to add file to be committed
2014-09-29 12:36:14 -07:00
4d4dc66df0 Merge branch 'sb/t9300-typofix'
* sb/t9300-typofix:
  t9300-fast-import: fix typo in test description
2014-09-29 12:36:13 -07:00
60dfd8461b Merge branch 'rs/remote-simplify'
* rs/remote-simplify:
  remote: simplify match_name_with_pattern() using strbuf
2014-09-29 12:36:12 -07:00
0a2ba82c76 Merge branch 'rs/graph-simplify'
* rs/graph-simplify:
  graph: simplify graph_padding_line()
2014-09-29 12:36:11 -07:00
507fe835ed Merge branch 'da/rev-parse-verify-quiet'
"rev-parse --verify --quiet $name" is meant to quietly exit with a
non-zero status when $name is not a valid object name, but still
gave error messages in some cases.

* da/rev-parse-verify-quiet:
  stash: prefer --quiet over shell redirection of the standard error stream
  refs: make rev-parse --quiet actually quiet
  t1503: use test_must_be_empty
  Documentation: a note about stdout for git rev-parse --verify --quiet
2014-09-29 12:36:10 -07:00
b8e533f12a Merge branch 'hj/pretty-naked-decoration'
The pretty-format specifier "%d", which expanded to " (tagname)"
for a tagged commit, gained a cousin "%D" that just gives the
"tagname" without frills.

* hj/pretty-naked-decoration:
  pretty: add %D format specifier
2014-09-29 12:36:09 -07:00
f51a48ec3a Documentation/git-rebase.txt: document when --fork-point is auto-enabled
Running "git rebase" without giving a specific commit with respect
to which the operation is done enables --fork-point mode, while
telling the command to rebase with respect to a specific commit,
i.e. "git rebase <upstream>" does not.

This was not mentioned in the DESCRIPTION section of the manual
page, even though the case of omitted <upstream> was otherwise
discussed.  That in turn made actual behavior of vanilla "git
rebase" hardly discoverable.

While we are at it, clarify the --fork-point description itself as
well.

Signed-off-by: Sergey Organov <sorganov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-29 09:30:04 -07:00
c049216fdf t/lib-credential: use write_script
Use write_script to create the helper "askpass" script, instead of
hand-creating it with hardcoded "#!/bin/sh" to make sure we use the
shell the user told us to use.

Signed-off-by: Ben Walton <bdwalton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-29 09:06:52 -07:00
a9583afc1d Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  l10n: de.po: use comma before "um"
  l10n: de.po: change Email to E-Mail
  po/TEAMS: add new member to German translation team
2014-09-28 00:03:25 -07:00
62b553cdd6 Merge branch 'maint' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po into maint
* 'maint' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: use comma before "um"
  l10n: de.po: change Email to E-Mail
  po/TEAMS: add new member to German translation team
2014-09-28 00:02:57 -07:00
d29e9c89db Update draft release notes to 2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-26 14:59:32 -07:00
5d7f49dc79 Merge branch 'sb/help-unknown-command-sort-fix'
Code cleanup.

* sb/help-unknown-command-sort-fix:
  help: fix the size passed to qsort
2014-09-26 14:39:49 -07:00
5500095ff4 Merge branch 'jk/branch-verbose-merged'
The "--verbose" option no longer breaks "git branch --merged $it".

* jk/branch-verbose-merged:
  branch: clean up commit flags after merge-filter walk
2014-09-26 14:39:45 -07:00
1c2ea2cdc0 Merge branch 'rs/realloc-array'
Code cleanup.

* rs/realloc-array:
  use REALLOC_ARRAY for changing the allocation size of arrays
  add macro REALLOC_ARRAY
2014-09-26 14:39:45 -07:00
b33000878a Merge branch 'jk/close-stderr-of-credential-cache-deamon'
Plug fd leaks.

* jk/close-stderr-of-credential-cache-deamon:
  credential-cache: close stderr in daemon process
2014-09-26 14:39:45 -07:00
bdab1bca53 Merge branch 'jc/ignore-sigpipe-while-running-hooks'
pre- and post-receive hooks are no longer required to read all
their inputs.

* jc/ignore-sigpipe-while-running-hooks:
  receive-pack: allow hooks to ignore its standard input stream
2014-09-26 14:39:44 -07:00
c0f5f311db Merge branch 'jk/prune-packed-server-info'
Code cleanup.

* jk/prune-packed-server-info:
  repack: call prune_packed_objects() and update_server_info() directly
  server-info: clean up after writing info/packs
  make update-server-info more robust
  prune-packed: fix minor memory leak
2014-09-26 14:39:44 -07:00
f190737f22 Merge branch 'jc/hash-object-fsck-tag'
Using "hash-object --literally", test one of the new breakages
js/fsck-tag-validation topic teaches "fsck" to catch is caught.

* jc/hash-object-fsck-tag:
  t1450: make sure fsck detects a malformed tagger line
2014-09-26 14:39:44 -07:00
868440f546 Merge branch 'jc/hash-object'
"hash-object" learned a new "--literally" option to hash any random
garbage into a loose object, to allow us to create a test data for
mechanisms to catch corrupt objects.

* jc/hash-object:
  hash-object: add --literally option
  hash-object: pass 'write_object' as a flag
  hash-object: reduce file-scope statics
2014-09-26 14:39:43 -07:00
13f4f04692 Merge branch 'js/fsck-tag-validation'
Teach "git fsck" to inspect the contents of annotated tag objects.

* js/fsck-tag-validation:
  Make sure that index-pack --strict checks tag objects
  Add regression tests for stricter tag fsck'ing
  fsck: check tag objects' headers
  Make sure fsck_commit_buffer() does not run out of the buffer
  fsck_object(): allow passing object data separately from the object itself
  Refactor type_from_string() to allow continuing after detecting an error
2014-09-26 14:39:43 -07:00
9bc4222746 Merge branch 'jk/faster-name-conflicts'
Optimize the check to see if a ref $F can be created by making sure
no existing ref has $F/ as its prefix, which especially matters in
a repository with a large number of existing refs.

* jk/faster-name-conflicts:
  refs: speed up is_refname_available
2014-09-26 14:39:43 -07:00
69a5bbbbfa Merge branch 'jk/write-packed-refs-via-stdio'
Optimize the code path to write out the packed-refs file, which
especially matters in a repository with a large number of refs.

* jk/write-packed-refs-via-stdio:
  refs: write packed_refs file using stdio
2014-09-26 14:39:42 -07:00
061540fcf7 l10n: de.po: use comma before "um"
This patch adds a comma before the "um". See:
http://www.duden.de/sprachwissen/rechtschreibregeln/komma#K117

Signed-off-by: Phillip Sz <phillip.szelat@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-09-25 20:26:27 +02:00
f51ccda810 l10n: de.po: change Email to E-Mail
Change all Email to E-Mail, as this is the correct form in German.

Signed-off-by: Phillip Sz <phillip.szelat@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-09-25 20:25:55 +02:00
89a0ead829 po/TEAMS: add new member to German translation team
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-09-25 20:25:30 +02:00
6f5ef44e0d receive-pack::hmac_sha1(): copy the entire SHA-1 hash out
clang gives the following warning:

builtin/receive-pack.c:327:35: error: sizeof on array function
parameter will return size of 'unsigned char *' instead of 'unsigned
char [20]' [-Werror,-Wsizeof-array-argument]
        git_SHA1_Update(&ctx, out, sizeof(out));
                                         ^
builtin/receive-pack.c:292:37: note: declared here
static void hmac_sha1(unsigned char out[20],
                                   ^
Signed-off-by: Brian Gernhardt <brian@gernhardtsoftware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-25 11:12:57 -07:00
b9a1907899 t7004: give the test a bit more stack space
It was reported that the allocated stack space was too small for
some archs openSUSE buildfarm runs the tests on.  Double it while
also doubling the amount of data to be handled.

Reported-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Tested-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-23 15:41:38 -07:00
040b2ac978 merge-recursive: remove stale commented debugging code
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-23 11:31:41 -07:00
422af49c2f merge-recursive: fix copy-paste mistake
The following issue was found by scan.coverity.com (ID: 1049510),
and claimed to be likely a copy-paste mistake.

Introduced in 331a1838b (2010-07-02, Try normalizing files
to avoid delete/modify conflicts when merging), which is
quite a long time ago, so I'm rather unsure if it's of any impact
or just went unnoticed.

The line after the changed line has a comparison of 'o.len' to 'a.len',
so we should assume the lengths may be different.

I'd be happy to have a test for this bug(?) attached to
t6031-merge-recursive.sh, but I did not manage to
come up with a test in a reasonable amount of time.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-23 11:29:20 -07:00
85de86a16b mailinfo: work around -Wstring-plus-int warning
The just-released Apple Xcode 6.0.1 has -Wstring-plus-int enabled by
default which complains about pointer arithmetic applied to a string
literal:

    builtin/mailinfo.c:303:24: warning:
        adding 'long' to a string does not append to the string
            return !memcmp(SAMPLE + (cp - line), cp, strlen(SAMPLE) ...
                           ~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-22 13:46:43 -07:00
4e6d207c45 mingw.h: add dummy functions for sigset_t operations
Windows does not have POSIX-like signals, and so we ignore all
operations on the non-existent signal mask machinery.

Do not turn sigemptyset into a function, but leave it a macro that
erases the code in the argument because it is used to set sa_mask
of a struct sigaction, but our dummy in mingw.h does not have that
member.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-22 13:41:52 -07:00
8c3419bdbd t6031-test-merge-recursive: do not forget to add file to be committed
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-22 12:46:15 -07:00
634c42da22 t9300-fast-import: fix typo in test description
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-22 12:42:24 -07:00
9079ab7cb6 sha1_file: don't convert off_t to size_t too early to avoid potential die()
xsize_t() checks if an off_t argument can be safely converted to
a size_t return value.  If the check is executed too early, it could
fail for large files on 32-bit architectures even if the size_t code
path is not taken.  Other paths might be able to handle the large file.
Specifically, index_stream_convert_blob() is able to handle a large file
if a filter is configured that returns a small result.

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-22 12:40:55 -07:00
07bfa575c1 remote: simplify match_name_with_pattern() using strbuf
Make the code simpler and shorter by avoiding repetitive use of
string length variables and leaving memory allocation to strbuf
functions.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-22 12:40:27 -07:00
0176e7a71f graph: simplify graph_padding_line()
Deduplicate code common to both branches of if statements.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-22 12:39:57 -07:00
ed22b4173b archive: support filtering paths with glob
This patch fixes two problems with using :(glob) (or even "*.c"
without ":(glob)").

The first one is we forgot to turn on the 'recursive' flag in struct
pathspec. Without that, tree_entry_interesting() will not mark
potential directories "interesting" so that it can confirm whether
those directories have anything matching the pathspec.

The marking directories interesting has a side effect that we need to
walk inside a directory to realize that there's nothing interested in
there. By that time, 'archive' code has already written the (empty)
directory down. That means lots of empty directories in the result
archive.

This problem is fixed by lazily writing directories down when we know
they are actually needed. There is a theoretical bug in this
implementation: we can't write empty trees/directories that match that
pathspec.

path_exists() is also made stricter in order to detect non-matching
pathspec because when this 'recursive' flag is on, we most likely
match some directories. The easiest way is not consider any
directories "matched".

Noticed-by: Peter Wu <peter@lekensteyn.nl>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-22 12:04:29 -07:00
97b8860c07 Update draft release notes to 2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-19 14:25:09 -07:00
85e70c31ef Sync with Git 2.1.1 2014-09-19 14:22:43 -07:00
349cb50963 Git 2.1.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-19 14:21:31 -07:00
b8f7239058 Merge branch 'et/spell-poll-infinite-with-minus-one-only' into maint
* et/spell-poll-infinite-with-minus-one-only:
  upload-pack: keep poll(2)'s timeout to -1
2014-09-19 14:05:13 -07:00
08fd8a055c Merge branch 'nd/fetch-pass-quiet-to-gc-child-process' into maint
* nd/fetch-pass-quiet-to-gc-child-process:
  fetch: silence git-gc if --quiet is given
  fetch: convert argv_gc_auto to struct argv_array
2014-09-19 14:05:12 -07:00
fb6f843a8f Merge branch 'jk/prune-top-level-refs-after-packing' into maint
* jk/prune-top-level-refs-after-packing:
  pack-refs: prune top-level refs like "refs/foo"
2014-09-19 14:05:12 -07:00
04481347ec Merge branch 'jk/fast-import-fixes' into maint
* jk/fast-import-fixes:
  fast-import: fix buffer overflow in dump_tags
  fast-import: clean up pack_data pointer in end_packfile
2014-09-19 14:05:12 -07:00
a28e876b9d Merge branch 'jn/unpack-trees-checkout-m-carry-deletion' into maint
* jn/unpack-trees-checkout-m-carry-deletion:
  checkout -m: attempt merge when deletion of path was staged
  unpack-trees: use 'cuddled' style for if-else cascade
  unpack-trees: simplify 'all other failures' case
2014-09-19 14:05:12 -07:00
f7153344cf Merge branch 'sp/pack-protocol-doc-on-shallow' into maint
* sp/pack-protocol-doc-on-shallow:
  Document LF appearing in shallow command during send-pack/receive-pack
2014-09-19 14:05:11 -07:00
8ec959fbce Merge branch 'jk/prompt-stash-could-be-packed' into maint
* jk/prompt-stash-could-be-packed:
  git-prompt: do not look for refs/stash in $GIT_DIR
2014-09-19 14:05:11 -07:00
92ea1ac826 Merge branch 'rs/refresh-beyond-symlink' into maint
* rs/refresh-beyond-symlink:
  read-cache: check for leading symlinks when refreshing index
2014-09-19 14:05:11 -07:00
ffe41f8d32 Merge branch 'lf/bundle-exclusion' into maint
* lf/bundle-exclusion:
  bundle: fix exclusion of annotated tags
2014-09-19 14:05:11 -07:00
bb6ac5ea13 Merge branch 'jc/apply-ws-prefix' into maint
* jc/apply-ws-prefix:
  apply: omit ws check for excluded paths
  apply: hoist use_patch() helper for path exclusion up
  apply: use the right attribute for paths in non-Git patches

Conflicts:
	builtin/apply.c
2014-09-19 14:05:10 -07:00
04cd47f553 Merge branch 'jk/command-line-config-empty-string' into maint
* jk/command-line-config-empty-string:
  config: teach "git -c" to recognize an empty string

Conflicts:
	config.c
2014-09-19 14:05:10 -07:00
723361a572 Merge branch 'jk/pretty-empty-format' into maint
* jk/pretty-empty-format:
  pretty: make empty userformats truly empty
  pretty: treat "--format=" as an empty userformat
  revision: drop useless string offset when parsing "--pretty"
2014-09-19 14:05:09 -07:00
5d62e59e4c Merge branch 'jk/fsck-exit-code-fix'
"git fsck" failed to report that it found corrupt objects via its
exit status in some cases.

* jk/fsck-exit-code-fix:
  fsck: return non-zero status on missing ref tips
  fsck: exit with non-zero status upon error from fsck_obj()
2014-09-19 11:38:42 -07:00
9c9fbee8f5 Merge branch 'so/rebase-doc'
* so/rebase-doc:
  Documentation/git-rebase.txt: <upstream> must be given to specify <branch>
2014-09-19 11:38:42 -07:00
05fcf66b74 Merge branch 'ir/makefile-typofix'
* ir/makefile-typofix:
  Makefile: fix some typos in the preamble
2014-09-19 11:38:41 -07:00
74d159a4ed Merge branch 'wk/pre-push-sample-hook'
* wk/pre-push-sample-hook:
  pre-push.sample: Write error message to stderr
2014-09-19 11:38:41 -07:00
dd716840f0 Merge branch 'ss/compat-default-source-for-newer-gnu'
* ss/compat-default-source-for-newer-gnu:
  compat-util: add _DEFAULT_SOURCE define
2014-09-19 11:38:41 -07:00
49fb13bef1 Merge branch 'mr/mark-i18n-log-rerere'
* mr/mark-i18n-log-rerere:
  builtin/log.c: mark strings for translation
  rerere.h: mark string for translation
2014-09-19 11:38:41 -07:00
19f8c8b2da Merge branch 'js/no-test-cmp-for-binaries'
* js/no-test-cmp-for-binaries:
  t9300: use test_cmp_bin instead of test_cmp to compare binary files
2014-09-19 11:38:40 -07:00
4daf5c8643 Merge branch 'ta/config-add-to-empty-or-true-fix'
"git config --add section.var val" used to lose existing
section.var whose value was an empty string.

* ta/config-add-to-empty-or-true-fix:
  config: avoid a funny sentinel value "a^"
  make config --add behave correctly for empty and NULL values
2014-09-19 11:38:40 -07:00
9d6db4a28d Merge branch 'sp/doc-update-index-cacheinfo'
* sp/doc-update-index-cacheinfo:
  Documentation: use single-parameter --cacheinfo in example
2014-09-19 11:38:40 -07:00
56feed1c76 Merge branch 'rs/export-strbuf-addchars'
Code clean-up.

* rs/export-strbuf-addchars:
  strbuf: use strbuf_addchars() for adding a char multiple times
  strbuf: export strbuf_addchars()
2014-09-19 11:38:39 -07:00
9ee9c9d068 Merge branch 'kb/perf-trace'
Compilation fix for some compilers.

* kb/perf-trace:
  trace: correct trace_strbuf() parameter type for !HAVE_VARIADIC_MACROS
2014-09-19 11:38:39 -07:00
5dbdb3bed6 Merge branch 'jc/parseopt-verify-short-name'
Add checks for a common programming mistake to assign the same
short option name to two separate options to help developers.

* jc/parseopt-verify-short-name:
  parse-options: detect attempt to add a duplicate short option name
2014-09-19 11:38:38 -07:00
49cbc11ddb Merge branch 'mk/reachable-protect-detached-head'
* mk/reachable-protect-detached-head:
  reachable.c: add HEAD to reachability starting commits
2014-09-19 11:38:38 -07:00
b6de2dcb80 Merge branch 'tb/complete-diff-ignore-blank-lines'
* tb/complete-diff-ignore-blank-lines:
  completion: Add --ignore-blank-lines for diff
2014-09-19 11:38:38 -07:00
14e2ae6126 Merge branch 'as/calloc-takes-nmemb-then-size'
Code clean-up.

* as/calloc-takes-nmemb-then-size:
  calloc() and xcalloc() takes nmemb and then size
2014-09-19 11:38:37 -07:00
70f003e107 Merge branch 'tb/crlf-tests'
* tb/crlf-tests:
  MinGW: update tests to handle a native eol of crlf
  Makefile: propagate NATIVE_CRLF to C
  t0027: Tests for core.eol=native, eol=lf, eol=crlf
2014-09-19 11:38:37 -07:00
fbc122eafe Merge branch 'rs/simplify-http-walker'
Code clean-up.

* rs/simplify-http-walker:
  http-walker: simplify process_alternates_response() using strbuf
2014-09-19 11:38:36 -07:00
56bee6420c Merge branch 'rs/simplify-config-include'
Code clean-up.

* rs/simplify-config-include:
  config: simplify git_config_include()
2014-09-19 11:38:36 -07:00
7669461459 Merge branch 'rs/merge-tree-simplify'
Code clean-up.

* rs/merge-tree-simplify:
  merge-tree: remove unused df_conflict arguments
2014-09-19 11:38:36 -07:00
83510ef3fd Merge branch 'da/styles'
* da/styles:
  stylefix: asterisks stick to the variable, not the type
2014-09-19 11:38:35 -07:00
296b4c4bbf Merge branch 'ah/grammofix'
* ah/grammofix:
  grammofix in user-facing messages
2014-09-19 11:38:35 -07:00
4fc72d9106 Merge branch 'rs/more-uses-of-skip-prefix'
Code clean-up.

* rs/more-uses-of-skip-prefix:
  pack-write: simplify index_pack_lockfile using skip_prefix() and xstrfmt()
  connect: simplify check_ref() using skip_prefix() and starts_with()
2014-09-19 11:38:35 -07:00
73da5a1e85 Merge branch 'mb/fast-import-delete-root'
An attempt to remove the entire tree in the "git fast-import" input
stream caused it to misbehave.

* mb/fast-import-delete-root:
  fast-import: fix segfault in store_tree()
  t9300: test filedelete command
2014-09-19 11:38:34 -07:00
04631848c4 Merge branch 'jp/index-with-corrupt-stages'
A broken reimplementation of Git could write an invalid index that
records both stage #0 and higher stage entries for the same path.
Notice and reject such an index, as there is no sensible fallback
(we do not know if the broken tool wanted to resolve and forgot to
remove higher stage entries, or if it wanted to unresolve and
forgot to remove the stage#0 entry).

* jp/index-with-corrupt-stages:
  read_index_unmerged(): remove unnecessary loop index adjustment
  read_index_from(): catch out of order entries when reading an index file
2014-09-19 11:38:34 -07:00
bd656f6e7b Merge branch 'jk/index-pack-threading-races'
When receiving an invalid pack stream that records the same object
twice, multiple threads got confused due to a race.  We should
reject or correct such a stream upon receiving, but that will be a
larger change.

* jk/index-pack-threading-races:
  index-pack: fix race condition with duplicate bases
2014-09-19 11:38:34 -07:00
9ff700ebac Merge branch 'jk/commit-author-parsing'
Code clean-up.

* jk/commit-author-parsing:
  determine_author_info(): copy getenv output
  determine_author_info(): reuse parsing functions
  date: use strbufs in date-formatting functions
  record_author_date(): use find_commit_header()
  record_author_date(): fix memory leak on malformed commit
  commit: provide a function to find a header in a buffer
2014-09-19 11:38:33 -07:00
ceeacc501b Merge branch 'bb/date-iso-strict'
"log --date=iso" uses a slight variant of ISO 8601 format that is
made more human readable.  A new "--date=iso-strict" option gives
datetime output that is more strictly conformant.

* bb/date-iso-strict:
  pretty: provide a strict ISO 8601 date format
2014-09-19 11:38:32 -07:00
a60f434e20 Merge branch 'mb/build-contrib-svn-fe'
* mb/build-contrib-svn-fe:
  contrib/svn-fe: fix Makefile
2014-09-19 11:38:32 -07:00
b1de6b21f3 Merge branch 'jk/fast-export-anonymize'
Sometimes users want to report a bug they experience on their
repository, but they are not at liberty to share the contents of
the repository.  "fast-export" was taught an "--anonymize" option
to replace blob contents, names of people and paths and log
messages with bland and simple strings to help them.

* jk/fast-export-anonymize:
  docs/fast-export: explain --anonymize more completely
  teach fast-export an --anonymize option
2014-09-19 11:38:31 -07:00
d9dd4cebec Merge branch 'jk/send-pack-many-refspecs'
The number of refs that can be pushed at once over smart HTTP was
limited by the command line length.  The limitation has been lifted
by passing these refs from the standard input of send-pack.

* jk/send-pack-many-refspecs:
  send-pack: take refspecs over stdin
2014-09-19 11:38:31 -07:00
1956dfa818 stash: prefer --quiet over shell redirection of the standard error stream
Use `git rev-parse --verify --quiet` instead of redirecting
stderr to /dev/null.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-19 10:51:59 -07:00
c41a87dd80 refs: make rev-parse --quiet actually quiet
When a reflog is deleted, e.g. when "git stash" clears its stashes,
"git rev-parse --verify --quiet" dies:

	fatal: Log for refs/stash is empty.

The reason is that the get_sha1() code path does not allow us
to suppress this message.

Pass the flags bitfield through get_sha1_with_context() so that
read_ref_at() can suppress the message.

Use get_sha1_with_context1() instead of get_sha1() in rev-parse
so that the --quiet flag is honored.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-19 10:46:15 -07:00
9271095cc5 pretty: add %D format specifier
Add a new format specifier, '%D' that is identical in behaviour to '%d',
except that it does not include the ' (' prefix or ')' suffix provided
by '%d'.

Signed-off-by: Harry Jeffery <harry@exec64.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-18 15:15:21 -07:00
7559a1be8a unblock and unignore SIGPIPE
Blocked and ignored signals -- but not caught signals -- are inherited
across exec.  Some callers with sloppy signal-handling behavior can call
git with SIGPIPE blocked or ignored, even non-deterministically.  When
SIGPIPE is blocked or ignored, several git commands can run indefinitely,
ignoring EPIPE returns from write() calls, even when the process that
called them has gone away.  Our specific case involved a pipe of git
diff-tree output to a script that reads a limited amount of diff data.

In an ideal world, git would never be called with SIGPIPE blocked or
ignored.  But in the real world, several real potential callers, including
Perl, Apache, and Unicorn, sometimes spawn subprocesses with SIGPIPE
ignored.  It is easier and more productive to harden git against this
mistake than to clean it up in every potential parent process.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Reynolds <patrick.reynolds@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-18 10:38:49 -07:00
d333ac1785 help: fix the size passed to qsort
We actually want to have the size of one 'name' and not the size
of the pointer.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-18 10:17:53 -07:00
8376a70441 branch: clean up commit flags after merge-filter walk
When we run `branch --merged`, we use prepare_revision_walk
with the merge-filter marked as UNINTERESTING. Any branch
tips that are marked UNINTERESTING after it returns must be
ancestors of that commit. As we iterate through the list of
refs to show, we check item->commit->object.flags to see
whether it was marked.

This interacts badly with --verbose, which will do a
separate walk to find the ahead/behind information for each
branch. There are two bad things that can happen:

  1. The ahead/behind walk may get the wrong results,
     because it can see a bogus UNINTERESTING flag leftover
     from the merge-filter walk.

  2. We may omit some branches if their tips are involved in
     the ahead/behind traversal of a branch shown earlier.
     The ahead/behind walk carefully cleans up its commit
     flags, meaning it may also erase the UNINTERESTING
     flag that we expect to check later.

We can solve this by moving the merge-filter state for each
ref into its "struct ref_item" as soon as we finish the
merge-filter walk. That fixes (2). Then we are free to clear
the commit flags we used in the walk, fixing (1).

Note that we actually do away with the matches_merge_filter
helper entirely here, and inline it between the revision
walk and the flag-clearing. This ensures that nobody
accidentally calls it at the wrong time (it is only safe to
check in that instant between the setting and clearing of
the global flag).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-18 09:21:16 -07:00
2756ca4347 use REALLOC_ARRAY for changing the allocation size of arrays
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-18 09:13:42 -07:00
3ac22f82ed add macro REALLOC_ARRAY
The macro ALLOC_GROW manages several aspects of dynamic memory
allocations for arrays: It performs overprovisioning in order to avoid
reallocations in future calls, updates the allocation size variable,
multiplies the item size and thus allows users to simply specify the
item count, performs the reallocation and updates the array pointer.

Sometimes this is too much.  Add the macro REALLOC_ARRAY, which only
takes care of the latter three points and allows users to specfiy the
number of items the array can store.  It can increase and also decrease
the size.  Using the macro avoid duplicating the variable name and
takes care of the item sizes automatically.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-18 09:13:38 -07:00
5732373daa signed push: allow stale nonce in stateless mode
When operating with the stateless RPC mode, we will receive a nonce
issued by another instance of us that advertised our capability and
refs some time ago.  Update the logic to check received nonce to
detect this case, compute how much time has passed since the nonce
was issued and report the status with a new environment variable
GIT_PUSH_CERT_NONCE_SLOP to the hooks.

GIT_PUSH_CERT_NONCE_STATUS will report "SLOP" in such a case.  The
hooks are free to decide how large a slop it is willing to accept.

Strictly speaking, the "nonce" is not really a "nonce" anymore in
the stateless RPC mode, as it will happily take any "nonce" issued
by it (which is protected by HMAC and its secret key) as long as it
is fresh enough.  The degree of this security degradation, relative
to the native protocol, is about the same as the "we make sure that
the 'git push' decided to update our refs with new objects based on
the freshest observation of our refs by making sure the values they
claim the original value of the refs they ask us to update exactly
match the current state" security is loosened to accomodate the
stateless RPC mode in the existing code without this series, so
there is no need for those who are already using smart HTTP to push
to their repositories to be alarmed any more than they already are.

In addition, the server operator can set receive.certnonceslop
configuration variable to specify how stale a nonce can be (in
seconds).  When this variable is set, and if the nonce received in
the certificate that passes the HMAC check was less than that many
seconds old, hooks are given "OK" in GIT_PUSH_CERT_NONCE_STATUS
(instead of "SLOP") and the received nonce value is given in
GIT_PUSH_CERT_NONCE, which makes it easier for a simple-minded
hook to check if the certificate we received is recent enough.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-17 15:19:54 -07:00
0ea47f9d33 signed push: teach smart-HTTP to pass "git push --signed" around
The "--signed" option received by "git push" is first passed to the
transport layer, which the native transport directly uses to notice
that a push certificate needs to be sent.  When the transport-helper
is involved, however, the option needs to be told to the helper with
set_helper_option(), and the helper needs to take necessary action.
For the smart-HTTP helper, the "necessary action" involves spawning
the "git send-pack" subprocess with the "--signed" option.

Once the above all gets wired in, the smart-HTTP transport now can
use the push certificate mechanism to authenticate its pushes.

Add a test that is modeled after tests for the native transport in
t5534-push-signed.sh to t5541-http-push-smart.sh.  Update the test
Apache configuration to pass GNUPGHOME environment variable through.
As PassEnv would trigger warnings for an environment variable that
is not set, export it from test-lib.sh set to a harmless value when
GnuPG is not being used in the tests.

Note that the added test is deliberately loose and does not check
the nonce in this step.  This is because the stateless RPC mode is
inevitably flaky and a nonce that comes back in the actual push
processing is one issued by a different process; if the two
interactions with the server crossed a second boundary, the nonces
will not match and such a check will fail.  A later patch in the
series will work around this shortcoming.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-17 14:58:04 -07:00
b89363e4a5 signed push: fortify against replay attacks
In order to prevent a valid push certificate for pushing into an
repository from getting replayed in a different push operation, send
a nonce string from the receive-pack process and have the signer
include it in the push certificate.  The receiving end uses an HMAC
hash of the path to the repository it serves and the current time
stamp, hashed with a secret seed (the secret seed does not have to
be per-repository but can be defined in /etc/gitconfig) to generate
the nonce, in order to ensure that a random third party cannot forge
a nonce that looks like it originated from it.

The original nonce is exported as GIT_PUSH_CERT_NONCE for the hooks
to examine and match against the value on the "nonce" header in the
certificate to notice a replay, but returned "nonce" header in the
push certificate is examined by receive-pack and the result is
exported as GIT_PUSH_CERT_NONCE_STATUS, whose value would be "OK"
if the nonce recorded in the certificate matches what we expect, so
that the hooks can more easily check.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-17 14:27:40 -07:00
ec7dbd145b receive-pack: allow hooks to ignore its standard input stream
The pre-receive and post-receive hooks were designed to be an
improvement over old style update and post-update hooks, which take
the update information on their command line and are limited by the
command line length limit.  The same information is fed from the
standard input to pre/post-receive hooks instead to lift this
limitation.  It has been mandatory for these new style hooks to
consume the update information fully from the standard input stream.
Otherwise, they would risk killing the receive-pack process via
SIGPIPE.

If a hook does not want to look at all the information, it is easy
to send its standard input to /dev/null (perhaps a niche use of hook
might need to know only the fact that a push was made, without
having to know what objects have been pushed to update which refs),
and this has already been done by existing hooks that are written
carefully.

However, because there is no good way to consistently fail hooks
that do not consume the input fully (a small push may result in a
short update record that may fit within the pipe buffer, to which
the receive-pack process may manage to write before the hook has a
chance to exit without reading anything, which will not result in a
death-by-SIGPIPE of receive-pack), it can lead to a hard to diagnose
"once in a blue moon" phantom failure.

Lift this "hooks must consume their input fully" mandate.  A mandate
that is not enforced strictly is not helping us to catch mistakes in
hooks.  If a hook has a good reason to decide the outcome of its
operation without reading the information we feed it, let it do so
as it pleases.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-16 15:11:58 -07:00
95c68267ff Documentation/git-rebase.txt: <upstream> must be given to specify <branch>
Current syntax description makes one wonder if there is any
syntactic way to distinguish between <branch> and <upstream> so that
one can specify <branch> but not <upstream>, but that is not the
case.

Make it explicit that these arguments are positional, i.e. the
earlier ones cannot be omitted if you want to give later ones.

Signed-off-by: Sergey Organov <sorganov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-16 11:27:12 -07:00
2892dfeec3 t1503: use test_must_be_empty
Use `test_must_be_be_empty <file>` instead of `test -z "$(cat <file>)"`.

Suggested-by: Fabian Ruch <bafain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-16 11:13:10 -07:00
f5e3c0b9d0 credential-cache: close stderr in daemon process
If the stderr of "git credential-cache" is redirected to a
pipe, the reader on the other end of a pipe may be surprised
that the pipe remains open long after the process exits.
This happens because we may auto-spawn a daemon which is
long-lived, and which keeps stderr open.

We can solve this by redirecting the daemon's stderr to
/dev/null once we are ready to go into our event loop. We
would not want to do so before then, because we may want to
report errors about the setup (e.g., failure to establish
the listening socket).

This does mean that we will not report errors we encounter
for specific clients. That's acceptable, as such errors
should be rare (e.g., clients sending buggy requests).
However, we also provide an escape hatch: if you want to see
these later messages, you can provide the "--debug" option
to keep stderr open.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-16 11:11:58 -07:00
2da1f36671 mailinfo: make ">From" in-body header check more robust
Since commit 81c5cf7 (mailinfo: skip bogus UNIX From line inside
body, 2006-05-21), we have treated lines like ">From" in the body as
headers. This makes "git am" work for people who erroneously paste
the whole output from format-patch:

  From 12345abcd...fedcba543210 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
  From: them
  Subject: [PATCH] whatever

into their email body (assuming that an mbox writer then quotes
"From" as ">From", as otherwise we would actually mailsplit on the
in-body line).

However, this has false positives if somebody actually has a commit
body that starts with "From "; in this case we erroneously remove
the line entirely from the commit message. We can make this check
more robust by making sure the line actually looks like a real mbox
"From" line.

Inspect the line that begins with ">From " a more carefully to only
skip lines that match the expected pattern (note that the datestamp
part of the format-patch output is designed to be kept constant to
help those who write magic(5) entries).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-16 11:05:46 -07:00
56625df74c Documentation: a note about stdout for git rev-parse --verify --quiet
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 15:34:31 -07:00
9be89160e7 signed push: add "pushee" header to push certificate
Record the URL of the intended recipient for a push (after
anonymizing it if it has authentication material) on a new "pushee
URL" header.  Because the networking configuration (SSH-tunnels,
proxies, etc.) on the pushing user's side varies, the receiving
repository may not know the single canonical URL all the pushing
users would refer it as (besides, many sites allow pushing over
ssh://host/path and https://host/path protocols to the same
repository but with different local part of the path).  So this
value may not be reliably used for replay-attack prevention
purposes, but this will still serve as a human readable hint to
identify the repository the certificate refers to.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:28 -07:00
4adf569dea signed push: remove duplicated protocol info
With the interim protocol, we used to send the update commands even
though we already send a signed copy of the same information when
push certificate is in use.  Update the send-pack/receive-pack pair
not to do so.

The notable thing on the receive-pack side is that it makes sure
that there is no command sent over the traditional protocol packet
outside the push certificate.  Otherwise a pusher can claim to be
pushing one set of ref updates in the signed certificate while
issuing commands to update unrelated refs, and such an update will
evade later audits.

Finally, start documenting the protocol.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:28 -07:00
20a7558f31 send-pack: send feature request on push-cert packet
We would want to update the interim protocol so that we do not send
the usual update commands when the push certificate feature is in
use, as the same information is in the certificate.  Once that
happens, the push-cert packet may become the only protocol command,
but then there is no packet to put the feature request behind, like
we always did.

As we have prepared the receiving end that understands the push-cert
feature to accept the feature request on the first protocol packet
(other than "shallow ", which was an unfortunate historical mistake
that has to come before everything else), we can give the feature
request on the push-cert packet instead of the first update protocol
packet, in preparation for the next step to actually update to the
final protocol.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:28 -07:00
d05b9618ce receive-pack: GPG-validate push certificates
Reusing the GPG signature check helpers we already have, verify
the signature in receive-pack and give the results to the hooks
via GIT_PUSH_CERT_{SIGNER,KEY,STATUS} environment variables.

Policy decisions, such as accepting or rejecting a good signature by
a key that is not fully trusted, is left to the hook and kept
outside of the core.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:28 -07:00
a85b377d04 push: the beginning of "git push --signed"
While signed tags and commits assert that the objects thusly signed
came from you, who signed these objects, there is not a good way to
assert that you wanted to have a particular object at the tip of a
particular branch.  My signing v2.0.1 tag only means I want to call
the version v2.0.1, and it does not mean I want to push it out to my
'master' branch---it is likely that I only want it in 'maint', so
the signature on the object alone is insufficient.

The only assurance to you that 'maint' points at what I wanted to
place there comes from your trust on the hosting site and my
authentication with it, which cannot easily audited later.

Introduce a mechanism that allows you to sign a "push certificate"
(for the lack of better name) every time you push, asserting that
what object you are pushing to update which ref that used to point
at what other object.  Think of it as a cryptographic protection for
ref updates, similar to signed tags/commits but working on an
orthogonal axis.

The basic flow based on this mechanism goes like this:

 1. You push out your work with "git push --signed".

 2. The sending side learns where the remote refs are as usual,
    together with what protocol extension the receiving end
    supports.  If the receiving end does not advertise the protocol
    extension "push-cert", an attempt to "git push --signed" fails.

    Otherwise, a text file, that looks like the following, is
    prepared in core:

	certificate version 0.1
	pusher Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> 1315427886 -0700

	7339ca65... 21580ecb... refs/heads/master
	3793ac56... 12850bec... refs/heads/next

    The file begins with a few header lines, which may grow as we
    gain more experience.  The 'pusher' header records the name of
    the signer (the value of user.signingkey configuration variable,
    falling back to GIT_COMMITTER_{NAME|EMAIL}) and the time of the
    certificate generation.  After the header, a blank line follows,
    followed by a copy of the protocol message lines.

    Each line shows the old and the new object name at the tip of
    the ref this push tries to update, in the way identical to how
    the underlying "git push" protocol exchange tells the ref
    updates to the receiving end (by recording the "old" object
    name, the push certificate also protects against replaying).  It
    is expected that new command packet types other than the
    old-new-refname kind will be included in push certificate in the
    same way as would appear in the plain vanilla command packets in
    unsigned pushes.

    The user then is asked to sign this push certificate using GPG,
    formatted in a way similar to how signed tag objects are signed,
    and the result is sent to the other side (i.e. receive-pack).

    In the protocol exchange, this step comes immediately before the
    sender tells what the result of the push should be, which in
    turn comes before it sends the pack data.

 3. When the receiving end sees a push certificate, the certificate
    is written out as a blob.  The pre-receive hook can learn about
    the certificate by checking GIT_PUSH_CERT environment variable,
    which, if present, tells the object name of this blob, and make
    the decision to allow or reject this push.  Additionally, the
    post-receive hook can also look at the certificate, which may be
    a good place to log all the received certificates for later
    audits.

Because a push certificate carry the same information as the usual
command packets in the protocol exchange, we can omit the latter
when a push certificate is in use and reduce the protocol overhead.
This however is not included in this patch to make it easier to
review (in other words, the series at this step should never be
released without the remainder of the series, as it implements an
interim protocol that will be incompatible with the final one).
As such, the documentation update for the protocol is left out of
this step.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:20 -07:00
e543b3f6fe pack-protocol doc: typofix for PKT-LINE
Everywhere else we use PKT-LINE to denote the pkt-line formatted
data, but "shallow/deepen" messages are described with PKT_LINE().

Fix them.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:20 -07:00
d7c67668fe gpg-interface: move parse_signature() to where it should be
Our signed-tag objects set the standard format used by Git to store
GPG-signed payload (i.e. the payload followed by its detached
signature) [*1*], and it made sense to have a helper to find the
boundary between the payload and its signature in tag.c back then.

Newer code added later to parse other kinds of objects that learned
to use the same format to store GPG-signed payload (e.g. signed
commits), however, kept using the helper from the same location.

Move it to gpg-interface; the helper is no longer about signed tag,
but it is how our code and data interact with GPG.

[Reference]
*1* http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/297998/focus=1383

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:20 -07:00
a50e7ca321 gpg-interface: move parse_gpg_output() to where it should be
Earlier, ffb6d7d5 (Move commit GPG signature verification to
commit.c, 2013-03-31) moved this helper that used to be in pretty.c
(i.e. the output code path) to commit.c for better reusability.

It was a good first step in the right direction, but still suffers
from a myopic view that commits will be the only thing we would ever
want to sign---we would actually want to be able to reuse it even
wider.

The function interprets what GPG said; gpg-interface is obviously a
better place.  Move it there.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:20 -07:00
c67072b90b send-pack: clarify that cmds_sent is a boolean
We use it to make sure that the feature request is sent only once on
the very first request packet (ignoring the "shallow " line, which
was an unfortunate mistake we cannot retroactively fix with existing
receive-pack already deployed in the field) and we set it to "true"
with cmds_sent++, not because we care about the actual number of
updates sent but because it is merely an idiomatic way.

Set it explicitly to one to clarify that the code that uses this
variable only cares about its zero-ness.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:20 -07:00
b783aa71c0 send-pack: refactor inspecting and resetting status and sending commands
The main loop over remote_refs list inspects the ref status
to see if we need to generate pack data (i.e. a delete-only push
does not need to send any additional data), resets it to "expecting
the status report" state, and formats the actual update commands
to be sent.

Split the former two out of the main loop, as it will become
conditional in later steps.

Besides, we should have code that does real thing here, before the
"Finally, tell the other end!" part ;-)

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:19 -07:00
ab2b0c908a send-pack: rename "new_refs" to "need_pack_data"
The variable counts how many non-deleting command is being sent, but
is only checked with 0-ness to decide if we need to send the pack
data.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:19 -07:00
52d2ae582e receive-pack: factor out capability string generation
Similar to the previous one for send-pack, make it easier and
cleaner to add to capability advertisement.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:19 -07:00
887f3533fd send-pack: factor out capability string generation
A run of 'var ? " var" : ""' fed to a long printf string in a deeply
nested block was hard to read.  Move it outside the loop and format
it into a strbuf.

As an added bonus, the trick to add "agent=<agent-name>" by using
two conditionals is replaced by a more readable version.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:19 -07:00
64de20a126 send-pack: always send capabilities
We tried to avoid sending one extra byte, NUL and nothing behind it
to signal there is no protocol capabilities being sent, on the first
command packet on the wire, but it just made the code look ugly.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:19 -07:00
e40671a3d9 send-pack: refactor decision to send update per ref
A new helper function ref_update_to_be_sent() decides for each ref
if the update is to be sent based on the status previously set by
set_ref_status_for_push() and also if this is a mirrored push.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:19 -07:00
621b0599fd send-pack: move REF_STATUS_REJECT_NODELETE logic a bit higher
20e8b465 (refactor ref status logic for pushing, 2010-01-08)
restructured the code to set status for each ref to be pushed, but
did not quite go far enough.  We inspect the status set earlier by
set_refs_status_for_push() and then perform yet another update to
the status of a ref with an otherwise OK status to be deleted to
mark it with REF_STATUS_REJECT_NODELETE when the protocol tells us
never to delete.

Split the latter into a separate loop that comes before we enter the
per-ref loop.  This way we would have one less condition to check in
the main loop.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:19 -07:00
39895c74d8 receive-pack: factor out queueing of command
Make a helper function to accept a line of a protocol message and
queue an update command out of the code from read_head_info().

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:18 -07:00
c09b71ccc4 receive-pack: do not reuse old_sha1[] for other things
This piece of code reads object names of shallow boundaries, not
old_sha1[], i.e. the current value the ref points at, which is to be
replaced by what is in new_sha1[].

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:18 -07:00
0e3c339bb6 receive-pack: parse feature request a bit earlier
Ideally, we should have also allowed the first "shallow" to carry
the feature request trailer, but that is water under the bridge
now.  This makes the next step to factor out the queuing of commands
easier to review.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:18 -07:00
3bfcb95fa8 receive-pack: do not overallocate command structure
An "update" command in the protocol exchange consists of 40-hex old
object name, SP, 40-hex new object name, SP, and a refname, but the
first instance is further followed by a NUL with feature requests.

The command structure, which has a flex-array member that stores the
refname at the end, was allocated based on the whole length of the
update command, without excluding the trailing feature requests.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 13:23:18 -07:00
1c4b660412 cleanups: ensure that git-compat-util.h is included first
CodingGuidelines states that the first #include in C files should be
git-compat-util.h or another header file that includes it, such as
cache.h or builtin.h.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 12:05:14 -07:00
f978a99faf compat-util: add _DEFAULT_SOURCE define
glibc has deprecated the use of _BSD_SOURCE define

  warning "_BSD_SOURCE and _SVID_SOURCE are deprecated, use _DEFAULT_SOURCE"

To make it easier to maintain a cross platform source code, that
warning can be suppressed by _DEFAULT_SOURCE.

Define both _BSD_SOURCE and _DEFAULT_SOURCE to clean-up the build.

Signed-off-by: Sergey Senozhatsky <sergey.senozhatsky@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 12:02:43 -07:00
3b2c5413c9 Makefile: fix some typos in the preamble
Signed-off-by: Ian Liu Rodrigues <ian.liu88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 12:00:52 -07:00
4489a480fd repack: call prune_packed_objects() and update_server_info() directly
Call the functions behind git prune-packed and git update-server-info
directly instead of using run_command().  This is shorter, easier and
quicker.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 11:39:58 -07:00
3907a4078a server-info: clean up after writing info/packs
We allocate pack information in a static global list but
never clean it up. This leaks memory, and means that calling
update_server_info twice will generate a buggy file (it will
have duplicate entries).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 11:39:54 -07:00
d38379ece9 make update-server-info more robust
Since "git update-server-info" may be called automatically
as part of a push or a "gc --auto", we should be robust
against two processes trying to update it simultaneously.
However, we currently use a fixed tempfile, which means that
two simultaneous writers may step on each other's toes and
end up renaming junk into place.

Let's instead switch to using a unique tempfile via mkstemp.
We do not want to use a lockfile here, because it's OK for
two writers to simultaneously update (one will "win" the
rename race, but that's OK; they should be writing the same
information).

While we're there, let's clean up a few other things:

  1. Detect write errors. Report them and abort the update
     if any are found.

  2. Free path memory rather than leaking it (and clean up
     the tempfile when necessary).

  3. Use the pathdup functions consistently rather than
     static buffers or manually calculated lengths.

This last one fixes a potential overflow of "infofile" in
update_info_packs (e.g., by putting large junk into
$GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY). However, this overflow was probably
not an interesting attack vector for two reasons:

  a. The attacker would need to control the environment to
     do this, in which case it was already game-over.

  b. During its setup phase, git checks that the directory
     actually exists, which means it is probably shorter
     than PATH_MAX anyway.

Because both update_info_refs and update_info_packs share
these same failings (and largely duplicate each other), this
patch factors out the improved error-checking version into a
helper function.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 11:38:13 -07:00
1cc2c772dd prune-packed: fix minor memory leak
We form all of our directories in a strbuf, but never release it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 11:37:43 -07:00
e4a590efa2 builtin/log.c: mark strings for translation
Signed-off-by: Matthias Ruester <matthias.ruester@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 11:29:54 -07:00
3424a02252 rerere.h: mark string for translation
Signed-off-by: Matthias Ruester <matthias.ruester@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-15 11:29:46 -07:00
30d45f798d git-svn: delay term initialization
On my Debian 7 system, this fixes annoying warnings when the output
of "git svn" commands are redirected:

    Unable to get Terminal Size. The TIOCGWINSZ ioctl didn't work.
    The COLUMNS and LINES environment variables didn't work. The
    resize program didn't work.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-09-14 08:08:54 +00:00
a831a3fd86 git svn: find-rev allows short switches for near matches
Allow -B and -A to act as short aliases for --before and --after
options respectively.  This reduces typing and hopefully allows
reuse of muscle memory for grep(1) users.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-09-14 08:08:24 +00:00
26bb3c10ef git-svn.txt: Remove mentions of repack options
Git no longer seems to use these flags or their associated config keys;
when they are present, git-svn outputs a message indicating that they
are being ignored.

Signed-off-by: Lawrence Velázquez <vq@larryv.me>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-09-14 08:08:24 +00:00
4950eed520 git svn: info: correctly handle absolute path args
Calling "git svn info $(pwd)" would hit:
  "Reading from filehandle failed at ..."
errors due to improper prefixing and canonicalization.

Strip the toplevel path from absolute filesystem paths to ensure
downstream canonicalization routines are only exposed to paths
tracked in git (or SVN).

v2:
  Thanks to Andrej Manduch for originally noticing the issue
  and fixing my original version of this to handle
  more corner cases such as "/path/to/top/../top" and
  "/path/to/top/../top/file" as shown in the new test cases.

v3:
  Fix pathname portability problems pointed out by Johannes Sixt
  with a hint from brian m. carlson.

Cc: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Cc: "brian m. carlson" <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Andrej Manduch <amanduch@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-09-14 08:08:24 +00:00
785a1c8258 git-svn: branch: avoid systematic prompt for cert/pass
Commands such as "git svn init/fetch/dcommit" do not prompt for client
certificate/password if they are stored in SVN config file.  Make
"git svn branch" consistent with the other commands, as SVN::Client is
capable of building its own authentication baton from information in the
SVN config directory.

Signed-off-by: Monard Vong <travelingsoul86@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-09-14 08:08:24 +00:00
f9f3851b4d t9300: use test_cmp_bin instead of test_cmp to compare binary files
test_cmp is intended to produce diff output for human consumption. The
input in one instance in t9300-fast-import.sh are binary files, however.
Use test_cmp_bin to compare the files.

This was noticed because on Windows we have a special implementation of
test_cmp in pure bash code (to ignore differences due to intermittent CR
in actual output), and bash runs into an infinite loop due to the binary
nature of the input.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-12 14:21:16 -07:00
cbe7333181 refs: speed up is_refname_available
Our filesystem ref storage does not allow D/F conflicts; so
if "refs/heads/a/b" exists, we do not allow "refs/heads/a"
to exist (and vice versa). This falls out naturally for
loose refs, where the filesystem enforces the condition. But
for packed-refs, we have to make the check ourselves.

We do so by iterating over the entire packed-refs namespace
and checking whether each name creates a conflict. If you
have a very large number of refs, this is quite inefficient,
as you end up doing a large number of comparisons with
uninteresting bits of the ref tree (e.g., we know that all
of "refs/tags" is uninteresting in the example above, yet we
check each entry in it).

Instead, let's take advantage of the fact that we have the
packed refs stored as a trie of ref_entry structs. We can
find each component of the proposed refname as we walk
through the trie, checking for D/F conflicts as we go. For a
refname of depth N (i.e., 4 in the above example), we only
have to visit N nodes. And at each visit, we can binary
search the M names at that level, for a total complexity of
O(N lg M). ("M" is different at each level, of course, but
we can take the worst-case "M" as a bound).

In a pathological case of fetching 30,000 fresh refs into a
repository with 8.5 million refs, this dropped the time to
run "git fetch" from tens of minutes to ~30s.

This may also help smaller cases in which we check against
loose refs (which we do when renaming a ref), as we may
avoid a disk access for unrelated loose directories.

Note that the tests we add appear at first glance to be
redundant with what is already in t3210. However, the early
tests are not robust; they are run with reflogs turned on,
meaning that we are not actually testing
is_refname_available at all! The operations will still fail
because the reflogs will hit D/F conflicts in the
filesystem. To get a true test, we must turn off reflogs
(but we don't want to do so for the entire script, because
the point of turning them on was to cover some other cases).

Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-12 12:48:54 -07:00
b659605da6 t1450: make sure fsck detects a malformed tagger line
With "hash-object --literally", write a tag object that is not
supposed to pass one of the new checks added to "fsck", and make
sure that the new check catches the breakage.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-12 11:05:15 -07:00
40e94ca19a Merge branch 'js/fsck-tag-validation' into HEAD
* js/fsck-tag-validation:
  Make sure that index-pack --strict checks tag objects
  Add regression tests for stricter tag fsck'ing
  fsck: check tag objects' headers
  Make sure fsck_commit_buffer() does not run out of the buffer
  fsck_object(): allow passing object data separately from the object itself
  Refactor type_from_string() to allow continuing after detecting an error
2014-09-12 11:05:08 -07:00
f99b7af661 Make sure that index-pack --strict checks tag objects
One of the most important use cases for the strict tag object checking
is when transfer.fsckobjects is set to true to catch invalid objects
early on. This new regression test essentially tests the same code path
by directly calling 'index-pack --strict' on a pack containing an
tag object without a 'tagger' line.

Technically, this test is not enough: it only exercises a code path that
*warns*, not one that *fails*. The reason is that hash-object and
pack-objects both insist on parsing the tag objects and would fail on
invalid tag objects at this time.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-12 11:04:13 -07:00
30d1038d1b fsck: return non-zero status on missing ref tips
Fsck tries hard to detect missing objects, and will complain
(and exit non-zero) about any inter-object links that are
missing. However, it will not exit non-zero for any missing
ref tips, meaning that a severely broken repository may
still pass "git fsck && echo ok".

The problem is that we use for_each_ref to iterate over the
ref tips, which hides broken tips. It does at least print an
error from the refs.c code, but fsck does not ever see the
ref and cannot note the problem in its exit code. We can solve
this by using for_each_rawref and noting the error ourselves.

In addition to adding tests for this case, we add tests for
all types of missing-object links (all of which worked, but
which we were not testing).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-12 10:45:49 -07:00
c1063be2a3 config: avoid a funny sentinel value "a^"
Introduce CONFIG_REGEX_NONE as a more explicit sentinel value to say
"we do not want to replace any existing entry" and use it in the
implementation of "git config --add".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-11 16:33:54 -07:00
1a947ba3a3 pre-push.sample: Write error message to stderr
githooks(5) suggests:

  Information about why the push is rejected may be sent to the user
  by writing to standard error.

So follow that advice in the sample.

Signed-off-by: W. Trevor King <wking@tremily.us>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-11 15:26:35 -07:00
5ba9a93b39 hash-object: add --literally option
This allows "hash-object --stdin" to just hash any garbage into a
"loose object" that may not pass the standard object parsing check
or fsck, so that different kind of corrupt objects we may encounter
in the field can be imitated in our test suite.  That would in turn
allow us to test features that catch these corrupt objects.

Note that "cat-file" may need to learn "--literally" option to allow
us peek into a truly broken object.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-11 14:23:51 -07:00
90e3e5f057 Add regression tests for stricter tag fsck'ing
The intent of the new test case is to catch general breakages in
the fsck_tag() function, not so much to test it extensively, trying to
strike the proper balance between thoroughness and speed.

While it *would* have been nice to test the code path where fsck_object()
encounters an invalid tag object, this is not possible using git fsck: tag
objects are parsed already before fsck'ing (and the parser already fails
upon such objects).

Even worse: we would not even be able write out invalid tag objects
because git hash-object parses those objects, too, unless we resorted to
really ugly hacks such as using something like this in the unit tests
(essentially depending on Perl *and* Compress::Zlib):

	hash_invalid_object () {
		contents="$(printf '%s %d\0%s' "$1" ${#2} "$2")" &&
		sha1=$(echo "$contents" | test-sha1) &&
		suffix=${sha1#??} &&
		mkdir -p .git/objects/${sha1%$suffix} &&
		echo "$contents" |
		perl -MCompress::Zlib -e 'undef $/; print compress(<>)' \
			> .git/objects/${sha1%$suffix}/$suffix &&
		echo $sha1
	}

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-11 14:19:09 -07:00
17b787f603 hash-object: pass 'write_object' as a flag
Instead of forcing callers of lower level functions write
(write_object ? HASH_WRITE_OBJECT : 0), prepare the flag to be
passed down in the callchain from the command line parser.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-11 12:48:01 -07:00
b64a984606 hash-object: reduce file-scope statics
Most of the knobs that affect helper functions called from
cmd_hash_object() were passed to them as parameters already, and the
only effect of having them as file-scope statics was to make the
reader wonder if the parameters are hiding the file-scope global
values by accident.  Adjust their initialisation and make them
function-local variables.

The only exception was no_filters hash_stdin_paths() peeked from the
file-scope global, which was converted to a parameter to the helper
function.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-11 12:23:42 -07:00
ce1d3a93a6 Update draft release notes to 2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-11 11:19:47 -07:00
cec097be3a fsck: check tag objects' headers
We inspect commit objects pretty much in detail in git-fsck, but we just
glanced over the tag objects. Let's be stricter.

Since we do not want to limit 'tag' lines unduly, values that would fail
the refname check only result in warnings, not errors.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-11 10:44:26 -07:00
4d0d89755e Make sure fsck_commit_buffer() does not run out of the buffer
So far, we assumed that the buffer is NUL terminated, but this is not
a safe assumption, now that we opened the fsck_object() API to pass a
buffer directly.

So let's make sure that there is at least an empty line in the buffer.
That way, our checks would fail if the empty line was encountered
prematurely, and consequently we can get away with the current string
comparisons even with non-NUL-terminated buffers are passed to
fsck_object().

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-11 10:44:01 -07:00
7ac92f64dd Documentation: use single-parameter --cacheinfo in example
The single-parameter form is described as the preferred way.  Separate
arguments are only supported for backward compatibility.  Update the
example to the recommended form.

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-11 10:38:02 -07:00
5dcdc7809e Merge branch 'br/imap-send-simplify-tunnel-child-process'
Code clean-up.

* br/imap-send-simplify-tunnel-child-process:
  imap-send: simplify v_issue_imap_cmd() and get_cmd_result() using starts_with()
  imap-send.c: imap_folder -> imap_server_conf.folder
  git-imap-send: simplify tunnel construction
2014-09-11 10:33:37 -07:00
1ebe6a825a Merge branch 'jk/name-decoration-alloc'
The API to allocate the structure to keep track of commit
decoration was cumbersome to use, inviting lazy code to
overallocate memory.

* jk/name-decoration-alloc:
  log-tree: use FLEX_ARRAY in name_decoration
  log-tree: make name_decoration hash static
  log-tree: make add_name_decoration a public function
2014-09-11 10:33:36 -07:00
f28763d756 Merge branch 'jn/unpack-trees-checkout-m-carry-deletion'
"git checkout -m" did not switch to another branch while carrying
the local changes forward when a path was deleted from the index.

* jn/unpack-trees-checkout-m-carry-deletion:
  checkout -m: attempt merge when deletion of path was staged
  unpack-trees: use 'cuddled' style for if-else cascade
  unpack-trees: simplify 'all other failures' case
2014-09-11 10:33:36 -07:00
294792326a Merge branch 'rs/list-optim'
Fix a couple of "accumulate into a sorted list" to "accumulate and
then sort the list".

* rs/list-optim:
  walker: avoid quadratic list insertion in mark_complete
  sha1_name: avoid quadratic list insertion in handle_one_ref
2014-09-11 10:33:35 -07:00
b6a1261751 Merge branch 'jk/fast-import-fixes'
With sufficiently long refnames, fast-import could have overflown
an on-stack buffer.

* jk/fast-import-fixes:
  fast-import: fix buffer overflow in dump_tags
  fast-import: clean up pack_data pointer in end_packfile
2014-09-11 10:33:34 -07:00
88e7dff93d Merge branch 'jk/prune-top-level-refs-after-packing'
After "pack-refs --prune" packed refs at the top-level, it failed
to prune them.

* jk/prune-top-level-refs-after-packing:
  pack-refs: prune top-level refs like "refs/foo"
2014-09-11 10:33:33 -07:00
bedd3b4b7b Merge branch 'nd/large-blobs'
Teach a few codepaths to punt (instead of dying) when large blobs
that would not fit in core are involved in the operation.

* nd/large-blobs:
  diff: shortcut for diff'ing two binary SHA-1 objects
  diff --stat: mark any file larger than core.bigfilethreshold binary
  diff.c: allow to pass more flags to diff_populate_filespec
  sha1_file.c: do not die failing to malloc in unpack_compressed_entry
  wrapper.c: introduce gentle xmallocz that does not die()
2014-09-11 10:33:33 -07:00
08ad26a63d Merge branch 'nd/fetch-pass-quiet-to-gc-child-process'
Progress output from "git gc --auto" was visible in "git fetch -q".

* nd/fetch-pass-quiet-to-gc-child-process:
  fetch: silence git-gc if --quiet is given
  fetch: convert argv_gc_auto to struct argv_array
2014-09-11 10:33:32 -07:00
3fd13cbcd5 Merge branch 'dt/cache-tree-repair'
Add a few more places in "commit" and "checkout" that make sure
that the cache-tree is fully populated in the index.

* dt/cache-tree-repair:
  cache-tree: do not try to use an invalidated subtree info to build a tree
  cache-tree: Write updated cache-tree after commit
  cache-tree: subdirectory tests
  test-dump-cache-tree: invalid trees are not errors
  cache-tree: create/update cache-tree on checkout
2014-09-11 10:33:32 -07:00
01d678a226 Merge branch 'rs/ref-transaction-1'
The second batch of the transactional ref update series.

* rs/ref-transaction-1: (22 commits)
  update-ref --stdin: pass transaction around explicitly
  update-ref --stdin: narrow scope of err strbuf
  refs.c: make delete_ref use a transaction
  refs.c: make prune_ref use a transaction to delete the ref
  refs.c: remove lock_ref_sha1
  refs.c: remove the update_ref_write function
  refs.c: remove the update_ref_lock function
  refs.c: make lock_ref_sha1 static
  walker.c: use ref transaction for ref updates
  fast-import.c: use a ref transaction when dumping tags
  receive-pack.c: use a reference transaction for updating the refs
  refs.c: change update_ref to use a transaction
  branch.c: use ref transaction for all ref updates
  fast-import.c: change update_branch to use ref transactions
  sequencer.c: use ref transactions for all ref updates
  commit.c: use ref transactions for updates
  replace.c: use the ref transaction functions for updates
  tag.c: use ref transactions when doing updates
  refs.c: add transaction.status and track OPEN/CLOSED
  refs.c: make ref_transaction_begin take an err argument
  ...
2014-09-11 10:33:31 -07:00
5e1dc48858 Merge branch 'nd/mv-code-cleaning'
Code clean-up.

* nd/mv-code-cleaning:
  mv: no SP between function name and the first opening parenthese
  mv: combine two if(s)
  mv: unindent one level for directory move code
  mv: move index search code out
  mv: remove an "if" that's always true
  mv: split submodule move preparation code out
  mv: flatten error handling code block
  mv: mark strings for translations
2014-09-11 10:33:30 -07:00
785514bb55 Merge branch 'mm/discourage-commit-a-to-finish-conflict-resolution'
* mm/discourage-commit-a-to-finish-conflict-resolution:
  merge, pull: stop advising 'commit -a' in case of conflict
2014-09-11 10:33:30 -07:00
683b4d828c Merge branch 'jk/make-simplify-dependencies'
Admit that keeping LIB_H up-to-date, only for those that do not use
the automatically generated dependencies, is a losing battle, and
make it conservative by making everything depend on anything.

* jk/make-simplify-dependencies:
  Makefile: drop CHECK_HEADER_DEPENDENCIES code
  Makefile: use `find` to determine static header dependencies
  i18n: treat "make pot" as an explicitly-invoked target
2014-09-11 10:33:29 -07:00
9ddd68973a Merge branch 'et/spell-poll-infinite-with-minus-one-only'
We used to pass -1000 to poll(2), expecting it to also mean "no
timeout", which should be spelled as -1.

* et/spell-poll-infinite-with-minus-one-only:
  upload-pack: keep poll(2)'s timeout to -1
2014-09-11 10:33:29 -07:00
6c1d42acae Merge branch 'br/http-init-fix'
Code clean-up.

* br/http-init-fix:
  http: style fixes for curl_multi_init error check
  http.c: die if curl_*_init fails
2014-09-11 10:33:28 -07:00
825fd93767 Merge branch 'rs/child-process-init'
Code clean-up.

* rs/child-process-init:
  run-command: inline prepare_run_command_v_opt()
  run-command: call run_command_v_opt_cd_env() instead of duplicating it
  run-command: introduce child_process_init()
  run-command: introduce CHILD_PROCESS_INIT
2014-09-11 10:33:27 -07:00
49feda62bd Merge branch 'jk/contrib-subtree-make-all'
* jk/contrib-subtree-make-all:
  subtree: make "all" default target of Makefile
2014-09-11 10:33:27 -07:00
554913daf4 Merge branch 'ta/config-set-2'
Update git_config() users with callback functions for a very narrow
scope with calls to config-set API that lets us query a single
variable.

* ta/config-set-2:
  builtin/apply.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_string_const()`
  merge-recursive.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_int()`
  ll-merge.c: refactor `read_merge_config()` to use `git_config_string()`
  fast-import.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_*()` family
  branch.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_string()
  alias.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_string()`
  imap-send.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_*()` family
  pager.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_value()`
  builtin/gc.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_*()` family
  rerere.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_*()` family
  fetchpack.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_*()` family
  archive.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_bool()` family
  read-cache.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_*()` family
  http-backend.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_bool()` family
  daemon.c: replace `git_config()` with `git_config_get_bool()` family
2014-09-11 10:33:26 -07:00
7f346e9d73 Merge branch 'ta/config-set-1'
Use the new caching config-set API in git_config() calls.

* ta/config-set-1:
  add tests for `git_config_get_string_const()`
  add a test for semantic errors in config files
  rewrite git_config() to use the config-set API
  config: add `git_die_config()` to the config-set API
  change `git_config()` return value to void
  add line number and file name info to `config_set`
  config.c: fix accuracy of line number in errors
  config.c: mark error and warnings strings for translation
2014-09-11 10:33:25 -07:00
90a398bbd7 fsck_object(): allow passing object data separately from the object itself
When fsck'ing an incoming pack, we need to fsck objects that cannot be
read via read_sha1_file() because they are not local yet (and might even
be rejected if transfer.fsckobjects is set to 'true').

For commits, there is a hack in place: we basically cache commit
objects' buffers anyway, but the same is not true, say, for tag objects.

By refactoring fsck_object() to take the object buffer and size as
optional arguments -- optional, because we still fall back to the
previous method to look at the cached commit objects if the caller
passes NULL -- we prepare the machinery for the upcoming handling of tag
objects.

The assumption that such buffers are inherently NUL terminated is now
wrong, of course, hence we pass the size of the buffer so that we can
add a sanity check later, to prevent running past the end of the buffer.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-10 13:54:21 -07:00
fe8e3b7180 Refactor type_from_string() to allow continuing after detecting an error
In the next commits, we will enhance the fsck_tag() function to check
tag objects more thoroughly. To this end, we need a function to verify
that a given string is a valid object type, but that does not die() in
the negative case.

While at it, prepare type_from_string() for counted strings, i.e. strings
with an explicitly specified length rather than a NUL termination.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-10 13:52:13 -07:00
9540ce5030 refs: write packed_refs file using stdio
We write each line of a new packed-refs file individually
using a write() syscall (and sometimes 2, if the ref is
peeled). Since each line is only about 50-100 bytes long,
this creates a lot of system call overhead.

We can instead open a stdio handle around our descriptor and
use fprintf to write to it. The extra buffering is not a
problem for us, because nobody will read our new packed-refs
file until we call commit_lock_file (by which point we have
flushed everything).

On a pathological repository with 8.5 million refs, this
dropped the time to run `git pack-refs` from 20s to 6s.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-10 10:58:32 -07:00
2e770fe47e fsck: exit with non-zero status upon error from fsck_obj()
Upon finding a corrupt loose object, we forgot to note the error to
signal it with the exit status of the entire process.

[jc: adjusted t1450 and added another test]

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-10 09:40:53 -07:00
0c72b98f31 Update draft release notes to 2.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-09 13:06:26 -07:00
346fad5bb3 Merge branch 'sp/pack-protocol-doc-on-shallow'
* sp/pack-protocol-doc-on-shallow:
  Document LF appearing in shallow command during send-pack/receive-pack
2014-09-09 12:54:09 -07:00
c0ad561a46 Merge branch 'tf/imap-send-create'
* tf/imap-send-create:
  imap-send: create target mailbox if it is missing
  imap-send: clarify CRAM-MD5 vs LOGIN documentation
2014-09-09 12:54:09 -07:00
64014894cf Merge branch 'jk/prompt-stash-could-be-packed'
The prompt script checked $GIT_DIR/ref/stash file to see if there
is a stash, which was a no-no.

* jk/prompt-stash-could-be-packed:
  git-prompt: do not look for refs/stash in $GIT_DIR
2014-09-09 12:54:08 -07:00
3ef87bd872 Merge branch 'tb/pretty-format-cd-date-format'
Documentation update.

* tb/pretty-format-cd-date-format:
  pretty: note that %cd respects the --date= option
2014-09-09 12:54:08 -07:00
73353e0f65 Merge branch 'rs/inline-compat-path-macros'
* rs/inline-compat-path-macros:
  turn path macros into inline function
2014-09-09 12:54:07 -07:00
8015a60715 Merge branch 'rs/clean-menu-item-defn'
* rs/clean-menu-item-defn:
  clean: use f(void) instead of f() to declare a pointer to a function without arguments
2014-09-09 12:54:06 -07:00
55b6dffd13 Merge branch 'jc/config-mak-document-darwin-vs-macosx'
* jc/config-mak-document-darwin-vs-macosx:
  config.mak.uname: add hint on uname_R for MacOS X
  config.mak.uname: set NO_APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO on older systems
2014-09-09 12:54:05 -07:00
08668f1802 Merge branch 'sb/mailsplit-dead-code-removal'
* sb/mailsplit-dead-code-removal:
  mailsplit.c: remove dead code
2014-09-09 12:54:04 -07:00
067f86fe12 Merge branch 'so/rebase-doc'
May need further updates to the description to explain what makes
various modes of operation to decide that the request can become a
"no-op".

* so/rebase-doc:
  Documentation/git-rebase.txt: -f forces a rebase that would otherwise be a no-op
2014-09-09 12:54:04 -07:00
715b63ceb3 Merge branch 'sb/prepare-revision-walk-error-check'
* sb/prepare-revision-walk-error-check:
  prepare_revision_walk(): check for return value in all places
2014-09-09 12:54:03 -07:00
929df991c2 Merge branch 'sb/blame-msg-i18n'
* sb/blame-msg-i18n:
  builtin/blame.c: add translation to warning about failed revision walk
2014-09-09 12:54:03 -07:00
1764e8124e Merge branch 'nd/strbuf-utf8-replace'
* nd/strbuf-utf8-replace:
  utf8.c: fix strbuf_utf8_replace() consuming data beyond input string
2014-09-09 12:54:02 -07:00
27fbcf8267 Merge branch 'sb/plug-leaks'
* sb/plug-leaks:
  clone.c: don't leak memory in cmd_clone
  remote.c: don't leak the base branch name in format_tracking_info
2014-09-09 12:54:02 -07:00
a75e759e59 Merge branch 'rs/refresh-beyond-symlink'
"git add x" where x that used to be a directory has become a
symbolic link to a directory misbehaved.

* rs/refresh-beyond-symlink:
  read-cache: check for leading symlinks when refreshing index
2014-09-09 12:54:01 -07:00
4645b014c5 Merge branch 'la/init-doc'
* la/init-doc:
  Documentation: git-init: flesh out example
  Documentation: git-init: template directory: reword and cross-reference
  Documentation: git-init: reword parenthetical statements
  Documentation: git-init: --separate-git-dir: clarify
  Documentation: git-init: template directory: reword
  Documentation: git-init: list items facelift
  Documentation: git-init: typographical fixes
2014-09-09 12:54:00 -07:00
753aaf3aab Merge branch 'jk/stash-list-p'
Teach "git stash list -p" to show the difference between the base
commit version and the working tree version, which is in line with
what "git show" gives.

* jk/stash-list-p:
  stash: default listing to working-tree diff
2014-09-09 12:54:00 -07:00
1bada2b0cc Merge branch 'mm/log-branch-desc-plug-leak'
* mm/log-branch-desc-plug-leak:
  builtin/log.c: fix minor memory leak
2014-09-09 12:53:59 -07:00
7b4164063e Merge branch 'lf/bundle-exclusion'
"git bundle create" with date-range specification were meant to
exclude tags outside the range

* lf/bundle-exclusion:
  bundle: fix exclusion of annotated tags
2014-09-09 12:53:59 -07:00
ead51a75d5 Merge branch 'jc/apply-ws-prefix'
Applying a patch not generated by Git in a subdirectory used to
check the whitespace breakage using the attributes for incorrect
paths. Also whitespace checks were performed even for paths
excluded via "git apply --exclude=<path>" mechanism.

* jc/apply-ws-prefix:
  apply: omit ws check for excluded paths
  apply: hoist use_patch() helper for path exclusion up
  apply: use the right attribute for paths in non-Git patches
2014-09-09 12:53:58 -07:00
93424a0fd8 Merge branch 'jk/command-line-config-empty-string'
"git -c section.var command" and "git -c section.var= command"
should pass the configuration differently (the former should be
a boolean true, the latter should be an empty string).

* jk/command-line-config-empty-string:
  config: teach "git -c" to recognize an empty string
2014-09-09 12:53:57 -07:00
713c6f3ab0 Merge branch 'bc/imap-send-doc'
* bc/imap-send-doc:
  imap-send doc: omit confusing "to use imap-send" modifier
2014-09-09 12:53:55 -07:00
50b335b783 Merge branch 'jc/not-mingw-cygwin'
We have been using NOT_{MINGW,CYGWIN} test prerequisites long
before Peff invented support for negated prerequisites e.g. !MINGW
and we still add more uses of the former.  Convert them to the
latter to avoid confusion.

* jc/not-mingw-cygwin:
  test prerequisites: enumerate with commas
  test prerequisites: eradicate NOT_FOO
2014-09-09 12:53:54 -07:00
415792edf5 strbuf: use strbuf_addchars() for adding a char multiple times
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-08 11:26:48 -07:00
d07235a027 strbuf: export strbuf_addchars()
Move strbuf_addchars() to strbuf.c, where it belongs, and make it
available for other callers.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-08 11:26:45 -07:00
792a646a19 trace: correct trace_strbuf() parameter type for !HAVE_VARIADIC_MACROS
Reported-by: dev <dev@cor0.com>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-08 11:08:04 -07:00
af465af8de parse-options: detect attempt to add a duplicate short option name
It is easy to overlook an already assigned single-letter option name
and try to use it for a new one.  Help the developer to catch it
before such a mistake escapes the lab.

This retroactively forbids any short option name (which is defined
to be of type "int") outside the ASCII printable range.  We might
want to do one of two things:

 - tighten the type of short_name member to 'char', and further
   update optbug() to protect it against doing "'%c'" on a funny
   value, e.g. negative or above 127.

 - drop the check (even the "duplicate" check) for an option whose
   short_name is either negative or above 255, to allow clever folks
   to take advantage of the fact that such a short_name cannot be
   parsed from the command line and the member can be used to store
   some extra information.

Helped-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-04 11:00:28 -07:00
4f1bbd23af mv: no SP between function name and the first opening parenthese
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 15:06:59 -07:00
dcadc8b806 mv: combine two if(s)
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 15:06:59 -07:00
b46b15dea0 mv: unindent one level for directory move code
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 15:06:52 -07:00
e2b6cfa02e mv: move index search code out
"Huh?" is removed from die() message.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 14:59:43 -07:00
42de4b169c mv: remove an "if" that's always true
This is inside an "else" block of "if (last - first < 1)", so we know
that "last - first >= 1" when we come here. No need to check
"last - first > 0".

While at there, save "argc + last - first" to a variable to shorten
the statements a bit.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 14:59:43 -07:00
3af05a6d0d mv: split submodule move preparation code out
"Huh?" is removed from die() message.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 14:59:40 -07:00
693eb02a5e calloc() and xcalloc() takes nmemb and then size
There are a handful more instances of this in compat/regex/ but they
are borrowed code taht we do not want to touch with a change that
really affects correctness, which this change is not.

Signed-off-by: Arjun Sreedharan <arjun024@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 14:35:37 -07:00
c254516737 completion: Add --ignore-blank-lines for diff
Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@virtuell-zuhause.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 12:23:10 -07:00
c40fdd01dd reachable.c: add HEAD to reachability starting commits
HEAD is not explicitly used as a starting commit for
calculating reachability, so if it's detached and reflogs
are disabled it may be pruned.

Add tests which demonstrate it. Test 'prune: prune former HEAD after checking
out branch' also reverts changes to repository.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:47:44 -07:00
4ed115e9c5 cache-tree: do not try to use an invalidated subtree info to build a tree
We punt from repairing the cache-tree during a branch switching if
it involves having to create a new tree object that does not yet
exist in the object store.  "mkdir dir && >dir/file && git add dir"
followed by "git checkout" is one example, when a tree that records
the state of such "dir/" is not in the object store.

However, after discovering that we do not have a tree object that
records the state of "dir/", the caller failed to remember the fact
that it noticed the cache-tree entry it received for "dir/" is
invalidated, it already knows it should not be populating the level
that has "dir/" as its immediate subdirectory, and it is not an
error at all for the sublevel cache-tree entry gave it a bogus
object name it shouldn't even look at.

This led the caller to detect and report a non-existent error.  The
end result was the same and we avoided stuffing a non-existent tree
to the cache-tree, but we shouldn't have issued an alarming error
message to the user.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:21:33 -07:00
88499b296b update-ref --stdin: pass transaction around explicitly
This makes it more obvious at a glance where the output of functions
parsing the --stdin stream goes.

No functional change intended.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:19 -07:00
ab5ac95725 update-ref --stdin: narrow scope of err strbuf
Making the strbuf local in each function that needs to print errors
saves the reader from having to think about action at a distance,
such as

 * errors piling up and being concatenated with no newline between
   them
 * errors unhandled in one function, to be later handled in another
 * concurrency issues, if this code starts using threads some day

No functional change intended.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:19 -07:00
7521cc4611 refs.c: make delete_ref use a transaction
Change delete_ref to use a ref transaction for the deletion. At the same time
since we no longer have any callers of repack_without_ref we can now delete
this function.

Change delete_ref to return 0 on success and 1 on failure instead of the
previous 0 on success either 1 or -1 on failure.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:18 -07:00
029cdb4ab2 refs.c: make prune_ref use a transaction to delete the ref
Change prune_ref to delete the ref using a ref transaction. To do this we also
need to add a new flag REF_ISPRUNING that will tell the transaction that we
do not want to delete this ref from the packed refs. This flag is private to
refs.c and not exposed to external callers.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:18 -07:00
cba12021c3 refs.c: remove lock_ref_sha1
lock_ref_sha1 was only called from one place in refs.c and only provided
a check that the refname was sane before adding back the initial "refs/"
part of the ref path name, the initial "refs/" that this caller had already
stripped off before calling lock_ref_sha1.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:17 -07:00
04ad6223ec refs.c: remove the update_ref_write function
Since we only call update_ref_write from a single place and we only call it
with onerr==QUIET_ON_ERR we can just as well get rid of it and just call
write_ref_sha1 directly. This changes the return status for _commit from
1 to -1 on failures when writing to the ref. Eventually we will want
_commit to start returning more detailed error conditions than the current
simple success/failure.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:17 -07:00
45421e24e8 refs.c: remove the update_ref_lock function
Since we now only call update_ref_lock with onerr==QUIET_ON_ERR we no longer
need this function and can replace it with just calling lock_any_ref_for_update
directly.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:16 -07:00
88b680ae8d refs.c: make lock_ref_sha1 static
No external callers reference lock_ref_sha1 any more so let's declare it
static.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:15 -07:00
b6b10bb44c walker.c: use ref transaction for ref updates
Switch to using ref transactions in walker_fetch(). As part of the refactoring
to use ref transactions we also fix a potential memory leak where in the
original code if write_ref_sha1() would fail we would end up returning from
the function without free()ing the msg string.

Note that this function is only called when fetching from a remote HTTP
repository onto the local (most of the time single-user) repository which
likely means that the type of collisions that the previous locking would
protect against and cause the fetch to fail for are even more rare.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:15 -07:00
3f09ba7543 fast-import.c: use a ref transaction when dumping tags
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:14 -07:00
6629ea2d4a receive-pack.c: use a reference transaction for updating the refs
Wrap all the ref updates inside a transaction.

In the new API there is no distinction between failure to lock and
failure to write a ref.  Both can be permanent (e.g., a ref
"refs/heads/topic" is blocking creation of the lock file
"refs/heads/topic/1.lock") or transient (e.g., file system full) and
there's no clear difference in how the client should respond, so
replace the two statuses "failed to lock" and "failed to write" with
a single status "failed to update ref".  In both cases a more
detailed message is sent by sideband to diagnose the problem.

Example, before:

 error: there are still refs under 'refs/heads/topic'
 remote: error: failed to lock refs/heads/topic
 To foo
  ! [remote rejected] HEAD -> topic (failed to lock)

After:

 error: there are still refs under 'refs/heads/topic'
 remote: error: Cannot lock the ref 'refs/heads/topic'.
 To foo
  ! [remote rejected] HEAD -> topic (failed to update ref)

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:14 -07:00
b4d75ac1d1 refs.c: change update_ref to use a transaction
Change the update_ref helper function to use a ref transaction internally.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:13 -07:00
d43f990fac branch.c: use ref transaction for all ref updates
Change create_branch to use a ref transaction when creating the new branch.

This also fixes a race condition in the old code where two concurrent
create_branch could race since the lock_any_ref_for_update/write_ref_sha1
did not protect against the ref already existing. I.e. one thread could end up
overwriting a branch even if the forcing flag is false.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:13 -07:00
de7e86f522 fast-import.c: change update_branch to use ref transactions
Change update_branch() to use ref transactions for updates.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:12 -07:00
d668d16ca7 sequencer.c: use ref transactions for all ref updates
Change to use ref transactions for all updates to refs.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:12 -07:00
c0fe1ed084 commit.c: use ref transactions for updates
Change commit.c to use ref transactions for all ref updates.
Make sure we pass a NULL pointer to ref_transaction_update if have_old
is false.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:11 -07:00
867c2fac0a replace.c: use the ref transaction functions for updates
Update replace.c to use ref transactions for updates.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:10 -07:00
e5074bfe8c tag.c: use ref transactions when doing updates
Change tag.c to use ref transactions for all ref updates.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:10 -07:00
2bdc785fd7 refs.c: add transaction.status and track OPEN/CLOSED
Track the state of a transaction in a new state field. Check the field for
sanity, i.e. that state must be OPEN when _commit/_create/_delete or
_update is called or else die(BUG:...)

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:09 -07:00
93a644ea9d refs.c: make ref_transaction_begin take an err argument
Add an err argument to _begin so that on non-fatal failures in future ref
backends we can report a nice error back to the caller.
While _begin can currently never fail for other reasons than OOM, in which
case we die() anyway, we may add other types of backends in the future.
For example, a hypothetical MySQL backend could fail in _begin with
"Can not connect to MySQL server. No route to host".

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:08 -07:00
8c8bdc0d35 refs.c: update ref_transaction_delete to check for error and return status
Change ref_transaction_delete() to do basic error checking and return
non-zero on error. Update all callers to check the return for
ref_transaction_delete(). There are currently no conditions in _delete that
will return error but there will be in the future. Add an err argument that
will be updated on failure.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:08 -07:00
b416af5bcd refs.c: change ref_transaction_create to do error checking and return status
Do basic error checking in ref_transaction_create() and make it return
non-zero on error. Update all callers to check the result of
ref_transaction_create(). There are currently no conditions in _create that
will return error but there will be in the future. Add an err argument that
will be updated on failure.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-03 10:04:07 -07:00
85f083786f Start the post-2.1 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-02 13:30:13 -07:00
f655651e09 Merge branch 'rs/strbuf-getcwd'
Reduce the use of fixed sized buffer passed to getcwd() calls
by introducing xgetcwd() helper.

* rs/strbuf-getcwd:
  use strbuf_add_absolute_path() to add absolute paths
  abspath: convert absolute_path() to strbuf
  use xgetcwd() to set $GIT_DIR
  use xgetcwd() to get the current directory or die
  wrapper: add xgetcwd()
  abspath: convert real_path_internal() to strbuf
  abspath: use strbuf_getcwd() to remember original working directory
  setup: convert setup_git_directory_gently_1 et al. to strbuf
  unix-sockets: use strbuf_getcwd()
  strbuf: add strbuf_getcwd()
2014-09-02 13:28:44 -07:00
51eeaea210 Merge branch 'ta/pretty-parse-config'
* ta/pretty-parse-config:
  pretty.c: make git_pretty_formats_config return -1 on git_config_string failure
2014-09-02 13:27:40 -07:00
4740891e47 Merge branch 'bc/archive-pax-header-mode'
Implementations of "tar" that do not understand an extended pax
header would extract the contents of it in a regular file; make
sure the permission bits of this file follows the same tar.umask
configuration setting.

* bc/archive-pax-header-mode:
  archive: honor tar.umask even for pax headers
2014-09-02 13:27:13 -07:00
0e28161700 Merge branch 'pr/remotes-in-hashmap'
Optimize remotes configuration look-up in a repository with very
many remotes defined.

* pr/remotes-in-hashmap:
  use a hashmap to make remotes faster
2014-09-02 13:26:38 -07:00
44ceb79f84 Merge branch 'jk/pretty-empty-format'
"git log --pretty/format=" with an empty format string did not mean
the more obvious "No output whatsoever" but "Use default format",
which was counterintuitive.

* jk/pretty-empty-format:
  pretty: make empty userformats truly empty
  pretty: treat "--format=" as an empty userformat
  revision: drop useless string offset when parsing "--pretty"
2014-09-02 13:25:04 -07:00
56f214e071 Merge branch 'ta/config-set'
Add in-core caching layer to let us avoid reading the same
configuration files number of times.

* ta/config-set:
  test-config: add tests for the config_set API
  add `config_set` API for caching config-like files
2014-09-02 13:24:18 -07:00
e8e4ce72cd Merge branch 'rs/init-no-duplicate-real-path'
* rs/init-no-duplicate-real-path:
  init: avoid superfluous real_path() calls
2014-09-02 13:24:05 -07:00
1d8a6f6929 Merge branch 'mm/config-edit-global'
Start "git config --edit --global" from a skeletal per-user
configuration file contents, instead of a total blank, when the
user does not already have any.  This immediately reduces the need
for a later "Have you forgotten setting core.user?" and we can add
more to the template as we gain more experience.

* mm/config-edit-global:
  commit: advertise config --global --edit on guessed identity
  home_config_paths(): let the caller ignore xdg path
  config --global --edit: create a template file if needed
2014-09-02 13:23:20 -07:00
c518279c0e Merge branch 'jc/reopen-lock-file'
There are cases where you lock and open to write a file, close it to
show the updated contents to external processes, and then have to
update the file again while still holding the lock, but the lockfile
API lacked support for such an access pattern.

* jc/reopen-lock-file:
  lockfile: allow reopening a closed but still locked file
2014-09-02 13:20:13 -07:00
ba9b9e1242 imap-send: simplify v_issue_imap_cmd() and get_cmd_result() using starts_with()
Use starts_with() instead of memcmp() to check if NUL-terminated
strings match prefixes.  This gets rid of some magic string length
constants.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-02 12:26:23 -07:00
5f4e02e517 MinGW: update tests to handle a native eol of crlf
Some of the tests were written with the assumption that the native
eol would always be lf. After defining NATIVE_CRLF on MinGW, these
tests began failing.  This change will update the tests to also
handle a native eol of crlf.

Signed-off-by: Brice Lambson <bricelam@live.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-02 12:09:40 -07:00
5491e9e29e Makefile: propagate NATIVE_CRLF to C
Commit 95f31e9a (convert: The native line-ending is \r\n on MinGW,
2010-09-04) correctly points out that the NATIVE_CRLF setting is
incorrectly set on Mingw git. However, the Makefile variable is not
propagated to the C preprocessor and results in no change. This patch
pushes the definition to the C code and adds a test to validate that
when core.eol as native is crlf, we actually normalize text files to
this line ending convention when core.autocrlf is false.

Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-02 12:09:40 -07:00
ad5fe3771b grammofix in user-facing messages
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-02 12:00:30 -07:00
24d36f1472 stylefix: asterisks stick to the variable, not the type
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-02 11:33:32 -07:00
57065289a9 merge-tree: remove unused df_conflict arguments
merge_trees_recursive() stores a pointer to its parameter df_conflict in
its struct traverse_info, but it is never actually used.  Stop doing
that, remove the parameter and inline the function into merge_trees(),
as the latter is now only passing on its parameters.

Remove the parameter df_conflict from unresolved_directory() as well,
now that there is no way to pass it to merge_trees_recursive() through
that function anymore.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-02 11:02:58 -07:00
59b8263a6d http-walker: simplify process_alternates_response() using strbuf
Use strbuf to build the new base, which takes care of allocations and
the terminating NUL character automatically.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-02 10:57:14 -07:00
37007c3a87 config: simplify git_config_include()
Instead of using skip_prefix() to check the first part of the string
and then strcmp() to check the rest, simply use strcmp() to check the
whole string.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-02 10:56:43 -07:00
d773144417 pack-write: simplify index_pack_lockfile using skip_prefix() and xstrfmt()
Get rid of magic string length constants by using skip_prefix() instead
of memcmp() and use xstrfmt() for building a string instead of a
PATH_MAX-sized buffer, snprintf() and xstrdup().

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-02 10:37:24 -07:00
be0b3f822b connect: simplify check_ref() using skip_prefix() and starts_with()
Both callers of check_ref() pass in NUL-terminated strings for name.
Remove the len parameter and then use skip_prefix() and starts_with()
instead of memcmp() to check if it starts with certain strings.  This
gets rid of several magic string length constants and a strlen() call.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-09-02 10:36:42 -07:00
ab791dd138 index-pack: fix race condition with duplicate bases
When we are resolving deltas in an indexed pack, we do it by
first selecting a potential base (either one stored in full
in the pack, or one created by resolving another delta), and
then resolving any deltas that use that base.  When we
resolve a particular delta, we flip its "real_type" field
from OBJ_{REF,OFS}_DELTA to whatever the real type is.

We assume that traversing the objects this way will visit
each delta only once. This is correct for most packs; we
visit the delta only when we process its base, and each
object (and thus each base) appears only once. However, if a
base object appears multiple times in the pack, we will try
to resolve any deltas based on it once for each instance.

We can detect this case by noting that a delta we are about
to resolve has already had its real_type field flipped, and
we already do so with an assert().  However, if multiple
threads are in use, we may race with another thread on
comparing and flipping the field. We need to synchronize the
access.

The right mechanism for doing this is a compare-and-swap (we
atomically "claim" the delta for our own and find out
whether our claim was successful). We can implement this
in C by using a pthread mutex to protect the operation. This
is not the fastest way of doing a compare-and-swap; many
processors provide instructions for this, and gcc and other
compilers provide builtins to access them. However, some
experiments showed that lock contention does not cause a
significant slowdown here. Adding c-a-s support for many
compilers would increase the maintenance burden (and we
would still end up including the pthread version as a
fallback).

Note that we only need to touch the OBJ_REF_DELTA codepath
here. An OBJ_OFS_DELTA object points to its base using an
offset, and therefore has only one base, even if another
copy of that base object appears in the pack (we do still
touch it briefly because the setting of real_type is
factored out of resolve_data).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-29 14:50:43 -07:00
466fb6742d pretty: provide a strict ISO 8601 date format
Git's "ISO" date format does not really conform to the ISO 8601
standard due to small differences, and it cannot be parsed by ISO
8601-only parsers, e.g. those of XML toolchains.

The output from "--date=iso" deviates from ISO 8601 in these ways:

  - a space instead of the `T` date/time delimiter
  - a space between time and time zone
  - no colon between hours and minutes of the time zone

Add a strict ISO 8601 date format for displaying committer and
author dates.  Use the '%aI' and '%cI' format specifiers and add
'--date=iso-strict' or '--date=iso8601-strict' date format names.

See http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/255879 and
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/52414/focus=52585
for discussion.

Signed-off-by: Beat Bolli <bbolli@ewanet.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-29 12:37:02 -07:00
a6fd4fb55d autoconf: check for setitimer()
The Makefile has provisions for this case, so let's detect it in the
configure script as well.

Signed-off-by: Jonas 'Sortie' Termansen <sortie@maxsi.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-29 10:45:32 -07:00
6441090cf2 autoconf: check for struct itimerval
The Makefile has provisions for this case, so let's detect it in the
configure script as well.

Signed-off-by: Jonas 'Sortie' Termansen <sortie@maxsi.org>
Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.e.keller@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-29 10:39:39 -07:00
981ff520b7 git-compat-util.h: add missing semicolon after struct itimerval
This hasn't been a problem in practice as almost all systems have the
setitimer() API (or it is provided by git in the case of mingw). This code
wasn't used in any default circumstances, as the build system never sets
NO_STRUCT_ITIMERVAL - this breakage only occured if the user asked for it.

We repair this case so we can rely on it in the following commits.

Signed-off-by: Jonas 'Sortie' Termansen <sortie@maxsi.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-29 10:38:07 -07:00
f4ef517393 determine_author_info(): copy getenv output
When figuring out the author name for a commit, we may end
up either pointing to const storage from getenv("GIT_AUTHOR_*"),
or to newly allocated storage based on an existing commit or
the --author option.

Using const pointers to getenv's return has two problems:

  1. It is not guaranteed that the return value from getenv
     remains valid across multiple calls.

  2. We do not know whether to free the values at the end,
     so we just leak them.

We can solve both by duplicating the string returned by
getenv().

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-29 10:33:28 -07:00
f0f9662ae9 determine_author_info(): reuse parsing functions
Rather than parsing the header manually to find the "author"
field, and then parsing its sub-parts, let's use
find_commit_header and split_ident_line. This is shorter and
easier to read, and should do a more careful parsing job.

For example, the current parser could find the end-of-email
right-bracket across a newline (for a malformed commit), and
calculate a bogus gigantic length for the date (by using
"eol - rb").

As a bonus, this also plugs a memory leak when we pull the
date field from an existing commit (we still leak the name
and email buffers, which will be fixed in a later commit).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-29 10:33:28 -07:00
2668d692eb fast-import: fix segfault in store_tree()
Branch tree is NULLified by filedelete command if we are trying
to delete root tree. Add sanity check and use load_tree() in that case.

Signed-off-by: Maxim Bublis <satori@yandex-team.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-29 10:31:14 -07:00
8d30d8a89a t9300: test filedelete command
Add new fast-import test series for filedelete command.

Signed-off-by: Maxim Bublis <satori@yandex-team.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-29 10:30:14 -07:00
96db324a73 Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  po/TEAMS: add new members to German translation team
  l10n: de.po: translate 38 new messages
2014-08-29 10:18:22 -07:00
0344d93ced read_index_unmerged(): remove unnecessary loop index adjustment
Signed-off-by: Jaime Soriano Pastor <jsorianopastor@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-29 10:05:53 -07:00
15999d0be8 read_index_from(): catch out of order entries when reading an index file
Signed-off-by: Jaime Soriano Pastor <jsorianopastor@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-29 10:05:14 -07:00
782ac539ea po/TEAMS: add new members to German translation team
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-08-29 07:08:17 +02:00
d35ea4dec6 l10n: de.po: translate 38 new messages
Translate 38 new messages came from git.pot update in fe05e19
(l10n: git.pot: v2.1.0 round 1 (38 new, 9 removed)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-08-29 07:07:59 +02:00
da011cb0e7 contrib/svn-fe: fix Makefile
Fixes several problems:
  * include config.mak.uname, config.mak.autogen and config.mak
    in order to use settings for prefix and other such things;
  * link xdiff/lib.a as it is a requirement for libgit.a;
  * fix CFLAGS, LDFLAGS and EXTLIBS for Linux and Mac OS X.

Signed-off-by: Maxim Bublis <satori@yandex-team.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-28 15:41:28 -07:00
5d146f7a0f Document LF appearing in shallow command during send-pack/receive-pack
The implementation sends an LF, but the protocol documentation was
missing this detail.

Signed-off-by: Shawn Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-28 15:13:55 -07:00
f6975a6b11 t0027: Tests for core.eol=native, eol=lf, eol=crlf
Add test cases for core.eol "native" and "" (unset).
(MINGW uses CRLF, all other systems LF as native line endings)

Add test cases for the attributes "eol=lf" and "eol=crlf"

Other minor changes:
- Use the more portable 'tr' instead of 'od -c' to convert '\n' into 'Q'
  and '\0' into 'N'
- Style fixes for shell functions according to the coding guide lines
- Replace "txtbin" with "attr"

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-28 11:18:55 -07:00
75d3d6573e docs/fast-export: explain --anonymize more completely
The original commit made mention of this option, but not why
one might want it or how they might use it. Let's try to be
a little more thorough, and also explain how to confirm that
the output really is anonymous.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-28 10:32:52 -07:00
91e70e00ac merge, pull: stop advising 'commit -a' in case of conflict
'git commit -a' is rarely a good way to mark conflicts as resolved:
the user anyway has to go manually through the list of conflicts to
do the actual resolution, and it is usually better to use "git add"
on each files after doing the resolution.

On the other hand, using 'git commit -a' is potentially dangerous,
as it makes it very easy to mistakenly commit conflict markers
without noticing, and even worse, the user may have started a merge
while having local changes that do not overlap with it in the
working tree.

While we're there, synchronize the 'git pull' and 'git merge'
messages: the first was ending with '...  and make a commit.', but
not the latter.

Eventually, git should detect that conflicts have been resolved in
the working tree and tailor these messages further.  Not only "use
git commit -a" could be resurected, but "Fix them up in the work
tree" should be dropped when it happens.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-28 10:29:53 -07:00
9035d75a2b convert: stream from fd to required clean filter to reduce used address space
The data is streamed to the filter process anyway.  Better avoid mapping
the file if possible.  This is especially useful if a clean filter
reduces the size, for example if it computes a sha1 for binary data,
like git media.  The file size that the previous implementation could
handle was limited by the available address space; large files for
example could not be handled with (32-bit) msysgit.  The new
implementation can filter files of any size as long as the filter output
is small enough.

The new code path is only taken if the filter is required.  The filter
consumes data directly from the fd.  If it fails, the original data is
not immediately available.  The condition can easily be handled as
a fatal error, which is expected for a required filter anyway.

If the filter was not required, the condition would need to be handled
in a different way, like seeking to 0 and reading the data.  But this
would require more restructuring of the code and is probably not worth
it.  The obvious approach of falling back to reading all data would not
help achieving the main purpose of this patch, which is to handle large
files with limited address space.  If reading all data is an option, we
can simply take the old code path right away and mmap the entire file.

The environment variable GIT_MMAP_LIMIT, which has been introduced in
a previous commit is used to test that the expected code path is taken.
A related test that exercises required filters is modified to verify
that the data actually has been modified on its way from the file system
to the object store.

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-28 10:25:15 -07:00
b29763aa9b copy_fd(): do not close the input file descriptor
The caller, not this function, opened the file descriptor; it is
selfish for the callee to close it when it is done reading from it.
The caller may want an option to rewind and re-read the contents
after it returns.

Simplify the loop to copy the input in full to the output; its
body essentially is what a call to write_in_full() helper does.

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-28 10:25:14 -07:00
02710228dd mmap_limit: introduce GIT_MMAP_LIMIT to allow testing expected mmap size
In order to test expectations about mmap in a way similar to testing
expectations about malloc with GIT_ALLOC_LIMIT introduced by
d41489a6 (Add more large blob test cases, 2012-03-07), introduce a
new environment variable GIT_MMAP_LIMIT to limit the largest allowed
mmap length.

xmmap() is modified to check the size of the requested region and
fail it if it is beyond the limit.  Together with GIT_ALLOC_LIMIT
tests can now confirm expectations about memory consumption.

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-28 10:25:14 -07:00
9927d9627f memory_limit: use git_env_ulong() to parse GIT_ALLOC_LIMIT
GIT_ALLOC_LIMIT limits xmalloc()'s size, which is of type size_t.
Better use git_env_ulong() to parse the environment variable, so
that the postfixes 'k', 'm', and 'g' can be used; and use size_t to
store the limit for consistency.  The change to size_t has no direct
practical impact, because the environment variable is only meant to
be used for our own tests, and we use it to test small sizes.

The cast of size in the call to die() is changed to uintmax_t to
match the format string PRIuMAX.

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-28 10:25:04 -07:00
23b0c4782e config.c: add git_env_ulong() to parse environment variable
The new function parses an integeral value that fits in unsigned
long in human readable form, i.e. possibly with unit suffix, e.g.
10k = 10240, etc., from an environment variable.  Parsing of
GIT_MMAP_LIMIT and GIT_ALLOC_LIMIT will use it in later patches.

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-28 10:24:54 -07:00
a872275098 teach fast-export an --anonymize option
Sometimes users want to report a bug they experience on
their repository, but they are not at liberty to share the
contents of the repository. It would be useful if they could
produce a repository that has a similar shape to its history
and tree, but without leaking any information. This
"anonymized" repository could then be shared with developers
(assuming it still replicates the original problem).

This patch implements an "--anonymize" option to
fast-export, which generates a stream that can recreate such
a repository. Producing a single stream makes it easy for
the caller to verify that they are not leaking any useful
information. You can get an overview of what will be shared
by running a command like:

  git fast-export --anonymize --all |
  perl -pe 's/\d+/X/g' |
  sort -u |
  less

which will show every unique line we generate, modulo any
numbers (each anonymized token is assigned a number, like
"User 0", and we replace it consistently in the output).

In addition to anonymizing, this produces test cases that
are relatively small (compared to the original repository)
and fast to generate (compared to using filter-branch, or
modifying the output of fast-export yourself). Here are
numbers for git.git:

  $ time git fast-export --anonymize --all \
         --tag-of-filtered-object=drop >output
  real    0m2.883s
  user    0m2.828s
  sys     0m0.052s

  $ gzip output
  $ ls -lh output.gz | awk '{print $5}'
  2.9M

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-27 10:42:16 -07:00
c33ddc2e33 date: use strbufs in date-formatting functions
Many of the date functions write into fixed-size buffers.
This is a minor pain, as we have to take special
precautions, and frequently end up copying the result into a
strbuf or heap-allocated buffer anyway (for which we
sometimes use strcpy!).

Let's instead teach parse_date, datestamp, etc to write to a
strbuf. The obvious downside is that we might need to
perform a heap allocation where we otherwise would not need
to. However, it turns out that the only two new allocations
required are:

  1. In test-date.c, where we don't care about efficiency.

  2. In determine_author_info, which is not performance
     critical (and where the use of a strbuf will help later
     refactoring).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-27 10:32:56 -07:00
ea5517f04b record_author_date(): use find_commit_header()
This saves us some manual parsing and makes the code more
readable.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-27 10:31:13 -07:00
6876618cea record_author_date(): fix memory leak on malformed commit
If we hit the end-of-header without finding an "author"
line, we just return from the function. We should jump to
the fail_exit path to clean up the buffer that we may have
allocated.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-27 10:30:42 -07:00
fe6eb7f2c5 commit: provide a function to find a header in a buffer
Usually when we parse a commit, we read it line by line and
handle each individual line (e.g., parse_commit and
parse_commit_header).  Sometimes, however, we only care
about extracting a single header. Code in this situation is
stuck doing an ad-hoc parse of the commit buffer.

Let's provide a reusable function to locate a header within
the commit.  The code is modeled after pretty.c's
get_header, which is used to extract the encoding.

Since some callers may not have the "struct commit" to go
along with the buffer, we drop that parameter.  The only
thing lost is a warning for truncated commits, but that's
OK.  This shouldn't happen in practice, and even if it does,
there's no particular reason that this function needs to
complain about it. It either finds the header it was asked
for, or it doesn't (and in the latter case, the caller will
typically complain).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-27 10:25:28 -07:00
2e3dfb2169 log-tree: use FLEX_ARRAY in name_decoration
We are already using the flex-array technique; let's
annotate it with our usual FLEX_ARRAY macro. Besides being
more readable, this is slightly more efficient on compilers
that understand flex-arrays.

Note that we need to bump the allocation in add_name_decoration,
which did not explicitly add one byte for the NUL terminator
of the string we are putting into the flex-array (it did not
need to before, because the struct itself was over-allocated
by one byte).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-27 07:44:27 -07:00
26be19ba8d send-pack: take refspecs over stdin
Pushing a large number of refs works over most transports,
because we implement send-pack as an internal function.
However, it can sometimes fail when pushing over http,
because we have to spawn "git send-pack --stateless-rpc" to
do the heavy lifting, and we pass each refspec on the
command line. This can cause us to overflow the OS limits on
the size of the command line for a large push.

We can solve this by giving send-pack a --stdin option and
using it from remote-curl.  We already dealt with this on
the fetch-pack side in 078b895 (fetch-pack: new --stdin
option to read refs from stdin, 2012-04-02). The stdin
option (and in particular, its use of packet-lines for
stateless-rpc input) is modeled after that solution.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-26 12:58:02 -07:00
14821f8822 Makefile: drop CHECK_HEADER_DEPENDENCIES code
This code was useful when we kept a static list of header
files, and it was easy to forget to update it. Since the last
commit, we generate the list dynamically.

Technically this could still be used to find a dependency
that our dynamic check misses (e.g., a header file without a
".h" extension).  But that is reasonably unlikely to be
added, and even less likely to be noticed by this tool
(because it has to be run manually)., It is not worth
carrying around the cruft in the Makefile.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-26 12:56:31 -07:00
4109c28e05 Merge branch 'jk/diff-tree-t-fix'
Fix (rarely used) "git diff-tree -t" regression in 2.0.

* jk/diff-tree-t-fix:
  intersect_paths: respect mode in git's tree-sort
2014-08-26 11:16:26 -07:00
a3d54f9a1f Merge branch 'jk/pack-shallow-always-without-bitmap'
Reachability bitmaps do not work with shallow operations.
Fixes regression in 2.0.

* jk/pack-shallow-always-without-bitmap:
  pack-objects: turn off bitmaps when we see --shallow lines
2014-08-26 11:16:25 -07:00
212d781c96 Merge branch 'jk/fix-profile-feedback-build'
Fix profile-feedback build broken in 2.1 for tarball releases.

* jk/fix-profile-feedback-build:
  Makefile: make perf tests optional for profile build
2014-08-26 11:16:25 -07:00
9610decf4d use strbuf_add_absolute_path() to add absolute paths
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-26 11:06:06 -07:00
679eebe24d abspath: convert absolute_path() to strbuf
Move most of the code of absolute_path() into the new function
strbuf_add_absolute_path() and in the process transform it to use
struct strbuf and xgetcwd() instead of a PATH_MAX-sized buffer,
which can be too small on some file systems.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-26 11:06:06 -07:00
4d3ab44d26 use xgetcwd() to set $GIT_DIR
Instead of dying of a segmentation fault if getcwd() returns NULL, use
xgetcwd() to make sure to write a useful error message and then exit
in an orderly fashion.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-26 11:06:06 -07:00
56b9f6e738 use xgetcwd() to get the current directory or die
Convert several calls of getcwd() and die() to use xgetcwd() instead.
This way we get rid of fixed-size buffers (which can be too small
depending on the used file system) and gain consistent error messages.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-26 11:06:06 -07:00
aa14e980ff wrapper: add xgetcwd()
Add the helper function xgetcwd(), which returns the current directory
or dies.  The returned string has to be free()d after use.

Helped-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-26 11:06:05 -07:00
2fdb9ce067 abspath: convert real_path_internal() to strbuf
Use strbuf instead of fixed-sized buffers in real_path() in order to
avoid the size limitations of the latter.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-26 11:06:05 -07:00
251277acdf abspath: use strbuf_getcwd() to remember original working directory
Store the original working directory in a strbuf instead of in a
fixed-sized buffer, in order to be able to handle longer paths.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-26 11:06:04 -07:00
7333ed1788 setup: convert setup_git_directory_gently_1 et al. to strbuf
Convert setup_git_directory_gently_1() and its helper functions
setup_explicit_git_dir(), setup_discovered_git_dir() and
setup_bare_git_dir() to use a struct strbuf to hold the current working
directory.  Replacing the PATH_MAX-sized buffer used before removes a
path length limition on some file systems.  The functions are converted
all in one go because they all read and write the variable cwd.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-26 11:06:04 -07:00
2608c24940 log-tree: make name_decoration hash static
In the previous commit, we made add_name_decoration global
so that adders would not have to access the hash directly.
We now make the hash itself static so that callers _have_ to
add through our function, making sure that all additions go
through a single point.  To do this, we have to add one more
accessor function: a way to lookup entries in the hash.

Since the only caller doesn't actually look at the returned
value, but rather only asks whether there is a decoration or
not, we could provide only a boolean "has_name_decoration".
That would allow us to make "struct name_decoration" local
to log-tree, as well.

However, it's unlikely to cause any maintainability harm
making the actual data public, and this interface is more
flexible if we need to look at decorations from other parts
of the code in the future.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-26 10:34:26 -07:00
662174d299 log-tree: make add_name_decoration a public function
The log-tree code keeps a "struct decoration" hash to show
text decorations for each commit during log traversals. It
makes this available to other files by providing global
access to the hash. This can result in other code adding
entries that do not conform to what log-tree expects.

For example, the bisect code adds its own "dist"
decorations to be shown. Originally the bisect code was
correct, but when the name_decoration code grew a new field
in eb3005e (commit.h: add 'type' to struct name_decoration,
2010-06-19), the bisect code was not updated. As a result,
the log-tree code can access uninitialized memory and even
segfault.

We can fix this by making name_decoration's adding function
public. If all callers use it, then any changes to struct
initialization only need to happen in one place (and because
the members come in as parameters, the compiler can notice a
caller who does not supply enough information).

As a bonus, this also means that the decoration hashes
created by the bisect code will use less memory (previously
we over-allocated space for the distance integer, but now we
format it into a temporary buffer and copy it to the final
flex-array).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-26 10:33:01 -07:00
e0d8e3084f imap-send: create target mailbox if it is missing
Some MUAs delete their "drafts" folder when it is empty, so
git imap-send should be able to create it if necessary.

This change checks that the folder exists immediately after
login and tries to create it if it is missing.

There was some vestigial code to handle a [TRYCREATE] response
from the server when an APPEND target is missing. However this
code never ran (the create and trycreate flags were never set)
and when I tried to make it run I found that the code had already
thrown away the contents of the message it was trying to append.

Signed-off-by: Tony Finch <dot@dotat.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-25 15:21:05 -07:00
6a143aa2b2 checkout -m: attempt merge when deletion of path was staged
twoway_merge() is missing an o->gently check in the case where a file
that needs to be modified is missing from the index but present in the
old and new trees.  As a result, in this case 'git checkout -m' errors
out instead of trying to perform a merge.

Fix it by checking o->gently.  While at it, inline the o->gently check
into reject_merge to prevent future call sites from making the same
mistake.

Noticed by code inspection.  The test for the motivating case was
added by JC.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-25 15:17:34 -07:00
c285171dac Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: improve message when switching branches
  l10n: de.po: fix typo
  po/TEAMS: Add Catalan team
  l10n: Add Catalan translation
  l10n: fr.po (2257t) update for version 2.1.0
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2257t0f0u)
  l10n: vi.po (2257t): Update translation
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2257t,0f,0u)
  l10n: zh_CN: translations for git v2.1.0-rc0
  l10n: git.pot: v2.1.0 round 1 (38 new, 9 removed)
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2247t,0f,0u)
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2228t,0f,0u)
  l10n: Fix more typos in the Swedish translations
2014-08-25 15:12:58 -07:00
d85b0dff72 Makefile: use find to determine static header dependencies
Most modern platforms will use automatically computed header
dependencies to figure out when a C file needs rebuilt due
to a header changing. With old compilers, however, we
fallback to a static list of header files. If any of them
changes, we recompile everything. This is overly
conservative, but the best we can do on older platforms.

It is unfortunately easy for our static header list to grow
stale, as none of the regular developers make use of it.
Instead of trying to keep it up to date, let's invoke "find"
to generate the list dynamically.

Since we do not use the value $(LIB_H) unless either
COMPUTE_HEADER_DEPENDENCIES is turned on or the user is
building "po/git.pot" (where it comes in via $(LOCALIZED_C),
make is smart enough to not even run this "find" in most
cases. However, we do need to stop using the "immediate"
variable assignment ":=" for $(LOCALIZED_C). That's OK,
because it was not otherwise useful here.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-25 14:03:07 -07:00
1f31963e92 i18n: treat "make pot" as an explicitly-invoked target
po/git.pot is normally used as-is and not regenerated by people
building git, so it is okay if an explicit "make po/git.pot" always
automatically regenerates it.  Depend on the magic FORCE target
instead of explicitly keeping track of dependencies.

This simplifies the makefile, in particular preparing for a moment
when $(LIB_H), which is part of $(LOCALIZED_C), can be computed on the
fly. It also fixes a slight breakage in which changes to perl and shell
scripts did not trigger a rebuild of po/git.pot.

We still need a dependency on GENERATED_H, to force those files to be
built when regenerating git.pot.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-25 12:23:01 -07:00
0fa7f01635 git-prompt: do not look for refs/stash in $GIT_DIR
Since dd0b72c (bash prompt: use bash builtins to check stash
state, 2011-04-01), git-prompt checks whether we have a
stash by looking for $GIT_DIR/refs/stash. Generally external
programs should never do this, because they would miss
packed-refs.

That commit claims that packed-refs does not pack
refs/stash, but that is not quite true. It does pack the
ref, but due to a bug, fails to prune the ref. When we fix
that bug, we would want to be doing the right thing here.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-25 12:21:17 -07:00
c252785982 fast-import: fix buffer overflow in dump_tags
When creating a new annotated tag, we sprintf the refname
into a static-sized buffer. If we have an absurdly long
tagname, like:

  git init repo &&
  cd repo &&
  git commit --allow-empty -m foo &&
  git tag -m message mytag &&
  git fast-export mytag |
  perl -lpe '/^tag/ and s/mytag/"a" x 8192/e' |
  git fast-import <input

we'll overflow the buffer. We can fix it by using a strbuf.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-25 12:20:57 -07:00
3c078b9c86 fast-import: clean up pack_data pointer in end_packfile
We have a global pointer pack_data pointing to the current
pack we have open. Inside end_packfile we have two new
pointers, old_p and new_p. The latter points to pack_data,
and the former points to the new "installed" version of the
packfile we get when we hand the file off to the regular
sha1_file machinery. When then free old_p.

Presumably the extra old_p pointer was there so that we
could overwrite pack_data with new_p and still free old_p,
but we don't do that. We just leave pack_data pointing to
bogus memory, and don't overwrite it until we call
start_packfile again (if ever).

This can cause problems for our die routine, which calls
end_packfile to clean things up. If we die at the wrong
moment, we can end up looking at invalid memory in
pack_data left after the last end_packfile().

Instead, let's make sure we set pack_data to NULL after we
free it, and make calling endfile() again with a NULL
pack_data a noop (there is nothing to end).

We can further make things less confusing by dropping old_p
entirely, and moving new_p closer to its point of use.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-25 12:20:24 -07:00
afd11d3ebc pack-refs: prune top-level refs like "refs/foo"
After we have packed all refs, we prune any loose refs that
correspond to what we packed. We do so by first taking a
lock with lock_ref_sha1, and then deleting the loose ref
file.

However, lock_ref_sha1 will refuse to take a lock on any
refs that exist at the top-level of the "refs/" directory,
and we skip pruning the ref.  This is almost certainly not
what we want to happen here. The criteria to be pruned
should not differ from that to be packed; if a ref makes it
to prune_ref, it's because we want it both packed and
pruned (if there are refs you do not want to be packed, they
should be omitted much earlier by pack_ref_is_possible,
which we do in this case if --all is not given).

We can fix this by switching to lock_any_ref_for_update.
This behaves exactly the same with the exception of this
top-level check.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-25 12:19:50 -07:00
3bc7a05b1a walker: avoid quadratic list insertion in mark_complete
Similar to 16445242 (fetch-pack: avoid quadratic list insertion in
mark_complete), sort only after all refs are collected instead of while
inserting.  The result is the same, but it's more efficient that way.
The difference will only be measurable in repositories with a large
number of refs.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-25 10:28:14 -07:00
e8d1dfe639 sha1_name: avoid quadratic list insertion in handle_one_ref
Similar to 16445242 (fetch-pack: avoid quadratic list insertion in
mark_complete), sort only after all refs are collected instead of while
inserting.  The result is the same, but it's more efficient that way.
The difference will only be measurable in repositories with a large
number of refs.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-25 10:27:52 -07:00
869951babc l10n: de.po: improve message when switching branches
Suggested-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-08-23 19:17:38 +02:00
795b9ff872 l10n: de.po: fix typo
Reported-by: Hartmut Henkel
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-08-23 19:17:38 +02:00
47abf17be5 po/TEAMS: Add Catalan team
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
2014-08-22 20:10:30 -06:00
0082d82183 l10n: Add Catalan translation
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
2014-08-22 20:10:22 -06:00
6c71f8b0d3 upload-pack: keep poll(2)'s timeout to -1
Keep poll's timeout at -1 when uploadpack.keepalive = 0, instead of
setting it to -1000, since some pedantic old systems (eg HP-UX) and
the gnulib compat/poll will treat only -1 as the valid value for
an infinite timeout.

Signed-off-by: Edward Thomson <ethomson@microsoft.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-22 11:19:47 -07:00
7ce7c7607b convert: drop arguments other than 'path' from would_convert_to_git()
It is only the path that matters in the decision whether to filter
or not.  Clarify this by making path the only argument of
would_convert_to_git().

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-21 15:27:20 -07:00
dddecc5b7f pretty: note that %cd respects the --date= option
Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@virtuell-zuhause.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-21 13:09:06 -07:00
8837eb47f2 http: style fixes for curl_multi_init error check
Unless there is a good reason, we should use die() rather than
fprintf/exit. We can also shorten the message to match other curl init
failures (and match our usual lowercase no-full-stop style).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-21 10:53:55 -07:00
e09867f060 intersect_paths: respect mode in git's tree-sort
When we do a combined diff, we individually diff against
each parent, and then use intersect_paths to do a parallel
walk through the sorted results and come up with a final
list of interesting paths.

The sort order here is that returned by the diffs, which
means it is in git's tree-order which sorts sub-trees as if
their paths have "/" at the end. When we do our parallel
walk, we need to use a comparison function which provides
the same order.

Since 8518ff8 (combine-diff: optimize combine_diff_path sets
intersection, 2014-01-20), we use a simple strcmp to
compare the pathnames, and get this wrong. It's somewhat
hard to trigger because normally a diff does not produce
tree entries at all, and therefore the sort order is the
same as a strcmp. However, if the "-t" option is used with
the diff, then we will produce diff_filepairs for both trees
and files.

We can use base_name_compare to do the comparison, just as
the tree-diff code does. Even though what we have are not
technically base names (they are full paths within the
tree), the end result is the same (we do not care about
interior slashes at all, only about the final character).

However, since we do not have the length of each path
stored, we take a slight shortcut: if neither of the entries
is a sub-tree then the comparison is equivalent to a strcmp.
This lets us skip the extra strlen calls in the common case
without having to reimplement base_name_compare from
scratch.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-20 13:38:37 -07:00
3918057164 imap-send.c: imap_folder -> imap_server_conf.folder
Rename the imap_folder variable to folder and make it a member
of struct imap_server_conf.

Signed-off-by: Bernhard Reiter <ockham@raz.or.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-20 12:13:44 -07:00
1f87293d78 run-command: inline prepare_run_command_v_opt()
Merge prepare_run_command_v_opt() and its only caller.  This removes a
pointer indirection and allows to initialize the struct child_process
using CHILD_PROCESS_INIT.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-20 09:56:12 -07:00
41e9bad75e run-command: call run_command_v_opt_cd_env() instead of duplicating it
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-20 09:55:41 -07:00
483bbd4e4c run-command: introduce child_process_init()
Add a helper function for initializing those struct child_process
variables for which the macro CHILD_PROCESS_INIT can't be used.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-20 09:54:58 -07:00
d318027932 run-command: introduce CHILD_PROCESS_INIT
Most struct child_process variables are cleared using memset first after
declaration.  Provide a macro, CHILD_PROCESS_INIT, that can be used to
initialize them statically instead.  That's shorter, doesn't require a
function call and is slightly more readable (especially given that we
already have STRBUF_INIT, ARGV_ARRAY_INIT etc.).

Helped-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-20 09:53:37 -07:00
93b5393611 Makefile: make perf tests optional for profile build
The perf tests need a repository to operate on; if none is
defined, we fall back to the repository containing our build
directory.  That fails, though, for an exported tarball of
git.git, which has no repository.

Since 5d7fd6d we run the perf tests as part of "make
profile". Therefore "make profile" fails out of the box on
released tarballs of v2.1.0.

We can fix this by making the perf tests optional; if they
are skipped, we still run the regular test suite, which
should give a lot of profile data (and is what we used to do
prior to 5d7fd6d anyway).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Andi Kleen <ak@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-19 09:59:22 -07:00
c8466645ed make config --add behave correctly for empty and NULL values
Currently if we have a config file like,
[foo]
        baz
        bar =

and we try something like, "git config --add foo.baz roll", Git will
segfault. Moreover, for "git config --add foo.bar roll", it will
overwrite the original value instead of appending after the existing
empty value.

The problem lies with the regexp used for simulating --add in
`git_config_set_multivar_in_file()`, "^$", which in ideal case should
not match with any string but is true for empty strings. Instead use a
regexp like "a^" which can not be true for any string, empty or not.

For removing the segfault add a check for NULL values in `matches()` in
config.c.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-18 10:45:59 -07:00
960160b061 subtree: make "all" default target of Makefile
You should be able to run "make" in contrib/subtree with no
arguments and get the "all" target. This was broken by 8e2a5cc
(contrib/subtree/Makefile: use GIT-VERSION-FILE, 2014-05-06), which
put the rule for GIT-VERSION-FILE higher in the file.

We can fix this by putting an empty "all::" target at the top of the
file, just like our main Makefile does, and document that fact.
That fixes this instance and future-proofs against it happening
again.

Reported-by: Jack Nagel <jacknagel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-18 10:20:36 -07:00
1aaf69e669 diff: shortcut for diff'ing two binary SHA-1 objects
If we are given two SHA-1 and asked to determine if they are different
(but not _what_ differences), we know right away by comparing SHA-1.

A side effect of this patch is, because large files are marked binary,
diff-tree will not need to unpack them. 'diff-index --cached' will not
either. But 'diff-files' still does.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-18 10:16:55 -07:00
6bf3b81348 diff --stat: mark any file larger than core.bigfilethreshold binary
Too large files may lead to failure to allocate memory. If it happens
here, it could impact quite a few commands that involve
diff. Moreover, too large files are inefficient to compare anyway (and
most likely non-text), so mark them binary and skip looking at their
content.

Noticed-by: Dale R. Worley <worley@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-18 10:16:45 -07:00
8e5dd3d654 diff.c: allow to pass more flags to diff_populate_filespec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-18 10:16:35 -07:00
735efde838 sha1_file.c: do not die failing to malloc in unpack_compressed_entry
Fewer die() gives better control to the caller, provided that the
caller _can_ handle it. And in unpack_compressed_entry() case, it can,
because unpack_compressed_entry() already returns NULL if it fails to
inflate data.

A side effect from this is fsck continues to run when very large blobs
are present (and do not fit in memory).

Noticed-by: Dale R. Worley <worley@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-18 10:15:19 -07:00
f8bb1d9431 wrapper.c: introduce gentle xmallocz that does not die()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-18 10:15:08 -07:00
6fceed3bea fetch: silence git-gc if --quiet is given
Noticed-by: Matthew Flaschen <mflaschen@wikimedia.org>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-18 10:14:19 -07:00
1991006cb9 fetch: convert argv_gc_auto to struct argv_array
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-18 10:14:08 -07:00
f9dc5d65ca git-imap-send: simplify tunnel construction
Signed-off-by: Bernhard Reiter <ockham@raz.or.at>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-18 10:12:16 -07:00
faa3807cfe http.c: die if curl_*_init fails
Signed-off-by: Bernhard Reiter <ockham@raz.or.at>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-18 10:11:42 -07:00
bf7283465b turn path macros into inline function
Use static inline functions instead of macros for has_dos_drive_prefix,
offset_1st_component, is_dir_sep and find_last_dir_sep in order to let
the compiler do type checking.

The definitions of offset_1st_component and is_dir_sep are switched
around because the former uses the latter.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-18 09:45:39 -07:00
8687f7776d clean: use f(void) instead of f() to declare a pointer to a function without arguments
Explicitly state that menu_item functions like clean_cmd don't take
any arguments by using void instead of an empty parameter list.

Found using gcc -Wstrict-prototypes.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-18 09:36:56 -07:00
6c4ab27f23 Git 2.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-15 15:09:12 -07:00
9eeff2f681 config.mak.uname: add hint on uname_R for MacOS X
I always have to scratch my head every time I see this cryptic
pattern "[15678]\."; leave a short note to remind the maintainer
and the reviewers.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-15 11:04:59 -07:00
9c7a0beee0 config.mak.uname: set NO_APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO on older systems
Older MacOS systems prior to 10.5 do not have the CommonCrypto
support Git uses so set NO_APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO on those systems.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-15 09:50:18 -07:00
41ca19b6a6 tests: fix negated test_i18ngrep calls
The helper function test_i18ngrep pretends that it found the expected
results when it is running under GETTEXT_POISON. For this reason, it must
not be used negated like so

   ! test_i18ngrep foo bar

because the test case would fail under GETTEXT_POISON. The function offers
a special syntax to test that a pattern is *not* found:

   test_i18ngrep ! foo bar

Convert incorrect uses to this syntax.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-13 13:12:06 -07:00
b35b10d463 builtin/apply.c: replace git_config() with git_config_get_string_const()
Use `git_config_get_string_const()` instead of `git_config()` to take
advantage of the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-13 12:37:47 -07:00
0e7bcb1b00 merge-recursive.c: replace git_config() with git_config_get_int()
Use `git_config_get_int()` instead of `git_config()` to take advantage
of the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-13 12:37:41 -07:00
6ea358f784 ll-merge.c: refactor read_merge_config() to use git_config_string()
There is one slight behavior change, previously "merge.default"
silently ignored a NULL value and didn't raise any error. But,
in the same function, all other values raise an error on a NULL
value. So to conform with other call sites in Git, a NULL value
for "merge.default" raises an error.

The the new config-set API is not very useful here, because much of
the function is dedicated to processing "merge.<name>.variable",
which the new API does not handle well.  If it were for variables
like, "merge.summary", "merge.tool", and "merge.verbosity", we could
use the new API.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-13 12:36:21 -07:00
536900e5b2 fast-import.c: replace git_config() with git_config_get_*() family
Use `git_config_get_*()` family instead of `git_config()` to take
advantage of the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-13 12:36:02 -07:00
6c1db1b388 unpack-trees: use 'cuddled' style for if-else cascade
Match the predominant style in git by following K&R style for if/else
cascades.  Documentation/CodingStyle from linux.git explains:

  Note that the closing brace is empty on a line of its own, _except_ in
  the cases where it is followed by a continuation of the same statement,
  ie a "while" in a do-statement or an "else" in an if-statement, like
  this:

	if (x == y) {
		..
	} else if (x > y) {
		...
	} else {
		....
	}

  Rationale: K&R.

  Also, note that this brace-placement also minimizes the number of empty
  (or almost empty) lines, without any loss of readability.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-13 10:32:12 -07:00
0ecd180a27 unpack-trees: simplify 'all other failures' case
In the 'if (current)' block of twoway_merge, we handle the boring
errors by checking if the entry from the old tree, current index, and
new tree are present, to get a pathname for the error message from one
of them:

	if (oldtree)
		return o->gently ? -1 : reject_merge(oldtree, o);
	if (current)
		return o->gently ? -1 : reject_merge(current, o);
	if (newtree)
		return o->gently ? -1 : reject_merge(newtree, o);
	return -1;

Since this is guarded by 'if (current)', the second test is guaranteed
to succeed.  Moreover, any of the three entries, if present, would
have the same path because there is no rename detection in this code
path.   Even if some day in the future the entries' paths differ, the
'current' path used in the index and worktree would presumably be the
most recognizable for the end user.

Simplify by just using 'current'.

Noticed by coverity, Id:290002

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Improved-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-13 10:32:08 -07:00
13b081257a mailsplit.c: remove dead code
This was found by coverity. (Id: 290001)

The variable 'output' is assigned to a value
after all gotos to the corrupt label.

Remove the goto by moving the errorhandling code to the
condition, which detects the error.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Helped-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-13 09:50:58 -07:00
2d26d533a0 Documentation/git-rebase.txt: -f forces a rebase that would otherwise be a no-op
"Current branch is a descendant of the commit you are rebasing onto"
does not necessarily mean "rebase" requires "--force".  For a plain
vanilla "history flattening" rebase, the rebase can be done without
forcing if there is a merge between the tip of the branch being
rebased and the commit you are rebasing onto, even if the tip is
descendant of the other.

[jc: reworded both the text and the log description]

Signed-off-by: Sergey Organov <sorganov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-12 13:37:45 -07:00
f7f91086a3 pack-objects: turn off bitmaps when we see --shallow lines
Reachability bitmaps do not work with shallow operations,
because they cache a view of the object reachability that
represents the true objects. Whereas a shallow repository
(or a shallow operation in a repository) is inherently
cutting off the object graph with a graft.

We explicitly disallow the use of bitmaps in shallow
repositories by checking is_repository_shallow(), and we
should continue to do that. However, we also want to
disallow bitmaps when we are serving a fetch to a shallow
client, since we momentarily take on their grafted view of
the world.

It used to be enough to call is_repository_shallow at the
start of pack-objects.  Upload-pack wrote the other side's
shallow state to a temporary file and pointed the whole
pack-objects process at this state with "git --shallow-file",
and from the perspective of pack-objects, we really were
in a shallow repo.  But since b790e0f (upload-pack: send
shallow info over stdin to pack-objects, 2014-03-11), we do
it differently: we send --shallow lines to pack-objects over
stdin, and it registers them itself.

This means that our is_repository_shallow check is way too
early (we have not been told about the shallowness yet), and
that it is insufficient (calling is_repository_shallow is
not enough, as the shallow grafts we register do not change
its return value). Instead, we can just turn off bitmaps
explicitly when we see these lines.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-12 12:17:19 -07:00
201087422d builtin/blame.c: add translation to warning about failed revision walk
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-12 11:01:44 -07:00
81c3ce3cdc prepare_revision_walk(): check for return value in all places
Even the documentation tells us:

	You should check if it returns any error (non-zero return
	code) and if it does not, you can start using get_revision()
	to do the iteration.

In preparation for this commit, I grepped all occurrences of
prepare_revision_walk and added error messages, when there were none.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-12 11:00:33 -07:00
430875969a utf8.c: fix strbuf_utf8_replace() consuming data beyond input string
The main loop in strbuf_utf8_replace() could summed up as:

  while ('src' is still valid) {
    1) advance 'src' to copy ANSI escape sequences
    2) advance 'src' to copy/replace visible characters
  }

The problem is after #1, 'src' may have reached the end of the string
(so 'src' points to NUL) and #2 will continue to copy that NUL as if
it's a normal character. Because the output is stored in a strbuf,
this NUL accounted in the 'len' field as well. Check after #1 and
break the loop if necessary.

The test does not look obvious, but the combination of %>>() should
make a call trace like this

  show_log()
  pretty_print_commit()
  format_commit_message()
  strbuf_expand()
  format_commit_item()
  format_and_pad_commit()
  strbuf_utf8_replace()

where %C(auto)%d would insert a color reset escape sequence in the end
of the string given to strbuf_utf8_replace() and show_log() uses
fwrite() to send everything to stdout (including the incorrect NUL
inserted by strbuf_utf8_replace)

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-11 11:52:22 -07:00
ad1a19d0e7 mv: flatten error handling code block
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-11 10:48:07 -07:00
eac0ccc2cd mv: mark strings for translations
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-11 10:48:06 -07:00
50b6773287 clone.c: don't leak memory in cmd_clone
Free the refspec.
Found by scan.coverity.com (Id: 1127806)

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-10 16:41:14 -07:00
2f50babef1 remote.c: don't leak the base branch name in format_tracking_info
Found by scan.coverity.com (Id: 1127809)

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-10 16:40:54 -07:00
ccad42d483 read-cache: check for leading symlinks when refreshing index
Don't add paths with leading symlinks to the index while refreshing; we
only track those symlinks themselves.  We already ignore them while
preloading (see read_index_preload.c).

Reported-by: Nikolay Avdeev <avdeev@math.vsu.ru>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-10 11:16:20 -07:00
67de23ddb1 Merge branch 'master' of git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk
* 'master' of git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk:
  gitk: Updated Bulgarian translation (302t,0f,0u)
  gitk: Add keybinding to switch to parent commit
2014-08-10 11:03:03 -07:00
f82887f290 Git 2.1-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-08 13:52:16 -07:00
64de2e10a0 Documentation: git-init: flesh out example
Add a third step `git commit` after adding files for the first time.

Signed-off-by: Linus Arver <linusarver@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-08 13:17:42 -07:00
8994fbf3ec Documentation: git-init: template directory: reword and cross-reference
Signed-off-by: Linus Arver <linusarver@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-08 13:17:42 -07:00
4dde849a20 Documentation: git-init: reword parenthetical statements
Signed-off-by: Linus Arver <linusarver@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-08 13:17:41 -07:00
c165d1f5ca Documentation: git-init: --separate-git-dir: clarify
Use shorter sentences to describe what actually happens. We describe
what the term "Git symbolic link" actually means.

Also, we separate out the description of the behavioral change upon
reinitialization into its own paragraph.

Signed-off-by: Linus Arver <linusarver@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-08 13:17:41 -07:00
86d387af37 Documentation: git-init: template directory: reword
Signed-off-by: Linus Arver <linusarver@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-08 13:17:41 -07:00
ddeab3aea3 Documentation: git-init: list items facelift
No textual change.

Signed-off-by: Linus Arver <linusarver@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-08 13:17:40 -07:00
6e1ccacbed Documentation: git-init: typographical fixes
Use backticks when we quote something that the user should literally
use.

Signed-off-by: Linus Arver <linusarver@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-08 13:17:40 -07:00
09898e7c3b gitk: Updated Bulgarian translation (302t,0f,0u)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-08-08 16:39:30 +10:00
d4ec30b24a gitk: Add keybinding to switch to parent commit
Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-08-08 16:39:02 +10:00
2c8544ab91 bundle: fix exclusion of annotated tags
In commit c9a42c4 (bundle: allow rev-list options to exclude annotated
tags, 2009-01-02), support for excluding annotated tags outside the
specified date range was added. However, the wrong order of parameters
was chosen when calling memchr().

Fix this by swapping the character to search for with the maximum length
parameter.  Also cover this behavior with an additional test.

Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <git@cryptocrack.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 15:35:25 -07:00
288c67caf6 stash: default listing to working-tree diff
When you list stashes, you can provide arbitrary git-log
options to change the display. However, adding just "-p"
does nothing, because each stash is actually a merge commit.

This implementation detail is easy to forget, leading to
confused users who think "-p" is not working. We can make
this easier by defaulting to "--first-parent -m", which will
show the diff against the working tree. This omits the
index portion of the stash entirely, but it's simple and it
matches what "git stash show" provides.

People who are more clueful about stash's true form can use
"--cc" to override the "-m", and the "--first-parent" will
then do nothing. For diffs, it only affects non-combined
diffs, so "--cc" overrides it. And for the traversal, we are
walking the linear reflog anyway, so we do not even care
about the parents.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 14:37:28 -07:00
540b0f4977 branch.c: replace git_config() with `git_config_get_string()
Use `git_config_get_string()` instead of `git_config()` to take advantage of
the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow. While we are at
it, return -1 if we find no value for the queried variable. Original code
returned 0 for all cases, which was checked by `add_branch_desc()` in
fmt-merge-msg.c resulting in addition of a spurious newline to the `out`
strbuf. Now, the newline addition is skipped as -1 is returned to the caller
if no value is found.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 13:33:29 -07:00
111791559e alias.c: replace git_config() with git_config_get_string()
Use `git_config_get_string()` instead of `git_config()` to take advantage of
the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 13:33:29 -07:00
ef7e1d0cda imap-send.c: replace git_config() with git_config_get_*() family
Use `git_config_get_*()` family instead of `git_config()` to take advantage of
the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 13:33:28 -07:00
586f414a89 pager.c: replace git_config() with git_config_get_value()
Use `git_config_get_value()` instead of `git_config()` to take advantage of
the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 13:33:28 -07:00
5801d3b416 builtin/gc.c: replace git_config() with git_config_get_*() family
Use `git_config_get_*()` family instead of `git_config()` to take advantage of
the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 13:33:28 -07:00
633e5ad326 rerere.c: replace git_config() with git_config_get_*() family
Use `git_config_get_*()` family instead of `git_config()` to take advantage of
the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 13:33:27 -07:00
f44af51d13 fetchpack.c: replace git_config() with git_config_get_*() family
Use `git_config_get_*()` family instead of `git_config()` to take advantage of
the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 13:33:27 -07:00
95790ff60d archive.c: replace git_config() with git_config_get_bool() family
Use `git_config_get_bool()` family instead of `git_config()` to take advantage of
the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 13:33:27 -07:00
b27a572099 read-cache.c: replace git_config() with git_config_get_*() family
Use `git_config_get_*()` family instead of `git_config()` to take
advantage of the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.

Use an intermediate value, as `version` can not be used directly in
git_config_get_int() due to incompatible type.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 13:33:26 -07:00
6881f0ccb4 http-backend.c: replace git_config() with git_config_get_bool() family
Use `git_config_get_bool()` family instead of `git_config()` to take advantage of
the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 13:33:26 -07:00
8939d32d81 daemon.c: replace git_config() with git_config_get_bool() family
Use `git_config_get_bool()` family instead of `git_config()` to take advantage of
the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 13:33:25 -07:00
94204bf505 builtin/log.c: fix minor memory leak
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 12:29:09 -07:00
477a08af04 apply: omit ws check for excluded paths
Whitespace breakages are checked while the patch is being parsed.
Disable them at the beginning of parse_chunk(), where each
individual patch is parsed, immediately after we learn the name of
the file the patch applies to and before we start parsing the diff
contained in the patch.

One may naively think that we should be able to not just skip the
whitespace checks but simply fast-forward to the next patch without
doing anything once use_patch() tells us that this patch is not
going to be used.  But in reality we cannot really skip much of the
parsing in order to do such a "fast-forward", primarily because
parsing "@@ -k,l +m,n @@" lines and counting the input lines is how
we determine the boundaries of individual patches.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 12:23:55 -07:00
3ee2ad14c6 apply: hoist use_patch() helper for path exclusion up
We will be adding a caller to the function a bit earlier in this
file in a later patch.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 12:23:50 -07:00
d487b0ba50 apply: use the right attribute for paths in non-Git patches
We parse each patchfile and find the name of the path the patch
applies to, and then use that name to consult the attribute system
to find the whitespace rules to be used, and also the target file
(either in the working tree or in the index) to replay the changes
against.

Unlike a Git-generated patch, a non-Git patch is taken to have the
pathnames relative to the current working directory.  The names
found in such a patch are modified by prepending the prefix by the
prefix_patches() helper function introduced in 56185f49 (git-apply:
require -p<n> when working in a subdirectory., 2007-02-19).

However, this prefixing is done after the patch is fully parsed and
affects only what target files are patched.  Because the attributes
are checked against the names found in the patch during the parsing,
not against the final pathname, the whitespace check that is done
during parsing ends up using attributes for a wrong path for non-Git
patches.

Fix this by doing the prefix much earlier, immediately after the
header part of each patch is parsed and we learn the name of the
path the patch affects.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 12:17:07 -07:00
8a7b034d6d add tests for git_config_get_string_const()
Add tests for `git_config_get_string_const()`, check whether it
dies printing the line number and the file name if a NULL
value is retrieved for the given key.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 11:41:20 -07:00
79e9ce21fa add a test for semantic errors in config files
Semantic errors (for example, for alias.* variables NULL values are
not allowed) in configuration files cause a die printing the line
number and file name of the offending value.

Add a test documenting that such errors cause a die printing the
accurate line number and file name.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 11:41:18 -07:00
155ef25f12 rewrite git_config() to use the config-set API
Of all the functions in `git_config*()` family, `git_config()` has the
most invocations in the whole code base. Each `git_config()` invocation
causes config file rereads which can be avoided using the config-set API.

Use the config-set API to rewrite `git_config()` to use the config caching
layer to avoid config file rereads on each invocation during a git process
lifetime. First invocation constructs the cache, and after that for each
successive invocation, `git_config()` feeds values from the config cache
instead of rereading the configuration files.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 11:41:10 -07:00
5a80e97c82 config: add git_die_config() to the config-set API
Add `git_die_config` that dies printing the line number and the file name
of the highest priority value for the configuration variable `key`. A custom
error message is also printed before dying, specified by the caller, which can
be skipped if `err` argument is set to NULL.

It has usage in non-callback based config value retrieval where we can
raise an error and die if there is a semantic error.
For example,

	if (!git_config_get_value(key, &value)){
		if (!strcmp(value, "foo"))
			git_config_die(key, "value: `%s` is illegal", value);
		else
			/* do work */
	}

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 11:40:25 -07:00
aace438502 change git_config() return value to void
Currently `git_config()` returns an integer signifying an error code.
During rewrites of the function most of the code was shifted to
`git_config_with_options()`. `git_config_with_options()` normally
returns positive values if its `config_source` parameter is set as NULL,
as most errors are fatal, and non-fatal potential errors are guarded
by "if" statements that are entered only when no error is possible.

Still a negative value can be returned in case of race condition between
`access_or_die()` & `git_config_from_file()`. Also, all callers of
`git_config()` ignore the return value except for one case in branch.c.

Change `git_config()` return value to void and make it die if it receives
a negative value from `git_config_with_options()`.

Original-patch-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 11:40:17 -07:00
3df8fd625f add line number and file name info to config_set
Store file name and line number for each key-value pair in the cache
during parsing of the configuration files.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 11:38:50 -07:00
b3b3f60bb6 config.c: fix accuracy of line number in errors
If a callback returns a negative value to `git_config*()` family,
they call `die()` while printing the line number and the file name.
Currently the printed line number is off by one, thus printing the
wrong line number.

Make `linenr` point to the line we just parsed during the call
to callback to get accurate line number in error messages.

Commit-message-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 11:38:32 -07:00
8262aaa283 config.c: mark error and warnings strings for translation
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 11:37:44 -07:00
764c739c16 Merge branch 'mb/relnotes-2.1'
* mb/relnotes-2.1:
  Release notes: grammatical fixes
  RelNotes: no more check_ref_format micro-optimization
2014-08-07 09:44:17 -07:00
5261ec5d5d Release notes: grammatical fixes
Signed-off-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 09:44:05 -07:00
663d096c24 various contrib: Fix links in man pages
Inspired by 2147fa7e (2014-07-31 git-push: fix link in man page),
I grepped through the whole tree searching for 'gitlink:' occurrences.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-07 09:43:21 -07:00
f7fbc357f8 l10n: fr.po (2257t) update for version 2.1.0
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2014-08-07 09:07:18 +02:00
a127b3f24d imap-send doc: omit confusing "to use imap-send" modifier
It wouldn't make sense for these configuration variables to be
required for Git in general to function.  'Required' in this context
means required for git imap-send to work.

Noticed while trying to figure out what the sentence describing
imap.tunnel meant.

[jn: expanded to also simplify explanation of imap.folder and
 imap.host in the same way]

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-05 11:51:37 -07:00
f54d3c6d7c RelNotes: no more check_ref_format micro-optimization
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-05 11:45:09 -07:00
a789ca70e7 config: teach "git -c" to recognize an empty string
In a config file, you can do:

  [foo]
  bar

to turn the "foo.bar" boolean flag on, and you can do:

  [foo]
  bar=

to set "foo.bar" to the empty string. However, git's "-c"
parameter treats both:

  git -c foo.bar

and

  git -c foo.bar=

as the boolean flag, and there is no way to set a variable
to the empty string. This patch enables the latter form to
do that.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-05 10:09:17 -07:00
b9e343e640 Merge remote-tracking branch 'l10n/vi/vnwildman/master'
* l10n/vi/vnwildman/master:
  l10n: vi.po (2257t): Update translation
2014-08-05 23:07:22 +08:00
4b71297969 Merge branch 'master' of github.com:alshopov/git-po
* 'master' of github.com:alshopov/git-po:
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2257t,0f,0u)
2014-08-05 22:41:00 +08:00
dc4a1ba99c l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2257t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2014-08-05 13:49:51 +01:00
8d388239fd l10n: vi.po (2257t): Update translation
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2014-08-05 07:35:56 +07:00
7b69fcb181 Git 2.1.0-rc1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-04 14:05:06 -07:00
b16665e832 Merge branch 'tf/maint-doc-push'
* tf/maint-doc-push:
  git-push: fix link in man page
2014-08-04 14:03:45 -07:00
18bd789a18 Merge branch 'ta/doc-config'
* ta/doc-config:
  add documentation for writing config files
2014-08-04 14:03:25 -07:00
a26bc613a6 pretty.c: make git_pretty_formats_config return -1 on git_config_string failure
`git_pretty_formats_config()` continues without checking git_config_string's
return value which can lead to a SEGFAULT. Instead return -1 when
git_config_string fails signalling `git_config()` to die printing the location
of the erroneous variable.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-04 12:12:25 -07:00
10f343ea81 archive: honor tar.umask even for pax headers
git archive's tar format uses extended pax headers to encode metadata
into the archive.  Most tar implementations correctly treat these as
metadata, but some that do not understand the pax format extract these
as files instead.  Apply the tar.umask setting to these entries to
prevent tampering by other users.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-08-04 11:39:11 -07:00
aafbee8c4b l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2257t,0f,0u)
Sync with tags v2.1.0-rc1 and v2.0.4

Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2014-08-04 21:30:38 +03:00
6acbf03300 l10n: zh_CN: translations for git v2.1.0-rc0
Translate 37 new messages (2257t0f0u) for git v2.1.0-rc0.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-08-04 16:42:40 +08:00
afc344c4ad Merge commit 'bg/alshopov/master'
* commit 'bg/alshopov/master':
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2247t,0f,0u)
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2228t,0f,0u)
2014-08-04 16:38:00 +08:00
6d0081ad61 Merge remote-tracking branch 'sv/nafmo/master'
* sv/nafmo/master:
  l10n: Fix more typos in the Swedish translations
2014-08-04 16:33:18 +08:00
fe05e196c5 l10n: git.pot: v2.1.0 round 1 (38 new, 9 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.1.0-rc0 for git v2.1.0 l10n round 1.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-08-04 14:51:24 +08:00
c099f8c7ed l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2247t,0f,0u)
Used make po/git.pot from git-l10n/git-po/master

Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2014-08-03 13:14:03 +03:00
642c7fab1d l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2228t,0f,0u)
Used po/git.pot from git-l10n/git-po/master

Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2014-08-03 13:11:46 +03:00
f07243fe16 imap-send: clarify CRAM-MD5 vs LOGIN documentation
Explicitly mention that leaving imap.authMethod unset makes
git imap-send use the basic IMAP plaintext LOGIN command.

Signed-off-by: Tony Finch <dot@dotat.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-31 11:45:09 -07:00
2147fa7e19 git-push: fix link in man page
Signed-off-by: Tony Finch <dot@dotat.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-31 10:17:37 -07:00
aa544bfbc6 Sync with 2.0.4
* maint:
  Git 2.0.4
  commit --amend: test specifies authorship but forgets to check
2014-07-30 14:25:46 -07:00
aa0ba07a02 Update draft release notes to 2.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-30 14:25:14 -07:00
0d9cb2d14e Merge branch 'jk/more-push-completion'
* jk/more-push-completion:
  completion: complete `git push --force-with-lease=`
  completion: add some missing options to `git push`
  completion: complete "unstuck" `git push --recurse-submodules`
2014-07-30 14:21:14 -07:00
c372e7b01b Merge branch 'sk/mingw-tests-workaround'
Make tests pass on msysgit by mostly disabling ones that are
infeasible on that platform.

* sk/mingw-tests-workaround:
  t800[12]: work around MSys limitation
  t9902: mingw-specific fix for gitfile link files
  t4210: skip command-line encoding tests on mingw
  MinGW: disable legacy encoding tests
  t0110/MinGW: skip tests that pass arbitrary bytes on the command line
  MinGW: Skip test redirecting to fd 4
2014-07-30 14:21:12 -07:00
385e171a5b Merge branch 'sk/mingw-uni-fix-more'
Most of these are battle-tested in msysgit and are needed to
complete what has been merged to 'master' already.

* sk/mingw-uni-fix-more:
  Win32: enable color output in Windows cmd.exe
  Win32: patch Windows environment on startup
  Win32: keep the environment sorted
  Win32: use low-level memory allocation during initialization
  Win32: reduce environment array reallocations
  Win32: don't copy the environment twice when spawning child processes
  Win32: factor out environment block creation
  Win32: unify environment function names
  Win32: unify environment case-sensitivity
  Win32: fix environment memory leaks
  Win32: Unicode environment (incoming)
  Win32: Unicode environment (outgoing)
  Revert "Windows: teach getenv to do a case-sensitive search"
  tests: do not pass iso8859-1 encoded parameter
2014-07-30 14:21:09 -07:00
4b0c0e35dd Merge branch 'ep/avoid-test-a-o'
* ep/avoid-test-a-o:
  t9814: fix misconversion from test $a -o $b to test $a || test $b
2014-07-30 14:21:05 -07:00
32f56600bb Git 2.0.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-30 14:19:53 -07:00
b9c7d6e433 pretty: make empty userformats truly empty
If the user provides an empty format with "--format=", we
end up putting in extra whitespace that the user cannot
prevent. This comes from two places:

  1. If the format is missing a terminating newline, we add
     one automatically. This makes sense for --format=%h, but
     not for a truly empty format.

  2. We add an extra newline between the pretty-printed
     format and a diff or diffstat. If the format is empty,
     there's no point in doing so if there's nothing to
     separate.

With this patch, one can get a diff with no other cruft out
of "diff-tree --format= $commit".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-30 12:30:08 -07:00
c75e7ad28a pretty: treat "--format=" as an empty userformat
Until now, we treated "--pretty=" or "--format=" as "give me
the default format". This was not planned nor documented,
but only what happened to work due to our parsing of
"--pretty" (which should give the default format).

Let's instead let these be an actual empty userformat.
Otherwise one must write out the annoyingly long
"--pretty=tformat:" to get the same behavior.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-30 12:30:06 -07:00
ae18165fbb revision: drop useless string offset when parsing "--pretty"
Once upon a time, we parsed pretty options by looking for
"--pretty" at the start of the string, and then feeding the
rest (including an "=") to get_commit_format. Later, commit
48ded91 (log --pretty: do not accept bogus "--prettyshort",
2008-05-25) split this into a separate check for "--pretty"
versus "--pretty=".

However, when parsing "--pretty", we still passed "arg+8" to
get_commit_format. This is useless, since it will always
point to the NUL terminator at the end of the string. We can
simply pass NULL instead; both parameters are treated the
same by get_commit_format.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-30 12:30:02 -07:00
97d6e799aa add documentation for writing config files
Replace TODO introduced in commit 9c3c22 with documentation
explaining Git config API functions for writing configuration
files.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-30 12:16:07 -07:00
d8b396e17e commit --amend: test specifies authorship but forgets to check
The test case "--amend option copies authorship" specifies that the
git-commit option `--amend` uses the authorship of the replaced
commit for the new commit. Add the omitted check that this property
actually holds.

Signed-off-by: Fabian Ruch <bafain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-30 11:32:12 -07:00
d0da003d5b use a hashmap to make remotes faster
Remotes are stored as an array, so looking one up or adding one without
duplication is an O(n) operation.  Reading an entire config file full of
remotes is O(n^2) in the number of remotes.  For a repository with tens of
thousands of remotes, the running time can hit multiple minutes.

Hash tables are way faster.  So we add a hashmap from remote name to
struct remote and use it for all lookups.  The time to add a new remote to
a repo that already has 50,000 remotes drops from ~2 minutes to < 1
second.

We retain the old array of remotes so iterators proceed in config-file
order.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Reynolds <patrick.reynolds@github.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-30 11:29:33 -07:00
4c715ebb96 test-config: add tests for the config_set API
Expose the `config_set` C API as a set of simple commands in order to
facilitate testing. Add tests for the `config_set` API as well as for
`git_config_get_*()` family for the usual config files.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-29 14:33:36 -07:00
3c8687a73e add config_set API for caching config-like files
Currently `git_config()` uses a callback mechanism and file rereads for
config values. Due to this approach, it is not uncommon for the config
files to be parsed several times during the run of a git program, with
different callbacks picking out different variables useful to themselves.

Add a `config_set`, that can be used to construct an in-memory cache for
config-like files that the caller specifies (i.e., files like `.gitmodules`,
`~/.gitconfig` etc.). Add two external functions `git_configset_get_value`
and `git_configset_get_value_multi` for querying from the config sets.
`git_configset_get_value` follows `last one wins` semantic (i.e. if there
are multiple matches for the queried key in the files of the configset the
value returned will be the last entry in `value_list`).
`git_configset_get_value_multi` returns a list of values sorted in order of
increasing priority (i.e. last match will be at the end of the list). Add
type specific query functions like `git_configset_get_bool` and similar.

Add a default `config_set`, `the_config_set` to cache all key-value pairs
read from usual config files (repo specific .git/config, user wide
~/.gitconfig, XDG config and the global /etc/gitconfig). `the_config_set`
is populated using `git_config()`.

Add two external functions `git_config_get_value` and
`git_config_get_value_multi` for querying in a non-callback manner from
`the_config_set`. Also, add type specific query functions that are
implemented as a thin wrapper around the `config_set` API.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-29 14:29:56 -07:00
2d186c8be5 init: avoid superfluous real_path() calls
Feeding the result of a real_path() call to real_path() again doesn't
change that result -- the returned path won't get any more real.  Avoid
such a double call in set_git_dir_init() and for the same reason stop
calling real_path() before feeding paths to set_git_work_tree(), as the
latter already takes care of that.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-28 16:17:12 -07:00
d13a0a97e0 unix-sockets: use strbuf_getcwd()
Instead of using a PATH_MAX-sized buffer, which can be too small on some
file systems, use strbuf_getcwd(), which handles any path getcwd()
returns.  Also preserve the errno set by strbuf_getcwd() instead of
setting it to ENAMETOOLONG; that way a more appropriate error message
can be shown based on the actual reason for failing.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-28 13:49:02 -07:00
f22a76e911 strbuf: add strbuf_getcwd()
Add strbuf_getcwd(), which puts the current working directory into a
strbuf.  Because it doesn't use a fixed-size buffer it supports
arbitrarily long paths, provided the platform's getcwd() does as well.
At least on Linux and FreeBSD it handles paths longer than PATH_MAX
just fine.

Suggested-by: Karsten Blees <karsten.blees@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-28 13:48:07 -07:00
583b61c1af Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  t4013: test diff-tree's --stdin commit formatting
  diff-tree: avoid lookup_unknown_object
  object_as_type: set commit index
  alloc: factor out commit index
  add object_as_type helper for casting objects
  parse_object_buffer: do not set object type
  move setting of object->type to alloc_* functions
  alloc: write out allocator definitions
  alloc.c: remove the alloc_raw_commit_node() function
2014-07-28 11:31:46 -07:00
d299e9e550 t4013: test diff-tree's --stdin commit formatting
Once upon a time, git-log was just "rev-list | diff-tree",
and we did not bother to test it separately. These days git-log
is implemented internally, but we want to make sure that the
rev-list to diff-tree pipeline continues to function. Let's
add a basic sanity test.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-28 11:31:32 -07:00
ad524f834a Merge branch 'jk/misc-fixes-maint'
* jk/misc-fixes-maint:
  apply: avoid possible bogus pointer
  fix memory leak parsing core.commentchar
  transport: fix leaks in refs_from_alternate_cb
  free ref string returned by dwim_ref
  receive-pack: don't copy "dir" parameter
2014-07-28 11:30:41 -07:00
919eb8acea t1402: check for refs ending with a dot
This has been illegal since cbdffe4 (check_ref_format(): tighten
refname rules, 2009-03-21), but we never tested it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-28 10:42:39 -07:00
5e6502288d Revert "Merge branch 'dt/refs-check-refname-component-sse'"
This reverts commit 6f92e5ff3c, reversing
changes made to a02ad882a1.
2014-07-28 10:41:53 -07:00
dad2e7f4bf Revert "Merge branch 'dt/refs-check-refname-component-sse-fix'"
This reverts commit 779c99fd68, reversing
changes made to df4d7d5646.
2014-07-28 10:41:16 -07:00
5d7c37a130 Merge branch 'jk/alloc-commit-id-maint' into maint
* jk/alloc-commit-id-maint:
  diff-tree: avoid lookup_unknown_object
  object_as_type: set commit index
  alloc: factor out commit index
  add object_as_type helper for casting objects
  parse_object_buffer: do not set object type
  move setting of object->type to alloc_* functions
  alloc: write out allocator definitions
  alloc.c: remove the alloc_raw_commit_node() function
2014-07-28 10:35:35 -07:00
b794ebeac9 diff-tree: avoid lookup_unknown_object
We generally want to avoid lookup_unknown_object, because it
results in allocating more memory for the object than may be
strictly necessary.

In this case, it is used to check whether we have an
already-parsed object before calling parse_object, to save
us from reading the object from disk. Using lookup_object
would be fine for that purpose, but we can take it a step
further. Since this code was written, parse_object already
learned the "check lookup_object" optimization, so we can
simply call parse_object directly.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-28 10:14:34 -07:00
34dfe197a9 object_as_type: set commit index
The point of the "index" field of struct commit is that
every allocated commit would have one. It is supposed to be
an invariant that whenever object->type is set to
OBJ_COMMIT, we have a unique index.

Commit 969eba6 (commit: push commit_index update into
alloc_commit_node, 2014-06-10) covered this case for
newly-allocated commits. However, we may also allocate an
"unknown" object via lookup_unknown_object, and only later
convert it to a commit. We must make sure that we set the
commit index when we switch the type field.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-28 10:14:34 -07:00
5de7f500c1 alloc: factor out commit index
We keep a static counter to set the commit index on newly
allocated objects. However, since we also need to set the
index on any_objects which are converted to commits, let's
make the counter available as a public function.

While we're moving it, let's make sure the counter is
allocated as an unsigned integer to match the index field in
"struct commit".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-28 10:14:33 -07:00
c4ad00f8cc add object_as_type helper for casting objects
When we call lookup_commit, lookup_tree, etc, the logic goes
something like:

  1. Look for an existing object struct. If we don't have
     one, allocate and return a new one.

  2. Double check that any object we have is the expected
     type (and complain and return NULL otherwise).

  3. Convert an object with type OBJ_NONE (from a prior
     call to lookup_unknown_object) to the expected type.

We can encapsulate steps 2 and 3 in a helper function which
checks whether we have the expected object type, converts
OBJ_NONE as appropriate, and returns the object.

Not only does this shorten the code, but it also provides
one central location for converting OBJ_NONE objects into
objects of other types. Future patches will use that to
enforce type-specific invariants.

Since this is a refactoring, we would want it to behave
exactly as the current code. It takes a little reasoning to
see that this is the case:

  - for lookup_{commit,tree,etc} functions, we are just
    pulling steps 2 and 3 into a function that does the same
    thing.

  - for the call in peel_object, we currently only do step 3
    (but we want to consolidate it with the others, as
    mentioned above). However, step 2 is a noop here, as the
    surrounding conditional makes sure we have OBJ_NONE
    (which we want to keep to avoid an extraneous call to
    sha1_object_info).

  - for the call in lookup_commit_reference_gently, we are
    currently doing step 2 but not step 3. However, step 3
    is a noop here. The object we got will have just come
    from deref_tag, which must have figured out the type for
    each object in order to know when to stop peeling.
    Therefore the type will never be OBJ_NONE.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-28 10:14:33 -07:00
fe0444b50b parse_object_buffer: do not set object type
The only way that "obj" can be non-NULL is if it came from
one of the lookup_* functions. These functions always ensure
that the object has the expected type (and return NULL
otherwise), so there is no need for us to set the type.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-28 10:14:33 -07:00
fe24d396e1 move setting of object->type to alloc_* functions
The "struct object" type implements basic object
polymorphism.  Individual instances are allocated as
concrete types (or as a union type that can store any
object), and a "struct object *" can be cast into its real
type after examining its "type" enum.  This means it is
dangerous to have a type field that does not match the
allocation (e.g., setting the type field of a "struct blob"
to "OBJ_COMMIT" would mean that a reader might read past the
allocated memory).

In most of the current code this is not a problem; the first
thing we do after allocating an object is usually to set its
type field by passing it to create_object. However, the
virtual commits we create in merge-recursive.c do not ever
get their type set. This does not seem to have caused
problems in practice, though (presumably because we always
pass around a "struct commit" pointer and never even look at
the type).

We can fix this oversight and also make it harder for future
code to get it wrong by setting the type directly in the
object allocation functions.

This will also make it easier to fix problems with commit
index allocation, as we know that any object allocated by
alloc_commit_node will meet the invariant that an object
with an OBJ_COMMIT type field will have a unique index
number.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-28 10:14:33 -07:00
52604d7144 alloc: write out allocator definitions
Because the allocator functions for tree, blobs, etc are all
very similar, we originally used a macro to avoid repeating
ourselves. Since the prior commit, though, the heavy lifting
is done by an inline helper function.  The macro does still
save us a few lines, but at some readability cost.  It
obfuscates the function definitions (and makes them hard to
find via grep).

Much worse, though, is the fact that it isn't used
consistently for all allocators. Somebody coming later may
be tempted to modify DEFINE_ALLOCATOR, but they would miss
alloc_commit_node, which is treated specially.

Let's just drop the macro and write everything out
explicitly.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-28 10:14:33 -07:00
8c3f3f28cb alloc.c: remove the alloc_raw_commit_node() function
In order to encapsulate the setting of the unique commit index, commit
969eba63 ("commit: push commit_index update into alloc_commit_node",
10-06-2014) introduced a (logically private) intermediary allocator
function. However, this function (alloc_raw_commit_node()) was declared
as a public function, which undermines its entire purpose.

Introduce an inline function, alloc_node(), which implements the main
logic of the allocator used by DEFINE_ALLOCATOR, and redefine the macro
in terms of the new function. In addition, use the new function in the
implementation of the alloc_commit_node() allocator, rather than the
intermediary allocator, which can now be removed.

Noticed by sparse ("symbol 'alloc_raw_commit_node' was not declared.
Should it be static?").

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-28 10:14:33 -07:00
49f1cb93a2 Git 2.1.0-rc0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-27 15:22:22 -07:00
3dcacd7797 Merge branch 'jk/rebase-am-fork-point'
"git rebase --fork-point" did not filter out patch-identical
commits correctly.

* jk/rebase-am-fork-point:
  rebase: omit patch-identical commits with --fork-point
  rebase--am: use --cherry-pick instead of --ignore-if-in-upstream
2014-07-27 15:14:21 -07:00
16737445a9 Merge branch 'cc/replace-graft'
"git replace" learned a "--graft" option to rewrite parents of a
commit.

* cc/replace-graft:
  replace: add test for --graft with a mergetag
  replace: check mergetags when using --graft
  replace: add test for --graft with signed commit
  replace: remove signature when using --graft
  contrib: add convert-grafts-to-replace-refs.sh
  Documentation: replace: add --graft option
  replace: add test for --graft
  replace: add --graft option
  replace: cleanup redirection style in tests
2014-07-27 15:14:18 -07:00
4799593e26 Merge branch 'jk/stable-prio-queue'
* jk/stable-prio-queue:
  t5539: update a flaky test
  paint_down_to_common: use prio_queue
  prio-queue: make output stable with respect to insertion
  prio-queue: factor out compare and swap operations
2014-07-27 15:14:15 -07:00
e832f7374b t9814: fix misconversion from test $a -o $b to test $a || test $b
Spotted-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-25 12:44:22 -07:00
8b27ff7eac commit: advertise config --global --edit on guessed identity
When the user has no user-wide configuration file, it's faster to use the
newly introduced config file template than to run two commands to set
user.name and user.email. Advise this to the user.

The old advice is kept if the user already has a configuration file since
the template feature would not trigger in this case.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-25 12:37:45 -07:00
06b2d87244 home_config_paths(): let the caller ignore xdg path
The caller can signal that it is not interested in learning
the location of $HOME/.gitconfig by passing global=NULL, but
there is no way to decline the path to the configuration
file based on $XDG_CONFIG_HOME.

Allow the caller to pass xdg=NULL to signal that it is not
interested in the XDG location.

Commit-message-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-25 12:23:08 -07:00
9830534e40 config --global --edit: create a template file if needed
When the user has no ~/.gitconfig file, git config --global --edit used
to launch an editor on an nonexistant file name.

Instead, create a file with a default content before launching the
editor. The template contains only commented-out entries, to save a few
keystrokes for the user. If the values are guessed properly, the user
will only have to uncomment the entries.

Advanced users teaching newbies can create a minimalistic configuration
faster for newbies. Beginners reading a tutorial advising to run "git
config --global --edit" as a first step will be slightly more guided for
their first contact with Git.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-25 12:23:06 -07:00
31bb6d37f9 apply: avoid possible bogus pointer
When parsing "index" lines from a git-diff, we look for a
space followed by the mode. If we don't have a space, then
we set our pointer to the end-of-line. However, we don't
double-check that our end-of-line pointer is valid (e.g., if
we got a truncated diff input), which could lead to some
wrap-around pointer arithmetic.

In most cases this would probably get caught by our "40 <
len" check later in the function, but to be on the safe
side, let's just use strchrnul to treat end-of-string the
same as end-of-line.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-24 13:57:50 -07:00
649409b7bc fix memory leak parsing core.commentchar
When we see the core.commentchar config option, we extract
the string with git_config_string, which does two things:

  1. It complains via config_error_nonbool if there is no
     string value.

  2. It makes a copy of the string.

Since we immediately parse the string into its
single-character value, we only care about (1). And in fact
(2) is a detriment, as it means we leak the copy. Instead,
let's just check the pointer value ourselves, and parse
directly from the const string we already have.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-24 13:57:50 -07:00
def0697167 transport: fix leaks in refs_from_alternate_cb
The function starts by creating a copy of the static buffer
returned by real_path, but forgets to free it in the error
code paths. We can solve this by jumping to the cleanup code
that is already there.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-24 13:57:50 -07:00
28b3563241 free ref string returned by dwim_ref
A call to "dwim_ref(name, len, flags, &ref)" will allocate a
new string in "ref" to return the exact ref we found. We do
not consistently free it in all code paths, leading to small
leaks. The worst is in get_sha1_basic, which may be called
many times (e.g., by "cat-file --batch"), though it is
relatively unlikely, as it only triggers on a bogus reflog
specification.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-24 13:57:49 -07:00
d51428bf17 receive-pack: don't copy "dir" parameter
We used to do this so could pass a mutable string to
enter_repo. But since 1c64b48 (enter_repo: do not modify
input, 2011-10-04), this is not necessary.

The resulting code is simpler, and it fixes a minor leak.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-24 13:57:49 -07:00
996b0fdbb4 Sync with v2.0.3
* maint:
  Git 2.0.3
  .mailmap: combine Stefan Beller's emails
  git.1: switch homepage for stats
2014-07-23 11:36:40 -07:00
6da748a7ce Merge branch 'rs/fix-unlink-unix-socket'
The unix-domain socket used by the sample credential cache daemon
tried to unlink an existing stale one at a wrong path, if the path
to the socket was given as an overlong path that does not fit in
sun_path member of the sockaddr_un structure.

* rs/fix-unlink-unix-socket:
  unix-socket: remove stale socket before calling chdir()
2014-07-23 11:36:00 -07:00
955d7be808 Merge branch 'ta/string-list-init'
* ta/string-list-init:
  replace memset with string-list initializers
  string-list: add string_list initializer helper function
2014-07-23 11:35:54 -07:00
bc88defa2f Merge branch 'mb/local-clone-after-applying-insteadof'
Apply the "if cloning from a local disk, physically copy repository
using hardlinks, unless otherwise told not to with --no-local"
optimization when url.*.insteadOf mechanism rewrites a "git clone
$URL" that refers to a repository over the network to a clone from
a local disk.

* mb/local-clone-after-applying-insteadof:
  use local cloning if insteadOf makes a local URL
2014-07-23 11:35:49 -07:00
c3d2bc720c Merge branch 'jk/tag-sort'
* jk/tag-sort:
  tag: support configuring --sort via .gitconfig
  tag: fix --sort tests to use cat<<-\EOF format
2014-07-23 11:35:45 -07:00
740c281d21 Git 2.0.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-23 11:33:16 -07:00
98b12a4b9a .mailmap: combine Stefan Beller's emails
Google mail has had the extension @googlemail.com for a long time
in Germany as @gmail.de was already taken by a competitor.
Nowadays the original gmail company isn't there anymore(?), hence
Googlemail also introduced @gmail.com in Germany, which I switched to.

This changed mail address of mine first appeared in 398dd4bd03
(2014-07-10, .mailmap: map different names with the same email
address together) ironically.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-23 11:27:05 -07:00
405869d0d5 git.1: switch homepage for stats
According to http://meta.ohloh.net/2014/07/black-duck-open-hub/
the site name of ohloh changed to openhub.

Change the man page accordingly.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-23 11:26:52 -07:00
aaf7253f84 completion: complete git push --force-with-lease=
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-22 13:30:30 -07:00
9e8a6a9433 completion: add some missing options to git push
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-22 13:23:39 -07:00
3a224ff2bb completion: complete "unstuck" git push --recurse-submodules
Since the argument to `--recurse-submodules` is mandatory, it does not
need to be stuck to the option with `=`.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-22 13:21:07 -07:00
247b4d5f38 Sync with maint
* maint:
  Documentation: fix missing text for rev-parse --verify
2014-07-22 11:00:23 -07:00
12621cb222 Merge branch 'rs/code-cleaning'
* rs/code-cleaning:
  remote-testsvn: use internal argv_array of struct child_process in cmd_import()
  bundle: use internal argv_array of struct child_process in create_bundle()
  fast-import: use hashcmp() for SHA1 hash comparison
  transport: simplify fetch_objs_via_rsync() using argv_array
  run-command: use internal argv_array of struct child_process in run_hook_ve()
  use commit_list_count() to count the members of commit_lists
  strbuf: use strbuf_addstr() for adding C strings
2014-07-22 10:59:37 -07:00
4328190a81 Merge branch 'nd/path-max-must-go'
* nd/path-max-must-go:
  prep_exclude: remove the artificial PATH_MAX limit
  dir.h: move struct exclude declaration to top level
  dir.c: coding style fix
2014-07-22 10:59:32 -07:00
10b944b37b Merge branch 'jk/alloc-commit-id'
Make sure all in-core commit objects are assigned a unique number
so that they can be annotated using the commit-slab API.

* jk/alloc-commit-id:
  diff-tree: avoid lookup_unknown_object
  object_as_type: set commit index
  alloc: factor out commit index
  add object_as_type helper for casting objects
  parse_object_buffer: do not set object type
  move setting of object->type to alloc_* functions
  alloc: write out allocator definitions
  alloc.c: remove the alloc_raw_commit_node() function
2014-07-22 10:59:25 -07:00
9f2de9c121 Merge branch 'kb/perf-trace'
* kb/perf-trace:
  api-trace.txt: add trace API documentation
  progress: simplify performance measurement by using getnanotime()
  wt-status: simplify performance measurement by using getnanotime()
  git: add performance tracing for git's main() function to debug scripts
  trace: add trace_performance facility to debug performance issues
  trace: add high resolution timer function to debug performance issues
  trace: add 'file:line' to all trace output
  trace: move code around, in preparation to file:line output
  trace: add current timestamp to all trace output
  trace: disable additional trace output for unit tests
  trace: add infrastructure to augment trace output with additional info
  sha1_file: change GIT_TRACE_PACK_ACCESS logging to use trace API
  Documentation/git.txt: improve documentation of 'GIT_TRACE*' variables
  trace: improve trace performance
  trace: remove redundant printf format attribute
  trace: consistently name the format parameter
  trace: move trace declarations from cache.h to new trace.h
2014-07-22 10:59:19 -07:00
cd989a97ec Merge branch 'ah/fix-http-push' into maint
* ah/fix-http-push:
  http-push.c: make CURLOPT_IOCTLDATA a usable pointer
2014-07-22 10:29:07 -07:00
0d854fc1e3 Merge branch 'po/error-message-style' into maint
* po/error-message-style:
  doc: give some guidelines for error messages
2014-07-22 10:28:59 -07:00
a1991f1734 Merge branch 'zk/log-graph-showsig' into maint
* zk/log-graph-showsig:
  log: fix indentation for --graph --show-signature
2014-07-22 10:28:51 -07:00
514dd21326 Merge branch 'mg/fix-log-mergetag-color' into maint
* mg/fix-log-mergetag-color:
  log: correctly identify mergetag signature verification status
2014-07-22 10:28:43 -07:00
5796c5baa3 Merge branch 'cb/filter-branch-prune-empty-degenerate-merges' into maint
* cb/filter-branch-prune-empty-degenerate-merges:
  filter-branch: eliminate duplicate mapped parents
2014-07-22 10:28:30 -07:00
1a1f7b2c52 Merge branch 'ye/doc-http-proto' into maint
* ye/doc-http-proto:
  http-protocol.txt: Basic Auth is defined in RFC 2617, not RFC 2616
2014-07-22 10:28:02 -07:00
0196a605f7 Merge branch 'jm/api-strbuf-doc' into maint
* jm/api-strbuf-doc:
  api-strbuf.txt minor typos
2014-07-22 10:26:52 -07:00
054e22caf4 Merge branch 'jm/dedup-test-config' into maint
* jm/dedup-test-config:
  t/t7810-grep.sh: remove duplicate test_config()
2014-07-22 10:26:45 -07:00
ef937140a6 Merge branch 'sk/test-cmp-bin' into maint
* sk/test-cmp-bin:
  t5000, t5003: do not use test_cmp to compare binary files
2014-07-22 10:26:34 -07:00
79e9dba0d4 Merge branch 'jm/doc-wording-tweaks' into maint
* jm/doc-wording-tweaks:
  Documentation: wording fixes in the user manual and glossary
2014-07-22 10:26:17 -07:00
af3e5d1b2a Merge branch 'jm/instaweb-apache-24' into maint
* jm/instaweb-apache-24:
  git-instaweb: add support for Apache 2.4
2014-07-22 10:25:24 -07:00
cfececfe1f Merge branch 'bg/xcalloc-nmemb-then-size' into maint
* bg/xcalloc-nmemb-then-size:
  transport-helper.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  remote.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  reflog-walk.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  pack-revindex.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  notes.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  imap-send.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  http-push.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  diff.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  config.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  commit.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  builtin/remote.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  builtin/ls-remote.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
2014-07-22 10:25:17 -07:00
1fbc6e6e60 Merge branch 'cb/byte-order' into maint
* cb/byte-order:
  compat/bswap.h: fix endianness detection
  compat/bswap.h: restore preference __BIG_ENDIAN over BIG_ENDIAN
  compat/bswap.h: detect endianness on more platforms that don't use BYTE_ORDER
2014-07-22 10:25:02 -07:00
85dd37941a Merge branch 'lt/request-pull' into maint
* lt/request-pull:
  fix brown paper bag breakage in t5150-request-pull.sh
2014-07-22 10:23:41 -07:00
63618af24a Merge branch 'ep/shell-assign-and-export-vars' into maint
* ep/shell-assign-and-export-vars:
  scripts: more "export VAR=VALUE" fixes
  scripts: "export VAR=VALUE" construct is not portable
2014-07-22 10:22:57 -07:00
bba6acb335 Merge branch 'maint-1.9' into maint
* maint-1.9:
  Documentation: fix missing text for rev-parse --verify
2014-07-22 10:17:34 -07:00
d31f3ad23d Merge branch 'maint-1.8.5' into maint-1.9
* maint-1.8.5:
  Documentation: fix missing text for rev-parse --verify
2014-07-22 10:16:50 -07:00
e6aaa39347 Documentation: fix missing text for rev-parse --verify
The caret (^) is used as a markup symbol in AsciiDoc.  Due to the
inability of AsciiDoc to parse a line containing an unmatched caret, it
omitted the line from the output, resulting in the man page missing the
end of a sentence.  Escape this caret so that the man page ends up with
the complete text.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-22 10:10:57 -07:00
b0562224c9 test prerequisites: enumerate with commas
test_have_prereq does understand multiple predicates given as
separate arguments, but that is by accident.  We should list the
prerequisites just like we use them as the (first) optional
parameter for test_expect_success, concatenated with commas, for
consistency.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 15:42:34 -07:00
f57a8715bc test prerequisites: eradicate NOT_FOO
Support for Back when bdccd3c1 (test-lib: allow negation of
prerequisites, 2012-11-14) introduced negated predicates
(e.g. "!MINGW,!CYGWIN"), we already had 5 test files that use
NOT_MINGW (and a few MINGW) as prerequisites.

Let's not add NOT_FOO and rewrite existing ones as !FOO for both
MINGW and CYGWIN.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 15:42:34 -07:00
9ab0882255 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  use xmemdupz() to allocate copies of strings given by start and length
  use xcalloc() to allocate zero-initialized memory
2014-07-21 12:35:39 -07:00
0eff86e4f4 Ninth batch for 2.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 12:13:03 -07:00
3fa1025907 replace: add test for --graft with a mergetag
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 12:07:04 -07:00
25a05a8cae replace: check mergetags when using --graft
When using --graft, with a mergetag in the original
commit, we should check that the commit pointed to by
the mergetag is still a parent of then new commit we
create, otherwise the mergetag could be misleading.

If the commit pointed to by the mergetag is no more
a parent of the new commit, we could remove the
mergetag, but in this case there is a good chance
that the title or other elements of the commit might
also be misleading. So let's just error out and
suggest to use --edit instead on the commit.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 12:06:49 -07:00
60e2f5a5af replace: add test for --graft with signed commit
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 12:06:20 -07:00
0b05ab6f1b replace: remove signature when using --graft
It could be misleading to keep a signature in a
replacement commit, so let's remove it.

Note that there should probably be a way to sign
the replacement commit created when using --graft,
but this can be dealt with in another commit or
patch series.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 12:05:58 -07:00
b0ab2b71d0 contrib: add convert-grafts-to-replace-refs.sh
This patch adds into contrib/ an example script to convert
grafts from an existing grafts file into replace refs using
the new --graft option of "git replace".

While at it let's mention this new script in the
"git replace" documentation for the --graft option.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 12:05:53 -07:00
78024c4e31 Documentation: replace: add --graft option
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 12:05:47 -07:00
adf8e54238 replace: add test for --graft
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 12:04:40 -07:00
4228e8bc98 replace: add --graft option
The usage string for this option is:

git replace [-f] --graft <commit> [<parent>...]

First we create a new commit that is the same as <commit>
except that its parents are [<parents>...]

Then we create a replace ref that replace <commit> with
the commit we just created.

With this new option, it should be straightforward to
convert grafts to replace refs.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 12:04:23 -07:00
528396a463 Merge branch 'rs/unify-is-branch'
* rs/unify-is-branch:
  refs.c: add a public is_branch function
2014-07-21 11:18:57 -07:00
fb0166c674 Merge branch 'kb/avoid-fchmod-for-now'
Replaces the only two uses of fchmod() with chmod() because the
former does not work on Windows port and because luckily we can.

* kb/avoid-fchmod-for-now:
  config: use chmod() instead of fchmod()
2014-07-21 11:18:54 -07:00
80e85754e0 Merge branch 'sk/mingw-uni-fix'
* sk/mingw-uni-fix:
  Win32: Unicode file name support (dirent)
  Win32: Unicode file name support (except dirent)
2014-07-21 11:18:50 -07:00
a8c565b227 Merge branch 'ek/alt-odb-entry-fix'
* ek/alt-odb-entry-fix:
  sha1_file: do not add own object directory as alternate
2014-07-21 11:18:46 -07:00
9b1c2a3a8e Merge branch 'kb/hashmap-updates'
* kb/hashmap-updates:
  hashmap: add string interning API
  hashmap: add simplified hashmap_get_from_hash() API
  hashmap: improve struct hashmap member documentation
  hashmap: factor out getting a hash code from a SHA1
2014-07-21 11:18:44 -07:00
0ac744305f Merge branch 'jk/remote-curl-squelch-extra-errors'
* jk/remote-curl-squelch-extra-errors:
  remote-curl: mark helper-protocol errors more clearly
  remote-curl: use error instead of fprintf(stderr)
  remote-curl: do not complain on EOF from parent git
2014-07-21 11:18:41 -07:00
19a249ba83 Merge branch 'rs/ref-transaction-0'
Early part of the "ref transaction" topic.

* rs/ref-transaction-0:
  refs.c: change ref_transaction_update() to do error checking and return status
  refs.c: remove the onerr argument to ref_transaction_commit
  update-ref: use err argument to get error from ref_transaction_commit
  refs.c: make update_ref_write update a strbuf on failure
  refs.c: make ref_update_reject_duplicates take a strbuf argument for errors
  refs.c: log_ref_write should try to return meaningful errno
  refs.c: make resolve_ref_unsafe set errno to something meaningful on error
  refs.c: commit_packed_refs to return a meaningful errno on failure
  refs.c: make remove_empty_directories always set errno to something sane
  refs.c: verify_lock should set errno to something meaningful
  refs.c: make sure log_ref_setup returns a meaningful errno
  refs.c: add an err argument to repack_without_refs
  lockfile.c: make lock_file return a meaningful errno on failurei
  lockfile.c: add a new public function unable_to_lock_message
  refs.c: add a strbuf argument to ref_transaction_commit for error logging
  refs.c: allow passing NULL to ref_transaction_free
  refs.c: constify the sha arguments for ref_transaction_create|delete|update
  refs.c: ref_transaction_commit should not free the transaction
  refs.c: remove ref_transaction_rollback
2014-07-21 11:18:37 -07:00
ad25da009e Merge branch 'jl/submodule-tests'
* jl/submodule-tests:
  revert: add t3513 for submodule updates
  stash: add t3906 for submodule updates
  am: add t4255 for submodule updates
  cherry-pick: add t3512 for submodule updates
  pull: add t5572 for submodule updates
  rebase: add t3426 for submodule updates
  merge: add t7613 for submodule updates
  bisect: add t6041 for submodule updates
  reset: add t7112 for submodule updates
  read-tree: add t1013 for submodule updates
  apply: add t4137 for submodule updates
  checkout: call the new submodule update test framework
  submodules: add the lib-submodule-update.sh test library
  test-lib: add test_dir_is_empty()
2014-07-21 11:18:31 -07:00
3b3b61c5d5 Merge branch 'ak/profile-feedback-build'
* ak/profile-feedback-build:
  Fix profile feedback with -jN and add profile-fast
  Run the perf test suite for profile feedback too
  Don't define away __attribute__ on gcc
  Use BASIC_FLAGS for profile feedback
2014-07-21 11:17:47 -07:00
dadb89d92c Merge branch 'cc/for-each-mergetag'
* cc/for-each-mergetag:
  commit: add for_each_mergetag()
2014-07-21 11:17:45 -07:00
da33a97998 Fix contrib/subtree Makefile to patch #! line
Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 10:39:48 -07:00
5c0b13f85a use xmemdupz() to allocate copies of strings given by start and length
Use xmemdupz() to allocate the memory, copy the data and make sure to
NUL-terminate the result, all in one step.  The resulting code is
shorter, doesn't contain the constants 1 and '\0', and avoids
duplicating function parameters.

For blame, the last copied byte (o->file.ptr[o->file.size]) is always
set to NUL by fake_working_tree_commit() or read_sha1_file(), so no
information is lost by the conversion to using xmemdupz().

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 10:37:02 -07:00
51a60f5bfb use xcalloc() to allocate zero-initialized memory
Use xcalloc() instead of xmalloc() followed by memset() to allocate
and zero out memory because it's shorter and avoids duplicating the
function parameters.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 10:30:21 -07:00
f93d7c6fa0 replace memset with string-list initializers
Using memset and then manually setting values of the string-list
members is not future proof as the internal representation of
string-list may change any time.
Use `string_list_init()` or STRING_LIST_INIT_* macros instead of
memset.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 10:23:44 -07:00
3ed3f5fe85 string-list: add string_list initializer helper function
The string-list API has STRING_LIST_INIT_* macros to be used
to define variables with initializers, but lacks functions
to initialize an uninitialized piece of memory to be used as
a string-list at the run-time.
Introduce `string_list_init()` function for that.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 10:23:36 -07:00
e8d08871c9 t800[12]: work around MSys limitation
MSys works very hard to convert Unix-style paths into DOS-style ones.
*Very* hard.

So hard, indeed, that

	git blame -L/hello/,/green/

is translated into something like

	git blame -LC:/msysgit/hello/,C:/msysgit/green/

As seen in msys_p2w in src\msys\msys\rt\src\winsup\cygwin\path.cc, line
3204ff:

	case '-':
	  //
	  // here we check for POSIX paths as attributes to a POSIX switch.
	  //
	...

seemingly absolute POSIX paths in single-letter options get expanded by
msys.dll unless they contain '=' or ';'.

So a quick and very dirty fix is to use '-L/;*evil/'. (Using an equal sign
works only when it is before a comma, so in the above example, /=*green/
would still be converted to a DOS-style path.)

The -L mangling can be done by the script, just before the parameter is
passed to the executable.  This version does not modify the body of the
tests and is active on MinGW only.

Commit-message-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Author: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:39:57 -07:00
44cf1c0ef1 t9902: mingw-specific fix for gitfile link files
The path in a .git platform independent link file needs to be absolute
and under mingw we need it to be a windows type path, not a unix style
path so it should start with a drive letter and not a /.

Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:39:57 -07:00
5212f91deb t4210: skip command-line encoding tests on mingw
On Windows the application command line is provided as unicode and in
mingw-git we convert that to utf-8. So these tests that require a iso-8859-1
input are being subverted by the encoding transformations we perform and
should be skipped.

Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:39:57 -07:00
32f4cb6cee MinGW: disable legacy encoding tests
On Windows, all native APIs are Unicode-based. It is impossible to pass
legacy encoded byte arrays to a process via command line or environment
variables. Disable the tests that try to do so.

In t3901, most tests still work if we don't mess up the repository encoding
in setup, so don't switch to ISO-8859-1 on MinGW.

Note that i18n tests that do their encoding tricks via encoded files (such
as t3900) are not affected by this.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:39:57 -07:00
480cd53014 t0110/MinGW: skip tests that pass arbitrary bytes on the command line
On Windows, the command line is a Unicode string, it is not possible to
pass arbitrary bytes to a program. Disable tests that try to do so.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:39:19 -07:00
2869b3e5da unix-socket: remove stale socket before calling chdir()
unix_stream_listen() is given a path.  It calls unix_sockaddr_init(),
which in turn can call chdir().  After that a relative path doesn't
mean the same as before.  Any use of the original path should thus
happen before that call.  For that reason, unlink the given path
(to get rid of a possibly existing stale socket) right at the
beginning of the function.

Noticed-by: Karsten Blees <karsten.blees@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:38:07 -07:00
baea068d67 Win32: enable color output in Windows cmd.exe
Git requires the TERM environment variable to be set for all color*
settings. Simulate the TERM variable if it is not set (default on Windows).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:32:50 -07:00
6dc715439b Win32: patch Windows environment on startup
Fix Windows specific environment settings on startup rather than checking
for special values on every getenv call.

As a side effect, this makes the patched environment (i.e. with properly
initialized TMPDIR and TERM) available to child processes.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:32:50 -07:00
343ff06da7 Win32: keep the environment sorted
The Windows environment is sorted, keep it that way for O(log n)
environment access.

Change compareenv to compare only the keys, so that it can be used to
find an entry irrespective of the value.

Change lookupenv to binary seach for an entry. Return one's complement of
the insert position if not found (libc's bsearch returns NULL).

Replace MSVCRT's getenv with a minimal do_getenv based on the binary search
function.

Change do_putenv to insert new entries at the correct position. Simplify
the function by swapping if conditions and using memmove instead of for
loops.

Move qsort from make_environment_block to mingw_startup. We still need to
sort on startup to make sure that the environment is sorted according to
our compareenv function (while Win32 / CreateProcess requires the
environment block to be sorted case-insensitively, CreateProcess currently
doesn't enforce this, and some applications such as bash just don't care).

Note that environment functions are _not_ thread-safe and are not required
to be so by POSIX, the application is responsible for synchronizing access
to the environment. MSVCRT's getenv and our new getenv implementation are
better than that in that they are thread-safe with respect to other getenv
calls as long as the environment is not modified. Git's indiscriminate use
of getenv in background threads currently requires this property.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:32:50 -07:00
6f1c189cad Win32: use low-level memory allocation during initialization
As of d41489a6 "Add more large blob test cases", git's high-level memory
allocation functions (xmalloc, xmemdupz etc.) access the environment to
simulate limited memory in tests (see 'getenv("GIT_ALLOC_LIMIT")' in
memory_limit_check()). These functions should not be used before the
environment is fully initialized (particularly not to initialize the
environment itself).

The current solution ('environ = NULL; ALLOC_GROW(environ...)') only works
because MSVCRT's getenv() reinitializes environ when it is NULL (i.e. it
leaves us with two sets of unusabe (non-UTF-8) and unfreeable (CRT-
allocated) environments).

Add our own set of malloc-or-die functions to be used in startup code.

Also check the result of __wgetmainargs, which may fail if there's not
enough memory for wide-char arguments and environment.

This patch is in preparation of the sorted environment feature, which
completely replaces MSVCRT's getenv() implementation.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:32:50 -07:00
f279242d5e Win32: reduce environment array reallocations
Move environment array reallocation from do_putenv to the respective
callers. Keep track of the environment size in a global variable. Use
ALLOC_GROW in mingw_putenv to reduce reallocations. Allocate a
sufficiently sized environment array in make_environment_block to prevent
reallocations.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:32:49 -07:00
77734da241 Win32: don't copy the environment twice when spawning child processes
When spawning child processes via start_command(), the environment and all
environment entries are copied twice. First by make_augmented_environ /
copy_environ to merge with child_process.env. Then a second time by
make_environment_block to create a sorted environment block string as
required by CreateProcess.

Move the merge logic to make_environment_block so that we only need to copy
the environment once. This changes semantics of the env parameter: it now
expects a delta (such as child_process.env) rather than a full environment.
This is not a problem as the parameter is only used by start_command()
(all other callers previously passed char **environ, and now pass NULL).

The merge logic no longer xstrdup()s the environment strings, so do_putenv
must not free them. Add a parameter to distinguish this from normal putenv.

Remove the now unused make_augmented_environ / free_environ API.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:32:49 -07:00
df0e998c31 Win32: factor out environment block creation
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:32:49 -07:00
26c7b21ab1 Win32: unify environment function names
Environment helper functions use random naming ('env' prefix or suffix or
both, with or without '_'). Change to POSIX naming scheme ('env' suffix,
no '_').

Env_setenv has more in common with putenv than setenv. Change to do_putenv.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:32:49 -07:00
38d2750126 Win32: unify environment case-sensitivity
The environment on Windows is case-insensitive. Some environment functions
(such as unsetenv and make_augmented_environ) have always used case-
sensitive comparisons instead, while others (getenv, putenv, sorting in
spawn*) were case-insensitive.

Prevent potential inconsistencies by using case-insensitive comparison in
lookup_env (used by putenv, unsetenv and make_augmented_environ).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:32:49 -07:00
e96942e821 Win32: fix environment memory leaks
All functions that modify the environment have memory leaks.

Disable gitunsetenv in the Makefile and use env_setenv (via mingw_putenv)
instead (this frees removed environment entries).

Move xstrdup from env_setenv to make_augmented_environ, so that
mingw_putenv no longer copies the environment entries (according to POSIX
[1], "the string [...] shall become part of the environment"). This also
fixes the memory leak in gitsetenv, which expects a POSIX compliant putenv.

[1] http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/putenv.html

Note: This patch depends on taking control of char **environ and having
our own mingw_putenv (both introduced in "Win32: Unicode environment
(incoming)").

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:32:49 -07:00
b729f98fa5 Win32: Unicode environment (incoming)
Convert environment from UTF-16 to UTF-8 on startup.

No changes to getenv() are necessary, as the MSVCRT version is implemented
on top of char **environ.

However, putenv / _wputenv from MSVCRT no longer work, for two reasons:
1. they try to keep environ, _wenviron and the Win32 process environment
in sync, using the default system encoding instead of UTF-8 to convert
between charsets
2. msysgit and MSVCRT use different allocators, memory allocated in git
cannot be freed by the CRT and vice versa

Implement mingw_putenv using the env_setenv helper function from the
environment merge code.

Note that in case of memory allocation failure, putenv now dies with error
message (due to xrealloc) instead of failing with ENOMEM. As git assumes
setenv / putenv to always succeed, this prevents it from continuing with
incorrect settings.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:32:48 -07:00
7eb2619c5c Win32: Unicode environment (outgoing)
Convert environment from UTF-8 to UTF-16 when creating other processes.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-21 09:32:48 -07:00
1cefa14325 remote-testsvn: use internal argv_array of struct child_process in cmd_import()
Use the existing argv_array member instead of providing our own.  This
way we don't have to initialize or clean it up explicitly.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-18 12:50:03 -07:00
92859f3a79 bundle: use internal argv_array of struct child_process in create_bundle()
Use the existing argv_array member instead of providing our own.  This
way the argv_array is cleared after use automatically for us; it was
leaking before.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-18 12:14:47 -07:00
14576df044 fast-import: use hashcmp() for SHA1 hash comparison
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-18 12:14:47 -07:00
e929f515fa transport: simplify fetch_objs_via_rsync() using argv_array
Use the existing argv_array member instead of building the arguments
list using a string array and a strbuf.  This way we don't need magic
number constants and allocations are cleaned up for us automatically
by run_command().

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-18 11:15:23 -07:00
d1d094564a run-command: use internal argv_array of struct child_process in run_hook_ve()
Use the existing argv_array member instead of providing our own.  This
way we don't have to initialize or clean it up explicitly.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-17 15:09:24 -07:00
a7220fba73 MinGW: Skip test redirecting to fd 4
... because that does not work in MinGW.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-17 13:39:02 -07:00
4bbaa1eb6f use commit_list_count() to count the members of commit_lists
Call commit_list_count() instead of open-coding it repeatedly.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-17 13:36:25 -07:00
cedc61a998 strbuf: use strbuf_addstr() for adding C strings
Avoid code duplication and let strbuf_addstr() call strlen() for us.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-17 13:33:52 -07:00
f38aa83f9a use local cloning if insteadOf makes a local URL
Move the is_local logic to the place where origin remote has been setup and
check if the remote url can be used to do local cloning.

This saves a lot of space (and time) in some of the mirroring scenarios that
involve insteadOf rewrites.

Signed-off-by: Michael Barabanov <michael.barabanov@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-17 11:17:13 -07:00
9ae1afa5e6 Revert "Windows: teach getenv to do a case-sensitive search"
This reverts commit df599e9612.

As of 5e9637c6 "i18n: add infrastructure for translating Git with gettext",
eval_gettext uses MinGW envsubst.exe instead of git-sh-i18n--envsubst.exe
for variable substitution. This breaks git-submodule.sh messages and tests,
as envsubst.exe doesn't support case-sensitive environment lookup (the same
is true for almost everything on Windows, including MSys and Cygwin tools).

30a615ac "Windows/i18n: rename $path to prevent clashes with $PATH" renames
the conflicting variable in git-submodule.sh, so that it works on Windows
(i.e. with case-insensitive environment, regardless of the toolset).

Revert to the documented behaviour of case-insensitive environment on
Windows.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-17 10:54:14 -07:00
398dd4bd03 .mailmap: map different names with the same email address together
Pretty much one year ago (94b410bba8, Jul 12 2013, .mailmap: Map
email addresses to names) I cleaned up the output of `git shortlog
-sne` of git.git by writing a .mailmap file fot the git.git project.

During the year Jens, Kazuki and Trần contributed to git.git using
different names, but the same email address; unify them.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-17 10:48:09 -07:00
b150794daf tag: support configuring --sort via .gitconfig
Add support for configuring default sort ordering for git tags. Command
line option will override this configured value, using the exact same
syntax.

Cc: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.e.keller@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-17 09:22:20 -07:00
1e0dacdbdb rebase: omit patch-identical commits with --fork-point
When the `--fork-point` argument was added to `git rebase`, we changed
the value of $upstream to be the fork point instead of the point from
which we want to rebase.  When $orig_head..$upstream is empty this does
not change the behaviour, but when there are new changes in the upstream
we are no longer checking if any of them are patch-identical with
changes in $upstream..$orig_head.

Fix this by introducing a new variable to hold the fork point and using
this to restrict the range as an extra (negative) revision argument so
that the set of desired revisions becomes (in fork-point mode):

	git rev-list --cherry-pick --right-only \
		$upstream...$orig_head ^$fork_point

This allows us to correctly handle the scenario where we have the
following topology:

	    C --- D --- E  <- dev
	   /
	  B  <- master@{1}
	 /
	o --- B' --- C* --- D*  <- master

where:
- B' is a fixed-up version of B that is not patch-identical with B;
- C* and D* are patch-identical to C and D respectively and conflict
  textually if applied in the wrong order;
- E depends textually on D.

The correct result of `git rebase master dev` is that B is identified as
the fork-point of dev and master, so that C, D, E are the commits that
need to be replayed onto master; but C and D are patch-identical with C*
and D* and so can be dropped, so that the end result is:

	o --- B' --- C* --- D* --- E  <- dev

If the fork-point is not identified, then picking B onto a branch
containing B' results in a conflict and if the patch-identical commits
are not correctly identified then picking C onto a branch containing D
(or equivalently D*) results in a conflict.

This change allows us to handle both of these cases, where previously we
either identified the fork-point (with `--fork-point`) but not the
patch-identical commits *or* (with `--no-fork-point`) identified the
patch-identical commits but not the fact that master had been rewritten.

Reported-by: Ted Felix <ted@tedfelix.com>
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-16 13:07:40 -07:00
e7e0f26eb6 refs.c: add a public is_branch function
Both refs.c and fsck.c have their own private copies of the is_branch function.
Delete the is_branch function from fsck.c and make the version in refs.c
public.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-16 13:06:41 -07:00
2569d23915 config: use chmod() instead of fchmod()
There is no fchmod() on native Windows platforms (MinGW and MSVC), and the
equivalent Win32 API (SetFileInformationByHandle) requires Windows Vista.

Use chmod() instead.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-16 13:05:21 -07:00
f2c9f21369 Sync with 2.0.2
* maint:
  Git 2.0.2
  annotate: use argv_array
2014-07-16 11:48:16 -07:00
fb46e0c545 Eighth batch for 2.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-16 11:47:32 -07:00
d9037eae7e Merge branch 'ah/fix-http-push'
An ancient rewrite passed a wrong pointer to a curl library
function in a rarely used code path.

* ah/fix-http-push:
  http-push.c: make CURLOPT_IOCTLDATA a usable pointer
2014-07-16 11:33:11 -07:00
1fc83452c7 Merge branch 'rs/code-cleaning'
* rs/code-cleaning:
  fsck: simplify fsck_commit_buffer() by using commit_list_count()
  commit: use commit_list_append() instead of duplicating its code
  merge: simplify merge_trivial() by using commit_list_append()
  use strbuf_addch for adding single characters
  use strbuf_addbuf for adding strbufs
2014-07-16 11:33:09 -07:00
f357797678 Merge branch 'jk/skip-prefix'
One more to an already graduated topic.

* jk/skip-prefix:
  tag: use skip_prefix instead of magic numbers
2014-07-16 11:33:06 -07:00
7591e2c53c Merge branch 'po/error-message-style'
* po/error-message-style:
  doc: give some guidelines for error messages
2014-07-16 11:33:03 -07:00
ce33d61096 Merge branch 'jl/test-lint-scripts'
* jl/test-lint-scripts:
  t/Makefile: always test all lint targets when running tests
  t/Makefile: check helper scripts for non-portable shell commands too
2014-07-16 11:33:01 -07:00
5e40e41f1c Merge branch 'zk/log-graph-showsig'
The "--show-signature" option did not pay much attention to
"--graph".

* zk/log-graph-showsig:
  log: fix indentation for --graph --show-signature
2014-07-16 11:32:57 -07:00
efbef3f6e3 Merge branch 'mg/fix-log-mergetag-color'
* mg/fix-log-mergetag-color:
  log: correctly identify mergetag signature verification status
2014-07-16 11:32:36 -07:00
c9831bb09d Merge branch 'kb/path-max-must-go'
* kb/path-max-must-go:
  cache.h: rename cache_def_free to cache_def_clear
2014-07-16 11:32:33 -07:00
6a5713b576 Merge branch 'cb/filter-branch-prune-empty-degenerate-merges'
"filter-branch" left an empty single-parent commit that results when
all parents of a merge commit gets mapped to the same commit, even
under "--prune-empty".

* cb/filter-branch-prune-empty-degenerate-merges:
  filter-branch: eliminate duplicate mapped parents
2014-07-16 11:29:06 -07:00
2e42338f80 Merge branch 'mk/merge-incomplete-files'
Merging changes into a file that ends in an incomplete line made the
last line into a complete one, even when the other branch did not
change anything around the end of file.

* mk/merge-incomplete-files:
  git-merge-file: do not add LF at EOF while applying unrelated change
  t6023-merge-file.sh: fix and mark as broken invalid tests
2014-07-16 11:26:04 -07:00
6e4094731a Merge branch 'jk/strip-suffix'
* jk/strip-suffix:
  prepare_packed_git_one: refactor duplicate-pack check
  verify-pack: use strbuf_strip_suffix
  strbuf: implement strbuf_strip_suffix
  index-pack: use strip_suffix to avoid magic numbers
  use strip_suffix instead of ends_with in simple cases
  replace has_extension with ends_with
  implement ends_with via strip_suffix
  add strip_suffix function
  sha1_file: replace PATH_MAX buffer with strbuf in prepare_packed_git_one()
2014-07-16 11:26:00 -07:00
d518cc0a56 Merge branch 'ep/submodule-code-cleanup'
* ep/submodule-code-cleanup:
  submodule.c: use the ARRAY_SIZE macro
2014-07-16 11:25:57 -07:00
5418212191 Merge branch 'jk/replace-edit-raw'
Teach "git replace --edit" mode a "--raw" option to allow
editing the bare-metal representation data of objects.

* jk/replace-edit-raw:
  replace: add a --raw mode for --edit
2014-07-16 11:25:55 -07:00
dcc1b38517 Merge branch 'cc/replace-edit'
Teach "git replace" an "--edit" mode.

* cc/replace-edit:
  replace: use argv_array in export_object
  avoid double close of descriptors handed to run_command
  replace: replace spaces with tabs in indentation
2014-07-16 11:25:47 -07:00
b5f7b21e59 Merge branch 'tb/crlf-tests'
* tb/crlf-tests:
  t0027: combinations of core.autocrlf, core.eol and text
  t0025: rename the test files
2014-07-16 11:25:45 -07:00
788cef81d4 Merge branch 'nd/split-index'
An experiment to use two files (the base file and incremental
changes relative to it) to represent the index to reduce I/O cost
of rewriting a large index when only small part of the working tree
changes.

* nd/split-index: (32 commits)
  t1700: new tests for split-index mode
  t2104: make sure split index mode is off for the version test
  read-cache: force split index mode with GIT_TEST_SPLIT_INDEX
  read-tree: note about dropping split-index mode or index version
  read-tree: force split-index mode off on --index-output
  rev-parse: add --shared-index-path to get shared index path
  update-index --split-index: do not split if $GIT_DIR is read only
  update-index: new options to enable/disable split index mode
  split-index: strip pathname of on-disk replaced entries
  split-index: do not invalidate cache-tree at read time
  split-index: the reading part
  split-index: the writing part
  read-cache: mark updated entries for split index
  read-cache: save deleted entries in split index
  read-cache: mark new entries for split index
  read-cache: split-index mode
  read-cache: save index SHA-1 after reading
  entry.c: update cache_changed if refresh_cache is set in checkout_entry()
  cache-tree: mark istate->cache_changed on prime_cache_tree()
  cache-tree: mark istate->cache_changed on cache tree update
  ...
2014-07-16 11:25:40 -07:00
ebc5da3208 Git 2.0.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-16 11:19:56 -07:00
2e931843ad Merge branch 'jc/fix-clone-single-starting-at-a-tag' into maint
"git clone -b brefs/tags/bar" would have mistakenly thought we were
following a single tag, even though it was a name of the branch,
because it incorrectly used strstr().

* jc/fix-clone-single-starting-at-a-tag:
  builtin/clone.c: detect a clone starting at a tag correctly
2014-07-16 11:17:36 -07:00
588de86f06 Merge branch 'jk/pretty-G-format-fixes' into maint
"%G" (nothing after G) is an invalid pretty format specifier, but
the parser did not notice it as garbage.

* jk/pretty-G-format-fixes:
  move "%G" format test from t7510 to t6006
  pretty: avoid reading past end-of-string with "%G"
  t7510: check %G* pretty-format output
  t7510: test a commit signed by an unknown key
  t7510: use consistent &&-chains in loop
  t7510: stop referring to master in later tests
2014-07-16 11:17:21 -07:00
5a3db94539 Merge branch 'rs/fix-alt-odb-path-comparison' into maint
Code to avoid adding the same alternate object store twice was
subtly broken for a long time, but nobody seems to have noticed.

* rs/fix-alt-odb-path-comparison:
  sha1_file: avoid overrunning alternate object base string
2014-07-16 11:17:08 -07:00
5c18fde0d9 Merge branch 'jk/commit-buffer-length' into maint
A handful of code paths had to read the commit object more than
once when showing header fields that are usually not parsed.  The
internal data structure to keep track of the contents of the commit
object has been updated to reduce the need for this double-reading,
and to allow the caller find the length of the object.

* jk/commit-buffer-length:
  reuse cached commit buffer when parsing signatures
  commit: record buffer length in cache
  commit: convert commit->buffer to a slab
  commit-slab: provide a static initializer
  use get_commit_buffer everywhere
  convert logmsg_reencode to get_commit_buffer
  use get_commit_buffer to avoid duplicate code
  use get_cached_commit_buffer where appropriate
  provide helpers to access the commit buffer
  provide a helper to set the commit buffer
  provide a helper to free commit buffer
  sequencer: use logmsg_reencode in get_message
  logmsg_reencode: return const buffer
  do not create "struct commit" with xcalloc
  commit: push commit_index update into alloc_commit_node
  alloc: include any-object allocations in alloc_report
  replace dangerous uses of strbuf_attach
  commit_tree: take a pointer/len pair rather than a const strbuf
2014-07-16 11:16:38 -07:00
64630d807a Merge branch 'bc/fix-rebase-merge-skip' into maint
During "git rebase --merge", a conflicted patch could not be
skipped with "--skip" if the next one also conflicted.

* bc/fix-rebase-merge-skip:
  rebase--merge: fix --skip with two conflicts in a row
2014-07-16 11:16:16 -07:00
9092a9696b Merge branch 'maint-1.9' into maint
* maint-1.9:
  annotate: use argv_array
2014-07-16 11:11:06 -07:00
d22acacf81 Merge branch 'maint-1.8.5' into maint-1.9
* maint-1.8.5:
  annotate: use argv_array
  t7300: repair filesystem permissions with test_when_finished
  enums: remove trailing ',' after last item in enum
2014-07-16 11:10:30 -07:00
8c2cfa5544 annotate: use argv_array
Simplify the code and get rid of some magic constants by using
argv_array to build the argument list for cmd_blame.  Be lazy and let
the OS release our allocated memory, as before.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-16 11:10:11 -07:00
e0a064a107 MinGW: fix compile error due to missing ELOOP
MinGW and MSVC before 2010 don't define ELOOP, use EMLINK (aka "Too many
links") instead.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-16 10:42:49 -07:00
b6266dc88b rebase--am: use --cherry-pick instead of --ignore-if-in-upstream
When using `git format-patch --ignore-if-in-upstream` we are only
allowed to give a single revision range.  In the next commit we will
want to add an additional exclusion revision in order to handle fork
points correctly, so convert `git-rebase--am` to use a symmetric
difference with `--cherry-pick --right-only`.

This does not change the result of the format-patch invocation, just how
we spell the arguments.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-15 15:05:02 -07:00
539e75069f sha1_file: do not add own object directory as alternate
When adding alternate object directories, we try not to add the
directory of the current repository to avoid cycles.  Unfortunately,
that test was broken, since it compared an absolute with a relative
path.

Signed-off-by: Ephrim Khong <dr.khong@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-15 11:50:15 -07:00
f0e802ca20 t5539: update a flaky test
The test creates some unrelated commits in two separate repositories,
and then fetches from one to the other. Since the commit creation
happens in a subshell, the first commit in each ends up with the
same test_tick value. When fetch-pack looks at the two root commits
"unrelated1" and "new-too", the exact sequence of ACKs is different
depending on which one it pulls out of the queue first.

With the current code, it happens to be "unrelated1" (though this is not
at all guaranteed by the prio_queue data structure, it is deterministic
for this particular sequence of input). We see the ready-ACK, and the
test succeeds.

With the stable queue, we reliably get "new-too" out (since it is our
local tip, it is added to the queue before we even talk to the remote).
We never see a ready-ACK, and the test fails due to the grep on the
TRACE_PACKET output at the end (the fetch itself succeeds as expected).

I'm really not quite clear on what's supposed to be going on in the
test. I can make it pass with this change.
2014-07-15 11:27:08 -07:00
e6ce2be2d7 tests: do not pass iso8859-1 encoded parameter
git commit -m with some iso8859-1 encoded stuff is doomed to fail in MinGW,
because Windows don't let you pass encoded bytes to a process (CreateProcessW
always takes a UTF-16LE encoded string).

It is safe to pass the iso8859-1 message using a file or a pipe.

Thanks-to: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Author: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-15 11:19:11 -07:00
0217569bb2 Win32: Unicode file name support (dirent)
Changes opendir/readdir to use Windows Unicode APIs and convert between
UTF-8/UTF-16.

Removes parameter checks that are already covered by xutftowcs_path. This
changes detection of ENAMETOOLONG from MAX_PATH - 2 to MAX_PATH (matching
is_dir_empty in mingw.c). If name + "/*" or the resulting absolute path is
too long, FindFirstFile fails and errno is set through err_win_to_posix.

Increases the size of dirent.d_name to accommodate the full
WIN32_FIND_DATA.cFileName converted to UTF-8 (UTF-16 to UTF-8 conversion
may grow by factor three in the worst case).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-15 11:19:09 -07:00
85faec9d3a Win32: Unicode file name support (except dirent)
Replaces Windows "ANSI" APIs dealing with file- or path names with their
Unicode equivalent, adding UTF-8/UTF-16LE conversion as necessary.

The dirent API (opendir/readdir/closedir) is updated in a separate commit.

Adds trivial wrappers for access, chmod and chdir.

Adds wrapper for mktemp (needed for both mkstemp and mkdtemp).

The simplest way to convert a repository with legacy-encoded (e.g. Cp1252)
file names to UTF-8 ist to checkout with an old msysgit version and
"git add --all & git commit" with the new version.

Includes a fix for bug reported by John Chen:
On Windows XP (not Win7), directories cannot be deleted while a find handle
is open, causing "Deletion of directory '...' failed. Should I try again?"
prompts.

Prior to this commit, these failures were silently ignored due to
strbuf_free in is_dir_empty resetting GetLastError to ERROR_SUCCESS.

Close the find handle in is_dir_empty so that git doesn't block deletion
of the directory even after all other applications have released it.

Reported-by: John Chen <john0312@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-15 11:19:08 -07:00
73f43f220f paint_down_to_common: use prio_queue
When we are traversing to find merge bases, we keep our
usual commit_list of commits to process, sorted by their
commit timestamp. As we add each parent to the list, we have
to spend "O(width of history)" to do the insertion, where
the width of history is the number of simultaneous lines of
development.

If we instead use a heap-based priority queue, we can do
these insertions in "O(log width)" time. This provides minor
speedups to merge-base calculations (timings in linux.git,
warm cache, best-of-five):

  [before]
  $ git merge-base HEAD v2.6.12
  real    0m3.251s
  user    0m3.148s
  sys     0m0.104s

  [after]
  $ git merge-base HEAD v2.6.12
  real    0m3.234s
  user    0m3.108s
  sys     0m0.128s

That's only an 0.5% speedup, but it does help protect us
against pathological cases.

While we are munging the "interesting" function, we also
take the opportunity to give it a more descriptive name, and
convert the return value to an int (we returned the first
interesting commit, but nobody ever looked at it).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-15 11:02:56 -07:00
e8f91e3df8 prio-queue: make output stable with respect to insertion
If two items are added to a prio_queue and compare equal,
they currently come out in an apparently random order (this
order is deterministic for a particular sequence of
insertions and removals, but does not necessarily match the
insertion order). This makes it unlike using a date-ordered
commit_list, which is one of the main types we would like to
replace with it (because prio_queue does not suffer from
O(n) insertions).

We can make the priority queue stable by keeping an
insertion counter for each element, and using it to break
ties. This does increase the memory usage of the structure
(one int per element), but in practice it does not seem to
affect runtime. A best-of-five "git rev-list --topo-order"
on linux.git showed less than 1% difference (well within the
run-to-run noise).

In an ideal world, we would offer both stable and unstable
priority queues (the latter to try to maximize performance).
However, given the lack of a measurable performance
difference, it is not worth the extra code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-15 11:02:54 -07:00
6d63baa478 prio-queue: factor out compare and swap operations
When manipulating the priority queue's heap, we frequently
have to compare and swap heap entries. As we are storing
only void pointers right now, this is quite easy to do
inline in a few lines. However, when we start using a more
complicated heap entry in a future patch, that will get
longer. Factoring out these operations lets us make future
changes in one place. It also makes the code a little
shorter and more readable.

Note that we actually accept indices into the queue array
instead of pointers. This is slightly less flexible than
passing pointers-to-pointers (we could not swap items from
unrelated arrays, but we would not want to), but will make
further refactoring simpler (and lets us avoid repeating
"queue->array" at each callsite, which led to some long
lines).

And finally, note that we are cleaning up an accidental use
of a "struct commit" pointer to hold a temporary entry
during swap. Even though we currently only use this code for
commits, it is supposed to be type-agnostic. In practice
this didn't matter anyway because we never dereferenced the
commit pointer (and on most systems, the pointer values
themselves are interchangeable between types).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-15 11:02:53 -07:00
3d15f536a7 .gitignore: "git-verify-commit" is a generated file
builtin/verify-commit.c was added in commit d07b00b ("verify-commit:
scriptable commit signature verification", 2014-06-23), update
.gitignore to ignore the generated file.

Signed-off-by: Øyvind A. Holm <sunny@sunbase.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-15 08:05:03 -07:00
aceb9429b3 prep_exclude: remove the artificial PATH_MAX limit
This fixes a segfault in git-status with long paths on Windows,
where PATH_MAX is only 260.

This also fixes the problem of silently ignoring .gitignore if the
full path exceeds PATH_MAX. Now add_excludes_from_file() will report
if it gets ENAMETOOLONG.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 15:24:34 -07:00
709359c85c dir.h: move struct exclude declaration to top level
There is no actual nested struct here. Move it out for clarity.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 15:24:34 -07:00
d961baa846 dir.c: coding style fix
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 15:24:34 -07:00
93dcaea226 lockfile: allow reopening a closed but still locked file
In some code paths (e.g. giving "add -i" to prepare the contents to
be committed interactively inside "commit -p") where a caller takes
a lock, writes the new content, give chance for others to use it
while still holding the lock, and then releases the lock when all is
done.  As an extension, allow the caller to re-update an already
closed file while still holding the lock (i.e. not yet committed) by
re-opening the file, to be followed by updating the contents and
then by the usual close_lock_file() or commit_lock_file().

This is necessary if we want to add code to rebuild the cache-tree
and write the resulting index out after "add -i" returns the control
to "commit -p", for example.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 13:05:37 -07:00
9c4d6c0297 cache-tree: Write updated cache-tree after commit
During the commit process, update the cache-tree. Write this updated
cache-tree so that it's ready for subsequent commands.

Add test code which demonstrates that git commit now writes the cache
tree.  Make all tests test the entire cache-tree, not just the root
level.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twitter.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:34:51 -07:00
1621c99c79 revert: add t3513 for submodule updates
Test that the revert command updates the work tree as expected (for
submodule changes which don't result in conflicts). Add a helper function
to first revert the checked out target commit to make the last revert
produce the to-be-tested work tree.

Set the KNOWN_FAILURE_CHERRY_PICK_SEES_EMPTY_COMMIT and
KNOWN_FAILURE_NOFF_MERGE_DOESNT_CREATE_EMPTY_SUBMODULE_DIR switches to
document that revert has the similar failures.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:06:16 -07:00
da7fe3fb6d stash: add t3906 for submodule updates
Test that the stash apply command updates the work tree as expected for
changes which don't result in conflicts. To make that work add a helper
function that uses read-tree to apply the changes of the target commit
to the work tree, then stashes these changes and at last applies that
stash.

Implement the KNOWN_FAILURE_STASH_DOES_IGNORE_SUBMODULE_CHANGES switch
and reuse two other already present switches to expect the known
failure that stash does ignore submodule changes.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:06:16 -07:00
23e2f388c7 am: add t4255 for submodule updates
Test that the am command updates the work tree as expected (for submodule
changes which don't result in conflicts). To make that work add two
helper functions that use format-patch to create the input for am.

Add the KNOWN_FAILURE_NOFF_MERGE_ATTEMPTS_TO_MERGE_REMOVED_SUBMODULE_FILES
switch to expect the known failure that --no-ff merges attempt to merge
the new files in the former submodule directory with those of the removed
submodule.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:06:16 -07:00
283f56a40b cherry-pick: add t3512 for submodule updates
Test that the cherry-pick command updates the work tree as expected (for
submodule changes which don't result in conflicts).

Set KNOWN_FAILURE_NOFF_MERGE_ATTEMPTS_TO_MERGE_REMOVED_SUBMODULE_FILES
and KNOWN_FAILURE_NOFF_MERGE_DOESNT_CREATE_EMPTY_SUBMODULE_DIR to
document that cherry-pick has the same --no-ff known failures merge has.

Implement the KNOWN_FAILURE_CHERRY_PICK_SEES_EMPTY_COMMIT switch to expect
the known failure that while cherry picking just a SHA-1 update for an
ignored submodule the commit incorrectly fails with "The previous
cherry-pick is now empty, possibly due to conflict resolution.".

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:06:16 -07:00
921f50b48e pull: add t5572 for submodule updates
Test that the pull command updates the work tree as expected (for
submodule changes which don't result in conflicts) when used without
arguments or with the '--ff', '--ff-only' and '--no-ff' flag each. Add
helper functions to reset the branch to be updated to to the current
HEAD so that pull is doing the transition from HEAD to the given branch.

Set KNOWN_FAILURE_NOFF_MERGE_ATTEMPTS_TO_MERGE_REMOVED_SUBMODULE_FILES
and KNOWN_FAILURE_NOFF_MERGE_DOESNT_CREATE_EMPTY_SUBMODULE_DIR to
document that pull has the same --no-ff known failures merge has.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:06:16 -07:00
c7e69168cf rebase: add t3426 for submodule updates
Test that the rebase command updates the work tree as expected for
changes which don't result in conflicts. To make that work add two
helper functions that add a commit only touching files and then
revert it. This allows to rebase the target commit over these two
and to compare the result.

Set KNOWN_FAILURE_NOFF_MERGE_DOESNT_CREATE_EMPTY_SUBMODULE_DIR to
document that "replace directory with submodule" fails for an
interactive rebase because a directory "sub1" already exists.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:06:16 -07:00
663ed39a88 merge: add t7613 for submodule updates
Test that the merge command updates the work tree as expected (for
submodule changes which don't result in conflicts) when used without
arguments or with the '--ff', '--ff-only' and '--no-ff' flag.

Implement the KNOWN_FAILURE_NOFF_MERGE_DOESNT_CREATE_EMPTY_SUBMODULE_DIR
switch to expect the known failure that --no-ff merges do not create the
empty submodule directory.

The KNOWN_FAILURE_NOFF_MERGE_ATTEMPTS_TO_MERGE_REMOVED_SUBMODULE_FILES
switch is also implemented to expect the known failure that --no-ff
merges attempt to merge the new files in the former submodule directory
with those of the removed submodule.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:06:15 -07:00
8f8ba56b5b bisect: add t6041 for submodule updates
Test that the bisect command updates the work tree as expected. To make
that work with the new submodule test framework a git_bisect helper
function is added. This adds a commit after the one given to be switched
to and makes that one the bad commit. The starting point is then given to
bisect as the good commit which makes bisect change the work tree to the
commit in between, which is the commit given.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:06:15 -07:00
8ef85694a5 reset: add t7112 for submodule updates
Test that the reset command updates the work tree as expected for changes
with '--keep', '--merge' (for changes which don't result in conflicts) and
'--hard'.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:06:15 -07:00
48294e1ddb read-tree: add t1013 for submodule updates
Test that the read-tree command updates the work tree as expected for
changes which don't result in conflicts with the '-m' and '--reset' flag.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:06:15 -07:00
558643e1d6 apply: add t4137 for submodule updates
Test that the apply command updates the work tree as expected for the
'--index' and the '--3way' options (for submodule changes which don't
result in conflicts).

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:06:15 -07:00
d78ecca520 checkout: call the new submodule update test framework
Test that the checkout command updates the work tree as expected with
and without the '-f' flag.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:06:15 -07:00
42639d2317 submodules: add the lib-submodule-update.sh test library
Add this test library to simplify covering all combinations of submodule
update scenarios without having to add those to a test of each work tree
manipulating command over and over again.

The functions test_submodule_switch() and test_submodule_forced_switch()
are intended to be called from a test script with a single argument. This
argument is either a work tree manipulating command (including any command
line options) or a function (when more than a single git command is needed
to switch work trees from the current HEAD to another commit). This
command (or function) is passed a target branch as argument. The two new
functions check that each submodule transition is handled as expected,
which currently means that submodule work trees are not affected until
"git submodule update" is called. The "forced" variant is for commands
using their '-f' or '--hard' option and expects them to overwrite local
modifications as a result. Each of these two functions contains 14
tests_expect_* calls.

Calling one of these test functions the first time creates a repository
named "submodule_update_repo". At first it contains two files, then a
single submodule is added in another commit followed by commits covering
all relevant submodule modifications. This repository is newly cloned into
the "submodule_update" for each test_expect_* to avoid interference
between different parts of the test functions (some to-be-tested commands
also manipulate refs along with the work tree, e.g. "git reset").

Follow-up commits will then call these two test functions for all work
tree manipulating commands (with a combination of all their options
relevant to what they do with the work tree) making sure they work as
expected. Later this test library will be extended to cover merges
resulting in conflicts too. Also it is intended to be easily extendable
for the recursive update functionality, where even more combinations of
submodule modifications have to be tested for.

This version documents two bugs in current Git with expected failures:

*) When a submodule is replaced with a tracked file of the same name the
   submodule work tree including any local modifications (and even the
   whole history if it uses a .git directory instead of a gitfile!) is
   silently removed.

*) Forced work tree updates happily manipulate files in the directory of a
   submodule that has just been removed in the superproject (but is of
   course still present in the work tree due to the way submodules are
   currently handled). This becomes dangerous when files in the submodule
   directory are overwritten by files from the new superproject commit, as
   any modifications to the submodule files will be lost) and is expected
   to also destroy history in the - admittedly unlikely case - the new
   commit adds a file named ".git" to the submodule directory.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-14 12:06:15 -07:00
8e34800e5b refs.c: change ref_transaction_update() to do error checking and return status
Update ref_transaction_update() do some basic error checking and return
non-zero on error. Update all callers to check ref_transaction_update() for
error. There are currently no conditions in _update that will return error but
there will be in the future. Add an err argument that will be updated on
failure. In future patches we will start doing both locking and checking
for name conflicts in _update instead of _commit at which time this function
will start returning errors for these conditions.

Also check for BUGs during update and die(BUG:...) if we are calling
_update with have_old but the old_sha1 pointer is NULL.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:42 -07:00
01319837c5 refs.c: remove the onerr argument to ref_transaction_commit
Since all callers now use QUIET_ON_ERR we no longer need to provide an onerr
argument any more. Remove the onerr argument from the ref_transaction_commit
signature.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:42 -07:00
8bcd37482e update-ref: use err argument to get error from ref_transaction_commit
Call ref_transaction_commit with QUIET_ON_ERR and use the strbuf that is
returned to print a log message if/after the transaction fails.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:42 -07:00
c1703d7634 refs.c: make update_ref_write update a strbuf on failure
Change update_ref_write to also update an error strbuf on failure.
This makes the error available to ref_transaction_commit callers if the
transaction failed due to update_ref_sha1/write_ref_sha1 failures.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:42 -07:00
038d005129 refs.c: make ref_update_reject_duplicates take a strbuf argument for errors
Make ref_update_reject_duplicates return any error that occurs through a
new strbuf argument. This means that when a transaction commit fails in
this function we will now be able to pass a helpful error message back to the
caller.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:42 -07:00
dc615de861 refs.c: log_ref_write should try to return meaningful errno
Making errno from write_ref_sha1() meaningful, which should fix

* a bug in "git checkout -b" where it prints strerror(errno)
  despite errno possibly being zero or clobbered

* a bug in "git fetch"'s s_update_ref, which trusts the result of an
  errno == ENOTDIR check to detect D/F conflicts

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:42 -07:00
76d70dc0c6 refs.c: make resolve_ref_unsafe set errno to something meaningful on error
Making errno when returning from resolve_ref_unsafe() meaningful,
which should fix

 * a bug in lock_ref_sha1_basic, where it assumes EISDIR
   means it failed due to a directory being in the way

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:42 -07:00
d3f6655505 refs.c: commit_packed_refs to return a meaningful errno on failure
Making errno when returning from commit_packed_refs() meaningful,
which should fix

 * a bug in "git clone" where it prints strerror(errno) based on
   errno, despite errno possibly being zero and potentially having
   been clobbered by that point
 * the same kind of bug in "git pack-refs"

and prepares for repack_without_refs() to get a meaningful
error message when commit_packed_refs() fails without falling into
the same bug.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:41 -07:00
470a91ef75 refs.c: make remove_empty_directories always set errno to something sane
Making errno when returning from remove_empty_directories() more
obviously meaningful, which should provide some peace of mind for
people auditing lock_ref_sha1_basic.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:41 -07:00
835e3c992f refs.c: verify_lock should set errno to something meaningful
Making errno when returning from verify_lock() meaningful, which
should almost but not completely fix

 * a bug in "git fetch"'s s_update_ref, which trusts the result of an
   errno == ENOTDIR check to detect D/F conflicts

ENOTDIR makes sense as a sign that a file was in the way of a
directory we wanted to create.  Should "git fetch" also look for
ENOTEMPTY or EEXIST to catch cases where a directory was in the way
of a file to be created?

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:41 -07:00
bd3b02daec refs.c: make sure log_ref_setup returns a meaningful errno
Making errno when returning from log_ref_setup() meaningful,

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:41 -07:00
60bca085c8 refs.c: add an err argument to repack_without_refs
Update repack_without_refs to take an err argument and update it if there
is a failure. Pass the err variable from ref_transaction_commit to this
function so that callers can print a meaningful error message if _commit
fails due to this function.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:41 -07:00
447ff1bf0a lockfile.c: make lock_file return a meaningful errno on failurei
Making errno when returning from lock_file() meaningful, which should
fix

 * an existing almost-bug in lock_ref_sha1_basic where it assumes
   errno==ENOENT is meaningful and could waste some work on retries

 * an existing bug in repack_without_refs where it prints
   strerror(errno) and picks advice based on errno, despite errno
   potentially being zero and potentially having been clobbered by
   that point

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:41 -07:00
6af926e8bc lockfile.c: add a new public function unable_to_lock_message
Introducing a new unable_to_lock_message helper, which has nicer
semantics than unable_to_lock_error and cleans up lockfile.c a little.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:40 -07:00
995f8746bc refs.c: add a strbuf argument to ref_transaction_commit for error logging
Add a strbuf argument to _commit so that we can pass an error string back to
the caller. So that we can do error logging from the caller instead of from
_commit.

Longer term plan is to first convert all callers to use onerr==QUIET_ON_ERR
and craft any log messages from the callers themselves and finally remove the
onerr argument completely.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:40 -07:00
1b07255c95 refs.c: allow passing NULL to ref_transaction_free
Allow ref_transaction_free(NULL) as a no-op. This makes ref_transaction_free
easier to use and more similar to plain 'free'.

In particular, it lets us rollback unconditionally as part of cleanup code
after setting 'transaction = NULL' if a transaction has been committed or
rolled back already.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:40 -07:00
f1c9350ad7 refs.c: constify the sha arguments for ref_transaction_create|delete|update
ref_transaction_create|delete|update has no need to modify the sha1
arguments passed to it so it should use const unsigned char* instead
of unsigned char*.

Some functions, such as fast_forward_to(), already have its old/new
sha1 arguments as consts. This function will at some point need to
use ref_transaction_update() in which case this change is required.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:40 -07:00
33f9fc5932 refs.c: ref_transaction_commit should not free the transaction
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:40 -07:00
026bd1d3e2 refs.c: remove ref_transaction_rollback
We do not yet need both a rollback and a free function for transactions.
Remove ref_transaction_rollback and use ref_transaction_free instead.

At a later stage we may reintroduce a rollback function if we want to start
adding reusable transactions and similar.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2014-07-14 11:54:40 -07:00
c7d3f8cb48 api-trace.txt: add trace API documentation
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:25:21 -07:00
83d26fa724 progress: simplify performance measurement by using getnanotime()
Calculating duration from a single uint64_t is simpler than from a struct
timeval. Change throughput measurement from gettimeofday() to
getnanotime().

Also calculate misec only if needed, and change integer division to integer
multiplication + shift, which should be slightly faster.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:25:21 -07:00
132d41e69a wt-status: simplify performance measurement by using getnanotime()
Calculating duration from a single uint64_t is simpler than from a struct
timeval. Change performance measurement for 'advice.statusuoption' from
gettimeofday() to getnanotime().

Also initialize t_begin to prevent uninitialized variable warning.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:25:21 -07:00
578da0391a git: add performance tracing for git's main() function to debug scripts
Use trace_performance to measure and print execution time and command line
arguments of the entire main() function. In constrast to the shell's 'time'
utility, which measures total time of the parent process, this logs all
involved git commands recursively. This is particularly useful to debug
performance issues of scripted commands (i.e. which git commands were
called with which parameters, and how long did they execute).

Due to git's deliberate use of exit(), the implementation uses an atexit
routine rather than just adding trace_performance_since() at the end of
main().

Usage example: > GIT_TRACE_PERFORMANCE=~/git-trace.log git stash list

Creates a log file like this:
23:57:38.638765 trace.c:405 performance: 0.000310107 s: git command: 'git' 'rev-parse' '--git-dir'
23:57:38.644387 trace.c:405 performance: 0.000261759 s: git command: 'git' 'rev-parse' '--show-toplevel'
23:57:38.646207 trace.c:405 performance: 0.000304468 s: git command: 'git' 'config' '--get-colorbool' 'color.interactive'
23:57:38.648491 trace.c:405 performance: 0.000241667 s: git command: 'git' 'config' '--get-color' 'color.interactive.help' 'red bold'
23:57:38.650465 trace.c:405 performance: 0.000243063 s: git command: 'git' 'config' '--get-color' '' 'reset'
23:57:38.654850 trace.c:405 performance: 0.025126313 s: git command: 'git' 'stash' 'list'

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:25:21 -07:00
09b2c1c769 trace: add trace_performance facility to debug performance issues
Add trace_performance and trace_performance_since macros that print a
duration and an optional printf-formatted text to the file specified in
environment variable GIT_TRACE_PERFORMANCE.

These macros, in conjunction with getnanotime(), are intended to simplify
performance measurements from within the application (i.e. profiling via
manual instrumentation, rather than using an external profiling tool).

Unless enabled via GIT_TRACE_PERFORMANCE, these macros have no noticeable
impact on performance, so that test code for well known time killers may
be shipped in release builds. Alternatively, a developer could provide an
additional performance patch (not meant for master) that allows reviewers
to reproduce performance tests more easily, e.g. on other platforms or
using their own repositories.

Usage examples:

Simple use case (measure one code section):

  uint64_t start = getnanotime();
  /* code section to measure */
  trace_performance_since(start, "foobar");

Complex use case (measure repetitive code sections):

  uint64_t t = 0;
  for (;;) {
    /* ignore */
    t -= getnanotime();
    /* code section to measure */
    t += getnanotime();
    /* ignore */
  }
  trace_performance(t, "frotz");

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:25:20 -07:00
148d6771bf trace: add high resolution timer function to debug performance issues
Add a getnanotime() function that returns nanoseconds since 01/01/1970 as
unsigned 64-bit integer (i.e. overflows in july 2554). This is easier to
work with than e.g. struct timeval or struct timespec. Basing the timer on
the epoch allows using the results with other time-related APIs.

To simplify adaption to different platforms, split the implementation into
a common getnanotime() and a platform-specific highres_nanos() function.

The common getnanotime() function handles errors, falling back to
gettimeofday() if highres_nanos() isn't implemented or doesn't work.

getnanotime() is also responsible for normalizing to the epoch. The offset
to the system clock is calculated only once on initialization, i.e.
manually setting the system clock has no impact on the timer (except if
the fallback gettimeofday() is in use). Git processes are typically short
lived, so we don't need to handle clock drift.

The highres_nanos() function returns monotonically increasing nanoseconds
relative to some arbitrary point in time (e.g. system boot), or 0 on
failure. Providing platform-specific implementations should be relatively
easy, e.g. adapting to clock_gettime() as defined by the POSIX realtime
extensions is seven lines of code.

This version includes highres_nanos() implementations for:
 * Linux: using clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC)
 * Windows: using QueryPerformanceCounter()

Todo:
 * enable clock_gettime() on more platforms
 * add Mac OSX version, e.g. using mach_absolute_time + mach_timebase_info

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:25:20 -07:00
e05bed960d trace: add 'file:line' to all trace output
This is useful to see where trace output came from.

Add 'const char *file, int line' parameters to the printing functions and
rename them to *_fl.

Add trace_printf* and trace_strbuf macros resolving to the *_fl functions
and let the preprocessor fill in __FILE__ and __LINE__.

As the trace_printf* functions take a variable number of arguments, this
requires variadic macros (i.e. '#define foo(...) foo_impl(__VA_ARGS__)'.
Though part of C99, it is unclear whether older compilers support this.
Thus keep the old functions and only enable variadic macros for GNUC and
MSVC 2005+ (_MSC_VER 1400). This has the nice side effect that the old
C-style declarations serve as documentation how the macros are to be used.

Print 'file:line ' as prefix to each trace line. Align the remaining trace
output at column 40 to accommodate 18 char file names + 4 digit line
number (currently there are 30 *.c files of length 18 and just 11 of 19).
Trace output from longer source files (e.g. builtin/receive-pack.c) will
not be aligned.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:25:20 -07:00
66f66c596f trace: move code around, in preparation to file:line output
No functional changes, just move stuff around so that the next patch isn't
that ugly...

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:25:19 -07:00
b72be02cfb trace: add current timestamp to all trace output
This is useful to tell apart trace output of separate test runs.

It can also be used for basic, coarse-grained performance analysis. Note
that the accuracy is tainted by writing to the trace file, and you have to
calculate the deltas yourself (which is next to impossible if multiple
threads or processes are involved).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:25:19 -07:00
124647c4b0 trace: disable additional trace output for unit tests
Some unit-tests use trace output to verify internal state, and unstable
output such as timestamps and line numbers are not useful there.

Disable additional trace output if GIT_TRACE_BARE is set.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:25:19 -07:00
c69dfd24db trace: add infrastructure to augment trace output with additional info
To be able to add a common prefix or suffix to all trace output (e.g.
a timestamp or file:line of the caller), factor out common setup and
cleanup tasks of the trace* functions.

When adding a common prefix, it makes sense that the output of each trace
call starts on a new line. Add '\n' in case the caller forgot.

Note that this explicitly limits trace output to line-by-line, it is no
longer possible to trace-print just part of a line. Until now, this was
just an implicit assumption (trace-printing part of a line worked, but
messed up the trace file if multiple threads or processes were involved).

Thread-safety / inter-process-safety is also the reason why we need to do
the prefixing and suffixing in memory rather than issuing multiple write()
calls. Write_or_whine_pipe() / xwrite() is atomic unless the size exceeds
MAX_IO_SIZE (8MB, see wrapper.c). In case of trace_strbuf, this costs an
additional string copy (which should be irrelevant for performance in light
of actual file IO).

While we're at it, rename trace_strbuf's 'buf' argument, which suggests
that the function is modifying the buffer. Trace_strbuf() currently is the
only trace API that can print arbitrary binary data (without barfing on
'%' or stopping at '\0'), so 'data' seems more appropriate.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:25:18 -07:00
67dc598ec4 sha1_file: change GIT_TRACE_PACK_ACCESS logging to use trace API
This changes GIT_TRACE_PACK_ACCESS functionality as follows:
 * supports the same options as GIT_TRACE (e.g. printing to stderr)
 * no longer supports relative paths
 * appends to the trace file rather than overwriting

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:25:18 -07:00
eb9250dfd5 Documentation/git.txt: improve documentation of 'GIT_TRACE*' variables
Separate GIT_TRACE description into what it prints and how to configure
where trace output is printed to. Change other GIT_TRACE_* descriptions to
refer to GIT_TRACE.

Add descriptions for GIT_TRACE_SETUP and GIT_TRACE_SHALLOW.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:25:18 -07:00
6aa3085702 trace: improve trace performance
The trace API currently rechecks the environment variable and reopens the
trace file on every API call. This has the ugly side effect that errors
(e.g. file cannot be opened, or the user specified a relative path) are
also reported on every call. Performance can be improved by about factor
three by remembering the environment state and keeping the file open.

Replace the 'const char *key' parameter in the API with a pointer to a
'struct trace_key' that bundles the environment variable name with
additional, trace-internal state. Change the call sites of these APIs to
use a static 'struct trace_key' instead of a string constant.

In trace.c::get_trace_fd(), save and reuse the file descriptor in 'struct
trace_key'.

Add a 'trace_disable()' API, so that packet_trace() can cleanly disable
tracing when it encounters packed data (instead of using unsetenv()).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 21:24:23 -07:00
fa96082617 diff-tree: avoid lookup_unknown_object
We generally want to avoid lookup_unknown_object, because it
results in allocating more memory for the object than may be
strictly necessary.

In this case, it is used to check whether we have an
already-parsed object before calling parse_object, to save
us from reading the object from disk. Using lookup_object
would be fine for that purpose, but we can take it a step
further. Since this code was written, parse_object already
learned the "check lookup_object" optimization, so we can
simply call parse_object directly.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 18:59:05 -07:00
d66bebcbcf object_as_type: set commit index
The point of the "index" field of struct commit is that
every allocated commit would have one. It is supposed to be
an invariant that whenever object->type is set to
OBJ_COMMIT, we have a unique index.

Commit 969eba6 (commit: push commit_index update into
alloc_commit_node, 2014-06-10) covered this case for
newly-allocated commits. However, we may also allocate an
"unknown" object via lookup_unknown_object, and only later
convert it to a commit. We must make sure that we set the
commit index when we switch the type field.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 18:59:05 -07:00
94d5a22cf6 alloc: factor out commit index
We keep a static counter to set the commit index on newly
allocated objects. However, since we also need to set the
index on any_objects which are converted to commits, let's
make the counter available as a public function.

While we're moving it, let's make sure the counter is
allocated as an unsigned integer to match the index field in
"struct commit".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 18:59:05 -07:00
8ff226a9d5 add object_as_type helper for casting objects
When we call lookup_commit, lookup_tree, etc, the logic goes
something like:

  1. Look for an existing object struct. If we don't have
     one, allocate and return a new one.

  2. Double check that any object we have is the expected
     type (and complain and return NULL otherwise).

  3. Convert an object with type OBJ_NONE (from a prior
     call to lookup_unknown_object) to the expected type.

We can encapsulate steps 2 and 3 in a helper function which
checks whether we have the expected object type, converts
OBJ_NONE as appropriate, and returns the object.

Not only does this shorten the code, but it also provides
one central location for converting OBJ_NONE objects into
objects of other types. Future patches will use that to
enforce type-specific invariants.

Since this is a refactoring, we would want it to behave
exactly as the current code. It takes a little reasoning to
see that this is the case:

  - for lookup_{commit,tree,etc} functions, we are just
    pulling steps 2 and 3 into a function that does the same
    thing.

  - for the call in peel_object, we currently only do step 3
    (but we want to consolidate it with the others, as
    mentioned above). However, step 2 is a noop here, as the
    surrounding conditional makes sure we have OBJ_NONE
    (which we want to keep to avoid an extraneous call to
    sha1_object_info).

  - for the call in lookup_commit_reference_gently, we are
    currently doing step 2 but not step 3. However, step 3
    is a noop here. The object we got will have just come
    from deref_tag, which must have figured out the type for
    each object in order to know when to stop peeling.
    Therefore the type will never be OBJ_NONE.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 18:59:05 -07:00
5af01caa08 parse_object_buffer: do not set object type
The only way that "obj" can be non-NULL is if it came from
one of the lookup_* functions. These functions always ensure
that the object has the expected type (and return NULL
otherwise), so there is no need for us to set the type.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 18:59:05 -07:00
d36f51c13b move setting of object->type to alloc_* functions
The "struct object" type implements basic object
polymorphism.  Individual instances are allocated as
concrete types (or as a union type that can store any
object), and a "struct object *" can be cast into its real
type after examining its "type" enum.  This means it is
dangerous to have a type field that does not match the
allocation (e.g., setting the type field of a "struct blob"
to "OBJ_COMMIT" would mean that a reader might read past the
allocated memory).

In most of the current code this is not a problem; the first
thing we do after allocating an object is usually to set its
type field by passing it to create_object. However, the
virtual commits we create in merge-recursive.c do not ever
get their type set. This does not seem to have caused
problems in practice, though (presumably because we always
pass around a "struct commit" pointer and never even look at
the type).

We can fix this oversight and also make it harder for future
code to get it wrong by setting the type directly in the
object allocation functions.

This will also make it easier to fix problems with commit
index allocation, as we know that any object allocated by
alloc_commit_node will meet the invariant that an object
with an OBJ_COMMIT type field will have a unique index
number.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 18:59:05 -07:00
600e2a69df alloc: write out allocator definitions
Because the allocator functions for tree, blobs, etc are all
very similar, we originally used a macro to avoid repeating
ourselves. Since the prior commit, though, the heavy lifting
is done by an inline helper function.  The macro does still
save us a few lines, but at some readability cost.  It
obfuscates the function definitions (and makes them hard to
find via grep).

Much worse, though, is the fact that it isn't used
consistently for all allocators. Somebody coming later may
be tempted to modify DEFINE_ALLOCATOR, but they would miss
alloc_commit_node, which is treated specially.

Let's just drop the macro and write everything out
explicitly.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 18:59:04 -07:00
225ea22046 alloc.c: remove the alloc_raw_commit_node() function
In order to encapsulate the setting of the unique commit index, commit
969eba63 ("commit: push commit_index update into alloc_commit_node",
10-06-2014) introduced a (logically private) intermediary allocator
function. However, this function (alloc_raw_commit_node()) was declared
as a public function, which undermines its entire purpose.

Introduce an inline function, alloc_node(), which implements the main
logic of the allocator used by DEFINE_ALLOCATOR, and redefine the macro
in terms of the new function. In addition, use the new function in the
implementation of the alloc_commit_node() allocator, rather than the
intermediary allocator, which can now be removed.

Noticed by sparse ("symbol 'alloc_raw_commit_node' was not declared.
Should it be static?").

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 18:59:04 -07:00
479eaa8ef8 http-push.c: make CURLOPT_IOCTLDATA a usable pointer
Fixes a small bug affecting push to remotes which use some sort of
multi-pass authentication. In particular the bug affected SabreDAV as
configured by Box.com [1].

It must be a weird server configuration for the bug to have survived
this long. Someone should write a test for it.

[1] http://marc.info/?l=git&m=140460482604482

Signed-off-by: Abbaad Haider <abbaad@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 17:57:59 -07:00
2a60839150 cache.h: rename cache_def_free to cache_def_clear
Rename cache_def_free to cache_def_clear as it doesn't free the struct
cache_def, but just clears its content.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 10:12:37 -07:00
dc662d449f tag: fix --sort tests to use cat<<-\EOF format
The --sort tests should use the better format for >expect to maintain
indenting and ensure that no substitution is occurring. This makes
parsing and understanding the tests a bit easier.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.e.keller@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-13 10:05:39 -07:00
59a8adb6fb cache-tree: subdirectory tests
Add tests to confirm that invalidation of subdirectories neither over-
nor under-invalidates.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twitter.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-11 08:09:16 -07:00
42c55ce49e log: correctly identify mergetag signature verification status
A wrong '}' made our code record the results of mergetag signature
verification incorrectly.

Fix it.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 15:25:03 -07:00
9d02150cf4 fsck: simplify fsck_commit_buffer() by using commit_list_count()
fsck_commit_buffer() checks that the number of items in the parents
list of a commit matches the number of parent lines in its buffer or --
if a graft is used -- the number of parents in that graft.  Simplify
the code by using commit_list_count() instead of counting by hand.
Also use different variables for the number of lines and the number of
list items, making it easier to compare them.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 14:10:27 -07:00
cb979dbd8f commit: use commit_list_append() instead of duplicating its code
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 14:07:22 -07:00
910a09a735 merge: simplify merge_trivial() by using commit_list_append()
Build the commit_list of parents by calling commit_list_append() twice
instead of allocating and linking the items by hand.  This makes the
code shorter and simpler.  Rename the commit_list from parent to parents
(plural) while at it because there are two of them.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 14:07:16 -07:00
294b2680cd use strbuf_addch for adding single characters
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 14:06:46 -07:00
e992d1eb39 use strbuf_addbuf for adding strbufs
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 14:06:45 -07:00
0ae0e882b2 doc: give some guidelines for error messages
Clarify error message puntuation to reduce review workload.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 13:31:55 -07:00
00f6991d4b t/Makefile: always test all lint targets when running tests
Only the two targets "test-lint-duplicates" and "test-lint-executable" are
currently executed when running the test target. This was done on purpose
when the TEST_LINT variable was added in 81127d74 to avoid twisted shell
scripting by developers only to avoid false positives that might result
from the rather simple minded tests, e.g. test-lint-shell-syntax. But it
looks like it might be better to include all lint tests to help developers
to detect non portable shell constructs before the patch is sent to the
list and reviewed there.

Change the TEST_LINT variable to run all lint test unless the TEST_LINT
variable is overridden. If we hit false positives more often than helping
developers to avoid non-portable code (or add less accurate or slow tests
later) we could still fall back to exclude them like 81127d74 proposed.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 13:04:42 -07:00
cd78cea29d t/Makefile: check helper scripts for non-portable shell commands too
Currently only the "t[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]-*.sh" scripts are tested for
shell incompatibilities using the check-non-portable-shell.pl script. This
makes it easy to miss non-POSIX constructs added to one of the t/*lib*.sh
helper scripts, as they aren't automatically detected.

Fix that by adding a THELPERS variable containing all shell scripts that
aren't tests and add these to the "test-lint-shell-syntax" target too.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 13:04:34 -07:00
66f467c3e6 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  Start preparing for 2.0.2
2014-07-10 11:37:56 -07:00
da86971c2a Seventh batch for 2.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 11:37:30 -07:00
779c99fd68 Merge branch 'dt/refs-check-refname-component-sse-fix'
Fixes to a topic that is already in 'master'.

* dt/refs-check-refname-component-sse-fix:
  refs: fix valgrind suppression file
  refs.c: handle REFNAME_REFSPEC_PATTERN at end of page
2014-07-10 11:27:55 -07:00
df4d7d5646 Merge branch 'rs/simplify-archive-tests'
* rs/simplify-archive-tests:
  t5000, t5003: simplify commit
2014-07-10 11:27:54 -07:00
b41a4636ee Merge branch 'rs/fix-alt-odb-path-comparison'
* rs/fix-alt-odb-path-comparison:
  sha1_file: avoid overrunning alternate object base string
2014-07-10 11:27:52 -07:00
e7cdec622a Merge branch 'rs/status-code-clean-up'
* rs/status-code-clean-up:
  wt-status: simplify building of summary limit argument
  wt-status: use argv_array for environment
2014-07-10 11:27:50 -07:00
11def366e5 Merge branch 'kb/path-max-must-go'
* kb/path-max-must-go:
  symlinks: remove PATH_MAX limitation
2014-07-10 11:27:47 -07:00
39177c7f18 Merge branch 'mg/verify-commit'
Add 'verify-commit' to be used in a way similar to 'verify-tag' is
used.  Further work on verifying the mergetags might be needed.

* mg/verify-commit:
  t7510: test verify-commit
  t7510: exit for loop with test result
  verify-commit: scriptable commit signature verification
  gpg-interface: provide access to the payload
  gpg-interface: provide clear helper for struct signature_check
2014-07-10 11:27:34 -07:00
3d77f72efe Merge branch 'jc/fix-clone-single-starting-at-a-tag'
"git clone -b brefs/tags/bar" would have mistakenly thought we were
following a single tag, even though it was a name of the branch,
because it incorrectly used strstr().

* jc/fix-clone-single-starting-at-a-tag:
  builtin/clone.c: detect a clone starting at a tag correctly
2014-07-10 11:17:24 -07:00
8693e1cc2f Start preparing for 2.0.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 11:15:10 -07:00
cbf4e024ad Merge branch 'pb/trim-trailing-spaces' into maint
* pb/trim-trailing-spaces:
  t0008: do not depend on 'echo' handling backslashes specially
  dir.c:trim_trailing_spaces(): fix for " \ " sequence
2014-07-10 11:10:52 -07:00
f35392b018 Merge branch 'jk/repack-pack-keep-objects' into maint
* jk/repack-pack-keep-objects:
  repack: s/write_bitmap/&s/ in code
  repack: respect pack.writebitmaps
  repack: do not accidentally pack kept objects by default
2014-07-10 11:10:05 -07:00
3fea9ebdff Merge branch 'mc/doc-submodule-sync-recurse' into maint
* mc/doc-submodule-sync-recurse:
  submodule: document "sync --recursive"
2014-07-10 11:08:31 -07:00
ce85604468 tag: use skip_prefix instead of magic numbers
We can make the parsing of the --sort parameter a bit more
readable by having skip_prefix keep our pointer up to date.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 10:56:50 -07:00
cdaa4e98ca remote-curl: mark helper-protocol errors more clearly
When we encounter an error in remote-curl, we generally just
report it to stderr. There is no need for the user to care
that the "could not connect to server" error was generated
by git-remote-https rather than a function in the parent
git-fetch process.

However, when the error is in the protocol between git and
the helper, it makes sense to clearly identify which side is
complaining. These cases shouldn't ever happen, but when
they do, we can make them less confusing by being more
verbose.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 10:54:22 -07:00
b725b270d1 remote-curl: use error instead of fprintf(stderr)
We usually prefix our error messages with "error: ", but
many error messages from remote-curl are simply printed with
fprintf. This can make the output a little harder to read
(especially because such message may be intermingled with
errors from the parent git process).

There is no reason to avoid error(), as we are already
calling it many places (in addition to libgit.a functions
which use it).

While we're adjusting the messages, we can also drop the
capitalization which makes them unlike other git error
messages.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 10:53:47 -07:00
37943e4c38 remote-curl: do not complain on EOF from parent git
The parent git process is supposed to send us an empty line
to indicate that the conversation is over. However, the
parent process may die() if there is a problem with the
operation (e.g., we try to fetch a ref that does not exist).
In this case, it produces a useful message, but then
remote-curl _also_ produces an unhelpful message:

  $ git pull origin matser
  fatal: couldn't find remote ref matser
  Unexpected end of command stream

The "right" way to fix this is to teach the parent git to
always cleanly close the connection to the helper, letting
it know that we are done. Implementing that is rather
clunky, though, as it would involve either replacing die()
operations with returning errors up the stack (until we
disconnect the transport), or adding an atexit handler to
clean up any transport helpers left open.

It's much simpler to just suppress the EOF message in
remote-curl. It was not added to address any real-world
situation in the first place, but rather a "we should
probably report unexpected things" suggestion[1].

It is the parent git which drives the operation, and whose
exit value actually matters. If the parent dies, then the
helper has no need to complain (except as a debugging aid).
In the off chance that the pipe is closed without the parent
dying, it can still notice the non-zero exit code.

[1] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/176036

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-10 10:53:00 -07:00
81e776d92b Sixth batch for 2.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-09 11:54:17 -07:00
cb9cd515ee Merge branch 'sk/mingw-unicode-spawn-args'
* sk/mingw-unicode-spawn-args:
  Win32: Unicode arguments (incoming)
  Win32: Unicode arguments (outgoing)
  MinGW: disable CRT command line globbing
  Win32: fix potential multi-threading issue
  Win32: simplify internal mingw_spawn* APIs
  Win32: let mingw_execve() return an int
2014-07-09 11:34:28 -07:00
b0bae7f0e4 Merge branch 'sk/mingw-dirent'
* sk/mingw-dirent:
  Win32 dirent: improve dirent implementation
  Win32 dirent: clarify #include directives
  Win32 dirent: change FILENAME_MAX to MAX_PATH
  Win32 dirent: remove unused dirent.d_reclen member
  Win32 dirent: remove unused dirent.d_ino member
2014-07-09 11:34:27 -07:00
641830cbe1 Merge branch 'sk/mingw-uni-console'
* sk/mingw-uni-console:
  Win32: reliably detect console pipe handles
  Win32: fix broken pipe detection
  Win32: Thread-safe windows console output
  Win32: add Unicode conversion functions
  Win32: warn if the console font doesn't support Unicode
  Win32: detect console streams more reliably
  Win32: support Unicode console output
2014-07-09 11:34:25 -07:00
ba655d15b5 Merge branch 'sk/mingw-main'
* sk/mingw-main:
  mingw: avoid const warning
  Win32: move main macro to a function
2014-07-09 11:34:22 -07:00
ce8350f8ea Merge branch 'jk/pretty-G-format-fixes'
* jk/pretty-G-format-fixes:
  move "%G" format test from t7510 to t6006
  pretty: avoid reading past end-of-string with "%G"
  t7510: check %G* pretty-format output
  t7510: test a commit signed by an unknown key
  t7510: use consistent &&-chains in loop
  t7510: stop referring to master in later tests
2014-07-09 11:34:13 -07:00
3b8e8af187 Merge branch 'jk/xstrfmt'
* jk/xstrfmt:
  setup_git_env(): introduce git_path_from_env() helper
  unique_path: fix unlikely heap overflow
  walker_fetch: fix minor memory leak
  merge: use argv_array when spawning merge strategy
  sequencer: use argv_array_pushf
  setup_git_env: use git_pathdup instead of xmalloc + sprintf
  use xstrfmt to replace xmalloc + strcpy/strcat
  use xstrfmt to replace xmalloc + sprintf
  use xstrdup instead of xmalloc + strcpy
  use xstrfmt in favor of manual size calculations
  strbuf: add xstrfmt helper
2014-07-09 11:34:05 -07:00
e91ae32a01 Merge branch 'jk/skip-prefix'
* jk/skip-prefix:
  http-push: refactor parsing of remote object names
  imap-send: use skip_prefix instead of using magic numbers
  use skip_prefix to avoid repeated calculations
  git: avoid magic number with skip_prefix
  fetch-pack: refactor parsing in get_ack
  fast-import: refactor parsing of spaces
  stat_opt: check extra strlen call
  daemon: use skip_prefix to avoid magic numbers
  fast-import: use skip_prefix for parsing input
  use skip_prefix to avoid repeating strings
  use skip_prefix to avoid magic numbers
  transport-helper: avoid reading past end-of-string
  fast-import: fix read of uninitialized argv memory
  apply: use skip_prefix instead of raw addition
  refactor skip_prefix to return a boolean
  avoid using skip_prefix as a boolean
  daemon: mark some strings as const
  parse_diff_color_slot: drop ofs parameter
2014-07-09 11:33:28 -07:00
cf3983d1ff log: fix indentation for --graph --show-signature
The git log --graph --show-signature command incorrectly indents the gpg
information about signed commits and merged signed tags. It does not
follow the level of indentation of the current commit.

Example of garbled output:
$ git log --show-signature --graph
*   commit 258e0a237cb69aaa587b0a4fb528bb0316b1b776
|\  gpg: Signature made Mon, Jun 30, 2014 13:22:33 EDT using RSA key ID DA08
gpg: Good signature from "Jason Pyeron <jpye...@pdinc.us>"
Merge: 727c355 1ca13ed
| | Author: Jason Pyeron <jpye...@pdinc.us>
| | Date:   Mon Jun 30 13:22:29 2014 -0400
| |
| |     Merge of 1ca13ed2271d60ba9 branch - rebranding
| |
| * commit 1ca13ed2271d60ba93d40bcc8db17ced8545f172
| | gpg: Signature made Mon, Jun 23, 2014  9:45:47 EDT using RSA key ID DD37
gpg: Good signature from "Stephen Robert Guglielmo <s...@guglielmo.us>"
gpg:                 aka "Stephen Robert Guglielmo <srguglie...@gmail.com>"
Author: Stephen R Guglielmo <s...@guglielmo.us>
| | Date:   Mon Jun 23 09:45:27 2014 -0400
| |
| |     Minor URL updates

In log-tree.c modify show_sig_lines() function to call graph_show_oneline()
after each line of gpg information it has printed in order to preserve
the level of indentation for the next output line.

Reported-by: Jason Pyeron <jpyeron@pdinc.us>
Signed-off-by: Zoltan Klinger <zoltan.klinger@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-09 09:37:43 -07:00
a8d9fea772 refs: fix valgrind suppression file
Add all of the ways in which check_refname_format violates valgrind's
expectations to the valgrind suppression file; remove an assumption about
the call chain of check_refname_format from same.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twitter.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-08 12:56:39 -07:00
343151dcbd t0027: combinations of core.autocrlf, core.eol and text
Historically there are 3 different parameters controlling how line endings
are handled by Git:
- core.autocrlf
- core.eol
- the "text" attribute in .gitattributes

There are different types of content:
- (1) Files with only LF
- (2) Files with only CRLF
- (3) Files with mixed LF and CRLF
- (4) Files with LF and/or CRLF with CR not followed by LF
- (5) Files which are binary (e.g. have NUL bytes)

Recently the question came up, how files with mixed EOLs are handled by Git
(and libgit2) when they are checked out and core.autocrlf=true.

See
http://git.661346.n2.nabble.com/The-different-EOL-behavior-between-libgit2-based-software-and-official-Git-td7613670.html#a7613801

Add the EXPENSIVE t0027-auto-crlf.sh to test all combination of files
and parameters for both "git add/commit" and "git checkout".

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-08 12:40:40 -07:00
b0cdb4dafc t0025: rename the test files
The current test files are named one, two and three.
Make it clearer what the tests do and rename them into
LFonly, CRLFonly and LFwithNUL.

After the renaming we can see easier that we may want more test cases
for 2 types of files:
- files which have mixed LF and CRLF line endings,
- files which have mixed LF and CR line endings.

See commit fd6cce9e, "Add per-repository eol normalization" and
"the new safer autocrlf handling" in convert.c

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-08 12:40:37 -07:00
72c779457c line-log: use commit_list_append() instead of duplicating its code
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-08 11:01:53 -07:00
4602f1a434 diff-tree: call free_commit_list() instead of duplicating its code
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-08 11:01:50 -07:00
066dd2632a Fix profile feedback with -jN and add profile-fast
Profile feedback always failed for me with -jN. The problem
was that there was no implicit ordering between the profile generate
stage and the profile use stage. So some objects in the later stage
would be linked with profile generate objects, and fail due
to the missing -lgcov.

This adds a new profile target that implicitely enforces the
correct ordering by using submakes. Plus a profile-install target
to also install. This is also nicer to type that PROFILE=...

Plus I always run the performance test suite now for the full
profile run.

In addition I also added a profile-fast / profile-fast-install
target the only runs the performance test suite instead of the
whole test suite. This significantly speeds up the profile build,
which was totally dominated by test suite run time. However
it may have less coverage of course.

Signed-off-by: Andi Kleen <ak@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-08 10:56:47 -07:00
5d7fd6d06f Run the perf test suite for profile feedback too
Signed-off-by: Andi Kleen <ak@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-08 10:56:37 -07:00
969dd8c612 test-dump-cache-tree: invalid trees are not errors
Do not treat known-invalid trees as errors even when their subtree_nr is
incorrect.  Because git already knows that these trees are invalid,
an incorrect subtree_nr will not cause problems.

Add a couple of comments.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twitter.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-08 10:35:11 -07:00
1c2828c194 replace: cleanup redirection style in tests
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-07 15:33:17 -07:00
063da62b02 commit: add for_each_mergetag()
In the same way as there is for_each_ref() to iterate on refs,
for_each_mergetag() allows the caller to iterate on the mergetags of
a given commit.  Use it to rewrite show_mergetag() used in "git log".

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-07 15:32:21 -07:00
21711ca4b2 t5000, t5003: simplify commit
Add the whole directory of test files at once using git add instead of
calling git update-index on each of them and use git commit instead of
the plumbing commands write-tree, update-ref and commit-tree to build
the commit.  This simplifies the code considerably.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-07 14:10:13 -07:00
8cd7ebc89e Don't define away __attribute__ on gcc
Profile feedback sets -DNO_NORETURN, which causes the compat
header file to go into a default #else block. That #else
block defines away __attribute__(). Doing so causes all
kinds of problems with the Linux and gcc system headers:
in particular it makes the xmmintrin.h headers error out,
breaking the build.

Don't define away __attribute__ when __GNUC__ is set.

Signed-off-by: Andi Kleen <ak@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-07 14:01:14 -07:00
0be314c207 Use BASIC_FLAGS for profile feedback
Use BASIC_CFLAGS instead of CFLAGS to set up the profile feedback
option in the Makefile.

This allows still overriding CFLAGS on the make command line
without disabling profile feedback.

Signed-off-by: Andi Kleen <ak@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-07 14:01:11 -07:00
7b64d42d22 hashmap: add string interning API
Interning short strings with high probability of duplicates can reduce the
memory footprint and speed up comparisons.

Add strintern() and memintern() APIs that use a hashmap to manage the pool
of unique, interned strings.

Note: strintern(getenv()) could be used to sanitize git's use of getenv(),
in case we ever encounter a platform where a call to getenv() invalidates
previous getenv() results (which is allowed by POSIX).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-07 13:56:38 -07:00
ab73a9d119 hashmap: add simplified hashmap_get_from_hash() API
Hashmap entries are typically looked up by just a key. The hashmap_get()
API expects an initialized entry structure instead, to support compound
keys. This flexibility is currently only needed by find_dir_entry() in
name-hash.c (and compat/win32/fscache.c in the msysgit fork). All other
(currently five) call sites of hashmap_get() have to set up a near emtpy
entry structure, resulting in duplicate code like this:

  struct hashmap_entry keyentry;
  hashmap_entry_init(&keyentry, hash(key));
  return hashmap_get(map, &keyentry, key);

Add a hashmap_get_from_hash() API that allows hashmap lookups by just
specifying the key and its hash code, i.e.:

  return hashmap_get_from_hash(map, hash(key), key);

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-07 13:56:35 -07:00
aa420c48ea hashmap: improve struct hashmap member documentation
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-07 13:56:31 -07:00
039dc71a7c hashmap: factor out getting a hash code from a SHA1
Copying the first bytes of a SHA1 is duplicated in six places,
however, the implications (the actual value would depend on the
endianness of the platform) is documented only once.

Add a properly documented API for this.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-07 13:56:24 -07:00
aecf567cbf cache-tree: create/update cache-tree on checkout
When git checkout checks out a branch, create or update the
cache-tree so that subsequent operations are faster.

update_main_cache_tree learned a new flag, WRITE_TREE_REPAIR.  When
WRITE_TREE_REPAIR is set, portions of the cache-tree which do not
correspond to existing tree objects are invalidated (and portions which
do are marked as valid).  No new tree objects are created.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twitter.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-07 12:30:34 -07:00
e7c7305300 symlinks: remove PATH_MAX limitation
'git checkout' fails if a directory is longer than PATH_MAX, because the
lstat_cache in symlinks.c checks if the leading directory exists using
PATH_MAX-bounded string operations.

Remove the limitation by using strbuf instead.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-07 11:22:42 -07:00
6d17dc1dd3 refs.c: handle REFNAME_REFSPEC_PATTERN at end of page
When a ref crosses a memory page boundary, we restart the parsing
at the beginning with the bytewise code.  Pass the original flags
to that code, rather than the current flags.

Reported-By: Øyvind A. Holm <sunny@sunbase.org>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twitter.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-07 11:05:43 -07:00
6f92e5ff3c Merge branch 'dt/refs-check-refname-component-sse'
Further micro-optimization of a leaf-function.

* dt/refs-check-refname-component-sse:
  refs.c: SSE2 optimizations for check_refname_component
2014-07-02 12:53:07 -07:00
a02ad882a1 Merge branch 'ye/http-extract-charset'
* ye/http-extract-charset:
  http: fix charset detection of extract_content_type()
2014-07-02 12:53:05 -07:00
6293aea559 Merge branch 'bc/fix-rebase-merge-skip'
"git rebase --skip" did not work well when it stopped due to a
conflict twice in a row.

* bc/fix-rebase-merge-skip:
  rebase--merge: fix --skip with two conflicts in a row
2014-07-02 12:53:04 -07:00
8061ae8b46 Merge branch 'jk/commit-buffer-length'
Move "commit->buffer" out of the in-core commit object and keep
track of their lengths.  Use this to optimize the code paths to
validate GPG signatures in commit objects.

* jk/commit-buffer-length:
  reuse cached commit buffer when parsing signatures
  commit: record buffer length in cache
  commit: convert commit->buffer to a slab
  commit-slab: provide a static initializer
  use get_commit_buffer everywhere
  convert logmsg_reencode to get_commit_buffer
  use get_commit_buffer to avoid duplicate code
  use get_cached_commit_buffer where appropriate
  provide helpers to access the commit buffer
  provide a helper to set the commit buffer
  provide a helper to free commit buffer
  sequencer: use logmsg_reencode in get_message
  logmsg_reencode: return const buffer
  do not create "struct commit" with xcalloc
  commit: push commit_index update into alloc_commit_node
  alloc: include any-object allocations in alloc_report
  replace dangerous uses of strbuf_attach
  commit_tree: take a pointer/len pair rather than a const strbuf
2014-07-02 12:53:02 -07:00
95acfc2479 enums: remove trailing ',' after last item in enum
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-02 12:52:55 -07:00
64d845477b Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  t7300: repair filesystem permissions with test_when_finished
  enums: remove trailing ',' after last item in enum
2014-07-02 12:52:46 -07:00
c2f7b1026e Merge branch 'maint-1.8.5' into maint
* maint-1.8.5:
  t7300: repair filesystem permissions with test_when_finished
  enums: remove trailing ',' after last item in enum
2014-07-02 12:51:50 -07:00
45067fc973 t7300: repair filesystem permissions with test_when_finished
We create a directory that cannot be removed, confirm that
it cannot be removed, and then fix it like:

  chmod 0 foo &&
  test_must_fail git clean -d -f &&
  chmod 755 foo

If the middle step fails but leaves the directory (e.g., the
bug is that clean does not notice the failure), this
pollutes the test repo with an unremovable directory. Not
only does this cause further tests to fail, but it means
that "rm -rf" fails on the whole trash directory, and the
user has to intervene manually to even re-run the test script.

We can bump the "chmod 755" recovery to a test_when_finished
block to be sure that it always runs.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-02 12:51:38 -07:00
782735203c enums: remove trailing ',' after last item in enum
Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-02 12:37:05 -07:00
80b47854ca sha1_file: avoid overrunning alternate object base string
While checking if a new alternate object database is a duplicate make
sure that old and new base paths have the same length before comparing
them with memcmp.  This avoids overrunning the buffer of the existing
entry if the new one is longer and it stops rejecting foobar/ after
foo/ was already added.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <ls.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-01 13:30:50 -07:00
79bc4ef368 filter-branch: eliminate duplicate mapped parents
When multiple parents of a merge commit get mapped to the same
commit, filter-branch used to pass all instances of the parent
commit to the parent and commit filters and to "git commit-tree" or
"git_commit_non_empty_tree".

This can often happen when extracting a small project from a large
repository; merges can join history with no commits on any branch
which affect the paths being retained.  Once the intermediate
commits have been filtered out, all the immediate parents of the
merge commit can end up being mapped to the same commit - either the
original merge-base or an ancestor of it.

"git commit-tree" would display an error but write the commit with
the normalized parents in any case.  "git_commit_non_empty_tree"
would fail to notice that the commit being made was in fact a
non-merge commit and would retain it even if a further pass with
"--prune-empty" would discard the commit as empty.

Ensure that duplicate parents are pruned before the parent filter to
make "--prune-empty" idempotent, removing all empty non-merge
commits in a singe pass.

Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-07-01 08:30:41 -07:00
ba311807f8 git-merge-file: do not add LF at EOF while applying unrelated change
If 'current-file' does not contain LF at EOF, and change between
'base-file' and 'other-file' does not change any line close to EOF, the
3-way merge should not add LF to EOF.  This is what 'diff3 -m' does, and
seems to be a reasonable expectation.

The change which introduced the behavior is cd1d61c44f. It always calls
function xdl_recs_copy() for sides with add_nl == 1. In fact, it looks
like the only case when this is needed is when 2 files are being
union-merged, and they do not have LF at EOF (strictly speaking, the
first of them).

Add tests:
* "merge without conflict (missing LF at EOF, away from change in the
other file)" and "merge does not add LF away of change", to demonstrate
the changed behavior.
* "conflict at EOF without LF resolved by --union", to verify that the
union-merge at the end inerts newline between versions.
* some more tests which I felt like not covering the functionality well

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-30 14:07:58 -07:00
6d49de414f t6023-merge-file.sh: fix and mark as broken invalid tests
Tests "merge without conflict (missing LF at EOF" and "merge result
added missing LF" are meaningless - the first one is identical to
"merge without conflict" and the second compares results of those
identical tests, which are always same.

This has been so since their addition in ba1f5f3537. Probably "new4.txt"
was meant to be used instead of "new2.txt". Unfortunately, the current
merge-file breaks with new4 - conflict is reported. They also fail at
that revision if fixed.

Fix the file reference to "new4.txt" and mark the tests as failing -
they look like legitimate expectations, just not satisfied at time
being.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-30 14:07:48 -07:00
47bf4b0fc5 prepare_packed_git_one: refactor duplicate-pack check
When we are reloading the list of packs, we check whether a
particular pack has been loaded. This is slightly tricky,
because we load packs based on the presence of their ".idx"
files, but record the name of the matching ".pack" file.
Therefore we want to compare their bases.

The existing code stripped off ".idx" from a file we found,
then compared that whole base length to strings containing
the ".pack" version. This meant we could end up comparing
bytes past what the ".pack" string contained, if the ".idx"
file name was much longer.

In practice, it worked OK because memcmp would end up seeing
a difference in the two strings and would return early
before hitting the full length. However, memcmp may
sometimes read extra bytes past a difference (e.g., because
it is comparing 64-bit words), or is even free to compare in
reverse order.

Furthermore, our memcmp made no guarantees that we matched
the whole pack name, up to ".pack". So "foo.idx" would match
"foo-bar.pack", which is wrong (but does not typically
happen, because our pack names have a fixed size).

We can fix both issues, avoid magic numbers, and document
that we expect to compare against a string with ".pack" by
using strip_suffix.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-30 13:43:32 -07:00
d6cd00c768 verify-pack: use strbuf_strip_suffix
In this code, we try to convert both "foo.idx" and "foo"
into "foo.pack". By stripping the suffix, we can avoid a
confusing use of strbuf_splice, and make it clear that both
cases are adding ".pack" to the end.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-30 13:43:32 -07:00
6dda4e60f2 strbuf: implement strbuf_strip_suffix
You can almost get away with just calling "strip_suffix_mem"
on a strbuf's buf and len fields. But we also need to move
the NUL-terminator to satisfy strbuf's invariants. Let's
provide a convenience wrapper that handles this.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-30 13:43:32 -07:00
592ce20820 index-pack: use strip_suffix to avoid magic numbers
We also switch to using strbufs, which lets us avoid the
potentially dangerous combination of a manual malloc
followed by a strcpy.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-30 13:43:17 -07:00
26936bfd9b use strip_suffix instead of ends_with in simple cases
When stripping a suffix like:

  if (ends_with(str, "foo"))
	buf = xmemdupz(str, strlen(str) - 3);

we can instead use strip_suffix to avoid the constant 3,
which must match the literal "foo" (we sometimes use
strlen("foo") instead, but that means we are repeating
ourselves). The example above becomes:

  if (strip_suffix(str, "foo", &len))
	buf = xmemdupz(str, len);

This also saves a strlen(), since we calculate the string
length when detecting the suffix.

Note that in some cases we also switch from xstrndup to
xmemdupz, which saves a further strlen call.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-30 13:43:17 -07:00
2975c770ca replace has_extension with ends_with
These two are almost the same function, with the exception
that has_extension only matches if there is content before
the suffix. So ends_with(".exe", ".exe") is true, but
has_extension would not be.

This distinction does not matter to any of the callers,
though, and we can just replace uses of has_extension with
ends_with. We prefer the "ends_with" name because it is more
generic, and there is nothing about the function that
requires it to be used for file extensions.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-30 13:43:16 -07:00
f52a35fd63 implement ends_with via strip_suffix
The ends_with function is essentially a simplified version
of strip_suffix, in which we throw away the stripped length.
Implementing it as an inline on top of strip_suffix has two
advantages:

  1. We save a bit of duplicated code.

  2. The suffix is typically a string literal, and we call
     strlen on it. By making the function inline, many
     compilers can replace the strlen call with a constant.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-30 13:43:16 -07:00
35480f0b23 add strip_suffix function
Many callers of ends_with want to not only find out whether
a string has a suffix, but want to also strip it off. Doing
that separately has two minor problems:

  1. We often run over the string twice (once to find
     the suffix, and then once more to find its length to
     subtract the suffix length).

  2. We have to specify the suffix length again, which means
     either a magic number, or repeating ourselves with
     strlen("suffix").

Just as we have skip_prefix to avoid these cases with
starts_with, we can add a strip_suffix to avoid them with
ends_with.

Note that we add two forms of strip_suffix here: one that
takes a string, with the resulting length as an
out-parameter; and one that takes a pointer/length pair, and
reuses the length as an out-parameter. The latter is more
efficient when the caller already has the length (e.g., when
using strbufs), but it can be easy to confuse the two, as
they take the same number and types of parameters.

For that reason, the "mem" form puts its length parameter
next to the buffer (since they are a pair), and the string
form puts it at the end (since it is an out-parameter). The
compiler can notice when you get the order wrong, which
should help prevent writing one when you meant the other.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-30 13:43:16 -07:00
880fb8de67 sha1_file: replace PATH_MAX buffer with strbuf in prepare_packed_git_one()
Instead of using strbuf to create a message string in case a path is
too long for our fixed-size buffer, replace that buffer with a strbuf
and thus get rid of the limitation.

Helped-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-30 13:43:16 -07:00
94c0cc8f72 submodule.c: use the ARRAY_SIZE macro
Use the ARRAY_SIZE macro to get the number
of elements in an array.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-30 13:39:23 -07:00
10761eb681 wt-status: simplify building of summary limit argument
Use argv_array_pushf for building the number string for the option
--summary-limit directly instead of using an intermediate buffer.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-29 23:41:04 -07:00
85dd6bf491 wt-status: use argv_array for environment
Instead of using a PATH_MAX buffer, use argv_array for constructing the
environment for git submodule summary.  This simplifies the code a bit
and removes the arbitrary length limit.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-29 23:41:02 -07:00
7fe6834801 Merge git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk
* git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk:
  gitk: Add visiblerefs option, which lists always-shown branches
  gitk: Catch mkdtemp errors
  gitk: Use mktemp -d to avoid predictable temporary directories
  gitk: Honor TMPDIR when viewing external diffs
2014-06-27 11:23:03 -07:00
bde4a0f9f3 gitk: Add visiblerefs option, which lists always-shown branches
When many branches contain a commit, the branches used to be shown in
the form "A, B and many more", where A, B can be master of current
HEAD. But there are more which might be interesting to always know about.
For example, "origin/master".

The new option, visiblerefs, is stored in ~/.gitk. It contains a list
of references which are always shown before "and many more" if they
contain the commit. By default it is `{"master"}', which is compatible
with previous behavior.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-06-27 16:37:14 +10:00
ac54a4b771 gitk: Catch mkdtemp errors
105b5d3f ("gitk: Use mktemp -d to avoid predictable temporary
directories") introduced a dependency on mkdtemp, which is not
available on Windows.

Use the original temporary directory behavior when mkdtemp fails.
This makes the code use mkdtemp when available and gracefully
fallback to the existing behavior when it is not available.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-06-27 16:30:39 +10:00
ea0e524ebd Merge early parts from git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk.git
* master~2:
  gitk: Show staged submodules regardless of ignore config
  gitk: Allow displaying time zones from author and commit dates timestamps
  gitk: Switch to patch mode when searching for line origin
  gitk: Replace SHA1 entry field on keyboard paste
  l10n: Init Vietnamese translation
2014-06-26 13:46:09 -07:00
ad1c66033e Merge git://repo.or.cz/git-gui
* git://repo.or.cz/git-gui:
  git-gui: tolerate major version changes when comparing the git version
  git-gui: show staged submodules regardless of ignore config
2014-06-26 13:44:11 -07:00
2deda629c2 replace: add a --raw mode for --edit
One of the purposes of "git replace --edit" is to help a
user repair objects which are malformed or corrupted.
Usually we pretty-print trees with "ls-tree", which is much
easier to work with than the raw binary data.  However, some
forms of corruption break the tree-walker, in which case our
pretty-printing fails, rendering "--edit" useless for the
user.

This patch introduces a "--raw" option, which lets you edit
the binary data in these instances.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-25 15:28:28 -07:00
36857e0026 replace: use argv_array in export_object
This is a little more verbose, but will make it easier to
make parts of our command-line conditional (without
resorting to magic numbers or lots of NULLs to get an
appropriately sized argv array).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-25 15:28:01 -07:00
28bf9429ef avoid double close of descriptors handed to run_command
When a file descriptor is given to run_command via the
"in", "out", or "err" parameters, run_command takes
ownership. The descriptor will be closed in the parent
process whether the process is spawned successfully or not,
and closing it again is wrong.

In practice this has not caused problems, because we usually
close() right after start_command returns, meaning no other
code has opened a descriptor in the meantime. So we just get
EBADF and ignore it (rather than accidentally closing
somebody else's descriptor!).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-25 15:27:24 -07:00
3cc9d87710 replace: replace spaces with tabs in indentation
This matches our usual style and the surrounding code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-25 15:26:46 -07:00
958b2eb26c move "%G" format test from t7510 to t6006
The final test in t7510 checks that "--format" placeholders
that look similar to GPG placeholders (but that we don't
actually understand) are passed through. That test was
placed in t7510, since the other GPG placeholder tests are
there. However, it does not have a GPG prerequisite, because
it is not actually checking any signed commits.

This causes the test to erroneously fail when gpg is not
installed on a system, however. Not because we need signed
commits, but because we need _any_ commit to run "git log".
If we don't have gpg installed, t7510 doesn't create any
commits at all.

We can fix this by moving the test into t6006. This is
arguably a better place anyway, because it is where we test
most of the other placeholders (we do not test GPG
placeholders there because of the infrastructure needed to
make signed commits).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-25 15:01:06 -07:00
c47372d3a8 Sync with maint 2014-06-25 12:32:58 -07:00
369a70fc77 Fifth batch for 2.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-25 12:32:23 -07:00
597072314c Merge branch 'jm/dedup-name-compare'
* jm/dedup-name-compare:
  cleanup duplicate name_compare() functions
  name-hash.c: replace cache_name_compare() with memcmp(3)
2014-06-25 12:23:57 -07:00
e56857246a Merge branch 'ep/avoid-test-a-o'
Update tests and scripts to avoid "test ... -a ...", which is often
more error-prone than "test ... && test ...".

Squashed misconversion fix-up into git-submodule.sh updates.

* ep/avoid-test-a-o:
  git-submodule.sh: avoid "echo" path-like values
  git-submodule.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  t/test-lib-functions.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  t/t9814-git-p4-rename.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  t/t5538-push-shallow.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  t/t5403-post-checkout-hook.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  t/t5000-tar-tree.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  t/t4102-apply-rename.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  t/t0026-eol-config.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  t/t0025-crlf-auto.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  t/lib-httpd.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  git-rebase--interactive.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  git-mergetool.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  git-bisect.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  contrib/examples/git-resolve.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  contrib/examples/git-repack.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  contrib/examples/git-merge.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  contrib/examples/git-commit.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  contrib/examples/git-clone.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  check_bindir: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
2014-06-25 12:23:56 -07:00
5b9b715f94 Merge branch 'tb/unicode-7.0-display-width'
* tb/unicode-7.0-display-width:
  Update of unicode_width.h to Unicode Version 7.0
2014-06-25 12:23:54 -07:00
ccca6b6523 Merge branch 'ye/doc-http-proto'
* ye/doc-http-proto:
  http-protocol.txt: Basic Auth is defined in RFC 2617, not RFC 2616
2014-06-25 12:23:52 -07:00
8d87e35bab Merge branch 'rs/blame-refactor'
* rs/blame-refactor:
  blame: simplify prepare_lines()
  blame: factor out get_next_line()
2014-06-25 12:23:36 -07:00
35869f4c62 Merge branch 'pb/trim-trailing-spaces'
* pb/trim-trailing-spaces:
  t0008: do not depend on 'echo' handling backslashes specially
2014-06-25 12:23:34 -07:00
b47761dd1e Merge branch 'mc/doc-submodule-sync-recurse'
* mc/doc-submodule-sync-recurse:
  submodule: document "sync --recursive"
2014-06-25 12:23:29 -07:00
af6ba0eb9e Merge branch 'sp/complete-ext-alias'
* sp/complete-ext-alias:
  completion: handle '!f() { ... }; f' and "!sh -c '...' -" aliases
2014-06-25 12:23:27 -07:00
2a20f4b7e2 Merge branch 'mc/git-p4-prepare-p4-only'
* mc/git-p4-prepare-p4-only:
  git-p4: fix submit in non --prepare-p4-only mode
2014-06-25 12:23:24 -07:00
25f3119000 Merge branch 'jk/repack-pack-writebitmaps-config'
* jk/repack-pack-writebitmaps-config:
  t7700: drop explicit --no-pack-kept-objects from .keep test
  repack: introduce repack.writeBitmaps config option
  repack: simplify handling of --write-bitmap-index
  pack-objects: stop respecting pack.writebitmaps
2014-06-25 12:23:19 -07:00
b30adaac52 Merge branch 'nd/init-restore-env'
Some subcommands do not want to be aliased because of the side
effects that happens while the definitions of the aliases are looked
up from configuration system.

* nd/init-restore-env:
  git potty: restore environments after alias expansion
2014-06-25 12:22:00 -07:00
b7ce583682 Merge branch 'jk/repack-pack-keep-objects'
Recent updates to "git repack" started to duplicate objects that
are in packfiles marked with .keep flag into the new packfile by
mistake.

* jk/repack-pack-keep-objects:
  repack: s/write_bitmap/&s/ in code
  repack: respect pack.writebitmaps
  repack: do not accidentally pack kept objects by default
2014-06-25 12:21:51 -07:00
9ce7100b1c Merge branch 'fr/sequencer-fail-with-not-one-upon-no-ff'
* fr/sequencer-fail-with-not-one-upon-no-ff:
  sequencer: signal failed ff as an aborted, not a conflicted merge
2014-06-25 12:21:45 -07:00
341e7e8eda Git 2.0.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-25 12:21:11 -07:00
62bfd831bc Merge branch 'na/no-http-test-in-the-middle' into maint
The mode to run tests with HTTP server tests disabled was broken.

* na/no-http-test-in-the-middle:
  t5538: move http push tests out to t5542
2014-06-25 11:50:13 -07:00
287a8701f6 Merge branch 'jl/status-added-submodule-is-never-ignored' into maint
"git status" (and "git commit") behaved as if changes in a modified
submodule are not there if submodule.*.ignore configuration is set,
which was misleading.  The configuration is only to unclutter diff
output during the course of development, and should not to hide
changes in the "status" output to cause the users forget to commit
them.

* jl/status-added-submodule-is-never-ignored:
  commit -m: commit staged submodules regardless of ignore config
  status/commit: show staged submodules regardless of ignore config
2014-06-25 11:50:03 -07:00
1881d2b88c Merge branch 'ym/fix-opportunistic-index-update-race' into maint
"git status", even though it is a read-only operation, tries to
update the index with refreshed lstat(2) info to optimize future
accesses to the working tree opportunistically, but this could
race with a "read-write" operation that modify the index while it
is running.  Detect such a race and avoid overwriting the index.

* ym/fix-opportunistic-index-update-race:
  read-cache.c: verify index file before we opportunistically update it
  wrapper.c: add xpread() similar to xread()
2014-06-25 11:49:48 -07:00
85785df6d6 Merge branch 'mk/show-s-no-extra-blank-line-for-merges' into maint
"git show -s" (i.e. show log message only) used to incorrectly emit
an extra blank line after a merge commit.

* mk/show-s-no-extra-blank-line-for-merges:
  git-show: fix 'git show -s' to not add extra terminator after merge commit
2014-06-25 11:49:39 -07:00
d9036cd28c Merge branch 'rr/rebase-autostash-fix' into maint
The autostash mode of "git rebase -i" did not restore the dirty
working tree state if the user aborted the interactive rebase by
emptying the insn sheet.

* rr/rebase-autostash-fix:
  rebase -i: test "Nothing to do" case with autostash
  rebase -i: handle "Nothing to do" case with autostash
2014-06-25 11:49:31 -07:00
8675779454 Merge branch 'jc/shortlog-ref-exclude' into maint
"git log --exclude=<glob> --all | git shortlog" worked as expected,
but "git shortlog --exclude=<glob> --all", which is supposed to be
identical to the above pipeline, was not accepted at the command
line argument parser level.

* jc/shortlog-ref-exclude:
  shortlog: allow --exclude=<glob> to be passed
2014-06-25 11:49:11 -07:00
c4f79d13b9 Merge branch 'jl/remote-rm-prune' into maint
"git remote rm" and "git remote prune" can involve removing many
refs at once, which is not a very efficient thing to do when very
many refs exist in the packed-refs file.

* jl/remote-rm-prune:
  remote prune: optimize "dangling symref" check/warning
  remote: repack packed-refs once when deleting multiple refs
  remote rm: delete remote configuration as the last
2014-06-25 11:49:01 -07:00
ada8710e63 Merge branch 'fc/rerere-conflict-style' into maint
"git rerere forget" did not work well when merge.conflictstyle
was set to a non-default value.

* fc/rerere-conflict-style:
  rerere: fix for merge.conflictstyle
2014-06-25 11:48:54 -07:00
5327207e0f Merge branch 'rs/pack-objects-no-unnecessary-realloc' into maint
"git pack-objects" unnecessarily copied the previous contents when
extending the hashtable, even though it will populate the table
from scratch anyway.

* rs/pack-objects-no-unnecessary-realloc:
  pack-objects: use free()+xcalloc() instead of xrealloc()+memset()
2014-06-25 11:48:43 -07:00
5fa38cc3a4 Merge branch 'dt/merge-recursive-case-insensitive' into maint
On a case insensitive filesystem, merge-recursive incorrectly
deleted the file that is to be renamed to a name that is the same
except for case differences.

* dt/merge-recursive-case-insensitive:
  mv: allow renaming to fix case on case insensitive filesystems
  merge-recursive.c: fix case-changing merge bug
2014-06-25 11:48:34 -07:00
ed5d0d2105 Merge branch 'rs/mailinfo-header-cmp' into maint
"git mailinfo" used to read beyond the end of header string while
parsing an incoming e-mail message to extract the patch.

* rs/mailinfo-header-cmp:
  mailinfo: use strcmp() for string comparison
2014-06-25 11:48:23 -07:00
182c3d69e4 Merge branch 'jk/index-pack-report-missing' into maint
The error reporting from "git index-pack" has been improved to
distinguish missing objects from type errors.

* jk/index-pack-report-missing:
  index-pack: distinguish missing objects from type errors
2014-06-25 11:48:14 -07:00
a9041df7ab Merge branch 'nd/index-pack-one-fd-per-thread' into maint
We used to disable threaded "git index-pack" on platforms without
thread-safe pread(); use a different workaround for such
platforms to allow threaded "git index-pack".

* nd/index-pack-one-fd-per-thread:
  index-pack: work around thread-unsafe pread()
2014-06-25 11:47:58 -07:00
75b1b04c63 Merge branch 'sk/spawn-less-case-insensitively-from-grep-O-i' into maint
"git grep -O" to show the lines that hit in the pager did not work
well with case insensitive search.  We now spawn "less" with its
"-I" option when it is used as the pager (which is the default).

* sk/spawn-less-case-insensitively-from-grep-O-i:
  git grep -O -i: if the pager is 'less', pass the '-I' option
2014-06-25 11:47:49 -07:00
94c734a607 Merge branch 'nd/daemonize-gc' into maint
"git gc --auto" was recently changed to run in the background to
give control back early to the end-user sitting in front of the
terminal, but it forgot that housekeeping involving reflogs should
be done without other processes competing for accesses to the refs.

* nd/daemonize-gc:
  gc --auto: do not lock refs in the background
2014-06-25 11:47:36 -07:00
cb4575fb18 Merge branch 'jk/diff-follow-must-take-one-pathspec' into maint
"git format-patch" did not enforce the rule that the "--follow"
option from the log/diff family of commands must be used with
exactly one pathspec.

* jk/diff-follow-must-take-one-pathspec:
  move "--follow needs one pathspec" rule to diff_setup_done
2014-06-25 11:47:23 -07:00
11aae3e1c1 Merge branch 'jk/diff-files-assume-unchanged' into maint
"git diff --find-copies-harder" sometimes pretended as if the mode
bits have changed for paths that are marked with assume-unchanged
bit.

* jk/diff-files-assume-unchanged:
  run_diff_files: do not look at uninitialized stat data
2014-06-25 11:47:09 -07:00
b659f81085 Merge branch 'jk/commit-C-pick-empty' into maint
"git commit --allow-empty-message -C $commit" did not work when the
commit did not have any log message.

* jk/commit-C-pick-empty:
  commit: do not complain of empty messages from -C
2014-06-25 11:46:54 -07:00
4d27d8cbc4 Merge branch 'bc/blame-crlf-test' into maint
"git blame" assigned the blame to the copy in the working-tree if
the repository is set to core.autocrlf=input and the file used CRLF
line endings.

* bc/blame-crlf-test:
  blame: correctly handle files regardless of autocrlf
2014-06-25 11:46:45 -07:00
6bf84263b3 Merge branch 'jx/blame-align-relative-time' into maint
"git blame" miscounted number of columns needed to show localized
timestamps, resulting in jaggy left-side-edge of the source code
lines in its output.

* jx/blame-align-relative-time:
  blame: dynamic blame_date_width for different locales
  blame: fix broken time_buf paddings in relative timestamp
2014-06-25 11:46:34 -07:00
c122c9a968 Merge branch 'jc/apply-ignore-whitespace' into maint
"--ignore-space-change" option of "git apply" ignored the spaces
at the beginning of line too aggressively, which is inconsistent
with the option of the same name "diff" and "git diff" have.

* jc/apply-ignore-whitespace:
  apply --ignore-space-change: lines with and without leading whitespaces do not match
2014-06-25 11:46:23 -07:00
ff7e96b78f Merge branch 'jk/complete-merge-pull' into maint
The completion scripts (in contrib/) did not know about quite a few
options that are common between "git merge" and "git pull", and a
couple of options unique to "git merge".

* jk/complete-merge-pull:
  completion: add missing options for git-merge
  completion: add a note that merge options are shared
2014-06-25 11:46:12 -07:00
fbfdf13b5c Merge branch 'ow/config-mailmap-pathname' into maint
The "mailmap.file" configuration option did not support the tilde
expansion (i.e. ~user/path and ~/path).

* ow/config-mailmap-pathname:
  config: respect '~' and '~user' in mailmap.file
2014-06-25 11:45:55 -07:00
ad5d893907 Merge branch 'as/pretty-truncate' into maint
The "%<(10,trunc)%s" pretty format specifier in the log family of
commands is used to truncate the string to a given length (e.g. 10
in the example) with padding to column-align the output, but did
not take into account that number of bytes and number of display
columns are different.

* as/pretty-truncate:
  pretty.c: format string with truncate respects logOutputEncoding
  t4205, t6006: add tests that fail with i18n.logOutputEncoding set
  t4205 (log-pretty-format): use `tformat` rather than `format`
  t4041, t4205, t6006, t7102: don't hardcode tested encoding value
  t4205 (log-pretty-formats): don't hardcode SHA-1 in expected outputs
2014-06-25 11:45:32 -07:00
91043fc95c Merge branch 'jc/revision-dash-count-parsing' into maint
"git log -2master" is a common typo that shows two commits starting
from whichever random branch that is not 'master' that happens to
be checked out currently.

* jc/revision-dash-count-parsing:
  revision: parse "git log -<count>" more carefully
2014-06-25 11:44:53 -07:00
81bd9b1000 Merge branch 'jk/report-fail-to-read-objects-better' into maint
Reworded the error message given upon a failure to open an existing
loose object file due to e.g. permission issues; it was reported as
the object being corrupt, but that is not quite true.

* jk/report-fail-to-read-objects-better:
  open_sha1_file: report "most interesting" errno
2014-06-25 11:43:58 -07:00
73505ef7a5 Merge branch 'mn/sideband-no-ansi' into maint
Tools that read diagnostic output in our standard error stream do
not want to see terminal control sequence (e.g. erase-to-eol).
Detect them by checking if the standard error stream is connected
to a tty.

* mn/sideband-no-ansi:
  sideband.c: do not use ANSI control sequence on non-terminal
2014-06-25 11:43:43 -07:00
e293c563b0 Merge branch 'je/pager-do-not-recurse' into maint
We used to unconditionally disable the pager in the pager process
we spawn to feed out output, but that prevented people who want to
run "less" within "less" from doing so.

* je/pager-do-not-recurse:
  pager: do allow spawning pager recursively
2014-06-25 11:43:07 -07:00
cb6c38d5cc setup_git_env(): introduce git_path_from_env() helper
"Check the value of an environment and fall back to a known path
inside $GIT_DIR" is repeated a few times to determine the location
of the data store, the index and the graft file, but the return
value of getenv is not guaranteed to survive across further
invocations of setenv or even getenv.

Make sure to xstrdup() the value we receive from getenv(3), and
encapsulate the pattern into a helper function.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-25 10:33:27 -07:00
7cefd3431a l10n: Fix more typos in the Swedish translations
Thanks-to: Anders Jonsson <anders.jonsson@norsjovallen.se>
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2014-06-24 19:52:47 +01:00
8e92c2cf37 t7510: test verify-commit
This mixes the "git verify-commit" tests in with the "git show
--show-signature" tests, to keep the tests more readable.

The tests already mix in the "call show" tests with the "verify" tests.
So in case of a test beakage, a '-v' run would be needed to reveal the
exact point of breakage anyway.

Additionally, test the actual output of "git verify-commit" and "git
show --show-signature" and compare to "git cat-file".

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-23 15:50:31 -07:00
0f109c92b0 t7510: exit for loop with test result
t7510 uses for loops in a subshell, which need to make sure that the test
returns with the appropriate error code from within the loop.

Restructure the loops as the usual && chains with a single point of
"exit 1" at the end of the loop to make this clearer.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-23 15:50:31 -07:00
d07b00b7f3 verify-commit: scriptable commit signature verification
Commit signatures can be verified using "git show -s --show-signature"
or the "%G?" pretty format and parsing the output, which is well suited
for user inspection, but not for scripting.

Provide a command "verify-commit" which is analogous to "verify-tag": It
returns 0 for good signatures and non-zero otherwise, has the gpg output
on stderr and (optionally) the commit object on stdout, sans the
signature, just like "verify-tag" does.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-23 15:50:31 -07:00
71c214c840 gpg-interface: provide access to the payload
In contrast to tag signatures, commit signatures are put into the
header, that is between the other header parts and commit messages.

Provide access to the commit content sans the signature, which is the
payload that is actually signed. Commit signature verification does the
parsing anyways, and callers may wish to act on or display the commit
object sans the signature.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-23 15:50:30 -07:00
01e57b5d91 gpg-interface: provide clear helper for struct signature_check
The struct has been growing members whose malloced memory needs to be
freed. Do this with one helper function so that no malloced memory shall
be left unfreed.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-23 15:50:29 -07:00
60a5f5fc79 builtin/clone.c: detect a clone starting at a tag correctly
31b808a0 (clone --single: limit the fetch refspec to fetched branch,
2012-09-20) tried to see if the given "branch" to follow is actually
a tag at the remote repository by checking with "refs/tags/" but it
incorrectly used strstr(3); it is actively wrong to treat a "branch"
"refs/heads/refs/tags/foo" and use the logic for the "refs/tags/"
ref hierarchy.  What the code really wanted to do is to see if it
starts with "refs/tags/".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-23 14:31:35 -07:00
786a89d347 Fourth batch for 2.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 13:22:55 -07:00
bf80b8a6d8 Merge branch 'jc/test-lazy-prereq' (early part)
* 'jc/test-lazy-prereq' (early part):
  t3419: drop unnecessary NOT_EXPENSIVE pseudo-prerequisite
  t3302: drop unnecessary NOT_EXPENSIVE pseudo-prerequisite
  t3302: do not chdir around in the primary test process
  t3302: coding style updates
  test: turn USR_BIN_TIME into a lazy prerequisite
  test: turn EXPENSIVE into a lazy prerequisite
2014-06-20 13:21:26 -07:00
a668853c67 Merge branch 'jc/fetch-pull-refmap'
* jc/fetch-pull-refmap:
  docs: Explain the purpose of fetch's and pull's <refspec> parameter.
  fetch: allow explicit --refmap to override configuration
  fetch doc: add a section on configured remote-tracking branches
  fetch doc: remove "short-cut" section
  fetch doc: update refspec format description
  fetch doc: on pulling multiple refspecs
  fetch doc: remove notes on outdated "mixed layout"
  fetch doc: update note on '+' in front of the refspec
  fetch doc: move FETCH_HEAD material lower and add an example
  fetch doc: update introductory part for clarity
2014-06-20 13:14:10 -07:00
9fe49ae7d7 Merge branch 'mt/send-email-cover-to-cc'
* mt/send-email-cover-to-cc:
  t9001: avoid non-portable '\n' with sed
  test/send-email: to-cover, cc-cover tests
  git-send-email: two new options: to-cover, cc-cover
2014-06-20 13:12:20 -07:00
7402a1c160 Merge branch 'tb/t5551-clone-notice-to-stderr'
* tb/t5551-clone-notice-to-stderr:
  t5551: fix the 50,000 tag test
2014-06-20 13:12:17 -07:00
fa8203741e Merge branch 'rs/more-starts-with'
* rs/more-starts-with:
  Use starts_with() for C strings instead of memcmp()
2014-06-20 13:12:14 -07:00
9ba66403fd Merge branch 'jm/api-strbuf-doc'
* jm/api-strbuf-doc:
  api-strbuf.txt minor typos
2014-06-20 13:12:11 -07:00
7a3b4e3bd2 Merge branch 'jc/revision-dash-count-parsing'
"git log -2master" is a common typo that shows two commits starting
from whichever random branch that is not 'master' that happens to
be checked out currently.

* jc/revision-dash-count-parsing:
  revision: parse "git log -<count>" more carefully
2014-06-20 13:10:25 -07:00
67a31f6128 http-push: refactor parsing of remote object names
We get loose object names like "objects/??/..." from the
remote side, and need to convert them to their hex
representation.

The code to do so is rather hard to follow, as it uses some
calculated lengths whose origins are hard to understand and
verify (e.g., the path must be exactly 49 characters long.
why? Why doesn't the strcpy overflow obj_hex, which is the
same length as path?).

We can simplify this a bit by using skip_prefix, using standard
40- and 20-character buffers for hex and binary sha1s, and
adding some comments.

We also drop a totally bogus comment that claims strlcpy
cannot be used because "path" is not NUL-terminated. Right
between a call to strlen(path) and strcpy(path).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:45:19 -07:00
59a642f8ac imap-send: use skip_prefix instead of using magic numbers
Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:45:19 -07:00
de8118e153 use skip_prefix to avoid repeated calculations
In some cases, we use starts_with to check for a prefix, and
then use an already-calculated prefix length to advance a
pointer past the prefix. There are no magic numbers or
duplicated strings here, but we can still make the code
simpler and more obvious by using skip_prefix.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:45:19 -07:00
6d87780399 git: avoid magic number with skip_prefix
After handling options, any leftover arguments should be
commands. However, we pass through "--help" and "--version",
so that we convert them into "git help" and "git version"
respectively.

This is a straightforward use of skip_prefix to avoid a
magic number, but while we are there, it is worth adding a
comment to explain this otherwise confusing behavior.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:45:19 -07:00
82e56767aa fetch-pack: refactor parsing in get_ack
There are several uses of the magic number "line+45" when
parsing ACK lines from the server, and it's rather unclear
why 45 is the correct number. We can make this more clear by
keeping a running pointer as we parse, using skip_prefix to
jump past the first "ACK ", then adding 40 to jump past
get_sha1_hex (which is still magical, but hopefully 40 is
less magical to readers of git code).

Note that this actually puts us at line+44. The original
required some character between the sha1 and further ACK
flags (it is supposed to be a space, but we never enforced
that). We start our search for flags at line+44, which
meanas we are slightly more liberal than the old code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:45:19 -07:00
e814c39c2f fast-import: refactor parsing of spaces
When we see a file change in a commit, we expect one of:

  1. A mark.

  2. An "inline" keyword.

  3. An object sha1.

The handling of spaces is inconsistent between the three
options. Option 1 calls a sub-function which checks for the
space, but doesn't parse past it. Option 2 parses the space,
then deliberately avoids moving the pointer past it. Option
3 detects the space locally but doesn't move past it.

This is confusing, because it looks like option 1 forgets to
check for the space (it's just buried). And option 2 checks
for "inline ", but only moves strlen("inline") characters
forward, which looks like a bug but isn't.

We can make this more clear by just having each branch move
past the space as it is checked (and we can replace the
doubled use of "inline" with a call to skip_prefix).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:45:19 -07:00
0539cc0038 stat_opt: check extra strlen call
As in earlier commits, the diff option parser uses
starts_with to find that an argument starts with "--stat-",
and then adds strlen("stat-") to find the rest of the
option.

However, in this case the starts_with and the strlen are
separated across functions, making it easy to call the
latter without the former. Let's use skip_prefix instead of
raw pointer arithmetic to catch such a case.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:45:19 -07:00
d12c24d2a9 daemon: use skip_prefix to avoid magic numbers
Like earlier cases, we can use skip_prefix to avoid magic
numbers that must match the length of starts_with prefixes.
However, the numbers are a little more complicated here, as
we keep parsing past the prefix. We can solve it by keeping
a running pointer as we parse; its final value is the
location we want.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:45:18 -07:00
97313bef2a fast-import: use skip_prefix for parsing input
Fast-import does a lot of parsing of commands and
dispatching to sub-functions. For example, given "option
foo", we might recognize "option " using starts_with, and
then hand it off to parse_option() to do the rest.

However, we do not let parse_option know that we have parsed
the first part already. It gets the full buffer, and has to
skip past the uninteresting bits. Some functions simply add
a magic constant:

  char *option = command_buf.buf + 7;

Others use strlen:

  char *option = command_buf.buf + strlen("option ");

And others use strchr:

  char *option = strchr(command_buf.buf, ' ') + 1;

All of these are brittle and easy to get wrong (especially
given that the starts_with call and the code that assumes
the presence of the prefix are far apart). Instead, we can
use skip_prefix, and just pass each handler a pointer to its
arguments.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:44:45 -07:00
95b567c7c3 use skip_prefix to avoid repeating strings
It's a common idiom to match a prefix and then skip past it
with strlen, like:

  if (starts_with(foo, "bar"))
	  foo += strlen("bar");

This avoids magic numbers, but means we have to repeat the
string (and there is no compiler check that we didn't make a
typo in one of the strings).

We can use skip_prefix to handle this case without repeating
ourselves.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:44:45 -07:00
ae021d8791 use skip_prefix to avoid magic numbers
It's a common idiom to match a prefix and then skip past it
with a magic number, like:

  if (starts_with(foo, "bar"))
	  foo += 3;

This is easy to get wrong, since you have to count the
prefix string yourself, and there's no compiler check if the
string changes.  We can use skip_prefix to avoid the magic
numbers here.

Note that some of these conversions could be much shorter.
For example:

  if (starts_with(arg, "--foo=")) {
	  bar = arg + 6;
	  continue;
  }

could become:

  if (skip_prefix(arg, "--foo=", &bar))
	  continue;

However, I have left it as:

  if (skip_prefix(arg, "--foo=", &v)) {
	  bar = v;
	  continue;
  }

to visually match nearby cases which need to actually
process the string. Like:

  if (skip_prefix(arg, "--foo=", &v)) {
	  bar = atoi(v);
	  continue;
  }

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:44:45 -07:00
21a2d4ada5 transport-helper: avoid reading past end-of-string
We detect the "import-marks" capability by looking for that
string, but _without_ a trailing space. Then we skip past it
using strlen("import-marks "), with a space. So if a remote
helper gives us exactly "import-marks", we will read past
the end-of-string by one character.

This is unlikely to be a problem in practice, because such
input is malformed in the first place, and because there is
a good chance that the string has an extra NUL terminator
one character after the original (because it formerly had a
newline in it that we parsed off).

We can fix it by using skip_prefix with "import-marks ",
with the space. The other form appears to be a typo from
a515ebe (transport-helper: implement marks location as
capability, 2011-07-16); "import-marks" has never existed
without an argument, and it should match the "export-marks"
definition above.

Speaking of which, we can also use skip_prefix in a few
other places while we are in the function.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:44:44 -07:00
ff45c0d4a3 fast-import: fix read of uninitialized argv memory
Fast-import shares code between its command-line parser and
the "option" command. To do so, it strips the "--" from any
command-line options and passes them to the option parser.
However, it does not confirm that the option even begins
with "--" before blindly passing "arg + 2".

It does confirm that the option starts with "-", so the only
affected case was:

  git fast-import -

which would read uninitialized memory after the argument. We
can fix it by using skip_prefix and checking the result. As
a bonus, this gets rid of some magic numbers.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:44:44 -07:00
ce2ecf2924 apply: use skip_prefix instead of raw addition
A submodule diff generally has content like:

  -Subproject commit [0-9a-f]{40}
  +Subproject commit [0-9a-f]{40}

When we are using "git apply --index" with a submodule, we
first apply the textual diff, and then parse that result to
figure out the new sha1.

If the diff has bogus input like:

  -Subproject commit 1234567890123456789012345678901234567890
  +bogus

we will parse the "bogus" portion. Our parser assumes that
the buffer starts with "Subproject commit", and blindly
skips past it using strlen(). This can cause us to read
random memory after the buffer.

This problem was unlikely to have come up in practice (since
it requires a malformed diff), and even when it did, we
likely noticed the problem anyway as the next operation was
to call get_sha1_hex on the random memory.

However, we can easily fix it by using skip_prefix to notice
the parsing error.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:44:44 -07:00
cf4fff579e refactor skip_prefix to return a boolean
The skip_prefix() function returns a pointer to the content
past the prefix, or NULL if the prefix was not found. While
this is nice and simple, in practice it makes it hard to use
for two reasons:

  1. When you want to conditionally skip or keep the string
     as-is, you have to introduce a temporary variable.
     For example:

       tmp = skip_prefix(buf, "foo");
       if (tmp)
	       buf = tmp;

  2. It is verbose to check the outcome in a conditional, as
     you need extra parentheses to silence compiler
     warnings. For example:

       if ((cp = skip_prefix(buf, "foo"))
	       /* do something with cp */

Both of these make it harder to use for long if-chains, and
we tend to use starts_with() instead. However, the first line
of "do something" is often to then skip forward in buf past
the prefix, either using a magic constant or with an extra
strlen(3) (which is generally computed at compile time, but
means we are repeating ourselves).

This patch refactors skip_prefix() to return a simple boolean,
and to provide the pointer value as an out-parameter. If the
prefix is not found, the out-parameter is untouched. This
lets you write:

  if (skip_prefix(arg, "foo ", &arg))
	  do_foo(arg);
  else if (skip_prefix(arg, "bar ", &arg))
	  do_bar(arg);

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:44:43 -07:00
0be7d9b73d test-lib: add test_dir_is_empty()
For the upcoming submodule test framework we often need to assert that an
empty directory exists in the work tree. Add the test_dir_is_empty()
function which asserts that the given argument is an empty directory.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:20:42 -07:00
ccdd4a0f3c cleanup duplicate name_compare() functions
We often represent our strings as a counted string, i.e. a pair of
the pointer to the beginning of the string and its length, and the
string may not be NUL terminated to that length.

To compare a pair of such counted strings, unpack-trees.c and
read-cache.c implement their own name_compare() functions
identically.  In addition, the cache_name_compare() function in
read-cache.c is nearly identical.  The only difference is when one
string is the prefix of the other string, in which case
name_compare() returns -1/+1 to show which one is longer, and
cache_name_compare() returns the difference of the lengths to show
the same information.

Unify these three functions by using the implementation from
cache_name_compare().  This does not make any difference to the
existing and future callers, as they must be paying attention only
to the sign of the returned value (and not the magnitude) because
the original implementations of these two functions return values
returned by memcmp(3) when the one string is not a prefix of the
other string, and the only thing memcmp(3) guarantees its callers is
the sign of the returned value, not the magnitude.

Signed-off-by: Jeremiah Mahler <jmmahler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:12:14 -07:00
be99ec97c8 name-hash.c: replace cache_name_compare() with memcmp(3)
The same_name() private function wants a quick-and-exact check to
see if they two names are byte-for-byte identical first and then
fall back to the slow path.  Use memcmp(3) for the former to make it
clear that we do not want any "name" specific comparison.

Signed-off-by: Jeremiah Mahler <jmmahler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-20 10:08:10 -07:00
45bc131dd3 unique_path: fix unlikely heap overflow
When merge-recursive creates a unique filename, it uses a
template like:

  path~branch_%d

where the final "_%d" is filled by an incrementing counter
until we find a unique name. We allocate 8 characters for
the counter, but there is no logic to limit the size of the
integer.

Of course, this is extremely unlikely, as you would need a
hundred million collisions to trigger the problem.  Even if
an attacker constructed a specialized repo, it is unlikely
that the victim would have the patience to run the merge.

However, we can make it trivially correct (and hopefully
more readable) by using a strbuf.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-19 15:20:56 -07:00
f33206992d walker_fetch: fix minor memory leak
We sometimes allocate "msg" on the heap, but will fail to
free it if we hit the failure code path. We can instead keep
a separate variable that is safe to be freed no matter how
we get to the failure code path.

While we're here, we can also do two readability
improvements:

  1. Use xstrfmt instead of a manual malloc/sprintf

  2. Due to the "maybe we allocate msg, maybe we don't"
     strategy, the logic for deciding which message to show
     was split into two parts. Since the deallocation is now
     pushed onto a separate variable, this is no longer a
     concern, and we can keep all of the logic in the same
     place.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-19 15:20:56 -07:00
5c1753b198 merge: use argv_array when spawning merge strategy
This is shorter, and avoids a rather complicated set of
allocation and free steps.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-19 15:20:55 -07:00
3bdd55228b sequencer: use argv_array_pushf
This avoids a manual allocation calculation, and is shorter
to boot.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-19 15:20:55 -07:00
a0279e1865 setup_git_env: use git_pathdup instead of xmalloc + sprintf
This is shorter, harder to get wrong, and more clearly
captures the intent.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-19 15:20:55 -07:00
b2724c8787 use xstrfmt to replace xmalloc + strcpy/strcat
It's easy to get manual allocation calculations wrong, and
the use of strcpy/strcat raise red flags for people looking
for buffer overflows (though in this case each site was
fine).

It's also shorter to use xstrfmt, and the printf-format
tends to be easier for a reader to see what the final string
will look like.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-19 15:20:54 -07:00
283101869b use xstrfmt to replace xmalloc + sprintf
This is one line shorter, and makes sure the length in the
malloc and sprintf steps match.

These conversions are very straightforward; we can drop the
malloc entirely, and replace the sprintf with xstrfmt.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-19 15:20:54 -07:00
95244ae3dd use xstrdup instead of xmalloc + strcpy
This is one line shorter, and makes sure the length in the
malloc and copy steps match.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-19 15:20:53 -07:00
6a0662304d git-submodule.sh: avoid "echo" path-like values
SysV-derived implementation of "echo" interprets some backslash
sequences as special instruction, e.g. "echo 'ab\c'" shows an
incomplete line with 'a' and 'b' on it.  Avoid using it when showing
a path-like values in the script.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-19 13:30:03 -07:00
496eeeb19b git-submodule.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-19 13:30:03 -07:00
fa3f60b783 use xstrfmt in favor of manual size calculations
In many parts of the code, we do an ugly and error-prone
malloc like:

  const char *fmt = "something %s";
  buf = xmalloc(strlen(foo) + 10 + 1);
  sprintf(buf, fmt, foo);

This makes the code brittle, and if we ever get the
allocation wrong, is a potential heap overflow. Let's
instead favor xstrfmt, which handles the allocation
automatically, and makes the code shorter and more readable.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-19 12:25:17 -07:00
30a0ddb705 strbuf: add xstrfmt helper
You can use a strbuf to build up a string from parts, and
then detach it. In the general case, you might use multiple
strbuf_add* functions to do the building. However, in many
cases, a single strbuf_addf is sufficient, and we end up
with:

  struct strbuf buf = STRBUF_INIT;
  ...
  strbuf_addf(&buf, fmt, some, args);
  str = strbuf_detach(&buf, NULL);

We can make this much more readable (and avoid introducing
an extra variable, which can clutter the code) by
introducing a convenience function:

  str = xstrfmt(fmt, some, args);

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-19 12:25:17 -07:00
c0264180d7 avoid using skip_prefix as a boolean
There's no point in using:

  if (skip_prefix(buf, "foo"))

over

  if (starts_with(buf, "foo"))

as the point of skip_prefix is to return a pointer to the
data after the prefix. Using starts_with is more readable,
and will make refactoring skip_prefix easier.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-18 14:56:54 -07:00
1055a890f0 daemon: mark some strings as const
None of these strings is modified; marking them as const
will help later refactoring.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-18 14:56:24 -07:00
9e1a5ebe52 parse_diff_color_slot: drop ofs parameter
This function originally took a whole config variable name
("var") and an offset ("ofs"). It checked "var+ofs" against
each color slot, but reported errors using the whole "var".

However, since 8b8e862 (ignore unknown color configuration,
2009-12-12), it returns -1 rather than printing its own
error, and therefore only cares about var+ofs. We can drop
the ofs parameter and teach its sole caller to derive the
pointer itself.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-18 14:56:17 -07:00
745224e04a refs.c: SSE2 optimizations for check_refname_component
Optimize check_refname_component using SSE2 on x86_64.

git rev-parse HEAD is a good test-case for this, since it does almost
nothing except parse refs.  For one particular repo with about 60k
refs, almost all packed, the timings are:

Look up table: 29 ms
SSE2:          23 ms

This cuts about 20% off of the runtime.

Ondřej Bílka <neleai@seznam.cz> suggested an SSE2 approach to the
substring searches, which netted a speed boost over the SSE4.2 code I
had initially written.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twitter.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-18 10:57:18 -07:00
a67c821ded Update of unicode_width.h to Unicode Version 7.0
Unicode Version 7.0 was released yesterday.
Run ./update_unicode.sh to update the zero_width table.
Note: the double_width is unchanged.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-18 10:53:45 -07:00
f34a655d4d http: fix charset detection of extract_content_type()
extract_content_type() could not extract a charset parameter if the
parameter is not the first one and there is a whitespace and a following
semicolon just before the parameter. For example:

    text/plain; format=fixed ;charset=utf-8

And it also could not handle correctly some other cases, such as:

    text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=fixed
    text/plain; some-param="a long value with ;semicolons;"; charset=utf-8

Thanks-to: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Yi EungJun <eungjun.yi@navercorp.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-17 15:25:00 -07:00
aa4b78d483 pretty: avoid reading past end-of-string with "%G"
If the user asks for --format=%G with nothing else, we
correctly realize that "%G" is not a valid placeholder (it
should be "%G?", "%GK", etc). But we still tell the
strbuf_expand code that we consumed 2 characters, causing it
to jump over the trailing NUL and output garbage.

This also fixes the case where "%GX" would be consumed (and
produce no output). In other cases, we pass unrecognized
placeholders through to the final string.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-17 13:41:41 -07:00
06ca0f45a0 t7510: check %G* pretty-format output
We do not check these along with the other pretty-format
placeholders in t6006, because we need signed commits to
make them interesting. t7510 has such commits, and can
easily exercise them in addition to the regular
--show-signature code path.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-17 13:41:39 -07:00
4baf839fe0 t7510: test a commit signed by an unknown key
We tested both good and bad signatures, but not ones made
correctly but with a key for which we have no trust.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-17 13:41:28 -07:00
7b1732c116 t7510: use consistent &&-chains in loop
We check multiple commits in a loop. Because we want to
break out of the loop if any single iteration fails, we use
a subshell/exit like:

  (
	for i in $stuff
	do
		do-something $i || exit 1
	done
  )

However, we are inconsistent in our loop body. Some commands
get their own "|| exit 1", and others try to chain to the
next command with "&&", like:

  X &&
  Y || exit 1
  Z || exit 1

This is a little hard to read and follow, because X and Y
are treated differently for no good reason. But much worse,
the second loop follows a similar pattern and gets it wrong.
"Y" is expected to fail, so we use "&& exit 1", giving us:

  X &&
  Y && exit 1
  Z || exit 1

That gets the test for X wrong (we do not exit unless both X
fails and Y unexpectedly succeeds, but we would want to exit
if _either_ is wrong). We can write this clearly and
correctly by consistently using "&&", followed by a single
"|| exit 1", and negating Y with "!" (as we would in a
normal &&-chain). Like:

  X &&
  ! Y &&
  Z || exit 1

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-17 13:39:52 -07:00
526d56e072 t7510: stop referring to master in later tests
Our setup creates a sequence of commits, each with its own
tag. However, we sometimes refer to "seventh-signed" as
"master". This works, since it is at the tip of the created
branch, but is brittle if new tests need to add more
commits. Let's use its tag name to be unambiguous.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-17 13:39:12 -07:00
0d0424272f trace: remove redundant printf format attribute
trace_printf_key() is the only non-static function that duplicates the
printf format attribute in the .c file, remove it for consistency.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-17 09:37:47 -07:00
4a3b0b25f1 trace: consistently name the format parameter
The format parameter to trace_printf functions is sometimes abbreviated
'fmt'. Rename to 'format' everywhere (consistent with POSIX' printf
specification).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-17 09:37:47 -07:00
5991a55c54 trace: move trace declarations from cache.h to new trace.h
Also include direct dependencies (strbuf.h and git-compat-util.h for
__attribute__) so that trace.h can be used independently of cache.h, e.g.
in test programs.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-17 09:37:47 -07:00
95104c7e25 rebase--merge: fix --skip with two conflicts in a row
If git rebase --merge encountered a conflict, --skip would not work if the
next commit also conflicted.  The msgnum file would never be updated with
the new patch number, so no patch would actually be skipped, resulting in an
inescapable loop.

Update the msgnum file's value as the first thing in call_merge.  This also
avoids an "Already applied" message when skipping a commit.  There is no
visible change for the other contexts in which call_merge is invoked, as the
msgnum file's value remains unchanged in those situations.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-16 13:29:16 -07:00
cb682f8cfe Third batch for 2.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-16 12:39:35 -07:00
7e1a5381b0 Merge branch 'ib/test-selectively-run'
Allow specifying only certain individual test pieces to be run
using a range notation (e.g. "t1234-test.sh --run='1-4 6 8 9-'").

* ib/test-selectively-run:
  t0000-*.sh: fix the GIT_SKIP_TESTS sub-tests
  test-lib: '--run' to run only specific tests
  test-lib: tests skipped by GIT_SKIP_TESTS say so
  test-lib: document short options in t/README
2014-06-16 12:18:56 -07:00
c6d3abbf99 Merge branch 'ta/string-list-init'
* ta/string-list-init:
  string-list: spell all values out that are given to a string_list initializer
2014-06-16 12:18:55 -07:00
bbfa0cc7f8 Merge branch 'jm/dedup-test-config'
* jm/dedup-test-config:
  t/t7810-grep.sh: remove duplicate test_config()
2014-06-16 12:18:54 -07:00
ae7dd1a492 Merge branch 'dt/refs-check-refname-component-optim'
* dt/refs-check-refname-component-optim:
  refs.c: optimize check_refname_component()
2014-06-16 12:18:52 -07:00
c651ccc91d Merge branch 'sk/test-cmp-bin'
* sk/test-cmp-bin:
  t5000, t5003: do not use test_cmp to compare binary files
2014-06-16 12:18:51 -07:00
96b29bde91 Merge branch 'sh/enable-preloadindex'
* sh/enable-preloadindex:
  environment.c: enable core.preloadindex by default
2014-06-16 12:18:49 -07:00
bb0ced7581 Merge branch 'rs/read-ref-at'
* rs/read-ref-at:
  refs.c: change read_ref_at to use the reflog iterators
2014-06-16 12:18:48 -07:00
d0d5ba7e6e Merge branch 'jk/error-resolve-conflict-advice'
* jk/error-resolve-conflict-advice:
  error_resolve_conflict: drop quotations around operation
  error_resolve_conflict: rewrap advice message
2014-06-16 12:18:47 -07:00
57a2eee925 Merge branch 'rs/pack-objects-no-unnecessary-realloc'
Avoid unnecessary copy of previous contents when extending the
hashtable used in pack-objects.

* rs/pack-objects-no-unnecessary-realloc:
  pack-objects: use free()+xcalloc() instead of xrealloc()+memset()
2014-06-16 12:18:42 -07:00
3009afd54e Merge branch 'lt/log-auto-decorate'
* lt/log-auto-decorate:
  git log: support "auto" decorations
2014-06-16 12:18:41 -07:00
668668ad50 Merge branch 'jm/doc-wording-tweaks'
* jm/doc-wording-tweaks:
  Documentation: wording fixes in the user manual and glossary
2014-06-16 12:18:39 -07:00
f18871dcd4 Merge branch 'jm/format-patch-mail-sig'
* jm/format-patch-mail-sig:
  format-patch: add "--signature-file=<file>" option
  format-patch: make newline after signature conditional
2014-06-16 12:18:38 -07:00
2075a0c27f Merge branch 'jk/http-errors'
Propagate the error messages from the webserver better to the
client coming over the HTTP transport.

* jk/http-errors:
  http: default text charset to iso-8859-1
  remote-curl: reencode http error messages
  strbuf: add strbuf_reencode helper
  http: optionally extract charset parameter from content-type
  http: extract type/subtype portion of content-type
  t5550: test display of remote http error messages
  t/lib-httpd: use write_script to copy CGI scripts
  test-lib: preserve GIT_CURL_VERBOSE from the environment
2014-06-16 12:18:36 -07:00
c37d3269d9 Merge branch 'ow/config-mailmap-pathname'
mailmap.file configuration names a pathname, hence should honor
~/path and ~user/path as its value.

* ow/config-mailmap-pathname:
  config: respect '~' and '~user' in mailmap.file
2014-06-16 12:18:24 -07:00
c9fc3a6ac5 Merge branch 'fc/remote-helper-refmap'
Allow remote-helper/fast-import based transport to rename the refs
while transferring the history.

* fc/remote-helper-refmap:
  transport-helper: remove unnecessary strbuf resets
  transport-helper: add support to delete branches
  fast-export: add support to delete refs
  fast-import: add support to delete refs
  transport-helper: add support to push symbolic refs
  transport-helper: add support for old:new refspec
  fast-export: add new --refspec option
  fast-export: improve argument parsing
2014-06-16 12:18:15 -07:00
1a81f6ceea Merge branch 'nd/daemonize-gc'
"git gc --auto" was recently changed to run in the background to
give control back early to the end-user sitting in front of the
terminal, but it forgot that housekeeping involving reflogs should
be done without other processes competing for accesses to the refs.

* nd/daemonize-gc:
  gc --auto: do not lock refs in the background
2014-06-16 12:18:12 -07:00
8dbd313394 Merge branch 'jm/t9138-style-fix'
* jm/t9138-style-fix:
  t9138-git-svn-authors-prog.sh fixups
2014-06-16 12:18:09 -07:00
bf2941be5d Merge branch 'jm/instaweb-apache-24'
* jm/instaweb-apache-24:
  git-instaweb: add support for Apache 2.4
2014-06-16 12:18:06 -07:00
474df928b1 Merge branch 'jl/remote-rm-prune'
"git remote rm" and "git remote prune" can involve removing many
refs at once, which is not a very efficient thing to do when very
many refs exist in the packed-refs file.

* jl/remote-rm-prune:
  remote prune: optimize "dangling symref" check/warning
  remote: repack packed-refs once when deleting multiple refs
  remote rm: delete remote configuration as the last
2014-06-16 12:17:58 -07:00
5cf2c571d0 Merge branch 'jk/complete-merge-pull'
The completion code did not know about quite a few options that are
common between "git merge" and "git pull", and a couple of options
unique to "git merge".

* jk/complete-merge-pull:
  completion: add missing options for git-merge
  completion: add a note that merge options are shared
2014-06-16 12:17:53 -07:00
a634a6d209 Merge branch 'bg/xcalloc-nmemb-then-size'
Like calloc(3), xcalloc() takes nmemb and then size.

* bg/xcalloc-nmemb-then-size:
  transport-helper.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  remote.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  reflog-walk.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  pack-revindex.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  notes.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  imap-send.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  http-push.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  diff.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  config.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  commit.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  builtin/remote.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
  builtin/ls-remote.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
2014-06-16 12:17:50 -07:00
04953bc888 http-protocol.txt: Basic Auth is defined in RFC 2617, not RFC 2616
Signed-off-by: Yi EungJun <eungjun.yi@navercorp.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-16 12:00:43 -07:00
3f046148d9 Win32: Unicode arguments (incoming)
Convert command line arguments from UTF-16 to UTF-8 on startup.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-16 10:56:47 -07:00
99c3c76d97 Win32: Unicode arguments (outgoing)
Convert command line arguments from UTF-8 to UTF-16 when creating other
processes.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-16 10:56:47 -07:00
5901dc6613 MinGW: disable CRT command line globbing
MingwRT listens to _CRT_glob to decide if __getmainargs should
perform globbing, with the default being that it should.
Unfortunately, __getmainargs globbing is sub-par; for instance
patterns like "*.c" will only match c-sources in the current
directory.

Disable __getmainargs' command line wildcard expansion, so these
patterns will be left untouched, and handled by Git's superior
built-in globbing instead.

MSVC defaults to no globbing, so we don't need to do anything
in that case.

This fixes t5505 and t7810.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-16 10:56:47 -07:00
58aa3d2a69 Win32: fix potential multi-threading issue
...by removing a static buffer in do_stat_internal.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-16 10:56:47 -07:00
3e66e47b1b Win32: simplify internal mingw_spawn* APIs
The only public spawn function that needs to tweak the environment is
mingw_spawnvpe (called from start_command). Nevertheless, all internal
spawn* functions take an env parameter and needlessly pass the global
char **environ around. Remove the env parameter where it's not needed.

This removes the internal mingw_execve abstraction, which is no longer
needed.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-16 10:56:47 -07:00
570f1e6e1a Win32: let mingw_execve() return an int
This is in the great tradition of POSIX. Original fix by Olivier Refalo.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-16 10:56:47 -07:00
51822653f5 Win32: reliably detect console pipe handles
As of "Win32: Thread-safe windows console output", child processes may
print to the console even if stdout has been redirected to a file. E.g.:

 git config tar.cat.command "cat"
 git archive -o test.cat HEAD

Detecting whether stdout / stderr point to our console pipe is currently
based on the assumption that OS HANDLE values are never reused. This is
apparently not true if stdout / stderr is replaced via dup2() (as in
builtin/archive.c:17).

Instead of comparing handle values, check if the file descriptor isatty()
backed by a pipe OS handle. This is only possible by swapping the handles
in MSVCRT's internal data structures, as we do in winansi_init().

Reported-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-16 10:56:19 -07:00
6d681f0a3e Merge branch 'jl/status-added-submodule-is-never-ignored'
submodule.*.ignore and diff.ignoresubmodules are used to ignore all
submodule changes in "diff" output, but it can be confusing to
apply these configuration values to status and commit.

This is a backward-incompatible change, but should be so in a good
way (aka bugfix).

* jl/status-added-submodule-is-never-ignored:
  commit -m: commit staged submodules regardless of ignore config
  status/commit: show staged submodules regardless of ignore config
2014-06-16 10:07:19 -07:00
83a4904fad Merge branch 'cb/byte-order'
Compatibility enhancement for Solaris.

* cb/byte-order:
  compat/bswap.h: fix endianness detection
  compat/bswap.h: restore preference __BIG_ENDIAN over BIG_ENDIAN
  compat/bswap.h: detect endianness on more platforms that don't use BYTE_ORDER
2014-06-16 10:07:18 -07:00
b4bba8de11 Merge branch 'jk/strbuf-tolower'
* jk/strbuf-tolower:
  strbuf: add strbuf_tolower function
2014-06-16 10:07:17 -07:00
b4516df9b8 Merge branch 'jk/daemon-tolower'
* jk/daemon-tolower:
  daemon/config: factor out duplicate xstrdup_tolower
2014-06-16 10:07:15 -07:00
09e13ad5b0 Merge branch 'as/pretty-truncate'
* as/pretty-truncate:
  pretty.c: format string with truncate respects logOutputEncoding
  t4205, t6006: add tests that fail with i18n.logOutputEncoding set
  t4205 (log-pretty-format): use `tformat` rather than `format`
  t4041, t4205, t6006, t7102: don't hardcode tested encoding value
  t4205 (log-pretty-formats): don't hardcode SHA-1 in expected outputs
2014-06-16 10:07:12 -07:00
b0e2c999af Merge branch 'jk/diff-follow-must-take-one-pathspec'
* jk/diff-follow-must-take-one-pathspec:
  move "--follow needs one pathspec" rule to diff_setup_done
2014-06-16 10:07:09 -07:00
b83163643b Merge branch 'sk/windows-unc-path'
* sk/windows-unc-path:
  Windows: allow using UNC path for git repository
2014-06-16 10:07:03 -07:00
4a43d4f98a Merge branch 'rr/rebase-autostash-fix'
* rr/rebase-autostash-fix:
  rebase -i: test "Nothing to do" case with autostash
  rebase -i: handle "Nothing to do" case with autostash
2014-06-16 10:06:57 -07:00
9d1d882e9c Merge branch 'jk/report-fail-to-read-objects-better'
* jk/report-fail-to-read-objects-better:
  open_sha1_file: report "most interesting" errno
2014-06-16 10:06:15 -07:00
414405969e Merge branch 'jk/diff-files-assume-unchanged'
* jk/diff-files-assume-unchanged:
  run_diff_files: do not look at uninitialized stat data
2014-06-16 10:06:12 -07:00
5b3a58d459 Merge branch 'jk/argv-array-for-child-process'
* jk/argv-array-for-child-process:
  argv-array: drop "detach" code
  get_importer: use run-command's internal argv_array
  get_exporter: use argv_array
  get_helper: use run-command's internal argv_array
  git_connect: use argv_array
  run_column_filter: use argv_array
  run-command: store an optional argv_array
2014-06-16 10:06:10 -07:00
45dc292716 Merge branch 'sk/wincred'
* sk/wincred:
  wincred: avoid overwriting configured variables
  wincred: add install target
2014-06-16 10:06:08 -07:00
fd80021438 Merge branch 'jk/do-not-run-httpd-tests-as-root'
* jk/do-not-run-httpd-tests-as-root:
  t/lib-httpd: require SANITY prereq
2014-06-16 10:06:05 -07:00
499168af3b Merge branch 'cc/replace-edit'
"git replace" learns a new "--edit" option.

* cc/replace-edit:
  Documentation: replace: describe new --edit option
  replace: add --edit to usage string
  replace: add tests for --edit
  replace: die early if replace ref already exists
  replace: refactor checking ref validity
  replace: make sure --edit results in a different object
  replace: add --edit option
  replace: factor object resolution out of replace_object
  replace: use OPT_CMDMODE to handle modes
  replace: refactor command-mode determination
2014-06-16 10:06:01 -07:00
79e539404c Merge branch 'mt/patch-id-stable' (early part)
* 'mt/patch-id-stable' (early part):
  patch-id-test: test stable and unstable behaviour
  patch-id: make it stable against hunk reordering
  test doc: test_write_lines does not split its arguments
  test: add test_write_lines helper
2014-06-16 10:05:38 -07:00
105b5d3fbb gitk: Use mktemp -d to avoid predictable temporary directories
gitk uses a predictable ".gitk-tmp.$PID" pattern when generating
a temporary directory.

Use "mktemp -d .gitk-tmp.XXXXXX" to harden gitk against someone
seeding /tmp with files matching the pid pattern.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-06-15 11:35:50 +10:00
17f9836c8a gitk: Show staged submodules regardless of ignore config
Currently setting submodule.<name>.ignore and/or diff.ignoreSubmodules to
"all" suppresses all output of submodule changes for gitk. This is really
confusing, as even when the user chooses to record a new commit for an
ignored submodule by adding it manually this change won't show up under
"Local changes checked in to index but not committed".

Fix that by using the '--ignore-submodules=dirty' option for both callers
of "git diff-index --cached" when the underlying git version supports that
option.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-06-15 11:35:50 +10:00
c7664f1a8c gitk: Honor TMPDIR when viewing external diffs
gitk fails to show diffs when browsing a read-only repository.
This is due to gitk's assumption that the current directory is always
writable.

Teach gitk to honor either the GITK_TMPDIR or TMPDIR environment
variables.  This allows users to override the default location
used when writing temporary files.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-06-15 11:35:50 +10:00
019e1630ac gitk: Allow displaying time zones from author and commit dates timestamps
Now gitk can be configured to display author and commit dates in their
original timezone, by putting %z into datetimeformat in ~/.gitk.

Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-06-15 11:35:50 +10:00
4135d36b0c gitk: Switch to patch mode when searching for line origin
If the "Show origin of this line" is started from tree mode,
it still shows the result in tree mode, which I suppose not
what user expects to see.

Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-06-15 11:35:50 +10:00
ada2ea1695 gitk: Replace SHA1 entry field on keyboard paste
We already replace old SHA with the clipboard content for the mouse
paste event.  It seems reasonable to do the same when pasting from
keyboard.

Signed-off-by: Ilya Bobyr <ilya.bobyr@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-06-15 11:35:50 +10:00
9393ae79c9 submodule: document "sync --recursive"
The "git submodule sync" command supports the --recursive flag, but
the documentation does not mention this.  That flag is useful, for
example when a remote is changed in a submodule of a submodule.

Signed-off-by: Matthew Chen <charlesmchen@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 15:00:17 -07:00
60d85e110b blame: simplify prepare_lines()
Changing get_next_line() to return the end pointer instead of NULL in
case no newline character is found treats allows us to treat complete
and incomplete lines the same, simplifying the code.  Switching to
counting lines instead of EOLs allows us to start counting at the
first character, instead of having to call get_next_line() first.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 14:52:50 -07:00
29aa0b2061 blame: factor out get_next_line()
Move the code for finding the start of the next line into a helper
function in order to reduce duplication.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 14:52:16 -07:00
56f24e80f0 completion: handle '!f() { ... }; f' and "!sh -c '...' -" aliases
'!f() { ... }; f' and "!sh -c '....' -" are recommended patterns for
declaring more complex aliases (see git wiki [1]).  This commit teaches
the completion to handle them.

When determining which completion to use for an alias, an opening brace
or single quote is now skipped, and the search for a git command is
continued.  For example, the aliases '!f() { git commit ... }' or "!sh
-c 'git commit ...'" now trigger commit completion.  Previously, the
search stopped on the opening brace or quote, and the completion tried
it to determine how to complete, which obviously was useless.

The null command ':' is now skipped, so that it can be used as
a workaround to declare the desired completion style.

For example, the aliases

    !f() { : git commit ; if ... } f
    !sh -c ': git commit; if ...' -

now trigger commit completion.

Shell function declarations now work with or without space before
the parens, i.e. '!f() ...' and '!f () ...' both work.

[1] https://git.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Aliases

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 13:37:43 -07:00
97c1364be6 t0008: do not depend on 'echo' handling backslashes specially
The original used to pass with /bin/dash but not with /bin/bash set
to $SHELL_PATH.  The former turns "\\" into "\", but the latter does
not.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 13:29:03 -07:00
218aa3a616 reuse cached commit buffer when parsing signatures
When we call show_signature or show_mergetag, we read the
commit object fresh via read_sha1_file and reparse its
headers. However, in most cases we already have the object
data available, attached to the "struct commit". This is
partially laziness in dealing with the memory allocation
issues, but partially defensive programming, in that we
would always want to verify a clean version of the buffer
(not one that might have been munged by other users of the
commit).

However, we do not currently ever munge the commit buffer,
and not using the already-available buffer carries a fairly
big performance penalty when we are looking at a large
number of commits. Here are timings on linux.git:

  [baseline, no signatures]
  $ time git log >/dev/null
  real    0m4.902s
  user    0m4.784s
  sys     0m0.120s

  [before]
  $ time git log --show-signature >/dev/null
  real    0m14.735s
  user    0m9.964s
  sys     0m0.944s

  [after]
  $ time git log --show-signature >/dev/null
  real    0m9.981s
  user    0m5.260s
  sys     0m0.936s

Note that our user CPU time drops almost in half, close to
the non-signature case, but we do still spend more
wall-clock and system time, presumably from dealing with
gpg.

An alternative to this is to note that most commits do not
have signatures (less than 1% in this repo), yet we pay the
re-parsing cost for every commit just to find out if it has
a mergetag or signature. If we checked that when parsing the
commit initially, we could avoid re-examining most commits
later on. Even if we did pursue that direction, however,
this would still speed up the cases where we _do_ have
signatures. So it's probably worth doing either way.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 12:10:13 -07:00
8597ea3afe commit: record buffer length in cache
Most callsites which use the commit buffer try to use the
cached version attached to the commit, rather than
re-reading from disk. Unfortunately, that interface provides
only a pointer to the NUL-terminated buffer, with no
indication of the original length.

For the most part, this doesn't matter. People do not put
NULs in their commit messages, and the log code is happy to
treat it all as a NUL-terminated string. However, some code
paths do care. For example, when checking signatures, we
want to be very careful that we verify all the bytes to
avoid malicious trickery.

This patch just adds an optional "size" out-pointer to
get_commit_buffer and friends. The existing callers all pass
NULL (there did not seem to be any obvious sites where we
could avoid an immediate strlen() call, though perhaps with
some further refactoring we could).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 12:09:38 -07:00
c1b3c71f4b commit: convert commit->buffer to a slab
This will make it easier to manage the buffer cache
independently of the "struct commit" objects. It also
shrinks "struct commit" by one pointer, which may be
helpful.

Unfortunately it does not reduce the max memory size of
something like "rev-list", because rev-list uses
get_cached_commit_buffer() to decide not to show each
commit's output (and due to the design of slab_at, accessing
the slab requires us to extend it, allocating exactly the
same number of buffer pointers we dropped from the commit
structs).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 12:08:17 -07:00
80cdaba569 commit-slab: provide a static initializer
Callers currently must use init_foo_slab() at runtime before
accessing a slab. For global slabs, it's much nicer if we
can initialize them in BSS, so that each user does not have
to add code to check-and-initialize.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 12:08:17 -07:00
bc6b8fc130 use get_commit_buffer everywhere
Each of these sites assumes that commit->buffer is valid.
Since they would segfault if this was not the case, they are
likely to be correct in practice. However, we can
future-proof them by using get_commit_buffer.

And as a side effect, we abstract away the final bare uses
of commit->buffer.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 12:08:17 -07:00
b66103c3ba convert logmsg_reencode to get_commit_buffer
Like the callsites in the previous commit, logmsg_reencode
already falls back to read_sha1_file when necessary.
However, I split its conversion out into its own commit
because it's a bit more complex.

We return either:

  1. The original commit->buffer

  2. A newly allocated buffer from read_sha1_file

  3. A reencoded buffer (based on either 1 or 2 above).

while trying to do as few extra reads/allocations as
possible. Callers currently free the result with
logmsg_free, but we can simplify this by pointing them
straight to unuse_commit_buffer. This is a slight layering
violation, in that we may be passing a buffer from (3).
However, since the end result is to free() anything except
(1), which is unlikely to change, and because this makes the
interface much simpler, it's a reasonable bending of the
rules.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 12:08:17 -07:00
ba41c1c93f use get_commit_buffer to avoid duplicate code
For both of these sites, we already do the "fallback to
read_sha1_file" trick. But we can shorten the code by just
using get_commit_buffer.

Note that the error cases are slightly different when
read_sha1_file fails. get_commit_buffer will die() if the
object cannot be loaded, or is a non-commit.

For get_sha1_oneline, this will almost certainly never
happen, as we will have just called parse_object (and if it
does, it's probably worth complaining about).

For record_author_date, the new behavior is probably better;
we notify the user of the error instead of silently ignoring
it. And because it's used only for sorting by author-date,
somebody examining a corrupt repo can fallback to the
regular traversal order.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 12:08:17 -07:00
a97934d820 use get_cached_commit_buffer where appropriate
Some call sites check commit->buffer to see whether we have
a cached buffer, and if so, do some work with it. In the
long run we may want to switch these code paths to make
their decision on a different boolean flag (because checking
the cache may get a little more expensive in the future).
But for now, we can easily support them by converting the
calls to use get_cached_commit_buffer.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 12:08:17 -07:00
152ff1cceb provide helpers to access the commit buffer
Many sites look at commit->buffer to get more detailed
information than what is in the parsed commit struct.
However, we sometimes drop commit->buffer to save memory,
in which case the caller would need to read the object
afresh. Some callers do this (leading to duplicated code),
and others do not (which opens the possibility of a segfault
if somebody else frees the buffer).

Let's provide a pair of helpers, "get" and "unuse", that let
callers easily get the buffer. They will use the cached
buffer when possible, and otherwise load from disk using
read_sha1_file.

Note that we also need to add a "get_cached" variant which
returns NULL when we do not have a cached buffer. At first
glance this seems to defeat the purpose of "get", which is
to always provide a return value. However, some log code
paths actually use the NULL-ness of commit->buffer as a
boolean flag to decide whether to try printing the
commit. At least for now, we want to continue supporting
that use.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 12:08:17 -07:00
66c2827ea4 provide a helper to set the commit buffer
Right now this is just a one-liner, but abstracting it will
make it easier to change later.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 12:08:17 -07:00
0fb370da9c provide a helper to free commit buffer
This converts two lines into one at each caller. But more
importantly, it abstracts the concept of freeing the buffer,
which will make it easier to change later.

Note that we also need to provide a "detach" mechanism for a
tricky case in index-pack. We are passed a buffer for the
object generated by processing the incoming pack. If we are
not using --strict, we just calculate the sha1 on that
buffer and return, leaving the caller to free it.  But if we
are using --strict, we actually attach that buffer to an
object, pass the object to the fsck functions, and then
detach the buffer from the object again (so that the caller
can free it as usual).  In this case, we don't want to free
the buffer ourselves, but just make sure it is no longer
associated with the commit.

Note that we are making the assumption here that the
attach/detach process does not impact the buffer at all
(e.g., it is never reallocated or modified). That holds true
now, and we have no plans to change that. However, as we
abstract the commit_buffer code, this dependency becomes
less obvious. So when we detach, let's also make sure that
we get back the same buffer that we gave to the
commit_buffer code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 12:07:47 -07:00
3e52f70b15 t1700: new tests for split-index mode
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:42 -07:00
5b0a78c1c0 t2104: make sure split index mode is off for the version test
Version tests only make sense when all entries are in the same file,
so we can see if version is downgraded to 2 if 3 is not required.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:42 -07:00
d6e3c181bc read-cache: force split index mode with GIT_TEST_SPLIT_INDEX
This could be used to run the whole test suite with split
indexes. Index splitting is carried out at random. "git read-tree"
also resets the index and forces splitting at the next update.

I had a lot of headaches with the test suite, which proves it
exercises split index pretty good.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:42 -07:00
5a092ceb6b read-tree: note about dropping split-index mode or index version
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:41 -07:00
5165dd598a read-tree: force split-index mode off on --index-output
Just a (paranoid?) safety measure..

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:41 -07:00
a76295da78 rev-parse: add --shared-index-path to get shared index path
Normally scripts do not have to be aware about split indexes because
all shared indexes are in $GIT_DIR. A simple "mv $tmp_index
$GIT_DIR/somewhere" is enough. Scripts that generate temporary indexes
and move them across repos must be aware about split index and copy
the shared file as well. This option enables that.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:41 -07:00
a0a967568e update-index --split-index: do not split if $GIT_DIR is read only
If $GIT_DIR is read only, we can't write $GIT_DIR/sharedindex. This
could happen when $GIT_INDEX_FILE is set to somehwere outside
$GIT_DIR.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:41 -07:00
c18b80a0e8 update-index: new options to enable/disable split index mode
If you have a large work tree but only make changes in a subset, then
$GIT_DIR/index's size should be stable after a while. If you change
branches that touch something else, $GIT_DIR/index's size may grow
large that it becomes as slow as the unified index. Do --split-index
again occasionally to force all changes back to the shared index and
keep $GIT_DIR/index small.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:41 -07:00
b3c96fb158 split-index: strip pathname of on-disk replaced entries
We know the positions of replaced entries via the replace bitmap in
"link" extension, so the "name" path does not have to be stored (it's
still in the shared index). With this, we also have a way to
distinguish additions vs replacements at load time and can catch
broken "link" extensions.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:41 -07:00
ce7c614bce split-index: do not invalidate cache-tree at read time
We are sure that after merge_base_index() is done. cache-tree can
still be used with the final index. So don't destroy cache tree.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:41 -07:00
76b07b37a3 split-index: the reading part
CE_REMOVE'd entries are removed here because only parts of the code
base (unpack_trees in fact) test this bit when they look for the
presence of an entry. Leaving them may confuse the code ignores this
bit and expects to see a real entry.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:40 -07:00
96a1d8d34c split-index: the writing part
prepare_to_write_split_index() does the major work, classifying
deleted, updated and added entries. write_link_extension() then just
writes it down.

An observation is, deleting an entry, then adding it back is recorded
as "entry X is deleted, entry X is added", not "entry X is replaced".
This is simpler, with small overhead: a replaced entry is stored
without its path, a new entry is store with its path.

A note about unpack_trees() and the deduplication code inside
prepare_to_write_split_index(). Usually tracking updated/removed
entries via read-cache API is enough. unpack_trees() manipulates the
index in a different way: it throws the entire source index out,
builds up a new one, copying/duplicating entries (using dup_entry)
from the source index over if necessary, then returns the new index.

A naive solution would be marking the entire source index "deleted"
and add their duplicates as new. That could bring $GIT_DIR/index back
to the original size. So we try harder and memcmp() between the
original and the duplicate to see if it needs updating.

We could avoid memcmp() too, by avoiding duplicating the original
entry in dup_entry(). The performance gain this way is within noise
level and it complicates unpack-trees.c. So memcmp() is the preferred
way to deal with deduplication.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:40 -07:00
078a58e825 read-cache: mark updated entries for split index
The large part of this patch just follows CE_ENTRY_CHANGED
marks. replace_index_entry() is updated to update
split_index->base->cache[] as well so base->cache[] does not reference
to a freed entry.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:40 -07:00
045113a53e read-cache: save deleted entries in split index
Entries that belong to the base index should not be freed. Mark
CE_REMOVE to track them.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:40 -07:00
e0cf0d7de2 read-cache: mark new entries for split index
Make sure entry addition does not lead to unifying the index. We don't
need to explicitly keep track of new entries. If ce->index is zero,
they're new. Otherwise it's unlikely that they are new, but we'll do a
thorough check later at writing time.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:40 -07:00
5fc2fc8fa2 read-cache: split-index mode
This split-index mode is designed to keep write cost proportional to
the number of changes the user has made, not the size of the work
tree. (Read cost is another matter, to be dealt separately.)

This mode stores index info in a pair of $GIT_DIR/index and
$GIT_DIR/sharedindex.<SHA-1>. sharedindex is large and unchanged over
time while "index" is smaller and updated often. Format details are in
index-format.txt, although not everything is implemented in this
patch.

Shared indexes are not automatically removed, because it's unclear if
the shared index is needed by any (even temporary) indexes by just
looking at it. After a while you'll collect stale shared indexes. The
good news is one shared index is useable for long, until
$GIT_DIR/index becomes too big and sluggish that the new shared index
must be created.

The safest way to clean shared indexes is to turn off split index
mode, so shared files are all garbage, delete them all, then turn on
split index mode again.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:39 -07:00
e93021b20a read-cache: save index SHA-1 after reading
Also update SHA-1 after writing. If we do not do that, the second
read_index() will see "initialized" variable already set and not read
.git/index again, which is fine, except istate->sha1 now has a stale
value.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:39 -07:00
d4a2024aef entry.c: update cache_changed if refresh_cache is set in checkout_entry()
Other fill_stat_cache_info() is on new entries, which should set
CE_ENTRY_ADDED in cache_changed, so we're safe.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:39 -07:00
e6c286e8b2 cache-tree: mark istate->cache_changed on prime_cache_tree()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:39 -07:00
d0cfc3e866 cache-tree: mark istate->cache_changed on cache tree update
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:39 -07:00
a5400efe29 cache-tree: mark istate->cache_changed on cache tree invalidation
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:39 -07:00
a5c446f116 unpack-trees: be specific what part of the index has changed
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:39 -07:00
6c306a34ee resolve-undo: be specific what part of the index has changed
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:38 -07:00
782a5ff9ce update-index: be specific what part of the index has changed
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:38 -07:00
e636a7b4d0 read-cache: be specific what part of the index has changed
cache entry additions, removals and modifications are separated
out. The rest of changes are still in the catch-all flag
SOMETHING_CHANGED, which would be more specific later.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:38 -07:00
ad837d9ef9 read-cache: be strict about "changed" in remove_marked_cache_entries()
remove_marked_cache_entries() deletes entries marked with
CE_REMOVE. But if there is no such entry, do not mark the index as
"changed" because that could trigger an index update unnecessarily.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:38 -07:00
ce51bf09f8 read-cache: store in-memory flags in the first 12 bits of ce_flags
We're running out of room for in-memory flags. But since b60e188
(Strip namelen out of ce_flags into a ce_namelen field - 2012-07-11),
we copy the namelen (first 12 bits) to ce_namelen field. So those bits
are free to use. Just make sure we do not accidentally write any
in-memory flags back.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:38 -07:00
626f35c893 read-cache: relocate and unexport commit_locked_index()
This function is now only used by write_locked_index(). Move it to
read-cache.c (because read-cache.c will need to be aware of
alternate_index_output later) and unexport it.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:38 -07:00
03b8664772 read-cache: new API write_locked_index instead of write_index/write_cache
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:49:10 -07:00
1bb207e0fe tests: drop GIT_*_TIMING_TESTS environment variable support
Two tests (t3302 and t3419) used to have their own environment
variable to trigger expensive tests without enabling expensive
tests in other scripts; a user could set GIT_NOTES_TIMING_TESTS
but not GIT_TEST_LONG and run the whole test suite and trigger
expensive tests only in t3302 but not other tests.  The same for
GIT_PATCHID_TIMING_TESTS in t3419.

While this may have seemed a good flexibility, in reality if you are
concentrating on a single test (e.g. t3302), you can just run that
single test with the GIT_TEST_LONG to trigger expensive tests.  It
does not seem worth forcing other people who may want to come up
with their own expensive tests to invent new environment variables
by keeping this convention.

Drop them.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:06:21 -07:00
e2a892ee05 git-p4: fix submit in non --prepare-p4-only mode
b4073bb3 (git-p4: Do not include diff in spec file when just
preparing p4, 2014-05-24) broke git p4 submit, here is a proper
fix, including proper handling for windows end of lines.

Signed-off-by: Maxime Coste <frrrwww@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-13 11:04:04 -07:00
3decb8e0ac git-gui: tolerate major version changes when comparing the git version
Since git 2.0.0 starting git gui in a submodule using a gitfile fails with
the following error:

   No working directory ../../../<path>

   couldn't change working directory
   to "../../../<path>": no such file or
   directory

This is because "git rev-parse --show-toplevel" is only run when git gui
sees a git version of at least 1.7.0 (which is the version in which the
 --show-toplevel option was introduced). But "package vsatisfies" returns
false when the major version changes, which is not what we want here.

Fix that for both places where the git version is checked using vsatisfies
by appending a '-' to the version number. This tells vsatisfies that a
change of the major version is not considered to be a problem, as long as
the new major version is larger. This is done for both the place that
caused the reported bug and another spot where the git version is tested
for another feature.

Reported-by: Chris Packham <judge.packham@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
2014-06-13 19:03:48 +01:00
e0db1dd7d4 git-gui: show staged submodules regardless of ignore config
Currently setting submodule.<name>.ignore and/or diff.ignoreSubmodules to
"all" suppresses all output of submodule changes for git-gui. This is
really confusing, as even when the user chooses to record a new commit for
an ignored submodule by adding it manually this change won't show up under
"Staged Changes (Will Commit)".

Fix that by using the '--ignore-submodules=dirty' option for both callers
of "git diff-index --cached" when the underlying git version supports that
option.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2014-06-13 18:27:33 +01:00
2d0174e38e t7700: drop explicit --no-pack-kept-objects from .keep test
We want to make sure that the default behavior of git-repack,
without any options, continues to treat .keep files as it
always has. Adding an explicit --no-pack-kept-objects, as
ee34a2b did, is a much less interesting test, and prevented
us from noticing the bug fixed by 64d3dc9 (repack: do not
accidentally pack kept objects by default, 2014-06-10).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-12 13:53:45 -07:00
75cc6c67e2 Sync with maint
* maint:
  pull: do not abuse 'break' inside a shell 'case'
2014-06-12 12:22:38 -07:00
9a597edc83 Merge branch 'jc/rev-parse-argh-dashed-multi-words' into maint
* jc/rev-parse-argh-dashed-multi-words:
  update-index: fix segfault with missing --cacheinfo argument
2014-06-12 12:17:57 -07:00
8f92c7755e pull: do not abuse 'break' inside a shell 'case'
It is not C. The code would break under mksh when 'pull.ff' is set:

  $ git pull
  /usr/lib/git-core/git-pull[67]: break: can't break
  Already up-to-date.

Signed-off-by: Jacek Konieczny <jajcus@jajcus.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-12 12:15:49 -07:00
d74a4e57d2 sequencer: use logmsg_reencode in get_message
This simplifies the code, as logmsg_reencode handles the
reencoding for us in a single call. It also means we learn
logmsg_reencode's trick of pulling the buffer from disk when
commit->buffer is NULL (we currently just silently return!).
It is doubtful this matters in practice, though, as
sequencer operations would not generally turn off
save_commit_buffer.

Note that we may be fixing a bug here. The existing code
does:

  if (same_encoding(to, from))
	  reencode_string(buf, to, from);

That probably should have been "!same_encoding".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-12 10:29:43 -07:00
b000c59b0c logmsg_reencode: return const buffer
The return value from logmsg_reencode may be either a newly
allocated buffer or a pointer to the existing commit->buffer.
We would not want the caller to accidentally free() or
modify the latter, so let's mark it as const.  We can cast
away the constness in logmsg_free, but only once we have
determined that it is a free-able buffer.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-12 10:29:43 -07:00
10322a0aaf do not create "struct commit" with xcalloc
In both blame and merge-recursive, we sometimes create a
"fake" commit struct for convenience (e.g., to represent the
HEAD state as if we would commit it). By allocating
ourselves rather than using alloc_commit_node, we do not
properly set the "index" field of the commit. This can
produce subtle bugs if we then use commit-slab on the
resulting commit, as we will share the "0" index with
another commit.

We can fix this by using alloc_commit_node() to allocate.
Note that we cannot free the result, as it is part of our
commit allocator. However, both cases were already leaking
the allocated commit anyway, so there's nothing to fix up.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-12 10:29:42 -07:00
969eba6341 commit: push commit_index update into alloc_commit_node
Whenever we create a commit object via lookup_commit, we
give it a unique index to be used with the commit-slab API.
The theory is that any "struct commit" we create would
follow this code path, so any such struct would get an
index. However, callers could use alloc_commit_node()
directly (and get multiple commits with index 0).

Let's push the indexing into alloc_commit_node so that it's
hard for callers to get it wrong.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-12 10:29:42 -07:00
c335d74d34 alloc: include any-object allocations in alloc_report
When 2c1cbec (Use proper object allocators for unknown
object nodes too, 2007-04-16), added a special "any_object"
allocator, it never taught alloc_report to report on it. To
do so we need to add an extra type argument to the REPORT
macro, as that commit did for DEFINE_ALLOCATOR.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-12 10:29:42 -07:00
e6dfcd6767 replace dangerous uses of strbuf_attach
It is not a good idea to strbuf_attach an arbitrary pointer
just because a function you are calling wants a strbuf.
Attaching implies a transfer of memory ownership; if anyone
were to modify or release the resulting strbuf, we would
free() the pointer, leading to possible problems:

  1. Other users of the original pointer might access freed
     memory.

  2. The pointer might not be the start of a malloc'd
     area, so calling free() on it in the first place would
     be wrong.

In the two cases modified here, we are fortunate that nobody
touches the strbuf once it is attached, but it is an
accident waiting to happen.  Since the previous commit,
commit_tree and friends take a pointer/buf pair, so we can
just do away with the strbufs entirely.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-12 10:29:42 -07:00
3ffefb54c0 commit_tree: take a pointer/len pair rather than a const strbuf
While strbufs are pretty common throughout our code, it is
more flexible for functions to take a pointer/len pair than
a strbuf. It's easy to turn a strbuf into such a pair (by
dereferencing its members), but less easy to go the other
way (you can strbuf_attach, but that has implications about
memory ownership).

This patch teaches commit_tree (and its associated callers
and sub-functions) to take such a pair for the commit
message rather than a strbuf.  This makes passing the buffer
around slightly more verbose, but means we can get rid of
some dangerous strbuf_attach calls in the next patch.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-12 10:29:41 -07:00
db4e4113ea docs: Explain the purpose of fetch's and pull's <refspec> parameter.
Signed-off-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-12 09:59:13 -07:00
71d76cb480 repack: introduce repack.writeBitmaps config option
We currently have pack.writeBitmaps, which originally
operated at the pack-objects level. This should really have
been a repack.* option from day one. Let's give it the more
sensible name, but keep the old version as a deprecated
synonym.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 14:05:19 -07:00
2bed2d47b4 repack: simplify handling of --write-bitmap-index
We previously needed to pass --no-write-bitmap-index
explicitly to pack-objects to override its reading of
pack.writebitmaps from the config. Now that it no longer
does so, we can assume that bitmaps are off by default, and
only turn them on when necessary. This also lets us avoid a
confusing tri-state flag for write_bitmaps.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 14:04:06 -07:00
15a906c5e9 pack-objects: stop respecting pack.writebitmaps
The handling of the pack.writebitmaps config option
originally happened in pack-objects, which is quite
low-level. It would make more sense for drivers of
pack-objects to read the config, and then manipulate
pack-objects with command-line options.

Recently, repack learned to do so, making the low-level read
of pack.writebitmaps redundant here. Other callers, like
upload-pack, would not generally want to write bitmaps
anyway.

This could be considered a regression for somebody who is
driving pack-objects themselves outside of repack and
expects the config option to be used. However, such users
seem rather unlikely given how new the bitmap code is (and
the fact that they would basically be reimplementing repack
in the first place).

Note that we do not do anything with pack.writeBitmapHashCache
here. That option is not about "do we write bimaps", but
rather "when we are writing bitmaps, how do we do it?". You
would want that to kick in anytime you decide to write them,
similar to how pack.indexVersion is used.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 14:01:53 -07:00
d078d85bc3 repack: s/write_bitmap/&s/ in code
The config name is "writeBitmaps", so the internal variable
missing the plural is unnecessarily confusing to write.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 14:01:30 -07:00
3198b89fb2 repack: respect pack.writebitmaps
The config option to turn on bitmaps is read all the way
down in the plumbing of pack-objects. This makes it hard for
other options in the porcelain of repack to make decisions
based on the bitmap setting. For example,
repack.packKeptObjects tries to kick in by default only when
bitmaps are turned on. But it can't do so reliably because
it doesn't yet know whether we are using bitmaps.

This patch teaches repack to respect pack.writebitmaps. It
means we pass a redundant command-line flag to pack-objects,
but that's OK; it shouldn't affect the outcome.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 14:01:08 -07:00
64d3dc9468 repack: do not accidentally pack kept objects by default
Commit ee34a2b (repack: add `repack.packKeptObjects` config
var, 2014-03-03) added a flag which could duplicate kept
objects, but did not mean to turn it on by default. Instead,
the option is tied by default to the decision to write
bitmaps, like:

  if (pack_kept_objects < 0)
	  pack_kept_objects = write_bitmap;

after which we expect pack_kept_objects to be a boolean 0 or
1.  However, that assignment neglects that write_bitmap is
_also_ a tri-state with "-1" as the default, and with
neither option given, we accidentally turn the option on.

This patch is the minimal fix to restore the desired
behavior for the default state. Further patches will fix the
more complicated cases.

Note the update to t7700. It failed to turn on bitmaps,
meaning we were actually confirming the wrong behavior!

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:58:43 -07:00
fcd428f4a9 Win32: fix broken pipe detection
As of "Win32: Thread-safe windows console output", git-log no longer
terminates when the pager process dies. This is due to disabling buffering
for the replaced stdout / stderr streams. Git-log will periodically fflush
stdout (see write_or_die.c/mayble_flush_or_die()), but with no buffering,
this is a NOP that always succeeds (so we never detect the EPIPE error).

Exchange the original console handles with our console thread pipe handles
by accessing the internal MSVCRT data structures directly (which are
exposed via __pioinfo for some reason).

Implement this with minimal assumptions about the actual data structure to
make it work with different (hopefully even future) MSVCRT versions.

While messing with internal data structures is ugly, this patch solves the
problem at the source instead of adding more workarounds. We no longer need
the special winansi_isatty override, and the limitations documented in
"Win32: Thread-safe windows console output" are gone (i.e. fdopen(1/2)
returns unbuffered streams now, and isatty() for duped console file
descriptors works as expected).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:32:59 -07:00
eac14f8909 Win32: Thread-safe windows console output
Winansi.c has many static variables that are accessed and modified from
the [v][f]printf / fputs functions overridden in the file. This may cause
multi threaded git commands that print to the console to produce corrupted
output or even crash.

Additionally, winansi.c doesn't override all functions that can be used to
print to the console (e.g. fwrite, write, fputc are missing), so that ANSI
escapes don't work properly for some git commands (e.g. git-grep).

Instead of doing ANSI emulation in just a few wrapped functions on top of
the IO API, let's plug into the IO system and take advantage of the thread
safety inherent to the IO system.

Redirect stdout and stderr to a pipe if they point to the console. A
background thread reads from the pipe, handles ANSI escape sequences and
UTF-8 to UTF-16 conversion, then writes to the console.

The pipe-based stdout and stderr replacements must be set to unbuffered, as
MSVCRT doesn't support line buffering and fully buffered streams are
inappropriate for console output.

Due to the byte-oriented pipe, ANSI escape sequences and multi-byte UTF-8
sequences can no longer be expected to arrive in one piece. Replace the
string-based ansi_emulate() with a simple stateful parser (this also fixes
colored diff hunk headers, which were broken as of commit 2efcc977).

Override isatty to return true for the pipes redirecting to the console.

Exec/spawn obtain the original console handle to pass to the next process
via winansi_get_osfhandle().

All other overrides are gone, the default stdio implementations work as
expected with the piped stdout/stderr descriptors.

Global variables are either initialized on startup (single threaded) or
exclusively modified by the background thread. Threads communicate through
the pipe, no further synchronization is necessary.

The background thread is terminated by disonnecting the pipe after flushing
the stdio and pipe buffers. This doesn't work for anonymous pipes (created
via CreatePipe), as DisconnectNamedPipe only works on the read end, which
discards remaining data. Thus we have to setup the pipe manually, with the
write end beeing the server (opened with CreateNamedPipe) and the read end
the client (opened with CreateFile).

Limitations: doesn't track reopened or duped file descriptors, i.e.:
- fdopen(1/2) returns fully buffered streams
- dup(1/2), dup2(1/2) returns normal pipe descriptors (i.e. isatty() =
  false, winansi_get_osfhandle won't return the original console handle)

Currently, only the git-format-patch command uses xfdopen(xdup(1)) (see
"realstdout" in builtin/log.c), but works well with these limitations.

Many thanks to Atsushi Nakagawa <atnak@chejz.com> for suggesting and
reviewing the thread-exit-mechanism.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:32:59 -07:00
1c950a594c Win32: add Unicode conversion functions
Add Unicode conversion functions to convert between Windows native UTF-16LE
encoding to UTF-8 and back.

To support repositories with legacy-encoded file names, the UTF-8 to UTF-16
conversion function tries to create valid, unique file names even for
invalid UTF-8 byte sequences, so that these repositories can be checked out
without error.

The current implementation leaves invalid UTF-8 bytes in range 0xa0 - 0xff
as is (producing printable Unicode chars \u00a0 - \u00ff, equivalent to
ISO-8859-1), and converts 0x80 - 0x9f to hex-code (\u0080 - \u009f are
control chars).

The Windows MultiByteToWideChar API was not used as it either drops invalid
UTF-8 sequences (on Win2k/XP; producing non-unique or even empty file
names) or converts them to the replacement char \ufffd (Vista/7; causing
ERROR_INVALID_NAME in subsequent calls to file system APIs).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:32:59 -07:00
1edeb9abf5 Win32: warn if the console font doesn't support Unicode
Unicode console output won't display correctly with default settings
because the default console font ("Terminal") only supports the system's
OEM charset. Unfortunately, this is a user specific setting, so it cannot
be easily fixed by e.g. some registry tricks in the setup program.

This change prints a warning on exit if console output contained non-ascii
characters and the console font is supposedly not a TrueType font (which
usually have decent Unicode support).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:32:50 -07:00
143e615270 Win32: detect console streams more reliably
GetStdHandle(STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE) doesn't work for stderr if stdout is
redirected. Use _get_osfhandle of the FILE* instead.

_isatty() is true for all character devices (including parallel and serial
ports). Check return value of GetConsoleScreenBufferInfo instead to
reliably detect console handles (also don't initialize internal state from
an uninitialized CONSOLE_SCREEN_BUFFER_INFO structure if the function
fails).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:32:44 -07:00
617ce965aa Win32: support Unicode console output
WriteConsoleW seems to be the only way to reliably print unicode to the
console (without weird code page conversions).

Also redirects vfprintf to the winansi.c version.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:32:37 -07:00
a15d4af449 mingw: avoid const warning
Fix const warnings in http-fetch.c and remote-curl.c main() where is
argv declared as const.

The fix should work for all future declarations of main, no matter
whether the second parameter's type is "char**", "const char**", or
"char *[]".

Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:31:01 -07:00
13f1df432e Win32: move main macro to a function
The code in the MinGW main macro is getting more and more complex, move to
a separate initialization function for readabiliy and extensibility.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:31:01 -07:00
c2369bdf7f Windows: allow using UNC path for git repository
[efl: moved MinGW-specific part to compat/]
[jes: fixed compilation on non-Windows]

Eric Sunshine fixed mingw_offset_1st_component() to return
consistently "foo" for UNC "//machine/share/foo", cf

http://groups.google.com/group/msysgit/browse_thread/thread/c0af578549b5dda0

Author: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Cezary Zawadka <czawadka@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:30:04 -07:00
8f2514e95f patch-id-test: test stable and unstable behaviour
Verify that patch ID supports an algorithm
that is stable against diff split and reordering.

Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:09:39 -07:00
30e12b924b patch-id: make it stable against hunk reordering
Patch id changes if users reorder file diffs that make up a patch.

As the result is functionally equivalent, a different patch id is
surprising to many users.
In particular, reordering files using diff -O is helpful to make patches
more readable (e.g. API header diff before implementation diff).

Add an option to change patch-id behaviour making it stable against
these kinds of patch change:
calculate SHA1 hash for each hunk separately and sum all hashes
(using a symmetrical sum) to get patch id

We use a 20byte sum and not xor - since xor would give 0 output
for patches that have two identical diffs, which isn't all that
unlikely (e.g. append the same line in two places).

The new behaviour is enabled
- when patchid.stable is true
- when --stable flag is present

Using a new flag --unstable or setting patchid.stable to false force
the historical behaviour.

In the documentation, clarify that patch ID can now be a sum of hashes,
not a hash.
Document how command line and config options affect the
behaviour.

Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:09:24 -07:00
bb98b01ee8 test doc: test_write_lines does not split its arguments
test_write_lines carefully quotes its arguments as "$@", so

	test_write_lines "a b" c

writes two lines as requested, not three.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:09:05 -07:00
ac9afcc31c test: add test_write_lines helper
API and implementation as suggested by Junio.

Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 13:09:00 -07:00
c0562611c5 git potty: restore environments after alias expansion
Commit 4ad8332 (t0001: test git init when run via an alias -
2010-11-26) noted breakages when running init via alias. The problem
is for alias to be used, $GIT_DIR must be searched, but 'init' and
'clone' are not happy with that. So we start a new process like an
external command, with clean environment in this case. Env variables
that are set by command line (e.g. "git --git-dir=.. ") are kept.

This should also fix autocorrecting a command typo to "init" because
it's the same problem: aliases are read, then "init" is unhappy with
$GIT_DIR already set up because of that.

Reminded-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 12:00:53 -07:00
35ec002cf7 t9001: avoid non-portable '\n' with sed
t9001 used a '\n' in a sed expression to split one line into two
lines, but the usage of '\n' in the "replacement string" is not
portable.

The '\n' can be used to match a newline in the "pattern space",
but otherwise the meaning of '\n' is unspecified in POSIX.

- Gnu versions of sed will treat '\n' as a newline character.
- Other versions of sed (like /usr/bin/sed under Mac OS X)
  simply ignore the '\' before the 'n', treating '\n' as 'n'.

For reference see:
pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/sed.html
http://www.gnu.org/software/sed/manual/sed.html

As the test already requires perl as a prerequisite, use perl
instead of sed.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-10 08:39:06 -07:00
0cfe6fd252 t/test-lib-functions.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:53:42 -07:00
795fcb0e5e t/t9814-git-p4-rename.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:53:41 -07:00
754b574cf9 t/t5538-push-shallow.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:53:41 -07:00
7281f36612 t/t5403-post-checkout-hook.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:53:41 -07:00
d0b30a3d4d t/t5000-tar-tree.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:53:41 -07:00
4399345d5e t/t4102-apply-rename.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:53:41 -07:00
66e1fe7db6 t/t0026-eol-config.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:53:41 -07:00
fbaff7a262 t/t0025-crlf-auto.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:53:41 -07:00
ce5dadb616 t/lib-httpd.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:53:41 -07:00
d8890ce726 Win32 dirent: improve dirent implementation
Improve the dirent implementation by removing the relics that were once
necessary to plug into the now unused MinGW runtime, in preparation for
Unicode file name support.

Move FindFirstFile to opendir, and FindClose to closedir, with the
following implications:
- DIR.dd_name is no longer needed
- chdir(one); opendir(relative); chdir(two); readdir() works as expected
  (i.e. lists one/relative instead of two/relative)
- DIR.dd_handle is a valid handle for the entire lifetime of the DIR struct
- thus, all checks for dd_handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE and dd_handle == 0
  have been removed
- the special case that the directory has been fully read (which was
  previously explicitly tracked with dd_handle == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE &&
  dd_stat != 0) is now handled implicitly by the FindNextFile error
  handling code (if a client continues to call readdir after receiving
  NULL, FindNextFile will continue to fail with ERROR_NO_MORE_FILES, to
  the same effect)
- extracting dirent data from WIN32_FIND_DATA is needed in two places, so
  moved to its own method
- GetFileAttributes is no longer needed. The same information can be
  obtained from the FindFirstFile error code, which is ERROR_DIRECTORY if
  the name is NOT a directory (-> ENOTDIR), otherwise we can use
  err_win_to_posix (e.g. ERROR_PATH_NOT_FOUND -> ENOENT). The
  ERROR_DIRECTORY case could be fixed in err_win_to_posix, but this
  probably breaks other functionality.

Removes the ERROR_NO_MORE_FILES check after FindFirstFile (this was
fortunately a NOOP (searching for '*' always finds '.' and '..'),
otherwise the subsequent code would have copied data from an uninitialized
buffer).

Changes malloc to git support function xmalloc, so opendir will die() if
out of memory, rather than failing with ENOMEM and letting git work on
incomplete directory listings (error handling in dir.c is quite sparse).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:10:53 -07:00
a8248f4a8d Win32 dirent: clarify #include directives
Git-compat-util.h is two dirs up, and already includes <dirent.h> (which
is the same as "dirent.h" due to -Icompat/win32 in the Makefile).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:10:53 -07:00
fa9abe95be Win32 dirent: change FILENAME_MAX to MAX_PATH
FILENAME_MAX and MAX_PATH are both 260 on Windows, however, MAX_PATH is
used throughout the other Win32 code in Git, and also defines the length
of file name buffers in the Win32 API (e.g. WIN32_FIND_DATA.cFileName,
from which we're copying the dirent data).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:10:53 -07:00
b0601e6564 Win32 dirent: remove unused dirent.d_reclen member
Remove the union around dirent.d_type and the unused dirent.d_reclen member
(which was necessary for compatibility with the MinGW dirent runtime, which
is no longer used).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:10:53 -07:00
1d94c403fd Win32 dirent: remove unused dirent.d_ino member
There are no proper inodes on Windows, so remove dirent.d_ino and #define
NO_D_INO_IN_DIRENT in the Makefile (this skips e.g. an ineffective qsort in
fsck.c).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 15:10:52 -07:00
43dee070eb sequencer: signal failed ff as an aborted, not a conflicted merge
`do_pick_commit` handles three situations if it is not fast-forwarding.
In order for `do_pick_commit` to identify the situation, it examines the
return value of the selected merge command.

1. return value 0 stands for a clean merge
2. 1 is passed in case of a failed merge due to conflict
3. any other return value means that the merge did not even start

So far, the sequencer returns 1 in case of a failed fast-forward, which
would mean "failed merge due to conflict". However, a fast-forward
either starts and succeeds or does not start at all. In particular, it
cannot fail in between like a merge with a dirty index due to conflicts.

In order to signal the three possible situations (not only success and
failure to complete) after a pick through porcelain commands such as
`cherry-pick`, exit with a return value that is neither 0 nor 1. 128 was
chosen in line with the other situations in which the sequencer
encounters an error. In such situations, the sequencer returns a
negative value and `cherry-pick` translates this into a call to `die`.
`die` then terminates the process with exit status 128.

Signed-off-by: Fabian Ruch <bafain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:55:43 -07:00
97ea0d1043 api-strbuf.txt minor typos
Fixed some minor typos in api-strbuf.txt: 'A' instead of 'An', 'have'
instead of 'has', a overlong line, and 'another' instead of 'an other'.

Signed-off-by: Jeremiah Mahler <jmmahler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:54:52 -07:00
e3fa568cb3 revision: parse "git log -<count>" more carefully
This mistyped command line simply ignores "master" and ends up
showing two commits from the current HEAD:

    $ git log -2master

because we feed "2master" to atoi() without making sure that the
whole string is parsed as an integer.

Use the strtol_i() helper function instead.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:53:49 -07:00
e425f6ad4d git-rebase--interactive.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:47:07 -07:00
1cb4937395 git-mergetool.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:47:07 -07:00
c82af12a1b git-bisect.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:47:07 -07:00
6f34b79de1 contrib/examples/git-resolve.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:47:06 -07:00
cd4de93f2e contrib/examples/git-repack.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:47:06 -07:00
57b74cdaba contrib/examples/git-merge.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:47:06 -07:00
0783df5d26 contrib/examples/git-commit.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:47:06 -07:00
cb9d69ad63 contrib/examples/git-clone.sh: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:47:06 -07:00
4eaeb3264e check_bindir: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:47:06 -07:00
50e19a8358 Use starts_with() for C strings instead of memcmp()
Convert three cases of checking for a constant prefix using memcmp() to
starts_with().  This way there is no need for magic string length
constants and we avoid running over the end of the string should it be
shorter than the prefix.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:38:12 -07:00
b687cd6aba t3419: drop unnecessary NOT_EXPENSIVE pseudo-prerequisite
This was only necessary because do_tests helper the script defines
took its parameters in a wrong order.  Just pass an empty string (or
not passing the optional EXPENSIVE prerequisite) when running the
test with a light-weight set of parameters and have the shell do the
right thing when parsing test_expect_success helper.

Also update coding style while we are at it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:18:55 -07:00
19c8c4a9b7 t3302: drop unnecessary NOT_EXPENSIVE pseudo-prerequisite
This was only necessary because do_tests helper the script defines
took its parameters in a wrong order.  Just pass an empty string (or
not passing the optional EXPENSIVE prerequisite) when running the
test with a light-weight set of parameters and have the shell do the
right thing when parsing test_expect_success helper.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:18:55 -07:00
f23b1d06e5 t3302: do not chdir around in the primary test process
These days^Wyears we strive to do stuff in subdirectories inside
subshells to avoid mistakes.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:18:55 -07:00
ac2803b962 t3302: coding style updates
Use "<<-END_OF_HERE_TEXT" to push the contents of here-text to the
right in order to show the loop structure better.

Use write_script when writing a script to be run.

Use "test" (not "[ ... ]") and avoid unnecessary ";" in the middle
of a line.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:18:55 -07:00
e1ecd9e3c8 test: turn USR_BIN_TIME into a lazy prerequisite
Two test scripts (t3302 and t3419) had copy & paste code to set
USR_BIN_TIME prerequisite.  Use the test_lazy_prereq helper to define
them in the common t/test-lib.sh.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:18:55 -07:00
6219bb22ba test: turn EXPENSIVE into a lazy prerequisite
Two test scripts (t0021 and t5551) had copy & paste code to set
EXPENSIVE prerequisite.  Use the test_lazy_prereq helper to define
them in the common t/test-lib.sh.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 14:18:55 -07:00
9e10e0b9a0 t5551: fix the 50,000 tag test
The first version of test 23 did simply check that no output was
sent to the standard error stream.  With 5e2c7cd2 (t5551: do not use
unportable sed '\+', 2013-05-12), we started to also verify that the
expected tags were actually cloned.

Since 68b939b2 (clone: send diagnostic messages to stderr,
2013-09-18), "git clone" shows "Cloning into 'too-many-refs'" to the
standard error stream (it used to do so to the standard output),
causing the test to fail.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 12:06:12 -07:00
50f84e34a1 Update draft release notes to 2.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-09 11:39:43 -07:00
07768e03b5 Merge branch 'jc/shortlog-ref-exclude'
"log --exclude=<glob> --all | shortlog" worked as expected, but
"shortlog --exclude=<glob> --all" was not accepted at the command
line argument parser level.

* jc/shortlog-ref-exclude:
  shortlog: allow --exclude=<glob> to be passed
2014-06-09 11:30:13 -07:00
251cb96eab Merge branch 'mn/sideband-no-ansi'
Tools that read diagnostic output in our standard error stream do
not want to see terminal control sequence (e.g. erase-to-eol).
Detect them by checking if the standard error stream is connected to
a tty.

* mn/sideband-no-ansi:
  sideband.c: do not use ANSI control sequence on non-terminal
2014-06-09 11:27:56 -07:00
d37e8c54a6 Merge branch 'rs/mailinfo-header-cmp'
Avoid running over the end of header string while parsing an
incoming e-mail message to extract the patch.

* rs/mailinfo-header-cmp:
  mailinfo: use strcmp() for string comparison
2014-06-09 11:27:53 -07:00
53b4d8387b Merge branch 'pb/trim-trailing-spaces'
Fix an error in parsing of .gitignore files that use a trailing
"\ " to mark pathnames that end with a SP.

* pb/trim-trailing-spaces:
  dir.c:trim_trailing_spaces(): fix for " \ " sequence
2014-06-09 11:27:47 -07:00
0908b6dfc3 Merge branch 'na/no-http-test-in-the-middle'
The mode to run tests with HTTP server tests disabled was broken.

* na/no-http-test-in-the-middle:
  t5538: move http push tests out to t5542
2014-06-09 11:26:51 -07:00
0147602c2b Merge branch 'jc/rev-parse-argh-dashed-multi-words'
"update-index --cacheinfo" in 2.0 crashes on a malformed command line.

* jc/rev-parse-argh-dashed-multi-words:
  update-index: fix segfault with missing --cacheinfo argument
2014-06-09 11:26:49 -07:00
bfbdfa33f6 Merge branch 'lt/request-pull'
A brown-paper-bag bugfix to a test that turned out to be a no-op by
mistake.

* lt/request-pull:
  fix brown paper bag breakage in t5150-request-pull.sh
2014-06-09 11:26:23 -07:00
acb3d22264 string-list: spell all values out that are given to a string_list initializer
STRING_LIST_INIT_{NODUP,DUP} initializers list values only
for earlier structure members, relying on the usual
convention in C that the omitted members are initailized to
0, i.e. the former is expanded to the latter:

	struct string_list l = STRING_LIST_INIT_DUP;
	struct string_list l = { NULL, 0, 0, 1 };

and the last member that is not mentioned (i.e. 'cmp') is
initialized to NULL.

While there is nothing wrong in this construct, spelling out
all the values where the macros are defined will serve also
as a documentation, so let's do so.

Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-06 13:49:19 -07:00
7e28c16fdb t0000-*.sh: fix the GIT_SKIP_TESTS sub-tests
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-06 13:48:00 -07:00
0445e6f0a1 test-lib: '--run' to run only specific tests
Allow better control of the set of tests that will be executed for a
single test suite.  Mostly useful while debugging or developing as it
allows to focus on a specific test.

Signed-off-by: Ilya Bobyr <ilya.bobyr@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-06 13:48:00 -07:00
ef2ac68def test-lib: tests skipped by GIT_SKIP_TESTS say so
We used to show "(missing )" next to tests skipped because they are
specified in GIT_SKIP_TESTS.  Use "(GIT_SKIP_TESTS)" instead.

Plus tests that check basic GIT_SKIP_TESTS functions.

Signed-off-by: Ilya Bobyr <ilya.bobyr@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-06 13:48:00 -07:00
5e3b4fce42 test-lib: document short options in t/README
Most arguments that could be provided to a test have short forms.
Unless documented, the only way to learn them is to read the code.

Signed-off-by: Ilya Bobyr <ilya.bobyr@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-06 13:47:54 -07:00
0953113bb5 Second batch for 2.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-06 11:42:05 -07:00
75866e6045 Merge branch 'ss/howto-manage-trunk'
* ss/howto-manage-trunk:
  How to keep a project's canonical history correct.
2014-06-06 11:39:12 -07:00
eb5398a891 Merge branch 'mc/git-p4-prepare-p4-only'
* mc/git-p4-prepare-p4-only:
  git-p4: Do not include diff in spec file when just preparing p4
2014-06-06 11:38:57 -07:00
3784ba310f Merge branch 'jn/test-lint-unmoor'
* jn/test-lint-unmoor:
  test-lint: find unportable sed, echo, test, and export usage after &&
2014-06-06 11:38:54 -07:00
3ea8ecc21e Merge branch 'ep/shell-assign-and-export-vars'
* ep/shell-assign-and-export-vars:
  scripts: more "export VAR=VALUE" fixes
  scripts: "export VAR=VALUE" construct is not portable
2014-06-06 11:38:51 -07:00
ed47bbd1d0 Merge branch 'jj/command-line-adjective'
* jj/command-line-adjective:
  Documentation: use "command-line" when used as a compound adjective, and fix other minor grammatical issues
2014-06-06 11:38:48 -07:00
aa4bffa235 Merge branch 'jc/coding-guidelines'
* jc/coding-guidelines:
  CodingGuidelines: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
  CodingGuidelines: on splitting a long line
  CodingGuidelines: on comparison
  CodingGuidelines: do not call the conditional statement "if()"
  CodingGuidelines: give an example for shell function preamble
  CodingGuidelines: give an example for control statements
  CodingGuidelines: give an example for redirection
  CodingGuidelines: give an example for case/esac statement
  CodingGuidelines: once it is in, it is not worth the code churn
2014-06-06 11:38:45 -07:00
1e2600dd6a Merge branch 'nd/status-auto-comment-char'
* nd/status-auto-comment-char:
  commit: allow core.commentChar=auto for character auto selection
  config: be strict on core.commentChar
2014-06-06 11:36:10 -07:00
0756529537 Merge branch 'mt/rebase-i-keep-empty-test'
* mt/rebase-i-keep-empty-test:
  rebase --keep-empty -i: add test
2014-06-06 11:36:06 -07:00
e7cc0ede18 Merge branch 'mk/show-s-no-extra-blank-line-for-merges'
* mk/show-s-no-extra-blank-line-for-merges:
  git-show: fix 'git show -s' to not add extra terminator after merge commit
2014-06-06 11:35:02 -07:00
7e03f41663 Merge branch 'sk/spawn-less-case-insensitively-from-grep-O-i'
* sk/spawn-less-case-insensitively-from-grep-O-i:
  git grep -O -i: if the pager is 'less', pass the '-I' option
2014-06-06 11:32:49 -07:00
7173ad76ed Merge branch 'jd/subtree'
* jd/subtree:
  contrib/subtree: allow adding an annotated tag
  contrib/subtree/Makefile: clean up rule for "clean"
  contrib/subtree/Makefile: clean up rules to generate documentation
  contrib/subtree/Makefile: s/libexecdir/gitexecdir/
  contrib/subtree/Makefile: use GIT-VERSION-FILE
  contrib/subtree/Makefile: scrap unused $(gitdir)
2014-06-06 11:32:21 -07:00
c8704ad335 Merge branch 'wk/doc-clarify-upstream'
* wk/doc-clarify-upstream:
  Documentation: mention config sources for @{upstream}
2014-06-06 11:32:14 -07:00
334d40e951 Merge branch 'tb/unicode-6.3-zero-width'
Update the logic to compute the display width needed for utf8
strings and allow us to more easily maintain the tables used in
that logic.

We may want to let the users choose if codepoints with ambiguous
widths are treated as a double or single width in a follow-up patch.

* tb/unicode-6.3-zero-width:
  utf8: make it easier to auto-update git_wcwidth()
  utf8.c: use a table for double_width
2014-06-06 11:29:38 -07:00
a0460132a7 Merge branch 'jk/index-pack-report-missing'
* jk/index-pack-report-missing:
  index-pack: distinguish missing objects from type errors
2014-06-06 11:28:13 -07:00
e934c67b66 Merge branch 'bc/blame-crlf-test'
If a file contained CRLF line endings in a repository with
core.autocrlf=input, then blame always marked lines as "Not
Committed Yet", even if they were unmodified.

* bc/blame-crlf-test:
  blame: correctly handle files regardless of autocrlf
2014-06-06 11:26:50 -07:00
ee8213951a Merge branch 'sk/submodules-absolute-path-on-windows'
* sk/submodules-absolute-path-on-windows:
  Revert "submodules: fix ambiguous absolute paths under Windows"
2014-06-06 11:26:38 -07:00
c7be99ea51 Merge branch 'dk/blame-reorg'
"git blame" has been optimized greatly by reorganising the data
structure that is used to keep track of the work to be done, thanks
to David Karstrup <dak@gnu.org>.

* dk/blame-reorg:
  blame: large-scale performance rewrite
2014-06-06 11:24:44 -07:00
ff0b8753a1 Merge branch 'wg/svn-fe-style-fixes'
* wg/svn-fe-style-fixes:
  svn-fe: conform to pep8
2014-06-06 11:24:32 -07:00
e318b83511 Merge branch 'jn/contrib-remove-vim'
Spring cleaning of contrib/.

* jn/contrib-remove-vim:
  contrib: remove vim support instructions
2014-06-06 11:24:30 -07:00
c8eb5d3309 Merge branch 'jn/contrib-remove-diffall'
Spring cleaning of contrib/.

* jn/contrib-remove-diffall:
  contrib: remove git-diffall
2014-06-06 11:23:46 -07:00
067fe64355 Merge branch 'dt/merge-recursive-case-insensitive'
On a case insensitive filesystem, merge-recursive incorrectly
deleted the file that is to be renamed to a name that is the same
except for case differences.

* dt/merge-recursive-case-insensitive:
  mv: allow renaming to fix case on case insensitive filesystems
  merge-recursive.c: fix case-changing merge bug
2014-06-06 11:23:13 -07:00
f7f349e138 Merge branch 'rs/reflog-exists'
* rs/reflog-exists:
  checkout.c: use ref_exists instead of file_exist
  refs.c: add new functions reflog_exists and delete_reflog
2014-06-06 11:23:04 -07:00
43eb7cb260 Merge branch 'tg/tag-state-tag-name-in-editor-hints'
* tg/tag-state-tag-name-in-editor-hints:
  builtin/tag.c: show tag name to hint in the message editor
2014-06-06 11:22:25 -07:00
d83c9c75e1 Merge branch 'jk/grep-tell-run-command-to-cd-when-running-pager'
* jk/grep-tell-run-command-to-cd-when-running-pager:
  grep: use run-command's "dir" option for --open-files-in-pager
2014-06-06 11:21:49 -07:00
09e141f127 Merge branch 'fc/status-printf-squelch-format-zero-length-warnings'
* fc/status-printf-squelch-format-zero-length-warnings:
  silence a bunch of format-zero-length warnings
2014-06-06 11:21:47 -07:00
610a14f643 Merge branch 'jk/squelch-compiler-warning-from-funny-error-macro'
* jk/squelch-compiler-warning-from-funny-error-macro:
  let clang use the constant-return error() macro
  inline constant return from error() function
2014-06-06 11:21:36 -07:00
d2a274aa87 Merge branch 'dk/raise-core-deltabasecachelimit'
The `core.deltabasecachelimit` used to default to 16 MiB , but this
proved to be too small, and has been bumped to 96 MiB.

* dk/raise-core-deltabasecachelimit:
  Bump core.deltaBaseCacheLimit to 96m
2014-06-06 11:18:34 -07:00
7461a3e9fc Merge branch 'tl/relax-in-poll-emulation'
* tl/relax-in-poll-emulation:
  compat/poll: sleep 1 millisecond to avoid busy wait
2014-06-06 11:18:29 -07:00
1265886303 Merge branch 'jk/utf8-switch-between-nfd-and-nfc'
Document a known breakage with a test.

* jk/utf8-switch-between-nfd-and-nfc:
  t3910: show failure of core.precomposeunicode with decomposed filenames
2014-06-06 11:18:26 -07:00
89080fcd9a Merge branch 'da/imap-send-use-credential-helper'
"git imap-send" learns to ask the credential helper for
authentication material.

* da/imap-send-use-credential-helper:
  imap-send: use git-credential
2014-06-06 11:17:56 -07:00
db6fbe3770 Merge branch 'je/pager-do-not-recurse'
We used to unconditionally disable the pager in the pager process
we spawn to feed out output, but that prevented people who want to
run "less" within "less" from doing so.

* je/pager-do-not-recurse:
  pager: do allow spawning pager recursively
2014-06-06 11:17:00 -07:00
e88155d1e1 Merge branch 'jk/commit-C-pick-empty'
"git commit --allow-empty-message -C $commit" did not work when the
commit did not have any log message.

* jk/commit-C-pick-empty:
  commit: do not complain of empty messages from -C
2014-06-06 11:16:04 -07:00
561d952ed4 Merge branch 'mm/pager-less-sans-S'
Since the very beginning of Git, we gave the LESS environment a
default value "FRSX" when we spawn "less" as the pager.  "S" (chop
long lines instead of wrapping) has been removed from this default
set of options, because it is more or less a personal taste thing,
as opposed to others that have good justifications (i.e. "R" is very
much justified because many kinds of output we produce are colored
and "FX" is justified because output we produce is often shorter
than a page).

Existing users who prefer not to see line-wrapped output may want to
set

  $ git config core.pager "less -S"

to restore the traditional behaviour.  It is expected that people
find output from the most subcommands easier to read with the new
default, except for "blame" which tends to produce really long
lines.  To override the new default only for "git blame", you can do
this:

  $ git config pager.blame "less -S"

* mm/pager-less-sans-S:
  pager: remove 'S' from $LESS by default
2014-06-06 11:02:59 -07:00
dde8a902c7 refs.c: optimize check_refname_component()
In a repository with many refs, check_refname_component can be a major
contributor to the runtime of some git commands. One such command is

git rev-parse HEAD

Timings for one particular repo, with about 60k refs, almost all
packed, are:

Old: 35 ms
New: 29 ms

Many other commands which read refs are also sped up.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twitter.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-05 15:24:50 -07:00
c5558f80c3 fetch: allow explicit --refmap to override configuration
Since the introduction of opportunisitic updates of remote-tracking
branches, started at around f2690487 (fetch: opportunistically
update tracking refs, 2013-05-11) with a few updates in v1.8.4 era,
the remote.*.fetch configuration always kicks in even when a refspec
to specify what to fetch is given on the command line, and there is
no way to disable or override it per-invocation.

Teach the command to pay attention to the --refmap=<lhs>:<rhs>
command-line options that can be used to override the use of
configured remote.*.fetch as the refmap.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
---
2014-06-05 15:13:12 -07:00
fcb14b0c8d fetch doc: add a section on configured remote-tracking branches
To resurrect a misleading mention removed in the previous step,
add a section to explain how the remote-tracking configuration
interacts with the refspecs given as the command-line arguments.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-05 14:59:07 -07:00
dce6818d10 t/t7810-grep.sh: remove duplicate test_config()
t/t7810-grep.sh had its own test_config() function which served the
same purpose as the one in t/test-lib-functions.sh.  Removed, all tests
pass.

Signed-off-by: Jeremiah Mahler <jmmahler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-05 11:56:01 -07:00
5cc3268720 fetch doc: remove "short-cut" section
It is misleading to mention that <ref> that does not store is to
fetch the ref into FETCH_HEAD, because a refspec that does store is
also to fetch the LHS into FETCH_HEAD.  It is doubly misleading to
list it as part of "short-cut".  <ref> stands for a refspec that has
it on the LHS with a colon and an empty RHS, and that definition
should be given at the beginning of the entry where the format is
defined.

Tentatively remove this misleading description, which leaves the
`tag <tag>` as the only true short-hand, so move it at the beginning
of the entry.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-04 15:29:38 -07:00
b8bdaa97a6 fetch doc: update refspec format description
The text made it sound as if the leading plus is the only thing that
is optional, and forgot that <lhs> is the same as <lhs>:, i.e. fetch
it and do not store anywhere.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-04 15:29:38 -07:00
5d59a32fa1 fetch doc: on pulling multiple refspecs
Replace desription of old-style "Pull:" lines in remotes/
configuration with modern remote.*.fetch variables.

As this note applies only to "git pull", enable it only
in git-pull manual page.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-04 15:29:38 -07:00
eb077745a4 shortlog: allow --exclude=<glob> to be passed
These two commands are supposed to be equivalent:

  $ git log --exclude=refs/notes/\* --all --no-merges --since=2.days |
    git shortlog
  $ git shortlog --exclude=refs/notes/\* --all --no-merges --since=2.days

However, the latter does not understand the ref-exclusion command
line option, even though other options understood by "log", such as
"--all" and "--no-merges", are understood.

This was because e7b432c5 (revision: introduce --exclude=<glob> to
tame wildcards, 2013-08-30) did not wire the new option fully to the
machinery.  A new option understood by handle_revision_pseudo_opt()
must be told to handle_revision_opt() as well.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-04 13:41:33 -07:00
b93e6e3663 t5000, t5003: do not use test_cmp to compare binary files
test_cmp() is primarily meant to compare text files (and display the
difference for debug purposes).

Raw "cmp" is better suited to compare binary files (tar, zip, etc.).

On MinGW, test_cmp is a shell function mingw_test_cmp that tries to
read both files into environment, stripping CR characters (introduced
in commit 4d715ac0).

This function usually speeds things up, as fork is extremly slow on
Windows.  But no wonder that this function is extremely slow and
sometimes even crashes when comparing large tar or zip files.

Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-04 11:14:25 -07:00
c8e1ee4f2c update-index: fix segfault with missing --cacheinfo argument
Running "git update-index --cacheinfo" without any further
arguments results in a segfault rather than an error
message. Commit ec160ae (update-index: teach --cacheinfo a
new syntax "mode,sha1,path", 2014-03-23) added code to
examine the format of the argument, but forgot to handle the
NULL case.

Returning an error from the parser is enough, since we then
treat it as an old-style "--cacheinfo <mode> <sha1> <path>",
and complain that we have less than 3 arguments to read.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-04 11:02:55 -07:00
79dcccc503 First batch for 2.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-03 12:09:13 -07:00
14ce98d7e9 Merge branch 'sk/msvc-dynlink-crt'
* sk/msvc-dynlink-crt:
  MSVC: link dynamically to the CRT
2014-06-03 12:06:46 -07:00
a3c0efec9b Merge branch 'ew/config-protect-mode'
* ew/config-protect-mode:
  config: preserve config file permissions on edits
2014-06-03 12:06:46 -07:00
d6850db3c2 Merge branch 'bg/strbuf-trim'
* bg/strbuf-trim:
  api-strbuf.txt: add docs for _trim and _ltrim
  strbuf: use _rtrim and _ltrim in strbuf_trim
2014-06-03 12:06:46 -07:00
e1857af923 Merge branch 'jk/commit-date-approxidate'
* jk/commit-date-approxidate:
  commit: accept more date formats for "--date"
  commit: print "Date" line when the user has set date
  pretty: make show_ident_date public
  commit: use split_ident_line to compare author/committer
2014-06-03 12:06:46 -07:00
6753d8a85d Merge branch 'ep/shell-command-substitution'
Adjust shell scripts to use $(cmd) instead of `cmd`.

* ep/shell-command-substitution: (41 commits)
  t5000-tar-tree.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t4204-patch-id.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t4119-apply-config.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t4116-apply-reverse.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t4057-diff-combined-paths.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t4038-diff-combined.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t4036-format-patch-signer-mime.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t4014-format-patch.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t4013-diff-various.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t4012-diff-binary.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t4010-diff-pathspec.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t4006-diff-mode.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t3910-mac-os-precompose.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t3905-stash-include-untracked.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t1050-large.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t1020-subdirectory.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t1004-read-tree-m-u-wf.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t1003-read-tree-prefix.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t1002-read-tree-m-u-2way.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t1001-read-tree-m-2way.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  ...
2014-06-03 12:06:45 -07:00
6d3c4e93d4 Merge branch 'fc/rerere-conflict-style'
* fc/rerere-conflict-style:
  rerere: fix for merge.conflictstyle
2014-06-03 12:06:45 -07:00
520cd9cd20 Merge branch 'dt/api-doc-setup-gently'
* dt/api-doc-setup-gently:
  docs: document RUN_SETUP_GENTLY and clarify RUN_SETUP
2014-06-03 12:06:45 -07:00
7ea60c15cc Merge branch 'fc/mergetool-prompt'
mergetool.prompt used to default to 'true', always causing a confirmation
"do you really want to run the tool on this path" to be shown.

Among the two purposes the prompt serves, ignore the use case to
confirm that the user wants to view particular path with the named
tool, and make the prompt only to confirm the choice of the tool
made by autodetection and defaulting.  For those who configured the
tool explicitly, the prompt shown for the latter purpose is simply
annoying.

Strictly speaking, this is a backward incompatible change and the
users need to explicitly set the variable to 'true' if they want to
resurrect the now-ignored use case.

* fc/mergetool-prompt:
  mergetool: document the default for --[no-]prompt
  mergetool: run prompt only if guessed tool
2014-06-03 12:06:44 -07:00
e3798318b1 Merge branch 'mm/mediawiki-encoding-fix'
* mm/mediawiki-encoding-fix:
  git-remote-mediawiki: fix encoding issue for UTF-8 media files
  git-remote-mediawiki: allow stop/start-ing the test server
2014-06-03 12:06:44 -07:00
59e0821a81 Merge branch 'sk/tag-contains-wo-recursion'
* sk/tag-contains-wo-recursion:
  git tag --contains: avoid stack overflow
2014-06-03 12:06:44 -07:00
0b4494625d Merge branch 'ef/send-email-absolute-path-to-the-command'
* ef/send-email-absolute-path-to-the-command:
  send-email: windows drive prefix (e.g. C:) appears only at the beginning
  send-email: recognize absolute path on Windows
2014-06-03 12:06:44 -07:00
84241e70d6 Merge branch 'jx/blame-align-relative-time'
"git blame" miscounted number of columns needed to show localized
timestamps, resulting in jaggy left-side-edge of the source code
lines in its output.

* jx/blame-align-relative-time:
  blame: dynamic blame_date_width for different locales
  blame: fix broken time_buf paddings in relative timestamp
2014-06-03 12:06:44 -07:00
22e91ba815 Merge branch 'lr/git-run-setup-gently'
* lr/git-run-setup-gently:
  git.c: treat RUN_SETUP_GENTLY and RUN_SETUP as mutually exclusive
2014-06-03 12:06:43 -07:00
3a9dae783b Merge branch 'fc/mergetools-vimdiff3'
* fc/mergetools-vimdiff3:
  mergetools: add vimdiff3 mode
2014-06-03 12:06:43 -07:00
b8ef69fe2e Merge branch 'fc/merge-default-to-upstream'
"git merge" without argument, even when there is an upstream
defined for the current branch, refused to run until
merge.defaultToUpstream is set to true. Flip the default of that
configuration variable to true.

* fc/merge-default-to-upstream:
  merge: enable defaulttoupstream by default
2014-06-03 12:06:43 -07:00
6779e43b0d Merge branch 'jk/external-diff-use-argv-array'
Code clean-up (and a bugfix which has been merged for 2.0).

* jk/external-diff-use-argv-array:
  run_external_diff: refactor cmdline setup logic
  run_external_diff: hoist common bits out of conditional
  run_external_diff: drop fflush(NULL)
  run_external_diff: clean up error handling
  run_external_diff: use an argv_array for the environment
2014-06-03 12:06:43 -07:00
06b2a0f191 Merge branch 'sk/svn-parse-datestamp'
* sk/svn-parse-datestamp:
  SVN.pm::parse_svn_date: allow timestamps with a single-digit hour
2014-06-03 12:06:42 -07:00
2e4b5dee97 Merge branch 'rs/ref-update-check-errors-early'
* rs/ref-update-check-errors-early:
  commit.c: check for lock error and return early
  sequencer.c: check for lock failure and bail early in fast_forward_to
2014-06-03 12:06:42 -07:00
53f52cd92a Merge branch 'nd/index-pack-one-fd-per-thread'
Enable threaded index-pack on platforms without thread-unsafe
pread() emulation.

* nd/index-pack-one-fd-per-thread:
  index-pack: work around thread-unsafe pread()
2014-06-03 12:06:42 -07:00
9af098c29b Merge branch 'ym/fix-opportunistic-index-update-race'
Read-only operations such as "git status" that internally refreshes
the index write out the refreshed index to the disk to optimize
future accesses to the working tree, but this could race with a
"read-write" operation that modify the index while it is running.
Detect such a race and avoid overwriting the index.

Duy raised a good point that we may need to do the same for the
normal writeout codepath, not just the "opportunistic" update
codepath.  While that is true, nobody sane would be running two
simultaneous operations that are clearly write-oriented competing
with each other against the same index file.  So in that sense that
can be done as a less urgent follow-up for this topic.

* ym/fix-opportunistic-index-update-race:
  read-cache.c: verify index file before we opportunistically update it
  wrapper.c: add xpread() similar to xread()
2014-06-03 12:06:41 -07:00
2cc70cefdd Merge branch 'mh/ref-transaction'
Update "update-ref --stdin [-z]" and then introduce a transactional
support for (multi-)reference updates.

* mh/ref-transaction: (27 commits)
  ref_transaction_commit(): work with transaction->updates in place
  struct ref_update: add a type field
  struct ref_update: add a lock field
  ref_transaction_commit(): simplify code using temporary variables
  struct ref_update: store refname as a FLEX_ARRAY
  struct ref_update: rename field "ref_name" to "refname"
  refs: remove API function update_refs()
  update-ref --stdin: reimplement using reference transactions
  refs: add a concept of a reference transaction
  update-ref --stdin: harmonize error messages
  update-ref --stdin: improve the error message for unexpected EOF
  t1400: test one mistake at a time
  update-ref --stdin -z: deprecate interpreting the empty string as zeros
  update-ref.c: extract a new function, parse_next_sha1()
  t1400: test that stdin -z update treats empty <newvalue> as zeros
  update-ref --stdin: simplify error messages for missing oldvalues
  update-ref --stdin: make error messages more consistent
  update-ref --stdin: improve error messages for invalid values
  update-ref.c: extract a new function, parse_refname()
  parse_cmd_verify(): copy old_sha1 instead of evaluating <oldvalue> twice
  ...
2014-06-03 12:06:41 -07:00
8eaf517835 Merge branch 'ks/tree-diff-nway'
Instead of running N pair-wise diff-trees when inspecting a
N-parent merge, find the set of paths that were touched by walking
N+1 trees in parallel.  These set of paths can then be turned into
N pair-wise diff-tree results to be processed through rename
detections and such.  And N=2 case nicely degenerates to the usual
2-way diff-tree, which is very nice.

* ks/tree-diff-nway:
  mingw: activate alloca
  combine-diff: speed it up, by using multiparent diff tree-walker directly
  tree-diff: rework diff_tree() to generate diffs for multiparent cases as well
  Portable alloca for Git
  tree-diff: reuse base str(buf) memory on sub-tree recursion
  tree-diff: no need to call "full" diff_tree_sha1 from show_path()
  tree-diff: rework diff_tree interface to be sha1 based
  tree-diff: diff_tree() should now be static
  tree-diff: remove special-case diff-emitting code for empty-tree cases
  tree-diff: simplify tree_entry_pathcmp
  tree-diff: show_path prototype is not needed anymore
  tree-diff: rename compare_tree_entry -> tree_entry_pathcmp
  tree-diff: move all action-taking code out of compare_tree_entry()
  tree-diff: don't assume compare_tree_entry() returns -1,0,1
  tree-diff: consolidate code for emitting diffs and recursion in one place
  tree-diff: show_tree() is not needed
  tree-diff: no need to pass match to skip_uninteresting()
  tree-diff: no need to manually verify that there is no mode change for a path
  combine-diff: move changed-paths scanning logic into its own function
  combine-diff: move show_log_first logic/action out of paths scanning
2014-06-03 12:06:40 -07:00
f008cef4ab Merge branch 'jc/apply-ignore-whitespace'
"--ignore-space-change" option of "git apply" ignored the
spaces at the beginning of line too aggressively, which is
inconsistent with the option of the same name "diff" and "git diff"
have.

* jc/apply-ignore-whitespace:
  apply --ignore-space-change: lines with and without leading whitespaces do not match
2014-06-03 12:06:40 -07:00
52df9173fa Merge branch 'as/grep-fullname-config'
Add a configuration variable to force --full-name to be default for
"git grep".

This may cause regressions on scripted users that do not expect
this new behaviour.

* as/grep-fullname-config:
  grep: add grep.fullName config variable
2014-06-03 12:06:39 -07:00
4207ed285f refs.c: change read_ref_at to use the reflog iterators
read_ref_at has its own parsing of the reflog file for no really good reason
so lets change this to use the existing reflog iterators. This removes one
instance where we manually unmarshall the reflog file format.

Remove the now redundant ref_msg function.

Log messages for errors are changed slightly. We no longer print the file
name for the reflog, instead we refer to it as 'Log for ref <refname>'.
This might be a minor useability regression, but I don't really think so, since
experienced users would know where the log is anyway and inexperienced users
would not know what to do about/how to repair 'Log ... has gap ...' anyway.

Adapt the t1400 test to handle the change in log messages.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-03 11:09:32 -07:00
299e29870b environment.c: enable core.preloadindex by default
Many people are on filesystems with horrible stat latency (not
limited to Windows but also NFS), which core.preloadindex was
designed to help.  We discussed enabling it by default early in 2013
but didn't.

Per

  http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/219273/focus=219322

let's enable the setting by default, with the original choice of max
20 threads / min 500 paths per thread parameters.

Signed-off-by: Steve Hoelzer <shoelzer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-03 10:06:53 -07:00
d795216ac3 error_resolve_conflict: drop quotations around operation
When you try to commit with unmerged entries, you get an
error like:

  $ git commit
  error: 'commit' is not possible because you have unmerged files.

The quotes around "commit" are clunky; the user doesn't care
that this message is a template with the command-name filled
in.  Saying:

  error: commit is not possible because you have unmerged files

is easier to read. As this code is called from other places,
we may also end up with:

  $ git merge
  error: merge is not possible because you have unmerged files

  $ git cherry-pick foo
  error: cherry-pick is not possible because you have unmerged files

  $ git revert foo
  error: revert is not possible because you have unmerged files

All of which look better without the quotes. This also
happens to match the behavior of "git pull", which generates
a similar message (but does not share code, as it is a shell
script).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-03 10:04:21 -07:00
c057b2424a error_resolve_conflict: rewrap advice message
If you try to commit with unresolved conflicts in the index,
you get this message:

	$ git commit
	U       foo
	error: 'commit' is not possible because you have unmerged files.
	hint: Fix them up in the work tree,
	hint: and then use 'git add/rm <file>' as
	hint: appropriate to mark resolution and make a commit,
	hint: or use 'git commit -a'.
	fatal: Exiting because of an unresolved conflict.

The irregular line-wrapping makes this awkward to read, and
it takes up more lines than necessary. Instead, let's rewrap
it to about 60 characters per line:

	$ git commit
	U       foo
	error: 'commit' is not possible because you have unmerged files.
	hint: Fix them up in the work tree, and then use 'git add/rm <file>'
	hint: as appropriate to mark resolution and make a commit, or use
	hint: 'git commit -a'.
	fatal: Exiting because of an unresolved conflict.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-03 10:04:19 -07:00
e61a6c1d82 dir.c:trim_trailing_spaces(): fix for " \ " sequence
Discard the unnecessary 'nr_spaces' variable, remove 'strlen()' and
improve the 'if' structure.  Switch to pointers instead of integers
to control the loop.

Slightly more rare occurrences of 'text  \    ' with a backslash
in between spaces are handled correctly.  Namely, the code in
7e2e4b37 (dir: ignore trailing spaces in exclude patterns, 2014-02-09)
does not reset 'last_space' when a backslash is encountered and the above
line stays intact as a result.

Add a test at the end of t/t0008-ignores.sh to exhibit this behavior.

Signed-off-by: Pasha Bolokhov <pasha.bolokhov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-02 15:48:48 -07:00
fb79947487 pack-objects: use free()+xcalloc() instead of xrealloc()+memset()
Whenever the hash table becomes too small then its size is increased,
the original part (and the added space) is zerod out using memset(),
and the table is rebuilt from scratch.

Simplify this proceess by returning the old memory using free() and
allocating the new buffer using xcalloc(), which already clears the
buffer for us.  That way we avoid copying the old hash table contents
needlessly inside xrealloc().

While at it, use the first array member with sizeof instead of a
specific type.  The old code used uint32_t and int, while index is
actually an array of int32_t.  Their sizes are the same basically
everywhere, so it's not actually a problem, but the new code is
cleaner and doesn't have to be touched should the type be changed.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-02 13:51:22 -07:00
b1a013dd6a mailinfo: use strcmp() for string comparison
The array header is defined as:

	static const char *header[MAX_HDR_PARSED] = {
	     "From","Subject","Date",
	};

When looking for the index of a specfic string in that array, simply
use strcmp() instead of memcmp().  This avoids running over the end of
the string (e.g. with memcmp("Subject", "From", 7)) and gets rid of
magic string length constants.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-02 13:30:18 -07:00
3630654956 fetch doc: remove notes on outdated "mixed layout"
In old days before Git 1.5, it was customery for "git fetch" to use
the same local branch namespace to keep track of the remote-tracking
branches, and it was necessary to tell users not to check them out
and commit on them.  Since everybody uses the separate remote layout
these days, there is no need to warn against the practice to check
out the right-hand side of <refspec> and build on it---the RHS is
typically not even a local branch.

Incidentally, this also kills one mention of "Pull:" line of
$GIT_DIR/remotes/* configuration, which is a lot less familiar to
new people than the more modern remote.*.fetch configuration
variable.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-02 11:21:54 -07:00
f471dbc5fe fetch doc: update note on '+' in front of the refspec
While it is not *wrong* per-se to say that pulling a rewound/rebased
branch will lead to an unnecessary merge conflict, that is not what
the leading "+" sign to allow non-fast-forward update of remote-tracking
branch is at all.

Helped-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-02 11:21:51 -07:00
366a0184e5 fetch doc: move FETCH_HEAD material lower and add an example
Signed-off-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-02 11:21:12 -07:00
644edd02c1 fix brown paper bag breakage in t5150-request-pull.sh
The recent addition to the test case 'pull request format' interrupted
the single-quoted text, effectively adding a third argument to the
test_expect_success command. Since we do not have a prerequisite named
"pull request format", the test is skipped, no matter what. Additionally,
the file name argument to the grep command is missing. Fix both issues.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-02 11:05:33 -07:00
38de156a05 sideband.c: do not use ANSI control sequence on non-terminal
Diagnostic messages received on the sideband #2 from the server side
are sent to the standard error with ANSI terminal control sequence
"\033[K" that erases to the end of line appended at the end of each
line.

However, some programs (e.g. GitExtensions for Windows) read and
interpret and/or show the message without understanding the terminal
control sequences, resulting them to be shown to their end users.
To help these programs, squelch the control sequence when the
standard error stream is not being sent to a tty.

NOTE: I considered to cover the case that a pager has already been
started. But decided that is probably not worth worrying about here,
though, as we shouldn't be using a pager for commands that do network
communications (and if we do, omitting the magic line-clearing signal
is probably a sane thing to do).

Thanks-to: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Thanks-to: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Naumov <mnaoumov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-06-02 11:02:27 -07:00
1571586648 git log: support "auto" decorations
This works kind of like "--color=auto" - add decorations for interactive
use, but do not change defaults when scripting or when piping the output
to anything but a terminal.

You can use either

    [log]
         decorate=auto

in the git config files, or the "--decorate=auto" command line option to
choose this behavior.

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-30 13:47:24 -07:00
9c65ee15ee compat/bswap.h: fix endianness detection
The changes to make detection of endianness more portable had a bug
that breaks on (at least) Solaris x86.

The bug appears to be a simple copy/paste typo. It checks for
_BIG_ENDIAN and not _LITTLE_ENDIAN for both the case where we would
decide the system is big endian and little endian. Instead, the
second test should be for _LITTLE_ENDIAN and not _BIG_ENDIAN.

Two fixes were possible:

 1. Change the negation order of the conditions in the second test.
 2. Reverse the order of the conditions in the second test.

Use the second option so that the condition we expect is always a
positive check.

Signed-off-by: Ben Walton <bdwalton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-30 11:48:28 -07:00
afa53fe5d1 t5538: move http push tests out to t5542
As 0232852b, but for the push tests instead: this avoids a start_httpd
in the middle of the file, which fails under GIT_TEST_HTTPD=false.

Note that we have to munge the test in a few ways while
moving it:

  1. We drop the `test -z "$GIT_TEST_HTTPD"` check; this is
     too simplistic since 83d842d, and we should let
     lib-httpd.sh handle it.

  2. We have to port over some of the old setup from t5538.

  3. In the final test, we no longer expect the extra commit
     "1" built on top of "4". This was a side effect from an
     earlier test in t5538 which was not ported over.

Signed-off-by: Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-30 11:13:45 -07:00
532845604d fetch doc: update introductory part for clarity
- "Branches" is a more common way to say "heads" in these days.

 - Remote-tracking branches are used a lot more these days and it is
   worth mentioning that it is one of the primary side effects of
   the command to update them.

 - Avoid "X. That means Y."  If Y is easier to understand to
   readers, just say that upfront.

 - Use of explicit refspec to fetch tags does not have much to do
   with turning "auto following" on or off.  It is a way to fetch
   tags that otherwise would not be fetched by auto-following.

Helped-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-30 11:04:37 -07:00
bce14aa132 Sync with 1.9.4 2014-05-30 10:57:52 -07:00
34d5217584 Git 1.9.4
This is expected to be the final maintenance release for 1.9 series,
merging the remaining fixes that are relevant and are already in 2.0.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-30 10:13:41 -07:00
d717282532 t5537: re-drop http tests
These were originally removed by 0232852 (t5537: move
http tests out to t5539, 2014-02-13). However, they were
accidentally re-added in 1ddb4d7 (Merge branch
'nd/upload-pack-shallow', 2014-03-21).

This looks like an error in manual conflict resolution.
Here's what happened:

  1. v1.9.0 shipped with the http tests in t5537.

  2. We realized that this caused problems, and built
     0232852 on top to move the tests to their own file.
     This fix made it into v1.9.1.

  3. We later had another fix in nd/upload-pack-shallow that
     also touched t5537. It was built directly on v1.9.0.

When we merged nd/upload-pack-shallow to master, we got a
conflict; it was built on a version with the http tests, but
we had since removed them. The correct resolution was to
drop the http tests and keep the new ones, but instead we
kept everything.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-30 09:46:19 -07:00
12188a8299 Merge branch 'rh/prompt-pcmode-avoid-eval-on-refname' into maint
* rh/prompt-pcmode-avoid-eval-on-refname:
  git-prompt.sh: don't assume the shell expands the value of PS1
2014-05-28 15:46:36 -07:00
64d8c31ebe Merge branch 'mw/symlinks' into maint
* mw/symlinks:
  setup: fix windows path buffer over-stepping
  setup: don't dereference in-tree symlinks for absolute paths
  setup: add abspath_part_inside_repo() function
  t0060: add tests for prefix_path when path begins with work tree
  t0060: add test for prefix_path when path == work tree
  t0060: add test for prefix_path on symlinks via absolute paths
  t3004: add test for ls-files on symlinks via absolute paths
2014-05-28 15:45:57 -07:00
0678b649a1 How to keep a project's canonical history correct.
During the mail thread about "Pull is mostly evil" a user asked how
the first parent could become reversed.

This howto explains how the first parent can get reversed when viewed
by the project and then explains a method to keep the history correct.

Signed-off-by: Stephen P. Smith <ischis2@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-28 13:35:43 -07:00
e156455ea4 Git 2.0 2014-05-28 11:04:19 -07:00
3c735e0776 Documentation: wording fixes in the user manual and glossary
Re-word the section on "Updating a repository with git fetch" in the
user manual.

Various other minor fixes in the manual and glossary.

Signed-off-by: Jeremiah Mahler <jmmahler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-28 10:40:06 -07:00
92e25b6b5b transport-helper.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
xcalloc() takes two arguments: the number of elements and their size.
transport_helper_init passes the arguments in reverse order, passing the
size of a helper_data*, followed by the number to allocate.

Rearrange them so they are in the correct order.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 14:02:45 -07:00
da7a478bc0 remote.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
xcalloc() takes two arguments: the number of elements and their size.
parse_refspec_internal passes the arguments in reverse order, passing the
size of a refspec, followed by the number to allocate.

Rearrange them so they are in the correct order.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 14:02:45 -07:00
8e1aa2f792 reflog-walk.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
xcalloc() takes two arguments: the number of elements and their size.
reflog-walk.c includes several calls to xcalloc() that pass the arguments
in reverse order.

Rearrange them so they are in the correct order.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 14:02:45 -07:00
48d547fb38 pack-revindex.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
xcalloc() takes two arguments: the number of elements and their size.
init_pack_revindex() passes the arguments in reverse order, passing the
size of a pack_revindex, followed by the number to allocate.

Rearrange them so they are in the correct order.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 14:02:45 -07:00
65bbf082c2 notes.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
xcalloc() takes two arguments: the number of elements and their size.
notes.c includes several calls to xcalloc() that pass the arguments in
reverse order.

Rearrange them so they are in the correct order.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 14:02:45 -07:00
3345c0f5b9 imap-send.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
xcalloc() takes two arguments: the number of elements and their size.
imap_open_store() passes the arguments in reverse order, passing the
size of an imap_store*, followed by the number to allocate.

Rearrange them so they are in the correct order.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 14:02:45 -07:00
f3d51ffde8 http-push.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
xcalloc() takes two arguments: the number of elements and their size.
http-push passes the arguments in reverse order, passing the size
of a repo, followed by the number to allocate.

Rearrange them so they are in the correct order.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 14:02:45 -07:00
1a4927c5c5 diff.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
xcalloc() takes two arguments: the number of elements and their size.
diffstat_add() passes the arguments in reverse order, passing the
size of a diffstat_file*, followed by the number of diffstat_file* to
be allocated.

Rearrange them so they are in the correct order.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 14:02:03 -07:00
f1064f6bc8 config.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
xcalloc() takes two arguments: the number of elements and their size.
config.c includes several calls to xcalloc() that pass the arguments
in reverse order: the size of a struct lock_file*, followed by the
number to allocate.

Rearrange them so they are in the correct order.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 14:00:44 -07:00
c4a7b0092b commit.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
xcalloc() takes two arguments: the number of elements and their size.
reduce_heads() passes the arguments in reverse order, passing the
size of a commit*, followed by the number of commit* to be allocated.

Rearrange them so they are in the correct order.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 14:00:43 -07:00
380694544d builtin/remote.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
xcalloc() takes two arguments: the number of elements and their size.
builtin/remote.c includes several calls to xcalloc() that pass the
arguments in reverse order.

Rearrange them so they are in the correct order.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 14:00:43 -07:00
edd2d84665 builtin/ls-remote.c: rearrange xcalloc arguments
xcalloc() takes two arguments: the number of elements and their size.
cmd_ls_remote() passes the arguments in reverse order, passing the
size of a char*, followed by the number of char* to be allocated.

Rearrange them so they are in the correct order.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 14:00:43 -07:00
9352fd5708 config: respect '~' and '~user' in mailmap.file
git_config_string() does not handle '~' and '~user' as part of the
value. Using git_config_pathname() fixes this.

Signed-off-by: Øystein Walle <oystwa@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 12:59:32 -07:00
f8ee1f02da git-instaweb: add support for Apache 2.4
Detect available Apache MPMs and use first available according to
following order of precedence:
mpm_event
mpm_prefork
mpm_worker

Add authz_core module if available to avoid HTTP Error 500 errors.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan McCrohan <jmccrohan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 12:57:19 -07:00
01730a3bb4 t9138-git-svn-authors-prog.sh fixups
Several fixups of the t9138-git-svn-authors-prog.sh test script to
follow current recommendations in t/README.

  - Fixed a Perl script with a full "#!/usr/bin/perl" shebang
    to use write_script() and $PERL_PATH as per t/README.

  - Placed svn-authors data setup inside a test_expect_success.

  - Fixed trailing quotes to use the same indentation throughout.

Signed-off-by: Jeremiah Mahler <jmmahler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 12:44:33 -07:00
7022650f61 format-patch: add "--signature-file=<file>" option
Add an option to format-patch for reading a signature from a file.

  $ git format-patch -1 --signature-file=$HOME/.signature

The config variable `format.signaturefile` can also be used to make
this the default.

  $ git config format.signaturefile $HOME/.signature

  $ git format-patch -1

Signed-off-by: Jeremiah Mahler <jmmahler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 12:38:32 -07:00
b4073bb387 git-p4: Do not include diff in spec file when just preparing p4
The diff information render the spec file unusable as is by p4,
do not include it when run with --prepare-p4-only so that the
given file can be directly passed to p4.

With --prepare-p4-only, git-p4 already tells the user it can use
p4 submit with the generated spec file. This fails because of the
diff being present in the file. Not including the diff fixes that.

Without --prepare-p4-only, keeping the diff makes sense for a
quick review of the patch before submitting it. And does not cause
problems with p4 as we remove it programmatically.

Signed-off-by: Maxime Coste <frrrwww@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 12:35:15 -07:00
62aad1849f gc --auto: do not lock refs in the background
9f673f9 (gc: config option for running --auto in background -
2014-02-08) puts "gc --auto" in background to reduce user's wait
time. Part of the garbage collecting is pack-refs and pruning
reflogs. These require locking some refs and may abort other processes
trying to lock the same ref. If gc --auto is fired in the middle of a
script, gc's holding locks in the background could fail the script,
which could never happen before 9f673f9.

Keep running pack-refs and "reflog --prune" in foreground to stop
parallel ref updates. The remaining background operations (repack,
prune and rerere) should not impact running git processes.

Reported-by: Adam Borowski <kilobyte@angband.pl>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 12:33:53 -07:00
e6bea66db6 remote prune: optimize "dangling symref" check/warning
When 'git remote prune' was used to delete many refs in a repository
with many refs, a lot of time was spent checking for (now) dangling
symbolic refs pointing to the deleted ref, since warn_dangling_symref()
was once per deleted ref to check all other refs in the repository.

Avoid this using the new warn_dangling_symrefs() function which
makes one pass over all refs and checks for all the deleted refs in
one go, after they have all been deleted.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lindström <jl@opera.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 12:30:47 -07:00
c9e768bb77 remote: repack packed-refs once when deleting multiple refs
When 'git remote rm' or 'git remote prune' were used in a repository
with many refs, and needed to delete many remote-tracking refs, a lot
of time was spent deleting those refs since for each deleted ref,
repack_without_refs() was called to rewrite packed-refs without just
that deleted ref.

To avoid this, call repack_without_refs() first to repack without all
the refs that will be deleted, before calling delete_ref() to delete
each one completely.  The call to repack_without_ref() in delete_ref()
then becomes a no-op, since packed-refs already won't contain any of
the deleted refs.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lindström <jl@opera.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 12:30:42 -07:00
8fee872647 completion: add missing options for git-merge
The options added to __git_merge_options are those that git-pull passes
to git-merge, since that variable is used by both commands.

Those added directly in _git_merge() are specific to git-merge and
are not passed thru from git-pull.

Reported-by: Haralan Dobrev <hkdobrev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 12:27:50 -07:00
6d2b06f02b completion: add a note that merge options are shared
This should avoid future confusion after a subsequent patch has added
some options to __git_merge_options and some directly in _git_merge().

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 12:27:36 -07:00
c553fd1c1e http: default text charset to iso-8859-1
This is specified by RFC 2616 as the default if no "charset"
parameter is given.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 09:59:22 -07:00
fc1b774c72 remote-curl: reencode http error messages
We currently recognize an error message with a content-type
"text/plain; charset=utf-16" as text, but we ignore the
charset parameter entirely. Let's encode it to
log_output_encoding, which is presumably something the
user's terminal can handle.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 09:59:22 -07:00
d4241f52d1 strbuf: add strbuf_reencode helper
This is a convenience wrapper around `reencode_string_len`
and `strbuf_attach`.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 09:59:21 -07:00
e31316263a http: optionally extract charset parameter from content-type
Since the previous commit, we now give a sanitized,
shortened version of the content-type header to any callers
who ask for it.

This patch adds back a way for them to cleanly access
specific parameters to the type. We could easily extract all
parameters and make them available via a string_list, but:

  1. That complicates the interface and memory management.

  2. In practice, no planned callers care about anything
     except the charset.

This patch therefore goes with the simplest thing, and we
can expand or change the interface later if it becomes
necessary.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 09:59:19 -07:00
bf197fd7ee http: extract type/subtype portion of content-type
When we get a content-type from curl, we get the whole
header line, including any parameters, and without any
normalization (like downcasing or whitespace) applied.
If we later try to match it with strcmp() or even
strcasecmp(), we may get false negatives.

This could cause two visible behaviors:

  1. We might fail to recognize a smart-http server by its
     content-type.

  2. We might fail to relay text/plain error messages to
     users (especially if they contain a charset parameter).

This patch teaches the http code to extract and normalize
just the type/subtype portion of the string. This is
technically passing out less information to the callers, who
can no longer see the parameters. But none of the current
callers cares, and a future patch will add back an
easier-to-use method for accessing those parameters.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-27 09:57:00 -07:00
c1cebcf431 scripts: more "export VAR=VALUE" fixes
Found by

    git grep '[^-]export [^&]*=' -- \*.sh

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-23 15:32:54 -07:00
bed137d2d5 scripts: "export VAR=VALUE" construct is not portable
Found by check-non-portable-shell.pl

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-23 15:32:33 -07:00
ffb20ce125 strbuf: add strbuf_tolower function
This is a convenience wrapper to call tolower on each
character of the string.

This makes config's lowercase() function obsolete, though
note that because we have a strbuf, we are careful to
operate over the whole strbuf, rather than assuming that a
NUL is the end-of-string.

We could continue to offer a pure-string lowercase, but
there would be no callers (in most pure-string cases, we
actually duplicate and lowercase the duplicate, for which we
have the xstrdup_tolower wrapper).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-23 14:09:58 -07:00
dbcf2bd3de t5550: test display of remote http error messages
Since commit 426e70d (remote-curl: show server content on
http errors, 2013-04-05), we relay any text/plain error
messages from the remote server to the user. However, we
never tested it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-23 12:43:51 -07:00
c7db2d1647 t/lib-httpd: use write_script to copy CGI scripts
Using write_script will set our shebang line appropriately
with $SHELL_PATH. The script that is there now is quite
simple and likely to succeed even with a non-POSIX /bin/sh,
but it does not hurt to be defensive.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-23 12:41:50 -07:00
e2a0ccc01f test-lib: preserve GIT_CURL_VERBOSE from the environment
Turning on this variable can be useful when debugging http
tests. It does break a few tests in t5541, but it is not
a variable that the user is likely to have enabled
accidentally.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-23 12:41:48 -07:00
88d5a6f6cd daemon/config: factor out duplicate xstrdup_tolower
We have two implementations of the same function; let's drop
that to one. We take the name from daemon.c, but the
implementation (which is just slightly more efficient) from
the config code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-23 12:39:44 -07:00
561b46c5c8 test-lint: find unportable sed, echo, test, and export usage after &&
Instead of anchoring these checks with "^\s*", just check that the
usage is preceded by a word boundary.  So now we can catch

	test $cond && export foo=bar

just like we already catch

	test $cond &&
	export foo=bar

As a side effect, this will detect usage of "sed -i", "echo -n", "test
a == b", and "export a=b" in comments.  That is not ideal but it's
potentially useful because people sometimes copy code from comments so
it can be good to also avoid nonportable patterns there.

To avoid false positives, keep the checks for 'declare' and 'which'
anchored.  Those are frequently used words in normal English-language
comments.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-23 12:17:38 -07:00
b07bdd3472 remote rm: delete remote configuration as the last
When removing a remote, delete the remote-tracking branches before
deleting the remote configuration.  This way, if the operation fails or
is aborted while deleting the remote-tracking branches, the command can
be rerun to complete the operation.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lindström <jl@opera.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-23 11:56:15 -07:00
c6076e2b4a format-patch: make newline after signature conditional
When we print an email signature, we print the divider
"-- \n", then the signature string, then two newlines.

Usually the signature is a one-liner (and the default is just the
git version), so the extra newline makes sense.  But one could
easily specify a multi-line signature, like this:

  git format-patch --signature='this is my long signature

  it has multiple lines
  ' ...

and it may end with its own newline, in which case we do not have
to add yet another one.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeremiah Mahler <jmmahler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-21 14:27:48 -07:00
06ab60c066 Documentation: use "command-line" when used as a compound adjective, and fix other minor grammatical issues
Signed-off-by: Jason St. John <jstjohn@purdue.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-21 13:57:10 -07:00
4a28f169ad Update draft release notes to 2.0
Hopefully for the last time ;-)

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-21 11:50:35 -07:00
7d509878b8 pretty.c: format string with truncate respects logOutputEncoding
Pretty format string %<(N,[ml]trunc)>%s truncates subject to a given
length with an appropriate padding. This works for non-ASCII texts when
i18n.logOutputEncoding is UTF-8 only (independently of a printed commit
message encoding) but does not work when i18n.logOutputEncoding is NOT
UTF-8.

In 7e77df3 (pretty: two phase conversion for non utf-8 commits, 2013-04-19)
'format_commit_item' function assumes commit message to be in UTF-8.
And that was so until ecaee80 (pretty: --format output should honor
logOutputEncoding, 2013-06-26) where conversion to logOutputEncoding was
added before calling 'format_commit_message'.

Correct this by converting a commit message to UTF-8 first (as it
assumed in 7e77df3 (pretty: two phase conversion for non utf-8 commits,
2013-04-19)). Only after that convert a commit message to an actual
logOutputEncoding.

Signed-off-by: Alexey Shumkin <Alex.Crezoff@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-21 11:13:30 -07:00
d928d81051 t4205, t6006: add tests that fail with i18n.logOutputEncoding set
Pretty format string %<(N,[ml]trunc)>%s truncates subject to a given
length with an appropriate padding. This works for non-ASCII texts when
i18n.logOutputEncoding is UTF-8 only (independently of a printed commit
message encoding) but does not work when i18n.logOutputEncoding is NOT
UTF-8.

There were no breakages as far as were no tests for the case
when both a commit message and logOutputEncoding are not UTF-8.

Add failing tests for that which will be fixed in the next patch.

Signed-off-by: Alexey Shumkin <Alex.Crezoff@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-21 11:11:50 -07:00
c82134a9f3 t4205 (log-pretty-format): use tformat rather than format
Use `tformat` to avoid using of `echo` to complete end of line.

Signed-off-by: Alexey Shumkin <Alex.Crezoff@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-21 11:10:10 -07:00
ee3efaf66c t4041, t4205, t6006, t7102: don't hardcode tested encoding value
The tested encoding is always available in a variable. Use it instead of
hardcoding. Also, to be in line with other tests use ISO8859-1
(uppercase) rather then iso8859-1.

Signed-off-by: Alexey Shumkin <Alex.Crezoff@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-21 11:10:06 -07:00
8ced8e40ac Git 2.0-rc4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-20 14:51:11 -07:00
3054c66bd4 RelNotes/2.0.0.txt: Fix several grammar issues, notably a lack of hyphens, double quotes, or articles
Signed-off-by: Jason St. John <jstjohn@purdue.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-20 14:51:06 -07:00
b2c851a8e6 Revert "Merge branch 'jc/graduate-remote-hg-bzr' (early part)"
Instead of showing a warning and working as before, fail and show
the message and force immediate upgrade from their upstream
repositories when these tools are run, per request from their
primary author.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-20 14:48:11 -07:00
ddb5432d23 rebase -i: test "Nothing to do" case with autostash
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-20 11:33:49 -07:00
897f964c0d CodingGuidelines: avoid "test <cond> -a/-o <cond>"
The construct is error-prone; "test" being built-in in most modern
shells, the reason to avoid "test <cond> && test <cond>" spawning
one extra process by using a single "test <cond> -a <cond>" no
longer exists.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-20 11:19:43 -07:00
dd63f169d9 move "--follow needs one pathspec" rule to diff_setup_done
Because of the way "--follow" is implemented, we must have
exactly one pathspec. "git log" enforces this restriction,
but other users of the revision traversal code do not. For
example, "git format-patch --follow" will segfault during
try_to_follow_renames, as we have no pathspecs at all.

We can push this check down into diff_setup_done, which is
probably a better place anyway. It is the diff code that
introduces this restriction, so other parts of the code
should not need to care themselves.

Reported-by: "Michael S. Tsirkin" <mst@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-20 11:09:03 -07:00
00a5b79466 Merge branch 'jc/graduate-remote-hg-bzr' (early part)
* 'jc/graduate-remote-hg-bzr' (early part):
  remote-helpers: point at their upstream repositories
  contrib: remote-helpers: add move warnings (v2.0)
  Revert "Merge branch 'fc/transport-helper-sync-error-fix'"
2014-05-19 17:12:36 -07:00
896ba14d65 remote-helpers: point at their upstream repositories
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 17:10:03 -07:00
0311086351 contrib: remote-helpers: add move warnings (v2.0)
The tools are now maintained out-of-tree, and they have a regression
in v2.0. It's better to start warning the users as soon as possible.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 17:10:03 -07:00
10e1feebb4 Revert "Merge branch 'fc/transport-helper-sync-error-fix'"
This reverts commit d508e4a8e2,
reversing changes made to e42552135a.

The author of the original topic says he broke the upcoming 2.0
release with something that relates to "synchronization crash
regression" while refusing to give further specifics, so this would
unfortunately be the safest option for the upcoming release.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 17:09:57 -07:00
df43b41afc Merge branch 'rh/prompt-pcmode-avoid-eval-on-refname'
* rh/prompt-pcmode-avoid-eval-on-refname:
  git-prompt.sh: don't assume the shell expands the value of PS1
2014-05-19 16:10:10 -07:00
1e4119c81b git-prompt.sh: don't assume the shell expands the value of PS1
Not all shells subject the prompt string to parameter expansion.  Test
whether the shell will expand the value of PS1, and use the result to
control whether raw ref names are included directly in PS1.

This fixes a regression introduced in commit 8976500 ("git-prompt.sh:
don't put unsanitized branch names in $PS1"):  zsh does not expand PS1
by default, but that commit assumed it did.  The bug resulted in
prompts containing the literal string '${__git_ps1_branch_name}'
instead of the actual branch name.

Reported-by: Caleb Thompson <caleb@calebthompson.io>
Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 16:09:53 -07:00
e4244eb395 rebase -i: handle "Nothing to do" case with autostash
When a user invokes

  $ git rebase -i @~3

with dirty files and rebase.autostash turned on, and exits the $EDITOR
with an empty buffer, the autostash fails to apply. Although the primary
focus of rr/rebase-autostash was to get the git-rebase--backend.sh
scripts to return control to git-rebase.sh, it missed this case in
git-rebase--interactive.sh. Since this case is unlike the other cases
which return control for housekeeping, assign it a special return status
and handle that return value explicitly in git-rebase.sh.

Reported-by: Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>
Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 15:36:24 -07:00
bd46cfae82 rebase --keep-empty -i: add test
There's some special code in rebase -i to deal
with --keep-empty.
Add test for this combination.

Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Neil Horman <nhorman@tuxdriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 13:44:00 -07:00
4e4b125c23 Documentation: replace: describe new --edit option
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 13:39:54 -07:00
ab77c309b6 replace: add --edit to usage string
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 13:39:54 -07:00
85f98fc037 replace: add tests for --edit
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 13:39:53 -07:00
2479083573 replace: die early if replace ref already exists
If a replace ref already exists for an object, it is
much better for the user if we error out before we
let the user edit the object, rather than after.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 13:39:53 -07:00
b6e3884092 replace: refactor checking ref validity
This will be useful in a following commit when we will
want to check if the ref already exists before we let the
user edit an object.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 13:39:53 -07:00
f22166b5fe replace: make sure --edit results in a different object
It's a bad idea to create a replace ref for an object
that points to the original object itself.

That's why we have to check if the result from editing
the original object is a different object and error out
if it isn't.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 13:39:53 -07:00
84c9dc2c5a commit: allow core.commentChar=auto for character auto selection
When core.commentChar is "auto", the comment char starts with '#' as
in default but if it's already in the prepared message, find another
char in a small subset. This should stop surprises because git strips
some lines unexpectedly.

Note that git is not smart enough to recognize '#' as the comment char
in custom templates and convert it if the final comment char is
different. It thinks '#' lines in custom templates as part of the
commit message. So don't use this with custom templates.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 13:37:25 -07:00
50b54fd72a config: be strict on core.commentChar
We don't support comment _strings_ (at least not yet). And multi-byte
character encoding could also be misinterpreted.

The test with two commas is updated because it violates this. It's
added with the patch that introduces core.commentChar in eff80a9
(Allow custom "comment char" - 2013-01-16). It's not clear to me _why_
that behavior is wanted.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 13:37:07 -07:00
496a69802b t4205 (log-pretty-formats): don't hardcode SHA-1 in expected outputs
The expected SHA-1 digests are always available in variables. Use
them instead of hardcoding.

That was introduced in a742f2a (t4205 (log-pretty-formats): don't
hardcode SHA-1 in expected outputs, 2013-06-26) but unfortunately was
not followed in 5e1361c (log: properly handle decorations with chained
tags, 2013-12-17)

Signed-off-by: Alexey Shumkin <Alex.Crezoff@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 11:24:46 -07:00
7dde48ea7a Merge branch 'lt/request-pull'
* lt/request-pull:
  request-pull: resurrect for-linus -> tags/for-linus DWIM
2014-05-19 10:35:36 -07:00
5714722f71 Merge branch 'jl/use-vsatisfy-correctly-for-2.0'
* jl/use-vsatisfy-correctly-for-2.0:
  git-gui: tolerate major version changes when comparing the git version
2014-05-19 10:35:24 -07:00
c29bf4a556 Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  fr: a lot of good fixups
2014-05-19 10:32:56 -07:00
3fc2aea770 Merge branch 'kb/fast-hashmap'
* kb/fast-hashmap:
  Documentation/technical/api-hashmap: remove source highlighting
2014-05-19 10:32:25 -07:00
c2538fd6ba Documentation/technical/api-hashmap: remove source highlighting
The highlighting was pretty, but unfortunately, the failure mode
when source-highlight is not installed was that the entire code
block disappears.

See https://bugs.debian.org/745591,
    https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1316810.

Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 10:31:36 -07:00
b3f0c5c04e git-gui: tolerate major version changes when comparing the git version
Since git 2.0.0 starting git gui in a submodule using a gitfile fails with
the following error:

   No working directory ../../../<path>

   couldn't change working directory
   to "../../../<path>": no such file or
   directory

This is because "git rev-parse --show-toplevel" is only run when git gui
sees a git version of at least 1.7.0 (which is the version in which the
--show-toplevel option was introduced). But "package vsatisfies" returns
false when the major version changes, which is not what we want here.

Fix that for both places where the git version is checked using vsatisfies
by appending a '-' to the version number. This tells vsatisfies that a
change of the major version is not considered to be a problem, as long as
the new major version is larger. This is done for both the place that
caused the reported bug and another spot where the git version is tested
for another feature.

Reported-by: Chris Packham <judge.packham@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@free.fr>
Helped-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Tested-by: Chris Packham <judge.packham@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-19 10:12:45 -07:00
a6e888397c fr: a lot of good fixups
Signed-off-by: Grégoire Paris <postmaster@greg0ire.fr>
Acked-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2014-05-17 19:08:59 +02:00
d952cbb190 request-pull: resurrect for-linus -> tags/for-linus DWIM
Older versions of Git before v1.7.10 did not DWIM

    $ git pull $URL for-linus

to the tag "tags/for-linus" and the users were required to say

    $ git pull $URL tags/for-linus

instead.  Because newer versions of Git works either way,
request-pull used to show tags/for-linus when asked

    $ git request-pull origin/master $URL for-linus

The recent updates broke this and in the output we see "for-linus"
without the "tags/" prefix.

As v1.7.10 is more than 2 years old, this should matter very little
in practice, but resurrecting it is very simple.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-16 10:18:25 -07:00
f7febbea07 git grep -O -i: if the pager is 'less', pass the '-I' option
When <command> happens to be the magic string "less", today

	git grep -O<command> -e<pattern>

helpfully passes +/<pattern> to less so you can navigate through
the results within a file using the n and shift+n keystrokes.

Alas, that doesn't do the right thing for a case-insensitive match,
i.e.

	git grep -i -O<command> -e<pattern>

For that case we should pass --IGNORE-CASE to "less" so that n and
shift+n can move between results ignoring case in the pattern.

The original patch came from msysgit and used "-i", but that was not
due to lack of support for "-I" but it merely overlooked that it
ought to work even when the pattern contains capital letters.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-15 12:49:23 -07:00
d6c8a05bd5 open_sha1_file: report "most interesting" errno
When we try to open a loose object file, we first attempt to
open in the local object database, and then try any
alternates. This means that the errno value when we return
will be from the last place we looked (and due to the way
the code is structured, simply ENOENT if we do not have have
any alternates).

This can cause confusing error messages, as read_sha1_file
checks for ENOENT when reporting a missing object. If errno
is something else, we report that. If it is ENOENT, but
has_loose_object reports that we have it, then we claim the
object is corrupted. For example:

    $ chmod 0 .git/objects/??/*
    $ git rev-list --all
    fatal: loose object b2d6fab18b92d49eac46dc3c5a0bcafabda20131 (stored in .git/objects/b2/d6fab18b92d49eac46dc3c5a0bcafabda20131) is corrupt

This patch instead keeps track of the "most interesting"
errno we receive during our search. We consider ENOENT to be
the least interesting of all, and otherwise report the first
error found (so problems in the object database take
precedence over ones in alternates). Here it is with this
patch:

    $ git rev-list --all
    fatal: failed to read object b2d6fab18b92d49eac46dc3c5a0bcafabda20131: Permission denied

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-15 10:03:06 -07:00
ff857e4ee8 argv-array: drop "detach" code
The argv_array_detach function (and associated free() function) was
really only useful for transferring ownership of the memory to a "struct
child_process". Now that we have an internal argv_array in that struct,
there are no callers left.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-15 09:49:12 -07:00
173fd1a1a4 get_importer: use run-command's internal argv_array
This saves a few lines and lets us avoid having to clean up
the memory manually when the command finishes.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-15 09:49:11 -07:00
2aeae40a75 get_exporter: use argv_array
This simplifies the code and avoids a fixed array size that
we might accidentally overflow. It also prevents a leak
after finish_command is run, by using the argv_array that
run-command manages for us.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-15 09:49:11 -07:00
e0ab2ac6c5 get_helper: use run-command's internal argv_array
The get_helper functions dynamically allocates an
argv_array, feeds it to start_command, and then returns. We
then have to later clean up the memory manually after
calling finish_command. We can make this simpler by just
using run-command's internal argv_array, which handles
cleanup for us.

This also prevents a memory leak in the case that
transport_take_over is used, in which case we free the child
in finish_connect, which does not manually free the array.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-15 09:49:11 -07:00
1823bea10f git_connect: use argv_array
This avoids magic numbers when we allocate fixed-size argv
arrays, and makes it more obvious that we are not
overflowing.

It is also the first step to fixing a memory leak. When
git_connect returns a child_process struct, the argv array
in the struct is dynamically allocated, but the individual
strings are not (they are either owned elsewhere, or are
freed). Later, in finish_connect, we free the array but
leave the strings alone.

This works for the child_process created by git_connect, but
if we use transport_take_over, we may also end up with a
child_process created by transport-helper's get_helper.
In that case, the strings are freshly allocated, and we
would want to free them.  However, we have no idea in
finish_connect which type we have.

By consistently using run-command's internal argv-array, we
do not have to worry about this issue at all; finish_command
takes care of it for us, and we can drop our manual free
entirely.

Note that this actually makes the get_helper leak slightly
worse; now we are leaking both the strings and the array.
But when we adjust it in a future patch, that leak will go
away entirely.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-15 09:49:10 -07:00
5eb7f7ead8 run_column_filter: use argv_array
We currently set up the argv array by hand in a fixed-size
stack-local array. Using an argv array is more readable, as
it handles buffer allocation us (not to mention makes it
obvious we do not overflow the array).

However, there's a more subtle benefit, too. We leave the
function having run start_command (with the child_process
in a static global), and then later run finish_command from
another function. That means when we run finish_command,
neither column_process.argv nor the memory it points to is
valid any longer.

Most of the time finish_command does not bother looking at
argv, but it may if it encounters an error (e.g., waitpid
failure or signal death). This is unusual, which is why
nobody has noticed. But by using run-command's built-in
argv_array, the memory ownership is handled for us
automatically.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-15 09:49:10 -07:00
c460c0ecdc run-command: store an optional argv_array
All child_process structs need to point to an argv. For
flexibility, we do not mandate the use of a dynamic
argv_array. However, because the child_process does not own
the memory, this can make memory management with a
separate argv_array difficult.

For example, if a function calls start_command but not
finish_command, the argv memory must persist. The code needs
to arrange to clean up the argv_array separately after
finish_command runs. As a result, some of our code in this
situation just leaks the memory.

To help such cases, this patch adds a built-in argv_array to
the child_process, which gets cleaned up automatically (both
in finish_command and when start_command fails).  Callers
may use it if they choose, but can continue to use the raw
argv if they wish.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-15 09:49:09 -07:00
5304810044 run_diff_files: do not look at uninitialized stat data
If we try to diff an index entry marked CE_VALID (because it
was marked with --assume-unchanged), we do not bother even
running stat() on the file to see if it was removed. This
started long ago with 540e694 (Prevent diff machinery from
examining assume-unchanged entries on worktree, 2009-08-11).

However, the subsequent code may look at our "struct stat"
and expect to find actual data; currently it will find
whatever cruft was left on the stack. This can cause
problems in two situations:

  1. We call match_stat_with_submodule with the stat data,
     so a submodule may be erroneously marked as changed.

  2. If --find-copies-harder is in effect, we pass all
     entries, even unchanged ones, to diff_change, so it can
     list them as rename/copy sources. Since we found no
     change, we assume that function will realize it and not
     actually display any diff output. However, we end up
     feeding it a bogus mode, leading it to sometimes claim
     there was a mode change.

We can fix both by splitting the CE_VALID and regular code
paths, and making sure only to look at the stat information
in the latter. Furthermore, we push the declaration of our
"struct stat" down into the code paths that actually set it,
so we cannot accidentally access it uninitialized in future
code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-15 09:35:33 -07:00
ad2f7255b3 git-show: fix 'git show -s' to not add extra terminator after merge commit
When git show -s is called for merge commit it prints extra newline
after any merge commit. This differs from output for commits with one
parent. Fix it by more thorough checking that diff output is disabled.

The code in question exists since commit 3969cf7db1. The additional
newline is really needed for cases when patch is requested, test
t4013-diff-various.sh contains cases which can demonstrate behavior when
the condition is restricted further.

Tests:

Added merge commit to 'set up a bit of history' case in t7007-show.sh to
cover the fix.

Existing tests are updated to demonstrate the new behaviour.  Earlier,
the tests that used "git show -s --pretty=format:%s", even though
"--pretty=format:%s" calls for item separator semantics and does not ask
for the terminating newline after the last item, expected the output to
end with such a newline.  They were relying on the buggy behaviour.  Use
of "--format=%s", which is equivalent to "--pretty=tformat:%s" that asks
for a terminating newline after each item, is a more realistic way to
use the command.

In the test 'merge log messages' the expected data is changed, because
it was explicitly listing the extra newline. Also the msg.nologff and
msg.nolognoff expected files are replaced by one msg.nolog, because they
were diffing because of the bug, and now there should be no difference.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-15 09:32:08 -07:00
248b68f3f2 wincred: avoid overwriting configured variables
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Acked-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-14 10:30:07 -07:00
ccfb5bdad9 wincred: add install target
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Acked-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-14 10:30:03 -07:00
670a7297c2 Documentation: mention config sources for @{upstream}
The earlier documentation made vague references to "is set to build
on".  Flesh that out with references to the config settings, so folks
can use git-config(1) to get more detail on what @{upstream} means.
For example, @{upstream} does not care about remote.pushdefault or
branch.<name>.pushremote.

Signed-off-by: W. Trevor King <wking@tremily.us>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-13 12:35:00 -07:00
6f1871fe0f contrib/subtree: allow adding an annotated tag
cmd_add_commit() is passed FETCH_HEAD by cmd_add_repository, which
is then rev-parsed into an object name.  However, if the user is
fetching a tag rather than a branch HEAD, such as by executing:

  $ git subtree add -P oldGit https://github.com/git/git.git tags/v1.8.0

the object name refers to a tag and is never peeled, and the git
commit-tree call (line 561) slaps us in the face because it doesn't
peel tags to commits.

Because peeling a committish doesn't do anything if it's already a
commit, fix by peeling the object name before assigning it to $rev
using peel_committish() from git:git-sh-setup.sh, a pre-existing
dependency of git-subtree.

Reported-by: Kevin Cagle <kcagle@micron.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: James Denholm <nod.helm@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-13 12:33:26 -07:00
6308767f0b Merge branch 'fc/prompt-zsh-read-from-file'
* fc/prompt-zsh-read-from-file:
  contrib: completion: fix 'eread()' namespace
2014-05-13 11:53:14 -07:00
66ab301c16 contrib: completion: fix 'eread()' namespace
Otherwise it might collide with a function of the same name in the
user's environment.

Suggested-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-13 11:52:51 -07:00
20c4fbf97d svn-fe: conform to pep8
Quite a large change, most of this was whitespace changes, though there
were a few places where I removed a comma or added a few characters.
Should pass through pep8 and pass every test.

Signed-off-by: William Giokas <1007380@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-12 13:42:52 -07:00
77583e7739 index-pack: distinguish missing objects from type errors
When we fetch a pack that does not contain an object we
expected to receive, we get an error like:

  $ git init --bare tmp.git && cd tmp.git
  $ git fetch ../parent.git
  [...]
  error: Could not read 964953ec7bcc0245cb1d0db4095455edd21a2f2e
  fatal: Failed to traverse parents of commit b8247b40caf6704fe52736cdece6d6aae87471aa
  error: ../parent.git did not send all necessary objects

This comes from the check_everything_connected rev-list. If
we try cloning the same repo (rather than a fetch), we end
up using index-pack's --check-self-contained-and-connected
option instead, which produces output like:

  $ git clone --no-local --bare parent.git tmp.git
  [...]
  fatal: object of unexpected type
  fatal: index-pack failed

Not only is the sha1 missing, but it's a misleading message.
There's no type problem, but rather a missing object
problem; we don't notice the difference because we simply
compare OBJ_BAD != OBJ_BLOB.  Let's provide a different
message for this case:

  $ git clone --no-local --bare parent.git tmp.git
  fatal: did not receive expected object 6b00a8c61ed379d5f925a72c1987c9c52129d364
  fatal: index-pack failed

While we're at it, let's also improve a true type mismatch
error to look like

  fatal: object 6b00a8c61ed379d5f925a72c1987c9c52129d364: expected type blob, got tree

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-12 11:27:50 -07:00
9c94389c3e utf8: make it easier to auto-update git_wcwidth()
The function git_wcwidth() returns for a given unicode code point the
width on the display:

 -1 for control characters,
  0 for combining or other non-visible code points
  1 for e.g. ASCII
  2 for double-width code points.

This table had been originally been extracted for one Unicode
version, probably 3.2.

We now use two tables these days, one for zero-width and another for
double-width.  Make it easier to update these tables to a later
version of Unicode by factoring out the table from utf8.c into
unicode_width.h and add the script update_unicode.sh to update the
table based on the latest Unicode specification files.

Thanks to Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se> and Kevin Bracey
<kevin@bracey.fi> for helping with their Unicode knowledge.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-12 10:38:01 -07:00
08460345b5 utf8.c: use a table for double_width
Refactor git_wcwidth() and replace the if-else-if chain.
Use the table double_width which is scanned by the bisearch() function,
which is already used to find combining code points.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-12 10:20:46 -07:00
a1a301114e t/lib-httpd: require SANITY prereq
Our test httpd setup will not generally run as root, because
Apache will want to setuid, and we do not set up the "User"
config directive. On some systems, like current Debian
unstable, Apache fails to start, and we skip the tests:

    $ sudo ./t5539-fetch-http-shallow.sh --debug
    1..0 # SKIP web server setup failed
    $ cat trash*t5539*/httpd/error.log
    [...]
    (22)Invalid argument: AH00024: Couldn't set permissions on
      the rewrite-map mutex; check User and Group directives
    AH00016: Configuration Failed

However, on other systems (reportedly Ubuntu 11.04), Apache
seems to start, and then bails during our tests with:

   getpwuid: couldn't determine user name from uid 4294967295,
     you probably need to modify the User directive
   Child 12037 returned a Fatal error...  Apache is exiting!

This may be related to the pre-fork/threading model in use
(note that the second one complains of the child dying).
However, it's not even worth investigating; in either case
we just want to skip the tests, and we already recommend
against running the test suite as root. Let's just
explicitly check this condition and skip the tests rather
than expecting Apache to do the right thing.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-12 10:19:23 -07:00
998f84075a Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (1307t0f921u)
2014-05-12 10:12:05 -07:00
1c3c8410ef l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (1307t0f921u)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2014-05-11 17:09:01 +03:00
502b0a1ad1 contrib: remove git-diffall
The functionality of the "git diffall" script in contrib/ was
incorporated into "git difftool" when the --dir-diff option was added
in v1.7.11 (ca. June, 2012).  Once difftool learned those features,
the diffall script became obsolete.

The only difference in behavior is that when comparing to the working
tree, difftool copies any files modified by the user back to the
working tree when the diff tool exits.  "git diffall" required the
--copy-back option to do the same.  All other diffall options have the
same meaning in difftool.

Make life easier for people choosing a tool to use by removing the old
diffall script.  A pointer in the release notes should be enough to
help current users migrate.

Helped-by: Tim Henigan <tim.henigan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-09 13:30:17 -07:00
b28aeab4ec Git 2.0-rc3 2014-05-09 11:23:55 -07:00
7d445f518e contrib: remove vim support instructions
The git support scripts started shipping in upstream vim in version
7.2 (2008-08-09).  Clean up contrib/ a little by removing the
instructions for people on older versions of vim.

RHEL 6 already has vim 7.2.something, so anyone on a reasonably modern
operating system should not be affected.  Users on RHEL 5 presumably
know that means sometimes missing out on niceties like syntax
highlighting, so this should be safe.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-09 11:17:21 -07:00
7234af6e7b Sync with 1.9.3 2014-05-09 11:00:48 -07:00
eea591373e Git 1.9.3
The third maintenance release for Git 1.9; contains all the fixes
that are scheduled to appear in Git 2.0 since 1.9.2.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-09 10:59:07 -07:00
4d4813a52f blame: correctly handle files regardless of autocrlf
If a file contained CRLF line endings in a repository with
core.autocrlf=input, then blame always marked lines as "Not
Committed Yet", even if they were unmodified.  Don't attempt to
convert the line endings when creating the fake commit so that blame
works correctly regardless of the autocrlf setting.

Reported-by: Ephrim Khong <dr.khong@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-08 14:43:49 -07:00
baa37bff9a mv: allow renaming to fix case on case insensitive filesystems
"git mv hello.txt Hello.txt" on a case insensitive filesystem
always triggers "destination already exists" error, because these
two names refer to the same path from the filesystem's point of
view, and requires the user to give "--force" when correcting the
case of the path recorded in the index and in the next commit.

Detect this case and allow it without requiring "--force".

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twitter.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-08 14:34:00 -07:00
482b8f3208 checkout.c: use ref_exists instead of file_exist
Change checkout.c to check if a ref exists instead of checking if a loose ref
file exists when deciding if to delete an orphaned log file. Otherwise, if a
ref only exists as a packed ref without a corresponding loose ref for the
currently checked out branch, we risk that the reflog will be deleted when we
switch to a different branch.

Update the reflog tests to check for this bug.

The following reproduces the bug:
$ git init-db
$ git config core.logallrefupdates true
$ git commit -m Initial --allow-empty
    [master (root-commit) bb11abe] Initial
$ git reflog master
    [8561dcb master@{0}: commit (initial): Initial]
$ find .git/{refs,logs} -type f | grep master
    [.git/refs/heads/master]
    [.git/logs/refs/heads/master]
$ git branch foo
$ git pack-refs --all
$ find .git/{refs,logs} -type f | grep master
    [.git/logs/refs/heads/master]
$ git checkout foo
$ find .git/{refs,logs} -type f | grep master
    ... reflog file is missing ...
$ git reflog master
    ... nothing ...

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-08 14:31:44 -07:00
4da588357a refs.c: add new functions reflog_exists and delete_reflog
Add two new functions, reflog_exists and delete_reflog, to hide the internal
reflog implementation (that they are files under .git/logs/...) from callers.
Update checkout.c to use these functions in update_refs_for_switch instead of
building pathnames and calling out to file access functions. Update reflog.c
to use these to check if the reflog exists. Now there are still many places
in reflog.c where we are still leaking the reflog storage implementation but
this at least reduces the number of such dependencies by one. Finally
change two places in refs.c itself to use the new function to check if a ref
exists or not isntead of build-path-and-stat(). Now, this is strictly not all
that important since these are in parts of refs that are implementing the
actual file storage backend but on the other hand it will not hurt either.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-08 14:31:43 -07:00
0170a3c6ee Revert "submodules: fix ambiguous absolute paths under Windows"
This reverts commit 4dce7d9b40,
which was originally done to help Windows but was almost
immediately reverted in msysGit, and the codebase kept this
unnecessary divergence for almost two years.

Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-08 13:57:11 -07:00
d30acb71ca Sync with maint
* maint:
  shell doc: remove stray "+" in example
  Start preparing for 1.9.3
2014-05-08 11:59:51 -07:00
e28dcdce13 shell doc: remove stray "+" in example
The git-shell(1) manpage says

	EXAMPLE
	       To disable interactive logins, displaying a greeting
		instead:

		+

		   $ chsh -s /usr/bin/git-shell
		   $ mkdir $HOME/git-shell-commands
[...]

The stray "+" has been there ever since the example was added in
v1.8.3-rc0~210^2 (shell: new no-interactive-login command to print a
custom message, 2013-03-09).  The "+" sign between paragraphs is
needed in asciidoc to attach extra paragraphs to a list item but here
it is not needed and ends up rendered as a literal "+".  Remove it.

A quick search with "grep -e '<p>+' /usr/share/doc/git/html/*.html"
doesn't find any other instances of this problem.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-08 10:26:26 -07:00
2b141241bf Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: Fix a couple of typos in the Swedish translation
2014-05-08 10:25:37 -07:00
86ae051274 Start preparing for 1.9.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-08 10:05:22 -07:00
bd51339355 Merge branch 'cl/p4-use-diff-tree' into maint
"git p4" dealing with changes in binary files were broken by a
change in 1.9 release.

* cl/p4-use-diff-tree:
  git-p4: format-patch to diff-tree change breaks binary patches
2014-05-08 10:01:32 -07:00
6eca9c0e87 Merge branch 'rh/prompt-pcmode-avoid-eval-on-refname' into maint
The shell prompt script (in contrib/), when using the PROMPT_COMMAND
interface, used an unsafe construct when showing the branch name in
$PS1.

* rh/prompt-pcmode-avoid-eval-on-refname:
  git-prompt.sh: don't put unsanitized branch names in $PS1
2014-05-08 10:01:18 -07:00
e79fcfcd3f Merge branch 'km/avoid-non-function-return-in-rebase' into maint
"git rebase" used a POSIX shell construct FreeBSD /bin/sh does not
work well with.

* km/avoid-non-function-return-in-rebase:
  Revert "rebase: fix run_specific_rebase's use of "return" on FreeBSD"
  rebase: avoid non-function use of "return" on FreeBSD
2014-05-08 10:01:06 -07:00
e230cd861b Merge branch 'tb/unicode-6.3-zero-width' into maint
Some more Unicode codepoints defined in Unicode 6.3 as having zero
width have been taught to our display column counting logic.

* tb/unicode-6.3-zero-width:
  utf8.c: partially update to version 6.3
2014-05-08 10:00:45 -07:00
16fefdc3eb Merge branch 'km/avoid-bs-in-shell-glob' into maint
Some tests used shell constructs that did not work well on FreeBSD

* km/avoid-bs-in-shell-glob:
  test: fix t5560 on FreeBSD
2014-05-08 10:00:36 -07:00
73edc54e90 Merge branch 'km/avoid-cp-a' into maint
Some tests used shell constructs that did not work well on FreeBSD

* km/avoid-cp-a:
  test: fix t7001 cp to use POSIX options
2014-05-08 09:59:41 -07:00
1dc51c663c Update draft release notes for 2.0
Describe one last minute one-liner fix for regression introduced in
1.9, and fix a grave mischaracterization on a recent remote-hg/bzr
change, pointed out by Felipe.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-07 15:51:17 -07:00
ccfa587787 Merge branch 'cl/p4-use-diff-tree'
Fixes a regression in 1.9.0 with an obviously correct single-liner.

* cl/p4-use-diff-tree:
  git-p4: format-patch to diff-tree change breaks binary patches
2014-05-07 14:39:29 -07:00
d78f340ed6 builtin/tag.c: show tag name to hint in the message editor
Display the tag name about to be added to the user during interactive
editing.

Signed-off-by: Thorsten Glaser <tg@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Hartmann <richih@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-07 14:25:25 -07:00
ae352c7f37 merge-recursive.c: fix case-changing merge bug
On a case-insensitive filesystem, when merging, a file would be
wrongly deleted from the working tree if an incoming commit had
renamed it changing only its case.  When merging a rename, the file
with the old name would be deleted -- but since the filesystem
considers the old name to be the same as the new name, the new
file would in fact be deleted.

We avoid this by not deleting files that have a case-clone in the
index at stage 0.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twitter.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-07 13:53:10 -07:00
b3275838d9 pager: remove 'S' from $LESS by default
By default, Git used to set $LESS to -FRSX if $LESS was not set by
the user. The FRX flags actually make sense for Git (F and X because
sometimes the output Git pipes to less is short, and R because Git
pipes colored output). The S flag (chop long lines), on the other
hand, is not related to Git and is a matter of user preference. Git
should not decide for the user to change LESS's default.

More specifically, the S flag harms users who review untrusted code
within a pager, since a patch looking like:

    -old code;
    +new good code; [... lots of tabs ...] malicious code;

would appear identical to:

    -old code;
    +new good code;

Users who prefer the old behavior can still set the $LESS environment
variable to -FRSX explicitly, or set core.pager to 'less -S'.

The documentation in config.txt is made a bit longer to keep both an
example setting the 'S' flag (needed to recover the old behavior)
and an example showing how to unset a flag set by Git.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-07 13:41:04 -07:00
7d7d680221 silence a bunch of format-zero-length warnings
This can be observed in many versions of gcc and still exists with 4.9.0:

  wt-status.c: In function ‘wt_status_print_unmerged_header’:
  wt-status.c:191:2: warning: zero-length gnu_printf format string [-Wformat-zero-length]
    status_printf_ln(s, c, "");
    ^

The user have long been told to pass -Wno-format-zero-length, but a
patch that avoids warning altogether is not too noisy, so let's do
so.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-07 11:20:54 -07:00
26ecfe3e20 grep: use run-command's "dir" option for --open-files-in-pager
Git generally changes directory to the repository root on
startup.  When running "grep --open-files-in-pager" from a
subdirectory, we chdir back to the original directory before
running the pager, so that we can feed the relative
pathnames to the pager.

We currently do this chdir manually, but we can ask
run_command to do it for us. This is fewer lines of code,
and as a bonus, the chdir is limited to the child process,
which avoids any unexpected surprises for code running after
the pager (there isn't any currently, but this is
future-proofing).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-07 10:40:01 -07:00
749b668c7d git-p4: format-patch to diff-tree change breaks binary patches
When applying binary patches a full index is required. format-patch
already handles this, but diff-tree needs '--full-index' argument
to always output full index. When git-p4 runs git-apply to test
the patch, git-apply rejects the patch due to abbreviated blob
object names. This is the error message git-apply emits in this
case:

    error: cannot apply binary patch to '<filename>' without full index line
    error: <filename>: patch does not apply

Signed-off-by: Tolga Ceylan <tolga.ceylan@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-07 10:27:22 -07:00
80dad719fb l10n: Fix a couple of typos in the Swedish translation
Thanks-to: Anders Jonsson <anders.jonsson@norsjovallen.se>
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2014-05-07 07:06:37 +01:00
1c65d3b9d3 RelNotes/2.0.0: Grammar and typo fixes
Signed-off-by: Øyvind A. Holm <sunny@sunbase.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-06 17:05:34 -07:00
602efc4f90 contrib/subtree/Makefile: clean up rule for "clean"
git:Documentation/Makefile and others establish "RM ?= rm -f" as a
convention for rm calls in clean rules, hence follow this convention
instead of simply forcing clean to use rm.

subproj and mainline no longer need to be removed in clean, as they are
no longer created in git:contrib/subtree by "make test". Hence, remove
the rm call for those folders.

Other makefiles don't remove "*~" files, remove the rm call to prevent
unexpected behaviour in the future. Similarly, clean doesn't remove the
installable file, so rectify this.

Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: James Denholm <nod.helm@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-06 15:36:17 -07:00
c7abbb9863 contrib/subtree/Makefile: clean up rules to generate documentation
git:Documentation/Makefile establishes asciidoc/xmlto calls as being
handled through their appropriate variables, Hence, change to bring into
congruency with.

Similarly, MANPAGE_XSL exists in git:Documentation/Makefile, while
MANPAGE_NORMAL_XSL does not outside contrib/subtree. Hence, replace
MANPAGE_NORMAL_XSL with MANPAGE_XSL.

Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: James Denholm <nod.helm@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-06 15:35:52 -07:00
2c45009b73 contrib/subtree/Makefile: s/libexecdir/gitexecdir/
$(libexecdir) isn't used anywhere else in the project, while
$(gitexecdir) is the standard in the other appropriate makefiles. Hence,
replace the former with the latter.

Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: James Denholm <nod.helm@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-06 15:35:41 -07:00
8e2a5ccad1 contrib/subtree/Makefile: use GIT-VERSION-FILE
GVF is already being used in most/all other makefiles in the project,
and has been for _quite_ a while. Hence, drop file-unique gitver and
replace with GIT_VERSION.

Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: James Denholm <nod.helm@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-06 15:35:31 -07:00
10f5b034b6 api-strbuf.txt: add docs for _trim and _ltrim
API documentation for strbuf does not document strbuf_trim() or
strbuf_ltrim(). Add documentation for these two functions.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-06 15:33:58 -07:00
3bb55e8aa8 strbuf: use _rtrim and _ltrim in strbuf_trim
strbuf_trim() strips whitespace from the end, then the beginning of
a strbuf.  Those operations are duplicated in strbuf_rtrim() and
strbuf_ltrim().

Replace strbuf_trim() implementation with calls to strbuf_rtrim(),
then strbuf_ltrim().

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-06 15:33:39 -07:00
4874f544f1 Bump core.deltaBaseCacheLimit to 96m
The default of 16m causes serious thrashing for large delta chains
combined with large files.

Here are some benchmarks (pu variant of git blame):

time git blame -C src/xdisp.c >/dev/null

for a repository of Emacs repacked with git gc --aggressive (v1.9,
resulting in a window size of 250) located on an SSD drive.  The file in
question has about 30000 lines, 1Mb of size, and a history with about
2500 commits.

    16m (previous default):
    real	3m33.936s
    user	2m15.396s
    sys	1m17.352s

    32m:
    real	3m1.319s
    user	2m8.660s
    sys	0m51.904s

    64m:
    real	2m20.636s
    user	1m55.780s
    sys	0m23.964s

    96m:
    real	2m5.668s
    user	1m50.784s
    sys	0m14.288s

    128m:
    real	2m4.337s
    user	1m50.764s
    sys	0m12.832s

    192m:
    real	2m3.567s
    user	1m49.508s
    sys	0m13.312s

Signed-off-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-06 15:32:21 -07:00
ff0a80af72 let clang use the constant-return error() macro
Commit e208f9c converted error() into a macro to make its
constant return value more apparent to calling code.  Commit
5ded807 prevents us using this macro with clang, since
clang's -Wunused-value is smart enough to realize that the
constant "-1" is useless in some contexts.

However, since the last commit puts the constant behind an
inline function call, this is enough to prevent the
-Wunused-value warning on both modern gcc and clang. So we
can now re-enable the macro when compiling with clang.

Tested with clang 3.3, 3.4, and 3.5.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-06 15:30:40 -07:00
87fe5df365 inline constant return from error() function
Commit e208f9c introduced a macro to turn error() calls
into:

  (error(), -1)

to make the constant return value more visible to the
calling code (and thus let the compiler make better
decisions about the code).

This works well for code like:

  return error(...);

but the "-1" is superfluous in code that just calls error()
without caring about the return value. In older versions of
gcc, that was fine, but gcc 4.9 complains with -Wunused-value.

We can work around this by encapsulating the constant return
value in a static inline function, as gcc specifically
avoids complaining about unused function returns unless the
function has been specifically marked with the
warn_unused_result attribute.

We also use the same trick for config_error_nonbool and
opterror, which learned the same error technique in a469a10.

Reported-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-06 15:30:38 -07:00
daa22c6f8d config: preserve config file permissions on edits
Users may already store sensitive data such as imap.pass in
.git/config; making the file world-readable when "git config"
is called to edit means their password would be compromised
on a shared system.

[v2: updated for section renames, as noted by Junio]

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-06 12:23:58 -07:00
3330311c91 contrib/subtree/Makefile: scrap unused $(gitdir)
In 7ff8463dba, the references to gitdir
were removed but the assignment itself wasn't. Hence, drop the gitdir
assignment.

Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: James Denholm <nod.helm@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-06 12:20:31 -07:00
a08e803d76 MSVC: link dynamically to the CRT
Dynamic linking is generally preferred over static linking, and MSVCRT.dll
has been integral part of Windows for a long time.

This also fixes linker warnings for _malloc and _free in zlib.lib, which
seems to be compiled for MSVCRT.dll already.

The DLL version also exports some of the CRT initialization functions,
which are hidden in the static libcmt.lib (e.g. __wgetmainargs, required by
subsequent Unicode patches).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Acked-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Marat Radchenko <marat@slonopotamus.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-06 09:52:12 -07:00
14ac2864dc commit: accept more date formats for "--date"
Right now we pass off the string found by "--date" straight
to the fmt_ident function, which will use our strict
parse_date to normalize it. However, this means obvious
things like "--date=now" or "--date=2.days.ago" will not
work.

Instead, let's fallback to the approxidate function to
handle this for us. Note that we must try parse_date
ourselves first, even though approxidate will try strict
parsing itself. The reason is that approxidate throws away
any timezone information it sees from the strict parsing,
and we want to preserve it. So asking for:

  git commit --date="@1234567890 -0700"

continues to set the date in -0700, regardless of what the
local timezone is.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 14:15:22 -07:00
b7242b8c9e commit: print "Date" line when the user has set date
When we make a commit and the author is not the same as the
committer (e.g., because you used "-c $commit" or
"--author=$somebody"), we print the author's name and email
in both the commit-message template and as part of the
commit summary. This is a safety check to give the user a
chance to confirm that we are doing what they expect.

This patch brings the same safety for the "date" field,
which may be set by "-c" or by using "--date".  Note that we
explicitly do not set it for $GIT_AUTHOR_DATE, as it is
probably not of interest when "git commit" is being fed its
parameters by a script.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 14:14:21 -07:00
d105324655 pretty: make show_ident_date public
We use this function internally to format "Date" lines in
commit logs, but other parts of the code will want it, too.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 14:13:00 -07:00
4701026352 commit: use split_ident_line to compare author/committer
Instead of string-wise comparing the author/committer lines
with their timestamps truncated, we can use split_ident_line
and ident_cmp. These functions are more robust than our
ad-hoc parsing, though in practice it should not matter, as
we just generated these ident lines ourselves.

However, this will also allow us easy access to the
timestamp and tz fields in future patches.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 14:12:27 -07:00
f26443da04 CodingGuidelines: on splitting a long line
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 14:08:16 -07:00
5db9ab82b9 CodingGuidelines: on comparison
There are arguments for writing a conditional as "a < b" rather than
"b > a", or vice versa.  Let's give guidance on which we prefer.

See http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/3903/focus=4126
for the original discussion.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 13:44:46 -07:00
691d0dd0a9 CodingGuidelines: do not call the conditional statement "if()"
The point immediately before it is about having SP after the control
keyword.  Spell it out as 'an "if" statement' instead.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 13:26:07 -07:00
6117a3d494 CodingGuidelines: give an example for shell function preamble
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 13:24:57 -07:00
9dbe780174 CodingGuidelines: give an example for control statements
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 13:24:57 -07:00
6a49909b52 CodingGuidelines: give an example for redirection
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 13:24:57 -07:00
79fc3ca123 CodingGuidelines: give an example for case/esac statement
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 13:24:57 -07:00
dd30800bcd CodingGuidelines: once it is in, it is not worth the code churn
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 13:24:57 -07:00
b4f86a4ce8 Git 2.0-rc2 2014-05-02 13:15:52 -07:00
648d9c1827 Merge branch 'mw/symlinks'
A finishing touch fix to a new change already in 'master'.

* mw/symlinks:
  setup: fix windows path buffer over-stepping
2014-05-02 13:11:03 -07:00
06229a6ee0 Merge branch 'km/git-svn-workaround-older-getopt-long'
* km/git-svn-workaround-older-getopt-long:
  t9117: use --prefix "" instead of --prefix=""
2014-05-02 13:10:58 -07:00
f7003da0f4 Merge branch 'rh/prompt-pcmode-avoid-eval-on-refname'
* rh/prompt-pcmode-avoid-eval-on-refname:
  git-prompt.sh: don't put unsanitized branch names in $PS1
2014-05-02 13:10:53 -07:00
b809658141 Merge branch 'mk/doc-git-gui-display-untracked'
* mk/doc-git-gui-display-untracked:
  Documentation: git-gui: describe gui.displayuntracked
2014-05-02 13:10:47 -07:00
839fa9c500 compat/bswap.h: restore preference __BIG_ENDIAN over BIG_ENDIAN
The previous commit swaps the order we check the macros defined by
the compiler and the system headers from the original.  Since the
order of check should not matter (i.e. it is insane to define both
__BIG_ENDIAN and friends and BIG_ENDIAN and friends and in a
conflicting way), it is the most conservative thing to do not to
change it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 12:36:10 -07:00
3cf6bb3406 compat/bswap.h: detect endianness on more platforms that don't use BYTE_ORDER
Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-05-02 12:31:59 -07:00
1d39dbecc2 docs: document RUN_SETUP_GENTLY and clarify RUN_SETUP
We only said what happens when we find the Git directory under
RUN_SETUP, without saying what happens otherwise.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twitter.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:28:21 -07:00
f5efd5196c t5000-tar-tree.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:10 -07:00
ce21ccfae0 t4204-patch-id.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:09 -07:00
6003eb13c6 t4119-apply-config.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:09 -07:00
991a9c3af9 t4116-apply-reverse.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:08 -07:00
274447aa6b t4057-diff-combined-paths.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:08 -07:00
7c0c51baa4 t4038-diff-combined.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:07 -07:00
20cb28baf9 t4036-format-patch-signer-mime.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:07 -07:00
54835fc57e t4014-format-patch.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:06 -07:00
4ff03347ec t4013-diff-various.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:06 -07:00
e6ce6f4c7a t4012-diff-binary.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:05 -07:00
38b2e5d12c t4010-diff-pathspec.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:05 -07:00
e1d6b55d5d t4006-diff-mode.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:04 -07:00
a4cf6b4b91 t3910-mac-os-precompose.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:04 -07:00
cba1262100 t3905-stash-include-untracked.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 11:08:03 -07:00
7e76a2f975 Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: improve hint for autocorrected command execution
  l10n: de.po: translate 45 new messages
  l10n: de.po: correct translation of "completed" after resolving deltas
  l10n: zh_CN.po: translate 46 new messages (2229t0f0u)
  l10n: fr translation for v2.0.0rc0 (2228t)
  l10n: Update Swedish translation (2228t0f0u)
  l10n: vi.po (2228t): Update and minor fix
  l10n: git.pot: v2.0.0 round 1 (45 new, 28 removed)
2014-04-30 11:01:42 -07:00
b2feb64309 Revert the whole "ask curl-config" topic for now
Postpone this a bit during the feature freeze and retry the effort
in the next cycle.
2014-04-30 11:00:15 -07:00
de3d8bb773 rerere: fix for merge.conflictstyle
If we use a different conflict style `git rerere forget` is not able
to find the matching conflict SHA-1 because the diff generated is
actually different from what `git merge` generated, due to the
XDL_MERGE_* option differences among the codepaths.

The fix is to call git_xmerge_config() so that git_xmerge_style is set
properly and the diffs match.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-30 10:30:02 -07:00
714c71b2b1 t1050-large.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:39 -07:00
c9e454ccef t1020-subdirectory.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:37 -07:00
77317c0c5c t1004-read-tree-m-u-wf.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:36 -07:00
7f311eb54b t1003-read-tree-prefix.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:35 -07:00
9b3bc877f0 t1002-read-tree-m-u-2way.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:33 -07:00
142efa3e43 t1001-read-tree-m-2way.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:32 -07:00
86e3043217 t1000-read-tree-m-3way.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:30 -07:00
dd64267fe2 t0300-credentials.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:29 -07:00
4d713567f9 t0030-stripspace.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:28 -07:00
8deeab4a24 t0026-eol-config.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:27 -07:00
0bf6414996 t0025-crlf-auto.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:25 -07:00
def226bdbb t0020-crlf.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:24 -07:00
8fc5593c53 t0010-racy-git.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:23 -07:00
88619b3ee4 t0001-init.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:44:22 -07:00
33c297aacc sequencer: do not update/refresh index if the lock cannot be held
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:43:16 -07:00
16fc2b7a9c ewah: delete unused ewah_read_mmap_native declaration
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:43:16 -07:00
a0a2f7d79c ewah: fix constness of ewah_read_mmap
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:43:15 -07:00
b892bb45ea replace: add --edit option
This allows you to run:

    git replace --edit SHA1

to get dumped in an editor with the contents of the object
for SHA1. The result is then read back in and used as a
"replace" object for SHA1. The writing/reading is
type-aware, so you get to edit "ls-tree" output rather than
the binary tree format.

Missing documentation and tests.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:38:33 -07:00
479bd75751 replace: factor object resolution out of replace_object
As we add new options that operate on objects before
replacing them, we'll want to be able to feed raw sha1s
straight into replace_object. Split replace_object into the
object-resolution part and the actual replacement.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:38:33 -07:00
70c7bd6daf replace: use OPT_CMDMODE to handle modes
By using OPT_CMDMODE, the mutual exclusion between modes is
taken care of for us. It also makes it easy for us to
maintain a single variable with the mode, which makes its
intent more clear. We can use a single switch() to make sure
we have covered all of the modes.

This ends up breaking even in code size, but the win will be
much bigger when we start adding more modes.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:38:32 -07:00
3f495f67bc replace: refactor command-mode determination
The git-replace command has three modes: listing, deleting,
and replacing. The first two are selected explicitly. If
none is selected, we fallback to listing when there are no
arguments, and replacing otherwise.

Let's figure out up front which operation we are going to
do, before getting into the application logic. That lets us
simplify our option checks (e.g., we currently have to check
whether a useless "--force" is given both along with an
explicit list, as well as with an implicit one).

This saves some lines, makes the logic easier to follow, and
will facilitate further cleanups.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:38:32 -07:00
8ccc4e4260 test/send-email: to-cover, cc-cover tests
Add tests for the new feature.

Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 12:01:04 -07:00
f515c904fb git-send-email: two new options: to-cover, cc-cover
Allow extracting To/Cc addresses from the first patch
(typically the cover letter), and use them as To/Cc addresses of the
remainder of the series.

Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 11:27:41 -07:00
791643a865 imap-send: use git-credential
git-imap-send was directly prompting for a password rather than using
git-credential. git-send-email, on the other hand, supports git-credential.

This is a necessary improvement for users that use two factor authentication, as
they should not be expected to remember all of their app specific passwords.

Signed-off-by: Dan Albert <danalbert@google.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 10:16:46 -07:00
750b2e4785 t3910: show failure of core.precomposeunicode with decomposed filenames
If you have existing decomposed filenames in your git
repository (e.g., that were created with older versions of
git that did not precompose unicode), a modern git with
core.precomposeunicode set does not handle them well.

The problem is that we normalize the paths coming from the
disk into their precomposed form, and then compare them
against the literal bytes in the index. This makes things
better if you have the precomposed form in the index. It
makes things worse if you actually have the decomposed form
in the index.

As a result, paths with decomposed filenames may have their
precomposed variants listed as untracked files (even though
the precomposed variants do not exist on-disk at all).

This patch just adds a test to demonstrate the breakage.
Some possible fixes are:

  1. Tell everyone that NFD in the git repo is wrong, and
     they should make a new commit to normalize all their
     in-repo files to be precomposed.

     This is probably not the right thing to do, because it
     still doesn't fix checkouts of old history. And it
     spreads the problem to people on byte-preserving
     filesystems (like ext4), because now they have to start
     precomposing their filenames as they are adde to git.

  2. Do all index filename comparisons using a UTF-8 aware
     comparison function when core.precomposeunicode is set.
     This would probably have bad performance, and somewhat
     defeats the point of converting the filenames at the
     readdir level in the first place.

  3. Convert index filenames to their precomposed form when
     we read the index from disk. This would be efficient,
     but we would have to be careful not to write the
     precomposed forms back out to disk.

  4. Introduce some infrastructure to efficiently match up
     the precomposed/decomposed forms. We already do
     something similar for case-insensitive files using
     name-hash.c. We might be able to adapt that strategy
     here.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 09:59:44 -07:00
76e7c8a7ed compat/poll: sleep 1 millisecond to avoid busy wait
SwitchToThread() only gives away the rest of the current time slice
to another thread in the current process. So if the thread that feeds
the file decscriptor we're polling is not in the current process, we
get busy-waiting.

I played around with this quite a bit. After trying some more complex
schemes, I found that what worked best is to just sleep 1 millisecond
between iterations. Though it's a very short time, it still completely
eliminates the busy wait condition, without hurting perf.

There code uses SleepEx(1, TRUE) to sleep. See this page for a good
discussion of why that is better than calling SwitchToThread, which
is what was used previously:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1383943/switchtothread-vs-sleep1

Note that calling SleepEx(0, TRUE) does *not* solve the busy wait.

The most striking case was when testing on a UNC share with a large repo,
on a single CPU machine. Without the fix, it took 4 minutes 15 seconds,
and with the fix it took just 1:08! I think it's because git-upload-pack's
busy wait was eating the CPU away from the git process that's doing the
real work. With multi-proc, the timing is not much different, but tons of
CPU time is still wasted, which can be a killer on a server that needs to
do bunch of other things.

I also tested the very fast local case, and didn't see any measurable
difference. On a big repo with 4500 files, the upload-pack took about 2
seconds with and without the fix.

[jc: this was first accepted in msysgit tree in May 2012 via a pull
request and Paolo Bonzini has also accepted the same fix to Gnulib
around the same time; see $gmane/247518 for a bit more detail]

Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Acked-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Acked-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-29 09:55:38 -07:00
94f94fcbf2 l10n: de.po: improve hint for autocorrected command execution
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-04-29 06:12:31 +02:00
74c17bb84b l10n: de.po: translate 45 new messages
Translate 45 new messages came from git.pot update in 5e078fc
(l10n: git.pot: v2.0.0 round 1 (45 new, 28 removed)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
2014-04-29 06:12:25 +02:00
3957310734 l10n: de.po: correct translation of "completed" after resolving deltas
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-04-29 06:11:09 +02:00
c0459ca4dc pager: do allow spawning pager recursively
This reverts commit 88e8f908f2, which
tried to allow

    GIT_PAGER="git -p column --mode='dense color'" git -p branch

and still wanted to avoid "git -p column" to invoke itself.  However,
this falls into "don't do that -p then" category.

In particular, inside "git log", with results going through less, a
potentially interesting commit may be found and from there inside
"less", the user may want to execute "git show <commit>".  Before
the commit being reverted, this used to show the patch in less but
it no longer does.

Signed-off-by: Jörn Engel <joern@logfs.org>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Acked-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-28 16:03:22 -07:00
d8779e1e25 Merge branch 'db/make-with-curl'
It turns out that some platforms do ship without curl-config even
though they build with the hardcoded default -lcurl and rely on it
to work.

* db/make-with-curl:
  Makefile: default to -lcurl when no CURL_CONFIG or CURLDIR
2014-04-28 15:48:12 -07:00
5f11a7aad0 Merge branch 'jk/external-diff-use-argv-array' (early part)
Crash fix for codepath that miscounted the necessary size for an
array when spawning an external diff program.

* 'jk/external-diff-use-argv-array' (early part):
  run_external_diff: use an argv_array for the command line
2014-04-28 15:47:35 -07:00
7e6ac6e439 blame: large-scale performance rewrite
The previous implementation used a single sorted linear list of blame
entries for organizing all partial or completed work.  Every subtask had
to scan the whole list, with most entries not being relevant to the
task.  The resulting run-time was quadratic to the number of separate
chunks.

This change gives every subtask its own data to work with.  Subtasks are
organized into "struct origin" chains hanging off particular commits.
Commits are organized into a priority queue, processing them in commit
date order in order to keep most of the work affecting a particular blob
collated even in the presence of an extensive merge history.

For large files with a diversified history, a speedup by a factor of 3
or more is not unusual.

Signed-off-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-28 14:38:15 -07:00
f3f11fa6a5 Makefile: default to -lcurl when no CURL_CONFIG or CURLDIR
The original implementation of CURL_CONFIG support did not match the
original behavior of using -lcurl when CURLDIR was not set. This broke
implementations that were lacking curl-config but did have libcurl
installed along system libraries, such as MSysGit. In other words, the
assumption that curl-config is always installed was incorrect.

Instead, if CURL_CONFIG is empty or returns an empty result (e.g. due
to curl-config being missing), use the old behavior of falling back to
-lcurl.

Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-28 14:29:14 -07:00
076cbd6341 commit: do not complain of empty messages from -C
When we pick another commit's message, we die() immediately
if we find that it's empty and we are not going to run an
editor (i.e., when running "-C" instead of "-c").  However,
this check is redundant and harmful.

It's redundant because we will already notice the empty
message later, after we would have run the editor, and die
there (just as we would for a regular, not "-C" case, where
the user provided an empty message in the editor).

It's harmful for a few reasons:

  1. It does not respect --allow-empty-message. As a result,
     a "git rebase -i" cannot "pick" such a commit. So you
     cannot even go back in time to fix it with a "reword"
     or "edit" instruction.

  2. It does not take into account other ways besides the
     editor to modify the message. For example, "git commit
     -C empty-commit -m foo" could take the author
     information from empty-commit, but add a message to it.
     There's more to do to make that work correctly (and
     right now we explicitly forbid "-C with -m"), but this
     removes one roadblock.

  3. The existing check is not enough to prevent segfaults.
     We try to find the "\n\n" header/body boundary in the
     commit. If it is at the end of the string (i.e., no
     body), _or_ if we cannot find it at all (i.e., a
     truncated commit object), we consider the message
     empty. With "-C", that's OK; we die in either case. But
     with "-c", we continue on, and in the case of a
     truncated commit may end up dereferencing NULL+2.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-28 09:58:09 -07:00
35936f8fc3 Git 2.0-rc1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-25 10:03:41 -07:00
cbc60b6720 git tag --contains: avoid stack overflow
In large repos, the recursion implementation of contains(commit,
commit_list) may result in a stack overflow. Replace the recursion with
a loop to fix it.

This problem is more apparent on Windows than on Linux, where the stack
is more limited by default.

See also this thread on the msysGit list:

	https://groups.google.com/d/topic/msysgit/FqT6boJrb2g/discussion

[jes: re-written to imitate the original recursion more closely]

Thomas Braun pointed out several documentation shortcomings.

Tests are run only if ulimit -s is available.  This means they cannot
be run on Windows.

Signed-off-by: Jean-Jacques Lafay <jeanjacques.lafay@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Tested-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-25 09:35:20 -07:00
6127ff63cf setup: fix windows path buffer over-stepping
Fix a buffer over-stepping issue triggered by providing an absolute path
that is similar to the work tree path.

abspath_part_inside_repo() may currently increment the path pointer by
offset_1st_component() + wtlen, which is too much, since
offset_1st_component() is a subset of wtlen.

For the *nix-style prefix '/', this does (by luck) not cause any issues,
since offset_1st_component() is 1 and there will always be a '/' or '\0'
that can "absorb" this.

In the case of DOS-style prefixes though, the offset_1st_component() is
3 and this can potentially over-step the string buffer. For example if

    work_tree = "c:/r"
    path      = "c:/rl"

Then wtlen is 4, and incrementing the path pointer by (3 + 4) would
end up 2 bytes outside a string buffer of length 6.

Similarly if

    work_tree = "c:/r"
    path      = "c:/rl/d/a"

Then (since the loop starts by also incrementing the pointer one step),
this would mean that the function would miss checking if "c:/rl/d" could
be the work_tree, arguably this is unlikely though, since it would only
be possible with symlinks on windows.

Fix this by simply avoiding to increment by offset_1st_component() and
wtlen at the same time.

Signed-off-by: Martin Erik Werner <martinerikwerner@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-24 13:46:13 -07:00
1697bf30df Merge branch 'jk/pack-bitmap'
A last minute (and hopefully the last) fix to avoid coredumps due
to an incorrect pointer arithmetic.

* jk/pack-bitmap:
  ewah_bitmap.c: do not assume size_t and eword_t are the same size
2014-04-24 12:31:51 -07:00
d508e4a8e2 Merge branch 'fc/transport-helper-sync-error-fix'
Make sure the marks are not written out when the transport helper
did not finish happily, to avoid leaving a marks file that is out of
sync with the reality.

* fc/transport-helper-sync-error-fix:
  t5801 (remote-helpers): cleanup environment sets
  transport-helper: fix sync issue on crashes
  transport-helper: trivial cleanup
  transport-helper: propagate recvline() error pushing
  remote-helpers: make recvline return an error
  transport-helper: remove barely used xchgline()
2014-04-24 12:31:34 -07:00
e42552135a Merge branch 'db/make-with-curl'
Ask curl-config how to link with the curl library, instead of
having only a limited configurability knobs in the Makefile.

* db/make-with-curl:
  Makefile: allow static linking against libcurl
  Makefile: use curl-config to determine curl flags
2014-04-24 12:31:27 -07:00
c15bb0cad7 mergetool: document the default for --[no-]prompt
The original motivation of using the prompt was to confirm to run a
tool on this particular (as opposed to another) path, but the user
can also take the prompt as to confirm to run this (as opposed to
some other) tool.  The latter of which of course is irritating for
those who told which exact tool to use, which is the reason why we
are flipping the default.

During the review discussion of the patch, many people (including
the maintainer) missed that a user can find the prompt useful way to
skip running the tool on particular paths.  Clarify it by adding a
brief half-sentence to the description.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-24 11:29:05 -07:00
9742fb7e53 git-remote-mediawiki: fix encoding issue for UTF-8 media files
When a media file contains valid UTF-8, git-remote-mediawiki tried to be
too clever about the encoding, and the call to utf8::downgrade() on the
downloaded content was failing with

  Wide character in subroutine entry at git-remote-mediawiki line 583.

Instead, use $response->decode() to apply decoding linked to the
Content-Encoding: header, and return the content without attempting any
charset decoding.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:22:54 -07:00
1c4ea83902 git-remote-mediawiki: allow stop/start-ing the test server
Previously, the user had to launch a complete re-install after a lighttpd
stop (e.g. a reboot).

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:22:53 -07:00
4717659144 p5302-pack-index.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:17:03 -07:00
be194d53c0 lib-gpg.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:17:03 -07:00
03db917867 lib-cvs.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:17:03 -07:00
5a4352024a lib-credential.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:17:02 -07:00
9e5878fbed git-web--browse.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:17:02 -07:00
d0ea45bfc7 git-stash.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:17:02 -07:00
728fc79c00 git-rebase.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:17:02 -07:00
f257482c9c git-rebase--merge.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:17:02 -07:00
eadf619cd4 git-pull.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:17:02 -07:00
faf58f4ee6 appp.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:17:01 -07:00
5c00acdd25 t7900-subtree.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:17:01 -07:00
0eca37c63a test-gitmw-lib.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:17:01 -07:00
9bfeaa0bcf t9365-continuing-queries.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 15:17:01 -07:00
7bbc458b44 t9117: use --prefix "" instead of --prefix=""
Versions of Perl's Getopt::Long module before 2.37 do not contain
this fix that first appeared in Getopt::Long version 2.37:

* Bugfix: With gnu_compat, --foo= will no longer trigger "Option
  requires an argument" but return the empty string.

Instead of using --prefix="" use --prefix "" when testing an
explictly empty prefix string in order to work with older versions
of Perl's Getopt::Long module.

Also add a paragraph on this workaround to the documentation of
git-svn itself.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 09:42:28 -07:00
f24ecf5998 send-email: windows drive prefix (e.g. C:) appears only at the beginning
Tighten the regexp used in the "file_name_is_absolute" replacement
used on msys to declare that only "[a-zA-Z]:" that appear at the
very beginning is a path with a drive-prefix.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 09:37:38 -07:00
dd75553b35 blame: dynamic blame_date_width for different locales
When show date in relative date format for git-blame, the max display
width of datetime is set as the length of the string "Thu Oct 19
16:00:04 2006 -0700" (30 characters long).  But actually the max width
for C locale is only 22 (the length of string "x years, xx months ago").
And for other locale, it maybe smaller.  E.g. For Chinese locale, only
needs a half (16-character width).

Set blame_date_width as the display width of _("4 years, 11 months
ago"), so that translators can make the choice.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 00:02:15 -07:00
bccce0f809 blame: fix broken time_buf paddings in relative timestamp
Command `git blame --date relative` aligns the date field with a
fixed-width (defined by blame_date_width), and if time_str is shorter
than that, it adds spaces for padding.  But there are two bugs in the
following codes:

        time_len = strlen(time_str);
        ...
        memset(time_buf + time_len, ' ', blame_date_width - time_len);

 1. The type of blame_date_width is size_t, which is unsigned.  If
    time_len is greater than blame_date_width, the result of
    "blame_date_width - time_len" will never be a negative number, but a
    really big positive number, and will cause memory overwrite.

    This bug can be triggered if either l10n message for function
    show_date_relative() in date.c is longer than 30 characters, then
    `git blame --date relative` may exit abnormally.

 2. When show blame information with relative time, the UTF-8 characters
    in time_str will break the alignment of columns after the date field.
    This is because the time_buf padding with spaces should have a
    constant display width, not a fixed strlen size.  So we should call
    utf8_strwidth() instead of strlen() for width calibration.

Helped-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-23 00:01:52 -07:00
6c94aba5fa l10n: zh_CN.po: translate 46 new messages (2229t0f0u)
Translations for git v2.0.0-rc0.  Also correct translatioins on relative
date in date.c with help from Brian Gesiak ($gmane/246390).

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-04-23 13:00:08 +08:00
937ca16645 Merge branch 'fr-po' of git://github.com/jnavila/git
* 'fr-po' of git://github.com/jnavila/git:
  l10n: fr translation for v2.0.0rc0 (2228t)
2014-04-23 12:33:47 +08:00
68f4e1fc6a ewah_bitmap.c: do not assume size_t and eword_t are the same size
When buffer_grow changes the size of the buffer using realloc,
it first computes and saves the rlw pointer's offset into the
buffer using (uint8_t *) math before the realloc but then
restores it using (eword_t *) math.

In order to do this it's necessary to convert the (uint8_t *)
offset into an (eword_t *) offset.  It was doing this by
dividing by the sizeof(size_t).  Unfortunately sizeof(size_t)
is not same as sizeof(eword_t) on all platforms.

This causes illegal memory accesses and other bad things to
happen when attempting to use bitmaps on those platforms.

Fix this by dividing by the sizeof(eword_t) instead which
will always be correct for all platforms.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-22 16:21:16 -07:00
a01f7f2ba0 merge: enable defaulttoupstream by default
There's no point in this:

% git merge
fatal: No commit specified and merge.defaultToUpstream not set.

We know the most likely scenario is that the user wants to merge the
upstream, and if not, he can set merge.defaultToUpstream to false.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-22 12:53:59 -07:00
4ecc63d7f9 mergetool: run prompt only if guessed tool
It's annoying to see the prompt:

  Hit return to start merge resolution tool (foo):

Every time the user does 'git mergetool' even if the user already
configured 'foo' as the wanted tool.

Display this prompt only when the user hasn't explicitly configured a
tool.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Acked-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-22 12:49:46 -07:00
7c147b77d3 mergetools: add vimdiff3 mode
It's similar to the default, except that the other windows are hidden.
This ensures that removed/added colors are still visible on the main
merge window, but the other windows not visible.

Specially useful with merge.conflictstyle=diff3.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Acked-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-22 12:49:07 -07:00
2233806207 l10n: fr translation for v2.0.0rc0 (2228t)
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Baerts <matttbe@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Xavier Mehrenberger <xavier.mehrenberger@gmail.com>
2014-04-22 21:41:16 +02:00
8976500cbb git-prompt.sh: don't put unsanitized branch names in $PS1
Both bash and zsh subject the value of PS1 to parameter expansion,
command substitution, and arithmetic expansion.  Rather than include
the raw, unescaped branch name in PS1 when running in two- or
three-argument mode, construct PS1 to reference a variable that holds
the branch name.  Because the shells do not recursively expand, this
avoids arbitrary code execution by specially-crafted branch names such
as '$(IFS=_;cmd=sudo_rm_-rf_/;$cmd)'.

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-22 12:37:53 -07:00
27bd38d4e5 git.c: treat RUN_SETUP_GENTLY and RUN_SETUP as mutually exclusive
This saves us a few branches when RUN_SETUP is set up.

Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <mcgrof@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-22 12:37:02 -07:00
d372b5cf6e l10n: Update Swedish translation (2228t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2014-04-22 10:26:02 +01:00
779792a5f2 Update draft release notes to 2.0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 11:54:29 -07:00
e143ef4f6b transport-helper: remove unnecessary strbuf resets
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 11:47:34 -07:00
f3d0376356 transport-helper: add support to delete branches
For remote-helpers that use 'export' to push.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 11:47:34 -07:00
60ed26438c fast-export: add support to delete refs
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 11:47:34 -07:00
4ee1b225b9 fast-import: add support to delete refs
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 11:47:34 -07:00
9193f74235 transport-helper: add support to push symbolic refs
For example 'HEAD'.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 11:47:33 -07:00
d98c815380 transport-helper: add support for old:new refspec
By using fast-export's new --refspec option.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 11:47:33 -07:00
03e9010c66 fast-export: add new --refspec option
So that we can convert the exported ref names.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 11:47:33 -07:00
8b2f86a761 fast-export: improve argument parsing
We don't want to pass arguments specific to fast-export to
setup_revisions.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 11:47:33 -07:00
aeaa7e2784 Merge git://bogomips.org/git-svn
* git://bogomips.org/git-svn:
  Git 2.0: git svn: Set default --prefix='origin/' if --prefix is not given
2014-04-21 10:53:09 -07:00
8fe3ee67ad Merge branch 'jx/i18n'
* jx/i18n:
  i18n: mention "TRANSLATORS:" marker in Documentation/CodingGuidelines
  i18n: only extract comments marked with "TRANSLATORS:"
  i18n: remove obsolete comments for translators in diffstat generation
  i18n: fix uncatchable comments for translators in date.c
2014-04-21 10:42:52 -07:00
0b17b43310 Merge branch 'km/avoid-non-function-return-in-rebase'
Work around /bin/sh that does not like "return" at the top-level
of a file that is dot-sourced from inside a function definition.

* km/avoid-non-function-return-in-rebase:
  Revert "rebase: fix run_specific_rebase's use of "return" on FreeBSD"
  rebase: avoid non-function use of "return" on FreeBSD
2014-04-21 10:42:46 -07:00
0e6e1a5fbd Merge branch 'ep/shell-command-substitution'
* ep/shell-command-substitution:
  t9362-mw-to-git-utf8.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9360-mw-to-git-clone.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  git-tag.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  git-revert.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  git-resolve.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  git-repack.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  git-merge.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  git-ls-remote.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  git-fetch.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  git-commit.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  git-clone.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  git-checkout.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  install-webdoc.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  howto-index.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
2014-04-21 10:42:42 -07:00
3667a5b674 t5801 (remote-helpers): cleanup environment sets
Commit 512477b (tests: use "env" to run commands with temporary env-var
settings) missed some variables in the remote-helpers test. Also
standardize these.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 10:41:38 -07:00
ec9fa62a10 Documentation: git-gui: describe gui.displayuntracked
Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 10:33:20 -07:00
f3efe78782 run_external_diff: refactor cmdline setup logic
The current logic makes it hard to see what gets put onto
the command line in which cases. Pulling out a helper
function lets us see that we have two sets of file data, and
the second set either uses the original name, or the "other"
renamed/copy name.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 10:32:19 -07:00
0d4217d92e run_external_diff: hoist common bits out of conditional
Whether we have diff_filespecs to give to the diff command
or not, we always are going to run the program and pass it
the pathname. Let's pull that duplicated part out of the
conditional to make it more obvious.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 10:32:07 -07:00
5b88caa417 run_external_diff: drop fflush(NULL)
This fflush was added in d5535ec (Use run_command() to spawn
external diff programs instead of fork/exec., 2007-10-19),
because flushing buffers before forking is a good habit.

But later, 7d0b18a (Add output flushing before fork(),
2008-08-04) added it to the generic run-command interface,
meaning that our flush here is redundant.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 10:31:51 -07:00
89294d143d run_external_diff: clean up error handling
When the external diff reports an error, we try to clean up
and die. However, we can make this process a bit simpler:

  1. We do not need to bother freeing memory, since we are
     about to exit.  Nor do we need to clean up our
     tempfiles, since the atexit() handler will do it for
     us. So we can die as soon as we see the error.

  3. We can just call die() rather than fprintf/exit. This
     does technically change our exit code, but the exit
     code of "1" is not meaningful here. In fact, it is
     probably wrong, since "1" from diff usually means
     "completed successfully, but there were differences".

And while we're there, we can mark the error message for
translation, and drop the full stop at the end to make it
more like our other messages.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 10:31:36 -07:00
ae049c955c run_external_diff: use an argv_array for the environment
We currently use static buffers and a static array for
formatting the environment passed to the external diff.
There's nothing wrong in the code, but it is much easier to
verify that it is correct if we use a dynamic argv_array.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 10:30:33 -07:00
82fbf269b9 run_external_diff: use an argv_array for the command line
We currently generate the command-line for the external
command using a fixed-length array of size 10. But if there
is a rename, we actually need 11 elements (10 items, plus a
NULL), and end up writing a random NULL onto the stack.

Rather than bump the limit, let's just use an argv_array, which
makes this sort of error impossible.

Noticed-by: Max L <infthi.inbox@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-21 10:29:50 -07:00
15fbbed790 l10n: vi.po (2228t): Update and minor fix
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2014-04-20 15:22:26 +07:00
fe191fcaa5 Git 2.0: git svn: Set default --prefix='origin/' if --prefix is not given
git-svn by default puts its Subversion-tracking refs directly in
refs/remotes/*. This runs counter to Git's convention of using
refs/remotes/$remote/* for storing remote-tracking branches.

Furthermore, combining git-svn with regular git remotes run the risk of
clobbering refs under refs/remotes (e.g. if you have a git remote
called "tags" with a "v1" branch, it will overlap with the git-svn's
tracking branch for the "v1" tag from Subversion.

Even though the git-svn refs stored in refs/remotes/* are not "proper"
remote-tracking branches (since they are not covered by a proper git
remote's refspec), they clearly represent a similar concept, and would
benefit from following the same convention.

For example, if git-svn tracks Subversion branch "foo" at
refs/remotes/foo, and you create a local branch refs/heads/foo to add
some commits to be pushed back to Subversion (using "git svn dcommit),
then it is clearly unhelpful of Git to throw

  warning: refname 'foo' is ambiguous.

every time you checkout, rebase, or otherwise interact with the branch.

The existing workaround for this is to supply the --prefix=quux/ to
git svn init/clone, so that git-svn's tracking branches end up in
refs/remotes/quux/* instead of refs/remotes/*. However, encouraging
users to specify --prefix to work around a design flaw in git-svn is
suboptimal, and not a long term solution to the problem. Instead,
git-svn should default to use a non-empty prefix that saves
unsuspecting users from the inconveniences described above.

This patch will only affect newly created git-svn setups, as the
--prefix option only applies to git svn init (and git svn clone).
Existing git-svn setups will continue with their existing (lack of)
prefix. Also, if anyone somehow prefers git-svn's old layout, they
can recreate that by explicitly passing an empty prefix (--prefix "")
on the git svn init/clone command line.

The patch changes the default value for --prefix from "" to "origin/",
updates the git-svn manual page, and fixes the fallout in the git-svn
testcases.

(Note that this patch might be easier to review using the --word-diff
and --word-diff-regex=. diff options.)

[ew: squashed description of <= 1.9 behavior into manpage]

Suggested-by: Thomas Ferris Nicolaisen <tfnico@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-04-19 11:30:13 +00:00
5e078fcd83 l10n: git.pot: v2.0.0 round 1 (45 new, 28 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.0.0-rc0 for git v2.0.0 l10n round 1.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-04-19 12:55:29 +08:00
cc291953df Git 2.0-rc0
An early-preview for the upcoming Git 2.0.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-18 11:21:43 -07:00
531675ad17 Merge branch 'jk/config-die-bad-number-noreturn'
Squelch a false compiler warning from older gcc.

* jk/config-die-bad-number-noreturn:
  config.c: mark die_bad_number as NORETURN
2014-04-18 11:17:45 -07:00
8f87d548b6 Merge branch 'fc/remote-helper-fixes'
* fc/remote-helper-fixes:
  remote-bzr: trivial test fix
  remote-bzr: include authors field in pushed commits
  remote-bzr: add support for older versions
  remote-hg: always normalize paths
  remote-helpers: allow all tests running from any dir
2014-04-18 11:17:40 -07:00
961c1b191a Merge branch 'fc/complete-aliased-push'
* fc/complete-aliased-push:
  completion: fix completing args of aliased "push", "fetch", etc.
2014-04-18 11:17:36 -07:00
427ed406cd Merge branch 'fc/prompt-zsh-read-from-file'
* fc/prompt-zsh-read-from-file:
  prompt: fix missing file errors in zsh
2014-04-18 11:17:23 -07:00
cbcfd4e3ea i18n: mention "TRANSLATORS:" marker in Documentation/CodingGuidelines
These comments have to have "TRANSLATORS: " at the very beginning
and have to deviate from the usual multi-line comment formatting
convention.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-18 10:48:49 -07:00
55a5c8d72b commit.c: check for lock error and return early
Move the check for the lock failure to happen immediately after
lock_any_ref_for_update().  Previously the lock and the
check-if-lock-failed was separated by a handful of string
manipulation statements.

Moving the check to occur immediately after the failed lock makes
the code slightly easier to read and makes it follow the pattern of

 try-to-take-a-lock();
 if (check-if-lock-failed) {
    error();
 }

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 12:57:13 -07:00
651ab9f553 sequencer.c: check for lock failure and bail early in fast_forward_to
Change fast_forward_to() to check if locking the ref failed, print a
nice error message and bail out early.

The old code did not check if ref_lock was NULL and relied on the
fact that the write_ref_sha1() would safely detect this condition
and set the return variable ret to indicate an error.

While that is safe, it makes the code harder to read for two reasons:

 * Inconsistency.  Almost all other places we do check the lock for
   NULL explicitly, so the naive reader is confused "why don't we
   check here?"

 * And relying on write_ref_sha1() to detect and return an error for
   when a previous lock_any_ref_for_update() failed feels obfuscated.

This change should not change any functionality or logic aside from
adding an extra error message when this condition is triggered
(write_ref_sha1() returns an error silently for this condition).

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 12:54:15 -07:00
bd368a9baf t9362-mw-to-git-utf8.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:15:01 -07:00
c9b92706af t9360-mw-to-git-clone.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:15:01 -07:00
b352891021 git-tag.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:15:00 -07:00
fb6644a32f git-revert.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:15:00 -07:00
6aeb30eb9f git-resolve.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:15:00 -07:00
ddbac79de9 git-repack.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:15:00 -07:00
34da37cc42 git-merge.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:14:59 -07:00
1b3cddd288 git-ls-remote.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:14:59 -07:00
3e86741517 git-fetch.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:14:59 -07:00
346b54dbc9 git-commit.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:14:59 -07:00
add77e8400 git-clone.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:14:58 -07:00
844cb24f28 git-checkout.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:14:58 -07:00
2c4a050bc6 install-webdoc.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:14:58 -07:00
f25f5e61a7 howto-index.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
do
   sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:14:57 -07:00
47fbfded53 i18n: only extract comments marked with "TRANSLATORS:"
When extract l10n messages, we use "--add-comments" option to keep
comments right above the l10n messages for references.  But sometimes
irrelevant comments are also extracted.  For example in the following
code block, the comment in line 2 will be extracted as comment for the
l10n message in line 3, but obviously it's wrong.

        { OPTION_CALLBACK, 0, "ignore-removal", &addremove_explicit,
          NULL /* takes no arguments */,
          N_("ignore paths removed in the working tree (same as
          --no-all)"),
          PARSE_OPT_NOARG, ignore_removal_cb },

Since almost all comments for l10n translators are marked with the same
prefix (tag): "TRANSLATORS:", it's safe to only extract comments with
this special tag.  I.E. it's better to call xgettext as:

        xgettext --add-comments=TRANSLATORS: ...

Also tweaks the multi-line comment in "init-db.c", to make it start with
the proper tag, not "* TRANSLATORS:" (which has a star before the tag).

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:09:56 -07:00
d1d96a82bb i18n: remove obsolete comments for translators in diffstat generation
Since we do not translate diffstat any more, remove the obsolete comments.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:09:56 -07:00
fcaed04df6 i18n: fix uncatchable comments for translators in date.c
Comment for l10n translators can not be extracted by xgettext if it
is not right above the l10n tag.  Moving the comment right before
the l10n tag will fix this issue.

Reported-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:03:28 -07:00
784f4b6f33 SVN.pm::parse_svn_date: allow timestamps with a single-digit hour
Some broken subversion server gives timestamps with only one digit
in the hour part, like this:

    2014-01-07T5:01:02.048176Z

Loosen the regexp that expected to see two-digit hour, minute and
second parts to accept a single-digit hour (but not minute or
second).

Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 11:01:26 -07:00
8cd65967fe Revert "rebase: fix run_specific_rebase's use of "return" on FreeBSD"
This reverts commit 99855ddf4b.

The workaround 99855ddf introduced to deal with problematic
"return" statements in scripts run by "dot" commands located
inside functions only handles one part of the problem.  The
issue has now been addressed by not using "return" statements
in this way in the git-rebase--*.sh scripts.

This workaround is therefore no longer necessary, so clean
up the code by reverting it.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 10:15:27 -07:00
9f50d32b9c rebase: avoid non-function use of "return" on FreeBSD
Since a1549e10, 15d4bf2e and 01a1e646 (first appearing in v1.8.4)
the git-rebase--*.sh scripts have used a "return" to stop execution
of the dot-sourced file and return to the "dot" command that
dot-sourced it.  The /bin/sh utility on FreeBSD however behaves
poorly under some circumstances when such a "return" is executed.

In particular, if the "dot" command is contained within a function,
then when a "return" is executed by the script it runs (that is not
itself inside a function), control will return from the function
that contains the "dot" command skipping any statements that might
follow the dot command inside that function.  Commit 99855ddf (first
appearing in v1.8.4.1) addresses this by making the "dot" command
the last line in the function.

Unfortunately the FreeBSD /bin/sh may also execute some statements
in the script run by the "dot" command that appear after the
troublesome "return".  The fix in 99855ddf does not address this
problem.

For example, if you have script1.sh with these contents:

run_script2() {
        . "$(dirname -- "$0")/script2.sh"
        _e=$?
        echo only this line should show
        [ $_e -eq 5 ] || echo expected status 5 got $_e
        return 3
}
run_script2
e=$?
[ $e -eq 3 ] || { echo expected status 3 got $e; exit 1; }

And script2.sh with these contents:

if [ 5 -gt 3 ]; then
        return 5
fi
case bad in *)
        echo always shows
esac
echo should not get here
! :

When running script1.sh (e.g. '/bin/sh script1.sh' or './script1.sh'
after making it executable), the expected output from a POSIX shell
is simply the single line:

only this line should show

However, when run using FreeBSD's /bin/sh, the following output
appears instead:

should not get here
expected status 3 got 1

Not only did the lines following the "dot" command in the run_script2
function in script1.sh get skipped, but additional lines in script2.sh
following the "return" got executed -- but not all of them (e.g. the
"echo always shows" line did not run).

These issues can be avoided by not using a top-level "return" in
script2.sh.  If script2.sh is changed to this:

main() {
        if [ 5 -gt 3 ]; then
                return 5
        fi
        case bad in *)
                echo always shows
        esac
        echo should not get here
        ! :
}
main

Then it behaves the same when using FreeBSD's /bin/sh as when using
other more POSIX compliant /bin/sh implementations.

We fix the git-rebase--*.sh scripts in a similar fashion by moving
the top-level code that contains "return" statements into its own
function and then calling that as the last line in the script.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-17 10:13:29 -07:00
3f0c02a1c0 Update draft release notes for 2.0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-16 13:43:26 -07:00
940bf249fe Merge branch 'mh/multimail'
* mh/multimail:
  git-multimail: update to version 1.0.0
2014-04-16 13:39:00 -07:00
9fd911a810 Merge branch 'tb/unicode-6.3-zero-width'
Teach our display-column-counting logic about decomposed umlauts
and friends.

* tb/unicode-6.3-zero-width:
  utf8.c: partially update to version 6.3
2014-04-16 13:38:57 -07:00
51bb8adbc9 Merge branch 'km/avoid-cp-a'
Portability fix.

* km/avoid-cp-a:
  test: fix t7001 cp to use POSIX options
2014-04-16 13:38:55 -07:00
5b713d990d Merge branch 'km/avoid-bs-in-shell-glob'
Portability fix.

* km/avoid-bs-in-shell-glob:
  test: fix t5560 on FreeBSD
2014-04-16 13:38:52 -07:00
cb005c1fdf send-email: recognize absolute path on Windows
On Windows, absolute paths might start with a DOS drive prefix,
which these two checks failed to recognize.

Unfortunately, we cannot simply use the file_name_is_absolute
helper in File::Spec::Functions, because Git for Windows has an
MSYS-based Perl, where this helper doesn't grok DOS
drive-prefixes.

So let's manually check for these in that case, and fall back to
the File::Spec-helper on other platforms (e.g Win32 with native
Perl)

Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-16 11:51:16 -07:00
06bdc23b7e config.c: mark die_bad_number as NORETURN
This can help avoid -Wuninitialized false positives in
git_config_int and git_config_ulong, as the compiler now
knows that we do not return "ret" if we hit the error
codepath.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-16 10:21:14 -07:00
39539495ac index-pack: work around thread-unsafe pread()
Multi-threaing of index-pack was disabled with c0f8654
(index-pack: Disable threading on cygwin - 2012-06-26), because
pread() implementations for Cygwin and MSYS were not thread
safe.  Recent Cygwin does offer usable pread() and we enabled
multi-threading with 103d530f (Cygwin 1.7 has thread-safe pread,
2013-07-19).

Work around this problem on platforms with a thread-unsafe
pread() emulation by opening one file handle per thread; it
would prevent parallel pread() on different file handles from
stepping on each other.

Also remove NO_THREAD_SAFE_PREAD that was introduced in c0f8654
because it's no longer used anywhere.

This workaround is unconditional, even for platforms with
thread-safe pread() because the overhead is small (a couple file
handles more) and not worth fragmenting the code.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-16 09:29:41 -07:00
d5067112db Makefile: allow static linking against libcurl
This requires more flags than can be guessed with the old-style
CURLDIR and related options, so is only supported when curl-config is
present.

Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-15 13:01:51 -07:00
61a64fff4f Makefile: use curl-config to determine curl flags
curl-config should always be installed alongside a curl distribution,
and its purpose is to provide flags for building against libcurl, so
use it instead of guessing flags and dependent libraries.

Allow overriding CURL_CONFIG to a custom path to curl-config, to
compile against a curl installation other than the first in PATH.

Depending on the set of features curl is compiled with, there may be
more libraries required than the previous two options of -lssl and
-lidn. For example, with a vanilla build of libcurl-7.36.0 on Mac OS X
10.9:

$ ~/d/curl-out-7.36.0/lib/curl-config --libs
-L/Users/dborowitz/d/curl-out-7.36.0/lib -lcurl -lgssapi_krb5 -lresolv -lldap -lz

Use this only when CURLDIR is not explicitly specified, to continue
supporting older builds.

Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-15 13:01:49 -07:00
3994e64d77 transport-helper: fix sync issue on crashes
When a remote helper crashes while pushing we should revert back to the
state before the push, however, it's possible that `git fast-export`
already finished its job, and therefore has exported the marks already.

This creates a synchronization problem because from that moment on
`git fast-{import,export}` will have marks that the remote helper is not
aware of and all further commands fail (if those marks are referenced).

The fix is to tell `git fast-export` to export to a temporary file, and
only after the remote helper has finishes successfully, move to the
final destination.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-14 14:03:33 -07:00
852e54bc0f transport-helper: trivial cleanup
It's simpler to store the file names directly, and form the fast-export
arguments only when needed, and re-use the same strbuf with a format.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-14 14:03:33 -07:00
0551a06c22 transport-helper: propagate recvline() error pushing
It's cleaner, and will allow us to do something sensible on errors
later.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-14 13:51:37 -07:00
5931b33e20 remote-helpers: make recvline return an error
Instead of exiting directly, make it the duty of the caller to do so.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-14 13:48:33 -07:00
4a1b59c85f transport-helper: remove barely used xchgline()
It's only used once, we can just call the two functions inside directly.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-14 13:48:17 -07:00
59d3924fbb prompt: fix missing file errors in zsh
zsh seems to have a bug while redirecting the stderr of the 'read'
command:

    % read foo 2>/dev/null <foo
    zsh: no such file or directory: foo

Which causes errors to be displayed when certain files are missing.
Let's add a convenience function to manually check if the file is
readable before calling "read".

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-14 13:27:23 -07:00
7569accf41 remote-bzr: trivial test fix
So that the committer is reset properly.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-14 13:25:28 -07:00
ff7a1c677a test: fix t5560 on FreeBSD
Since fd0a8c2e (first appearing in v1.7.0), the
t/t5560-http-backend-noserver.sh test has used a backslash escape
inside a ${} expansion in order to specify a literal '?' character.

Unfortunately the FreeBSD /bin/sh does not interpret this correctly.

In a POSIX compliant shell, the following:

x='one?two?three'
echo "${x#*\?}"

Would be expected to produce this:

two?three

When using the FreeBSD /bin/sh instead you get this:

one?two?three

In fact the FreeBSD /bin/sh treats the backslash as a literal
character to match so that this:

y='one\two\three'
echo "${y#*\?}"

Produces this unexpected value:

wo\three

In this case the backslash is not only treated literally, it also
fails to defeat the special meaning of the '?' character.

Instead, we can use the [...] construct to defeat the special meaning
of the '?' character and match it exactly in a way that works for the
FreeBSD /bin/sh as well as other POSIX /bin/sh implementations.

Changing the example like so:

x='one?two?three'
echo "${x#*[?]}"

Produces the expected output using the FreeBSD /bin/sh.

Therefore, change the use of \? to [?] in order to be compatible with
the FreeBSD /bin/sh which allows t/t5560-http-backend-noserver.sh to
pass on FreeBSD again.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-11 13:21:56 -07:00
00764ca10e test: fix t7001 cp to use POSIX options
Since 11502468 and 04c1ee57 (both first appearing in v1.8.5), the
t7001-mv test has used "cp -a" to perform a copy in several of the
tests.

However, the "-a" option is not required for a POSIX cp utility and
some platforms' cp utilities do not support it.

The POSIX equivalent of -a is -R -P -p.

Change "cp -a" to "cp -R -P -p" so that the t7001-mv test works
on systems with a cp utility that only implements the POSIX
required set of options and not the "-a" option.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-11 13:19:00 -07:00
426ddeead6 read-cache.c: verify index file before we opportunistically update it
Before we proceed to opportunistically update the index (often done
by an otherwise read-only operation like "git status" and "git diff"
that internally refreshes the index), we must verify that the
current index file is the same as the one that we read earlier
before we took the lock on it, in order to avoid a possible race.

In the example below git-status does "opportunistic update" and
git-rebase updates the index, but the race can happen in general.

  1. process A calls git-rebase (or does anything that uses the index)

  2. process A applies 1st commit

  3. process B calls git-status (or does anything that updates the index)

  4. process B reads index

  5. process A applies 2nd commit

  6. process B takes the lock, then overwrites process A's changes.

  7. process A applies 3rd commit

As an end result the 3rd commit will have a revert of the 2nd commit.
When process B takes the lock, it needs to make sure that the index
hasn't changed since step 4.

Signed-off-by: Yiannis Marangos <yiannis.marangos@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-10 12:27:58 -07:00
9aa91af036 wrapper.c: add xpread() similar to xread()
It is a common mistake to call read(2)/pread(2) and forget to
anticipate that they may return error with EAGAIN/EINTR when the
system call is interrupted.

We have xread() helper to relieve callers of read(2) from having to
worry about it; add xpread() helper to do the same for pread(2).

Update the caller in the builtin/index-pack.c and the mmap emulation
in compat/.

Signed-off-by: Yiannis Marangos <yiannis.marangos@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-10 12:18:55 -07:00
880111c11b completion: fix completing args of aliased "push", "fetch", etc.
Some commands need the first word to determine the actual action that is
being executed, however, the command is wrong when we use an alias, for
example 'alias.p=push', if we try to complete 'git p origin ', the
result would be wrong because __git_complete_remote_or_refspec() doesn't
know where it came from.

So let's override words[1], so the alias 'p' is override by the actual
command, 'push'.

Reported-by: Aymeric Beaumet <aymeric.beaumet@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-09 14:22:18 -07:00
62210887f7 remote-bzr: include authors field in pushed commits
Tests-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-09 14:20:48 -07:00
5ff569908d remote-bzr: add support for older versions
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-09 14:20:48 -07:00
867bf7b490 remote-hg: always normalize paths
Apparently Mercurial can have paths such as 'foo//bar', so normalize all
paths.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-09 14:20:48 -07:00
fe45cfb518 remote-helpers: allow all tests running from any dir
Commit d3243d7 (test-bzr.sh, test-hg.sh: allow running from any dir)
allowed the tests to run from any directory, however, it didn't update
all the tests.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-09 14:20:47 -07:00
68773ac915 Sync with 1.9.2
* maint:
  Git 1.9.2
  doc/http-backend: missing accent grave in literal mark-up
2014-04-09 12:06:14 -07:00
0bc85abb7a Git 1.9.2
The second maintenance release for Git 1.9; contains all the fixes
that are scheduled to appear in Git 2.0.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-09 12:04:34 -07:00
3c9e56b75c Merge branch 'jl/nor-or-nand-and' into maint
* jl/nor-or-nand-and:
  code and test: fix misuses of "nor"
  comments: fix misuses of "nor"
  contrib: fix misuses of "nor"
  Documentation: fix misuses of "nor"
2014-04-09 12:03:26 -07:00
fbae3d9ace Merge branch 'cn/fetch-prune-overlapping-destination' into maint
* cn/fetch-prune-overlapping-destination:
  fetch: handle overlaping refspecs on --prune
  fetch: add a failing test for prunning with overlapping refspecs
2014-04-09 12:02:41 -07:00
aba7af8e67 Merge branch 'mh/update-ref-batch-create-fix' into maint
* mh/update-ref-batch-create-fix:
  update-ref: fail create operation over stdin if ref already exists
2014-04-09 12:01:28 -07:00
b8a30194db Merge branch 'jk/commit-dates-parsing-fix' into maint
* jk/commit-dates-parsing-fix:
  t4212: loosen far-in-future test for AIX
  date: recognize bogus FreeBSD gmtime output
2014-04-09 11:59:38 -07:00
693b407077 Merge branch 'jc/fix-diff-no-index-diff-opt-parse' into maint
* jc/fix-diff-no-index-diff-opt-parse:
  diff-no-index: correctly diagnose error return from diff_opt_parse()
2014-04-09 11:59:16 -07:00
efb4ec68b8 Merge commit 'doc/http-backend: missing accent grave in literal mark-up'
* commit '5df05146d5cb94628a3dfc53063c802ee1152cec':
  doc/http-backend: missing accent grave in literal mark-up
2014-04-09 11:45:04 -07:00
5df05146d5 doc/http-backend: missing accent grave in literal mark-up
Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-09 11:43:56 -07:00
d813ab970d utf8.c: partially update to version 6.3
Unicode 6.3 defines more code points as combining or accents.  For
example, the character "ö" could be expressed as an "o" followed by
U+0308 COMBINING DIARESIS (aka umlaut, double-dot-above).  We should
consider that such a sequence of two codepoints occupies one display
column for the alignment purposes, and for that, git_wcwidth()
should return 0 for them.  Affected codepoints are:

    U+0358..U+035C
    U+0487
    U+05A2, U+05BA, U+05C5, U+05C7
    U+0604, U+0616..U+061A, U+0659..U+065F

Earlier unicode standards had defined these as "reserved".

Only the range 0..U+07FF has been checked to see which codepoints
need to be marked as 0-width while preparing for this commit; more
updates may be needed.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-09 10:14:05 -07:00
22f4c27e68 mingw: activate alloca
Both MSVC and MINGW have alloca(3) definitions in malloc.h, so by moving
win32-compat alloca.h from compat/vcbuild/include/ to compat/win32/ ,
which is included by both MSVC and MINGW CFLAGS, we can make alloca()
work on both those Windows environments.

In MINGW, malloc.h has explicit check for GNUC and if it is so, defines
alloca to __builtin_alloca, so it looks like we don't need to add any
code to here-shipped alloca.h to get optimum performance.

Compile-tested on Windows in MSysGit.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Acked-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-09 10:08:35 -07:00
7bf272cc04 Update draft release notes to 2.0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-08 12:11:17 -07:00
2d1a5a5856 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  Update draft release notes to 1.9.2
2014-04-08 12:08:59 -07:00
4d7ad08f6a Update draft release notes to 1.9.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-08 12:08:34 -07:00
360f852d24 Merge branch 'mm/status-porcelain-format-i18n-fix' into maint
* mm/status-porcelain-format-i18n-fix:
  status: disable translation when --porcelain is used
2014-04-08 12:07:06 -07:00
86b4c1639c Merge branch 'bp/commit-p-editor' into maint
* bp/commit-p-editor:
  run-command: mark run_hook_with_custom_index as deprecated
  merge hook tests: fix and update tests
  merge: fix GIT_EDITOR override for commit hook
  commit: fix patch hunk editing with "commit -p -m"
  test patch hunk editing with "commit -p -m"
  merge hook tests: use 'test_must_fail' instead of '!'
  merge hook tests: fix missing '&&' in test
2014-04-08 12:07:06 -07:00
967f8c9184 Merge branch 'jk/pack-bitmap'
* jk/pack-bitmap:
  pack-objects: do not reuse packfiles without --delta-base-offset
  add `ignore_missing_links` mode to revwalk
2014-04-08 12:00:33 -07:00
d59c12d7ad Merge branch 'jl/nor-or-nand-and'
Eradicate mistaken use of "nor" (that is, essentially "nor" used
not in "neither A nor B" ;-)) from in-code comments, command output
strings, and documentations.

* jl/nor-or-nand-and:
  code and test: fix misuses of "nor"
  comments: fix misuses of "nor"
  contrib: fix misuses of "nor"
  Documentation: fix misuses of "nor"
2014-04-08 12:00:28 -07:00
9b30a0339d Merge branch 'mh/update-ref-batch-create-fix'
* mh/update-ref-batch-create-fix:
  update-ref: fail create operation over stdin if ref already exists
2014-04-08 12:00:22 -07:00
b389e04031 Merge branch 'mr/opt-set-ptr'
OPT_SET_PTR() implementation was broken on IL32P64 platforms;
it turns out that the macro is not used by any real user.

* mr/opt-set-ptr:
  parse-options: remove unused OPT_SET_PTR
  parse-options: add cast to correct pointer type to OPT_SET_PTR
  MSVC: fix t0040-parse-options crash
2014-04-08 12:00:17 -07:00
ed15e20ba3 Merge branch 'ib/rev-parse-parseopt-argh'
Finishing touch to a new topic scheduled for 2.0.

* ib/rev-parse-parseopt-argh:
  rev-parse: fix typo in example on manpage
2014-04-08 12:00:09 -07:00
48ae20513d Merge branch 'mr/msvc-link-with-invalidcontinue'
* mr/msvc-link-with-invalidcontinue:
  MSVC: link in invalidcontinue.obj for better POSIX compatibility
2014-04-08 11:59:46 -07:00
b5a52fa6c6 Merge branch 'jc/rev-parse-argh-dashed-multi-words'
Make sure that the help text given to describe the "<param>" part
of the "git cmd --option=<param>" does not contain SP or _,
e.g. "--gpg-sign=<key-id>" option for "git commit" is not spelled
as "--gpg-sign=<key id>".

* jc/rev-parse-argh-dashed-multi-words:
  parse-options: make sure argh string does not have SP or _
  update-index: teach --cacheinfo a new syntax "mode,sha1,path"
  parse-options: multi-word argh should use dash to separate words
2014-04-08 11:59:27 -07:00
bdb830c445 Merge branch 'jk/commit-dates-parsing-fix'
Finishing touches for portability.

* jk/commit-dates-parsing-fix:
  t4212: loosen far-in-future test for AIX
  date: recognize bogus FreeBSD gmtime output
2014-04-08 11:59:06 -07:00
4e49d95ece git-p4: explicitly specify that HEAD is a revision
'git p4 rebase' fails with the following message if there is a file
named HEAD in the current directory:

	fatal: ambiguous argument 'HEAD': both revision and filename
	Use '--' to separate paths from revisions, like this:
	'git <command> [<revision>...] -- [<file>...]'

Take the suggestion above and explicitly state that HEAD should be
treated as a revision.

Signed-off-by: Vlad Dogaru <vdogaru@ixiacom.com>
Acked-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 15:37:12 -07:00
7195fbfaf5 combine-diff: speed it up, by using multiparent diff tree-walker directly
As was recently shown in "combine-diff: optimize
combine_diff_path sets intersection", combine-diff runs very slowly. In
that commit we optimized paths sets intersection, but that accounted
only for ~ 25% of the slowness, and as my tracing showed, for linux.git
v3.10..v3.11, for merges a lot of time is spent computing
diff(commit,commit^2) just to only then intersect that huge diff to
almost small set of files from diff(commit,commit^1).

In previous commit, we described the problem in more details, and
reworked the diff tree-walker to be general one - i.e. to work in
multiple parent case too. Now is the time to take advantage of it for
finding paths for combine diff.

The implementation is straightforward - if we know, we can get generated
diff paths directly, and at present that means no diff filtering or
rename/copy detection was requested(*), we can call multiparent tree-walker
directly and get ready paths.

(*) because e.g. at present, all diffcore transformations work on
    diff_filepair queues, but in the future, that limitation can be
    lifted, if filters would operate directly on combine_diff_paths.

Timings for `git log --raw --no-abbrev --no-renames` without `-c` ("git log")
and with `-c` ("git log -c") and with `-c --merges` ("git log -c --merges")
before and after the patch are as follows:

                linux.git v3.10..v3.11

            log     log -c     log -c --merges

    before  1.9s    16.4s      15.2s
    after   1.9s     2.4s       1.1s

The result stayed the same.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 14:41:49 -07:00
72441af7c4 tree-diff: rework diff_tree() to generate diffs for multiparent cases as well
Previously diff_tree(), which is now named ll_diff_tree_sha1(), was
generating diff_filepair(s) for two trees t1 and t2, and that was
usually used for a commit as t1=HEAD~, and t2=HEAD - i.e. to see changes
a commit introduces.

In Git, however, we have fundamentally built flexibility in that a
commit can have many parents - 1 for a plain commit, 2 for a simple merge,
but also more than 2 for merging several heads at once.

For merges there is a so called combine-diff, which shows diff, a merge
introduces by itself, omitting changes done by any parent. That works
through first finding paths, that are different to all parents, and then
showing generalized diff, with separate columns for +/- for each parent.
The code lives in combine-diff.c .

There is an impedance mismatch, however, in that a commit could
generally have any number of parents, and that while diffing trees, we
divide cases for 2-tree diffs and more-than-2-tree diffs. I mean there
is no special casing for multiple parents commits in e.g.
revision-walker .

That impedance mismatch *hurts* *performance* *badly* for generating
combined diffs - in "combine-diff: optimize combine_diff_path
sets intersection" I've already removed some slowness from it, but from
the timings provided there, it could be seen, that combined diffs still
cost more than an order of magnitude more cpu time, compared to diff for
usual commits, and that would only be an optimistic estimate, if we take
into account that for e.g. linux.git there is only one merge for several
dozens of plain commits.

That slowness comes from the fact that currently, while generating
combined diff, a lot of time is spent computing diff(commit,commit^2)
just to only then intersect that huge diff to almost small set of files
from diff(commit,commit^1).

That's because at present, to compute combine-diff, for first finding
paths, that "every parent touches", we use the following combine-diff
property/definition:

D(A,P1...Pn) = D(A,P1) ^ ... ^ D(A,Pn)      (w.r.t. paths)

where

D(A,P1...Pn) is combined diff between commit A, and parents Pi

and

D(A,Pi) is usual two-tree diff Pi..A

So if any of that D(A,Pi) is huge, tracting 1 n-parent combine-diff as n
1-parent diffs and intersecting results will be slow.

And usually, for linux.git and other topic-based workflows, that
D(A,P2) is huge, because, if merge-base of A and P2, is several dozens
of merges (from A, via first parent) below, that D(A,P2) will be diffing
sum of merges from several subsystems to 1 subsystem.

The solution is to avoid computing n 1-parent diffs, and to find
changed-to-all-parents paths via scanning A's and all Pi's trees
simultaneously, at each step comparing their entries, and based on that
comparison, populate paths result, and deduce we could *skip*
*recursing* into subdirectories, if at least for 1 parent, sha1 of that
dir tree is the same as in A. That would save us from doing significant
amount of needless work.

Such approach is very similar to what diff_tree() does, only there we
deal with scanning only 2 trees simultaneously, and for n+1 tree, the
logic is a bit more complex:

D(T,P1...Pn) calculation scheme
-------------------------------

D(T,P1...Pn) = D(T,P1) ^ ... ^ D(T,Pn)	(regarding resulting paths set)

    D(T,Pj)		- diff between T..Pj
    D(T,P1...Pn)	- combined diff from T to parents P1,...,Pn

We start from all trees, which are sorted, and compare their entries in
lock-step:

     T     P1       Pn
     -     -        -
    |t|   |p1|     |pn|
    |-|   |--| ... |--|      imin = argmin(p1...pn)
    | |   |  |     |  |
    |-|   |--|     |--|
    |.|   |. |     |. |
     .     .        .
     .     .        .

at any time there could be 3 cases:

    1)  t < p[imin];
    2)  t > p[imin];
    3)  t = p[imin].

Schematic deduction of what every case means, and what to do, follows:

1)  t < p[imin]  ->  ∀j t ∉ Pj  ->  "+t" ∈ D(T,Pj)  ->  D += "+t";  t↓

2)  t > p[imin]

    2.1) ∃j: pj > p[imin]  ->  "-p[imin]" ∉ D(T,Pj)  ->  D += ø;  ∀ pi=p[imin]  pi↓
    2.2) ∀i  pi = p[imin]  ->  pi ∉ T  ->  "-pi" ∈ D(T,Pi)  ->  D += "-p[imin]";  ∀i pi↓

3)  t = p[imin]

    3.1) ∃j: pj > p[imin]  ->  "+t" ∈ D(T,Pj)  ->  only pi=p[imin] remains to investigate
    3.2) pi = p[imin]  ->  investigate δ(t,pi)
     |
     |
     v

    3.1+3.2) looking at δ(t,pi) ∀i: pi=p[imin] - if all != ø  ->

                      ⎧δ(t,pi)  - if pi=p[imin]
             ->  D += ⎨
                      ⎩"+t"     - if pi>p[imin]

    in any case t↓  ∀ pi=p[imin]  pi↓

~

For comparison, here is how diff_tree() works:

D(A,B) calculation scheme
-------------------------

    A     B
    -     -
   |a|   |b|    a < b   ->  a ∉ B   ->   D(A,B) +=  +a    a↓
   |-|   |-|    a > b   ->  b ∉ A   ->   D(A,B) +=  -b    b↓
   | |   | |    a = b   ->  investigate δ(a,b)            a↓ b↓
   |-|   |-|
   |.|   |.|
    .     .
    .     .

~~~~~~~~

This patch generalizes diff tree-walker to work with arbitrary number of
parents as described above - i.e. now there is a resulting tree t, and
some parents trees tp[i] i=[0..nparent). The generalization builds on
the fact that usual diff

D(A,B)

is by definition the same as combined diff

D(A,[B]),

so if we could rework the code for common case and make it be not slower
for nparent=1 case, usual diff(t1,t2) generation will not be slower, and
multiparent diff tree-walker would greatly benefit generating
combine-diff.

What we do is as follows:

1) diff tree-walker ll_diff_tree_sha1() is internally reworked to be
   a paths generator (new name diff_tree_paths()), with each generated path
   being `struct combine_diff_path` with info for path, new sha1,mode and for
   every parent which sha1,mode it was in it.

2) From that info, we can still generate usual diff queue with
   struct diff_filepairs, via "exporting" generated
   combine_diff_path, if we know we run for nparent=1 case.
   (see emit_diff() which is now named emit_diff_first_parent_only())

3) In order for diff_can_quit_early(), which checks

       DIFF_OPT_TST(opt, HAS_CHANGES))

   to work, that exporting have to be happening not in bulk, but
   incrementally, one diff path at a time.

   For such consumers, there is a new callback in diff_options
   introduced:

       ->pathchange(opt, struct combine_diff_path *)

   which, if set to !NULL, is called for every generated path.

   (see new compat ll_diff_tree_sha1() wrapper around new paths
    generator for setup)

4) The paths generation itself, is reworked from previous
   ll_diff_tree_sha1() code according to "D(A,P1...Pn) calculation
   scheme" provided above:

   On the start we allocate [nparent] arrays in place what was
   earlier just for one parent tree.

   then we just generalize loops, and comparison according to the
   algorithm.

Some notes(*):

1) alloca(), for small arrays, is used for "runs not slower for
   nparent=1 case than before" goal - if we change it to xmalloc()/free()
   the timings get ~1% worse. For alloca() we use just-introduced
   xalloca/xalloca_free compatibility wrappers, so it should not be a
   portability problem.

2) For every parent tree, we need to keep a tag, whether entry from that
   parent equals to entry from minimal parent. For performance reasons I'm
   keeping that tag in entry's mode field in unused bit - see S_IFXMIN_NEQ.
   Not doing so, we'd need to alloca another [nparent] array, which hurts
   performance.

3) For emitted paths, memory could be reused, if we know the path was
   processed via callback and will not be needed later. We use efficient
   hand-made realloc-style path_appendnew(), that saves us from ~1-1.5%
   of potential additional slowdown.

4) goto(s) are used in several places, as the code executes a little bit
   faster with lowered register pressure.

Also

- we should now check for FIND_COPIES_HARDER not only when two entries
  names are the same, and their hashes are equal, but also for a case,
  when a path was removed from some of all parents having it.

  The reason is, if we don't, that path won't be emitted at all (see
  "a > xi" case), and we'll just skip it, and FIND_COPIES_HARDER wants
  all paths - with diff or without - to be emitted, to be later analyzed
  for being copies sources.

  The new check is only necessary for nparent >1, as for nparent=1 case
  xmin_eqtotal always =1 =nparent, and a path is always added to diff as
  removal.

~~~~~~~~

Timings for

    # without -c, i.e. testing only nparent=1 case
    `git log --raw --no-abbrev --no-renames`

before and after the patch are as follows:

                navy.git        linux.git v3.10..v3.11

    before      0.611s          1.889s
    after       0.619s          1.907s
    slowdown    1.3%            0.9%

This timings show we did no harm to usual diff(tree1,tree2) generation.
From the table we can see that we actually did ~1% slowdown, but I think
I've "earned" that 1% in the previous patch ("tree-diff: reuse base
str(buf) memory on sub-tree recursion", HEAD~~) so for nparent=1 case,
net timings stays approximately the same.

The output also stayed the same.

(*) If we revert 1)-4) to more usual techniques, for nparent=1 case,
    we'll get ~2-2.5% of additional slowdown, which I've tried to avoid, as
   "do no harm for nparent=1 case" rule.

For linux.git, combined diff will run an order of magnitude faster and
appropriate timings will be provided in the next commit, as we'll be
taking advantage of the new diff tree-walker for combined-diff
generation there.

P.S. and combined diff is not some exotic/for-play-only stuff - for
example for a program I write to represent Git archives as readonly
filesystem, there is initial scan with

    `git log --reverse --raw --no-abbrev --no-renames -c`

to extract log of what was created/changed when, as a result building a
map

    {}  sha1    ->  in which commit (and date) a content was added

that `-c` means also show combined diff for merges, and without them, if
a merge is non-trivial (merges changes from two parents with both having
separate changes to a file), or an evil one, the map will not be full,
i.e. some valid sha1 would be absent from it.

That case was my initial motivation for combined diffs speedup.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 14:40:46 -07:00
6a402338ec ref_transaction_commit(): work with transaction->updates in place
Now that we free the transaction when we are done, there is no need to
make a copy of transaction->updates before working with it.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:16 -07:00
84178db76f struct ref_update: add a type field
It used to be that ref_transaction_commit() allocated a temporary
array to hold the types of references while it is working.  Instead,
add a type field to ref_update that ref_transaction_commit() can use
as its scratch space.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:15 -07:00
81c960e4dc struct ref_update: add a lock field
Now that we manage ref_update objects internally, we can use them to
hold some of the scratch space we need when actually carrying out the
updates.  Store the (struct ref_lock *) there.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:15 -07:00
cb198d21d3 ref_transaction_commit(): simplify code using temporary variables
Use temporary variables in the for-loop blocks to simplify expressions
in the rest of the loop.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:15 -07:00
88615910db struct ref_update: store refname as a FLEX_ARRAY
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:15 -07:00
5524e2416e struct ref_update: rename field "ref_name" to "refname"
This is consistent with the usual nomenclature.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:15 -07:00
b5c8ea2afb refs: remove API function update_refs()
It has been superseded by reference transactions.  This also means
that struct ref_update can become private.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:14 -07:00
aebfc13337 update-ref --stdin: reimplement using reference transactions
This change is mostly clerical: the parse_cmd_*() functions need to
use local variables rather than a struct ref_update to collect the
arguments needed for each update, and then call ref_transaction_*() to
queue the change rather than building up the list of changes at the
caller side.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:14 -07:00
caa4046c4f refs: add a concept of a reference transaction
Build out the API for dealing with a bunch of reference checks and
changes within a transaction.  Define an opaque ref_transaction type
that is managed entirely within refs.c.  Introduce functions for
beginning a transaction, adding updates to a transaction, and
committing/rolling back a transaction.

This API will soon replace update_refs().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:14 -07:00
f11b09fb60 update-ref --stdin: harmonize error messages
Make (most of) the error messages for invalid input have the same
format [1]:

    $COMMAND [SP $REFNAME]: $MESSAGE

Update the tests accordingly.

[1] A few error messages are left with their old form, because
    $COMMAND and $REFNAME aren't passed all the way down the call
    stack.  Maybe those sites should be changed some day, too.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:14 -07:00
726f69166f update-ref --stdin: improve the error message for unexpected EOF
Distinguish this error from the error that an argument is missing for
another reason.  Update the tests accordingly.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:14 -07:00
ff6ee39525 t1400: test one mistake at a time
This case wants to test passing a bad refname to the "update" command.
But it also passes too few arguments to "update", which muddles the
situation: which error should be diagnosed?  So split this test into
two:

* One that passes too few arguments to update

* One that passes all three arguments to "update", but with a bad
  refname.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:13 -07:00
1fbd504942 update-ref --stdin -z: deprecate interpreting the empty string as zeros
In the original version of this command, for the single case of the
"update" command's <newvalue>, the empty string was interpreted as
being equivalent to 40 "0"s.  This shorthand is unnecessary (binary
input will usually be generated programmatically anyway), and it
complicates the parser and the documentation.

So gently deprecate this usage: remove its description from the
documentation and emit a warning if it is found.  But for reasons of
backwards compatibility, continue to accept it.

Helped-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:13 -07:00
3afcc46374 update-ref.c: extract a new function, parse_next_sha1()
Replace three functions, update_store_new_sha1(),
update_store_old_sha1(), and parse_next_arg(), with a single function,
parse_next_sha1().  The new function takes care of a whole argument,
including checking whether it is there, converting it to an SHA-1, and
emitting errors on EOF or for invalid values.  The return value
indicates whether the argument was present or absent, which requires
a bit of intelligence because absent values are represented
differently depending on whether "-z" was used.

The new interface means that the calling functions, parse_cmd_*(),
don't have to interpret the result differently based on the
line_termination mode that is in effect.  It also means that
parse_cmd_create() can distinguish unambiguously between an empty new
value and a zeros new value, which fixes a failure in t1400.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:13 -07:00
191f241b52 t1400: test that stdin -z update treats empty <newvalue> as zeros
This is the (slightly inconsistent) status quo; make sure it doesn't
change by accident.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:13 -07:00
ac1177553d update-ref --stdin: simplify error messages for missing oldvalues
Instead of, for example,

    fatal: update refs/heads/master missing [<oldvalue>] NUL

emit

    fatal: update refs/heads/master missing <oldvalue>

Update the tests accordingly.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:12 -07:00
9255f059ff update-ref --stdin: make error messages more consistent
The old error messages emitted for invalid input sometimes said
"<oldvalue>"/"<newvalue>" and sometimes said "old value"/"new value".
Convert them all to the former.  Update the tests accordingly.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:12 -07:00
1746ef4e9d update-ref --stdin: improve error messages for invalid values
If an invalid value is passed to "update-ref --stdin" as <oldvalue> or
<newvalue>, include the command and the name of the reference at the
beginning of the error message.  Update the tests accordingly.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:12 -07:00
ed410e611d update-ref.c: extract a new function, parse_refname()
There is no reason to obscure the fact that parse_first_arg() always
parses refnames.  Form the new function by combining parse_first_arg()
and update_store_ref_name().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:12 -07:00
2f57736002 parse_cmd_verify(): copy old_sha1 instead of evaluating <oldvalue> twice
Aside from avoiding a tiny bit of work, this makes it transparently
obvious that old_sha1 and new_sha1 are identical.  It is arguably a
bit silly to have to set new_sha1 in order to verify old_sha1, but
that is a problem for another day.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:12 -07:00
e23d84350a update-ref --stdin: read the whole input at once
Read the whole input into a strbuf at once, and then parse it from
there.  This might also be a tad faster, but that is not the point.
The point is to decouple the parsing code from the input source (the
old parsing code had to read new data even in the middle of commands).
Add docstrings for the parsing functions.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:11 -07:00
595deb8da6 update_refs(): fix constness
The old signature of update_refs() required a
(const struct ref_update **) for its updates_orig argument.  The
"const" is presumably there to promise that the function will not
modify the contents of the structures.

But this declaration does not permit the function to be called with a
(struct ref_update **), which is perfectly legitimate.  C's type
system is not powerful enough to express what we'd like.  So remove
the first "const" from the declaration.

On the other hand, the function *can* promise not to modify the
pointers within the array that is passed to it without inconveniencing
its callers.  So add a "const" that has that effect, making the final
declaration
(struct ref_update * const *).

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:11 -07:00
f412411245 refs.h: rename the action_on_err constants
Given that these constants are only being used when updating
references, it is inappropriate to give them such generic names as
"DIE_ON_ERR".  So prefix their names with "UPDATE_REFS_".

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:11 -07:00
20fcffcc8d t1400: add some more tests involving quoted arguments
Previously there were no good tests of C-quoted arguments.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:11 -07:00
697a41519b parse_arg(): really test that argument is properly terminated
The old parse_arg(), when fed an argument

    "refs/heads/a"master

parsed 'refs/heads/a' off of the front of the argument and considered
itself successful.  It was only when parse_next_arg() tried to parse
the *next* argument that a problem was noticed.  But in fact, the
definition of the input format requires arguments to be terminated by
SP or NUL, so *this* argument is already erroneous and parse_arg()
should diagnose the problem.

So teach parse_arg() to verify that C-quoted arguments are terminated
correctly.  If not, emit a more specific error message.

There is no corresponding error case of a non-C-quoted argument that
is not terminated correctly, because the end of a non-quoted argument
is *by definition* a space or NUL, so there is no way to insert other
junk between the "end" of the argument and the argument terminator.

Adjust the tests to expect the new error message.  Add a docstring to
the function, incorporating the comments that were formerly within the
function plus some added information.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:11 -07:00
c132911088 t1400: provide more usual input to the command
The old version was passing (among other things)

    update SP refs/heads/c NUL NUL 0{40} NUL

to "git update-ref -z --stdin" to test whether the old-value check for
c is working.  But the <newvalue> is empty, which is a bit off the
beaten track.

So, to be sure that we are testing what we want to test, provide an
actual <newvalue> on the "update" line.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:10 -07:00
b984d333a1 t1400: fix name and expected result of one test
The test

    stdin -z create ref fails with zero new value

actually passes an empty new value, not a zero new value.  So rename
the test s/zero/empty/, and change the expected error from

    fatal: create $c given zero new value

to

    fatal: create $c missing <newvalue>

Of course, this makes the test fail now, because although "git
update-ref" tries to distinguish between these two errors, it does not
succeed in this situation.  Fixing it is more than a one-liner, so
mark the test test_expect_failure for now.  The failure will be fixed
later in this patch series.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 12:09:10 -07:00
b513f71f60 git-multimail: update to version 1.0.0
This commit contains the squashed changes from the upstream
git-multimail repository since the last code drop.  Highlights:

* Fix encoding of non-ASCII email addresses in email headers.

* Fix backwards-compatibility bugs for older Python 2.x versions.

* Fix a backwards-compatibility bug for Git 1.7.1.

* Add an option commitDiffOpts to customize logs for revisions.

* Pass "-oi" to sendmail by default to prevent premature
  termination
  on a line containing only ".".

* Stagger email "Date:" values in an attempt to help mail clients
  thread the emails in the right order.

* If a mailing list setting is missing, just skip sending the
  corresponding email (with a warning) instead of failing.

* Add a X-Git-Host header that can be used for email filtering.

* Allow the sender's fully-qualified domain name to be configured.

* Minor documentation improvements.

* Add a CHANGES file.

Contributions-by: Raphaël Hertzog <hertzog@debian.org>
Contributions-by: Eric Berberich <eric.berberich@gmail.com>
Contributions-by: Michiel Holtkamp <git@elfstone.nl>
Contributions-by: Malte Swart <mswart@devtation.de>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 11:57:11 -07:00
c215d3d282 commit -m: commit staged submodules regardless of ignore config
The previous commit fixed the problem that the staged but that ignored
submodules did not show up in the status output of the commit command and
weren't committed afterwards either. But when commit doesn't generate the
status output (e.g. when used in a script with '-m') the ignored submodule
will still not be committed. This is because in that case a different code
path is taken which calls index_differs_from() instead of calling the
wt_status functions.

Fix that by calling index_differs_from() from builtin/commit.c with a
diff_options argument value that tells it not ignore any submodule changes
unless the '--ignore-submodules' option is used. Even though this option
isn't yet implemented for cmd_commit() but only for cmd_status() this
prepares cmd_commit() to correctly handle the '--ignore-submodules' option
later. As status and commit share the same ignore_submodule_arg variable
this makes the code more robust against accidental breakage and documents
how to correctly call index_differs_from().

Change the expected result of the test documenting this problem from
failure to success.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 10:42:35 -07:00
1d2f393ac9 status/commit: show staged submodules regardless of ignore config
Currently setting submodule.<name>.ignore and/or diff.ignoreSubmodules to
"all" suppresses all output of submodule changes for the diff family,
status and commit. For status and commit this is really confusing, as it
even when the user chooses to record a new commit for an ignored submodule
by adding it manually this change won't show up under the to-be-committed
changes. To add insult to injury, a later "git commit" will error out with
"nothing to commit" when only ignored submodules are staged.

Fix that by making wt_status always print staged submodule changes, no
matter what ignore settings are configured. The only exception is when the
user explicitly uses the "--ignore-submodules=all" command line option, in
that case the submodule output is still suppressed. This also makes "git
commit" work again when only modifications of ignored submodules are
staged, as that command uses the "commitable" member of the wt_status
struct to determine if staged changes are present. But this only happens
when the commit command uses the wt_status* functions to produce status
output for human consumption (when forking an editor or with --dry-run),
in all other cases (e.g. when run in a script with '-m') another code path
is taken which uses index_differs_from() to determine if any changes are
staged which still ignores submodules according to their configuration.
This will be fixed in a follow-up commit.

Change t7508 to reflect this new behavior and add three new tests to show
that a single staged submodule configured to be ignored will be committed
when the status output is generated and won't be if not. Also update the
documentation of the ignore config options accordingly.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-07 10:32:20 -07:00
69e4b3426a pack-objects: do not reuse packfiles without --delta-base-offset
When we are sending a packfile to a remote, we currently try
to reuse a whole chunk of packfile without bothering to look
at the individual objects. This can make things like initial
clones much lighter on the server, as we can just dump the
packfile bytes.

However, it's possible that the other side cannot read our
packfile verbatim. For example, we may have objects stored
as OFS_DELTA, but the client is an antique version of git
that only understands REF_DELTA. We negotiate this
capability over the fetch protocol. A normal pack-objects
run will convert OFS_DELTA into REF_DELTA on the fly, but
the "reuse pack" code path never even looks at the objects.

This patch disables packfile reuse if the other side is
missing any capabilities that we might have used in the
on-disk pack. Right now the only one is OFS_DELTA, but we
may need to expand in the future (e.g., if packv4 introduces
new object types).

We could be more thorough and only disable reuse in this
case when we actually have an OFS_DELTA to send, but:

  1. We almost always will have one, since we prefer
     OFS_DELTA to REF_DELTA when possible. So this case
     would almost never come up.

  2. Looking through the objects defeats the purpose of the
     optimization, which is to do as little work as possible
     to get the bytes to the remote.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-04 15:29:44 -07:00
2db1a43f41 add ignore_missing_links mode to revwalk
When pack-objects is computing the reachability bitmap to
serve a fetch request, it can erroneously die() if some of
the UNINTERESTING objects are not present. Upload-pack
throws away HAVE lines from the client for objects we do not
have, but we may have a tip object without all of its
ancestors (e.g., if the tip is no longer reachable and was
new enough to survive a `git prune`, but some of its
reachable objects did get pruned).

In the non-bitmap case, we do a revision walk with the HAVE
objects marked as UNINTERESTING. The revision walker
explicitly ignores errors in accessing UNINTERESTING commits
to handle this case (and we do not bother looking at
UNINTERESTING trees or blobs at all).

When we have bitmaps, however, the process is quite
different.  The bitmap index for a pack-objects run is
calculated in two separate steps:

First, we perform an extensive walk from all the HAVEs to
find the full set of objects reachable from them. This walk
is usually optimized away because we are expected to hit an
object with a bitmap during the traversal, which allows us
to terminate early.

Secondly, we perform an extensive walk from all the WANTs,
which usually also terminates early because we hit a commit
with an existing bitmap.

Once we have the resulting bitmaps from the two walks, we
AND-NOT them together to obtain the resulting set of objects
we need to pack.

When we are walking the HAVE objects, the revision walker
does not know that we are walking it only to mark the
results as uninteresting. We strip out the UNINTERESTING flag,
because those objects _are_ interesting to us during the
first walk. We want to keep going to get a complete set of
reachable objects if we can.

We need some way to tell the revision walker that it's OK to
silently truncate the HAVE walk, just like it does for the
UNINTERESTING case. This patch introduces a new
`ignore_missing_links` flag to the `rev_info` struct, which
we set only for the HAVE walk.

It also adds tests to cover UNINTERESTING objects missing
from several positions: a missing blob, a missing tree, and
a missing parent commit. The missing blob already worked (as
we do not care about its contents at all), but the other two
cases caused us to die().

Note that there are a few cases we do not need to test:

  1. We do not need to test a missing tree, with the blob
     still present. Without the tree that refers to it, we
     would not know that the blob is relevant to our walk.

  2. We do not need to test a tip commit that is missing.
     Upload-pack omits these for us (and in fact, we
     complain even in the non-bitmap case if it fails to do
     so).

Reported-by: Siddharth Agarwal <sid0@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-04 13:31:38 -07:00
e4eef26d98 MSVC: allow using ExtUtils::MakeMaker
Drop NO_PERL_MAKEMAKER from config.mak.uname for the MSVC platform.

MakeMaker is available on Windows Perl implementations and
installs modules to correct location, unlike NO_PERL_MAKEMAKER Makefile.

Signed-off-by: Marat Radchenko <marat@slonopotamus.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-04 11:57:38 -07:00
82edd39663 Update draft release notes to 2.0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-03 13:40:59 -07:00
5defdf12cc Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  Start preparing for 1.9.1
2014-04-03 13:40:31 -07:00
2f91649a9b Start preparing for 1.9.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-03 13:40:00 -07:00
3097b687be Merge branch 'jk/mv-submodules-fix' into maint
* jk/mv-submodules-fix:
  mv: prevent mismatched data when ignoring errors.
  builtin/mv: fix out of bounds write

Conflicts:
	t/t7001-mv.sh
2014-04-03 13:39:06 -07:00
a3236f4739 Merge branch 'mh/remove-subtree-long-pathname-fix' into maint
* mh/remove-subtree-long-pathname-fix:
  entry.c: fix possible buffer overflow in remove_subtree()
  checkout_entry(): use the strbuf throughout the function
2014-04-03 13:39:05 -07:00
e99a69da6b Merge branch 'jk/lib-terminal-lazy' into maint
* jk/lib-terminal-lazy:
  t/lib-terminal: make TTY a lazy prerequisite
2014-04-03 13:39:04 -07:00
3dd108348f Merge branch 'nd/index-pack-error-message' into maint
* nd/index-pack-error-message:
  index-pack: report error using the correct variable
2014-04-03 13:39:04 -07:00
9cbd46aee1 Merge branch 'us/printf-not-echo' into maint
* us/printf-not-echo:
  test-lib.sh: do not "echo" caller-supplied strings
  rebase -i: do not "echo" random user-supplied strings
2014-04-03 13:39:04 -07:00
3824595664 Merge branch 'rr/doc-merge-strategies' into maint
* rr/doc-merge-strategies:
  Documentation/merge-strategies: avoid hyphenated commands
2014-04-03 13:39:03 -07:00
9c7d0cc62f Merge branch 'jk/shallow-update-fix' into maint
* jk/shallow-update-fix:
  shallow: verify shallow file after taking lock
  shallow: automatically clean up shallow tempfiles
  shallow: use stat_validity to check for up-to-date file
2014-04-03 13:39:03 -07:00
6248be7678 Merge branch 'jc/stash-pop-not-popped' into maint
* jc/stash-pop-not-popped:
  stash pop: mention we did not drop the stash upon failing to apply
2014-04-03 13:39:03 -07:00
0a01752ad3 Merge branch 'jn/wt-status' into maint
* jn/wt-status:
  wt-status: lift the artificual "at least 20 columns" floor
  wt-status: i18n of section labels
  wt-status: extract the code to compute width for labels
  wt-status: make full label string to be subject to l10n
2014-04-03 13:39:02 -07:00
8815d8aa7c Merge branch 'nd/gc-aggressive'
Allow tweaking the maximum length of the delta-chain produced by
"gc --aggressive".

* nd/gc-aggressive:
  environment.c: fix constness for odb_pack_keep()
  gc --aggressive: make --depth configurable
2014-04-03 12:38:47 -07:00
7b6bc4d835 Merge branch 'jc/fix-diff-no-index-diff-opt-parse'
"diff --no-index -Mq a b" fell into an infinite loop.

* jc/fix-diff-no-index-diff-opt-parse:
  diff-no-index: correctly diagnose error return from diff_opt_parse()
2014-04-03 12:38:42 -07:00
8ba87adad6 Merge branch 'cb/aix'
* cb/aix:
  tests: don't rely on strerror text when testing rmdir failure
  dir.c: make git_fnmatch() not inline
2014-04-03 12:38:38 -07:00
400ecca8c1 Merge branch 'cn/fetch-prune-overlapping-destination'
Protect refs in a hierarchy that can come from more than one remote
hierarcies from incorrect removal by "git fetch --prune".

* cn/fetch-prune-overlapping-destination:
  fetch: handle overlaping refspecs on --prune
  fetch: add a failing test for prunning with overlapping refspecs
2014-04-03 12:38:18 -07:00
b407d40933 Merge branch 'nd/log-show-linear-break'
Attempts to show where a single-strand-of-pearls break in "git log"
output.

* nd/log-show-linear-break:
  log: add --show-linear-break to help see non-linear history
  object.h: centralize object flag allocation
2014-04-03 12:38:11 -07:00
2b06c1e57e Merge branch 'ep/shell-command-substitution'
* ep/shell-command-substitution:
  git-am.sh: use the $(...) construct for command substitution
  check-builtins.sh: use the $(...) construct for command substitution
2014-04-03 12:38:04 -07:00
125d8ecefe Merge branch 'ap/remote-hg-skip-null-bookmarks'
* ap/remote-hg-skip-null-bookmarks:
  remote-hg: do not fail on invalid bookmarks
2014-04-02 14:18:23 -07:00
8132f2c44d Merge branch 'rs/pickaxe-i'
Allow the options -i/--regexp-ignore-case, --pickaxe-regex, and -S
to be used together and work as expected to perform a pickaxe
search using case-insensitive regular expression matching.

* rs/pickaxe-i:
  pickaxe: simplify kwset loop in contains()
  pickaxe: call strlen only when necessary in diffcore_pickaxe_count()
  pickaxe: move pickaxe() after pickaxe_match()
  pickaxe: merge diffcore_pickaxe_grep() and diffcore_pickaxe_count() into diffcore_pickaxe()
  pickaxe: honor -i when used with -S and --pickaxe-regex
  t4209: use helper functions to test --author
  t4209: use helper functions to test --grep
  t4209: factor out helper function test_log_icase()
  t4209: factor out helper function test_log()
  t4209: set up expectations up front
2014-04-02 14:18:20 -07:00
6b869a1eeb Revert part of 384364b (Start preparing for Git 2.0, 2014-03-07)
As we are not shipping with the submodule change, remove the
entry for it.
2014-04-02 14:16:13 -07:00
d851ffb91f Revert "submodule: explicit local branch creation in module_clone"
This reverts commit 23d25e48f5, as it is
broken for users who haven't opted into the new feature of checking
out submodule.*.branch with update mode set to checkout.
2014-04-02 14:15:36 -07:00
b9d56b5dd9 update-ref: fail create operation over stdin if ref already exists
Signed-off-by: Aman Gupta <aman@tmm1.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Acked-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-02 10:40:43 -07:00
f80d1f95f0 t4212: loosen far-in-future test for AIX
One of the tests in t4212 checks our behavior when we feed
gmtime a date so far in the future that it gives up and
returns NULL. Some implementations, like AIX, may actually
just provide us a bogus result instead.

It's not worth it for us to come up with heuristics that
guess whether the return value is sensible or not. On good
platforms where gmtime reports the problem to us with NULL,
we will print the epoch value. On bad platforms, we will
print garbage.  But our test should be written for the
lowest common denominator so that it passes everywhere.

Reported-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-01 14:40:05 -07:00
6654754779 date: recognize bogus FreeBSD gmtime output
Most gmtime implementations return a NULL value when they
encounter an error (and this behavior is specified by ANSI C
and POSIX).  FreeBSD's implementation, however, will simply
leave the "struct tm" untouched.  Let's also recognize this
and convert it to a NULL (with this patch, t4212 should pass
on FreeBSD).

Reported-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-01 14:39:04 -07:00
a2df521127 rev-parse: fix typo in example on manpage
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-04-01 14:07:46 -07:00
edac360bdd Revert "Merge branch 'wt/doc-submodule-name-path-confusion-2'"
This reverts commit 00d4ff1a69, reversing
changes made to d3badc6eb0.
2014-04-01 11:52:37 -07:00
25d1ac0e59 Update draft release notes to 2.0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 16:41:23 -07:00
4ab9211ac2 Merge branch 'mm/status-porcelain-format-i18n-fix'
* mm/status-porcelain-format-i18n-fix:
  status: disable translation when --porcelain is used
2014-03-31 16:31:25 -07:00
1d9aaed2fa Merge branch 'an/branch-config-message'
* an/branch-config-message:
  branch.c: install_branch_config: simplify if chain
2014-03-31 16:31:20 -07:00
ad4d8911f8 Merge branch 'jk/tests-cleanup'
* jk/tests-cleanup:
  t0001: drop subshells just for "cd"
  t0001: drop useless subshells
  t0001: use test_must_fail
  t0001: use test_config_global
  t0001: use test_path_is_*
  t0001: make symlink reinit test more careful
  t: prefer "git config --file" to GIT_CONFIG
  t: prefer "git config --file" to GIT_CONFIG with test_must_fail
  t: stop using GIT_CONFIG to cross repo boundaries
  t: drop useless sane_unset GIT_* calls
  t/test-lib: drop redundant unset of GIT_CONFIG
  t/Makefile: stop setting GIT_CONFIG
2014-03-31 16:31:17 -07:00
00d4ff1a69 Merge branch 'wt/doc-submodule-name-path-confusion-2'
* wt/doc-submodule-name-path-confusion-2:
  doc: submodule.*.branch config is keyed by name
2014-03-31 16:31:16 -07:00
d3badc6eb0 Merge branch 'wt/doc-submodule-name-path-confusion-1'
* wt/doc-submodule-name-path-confusion-1:
  doc: submodule.* config are keyed by submodule names
2014-03-31 16:31:14 -07:00
8456113de5 Merge branch 'mr/msvc-link-with-lcurl'
* mr/msvc-link-with-lcurl:
  MSVC: allow linking with the cURL library
2014-03-31 16:31:07 -07:00
24b9cb1002 Merge branch 'ib/rev-parse-parseopt-argh'
Teaches the "rev-parse --parseopt" mechanism used by scripted
Porcelains to parse command line options and give help text how to
supply argv-help (the placeholder string for an option parameter,
e.g. "key-id" in "--gpg-sign=<key-id>").

* ib/rev-parse-parseopt-argh:
  t1502: protect runs of SPs used in the indentation
  rev-parse --parseopt: option argument name hints
2014-03-31 16:30:59 -07:00
a79cbc1368 Merge branch 'dp/makefile-charset-lib-doc'
* dp/makefile-charset-lib-doc:
  Makefile: describe CHARSET_LIB better
2014-03-31 16:30:57 -07:00
c228a5c077 Merge branch 'js/userdiff-cc'
Improves the pattern to match the hunk-header for C/C++.

* js/userdiff-cc:
  userdiff: have 'cpp' hunk header pattern catch more C++ anchor points
  t4018: test cases showing that the cpp pattern misses many anchor points
  t4018: test cases for the built-in cpp pattern
  t4018: reduce test files for pattern compilation tests
  t4018: convert custom pattern test to the new infrastructure
  t4018: convert java pattern test to the new infrastructure
  t4018: convert perl pattern tests to the new infrastructure
  t4018: an infrastructure to test hunk headers
  userdiff: support unsigned and long long suffixes of integer constants
  userdiff: support C++ ->* and .* operators in the word regexp
2014-03-31 16:30:54 -07:00
e164a8fd79 Merge branch 'dw/doc-status-no-longer-shows-pound-prefix'
* dw/doc-status-no-longer-shows-pound-prefix:
  doc: status, remove leftover statement about '#' prefix
2014-03-31 16:30:52 -07:00
76bc28a3bb Merge branch 'ca/doc-config-third-party'
* ca/doc-config-third-party:
  config.txt: third-party tools may and do use their own variables
2014-03-31 16:30:49 -07:00
f7804e250d Merge branch 'hs/simplify-bit-setting-in-fsck-tree'
* hs/simplify-bit-setting-in-fsck-tree:
  fsck: use bitwise-or assignment operator to set flag
2014-03-31 16:30:44 -07:00
fa73d35468 Merge branch 'dt/tests-with-env-not-subshell'
* dt/tests-with-env-not-subshell:
  tests: use "env" to run commands with temporary env-var settings
2014-03-31 16:30:40 -07:00
235e8d5914 code and test: fix misuses of "nor"
Signed-off-by: Justin Lebar <jlebar@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 15:29:33 -07:00
01689909eb comments: fix misuses of "nor"
Signed-off-by: Justin Lebar <jlebar@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 15:29:27 -07:00
e34b272344 contrib: fix misuses of "nor"
Signed-off-by: Justin Lebar <jlebar@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 15:17:56 -07:00
a58088abe2 Documentation: fix misuses of "nor"
Signed-off-by: Justin Lebar <jlebar@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 15:16:22 -07:00
20d1c6528c parse-options: remove unused OPT_SET_PTR
OPT_SET_PTR was never used since its creation at db7244bd
(parse-options new features., 2007-11-07).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 13:01:19 -07:00
9ff8ff310b parse-options: add cast to correct pointer type to OPT_SET_PTR
Do not force users of OPT_SET_PTR to cast pointer to correct
underlying pointer type by integrating cast into OPT_SET_PTR macro.

Cast is required to prevent 'initialization makes integer from pointer
without a cast' compiler warning.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 11:55:41 -07:00
e25c070cb5 MSVC: fix t0040-parse-options crash
On 64-bit MSVC, pointers are 64 bit but `long` is only 32.
Thus, casting string to `unsigned long`, which is redundand on other
platforms, throws away important bits and when later cast to `intptr_t`
results in corrupt pointer.

This patch fixes test-parse-options by replacing harming cast with
correct one.

Signed-off-by: Marat Radchenko <marat@slonopotamus.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 11:54:27 -07:00
11b5390251 tests: don't rely on strerror text when testing rmdir failure
AIX doesn't make a distiction between EEXIST and ENOTEMPTY; relying
on the strerror string for the rmdir failure is fragile. Just test
that the start of the string matches the Git controlled "failed to
rmdir..."  error. The exact text of the OS generated error string
isn't important to the test.

Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 11:53:24 -07:00
1f26ce615a dir.c: make git_fnmatch() not inline
Now that it calls a static inline function, it cannot be an inline
definition with external linkage. Remove inline and make it an
external definition.

Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 11:50:15 -07:00
ad1c3fbd26 diff-no-index: correctly diagnose error return from diff_opt_parse()
diff_opt_parse() returns the number of options parsed, or often
returns error() which is defined to return -1.  Yes, return value of
0 is "I did not process that option at all", which should cause the
caller to say that, but negative return should not be forgotten.

This bug caused "diff --no-index" to infinitely show the same error
message because the returned value was used to decrement the loop
control variable, e.g.

        $ git diff --no-index --color=words a b
        error: option `color' expects "always", "auto", or "never"
        error: option `color' expects "always", "auto", or "never"
        ...

Instead, make it act like so:

        $ git diff --no-index --color=words a b
        error: option `color' expects "always", "auto", or "never"
        fatal: invalid diff option/value: --color=words

Reported-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 11:48:26 -07:00
8640d49682 environment.c: fix constness for odb_pack_keep()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 10:31:43 -07:00
125f81461d gc --aggressive: make --depth configurable
When 1c192f3 (gc --aggressive: make it really aggressive - 2007-12-06)
made --depth=250 the default value, it didn't really explain the
reason behind, especially the pros and cons of --depth=250.

An old mail from Linus below explains it at length. Long story short,
--depth=250 is a disk saver and a performance killer. Not everybody
agrees on that aggressiveness. Let the user configure it.

    From: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
    Subject: Re: [PATCH] gc --aggressive: make it really aggressive
    Date: Thu, 6 Dec 2007 08:19:24 -0800 (PST)
    Message-ID: <alpine.LFD.0.9999.0712060803430.13796@woody.linux-foundation.org>
    Gmane-URL: http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gcc.devel/94637

    On Thu, 6 Dec 2007, Harvey Harrison wrote:
    >
    > 7:41:25elapsed 86%CPU

    Heh. And this is why you want to do it exactly *once*, and then just
    export the end result for others ;)

    > -r--r--r-- 1 hharrison hharrison 324094684 2007-12-06 07:26 pack-1d46...pack

    But yeah, especially if you allow longer delta chains, the end result can
    be much smaller (and what makes the one-time repack more expensive is the
    window size, not the delta chain - you could make the delta chains longer
    with no cost overhead at packing time)

    HOWEVER.

    The longer delta chains do make it potentially much more expensive to then
    use old history. So there's a trade-off. And quite frankly, a delta depth
    of 250 is likely going to cause overflows in the delta cache (which is
    only 256 entries in size *and* it's a hash, so it's going to start having
    hash conflicts long before hitting the 250 depth limit).

    So when I said "--depth=250 --window=250", I chose those numbers more as
    an example of extremely aggressive packing, and I'm not at all sure that
    the end result is necessarily wonderfully usable. It's going to save disk
    space (and network bandwidth - the delta's will be re-used for the network
    protocol too!), but there are definitely downsides too, and using long
    delta chains may simply not be worth it in practice.

    (And some of it might just want to have git tuning, ie if people think
    that long deltas are worth it, we could easily just expand on the delta
    hash, at the cost of some more memory used!)

    That said, the good news is that working with *new* history will not be
    affected negatively, and if you want to be _really_ sneaky, there are ways
    to say "create a pack that contains the history up to a version one year
    ago, and be very aggressive about those old versions that we still want to
    have around, but do a separate pack for newer stuff using less aggressive
    parameters"

    So this is something that can be tweaked, although we don't really have
    any really nice interfaces for stuff like that (ie the git delta cache
    size is hardcoded in the sources and cannot be set in the config file, and
    the "pack old history more aggressively" involves some manual scripting
    and knowing how "git pack-objects" works rather than any nice simple
    command line switch).

    So the thing to take away from this is:
     - git is certainly flexible as hell
     - .. but to get the full power you may need to tweak things
     - .. happily you really only need to have one person to do the tweaking,
       and the tweaked end results will be available to others that do not
       need to know/care.

    And whether the difference between 320MB and 500MB is worth any really
    involved tweaking (considering the potential downsides), I really don't
    know. Only testing will tell.

			    Linus

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 10:26:24 -07:00
96e67c86f8 Update draft release notes to 2.0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-28 13:56:29 -07:00
40adf520a3 Merge branch 'ys/fsck-commit-parsing'
* ys/fsck-commit-parsing:
  fsck.c:fsck_commit(): use skip_prefix() to verify and skip constant
  fsck.c:fsck_ident(): ident points at a const string
2014-03-28 13:51:24 -07:00
97345145ff Merge branch 'bg/rebase-off-of-previous-branch'
* bg/rebase-off-of-previous-branch:
  rebase: allow "-" short-hand for the previous branch
2014-03-28 13:51:20 -07:00
9abf65d23c Merge branch 'bp/commit-p-editor'
When it is not necessary to edit a commit log message (e.g. "git
commit -m" is given a message without specifying "-e"), we used to
disable the spawning of the editor by overriding GIT_EDITOR, but
this means all the uses of the editor, other than to edit the
commit log message, are also affected.

* bp/commit-p-editor:
  run-command: mark run_hook_with_custom_index as deprecated
  merge hook tests: fix and update tests
  merge: fix GIT_EDITOR override for commit hook
  commit: fix patch hunk editing with "commit -p -m"
  test patch hunk editing with "commit -p -m"
  merge hook tests: use 'test_must_fail' instead of '!'
  merge hook tests: fix missing '&&' in test
2014-03-28 13:51:11 -07:00
b2273d0603 Merge branch 'ah/doc-gitk-config'
* ah/doc-gitk-config:
  Documentation/gitk: document the location of the configulation file
2014-03-28 13:51:09 -07:00
c301a23ff8 Merge branch 'fr/add-interactive-argv-array'
* fr/add-interactive-argv-array:
  add: use struct argv_array in run_add_interactive()
2014-03-28 13:51:05 -07:00
fe2a4f1591 Merge branch 'jk/subtree-prefix'
A stray environment variable $prefix could have leaked into and
affected the behaviour of the "subtree" script.

* jk/subtree-prefix:
  subtree: initialize "prefix" variable
2014-03-28 13:50:59 -07:00
0ddcc9cfba Merge branch 'jk/pack-bitmap-progress'
The progress output while repacking and transferring objects showed
an apparent large silence while writing the objects out of existing
packfiles, when the reachability bitmap was in use.

* jk/pack-bitmap-progress:
  pack-objects: show reused packfile objects in "Counting objects"
  pack-objects: show progress for reused packfiles
2014-03-28 13:50:56 -07:00
e2450e1245 Merge branch 'jk/pack-bitmap'
Instead of dying when asked to (re)pack with the reachability
bitmap when a bitmap cannot be built, just (re)pack without
producing a bitmap in such a case, with a warning.

* jk/pack-bitmap:
  pack-objects: turn off bitmaps when skipping objects
2014-03-28 13:50:50 -07:00
4b623d80f7 MSVC: link in invalidcontinue.obj for better POSIX compatibility
By default, Windows abort()'s instead of setting
errno=EINVAL when invalid arguments are passed to standard functions.

For example, when PAGER quits and git detects it with
errno=EPIPE on write(), check_pipe() in write_or_die.c tries raise(SIGPIPE)
but since there is no SIGPIPE on Windows, it is treated as invalid argument,
causing abort() and crash report window.

Linking in invalidcontinue.obj (provided along with MS compiler) allows
raise(SIGPIPE) to return with errno=EINVAL.

Signed-off-by: Marat Radchenko <marat@slonopotamus.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-28 13:37:16 -07:00
7c15fe92ac doc: submodule.*.branch config is keyed by name
Ever since 941987a5 (git-submodule: give submodules proper names,
2007-06-11) introduced the ability to move a submodule from one path
to another inside its superproject tree without losing its identity,
we should have consistently used submodule.<name>.* to access
settings related to the named submodule.

Signed-off-by: W. Trevor King <wking@tremily.us>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-27 15:01:42 -07:00
15d64936d4 doc: submodule.* config are keyed by submodule names
Ever since 941987a5 (git-submodule: give submodules proper names,
2007-06-11) introduced the ability to move a submodule from one path
to another inside its superproject tree without losing its identity,
we should have consistently used submodule.<name>.* to access
settings related to the named submodule.

Reported-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: W. Trevor King <wking@tremily.us>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-27 14:58:37 -07:00
da8daa367b MSVC: allow linking with the cURL library
Teach the clink.pl script that -lcurl is a request to link with the
cURL library, and drop NO_CURL from config.mak.uname for the MSVC
platform.

Signed-off-by: Marat Radchenko <marat@slonopotamus.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-27 12:05:14 -07:00
61f76a3612 Portable alloca for Git
In the next patch we'll have to use alloca() for performance reasons,
but since alloca is non-standardized and is not portable, let's have a
trick with compatibility wrappers:

1. at configure time, determine, do we have working alloca() through
   alloca.h, and define

    #define HAVE_ALLOCA_H

   if yes.

2. in code

    #ifdef HAVE_ALLOCA_H
    # include <alloca.h>
    # define xalloca(size)      (alloca(size))
    # define xalloca_free(p)    do {} while(0)
    #else
    # define xalloca(size)      (xmalloc(size))
    # define xalloca_free(p)    (free(p))
    #endif

   and use it like

   func() {
       p = xalloca(size);
       ...

       xalloca_free(p);
   }

This way, for systems, where alloca is available, we'll have optimal
on-stack allocations with fast executions. On the other hand, on
systems, where alloca is not available, this gracefully fallbacks to
xmalloc/free.

Both autoconf and config.mak.uname configurations were updated. For
autoconf, we are not bothering considering cases, when no alloca.h is
available, but alloca() works some other way - its simply alloca.h is
available and works or not, everything else is deep legacy.

For config.mak.uname, I've tried to make my almost-sure guess for where
alloca() is available, but since I only have access to Linux it is the
only change I can be sure about myself, with relevant to other changed
systems people Cc'ed.

NOTE

SunOS and Windows had explicit -DHAVE_ALLOCA_H in their configurations.
I've changed that to now-common HAVE_ALLOCA_H=YesPlease which should be
correct.

Cc: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Cc: Marius Storm-Olsen <mstormo@gmail.com>
Cc: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Cc: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Cc: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Cc: Gerrit Pape <pape@smarden.org>
Cc: Petr Salinger <Petr.Salinger@seznam.cz>
Cc: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Thomas Schwinge <thomas@codesourcery.com> (GNU Hurd changes)
Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-27 11:54:01 -07:00
12cd81743d tree-diff: reuse base str(buf) memory on sub-tree recursion
Instead of allocating it all the time for every subtree in
ll_diff_tree_sha1, let's allocate it once in diff_tree_sha1, and then
all callee just use it in stacking style, without memory allocations.

This should be faster, and for me this change gives the following
slight speedups for

    git log --raw --no-abbrev --no-renames --format='%H'

                navy.git    linux.git v3.10..v3.11

    before      0.618s      1.903s
    after       0.611s      1.889s
    speedup     1.1%        0.7%

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-27 11:52:35 -07:00
b9081a6574 tree-diff: no need to call "full" diff_tree_sha1 from show_path()
As described in previous commit, when recursing into sub-trees, we can
use lower-level tree walker, since its interface is now sha1 based.

The change is ok, because diff_tree_sha1() only invokes
ll_diff_tree_sha1(), and also, if base is empty, try_to_follow_renames().
But base is not empty here, as we have added a path and '/' before
recursing.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-27 11:50:29 -07:00
52894e7095 tree-diff: rework diff_tree interface to be sha1 based
In the next commit this will allow to reduce intermediate calls, when
recursing into subtrees - at that stage we know only subtree sha1, and
it is natural for tree walker to start from that phase. For now we do

    diff_tree
        show_path
            diff_tree_sha1
                diff_tree
                    ...

and the change will allow to reduce it to

    diff_tree
        show_path
            diff_tree

Also, it will allow to omit allocating strbuf for each subtree, and just
reuse the common strbuf via playing with its len.

The above-mentioned improvements go in the next 2 patches.

The downside is that try_to_follow_renames(), if active, we cause
re-reading of 2 initial trees, which was negligible based on my timings,
and which is outweighed cogently by the upsides.

NOTE To keep with the current interface and semantics, I needed to
rename the function from diff_tree() to diff_tree_sha1(). As
diff_tree_sha1() was already used, and the function we are talking here
is its more low-level helper, let's use convention for prefixing
such helpers with "ll_". So the final renaming is

    diff_tree() -> ll_diff_tree_sha1()

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-27 11:49:35 -07:00
ad6f3cc7d2 tree-diff: diff_tree() should now be static
We reworked all its users to use the functionality through
diff_tree_sha1 variant in recent patches (see "tree-diff: allow
diff_tree_sha1 to accept NULL sha1" and what comes next).

diff_tree() is now not used outside tree-diff.c - make it static.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-26 14:30:47 -07:00
6ca844e9f5 tree-diff: remove special-case diff-emitting code for empty-tree cases
While walking trees, we iterate their entries from lowest to highest in
sort order, so empty tree means all entries were already went over.

If we artificially assign +infinity value to such tree "entry", it will
go after all usual entries, and through the usual driver loop we will be
taking the same actions, which were hand-coded for special cases, i.e.

    t1 empty, t2 non-empty
        pathcmp(+∞, t2) -> +1
        show_path(/*t1=*/NULL, t2);     /* = t1 > t2 case in main loop */

    t1 non-empty, t2-empty
        pathcmp(t1, +∞) -> -1
        show_path(t1, /*t2=*/NULL);     /* = t1 < t2 case in main loop */

In other words when we have t1 and t2, we return a sign that tells the
caller to indicate the "earlier" one to be emitted, and by returning the
sign that causes the non-empty side to be emitted, we will automatically
cause the entries from the remaining side to be emitted, without
attempting to touch the empty side at all.  We can teach
tree_entry_pathcmp() to pretend that an empty tree has an element that
sorts after anything else to achieve this.

Right now we never go to when compared tree descriptors are both
infinity, as this condition is checked in the loop beginning as
finishing criteria, but will do so in the future, when there will be
several parents iterated simultaneously, and some pair of them would run
to the end.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-26 14:25:11 -07:00
14d3bb4955 apply --ignore-space-change: lines with and without leading whitespaces do not match
The fuzzy_matchlines() function is used when attempting to resurrect
a patch that is whitespace-damaged, or when applying a patch that
was produced against an old codebase to the codebase after
indentation change.

The patch may want to change a line "a_bc" ("_" is used throught
this description for a whitespace to make it stand out) in the
original into something else, and we may not find "a_bc" in the
current source, but there may be "a__bc" (two spaces instead of one
the whitespace-damaged patch claims to expect).  By ignoring the
amount of whitespaces, it forces "git apply" to consider that "a_bc"
in the broken patch meant to refer to "a__bc" in reality.

However, the implementation special cases a run of whitespaces at
the beginning of a line and makes "abc" match "_abc", even though a
whitespace in the middle of string never matches a 0-width gap,
e.g. "a_bc" does not match "abc".  A run of whitespace at the end of
one string does not match a 0-width end of line on the other line,
either, e.g. "abc_" does not match "abc".

Fix this inconsistency by making the code skip leading whitespaces
only when both strings begin with a whitespace.  This makes the
option mean the same as the option of the same name in "diff" and
"git diff".

Note that I am not sure if anybody sane should use this option in
the first place.  The fuzzy match logic may be able to find the
original line that the patch author may have meant to touch because
it does not fully trust what the original lines say (i.e. context
lines prefixed by " " and old lines prefixed by "-" does not have to
exactly match the contents the patch is applied to).  There is no
reason for us to trust what the replacement lines (i.e. new lines
prefixed by "+") say, either, but with this option enabled, we end
up copying these new lines with suspicious whitespace distributions
literally into the patched result.  But as long as we keep it, we
should make it do its insane thing consistently.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-26 14:02:33 -07:00
e6f637122e fetch: handle overlaping refspecs on --prune
We need to consider that a remote-tracking branch may match more than
one rhs of a fetch refspec. In such a case, it is not enough to stop at
the first match but look at all of the matches in order to determine
whether a head is stale.

To this goal, introduce a variant of query_refspecs which returns all of
the matching refspecs and loop over those answers to check for
staleness.

Signed-off-by: Carlos Martín Nieto <cmn@elego.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-26 12:57:52 -07:00
7a76c28ff2 status: disable translation when --porcelain is used
"git status --branch --porcelain" displays the status of the branch
(ahead, behind, gone), and used gettext to translate the string.

Use hardcoded strings when --porcelain is used, but keep the gettext
translation for "git status --short" which is essentially the same, but
meant to be read by a human.

Reported-by: Anarky <ghostanarky@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-26 12:56:30 -07:00
1b32decefd log: add --show-linear-break to help see non-linear history
Option explanation is in rev-list-options.txt. The interaction with -z
is left undecided.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-25 15:09:49 -07:00
208acbfb82 object.h: centralize object flag allocation
While the field "flags" is mainly used by the revision walker, it is
also used in many other places. Centralize the whole flag allocation to
one place for a better overview (and easier to move flags if we have
too).

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-25 15:09:24 -07:00
75ee3d7078 git-am.sh: use the $(...) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

    for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
    do
      sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
    done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-25 13:43:32 -07:00
b09d8552bd check-builtins.sh: use the $(...) construct for command substitution
The Git CodingGuidelines prefer the $(...) construct for command
substitution instead of using the backquotes `...`.

The backquoted form is the traditional method for command
substitution, and is supported by POSIX.  However, all but the
simplest uses become complicated quickly.  In particular, embedded
command substitutions and/or the use of double quotes require
careful escaping with the backslash character.

The patch was generated by:

    for _f in $(find . -name "*.sh")
    do
      sed -i 's@`\(.*\)`@$(\1)@g' ${_f}
    done

and then carefully proof-read.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-25 13:42:52 -07:00
51be46ec4d remote-hg: do not fail on invalid bookmarks
Mercurial can have bookmarks pointing to "nullid" (the empty root
revision), while Git can not have references to it. When cloning or
fetching from a Mercurial repository that has such a bookmark, the
import failed because git-remote-hg was not be able to create the
corresponding reference.

Warn the user about the invalid reference, and do not advertise these
bookmarks as head refs, but otherwise continue the import. In
particular, we still keep track of the fact that the remote repository
has a bookmark of the given name, in case the user wants to modify that
bookmark.

Also add some test cases for this issue.

Reported-by: Antoine Pelisse <apelisse@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Max Horn <max@quendi.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-25 12:05:24 -07:00
d393d140b5 Update draft release notes to 2.0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-25 12:01:39 -07:00
53c98cc718 Merge branch 'ss/test-on-mingw-rsync-path-no-absolute'
* ss/test-on-mingw-rsync-path-no-absolute:
  t5510: Do not use $(pwd) when fetching / pushing / pulling via rsync
2014-03-25 11:08:35 -07:00
37943cc6b9 Merge branch 'bb/diff-no-index-dotdot'
* bb/diff-no-index-dotdot:
  diff-no-index: replace manual "."/".." check with is_dot_or_dotdot()
  diff-no-index: rename read_directory()
2014-03-25 11:08:31 -07:00
cf30bfb8fb Merge branch 'us/printf-not-echo'
* us/printf-not-echo:
  test-lib.sh: do not "echo" caller-supplied strings
  rebase -i: do not "echo" random user-supplied strings
2014-03-25 11:08:27 -07:00
3e33860aa1 Merge branch 'rr/doc-merge-strategies'
* rr/doc-merge-strategies:
  Documentation/merge-strategies: avoid hyphenated commands
2014-03-25 11:08:23 -07:00
0e8c09263e Merge branch 'nd/index-pack-error-message'
* nd/index-pack-error-message:
  index-pack: report error using the correct variable
2014-03-25 11:08:19 -07:00
66d913367d Merge branch 'jk/lib-terminal-lazy'
The test helper lib-terminal always run an actual test_expect_* when
included, which screwed up with the use of skil-all that may have to
be done later.

* jk/lib-terminal-lazy:
  t/lib-terminal: make TTY a lazy prerequisite
2014-03-25 11:08:09 -07:00
2f2db83fb7 Merge branch 'dm/configure-iconv-locale-charset'
* dm/configure-iconv-locale-charset:
  configure.ac: link with -liconv for locale_charset()
2014-03-25 11:07:51 -07:00
46c0f913a4 Merge branch 'nd/commit-editor-cleanup'
"git commit --cleanup=<mode>" learned a new mode, scissors.

* nd/commit-editor-cleanup:
  commit: add --cleanup=scissors
  wt-status.c: move cut-line print code out to wt_status_add_cut_line
  wt-status.c: make cut_line[] const to shrink .data section a bit
2014-03-25 11:07:48 -07:00
d4c6e9fb6f Merge branch 'jk/warn-on-object-refname-ambiguity'
* jk/warn-on-object-refname-ambiguity:
  rev-list: disable object/refname ambiguity check with --stdin
  cat-file: restore warn_on_object_refname_ambiguity flag
  cat-file: fix a minor memory leak in batch_objects
  cat-file: refactor error handling of batch_objects
2014-03-25 11:07:36 -07:00
ec8cd4fc11 Merge branch 'mh/remove-subtree-long-pathname-fix'
* mh/remove-subtree-long-pathname-fix:
  entry.c: fix possible buffer overflow in remove_subtree()
  checkout_entry(): use the strbuf throughout the function
2014-03-25 11:07:09 -07:00
34a2e88ae2 Merge branch 'nd/indent-fix-connect-c'
* nd/indent-fix-connect-c:
  connect.c: SP after "}", not TAB
2014-03-25 11:07:06 -07:00
12de60ac7a Merge branch 'jk/mv-submodules-fix'
"git mv" that moves a submodule forgot to adjust the array that uses
to keep track of which submodules were to be moved to update its
configuration.

* jk/mv-submodules-fix:
  mv: prevent mismatched data when ignoring errors.
  builtin/mv: fix out of bounds write
2014-03-25 11:02:02 -07:00
2dfefe0f89 Merge branch 'cp/am-patch-format-doc'
* cp/am-patch-format-doc:
  Documentation/git-am: typofix
  Documentation/git-am: Document supported --patch-format options
2014-03-25 11:01:31 -07:00
e4aab50475 pickaxe: simplify kwset loop in contains()
Inlining the variable "found" actually makes the code shorter and
easier to read.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 15:13:17 -07:00
542b2aa2c9 pickaxe: call strlen only when necessary in diffcore_pickaxe_count()
We need to determine the search term's length only when fixed-string
matching is used; regular expression compilation takes a NUL-terminated
string directly.  Only call strlen() in the former case.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 15:13:17 -07:00
3753bd1f69 pickaxe: move pickaxe() after pickaxe_match()
pickaxe() calls pickaxe_match(); moving the definition of the former
after the latter allows us to do without an explicit function
declaration.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 15:13:10 -07:00
63b52afaa8 pickaxe: merge diffcore_pickaxe_grep() and diffcore_pickaxe_count() into diffcore_pickaxe()
diffcore_pickaxe_count() initializes the regular expression or kwset for
the search term, calls pickaxe() with the callback has_changes() and
cleans up afterwards.  diffcore_pickaxe_grep() does the same, only it
doesn't support kwset and uses the callback diff_grep() instead.  Merge
the two functions to form the new diffcore_pickaxe() and thus get rid of
the duplicate regex setup and cleanup code.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 15:12:45 -07:00
218c45a45c pickaxe: honor -i when used with -S and --pickaxe-regex
accccde4 (pickaxe: allow -i to search in patch case-insensitively)
allowed case-insenitive matching for -G and -S, but for the latter
only if fixed string matching is used.  Allow it for -S and regular
expression matching as well to make the support complete.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 15:12:45 -07:00
31a8189ad1 t4209: use helper functions to test --author
Also add tests for case sensitive and non-matching cases.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 15:12:44 -07:00
65a3402f42 t4209: use helper functions to test --grep
Also add tests for non-matching cases.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 15:12:44 -07:00
e7880fcd41 t4209: factor out helper function test_log_icase()
Reduce code duplication by introducing test_log_icase() that runs the
same test with both --regexp-ignore-case and -i.  The specification of
the four basic test scenarios (matching/nomatching combined with case
sensitive/insensitive) becomes easier to read and write.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 15:12:42 -07:00
57b6dc76f2 t4209: factor out helper function test_log()
Twelve tests in t4209 follow the same simple pattern for description,
git log call and checking.  Extract that shared logic into a helper
function named test_log.  Test specifications become a lot more
compact, new tests can be added more easily.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 15:11:44 -07:00
9fe0cf3a5e branch.c: install_branch_config: simplify if chain
Simplify if chain in install_branch_config().

Signed-off-by: Adam <Adam@sigterm.info>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 12:43:07 -07:00
b0f7c7cf86 t4209: set up expectations up front
Instead of creating an expect file for each test, build three files with
the possible valid values during setup and use them in the tests.  This
shortens the test code and saves nine calls to git rev-parse.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 10:58:11 -07:00
b6c2a0d45d parse-options: make sure argh string does not have SP or _
We encourage to spell an argument hint that consists of multiple
words as a single-token separated with dashes.  In order to help
catching violations added by new callers of parse-options, make sure
argh does not contain SP or _ when the code validates the option
definitions.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 10:43:35 -07:00
ec160ae12b update-index: teach --cacheinfo a new syntax "mode,sha1,path"
The "--cacheinfo" option is unusual in that it takes three option
parameters.  An option with an optional parameter is bad enough.  An
option with multiple parameters is simply insane.

Introduce a new syntax that takes these three things concatenated
together with a comma, which makes the command line syntax more
uniform across subcommands, while retaining the traditional syntax
for backward compatiblity.

If we were designing the "update-index" subcommand from scratch
today, it may probably have made sense to make this option (and
possibly others) a command mode option that does not take any option
parameter (hence no need for arg-help).  But we do not live in such
an ideal world, and as far as I can tell, the command still supports
(and must support) mixed command modes in a single invocation, e.g.

    $ git update-index path1 --add path2 \
        --cacheinfo 100644 $(git hash-object --stdin -w <path3) path3 \
	path4

must make sure path1 is already in the index and update all of these
four paths.  So this is probably as far as we can go to fix this issue
without risking to break people's existing scripts.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 10:43:35 -07:00
e703d7118c parse-options: multi-word argh should use dash to separate words
"When you need to use space, use dash" is a strange way to say that
you must not use a space.  Because it is more common for the command
line descriptions to use dashed-multi-words, you do not even want to
use spaces in these places.  Rephrase the documentation to avoid
this strangeness.

Fix a few existing multi-word argument help strings, i.e.

 - GPG key-ids given to -S/--gpg-sign are "key-id";
 - Refs used for storing notes are "notes-ref"; and
 - Expiry timestamps given to --expire are "expiry-date".

and update the corresponding documentation pages.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-24 10:43:34 -07:00
ce7f8745aa t1502: protect runs of SPs used in the indentation
The expected output from the argument help use runs of SPs to align
the description of each option; a careless use of --whitespace=fix
can turn leading parts of them into appropriate number of HTs.
Prevent such a breakage by prefixing all the expected lines with
leading vertical bars in the original and stripping them with a
small sed script.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-23 17:28:03 -07:00
9bab5b6061 rev-parse --parseopt: option argument name hints
Built-in commands can specify names for option arguments when usage text
is generated for a command.  sh based commands should be able to do the
same.

Option argument name hint is any text that comes after [*=?!] after the
argument name up to the first whitespace.

Signed-off-by: Ilya Bobyr <ilya.bobyr@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-23 17:28:03 -07:00
3064b13053 Makefile: describe CHARSET_LIB better
The original explanation was not even grammatically correct or
readable.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-23 13:41:38 -07:00
8a2e8da367 userdiff: have 'cpp' hunk header pattern catch more C++ anchor points
The hunk header pattern 'cpp' is intended for C and C++ source code, but
it is actually not particularly useful for the latter, and even misses
some use-cases for the former.

The parts of the pattern have the following flaws:

- The first part matches an identifier followed immediately by a colon
  and arbitrary text and is intended to reject goto labels and C++
  access specifiers (public, private, protected). But this pattern also
  rejects C++ constructs, which look like this:

    MyClass::MyClass()
    MyClass::~MyClass()
    MyClass::Item MyClass::Find(...

- The second part matches an identifier followed by a list of qualified
  names (i.e. identifiers separated by the C++ scope operator '::')
  separated by space or '*' followed by an opening parenthesis (with
  space between the tokens). It matches function declarations like

    struct item* get_head(...
    int Outer::Inner::Func(...

  Since the pattern requires at least two identifiers, GNU-style
  function definitions are ignored:

    void
    func(...

  Moreover, since the pattern does not allow punctuation other than '*',
  the following C++ constructs are not recognized:

  . template definitions:
      template<class T> int func(T arg)

  . functions returning references:
      const string& get_message()

  . functions returning templated types:
      vector<int> foo()

  . operator definitions:
      Value operator+(Value l, Value r)

- The third part of the pattern finally matches compound definitions.
  But it forgets about unions and namespaces, and also skips single-line
  definitions

    struct random_iterator_tag {};

  because no semicolon can occur on the line.

Change the first pattern to require a colon at the end of the line
(except for trailing space and comments), so that it does not reject
constructor or destructor definitions.

Notice that all interesting anchor points begin with an identifier or
keyword. But since there is a large variety of syntactical constructs
after the first "word", the simplest is to require only this word and
accept everything else. Therefore, this boils down to a line that begins
with a letter or underscore (optionally preceded by the C++ scope
operator '::' to accept functions returning a type anchored at the
global namespace). Replace the second and third part by a single pattern
that picks such a line.

This has the following desirable consequence:

- All constructs mentioned above are recognized.

and the following likely desirable consequences:

- Definitions of global variables and typedefs are recognized:

    int num_entries = 0;
    extern const char* help_text;
    typedef basic_string<wchar_t> wstring;

- Commonly used marco-ized boilerplate code is recognized:

    BEGIN_MESSAGE_MAP(CCanvas,CWnd)
    Q_DECLARE_METATYPE(MyStruct)
    PATTERNS("tex",...)

  (The last one is from this very patch.)

but also the following possibly undesirable consequence:

- When a label is not on a line by itself (except for a comment) it is
  no longer rejected, but can appear as a hunk header if it occurs at
  the beginning of a line:

    next:;

IMO, the benefits of the change outweigh the (possible) regressions by a
large margin.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 15:03:32 -07:00
9cc444f057 t4018: test cases showing that the cpp pattern misses many anchor points
Most of the tests show C++ code, but there is also a union definition and
a GNU style function definition that are not recognized.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 15:03:31 -07:00
02907a08cc t4018: test cases for the built-in cpp pattern
A later patch changes the built-in cpp pattern. These test cases
demonstrate aspects of the pattern that we do not want to change.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 15:03:29 -07:00
ad5070fb36 t4018: reduce test files for pattern compilation tests
All test cases that need a file with specific text patterns have been
converted to utilize texts in the t4018/ directory. The remaining tests
in the test script deal only with the validity of the regular
expressions. These tests do not depend on the contents of files that
'git diff' is invoked on. Remove the largish here-document and use only
tiny files.

While we are touching these tests, convert grep to test_i18ngrep as the
texts checked for may undergo translation in the future.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 15:03:28 -07:00
f1b75fbaf1 t4018: convert custom pattern test to the new infrastructure
For the test case "matches to end of line", extend the pattern by a few
wildcards so that the pattern captures the "RIGHT" token, which is needed
for verification, without mentioning it in the pattern.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 15:02:57 -07:00
dd4dc5c574 t4018: convert java pattern test to the new infrastructure
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 15:02:36 -07:00
2d08413ba1 t4018: convert perl pattern tests to the new infrastructure
There is one subtlety: The old test case 'perl pattern gets full line of
POD header' does not have its own new test case, but the feature is
tested nevertheless by placing the RIGHT tag at the end of the expected
hunk header in t4018/perl-skip-sub-in-pod.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 15:02:19 -07:00
bfa7d01413 t4018: an infrastructure to test hunk headers
Add an infrastructure that simplifies adding new tests of the hunk
header regular expressions.

To add new tests, a file with the syntax to test can be dropped in the
directory t4018. The README file explains how a test file must contain;
the README itself tests the default behavior.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 15:00:51 -07:00
abf8f98602 userdiff: support unsigned and long long suffixes of integer constants
Do not split constants such as 123U, 456ll, 789UL at the first U or
second L.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:48:07 -07:00
407e07f2a6 userdiff: support C++ ->* and .* operators in the word regexp
The character sequences ->* and .* are valid C++ operators. Keep them
together in --word-diff mode.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:47:50 -07:00
410c3428ed t0001: drop subshells just for "cd"
Many tests do something like:

  (
	mkdir foo &&
	cd foo &&
	git init
  )

You can do the same these days with "git init foo", which
makes the tests shorter and simpler to read.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:35:13 -07:00
99e1c7367f t0001: drop useless subshells
Many tests use subshells, but don't actually change the
shell environment. They were probably cargo-culted from
earlier tests which did need subshells. Drop the useless
ones.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:35:08 -07:00
0981140fcc t0001: use test_must_fail
We've hand-rolled several "if" statements looking for
failures. We can use test_must_fail here, which is shorter
and more robust.

Note that we modify the commands slightly (to use "git init
foo" rather than "cd foo && git init") to avoid dealing with
a subshell, but this should not affect the outcome.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:28:05 -07:00
2a472410cb t0001: use test_config_global
We hand-set several config options using :

  git config -f $HOME/.gitconfig ...

Instead, we can use "test_config_global". Not only is this
more readable, but it cleans up for us so that subsequent
tests aren't polluted by our settings.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:28:03 -07:00
633734d4a1 t0001: use test_path_is_*
t0001 predates the test_path_is_* helpers, and uses "test
-f" and "test -d" directly. Using the helpers provides
better debugging output, and are a little more robust.
As opposed to "! test -d", test_path_is_missing will
actually makes sure the path does not exist at all.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:27:58 -07:00
3d06c5f19d t0001: make symlink reinit test more careful
In the final test of t0001, we have a repo whose .git is a
symlink to a directory "here", and we use
"--separate-git-dir" to migrate that to a .git file pointing
to a different directory. We check that the data is migrated
to the new directory and that .git looks like a git-file.

We also check that "here" is not a directory, which is
slightly misleading. It should not be a directory, but
neither should it be gone. It is the actual resting place of
the git-file, and .git remains a symlink to it.

Let's check that more explicitly, both to make our test more
robust, and to make further cleanups in this area more
obvious.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:27:52 -07:00
f7e8714101 t: prefer "git config --file" to GIT_CONFIG
Doing:

  GIT_CONFIG=foo git config ...

is equivalent to:

  git config --file=foo ...

The latter is easier to read and slightly less error-prone,
because of issues with one-shot variables and shell
functions (e.g., you cannot use the former with
test_must_fail).

Note that we explicitly leave one case in t1300 which checks
the same operation on both GIT_CONFIG and "git config
--file". They are equivalent in the code these days, but
this will make sure it remains so.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:26:55 -07:00
551a3e60d1 t: prefer "git config --file" to GIT_CONFIG with test_must_fail
This lets us get rid of an extra "env" invocation in the
middle, and is slightly more readable.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:26:22 -07:00
3cc6a6f0f7 t: stop using GIT_CONFIG to cross repo boundaries
Some tests want to check or set config in another
repository. E.g., t1000 creates repositories and makes sure
that their core.bare and core.worktree settings are what we
expect. We can do this with:

  GIT_CONFIG=$repo/.git/config git config ...

but it better shows the intent to just enter the repository
and let "git config" do the normal lookups:

  (cd $repo && git config ...)

In theory, this would cause us to use an extra subshell, but
in all such cases, we are actually already in a subshell.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:24:40 -07:00
221bf98506 t: drop useless sane_unset GIT_* calls
Several test scripts manually unset GIT_CONFIG and other
GIT_* variables. These are generally taken care of for us by
test-lib.sh already.

Unsetting these is not only useless, but can be confusing to
a reader, who may wonder why some tests in a script unset
them and others do not (t0001 is particularly guilty of this
inconsistency, probably because many of its tests predate
the test-lib.sh environment-cleansing).

Note that we cannot always get rid of such unsetting. For
example, t9130 can drop the GIT_CONFIG unset, but not the
GIT_DIR one, because lib-git-svn.sh sets the latter. And in
t1000, we unset GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR, which is explicitly
initialized by test-lib.sh.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:11:11 -07:00
35de3ac1db t/test-lib: drop redundant unset of GIT_CONFIG
This is already handled by the mass GIT_* unsetting added by
95a1d12 (tests: scrub environment of GIT_* variables,
2011-03-15).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:11:09 -07:00
a6ca9dfa5c t/Makefile: stop setting GIT_CONFIG
Once upon a time, the setting of GIT_CONFIG in the
environment could affect how tests ran. Commit 9c3796f (Fix
setting config variables with an alternative GIT_CONFIG,
2006-06-20) unconditionally set GIT_CONFIG in the Makefile
when running tests to give us a known starting point.

This is insufficient for running the tests outside of the
Makefile, however, and 8565d2d (Make tests independent of
global config files, 2007-02-15) later set GIT_CONFIG
directly in test-lib.sh. At that point the Makefile setting
was redundant, but we never removed it. Let's do so now.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 14:10:30 -07:00
3f09db07b3 Update draft release notes to 2.0 2014-03-21 13:41:27 -07:00
fe3623c635 Merge branch 'lt/request-pull'
Discard the accumulated "heuristics" to guess from which branch the
result wants to be pulled from and make sure what the end user
specified is not second-guessed by "git request-pull", to avoid
mistakes.

* lt/request-pull:
  request-pull: documentation updates
  request-pull: resurrect "pretty refname" feature
  request-pull: test updates
  request-pull: pick up tag message as before
  request-pull: allow "local:remote" to specify names on both ends
  request-pull: more strictly match local/remote branches
2014-03-21 12:50:44 -07:00
53d7d1b129 Merge branch 'es/sh-i18n-envsubst'
* es/sh-i18n-envsubst:
  sh-i18n--envsubst: retire unused string_list_member()
2014-03-21 12:50:39 -07:00
1ddb4d7e5e Merge branch 'nd/upload-pack-shallow'
Serving objects from a shallow repository needs to write a
temporary file to be used, but the serving upload-pack may not have
write access to the repository which is meant to be read-only.

Instead feed these temporary shallow bounds from the standard input
of pack-objects so that we do not have to use a temporary file.

* nd/upload-pack-shallow:
  upload-pack: send shallow info over stdin to pack-objects
2014-03-21 12:49:08 -07:00
6dada01b95 Merge branch 'jn/wt-status'
Unify the codepaths that format new/modified/changed sections and
conflicted paths in the "git status" output and make it possible to
properly internationalize their output.

* jn/wt-status:
  wt-status: lift the artificual "at least 20 columns" floor
  wt-status: i18n of section labels
  wt-status: extract the code to compute width for labels
  wt-status: make full label string to be subject to l10n
2014-03-21 12:48:59 -07:00
10bdb20d6a Merge branch 'jc/stash-pop-not-popped'
"stash pop", upon failing to apply the stash, refrains from
discarding the stash to avoid information loss.  Be more explicit
in the error message.

The wording may want to get a bit more bikeshedding.

* jc/stash-pop-not-popped:
  stash pop: mention we did not drop the stash upon failing to apply
2014-03-21 12:48:51 -07:00
1be645c0b1 Merge branch 'dk/skip-prefix-scan-only-once'
Update implementation of skip_prefix() to scan only once; given
that most "prefix" arguments to the inline function are constant
strings whose strlen() can be determined at the compile time, this
might actually make things worse with a compiler with sufficient
intelligence.

* dk/skip-prefix-scan-only-once:
  skip_prefix(): scan prefix only once
2014-03-21 12:47:41 -07:00
b6de0c633e Merge branch 'nd/tag-version-sort'
Allow v1.9.0 sorted before v1.10.0 in "git tag --list" output.

* nd/tag-version-sort:
  tag: support --sort=<spec>
2014-03-21 12:47:39 -07:00
3e14384b12 Merge branch 'jk/shallow-update-fix'
Serving objects from a shallow repository needs to write a
new file to hold the temporary shallow boundaries but it was not
cleaned when we exit due to die() or a signal.

* jk/shallow-update-fix:
  shallow: verify shallow file after taking lock
  shallow: automatically clean up shallow tempfiles
  shallow: use stat_validity to check for up-to-date file
2014-03-21 12:33:29 -07:00
4291cc10e6 Merge branch 'tc/commit-dry-run-exit-status-tests'
* tc/commit-dry-run-exit-status-tests:
  demonstrate git-commit --dry-run exit code behaviour
2014-03-21 12:33:25 -07:00
93728b23ad config.txt: third-party tools may and do use their own variables
Signed-off-by: Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 11:55:07 -07:00
22d55aee20 doc: status, remove leftover statement about '#' prefix
This hasn't been true since 2556b996 (status: disable display of '#'
comment prefix by default, 2013-09-06).

Signed-off-by: Dirk Wallenstein <halsmit@t-online.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-21 11:00:46 -07:00
1a27a15452 tree-diff: simplify tree_entry_pathcmp
Since an earlier "Finally switch over tree descriptors to contain a
pre-parsed entry", we can safely access all tree_desc->entry fields
directly instead of first "extracting" them through
tree_entry_extract.

Use it. The code generated stays the same - only it now visually looks
cleaner.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-20 15:04:32 -07:00
5acabd84a6 tree-diff: show_path prototype is not needed anymore
We moved all action-taking code below show_path() in recent HEAD~~
(tree-diff: move all action-taking code out of compare_tree_entry).

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-20 15:04:32 -07:00
9bc0619655 tree-diff: rename compare_tree_entry -> tree_entry_pathcmp
Since previous commit, this function does not compare entry hashes, and
mode are compared fully outside of it. So what it does is compare entry
names and DIR bit in modes. Reflect this in its name.

Add documentation stating the semantics, and move the note about
files/dirs comparison to it.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-20 15:04:32 -07:00
903bba68ab tree-diff: move all action-taking code out of compare_tree_entry()
- let it do only comparison.

This way the code is cleaner and more structured - cmp function only
compares, and the driver takes action based on comparison result.

There should be no change in performance, as effectively, we just move
if series from on place into another, and merge it to was-already-there
same switch/if, so the result is maybe a little bit faster.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-20 15:04:31 -07:00
5dfb2bbd8d tree-diff: don't assume compare_tree_entry() returns -1,0,1
It does, but we'll be reworking it in the next patch after it won't, and
besides it is better to stick to standard
strcmp/memcmp/base_name_compare/etc... convention, where comparison
function returns <0, =0, >0

Regarding performance, comparing for <0, =0, >0 should be a little bit
faster, than switch, because it is just 1 test-without-immediate
instruction and then up to 3 conditional branches, and in switch you
have up to 3 tests with immediate and up to 3 conditional branches.

No worry, that update_tree_entry(t2) is duplicated for =0 and >0 - it
will be good after we'll be adding support for multiparent walker and
will stay that way.

=0 case goes first, because it happens more often in real diffs - i.e.
paths are the same.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-20 15:04:31 -07:00
d00e980c22 tree-diff: consolidate code for emitting diffs and recursion in one place
Currently both compare_tree_entry() and show_entry() invoke opt diff
callbacks (opt->add_remove() and opt->change()), and also they both have
code which decides whether to recurse into sub-tree, and whether to emit
a tree as separate entry if DIFF_OPT_TREE_IN_RECURSIVE is set.

I.e. we have code duplication and logic scattered on two places.

Let's consolidate it - all diff emiting code and recurion logic moves
to show_entry, which is now named as show_path, because it shows diff
for a path, based on up to two tree entries, with actual diff emitting
code being kept in new helper emit_diff() for clarity.

What we have as the result, is that compare_tree_entry is now free from
code with logic for diff generation, and also performance is not
affected as timings for

    `git log --raw --no-abbrev --no-renames`

for navy.git and `linux.git v3.10..v3.11`, just like in previous patch,
stay the same.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-20 15:03:24 -07:00
6453f7b348 grep: add grep.fullName config variable
This configuration variable sets the default for the --full-name option.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-20 12:38:00 -07:00
effd12ec87 fsck: use bitwise-or assignment operator to set flag
fsck_tree() has two different ways to set a flag variable, either by
using a if-statement that guards an assignment, or by using a
bitwise-or assignment operator.  Most are done with the former, and
only one variable is assigned with the latter.

Since all the conditions are short-and-sweet, we can afford to
uniformly use the latter style, which makes the resulting code
shorter and easier to read.

Signed-off-by: Hiroyuki Sano <sh19910711@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-20 11:20:48 -07:00
36dc827bc9 Documentation/gitk: document the location of the configulation file
User config file location complies with the XDG base directory
specification while supporting the traditional $HOME/.gitk as a
fallback.

Signed-off-by: Astril Hayato <astrilhayato@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-20 10:59:55 -07:00
2d820a61df fsck.c:fsck_commit(): use skip_prefix() to verify and skip constant
fsck_commit() uses memcmp() to check if the buffer starts with a
certain prefix, and skips the prefix if it does.

This is exactly what skip_prefix() was designed for.

Signed-off-by: Yuxuan Shui <yshuiv7@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-19 15:34:56 -07:00
ab58289eff t5510: Do not use $(pwd) when fetching / pushing / pulling via rsync
On MINGW, "pwd" is defined as "pwd -W" in test-lib.sh. This usually is the
right thing, but the absolute Windows path with a colon confuses rsync. We
could use $PWD in this case to work around the issue, but in fact there is
no need to use an absolute path in the first place, so get rid of it.

This was discovered in the context of the mingwGitDevEnv project and only
did not surface before with msysgit because the latter does not ship
rsync.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-19 14:10:54 -07:00
512477b175 tests: use "env" to run commands with temporary env-var settings
Ordinarily, we would say "VAR=VAL command" to execute a tested
command with environment variable(s) set only for that command.
This however does not work if 'command' is a shell function (most
notably 'test_must_fail'); the result of the assignment is retained
and affects later commands.

To avoid this, we used to assign and export environment variables
and run such a test in a subshell, like so:

        (
                VAR=VAL && export VAR &&
                test_must_fail git command to be tested
        )

But with "env" utility, we should be able to say:

        test_must_fail env VAR=VAL git command to be tested

which is much shorter and easier to read.

Signed-off-by: David Tran <unsignedzero@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-19 12:55:57 -07:00
fd3aeeab0d diff-no-index: replace manual "."/".." check with is_dot_or_dotdot()
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Bourn <ba.bourn@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-19 11:49:39 -07:00
9daf0ef065 diff-no-index: rename read_directory()
In the next patch, we will replace a manual checking of "." or ".."
with a call to is_dot_or_dotdot() defined in dir.h.  The private
function read_directory() defined in this file will conflict with
the global function declared there when we do so.

As a preparatory step, rename the private read_directory() to avoid
the name collision.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Bourn <ba.bourn@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-19 11:49:35 -07:00
4f4074077f rebase: allow "-" short-hand for the previous branch
Teach rebase the same shorthand as checkout and merge to name the
branch to rebase the current branch on; that is, that "-" means "the
branch we were previously on".

Requested-by: Tim Chase <git@tim.thechases.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-19 10:52:51 -07:00
5172cb3bcb Sync with 1.9.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-18 14:34:25 -07:00
a35104faa2 Update draft release notes to Git 2.0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-18 14:33:34 -07:00
cee0c2750b Git 1.9.1
The version numbering scheme has changed since Git 1.9 and we
dropped the third dewey-decimal from the traditional numbering
(e.g. both 1.8.4 and 1.8.5 were major feature releases).  This
release 1.9.1 is the first maintenance relase for Git 1.9.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-18 14:16:16 -07:00
9526473f11 Merge branch 'jk/clean-d-pathspec' into maint
"git clean -d pathspec" did not use the given pathspec correctly
and ended up cleaning too much.

* jk/clean-d-pathspec:
  clean: simplify dir/not-dir logic
  clean: respect pathspecs with "-d"
2014-03-18 14:04:59 -07:00
01e13d0221 Merge branch 'da/difftool-git-files' into maint
"git difftool" misbehaved when the repository is bound to the
working tree with the ".git file" mechanism, where a textual file
".git" tells us where it is.

* da/difftool-git-files:
  t7800: add a difftool test for .git-files
  difftool: support repositories with .git-files
2014-03-18 14:04:36 -07:00
4097a25429 Merge branch 'jk/remote-pushremote-config-reading' into maint
"git push" did not pay attention to branch.*.pushremote if it is
defined earlier than remote.pushdefault; the order of these two
variables in the configuration file should not matter, but it did by
mistake.

* jk/remote-pushremote-config-reading:
  remote: handle pushremote config in any order
2014-03-18 14:04:16 -07:00
8aac6c97e8 Merge branch 'jk/commit-dates-parsing-fix' into maint
Codepaths that parse timestamps in commit objects have been
tightened.

* jk/commit-dates-parsing-fix:
  show_ident_date: fix tz range check
  log: do not segfault on gmtime errors
  log: handle integer overflow in timestamps
  date: check date overflow against time_t
  fsck: report integer overflow in author timestamps
  t4212: test bogus timestamps with git-log
2014-03-18 14:04:01 -07:00
a5aca6e883 Merge branch 'tr/diff-submodule-no-reuse-worktree' into maint
"git diff --external-diff" incorrectly fed the submodule directory
in the working tree to the external diff driver when it knew it is
the same as one of the versions being compared.

* tr/diff-submodule-no-reuse-worktree:
  diff: do not reuse_worktree_file for submodules
2014-03-18 14:03:41 -07:00
1f56977581 Merge branch 'nd/reset-setup-worktree' into maint
"git reset" needs to refresh the index when working in a working
tree (it can also be used to match the index to the HEAD in an
otherwise bare repository), but it failed to set up the working
tree properly, causing GIT_WORK_TREE to be ignored.

* nd/reset-setup-worktree:
  reset: optionally setup worktree and refresh index on --mixed
2014-03-18 14:03:24 -07:00
a8b31316ef Merge branch 'jc/check-attr-honor-working-tree' into maint
"git check-attr" when working on a repository with a working tree
did not work well when the working tree was specified via the
--work-tree (and obviously with --git-dir) option.

* jc/check-attr-honor-working-tree:
  check-attr: move to the top of working tree when in non-bare repository
  t0003: do not chdir the whole test process
2014-03-18 14:03:03 -07:00
6d011b8e3f Merge branch 'bk/refresh-missing-ok-in-merge-recursive' into maint
"merge-recursive" was broken in 1.7.7 era and stopped working in an
empty (temporary) working tree, when there are renames involved.
This has been corrected.

* bk/refresh-missing-ok-in-merge-recursive:
  merge-recursive.c: tolerate missing files while refreshing index
  read-cache.c: extend make_cache_entry refresh flag with options
  read-cache.c: refactor --ignore-missing implementation
  t3030-merge-recursive: test known breakage with empty work tree
2014-03-18 14:02:38 -07:00
c7b317320c Merge branch 'ds/rev-parse-required-args' into maint
"git rev-parse" was loose in rejecting command line arguments that
do not make sense, e.g. "--default" without the required value for
that option.

* ds/rev-parse-required-args:
  rev-parse: check i before using argv[i] against argc
2014-03-18 14:01:05 -07:00
6f0166771a Merge branch 'jk/config-path-include-fix' into maint
include.path variable (or any variable that expects a path that can
use ~username expansion) in the configuration file is not a boolean,
but the code failed to check it.

* jk/config-path-include-fix:
  handle_path_include: don't look at NULL value
  expand_user_path: do not look at NULL path
2014-03-18 14:00:15 -07:00
34120a5fb5 Merge branch 'nd/diff-quiet-stat-dirty' into maint
"git diff --quiet -- pathspec1 pathspec2" sometimes did not return
correct status value.

* nd/diff-quiet-stat-dirty:
  diff: do not quit early on stat-dirty files
  diff.c: move diffcore_skip_stat_unmatch core logic out for reuse later
2014-03-18 13:59:56 -07:00
1030d4c8f0 Merge branch 'nd/http-fetch-shallow-fix' into maint
Attempting to deepen a shallow repository by fetching over smart
HTTP transport failed in the protocol exchange, when no-done
extension was used.  The fetching side waited for the list of
shallow boundary commits after the sending end stopped talking to
it.

* nd/http-fetch-shallow-fix:
  t5537: move http tests out to t5539
  fetch-pack: fix deepen shallow over smart http with no-done cap
  protocol-capabilities.txt: document no-done
  protocol-capabilities.txt: refer multi_ack_detailed back to pack-protocol.txt
  pack-protocol.txt: clarify 'obj-id' in the last ACK after 'done'
  test: rename http fetch and push test files
  tests: auto-set LIB_HTTPD_PORT from test name
2014-03-18 13:59:37 -07:00
6a0556e4c0 Merge branch 'nd/submodule-pathspec-ending-with-slash' into maint
Allow "git cmd path/", when the 'path' is where a submodule is
bound to the top-level working tree, to match 'path', despite the
extra and unnecessary trailing slash (such a slash is often
given by command line completion).

* nd/submodule-pathspec-ending-with-slash:
  clean: use cache_name_is_other()
  clean: replace match_pathspec() with dir_path_match()
  pathspec: pass directory indicator to match_pathspec_item()
  match_pathspec: match pathspec "foo/" against directory "foo"
  dir.c: prepare match_pathspec_item for taking more flags
  pathspec: rename match_pathspec_depth() to match_pathspec()
  pathspec: convert some match_pathspec_depth() to dir_path_match()
  pathspec: convert some match_pathspec_depth() to ce_path_match()
2014-03-18 13:58:58 -07:00
6f6be80ef1 Merge branch 'rs/grep-h-c'
"git grep" learns to handle combination of "-h (no header)" and "-c
(counts)".

* rs/grep-h-c:
  grep: support -h (no header) with --count
  t7810: add missing variables to tests in loop
2014-03-18 13:51:20 -07:00
6f75e48323 Merge branch 'rm/strchrnul-not-strlen'
* rm/strchrnul-not-strlen:
  use strchrnul() in place of strchr() and strlen()
2014-03-18 13:51:18 -07:00
884377c128 Merge branch 'jc/tag-contains-with'
* jc/tag-contains-with:
  tag: grok "--with" as synonym to "--contains"
2014-03-18 13:51:15 -07:00
9cf0137bdf Merge branch 'bg/install-branch-config-skip-prefix'
* bg/install-branch-config-skip-prefix:
  branch: use skip_prefix() in install_branch_config()
  t3200-branch: test setting branch as own upstream
2014-03-18 13:51:09 -07:00
1c18a14b63 Merge branch 'jc/no-need-for-env-in-sh-scripts'
* jc/no-need-for-env-in-sh-scripts:
  *.sh: drop useless use of "env"
2014-03-18 13:51:07 -07:00
006f678780 Merge branch 'sh/use-hashcpy'
* sh/use-hashcpy:
  Use hashcpy() when copying object names
2014-03-18 13:51:05 -07:00
da2e0579ad Merge branch 'mh/simplify-cache-tree-find'
* mh/simplify-cache-tree-find:
  cache_tree_find(): use path variable when passing over slashes
  cache_tree_find(): remove early return
  cache_tree_find(): remove redundant check
  cache_tree_find(): fix comment formatting
  cache_tree_find(): find the end of path component using strchrnul()
  cache_tree_find(): remove redundant checks
2014-03-18 13:51:02 -07:00
6bd3424176 Merge branch 'jn/branch-lift-unnecessary-name-length-limit'
* jn/branch-lift-unnecessary-name-length-limit:
  branch.c: delete size check of newly tracked branch names
2014-03-18 13:50:48 -07:00
c0cca589fd Merge branch 'jk/doc-deprecate-grafts'
* jk/doc-deprecate-grafts:
  docs: mark info/grafts as outdated
2014-03-18 13:50:40 -07:00
9befb340dd Merge branch 'jk/detect-push-typo-early'
Catch "git push $there no-such-branch" early.

* jk/detect-push-typo-early:
  push: detect local refspec errors early
  match_explicit_lhs: allow a "verify only" mode
  match_explicit: hoist refspec lhs checks into their own function
2014-03-18 13:50:33 -07:00
249d54b231 Merge branch 'jk/repack-pack-keep-objects'
* jk/repack-pack-keep-objects:
  repack: add `repack.packKeptObjects` config var
2014-03-18 13:50:29 -07:00
f4eec8ce05 Merge branch 'sh/finish-tmp-packfile'
* sh/finish-tmp-packfile:
  finish_tmp_packfile():use strbuf for pathname construction
2014-03-18 13:50:24 -07:00
fe9122a352 Merge branch 'dd/use-alloc-grow'
Replace open-coded reallocation with ALLOC_GROW() macro.

* dd/use-alloc-grow:
  sha1_file.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in pretend_sha1_file()
  read-cache.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in add_index_entry()
  builtin/mktree.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in append_to_tree()
  attr.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in handle_attr_line()
  dir.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in create_simplify()
  reflog-walk.c: use ALLOC_GROW()
  replace_object.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in register_replace_object()
  patch-ids.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in add_commit()
  diffcore-rename.c: use ALLOC_GROW()
  diff.c: use ALLOC_GROW()
  commit.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in register_commit_graft()
  cache-tree.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in find_subtree()
  bundle.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in add_to_ref_list()
  builtin/pack-objects.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in check_pbase_path()
2014-03-18 13:50:21 -07:00
a8e1d711cc Merge branch 'dd/find-graft-with-sha1-pos'
Replace a hand-rolled binary search with a call to our generic
binary search helper function.

* dd/find-graft-with-sha1-pos:
  commit.c: use the generic "sha1_pos" function for lookup
2014-03-18 13:50:11 -07:00
90e6255a6d Merge branch 'fc/transport-helper-fixes'
Updates transport-helper, fast-import and fast-export to allow the
ref mapping and ref deletion in a way similar to the natively
supported transports.

* fc/transport-helper-fixes:
  remote-bzr: support the new 'force' option
  test-hg.sh: tests are now expected to pass
  transport-helper.c: do not overwrite forced bit
  transport-helper: check for 'forced update' message
  transport-helper: add 'force' to 'export' helpers
  transport-helper: don't update refs in dry-run
  transport-helper: mismerge fix
2014-03-18 13:49:33 -07:00
decba94d2c Merge branch 'nd/sha1-file-delta-stack-leakage-fix'
Fix a small leak in the delta stack used when resolving a long
delta chain at runtime.

* nd/sha1-file-delta-stack-leakage-fix:
  sha1_file: fix delta_stack memory leak in unpack_entry
2014-03-18 13:49:23 -07:00
9b347673a1 Merge branch 'jk/diff-filespec-cleanup'
Portability fix to a topic already in v1.9

* jk/diff-filespec-cleanup:
  diffcore.h: be explicit about the signedness of is_binary
2014-03-18 13:48:50 -07:00
15520a858f Merge branch 'jk/clean-d-pathspec'
"git clean -d pathspec" did not use the given pathspec correctly
and ended up cleaning too much.

* jk/clean-d-pathspec:
  clean: simplify dir/not-dir logic
  clean: respect pathspecs with "-d"
2014-03-18 13:47:57 -07:00
c45a18e88f add: use struct argv_array in run_add_interactive()
run_add_interactive() in builtin/add.c manually computes array bounds
and allocates a static args array to build the add--interactive command
line, which is error-prone. Use the argv-array helper functions instead.

Signed-off-by: Fabian Ruch <bafain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-18 12:47:29 -07:00
cb1aefda53 test-lib.sh: do not "echo" caller-supplied strings
In some places we "echo" a string that is supplied by the calling
test script and may contain backslash sequences. The echo command
of some shells, most notably "dash", interprets these backslash
sequences (POSIX.1 allows this) which may scramble the test
output.

Signed-off-by: Uwe Storbeck <uwe@ibr.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-18 11:48:00 -07:00
b549be0da7 run-command: mark run_hook_with_custom_index as deprecated
Signed-off-by: Benoit Pierre <benoit.pierre@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-18 11:26:12 -07:00
1fc4f97d57 merge hook tests: fix and update tests
- update 'no editor' hook test and add 'editor' hook test
- make sure the tree is reset to a clean state after running a test
  (using test_when_finished) so later tests are not impacted

Signed-off-by: Benoit Pierre <benoit.pierre@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-18 11:26:06 -07:00
0a3beb0e2e merge: fix GIT_EDITOR override for commit hook
Don't set GIT_EDITOR to ":" when calling prepare-commit-msg hook if the
editor is going to be called (e.g. with "merge -e").

Signed-off-by: Benoit Pierre <benoit.pierre@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-18 11:25:38 -07:00
15048f8a9a commit: fix patch hunk editing with "commit -p -m"
Don't change git environment: move the GIT_EDITOR=":" override to the
hook command subprocess, like it's already done for GIT_INDEX_FILE.

Signed-off-by: Benoit Pierre <benoit.pierre@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-18 11:25:12 -07:00
91c9c86920 test patch hunk editing with "commit -p -m"
Add (failing) tests: with commit changing the environment to let hooks
know that no editor will be used (by setting GIT_EDITOR to ":"), the
"edit hunk" functionality does not work (no editor is launched and the
whole hunk is committed).

Signed-off-by: Benoit Pierre <benoit.pierre@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-18 11:24:39 -07:00
cba5e28426 subtree: initialize "prefix" variable
We parse the "--prefix" command-line option into the
"$prefix" shell variable. However, if we do not see such an
option, the variable is left with whatever value it had in
the environment. We should initialize it to a known value,
like we do for other variables.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-17 15:19:52 -07:00
3c3e6f5645 Documentation/merge-strategies: avoid hyphenated commands
Replace git-pull and git-merge with the corresponding un-hyphenated
versions. While at it, use ` to mark it up instead of '.

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-17 15:13:46 -07:00
de983a0a18 index-pack: report error using the correct variable
We feed a string pointer that is potentially NULL to die() when
showing the message.  Don't.

Noticed-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy  <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-17 15:08:36 -07:00
f5b6ffad83 Documentation/git-am: typofix
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-17 15:04:12 -07:00
7839632167 shallow: verify shallow file after taking lock
Before writing the shallow file, we stat() the existing file
to make sure it has not been updated since our operation
began. However, we do not do so under a lock, so there is a
possible race:

  1. Process A takes the lock.

  2. Process B calls check_shallow_file_for_update and finds
     no update.

  3. Process A commits the lockfile.

  4. Process B takes the lock, then overwrite's process A's
     changes.

We can fix this by doing our check while we hold the lock.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-17 15:03:32 -07:00
373c67da1d pack-objects: turn off bitmaps when skipping objects
The pack bitmap format requires that we have a single bit
for each object in the pack, and that each object's bitmap
represents its complete set of reachable objects. Therefore
we have no way to represent the bitmap of an object which
references objects outside the pack.

We notice this problem while generating the bitmaps, as we
try to find the offset of a particular object and realize
that we do not have it. In this case we die, and neither the
bitmap nor the pack is generated. This is correct, but
perhaps a little unfriendly. If you have bitmaps turned on
in the config, many repacks will fail which would otherwise
succeed. E.g., incremental repacks, repacks with "-l" when
you have alternates, ".keep" files.

Instead, this patch notices early that we are omitting some
objects from the pack and turns off bitmaps (with a
warning). Note that this is not strictly correct, as it's
possible that the object being omitted is not reachable from
any other object in the pack. In practice, this is almost
never the case, and there are two advantages to doing it
this way:

  1. The code is much simpler, as we do not have to cleanly
     abort the bitmap-generation process midway through.

  2. We do not waste time partially generating bitmaps only
     to find out that some object deep in the history is not
     being packed.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-17 15:02:39 -07:00
78d2214eb4 pack-objects: show reused packfile objects in "Counting objects"
When we are sending a pack for push or fetch, we may reuse a
chunk of packfile without even parsing it. The progress
meter then looks like this:

  Reusing existing pack: 3440489, done.
  Counting objects: 3, done.

The first line shows that we are reusing a large chunk of
objects, and then we further count any objects not included
in the reused portion with an actual traversal.

These are all implementation details that the user does not
need to care about. Instead, we can show the reused objects
in the normal "counting..." progress meter (which will
simply go much faster than normal), and then continue to add
to it as we traverse.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-17 15:01:27 -07:00
657673f125 pack-objects: show progress for reused packfiles
When the "--all-progress" option is in effect, pack-objects
shows a progress report for the "writing" phase. If the
repository has bitmaps and we are reusing a packfile, the
user sees no progress update until the whole packfile is
sent.  Since this is typically the bulk of what is being
written, it can look like git hangs during this phase, even
though the transfer is proceeding.

This generally only happens with "git push" from a
repository with bitmaps. We do not use "--all-progress" for
fetch (since the result is going to index-pack on the
client, which takes care of progress reporting). And for
regular repacks to disk, we do not reuse packfiles.

We already have the progress meter setup during
write_reused_pack; we just need to call display_progress
whiel we are writing out the pack. The progress meter is
attached to our output descriptor, so it automatically
handles the throughput measurements.

However, we need to update the object count as we go, since
that is what feeds the percentage we show. We aren't
actually parsing the packfile as we send it, so we have no
idea how many objects we have sent; we only know that at the
end of N bytes, we will have sent M objects. So we cheat a
little and assume each object is M/N bytes (i.e., the mean
of the objects we are sending). While this isn't strictly
true, it actually produces a more pleasing progress meter
for the user, as it moves smoothly and predictably (and
nobody really cares about the object count; they care about
the percentage, and the object count is a proxy for that).

One alternative would be to actually show two progress
meters: one for the reused pack, and one for the rest of the
objects. That would more closely reflect the data we have
(the first would be measured in bytes, and the second
measured in objects). But it would also be more complex and
annoying to the user; rather than seeing one progress meter
counting up to 100%, they would finish one meter, then start
another one at zero.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-17 15:01:25 -07:00
47be066026 rebase -i: do not "echo" random user-supplied strings
In some places we "echo" a string that comes from a commit log
message, which may have a backslash sequence that is interpreted by
the command (POSIX.1 allows this), most notably "dash"'s built-in
'echo'.

A commit message which contains the string '\n' (or ends with the
string '\c') may result in a garbage line in the todo list of an
interactive rebase which causes the rebase to fail.

To reproduce the behavior (with dash as /bin/sh):

  mkdir test && cd test && git init
  echo 1 >foo && git add foo
  git commit -m"this commit message ends with '\n'"
  echo 2 >foo && git commit -a --fixup HEAD
  git rebase -i --autosquash --root

Now the editor opens with garbage in line 3 which has to be
removed or the rebase fails.

Signed-off-by: Uwe Storbeck <uwe@ibr.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-17 12:24:14 -07:00
fb8a4e8079 mv: prevent mismatched data when ignoring errors.
We shrink the source and destination arrays, but not the modes or
submodule_gitfile arrays, resulting in potentially mismatched data.  Shrink
all the arrays at the same time to prevent this.  Add tests to ensure the
problem does not recur.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-17 11:38:41 -07:00
7e27173ef9 t/lib-terminal: make TTY a lazy prerequisite
When lib-terminal.sh is sourced by a test script, we
immediately set up the TTY prerequisite. We do so inside a
test_expect_success, because that nicely isolates any
generated output.

However, this early test can interfere with a script that
later wants to skip all tests (e.g., t5541 then goes on to
set up the httpd server, and wants to skip_all if that
fails). TAP output doesn't let us skip everything after we
have already run at least one test.

We could fix this by reordering the inclusion of
lib-terminal.sh in t5541 to go after the httpd setup.  That
solves this case, but we might eventually hit a case with
circular dependencies, where either lib-*.sh include might
want to skip_all after the other has run a test.  So
instead, let's just remove the ordering constraint entirely
by doing the setup inside a test_lazy_prereq construct,
rather than in a regular test.  We never cared about the
test outcome anyway (it was written to always succeed).

Note that in addition to setting up the prerequisite, the
current test also defines test_terminal. Since we can't
affect the environment from a lazy_prereq, we have to hoist
that out. We previously depended on it _not_ being defined
when the TTY prereq isn't set as a way to ensure that tests
properly declare their dependency on TTY. However, we still
cover the case (see the in-code comment for details).

Reported-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-14 15:23:49 -07:00
00eda23228 Update draft release notes to Git 2.0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-14 14:27:26 -07:00
27ac2b1f24 Merge branch 'ta/parse-commit-with-skip-prefix'
* ta/parse-commit-with-skip-prefix:
  commit.c: use skip_prefix() instead of starts_with()
2014-03-14 14:27:23 -07:00
e8cb4996ad Merge branch 'sr/add--interactive-term-readkey'
* sr/add--interactive-term-readkey:
  git-add--interactive: warn if module for interactive.singlekey is missing
  git-config: document interactive.singlekey requires Term::ReadKey
2014-03-14 14:27:21 -07:00
56e2874a81 Merge branch 'sh/write-pack-file-warning-message-fix'
A warning from "git pack-objects" were generated by referring to an
incorrect variable when forming the filename that we had trouble
with.

* sh/write-pack-file-warning-message-fix:
  write_pack_file: use correct variable in diagnostic
2014-03-14 14:27:17 -07:00
27c2c2ec62 Merge branch 'nd/strbuf-inline-styles'
* nd/strbuf-inline-styles:
  strbuf: style fix -- top opening bracket on a separate line
2014-03-14 14:27:13 -07:00
117a355cda Merge branch 'jn/bisect-coding-style'
* jn/bisect-coding-style:
  git-bisect.sh: fix a few style issues
2014-03-14 14:27:11 -07:00
3e30cb0fbf Merge branch 'mh/replace-refs-variable-rename'
* mh/replace-refs-variable-rename:
  Document some functions defined in object.c
  Add docstrings for lookup_replace_object() and do_lookup_replace_object()
  rename read_replace_refs to check_replace_refs
2014-03-14 14:27:06 -07:00
d552f8df1b Merge branch 'sg/archive-restrict-remote'
Allow loosening remote "git archive" invocation security check that
refuses to serve tree-ish not at the tip of any ref.

* sg/archive-restrict-remote:
  add uploadarchive.allowUnreachable option
  docs: clarify remote restrictions for git-upload-archive
2014-03-14 14:27:03 -07:00
c89eb9870e Merge branch 'rt/help-pretty-prints-cmd-names'
* rt/help-pretty-prints-cmd-names:
  help.c: rename function "pretty_print_string_list"
2014-03-14 14:27:00 -07:00
d73e616003 Merge branch 'jl/doc-submodule-update-checkout'
Add missing documentation for "submodule update --checkout".

* jl/doc-submodule-update-checkout:
  submodule update: consistently document the '--checkout' option
2014-03-14 14:26:58 -07:00
2b66d315bb Merge branch 'jk/doc-coding-guideline'
Elaborate on a style niggle that has been part of "mimic existing
code".

* jk/doc-coding-guideline:
  CodingGuidelines: mention C whitespace rules
2014-03-14 14:26:55 -07:00
26696382ec Merge branch 'da/difftool-git-files'
"git difftool" misbehaved when the repository is bound to the
working tree with the ".git file" mechanism, where a textual
file ".git" tells us where it is.

* da/difftool-git-files:
  t7800: add a difftool test for .git-files
  difftool: support repositories with .git-files
2014-03-14 14:26:52 -07:00
13b49f1e74 Merge branch 'tg/index-v4-format'
* tg/index-v4-format:
  read-cache: add index.version config variable
  test-lib: allow setting the index format version
  introduce GIT_INDEX_VERSION environment variable
2014-03-14 14:26:50 -07:00
0963008cbf Merge branch 'nd/i18n-progress'
Mark the progress indicators from various time-consuming commands
for i18n/l10n.

* nd/i18n-progress:
  i18n: mark all progress lines for translation
2014-03-14 14:26:31 -07:00
060be00621 Merge branch 'mh/object-code-cleanup'
* mh/object-code-cleanup:
  sha1_file.c: document a bunch of functions defined in the file
  sha1_file_name(): declare to return a const string
  find_pack_entry(): document last_found_pack
  replace_object: use struct members instead of an array
2014-03-14 14:26:29 -07:00
85ff22e68b Merge branch 'jn/am-doc-hooks'
* jn/am-doc-hooks:
  am doc: add a pointer to relevant hooks
2014-03-14 14:26:27 -07:00
430e4761ce Merge branch 'jm/stash-doc-k-for-keep'
* jm/stash-doc-k-for-keep:
  stash doc: mention short form -k in save description
2014-03-14 14:26:23 -07:00
d52571d5c1 Merge branch 'jk/remote-pushremote-config-reading'
"git push" did not pay attention to branch.*.pushremote if it is
defined earlier than remote.pushdefault; the order of these two
variables in the configuration file should not matter, but it did by
mistake.

* jk/remote-pushremote-config-reading:
  remote: handle pushremote config in any order
2014-03-14 14:26:05 -07:00
3c83b080e4 Merge branch 'jk/commit-dates-parsing-fix'
Tighten codepaths that parse timestamps in commit objects.

* jk/commit-dates-parsing-fix:
  show_ident_date: fix tz range check
  log: do not segfault on gmtime errors
  log: handle integer overflow in timestamps
  date: check date overflow against time_t
  fsck: report integer overflow in author timestamps
  t4212: test bogus timestamps with git-log
2014-03-14 14:25:44 -07:00
b37f81b7b6 Merge branch 'jh/note-trees-record-blobs'
"git notes -C <blob>" should not take an object that is not a blob.

* jh/note-trees-record-blobs:
  notes: disallow reusing non-blob as a note object
2014-03-14 14:25:39 -07:00
c923f603ea Merge branch 'rt/links-for-asciidoctor'
* rt/links-for-asciidoctor:
  Documentation: fix documentation AsciiDoc links for external urls
2014-03-14 14:25:36 -07:00
650c90a185 Merge branch 'nd/no-more-fnmatch'
We started using wildmatch() in place of fnmatch(3); complete the
process and stop using fnmatch(3).

* nd/no-more-fnmatch:
  actually remove compat fnmatch source code
  stop using fnmatch (either native or compat)
  Revert "test-wildmatch: add "perf" command to compare wildmatch and fnmatch"
  use wildmatch() directly without fnmatch() wrapper
2014-03-14 14:25:31 -07:00
3a66e1bf9c Merge branch 'ak/gitweb-fit-image'
Instead of allowing an <img> to be shown in whatever size, force
scaling it to fit on the page with max-height/max-width css style
attributes.

* ak/gitweb-fit-image:
  gitweb: Avoid overflowing page body frame with large images
2014-03-14 14:25:28 -07:00
481e6aaacc Merge branch 'tr/diff-submodule-no-reuse-worktree'
"git diff --external-diff" incorrectly fed the submodule directory
in the working tree to the external diff driver when it knew it is
the same as one of the versions being compared.

* tr/diff-submodule-no-reuse-worktree:
  diff: do not reuse_worktree_file for submodules
2014-03-14 14:25:20 -07:00
6eb593a764 Merge branch 'nd/reset-setup-worktree'
"git reset" needs to refresh the index when working in a working
tree (it can also be used to match the index to the HEAD in an
otherwise bare repository), but it failed to set up the working
tree properly, causing GIT_WORK_TREE to be ignored.

* nd/reset-setup-worktree:
  reset: optionally setup worktree and refresh index on --mixed
2014-03-14 14:25:03 -07:00
ed27751961 Merge branch 'lb/contrib-contacts-looser-diff-parsing'
* lb/contrib-contacts-looser-diff-parsing:
  git-contacts: do not fail parsing of good diffs
2014-03-14 14:24:59 -07:00
08f36302b5 Merge branch 'ks/config-file-stdin'
"git config" learned to read from the standard input when "-" is
given as the value to its "--file" parameter (attempting an
operation to update the configuration in the standard input of
course is rejected).

* ks/config-file-stdin:
  config: teach "git config --file -" to read from the standard input
  config: change git_config_with_options() interface
  builtin/config.c: rename check_blob_write() -> check_write()
  config: disallow relative include paths from blobs
2014-03-14 14:24:40 -07:00
7aab05d2b4 Merge branch 'jk/janitorial-fixes'
* jk/janitorial-fixes:
  open_istream(): do not dereference NULL in the error case
  builtin/mv: don't use memory after free
  utf8: use correct type for values in interval table
  utf8: fix iconv error detection
  notes-utils: handle boolean notes.rewritemode correctly
2014-03-14 14:24:37 -07:00
b7de45b58e Merge branch 'jk/http-no-curl-easy'
Uses of curl's "multi" interface and "easy" interface do not mix
well when we attempt to reuse outgoing connections.  Teach the RPC
over http code, used in the smart HTTP transport, not to use the
"easy" interface.

* jk/http-no-curl-easy:
  http: never use curl_easy_perform
2014-03-14 14:24:18 -07:00
baf9e83c21 Merge branch 'ss/completion-rec-sub-fetch-push'
* ss/completion-rec-sub-fetch-push:
  completion: teach --recurse-submodules to fetch, pull and push
2014-03-14 14:24:15 -07:00
dfcd354cdf Merge branch 'nd/gitignore-trailing-whitespace'
Trailing whitespaces in .gitignore files, unless they are quoted for
fnmatch(3), e.g. "path\ ", are warned and ignored.

Strictly speaking, this is a backward incompatible change, but very
unlikely to bite any sane user and adjusting should be obvious and
easy.

* nd/gitignore-trailing-whitespace:
  t0008: skip trailing space test on Windows
  dir: ignore trailing spaces in exclude patterns
  dir: warn about trailing spaces in exclude patterns
2014-03-14 14:23:37 -07:00
28b68216de Merge branch 'jc/check-attr-honor-working-tree'
"git check-attr" when (trying to) work on a repository with a
working tree did not work well when the working tree was specified
via --work-tree (and obviously with --git-dir).

The command also works in a bare repository but it reads from the
(possibly stale, irrelevant and/or nonexistent) index, which may
need to be fixed to read from HEAD, but that is a completely
separate issue.  As a related tangent to this separate issue, we
may want to also fix "check-ignore", which refuses to work in a
bare repository, to also operate in a bare one.

* jc/check-attr-honor-working-tree:
  check-attr: move to the top of working tree when in non-bare repository
  t0003: do not chdir the whole test process
2014-03-14 14:06:00 -07:00
ec445074e0 request-pull: documentation updates
The original description talked only about what it does.  Instead,
start it with the purpose of the command, i.e. what it is used for,
and then mention what it does to achieve that goal.

Clarify what <start>, <url> and <end> means in the context of the
overall purpose of the command.

Describe the extended syntax of <end> parameter that is used when
the local branch name is different from the branch name at the
repository the changes are published.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-13 14:22:20 -07:00
de42180f6a fsck.c:fsck_ident(): ident points at a const string
Since fsck_ident doesn't change the content of **ident, the type of
ident could be const char **.

This change is required to rewrite fsck_commit() to use skip_prefix().

Signed-off-by: Yuxuan Shui <yshuiv7@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-13 13:00:30 -07:00
4c30d50402 rev-list: disable object/refname ambiguity check with --stdin
This is the "rev-list" analogue to 25fba78 (cat-file:
disable object/refname ambiguity check for batch mode,
2013-07-12).  Like cat-file, "rev-list --stdin" may read a
large number of sha1 object names, and the warning check
introduces a significant slow-down.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-13 11:56:29 -07:00
a42fcd15d8 cat-file: restore warn_on_object_refname_ambiguity flag
Commit 25fba78 turned off the object/refname ambiguity check
during "git cat-file --batch" operations. However, this is a
global flag, so let's restore it when we are done.

This shouldn't make any practical difference, as cat-file
exits immediately afterwards, but is good code hygeine and
would prevent an unnecessary surprise if somebody starts to
call cmd_cat_file later.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-13 11:56:17 -07:00
2f29e0c6fa entry.c: fix possible buffer overflow in remove_subtree()
remove_subtree() manipulated path in a fixed-size buffer even though
the length of the input, let alone the length of entries within the
directory, were not known in advance.  Change the function to take a
strbuf argument and use that object as its scratch space.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-13 10:57:48 -07:00
f63272a35e checkout_entry(): use the strbuf throughout the function
There is no need to break out the "buf" and "len" members into
separate temporary variables.  Rename path_buf to path and use
path.buf and path.len directly.  This makes it easier to reason about
the data flow in the function.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-13 10:56:50 -07:00
c049b61d42 connect.c: SP after "}", not TAB
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-13 10:54:21 -07:00
4825b80ef9 sh-i18n--envsubst: retire unused string_list_member()
This static function has no callers, nor has it had any since its
introduction in ba67aaf2d0 (git-sh-i18n--envsubst: our own envsubst(1)
for eval_gettext(), 2011-05-14). Remove it.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-12 15:04:55 -07:00
c7cb333f60 wt-status: lift the artificual "at least 20 columns" floor
When we show unmerged paths, we had an artificial 20 columns floor
for the width of labels (e.g. "both deleted:") shown next to the
pathnames.  Depending on the locale, this may result in a label that
is too wide when all the label strings are way shorter than 20
columns, or no-op when a label string is longer than 20 columns.

Just drop the artificial floor.  The screen real estate is better
utilized this way when all the strings are shorter.

Adjust the tests to this change.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-12 14:08:05 -07:00
8f17f5b22a wt-status: i18n of section labels
The original code assumes that:

 (1) the number of bytes written is the width of a string, so they
     can line up;

 (2) the "how" string is always <= 19 bytes.

Neither of which we should assume.

Using the same approach as the earlier 3651e45c (wt-status: take the
alignment burden off translators, 2013-11-05), compute the necessary
column width to hold the longest label and use that for alignment.

cf. http://bugs.debian.org/725777

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Sandy Carter
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-12 14:08:05 -07:00
335e825012 wt-status: extract the code to compute width for labels
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-12 14:08:05 -07:00
d52cb5761a wt-status: make full label string to be subject to l10n
Earlier in 3651e45c (wt-status: take the alignment burden off
translators, 2013-11-05), we assumed that it is OK to make the
string before the colon in a label string we give as the section
header of various kinds of changes (e.g. "new file:") translatable.

This assumption apparently does not hold for some languages,
e.g. ones that want to have spaces around the colon.

Also introduce a static label_width to avoid having to run
strlen(padding) over and over.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-12 14:07:30 -07:00
f76d947ae1 grep: support -h (no header) with --count
Suppress printing the header (filename) with -h even if in -c/--count
mode.  GNU grep and OpenBSD's grep do the same.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-11 15:05:28 -07:00
9afad7a1e6 t7810: add missing variables to tests in loop
Some tests in t7810-grep.sh are in a loop that runs them against HEAD and
the work tree.  In order for that to work the test code should use the
variables $L (display name), $H (HEAD or empty string) and $HC (revision
prefix for result lines); otherwise tests are just repeated with the same
target.  Add the variables where they're missing and make sure the test
description is wrapped in double quotes (instead of single quotes) to
allow variables to be expanded.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-11 15:05:26 -07:00
89ccc1b09c builtin/mv: fix out of bounds write
When commit a88c915 (mv: move submodules using a gitfile, 2013-07-30)
added the submodule_gitfile array, it was not added to the block that
enlarges the arrays when we are moving a directory so that we do not
have to worry about it being a directory when we perform the actual
move.  After this, the loop continues over the enlarged set of sources.

Since we assume that submodule_gitfile has size argc, if any of the
items in the source directory are submodules we are guaranteed to write
beyond the end of submodule_gitfile.

Fix this by realloc'ing submodule_gitfile at the same time as the other
arrays.

Reported-by: Guillaume Gelin <contact@ramnes.eu>
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-11 14:44:21 -07:00
b7ae14148f merge hook tests: use 'test_must_fail' instead of '!'
Signed-off-by: Benoit Pierre <benoit.pierre@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-11 13:57:43 -07:00
3219bad944 merge hook tests: fix missing '&&' in test
Signed-off-by: Benoit Pierre <benoit.pierre@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-11 13:57:39 -07:00
649813763c Documentation/git-am: Document supported --patch-format options
The --patch-format option has been supported for a while but it is not
mentioned in the man page and the short help cannot tell the user what
the supported formats are. Add the option to the man page along with the
supported options.

Signed-off-by: Chris Packham <judge.packham@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-11 13:40:25 -07:00
62fb6d03da configure.ac: link with -liconv for locale_charset()
On e.g. FreeBSD 10.x, the following situation is common:
- there's iconv implementation in libc, which has no locale_charset()
  function
- there's GNU libiconv installed from Ports Collection

Git build process
- detects that iconv is in libc and thus -liconv is not needed for it
- detects locale_charset in -liconv, but for some reason doesn't add it
  to CHARSET_LIB (as it would do with -lcharset if locale_charset() was
  found there instead of -liconv)
- git doesn't build due to unresolved external locale_charset()

Fix this by adding -liconv to CHARSET_LIB if locale_charset() is
detected in this library.

Signed-off-by: Dmitry Marakasov <amdmi3@amdmi3.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-11 13:33:15 -07:00
b790e0f67c upload-pack: send shallow info over stdin to pack-objects
Before cdab485 (upload-pack: delegate rev walking in shallow fetch to
pack-objects - 2013-08-16) upload-pack does not write to the source
repository. cdab485 starts to write $GIT_DIR/shallow_XXXXXX if it's a
shallow fetch, so the source repo must be writable.

git:// servers do not need write access to repos and usually don't
have it, which means cdab485 breaks shallow clone over git://

Instead of using a temporary file as the media for shallow points, we
can send them over stdin to pack-objects as well. Prepend shallow
SHA-1 with --shallow so pack-objects knows what is what.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-11 13:32:10 -07:00
1f2e108887 clean: simplify dir/not-dir logic
When we get a list of paths from read_directory, we further
prune it to create the final list of items to remove. The
code paths for directories and non-directories repeat the
same "add to list" code.

This patch restructures the code so that we don't repeat
ourselves. Also, by following a "if (condition) continue"
pattern like the pathspec check above, it makes it more
obvious that the conditional is about excluding directories
under certain circumstances.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-11 12:14:25 -07:00
cf424f5fd8 clean: respect pathspecs with "-d"
git-clean uses read_directory to fill in a `struct dir` with
potential hits. However, read_directory does not actually
check against our pathspec. It uses a simplified version
that may turn up false positives. As a result, we need to
check that any hits match our pathspec. We do so reliably
for non-directories. For directories, if "-d" is not given
we check that the pathspec matched exactly (i.e., we are
even stricter, and require an explicit "git clean foo" to
clean "foo/"). But if "-d" is given, rather than relaxing
the exact match to allow a recursive match, we do not check
the pathspec at all.

This regression was introduced in 113f10f (Make git-clean a
builtin, 2007-11-11).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-11 12:13:42 -07:00
35e4d77587 t0008: skip trailing space test on Windows
The Windows API does not preserve file names with trailing spaces (and
dots), but rather strips them. Our tools (MSYS bash, git) base the POSIX
emulation on the Windows API. As a consequence, it is impossible for bash
on Windows to allocate a file whose name has trailing spaces, and for git
to stat such a file. Both operate on a file whose name has the spaces
stripped. Skip the test that needs such a file name.

Note that we do not use (another incarnation of) prerequisite FUNNYNAMES.
The reason is that FUNNYNAMES is intended to represent a property of the
file system. But the inability to have trailing spaces in a file name is
a property of the Windows API. The file system (NTFS) does not have this
limitation.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-11 12:11:49 -07:00
2c5495f7b6 use strchrnul() in place of strchr() and strlen()
Avoid scanning strings twice, once with strchr() and then with
strlen(), by using strchrnul().

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Rohit Mani <rohit.mani@outlook.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-10 08:35:30 -07:00
384364b5f1 Start preparing for Git 2.0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-07 15:22:37 -08:00
e3f1185946 Merge branch 'cc/starts-n-ends-with-endgame'
prefixcmp/suffixcmp are gone.
2014-03-07 15:18:28 -08:00
2687ffdeb7 Merge branch 'jc/hold-diff-remove-q-synonym-for-no-deletion'
Remove a confusing and deprecated "-q" option from "git diff-files";
"git diff-files --diff-filter=d" can be used instead.
2014-03-07 15:17:41 -08:00
289ca27dee Merge branch 'gj/push-more-verbose-advice' 2014-03-07 15:17:20 -08:00
2b4a888069 Merge branch 'jc/core-checkstat-2.0'
"core.statinfo" configuration variable, which was a never-advertised
synonym to "core.checkstat", has been removed.
2014-03-07 15:16:23 -08:00
160c4b183c Merge branch 'jc/add-2.0-ignore-removal'
"git add <pathspec>" is the same as "git add -A <pathspec>" now,
i.e. it does not ignore removals from the directory specified.
2014-03-07 15:14:47 -08:00
053a6b1807 Merge branch 'jn/add-2.0-u-A-sans-pathspec'
"git add -u" and "git add -A" without any pathspec is a tree-wide
operation now, even when they are run in a subdirectory of the
working tree.
2014-03-07 15:14:02 -08:00
009055f3ec Merge branch 'jc/push-2.0-default-to-simple'
Finally update the "git push" default behaviour to "simple".
2014-03-07 15:13:15 -08:00
b0bc1365c2 tag: grok "--with" as synonym to "--contains"
Just like "git branch" can be told to list the branches that has the
named commit by "git branch --with <commit>", teach the same
short-hand to "git tag", so that "git tag --with <commit>" shows the
releases with the named commit.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-07 12:52:02 -08:00
3f419d45ef show_ident_date: fix tz range check
Commit 1dca155fe3 (log: handle integer overflow in
timestamps, 2014-02-24) tried to catch integer overflow
coming from strtol() on the timezone field by comparing against
LONG_MIN/LONG_MAX. However, the intermediate "tz" variable
is an "int", which means it can never be LONG_MAX on LP64
systems; we would truncate the output from strtol before the
comparison.

Clang's -Wtautological-constant-out-of-range-compare notices
this and rightly complains.

Let's instead store the result of strtol in a long, and then
compare it against INT_MIN/INT_MAX. This will catch overflow
from strtol, and also overflow when we pass the result as an
int to show_date.

Reported-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-07 11:53:29 -08:00
6eca18ca73 *.sh: drop useless use of "env"
In a bourne shell script, "VAR=VAL command" is sufficient to run
'command' with environment variable VAR set to value VAL without
affecting the environment of the shell itself; there is no need
to say "env VAR=VAL command".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-06 15:22:34 -08:00
50546b15ed Use hashcpy() when copying object names
We invented hashcpy() to keep the abstraction of "object name"
behind it.  Use it instead of calling memcpy() with hard-coded
20-byte length when moving object names between pieces of memory.

Leave ppc/sha1.c as-is, because the function is about the SHA-1 hash
algorithm whose output is and will always be 20 bytes.

Helped-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Helped-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sun He <sunheehnus@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-06 14:03:12 -08:00
303d1d0bd6 branch: use skip_prefix() in install_branch_config()
The install_branch_config() function reimplemented the skip_prefix()
function inline.

Reported-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-06 13:54:17 -08:00
95052d1f2d t3200-branch: test setting branch as own upstream
No test asserts that "git branch -u refs/heads/my-branch my-branch"
avoids leaving nonsense configuration and emits a warning.

Add a test that does so.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gesiak <modocache@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-06 13:53:06 -08:00
6ab4ae2b41 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  i18n: proposed command missing leading dash
2014-03-05 15:06:59 -08:00
ee3a81e69c Merge branch 'jk/run-network-tests-by-default'
Teach "make test" to run networking tests when possible by default.

* jk/run-network-tests-by-default:
  tests: turn on network daemon tests by default
2014-03-05 15:06:45 -08:00
4c4ac4db2c Merge branch 'nd/daemonize-gc'
Allow running "gc --auto" in the background.

* nd/daemonize-gc:
  gc: config option for running --auto in background
  daemon: move daemonize() to libgit.a
2014-03-05 15:06:39 -08:00
6376463c37 Merge branch 'ks/combine-diff'
Teach combine-diff to honour the path-output-order imposed by
diffcore-order, and optimize how matching paths are found in
the N-way diffs made with parents.

* ks/combine-diff:
  tests: add checking that combine-diff emits only correct paths
  combine-diff: simplify intersect_paths() further
  combine-diff: combine_diff_path.len is not needed anymore
  combine-diff: optimize combine_diff_path sets intersection
  diff test: add tests for combine-diff with orderfile
  diffcore-order: export generic ordering interface
2014-03-05 15:06:26 -08:00
ba928c13d7 push: detect local refspec errors early
When pushing, we do not even look at our push refspecs until
after we have made contact with the remote receive-pack and
gotten its list of refs. This means that we may go to some
work, including asking the user to log in, before realizing
we have simple errors like "git push origin matser".

We cannot catch all refspec problems, since fully evaluating
the refspecs requires knowing what the remote side has. But
we can do a quick sanity check of the local side and catch a
few simple error cases.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-05 13:23:27 -08:00
471fd3fe41 match_explicit_lhs: allow a "verify only" mode
The match_explicit_lhs function has all of the logic
necessary to verify the refspecs without actually doing any
work. This patch lets callers pass a NULL "match" pointer to
indicate they want a "verify only" operation.

For the most part, we just need to avoid writing to the NULL
pointer. However, we also have to refactor the
try_explicit_object_name sub-function; it indicates success by
allocating and returning a new ref. Instead, we give it an
"out" parameter for the match and return a numeric status.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-05 13:23:26 -08:00
f7ade3d36b match_explicit: hoist refspec lhs checks into their own function
In preparation for being able to check the left-hand side of
our push refspecs separately, this pulls the examination of
them out into its own function. There should be no behavior
change.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-05 13:23:26 -08:00
3491047e14 cache_tree_find(): use path variable when passing over slashes
The search for the end of the slashes is part of the update of the
path variable for the next iteration as opposed to an update of the
slash variable.  So iterate using path rather than slash.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-05 12:34:26 -08:00
8b7e5f7972 cache_tree_find(): remove early return
There is no need for an early

    return it;

from the loop if slash points at the end of the string, because that
is exactly what will happen when the while condition fails at the
start of the next iteration.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-05 12:34:05 -08:00
03b0403b4a cache_tree_find(): remove redundant check
If *slash == '/', then it is necessarily non-NUL.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-05 12:33:53 -08:00
79192b87ad cache_tree_find(): fix comment formatting
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-05 12:33:46 -08:00
17e22ddc1c cache_tree_find(): find the end of path component using strchrnul()
Suggested-by: Junio Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-05 12:33:30 -08:00
72c378d8a6 cache_tree_find(): remove redundant checks
slash is initialized to a value that cannot be NULL.  So remove the
guards against slash == NULL later in the loop.

Suggested-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-05 12:33:02 -08:00
9ef5e2a722 branch.c: delete size check of newly tracked branch names
Since commit 6f084a56 the length of a newly tracked branch name was limited
to 1019 = 1024 - 7 - 7 - 1 characters, a bound derived by having to store
this name in a char[1024] called key with two strings of length at most 7
and a '\0' character.

This was no longer necessary as of commit a9f2c136, which uses a strbuf
(documented in Documentation/technical/api-strbuf.txt) to store this value.

Remove this unneeded check to allow branch names longer than 1019
characters.

Signed-off-by: Jacopo Notarstefano <jacopo.notarstefano@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-05 12:26:51 -08:00
e650d0643b docs: mark info/grafts as outdated
We should be encouraging people to use git-replace instead.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-05 12:24:01 -08:00
fcfec8bd9a t7800: add a difftool test for .git-files
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-05 12:20:23 -08:00
16216b6ab1 i18n: proposed command missing leading dash
Add missing leading dash to proposed commands in french output when
using the command:
    git branch --set-upstream remotename/branchname
and when upstream is gone

Signed-off-by: Sandy Carter <sandy.carter@savoirfairelinux.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-05 22:10:24 +08:00
7e9003c149 tree-diff: show_tree() is not needed
We don't need special code for showing added/removed subtree, because we
can do the same via diff_tree_sha1, just passing NULL for absent tree.

And compared to show_tree(), which was calling show_entry() for every
tree entry, that would lead to the same show_entry() callings:

    show_tree(t):
        for e in t.entries:
            show_entry(e)

    diff_tree_sha1(NULL, new):  /* the same applies to (old, NULL) */
        diff_tree(t1=NULL, t2)
            ...
            if (!t1->size)
                show_entry(t2)
            ...

and possible overhead is negligible, since after the patch, timing for

    `git log --raw --no-abbrev --no-renames`

for navy.git and `linux.git v3.10..v3.11` is practically the same.

So let's say goodbye to show_tree() - it removes some code, but also,
and what is important, consolidates more code for showing/recursing into
trees into one place.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-04 13:33:47 -08:00
147972b1a6 commit.c: use skip_prefix() instead of starts_with()
In record_author_date() & parse_gpg_output(), the callers of
starts_with() not just want to know if the string starts with the
prefix, but also can benefit from knowing the string that follows
the prefix.

By using skip_prefix(), we can do both at the same time.

Helped-by: Max Horn <max@quendi.de>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-04 13:26:42 -08:00
305a233c98 git-bisect.sh: fix a few style issues
Redirection operators should have a space before them, but not after them.

Signed-off-by: Jacopo Notarstefano <jacopo.notarstefano@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 18:29:34 -08:00
ba399c46d9 skip_prefix(): scan prefix only once
Signed-off-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 15:38:14 -08:00
c7353967ca sha1_file.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in pretend_sha1_file()
Helped-by: He Sun <sunheehnus@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:54:58 -08:00
999f566013 read-cache.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in add_index_entry()
Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:54:54 -08:00
66d9f38bc7 builtin/mktree.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in append_to_tree()
Helped-by: He Sun <sunheehnus@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:54:45 -08:00
3a7fa03db9 attr.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in handle_attr_line()
Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:54:37 -08:00
9af49f822b dir.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in create_simplify()
Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:54:29 -08:00
6647cc2626 reflog-walk.c: use ALLOC_GROW()
Use ALLOC_GROW() instead of open-coding it in add_commit_info() and
read_one_reflog().

Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:53:57 -08:00
72004b4310 replace_object.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in register_replace_object()
Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:49:17 -08:00
104fb26a1e patch-ids.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in add_commit()
Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:49:12 -08:00
337ce247e3 diffcore-rename.c: use ALLOC_GROW()
Use ALLOC_GROW() instead of open-coding it in locate_rename_dst()
and register_rename_src().

Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:49:02 -08:00
4c960a432c diff.c: use ALLOC_GROW()
Use ALLOC_GROW() instead of open-coding it in diffstat_add() and
diff_q().

Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:48:39 -08:00
d6e82b575a commit.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in register_commit_graft()
Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:47:07 -08:00
bcc7a03285 cache-tree.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in find_subtree()
Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:45:35 -08:00
5cbbe13a9f bundle.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in add_to_ref_list()
Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:44:48 -08:00
25e1940709 builtin/pack-objects.c: use ALLOC_GROW() in check_pbase_path()
Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:44:11 -08:00
b294097bc6 git-add--interactive: warn if module for interactive.singlekey is missing
Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Ruderich <simon@ruderich.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:11:18 -08:00
8358f1acd5 git-config: document interactive.singlekey requires Term::ReadKey
Most distributions don't require Term::ReadKey as dependency, leaving
the user to wonder why the setting doesn't work.

Signed-off-by: Simon Ruderich <simon@ruderich.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 14:10:55 -08:00
187e290a98 strbuf: style fix -- top opening bracket on a separate line
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 12:26:08 -08:00
ee34a2bead repack: add repack.packKeptObjects config var
The git-repack command always passes `--honor-pack-keep`
to pack-objects. This has traditionally been a good thing,
as we do not want to duplicate those objects in a new pack,
and we are not going to delete the old pack.

However, when bitmaps are in use, it is important for a full
repack to include all reachable objects, even if they may be
duplicated in a .keep pack. Otherwise, we cannot generate
the bitmaps, as the on-disk format requires the set of
objects in the pack to be fully closed.

Even if the repository does not generally have .keep files,
a simultaneous push could cause a race condition in which a
.keep file exists at the moment of a repack. The repack may
try to include those objects in one of two situations:

  1. The pushed .keep pack contains objects that were
     already in the repository (e.g., blobs due to a revert of
     an old commit).

  2. Receive-pack updates the refs, making the objects
     reachable, but before it removes the .keep file, the
     repack runs.

In either case, we may prefer to duplicate some objects in
the new, full pack, and let the next repack (after the .keep
file is cleaned up) take care of removing them.

This patch introduces both a command-line and config option
to disable the `--honor-pack-keep` option.  By default, it
is triggered when pack.writeBitmaps (or `--write-bitmap-index`
is turned on), but specifying it explicitly can override the
behavior (e.g., in cases where you prefer .keep files to
bitmaps, but only when they are present).

Note that this option just disables the pack-objects
behavior. We still leave packs with a .keep in place, as we
do not necessarily know that we have duplicated all of their
objects.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 12:21:49 -08:00
5889271114 finish_tmp_packfile():use strbuf for pathname construction
The old version fixes a maximum length on the buffer, which could be a problem
if one is not certain of the length of get_object_directory().
Using strbuf can avoid the protential bug.

Helped-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Sun He <sunheehnus@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 12:15:10 -08:00
2156a98045 Merge branch 'sh/write-pack-file-warning-message-fix' into sh/finish-tmp-packfile
* sh/write-pack-file-warning-message-fix:
  write_pack_file: use correct variable in diagnostic
2014-03-03 12:13:20 -08:00
0eea5a6e91 write_pack_file: use correct variable in diagnostic
'pack_tmp_name' is the subject of the utime() check, so report it in the
warning, not the uninitialized 'tmpname'

Signed-off-by: Sun He <sunheehnus@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-03 10:43:40 -08:00
893a9764dc submodule update: consistently document the '--checkout' option
Commit 322bb6e12f (add update 'none' flag to disable update of submodule
by default) added the '--checkout' option to "git submodule update" but
forgot to explicitly document it in synopsis, usage string and man page
(It is only mentioned implicitly in the man page). In 23d25e48 (submodule:
explicit local branch creation in module_clone) the synopsis of the man
page was updated, but the "OPTIONS" section of the man page and the usage
string of the git-submodule script still do not mention the '--checkout'
option.

Fix that by documenting this option in usage string and the "OPTIONS"
section of man page too. While at it group the update-mode options into
a single set in the usage string.

Reported-by: Matthijs Kooijman <matthijs@stdin.nl>
Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-28 15:34:36 -08:00
d10cb3dfab help.c: rename function "pretty_print_string_list"
The part "string_list" of the name of function
"pretty_print_string_list" is just an implementation
detail. The function pretty-prints command names so
rename it to "pretty_print_cmdnames".

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-28 13:24:53 -08:00
33bef7ea25 Document some functions defined in object.c
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-28 13:18:09 -08:00
1f91e79cf6 Add docstrings for lookup_replace_object() and do_lookup_replace_object()
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-28 13:17:56 -08:00
f57b6cfdf7 CodingGuidelines: mention C whitespace rules
We are fairly consistent about these, so most are covered by
"follow existing style", but it doesn't hurt to be explicit.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-28 12:53:50 -08:00
f377e7a37c fetch: add a failing test for prunning with overlapping refspecs
When a remote has multiple fetch refspecs and these overlap in the
target namespace, fetch may prune a remote-tracking branch which still
exists in the remote. The test uses a popular form of this, by putting
pull requests as stored in a popular hosting platform alongside "real"
remote-tracking branches.

The fetch command makes a decision of whether to prune based
on the first matching refspec, which in this case is insufficient, as it
covers the pull request names. This pair of refspecs does work as
expected if the more "specific" refspec is the first in the list.

Signed-off-by: Carlos Martín Nieto <cmn@elego.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-28 12:38:20 -08:00
7671b63211 add uploadarchive.allowUnreachable option
In commit ee27ca4, we started restricting remote git-archive
invocations to only accessing reachable commits. This
matches what upload-pack allows, but does restrict some
useful cases (e.g., HEAD:foo). We loosened this in 0f544ee,
which allows `foo:bar` as long as `foo` is a ref tip.
However, that still doesn't allow many useful things, like:

  1. Commits accessible from a ref, like `foo^:bar`, which
     are reachable

  2. Arbitrary sha1s, even if they are reachable.

We can do a full object-reachability check for these cases,
but it can be quite expensive if the client has sent us the
sha1 of a tree; we have to visit every sub-tree of every
commit in the worst case.

Let's instead give site admins an escape hatch, in case they
prefer the more liberal behavior.  For many sites, the full
object database is public anyway (e.g., if you allow dumb
walker access), or the site admin may simply decide the
security/convenience tradeoff is not worth it.

This patch adds a new config option to disable the
restrictions added in ee27ca4. It defaults to off, meaning
there is no change in behavior by default.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-28 09:55:37 -08:00
69897bc2b8 docs: clarify remote restrictions for git-upload-archive
Commits ee27ca4 and 0f544ee introduced rules by which
git-upload-archive would restrict clients from accessing
unreachable objects. However, we never documented those
rules anywhere, nor their reason for being. Let's do so now.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-28 09:55:35 -08:00
9ef176b55c tag: support --sort=<spec>
--sort=version:refname (or --sort=v:refname for short) sorts tags as
if they are versions. --sort=-refname reverses the order (with or
without ":version").

versioncmp() is copied from string/strverscmp.c in glibc commit
ee9247c38a8def24a59eb5cfb7196a98bef8cfdc, reformatted to Git coding
style. The implementation is under LGPL-2.1 and according to [1] I can
relicense it to GPLv2.

[1] http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html#AllCompatibility

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-27 14:04:05 -08:00
2de34784df Merge branch 'nd/http-fetch-shallow-fix'
Attempting to deepen a shallow repository by fetching over smart
HTTP transport failed in the protocol exchange, when no-done
extension was used.  The fetching side waited for the list of
shallow boundary commits after the sending end stopped talking to
it.

* nd/http-fetch-shallow-fix:
  t5537: move http tests out to t5539
  fetch-pack: fix deepen shallow over smart http with no-done cap
  protocol-capabilities.txt: document no-done
  protocol-capabilities.txt: refer multi_ack_detailed back to pack-protocol.txt
  pack-protocol.txt: clarify 'obj-id' in the last ACK after 'done'
  test: rename http fetch and push test files
2014-02-27 14:01:50 -08:00
0f9e62e084 Merge branch 'jk/pack-bitmap'
Borrow the bitmap index into packfiles from JGit to speed up
enumeration of objects involved in a commit range without having to
fully traverse the history.

* jk/pack-bitmap: (26 commits)
  ewah: unconditionally ntohll ewah data
  ewah: support platforms that require aligned reads
  read-cache: use get_be32 instead of hand-rolled ntoh_l
  block-sha1: factor out get_be and put_be wrappers
  do not discard revindex when re-preparing packfiles
  pack-bitmap: implement optional name_hash cache
  t/perf: add tests for pack bitmaps
  t: add basic bitmap functionality tests
  count-objects: recognize .bitmap in garbage-checking
  repack: consider bitmaps when performing repacks
  repack: handle optional files created by pack-objects
  repack: turn exts array into array-of-struct
  repack: stop using magic number for ARRAY_SIZE(exts)
  pack-objects: implement bitmap writing
  rev-list: add bitmap mode to speed up object lists
  pack-objects: use bitmaps when packing objects
  pack-objects: split add_object_entry
  pack-bitmap: add support for bitmap indexes
  documentation: add documentation for the bitmap format
  ewah: compressed bitmap implementation
  ...
2014-02-27 14:01:48 -08:00
6784fab0ac Merge branch 'dk/blame-janitorial'
Code clean-up.

* dk/blame-janitorial:
  builtin/blame.c::find_copy_in_blob: no need to scan for region end
  blame.c: prepare_lines should not call xrealloc for every line
  builtin/blame.c::prepare_lines: fix allocation size of sb->lineno
  builtin/blame.c: eliminate same_suspect()
  builtin/blame.c: struct blame_entry does not need a prev link
2014-02-27 14:01:46 -08:00
62bef66fe7 Merge branch 'bc/gpg-sign-everywhere'
Teach "--gpg-sign" option to many commands that create commits.

* bc/gpg-sign-everywhere:
  pull: add the --gpg-sign option.
  rebase: add the --gpg-sign option
  rebase: parse options in stuck-long mode
  rebase: don't try to match -M option
  rebase: remove useless arguments check
  am: add the --gpg-sign option
  am: parse options in stuck-long mode
  git-sh-setup.sh: add variable to use the stuck-long mode
  cherry-pick, revert: add the --gpg-sign option
2014-02-27 14:01:44 -08:00
d8a1bac1d4 Merge branch 'al/docs'
A handful of documentation updates, all trivially harmless.

* al/docs:
  docs/git-blame: explain more clearly the example pickaxe use
  docs/git-clone: clarify use of --no-hardlinks option
  docs/git-remote: capitalize first word of initial blurb
  docs/merge-strategies: remove hyphen from mis-merges
2014-02-27 14:01:43 -08:00
bd62e7c364 Merge branch 'jk/test-ports'
Avoid having to assign port number to be used in tests manually.

* jk/test-ports:
  tests: auto-set git-daemon port
  tests: auto-set LIB_HTTPD_PORT from test name
2014-02-27 14:01:42 -08:00
8336832ad9 Merge branch 'nd/reset-intent-to-add'
* nd/reset-intent-to-add:
  reset: support "--mixed --intent-to-add" mode
2014-02-27 14:01:40 -08:00
795dd116bb Merge branch 'ks/tree-diff-walk'
* ks/tree-diff-walk:
  tree-walk: finally switch over tree descriptors to contain a pre-parsed entry
  revision: convert to using diff_tree_sha1()
  line-log: convert to using diff_tree_sha1()
  tree-diff: convert diff_root_tree_sha1() to just call diff_tree_sha1 with old=NULL
  tree-diff: allow diff_tree_sha1 to accept NULL sha1
2014-02-27 14:01:39 -08:00
8a342058f6 Merge branch 'mw/symlinks'
All subcommands that take pathspecs mishandled an in-tree symbolic
link when given it as a full path from the root (which arguably is
a sick way to use pathspecs).  "git ls-files -s $(pwd)/RelNotes" in
our tree is an easy reproduction recipe.

* mw/symlinks:
  setup: don't dereference in-tree symlinks for absolute paths
  setup: add abspath_part_inside_repo() function
  t0060: add tests for prefix_path when path begins with work tree
  t0060: add test for prefix_path when path == work tree
  t0060: add test for prefix_path on symlinks via absolute paths
  t3004: add test for ls-files on symlinks via absolute paths
2014-02-27 14:01:37 -08:00
f813f71a20 Merge branch 'nd/test-rename-reset'
* nd/test-rename-reset:
  t7101, t7014: rename test files to indicate what that file is for
2014-02-27 14:01:36 -08:00
06c27689dd Merge branch 'wk/submodule-on-branch'
Make sure 'submodule update' modes that do not detach HEADs can
be used more pleasantly by checking out a concrete branch when
cloning them to prime the well.

* wk/submodule-on-branch:
  Documentation: describe 'submodule update --remote' use case
  submodule: explicit local branch creation in module_clone
  submodule: document module_clone arguments in comments
  submodule: make 'checkout' update_module mode more explicit
2014-02-27 14:01:33 -08:00
043478308f Merge branch 'ep/varscope'
Shrink lifetime of variables by moving their definitions to an
inner scope where appropriate.

* ep/varscope:
  builtin/gc.c: reduce scope of variables
  builtin/fetch.c: reduce scope of variable
  builtin/commit.c: reduce scope of variables
  builtin/clean.c: reduce scope of variable
  builtin/blame.c: reduce scope of variables
  builtin/apply.c: reduce scope of variables
  bisect.c: reduce scope of variable
2014-02-27 14:01:30 -08:00
a06f23c739 Merge branch 'bs/stdio-undef-before-redef'
When we replace broken macros from stdio.h in git-compat-util.h,
preprocessor.

* bs/stdio-undef-before-redef:
  git-compat-util.h: #undef (v)snprintf before #define them
2014-02-27 14:01:28 -08:00
bfef492d76 Merge branch 'jk/config-path-include-fix'
include.path variable (or any variable that expects a path that can
use ~username expansion) in the configuration file is not a
boolean, but the code failed to check it.

* jk/config-path-include-fix:
  handle_path_include: don't look at NULL value
  expand_user_path: do not look at NULL path
2014-02-27 14:01:25 -08:00
28006fb046 Merge branch 'ds/rev-parse-required-args'
"git rev-parse --default" without the required option argument did
not diagnose it as an error.

* ds/rev-parse-required-args:
  rev-parse: check i before using argv[i] against argc
2014-02-27 14:01:23 -08:00
1e745453fe Merge branch 'nd/diff-quiet-stat-dirty'
"git diff --quiet -- pathspec1 pathspec2" sometimes did not return
correct status value.

* nd/diff-quiet-stat-dirty:
  diff: do not quit early on stat-dirty files
  diff.c: move diffcore_skip_stat_unmatch core logic out for reuse later
2014-02-27 14:01:21 -08:00
cbaeafc325 Merge branch 'nd/submodule-pathspec-ending-with-slash'
Allow "git cmd path/", when the 'path' is where a submodule is
bound to the top-level working tree, to match 'path', despite the
extra and unnecessary trailing slash.

* nd/submodule-pathspec-ending-with-slash:
  clean: use cache_name_is_other()
  clean: replace match_pathspec() with dir_path_match()
  pathspec: pass directory indicator to match_pathspec_item()
  match_pathspec: match pathspec "foo/" against directory "foo"
  dir.c: prepare match_pathspec_item for taking more flags
  pathspec: rename match_pathspec_depth() to match_pathspec()
  pathspec: convert some match_pathspec_depth() to dir_path_match()
  pathspec: convert some match_pathspec_depth() to ce_path_match()
2014-02-27 14:01:15 -08:00
156d6ed922 Merge branch 'bk/refresh-missing-ok-in-merge-recursive'
Allow "merge-recursive" to work in an empty (temporary) working
tree again when there are renames involved, correcting an old
regression in 1.7.7 era.

* bk/refresh-missing-ok-in-merge-recursive:
  merge-recursive.c: tolerate missing files while refreshing index
  read-cache.c: extend make_cache_entry refresh flag with options
  read-cache.c: refactor --ignore-missing implementation
  t3030-merge-recursive: test known breakage with empty work tree
2014-02-27 14:01:14 -08:00
7da5fd6895 Merge branch 'da/pull-ff-configuration'
"git pull" learned to pay attention to pull.ff configuration
variable.

* da/pull-ff-configuration:
  pull: add --ff-only to the help text
  pull: add pull.ff configuration
2014-02-27 14:01:11 -08:00
d637d1b9a8 Merge branch 'kb/fast-hashmap'
Improvements to our hash table to get it to meet the needs of the
msysgit fscache project, with some nice performance improvements.

* kb/fast-hashmap:
  name-hash: retire unused index_name_exists()
  hashmap.h: use 'unsigned int' for hash-codes everywhere
  test-hashmap.c: drop unnecessary #includes
  .gitignore: test-hashmap is a generated file
  read-cache.c: fix memory leaks caused by removed cache entries
  builtin/update-index.c: cleanup update_one
  fix 'git update-index --verbose --again' output
  remove old hash.[ch] implementation
  name-hash.c: remove cache entries instead of marking them CE_UNHASHED
  name-hash.c: use new hash map implementation for cache entries
  name-hash.c: remove unreferenced directory entries
  name-hash.c: use new hash map implementation for directories
  diffcore-rename.c: use new hash map implementation
  diffcore-rename.c: simplify finding exact renames
  diffcore-rename.c: move code around to prepare for the next patch
  buitin/describe.c: use new hash map implementation
  add a hashtable implementation that supports O(1) removal
  submodule: don't access the .gitmodules cache entry after removing it
2014-02-27 14:01:09 -08:00
810273bc33 Merge branch 'nv/commit-gpgsign-config'
Introduce commit.gpgsign configuration variable to force every
commit to be GPG signed.  The variable cannot be overriden from the
command line of some of the commands that create commits except for
"git commit" and "git commit-tree", but I am not convinced that it
is a good idea to sprinkle support for --no-gpg-sign everywhere,
which in turn means that this configuration variable may not be
such a good idea.

* nv/commit-gpgsign-config:
  test the commit.gpgsign config option
  commit-tree: add and document --no-gpg-sign
  commit-tree: add the commit.gpgsign option to sign all commits
2014-02-27 14:01:03 -08:00
0179c945fc shallow: automatically clean up shallow tempfiles
We sometimes write tempfiles of the form "shallow_XXXXXX"
during fetch/push operations with shallow repositories.
Under normal circumstances, we clean up the result when we
are done. However, we do no take steps to clean up after
ourselves when we exit due to die() or signal death.

This patch teaches the tempfile creation code to register
handlers to clean up after ourselves. To handle this, we
change the ownership semantics of the filename returned by
setup_temporary_shallow. It now keeps a copy of the filename
itself, and returns only a const pointer to it.

We can also do away with explicit tempfile removal in the
callers. They all exit not long after finishing with the
file, so they can rely on the auto-cleanup, simplifying the
code.

Note that we keep things simple and maintain only a single
filename to be cleaned. This is sufficient for the current
caller, but we future-proof it with a die("BUG").

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-27 12:07:13 -08:00
0cc77c386c shallow: use stat_validity to check for up-to-date file
When we are about to write the shallow file, we check that
it has not changed since we last read it. Instead of
hand-rolling this, we can use stat_validity. This is built
around the index stat-check, so it is more robust than just
checking the mtime, as we do now (it uses the same check as
we do for index files).

The new code also handles the case of a shallow file
appearing unexpectedly. With the current code, two
simultaneous processes making us shallow (e.g., two "git
fetch --depth=1" running at the same time in a non-shallow
repository) can race to overwrite each other.

As a bonus, we also remove a race in determining the stat
information of what we read (we stat and then open, leaving
a race window; instead we should open and then fstat the
descriptor).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-27 12:04:23 -08:00
0a9136f327 commit.c: use the generic "sha1_pos" function for lookup
Refactor binary search in "commit_graft_pos" function: use
generic "sha1_pos" function.

Signed-off-by: Dmitry S. Dolzhenko <dmitrys.dolzhenko@yandex.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-27 10:55:27 -08:00
2d4c993392 stash pop: mention we did not drop the stash upon failing to apply
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-26 14:18:54 -08:00
5aae66bd99 request-pull: resurrect "pretty refname" feature
When asking to fetch/pull a branch whose name is B or a tag whose
name is T, we used to show the command to run as:

	git pull $URL B
        git pull $URL tags/T

even when B and T were spelled in a more qualified way in order to
disambiguate, e.g. heads/B or refs/tags/T, but the recent update
lost this feature.  Resurrect it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-25 13:45:38 -08:00
28ad685f70 request-pull: test updates
This illustrates behaviour changes that result from the recent
change by Linus.  Most show good changes, but there may be some
usability regressions:

 - The command continues to fail when the user forgot to push out
   before running the command, but the wording of the message has
   been slightly changed.

 - The command no longer guesses when asked to request the commit at
   the HEAD be pulled after pushing it to a branch 'for-upstream',
   even when that branch points at the correct commit.  The user
   must ask the command with the new "master:for-upstream" syntax.

The new behaviour needs to be documented in any case, but we need to
agree what the new behaviour should be before doing so first.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-25 12:54:45 -08:00
4b14ec878a request-pull: pick up tag message as before
The previous two steps were meant to stop updating the explicit
refname the user gave to the command to a different ref that points
at it.  Most notably, we no longer substitute a branch name the user
used with a name of the tag that points at the commit at the tip of
the branch (it still can be done with "local-branch:remote-tag").

However, they also lost the code that included the message in a
tag when the user _did_ ask the tag to be pulled.  Resurrect it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-25 12:53:40 -08:00
dc2eacc58c request-pull: allow "local:remote" to specify names on both ends
This allows a user to say that a local branch has a different name on
the remote server, using the same syntax that "git push" uses to create
that situation.

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-25 12:52:59 -08:00
024d34cb08 request-pull: more strictly match local/remote branches
The current 'request-pull' will try to find matching commit on the given
remote, and rewrite the "please pull" line to match that remote ref.

That may be very helpful if your local tree doesn't match the layout of
the remote branches, but for the common case it's been a recurring
disaster, when "request-pull" is done against a delayed remote update, and
it rewrites the target branch randomly to some other branch name that
happens to have the same expected SHA1 (or more commonly, leaves it
blank).

To avoid that recurring problem, this changes "git request-pull" so that
it matches the ref name to be pulled against the *local* repository, and
then warns if the remote repository does not have that exact same branch
or tag name and content.

This means that git request-pull will never rewrite the ref-name you gave
it.  If the local branch name is "xyzzy", that is the only branch name
that request-pull will ask the other side to fetch.

If the remote has that branch under a different name, that's your problem
and git request-pull will not try to fix it up (but git request-pull will
warn about the fact that no exact matching branch is found, and you can
edit the end result to then have the remote name you want if it doesn't
match your local one).

The new "find local ref" code will also complain loudly if you give an
ambiguous refname (eg you have both a tag and a branch with that same
name, and you don't specify "heads/name" or "tags/name").

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-25 12:52:28 -08:00
3ee8944fa5 builtin/blame.c::find_copy_in_blob: no need to scan for region end
The region end can be looked up just like its beginning.

Signed-off-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-25 09:51:24 -08:00
75df1f434f commit: add --cleanup=scissors
Since 1a72cfd (commit -v: strip diffs and submodule shortlogs from the
commit message - 2013-12-05) we have a less fragile way to cut out
"git status" at the end of a commit message but it's only enabled for
stripping submodule shortlogs.

Add new cleanup option that reuses the same mechanism for the entire
"git status" without accidentally removing lines starting with '#'.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-25 09:35:20 -08:00
d40d535b89 sha1_file.c: document a bunch of functions defined in the file
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 16:01:11 -08:00
7b359ea6b3 name-hash: retire unused index_name_exists()
db5360f3f4 (name-hash: refactor polymorphic index_name_exists();
2013-09-17) split index_name_exists() into index_file_exists() and
index_dir_exists() but retained index_name_exists() as a thin wrapper
to avoid disturbing possible in-flight topics. Since this change
landed in 'master' some time ago and there are no in-flight topics
referencing index_name_exists(), retire it.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 15:26:33 -08:00
b6aad99473 hashmap.h: use 'unsigned int' for hash-codes everywhere
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 15:26:30 -08:00
4b8d14b4c5 test the commit.gpgsign config option
The tests are checking that :

- when commit.gpgsign is true, "git commit" creates signed commits

- when commit.gpgsign is false, "git commit" creates unsigned commits

- when commit.gpgsign is true, "git commit --no-gpg-sign" creates
  unsigned commits

- when commit.gpgsign is true, "git rebase -f" creates signed commits

Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:51:35 -08:00
55ca3f99ae commit-tree: add and document --no-gpg-sign
Document how to override commit.gpgsign configuration that is set to
true per "git commit" invocation (parse-options machinery lets us
say "--no-gpg-sign" to do so).

"git commit-tree" does not use parse-options, so manually add the
corresponding option for now.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:51:35 -08:00
d95bfb12b8 commit-tree: add the commit.gpgsign option to sign all commits
If you want to GPG sign all your commits, you have to add the -S option
all the time. The commit.gpgsign config option allows to sign all
commits automatically.

Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:50:56 -08:00
f34b205f6c diff: do not quit early on stat-dirty files
When QUICK is set (i.e. with --quiet) we try to do as little work as
possible, stopping after seeing the first change. stat-dirty is
considered a "change" but it may turn out not, if no actual content is
changed. The actual content test is performed too late in the process
and the shortcut may be taken prematurely, leading to incorrect return
code.

Assume we do "git diff --quiet". If we have a stat-dirty file "a" and
a really dirty file "b". We break the loop in run_diff_files() and
stop after "a" because we have got a "change". Later in
diffcore_skip_stat_unmatch() we find out "a" is actually not
changed. But there's nothing else in the diff queue, we incorrectly
declare "no change", ignoring the fact that "b" is changed.

This also happens to "git diff --quiet HEAD" when it hits
diff_can_quit_early() in oneway_diff().

This patch does the content test earlier in order to keep going if "a"
is unchanged. The test result is cached so that when
diffcore_skip_stat_unmatch() is done in the end, we spend no cycles on
re-testing "a".

Reported-by: IWAMOTO Toshihiro <iwamoto@valinux.co.jp>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:50:14 -08:00
fceb907225 diff.c: move diffcore_skip_stat_unmatch core logic out for reuse later
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:50:03 -08:00
e906612121 tree-diff: no need to pass match to skip_uninteresting()
It is neither used there as input, nor the output written through it, is
used outside.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:46:11 -08:00
e197c2b650 tree-diff: no need to manually verify that there is no mode change for a path
Because if there is, such two tree entries would never be compared as
equal - the code in base_name_compare() explicitly compares modes, if
there is a change for dir bit, even for equal paths, entries would
compare as different.

The code I'm removing here is from 2005 April 262e82b4 (Fix diff-tree
recursion), which pre-dates base_name_compare() introduction in 958ba6c9
(Introduce "base_name_compare()" helper function) by a month.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:46:11 -08:00
eeb3f32868 combine-diff: move changed-paths scanning logic into its own function
Move code for finding paths for which diff(commit,parent_i) is not-empty
for all parents to separate function - at present we have generic (and
slow) code for this job, which translates 1 n-parent problem to n
1-parent problems and then intersect results, and will be adding another
limited, but faster, paths scanning implementation in the next patch.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:46:11 -08:00
51af1886c7 combine-diff: move show_log_first logic/action out of paths scanning
Judging from sample outputs and tests nothing changes in diff -c output,
and this change will help later patches, when we'll be refactoring paths
scanning into its own function with several variants - the
show_log_first logic / code will stay common to all of them.

NOTE: only now we have to take care to explicitly not show anything if
    parents array is empty, as in fact there are some clients in Git code,
    which calls diff_tree_combined() in such a way.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:46:11 -08:00
fce135c4ff tests: add checking that combine-diff emits only correct paths
where "correct paths" stands for paths that are different to all
parents.

Up until now, we were testing combined diff only on one file, or on
several files which were all different (t4038-diff-combined.sh).

As recent thinko in "simplify intersect_paths() further" showed, and
also, since we are going to rework code for finding paths different to
all parents, lets write at least basic tests.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:44:57 -08:00
7b1004b0ba combine-diff: simplify intersect_paths() further
Linus once said:

    I actually wish more people understood the really core low-level
    kind of coding. Not big, complex stuff like the lockless name
    lookup, but simply good use of pointers-to-pointers etc. For
    example, I've seen too many people who delete a singly-linked
    list entry by keeping track of the "prev" entry, and then to
    delete the entry, doing something like

	if (prev)
	    prev->next = entry->next;
	else
	    list_head = entry->next;

    and whenever I see code like that, I just go "This person
    doesn't understand pointers". And it's sadly quite common.

    People who understand pointers just use a "pointer to the entry
    pointer", and initialize that with the address of the
    list_head. And then as they traverse the list, they can remove
    the entry without using any conditionals, by just doing a "*pp =
    entry->next".

Applying that simplification lets us lose 7 lines from this function
even while adding 2 lines of comment.

I was tempted to squash this into the original commit, but because
the benchmarking described in the commit log is without this
simplification, I decided to keep it a separate follow-up patch.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:44:57 -08:00
af82c7880f combine-diff: combine_diff_path.len is not needed anymore
The field was used in order to speed-up name comparison and also to
mark removed paths by setting it to 0.

Because the updated code does significantly less strcmp and also
just removes paths from the list and free right after we know a path
will not be needed, it is not needed anymore.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:44:57 -08:00
8518ff8fab combine-diff: optimize combine_diff_path sets intersection
When generating combined diff, for each commit, we intersect diff
paths from diff(parent_0,commit) to diff(parent_i,commit) comparing
all paths pairs, i.e. doing it the quadratic way. That is correct,
but could be optimized.

Paths come from trees in sorted (= tree) order, and so does diff_tree()
emits resulting paths in that order too. Now if we look at diffcore
transformations, all of them, except diffcore_order, preserve resulting
path ordering:

    - skip_stat_unmatch, grep, pickaxe, filter
                            -- just skip elements -> order stays preserved

    - break                 -- just breaks diff for a path, adding path
                               dup after the path -> order stays preserved

    - detect rename/copy    -- resulting paths are emitted sorted
                               (verified empirically)

So only diffcore_order changes diff paths ordering.

But diffcore_order meaning affects only presentation - i.e. only how to
show the diff, so we could do all the internal computations without
paths reordering, and order only resultant paths set. This is faster,
since, if we know two paths sets are all ordered, their intersection
could be done in linear time.

This patch does just that.

Timings for `git log --raw --no-abbrev --no-renames` without `-c` ("git log")
and with `-c` ("git log -c") before and after the patch are as follows:

                linux.git v3.10..v3.11

            log     log -c

    before  1.9s    20.4s
    after   1.9s    16.6s

                navy.git    (private repo)

            log     log -c

    before  0.83s   15.6s
    after   0.83s    2.1s

P.S.

I think linux.git case is sped up not so much as the second one, since
in navy.git, there are more exotic (subtree, etc) merges.

P.P.S.

My tracing showed that the rest of the time (16.6s vs 1.9s) is usually
spent in computing huge diffs from commit to second parent. Will try to
deal with it, if I'll have time.

P.P.P.S.

For combine_diff_path, ->len is not needed anymore - will remove it in
the next noisy cleanup path, to maintain good signal/noise ratio here.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:44:57 -08:00
91921ceff6 diff test: add tests for combine-diff with orderfile
In the next patch combine-diff will have special code-path for taking
orderfile into account. Prepare for making changes by introducing
coverage tests for that case.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:44:57 -08:00
1df4320fa2 diffcore-order: export generic ordering interface
diffcore_order() interface only accepts a queue of `struct
diff_filepair`.

In the next patches, we'll want to order `struct combine_diff_path`
by path, so let's first rework diffcore-order to also provide
generic low-level interface for ordering arbitrary objects, provided
they have path accessors.

The new interface is:

    - `struct obj_order`    for describing objects to ordering routine, and
    - order_objects()       for actually doing the ordering work.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:44:57 -08:00
7146e66f08 tree-walk: finally switch over tree descriptors to contain a pre-parsed entry
This continues 4651ece8 (Switch over tree descriptors to contain a
pre-parsed entry) and moves the only rest computational part

    mode = canon_mode(mode)

from tree_entry_extract() to tree entry decode phase - to
decode_tree_entry().

The reason to do it, is that canon_mode() is at least 2 conditional
jumps for regular files, and that could be noticeable should canon_mode()
be invoked several times.

That does not matter for current Git codebase, where typical tree
traversal is

    while (t->size) {
        sha1 = tree_entry_extract(t, &path, &mode);
        ...
        update_tree_entry(t);
    }

i.e. we do t -> sha1,path.mode "extraction" only once per entry. In such
cases, it does not matter performance-wise, where that mode
canonicalization is done - either once in tree_entry_extract(), or once
in decode_tree_entry() called by update_tree_entry() - it is
approximately the same.

But for future code, which could need to work with several tree_desc's
in parallel, it could be handy to operate on tree_desc descriptors, and
do "extracts" only when needed, or at all, access only relevant part of
it through structure fields directly.

And for such situations, having canon_mode() be done once in decode
phase is better - we won't need to pay the performance price of 2 extra
conditional jumps on every t->mode access.

So let's move mode canonicalization to decode_tree_entry(). That was the
final bit. Now after tree entry is decoded, it is fully ready and could
be accessed either directly via field, or through tree_entry_extract()
which this time got really "totally trivial".

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:43:29 -08:00
2e70c01799 clean: use cache_name_is_other()
cmd_clean() has the exact same code of index_name_is_other(). Reduce
code duplication.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:37:24 -08:00
05b85022c9 clean: replace match_pathspec() with dir_path_match()
This instance was left out when many match_pathspec() call sites that
take input from dir_entry were converted to dir_path_match() because
it passed a path with the trailing slash stripped out to match_pathspec()
while the others did not. Stripping for all call sites back then would
be a regression because match_pathspec() did not know how to match
pathspec foo/ against _directory_ foo (the stripped version of path
"foo/").

match_pathspec() knows how to do it now. And dir_path_match() strips
the trailing slash also. Use the new function, because the stripping
code is removed in the next patch.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:37:24 -08:00
ae8d082421 pathspec: pass directory indicator to match_pathspec_item()
This patch activates the DO_MATCH_DIRECTORY code in m_p_i(), which
makes "git diff HEAD submodule/" and "git diff HEAD submodule" produce
the same output. Previously only the version without trailing slash
returns the difference (if any).

That's the effect of new ce_path_match(). dir_path_match() is not
executed by the new tests. And it should not introduce regressions.

Previously if path "dir/" is passed in with pathspec "dir/", they
obviously match. With new dir_path_match(), the path becomes
_directory_ "dir" vs pathspec "dir/", which is not executed by the old
code path in m_p_i(). The new code path is executed and produces the
same result.

The other case is pathspec "dir" and path "dir/" is now turned to
"dir" (with DO_MATCH_DIRECTORY). Still the same result before or after
the patch.

So why change? Because of the next patch about clean.c.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:37:19 -08:00
68690fdd0b match_pathspec: match pathspec "foo/" against directory "foo"
Currently we do support matching pathspec "foo/" against directory
"foo". That is because match_pathspec() has no way to tell "foo" is a
directory and matching "foo/" against _file_ "foo" is wrong.

The callers can now tell match_pathspec if "foo" is a directory, we
could make an exception for this case. Code is not executed though
because no callers pass the flag yet.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:37:19 -08:00
42b0874a7e dir.c: prepare match_pathspec_item for taking more flags
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:37:19 -08:00
854b09592c pathspec: rename match_pathspec_depth() to match_pathspec()
A long time ago, for some reason I was not happy with
match_pathspec(). I created a better version, match_pathspec_depth()
that was suppose to replace match_pathspec()
eventually. match_pathspec() has finally been gone since 6 months
ago. Use the shorter name for match_pathspec_depth().

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:37:14 -08:00
ebb32893ba pathspec: convert some match_pathspec_depth() to dir_path_match()
This helps reduce the number of match_pathspec_depth() call sites and
show how m_p_d() is used. And it usage is:

 - match against an index entry (ce_path_match or match_pathspec_depth
   in ls-files)

 - match against a dir_entry from read_directory (dir_path_match and
   match_pathspec_depth in clean.c, which will be converted later)

 - resolve-undo (rerere.c and ls-files.c)

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:37:09 -08:00
429bb40abd pathspec: convert some match_pathspec_depth() to ce_path_match()
This helps reduce the number of match_pathspec_depth() call sites and
show how match_pathspec_depth() is used.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:36:52 -08:00
9937e65d88 Documentation: describe 'submodule update --remote' use case
Make it clear that there is no implicit floating going on; --remote
lets you explicitly integrate the upstream branch in your current
HEAD (just like running 'git pull' in the submodule).  The only
distinction with the current 'git pull' is the config location and
setting used for the upstream branch, which is hopefully clear now.

Signed-off-by: W. Trevor King <wking@tremily.us>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:35:52 -08:00
23d25e48f5 submodule: explicit local branch creation in module_clone
The previous code only checked out branches in cmd_add.  This commit
moves the branch-checkout logic into module_clone, where it can be
shared by cmd_add and cmd_update.  I also update the initial checkout
command to use 'reset' to preserve branches setup during module_clone.

With this change, folks cloning submodules for the first time via:

  $ git submodule update ...

will get a local branch instead of a detached HEAD, unless they are
using the default checkout-mode updates.  This is a change from the
previous situation where cmd_update always used checkout-mode logic
(regardless of the requested update mode) for updates that triggered
an initial clone, which always resulted in a detached HEAD.

This commit does not change the logic for updates after the initial
clone, which will continue to create detached HEADs for checkout-mode
updates, and integrate remote work with the local HEAD (detached or
not) in other modes.

The motivation for the change is that developers doing local work
inside the submodule are likely to select a non-checkout-mode for
updates so their local work is integrated with upstream work.
Developers who are not doing local submodule work stick with
checkout-mode updates so any apparently local work is blown away
during updates.  For example, if upstream rolls back the remote branch
or gitlinked commit to an earlier version, the checkout-mode developer
wants their old submodule checkout to be rolled back as well, instead
of getting a no-op merge/rebase with the rolled-back reference.

By using the update mode to distinguish submodule developers from
black-box submodule consumers, we can setup local branches for the
developers who will want local branches, and stick with detached HEADs
for the developers that don't care.

Testing
=======

In t7406, just-cloned checkouts now update to the gitlinked hash with
'reset', to preserve the local branch for situations where we're not
on a detached HEAD.

I also added explicit tests to t7406 for HEAD attachement after
cloning updates, showing that it depends on their update mode:

* Checkout-mode updates get detached HEADs
* Everyone else gets a local branch, matching the configured
  submodule.<name>.branch and defaulting to master.

The 'initial-setup' tag makes it easy to reset the superproject to a
known state, as several earlier tests commit to submodules and commit
the changed gitlinks to the superproject, but don't push the new
submodule commits to the upstream subprojects.  This makes it
impossible to checkout the current super master, because it references
submodule commits that don't exist in the upstream subprojects.  For a
specific example, see the tests that currently generate the
'two_new_submodule_commits' commits.

Documentation
=============

I updated the docs to describe the 'submodule update' modes in detail.
The old documentation did not distinguish between cloning and
non-cloning updates and lacked clarity on which operations would lead
to detached HEADs, and which would not.  The new documentation
addresses these issues while updating the docs to reflect the changes
introduced by this commit's explicit local branch creation in
module_clone.

I also add '--checkout' to the usage summary and group the update-mode
options into a single set.

Signed-off-by: W. Trevor King <wking@tremily.us>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:35:48 -08:00
9adfc1cfa7 submodule: document module_clone arguments in comments
Signed-off-by: W. Trevor King <wking@tremily.us>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:35:44 -08:00
a2aed08b41 submodule: make 'checkout' update_module mode more explicit
This avoids the current awkwardness of having either '' or 'checkout'
for checkout-mode updates, which makes testing for checkout-mode
updates (or non-checkout-mode updates) easier.

Signed-off-by: W. Trevor King <wking@tremily.us>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:35:09 -08:00
e8fa59b908 test-hashmap.c: drop unnecessary #includes
Per Documentation/CodingGuidelines most C files in git start with
a #include of git-compat-util.h or another header file that includes
it, such as cache.h or builtin.h.  This file doesn't need anything
beyond "git-compat-util.h", so use that.

Remove a #include of the system header <stdio.h> since it is already
included by "git-compat-util.h".

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:33:46 -08:00
f7988c15ad .gitignore: test-hashmap is a generated file
Prevent the "test-hashmap" program from being accidentally tracked
with "git add" or cluttering "git status" output.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:33:29 -08:00
352bbbd9f2 blame.c: prepare_lines should not call xrealloc for every line
Making a single preparation run for counting the lines will avoid memory
fragmentation.  Also, fix the allocated memory size which was wrong
when sizeof(int *) != sizeof(int), and would have been too small
for sizeof(int *) < sizeof(int), admittedly unlikely.

Signed-off-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:32:41 -08:00
62cf3ca95a builtin/blame.c::prepare_lines: fix allocation size of sb->lineno
If we are calling xrealloc on every single line, the least we can do
is get the right allocation size.

Signed-off-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:32:41 -08:00
0a88f08e28 builtin/blame.c: eliminate same_suspect()
Since the origin pointers are "interned" and reference-counted, comparing
the pointers rather than the content is enough.  The only uninterned
origins are cached values kept in commit->util, but same_suspect is not
called on them.

Signed-off-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:32:21 -08:00
6e2068ae48 merge-recursive.c: tolerate missing files while refreshing index
Teach add_cacheinfo to tell make_cache_entry to skip refreshing stat
information when a file is missing from the work tree.  We do not want
the index to be stat-dirty after the merge but also do not want to fail
when a file happens to be missing.

This fixes the 'merge-recursive w/ empty work tree - ours has rename'
case in t3030-merge-recursive.

Suggested-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:31:30 -08:00
257627268a read-cache.c: extend make_cache_entry refresh flag with options
Convert the make_cache_entry boolean 'refresh' argument to a more
general 'refresh_options' argument.  Pass the value through to the
underlying refresh_cache_ent call.  Add option CE_MATCH_REFRESH to
enable stat refresh.  Update call sites to use the new signature.

Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:31:17 -08:00
2e2e7ec1ef read-cache.c: refactor --ignore-missing implementation
Move lstat ENOENT handling from refresh_index to refresh_cache_ent and
activate it with a new CE_MATCH_IGNORE_MISSING option.  This will allow
other call paths into refresh_cache_ent to use the feature.

Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:31:10 -08:00
29d9af586b t3030-merge-recursive: test known breakage with empty work tree
Sometimes when working with a large repository it can be useful to try
out a merge and only check out conflicting files to disk (for example as
a speed optimization on a server).  Until v1.7.7-rc1~28^2~20
(merge-recursive: When we detect we can skip an update, actually skip
it, 2011-08-11), it was possible to do so with the following idiom:

	# Prepare a temporary index and empty work tree.
	GIT_INDEX_FILE="$PWD/tmp-$$-index" &&
	export GIT_INDEX_FILE &&
	GIT_WORK_TREE="$PWD/tmp-$$-work" &&
	export GIT_WORK_TREE &&
	mkdir "$GIT_WORK_TREE" &&

	# Convince the index that our side is on disk.
	git read-tree -i -m $ours &&
	git update-index --ignore-missing --refresh &&

	# Merge their side into our side.
	bases=$(git merge-base --all $ours $theirs) &&
	git merge-recursive $bases -- $ours $theirs &&
	tree=$(git write-tree)

Nowadays, that still works and the exit status is the same, but
merge-recursive produces a diagnostic if "our" side renamed a file:

	error: addinfo_cache failed for path 'dst'

Add a test to document this regression.

Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 14:30:22 -08:00
3c09d6845d read-cache: add index.version config variable
Add a config variable that allows setting the default index version when
initializing a new index file.  Similar to the GIT_INDEX_VERSION
environment variable this only affects new index files.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 13:33:17 -08:00
5d9fc888b4 test-lib: allow setting the index format version
Allow adding a TEST_GIT_INDEX_VERSION variable to config.mak to set the
index version with which the test suite should be run.

If it isn't set, the default version given in the source code is
used (currently version 3).

To avoid breakages with index versions other than [23], also set the
index version under which t2104 is run to 3.  This test only tests
functionality specific to version 2 and 3 of the index file and would
fail if the test suite is run with any other version.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 13:33:17 -08:00
0e3d40c60d am doc: add a pointer to relevant hooks
It is not obvious when looking at a new command what hooks will affect
it.  Add a HOOKS section to the git-am(1) page, imitating
git-commit(1), to make it easier for people to discover e.g. the
applypatch-msg hook that can implement a custom subject-mangling
strategy (e.g., removing a "bug #nnnn:" prefix introduced by a bug
tracker).

Reported-by: Phillip Susi <psusi@ubuntu.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 13:23:57 -08:00
98b406f3ad remote: handle pushremote config in any order
The remote we push can be defined either by
remote.pushdefault or by branch.*.pushremote for the current
branch. The order in which they appear in the config file
should not matter to precedence (which should be to prefer
the branch-specific config).

The current code parses the config linearly and uses a
single string to store both values, overwriting any
previous value. Thus, config like:

  [branch "master"]
  pushremote = foo
  [remote]
  pushdefault = bar

erroneously ends up pushing to "bar" from the master branch.

We can fix this by storing both values and resolving the
correct value after all config is read.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 12:53:28 -08:00
2b15846dbf log: do not segfault on gmtime errors
Many code paths assume that show_date and show_ident_date
cannot return NULL. For the most part, we handle missing or
corrupt timestamps by showing the epoch time t=0.

However, we might still return NULL if gmtime rejects the
time_t we feed it, resulting in a segfault. Let's catch this
case and just format t=0.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 10:12:58 -08:00
1dca155fe3 log: handle integer overflow in timestamps
If an ident line has a ridiculous date value like (2^64)+1,
we currently just pass ULONG_MAX along to the date code,
which can produce nonsensical dates.

On systems with a signed long time_t (e.g., 64-bit glibc
systems), this actually doesn't end up too bad. The
ULONG_MAX is converted to -1, we apply the timezone field to
that, and the result ends up somewhere between Dec 31, 1969
and Jan 1, 1970.

However, there is still a few good reasons to detect the
overflow explicitly:

  1. On systems where "unsigned long" is smaller than
     time_t, we get a nonsensical date in the future.

  2. Even where it would produce "Dec 31, 1969", it's easier
     to recognize "midnight Jan 1" as a consistent sentinel
     value for "we could not parse this".

  3.  Values which do not overflow strtoul but do overflow a
      signed time_t produce nonsensical values in the past.
      For example, on a 64-bit system with a signed long
      time_t, a timestamp of 18446744073000000000 produces a
      date in 1947.

We also recognize overflow in the timezone field, which
could produce nonsensical results. In this case we show the
parsed date, but in UTC.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 10:12:58 -08:00
7ca36d9398 date: check date overflow against time_t
When we check whether a timestamp has overflowed, we check
only against ULONG_MAX, meaning that strtoul has overflowed.
However, we also feed these timestamps to system functions
like gmtime, which expect a time_t. On many systems, time_t
is actually smaller than "unsigned long" (e.g., because it
is signed), and we would overflow when using these
functions.  We don't know the actual size or signedness of
time_t, but we can easily check for truncation with a simple
assignment.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 10:12:58 -08:00
d4b8de0420 fsck: report integer overflow in author timestamps
When we check commit objects, we complain if commit->date is
ULONG_MAX, which is an indication that we saw integer
overflow when parsing it. However, we do not do any check at
all for author lines, which also contain a timestamp.

Let's actually check the timestamps on each ident line
with strtoul. This catches both author and committer lines,
and we can get rid of the now-redundant commit->date check.

Note that like the existing check, we compare only against
ULONG_MAX. Now that we are calling strtoul at the site of
the check, we could be slightly more careful and also check
that errno is set to ERANGE. However, this will make further
refactoring in future patches a little harder, and it
doesn't really matter in practice.

For 32-bit systems, one would have to create a commit at the
exact wrong second in 2038. But by the time we get close to
that, all systems will hopefully have moved to 64-bit (and
if they haven't, they have a real problem one second later).

For 64-bit systems, by the time we get close to ULONG_MAX,
all systems will hopefully have been consumed in the fiery
wrath of our expanding Sun.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 10:12:58 -08:00
7d9a281941 t4212: test bogus timestamps with git-log
When t4212 was originally added by 9dbe7c3d (pretty: handle
broken commit headers gracefully, 2013-04-17), it tested our
handling of commits with broken ident lines in which the
timestamps could not be parsed. It does so using a bogus line
like "Name <email>-<> 1234 -0000", because that simulates an
error that was seen in the wild.

Later, 03818a4 (split_ident: parse timestamp from end of
line, 2013-10-14) made our parser smart enough to actually
find the timestamp on such a line, and t4212 was adjusted to
match. While it's nice that we handle this real-world case,
this meant that we were not actually testing the
bogus-timestamp case anymore.

This patch adds a test with a totally incomprehensible
timestamp to make sure we are testing the code path.

Note that the behavior is slightly different between regular log
output and "--format=%ad". In the former case, we produce a
sentinel value and in the latter, we produce an empty
string. While at first this seems unnecessarily
inconsistent, it matches the original behavior given by
9dbe7c3d.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 10:12:58 -08:00
94eaa80651 difftool: support repositories with .git-files
Modern versions of "git submodule" use .git-files to setup the
submodule directory.  When run in a "git submodule"-created
repository "git difftool --dir-diff" dies with the following
error:

	$ git difftool -d HEAD~
	fatal: This operation must be run in a work tree
	diff --raw --no-abbrev -z HEAD~: command returned error: 128

core.worktree is relative to the .git directory but the logic
in find_worktree() does not account for it.

Use `git rev-parse --show-toplevel` to find the worktree so that
the dir-diff feature works inside a submodule.

Reported-by: Gábor Lipták <gabor.liptak@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Jens Lehmann <jens.lehmann@web.de>
Helped-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 09:53:57 -08:00
7d0a9a752b diffcore.h: be explicit about the signedness of is_binary
Bitfields need to specify their signedness explicitly or the compiler is
free to default as it sees fit.  With compilers that default 'unsigned'
(SUNWspro 12 seems to do this) the tri-state nature of is_binary
vanishes and all files are treated as binary.

Signed-off-by: Richard Lowe <richlowe@richlowe.net>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 09:52:44 -08:00
136347d718 introduce GIT_INDEX_VERSION environment variable
Respect a GIT_INDEX_VERSION environment variable, when a new index is
initialized.  Setting the environment variable will not cause existing
index files to be converted to another format, but will only affect
newly written index files.  This can be used to initialize repositories
with index-v4.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 09:48:40 -08:00
9cbcc2a7ca demonstrate git-commit --dry-run exit code behaviour
In particular, show that --short and --porcelain, while implying
--dry-run, do not return the same exit code as --dry-run. This is due to
the wt_status.commitable flag being set only when a long status is
requested.

No fix is provided here; with [1], it should be trivial to fix though -
just a matter of calling wt_status_mark_commitable().

[1] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/242489

Signed-off-by: Tay Ray Chuan <rctay89@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 09:16:53 -08:00
c20aec05e3 stash doc: mention short form -k in save description
Document --keep-index's short form -k in both main synopsis and
the save synopsis in the Options section.

Signed-off-by: John Marshall <jm18@sanger.ac.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 09:13:30 -08:00
30d6c6eabf sha1_file_name(): declare to return a const string
Change the return value of sha1_file_name() to (const char *).
(Callers have no business mucking about here.)  Change callers
accordingly, deleting a few superfluous temporary variables along the
way.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 09:10:22 -08:00
1b1005d1b5 find_pack_entry(): document last_found_pack
Add a comment at the declaration of last_found_pack and where it is
used in find_pack_entry().  In the latter, separate the cases (1) to
make a place for the new comment and (2) to turn the success case into
affirmative logic.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 09:09:56 -08:00
ce37586475 replace_object: use struct members instead of an array
Give the poor humans some names to help them make sense of things.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 09:09:38 -08:00
754dbc43f0 i18n: mark all progress lines for translation
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 09:08:37 -08:00
019d1e65f5 sha1_file: fix delta_stack memory leak in unpack_entry
This delta_stack array can grow to any length depending on the actual
delta chain, but we forget to free it. Normally it does not matter
because we use small_delta_stack[] from stack and small_delta_stack
can hold 64-delta chains, more than standard --depth=50 in pack-objects.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 09:07:12 -08:00
a7cb1276cc remote-bzr: support the new 'force' option
Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Acked-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 09:04:27 -08:00
fdec195f89 test-hg.sh: tests are now expected to pass
Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 09:04:27 -08:00
cf31f70c08 transport-helper.c: do not overwrite forced bit
If the the transport helper says it was a forced update, then it is
a forced update.  It is however possible that an update is forced
without the transport-helper knowing about it, namely because some
higher up code had objections to the update and needed forcing in
order to let it through to the transport helper.  In other words, it
does not necessarily mean the update was *not* forced, when the
helper did not say "forced update".

Signed-off-by: Max Horn <max@quendi.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-24 09:04:17 -08:00
c4a0483fd5 gitk: Merge branch 'new' of https://github.com/vnwildman/gitk
to get Vietnamese translations for gitk.

Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-02-21 12:08:41 +11:00
afc711b8e1 rename read_replace_refs to check_replace_refs
The semantics of this flag was changed in commit

    e1111cef23 inline lookup_replace_object() calls

but wasn't renamed at the time to minimize code churn.  Rename it now,
and add a comment explaining its use.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-20 14:16:55 -08:00
2c0a1bd616 actually remove compat fnmatch source code
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-20 14:16:25 -08:00
70a8fc999d stop using fnmatch (either native or compat)
Since v1.8.4 (about six months ago) wildmatch is used as default
replacement for fnmatch. We have seen only one fix since so wildmatch
probably has done a good job as fnmatch replacement. This concludes
the fnmatch->wildmatch transition by no longer relying on fnmatch.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-20 14:16:11 -08:00
ff8802283f Revert "test-wildmatch: add "perf" command to compare wildmatch and fnmatch"
This reverts commit 1b25892636. compat
fnmatch will be removed soon and we can't rely on fnmatch() available
everywhere.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-20 14:15:58 -08:00
eb07894fe0 use wildmatch() directly without fnmatch() wrapper
Make it clear that we don't use fnmatch() anymore.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-20 14:15:46 -08:00
2df85669d1 Documentation: fix documentation AsciiDoc links for external urls
Turns out that putting 'link:' before the 'http' is actually superfluous
in AsciiDoc, as there's already a predefined macro to handle it.

"http, https, [etc] URLs are rendered using predefined inline macros."
http://www.methods.co.nz/asciidoc/userguide.html#_urls

"Hypertext links to files on the local file system are specified
using the link inline macro."
http://www.methods.co.nz/asciidoc/userguide.html#_linking_to_local_documents

Despite being superfluous, the reference implementation of AsciiDoc
tolerates the extra 'link:' and silently removes it, giving a functioning
link in the generated HTML. However, AsciiDoctor (the Ruby implementation
of AsciiDoc used to render the http://git-scm.com/ site) does /not/ have
this behaviour, and so generates broken links, as can be seen here:

http://git-scm.com/docs/git-cvsimport (links to cvs2git & parsecvs)
http://git-scm.com/docs/git-filter-branch (link to The BFG)

It's worth noting that after this change, the html generated by 'make html'
in the git project is identical, and all links still work.

Signed-off-by: Roberto Tyley <roberto.tyley@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-20 14:14:58 -08:00
ce8daa1eb8 notes: disallow reusing non-blob as a note object
Currently "git notes add -C $object" will read the raw bytes from $object,
and then copy those bytes into the note object, which is hardcoded to be
of type blob. This means that if the given $object is a non-blob (e.g.
tree or commit), the raw bytes from that object is copied into a blob
object. This is probably not useful, and certainly not what any sane
user would expect. So disallow it, by erroring out if the $object passed
to the -C option is not a blob.

The fix also applies to the -c option (in which the user is prompted to
edit/verify the note contents in a text editor), and also when -c/-C is
passed to "git notes append" (which appends the $object contents to an
existing note object). In both cases, passing a non-blob $object does not
make sense.

Also add a couple of tests demonstrating expected behavior.

Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-20 14:14:33 -08:00
46a7471f0e gitweb: Avoid overflowing page body frame with large images
When displaying a blob in gitweb, if it's an image, specify constraints for
maximum display width and height to prevent the image from overflowing the
frame of the enclosing page_body div.

This change assumes that it is more desirable to see the whole image without
scrolling (new behavior) than it is to see every pixel without zooming
(previous behavior).

Signed-off-by: Andrew Keller <andrew@kellerfarm.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-20 09:50:14 -08:00
3caec73b55 config: teach "git config --file -" to read from the standard input
The patch extends git config --file interface to allow read config from
stdin.

Editing stdin or setting value in stdin is an error.

Include by absolute path is allowed in stdin config, but not by relative
path.

Signed-off-by: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill@shutemov.name>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 16:12:14 -08:00
c8985ce053 config: change git_config_with_options() interface
We're going to have more options for config source.

Let's alter git_config_with_options() interface to accept struct with
all source options.

Signed-off-by: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill@shutemov.name>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 16:12:13 -08:00
6aea9f0fdd builtin/config.c: rename check_blob_write() -> check_write()
The function will be reused to check for other conditions which prevent
write.

Signed-off-by: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill@shutemov.name>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 16:12:11 -08:00
d14d42440d config: disallow relative include paths from blobs
When we see a relative config include like:

  [include]
  path = foo

we make it relative to the containing directory of the file
that contains the snippet. This makes no sense for config
read from a blob, as it is not on the filesystem.  Something
like "HEAD:some/path" could have a relative path within the
tree, but:

  1. It would not be part of include.path, which explicitly
     refers to the filesystem.

  2. It would need different parsing rules anyway to
     determine that it is a tree path.

The current code just uses the "name" field, which is wrong.
Let's split that into "name" and "path" fields, use the
latter for relative includes, and fill in only the former
for blobs.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill@shutemov.name>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 16:12:09 -08:00
78368f2c1a open_istream(): do not dereference NULL in the error case
When stream-filter cannot be attached, it is expected to return NULL,
and we should close the stream we opened and signal an error by
returning NULL ourselves from this function.

However, we attempted to dereference that NULL pointer between the
point we detected the error and returned from the function.

Brought-to-attention-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 16:00:53 -08:00
d954828d45 builtin/mv: don't use memory after free
If 'src' already ends with a slash, then add_slash() will just return
it, meaning that 'free(src_with_slash)' is actually 'free(src)'.  Since
we use 'src' later, this will result in use-after-free.

In fact, this cannot happen because 'src' comes from
internal_copy_pathspec() without the KEEP_TRAILING_SLASH flag, so any
trailing '/' will have been stripped; but static analysis tools are not
clever enough to realise this and so warn that 'src' could be used after
having been free'd.  Fix this by checking that 'src_w_slash' is indeed
newly allocated memory.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 15:51:56 -08:00
a68a67dea3 utf8: use correct type for values in interval table
We treat these as unsigned everywhere and compare against unsigned
values, so declare them using the typedef we already have for this.

While we're here, fix the indentation as well.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 15:51:40 -08:00
df5213b70d utf8: fix iconv error detection
iconv(3) returns "(size_t) -1" on error.  Make sure that we cast the
"-1" properly when checking for this.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 15:51:33 -08:00
aa012e9065 notes-utils: handle boolean notes.rewritemode correctly
If we carry on after outputting config_error_nonbool then we're
guaranteed to dereference a null pointer.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 15:51:29 -08:00
beed336c3e http: never use curl_easy_perform
We currently don't reuse http connections when fetching via
the smart-http protocol. This is bad because the TCP
handshake introduces latency, and especially because SSL
connection setup may be non-trivial.

We can fix it by consistently using curl's "multi"
interface.  The reason is rather complicated:

Our http code has two ways of being used: queuing many
"slots" to be fetched in parallel, or fetching a single
request in a blocking manner. The parallel code is built on
curl's "multi" interface. Most of the single-request code
uses http_request, which is built on top of the parallel
code (we just feed it one slot, and wait until it finishes).

However, one could also accomplish the single-request scheme
by avoiding curl's multi interface entirely and just using
curl_easy_perform. This is simpler, and is used by post_rpc
in the smart-http protocol.

It does work to use the same curl handle in both contexts,
as long as it is not at the same time.  However, internally
curl may not share all of the cached resources between both
contexts. In particular, a connection formed using the
"multi" code will go into a reuse pool connected to the
"multi" object. Further requests using the "easy" interface
will not be able to reuse that connection.

The smart http protocol does ref discovery via http_request,
which uses the "multi" interface, and then follows up with
the "easy" interface for its rpc calls. As a result, we make
two HTTP connections rather than reusing a single one.

We could teach the ref discovery to use the "easy"
interface. But it is only once we have done this discovery
that we know whether the protocol will be smart or dumb. If
it is dumb, then our further requests, which want to fetch
objects in parallel, will not be able to reuse the same
connection.

Instead, this patch switches post_rpc to build on the
parallel interface, which means that we use it consistently
everywhere. It's a little more complicated to use, but since
we have the infrastructure already, it doesn't add any code;
we can just factor out the relevant bits from http_request.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 15:50:57 -08:00
fcef9312a4 wt-status.c: move cut-line print code out to wt_status_add_cut_line
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 15:50:40 -08:00
983dc69748 wt-status.c: make cut_line[] const to shrink .data section a bit
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 15:50:36 -08:00
8f72011f1c git-contacts: do not fail parsing of good diffs
If a line in a patch starts with "--- " it will be deemed
malformed unless it also contains the proper diff header
format. This situation can happen with a valid patch if
it has a line starting with "-- " and that line is removed.

This patch just removes the check in git-contacts.

Signed-off-by: Lars Gullik Bjønnes <larsbj@gullik.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 15:10:47 -08:00
b7756d41dc reset: optionally setup worktree and refresh index on --mixed
Refreshing index requires work tree.  So we have two options: always
set up work tree (and refuse to reset if failing to do so), or make
refreshing index optional.

As refreshing index is not the main task, it makes more sense to make
it optional. This allows us to still work in a bare repository to update
what is in the index.

Reported-by: Patrick Palka <patrick@parcs.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 14:40:23 -08:00
aba4727281 diff: do not reuse_worktree_file for submodules
The GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF calling code attempts to reuse existing worktree
files for the worktree side of diffs, for performance reasons.
However, that code also tries to do the same with submodules.  This
results in calls to $GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF where the old-file is a file of
the form "Submodule commit $sha1", but the new-file is a directory in
the worktree.

Fix it by never reusing a worktree "file" in the submodule case.

Reported-by: Grégory Pakosz <gregory.pakosz@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-18 12:06:08 -08:00
5f95c9f850 Git 1.9.0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-14 11:35:04 -08:00
9c8ce7397b release notes: typo fixes
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-14 11:22:56 -08:00
83d842dc8c tests: turn on network daemon tests by default
We do not run the httpd nor git-daemon tests by default, as
they are rather heavyweight and require network access
(albeit over localhost). However, it would be nice if more
pepole ran them, for two reasons:

  1. We would get more test coverage on more systems.

  2. The point of the test suite is to find regressions. It
     is very easy to change some of the underlying code and
     break the httpd code without realizing you are even
     affecting it. Running the httpd tests helps find these
     problems sooner (ideally before the patches even hit
     the list).

We still want to leave an "out", though, for people who really do
not want to run them. For that reason, the GIT_TEST_HTTPD and
GIT_TEST_GIT_DAEMON variables are now tri-state booleans
(true/false/auto), so you can say GIT_TEST_HTTPD=false to turn the
tests back off.  To support those who want a stable single way to
disable these tests across versions of Git before and after this
change, an empty string explicitly set to these variables is also
taken as "false", so the behaviour changes only for those who:

  a. did not express any preference by leaving these variables
     unset.  They did not test these features before, but now they
     do; or

  b. did express that they want to test these features by setting
     GIT_TEST_FEATURE=false (or any equivalent other ways to tell
     "false" to Git, e.g. "0"), which has been a valid but funny way
     to say that they do want to test the feature only because we
     used to interpret any non-empty string to mean "yes please
     test".  They no longer test that feature.

In addition, we are forgiving of common setup failures (e.g., you do
not have apache installed, or have an old version) when the
tri-state is "auto" (or unset), but report an error when it is
"true". This makes "auto" a sane default, as we should not cause
failures on setups where the tests cannot run. But it allows people
who use "true" to catch regressions in their system (e.g., they
uninstalled apache, but were expecting their automated test runs to
test git-httpd, and would want to be notified).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-14 08:13:51 -08:00
475c52b7ac Sync with 1.8.5.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-13 13:42:26 -08:00
7bbc4e8fdb Git 1.8.5.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-13 13:41:53 -08:00
2cd861672e Merge branch 'bm/merge-base-octopus-dedup' into maint
"git merge-base --octopus" used to leave cleaning up suboptimal
result to the caller, but now it does the clean-up itself.

* bm/merge-base-octopus-dedup:
  merge-base --octopus: reduce the result from get_octopus_merge_bases()
  merge-base: separate "--independent" codepath into its own helper
2014-02-13 13:38:59 -08:00
5032098614 Merge branch 'jc/revision-range-unpeel' into maint
"git log --left-right A...B" lost the "leftness" of commits
reachable from A when A is a tag as a side effect of a recent
bugfix.  This is a regression in 1.8.4.x series.

* jc/revision-range-unpeel:
  revision: propagate flag bits from tags to pointees
  revision: mark contents of an uninteresting tree uninteresting
2014-02-13 13:38:47 -08:00
c337684842 Merge branch 'jk/allow-fetch-onelevel-refname' into maint
"git clone" would fail to clone from a repository that has a ref
directly under "refs/", e.g. "refs/stash", because different
validation paths do different things on such a refname.  Loosen the
client side's validation to allow such a ref.

* jk/allow-fetch-onelevel-refname:
  fetch-pack: do not filter out one-level refs
2014-02-13 13:38:34 -08:00
21261fabdd Merge branch 'jk/interpret-branch-name-fix' into maint
A handful of bugs around interpreting $branch@{upstream} notation
and its lookalike, when $branch part has interesting characters,
e.g. "@", and ":", have been fixed.

* jk/interpret-branch-name-fix:
  interpret_branch_name: find all possible @-marks
  interpret_branch_name: avoid @{upstream} past colon
  interpret_branch_name: always respect "namelen" parameter
  interpret_branch_name: rename "cp" variable to "at"
  interpret_branch_name: factor out upstream handling
2014-02-13 13:38:25 -08:00
7c9b668b83 Merge branch 'rk/send-email-ssl-cert' into maint
A recent update to "git send-email" broke platforms where
/etc/ssl/certs/ directory exists but cannot be used as SSL_ca_path
(e.g. Fedora rawhide).

* rk/send-email-ssl-cert:
  send-email: /etc/ssl/certs/ directory may not be usable as ca_path
2014-02-13 13:38:19 -08:00
90791e3416 Merge branch 'sb/repack-in-c' into maint
"git repack --max-pack-size=8g" stopped being parsed correctly when
the command was reimplemented in C.

* sb/repack-in-c:
  repack: propagate pack-objects options as strings
  repack: make parsed string options const-correct
  repack: fix typo in max-pack-size option
2014-02-13 13:38:09 -08:00
b4e931d84e Merge branch 'as/tree-walk-fix-aggressive-short-cut' into maint
The pathspec matching code, while comparing two trees (e.g. "git
diff A B -- path1 path2") was too aggressive and failed to match
some paths when multiple pathspecs were involved.

* as/tree-walk-fix-aggressive-short-cut:
  tree_entry_interesting: match against all pathspecs
2014-02-13 13:37:53 -08:00
0232852b06 t5537: move http tests out to t5539
start_httpd is supposed to be at the beginning of the test file, not
the middle of it. The "test_seq" line in "no shallow lines.." test is
updated to compensate missing refs that are there in t5537, but not in
the new t5539.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-13 10:10:00 -08:00
bc97e2d8ae Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: correct message when hiding commits by craft
  l10n: de.po: translate 28 new messages
2014-02-12 12:28:47 -08:00
6b5b3a27b7 ewah: unconditionally ntohll ewah data
Commit a201c20 tried to optimize out a loop like:

  for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
	  data[i] = ntohll(data[i]);

in the big-endian case, because we know that ntohll is a
noop, and we do not need to pay the cost of the loop at all.
However, it mistakenly assumed that __BYTE_ORDER was always
defined, whereas it may not be on systems which do not
define it by default, and where we did not need to define it
to set up the ntohll macro. This includes OS X and Windows.

We could muck with the ordering in compat/bswap.h to make
sure it is defined unconditionally, but it is simpler to
still to just execute the loop unconditionally. That avoids
the application code knowing anything about these magic
macros, and lets it depend only on having ntohll defined.

And since the resulting loop looks like (on a big-endian
system):

  for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
	  data[i] = data[i];

any decent compiler can probably optimize it out.

Original report and analysis by Brian Gernhardt.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-12 11:21:29 -08:00
92cd3e35a0 l10n: de.po: correct message when hiding commits by craft
The recent translation was giving the idea that all commits
based on a graft were meant to be hidden. Make it clear that
it is the graft commit itself.

Reported-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-02-12 07:16:03 +01:00
0dd2a2c9b4 l10n: de.po: translate 28 new messages
Translate 28 new messages came from git.pot update in
df49095 (l10n: git.pot: v1.9 round 1 (27 new, 11 removed)
and d57b24b (l10n: git.pot: v1.9 round 2 (1 new)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-02-12 07:15:55 +01:00
ea230d8b62 pull: add the --gpg-sign option.
git merge already allows us to sign commits, and git rebase has recently
learned how to do so as well.  Teach git pull to parse the -S/--gpg-sign
option and pass this along to merge or rebase, as appropriate.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-11 14:52:08 -08:00
3ee5e54038 rebase: add the --gpg-sign option
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-11 14:48:20 -08:00
b6e9e73e8a rebase: parse options in stuck-long mode
There is no functional change. The reason for this change is to be able
to add a new option taking an optional argument.

Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-11 14:48:05 -08:00
4dd5c4709a completion: teach --recurse-submodules to fetch, pull and push
Signed-off-by: Sup Yut Sum <ch3cooli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-11 11:17:04 -08:00
246090a5d0 docs/git-blame: explain more clearly the example pickaxe use
We state that the following paragraph mentions the pickaxe
interface, but the term pickaxe is not then used. This
change clarifies that the example command uses the pickaxe
interface and what it is searching for.

Signed-off-by: Albert L. Lash, IV <alash3@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-11 11:03:07 -08:00
897e3e4540 docs/git-clone: clarify use of --no-hardlinks option
Current text claims optimization, implying the use of
hardlinks, when this option ratchets down the level of
efficiency. This change explains the difference made by
using this option, namely copying instead of hardlinking,
and why it may be useful.

Signed-off-by: Albert L. Lash, IV <alash3@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-11 11:03:07 -08:00
a2f69581ff docs/git-remote: capitalize first word of initial blurb
All other man files have capitalized descriptions which
immediately follow the command's name. Let's capitalize
this one too for consistency.

Signed-off-by: Albert L. Lash, IV <alash3@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-11 11:03:07 -08:00
13f72a1d5f docs/merge-strategies: remove hyphen from mis-merges
The term mismerges without hyphen is used a few other
places in the documentation. Let's update this to
be consistent.

Signed-off-by: Albert L. Lash, IV <alash3@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-11 11:02:59 -08:00
e265f1f716 Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: zh_CN.po: Disambiguation for rebase
  l10n: zh_CN.po: translate 1 new message (2211t0f0u)
  l10n: vi.po (2211t): Updated one new string
  l10n: Update Swedish translation (2211t0f0u)
  l10n: fr: 1.9rc2 2211t
  l10n: git.pot: v1.9 round 2 (1 new)
2014-02-11 11:02:05 -08:00
7e2e4b37d3 dir: ignore trailing spaces in exclude patterns
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-10 11:49:53 -08:00
16402b992e dir: warn about trailing spaces in exclude patterns
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-10 11:49:53 -08:00
c44132fcf3 tests: auto-set git-daemon port
A recent commit taught lib-httpd to always start apache on
the same port as the numbered tests. Let's do the same for
the git-daemon tests.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-10 11:19:39 -08:00
9f673f9477 gc: config option for running --auto in background
`gc --auto` takes time and can block the user temporarily (but not any
less annoyingly). Make it run in background on systems that support
it. The only thing lost with running in background is printouts. But
gc output is not really interesting. You can keep it in foreground by
changing gc.autodetach.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-10 10:46:37 -08:00
de0957ce2e daemon: move daemonize() to libgit.a
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-10 10:46:35 -08:00
ff62eca7d1 fetch-pack: fix deepen shallow over smart http with no-done cap
In smart http, upload-pack adds new shallow lines at the beginning of
each rpc response. Only shallow lines from the first rpc call are
useful. After that they are thrown away. It's designed this way
because upload-pack is stateless and has no idea when its shallow
lines are helpful or not.

So after refs are negotiated with multi_ack_detailed and the server
thinks it learned enough, it sends "ACK obj-id ready", terminates the
rpc call and waits for the final rpc round. The client sends "done".
The server sends another response, which also has shallow lines at
the beginning, and the last "ACK obj-id" line.

When no-done is active, the last round is cut out, the server sends
"ACK obj-id ready" and "ACK obj-id" in the same rpc
response. fetch-pack is updated to recognize this and not send
"done". However it still tries to consume shallow lines, which are
never sent.

Update the code, make sure to skip consuming shallow lines when
no-done is enabled.

Reported-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-10 10:21:33 -08:00
c9cd60f6fa protocol-capabilities.txt: document no-done
See 3e63b21 (upload-pack: Implement no-done capability - 2011-03-14)
and 761ecf0 (fetch-pack: Implement no-done capability - 2011-03-14)
for more information.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-10 10:21:33 -08:00
087e347f26 protocol-capabilities.txt: refer multi_ack_detailed back to pack-protocol.txt
pack-protocol.txt explains in detail how multi_ack_detailed works and
what's the difference between no multi_ack, multi_ack and
multi_ack_detailed. No need to repeat here.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-10 10:21:33 -08:00
32752e966d pack-protocol.txt: clarify 'obj-id' in the last ACK after 'done'
It's introduced in 1bd8c8f (git-upload-pack: Support the multi_ack
protocol - 2005-10-28) but probably better documented in the commit
message of 78affc4 (Add multi_ack_detailed capability to
fetch-pack/upload-pack - 2009-10-30).

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-10 10:21:33 -08:00
a87679339c test: rename http fetch and push test files
Make clear which one is for dumb protocol, which one is for smart from
their file name.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-10 10:21:06 -08:00
3bb486e439 tests: auto-set LIB_HTTPD_PORT from test name
We set the default apache port for each of the httpd tests
to the 4-digit test number of the test script. We want these
to remain unique so that the tests do not conflict with each
other when run in parallel.

Instead of doing it manually in each test script, let's just
set it from the test name at run time. This is simpler, and
is one less thing to be updated when test scripts are
renamed (e.g., when being re-rolled or when conflicting
after being merged with another topic).

Incidentally, this fixes a case where t5537 and t5538 used
the same port number (5537), and could conflict with each
other when run in parallel.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-10 10:20:45 -08:00
6a70719586 Git 1.9.0-rc3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-07 11:56:07 -08:00
efe5f1d25d Merge branch 'ow/manpages-typofix'
Various typofixes, all looked correct.

* ow/manpages-typofix:
  Documentation: fix typos in man pages
2014-02-07 11:55:12 -08:00
c256661bbe Merge branch 'aj/ada-diff-word-pattern'
* aj/ada-diff-word-pattern:
  userdiff: update Ada patterns
2014-02-07 11:55:10 -08:00
53c2a5980e Merge branch 'nd/tag-doc'
* nd/tag-doc:
  git-tag.txt: <commit> for --contains is optional
2014-02-07 11:55:07 -08:00
cdbf623254 check-attr: move to the top of working tree when in non-bare repository
Lasse Makholm noticed that running "git check-attr" from a place
totally unrelated to $GIT_DIR and $GIT_WORK_TREE does not give
expected results.  I think it is because the command does not say it
wants to call setup_work_tree().

We still need to support use cases where only a bare repository is
involved, so unconditionally requiring a working tree would not work
well.  Instead, make a call only in a non-bare repository.

We may want to see if we want to do a similar fix in the opposite
direction to check-ignore.  The command unconditionally requires a
working tree, but it should be usable in a bare repository just like
check-attr attempts to be.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-06 10:19:33 -08:00
c4a7bce1b5 t0003: do not chdir the whole test process
Moving to some other directory and letting the remainder of the test
pieces to expect that they start there is a bad practice.  The test
that contains chdir itself may fail (or by mistake skipped via the
GIT_SKIP_TESTS mechanism) in which case the remainder may operate on
files in unexpected places.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-06 10:16:27 -08:00
98b2761d5e l10n: zh_CN.po: Disambiguation for rebase
Disambiguate the Chinese translation for "rebase", and update other
related entries.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-02-06 23:15:33 +08:00
b4b313f94a reset: support "--mixed --intent-to-add" mode
When --mixed is used, entries could be removed from index if the
target ref does not have them. When "reset" is used in preparation for
commit spliting (in a dirty worktree), it could be hard to track what
files to be added back. The new option --intent-to-add simplifies it
by marking all removed files intent-to-add.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
2014-02-05 16:44:51 -08:00
5fe8f49b6d Documentation: fix typos in man pages
Signed-off-by: Øystein Walle <oystwa@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-05 14:35:45 -08:00
89ba81dc76 Sync with 1.8.5.4 2014-02-05 14:14:40 -08:00
c7b8cf4985 howto/maintain-git.txt: new version numbering scheme
We wanted to call the upcoming release "Git 1.9", with its
maintenance track being "Git 1.9.1", "Git 1.9.2", etc., but various
third-party tools are reported to assume that there are at least
three dewey-decimal components in our version number.

Adjust the plan so that vX.Y.0 are feature releases while vX.Y.Z
(Z > 0) are maintenance releases.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-05 14:14:00 -08:00
3330a2c4f6 Git 1.8.5.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-05 14:13:23 -08:00
01a5774571 Merge branch 'jc/maint-pull-docfix' into maint
The documentation to "git pull" hinted there is an "-m" option
because it incorrectly shared the documentation with "git merge".

* jc/maint-pull-docfix:
  Documentation: "git pull" does not have the "-m" option
  Documentation: exclude irrelevant options from "git pull"
2014-02-05 14:03:47 -08:00
a74a682b55 Merge branch 'ow/stash-with-ifs' into maint
The implementation of 'git stash $cmd "stash@{...}"' did not quote
the stash argument properly and left it split at IFS whitespace.

* ow/stash-with-ifs:
  stash: handle specifying stashes with $IFS
2014-02-05 14:03:20 -08:00
3c864743a6 Merge branch 'js/lift-parent-count-limit' into maint
There is no reason to have a hardcoded upper limit of the number of
parents for an octopus merge, created via the graft mechanism, but
there was.

* js/lift-parent-count-limit:
  Remove the line length limit for graft files
2014-02-05 14:03:01 -08:00
ee5788e306 Merge branch 'nd/add-empty-fix' into maint
"git add -A" (no other arguments) in a totally empty working tree
used to emit an error.

* nd/add-empty-fix:
  add: don't complain when adding empty project root
2014-02-05 14:02:44 -08:00
d11ade701a Merge branch 'bc/log-decoration' into maint
"git log --decorate" did not handle a tag pointed by another tag
nicely.

* bc/log-decoration:
  log: properly handle decorations with chained tags
2014-02-05 14:02:05 -08:00
28856247e2 Merge branch 'jh/rlimit-nofile-fallback' into maint
When we figure out how many file descriptors to allocate for
keeping packfiles open, a system with non-working getrlimit() could
cause us to die(), but because we make this call only to get a
rough estimate of how many is available and we do not even attempt
to use up all file descriptors available ourselves, it is nicer to
fall back to a reasonable low value rather than dying.

* jh/rlimit-nofile-fallback:
  get_max_fd_limit(): fall back to OPEN_MAX upon getrlimit/sysconf failure
2014-02-05 14:01:23 -08:00
a118beeddf Merge branch 'jl/commit-v-strip-marker' into maint
"git commit -v" appends the patch to the log message before
editing, and then removes the patch when the editor returned
control. However, the patch was not stripped correctly when the
first modified path was a submodule.

* jl/commit-v-strip-marker:
  commit -v: strip diffs and submodule shortlogs from the commit message
2014-02-05 14:01:09 -08:00
ac0835f94b Merge branch 'tr/send-email-ssl' into maint
SSL-related options were not passed correctly to underlying socket
layer in "git send-email".

* tr/send-email-ssl:
  send-email: set SSL options through IO::Socket::SSL::set_client_defaults
  send-email: --smtp-ssl-cert-path takes an argument
  send-email: pass Debug to Net::SMTP::SSL::new
2014-02-05 14:00:18 -08:00
1a111957b3 Merge branch 'tb/clone-ssh-with-colon-for-port' into maint
Remote repository URL expressed in scp-style host:path notation are
parsed more carefully (e.g. "foo/bar:baz" is local, "[::1]:/~user" asks
to connect to user's home directory on host at address ::1.

* tb/clone-ssh-with-colon-for-port:
  git_connect(): use common return point
  connect.c: refactor url parsing
  git_connect(): refactor the port handling for ssh
  git fetch: support host:/~repo
  t5500: add test cases for diag-url
  git fetch-pack: add --diag-url
  git_connect: factor out discovery of the protocol and its parts
  git_connect: remove artificial limit of a remote command
  t5601: add tests for ssh
  t5601: remove clear_ssh, refactor setup_ssh_wrapper
2014-02-05 13:59:16 -08:00
bf03d6e92d Merge branch 'nd/transport-positive-depth-only' into maint
"git fetch --depth=0" was a no-op, and was silently ignored.
Diagnose it as an error.

* nd/transport-positive-depth-only:
  clone,fetch: catch non positive --depth option value
2014-02-05 13:58:52 -08:00
2171c0c36f Merge branch 'tb/repack-fix-renames' (early part)
Finishing touches to the "rewrite repack in C" series.

* 'tb/repack-fix-renames' (early part):
  repack.c: rename and unlink pack file if it exists
2014-02-05 12:02:29 -08:00
9d7fbfd204 repack.c: rename and unlink pack file if it exists
When a repo was fully repacked, and is repacked again, we may run
into the situation that "new" packfiles have the same name as
already existing ones (traditionally packfiles have been named after
the list of names of objects in them, so repacking all the objects
in a single pack would have produced a packfile with the same name).

The logic is to rename the existing ones into filename like
"old-XXX", create the new ones and then remove the "old-" ones.
When something went wrong in the middle, this sequence is rolled
back by renaming the "old-" files back.

The renaming into "old-" did not work as intended, because
file_exists() was done on "XXX", not "pack-XXX".  Also when rolling
back the change, the code tried to rename "old-pack-XXX" but the
saved ones are named "old-XXX", so this couldn't have worked.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-05 11:58:49 -08:00
6275c91c08 revision: convert to using diff_tree_sha1()
Since diff_tree_sha1() can now accept empty trees via NULL sha1, we
could just call it without manually reading trees into tree_desc and
duplicating code.

Besides, that

	if (!tree)
		return 0;

looked suspect - we were saying an invalid tree != empty tree, but maybe it is
better to just say the tree is invalid here, which is what diff_tree_sha1()
does for such case.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-05 10:51:16 -08:00
7bc4ec01dd line-log: convert to using diff_tree_sha1()
Since diff_tree_sha1() can now accept empty trees via NULL sha1, we
could just call it without manually reading trees into tree_desc and
duplicating code.

Cc: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-05 10:50:36 -08:00
0b707c3319 tree-diff: convert diff_root_tree_sha1() to just call diff_tree_sha1 with old=NULL
Now since diff_tree_sha1 understands NULL for both old and new, we could
indicate an empty tree for root commit by providing just NULL for old
sha1.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-05 10:49:07 -08:00
791303284c tree-diff: allow diff_tree_sha1 to accept NULL sha1
which would mean that corresponding tree - old or new - is empty.

As followup patches will show, that functionality was already needed in
several places of Git codebase, but there, we were preparing empty
tree_desc objects by hand, with some code duplication.

For handling sha1 = NULL case, let's reuse fill_tree_descriptor() which
returns just empty tree_desc in that case.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-05 10:48:14 -08:00
39a87a29ce userdiff: update Ada patterns
- Allow extra space in "is new" and "is separate"
- Fix bug in word regex for numbers

Signed-off-by: Adrian Johnson <ajohnson@redneon.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-05 10:45:51 -08:00
655ee9ea3e setup: don't dereference in-tree symlinks for absolute paths
The prefix_path_gently() function currently applies real_path to
everything if given an absolute path, dereferencing symlinks both
outside and inside the work tree.

This causes most high-level functions to misbehave when acting on
symlinks given via absolute paths. For example

	$ git add /dir/repo/symlink

attempts to add the target of the symlink rather than the symlink
itself, which is usually not what the user intends to do.

In order to manipulate symlinks in the work tree using absolute paths,
symlinks should only be dereferenced outside the work tree.

Modify the prefix_path_gently() to first normalize the path in order to
make sure path levels are separated by '/', then pass the result to
'abspath_part_inside_repo' to find the part inside the work tree
(without dereferencing any symlinks inside the work tree).

For absolute paths, prefix_path_gently() did not, nor does now do, any
actual prefixing, hence the result from abspath_part_in_repo() is
returned as-is.

Fixes t0060-82 and t3004-5.

Signed-off-by: Martin Erik Werner <martinerikwerner@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-04 12:08:49 -08:00
ddc2a62815 setup: add abspath_part_inside_repo() function
In order to extract the part of an absolute path which lies inside the
repo, it is not possible to directly use real_path, since that would
dereference symlinks both outside and inside the work tree.

Add an abspath_part_inside_repo() function which first checks if the
work tree is already the prefix, then incrementally checks each path
level by temporarily NUL-terminating at each '/' and comparing against
the work tree path. If a match is found, it overwrites the input path
with the remainder past the work tree (which will be the part inside the
work tree).

This function is currently only intended for use in
'prefix_path_gently'.

Signed-off-by: Martin Erik Werner <martinerikwerner@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-04 12:08:49 -08:00
e131daa4c6 t0060: add tests for prefix_path when path begins with work tree
One edge-case that isn't currently checked in the tests is the beginning
of the path matching the work tree, despite the target not actually
being the work tree, for example:

  path = /dir/repoa
  work_tree = /dir/repo

should fail since the path is outside the repo. However, if /dir/repoa
is in fact a symlink that points to /dir/repo, it should instead
succeed.

Add two tests covering these cases, since they might be potential
regression points.

Signed-off-by: Martin Erik Werner <martinerikwerner@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-04 12:08:47 -08:00
e5aa1fc472 t0060: add test for prefix_path when path == work tree
The current behaviour of prefix_path is to return an empty string if
prefixing and absolute path that only contains exactly the work tree.
This behaviour is a potential regression point.

Signed-off-by: Martin Erik Werner <martinerikwerner@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-04 11:25:33 -08:00
74af95d6aa t0060: add test for prefix_path on symlinks via absolute paths
When symlinks in the working tree are manipulated using the absolute
path, git dereferences them, and tries to manipulate the link target
instead.

This applies to most high-level commands but prefix_path is the common
denominator for all of them.

Add a known-breakage tests using the prefix_path function, which
currently uses real_path, causing the dereference.

Signed-off-by: Martin Erik Werner <martinerikwerner@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-04 11:25:15 -08:00
f02033f1d0 t3004: add test for ls-files on symlinks via absolute paths
When symlinks in the working tree are manipulated using the absolute
path, git dereferences them, and tries to manipulate the link target
instead.

This causes most high-level functions to misbehave when acting on
symlinks given via absolute paths. For example

  $ git add /dir/repo/symlink

attempts to add the target of the symlink rather than the symlink
itself, which is usually not what the user intends to do.

This is a regression introduced by 18e051a:
  setup: translate symlinks in filename when using absolute paths
(which did not take symlinks inside the work tree into consideration).

Add a known-breakage test using the ls-files function, checking both if
the symlink leads to a target in the same directory, and a target in the
above directory.

Signed-off-by: Martin Erik Werner <martinerikwerner@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Martin Erik Werner <martinerikwerner@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-04 11:24:53 -08:00
b19c12e6ed t7101, t7014: rename test files to indicate what that file is for
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-04 10:49:10 -08:00
81966ab2ec git-tag.txt: <commit> for --contains is optional
This goes far back to e84fb2f (branch --contains: default to HEAD -
2008-07-08) where the same parsing code is shared with
builtin/tag.c. git-branch.txt correctly states that <commit> for
--contains is optional while git-tag.txt does not. Correct it.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-04 10:35:58 -08:00
e4a4e7f27a rebase: don't try to match -M option
The -M option does not exist in OPTIONS_SPEC, so there is no use to try
to find it.

Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-03 12:13:55 -08:00
2f9dc1fb52 rebase: remove useless arguments check
Remove a check on the number of arguments for --onto and -x options.
It is not possible for $# to be <= 2 at this point :

 - if --onto or -x has an argument, git rev-parse --parseopt will
   provide something like this :
     set -- --onto 'x' --
   when parsing the "--onto" option, $# will be 3 or more if there are
   other options.

 - if --onto or -x doesn't have an argument, git rev-parse --parseopt
   will exit with an error and display usage information.

Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-03 12:13:44 -08:00
3b4e395f51 am: add the --gpg-sign option
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-03 12:12:34 -08:00
883366235f am: parse options in stuck-long mode
There is no functional change. The reason for this change is to be able
to add a new option taking an optional argument.

Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-03 12:12:18 -08:00
51ba8ce372 git-sh-setup.sh: add variable to use the stuck-long mode
If the variable $OPTIONS_STUCKLONG is not empty, then rev-parse
option parsing is done in --stuck-long mode.

Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-02-03 12:11:10 -08:00
8376b58d1c l10n: zh_CN.po: translate 1 new message (2211t0f0u)
Update translation for git v1.9-rc2.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-02-03 10:53:18 +08:00
afa41284a2 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/nafmo/git-l10n-sv
* 'master' of git://github.com/nafmo/git-l10n-sv:
  l10n: Update Swedish translation (2211t0f0u)
2014-02-03 09:47:27 +08:00
e8f4a7cb6e Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/vnwildman/git
* 'master' of git://github.com/vnwildman/git:
  l10n: vi.po (2211t): Updated one new string
2014-02-03 09:45:14 +08:00
8620ed578b l10n: vi.po (2211t): Updated one new string
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2014-02-03 07:49:47 +07:00
b6c0df8948 l10n: Update Swedish translation (2211t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2014-02-02 17:22:21 +01:00
893fcc3e4d l10n: fr: 1.9rc2 2211t
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2014-02-02 14:38:05 +01:00
d57b24b60b l10n: git.pot: v1.9 round 2 (1 new)
Generate po/git.pot from v1.9-rc2 for git v1.9 l10n round 2.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-02-01 08:07:02 +08:00
be961c292f Git 1.9-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-31 14:16:06 -08:00
e94ea162db Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: Bulgarian translation of git (222t21f1967u)
  po/TEAMS: Added Bulgarian team
  l10n: remove 2 blank translations on Danish, Dutch
  l10n: zh_CN.po: translate 27 messages (2210t0f0u)
  l10n: Update Swedish translation (2210t0f0u)
  [fr] update french translation 2210/2210
  l10n: vi.po (2210t): Updated git-core translation
  l10n: git.pot: v1.9 round 1 (27 new, 11 removed)
2014-01-31 10:52:29 -08:00
3de92cd16d Merge branch 'jn/pager-lv-default-env'
A finishing touch to its test.

* jn/pager-lv-default-env:
  pager test: make fake pager consume all its input
2014-01-31 10:51:57 -08:00
4f1c0b21e9 builtin/gc.c: reduce scope of variables
Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-31 10:44:05 -08:00
bf7e645c90 builtin/fetch.c: reduce scope of variable
Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-31 10:44:05 -08:00
e23fd15ada builtin/commit.c: reduce scope of variables
Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-31 10:44:05 -08:00
e666b89d76 builtin/clean.c: reduce scope of variable
Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-31 10:44:05 -08:00
ac39b27786 builtin/blame.c: reduce scope of variables
Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-31 10:44:05 -08:00
e36f3a8a6f builtin/apply.c: reduce scope of variables
Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-31 10:44:04 -08:00
4824d1b8c2 bisect.c: reduce scope of variable
Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-31 10:44:04 -08:00
ab03803c02 git-compat-util.h: #undef (v)snprintf before #define them
When we detect that vsnprintf / snprintf are broken, we #define them
to an alternative implementation.  On OS X, stdio.h already
re-define them in `git-compat-util.h'.

Signed-off-by: Benoit Sigoure <tsunanet@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-31 09:55:29 -08:00
52c02f658e pager test: make fake pager consume all its input
Otherwise there is a race: if 'git log' finishes writing before the
pager terminates and closes the pipe, all is well, and if the pager
finishes quickly enough then 'git log' terminates with SIGPIPE.

 died of signal 13 at /build/buildd/git-1.9~rc1/t/test-terminal.perl line 33.
 not ok 6 - LESS and LV envvars are set for pagination

Noticed on Ubuntu PPA builders, where the race was lost about half the
time.  Compare v1.7.0.2~6^2 (tests: Fix race condition in t7006-pager,
2010-02-22).

Reported-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@MIT.EDU>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-31 09:07:17 -08:00
25e2fbb4e2 l10n: Bulgarian translation of git (222t21f1967u)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2014-01-29 14:29:15 +02:00
a43219f2aa rev-parse: check i before using argv[i] against argc
The --prefix, --default, and --resolve-git-dir options to
git-rev-parse require an argument, but when given no argument,
the code uses the NULL read from argv[argc] without checking,
leading to a segfault.

Instead, check first and die() with an error message.

Signed-off-by: David Sharp <dhsharp@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-28 14:10:06 -08:00
67beb60056 handle_path_include: don't look at NULL value
When we see config like:

  [include]
  path

the expand_user_path helper notices that the config value is
empty, but we then dereference NULL while printing the error
message (glibc will helpfully print "(null)" for us here,
but we cannot rely on that).

  $ git -c include.path rev-parse
  error: Could not expand include path '(null)'
  fatal: unable to parse command-line config

Instead of tweaking our message, let's actually use
config_error_nonbool to match other config variables that
expect a value:

  $ git -c include.path rev-parse
  error: Missing value for 'include.path'
  fatal: unable to parse command-line config

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-28 11:59:49 -08:00
53ec551c87 expand_user_path: do not look at NULL path
We explicitly check for and handle the case that the
incoming "path" variable is NULL, but before doing so we
call strchrnul on it, leading to a potential segfault.

We can fix this simply by moving the strchrnul call down; as
a bonus, we can tighten the scope on the associated
variable.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-28 11:59:47 -08:00
5123e7d54f po/TEAMS: Added Bulgarian team
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2014-01-28 19:16:53 +02:00
3253553e12 cherry-pick, revert: add the --gpg-sign option
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-27 15:15:52 -08:00
bd3e186d81 Git 1.9-rc1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-27 11:01:35 -08:00
8bba7206b5 Merge branch 'as/tree-walk-fix-aggressive-short-cut'
* as/tree-walk-fix-aggressive-short-cut:
  tree_entry_interesting: match against all pathspecs
2014-01-27 10:48:32 -08:00
1ad5417a26 Merge branch 'ta/doc-http-protocol-in-html'
* ta/doc-http-protocol-in-html:
  http-protocol.txt: don't use uppercase for variable names in "The Negotiation Algorithm"
  Documentation: make it easier to maintain enumerated documents
  create HTML for http-protocol.txt
2014-01-27 10:45:59 -08:00
78dc48e4b0 Merge branch 'mh/doc-wo-names'
* mh/doc-wo-names:
  doc: remote author/documentation sections from more pages
2014-01-27 10:45:56 -08:00
69b024dc03 Merge branch 'jk/revision-o-is-in-libgit-a'
* jk/revision-o-is-in-libgit-a:
  Makefile: remove redundant object in git-http{fetch,push}
2014-01-27 10:45:52 -08:00
4110639865 Merge branch 'sb/repack-in-c'
"git repack --max-pack-size=8g" stopped being parsed correctly when
the command was reimplemented in C.

* sb/repack-in-c:
  repack: propagate pack-objects options as strings
  repack: make parsed string options const-correct
  repack: fix typo in max-pack-size option
2014-01-27 10:45:49 -08:00
cdc40bdb69 Merge branch 'jk/test-fixes'
* jk/test-fixes:
  t7700: do not use "touch" unnecessarily
  t7501: fix "empty commit" test with NO_PERL
2014-01-27 10:45:46 -08:00
017f804efc Merge branch 'nd/negative-pathspec'
* nd/negative-pathspec:
  tree-walk.c: ignore trailing slash on submodule in tree_entry_interesting()
2014-01-27 10:45:44 -08:00
523f0a25b9 Merge branch 'pw/git-p4'
Various "git p4" updates.

* pw/git-p4:
  git p4 doc: use two-line style for options with multiple spellings
  git p4 test: examine behavior with locked (+l) files
  git p4: fix an error message when "p4 where" fails
  git p4: handle files with wildcards when doing RCS scrubbing
  git p4 test: do not pollute /tmp
  git p4 test: run as user "author"
  git p4 test: is_cli_file_writeable succeeds
  git p4 test: explicitly check p4 wildcard delete
  git p4: work around p4 bug that causes empty symlinks
  git p4 test: ensure p4 symlink parsing works
  git p4 test: wildcards are supported
2014-01-27 10:45:41 -08:00
33d4669aaa Merge branch 'ss/safe-create-leading-dir-with-slash'
"git clone $origin foo\bar\baz" on Windows failed to create the
leading directories (i.e. a moral-equivalent of "mkdir -p").

* ss/safe-create-leading-dir-with-slash:
  safe_create_leading_directories(): on Windows, \ can separate path components
2014-01-27 10:45:37 -08:00
d0956cfa8e Merge branch 'mh/safe-create-leading-directories'
Code clean-up and protection against concurrent write access to the
ref namespace.

* mh/safe-create-leading-directories:
  rename_tmp_log(): on SCLD_VANISHED, retry
  rename_tmp_log(): limit the number of remote_empty_directories() attempts
  rename_tmp_log(): handle a possible mkdir/rmdir race
  rename_ref(): extract function rename_tmp_log()
  remove_dir_recurse(): handle disappearing files and directories
  remove_dir_recurse(): tighten condition for removing unreadable dir
  lock_ref_sha1_basic(): if locking fails with ENOENT, retry
  lock_ref_sha1_basic(): on SCLD_VANISHED, retry
  safe_create_leading_directories(): add new error value SCLD_VANISHED
  cmd_init_db(): when creating directories, handle errors conservatively
  safe_create_leading_directories(): introduce enum for return values
  safe_create_leading_directories(): always restore slash at end of loop
  safe_create_leading_directories(): split on first of multiple slashes
  safe_create_leading_directories(): rename local variable
  safe_create_leading_directories(): add explicit "slash" pointer
  safe_create_leading_directories(): reduce scope of local variable
  safe_create_leading_directories(): fix format of "if" chaining
2014-01-27 10:45:33 -08:00
c380cf85a7 Merge branch 'tr/nth-previous-is-a-commit'
* tr/nth-previous-is-a-commit:
  Documentation: @{-N} can refer to a commit
2014-01-27 10:45:31 -08:00
bf3939901b Merge branch 'tr/gitk-doc-range-trace'
* tr/gitk-doc-range-trace:
  Documentation/gitk: document -L option
2014-01-27 10:45:23 -08:00
a6bec00145 Merge branch 'jk/mark-edges-uninteresting'
Fix performance regression in v1.8.4.x and later.

* jk/mark-edges-uninteresting:
  list-objects: only look at cmdline trees with edge_hint
  t/perf: time rev-list with UNINTERESTING commits
2014-01-27 10:45:08 -08:00
e049109ef1 Merge branch 'jk/diff-filespec-cleanup'
* jk/diff-filespec-cleanup:
  diff_filespec: use only 2 bits for is_binary flag
  diff_filespec: reorder is_binary field
  diff_filespec: drop xfrm_flags field
  diff_filespec: drop funcname_pattern_ident field
  diff_filespec: reorder dirty_submodule macro definitions
2014-01-27 10:45:03 -08:00
7b4e2b7e6a Merge branch 'ef/mingw-write'
* ef/mingw-write:
  mingw: remove mingw_write
  prefer xwrite instead of write
2014-01-27 10:44:59 -08:00
de20e44721 Merge branch 'rk/send-email-ssl-cert'
The "if /etc/ssl/certs/ directory exists, explicitly telling the
library to use it as SSL_ca_path" blind-defaulting in "git
send-email" broke platforms where /etc/ssl/certs/ directory exists,
but it cannot used as SSL_ca_path (e.g. Fedora rawhide).  Fix it by
not specifying any SSL_ca_path/SSL_ca_file but still asking for peer
verification in such a case.

* rk/send-email-ssl-cert:
  send-email: /etc/ssl/certs/ directory may not be usable as ca_path
2014-01-27 10:44:34 -08:00
a0f4525ae0 Merge branch 'jn/ignore-doc'
Explicitly list $HOME/.config/git/ignore as one of the places you
can use to keep ignore patterns that depend on your personal choice
of tools, e.g. *~ for Emacs users.

* jn/ignore-doc:
  gitignore doc: add global gitignore to synopsis
2014-01-27 10:44:27 -08:00
4e9f9320e3 Merge branch 'jk/interpret-branch-name-fix'
Fix a handful of bugs around interpreting $branch@{upstream}
notation and its lookalike, when $branch part has interesting
characters, e.g. "@", and ":".

* jk/interpret-branch-name-fix:
  interpret_branch_name: find all possible @-marks
  interpret_branch_name: avoid @{upstream} past colon
  interpret_branch_name: always respect "namelen" parameter
  interpret_branch_name: rename "cp" variable to "at"
  interpret_branch_name: factor out upstream handling
2014-01-27 10:44:21 -08:00
f583ace157 Merge branch 'jk/allow-fetch-onelevel-refname'
"git clone" would fail to clone from a repository that has a ref
directly under "refs/", e.g. "refs/stash", because different
validation paths do different things on such a refname.  Loosen the
client side's validation to allow such a ref.

* jk/allow-fetch-onelevel-refname:
  fetch-pack: do not filter out one-level refs
2014-01-27 10:44:14 -08:00
63763273de Merge branch 'jc/revision-range-unpeel'
"git log --left-right A...B" lost the "leftness" of commits
reachable from A when A is a tag as a side effect of a recent
bugfix.  This is a regression in 1.8.4.x series.

* jc/revision-range-unpeel:
  revision: propagate flag bits from tags to pointees
  revision: mark contents of an uninteresting tree uninteresting
2014-01-27 10:44:10 -08:00
9bb5287098 Merge branch 'mh/retire-ref-fetch-rules'
Code simplification.

* mh/retire-ref-fetch-rules:
  refname_match(): always use the rules in ref_rev_parse_rules
2014-01-27 10:44:07 -08:00
ac355298b1 Merge branch 'mh/attr-macro-doc'
* mh/attr-macro-doc:
  gitattributes: document more clearly where macros are allowed
2014-01-27 10:44:04 -08:00
6d73dba8f6 Merge branch 'jc/maint-pull-docfix'
* jc/maint-pull-docfix:
  Documentation: "git pull" does not have the "-m" option
  Documentation: exclude irrelevant options from "git pull"
2014-01-27 10:44:00 -08:00
ba98a2f660 Merge branch 'jk/complete-merge-base'
* jk/complete-merge-base:
  completion: handle --[no-]fork-point options to git-rebase
  completion: complete merge-base options
2014-01-27 10:43:55 -08:00
c9e8c1aa3f Merge branch 'ab/subtree-doc'
* ab/subtree-doc:
  subtree: fix argument validation in add/pull/push
2014-01-27 10:43:51 -08:00
9c96c7f3aa http-protocol.txt: don't use uppercase for variable names in "The Negotiation Algorithm"
Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-27 09:06:26 -08:00
43cc5ce9ea Documentation: make it easier to maintain enumerated documents
Instead of starting an enumeration of documents with a DOC = doc1
followed by DOC += doc2, DOC += doc3, ..., empty it with "DOC =" at
the beginning and consistently add them with "DOC += ...".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-27 09:04:32 -08:00
586aa78631 create HTML for http-protocol.txt
./Documentation/technical/http-protocol.txt was missing from TECH_DOCS in Makefile.
Add it and also improve HTML formatting while still retaining good readability of the ASCII text:
- Use monospace font instead of italicized or roman font for machine output and source text
- Use roman font for things which should be body text
- Use double quotes consistently for "want" and "have" commands
- Use uppercase "C" / "S" consistently for "client" / "server";
  also use "C:" / "S:" instead of "(C)" / "(S)" for consistency and
  to avoid having formatted "(C)" as copyright symbol in HTML
- Use only spaces and not a combination of tabs and spaces for whitespace

Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-27 09:02:02 -08:00
e4ddb05720 tree_entry_interesting: match against all pathspecs
The current basedir compare aborts early in order to avoid futile
recursive searches. However, a match may still be found by another
pathspec. This can cause an error while checking out files from a branch
when using multiple pathspecs:

$ git checkout master -- 'a/*.txt' 'b/*.txt'
error: pathspec 'a/*.txt' did not match any file(s) known to git.

Signed-off-by: Andy Spencer <andy753421@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-27 09:01:50 -08:00
fd78cedc52 Makefile: remove redundant object in git-http{fetch,push}
revision.o is included in libgit.a which is in $(GITLIBS), so we don't
need to include is separately.  This fixes compilation with
"-fwhole-program" which otherwise fails with messages like this:

  libgit.a(revision.o): In function `mark_tree_uninteresting':
  /home/john/src/git/revision.c:108: multiple definition of `mark_tree_uninteresting'
  /tmp/ccKQRkZV.ltrans2.ltrans.o:/home/john/src/git/revision.c:108: first defined here

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-27 08:55:28 -08:00
8169007468 doc: remote author/documentation sections from more pages
We decided at 48bb914e (doc: drop author/documentation sections from
most pages, 2011-03-11) to remove "author" and "documentation"
sections from our documentation.  Remove a few stragglers.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-27 08:34:34 -08:00
608a82348b l10n: remove 2 blank translations on Danish, Dutch
Two l10n teams haven't contributed a single translation for about two
years since they was initialized with a blank template.  Remove them
can make the Git package smaller and give opportunities to other
contributors.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-01-25 06:17:14 +08:00
cfff71a961 l10n: zh_CN.po: translate 27 messages (2210t0f0u)
Translations for git v1.9-rc0, and also update translations on "graft"
and "reference repository".

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-01-25 06:17:14 +08:00
a201c20b41 ewah: support platforms that require aligned reads
The caller may hand us an unaligned buffer (e.g., because it
is an mmap of a file with many ewah bitmaps). On some
platforms (like SPARC) this can cause a bus error. We can
fix it with a combination of get_be32 and moving the data
into an aligned buffer (which we would do anyway, but we can
move it before fixing the endianness).

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-23 14:05:05 -08:00
c3d8da571f read-cache: use get_be32 instead of hand-rolled ntoh_l
Commit d60c49c (read-cache.c: allow unaligned mapping of the
index file, 2012-04-03) introduced helpers to access
unaligned data. However, we already have get_be32, which has
a few advantages:

  1. It's already written, so we avoid duplication.

  2. It's probably faster, since it does the endian
     conversion and the alignment fix at the same time.

  3. The get_be32 code is well-tested, having been in
     block-sha1 for a long time. By contrast, our custom
     helpers were probably almost never used, since the user
     needed to manually define a macro to enable them.

We have to add a get_be16 implementation to the existing
get_be32, but that is very simple to do.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-23 14:03:48 -08:00
802b123366 block-sha1: factor out get_be and put_be wrappers
The BLK_SHA1 code has optimized wrappers for doing endian
conversions on memory that may not be aligned. Let's pull
them out so that we can use them elsewhere, especially the
time-tested list of platforms that prefer each strategy.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-23 14:03:21 -08:00
a0332337be t7700: do not use "touch" unnecessarily
Some versions of touch (such as /usr/ucb/touch on Solaris)
do not know about the "-r" option. This would make sense as
a feature of test-chmtime, but fortunately this fix is even
easier.

The test does not care about the timestamp of the .keep file it
creates at all, only that it exists. For such a use case, with or
without portability issues around "-r", "touch" should not be used
in the first place.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-23 13:13:20 -08:00
088304bf73 t7501: fix "empty commit" test with NO_PERL
t7501.9 tries to check that "git commit" will fail when the
index is unchanged. It relies on previous tests not to have
modified the index. When it was originally written, this was
always the case. However, commit c65dc35 (t7501: test the
right kind of breakage, 2012-03-30) changed earlier tests (4
and 5) to leave a modification in the index.

We never noticed, however, because t7501.7, between the two,
clears the index state as a side effect. However, that test
depends on the PERL prerequisite, and so it does not always
run. Therefore if NO_PERL is set, we do not run the
intervening test, the index is left unclean, and t7501.9
fails.

We could fix this by moving t7501.9 up in the script.
However, this patch instead leaves it in place and adds a
"git reset" before the commit. This makes the test more
explicit about its preconditions, and will future-proof it
against any other changes in the test state.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-23 13:11:07 -08:00
74b4f7f277 tree-walk.c: ignore trailing slash on submodule in tree_entry_interesting()
We do ignore trailing slash on a directory, so pathspec "abc/" matches
directory "abc". A submodule is also a directory. Apply the same logic
to it. This makes "git log submodule-path" and "git log submodule-path/"
produce the same output.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-23 13:03:00 -08:00
b861e235bc repack: propagate pack-objects options as strings
In the original shell version of git-repack, any options
destined for pack-objects were left as strings, and passed
as a whole. Since the C rewrite in commit a1bbc6c (repack:
rewrite the shell script in C, 2013-09-15), we now parse
these values to integers internally, then reformat the
integers when passing the option to pack-objects.

This has the advantage that we catch format errors earlier
(i.e., when repack is invoked, rather than when pack-objects
is invoked).

It has three disadvantages, though:

  1. Our internal data types may not be the right size. In
     the case of "--window-memory" and "--max-pack-size",
     these are "unsigned long" in pack-objects, but we can
     only represent a regular "int".

  2. Our parsing routines might not be the same as those of
     pack-objects. For the two options above, pack-objects
     understands "100m" to mean "100 megabytes", but repack
     does not.

  3. We have to keep a sentinel value to know whether it is
     worth passing the option along. In the case of
     "--window-memory", we currently do not pass it if the
     value is "0". But that is a meaningful value to
     pack-objects, where it overrides any configured value.

We can fix all of these by simply passing the strings from
the user along to pack-objects verbatim. This does not
actually fix anything for "--depth" or "--window", but these
are converted, too, for consistency.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-23 10:34:53 -08:00
aa8bd519db repack: make parsed string options const-correct
When we use OPT_STRING to parse an option, we get back a
pointer into the argv array, which should be "const char *".
The compiler doesn't notice because it gets passed through a
"void *" in the option struct.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-23 10:34:51 -08:00
44b96ecaa8 repack: fix typo in max-pack-size option
When we see "--max-pack-size", we accidentally propagated
this to pack-objects as "--max_pack_size", which does not
work at all.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-23 10:34:49 -08:00
b594c975c7 Makefile: Fix compilation of Windows resource file
If the git version number consists of less than three period
separated numbers, then the Windows resource file compilation
issues a syntax error:

  $ touch git.rc
  $ make V=1 git.res
  GIT_VERSION = 1.9.rc0
  windres -O coff \
            -DMAJOR=1 -DMINOR=9 -DPATCH=rc0 \
            -DGIT_VERSION="\\\"1.9.rc0\\\"" git.rc -o git.res
  C:\msysgit\msysgit\mingw\bin\windres.exe: git.rc:2: syntax error
  make: *** [git.res] Error 1
  $

Note that -DPATCH=rc0.

The values passed via -DMAJOR=, -DMINOR=, and -DPATCH= are used in
FILEVERSION and PRODUCTVERSION statements, which expect up to four numeric
values. These version numbers are intended for machine consumption. They
are typically inspected by installers to decide whether a file to be
installed is newer than one that exists on the system, but are not used
for much else.

We can be pretty certain that there are no tools that look at these
version numbers, not even the installer of Git for Windows does.
Therefore, to fix the syntax error, fill in only the first two numbers,
which we are guaranteed to find in Git version numbers.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Acked-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-23 10:00:28 -08:00
b21c0bc8e6 Merge git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn
* 'master' of git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn:
  git-svn: memoize _rev_list and rebuild
2014-01-23 08:51:14 -08:00
2dbfa676f0 Merge git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk
* 'master' of git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk:
  gitk: Indent word-wrapped lines in commit display header
  gitk: Comply with XDG base directory specification
  gitk: Replace "next" and "prev" buttons with down and up arrows
  gitk: chmod +x po2msg.sh
  gitk: Update copyright dates
  gitk: Add Bulgarian translation (304t)
  gitk: Fix mistype
2014-01-23 08:50:50 -08:00
76d64ca6b5 gitk: Indent word-wrapped lines in commit display header
In the cases where the lines starting with Precedes:, Follows: and
Branches: in the commit display are long enough to be word-wrapped,
this adds a 1cm margin on the left of the wrapped lines, to make
the display more readable.  Suggested by Stephen Rothwell.

Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-01-23 22:06:22 +11:00
ab0bcec987 git-svn: memoize _rev_list and rebuild
According to profile data, _rev_list and rebuild consume a large
portion of time.  Memoize the results of _rev_list and memoize
rebuild internals to avoid subprocess invocation.

When importing 15152 revisions on a LAN, time improved from 10
hours to 3-4 hours.

Signed-off-by: lin zuojian <manjian2006@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2014-01-23 02:54:26 +00:00
f21e1c5d36 Add cross-references between docs for for-each-ref and show-ref
Add cross-references between the manpages for git-for-each-ref(1) and
git-show-ref(1).

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-22 12:08:39 -08:00
a0f58c5830 builtin/blame.c: struct blame_entry does not need a prev link
Signed-off-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-22 11:28:01 -08:00
0f5274033e safe_create_leading_directories(): on Windows, \ can separate path components
When cloning to a directory "C:\foo\bar" from Windows' cmd.exe where
"foo" does not exist yet, Git would throw an error like

    fatal: could not create work tree dir 'c:\foo\bar'.: No such file or directory

Fix this by not hard-coding a platform specific directory separator
into safe_create_leading_directories().

This patch, including its entire commit message, is derived from a
patch by Sebastian Schuberth.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-22 11:00:07 -08:00
f84cb68463 git p4 doc: use two-line style for options with multiple spellings
Thomas Rast noticed the docs have a mix of styles when
it comes to options with multiple spellings.  Standardize
the couple in git-p4.txt that are odd.

Instead of:
  -n, --dry-run::

Do this:
  -n::
  --dry-run::

See
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/219936/focus=219945

Signed-off-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-22 08:06:20 -08:00
3d5388afa8 git p4 test: examine behavior with locked (+l) files
The p4 server can enforce file locking, so that only one user
can edit a file at a time.  Git p4 is unable to submit changes
to locked files.  Currently it exits poorly.  Ideally it would
notice the locked condition and clean up nicely.

Add a bunch of tests that describe the problem, hoping that
fixes appear in the future.

Signed-off-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-22 08:06:19 -08:00
2000544330 git p4: fix an error message when "p4 where" fails
When "p4 where" fails, for whatever reason, the error message tries to
show an undefined variable.  This minor bug applies only when using a
client spec, and was introduced recently in 9d57c4a (git p4: implement
view spec wildcards with "p4 where", 2013-08-30).

Signed-off-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-22 08:06:19 -08:00
79467e61aa git p4: handle files with wildcards when doing RCS scrubbing
Commit 9d7d446 (git p4: submit files with wildcards, 2012-04-29)
fixed problems with handling files that had p4 wildcard
characters, like "@" and "*".  But it missed one case, that of
RCS keyword scrubbing, which uses "p4 fstat" to extract type
information.  Fix it by calling wildcard_encode() on the raw
filename.

Signed-off-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-22 08:06:19 -08:00
0cf1b72a38 git p4 test: do not pollute /tmp
Generating the submit template for p4 uses tempfile.mkstemp(),
which by default puts files in /tmp.  For a test that fails,
possibly on purpose, this is not cleaned up.  Run with TMPDIR
pointing into the trash directory so the temp files go away
with the test results.

To do this required some other minor changes.  First, the editor
is launched using system(editor + " " + template_file), using
shell expansion to build the command string.  This doesn't work
if editor has a space in it.  And is generally unwise as it's
easy to fool the shell into doing extra work.  Exec the args
directly, without shell expansion.

Second, without shell expansion, the trick of "P4EDITOR=:" used
in the tests doesn't work.  Use a real command, true, as the
non-interactive editor for testing.

Signed-off-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-22 08:06:19 -08:00
0055b56e10 git p4 test: run as user "author"
The tests use author@example.com as the canonical submitter,
but he does not have an entry in the p4 users database.
This causes the generated change description to complain
that the git and p4 users disagree.  The complaint message
is still valid, but isn't useful in tests.  It was introduced
in 848de9c (git-p4: warn if git authorship won't be retained,
2011-05-13).

Fix t9813 to use @example.com instead of @localhost due to
change in p4_add_user().  Move the function into the git p4
test library so author can be added at initialization time.

Signed-off-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-22 08:05:27 -08:00
0577849d2b git p4 test: is_cli_file_writeable succeeds
Commit e9df0f9 (git p4: cygwin p4 client does not mark read-only,
2013-01-26) fixed a problem with "test -w" on cygwin, but mistakenly
marked the new test as failing.  Fix this.

Signed-off-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-22 08:05:26 -08:00
630c4f19f0 git p4 test: explicitly check p4 wildcard delete
There was no test where p4 deleted a file with a wildcard
character.  Make sure git p4 applies the wildcard decoding
properly when importing a delete that includes a wildcard.

Signed-off-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-22 08:05:26 -08:00
40f846c35c git p4: work around p4 bug that causes empty symlinks
Damien Gérard highlights an interesting problem.  Some p4
repositories end up with symlinks that have an empty target.  It
is not possible to create this with current p4, but they do
indeed exist.

The effect in git p4 is that "p4 print" on the symlink returns an
empty string, confusing the curret symlink-handling code.

Such broken repositories cause problems in p4 as well, even with
no git involved.  In p4, syncing to a change that includes a
bogus symlink causes errors:

    //depot/empty-symlink - updating /home/me/p4/empty-symlink
    rename: /home/me/p4/empty-symlink: No such file or directory

and leaves no symlink.

In git, replicate the p4 behavior by ignoring these bad symlinks.
If, in a later p4 revision, the symlink happens to point to
something non-null, the symlink will be replaced properly.

Add a big test for all this too.

This happens to be a regression introduced by 1292df1 (git-p4:
Fix occasional truncation of symlink contents., 2013-08-08) and
appeared first in 1.8.5.  But it shows up only in p4 repositories
of dubious character, so can wait for a proper release.

Tested-by: Damien Gérard <damien@iwi.me>
Signed-off-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-22 08:05:04 -08:00
8f86339858 gitk: Comply with XDG base directory specification
Write the gitk config data to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/gitk ($HOME/.config/git/gitk
by default) in line with the XDG specification. This makes it consistent with
git which also follows the spec.

If $HOME/.gitk already exists use that for backward compatibility, so only new
installations are affected.

Signed-off-by: Astril Hayato <astrilhayato@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-01-22 22:05:32 +11:00
a8d8e382a9 git p4 test: ensure p4 symlink parsing works
While this happens to work, there was no test to make sure
that the basic importing of a symlink from p4 to git functioned.

Add a simple test to create a symlink in p4 and import it into git,
then verify that the symlink exists and has the correct target.

Signed-off-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 15:50:27 -08:00
16168986eb git p4 test: wildcards are supported
Since 9d57c4a (git p4: implement view spec wildcards with "p4
where", 2013-08-30), all the wildcard types should be supported.
Change must-fail tests to mark that they now pass.

Signed-off-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 15:50:27 -08:00
200abe7458 list-objects: only look at cmdline trees with edge_hint
When rev-list is given a command-line like:

  git rev-list --objects $commit --not --all

the most accurate answer is the difference between the set
of objects reachable from $commit and the set reachable from
all of the existing refs. However, we have not historically
provided that answer, because it is very expensive to
calculate. We would have to open every tree of every commit
in the entire history.

Instead, we find the accurate set difference of the
reachable commits, and then mark the trees at the boundaries
as uninteresting. This misses objects which appear in the
trees of both the interesting commits and deep within the
uninteresting history.

Commit fbd4a70 (list-objects: mark more commits as edges in
mark_edges_uninteresting, 2013-08-16) noticed that we miss
those objects during pack-objects, and added code to examine
the trees of all of the "--not" refs given on the
command-line.  Note that this is still not the complete set
difference, because we look only at the tips of the
command-line arguments, not all of their reachable commits.
But it increases the set of boundary objects we consider,
which is especially important for shallow fetches.  So we
are trading extra CPU time for a larger set of boundary
objects, which can improve the resulting pack size for a
--thin pack.

This tradeoff probably makes sense in the context of
pack-objects, where we have set revs->edge_hint to have the
traversal feed us the set of boundary objects.  For a
regular rev-list, though, it is probably not a good
tradeoff. It is true that it makes our list slightly closer
to a true set difference, but it is a rare case where this
is important. And because we do not have revs->edge_hint
set, we do nothing useful with the larger set of boundary
objects.

This patch therefore ties the extra tree examination to the
revs->edge_hint flag; it is the presence of that flag that
makes the tradeoff worthwhile.

Here is output from the p0001-rev-list showing the
improvement in performance:

Test                                             HEAD^             HEAD
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0001.1: rev-list --all                           0.69(0.65+0.02)   0.69(0.66+0.02) +0.0%
0001.2: rev-list --all --objects                 3.22(3.19+0.03)   3.23(3.20+0.03) +0.3%
0001.4: rev-list $commit --not --all             0.04(0.04+0.00)   0.04(0.04+0.00) +0.0%
0001.5: rev-list --objects $commit --not --all   0.27(0.26+0.01)   0.04(0.04+0.00) -85.2%

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 14:46:24 -08:00
ea97002fc9 t/perf: time rev-list with UNINTERESTING commits
We time a straight "rev-list --all" and its "--object"
counterpart, both going all the way to the root. However, we
do not time a partial history walk. This patch adds an
extreme case: a walk over a very small slice of history, but
with a very large set of UNINTERESTING tips. This is similar
to the connectivity check run by git on a small fetch, or
the walk done by any pre-receive hooks that want to check
incoming commits.

This test reveals a performance regression in git v1.8.4.2,
caused by fbd4a70 (list-objects: mark more commits as edges
in mark_edges_uninteresting, 2013-08-16):

Test                                             fbd4a703^         fbd4a703
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0001.1: rev-list --all                           0.69(0.67+0.02)   0.69(0.68+0.01) +0.0%
0001.2: rev-list --all --objects                 3.47(3.44+0.02)   3.48(3.44+0.03) +0.3%
0001.4: rev-list $commit --not --all             0.04(0.04+0.00)   0.04(0.04+0.00) +0.0%
0001.5: rev-list --objects $commit --not --all   0.04(0.03+0.00)   0.27(0.24+0.02) +575.0%

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 14:46:17 -08:00
75d6e552a8 Documentation: @{-N} can refer to a commit
The @{-N} syntax always referred to the N-th last thing checked out,
which can be either a branch or a commit (for detached HEAD cases).
However, the documentation only mentioned branches.

Edit in a "/commit" in the appropriate places.

Reported-by: Kevin <ikke@ikke.info>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 13:50:00 -08:00
08f555cb82 rename_tmp_log(): on SCLD_VANISHED, retry
If safe_create_leading_directories() fails because a file along the
path unexpectedly vanished, try again from the beginning.  Try at most
4 times.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 13:47:28 -08:00
f1e9e9a4db rename_tmp_log(): limit the number of remote_empty_directories() attempts
This doesn't seem to be a likely error, but we've got the counter
anyway, so we might as well use it for an added bit of safety.

Please note that the first call to rename() is optimistic, and it is
normal for it to fail if there is a directory in the way.  So bump the
total number of allowed attempts to 4, to be sure that we can still
have at least 3 retries in the case of a race.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 13:47:24 -08:00
ae4a283e3b rename_tmp_log(): handle a possible mkdir/rmdir race
If a directory vanishes while renaming the temporary reflog file,
retry (up to 3 times).  This could happen if another process deletes
the directory created by safe_create_leading_directories() just before
we rename the file into the directory.

As far as I can tell, this race could not occur internal to git.  The
only time that a directory under $GIT_DIR/logs is deleted is if room
has to be made for a log file for a reference with the same name;
for example, in the following sequence:

    git branch foo/bar    # Creates file .git/logs/refs/heads/foo/bar
    git branch -d foo/bar # Deletes file but leaves .git/logs/refs/heads/foo/
    git branch foo        # Deletes .git/logs/refs/heads/foo/

But the only reason the last command deletes the directory is because
it wants to create a file with the same name.  So if another process
(e.g.,

    git branch foo/baz

) wants to create that directory, one of the two is doomed to failure
anyway because of a D/F conflict.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 13:47:13 -08:00
fa59ae7971 rename_ref(): extract function rename_tmp_log()
It's about to become a bit more complex.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 13:46:59 -08:00
863808cd1a remove_dir_recurse(): handle disappearing files and directories
If a file or directory that we are trying to remove disappears (e.g.,
because another process has pruned it), do not consider it an error.

However, if REMOVE_DIR_KEEP_TOPLEVEL is set, and the toplevel
directory is missing, then consider it an error (like before).

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 13:46:47 -08:00
ecb2c282c0 remove_dir_recurse(): tighten condition for removing unreadable dir
If opendir() fails on the top-level directory, it makes sense to try
to delete it anyway--but only if the failure was due to EACCES.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 13:46:32 -08:00
e5c223e98b lock_ref_sha1_basic(): if locking fails with ENOENT, retry
If hold_lock_file_for_update() fails with errno==ENOENT, it might be
because somebody else (for example, a pack-refs process) has just
deleted one of the lockfile's ancestor directories.  So if this
condition is detected, try again (up to 3 times).

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 13:46:30 -08:00
c4c61c763e lock_ref_sha1_basic(): on SCLD_VANISHED, retry
If safe_create_leading_directories() fails because a file along the
path unexpectedly vanished, try again (up to 3 times).

This can occur if another process is deleting directories at the same
time as we are trying to make them.  For example, "git pack-refs
--all" tries to delete the loose refs and any empty directories that
are left behind.  If a pack-refs process is running, then it might
delete a directory that we need to put a new loose reference in.

If safe_create_leading_directories() thinks this might have happened,
then take its advice and try again (maximum three attempts).

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 13:46:07 -08:00
0c1cddd015 Documentation/gitk: document -L option
The -L option is the same as for git-log, so the entire block is just
copied from git-log.txt.  However, until the parser is fixed we add a
caveat that gitk only understands the stuck form.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-21 13:41:30 -08:00
d9bb4be53b Merge tag 'gitgui-0.19.0' of http://repo.or.cz/r/git-gui
git-gui 0.19.0

* tag 'gitgui-0.19.0' of http://repo.or.cz/r/git-gui:
  git-gui 0.19
  git-gui: chmod +x po2msg, windows/git-gui.sh
  git-gui: fallback right pane to packed widgets with Tk 8.4
  git-gui i18n: Added Bulgarian translation
  git-gui l10n: Add 29 more terms to glossary
  git-gui i18n: Initial glossary in Bulgarian
2014-01-21 13:16:17 -08:00
786f15c849 gitk: Replace "next" and "prev" buttons with down and up arrows
Users often find that "next" and "prev" do the opposite of what they
expect.  For example, "next" moves to the next match down the list, but
that is almost always backwards in time.  Replacing the text with arrows
makes it clear where the buttons will take the user.

Signed-off-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-01-21 22:18:23 +11:00
c61f3a97b1 gitk: chmod +x po2msg.sh
The Makefile only runs it using tclsh, but because the fallback po2msg
script has the usual tcl preamble starting with #!/bin/sh it can also
be run directly.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-01-21 22:14:42 +11:00
6c626a031a gitk: Update copyright dates
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-01-21 22:02:27 +11:00
45f884c346 gitk: Add Bulgarian translation (304t)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-01-21 22:00:29 +11:00
1f3c8726cd gitk: Fix mistype
Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2014-01-21 21:57:03 +11:00
d74d01808a l10n: Update Swedish translation (2210t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2014-01-21 09:26:56 +01:00
1b2c79e63e git-gui 0.19
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2014-01-18 17:29:34 +00:00
c64a0ad385 git-gui: chmod +x po2msg, windows/git-gui.sh
The Makefile only runs po/po2msg.sh using tclsh, but because the
script has the usual tcl preamble starting with #!/bin/sh it can also
be run directly.

The Windows git-gui wrapper is usable in-place for the same reason.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2014-01-18 17:06:41 +00:00
02f6cfbd16 git-gui: fallback right pane to packed widgets with Tk 8.4
Since 918dbf58, git-gui crashes if started with Tk 8.4. The reason is that
tk < 8.5 does not support -stretch option for panedwindow.

Without the option it's not possible to properly expand the right half -
the commit area is expanded, while desired behavior is to expand the diff
area. So the whole feature should be disabled with Tk
version less than 8.5.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2014-01-18 16:51:15 +00:00
1ea11f0e45 git-gui i18n: Added Bulgarian translation
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2014-01-18 16:32:13 +00:00
15a745305f git-gui l10n: Add 29 more terms to glossary
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2014-01-18 16:32:09 +00:00
99337ef22c git-gui i18n: Initial glossary in Bulgarian
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2014-01-18 16:32:04 +00:00
812b5e1c11 Merge branch 'fr-po' of git://github.com/jnavila/git
* 'fr-po' of git://github.com/jnavila/git:
  [fr] update french translation 2210/2210
2014-01-18 22:49:27 +08:00
561580eadd [fr] update french translation 2210/2210
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2014-01-18 14:44:13 +01:00
5832c3f2f4 l10n: vi.po (2210t): Updated git-core translation
* Updated new strings
 * Fix typos and review
 * Change meaning of stage

Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2014-01-18 09:07:40 +07:00
df49095ac2 l10n: git.pot: v1.9 round 1 (27 new, 11 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v1.9-rc0 for git v1.9 l10n round 1.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2014-01-18 07:45:37 +08:00
79fcbf7e70 Git 1.9-rc0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-17 12:30:14 -08:00
d98c916e8f Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  git-svn: workaround for a bug in svn serf backend
2014-01-17 12:21:39 -08:00
1aeb10a14d Merge branch 'fp/submodule-checkout-mode'
"submodule.*.update=checkout", when propagated from .gitmodules to
.git/config, turned into a "submodule.*.update=none", which did not
make much sense.

* fp/submodule-checkout-mode:
  git-submodule.sh: 'checkout' is a valid update mode
2014-01-17 12:21:20 -08:00
92251b1b5b Merge branch 'nd/shallow-clone'
Fetching from a shallow-cloned repository used to be forbidden,
primarily because the codepaths involved were not carefully vetted
and we did not bother supporting such usage. This attempts to allow
object transfer out of a shallow-cloned repository in a controlled
way (i.e. the receiver become a shallow repository with truncated
history).

* nd/shallow-clone: (31 commits)
  t5537: fix incorrect expectation in test case 10
  shallow: remove unused code
  send-pack.c: mark a file-local function static
  git-clone.txt: remove shallow clone limitations
  prune: clean .git/shallow after pruning objects
  clone: use git protocol for cloning shallow repo locally
  send-pack: support pushing from a shallow clone via http
  receive-pack: support pushing to a shallow clone via http
  smart-http: support shallow fetch/clone
  remote-curl: pass ref SHA-1 to fetch-pack as well
  send-pack: support pushing to a shallow clone
  receive-pack: allow pushes that update .git/shallow
  connected.c: add new variant that runs with --shallow-file
  add GIT_SHALLOW_FILE to propagate --shallow-file to subprocesses
  receive/send-pack: support pushing from a shallow clone
  receive-pack: reorder some code in unpack()
  fetch: add --update-shallow to accept refs that update .git/shallow
  upload-pack: make sure deepening preserves shallow roots
  fetch: support fetching from a shallow repository
  clone: support remote shallow repository
  ...
2014-01-17 12:21:20 -08:00
c9df6f4574 mingw: remove mingw_write
Since 0b6806b9 ("xread, xwrite: limit size of IO to 8MB"), this
wrapper is no longer needed, as read and write are already split
into small chunks.

Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-17 12:09:52 -08:00
7edc02f4de prefer xwrite instead of write
Our xwrite wrapper already deals with a few potential hazards, and
are as such more robust. Prefer it instead of write to get the
robustness benefits everywhere.

Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Reviewed-and-improved-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-17 12:09:26 -08:00
d8cf714c0e Merge branch 'jk/pull-rebase-using-fork-point'
Finishing touches so that an expected error message will not leak to
the UI.

* jk/pull-rebase-using-fork-point:
  pull: suppress error when no remoteref is found
2014-01-17 12:04:29 -08:00
ffc2b483de pull: suppress error when no remoteref is found
Commit 48059e4 (pull: use merge-base --fork-point when appropriate,
2013-12-08) incorrectly assumes that get_remote_merge_branch will either
yield a non-empty string or return an error, but there are circumstances
where it will yield an empty string.

The previous code then invoked git-rev-list with no arguments, which
results in an error suppressed by redirecting stderr to /dev/null.  Now
we invoke git-merge-base with an empty branch name, which also results
in an error.  Suppress this in the same way.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-17 12:03:32 -08:00
ac930287ff git-svn: workaround for a bug in svn serf backend
Subversion serf backend in versions 1.8.5 and below has a bug(*) that the
function creating the descriptor of a file change -- add_file() --
doesn't make a copy of its third argument when storing it on the
returned descriptor.  As a result, by the time this field is used (in
transactions of file copying or renaming) it may well be released, and
the memory reused.

One of its possible manifestations is the svn assertion triggering on an
invalid path, with a message

svn_fspath__skip_ancestor: Assertion
`svn_fspath__is_canonical(child_fspath)' failed.

This patch works around this bug, by storing the value to be passed as
the third argument to add_file() in a local variable with the same scope
as the file change descriptor, making sure their lifetime is the same.

* [ew: fixed in Subversion r1553376 as noted by Jonathan Nieder]

Cc: Benjamin Pabst <benjamin.pabst85@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Roman Kagan <rkagan@mail.ru>
2014-01-17 11:24:30 -08:00
cbfe47b67f diff_filespec: use only 2 bits for is_binary flag
The is_binary flag needs only three values: -1, 0, and 1.
However, we use a whole 32-bit int for it on most systems
(both 32- and 64- bit).

Instead, we can mark it to use only 2 bits. On 32-bit
systems, this lets it end up as part of the bitfield above
(saving 4 bytes). On 64-bit systems, we don't see any change
(because the savings end up as padding), but it does leave
room for another "free" 32-bit value to be added later.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-17 10:50:14 -08:00
b38f70a82b diff_filespec: reorder is_binary field
The middle of the diff_filespec struct contains a mixture of
ints, shorts, and bit-fields, followed by a pointer. On an
x86-64 system with an LP64 or LLP64 data model (i.e., most
of them), the integers and flags end up being padded out by
41 bits to put the pointer at an 8-byte boundary.

After the pointer, we have the "int is_binary" field, which
is only 32 bits. We end up wasting another 32 bits to pad
the struct size up to a multiple of 64 bits.

We can move the is_binary field before the pointer, which
lets the compiler store it where we used to have padding.
This shrinks the top padding to only 9 bits (from the
bit-fields), and eliminates the bottom padding entirely,
dropping the struct size from 88 to 80 bytes.

On a 32-bit system, there is no benefit, but nor should
there be any harm (we only need 4-byte alignment there, so
we were already using only 9 bits of padding).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-17 10:50:13 -08:00
428d52a5a5 diff_filespec: drop xfrm_flags field
The only mention of this field in the code is by some
debugging code which prints it out (and it will always be
zero, since we never touch it otherwise). It was obsoleted
very early on by 25d5ea4 ([PATCH] Redo rename/copy detection
logic., 2005-05-24).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-17 10:50:11 -08:00
5b711b207f diff_filespec: drop funcname_pattern_ident field
This struct field was obsoleted by be58e70 (diff: unify
external diff and funcname parsing code, 2008-10-05), but we
forgot to remove it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-17 10:50:10 -08:00
b837f5d68d diff_filespec: reorder dirty_submodule macro definitions
diff_filespec has a 2-bit "dirty_submodule" field and
defines two flags as macros. Originally these were right
next to each other, but a new field was accidentally added
in between in commit 4682d85. This patch puts the field and
its flags back together.

Using an enum like:

  enum {
	  DIRTY_SUBMODULE_UNTRACKED = 1,
	  DIRTY_SUBMODULE_MODIFIED = 2
  } dirty_submodule;

would be more obvious, but it bloats the structure. Limiting
the enum size like:

  } dirty_submodule : 2;

might work, but it is not portable.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-17 10:50:03 -08:00
2ce66e2a0a gitignore doc: add global gitignore to synopsis
The gitignore(5) manpage already documents $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/ignore
but it is easy to forget that it exists.  Add a reminder to the
synopsis.

Noticed while looking for a place to put a list of scratch filenames
in the cwd used by one's editor of choice.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-16 15:23:56 -08:00
01645b7493 send-email: /etc/ssl/certs/ directory may not be usable as ca_path
When sending patches on Fedora rawhide with
git-1.8.5.2-1.fc21.x86_64 and perl-IO-Socket-SSL-1.962-1.fc21.noarch,
with the following

    [sendemail]
	    smtpencryption = tls
	    smtpserver = smtp.gmail.com
	    smtpuser = ruben@rubenkerkhof.com
	    smtpserverport = 587

git-send-email fails with:

    STARTTLS failed! SSL connect attempt failed with unknown error
    error:14090086:SSL routines:SSL3_GET_SERVER_CERTIFICATE:certificate
    verify failed at /usr/libexec/git-core/git-send-email line 1236.

The current code detects the presence of /etc/ssl/certs directory
(it actually is a symlink to another directory, but that does not
matter) and uses SSL_ca_path to point at it when initializing the
connection with IO::Socket::SSL or Net::SMTP::SSL.  However, on the
said platform, it seems that this directory is not designed to be
used as SSL_ca_path.  Using a single file inside that directory
(cert.pem, which is a Mozilla CA bundle) with SSL_ca_file does work,
and also not specifying any SSL_ca_file/SSL_ca_path (and letting the
library use its own default) and asking for peer verification does
work.

By removing the code that blindly defaults $smtp_ssl_cert_path to
"/etc/ssl/certs", we can prevent the codepath that treats any
directory specified with that variable as usable for SSL_ca_path
from incorrectly triggering.

This change could introduce a regression for people on a platform
whose certificate directory is /etc/ssl/certs but its IO::Socket:SSL
somehow fails to use it as SSL_ca_path without being told.  Using
/etc/ssl/certs directory as SSL_ca_path by default like the current
code does would have been hiding such a broken installation without
its user needing to do anything.  These users can still work around
such a platform bug by setting the configuration variable explicitly
to point at /etc/ssl/certs.

This change should not negate what 35035bbf (send-email: be explicit
with SSL certificate verification, 2013-07-18), which was the
original change that introduced the defaulting to /etc/ssl/certs/,
attempted to do, which is to make sure we do not communicate over
insecure connection by default, triggering warning from the library.

Cf. https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1043194

Tested-by: Igor Gnatenko <i.gnatenko.brain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ruben Kerkhof <ruben@rubenkerkhof.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-16 14:34:51 -08:00
1a6d8b9148 do not discard revindex when re-preparing packfiles
When an object lookup fails, we re-read the objects/pack
directory to pick up any new packfiles that may have been
created since our last read. We also discard any pack
revindex structs we've allocated.

The discarding is a problem for the pack-bitmap code, which keeps
a pointer to the revindex for the bitmapped pack. After the
discard, the pointer is invalid, and we may read free()d
memory.

Other revindex users do not keep a bare pointer to the
revindex; instead, they always access it through
revindex_for_pack(), which lazily builds the revindex. So
one solution is to teach the pack-bitmap code a similar
trick. It would be slightly less efficient, but probably not
all that noticeable.

However, it turns out this discarding is not actually
necessary. When we call reprepare_packed_git, we do not
throw away our old pack list. We keep the existing entries,
and only add in new ones. So there is no safety problem; we
will still have the pack struct that matches each revindex.
The packfile itself may go away, of course, but we are
already prepared to handle that, and it may happen outside
of reprepare_packed_git anyway.

Throwing away the revindex may save some RAM if the pack
never gets reused (about 12 bytes per object). But it also
wastes some CPU time (to regenerate the index) if the pack
does get reused. It's hard to say which is more valuable,
but in either case, it happens very rarely (only when we
race with a simultaneous repack). Just leaving the revindex
in place is simple and safe both for current and future
code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-16 14:33:46 -08:00
ef93e3a49c pull: add --ff-only to the help text
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-15 16:01:07 -08:00
b814da891e pull: add pull.ff configuration
Add a `pull.ff` configuration option that is analogous
to the `merge.ff` option.

This allows us to control the fast-forward behavior for
pull-initiated merges only.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-15 16:01:06 -08:00
a74352867e revision: propagate flag bits from tags to pointees
With the previous fix 895c5ba3 (revision: do not peel tags used in
range notation, 2013-09-19), handle_revision_arg() that processes
command line arguments for the "git log" family of commands no
longer directly places the object pointed by the tag in the pending
object array when it sees a tag object.  We used to place pointee
there after copying the flag bits like UNINTERESTING and
SYMMETRIC_LEFT.

This change meant that any flag that is relevant to later history
traversal must now be propagated to the pointed objects (most often
these are commits) while starting the traversal, which is partly
done by handle_commit() that is called from prepare_revision_walk().
We did propagate UNINTERESTING, but did not do so for others, most
notably SYMMETRIC_LEFT.  This caused "git log --left-right v1.0..."
(where "v1.0" is a tag) to start losing the "leftness" from the
commit the tag points at.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-15 15:53:51 -08:00
2ac5e4470b revision: mark contents of an uninteresting tree uninteresting
"git rev-list --objects ^A^{tree} B^{tree}" ought to mean "I want a
list of objects inside B's tree, but please exclude the objects that
appear inside A's tree".

we see the top-level tree marked as uninteresting (i.e. ^A^{tree} in
the above example) and call mark_tree_uninteresting() on it; this
unfortunately prevents us from recursing into the tree and marking
the objects in the tree as uninteresting.

The reason why "git log ^A A" yields an empty set of commits,
i.e. we do not have a similar issue for commits, is because we call
mark_parents_uninteresting() after seeing an uninteresting commit.
The uninteresting-ness of the commit itself does not prevent its
parents from being marked as uninteresting.

Introduce mark_tree_contents_uninteresting() and structure the code
in handle_commit() in such a way that it makes it the responsibility
of the callchain leading to this function to mark commits, trees and
blobs as uninteresting, and also make it the responsibility of the
helpers called from this function to mark objects that are reachable
from them.

Note that this is a very old bug that probably dates back to the day
when "rev-list --objects" was introduced.  The line to clear
tree->object.parsed at the end of mark_tree_contents_uninteresting()
can be removed when this fix is merged to the codebase after
6e454b9a (clear parsed flag when we free tree buffers, 2013-06-05).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-15 15:48:58 -08:00
9892d5d454 interpret_branch_name: find all possible @-marks
When we parse a string like "foo@{upstream}", we look for
the first "@"-sign, and check to see if it is an upstream
mark. However, since branch names can contain an @, we may
also see "@foo@{upstream}". In this case, we check only the
first @, and ignore the second. As a result, we do not find
the upstream.

We can solve this by iterating through all @-marks in the
string, and seeing if any is a legitimate upstream or
empty-at mark.

Another strategy would be to parse from the right-hand side
of the string. However, that does not work for the
"empty_at" case, which allows "@@{upstream}". We need to
find the left-most one in this case (and we then recurse as
"HEAD@{upstream}").

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-15 12:51:14 -08:00
3f6eb30f1d interpret_branch_name: avoid @{upstream} past colon
get_sha1() cannot currently parse a valid object name like
"HEAD:@{upstream}" (assuming that such an oddly named file
exists in the HEAD commit). It takes two passes to parse the
string:

  1. It first considers the whole thing as a ref, which
     results in looking for the upstream of "HEAD:".

  2. It finds the colon, parses "HEAD" as a tree-ish, and then
     finds the path "@{upstream}" in the tree.

For a path that looks like a normal reflog (e.g.,
"HEAD:@{yesterday}"), the first pass is a no-op. We try to
dwim_ref("HEAD:"), that returns zero refs, and we proceed
with colon-parsing.

For "HEAD:@{upstream}", though, the first pass ends up in
interpret_upstream_mark, which tries to find the branch
"HEAD:". When it sees that the branch does not exist, it
actually dies rather than returning an error to the caller.
As a result, we never make it to the second pass.

One obvious way of fixing this would be to teach
interpret_upstream_mark to simply report "no, this isn't an
upstream" in such a case. However, that would make the
error-reporting for legitimate upstream cases significantly
worse. Something like "bogus@{upstream}" would simply report
"unknown revision: bogus@{upstream}", while the current code
diagnoses a wide variety of possible misconfigurations (no
such branch, branch exists but does not have upstream, etc).

However, we can take advantage of the fact that a branch
name cannot contain a colon. Therefore even if we find an
upstream mark, any prefix with a colon must mean that
the upstream mark we found is actually a pathname, and
should be disregarded completely. This patch implements that
logic.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-15 12:43:29 -08:00
8cd4249c4c interpret_branch_name: always respect "namelen" parameter
interpret_branch_name gets passed a "name" buffer to parse,
along with a "namelen" parameter representing its length. If
"namelen" is zero, we fallback to the NUL-terminated
string-length of "name".

However, it does not necessarily follow that if we have
gotten a non-zero "namelen", it is the NUL-terminated
string-length of "name". E.g., when get_sha1() is parsing
"foo:bar", we will be asked to operate only on the first
three characters.

Yet in interpret_branch_name and its helpers, we use string
functions like strchr() to operate on "name", looking past
the length we were given.  This can result in us mis-parsing
object names.  We should instead be limiting our search to
"namelen" bytes.

There are three distinct types of object names this patch
addresses:

  - The intrepret_empty_at helper uses strchr to find the
    next @-expression after our potential empty-at.  In an
    expression like "@:foo@bar", it erroneously thinks that
    the second "@" is relevant, even if we were asked only
    to look at the first character. This case is easy to
    trigger (and we test it in this patch).

  - When finding the initial @-mark for @{upstream}, we use
    strchr.  This means we might treat "foo:@{upstream}" as
    the upstream for "foo:", even though we were asked only
    to look at "foo". We cannot test this one in practice,
    because it is masked by another bug (which is fixed in
    the next patch).

  - The interpret_nth_prior_checkout helper did not receive
    the name length at all. This turns out not to be a
    problem in practice, though, because its parsing is so
    limited: it always starts from the far-left of the
    string, and will not tolerate a colon (which is
    currently the only way to get a smaller-than-strlen
    "namelen"). However, it's still worth fixing to make the
    code more obviously correct, and to future-proof us
    against callers with more exotic buffers.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-15 12:41:03 -08:00
f278f40f09 interpret_branch_name: rename "cp" variable to "at"
In the original version of this function, "cp" acted as a
pointer to many different things. Since the refactoring in
the last patch, it only marks the at-sign in the string.
Let's use a more descriptive variable name.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-15 12:38:47 -08:00
a39c14af82 interpret_branch_name: factor out upstream handling
This function checks a few different @{}-constructs. The
early part checks for and dispatches us to helpers for each
construct, but the code for handling @{upstream} is inline.

Let's factor this out into its own function. This makes
interpret_branch_name more readable, and will make it much
simpler to further refactor the function in future patches.

While we're at it, let's also break apart the refactored
code into a few helper functions. These will be useful if we
eventually implement similar @{upstream}-like constructs.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-15 12:38:30 -08:00
4c22408111 fetch-pack: do not filter out one-level refs
Currently fetching a one-level ref like "refs/foo" does not
work consistently. The outer "git fetch" program filters the
list of refs, checking each against check_refname_format.
Then it feeds the result to do_fetch_pack to actually
negotiate the haves/wants and get the pack. The fetch-pack
code does its own filter, and it behaves differently.

The fetch-pack filter looks for refs in "refs/", and then
feeds everything _after_ the slash (i.e., just "foo") into
check_refname_format.  But check_refname_format is not
designed to look at a partial refname. It complains that the
ref has only one component, thinking it is at the root
(i.e., alongside "HEAD"), when in reality we just fed it a
partial refname.

As a result, we omit a ref like "refs/foo" from the pack
request, even though "git fetch" then tries to store the
resulting ref.  If we happen to get the object anyway (e.g.,
because the ref is contained in another ref we are
fetching), then the fetch succeeds. But if it is a unique
object, we fail when trying to update "refs/foo".

We can fix this by just passing the whole refname into
check_refname_format; we know the part we were omitting is
"refs/", which is acceptable in a refname. This at least
makes the checks consistent with each other.

This problem happens most commonly with "refs/stash", which
is the only one-level ref in wide use. However, our test
does not use "refs/stash", as we may later want to restrict
it specifically (not because it is one-level, but because
of the semantics of stashes).

We may also want to do away with the multiple levels of
filtering (which can cause problems when they are out of
sync), or even forbid one-level refs entirely. However,
those decisions can come later; this fixes the most
immediate problem, which is the mismatch between the two.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-15 12:37:24 -08:00
54457fe509 refname_match(): always use the rules in ref_rev_parse_rules
We used to use two separate rules for the normal ref resolution
dwimming and dwimming done to decide which remote ref to grab.  The
third parameter to refname_match() selected which rules to use.

When these two rules were harmonized in

    2011-11-04 dd621df9cd refs DWIMmery: use the same rule for both "git fetch" and others

, ref_fetch_rules was #defined to avoid potential breakages for
in-flight topics.

It is now safe to remove the backwards-compatibility code, so remove
refname_match()'s third parameter, make ref_rev_parse_rules private to
refs.c, and remove ref_fetch_rules entirely.

Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-14 13:58:06 -08:00
e78e6967f3 gitattributes: document more clearly where macros are allowed
The old text made it sound like macros are only allowed in the
.gitattributes file at the top-level of the working tree.  Make it
clear that they are also allowed in $GIT_DIR/info/attributes and in
the global and system-wide gitattributes files.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-14 13:56:56 -08:00
08f19cfe9b Documentation: "git pull" does not have the "-m" option
Even though "--[no-]edit" can be used with "git pull", the
explanation of the interaction between this option and the "-m"
option does not make sense within the context of "git pull".  Use
the conditional inclusion mechanism to remove this part from "git
pull" documentation, while keeping it for "git merge".

Reported-by: Ivan Zakharyaschev
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-14 10:47:36 -08:00
8be1d04a7e Merge branch 'jc/maint-pull-docfix-for-409b8d82' into jc/maint-pull-docfix
* jc/maint-pull-docfix-for-409b8d82:
  Documentation: exclude irrelevant options from "git pull"
2014-01-14 10:47:09 -08:00
d51a47552a Documentation: exclude irrelevant options from "git pull"
10eb64f5 (git pull manpage: don't include -n from fetch-options.txt,
2008-01-25) introduced a way to exclude some parts of included
source when building git-pull documentation, and later 409b8d82
(Documentation/git-pull: put verbosity options before merge/fetch
ones, 2010-02-24) attempted to use the mechanism to exclude some
parts of merge-options.txt when used from git-pull.txt.

However, the latter did not have an intended effect, because the
macro "git-pull" used to decide if the source is included in
git-pull documentation were defined a bit too late.

Define the macro before it is used to fix this.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-14 10:46:17 -08:00
1c3e0f007c subtree: fix argument validation in add/pull/push
When working with a remote repository add/pull/push do not accept a
<refspec> as parameter but just a <ref>. They should accept any
well-formatted ref name.

This patch:
 - relaxes the check the <ref> argument in "git subtree add <repo>"
   (previous code would not accept a ref name that does not exist
   locally too, new code only ensures that the ref is well formatted)

 - add the same check in "git subtree pull/push" + check the number of
   parameters

 - update the doc to use <ref> instead of <refspec>

Signed-off-by: Anthony Baire <Anthony.Baire@irisa.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-13 14:37:52 -08:00
4310e328d4 completion: handle --[no-]fork-point options to git-rebase
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-13 14:20:31 -08:00
85453fd1e3 completion: complete merge-base options
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-13 14:20:25 -08:00
14598b9070 Sync with 1.8.5.3
* maint:
  Git 1.8.5.3
  pack-heuristics.txt: mark up the file header properly
2014-01-13 11:39:38 -08:00
864085aaf6 Update draft release notes to 1.9
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-13 11:39:09 -08:00
e8a2f5f271 Merge branch 'jk/t5531-prepare-to-default-to-non-matching'
* jk/t5531-prepare-to-default-to-non-matching:
  t5531: further "matching" fixups
2014-01-13 11:35:10 -08:00
7fe5e637ab Merge branch 'sb/diff-orderfile-config'
Finishing touches to avoid casting unnecessary detail in stone.

* sb/diff-orderfile-config:
  diff test: reading a directory as a file need not error out
2014-01-13 11:34:54 -08:00
540cc75f38 Merge branch 'mh/shorten-unambigous-ref'
* mh/shorten-unambigous-ref:
  shorten_unambiguous_ref(): tighten up pointer arithmetic
  gen_scanf_fmt(): delete function and use snprintf() instead
  shorten_unambiguous_ref(): introduce a new local variable
2014-01-13 11:34:08 -08:00
272220ff67 Merge branch 'mm/mv-file-to-no-such-dir-with-slash'
Finishing touches to do the same on windows.

* mm/mv-file-to-no-such-dir-with-slash:
  mv: let 'git mv file no-such-dir/' error out on Windows, too
2014-01-13 11:33:51 -08:00
a65a53bf04 Merge branch 'jl/submodule-mv-checkout-caveat'
With a submodule that was initialized in an old fashioned way
without gitlinks, switching branches in the superproject between
the one with and without the submodule may leave the submodule
working tree with its embedded repository behind, as there may be
unexpendable state there. Document and warn users about this.

* jl/submodule-mv-checkout-caveat:
  rm: better document side effects when removing a submodule
  mv: better document side effects when moving a submodule
2014-01-13 11:33:47 -08:00
5e72e7168c Merge branch 'jk/pull-rebase-using-fork-point'
Finishing touches.

* jk/pull-rebase-using-fork-point:
  rebase: fix fork-point with zero arguments
2014-01-13 11:33:40 -08:00
ca46578a1d Merge branch 'rr/completion-format-coverletter'
The bash/zsh completion code did not know about format.coverLetter
among many format.* configuration variables.

* rr/completion-format-coverletter:
  completion: complete format.coverLetter
2014-01-13 11:33:38 -08:00
ff724276cd Merge branch 'ow/stash-with-ifs'
The implementation of 'git stash $cmd "stash@{...}"' did not quote
the stash argument properly and left it split at IFS whitespace.

* ow/stash-with-ifs:
  stash: handle specifying stashes with $IFS
2014-01-13 11:33:37 -08:00
9fac0777e1 Merge branch 'jn/pager-lv-default-env'
Just like we give a reasonable default for "less" via the LESS
environment variable, specify a reasonable default for "lv" via the
"LV" environment variable when spawning the pager.

* jn/pager-lv-default-env:
  pager: set LV=-c alongside LESS=FRSX
2014-01-13 11:33:35 -08:00
0a8cb03555 Merge branch 'br/sha1-name-40-hex-no-disambiguation'
When parsing a 40-hex string into the object name, the string is
checked to see if it can be interpreted as a ref so that a warning
can be given for ambiguity. The code kicked in even when the
core.warnambiguousrefs is set to false to squelch this warning, in
which case the cycles spent to look at the ref namespace were an
expensive no-op, as the result was discarded without being used.

* br/sha1-name-40-hex-no-disambiguation:
  sha1_name: don't resolve refs when core.warnambiguousrefs is false
2014-01-13 11:33:29 -08:00
4224916ae9 Git 1.8.5.3 2014-01-13 11:28:26 -08:00
7fd90e0e72 Merge branch 'nd/daemon-informative-errors-typofix' into maint
The "--[no-]informative-errors" options to "git daemon" were parsed
a bit too loosely, allowing any other string after these option
names.

* nd/daemon-informative-errors-typofix:
  daemon: be strict at parsing parameters --[no-]informative-errors
2014-01-13 11:23:07 -08:00
3b72885bd8 Merge branch 'km/gc-eperm' into maint
A "gc" process running as a different user should be able to stop a
new "gc" process from starting.

* km/gc-eperm:
  gc: notice gc processes run by other users
2014-01-13 11:23:04 -08:00
f5678f1333 Merge branch 'jk/credential-plug-leak' into maint
An earlier "clean-up" introduced an unnecessary memory leak.

* jk/credential-plug-leak:
  Revert "prompt: clean up strbuf usage"
2014-01-13 11:23:01 -08:00
ada6ebb6e9 Merge branch 'mm/mv-file-to-no-such-dir-with-slash' into maint
"git mv A B/", when B does not exist as a directory, should error
out, but it didn't.

* mm/mv-file-to-no-such-dir-with-slash:
  mv: let 'git mv file no-such-dir/' error out on Windows, too
  mv: let 'git mv file no-such-dir/' error out
2014-01-13 11:22:48 -08:00
be941a2c34 Merge branch 'jk/rev-parse-double-dashes' into maint
"git rev-parse <revs> -- <paths>" did not implement the usual
disambiguation rules the commands in the "git log" family used in
the same way.

* jk/rev-parse-double-dashes:
  rev-parse: be more careful with munging arguments
  rev-parse: correctly diagnose revision errors before "--"
2014-01-13 11:22:38 -08:00
6845e8a62d Merge branch 'jk/cat-file-regression-fix' into maint
"git cat-file --batch=", an admittedly useless command, did not
behave very well.

* jk/cat-file-regression-fix:
  cat-file: handle --batch format with missing type/size
  cat-file: pass expand_data to print_object_or_die
2014-01-13 11:22:21 -08:00
ebba6c0ca6 pack-heuristics.txt: mark up the file header properly
AsciiDoc wants these header-lines left-aligned.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-13 11:18:34 -08:00
0b1985050e t5531: further "matching" fixups
Commit 43eb920 switched one of the sub-repository in this
test to matching to prepare for a world where the default
becomes "simple". However, the main repository needs a
similar change.

We did not notice any test failure when merged with b2ed944
(push: switch default from "matching" to "simple", 2013-01-04)
because t5531.6 is trying to provoke a failure of "git push"
due to a submodule check. When combined with b2ed944 the
push still fails, but for the wrong reason (because our
upstream setup does not exist, not because of the submodule).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-13 09:35:45 -08:00
0df49bef95 diff test: reading a directory as a file need not error out
There is no guarantee that strbuf_read_file must error out for
directories.  On some operating systems (e.g., Debian GNU/kFreeBSD
wheezy), reading a directory gives its raw content:

	$ head -c5 < / | cat -A
	^AM-|^_^@^L$

As a result, 'git diff -O/' succeeds instead of erroring out on
these systems, causing t4056.5 "orderfile is a directory" to fail.

On some weird OS it might even make sense to pass a directory to the
-O option and this is not a common user mistake that needs catching.
Remove the test.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-10 15:30:45 -08:00
a893346930 mv: let 'git mv file no-such-dir/' error out on Windows, too
The previous commit c57f628 (mv: let 'git mv file no-such-dir/' error out)
relies on that rename("file", "no-such-dir/") fails if the directory does not
exist (note the trailing slash).  This does not work as expected on Windows:
This rename() call does not fail, but renames "file" to "no-such-dir" (not to
"no-such-dir/file"). Insert an explicit check for this case to force an error.

This changes the error message from

   $ git mv file no-such-dir/
   fatal: renaming 'file' failed: Not a directory

to

   $ git mv file no-such-dir/
   fatal: destination directory does not exist, source=file, destination=no-such-dir/

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-10 11:28:12 -08:00
a25014bc4c Update draft release notes to 1.9
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-10 11:25:01 -08:00
74ca49330a Merge branch 'ss/builtin-cleanup'
"git help $cmd" unnecessarily enumerated potential command names
from the filesystem, even when $cmd is known to be a built-in.

Ideas for further optimization, primarily by killing the use of
is_in_cmdlist(), were suggested in the discussion, but they can
come as follow-ups on top of this series.

* ss/builtin-cleanup:
  builtin/help.c: speed up is_git_command() by checking for builtin commands first
  builtin/help.c: call load_command_list() only when it is needed
  git.c: consistently use the term "builtin" instead of "internal command"
2014-01-10 10:33:48 -08:00
4243b2d1e4 Merge branch 'vm/octopus-merge-bases-simplify'
* vm/octopus-merge-bases-simplify:
  get_octopus_merge_bases(): cleanup redundant variable
2014-01-10 10:33:45 -08:00
2b2849765f Merge branch 'ta/format-user-manual-as-an-article'
Update the way the user-manual is formatted via AsciiDoc to save
trees.

* ta/format-user-manual-as-an-article:
  user-manual: improve html and pdf formatting
2014-01-10 10:33:43 -08:00
30159e530d Merge branch 'rr/completion-branch-config'
Two-level configuration variable names in "branch.*" and "remote.*"
hierarchies whose variables are predominantly three-level where not
completed by hitting a <TAB> in bash and zsh completions.

* rr/completion-branch-config:
  completion: fix remote.pushdefault
  completion: fix branch.autosetup(merge|rebase)
  completion: introduce __gitcomp_nl_append ()
  zsh completion: find matching custom bash completion
2014-01-10 10:33:39 -08:00
3b9d69ec22 Merge branch 'js/lift-parent-count-limit'
There is no reason to have a hardcoded upper limit of the number of
parents for an octopus merge, created via the graft mechanism.

* js/lift-parent-count-limit:
  Remove the line length limit for graft files
2014-01-10 10:33:36 -08:00
f0f493ec58 Merge branch 'jk/test-framework-updates'
The basic test used to leave unnecessary trash directories in the
t/ directory.

* jk/test-framework-updates:
  t0000: drop "known breakage" test
  t0000: simplify HARNESS_ACTIVE hack
  t0000: set TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY for sub-tests
2014-01-10 10:33:34 -08:00
d5d1678b9c Merge branch 'bm/merge-base-octopus-dedup'
"git merge-base --octopus" used to leave cleaning up suboptimal
result to the caller, but now it does the clean-up itself.

* bm/merge-base-octopus-dedup:
  merge-base --octopus: reduce the result from get_octopus_merge_bases()
  merge-base: separate "--independent" codepath into its own helper
2014-01-10 10:33:33 -08:00
55869681f1 Merge branch 'km/gc-eperm'
A "gc" process running as a different user should be able to stop a
new "gc" process from starting.

* km/gc-eperm:
  gc: notice gc processes run by other users
2014-01-10 10:33:30 -08:00
35a116d740 Merge branch 'jk/http-auth-tests-robustify'
Using the same username and password during the tests would not
catch a potential breakage of sending one when we should be sending
the other.

* jk/http-auth-tests-robustify:
  use distinct username/password for http auth tests
2014-01-10 10:33:19 -08:00
56e648e253 Merge branch 'jk/credential-plug-leak'
An earlier "clean-up" introduced an unnecessary memory leak.

* jk/credential-plug-leak:
  Revert "prompt: clean up strbuf usage"
2014-01-10 10:33:16 -08:00
962fa6539c Merge branch 'bs/mirbsd'
* bs/mirbsd:
  Add MirBSD support to the build system.
2014-01-10 10:33:14 -08:00
34aacf30a3 Merge branch 'nd/commit-tree-constness'
Code clean-up.

* nd/commit-tree-constness:
  commit.c: make "tree" a const pointer in commit_tree*()
2014-01-10 10:33:13 -08:00
b2132068c6 Merge branch 'jk/oi-delta-base'
Teach "cat-file --batch" to show delta-base object name for a
packed object that is represented as a delta.

* jk/oi-delta-base:
  cat-file: provide %(deltabase) batch format
  sha1_object_info_extended: provide delta base sha1s
2014-01-10 10:33:11 -08:00
f06a5e607d Merge branch 'jk/sha1write-void'
Code clean-up.

* jk/sha1write-void:
  do not pretend sha1write returns errors
2014-01-10 10:33:09 -08:00
4ba46c2847 Merge branch 'nd/add-empty-fix'
"git add -A" (no other arguments) in a totally empty working tree
used to emit an error.

* nd/add-empty-fix:
  add: don't complain when adding empty project root
2014-01-10 10:33:03 -08:00
0c52457b7c Merge branch 'nd/daemon-informative-errors-typofix'
* nd/daemon-informative-errors-typofix:
  daemon: be strict at parsing parameters --[no-]informative-errors
2014-01-10 10:32:59 -08:00
666b4c2670 Merge branch 'tm/fetch-prune'
Fetching 'frotz' branch with "git fetch", while having
'frotz/nitfol' remote-tracking branch from an earlier fetch, would
error out, primarily because the command has not been told to
remove anything on our side. In such a case, "git fetch --prune"
can be used to remove 'frotz/nitfol' to make room to fetch and
store 'frotz' remote-tracking branch.

* tm/fetch-prune:
  fetch --prune: Run prune before fetching
  fetch --prune: always print header url
2014-01-10 10:32:50 -08:00
2da5cbd651 Merge branch 'sb/diff-orderfile-config'
Allow "git diff -O<file>" to be configured with a new configuration
variable.

* sb/diff-orderfile-config:
  diff: add diff.orderfile configuration variable
  diff: let "git diff -O" read orderfile from any file and fail properly
  t4056: add new tests for "git diff -O"
2014-01-10 10:32:42 -08:00
f8c2e3f671 Merge branch 'bc/log-decoration'
"git log --decorate" did not handle a tag pointed by another tag
nicely.

* bc/log-decoration:
  log: properly handle decorations with chained tags
2014-01-10 10:32:39 -08:00
c4bccea2d5 Merge branch 'jh/rlimit-nofile-fallback'
When we figure out how many file descriptors to allocate for
keeping packfiles open, a system with non-working getrlimit() could
cause us to die(), but because we make this call only to get a
rough estimate of how many is available and we do not even attempt
to use up all file descriptors available ourselves, it is nicer to
fall back to a reasonable low value rather than dying.

* jh/rlimit-nofile-fallback:
  get_max_fd_limit(): fall back to OPEN_MAX upon getrlimit/sysconf failure
2014-01-10 10:32:28 -08:00
8a334727fc Merge branch 'rt/bfg-ad-in-filter-branch-doc'
* rt/bfg-ad-in-filter-branch-doc:
  docs: add filter-branch notes on The BFG
2014-01-10 10:32:25 -08:00
061614b309 Merge branch 'mh/path-max'
A few places where we relied on a fixed length buffer to hold
pathnames in these two programs have been converted to use strbuf.

* mh/path-max:
  builtin/prune.c: use strbuf to avoid having to worry about PATH_MAX
  prune-packed: use strbuf to avoid having to worry about PATH_MAX
2014-01-10 10:32:21 -08:00
273c54f82c Merge branch 'ap/path-max'
* ap/path-max:
  Prevent buffer overflows when path is too long
2014-01-10 10:32:18 -08:00
b0504a9519 Merge branch 'cc/replace-object-info'
read_sha1_file() that is the workhorse to read the contents given
an object name honoured object replacements, but there is no
corresponding mechanism to sha1_object_info() that is used to
obtain the metainfo (e.g. type & size) about the object, leading
callers to weird inconsistencies.

* cc/replace-object-info:
  replace info: rename 'full' to 'long' and clarify in-code symbols
  Documentation/git-replace: describe --format option
  builtin/replace: unset read_replace_refs
  t6050: add tests for listing with --format
  builtin/replace: teach listing using short, medium or full formats
  sha1_file: perform object replacement in sha1_object_info_extended()
  t6050: show that git cat-file --batch fails with replace objects
  sha1_object_info_extended(): add an "unsigned flags" parameter
  sha1_file.c: add lookup_replace_object_extended() to pass flags
  replace_object: don't check read_replace_refs twice
  rename READ_SHA1_FILE_REPLACE flag to LOOKUP_REPLACE_OBJECT
2014-01-10 10:32:10 -08:00
010d81ae35 Merge branch 'nd/negative-pathspec'
Introduce "negative pathspec" magic, to allow "git log -- . ':!dir'" to
tell us "I am interested in everything but 'dir' directory".

* nd/negative-pathspec:
  pathspec.c: support adding prefix magic to a pathspec with mnemonic magic
  Support pathspec magic :(exclude) and its short form :!
  glossary-content.txt: rephrase magic signature part
2014-01-10 10:31:48 -08:00
bb3f45838b rebase: fix fork-point with zero arguments
When no arguments are specified, $switch_to is empty so we end up
passing the empty string to "git merge-base --fork-point", which causes
an error.  git-rebase carries on at this point, but in fact we have
failed to apply the fork-point operation.

It turns out that the test in t3400 that was meant to test this didn't
actually need the fork-point behaviour, so enhance it to make sure that
the fork-point is applied correctly.  The modified test fails without
the change to git-rebase.sh in this patch.

Reported-by: Andreas Krey <a.krey@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-09 15:05:26 -08:00
7902fe03f9 shorten_unambiguous_ref(): tighten up pointer arithmetic
As long as we're being pathologically stingy with mallocs, we might as
well do the math right and save 6 (!) bytes.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-09 15:02:36 -08:00
4346663a14 gen_scanf_fmt(): delete function and use snprintf() instead
To replace "%.*s" with "%s", all we have to do is use snprintf()
to interpolate "%s" into the pattern.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-09 14:56:06 -08:00
84d5633f98 shorten_unambiguous_ref(): introduce a new local variable
When filling the scanf_fmts array, use a separate variable to keep
track of the offset to avoid clobbering total_len (which we will need
in the next commit).

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-09 14:52:44 -08:00
3b32a7ca90 t5537: fix incorrect expectation in test case 10
Commit 48d25ca adds a new commit "7" to the repo that the next test case
in commit 1609488 clones from. But the next test case does not expect
this commit. For these tests, it's the bottom that's important, not
the top. Fix the expected commit list.

While at it, fix the default http port number to 5537. Otherwise when
t5536 learns to test httpd, running test in parallel may fail.

References:

48d25ca fetch: add --update-shallow to accept... - 2013-12-05
1609488 smart-http: support shallow fetch/clone - 2013-12-05

Noticed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-09 11:54:12 -08:00
bbad9f9314 rm: better document side effects when removing a submodule
The "Submodules" section of the "git rm" documentation mentions what will
happen when a submodule with a gitfile gets removed with newer git. But it
doesn't talk about what happens when the user changes between commits
before and after the removal, which does not remove the submodule from the
work tree like using the rm command did the first time.

Explain what happens and what the user has to do manually to fix that in
the new BUGS section. Also document this behavior in a new test.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-07 14:34:06 -08:00
1cbd18300a mv: better document side effects when moving a submodule
The "Submodules" section of the "git mv" documentation mentions what will
happen when a submodule with a gitfile gets moved with newer git. But it
doesn't talk about what happens when the user changes between commits
before and after the move, which does not update the work tree like using
the mv command did the first time.

Explain what happens and what the user has to do manually to fix that in
the new BUGS section. Also document this behavior in a new test.

Reported-by: George Papanikolaou <g3orge.app@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-07 14:33:04 -08:00
648027c4c8 cat-file: fix a minor memory leak in batch_objects
We should always have been freeing our strbuf, but doing so
consistently was annoying until the refactoring in the
previous patch.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-07 14:31:52 -08:00
07e2383945 cat-file: refactor error handling of batch_objects
This just pulls the return value for the function out of the
inner loop, so we can break out of the loop rather than do
an early return. This will make it easier to put any cleanup
for the function in one place.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-07 14:31:10 -08:00
2a07e4374c stash: handle specifying stashes with $IFS
When trying to pop/apply a stash specified with an argument
containing IFS whitespace, git-stash will throw an error:

    $ git stash pop 'stash@{two hours ago}'
    Too many revisions specified: stash@{two hours ago}

This happens because word splitting is used to count non-option
arguments. Make use of rev-parse's --sq option to quote the arguments
for us to ensure a correct count. Add quotes where necessary.

Also add a test that verifies correct behaviour.

Helped-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Signed-off-by: Øystein Walle <oystwa@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-07 10:51:04 -08:00
de06c13a94 completion: complete format.coverLetter
Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-07 09:59:25 -08:00
832cf74c07 sha1_name: don't resolve refs when core.warnambiguousrefs is false
When seeing a full 40-hex object name, get_sha1_basic()
unconditionally checks if the string can also be interpreted as a
refname, but the result will not be used unless warn_ambiguous_refs
is in effect.

Omitting this unnecessary ref resolution provides a substantial
performance improvement, especially when passing many hashes to a
command (like "git rev-list --stdin") and core.warnambiguousrefs is
set to false.  The check incurs 6 stat()s for every hash supplied,
which can be costly over NFS.

Signed-off-by: Brodie Rao <brodie@sf.io>
Acked-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-07 09:51:56 -08:00
e54c1f2d25 pager: set LV=-c alongside LESS=FRSX
On systems with lv configured as the preferred pager (i.e.,
DEFAULT_PAGER=lv at build time, or PAGER=lv exported in the
environment) git commands that use color show control codes instead of
color in the pager:

	$ git diff
	^[[1mdiff --git a/.mailfilter b/.mailfilter^[[m
	^[[1mindex aa4f0b2..17e113e 100644^[[m
	^[[1m--- a/.mailfilter^[[m
	^[[1m+++ b/.mailfilter^[[m
	^[[36m@@ -1,11 +1,58 @@^[[m

"less" avoids this problem because git uses the LESS environment
variable to pass the -R option ('output ANSI color escapes in raw
form') by default.  Use the LV environment variable to pass 'lv' the
-c option ('allow ANSI escape sequences for text decoration / color')
to fix it for lv, too.

Noticed when the default value for color.ui flipped to 'auto' in
v1.8.4-rc0~36^2~1 (2013-06-10).

Reported-by: Olaf Meeuwissen <olaf.meeuwissen@avasys.jp>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-07 09:23:41 -08:00
efa8fd7ee8 git-submodule.sh: 'checkout' is a valid update mode
'checkout' is documented as one of the valid values for the
'submodule.<name>.update' variable, and in a repository with the
variable set to 'checkout', "git submodule update" command does
update using the 'checkout' mode.

However, it has been an accident that the implementation works this
way; any unknown value would trigger the same codepath and update
using the 'checkout' mode.

Explicitly list 'checkout' as one of the known update modes, and
error out when an unknown update mode is used.

Teach the codepath that initializes the configuration variable from
an in-tree .gitmodules that 'checkout' is one of the valid values.
The code since ac1fbbda (submodule: do not copy unknown update mode
from .gitmodules, 2013-12-02) used to treat the value 'checkout' as
unknown and mapped it to 'none', which made little sense.  With this
change, 'checkout' specified in .gitmodules will stay to be 'checkout'.

Signed-off-by: Francesco Pretto <ceztko@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-07 09:20:59 -08:00
145e073b84 user-manual: improve html and pdf formatting
Use asciidoc style 'article' instead of 'book' and change asciidoc
title level.  This removes blank first page and superfluous "Part I"
page (there is no "Part II") in pdf output. Also pdf size is
decreased by this from 77 to 67 pages.  In html output this removes
unnecessary sub-tocs and chapter numbering.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 11:30:17 -08:00
c6127fa3e2 builtin/help.c: speed up is_git_command() by checking for builtin commands first
Since 2dce956 is_git_command() is a bit slow as it does file I/O in
the call to list_commands_in_dir(). Avoid the file I/O by adding an
early check for the builtin commands.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 11:26:31 -08:00
a3c5263438 builtin/help.c: call load_command_list() only when it is needed
This avoids list_commands_in_dir() being called when not needed which is
quite slow due to file I/O in order to list matching files in a directory.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 11:26:10 -08:00
3f784a4dcb git.c: consistently use the term "builtin" instead of "internal command"
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 11:25:50 -08:00
932f7e4769 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  Documentation/gitmodules: Only 'update' and 'url' are required
  l10n: de.po: fix translation of 'prefix'
2014-01-06 10:39:07 -08:00
18d37e860d safe_create_leading_directories(): add new error value SCLD_VANISHED
Add a new possible error result that can be returned by
safe_create_leading_directories() and
safe_create_leading_directories_const(): SCLD_VANISHED.  This value
indicates that a file or directory on the path existed at one point
(either it already existed or the function created it), but then it
disappeared.  This probably indicates that another process deleted the
directory while we were working.  If SCLD_VANISHED is returned, the
caller might want to retry the function call, as there is a chance
that a new attempt will succeed.

Why doesn't safe_create_leading_directories() do the retrying
internally?  Because an empty directory isn't really ever safe until
it holds a file.  So even if safe_create_leading_directories() were
absolutely sure that the directory existed before it returned, there
would be no guarantee that the directory still existed when the caller
tried to write something in it.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:34:22 -08:00
f3565c0ca5 cmd_init_db(): when creating directories, handle errors conservatively
safe_create_leading_directories_const() returns a non-zero value on
error.  The old code at this calling site recognized a couple of
particular error values, and treated all other return values as
success.  Instead, be more conservative: recognize the errors we are
interested in, but treat any other nonzero values as failures.  This
is more robust in case somebody adds another possible return value
without telling us.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:34:22 -08:00
0be0521b23 safe_create_leading_directories(): introduce enum for return values
Instead of returning magic integer values (which a couple of callers
go to the trouble of distinguishing), return values from an enum.  Add
a docstring.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:34:21 -08:00
9e6f885d14 safe_create_leading_directories(): always restore slash at end of loop
Always restore the slash that we scribbled over at the end of the
loop, rather than also fixing it up at each premature exit from the
loop.  This makes it harder to forget to do the cleanup as new paths
are added to the code.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:34:21 -08:00
bf10cf70ad safe_create_leading_directories(): split on first of multiple slashes
If the input path has multiple slashes between path components (e.g.,
"foo//bar"), then the old code was breaking the path at the last
slash, not the first one.  So in the above example, the second slash
was overwritten with NUL, resulting in the parent directory being
sought as "foo/".

When stat() is called on "foo/", it fails with ENOTDIR if "foo" exists
but is not a directory.  This caused the wrong path to be taken in the
subsequent logic.

So instead, split path components at the first intercomponent slash
rather than the last one.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:34:20 -08:00
26c8ae2a57 safe_create_leading_directories(): rename local variable
Rename "pos" to "next_component", because now it always points at the
next component of the path name that has to be processed.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:34:20 -08:00
831651fde8 safe_create_leading_directories(): add explicit "slash" pointer
Keep track of the position of the slash character independently of
"pos", thereby making the purpose of each variable clearer and
working towards other upcoming changes.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:34:19 -08:00
f05023324c safe_create_leading_directories(): reduce scope of local variable
This makes it more obvious that values of "st" don't persist across
loop iterations.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:34:19 -08:00
53a3972171 safe_create_leading_directories(): fix format of "if" chaining
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:34:19 -08:00
c39a2f1178 completion: fix remote.pushdefault
When attempting to complete

  $ git config remote.push<TAB>

'pushdefault' doesn't come up. This is because "$cur" is matched with
"remote.*" and a list of remotes are completed. Add 'pushdefault' as a
candidate for completion too, using __gitcomp_nl_append ().

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:17:25 -08:00
422553df49 completion: fix branch.autosetup(merge|rebase)
When attempting to complete

  $ git config branch.auto<TAB>

'autosetupmerge' and 'autosetuprebase' don't come up. This is because
"$cur" is matched with "branch.*" and a list of branches are
completed. Add 'autosetupmerge', 'autosetuprebase' as candidates for
completion too, using __gitcomp_nl_append ().

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:17:05 -08:00
f33c2c0f9e completion: introduce __gitcomp_nl_append ()
There are situations where multiple classes of completions possible. For
example

  branch.<TAB>

should try to complete

  branch.master.
  branch.autosetupmerge
  branch.autosetuprebase

The first candidate has the suffix ".", and the second/ third candidates
have the suffix " ". To facilitate completions of this kind, create a
variation of __gitcomp_nl () that appends to the existing list of
completion candidates, COMPREPLY.

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:14:48 -08:00
d028b8906a zsh completion: find matching custom bash completion
If zsh completion is being read from a location that is different from
system-wide default, it is likely that the user is trying to use a
custom version, perhaps closer to the bleeding edge, installed in her
own directory. We will more likely to find the matching bash completion
script in the same directory than in those system default places.

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:14:29 -08:00
c90d3dbe7d Merge branch 'maint' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po into maint
* 'maint' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: fix translation of 'prefix'
2014-01-06 09:10:09 -08:00
43fda9455c Documentation/gitmodules: Only 'update' and 'url' are required
Descriptions for all the settings fell under the initial "Each
submodule section also contains the following required keys:".  The
example shows sections with just 'path' and 'url' entries, which are
indeed required, but we should still make the required/optional
distinction explicit to clarify that the rest of them are optional.

Signed-off-by: W. Trevor King <wking@tremily.us>
Reviewed-by: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:08:18 -08:00
feefdf62c1 shallow: remove unused code
Commit 58babfff ("shallow.c: the 8 steps to select new commits for
.git/shallow", 05-12-2013) added a function to implement step 5 of
the quoted eight steps, namely 'remove_nonexistent_ours_in_pack()'.
This function implements an optional optimization step in the new
shallow commit selection algorithm. However, this function has no
callers. (The commented out call sites would need to change, in
order to provide information required by the function.)

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Acked-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 09:05:40 -08:00
16a2743cd0 send-pack.c: mark a file-local function static
Commit f2c681cf ("send-pack: support pushing from a shallow clone
via http", 05-12-2013) adds the 'advertise_shallow_grafts_buf'
function as an external symbol.

Noticed by sparse. ("'advertise_shallow_grafts_buf' was not declared.
Should it be static?")

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-06 08:26:36 -08:00
6bc76725ea get_octopus_merge_bases(): cleanup redundant variable
pptr is needless. Some related code got cleaned as well.

Signed-off-by: Vasily Makarov <einmalfel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-03 10:29:03 -08:00
10a6cc8890 fetch --prune: Run prune before fetching
When we have a remote-tracking branch named "frotz/nitfol" from a
previous fetch, and the upstream now has a branch named "frotz",
fetch would fail to remove "frotz/nitfol" with a "git fetch --prune"
from the upstream. git would inform the user to use "git remote
prune" to fix the problem.

Change the way "fetch --prune" works by moving the pruning operation
before the fetching operation. This way, instead of warning the user
of a conflict, it autmatically fixes it.

Signed-off-by: Tom Miller <jackerran@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-03 10:18:40 -08:00
4b3b33a747 fetch --prune: always print header url
If "fetch --prune" is run with no new refs to fetch, but it has refs
to prune. Then, the header url is not printed as it would if there were
new refs to fetch.

Output before this patch:

	$ git fetch --prune remote-with-no-new-refs
	 x [deleted]         (none)     -> origin/world

Output after this patch:

	$ git fetch --prune remote-with-no-new-refs
	From https://github.com/git/git
	 x [deleted]         (none)     -> origin/test

Signed-off-by: Tom Miller <jackerran@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-03 10:13:39 -08:00
cb0553651d l10n: de.po: fix translation of 'prefix'
The word 'prefix' is currently translated as 'Prefix'
which is not a German word. It should be translated as
'Präfix'.

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2014-01-03 18:21:38 +01:00
ed7eda8b38 gc: notice gc processes run by other users
Since 64a99eb4 git gc refuses to run without the --force option if
another gc process on the same repository is already running.

However, if the repository is shared and user A runs git gc on the
repository and while that gc is still running user B runs git gc on
the same repository the gc process run by user A will not be noticed
and the gc run by user B will go ahead and run.

The problem is that the kill(pid, 0) test fails with an EPERM error
since user B is not allowed to signal processes owned by user A
(unless user B is root).

Update the test to recognize an EPERM error as meaning the process
exists and another gc should not be run (unless --force is given).

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-02 16:15:29 -08:00
738a8beac4 t0000: drop "known breakage" test
Having a simulated "known breakage" test means that the test
suite will always tell us there is a bug to be fixed, even
though it is only simulated.

The right way to test this is in a sub-test, that can also
check that we provide the correct exit status and output.
Fortunately, we already have such a test (added much later
by 5ebf89e).

We could arguably get rid of the simulated success test
immediately above, as well, as it is also redundant with the
tests added in 5ebf89e. However, it does not have the
annoying behavior of the "known breakage" test. It may also
be easier to debug if the test suite is truly broken, since
it is not a test-within-a-test, as the later tests are.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-02 14:43:12 -08:00
a63c12c9be t0000: simplify HARNESS_ACTIVE hack
Commit 517cd55 set HARNESS_ACTIVE unconditionally in
sub-tests, because that value affects the output of
"--verbose". t0000 needs stable output from its sub-tests,
and we may or may not be running under a TAP harness.

That commit made the decision to always set the variable,
since it has another useful side effect, which is
suppressing writes to t/test-results by the sub-tests (which
would just pollute the real results).

Since the last commit, though, the sub-tests have their own
test-results directories, so this is no longer an issue. We
can now update a few comments that are no longer accurate
nor necessary.

We can also revisit the choice of HARNESS_ACTIVE. Since we
must choose one value for stability, it's probably saner to
have it off. This means that future patches could test
things like the test-results writing, or the "--quiet"
option, which is currently ignored when run under a harness.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-02 14:43:11 -08:00
6883047071 t0000: set TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY for sub-tests
Running t0000 produces more trash directories than expected and does
not clean up after itself:

    $ ./t0000-basic.sh
    [...]
    $ ls -d trash\ directory.*
    trash directory.failing-cleanup
    trash directory.mixed-results1
    trash directory.mixed-results2
    trash directory.partial-pass
    trash directory.test-verbose
    trash directory.test-verbose-only-2

These scratch areas for sub-tests should be under the t0000 trash
directory, but because TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY defaults to
TEST_DIRECTORY, which is exported to help sub-tests find
test-lib.sh, the sub-test trash directories are created under the
toplevel t/ directory instead.  Because some of the sub-tests
simulate failures, their trash directories are kept around.

Fix it by explicitly setting TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY appropriately for
sub-tests.

An alternative fix would be to pass the --root parameter that only
specifies where to put the trash directories, which would also work.
However, using TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY is more futureproof in case
tests want to write more output in addition to the test-results/
(which are already suppressed in sub-tests using the HARNESS_ACTIVE
setting) and trash directories.

This fixes a regression introduced by 38b074d (t/test-lib.sh: fix
TRASH_DIRECTORY handling, 2013-04-14).  Before that commit, the
TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY setting was not respected consistently so most
tests did their work in a "trash" subdirectory of the current
directory instead of the output dir.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Clarified-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-02 14:40:03 -08:00
afbf5ca507 use distinct username/password for http auth tests
The httpd server we set up to test git's http client code
knows about a single account, in which both the username and
password are "user@host" (the unusual use of the "@" here is
to verify that we handle the character correctly when URL
escaped).

This means that we may miss a certain class of errors in
which the username and password are mixed up internally by
git. We can make our tests more robust by having distinct
values for the username and password.

In addition to tweaking the server passwd file and the
client URL, we must teach the "askpass" harness to accept
multiple values. As a bonus, this makes the setup of some
tests more obvious; when we are expecting git to ask
only about the password, we can seed the username askpass
response with a bogus value.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-02 10:25:03 -08:00
e1c1a324fc Revert "prompt: clean up strbuf usage"
This reverts commit 31b49d9b65.

That commit taught do_askpass to hand ownership of our
buffer back to the caller rather than simply return a
pointer into our internal strbuf.  What it failed to notice,
though, was that our internal strbuf is static, because we
are trying to emulate the getpass() interface.

By handing off ownership, we created a memory leak that
cannot be solved. Sometimes git_prompt returns a static
buffer from getpass() (or our smarter git_terminal_prompt
wrapper), and sometimes it returns an allocated string from
do_askpass.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-02 10:21:40 -08:00
92164af978 Add MirBSD support to the build system.
Add an entry into the table of supported OSes. Do not set _XOPEN_SOURCE
(contrary to OpenBSD) because that disables the u_short and u_long
typedefs, which are used unconditionally in various other header files.

Signed-off-by: Benny Siegert <bsiegert@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-01-02 10:19:14 -08:00
663a8566be replace info: rename 'full' to 'long' and clarify in-code symbols
Enum names SHORT/MEDIUM/FULL were too broad to be descriptive.  And
they clashed with built-in symbols on platforms like Windows.
Clarify by giving them REPLACE_FORMAT_ prefix.

Rename 'full' format in "git replace --format=<name>" to 'long', to
match others (i.e. 'short' and 'medium').

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:33:11 -08:00
44484662d8 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  for-each-ref: remove unused variable
2013-12-30 12:27:01 -08:00
b9cf14d43b for-each-ref: remove unused variable
No code ever used this symbol since the command was introduced at
9f613ddd (Add git-for-each-ref: helper for language bindings,
2006-09-15).

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:23:51 -08:00
ae4f07fbcc pack-bitmap: implement optional name_hash cache
When we use pack bitmaps rather than walking the object
graph, we end up with the list of objects to include in the
packfile, but we do not know the path at which any tree or
blob objects would be found.

In a recently packed repository, this is fine. A fetch would
use the paths only as a heuristic in the delta compression
phase, and a fully packed repository should not need to do
much delta compression.

As time passes, though, we may acquire more objects on top
of our large bitmapped pack. If clients fetch frequently,
then they never even look at the bitmapped history, and all
works as usual. However, a client who has not fetched since
the last bitmap repack will have "have" tips in the
bitmapped history, but "want" newer objects.

The bitmaps themselves degrade gracefully in this
circumstance. We manually walk the more recent bits of
history, and then use bitmaps when we hit them.

But we would also like to perform delta compression between
the newer objects and the bitmapped objects (both to delta
against what we know the user already has, but also between
"new" and "old" objects that the user is fetching). The lack
of pathnames makes our delta heuristics much less effective.

This patch adds an optional cache of the 32-bit name_hash
values to the end of the bitmap file. If present, a reader
can use it to match bitmapped and non-bitmapped names during
delta compression.

Here are perf results for p5310:

Test                      origin/master       HEAD^                      HEAD
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5310.2: repack to disk    36.81(37.82+1.43)   47.70(48.74+1.41) +29.6%   47.75(48.70+1.51) +29.7%
5310.3: simulated clone   30.78(29.70+2.14)   1.08(0.97+0.10) -96.5%     1.07(0.94+0.12) -96.5%
5310.4: simulated fetch   3.16(6.10+0.08)     3.54(10.65+0.06) +12.0%    1.70(3.07+0.06) -46.2%
5310.6: partial bitmap    36.76(43.19+1.81)   6.71(11.25+0.76) -81.7%    4.08(6.26+0.46) -88.9%

You can see that the time spent on an incremental fetch goes
down, as our delta heuristics are able to do their work.
And we save time on the partial bitmap clone for the same
reason.

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:23 -08:00
bbcefa1f3f t/perf: add tests for pack bitmaps
This adds a few basic perf tests for the pack bitmap code to
show off its improvements. The tests are:

  1. How long does it take to do a repack (it gets slower
     with bitmaps, since we have to do extra work)?

  2. How long does it take to do a clone (it gets faster
     with bitmaps)?

  3. How does a small fetch perform when we've just
     repacked?

  4. How does a clone perform when we haven't repacked since
     a week of pushes?

Here are results against linux.git:

Test                      origin/master       this tree
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
5310.2: repack to disk    33.64(32.64+2.04)   67.67(66.75+1.84) +101.2%
5310.3: simulated clone   30.49(29.47+2.05)   1.20(1.10+0.10) -96.1%
5310.4: simulated fetch   3.49(6.79+0.06)     5.57(22.35+0.07) +59.6%
5310.6: partial bitmap    36.70(43.87+1.81)   8.18(21.92+0.73) -77.7%

You can see that we do take longer to repack, but we do way
better for further clones. A small fetch performs a bit
worse, as we spend way more time on delta compression (note
the heavy user CPU time, as we have 8 threads) due to the
lack of name hashes for the bitmapped objects.

The final test shows how the bitmaps degrade over time
between packs. There's still a significant speedup over the
non-bitmap case, but we don't do quite as well (we have to
spend time accessing the "new" objects the old fashioned
way, including delta compression).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:23 -08:00
212f2ffbf0 t: add basic bitmap functionality tests
Now that we can read and write bitmaps, we can exercise them
with some basic functionality tests. These tests aren't
particularly useful for seeing the benefit, as the test
repo is too small for it to make a difference. However, we
can at least check that using bitmaps does not break anything.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:23 -08:00
d3d3e4c490 count-objects: recognize .bitmap in garbage-checking
Count-objects will report any "garbage" files in the packs
directory, including files whose extensions it does not
know (case 1), and files whose matching ".pack" file is
missing (case 2).  Without having learned about ".bitmap"
files, the current code reports all such files as garbage
(case 1), even if their pack exists. Instead, they should be
treated as case 2.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:23 -08:00
5cf2741c5a repack: consider bitmaps when performing repacks
Since `pack-objects` will write a `.bitmap` file next to the `.pack` and
`.idx` files, this commit teaches `git-repack` to consider the new
bitmap indexes (if they exist) when performing repack operations.

This implies moving old bitmap indexes out of the way if we are
repacking a repository that already has them, and moving the newly
generated bitmap indexes into the `objects/pack` directory, next to
their corresponding packfiles.

Since `git repack` is now capable of handling these `.bitmap` files,
a normal `git gc` run on a repository that has `pack.writebitmaps` set
to true in its config file will generate bitmap indexes as part of the
garbage collection process.

Alternatively, `git repack` can be called with the `-b` switch to
explicitly generate bitmap indexes if you are experimenting
and don't want them on all the time.

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:23 -08:00
b77fcd1edc repack: handle optional files created by pack-objects
We ask pack-objects to pack to a set of temporary files, and
then rename them into place. Some files that pack-objects
creates may be optional (like a .bitmap file), in which case
we would not want to call rename(). We already call stat()
and make the chmod optional if the file cannot be accessed.
We could simply skip the rename step in this case, but that
would be a minor regression in noticing problems with
non-optional files (like the .pack and .idx files).

Instead, we can now annotate extensions as optional, and
skip them if they don't exist (and otherwise rely on
rename() to barf).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:23 -08:00
42a02d8529 repack: turn exts array into array-of-struct
This is slightly more verbose, but will let us annotate the
extensions with further options in future commits.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:23 -08:00
b328c2166e repack: stop using magic number for ARRAY_SIZE(exts)
We have a static array of extensions, but hardcode the size
of the array in our loops. Let's pull out this magic number,
which will make it easier to change.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:23 -08:00
7cc8f97108 pack-objects: implement bitmap writing
This commit extends more the functionality of `pack-objects` by allowing
it to write out a `.bitmap` index next to any written packs, together
with the `.idx` index that currently gets written.

If bitmap writing is enabled for a given repository (either by calling
`pack-objects` with the `--write-bitmap-index` flag or by having
`pack.writebitmaps` set to `true` in the config) and pack-objects is
writing a packfile that would normally be indexed (i.e. not piping to
stdout), we will attempt to write the corresponding bitmap index for the
packfile.

Bitmap index writing happens after the packfile and its index has been
successfully written to disk (`finish_tmp_packfile`). The process is
performed in several steps:

    1. `bitmap_writer_set_checksum`: this call stores the partial
       checksum for the packfile being written; the checksum will be
       written in the resulting bitmap index to verify its integrity

    2. `bitmap_writer_build_type_index`: this call uses the array of
       `struct object_entry` that has just been sorted when writing out
       the actual packfile index to disk to generate 4 type-index bitmaps
       (one for each object type).

       These bitmaps have their nth bit set if the given object is of
       the bitmap's type. E.g. the nth bit of the Commits bitmap will be
       1 if the nth object in the packfile index is a commit.

       This is a very cheap operation because the bitmap writing code has
       access to the metadata stored in the `struct object_entry` array,
       and hence the real type for each object in the packfile.

    3. `bitmap_writer_reuse_bitmaps`: if there exists an existing bitmap
       index for one of the packfiles we're trying to repack, this call
       will efficiently rebuild the existing bitmaps so they can be
       reused on the new index. All the existing bitmaps will be stored
       in a `reuse` hash table, and the commit selection phase will
       prioritize these when selecting, as they can be written directly
       to the new index without having to perform a revision walk to
       fill the bitmap. This can greatly speed up the repack of a
       repository that already has bitmaps.

    4. `bitmap_writer_select_commits`: if bitmap writing is enabled for
       a given `pack-objects` run, the sequence of commits generated
       during the Counting Objects phase will be stored in an array.

       We then use that array to build up the list of selected commits.
       Writing a bitmap in the index for each object in the repository
       would be cost-prohibitive, so we use a simple heuristic to pick
       the commits that will be indexed with bitmaps.

       The current heuristics are a simplified version of JGit's
       original implementation. We select a higher density of commits
       depending on their age: the 100 most recent commits are always
       selected, after that we pick 1 commit of each 100, and the gap
       increases as the commits grow older. On top of that, we make sure
       that every single branch that has not been merged (all the tips
       that would be required from a clone) gets their own bitmap, and
       when selecting commits between a gap, we tend to prioritize the
       commit with the most parents.

       Do note that there is no right/wrong way to perform commit
       selection; different selection algorithms will result in
       different commits being selected, but there's no such thing as
       "missing a commit". The bitmap walker algorithm implemented in
       `prepare_bitmap_walk` is able to adapt to missing bitmaps by
       performing manual walks that complete the bitmap: the ideal
       selection algorithm, however, would select the commits that are
       more likely to be used as roots for a walk in the future (e.g.
       the tips of each branch, and so on) to ensure a bitmap for them
       is always available.

    5. `bitmap_writer_build`: this is the computationally expensive part
       of bitmap generation. Based on the list of commits that were
       selected in the previous step, we perform several incremental
       walks to generate the bitmap for each commit.

       The walks begin from the oldest commit, and are built up
       incrementally for each branch. E.g. consider this dag where A, B,
       C, D, E, F are the selected commits, and a, b, c, e are a chunk
       of simplified history that will not receive bitmaps.

            A---a---B--b--C--c--D
                     \
                      E--e--F

       We start by building the bitmap for A, using A as the root for a
       revision walk and marking all the objects that are reachable
       until the walk is over. Once this bitmap is stored, we reuse the
       bitmap walker to perform the walk for B, assuming that once we
       reach A again, the walk will be terminated because A has already
       been SEEN on the previous walk.

       This process is repeated for C, and D, but when we try to
       generate the bitmaps for E, we can reuse neither the current walk
       nor the bitmap we have generated so far.

       What we do now is resetting both the walk and clearing the
       bitmap, and performing the walk from scratch using E as the
       origin. This new walk, however, does not need to be completed.
       Once we hit B, we can lookup the bitmap we have already stored
       for that commit and OR it with the existing bitmap we've composed
       so far, allowing us to limit the walk early.

       After all the bitmaps have been generated, another iteration
       through the list of commits is performed to find the best XOR
       offsets for compression before writing them to disk. Because of
       the incremental nature of these bitmaps, XORing one of them with
       its predecesor results in a minimal "bitmap delta" most of the
       time. We can write this delta to the on-disk bitmap index, and
       then re-compose the original bitmaps by XORing them again when
       loaded.

       This is a phase very similar to pack-object's `find_delta` (using
       bitmaps instead of objects, of course), except the heuristics
       have been greatly simplified: we only check the 10 bitmaps before
       any given one to find best compressing one. This gives good
       results in practice, because there is locality in the ordering of
       the objects (and therefore bitmaps) in the packfile.

     6. `bitmap_writer_finish`: the last step in the process is
	serializing to disk all the bitmap data that has been generated
	in the two previous steps.

	The bitmap is written to a tmp file and then moved atomically to
	its final destination, using the same process as
	`pack-write.c:write_idx_file`.

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:22 -08:00
aa32939fea rev-list: add bitmap mode to speed up object lists
The bitmap reachability index used to speed up the counting objects
phase during `pack-objects` can also be used to optimize a normal
rev-list if the only thing required are the SHA1s of the objects during
the list (i.e., not the path names at which trees and blobs were found).

Calling `git rev-list --objects --use-bitmap-index [committish]` will
perform an object iteration based on a bitmap result instead of actually
walking the object graph.

These are some example timings for `torvalds/linux` (warm cache,
best-of-five):

    $ time git rev-list --objects master > /dev/null

    real    0m34.191s
    user    0m33.904s
    sys     0m0.268s

    $ time git rev-list --objects --use-bitmap-index master > /dev/null

    real    0m1.041s
    user    0m0.976s
    sys     0m0.064s

Likewise, using `git rev-list --count --use-bitmap-index` will speed up
the counting operation by building the resulting bitmap and performing a
fast popcount (number of bits set on the bitmap) on the result.

Here are some sample timings of different ways to count commits in
`torvalds/linux`:

    $ time git rev-list master | wc -l
        399882

        real    0m6.524s
        user    0m6.060s
        sys     0m3.284s

    $ time git rev-list --count master
        399882

        real    0m4.318s
        user    0m4.236s
        sys     0m0.076s

    $ time git rev-list --use-bitmap-index --count master
        399882

        real    0m0.217s
        user    0m0.176s
        sys     0m0.040s

This also respects negative refs, so you can use it to count
a slice of history:

        $ time git rev-list --count v3.0..master
        144843

        real    0m1.971s
        user    0m1.932s
        sys     0m0.036s

        $ time git rev-list --use-bitmap-index --count v3.0..master
        real    0m0.280s
        user    0m0.220s
        sys     0m0.056s

Though note that the closer the endpoints, the less it helps. In the
traversal case, we have fewer commits to cross, so we take less time.
But the bitmap time is dominated by generating the pack revindex, which
is constant with respect to the refs given.

Note that you cannot yet get a fast --left-right count of a symmetric
difference (e.g., "--count --left-right master...topic"). The slow part
of that walk actually happens during the merge-base determination when
we parse "master...topic". Even though a count does not actually need to
know the real merge base (it only needs to take the symmetric difference
of the bitmaps), the revision code would require some refactoring to
handle this case.

Additionally, a `--test-bitmap` flag has been added that will perform
the same rev-list manually (i.e. using a normal revwalk) and using
bitmaps, and verify that the results are the same. This can be used to
exercise the bitmap code, and also to verify that the contents of the
.bitmap file are sane.

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:22 -08:00
6b8fda2db1 pack-objects: use bitmaps when packing objects
In this patch, we use the bitmap API to perform the `Counting Objects`
phase in pack-objects, rather than a traditional walk through the object
graph. For a reasonably-packed large repo, the time to fetch and clone
is often dominated by the full-object revision walk during the Counting
Objects phase. Using bitmaps can reduce the CPU time required on the
server (and therefore start sending the actual pack data with less
delay).

For bitmaps to be used, the following must be true:

  1. We must be packing to stdout (as a normal `pack-objects` from
     `upload-pack` would do).

  2. There must be a .bitmap index containing at least one of the
     "have" objects that the client is asking for.

  3. Bitmaps must be enabled (they are enabled by default, but can be
     disabled by setting `pack.usebitmaps` to false, or by using
     `--no-use-bitmap-index` on the command-line).

If any of these is not true, we fall back to doing a normal walk of the
object graph.

Here are some sample timings from a full pack of `torvalds/linux` (i.e.
something very similar to what would be generated for a clone of the
repository) that show the speedup produced by various
methods:

    [existing graph traversal]
    $ time git pack-objects --all --stdout --no-use-bitmap-index \
			    </dev/null >/dev/null
    Counting objects: 3237103, done.
    Compressing objects: 100% (508752/508752), done.
    Total 3237103 (delta 2699584), reused 3237103 (delta 2699584)

    real    0m44.111s
    user    0m42.396s
    sys     0m3.544s

    [bitmaps only, without partial pack reuse; note that
     pack reuse is automatic, so timing this required a
     patch to disable it]
    $ time git pack-objects --all --stdout </dev/null >/dev/null
    Counting objects: 3237103, done.
    Compressing objects: 100% (508752/508752), done.
    Total 3237103 (delta 2699584), reused 3237103 (delta 2699584)

    real    0m5.413s
    user    0m5.604s
    sys     0m1.804s

    [bitmaps with pack reuse (what you get with this patch)]
    $ time git pack-objects --all --stdout </dev/null >/dev/null
    Reusing existing pack: 3237103, done.
    Total 3237103 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0)

    real    0m1.636s
    user    0m1.460s
    sys     0m0.172s

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:22 -08:00
ce2bc42456 pack-objects: split add_object_entry
This function actually does three things:

  1. Check whether we've already added the object to our
     packing list.

  2. Check whether the object meets our criteria for adding.

  3. Actually add the object to our packing list.

It's a little hard to see these three phases, because they
happen linearly in the rather long function. Instead, this
patch breaks them up into three separate helper functions.

The result is a little easier to follow, though it
unfortunately suffers from some optimization
interdependencies between the stages (e.g., during step 3 we
use the packing list index from step 1 and the packfile
information from step 2).

More importantly, though, the various parts can be
composed differently, as they will be in the next patch.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:22 -08:00
fff42755ef pack-bitmap: add support for bitmap indexes
A bitmap index is a `.bitmap` file that can be found inside
`$GIT_DIR/objects/pack/`, next to its corresponding packfile, and
contains precalculated reachability information for selected commits.
The full specification of the format for these bitmap indexes can be found
in `Documentation/technical/bitmap-format.txt`.

For a given commit SHA1, if it happens to be available in the bitmap
index, its bitmap will represent every single object that is reachable
from the commit itself. The nth bit in the bitmap is the nth object in
the packfile; if it's set to 1, the object is reachable.

By using the bitmaps available in the index, this commit implements
several new functions:

	- `prepare_bitmap_git`
	- `prepare_bitmap_walk`
	- `traverse_bitmap_commit_list`
	- `reuse_partial_packfile_from_bitmap`

The `prepare_bitmap_walk` function tries to build a bitmap of all the
objects that can be reached from the commit roots of a given `rev_info`
struct by using the following algorithm:

- If all the interesting commits for a revision walk are available in
the index, the resulting reachability bitmap is the bitwise OR of all
the individual bitmaps.

- When the full set of WANTs is not available in the index, we perform a
partial revision walk using the commits that don't have bitmaps as
roots, and limiting the revision walk as soon as we reach a commit that
has a corresponding bitmap. The earlier OR'ed bitmap with all the
indexed commits can now be completed as this walk progresses, so the end
result is the full reachability list.

- For revision walks with a HAVEs set (a set of commits that are deemed
uninteresting), first we perform the same method as for the WANTs, but
using our HAVEs as roots, in order to obtain a full reachability bitmap
of all the uninteresting commits. This bitmap then can be used to:

	a) limit the subsequent walk when building the WANTs bitmap
	b) finding the final set of interesting commits by performing an
	   AND-NOT of the WANTs and the HAVEs.

If `prepare_bitmap_walk` runs successfully, the resulting bitmap is
stored and the equivalent of a `traverse_commit_list` call can be
performed by using `traverse_bitmap_commit_list`; the bitmap version
of this call yields the objects straight from the packfile index
(without having to look them up or parse them) and hence is several
orders of magnitude faster.

As an extra optimization, when `prepare_bitmap_walk` succeeds, the
`reuse_partial_packfile_from_bitmap` call can be attempted: it will find
the amount of objects at the beginning of the on-disk packfile that can
be reused as-is, and return an offset into the packfile. The source
packfile can then be loaded and the bytes up to `offset` can be written
directly to the result without having to consider the entires inside the
packfile individually.

If the `prepare_bitmap_walk` call fails (e.g. because no bitmap files
are available), the `rev_info` struct is left untouched, and can be used
to perform a manual rev-walk using `traverse_commit_list`.

Hence, this new set of functions are a generic API that allows to
perform the equivalent of

	git rev-list --objects [roots...] [^uninteresting...]

for any set of commits, even if they don't have specific bitmaps
generated for them.

In further patches, we'll use this bitmap traversal optimization to
speed up the `pack-objects` and `rev-list` commands.

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:22 -08:00
0d4455a3ab documentation: add documentation for the bitmap format
This is the technical documentation for the JGit-compatible Bitmap v1
on-disk format.

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:19:22 -08:00
e1273106f6 ewah: compressed bitmap implementation
EWAH is a word-aligned compressed variant of a bitset (i.e. a data
structure that acts as a 0-indexed boolean array for many entries).

It uses a 64-bit run-length encoding (RLE) compression scheme,
trading some compression for better processing speed.

The goal of this word-aligned implementation is not to achieve
the best compression, but rather to improve query processing time.
As it stands right now, this EWAH implementation will always be more
efficient storage-wise than its uncompressed alternative.

EWAH arrays will be used as the on-disk format to store reachability
bitmaps for all objects in a repository while keeping reasonable sizes,
in the same way that JGit does.

This EWAH implementation is a mostly straightforward port of the
original `javaewah` library that JGit currently uses. The library is
self-contained and has been embedded whole (4 files) inside the `ewah`
folder to ease redistribution.

The library is re-licensed under the GPLv2 with the permission of Daniel
Lemire, the original author. The source code for the C version can
be found on GitHub:

	https://github.com/vmg/libewok

The original Java implementation can also be found on GitHub:

	https://github.com/lemire/javaewah

[jc: stripped debug-only code per Peff's $gmane/239768]

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 12:17:20 -08:00
8f29299136 merge-base --octopus: reduce the result from get_octopus_merge_bases()
Scripts that use "merge-base --octopus" could do the reducing
themselves, but most of them are expected to want to get the reduced
results without having to do any work themselves.

Tests are taken from a message by Василий Макаров
<einmalfel@gmail.com>

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>

---

 We might want to vet the existing callers of the underlying
 get_octopus_merge_bases() and find out if _all_ of them are doing
 anything extra (like deduping) because the machinery can return
 duplicate results. And if that is the case, then we may want to
 move the dedupling down the callchain instead of having it here.
2013-12-30 11:58:54 -08:00
e2f5df4244 merge-base: separate "--independent" codepath into its own helper
It piggybacks on an unrelated handle_octopus() function only because
there are some similarities between the way they need to preprocess
their input and output their result.  There is nothing similar in
the true logic between these two operations.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-30 11:37:49 -08:00
e228c1736f Remove the line length limit for graft files
Support for grafts predates Git's strbuf, and hence it is understandable
that there was a hard-coded line length limit of 1023 characters (which
was chosen a bit awkwardly, given that it is *exactly* one byte short of
aligning with the 41 bytes occupied by a commit name and the following
space or new-line character).

While regular commit histories hardly win comprehensibility in general
if they merge more than twenty-two branches in one go, it is not Git's
business to limit grafts in such a way.

In this particular developer's case, the use case that requires
substantially longer graft lines to be supported is the visualization of
the commits' order implied by their changes: commits are considered to
have an implicit relationship iff exchanging them in an interactive
rebase would result in merge conflicts.

Thusly implied branches tend to be very shallow in general, and the
resulting thicket of implied branches is usually very wide; It is
actually quite common that *most* of the commits in a topic branch have
not even one implied parent, so that a final merge commit has about as
many implied parents as there are commits in said branch.

[jc: squashed in tests by Jonathan]

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-27 16:46:25 -08:00
53f3478d42 Merge git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn
* git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn:
  git-svn: workaround for a bug in svn serf backend
2013-12-27 14:58:35 -08:00
36ec9e2173 Merge branch 'fc/remote-helper-fixes'
* fc/remote-helper-fixes:
  remote-hg: test 'shared_path' in a moved clone
  remote-hg: add tests for special filenames
  remote-hg: fix 'shared path' path
  remote-helpers: add extra safety checks
  remote-hg: avoid buggy strftime()
2013-12-27 14:58:25 -08:00
97663a1e97 Merge branch 'js/gnome-keyring'
Style fix.

* js/gnome-keyring:
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: small stylistic cleanups
2013-12-27 14:58:23 -08:00
53b2a5ff30 Merge branch 'jk/name-pack-after-byte-representation'
Two packfiles that contain the same set of objects have
traditionally been named identically, but that made repacking a
repository that is already fully packed without any cruft with a
different packing parameter cumbersome. Update the convention to
name the packfile after the bytestream representation of the data,
not after the set of objects in it.

* jk/name-pack-after-byte-representation:
  pack-objects doc: treat output filename as opaque
  pack-objects: name pack files after trailer hash
  sha1write: make buffer const-correct
2013-12-27 14:58:19 -08:00
73b063130b Merge branch 'tg/diff-no-index-refactor'
"git diff ../else/where/A ../else/where/B" when ../else/where is
clearly outside the repository, and "git diff --no-index A B", do
not have to look at the index at all, but we used to read the index
unconditionally.

* tg/diff-no-index-refactor:
  diff: avoid some nesting
  diff: add test for --no-index executed outside repo
  diff: don't read index when --no-index is given
  diff: move no-index detection to builtin/diff.c
2013-12-27 14:58:17 -08:00
6904f9aa5b Merge branch 'zk/difftool-counts'
Show the total number of paths and the number of paths shown so far
when "git difftool" prompts to launch an external diff tool, which
would give users some sense of progress.

* zk/difftool-counts:
  diff.c: fix some recent whitespace style violations
  difftool: display the number of files in the diff queue in the prompt
2013-12-27 14:58:13 -08:00
604ada435b Merge branch 'jk/cat-file-regression-fix'
"git cat-file --batch=", an admittedly useless command, did not
behave very well.

* jk/cat-file-regression-fix:
  cat-file: handle --batch format with missing type/size
  cat-file: pass expand_data to print_object_or_die
2013-12-27 14:58:11 -08:00
2b0a564e02 Merge branch 'jk/pull-rebase-using-fork-point'
* jk/pull-rebase-using-fork-point:
  rebase: use reflog to find common base with upstream
  pull: use merge-base --fork-point when appropriate
2013-12-27 14:58:08 -08:00
e9ecee0423 Merge branch 'jk/rev-parse-double-dashes'
"git rev-parse <revs> -- <paths>" did not implement the usual
disambiguation rules the commands in the "git log" family used in
the same way.

* jk/rev-parse-double-dashes:
  rev-parse: be more careful with munging arguments
  rev-parse: correctly diagnose revision errors before "--"
2013-12-27 14:58:01 -08:00
7cdebd8a20 Merge branch 'jc/push-refmap'
Make "git push origin master" update the same ref that would be
updated by our 'master' when "git push origin" (no refspecs) is run
while the 'master' branch is checked out, which makes "git push"
more symmetric to "git fetch" and more usable for the triangular
workflow.

* jc/push-refmap:
  push: also use "upstream" mapping when pushing a single ref
  push: use remote.$name.push as a refmap
  builtin/push.c: use strbuf instead of manual allocation
2013-12-27 14:57:50 -08:00
2394e94e83 git-svn: workaround for a bug in svn serf backend
Subversion serf backend in versions 1.8.5 and below has a bug(*) that the
function creating the descriptor of a file change -- add_file() --
doesn't make a copy of its third argument when storing it on the
returned descriptor.  As a result, by the time this field is used (in
transactions of file copying or renaming) it may well be released, and
the memory reused.

One of its possible manifestations is the svn assertion triggering on an
invalid path, with a message

svn_fspath__skip_ancestor: Assertion
`svn_fspath__is_canonical(child_fspath)' failed.

This patch works around this bug, by storing the value to be passed as
the third argument to add_file() in a local variable with the same scope
as the file change descriptor, making sure their lifetime is the same.

* [ew: fixed in Subversion r1553376 as noted by Jonathan Nieder]

Cc: Benjamin Pabst <benjamin.pabst85@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Roman Kagan <rkagan@mail.ru>
2013-12-27 20:22:19 +00:00
8785b7654b commit.c: make "tree" a const pointer in commit_tree*()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-26 11:55:18 -08:00
65ea9c3c3d cat-file: provide %(deltabase) batch format
It can be useful for debugging or analysis to see which
objects are stored as delta bases on top of others. This
information is available by running `git verify-pack`, but
that is extremely expensive (and is harder than necessary to
parse).

Instead, let's make it available as a cat-file query format,
which makes it fast and simple to get the bases for a subset
of the objects.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-26 11:54:26 -08:00
5d642e7506 sha1_object_info_extended: provide delta base sha1s
A caller of sha1_object_info_extended technically has enough
information to determine the base sha1 from the results of
the call. It knows the pack, offset, and delta type of the
object, which is sufficient to find the base.

However, the functions to do so are not publicly available,
and the code itself is intimate enough with the pack details
that it should be abstracted away. We could add a public
helper to allow callers to query the delta base separately,
but it is simpler and slightly more efficient to optionally
grab it along with the rest of the object_info data.

For cases where the object is not stored as a delta, we
write the null sha1 into the query field. A careful caller
could check "oi.whence == OI_PACKED && oi.u.packed.is_delta"
before looking at the base sha1, but using the null sha1
provides a simple alternative (and gives a better sanity
check for a non-careful caller than simply returning random
bytes).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-26 11:53:32 -08:00
9af270e8c2 do not pretend sha1write returns errors
The sha1write function returns an int, but it will always be
"0". The failure-prone parts of the function happen in the
"flush" callback, which cannot pass an error back to us. So
we just end up calling die() during the flush.

Let's just drop the return value altogether, as it only
confuses callers into thinking that it might be useful.

Only one call site actually checked the return value. We can
drop that check, since it just led to a die() anyway.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-26 11:50:20 -08:00
64ed07cee0 add: don't complain when adding empty project root
This behavior was added in 07d7bed (add: don't complain when adding
empty project root - 2009-04-28) then broken by 84b8b5d (remove
match_pathspec() in favor of match_pathspec_depth() -
2013-07-14). Reinstate it.

Noticed-by: Thomas Ferris Nicolaisen <tfnico@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-26 10:46:26 -08:00
1f7feb7753 remote-hg: test 'shared_path' in a moved clone
Since e71d1378 (remote-hg: fix 'shared path' path, 2013-12-07),
Mercurial 'shared_path' file is correctly updated whenever a clone is
moved. Make sure it keeps working, especially as this is depending on a
private Mercurial file.

Signed-off-by: Antoine Pelisse <apelisse@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-26 10:43:56 -08:00
5e1361ccdb log: properly handle decorations with chained tags
git log did not correctly handle decorations when a tag object referenced
another tag object that was no longer a ref, such as when the second tag was
deleted.  The commit would not be decorated correctly because parse_object had
not been called on the second tag and therefore its tagged field had not been
filled in, resulting in none of the tags being associated with the relevant
commit.

Call parse_object to fill in this field if it is absent so that the chain of
tags can be dereferenced and the commit can be properly decorated.  Include
tests as well to prevent future regressions.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-20 14:37:03 -08:00
82246b765b daemon: be strict at parsing parameters --[no-]informative-errors
Use strcmp() instead of starts_with()/!prefixcmp() to stop accepting
--informative-errors-just-a-little

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-20 14:05:07 -08:00
6d8940b562 diff: add diff.orderfile configuration variable
diff.orderfile acts as a default for the -O command line option.

[sb: split up aw's original patch; rework tests and docs, treat option
as pathname]

Signed-off-by: Anders Waldenborg <anders@0x63.nu>
Signed-off-by: Samuel Bronson <naesten@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-18 16:39:00 -08:00
a21bae33d9 diff: let "git diff -O" read orderfile from any file and fail properly
The -O flag really shouldn't silently fail to do anything when given
a path that it can't read from.

However, it should be able to read from un-mmappable files, such as:

 * pipes/fifos

 * /dev/null:  It's a character device (at least on Linux)

 * ANY empty file:

   Quoting Linux mmap(2), "SUSv3 specifies that mmap() should fail if
   length is 0.  However, in kernels before 2.6.12, mmap() succeeded in
   this case: no mapping was created and the call returned addr.  Since
   kernel 2.6.12, mmap() fails with the error EINVAL for this case."

We especially want "-O/dev/null" to work, since we will be documenting
it as the way to cancel "diff.orderfile" when we add that.

(Note: "-O/dev/null" did have the right effect, since the existing error
handling essentially worked out to "silently ignore the orderfile".  But
this was probably more coincidence than anything else.)

So, lets toss all of that logic to get the file mmapped and just use
strbuf_read_file() instead, which gives us decent error handling
practically for free.

Signed-off-by: Samuel Bronson <naesten@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-18 16:29:05 -08:00
b527773092 t4056: add new tests for "git diff -O"
Adapted from $gmane/236427 by Anders Waldenborg, "diff: Add
diff.orderfile configuration variable".

Signed-off-by: Anders Waldenborg <anders@0x63.nu>
Signed-off-by: Samuel Bronson <naesten@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-18 16:26:12 -08:00
4454e9cb59 builtin/prune.c: use strbuf to avoid having to worry about PATH_MAX
While at it, rename prune_tmp_object(), which used to be a helper to
remove temporary files that were created to become loose object
files, to prune_tmp_file(), as the function is also used to remove
any random cruft whose name begins with tmp_ directly in .git/object
or .git/object/pack directories these days.

Noticed-by:  Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-18 15:53:56 -08:00
491a8dec44 get_max_fd_limit(): fall back to OPEN_MAX upon getrlimit/sysconf failure
On broken systems where RLIMIT_NOFILE is visible by the compliers
but underlying getrlimit() system call does not behave, we used to
simply die() when we are trying to decide how many file descriptors
to allocate for keeping packfiles open.  Instead, allow the fallback
codepath to take over when we get such a failure from getrlimit().

The same issue exists with _SC_OPEN_MAX and sysconf(); restructure
the code in a similar way to prepare for a broken sysconf() as well.

Noticed-by: Joey Hess <joey@kitenet.net>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-18 14:59:43 -08:00
615b8f1a8d docs: add filter-branch notes on The BFG
The BFG is a tool specifically designed for the task of removing
unwanted data from Git repository history - a common use-case for which
git-filter-branch has been the traditional workhorse.

It's beneficial to let users know that filter-branch has an alternative
here:

* speed : The BFG is 10-50x faster
  http://rtyley.github.io/bfg-repo-cleaner/#speed
* complexity of configuration : filter-branch is a very flexible tool,
  but demands very careful usage in order to get the desired results
  http://rtyley.github.io/bfg-repo-cleaner/#examples

Obviously, filter-branch has it's advantages too - it permits very
complex rewrites, and doesn't require a JVM - but for the common
use-case of deleting unwanted data, it's helpful to users to be aware
that an alternative exists.

The BFG was released under the GPL in February 2013, and has since seen
widespread production use (The Guardian, RedHat, Google, UK Government
Digital Service), been tested against large repos (~300K commits, ~5GB
packfiles) and received significant positive feedback from users:

http://rtyley.github.io/bfg-repo-cleaner/#feedback

Signed-off-by: Roberto Tyley <roberto.tyley@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-18 10:41:41 -08:00
7794a680e6 Sync with 1.8.5.2
* maint:
  Git 1.8.5.2
  cmd_repack(): remove redundant local variable "nr_packs"
2013-12-17 14:12:17 -08:00
b10cd577d8 Update draft release notes to 1.9
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-17 14:05:50 -08:00
173473c287 Merge branch 'kn/gitweb-extra-branch-refs'
Allow gitweb to be configured to show refs out of refs/heads/ as if
they were branches.

* kn/gitweb-extra-branch-refs:
  gitweb: Denote non-heads, non-remotes branches
  gitweb: Add a feature for adding more branch refs
  gitweb: Return 1 on validation success instead of passed input
  gitweb: Move check-ref-format code into separate function
2013-12-17 12:03:33 -08:00
1945e8ac85 Merge branch 'tb/clone-ssh-with-colon-for-port'
Be more careful when parsing remote repository URL given in the
scp-style host:path notation.

* tb/clone-ssh-with-colon-for-port:
  git_connect(): use common return point
  connect.c: refactor url parsing
  git_connect(): refactor the port handling for ssh
  git fetch: support host:/~repo
  t5500: add test cases for diag-url
  git fetch-pack: add --diag-url
  git_connect: factor out discovery of the protocol and its parts
  git_connect: remove artificial limit of a remote command
  t5601: add tests for ssh
  t5601: remove clear_ssh, refactor setup_ssh_wrapper
2013-12-17 12:03:32 -08:00
88cb2f96ac Merge branch 'nd/transport-positive-depth-only'
"git fetch --depth=0" was a no-op, and was silently
ignored. Diagnose it as an error.

* nd/transport-positive-depth-only:
  clone,fetch: catch non positive --depth option value
2013-12-17 12:03:29 -08:00
ad70448576 Merge branch 'cc/starts-n-ends-with'
Remove a few duplicate implementations of prefix/suffix comparison
functions, and rename them to starts_with and ends_with.

* cc/starts-n-ends-with:
  replace {pre,suf}fixcmp() with {starts,ends}_with()
  strbuf: introduce starts_with() and ends_with()
  builtin/remote: remove postfixcmp() and use suffixcmp() instead
  environment: normalize use of prefixcmp() by removing " != 0"
2013-12-17 12:02:44 -08:00
14a9c5f261 Merge branch 'jl/commit-v-strip-marker'
"git commit -v" appends the patch to the log message before
editing, and then removes the patch when the editor returned
control. However, the patch was not stripped correctly when the
first modified path was a submodule.

* jl/commit-v-strip-marker:
  commit -v: strip diffs and submodule shortlogs from the commit message
2013-12-17 11:47:18 -08:00
433a30d0ba Merge branch 'tr/send-email-ssl'
SSL-related options were not passed correctly to underlying socket
layer in "git send-email".

* tr/send-email-ssl:
  send-email: set SSL options through IO::Socket::SSL::set_client_defaults
  send-email: --smtp-ssl-cert-path takes an argument
  send-email: pass Debug to Net::SMTP::SSL::new
2013-12-17 11:47:12 -08:00
7dc8a65c86 Merge branch 'nd/gettext-vsnprintf'
* nd/gettext-vsnprintf:
  gettext.c: detect the vsnprintf bug at runtime
2013-12-17 11:47:10 -08:00
fb230b3523 Merge branch 'mm/mv-file-to-no-such-dir-with-slash'
* mm/mv-file-to-no-such-dir-with-slash:
  mv: let 'git mv file no-such-dir/' error out
2013-12-17 11:47:08 -08:00
053fbe672c Merge branch 'nd/remove-opt-boolean'
* nd/remove-opt-boolean:
  parse-options: remove OPT_BOOLEAN
2013-12-17 11:47:05 -08:00
0067272999 Merge branch 'bc/doc-merge-no-op-revert'
* bc/doc-merge-no-op-revert:
  Documentation: document pitfalls with 3-way merge
2013-12-17 11:47:01 -08:00
4d1826d1d9 Merge branch 'fc/trivial'
* fc/trivial:
  remote: fix status with branch...rebase=preserve
  fetch: add missing documentation
  t: trivial whitespace cleanups
  abspath: trivial style fix
2013-12-17 11:46:32 -08:00
aa13132d90 Merge branch 'jk/t5000-gzip-simplify'
Test fix.

* jk/t5000-gzip-simplify:
  t5000: simplify gzip prerequisite checks
2013-12-17 11:46:30 -08:00
f9633716d0 Merge branch 'kb/doc-exclude-directory-semantics'
* kb/doc-exclude-directory-semantics:
  gitignore.txt: clarify recursive nature of excluded directories
2013-12-17 11:44:19 -08:00
5512ac5840 Git 1.8.5.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-17 11:42:12 -08:00
59f3e3f1e2 Merge branch 'rs/doc-submitting-patches' into maint
* rs/doc-submitting-patches:
  SubmittingPatches: document how to handle multiple patches
2013-12-17 11:38:23 -08:00
5169f5a484 Merge branch 'tr/doc-git-cherry' into maint
* tr/doc-git-cherry:
  Documentation: revamp git-cherry(1)
2013-12-17 11:37:55 -08:00
212607494d Merge branch 'nd/glossary-content-pathspec-markup' into maint
* nd/glossary-content-pathspec-markup:
  glossary-content.txt: fix documentation of "**" patterns
2013-12-17 11:36:54 -08:00
c8394bb466 Merge branch 'jj/doc-markup-gitcli' into maint
* jj/doc-markup-gitcli:
  Documentation/gitcli.txt: fix double quotes
2013-12-17 11:36:38 -08:00
5712dcb209 Merge branch 'jj/doc-markup-hints-in-coding-guidelines' into maint
* jj/doc-markup-hints-in-coding-guidelines:
  State correct usage of literal examples in man pages in the coding standards
2013-12-17 11:36:10 -08:00
ace08c2239 Merge branch 'jj/log-doc' into maint
* jj/log-doc:
  Documentation/git-log.txt: mark-up fix and minor rephasing
  Documentation/git-log: update "--log-size" description
2013-12-17 11:35:41 -08:00
7be001dfbf Merge branch 'jj/rev-list-options-doc' into maint
* jj/rev-list-options-doc:
  Documentation/rev-list-options.txt: fix some grammatical issues and typos
  Documentation/rev-list-options.txt: fix mark-up
2013-12-17 11:34:41 -08:00
e8fcf70cd4 Merge branch 'tb/doc-fetch-pack-url' into maint
* tb/doc-fetch-pack-url:
  git-fetch-pack uses URLs like git-fetch
2013-12-17 11:34:24 -08:00
a4a227a725 Merge branch 'mi/typofixes' into maint
* mi/typofixes:
  contrib: typofixes
  Documentation/technical/http-protocol.txt: typofixes
  typofixes: fix misspelt comments
2013-12-17 11:34:01 -08:00
a5d56530e0 Merge branch 'jh/loose-object-dirs-creation-race' into maint
Two processes creating loose objects at the same time could have
failed unnecessarily when the name of their new objects started
with the same byte value, due to a race condition.

* jh/loose-object-dirs-creation-race:
  sha1_file.c:create_tmpfile(): Fix race when creating loose object dirs
2013-12-17 11:32:50 -08:00
4766036ecd Merge branch 'jk/two-way-merge-corner-case-fix' into maint
"git am --abort" sometimes complained about not being able to write
a tree with an 0{40} object in it.

* jk/two-way-merge-corner-case-fix:
  t1005: add test for "read-tree --reset -u A B"
  t1005: reindent
  unpack-trees: fix "read-tree -u --reset A B" with conflicted index
2013-12-17 11:32:17 -08:00
66c24cd8a4 Merge branch 'sb/sha1-loose-object-info-check-existence' into maint
"git cat-file --batch-check=ok" did not check the existence of the
named object.

* sb/sha1-loose-object-info-check-existence:
  sha1_loose_object_info(): do not return success on missing object
2013-12-17 11:31:18 -08:00
c8b928d770 Merge branch 'nd/magic-pathspec' into maint
"git diff -- ':(icase)makefile'" was unnecessarily rejected at the
command line parser.

* nd/magic-pathspec:
  diff: restrict pathspec limitations to diff b/f case only
2013-12-17 11:21:34 -08:00
3e7b066e22 cmd_repack(): remove redundant local variable "nr_packs"
Its value is the same as the number of entries in the "names"
string_list, so just use "names.nr" in its place.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Acked-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-17 10:54:41 -08:00
c235d960cb prune-packed: use strbuf to avoid having to worry about PATH_MAX
A/very/long/path/to/.git that becomes exactly PATH_MAX bytes long
after suffixed with /objects/??/??38-hex??, would have overflown
the on-stack pathname[] buffer.

Noticed-by:  Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-17 10:43:30 -08:00
fc2b621454 Prevent buffer overflows when path is too long
Some buffers created with PATH_MAX length are not checked when being
written, and can overflow if PATH_MAX is not big enough to hold the
path.

Replace those buffers by strbufs so that their size is automatically
grown if necessary. They are created as static local variables to avoid
reallocating memory on each call. Note that prefix_filename() returns
this static buffer so each callers should copy or use the string
immediately (this is currently true).

Reported-by: Wataru Noguchi <wnoguchi.0727@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Antoine Pelisse <apelisse@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-16 14:06:19 -08:00
aad90e85f8 diff: avoid some nesting
Avoid some nesting in builtin/diff.c, to make the code easier to read.
There are no functional changes.

Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-16 13:13:05 -08:00
8a19dfa1aa diff: add test for --no-index executed outside repo
470faf9 diff: move no-index detection to builtin/diff.c breaks the error
message for "git diff --no-index", when the command is executed outside
of a git repository and the wrong number of arguments are given. 6df5762
diff: don't read index when --no-index is given fixes the problem.

Add a test to guard against similar breakages in the future.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-16 13:12:33 -08:00
0ea7d5b6f8 diff.c: fix some recent whitespace style violations
These were introduced by ee7fb0b.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-16 13:04:47 -08:00
40a4f5a7bf pack-objects doc: treat output filename as opaque
After 1190a1a (pack-objects: name pack files after trailer hash,
2013-12-05), the SHA-1 used to determine the filename is calculated
differently.  Update the documentation to not guarantee anything more
than that the SHA-1 depends on the pack content somehow.

Hopefully this will discourage readers from depending on the old or
the new calculation.

Reported-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-16 11:36:09 -08:00
0162b3c430 contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: small stylistic cleanups
Signed-off-by: John Szakmeister <john@szakmeister.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
2013-12-16 09:50:42 -08:00
0166027e56 l10n: Init Vietnamese translation
Signed-off-by: Trần Ngọc Quân <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2013-12-14 14:43:04 +07:00
d7aced95cd Update draft release notes to 1.9
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 14:24:39 -08:00
694a88a309 Merge branch 'jn/scripts-updates'
* jn/scripts-updates:
  remove #!interpreter line from shell libraries
  test: replace shebangs with descriptions in shell libraries
  test: make FILEMODE a lazy prereq
  contrib: remove git-p4import
  mark contributed hooks executable
  mark perl test scripts executable
  mark Windows build scripts executable
2013-12-12 14:22:59 -08:00
72911f8c18 Merge branch 'cn/thin-push-capability'
Allow receive-pack to insist on receiving a fat pack from "git
push" clients.

* cn/thin-push-capability:
  send-pack: don't send a thin pack to a server which doesn't support it
2013-12-12 14:20:32 -08:00
577aed296a Merge branch 'jk/remove-deprecated'
* jk/remove-deprecated:
  stop installing git-tar-tree link
  peek-remote: remove deprecated alias of ls-remote
  lost-found: remove deprecated command
  tar-tree: remove deprecated command
  repo-config: remove deprecated alias for "git config"
2013-12-12 14:18:34 -08:00
df5f0ad251 Merge branch 'tr/commit-slab-cleanup'
* tr/commit-slab-cleanup:
  commit-slab: sizeof() the right type in xrealloc
  commit-slab: declare functions "static inline"
  commit-slab: document clear_$slabname()
2013-12-12 14:18:31 -08:00
fca26a3430 Merge branch 'rs/doc-submitting-patches'
* rs/doc-submitting-patches:
  SubmittingPatches: document how to handle multiple patches
2013-12-12 14:18:29 -08:00
71fe59f880 Merge branch 'tr/doc-git-cherry'
* tr/doc-git-cherry:
  Documentation: revamp git-cherry(1)
2013-12-12 14:18:24 -08:00
feb28ad0a8 Merge branch 'cl/p4-use-diff-tree'
* cl/p4-use-diff-tree:
  git p4: Use git diff-tree instead of format-patch
2013-12-12 14:18:20 -08:00
3497717941 Merge branch 'tr/config-multivalue-lift-max'
* tr/config-multivalue-lift-max:
  config: arbitrary number of matches for --unset and --replace-all
2013-12-12 14:18:09 -08:00
e66ef7ae6f Merge branch 'mh/fetch-tags-in-addition-to-normal-refs'
The "--tags" option to "git fetch" used to be literally a synonym to
a "refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*" refspec, which meant that (1) as an
explicit refspec given from the command line, it silenced the lazy
"git fetch" default that is configured, and (2) also as an explicit
refspec given from the command line, it interacted with "--prune"
to remove any tag that the remote we are fetching from does not
have.

This demotes it to an option; with it, we fetch all tags in
addition to what would be fetched without the option, and it does
not interact with the decision "--prune" makes to see what
remote-tracking refs the local has are missing the remote
counterpart.

* mh/fetch-tags-in-addition-to-normal-refs: (23 commits)
  fetch: improve the error messages emitted for conflicting refspecs
  handle_duplicate(): mark error message for translation
  ref_remote_duplicates(): extract a function handle_duplicate()
  ref_remove_duplicates(): simplify loop logic
  t5536: new test of refspec conflicts when fetching
  ref_remove_duplicates(): avoid redundant bisection
  git-fetch.txt: improve description of tag auto-following
  fetch-options.txt: simplify ifdef/ifndef/endif usage
  fetch, remote: properly convey --no-prune options to subprocesses
  builtin/remote.c:update(): use struct argv_array
  builtin/remote.c: reorder function definitions
  query_refspecs(): move some constants out of the loop
  fetch --prune: prune only based on explicit refspecs
  fetch --tags: fetch tags *in addition to* other stuff
  fetch: only opportunistically update references based on command line
  get_expanded_map(): avoid memory leak
  get_expanded_map(): add docstring
  builtin/fetch.c: reorder function definitions
  get_ref_map(): rename local variables
  api-remote.txt: correct section "struct refspec"
  ...
2013-12-12 14:14:10 -08:00
e374747f51 gitweb: Denote non-heads, non-remotes branches
Given two branches residing in refs/heads/master and refs/wip/feature
the list-of-branches view will present them in following way:
master
feature (wip)

When getting a snapshot of a 'feature' branch, the tarball is going to
have name like 'project-wip-feature-<short hash>.tgz'.

Signed-off-by: Krzesimir Nowak <krzesimir@endocode.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 12:37:37 -08:00
8d646a9bac gitweb: Add a feature for adding more branch refs
Allow extra-branch-refs feature to tell gitweb to show refs from
additional hierarchies in addition to branches in the list-of-branches
view.

Signed-off-by: Krzesimir Nowak <krzesimir@endocode.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 12:37:37 -08:00
23faf546ae gitweb: Return 1 on validation success instead of passed input
Users of validate_* passing "0" might get failures on correct name
because of coercion of "0" to false in code like:
die_error(500, "invalid ref") unless (check_ref_format ("0"));

Also, the validate_foo subs are renamed to is_valid_foo.

Signed-off-by: Krzesimir Nowak <krzesimir@endocode.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 12:37:36 -08:00
c0bc2265ef gitweb: Move check-ref-format code into separate function
This check will be used in more than one place later.

Signed-off-by: Krzesimir Nowak <krzesimir@endocode.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 12:37:36 -08:00
6df5762db3 diff: don't read index when --no-index is given
git diff --no-index ... currently reads the index, during setup, when
calling gitmodules_config().  This results in worse performance when the
index is not actually needed.  This patch avoids calling
gitmodules_config() when the --no-index option is given.  The times for
executing "git diff --no-index" in the WebKit repository are improved as
follows:

Test                      HEAD~3            HEAD
------------------------------------------------------------------
4001.1: diff --no-index   0.24(0.15+0.09)   0.01(0.00+0.00) -95.8%

An additional improvement of this patch is that "git diff --no-index" no
longer breaks when the index file is corrupt, which makes it possible to
use it for investigating the broken repository.

To improve the possible usage as investigation tool for broken
repositories, setup_git_directory_gently() is also not called when the
--no-index option is given.

Also add a test to guard against future breakages, and a performance
test to show the improvements.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 12:23:02 -08:00
470faf9654 diff: move no-index detection to builtin/diff.c
Currently the --no-index option is parsed in diff_no_index().  Move the
detection if a no-index diff should be executed to builtin/diff.c, where
we can use it for executing diff_no_index() conditionally.  This will
also allow us to execute other operations conditionally, which will be
done in the next patch.

There are no functional changes.

Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 12:23:02 -08:00
34a332221c Documentation/git-replace: describe --format option
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 11:53:49 -08:00
769a4fa463 builtin/replace: unset read_replace_refs
When checking to see if some objects are of the same type
and when displaying the type of objects, git replace uses
the sha1_object_info() function.

Unfortunately this function by default respects replace
refs, so instead of the type of a replaced object, it
gives the type of the replacement object which might
be different.

To fix this bug, and because git replace should work at a
level before replacement takes place, let's unset the
read_replace_refs global variable at the beginning of
cmd_replace().

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 11:53:49 -08:00
bbbb4afc26 t6050: add tests for listing with --format
This patch adds tests for "git replace -l --format=<fmt>".

'short', 'medium' and 'full' are the only allowed values
for <fmt>.

'short' is the same as with no --format option.
Tests for 'medium' and 'full' are the most needed.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 11:53:49 -08:00
44f9f850e8 builtin/replace: teach listing using short, medium or full formats
By default when listing replace refs, only the sha1 of the
replaced objects are shown.

In many cases, it is much nicer to be able to list all the
sha1 of the replaced objects along with the sha1 of the
replacment objects.

And in other cases it might be interesting to also show the
types of the replaced and replacement objects.

This patch introduce a new --format=<fmt> option where
<fmt> can be any of the following:

	'short': this is the same as when no --format
		option is used, that is only the sha1 of
		the replaced objects are shown
	'medium': this also lists the sha1 of the
		replacement objects
	'full': this shows the sha1 and the type of both
		the replaced and the replacement objects

Some documentation and some tests will follow.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 11:53:49 -08:00
1f7117ef7a sha1_file: perform object replacement in sha1_object_info_extended()
sha1_object_info_extended() should perform object replacement
if it is needed.

The simplest way to do that is to make it call
lookup_replace_object_extended().

And now its "unsigned flags" parameter is used as it is passed
to lookup_replace_object_extended().

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 11:53:49 -08:00
303c5d65c9 t6050: show that git cat-file --batch fails with replace objects
When --batch is passed to git cat-file, the sha1_object_info_extended()
function is used to get information about the objects passed to
git cat-file.

Unfortunately sha1_object_info_extended() doesn't take care of
object replacement properly, so it will often fail with a
message like this:

$ echo a3fb2e1845a1aaf129b7975048973414dc172173 | git cat-file --batch
a3fb2e1845a1aaf129b7975048973414dc172173 commit 231
fatal: object a3fb2e1845a1aaf129b7975048973414dc172173 change size!?

The goal of this patch is to show this breakage.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 11:53:49 -08:00
de7b5d6218 sha1_object_info_extended(): add an "unsigned flags" parameter
This parameter is not used yet, but it will be used to tell
sha1_object_info_extended() if it should perform object
replacement or not.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 11:53:48 -08:00
bf93eea0f6 sha1_file.c: add lookup_replace_object_extended() to pass flags
Currently, there is only one caller to lookup_replace_object()
that can benefit from passing it some flags, but we expect
that there could be more.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 11:53:48 -08:00
500a04f196 replace_object: don't check read_replace_refs twice
Since e1111cef (inline lookup_replace_object() calls,
May 15 2011) the read_replace_refs global variable is
checked twice, once in lookup_replace_object() and
once again in do_lookup_replace_object().

As do_lookup_replace_object() is called only from
lookup_replace_object(), we can remove the check in
do_lookup_replace_object().

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 11:53:48 -08:00
ffe68cf9ac rename READ_SHA1_FILE_REPLACE flag to LOOKUP_REPLACE_OBJECT
The READ_SHA1_FILE_REPLACE flag is more related to using the
lookup_replace_object() function rather than the
read_sha1_file() function.

We also need such a flag to be used with sha1_object_info()
instead of read_sha1_file().

The name LOOKUP_REPLACE_OBJECT is therefore better for this
flag.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 11:53:48 -08:00
6554dfa97a cat-file: handle --batch format with missing type/size
Commit 98e2092 taught cat-file to stream blobs with --batch,
which requires that we look up the object type before
loading it into memory.  As a result, we now print the
object header from information in sha1_object_info, and the
actual contents from the read_sha1_file. We double-check
that the information we printed in the header matches the
content we are about to show.

Later, commit 93d2a60 allowed custom header lines for
--batch, and commit 5b08640 made type lookups optional. As a
result, specifying a header line without the type or size
means that we will not look up those items at all.

This causes our double-checking to erroneously die with an
error; we think the type or size has changed, when in fact
it was simply left at "0".

For the size, we can fix this by only doing the consistency
double-check when we have retrieved the size via
sha1_object_info. In the case that we have not retrieved the
value, that means we also did not print it, so there is
nothing for us to check that we are consistent with.

We could do the same for the type. However, besides our
consistency check, we also care about the type in deciding
whether to stream or not. So instead of handling the case
where we do not know the type, this patch instead makes sure
that we always trigger a type lookup when we are printing,
so that even a format without the type will stream as we
would in the normal case.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 11:31:25 -08:00
370c9268d1 cat-file: pass expand_data to print_object_or_die
We currently individually pass the sha1, type, and size
fields calculated by sha1_object_info. However, if we pass
the whole struct, the called function can make more
intelligent decisions about which fields were actually
filled by sha1_object_info.

This patch takes that first refactoring step, passing the
whole struct, so further patches can make those decisions
with less noise in their diffs. There should be no
functional change to this patch (aside from a minor typo fix
in the error message).

As a side effect, we can rename the local variables in the
function to "type" and "size", since the names are no longer
taken.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-12 11:27:21 -08:00
82fba2b9d3 git-clone.txt: remove shallow clone limitations
Now that git supports data transfer from or to a shallow clone, these
limitations are not true anymore.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:19 -08:00
eab3296c7e prune: clean .git/shallow after pruning objects
This patch teaches "prune" to remove shallow roots that are no longer
reachable from any refs (e.g. when the relevant refs are removed).

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:19 -08:00
0d7d285f0e clone: use git protocol for cloning shallow repo locally
clone_local() does not handle $SRC/shallow. It could be made so, but
it's simpler to use fetch-pack/upload-pack instead.

This used to be caught by the check in upload-pack, which is triggered
by transport_get_remote_refs(), even in local clone case. The check is
now gone and check_everything_connected() should catch the result
incomplete repo. But check_everything_connected() will soon be skipped
in local clone case, opening a door to corrupt repo. This patch should
close that door.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:18 -08:00
f2c681cf12 send-pack: support pushing from a shallow clone via http
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:18 -08:00
c29a7b8b3f receive-pack: support pushing to a shallow clone via http
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:18 -08:00
16094885ca smart-http: support shallow fetch/clone
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:18 -08:00
58f2ed051f remote-curl: pass ref SHA-1 to fetch-pack as well
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:18 -08:00
b016918b2f send-pack: support pushing to a shallow clone
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:18 -08:00
0a1bc12b6e receive-pack: allow pushes that update .git/shallow
The basic 8 steps to update .git/shallow does not fully apply here
because the user may choose to accept just a few refs (while fetch
always accepts all refs). The steps are modified a bit.

1-6. same as before. After calling assign_shallow_commits_to_refs at
   step 6, each shallow commit has a bitmap that marks all refs that
   require it.

7. mark all "ours" shallow commits that are reachable from any
   refs. We will need to do the original step 7 on them later.

8. go over all shallow commit bitmaps, mark refs that require new
   shallow commits.

9. setup a strict temporary shallow file to plug all the holes, even
   if it may cut some of our history short. This file is used by all
   hooks. The hooks could use --shallow-file=$GIT_DIR/shallow to
   overcome this and reach everything in current repo.

10. go over the new refs one by one. For each ref, do the reachability
   test if it needs a shallow commit on the list from step 7. Remove
   it if it's reachable from our refs. Gather all required shallow
   commits, run check_everything_connected() with the new ref, then
   install them to .git/shallow.

This mode is disabled by default and can be turned on with
receive.shallowupdate

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:18 -08:00
614db3e292 connected.c: add new variant that runs with --shallow-file
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:18 -08:00
069c053222 add GIT_SHALLOW_FILE to propagate --shallow-file to subprocesses
This may be needed when a hook is run after a new shallow pack is
received, but .git/shallow is not settled yet. A temporary shallow
file to plug all loose ends should be used instead. GIT_SHALLOW_FILE
is overriden by --shallow-file.

--shallow-file does not work in this case because the hook may spawn
many git subprocesses and the launch commands do not have
--shallow-file as it's a recent addition.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:17 -08:00
5dbd767601 receive/send-pack: support pushing from a shallow clone
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:17 -08:00
31c42bff35 receive-pack: reorder some code in unpack()
This is the preparation for adding --shallow-file to both
unpack-objects and index-pack. To sum up:

 - struct argv_array used instead of const char **

 - status/code, ip/child, unpacker/keeper are moved out to function
   top level

 - successful flow now ends at the end of the function

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:17 -08:00
48d25cae22 fetch: add --update-shallow to accept refs that update .git/shallow
The same steps are done as in when --update-shallow is not given. The
only difference is we now add all shallow commits in "ours" and
"theirs" to .git/shallow (aka "step 8").

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:17 -08:00
79d3a236c5 upload-pack: make sure deepening preserves shallow roots
When "fetch --depth=N" where N exceeds the longest chain of history in
the source repo, usually we just send an "unshallow" line to the
client so full history is obtained.

When the source repo is shallow we need to make sure to "unshallow"
the current shallow point _and_ "shallow" again when the commit
reaches its shallow bottom in the source repo.

This should fix both cases: large <N> and --unshallow.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:17 -08:00
4820a33baa fetch: support fetching from a shallow repository
This patch just put together pieces from the 8 steps patch. We stop at
step 7 and reject refs that require new shallow commits.

Note that, by rejecting refs that require new shallow commits, we
leave dangling objects in the repo, which become "object islands" by
the next "git fetch" of the same source.

If the first fetch our "ours" set is zero and we do practically
nothing at step 7, "ours" is full at the next fetch and we may need to
walk through commits for reachability test. Room for improvement.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:17 -08:00
beea4152d9 clone: support remote shallow repository
Cloning from a shallow repository does not follow the "8 steps for new
.git/shallow" because if it does we need to get through step 6 for all
refs. That means commit walking down to the bottom.

Instead the rule to create .git/shallow is simpler and, more
importantly, cheap: if a shallow commit is found in the pack, it's
probably used (i.e. reachable from some refs), so we add it. Others
are dropped.

One may notice this method seems flawed by the word "probably". A
shallow commit may not be reachable from any refs at all if it's
attached to an object island (a group of objects that are not
reachable by any refs).

If that object island is not complete, a new fetch request may send
more objects to connect it to some ref. At that time, because we
incorrectly installed the shallow commit in this island, the user will
not see anything after that commit (fsck is still ok). This is not
desired.

Given that object islands are rare (C Git never sends such islands for
security reasons) and do not really harm the repository integrity, a
tradeoff is made to surprise the user occasionally but work faster
everyday.

A new option --strict could be added later that follows exactly the 8
steps. "git prune" can also learn to remove dangling objects _and_ the
shallow commits that are attached to them from .git/shallow.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:17 -08:00
f6486f07d2 fetch-pack.h: one statement per bitfield declaration
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:17 -08:00
a796ccee51 fetch-pack.c: move shallow update code out of fetch_pack()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:16 -08:00
8e277383e0 shallow.c: steps 6 and 7 to select new commits for .git/shallow
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:16 -08:00
58babfffde shallow.c: the 8 steps to select new commits for .git/shallow
Suppose a fetch or push is requested between two shallow repositories
(with no history deepening or shortening). A pack that contains
necessary objects is transferred over together with .git/shallow of
the sender. The receiver has to determine whether it needs to update
.git/shallow if new refs needs new shallow comits.

The rule here is avoid updating .git/shallow by default. But we don't
want to waste the received pack. If the pack contains two refs, one
needs new shallow commits installed in .git/shallow and one does not,
we keep the latter and reject/warn about the former.

Even if .git/shallow update is allowed, we only add shallow commits
strictly necessary for the former ref (remember the sender can send
more shallow commits than necessary) and pay attention not to
accidentally cut the receiver history short (no history shortening is
asked for)

So the steps to figure out what ref need what new shallow commits are:

1. Split the sender shallow commit list into "ours" and "theirs" list
   by has_sha1_file. Those that exist in current repo in "ours", the
   remaining in "theirs".

2. Check the receiver .git/shallow, remove from "ours" the ones that
   also exist in .git/shallow.

3. Fetch the new pack. Either install or unpack it.

4. Do has_sha1_file on "theirs" list again. Drop the ones that fail
   has_sha1_file. Obviously the new pack does not need them.

5. If the pack is kept, remove from "ours" the ones that do not exist
   in the new pack.

6. Walk the new refs to answer the question "what shallow commits,
   both ours and theirs, are required in .git/shallow in order to add
   this ref?". Shallow commits not associated to any refs are removed
   from their respective list.

7. (*) Check reachability (from the current refs) of all remaining
   commits in "ours". Those reachable are removed. We do not want to
   cut any part of our (reachable) history. We only check up
   commits. True reachability test is done by
   check_everything_connected() at the end as usual.

8. Combine the final "ours" and "theirs" and add them all to
   .git/shallow. Install new refs. The case where some hook rejects
   some refs on a push is explained in more detail in the push
   patches.

Of these steps, #6 and #7 are expensive. Both require walking through
some commits, or in the worst case all commits. And we rather avoid
them in at least common case, where the transferred pack does not
contain any shallow commits that the sender advertises. Let's look at
each scenario:

1) the sender has longer history than the receiver

   All shallow commits from the sender will be put into "theirs" list
   at step 1 because none of them exists in current repo. In the
   common case, "theirs" becomes empty at step 4 and exit early.

2) the sender has shorter history than the receiver

   All shallow commits from the sender are likely in "ours" list at
   step 1. In the common case, if the new pack is kept, we could empty
   "ours" and exit early at step 5.

   If the pack is not kept, we hit the expensive step 6 then exit
   after "ours" is emptied. There'll be only a handful of objects to
   walk in fast-forward case. If it's forced update, we may need to
   walk to the bottom.

3) the sender has same .git/shallow as the receiver

   This is similar to case 2 except that "ours" should be emptied at
   step 2 and exit early.

A fetch after "clone --depth=X" is case 1. A fetch after "clone" (from
a shallow repo) is case 3. Luckily they're cheap for the common case.

A push from "clone --depth=X" falls into case 2, which is expensive.
Some more work may be done at the sender/client side to avoid more
work on the server side: if the transferred pack does not contain any
shallow commits, send-pack should not send any shallow commits to the
receive-pack, effectively turning it into a normal push and avoid all
steps.

This patch implements all steps except #3, already handled by
fetch-pack and receive-pack, #6 and #7, which has their own patch due
to their size.

(*) in previous versions step 7 was put before step 3. I reorder it so
    that the common case that keeps the pack does not need to walk
    commits at all. In future if we implement faster commit
    reachability check (maybe with the help of pack bitmaps or commit
    cache), step 7 could become cheap and be moved up before 6 again.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:16 -08:00
1a30f5a2f2 shallow.c: extend setup_*_shallow() to accept extra shallow commits
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:16 -08:00
b06dcd7d68 connect.c: teach get_remote_heads to parse "shallow" lines
No callers pass a non-empty pointer as shallow_points at this
stage. As a result, all clients still refuse to talk to shallow
repository on the other end.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:16 -08:00
ad491366de make the sender advertise shallow commits to the receiver
If either receive-pack or upload-pack is called on a shallow
repository, shallow commits (*) will be sent after the ref
advertisement (but before the packet flush), so that the receiver has
the full "shape" of the sender's commit graph. This will be needed for
the receiver to update its .git/shallow if necessary.

This breaks the protocol for all clients trying to push to a shallow
repo, or fetch from one. Which is basically the same end result as
today's "is_repository_shallow() && die()" in receive-pack and
upload-pack. New clients will be made aware of shallow upstream and
can make use of this information.

The sender must send all shallow commits that are sent in the
following pack. It may send more shallow commits than necessary.

upload-pack for example may choose to advertise no shallow commits if
it knows in advance that the pack it's going to send contains no
shallow commits. But upload-pack is the server, so we choose the
cheaper way, send full .git/shallow and let the client deal with it.

Smart HTTP is not affected by this patch. Shallow support on
smart-http comes later separately.

(*) A shallow commit is a commit that terminates the revision
    walker. It is usually put in .git/shallow in order to keep the
    revision walker from going out of bound because there is no
    guarantee that objects behind this commit is available.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:16 -08:00
606e435a0a clone: prevent --reference to a shallow repository
If we borrow objects from another repository, we should also pay
attention to their $GIT_DIR/shallow (and even info/grafts). But
current alternates code does not.

Reject alternate repos that are shallow because we do not do it
right. In future the alternate code may be updated to check
$GIT_DIR/shallow properly so that this restriction could be lifted.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:16 -08:00
0b854bcc2a send-pack: forbid pushing from a shallow repository
send-pack can send a pack with loose ends to the server.  receive-pack
before 6d4bb38 (fetch: verify we have everything we need before
updating our ref - 2011-09-01) does not detect this and keeps the pack
anyway, which corrupts the repository, at least from fsck point of
view.

send-pack will learn to safely push from a shallow repository later.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:16 -08:00
13eb4626c4 remote.h: replace struct extra_have_objects with struct sha1_array
The latter can do everything the former can and is used in many more
places.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:15 -08:00
75f8cbab2a transport.h: remove send_pack prototype, already defined in send-pack.h
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 16:14:15 -08:00
ad8261d212 rebase: use reflog to find common base with upstream
Commit 15a147e (rebase: use @{upstream} if no upstream specified,
2011-02-09) says:

	Make it default to 'git rebase @{upstream}'. That is also what
	'git pull [--rebase]' defaults to, so it only makes sense that
	'git rebase' defaults to the same thing.

but that isn't actually the case.  Since commit d44e712 (pull: support
rebased upstream + fetch + pull --rebase, 2009-07-19), pull has actually
chosen the most recent reflog entry which is an ancestor of the current
branch if it can find one.

Add a '--fork-point' argument to git-rebase that can be used to trigger
this behaviour.  This option is turned on by default if no non-option
arguments are specified on the command line, otherwise we treat an
upstream specified on the command-line literally.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-10 10:56:30 -08:00
3d252a9c59 Merge git://repo.or.cz/git-gui
* git://repo.or.cz/git-gui:
  git-gui: correct spelling errors in comments
  git-gui: add menu item to launch a bash shell on Windows.
  git-gui: corrected setup of git worktree under cygwin.
  git-gui: right half window is paned
  git-gui: Add gui.displayuntracked option
  git-gui: show the maxrecentrepo config option in the preferences dialog
  git-gui: added gui.maxrecentrepo to extend the number of remembered repos
  git-gui: Improve font rendering on retina macbooks
2013-12-09 14:57:00 -08:00
ec418bcfd0 Merge git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk
* git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk:
  gitk: Recognize -L option
  gitk: Support showing the gathered inline diffs
  gitk: Split out diff part in $commitinfo
  gitk: Refactor per-line part of getblobdiffline and its support
  gitk: Support -G option from the command line
  gitk: Tag display improvements
2013-12-09 14:55:41 -08:00
a2036d7e00 git_connect(): use common return point
Use only one return point from git_connect(), doing the

    free();
    return conn;

only at one place in the code.

There may be a little confusion what the variable "host" is for.  At
some places it is only the host part, at other places it may include
the port number, so change host into hostandport here.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 14:54:48 -08:00
c59ab2e52a connect.c: refactor url parsing
Make the function is_local() in transport.c public, rename it into
url_is_local_not_ssh() and use it in both transport.c and connect.c

Use a protocol "local" for URLs for the local file system.

One note about using file:// under Windows:

The (absolute) path on Unix like system typically starts with "/".
When the host is empty, it can be omitted, so that a shell scriptlet
url=file://$pwd
will give a URL like "file:///home/user/repo".

Windows does not have the same concept of a root directory located in "/".
When parsing the URL allow "file://C:/user/repo"
(even if RFC1738 indicates that "file:///C:/user/repo" should be used).

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 14:54:48 -08:00
83b0587527 git_connect(): refactor the port handling for ssh
Use get_host_and_port() even for ssh.
Remove the variable port git_connect(), and simplify parse_connect_url()
Use only one return point in git_connect(), doing the free() and return conn.

t5601 had 2 corner test cases which now pass.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 14:54:47 -08:00
6a59974869 git fetch: support host:/~repo
The documentation (in urls.txt) says that

    "ssh://host:/~repo",
    "host:/~repo" or
    "host:~repo"

specify the repository "repo" in the home directory at "host".

This has not been working for "host:/~repo".

Before commit 356bec "Support [address] in URLs", the comparison
"url != hostname" could be used to determine if the URL had a scheme
or not: "ssh://host/host" != "host".

However, after 356bec "[::1]" was converted into "::1", yielding
url != hostname as well.  To fix this regression, don't use
"if (url != hostname)", but look at the separator instead.

Rename the variable "c" into "separator" to make it easier to read.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 14:54:47 -08:00
854aeb7beb t5500: add test cases for diag-url
Add test cases using git fetch-pack --diag-url:

- parse out host and path for URLs with a scheme (git:// file:// ssh://)
- parse host names embedded by [] correctly
- extract the port number, if present
- separate URLs like "file" (which are local)
  from URLs like "host:repo" which should use ssh

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 14:54:47 -08:00
5610b7c0c6 git fetch-pack: add --diag-url
The main purpose is to trace the URL parser called by git_connect() in
connect.c

The main features of the parser can be listed as this:

- parse out host and path for URLs with a scheme (git:// file:// ssh://)
- parse host names embedded by [] correctly
- extract the port number, if present
- separate URLs like "file" (which are local)
  from URLs like "host:repo" which should use ssh

Add the new parameter "--diag-url" to "git fetch-pack", which prints
the value for protocol, host and path to stderr and exits.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 14:54:47 -08:00
cabc3c12e4 git_connect: factor out discovery of the protocol and its parts
git_connect has grown large due to the many different protocols syntaxes
that are supported. Move the part of the function that parses the URL to
connect to into a separate function for readability.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 14:54:47 -08:00
d98d109979 git_connect: remove artificial limit of a remote command
Since day one, function git_connect() had a limit on the command line of
the command that is invoked to make a connection. 7a33bcbe converted the
code that constructs the command to strbuf. This would have been the
right time to remove the limit, but it did not happen. Remove it now.

git_connect() uses start_command() to invoke the command; consequently,
the limits of the system still apply, but are diagnosed only at execve()
time. But these limits are more lenient than the 1K that git_connect()
imposed.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 14:54:47 -08:00
62f162f8e7 rev-parse: be more careful with munging arguments
When rev-parse looks at whether an argument like "foo..bar" or
"foobar^@" is a difference or parent-shorthand, it internally
munges the arguments so that it can pass the individual rev
arguments to get_sha1(). However, we do not consistently un-munge
the result.

For cases where we do not match (e.g., "doesnotexist..HEAD"), we
would then want to try to treat the argument as a filename.
try_difference gets() this right, and always unmunges in this case.
However, try_parent_shorthand() never unmunges, leading to incorrect
error messages, or even incorrect results:

  $ git rev-parse foobar^@
  foobar
  fatal: ambiguous argument 'foobar': unknown revision or path not in the working tree.
  Use '--' to separate paths from revisions, like this:
  'git <command> [<revision>...] -- [<file>...]'

  $ >foobar
  $ git rev-parse foobar^@
  foobar

For cases where we do match, neither function unmunges. This does
not currently matter, since we are done with the argument. However,
a future patch will do further processing, and this prepares for
it. In addition, it's simply a confusing interface for some cases to
modify the const argument, and others not to.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 14:39:16 -08:00
0a54f70905 remote: fix status with branch...rebase=preserve
Commit 66713ef (pull: allow pull to preserve merges when rebasing)
didn't include an update so 'git remote status' parses branch.<name>.rebase=preserve
correctly, let's do that.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 14:12:24 -08:00
c566500032 Documentation: document pitfalls with 3-way merge
Oftentimes people will make the same change in two branches, revert the change
in one branch, and then be surprised when a merge reinstitutes that change when
the branches are merged.  Add an explanatory paragraph that explains that this
occurs and the reason why, so people are not surprised.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 13:42:40 -08:00
379484b551 fetch: add missing documentation
There's no mention of the 'origin' default, or the fact that the
upstream tracking branch remote is used.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 13:24:33 -08:00
70eabce801 t: trivial whitespace cleanups
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 13:24:21 -08:00
e46c92e4ef abspath: trivial style fix
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 13:19:56 -08:00
8d784daebf remote-hg: add tests for special filenames
So that we check that UTF-8 and spaces work fine.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 13:18:44 -08:00
e71d137879 remote-hg: fix 'shared path' path
If the repository is moved, the absolute path of the shared repository
would fail.

Make sure it's always up-to-date.

Reported-by: Michael Davis <mjmdavis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 13:18:44 -08:00
0c0ebc1fdf remote-helpers: add extra safety checks
Suggested-by: Roman Ovchinnikov <coolthecold@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 13:18:43 -08:00
257ec841b8 remote-hg: avoid buggy strftime()
error on pull: fatal: Invalid raw date "" in ident: remote-hg <>

Neither %s nor %z are officially supported by python, they may work on
some (most?) platforms, but not all.

removed strftime use of %s and %z, which are not officially supported by python, with standard formats

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 13:18:43 -08:00
48059e4050 pull: use merge-base --fork-point when appropriate
Since commit d96855f (merge-base: teach "--fork-point" mode, 2013-10-23)
we can replace a shell loop in git-pull with a single call to
git-merge-base.  So let's do so.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 13:05:20 -08:00
212c0a6ff2 parse-options: remove OPT_BOOLEAN
After a86a8b9 (sb/parseopt-boolean-removal), the deprecated
OPT_BOOLEAN is not used anywhere except by OPT__* macros. Kill
OPT_BOOLEAN and make OPT__* use OPT_COUNTUP directly instead. This
should stop OPT_BOOLEAN from entering the tree again in new patches.

OPT__DRY_RUN() is converted to use OPT_BOOL though because it does not
make sense to increase the level of dryness. All OPT__DRY_RUN call
sites have been checked and they look safe for OPT_BOOL.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 11:24:16 -08:00
1418567381 rev-parse: correctly diagnose revision errors before "--"
Rev-parse understands that a "--" may separate revisions and
filenames, and that anything after the "--" is taken as-is.
However, it does not understand that anything before the
token must be a revision (which is the usual rule
implemented by the setup_revisions parser).

Since rev-parse prefers revisions to files when parsing
before the "--", we end up with the correct result (if such
an argument is a revision, we parse it as one, and if it is
not, it is an error either way).  However, we misdiagnose
the errors:

  $ git rev-parse foobar -- >/dev/null
  fatal: ambiguous argument 'foobar': unknown revision or path not in the working tree.
  Use '--' to separate paths from revisions, like this:
  'git <command> [<revision>...] -- [<file>...]'

  $ >foobar
  $ git rev-parse foobar -- >/dev/null
  fatal: bad flag '--' used after filename

In both cases, we should know that the real error is that
"foobar" is meant to be a revision, but could not be
resolved.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 11:01:23 -08:00
59856de171 gitignore.txt: clarify recursive nature of excluded directories
Additionally, precedence of negated patterns is exactly as outlined in
the DESCRIPTION section, we don't need to repeat this.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-09 10:55:48 -08:00
ee7fb0b1d4 difftool: display the number of files in the diff queue in the prompt
When --prompt option is set, git-difftool displays a prompt for each
modified file to be viewed in an external diff program.  At that
point, it could be useful to display a counter and the total number
of files in the diff queue.

Below is the current difftool prompt for the first of 5 modified files:

    Viewing: 'diff.c'
    Launch 'vimdiff' [Y/n]:

Consider the modified prompt:

    Viewing (1/5): 'diff.c'
    Launch 'vimdiff' [Y/n]:

The current GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF mechanism does not tell the number of
paths in the diff queue nor the current counter.  To make this
"counter/total" info available for GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF programs
without breaking existing ones by doing the following:

 - Keep track of the number of paths shown so far in diff_options;

 - Export two new environment variables from run_external_diff() to
   show the total number of paths (from diff_queue_struct) and the
   current value of the counter (from diff_options); and

 - Update git-difftool--helper to use these two environment variables.

Signed-off-by: Zoltan Klinger <zoltan.klinger@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-06 14:00:27 -08:00
1649612a22 pathspec.c: support adding prefix magic to a pathspec with mnemonic magic
Back in 233c3e6 (parse_pathspec: preserve prefix length via
PATHSPEC_PREFIX_ORIGIN - 2013-07-14), parse_pathspec() is taught to
save prefix length as a dynamic magic. This is needed when the
pathspec is passed to another process and and prefix lenght would be
lost.

Back then we support two cases. If the pathspec is normal, e.g. "abc",
we simply add the prefix to become ":(prefix:2)abc". If the pathspec
contains long magic, e.g. ":(foo,bar)abc" then we turn it to
":(foo,bar,prefix:2)abc". We do not support prefixing on short form,
because the only supported mnemonic '/' disappears after the the
preprocessing steps.

With the introduction of exclude magic with mnemonic '!', we need to
add support for the short form case so that ':!abc' becomes
':(exclude,prefix:2)abc'. Without this, it will break

    cd Documentation
    git add -p -- . ':!technical'

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-06 13:00:40 -08:00
ef79b1f870 Support pathspec magic :(exclude) and its short form :!
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-06 13:00:39 -08:00
8b7cb51a9d glossary-content.txt: rephrase magic signature part
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-06 13:00:38 -08:00
5594bcad21 clone,fetch: catch non positive --depth option value
Instead of simply ignoring the value passed to --depth option when
it is zero or negative, catch and report it as an error to let
people know that they were using the option incorrectly.

Original-patch-by: Andrés G. Aragoneses <knocte@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-06 12:57:10 -08:00
83786fa412 config: arbitrary number of matches for --unset and --replace-all
git-config used a static match array to hold the matches we want to
unset/replace when using --unset or --replace-all.  Use a
variable-sized array instead.

This in particular fixes the symptoms git-svn had when storing large
numbers of svn-remote.*.added-placeholder entries in the config file.

While the tests are rather more paranoid than just --unset and
--replace-all, the other operations already worked.  Indeed git-svn's
usage only breaks the first time *after* creating so many entries,
when it wants to unset and re-add them all.

Reported-by: Jess Hottenstein <jess.hottenstein@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-06 11:48:47 -08:00
077f43447c Start 1.9 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-06 11:20:04 -08:00
dd1cec578d Merge branch 'jk/remove-experimental-loose-object-support'
* jk/remove-experimental-loose-object-support:
  drop support for "experimental" loose objects
2013-12-06 11:09:43 -08:00
e2bcd4f779 Merge branch 'nd/magic-pathspec'
"git diff -- ':(icase)makefile'" were rejected unnecessarily.
This needs to be merged to 'maint' later.

* nd/magic-pathspec:
  diff: restrict pathspec limitations to diff b/f case only
2013-12-06 11:09:41 -08:00
cb6bd5722f Merge branch 'rr/for-each-ref-decoration'
Add a few formatting directives to "git for-each-ref --format=...",
to paint them in color, etc.

* rr/for-each-ref-decoration:
  for-each-ref: avoid color leakage
  for-each-ref: introduce %(color:...) for color
  for-each-ref: introduce %(upstream:track[short])
  for-each-ref: introduce %(HEAD) asterisk marker
  t6300 (for-each-ref): don't hardcode SHA-1 hexes
  t6300 (for-each-ref): clearly demarcate setup
2013-12-06 11:07:21 -08:00
10a36382ac Merge branch 'jc/bundle'
Code clean-up.

* jc/bundle:
  bundle: use argv-array
2013-12-06 11:07:15 -08:00
ef63eb55cd Merge branch 'rh/remote-hg-bzr-updates'
Updates to remote-bzr and remote-hg in contrib.

* rh/remote-hg-bzr-updates:
  remote-bzr, remote-hg: fix email address regular expression
  test-hg.sh: help user correlate verbose output with email test
  test-hg.sh: fix duplicate content strings in author tests
  test-hg.sh: avoid obsolete 'test' syntax
  test-hg.sh: eliminate 'local' bashism
  test-bzr.sh, test-hg.sh: prepare for change to push.default=simple
  test-bzr.sh, test-hg.sh: allow running from any dir
  test-lib.sh: convert $TEST_DIRECTORY to an absolute path
2013-12-06 11:06:53 -08:00
128c5d07c5 Merge branch 'jn/perl-lib-extra'
Allow customizing the paths to Perl modules with the new
PERLLIB_EXTRA makefile variable.

* jn/perl-lib-extra:
  Makefile: add PERLLIB_EXTRA variable that adds to default perl path
  Makefile: rebuild perl scripts when perl paths change
2013-12-06 11:05:39 -08:00
1190a1acf8 pack-objects: name pack files after trailer hash
Our current scheme for naming packfiles is to calculate the
sha1 hash of the sorted list of objects contained in the
packfile. This gives us a unique name, so we are reasonably
sure that two packs with the same name will contain the same
objects.

It does not, however, tell us that two such packs have the
exact same bytes. This makes things awkward if we repack the
same set of objects. Due to run-to-run variations, the bytes
may not be identical (e.g., changed zlib or git versions,
different source object reuse due to new packs in the
repository, or even different deltas due to races during a
multi-threaded delta search).

In theory, this could be helpful to a program that cares
that the packfile contains a certain set of objects, but
does not care about the particular representation. In
practice, no part of git makes use of that, and in many
cases it is potentially harmful. For example, if a dumb http
client fetches the .idx file, it must be sure to get the
exact .pack that matches it. Similarly, a partial transfer
of a .pack file cannot be safely resumed, as the actual
bytes may have changed.  This could also affect a local
client which opened the .idx and .pack files, closes the
.pack file (due to memory or file descriptor limits), and
then re-opens a changed packfile.

In all of these cases, git can detect the problem, as we
have the sha1 of the bytes themselves in the pack trailer
(which we verify on transfer), and the .idx file references
the trailer from the matching packfile. But it would be
simpler and more efficient to actually get the correct
bytes, rather than noticing the problem and having to
restart the operation.

This patch simply uses the pack trailer sha1 as the pack
name. It should be similarly unique, but covers the exact
representation of the objects. Other parts of git should not
care, as the pack name is returned by pack-objects and is
essentially opaque.

One test needs to be updated, because it actually corrupts a
pack and expects that re-packing the corrupted bytes will
use the same name. It won't anymore, but we can easily just
use the name that pack-objects hands back.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-05 15:40:11 -08:00
1a72cfd7fa commit -v: strip diffs and submodule shortlogs from the commit message
When using the '-v' option of "git commit" the diff added to the commit
message temporarily for editing is stripped off after the user exited the
editor by searching for "\ndiff --git " and truncating the commmit message
there if it is found.

But this approach has two problems:

- when the commit message itself contains a line starting with
  "diff --git" it will be truncated there prematurely; and

- when the "diff.submodule" setting is set to "log", the diff may
  start with "Submodule <hash1>..<hash2>", which will be left in
  the commit message while it shouldn't.

Fix that by introducing a special scissor separator line starting with the
comment character ('#' or the core.commentChar config if set) followed by
two lines describing what it is for. The scissor line - which will not be
translated - is used to reliably detect the start of the diff so it can be
chopped off from the commit message, no matter what the user enters there.

Turn a known test failure fixed by this change into a successful test;
also add one for a diff starting with a submodule log and another one for
proper handling of the comment char.

Reported-by: Ari Pollak <ari@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-05 14:39:11 -08:00
666c90b629 strbuf: remove prefixcmp() and suffixcmp()
As starts_with() and ends_with() have been used to
replace prefixcmp() and suffixcmp() respectively,
we can now remove them.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-05 14:13:56 -08:00
5955654823 replace {pre,suf}fixcmp() with {starts,ends}_with()
Leaving only the function definitions and declarations so that any
new topic in flight can still make use of the old functions, replace
existing uses of the prefixcmp() and suffixcmp() with new API
functions.

The change can be recreated by mechanically applying this:

    $ git grep -l -e prefixcmp -e suffixcmp -- \*.c |
      grep -v strbuf\\.c |
      xargs perl -pi -e '
        s|!prefixcmp\(|starts_with\(|g;
        s|prefixcmp\(|!starts_with\(|g;
        s|!suffixcmp\(|ends_with\(|g;
        s|suffixcmp\(|!ends_with\(|g;
      '

on the result of preparatory changes in this series.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-05 14:13:21 -08:00
956623157f strbuf: introduce starts_with() and ends_with()
prefixcmp() and suffixcmp() share the common "cmp" suffix that
typically are used to name functions that can be used for ordering,
but they can't, because they are not antisymmetric:

        prefixcmp("foo", "foobar") < 0
        prefixcmp("foobar", "foo") == 0

We in fact do not use these functions for ordering.  Replace them
with functions that just check for equality.

Add starts_with() and end_with() that will be used to replace
prefixcmp() and suffixcmp(), respectively, as the first step.  These
are named after corresponding functions/methods in programming
languages, like Java, Python and Ruby.

In vcs-svn/fast_export.c, there was already an ends_with() function
that did the same thing. Let's use the new one instead while at it.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-05 14:12:52 -08:00
3fb5aead29 builtin/remote: remove postfixcmp() and use suffixcmp() instead
Commit 8cc5b290 (git merge -X<option>, 25 Nov 2009) introduced
suffixcmp() with nearly the same implementation as postfixcmp()
that already existed since commit 211c8968 (Make git-remote a
builtin, 29 Feb 2008).

The only difference between the two implementations is that,
when the string is smaller than the suffix, one implementation
returns 1 while the other one returns -1.

But, as postfixcmp() is only used to compare for equality, the
distinction does not matter and does not affect the correctness of
this patch.

As postfixcmp() has always been static in builtin/remote.c
and is used nowhere else, it makes more sense to remove it
and use suffixcmp() instead in builtin/remote.c, rather than
to remove suffixcmp().

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-05 14:12:52 -08:00
a4552ceb8a environment: normalize use of prefixcmp() by removing " != 0"
To be able to automatically convert prefixcmp() to starts_with()
we need first to make sure that prefixcmp() is always used in
the same way.

So let's remove " != 0" after prefixcmp().

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-05 14:12:52 -08:00
15a42a10ec Sync with 1.8.5 2013-12-05 14:11:20 -08:00
b00d2440f7 Merge branch 'gj/push-more-verbose-advice' (early part)
* 'gj/push-more-verbose-advice' (early part):
  push: enhance unspecified push default warning
2013-12-05 14:03:32 -08:00
968182a49d Merge branch 'jn/mediawiki-makefile-updates'
Build and installation procedure clean-up.

* jn/mediawiki-makefile-updates:
  git-remote-mediawiki build: handle DESTDIR/INSTLIBDIR with whitespace
  git-remote-mediawiki build: make 'install' command configurable
  git-remote-mediawiki: honor DESTDIR in "make install"
  git-remote-mediawiki: do not remove installed files in "clean" target
2013-12-05 13:00:23 -08:00
c83386d14d Merge branch 'jl/submodule-update-retire-orig-flags'
Code clean-up.

* jl/submodule-update-retire-orig-flags:
  submodule update: remove unnecessary orig_flags variable
2013-12-05 13:00:20 -08:00
c3dc3827d6 Merge branch 'nd/wt-status-align-i18n'
An attempt to automatically align the names in the "git status"
output, taking the display width of (translated) section labels
into account.

* nd/wt-status-align-i18n:
  wt-status: take the alignment burden off translators
2013-12-05 13:00:17 -08:00
c17fa972d3 Merge branch 'sb/sha1-loose-object-info-check-existence'
"git cat-file --batch-check=ok" did not check the existence of the
named object.

* sb/sha1-loose-object-info-check-existence:
  sha1_loose_object_info(): do not return success on missing object
2013-12-05 13:00:12 -08:00
3979580265 Merge branch 'jk/two-way-merge-corner-case-fix'
Fix a rather longstanding corner-case bug in twoway "reset to
there" merge, which is most often seen in "git am --abort".

* jk/two-way-merge-corner-case-fix:
  t1005: add test for "read-tree --reset -u A B"
  t1005: reindent
  unpack-trees: fix "read-tree -u --reset A B" with conflicted index
2013-12-05 12:59:25 -08:00
10167eb251 Merge branch 'jc/ref-excludes'
People often wished a way to tell "git log --branches" (and "git
log --remotes --not --branches") to exclude some local branches
from the expansion of "--branches" (similarly for "--tags", "--all"
and "--glob=<pattern>").  Now they have one.

* jc/ref-excludes:
  rev-parse: introduce --exclude=<glob> to tame wildcards
  rev-list --exclude: export add/clear-ref-exclusion and ref-excluded API
  rev-list --exclude: tests
  document --exclude option
  revision: introduce --exclude=<glob> to tame wildcards
2013-12-05 12:59:09 -08:00
3576f113cb Merge branch 'nv/parseopt-opt-arg'
Enhance "rev-parse --parseopt" mode to help parsing options with
an optional parameter.

* nv/parseopt-opt-arg:
  rev-parse --parseopt: add the --stuck-long mode
  Use the word 'stuck' instead of 'sticked'
2013-12-05 12:59:04 -08:00
c5a77e8f92 Merge branch 'bc/http-100-continue'
Issue "100 Continue" responses to help use of GSS-Negotiate
authentication scheme over HTTP transport when needed.

* bc/http-100-continue:
  remote-curl: fix large pushes with GSSAPI
  remote-curl: pass curl slot_results back through run_slot
  http: return curl's AUTHAVAIL via slot_results
2013-12-05 12:58:59 -08:00
07d406b742 Merge branch 'jc/merge-base-reflog'
Code the logic in "pull --rebase" that figures out a fork point
from reflog entries in C.

* jc/merge-base-reflog:
  merge-base: teach "--fork-point" mode
  merge-base: use OPT_CMDMODE and clarify the command line parsing
2013-12-05 12:58:27 -08:00
219ea0e79d Merge branch 'jk/replace-perl-in-built-scripts'
* jk/replace-perl-in-built-scripts:
  use @@PERL@@ in built scripts
2013-12-05 12:58:21 -08:00
86cd8dc8e7 Merge branch 'jh/loose-object-dirs-creation-race'
When two processes created one loose object file each, which fell
into the same fan-out bucket that previously did not have any
objects, they both tried to do an equivalent of

    mkdir .git/objects/$fanout &&
    chmod $shared_perm .git/objects/$fanout

before writing into their file .git/objects/$fanout/$remainder,
one of which could have failed unnecessarily when the second
invocation of mkdir found that the directory already has been
created by the first one.

* jh/loose-object-dirs-creation-race:
  sha1_file.c:create_tmpfile(): Fix race when creating loose object dirs
2013-12-05 12:54:14 -08:00
5bb62059f2 Merge branch 'jk/robustify-parse-commit'
* jk/robustify-parse-commit:
  checkout: do not die when leaving broken detached HEAD
  use parse_commit_or_die instead of custom message
  use parse_commit_or_die instead of segfaulting
  assume parse_commit checks for NULL commit
  assume parse_commit checks commit->object.parsed
  log_tree_diff: die when we fail to parse a commit
2013-12-05 12:54:01 -08:00
b2a0afd96a Merge branch 'ak/submodule-foreach-quoting'
A behavior change, but a worthwhile one: "git submodule foreach"
was treating its arguments as part of a single command to be
concatenated and passed to a shell, making writing buggy
scripts too easy.

This patch preserves the old "just pass it to the shell" behavior
when a single argument is passed to 'git submodule foreach' and
moves to a new "skip the shell and use the arguments passed
unmolested" behavior when more than one argument is passed.

The old behavior (always concatenating and passing to the shell)
was similar to the 'ssh' command, while the new behavior (switching
on the number of arguments) is what 'xterm -e' does.

May need more thought to make sure this change is advertised well
so that scripts that used multiple arguments but added their own
extra layer of quoting are not broken.

* ak/submodule-foreach-quoting:
  submodule foreach: skip eval for more than one argument
2013-12-05 12:53:17 -08:00
96174145fc t5000: simplify gzip prerequisite checks
In t5000, we test the built-in ".tar.gz" config for
git-archive. To make our tests portable, we check that we
have a way to both gzip and gunzip, and we respected
environment variables to point to alternate commands for
doing these operations.

However, the $GZIP variable did not actually do anything, as
changing it would not affect the baked-in value in
archive-tar.c. Moreover, setting the variable $GZIP
influences gzip itself. From the gzip man page:

  The environment variable GZIP can hold a set of default
  options for gzip. These options are interpreted first and
  can be overwritten by explicit command line parameters.

We could rename this variable, and use it to set up custom
config (or even have a Makefile knob to affect the built
binary), but it is not worth the trouble; nobody has ever
reported a problem with the baked-in default, and they can
always change it via config if they need to. Let's just drop
the variable and use "gzip" in the test (keeping the
prerequisite, of course).

While we're at it, we can drop the GUNZIP variable and
prerequisite; it uses "gzip -d", so if we have GZIP, we
will have both.

We can also use test_lazy_prereq for the gzip prerequisite,
which is simpler and behaves more consistently with the rest
of git (e.g., by making output available when the test is
run with "-v").

Noticed-by: Christian Hesse <mail@eworm.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-04 16:11:53 -08:00
9c0495d23e gettext.c: detect the vsnprintf bug at runtime
Bug 6530 [1] in glibc causes "git show v0.99.6~1" to fail with error
"your vsnprintf is broken". The workaround avoids that, but it
corrupts system error messages in non-C locales.

The bug has been fixed since 2.17. We could know running glibc version
with gnu_get_libc_version(). But version is not a sure way to detect
the bug because downstream may back port the fix to older versions. Do
a runtime test that immitates the call flow that leads to "your
vsnprintf is broken". Only enable the workaround if the test fails.

Tested on Gentoo Linux, glibc 2.16.0 and 2.17, amd64.

[1] http://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=6530

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-04 16:10:51 -08:00
2171f3d2aa t5601: add tests for ssh
Add more tests testing all the combinations:

 -IPv4 or IPv6
 -path starting with "/" or with "/~"
 -with and without the ssh:// scheme

Some tests fail; they need updates in connect.c

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-04 15:47:50 -08:00
710eb3e22c t5601: remove clear_ssh, refactor setup_ssh_wrapper
Commit 8d3d28f5 added test cases for URLs which should be ssh.
Remove the function clear_ssh, use test_when_finished to clean up.

Introduce the function setup_ssh_wrapper, which could be factored
out together with expect_ssh.

Tighten one test and use "foo:bar" instead of "./foo:bar",

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-04 15:33:20 -08:00
fc9261ca61 push: also use "upstream" mapping when pushing a single ref
When the user is using the 'upstream' mode, these commands:

    $ git push
    $ git push origin

would find the 'upstream' branch for the current branch, and then
push the current branch to update it.  However, pushing a single
branch explicitly, i.e.

    $ git push origin $(git symbolic-ref --short HEAD)

would not go through the same ref mapping process, and ends up
updating the branch at 'origin' of the same name, which may not
necessarily be the upstream of the branch being pushed.

In the spirit similar to the previous one, map a colon-less refspec
using the upstream mapping logic.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-04 15:12:34 -08:00
ca02465b41 push: use remote.$name.push as a refmap
Since f2690487 (fetch: opportunistically update tracking refs,
2013-05-11), we stopped taking a non-storing refspec given on the
command line of "git fetch" literally, and instead started mapping
it via remote.$name.fetch refspecs.  This allows

    $ git fetch origin master

from the 'origin' repository, which is configured with

    [remote "origin"]
        fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*

to update refs/remotes/origin/master with the result, as if the
command line were

    $ git fetch origin +master:refs/remotes/origin/master

to reduce surprises and improve usability.  Before that change, a
refspec on the command line without a colon was only to fetch the
history and leave the result in FETCH_HEAD, without updating the
remote-tracking branches.

When you are simulating a fetch from you by your mothership with a
push by you into your mothership, instead of having:

    [remote "satellite"]
        fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/satellite/*

on the mothership repository and running:

    mothership$ git fetch satellite

you would have:

    [remote "mothership"]
        push = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/satellite/*

on your satellite machine, and run:

    satellite$ git push mothership

Because we so far did not make the corresponding change to the push
side, this command:

    satellite$ git push mothership master

does _not_ allow you on the satellite to only push 'master' out but
still to the usual destination (i.e. refs/remotes/satellite/master).

Implement the logic to map an unqualified refspec given on the
command line via the remote.$name.push refspec.  This will bring a
bit more symmetry between "fetch" and "push".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-04 15:11:08 -08:00
c57f6281ff mv: let 'git mv file no-such-dir/' error out
Git used to trim the trailing slash, and make the command equivalent
to 'git mv file no-such-dir', which created the file no-such-dir
(while the trailing slash explicitly stated that it could only be a
directory).

This patch skips the trailing slash removal for the destination
path.  The path with its trailing slash is passed to rename(2),
which errors out with the appropriate message:

  $ git mv file no-such-dir/
  fatal: renaming 'file' failed: Not a directory

Original-patch-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-04 11:49:15 -08:00
5508f3ed2c send-email: set SSL options through IO::Socket::SSL::set_client_defaults
When --smtp-encryption=ssl, we use a Net::SMTP::SSL connection,
passing its ->new all the options that would otherwise go to
Net::SMTP->new (most options) and IO::Socket::SSL->start_SSL (for the
SSL options).

However, while Net::SMTP::SSL replaces the underlying socket class
with an SSL socket, it does nothing to allow passing options to that
socket.  So the SSL-relevant options are lost.

Fortunately there is an escape hatch: we can directly set the options
with IO::Socket::SSL::set_client_defaults.  They will then persist
within the IO::Socket::SSL module.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-04 11:45:32 -08:00
979e652a18 send-email: --smtp-ssl-cert-path takes an argument
35035bb (send-email: be explicit with SSL certificate verification,
2013-07-18) forgot to specify that --smtp-ssl-cert-path takes a string
argument.  This means that the option could not actually be used as
intended.  Presumably noone noticed because it's much easier to set it
through configs anyway.

Add the required "=s".

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-04 11:45:30 -08:00
d4d9653b54 send-email: pass Debug to Net::SMTP::SSL::new
We forgot to pass the Debug option through to Net::SMTP::SSL->new --
which is the same as Net::SMTP->new.  This meant that with security
set to SSL, we would never enable debug output.

Pass through the flag.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-04 11:45:27 -08:00
50d829c11a builtin/push.c: use strbuf instead of manual allocation
The command line arguments given to "git push" are massaged into
a list of refspecs in set_refspecs() function. This was implemented
using xmalloc, strcpy and friends, but it is much easier to read if
done using strbuf.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-03 14:47:18 -08:00
bb5d531efa stop installing git-tar-tree link
When the built-in "git tar-tree" command (a thin wrapper around "git
archive") was removed in 925ceccf (tar-tree: remove deprecated
command, 2013-11-10), the build continued to install a non-functioning
git-tar-tree command in gitexecdir by mistake:

	$ PATH=$(git --exec-path):$PATH
	$ git-tar-tree -h
	fatal: cannot handle tar-tree internally

The list of links in gitexecdir is populated from BUILTIN_OBJS, which
includes builtin/tar-tree.o to implement "git get-tar-commit-id".
Rename the get-tar-commit-id source file to builtin/get-tar-commit-id.c
to reflect its purpose and fix 'make install'.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-03 12:35:22 -08:00
daad3aa255 Sync with 1.8.5.1
* maint:
  Git 1.8.5.1
  ref-iteration doc: add_submodule_odb() returns 0 for success
2013-12-03 11:44:12 -08:00
34f4a75f1e Merge branch 'nd/glossary-content-pathspec-markup'
* nd/glossary-content-pathspec-markup:
  glossary-content.txt: fix documentation of "**" patterns
2013-12-03 11:41:52 -08:00
0b6f39b060 Merge branch 'jj/doc-markup-gitcli'
* jj/doc-markup-gitcli:
  Documentation/gitcli.txt: fix double quotes
2013-12-03 11:41:46 -08:00
f0c9253ef9 Merge branch 'jj/doc-markup-hints-in-coding-guidelines'
* jj/doc-markup-hints-in-coding-guidelines:
  State correct usage of literal examples in man pages in the coding standards
2013-12-03 11:41:44 -08:00
a2cb44c61d Merge branch 'jj/log-doc'
Mark-up fixes.

* jj/log-doc:
  Documentation/git-log.txt: mark-up fix and minor rephasing
  Documentation/git-log: update "--log-size" description
2013-12-03 11:41:41 -08:00
a8cb37fb39 Merge branch 'jj/rev-list-options-doc'
Mark-up and grammo fixes.

* jj/rev-list-options-doc:
  Documentation/rev-list-options.txt: fix some grammatical issues and typos
  Documentation/rev-list-options.txt: fix mark-up
2013-12-03 11:41:37 -08:00
144d84644f Merge branch 'mi/typofixes'
* mi/typofixes:
  contrib: typofixes
  Documentation/technical/http-protocol.txt: typofixes
  typofixes: fix misspelt comments
2013-12-03 11:41:33 -08:00
23ca729228 Merge branch 'tb/doc-fetch-pack-url'
* tb/doc-fetch-pack-url:
  git-fetch-pack uses URLs like git-fetch
2013-12-03 11:41:31 -08:00
a155a5f075 Git 1.8.5.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-03 11:16:56 -08:00
2951add0e9 ref-iteration doc: add_submodule_odb() returns 0 for success
The usage sample of add_submodule_odb() function in the Submodules
section expects non-zero return value for success, but the function
actually reports success with zero.

Helped-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
Signed-off-by: Nick Townsend <nick.townsend@mac.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-03 10:40:40 -08:00
be38bee862 Sync with 1.8.4.5 2013-12-02 15:34:44 -08:00
2f93541d88 Git 1.8.4.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-02 15:33:30 -08:00
ac1fbbda20 submodule: do not copy unknown update mode from .gitmodules
When submodule.$name.update is given as hint from the upstream in
the .gitmodules file, we used to blindly copy it to .git/config,
unless there already is a value defined for the submodule.

However, there is no reason to expect that the update mode hinted by
the upstream is available in the version of Git the user is using,
and a really custom "!cmd" prepared by an upstream person running on
Linux may not even be available to a user on Windows.  It is simply
irresponsible to copy the setting blindly and to attempt to use it
during a later "submodule update" without validating it first.

Just show the suggested value to the diagnostic output, and set the
value to 'none' in the configuration, if it is not one of the ones
that are known to be supported by this version of Git.

Helped-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-02 13:48:06 -08:00
cde0a0576c commit-slab: sizeof() the right type in xrealloc
When allocating the slab, the code accidentally computed the array
size from s->slab (an elemtype**).  The slab is an array of elemtype*,
however, so we should take the size of *s->slab.

Noticed-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-12-02 12:46:01 -08:00
ce2c58cdaa gitk: Recognize -L option
This gives line-log support to gitk, by exploiting the new support for
processing and showing "inline" diffs straight from the git-log
output.

Note that we 'set allknown 0', which is a bit counterintuitive since
this is a "known" option.  But that flag prevents gitk from thinking
it can optimize the view by running rev-list to see the topology; in
the -L case that doesn't work.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@inf.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2013-12-02 09:24:20 +11:00
9403bd02dd gitk: Support showing the gathered inline diffs
The previous commit split the diffs into a separate field.  Now we
actually want to show them.

To that end we use the stored diff, and

- process it once to build a fake "tree diff", i.e., a list of all
  changed files;

- feed it through parseblobdiffline to actually format it into the
  $ctext field, like the existing diff machinery would.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@inf.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2013-12-02 09:24:20 +11:00
b449eb2cb3 gitk: Split out diff part in $commitinfo
So far we just parsed everything after the headers into the "comment"
bit of $commitinfo, including notes and -- if you gave weird options
-- the diff.

Split out the diff, if any, into a separate field.  It's easy to
recognize, since it always starts with /^diff/ and is preceded by an
empty line.

We take care to snip away said empty line.  The display code already
properly spaces the end of the message from the first diff, and
leaving another empty line at the end looks ugly.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@inf.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2013-12-02 09:24:20 +11:00
5de460a2cf gitk: Refactor per-line part of getblobdiffline and its support
For later use with data sources other than a pipe, refactor the big
worker part of getblobdiffline to a separate function
parseblobdiffline.  Also refactor its initialization and wrap-up to
separate routines.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@inf.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2013-12-02 09:24:20 +11:00
71846c5caf gitk: Support -G option from the command line
The -G option's usage is exactly analogous to that of -S, so
supporting it is easy.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@inf.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2013-12-02 09:24:20 +11:00
7c801fbc74 Documentation: revamp git-cherry(1)
git-cherry(1)'s "description" section has never really managed
to explain to me what the command does.  It contains too much
explanation of the algorithm instead of simply saying what
goals it achieves, and too much terminology that we otherwise
do not use (fork-point instead of merge-base).

Try a much more concise approach: state what it finds out, why
this is neat, and how the output is formatted, in a few short
paragraphs.  In return, provide much longer examples of how it
fits into a "format-patch | am" based workflow, and how it
compares to reading the same from git-log.

Also carefully avoid using "merge" in a context where it does
not mean something that comes from git-merge(1).  Instead, say
"apply" in an attempt to further link to patch workflow
concepts.

While there, also omit the language about _which_ upstream
branch we treat as the default.  I literally just learned that
we support having several, so let's not confuse new users
here, especially considering that git-config(1) does not
document this.

Prompted-by: a.huemer@commend.com on #git
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-27 12:16:49 -08:00
d2446dfd7f Git 1.8.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-27 12:14:45 -08:00
4a3fc52d34 Sync with maint
* maint:
  remote-hg: don't decode UTF-8 paths into Unicode objects
2013-11-27 12:13:29 -08:00
5c1d2e8af9 remote-hg: don't decode UTF-8 paths into Unicode objects
The internal mercurial API expects ordinary 8-bit string objects, not
Unicode string objects.  With this change, the test-hg.sh unit tests
pass again.

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Reviewed-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-27 12:09:50 -08:00
eaa6c987e6 SubmittingPatches: document how to handle multiple patches
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-27 11:05:58 -08:00
e9e03a7799 commit-slab: declare functions "static inline"
This shuts up compiler warnings about unused functions.  No such
warnings are currently triggered, but if someone were to actually
use init_NAME_with_stride() as documented, they would get a warning
about init_NAME() being unused.

While there, write a comment about why the last real declaration of
the variable is without a terminating semicolon, while another
forward declarations have one.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-27 10:44:15 -08:00
dcbbc8fa2e commit-slab: document clear_$slabname()
The clear_$slabname() function was only documented by source code so
far.  Write something about it.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-27 10:44:13 -08:00
11d62145b9 remove #!interpreter line from shell libraries
In a shell snippet meant to be sourced by other shell scripts, an
opening #! line does more harm than good.

The harm:

 - When the shell library is sourced, the interpreter and options from
   the #! line are not used.  Specifying a particular shell can
   confuse the reader into thinking it is safe for the shell library
   to rely on idiosyncrasies of that shell.

 - Using #! instead of a plain comment drops a helpful visual clue
   that this is a shell library and not a self-contained script.

 - Tools such as lintian can use a #! line to tell when an
   installation script has failed by forgetting to set a script
   executable.  This check does not work if shell libraries also start
   with a #! line.

The good:

 - Text editors notice the #! line and use it for syntax highlighting
   if you try to edit the installed scripts (without ".sh" suffix) in
   place.

The use of the #! for file type detection is not needed because Git's
shell libraries are meant to be edited in source form (with ".sh"
suffix).  Replace the opening #! lines with comments.

This involves tweaking the test harness's valgrind support to find
shell libraries by looking for "# " in the first line instead of "#!"
(see v1.7.6-rc3~7, 2011-06-17).

Suggested by Russ Allbery through lintian.  Thanks to Jeff King and
Clemens Buchacher for further analysis.

Tested by searching for non-executable scripts with #! line:

	find . -name .git -prune -o -type f -not -executable |
	while read file
	do
		read line <"$file"
		case $line in
		'#!'*)
			echo "$file"
			;;
		esac
	done

The only remaining scripts found are templates for shell scripts
(unimplemented.sh, wrap-for-bin.sh) and sample input used in tests
(t/t4034/perl/{pre,post}).

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-26 14:23:56 -08:00
c74c72034f test: replace shebangs with descriptions in shell libraries
A #! line in these files is misleading, since these scriptlets are
meant to be sourced with '.' (using whatever shell sources them)
instead of run directly using the interpreter named on the #! line.

Removing the #! line shouldn't hurt syntax highlighting since
these files have filenames ending with '.sh'.  For documentation,
add a brief description of how the files are meant to be used in
place of the shebang line.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-26 14:23:52 -08:00
b018c73526 test: make FILEMODE a lazy prereq
This way, test authors don't need to remember to source
lib-prereq-FILEMODE.sh before using the FILEMODE prereq to guard tests
that rely on the executable bit being honored when checking out files.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-26 14:21:26 -08:00
30a3318ac0 contrib: remove git-p4import
The git p4import documentation has suggested git p4 as a better
alternative for more than 6 years.  (According to the mailing list
discussion when it was moved to contrib/, git-p4import has serious
bugs --- e.g., its incremental mode just doesn't work.) Since then,
git p4 has been actively developed and was promoted to a standard git
command alongside git svn.

Searches on google.com/trends and stackoverflow suggest that no one is
looking for git-p4import any more.  Remove it.

Noticed while considering marking the contrib/p4import/git-p4import.py
script executable as part of a wider sweep.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-26 14:21:15 -08:00
2e820ba9bc mark contributed hooks executable
The docs in contrib/hooks/pre-auto-gc-battery suggest:

	For example, if the hook is stored in
	/usr/share/git-core/contrib/hooks/pre-auto-gc-battery:

	chmod a+x pre-auto-gc-battery
	cd /path/to/your/repository.git
	ln -sf /usr/share/git-core/contrib/hooks/pre-auto-gc-battery \
	     hooks/pre-auto-gc

Unfortunately on multi-user systems most users do not have write
access to /usr.  Better to mark the sample hooks executable in
the first place so users do not have to tweak their permissions to
use them by symlinking into .git/hooks/.

Reported-by: Olivier Berger <olivier.berger@it-sudparis.eu>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-25 15:01:22 -08:00
2179b6727e mark perl test scripts executable
These scripts are not run directly as part of a normal build, so no
one noticed that they did not have the +x bit.  Mark them executable
to make it more obvious that they can be run directly (when debugging,
for example).

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-25 15:01:22 -08:00
bc380fca60 mark Windows build scripts executable
On Windows the convention is to rely on filename extensions to decide
whether a file is executable so Windows users are probably not relying
on the executable bit of these scripts, but on other platforms it can
be useful documentation.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-25 15:01:22 -08:00
1ba98a79f1 send-pack: don't send a thin pack to a server which doesn't support it
Up to now git has assumed that all servers are able to fix thin
packs. This is however not always the case.

Document the 'no-thin' capability and prevent send-pack from generating
a thin pack if the server advertises it.

Signed-off-by: Carlos Martín Nieto <cmn@elego.de>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-25 13:16:19 -08:00
c302941cd7 Merge branch 'rh/remote-hg-bzr-updates' (early part)
Unbreaks a recent breakage due to use of unquote-c-style.

This may need to be cherry-picked down to 1.8.4.x series.

* 'rh/remote-hg-bzr-updates' (early part):
  remote-hg: don't decode UTF-8 paths into Unicode objects
2013-11-25 08:20:02 -08:00
109efbe4f2 git p4: Use git diff-tree instead of format-patch
The output of git format-patch can vary with user preferences. In
particular setting diff.noprefix will break the "git apply" that
is done as part of "git p4 submit".

Acked-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Crestez Dan Leonard <cdleonard@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-22 15:30:51 -08:00
b039718d92 drop support for "experimental" loose objects
In git v1.4.3, we introduced a new loose object format that
encoded some object information outside of the zlib stream.
Ultimately the format was dropped in v1.5.3, but we kept the
reading side around to help people migrate objects. Each
time we open a loose object, we use a heuristic to check
whether it is in the normal loose format, or the
experimental one.

This heuristic is robust in the face of valid data, but it
tends to treat corrupted or garbage data as an experimental
object. With the regular format, we would notice quickly
that zlib's crc does not check out and complain. With the
experimental object, we are likely to extract a nonsensical
object size and try to allocate a huge buffer, resulting in
xmalloc calling "die".

This latter behavior is much worse, for two reasons. One,
git reports an allocation error when the real error is
corruption. And two, the program dies unconditionally, so
you cannot even run fsck (which would otherwise ignore the
broken object and keep going).

We could try to improve the heuristic to err on the side of
normal objects in the face of corruption, but there is
really little point. The experimental format is long-dead,
and was never enabled by default to begin with. We can
instead simply remove it. The only affected repository would
be one that explicitly set core.legacyheaders in 2007, and
then never repacked in the intervening 6 years.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-21 11:43:42 -08:00
746be68d31 glossary-content.txt: fix documentation of "**" patterns
"**" means bold in ASCIIDOC, so we need to escape it. This is similar
to 8447dc8 (gitignore.txt: fix documentation of "**" patterns -
2013-11-07)

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-21 10:33:40 -08:00
0b7e4e0da4 Documentation/gitcli.txt: fix double quotes
Replace double quotes around literal examples with backticks

Signed-off-by: Jason St. John <jstjohn@purdue.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-20 15:18:39 -08:00
887c6c18ba diff: restrict pathspec limitations to diff b/f case only
builtin_diff_b_f() needs a path, not pathspec. Other modes in diff
can deal with pathspec just fine. But because of the current
GUARD_PATHSPEC() location, other modes also reject :(glob) and
:(icase).

Move GUARD_PATHSPEC(), and the "path" assignment statement, which is
the reason of this GUARD_PATHSPEC(), inside builtin_diff_b_f().

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-20 15:04:51 -08:00
5fd09df393 Git 1.8.5-rc3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-20 11:27:26 -08:00
039a6d2463 Sync with 1.8.4.4 2013-11-20 11:26:59 -08:00
becb4336cb Git 1.8.4.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-20 11:26:08 -08:00
a39afc08cb Merge branch 'mb/relnotes-1.8.5-fix'
* mb/relnotes-1.8.5-fix:
  RelNotes: spelling & grammar fixes
2013-11-20 11:15:25 -08:00
db64eb655b for-each-ref: avoid color leakage
To make sure that an invocation like the following doesn't leak color,

  $ git for-each-ref --format='%(subject)%(color:green)'

auto-reset at the end of the format string when the last color token
seen in the format string isn't a color-reset.

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-19 10:14:15 -08:00
fddb74c947 for-each-ref: introduce %(color:...) for color
Enhance 'git for-each-ref' with color formatting options.  You can now
use the following format in for-each-ref:

  %(color:green)%(refname:short)%(color:reset)

where color names are described in color.branch.*.

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-19 10:14:15 -08:00
b28061ce0d for-each-ref: introduce %(upstream:track[short])
Introduce %(upstream:track) to display "[ahead M, behind N]" and
%(upstream:trackshort) to display "=", ">", "<", or "<>"
appropriately (inspired by contrib/completion/git-prompt.sh).

Now you can use the following format in for-each-ref:

  %(refname:short)%(upstream:trackshort)

to display refs with terse tracking information.

Note that :track and :trackshort only work with "upstream", and error
out when used with anything else.

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-19 10:14:15 -08:00
569fb49fce RelNotes: spelling & grammar fixes
Signed-off-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 14:35:55 -08:00
c6f1b920ac Merge branch 'nd/literal-pathspecs'
Fixes a regression on 'master' since v1.8.4.

* nd/literal-pathspecs:
  pathspec: stop --*-pathspecs impact on internal parse_pathspec() uses
2013-11-18 14:31:29 -08:00
0386dd37b1 Makefile: add PERLLIB_EXTRA variable that adds to default perl path
Some platforms ship Perl modules used by git scripts outside the
default perl path (e.g., on Mac OS X, Subversion's perl bindings live
in a separate xcode perl path).  Add an PERLLIB_EXTRA variable to hold
a colon-separated list of extra directories to add to the perl path in
git's scripts, as a convenience for packagers.

Requested-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 14:30:23 -08:00
07981dce81 Makefile: rebuild perl scripts when perl paths change
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 14:30:11 -08:00
7a48b83219 for-each-ref: introduce %(HEAD) asterisk marker
'git branch' shows which branch you are currently on with an '*', but
'git for-each-ref' misses this feature.  So, extend its format with
%(HEAD) for the same effect.

Now you can use the following format in for-each-ref:

  %(HEAD) %(refname:short)

to display an asterisk next to the current ref.

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:49:42 -08:00
189a546797 t6300 (for-each-ref): don't hardcode SHA-1 hexes
Use rev-parse in its place, making it easier for future patches to
modify the test script.

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:49:42 -08:00
bc147968a4 t6300 (for-each-ref): clearly demarcate setup
Condense the two-step setup into one step, and give it an appropriate
name.

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:49:42 -08:00
6c68a404e6 remote-bzr, remote-hg: fix email address regular expression
Before, strings like "foo.bar@example.com" would be converted to
"foo. <bar@example.com>" when they should be "unknown
<foo.bar@example.com>".

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Reviewed-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:46:00 -08:00
b2bff43170 test-hg.sh: help user correlate verbose output with email test
It's hard to tell which author conversion test failed when the email
addresses look similar.

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Reviewed-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:45:59 -08:00
962df3dab7 test-hg.sh: fix duplicate content strings in author tests
"beta" was used twice.  Change the second copy to "gamma" and
increment the remaining content strings.

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Reviewed-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:45:59 -08:00
25607db2c3 test-hg.sh: avoid obsolete 'test' syntax
The POSIX spec says that the '-a', '-o', and parentheses operands to
the 'test' utility are obsolete extensions due to the potential for
ambiguity.  Replace '-o' with '|| test' to avoid unspecified behavior.

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Reviewed-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:45:58 -08:00
5105edd411 test-hg.sh: eliminate 'local' bashism
Unlike bash, POSIX shell does not specify a 'local' command for
declaring function-local variable scope.  Except for IFS, the variable
names are not used anywhere else in the script so simply remove the
'local'.  For IFS, move the assignment to the 'read' command to
prevent it from affecting code outside the function.

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Reviewed-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:45:58 -08:00
4945725c64 test-bzr.sh, test-hg.sh: prepare for change to push.default=simple
Change 'git push <remote>' to 'git push <remote> <branch>' in one of
the test-bzr.sh tests to ensure that the test continues to pass when
the default value of push.default changes to simple.

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Reviewed-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:45:57 -08:00
d3243d738d test-bzr.sh, test-hg.sh: allow running from any dir
Set TEST_DIRECTORY to the t/ directory (if TEST_DIRECTORY is not
already set) so that the user doesn't already have to be in the test
directory to run these test scripts.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Based-on-patch-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Reviewed-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:45:57 -08:00
c939d24167 remote-hg: don't decode UTF-8 paths into Unicode objects
The internal mercurial API expects ordinary 8-bit string objects, not
Unicode string objects.  With this change, the test-hg.sh unit tests
pass again.

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Reviewed-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:45:56 -08:00
85176d7251 test-lib.sh: convert $TEST_DIRECTORY to an absolute path
If $TEST_DIRECTORY is specified in the environment, convert the value
to an absolute path to ensure that it remains valid even when 'cd' is
used.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:45:56 -08:00
19d6eb412c Documentation/rev-list-options.txt: fix some grammatical issues and typos
Various fixes:

 - fix typos (e.g. "show" -> "shown")
 - use "regular expression(s)" instead of "regexp" where appropriate
 - reword some sentences for easier reading
 - fix/improve some grammatical issues (e.g. comma usage)
 - add missing articles (e.g. "the")
 - change "E-mail" to "email"

Signed-off-by: Jason St. John <jstjohn@purdue.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:38:43 -08:00
4528aa1aaf Documentation/rev-list-options.txt: fix mark-up
Some the labeled list entries have a blank line between the label
and the body text, and some don't.  Use the latter style for
consistency; incidentally, syntax highlighting in Vim works better
if there is no blank line there.

Typeset literal options, commands, and path names in monospace.
When using `literal string` mark-up to do so, there is no need to
escape AsciiDoc special characters with backslashes, so make sure we
don't do so.

Replace some double quotes with proper AsciiDoc quotes
(e.g. ``foo'').

Signed-off-by: Jason St. John <jstjohn@purdue.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:33:55 -08:00
ca03c3682a State correct usage of literal examples in man pages in the coding standards
The man pages contain inconsistent usage of backticks vs. single quotes
around options, commands, etc. that are in paragraphs. This commit states
that backticks should always be used around literal examples.

This commit states that "--" and friends should not be escaped
(e.g. use `--pretty=oneline` instead of `\--pretty=oneline`).

This commit also states correct usage for typesetting command usage
examples with inline substitutions.

Thanks-to: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Thanks-to: Stuart Rackham <srackham@gmail.com>
Thanks-to: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Jason St. John <jstjohn@purdue.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:30:51 -08:00
5699d17ee0 read-cache.c: fix memory leaks caused by removed cache entries
When cache_entry structs are removed from index_state.cache, they are not
properly freed. Freeing those entries wasn't possible before because we
couldn't remove them from index_state.name_hash.

Now that we _do_ remove the entries from name_hash, we can also free them.
Add 'free(cache_entry)' to all call sites of name-hash.c::remove_name_hash
in read-cache.c (we could free() directly in remove_name_hash(), but
name-hash.c isn't concerned with cache_entry allocation at all).

Accessing a cache_entry after removing it from the index is now no longer
allowed, as the memory has been freed. The following functions need minor
fixes (typically by copying ce->name before use):
 - builtin/rm.c::cmd_rm
 - builtin/update-index.c::do_reupdate
 - read-cache.c::read_index_unmerged
 - resolve-undo.c::unmerge_index_entry_at

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:04:25 -08:00
6bb69077b7 builtin/update-index.c: cleanup update_one
do_reupdate calls update_one with a cache_entry.name, there's no need for
the extra sanitation / normalization that happens in prefix_path.
cmd_update_index calls update_one with an already prefixed path, no need to
prefix_path twice.

Remove the extra prefix_path from update_one. Also remove the now unused
'prefix' and 'prefix_length' parameters.

As of d089eba "setup: sanitize absolute and funny paths in get_pathspec()",
prefix_path uncoditionally returns a copy, even if the passed in path isn't
changed. Lets unconditionally free() the result.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:04:25 -08:00
e837af6134 fix 'git update-index --verbose --again' output
'git update-index --verbose' consistently reports paths relative to the
work-tree root. The only exception is the '--again' option, which reports
paths relative to the current working directory.

Change do_reupdate to use non-prefixed paths.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:04:25 -08:00
efc684245b remove old hash.[ch] implementation
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:04:25 -08:00
419a597f64 name-hash.c: remove cache entries instead of marking them CE_UNHASHED
The new hashmap implementation supports remove, so really remove unused
cache entries from the name hashmap instead of just marking them.

The CE_UNHASHED flag and CE_STATE_MASK are no longer needed.

Keep the CE_HASHED flag to prevent adding entries twice.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:04:24 -08:00
8b013788a1 name-hash.c: use new hash map implementation for cache entries
Note: the "ce->next = NULL;" in unpack-trees.c::do_add_entry can safely be
removed, as ce->next (now ce->ent.next) is always properly initialized in
name-hash.c::hash_index_entry.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:04:24 -08:00
1c8cca190a name-hash.c: remove unreferenced directory entries
The new hashmap implementation supports remove, so remove and free
directory entries that are no longer referenced by active cache entries.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:04:24 -08:00
e05881a457 name-hash.c: use new hash map implementation for directories
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:04:23 -08:00
f79d9c5814 diffcore-rename.c: use new hash map implementation
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:04:23 -08:00
7c85f8acb2 diffcore-rename.c: simplify finding exact renames
The find_exact_renames function currently only uses the hash table for
grouping, i.e.:

1. add sources
2. add destinations
3. iterate all buckets, per bucket:
4. split sources from destinations
5. iterate destinations, per destination:
6. iterate sources to find best match

This can be simplified by utilizing the lookup functionality of the hash
table, i.e.:

1. add sources
2. iterate destinations, per destination:
3. lookup sources matching the current destination
4. iterate sources to find best match

This saves several iterations and file_similarity allocations for the
destinations.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:04:23 -08:00
48f6407ffe diffcore-rename.c: move code around to prepare for the next patch
No actual code changes, just move hash_filespec up and outdent part of
find_identical_files.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:04:22 -08:00
29d8a834b5 buitin/describe.c: use new hash map implementation
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:04:22 -08:00
6a364ced49 add a hashtable implementation that supports O(1) removal
The existing hashtable implementation (in hash.[ch]) uses open addressing
(i.e. resolve hash collisions by distributing entries across the table).
Thus, removal is difficult to implement with less than O(n) complexity.
Resolving collisions of entries with identical hashes (e.g. via chaining)
is left to the client code.

Add a hashtable implementation that supports O(1) removal and is slightly
easier to use due to builtin entry chaining.

Supports all basic operations init, free, get, add, remove and iteration.

Also includes ready-to-use hash functions based on the public domain FNV-1
algorithm (http://www.isthe.com/chongo/tech/comp/fnv).

The per-entry data structure (hashmap_entry) is piggybacked in front of
the client's data structure to save memory. See test-hashmap.c for usage
examples.

The hashtable is resized by a factor of four when 80% full. With these
settings, average memory consumption is about 2/3 of hash.[ch], and
insertion is about twice as fast due to less frequent resizing.

Lookups are also slightly faster, because entries are strictly confined to
their bucket (i.e. no data of other buckets needs to be traversed).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 13:03:51 -08:00
33da0c9c3c Merge branch 'maint'
Hotfix for recent regression while talking to upload-pack
in a repository with many symbolic refs.

* maint:
  Revert "upload-pack: send non-HEAD symbolic refs"
2013-11-18 12:25:28 -08:00
ab930f0296 Merge branch 'jx/branch-vv-always-compare-with-upstream'
Hot-fix for a regression.

* jx/branch-vv-always-compare-with-upstream:
  branch: fix --verbose output column alignment
2013-11-18 12:24:49 -08:00
6b364d48f2 branch: fix --verbose output column alignment
Commit f2e0873 (branch: report invalid tracking branch as gone) removed
an early return from fill_tracking_info() in the path taken when 'git
branch -v' lists a branch in sync with its upstream. This resulted in an
unconditionally added space in front of the subject line:

    $ git branch -v
    * master f5eb3da  commit pushed to upstream
      topic  f935eb6 unpublished topic

Instead, only add the trailing space if a decoration have been added.

To catch this kind of whitespace breakage in the tests, be a bit less
smart when filtering the output through sed.

Signed-off-by: Torstein Hegge <hegge@resisty.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 11:24:08 -08:00
7e3dae4943 compat: add endianness helpers
The POSIX standard doesn't currently define a `ntohll`/`htonll`
function pair to perform network-to-host and host-to-network
swaps of 64-bit data. These 64-bit swaps are necessary for the on-disk
storage of EWAH bitmaps if they are not in native byte order.

Many thanks to Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk> and
Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de> for cygwin/mingw/msvc
portability fixes.

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-18 10:57:42 -08:00
d007dbf7d6 Revert "upload-pack: send non-HEAD symbolic refs"
This reverts commit 5e7dcad771cb873e278a0571b46910d7c32e2f6c; there
may be unbounded number of symbolic refs in the repository, but the
capability header line in the on-wire protocol has a rather low
length limit.
2013-11-18 10:15:45 -08:00
73fd416b29 git-gui: correct spelling errors in comments
Signed-off-by: Masanari Iida <standby24x7@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2013-11-15 20:44:08 +00:00
11037ee7e3 push: switch default from "matching" to "simple"
We promised to change the behaviour of lazy "git push [there]" that
does not say what to push on the command line from "matching" to
"simple" in Git 2.0.

This finally flips that bit.

Helped-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-13 14:12:37 -08:00
c13a5fe47b push: enhance unspecified push default warning
When the unset push.default warning message is displayed this may be
the first time many users encounter push.default.

Explain in the warning message in a compact manner what push.default
is and what the change means to the end-user to help the users decide.

Signed-off-by: Greg Jacobson <coder5000@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Helped-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-13 14:12:23 -08:00
b20cc13e73 Documentation/git-log.txt: mark-up fix and minor rephasing
- typeset options, commands, and paths in monospace;
 - typeset references to sections with emphasis;
 - replace some double quotes with proper AsciiDoc quotes (e.g. ``foo'');
 - use title case when referring to section headings.

Signed-off-by: Jason St. John <jstjohn@purdue.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-13 14:09:14 -08:00
c20e6fb1df Documentation/git-log: update "--log-size" description
"--log-size" was added in commit 9fa3465, and the commit message
contained a satisfactory explanation; however, the man page entry
for it did not describe the actual output format, what the output
meant and what the option was meant to be used for.

Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jason St. John <jstjohn@purdue.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-13 14:06:17 -08:00
03973056a0 Git 1.8.5-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-13 12:59:31 -08:00
816b2c04c9 peek-remote: remove deprecated alias of ls-remote
This has been deprecated since commit 87194d2 (Deprecate peek-remote,
2007-11-24), included in version 1.5.4.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-12 14:10:22 -08:00
7c4012812a lost-found: remove deprecated command
"git lost-found" has been deprecated since commit fc8b5f0 (Deprecate
git-lost-found, 2007-11-08), included in version 1.5.4.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-12 14:10:21 -08:00
925ceccf05 tar-tree: remove deprecated command
"git tar-tree" has been a thin wrapper around "git archive" since commit
fd88d9c (Remove upload-tar and make git-tar-tree a thin wrapper to
git-archive, 2006-09-24), which also made it print a message indicating
that git-tar-tree is deprecated.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-12 14:10:19 -08:00
eb8e7e1d9a repo-config: remove deprecated alias for "git config"
The release notes for Git 1.5.4 say that "git repo-config" will be
removed in the next feature release.  Since Git 2.0 is nearly here,
remove it.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-12 14:10:17 -08:00
f9e3c6bebb transport-helper: check for 'forced update' message
So the remote-helpers can tell us when a forced push was needed.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-12 13:34:48 -08:00
510fa6f518 transport-helper: add 'force' to 'export' helpers
Otherwise they cannot know when to force the push or not (other than
hacks).

Tests-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Documentation-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-12 13:34:32 -08:00
1e2371ea66 bundle: use argv-array
Instead of hand-crafted arrays to manage command line arguments
we create internally, use argv-array helpers.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-12 13:32:11 -08:00
706150404d Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: improve error message when pushing to unknown upstream
  l10n: de.po: translate 68 new messages
  po/TEAMS: update Thomas Rast's email address
  l10n: Update Swedish translation (2194t0f0u)
  l10n: fr.po 2194/1294 messages translated
  l10n: zh_CN.po: translate 68 messages (2194t0f0u)
  l10n: vi.po (2194t): Update and minor fix
  l10n: git.pot: v1.8.5 round 1 (68 new, 9 removed)
2013-11-12 11:26:11 -08:00
0ffa154b5b Correct word usage of "timezone" in "Documentation" directory
"timezone" is two words, not one (i.e. "time zone" is correct).

Correct this in these files:
-- date-formats.txt
-- git-blame.txt
-- git-cvsimport.txt
-- git-fast-import.txt
-- git-svn.txt
-- gitweb.conf.txt
-- rev-list-options.txt

Signed-off-by: Jason St. John <jstjohn@purdue.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-12 10:47:17 -08:00
68840cb5af contrib: typofixes
Signed-off-by: Masanari Iida <standby24x7@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-12 09:42:21 -08:00
7e7cf80d74 Documentation/technical/http-protocol.txt: typofixes
Signed-off-by: Masanari Iida <standby24x7@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-12 09:42:08 -08:00
382d20e3eb typofixes: fix misspelt comments
Signed-off-by: Masanari Iida <standby24x7@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-12 09:24:27 -08:00
1f6fb7ffc3 l10n: de.po: improve error message when pushing to unknown upstream
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
2013-11-12 06:31:15 +01:00
1d38363d86 l10n: de.po: translate 68 new messages
Translate 68 new messages came from git.pot update in 727b957
(l10n: git.pot: v1.8.5 round 1 (68 new, 9 removed)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
2013-11-12 06:31:15 +01:00
1b12df5262 po/TEAMS: update Thomas Rast's email address
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
2013-11-12 06:31:15 +01:00
c635b050e7 git-remote-mediawiki build: handle DESTDIR/INSTLIBDIR with whitespace
Quote DESTDIR and INSTLIBDIR for the shell in the same way as is done in
the toplevel Makefile to avoid confusion in case they contain shell
metacharacters.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-11 14:14:07 -08:00
33f918c675 git-remote-mediawiki build: make 'install' command configurable
On some machines, the most usable 'install' tool is named
'ginstall'.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-11 14:14:06 -08:00
c311741331 git-remote-mediawiki: honor DESTDIR in "make install"
So now you can run

	DESTDIR=$(pwd)/tmp make -Ccontrib/mw-to-git install

to install the mediawiki remote helper, git-mw tool, and Git::Mediawiki
perl module under tmp/ as preparation for zipping it up and extracting
on another machine.

While at it, make sure the directory that should contain Git::Mediawiki
exists before putting a file there.  Without this patch, the makefile
uses DESTDIR when installing git-mw and git-remote-mediawiki but not
the perl module, resulting in errors from "make install" if the
$(INSTLIBDIR)/Git directory does not exist:

 install: cannot create regular file \
 '/usr/share/perl/5.18.1/Git/Mediawiki.pm': No such file or directory

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-11 14:14:06 -08:00
361412828a submodule update: remove unnecessary orig_flags variable
cmd_update() in the submodule script tries to preserve the options given
on the command line in the "orig_flags" variable to pass them on into the
recursion when the '--recursive' option is given. But this isn't necessary
because all the variables set by the options will be seen in the recursion
too as that is achieved by executing "eval cmd_update".

The same has already been done for cmd_status() in e15bec0ec, so let's
clean up cmd_update() likewise. Also add a test to make sure that a
submodule name given on the command line is not passed into the recursion
(which was the goal of adding the orig_flags variable in 98dbe63db).

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-11 14:10:57 -08:00
70cce99441 git-fetch-pack uses URLs like git-fetch
"git fetch-pack" allows [<host>:]<directory> to point out the source
repository.
Use the term <repository>, which is already used in "git fetch" or "git pull"
to describe URLs supported by Git.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-11 12:18:05 -08:00
3176c59290 git-remote-mediawiki: do not remove installed files in "clean" target
Running "make clean" after a successful "make install" should not
result in a broken mediawiki remote helper.

Reported-by: Thorsten Glaser <t.glaser@tarent.de>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-11 10:13:34 -08:00
86fe7c0117 Merge remote-tracking branch 'sv/nafmo/master'
* sv/nafmo/master:
  l10n: Update Swedish translation (2194t0f0u)
2013-11-10 08:48:23 +08:00
1f32de1e14 l10n: Update Swedish translation (2194t0f0u)
And fix a typo.

Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2013-11-09 19:08:23 +01:00
eadd122b5e l10n: fr.po 2194/1294 messages translated
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Sebastien Helleu <flashcode@flashtux.org>
2013-11-08 23:27:57 +01:00
0ecd94d7d7 Sync with 1.8.4.3 2013-11-08 12:08:43 -08:00
d7d2c87955 Git 1.8.4.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-08 12:06:19 -08:00
cdc0c0f520 Merge branch 'jn/test-prereq-perl-doc' into maint
The interaction between use of Perl in our test suite and NO_PERL
has been clarified a bit.

* jn/test-prereq-perl-doc:
  t/README: tests can use perl even with NO_PERL
2013-11-08 12:01:58 -08:00
4bc3d3fca0 Merge branch 'ap/remote-hg-unquote-cquote' into maint
A fast-import stream expresses a pathname with funny characters by
quoting them in C style; remote-hg remote helper (in contrib/)
forgot to unquote such a path.

* ap/remote-hg-unquote-cquote:
  remote-hg: unquote C-style paths when exporting
2013-11-08 12:01:14 -08:00
9196a2f8bd Merge branch 'jc/upload-pack-send-symref' into maint
One long-standing flaw in the pack transfer protocol used by "git
clone" was that there was no way to tell the other end which branch
"HEAD" points at, and the receiving end needed to guess.  A new
capability has been defined in the pack protocol to convey this
information so that cloning from a repository with more than one
branches pointing at the same commit where the HEAD is at now
reliably sets the initial branch in the resulting repository.

* jc/upload-pack-send-symref:
  t5570: Update for clone-progress-to-stderr branch
  t5570: Update for symref capability
  clone: test the new HEAD detection logic
  connect: annotate refs with their symref information in get_remote_head()
  connect.c: make parse_feature_value() static
  upload-pack: send non-HEAD symbolic refs
  upload-pack: send symbolic ref information as capability
  upload-pack.c: do not pass confusing cb_data to mark_our_ref()
  t5505: fix "set-head --auto with ambiguous HEAD" test
2013-11-08 11:38:00 -08:00
e5becd042f Merge branch 'jk/http-auth-redirects' into maint
We did not handle cases where http transport gets redirected during
the authorization request (e.g. from http:// to https://).

* jk/http-auth-redirects:
  http.c: Spell the null pointer as NULL
  remote-curl: rewrite base url from info/refs redirects
  remote-curl: store url as a strbuf
  remote-curl: make refs_url a strbuf
  http: update base URLs when we see redirects
  http: provide effective url to callers
  http: hoist credential request out of handle_curl_result
  http: refactor options to http_get_*
  http_request: factor out curlinfo_strbuf
  http_get_file: style fixes
2013-11-08 11:37:26 -08:00
867b1c1bf6 Sync with maint
* maint:
  Start preparing for 1.8.4.3
  gitignore.txt: fix documentation of "**" patterns
2013-11-07 14:41:25 -08:00
486b65a4c3 Start preparing for 1.8.4.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-07 14:39:47 -08:00
8edf8c0a9b Merge branch 'sc/doc-howto-dumb-http' into maint
An ancient How-To on serving Git repositories on an HTTP server
lacked a warning that it has been mostly superseded with more
modern way.

* sc/doc-howto-dumb-http:
  doc/howto: warn about (dumb)http server document being too old
2013-11-07 14:37:39 -08:00
5022b58e58 Merge branch 'vd/doc-unpack-objects' into maint
The synopsis section of "git unpack-objects" documentation has been
clarified a bit.

* vd/doc-unpack-objects:
  Documentation: "pack-file" is not literal in unpack-objects
  Documentation: restore a space in unpack-objects usage
2013-11-07 14:37:36 -08:00
4ccf2f506c Merge branch 'jk/subtree-install-fix' into maint
We did not generate HTML version of documentation to "git subtree"
in contrib/.

* jk/subtree-install-fix:
  subtree: add makefile target for html docs
2013-11-07 14:37:17 -08:00
46992b5411 Merge branch 'hn/log-graph-color-octopus' into maint
Coloring around octopus merges in "log --graph" output was screwy.

* hn/log-graph-color-octopus:
  graph: fix coloring around octopus merges
2013-11-07 14:37:11 -08:00
07c55c00a5 Merge branch 'mm/checkout-auto-track-fix' into maint
"git checkout topic", when there is not yet a local "topic" branch
but there is a unique remote-tracking branch for a remote "topic"
branch, pretended as if "git checkout -t -b topic remote/$r/topic"
(for that unique remote $r) was run. This hack however was not
implemented for "git checkout topic --".

* mm/checkout-auto-track-fix:
  checkout: proper error message on 'git checkout foo bar --'
  checkout: allow dwim for branch creation for "git checkout $branch --"
2013-11-07 14:36:59 -08:00
9ad3f74cb6 Merge branch 'sg/prompt-svn-remote-fix' into maint
Bash prompting code to deal with an SVN remote as an upstream
were coded in a way not supported by older Bash versions (3.x).

* sg/prompt-svn-remote-fix:
  bash prompt: don't use '+=' operator in show upstream code path
2013-11-07 14:36:45 -08:00
0ceb7537c1 Merge branch 'jk/split-broken-ident' into maint
The fall-back parsing of commit objects with broken author or
committer lines were less robust than ideal in picking up the
timestamps.

* jk/split-broken-ident:
  split_ident: parse timestamp from end of line
2013-11-07 14:34:51 -08:00
0faff47d7b Merge branch 'jc/revision-range-unpeel' into maint
"git rev-list --objects ^v1.0^ v1.0" gave v1.0 tag itself in the
output, but "git rev-list --objects v1.0^..v1.0" did not.

* jc/revision-range-unpeel:
  revision: do not peel tags used in range notation
2013-11-07 14:34:14 -08:00
8447dc8904 gitignore.txt: fix documentation of "**" patterns
"**" means bold in ASCIIDOC, so we need to escape it.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-07 10:49:52 -08:00
bc8d6b9b90 submodule: don't access the .gitmodules cache entry after removing it
Commit 5fee995244 introduced the stage_updated_gitmodules() function to
add submodule configuration updates to the index. It assumed that even
after calling remove_cache_entry_at() the same cache entry would still be
valid. This was true in the old days, as cache entries could never be
freed, but that is not so sure in the present as there is ongoing work to
free removed cache entries, which makes this code segfault.

Fix that by calling add_file_to_cache() instead of open coding it. Also
remove the "could not find .gitmodules in index" warning, as that won't
happen in regular use cases (and by then just silently adding it to the
index we do the right thing).

Thanks-to: Karsten Blees <karsten.blees@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-07 10:28:26 -08:00
6ba01babcd Git 1.8.5-rc1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-06 14:35:19 -08:00
152a9c17a8 Merge branch 'fc/trivial'
A random collection of style fixes and minor doc updates.

* fc/trivial:
  setup: trivial style fixes
  run-command: trivial style fixes
  diff: trivial style fix
  revision: trivial style fixes
  pretty: trivial style fix
  describe: trivial style fixes
  transport-helper: trivial style fix
  sha1-name: trivial style cleanup
  branch: trivial style fix
  revision: add missing include
  doc/pull: clarify the illustrations
  t: replace pulls with merges
  merge: simplify ff-only option
2013-11-06 14:34:43 -08:00
3651e45c34 wt-status: take the alignment burden off translators
It's not easy for translators to see spaces in these strings have to
align, especially when there are no guarantees that these strings are
grouped together in .po files. Refactor the code and do the alignment
automatically.

Noticed-by: Wolfgang Rohdewald <wolfgang@rohdewald.de>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-06 12:11:30 -08:00
4ef8d1dd03 sha1_loose_object_info(): do not return success on missing object
Since 052fe5ea (sha1_loose_object_info: make type lookup optional,
2013-07-12), sha1_loose_object_info() returns happily without
checking if the object in question exists, which is not what the the
caller sha1_object_info_extended() expects; the caller does not even
bother checking the existence of the object itself.

Noticed-by: Sven Brauch <svenbrauch@googlemail.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-06 11:03:33 -08:00
f26f72de15 Update draft release notes to 1.8.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-04 15:05:08 -08:00
944adac909 Merge branch 'bw/solaris-sed-tr-test-portability'
* bw/solaris-sed-tr-test-portability:
  t4015: simplify sed command that is not even seen by sed
  Avoid difference in tr semantics between System V and BSD
  Change sed i\ usage to something Solaris' sed can handle
2013-11-04 14:58:20 -08:00
ea065926b3 Merge branch 'vd/doc-unpack-objects'
* vd/doc-unpack-objects:
  Documentation: "pack-file" is not literal in unpack-objects
  Documentation: restore a space in unpack-objects usage
2013-11-04 14:58:16 -08:00
d35a42a62e Merge branch 'jk/duplicate-objects-in-packs'
Test fixup to a topic recently graduated.

* jk/duplicate-objects-in-packs:
  Fix '\%o' for printf from coreutils
2013-11-04 14:58:10 -08:00
59c21d1789 Merge branch 'jk/subtree-install-fix'
* jk/subtree-install-fix:
  subtree: add makefile target for html docs
2013-11-04 14:58:08 -08:00
ec787db662 Merge branch 'ak/cvsserver-stabilize-use-of-hash-keys'
* ak/cvsserver-stabilize-use-of-hash-keys:
  cvsserver: Determinize output to combat Perl 5.18 hash randomization
2013-11-04 14:58:05 -08:00
a3a9cff037 Merge branch 'jk/wrap-perl-used-in-tests'
* jk/wrap-perl-used-in-tests:
  t: use perl instead of "$PERL_PATH" where applicable
  t: provide a perl() function which uses $PERL_PATH
2013-11-04 14:58:02 -08:00
68d5fbe285 Merge branch 'sc/doc-howto-dumb-http'
* sc/doc-howto-dumb-http:
  doc/howto: warn about (dumb)http server document being too old
2013-11-04 14:57:57 -08:00
46466ea1db Merge branch 'jn/test-prereq-perl-doc'
* jn/test-prereq-perl-doc:
  t/README: tests can use perl even with NO_PERL
2013-11-04 14:57:53 -08:00
77b43cac9f t1005: add test for "read-tree --reset -u A B"
With a conflicted index, this used to give us an error.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-04 10:13:45 -08:00
76da5b1d22 t1005: reindent
Just to update the style of this ancient test script to match
our house style.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-04 10:13:45 -08:00
b018ff6085 unpack-trees: fix "read-tree -u --reset A B" with conflicted index
When we call "read-tree --reset -u HEAD ORIG_HEAD", the first thing we
do with the index is to call read_cache_unmerged.  Originally that
would read the index, leaving aside any unmerged entries.  However, as
of d1a43f2 (reset --hard/read-tree --reset -u: remove unmerged new
paths, 2008-10-15), it actually creates a new cache entry to serve as
a placeholder, so that we later know to update the working tree.

However, we later noticed that the sha1 of that unmerged entry was
just copied from some higher stage, leaving you with random content in
the index.  That was fixed by e11d7b5 ("reset --merge": fix unmerged
case, 2009-12-31), which instead puts the null sha1 into the newly
created entry, and sets a CE_CONFLICTED flag. At the same time, it
teaches the unpack-trees machinery to pay attention to this flag, so
that oneway_merge throws away the current value.

However, it did not update the code paths for twoway_merge, which is
where we end up in the two-way read-tree with --reset. We notice that
the HEAD and ORIG_HEAD versions are the same, and say "oh, we can just
reuse the current version". But that's not true. The current version
is bogus.

Notice this case and make sure we do not keep the bogus entry; either
we do not have that path in the tree we are moving to (i.e. remove
it), or we want to have the cache entry we created for the tree we are
moving to (i.e. resolve by explicitly saying the "newtree" version is
what we want).

[jc: this is from the almost year-old $gmane/212316]

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-04 10:13:27 -08:00
05e9d907dd t4015: simplify sed command that is not even seen by sed
Noticed by Andreas Schwab; \<LF> inside a double quotes pair is
eaten by the shell to become an empty string and is not doing
anything.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-04 10:11:15 -08:00
903147923e l10n: zh_CN.po: translate 68 messages (2194t0f0u)
Translate 68 new messages came from git.pot update in 727b957
(l10n: git.pot: v1.8.5 round 1 (68 new, 9 removed)).

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2013-11-03 14:09:08 +08:00
44bb9364e2 l10n: vi.po (2194t): Update and minor fix
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2013-11-02 13:21:55 +07:00
727b9576eb l10n: git.pot: v1.8.5 round 1 (68 new, 9 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v1.8.5-rc0-23-gaa27064 for git v1.8.5
l10n round 1.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2013-11-02 08:08:26 +08:00
9dc01bf063 rev-parse: introduce --exclude=<glob> to tame wildcards
Teach "rev-parse" the same "I'm going to glob, but omit the ones
that match these patterns" feature as "rev-list".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-01 13:09:45 -07:00
ff32d3420a rev-list --exclude: export add/clear-ref-exclusion and ref-excluded API
... while updating their function signature.  To be squashed into
the initial patch to rev-list.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-01 13:09:24 -07:00
751a2ac6ed rev-list --exclude: tests
Add tests for the --exclude=<glob> feature.

A few tests are added for cases where use of globbing and
"--exclude" results in no positive revisions:

 * "--exclude=<glob>" before "--all" etc. resulted in no results;

 * "--stdin" is used but no input was given;

 * "--all" etc. is used but no matching refs are found.

Currently, we fail such a request with the same error message we
would give to a command line that does not specify any positive
revision (e.g. "git rev-list<ENTER>").

We may want to treat these cases differently and not error out, but
the logic to detect that would be common to all of them, so I'd
leave it outside this topic for now, and stop at adding these tests
as food-for-thought.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-01 13:09:23 -07:00
574d370b06 document --exclude option
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-01 13:09:19 -07:00
61e2e22f60 Documentation: "pack-file" is not literal in unpack-objects
Make it clear that "pack-file" is not to be spelled as is in the
unpack-objects usage.

Signed-off-by: Vivien Didelot <vivien.didelot@savoirfairelinux.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-01 09:13:35 -07:00
aa2706463f Update draft release notes to 1.8.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-11-01 08:14:52 -07:00
e0fd1e3841 Merge branch 'sb/refs-code-cleanup'
* sb/refs-code-cleanup:
  cache: remove unused function 'have_git_dir'
  refs: remove unused function invalidate_ref_cache
2013-11-01 07:38:58 -07:00
c9bb7d040a Merge branch 'rs/web-browse-xdg-open'
* rs/web-browse-xdg-open:
  web--browse: Add support for xdg-open
2013-11-01 07:38:56 -07:00
fbaa22678b Merge branch 'js/tests-windows-port-fix'
* js/tests-windows-port-fix:
  tests: undo special treatment of CRLF for Windows
  Windows: a test_cmp that is agnostic to random LF <> CRLF conversions
  t5300-pack-object: do not compare binary data using test_cmp
2013-11-01 07:38:54 -07:00
cbe59df99a Merge branch 'js/test-help-format-windows-port-fix'
* js/test-help-format-windows-port-fix:
  t3200: do not open a HTML manual page when DEFAULT_MAN_FORMAT is html
2013-11-01 07:38:51 -07:00
1feb458fb9 Merge branch 'jk/reset-p-current-head-fix'
"git reset -p HEAD" has codepath to special case it from resetting
to contents of other commits, but recent change broke it.

* jk/reset-p-current-head-fix:
  reset: pass real rev name to add--interactive
  add-interactive: handle unborn branch in patch mode
2013-11-01 07:38:49 -07:00
60e779adaa Merge branch 'jk/pack-corruption-post-mortem'
* jk/pack-corruption-post-mortem:
  howto: add article on recovering a corrupted object
2013-11-01 07:38:46 -07:00
c167b76a62 Merge branch 'jk/for-each-ref-skip-parsing'
* jk/for-each-ref-skip-parsing:
  for-each-ref: avoid loading objects to print %(objectname)
2013-11-01 07:38:41 -07:00
583736c0bc Merge branch 'ap/remote-hg-unquote-cquote'
A fast-import stream expresses a pathname with funny characters by
quoting them in C style; remote-hg remote helper forgot to unquote
such a path.

* ap/remote-hg-unquote-cquote:
  remote-hg: unquote C-style paths when exporting
2013-11-01 07:38:35 -07:00
9dd860c856 Merge branch 'jl/submodule-mv'
Moving a regular file in a repository with a .gitmodules file was
producing a warning 'Could not find section in .gitmodules where
path=<filename>'.

* jl/submodule-mv:
  mv: Fix spurious warning when moving a file in presence of submodules
2013-11-01 07:38:27 -07:00
f8c872127d rev-parse --parseopt: add the --stuck-long mode
Add the --stuck-long option to output the options in their long form
if available, and with their arguments stuck.

Contrary to the default form (non stuck arguments and short options),
this can be parsed unambiguously when using options with optional
arguments :

 - in the non stuck form, when an option is taking an optional argument
   you cannot know if the next argument is its optional argument, or the
   next option.

 - the long options form allows to differentiate between an empty argument
   '--option=' and an unset argument '--option', which is not possible
   with short options.

Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 15:47:41 -07:00
b0d12fc9b2 Use the word 'stuck' instead of 'sticked'
The past participle of 'stick' is 'stuck'.

Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 15:47:38 -07:00
724249862e Documentation: restore a space in unpack-objects usage
The commit 87b7b84 removed a space in the unpack-objects usage, which
makes the synopsis a bit confusing. This patch simply restores it.

Signed-off-by: Vivien Didelot <vivien.didelot@savoirfairelinux.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 15:11:28 -07:00
abf03eeb8e setup: trivial style fixes
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 13:48:32 -07:00
5a50085c6b run-command: trivial style fixes
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 13:48:26 -07:00
4e7e4b6b1b diff: trivial style fix
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 13:48:09 -07:00
9e57ac55ce revision: trivial style fixes
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 13:48:05 -07:00
35b2fa5ba3 pretty: trivial style fix
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 13:47:41 -07:00
c44726438f describe: trivial style fixes
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 13:47:35 -07:00
23cd01ec53 transport-helper: trivial style fix
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 13:47:22 -07:00
57b15ead77 sha1-name: trivial style cleanup
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 13:47:19 -07:00
54d07f2e25 branch: trivial style fix
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 13:46:55 -07:00
19ecb564ad revision: add missing include
Otherwise we might not have 'struct diff_options'.

[jc: needs a matching follow-up patch to remove inclusion of diff.h
from *.c files that do not themselves use anything from diff.h]

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 13:46:03 -07:00
5a3fd6afd4 doc/pull: clarify the illustrations
The second illustration that shows the history after "git pull"
spelled the remote-tracking branch with "remotes/" prefix, which
is not necessary.  Drop it.

To match the assumption that a remote-tracking branch is used to
keep track of the advancement of the master at the origin, update
the first illustration that shows the history before "git pull"
to show the distinction between the master currently at origin and
the stale origin/master remote-tracking branch.

Noticed-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Max Horn <max@quendi.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 13:45:29 -07:00
5a75353fe3 transport-helper: don't update refs in dry-run
The remote helper namespace should not be updated.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 11:16:57 -07:00
a21455ae66 transport-helper: mismerge fix
Commit 9c51558 (transport-helper: trivial code shuffle) moved these
lines above, but 99d9ec0 (Merge branch 'fc/transport-helper-no-refspec')
had a wrong merge conflict and readded them.

Reported-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 11:16:40 -07:00
501a75a7b3 t: replace pulls with merges
This is what the code intended.

No functional changes.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 11:12:26 -07:00
90f867b9a5 merge: simplify ff-only option
No functional changes.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 11:12:24 -07:00
fbc812a600 Fix '\%o' for printf from coreutils
The printf utility provided by coreutils when interpreting '\%o' format
does not recognize %o as formatting directive. For example
printf '\%o 0 returns \%o and warning: ignoring excess arguments,
starting with ‘0’, which results in failed tests in
t5309-pack-delta-cycles.sh. In most shells the test ends with success as
the printf is a builtin utility.

Fix it by using '\\%o' which is interpreted consistently in all versions
of printf.

Signed-off-by: Kacper Kornet <draenog@pld-linux.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-31 10:24:33 -07:00
c80d96ca0c remote-curl: fix large pushes with GSSAPI
Due to an interaction between the way libcurl handles GSSAPI
authentication over HTTP and the way git uses libcurl, large
pushes (those over http.postBuffer bytes) would fail due to
an authentication failure requiring a rewind of the curl
buffer.  Such a rewind was not possible because the data did
not fit into the entire buffer.

Enable the use of the Expect: 100-continue header for large
requests where the server offers GSSAPI authentication to
avoid this issue, since the request would otherwise fail.
This allows git to get the authentication data right before
sending the pack contents.  Existing cases where pushes
would succeed, including small requests using GSSAPI, still
disable the use of 100 Continue, as it causes problems for
some remote HTTP implementations (servers and proxies).

Signed-off-by: Brian M. Carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2013-10-31 10:13:40 -07:00
3a347ed707 remote-curl: pass curl slot_results back through run_slot
Some callers may want to know more than just the integer
error code we return. Let them optionally pass a
slot_results struct to fill in (or NULL if they do not
care). In either case we continue to return the integer
code.

We can also give probe_rpc the same treatment (since it
builds directly on run_slot).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2013-10-31 10:05:59 -07:00
0972ccd97c http: return curl's AUTHAVAIL via slot_results
Callers of the http code may want to know which auth types
were available for the previous request. But after finishing
with the curl slot, they are not supposed to look at the
curl handle again. We already handle returning other
information via the slot_results struct; let's add a flag to
check the available auth.

Note that older versions of curl did not support this, so we
simply return 0 (something like "-1" would be worse, as the
value is a bitflag and we might accidentally set a flag).
This is sufficient for the callers planned in this series,
who only trigger some optional behavior if particular bits
are set, and can live with a fake "no bits" answer.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2013-10-31 10:05:55 -07:00
4399fe3372 gitk: Tag display improvements
When a commit has many tags, the tag icons in the graph display can
easily become so wide as to push the commit message off the right-hand
edge of the graph display pane.  This changes the display so that if
there are more than 3 tags or they would take up more than a quarter
of the width of the pane, we instead display a single tag icon with
a legend inside it like "4 tags...".  If the user clicks on the tag
icon, gitk then displays all the tags in the diff display pane.

Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2013-10-31 20:03:28 +11:00
f096e6e826 fetch: improve the error messages emitted for conflicting refspecs
If we find two refspecs that want to update the same local reference,
emit an error message that is more informative based on whether one of
the conflicting refspecs is an opportunistic update during a fetch
with explicit command-line refspecs.  And especially, do not die if an
opportunistic reference update conflicts with an express wish of the
user; rather, just emit a warning and skip the opportunistic reference
update.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:42 -07:00
76ea6717fe handle_duplicate(): mark error message for translation
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:42 -07:00
df02ebdac8 ref_remote_duplicates(): extract a function handle_duplicate()
It will become more complex in a moment.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:41 -07:00
b9afe6654d ref_remove_duplicates(): simplify loop logic
Change the loop body into the more straightforward

* remove item from the front of the old list
* if necessary, add it to the tail of the new list

and return a pointer to the new list (even though it is currently
always the same as the input argument, because the first element in
the list is currently never deleted).

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:41 -07:00
2071e05ed2 t5536: new test of refspec conflicts when fetching
Add some tests that "git fetch" handles refspec conflicts (i.e., when
the same local reference should be updated from two different remote
references) correctly.

There is a small bug when updating references opportunistically,
namely that an explicit user wish like

    git fetch origin \
        refs/heads/branch1:refs/remotes/origin/branch2 \
        refs/heads/branch2:refs/remotes/origin/branch1

should override a configured refspec like

    +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*

The current code incorrectly treats this as a fatal error.

In a few commits we will improve the error messages for refspec
conflicts in general and also turn this buggy fatal error into a
warning.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:41 -07:00
09ea1f8e0e ref_remove_duplicates(): avoid redundant bisection
The old code called string_list_lookup(), and if that failed called
string_list_insert(), thus doing the bisection search through the
string list twice in the latter code path.

Instead, just call string_list_insert() right away.  If an entry for
that peer reference name already existed, then its util pointer is
always non-NULL.

Of course this doesn't change the fact that the repeated
string_list_insert() calls make the function scale like O(N^2) if the
input reference list is not already approximately sorted.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:41 -07:00
37f0dcbdc1 git-fetch.txt: improve description of tag auto-following
Make it clearer that tags are fetched independent of which branches
were fetched from the remote in any particular fetch.  (Tags are even
fetched if they point at objects that are in the current repository
but not reachable, which is probably a bug.)

Put less emphasis on the mechanism and more on the effect of tag
auto-following.  Also mention the options and configuration settings
that can change the tag-fetching behavior.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:41 -07:00
01ca90c2e5 fetch-options.txt: simplify ifdef/ifndef/endif usage
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:41 -07:00
90765fa3e0 fetch, remote: properly convey --no-prune options to subprocesses
If --no-prune is passed to one of the following commands:

    git fetch --all
    git fetch --multiple
    git fetch --recurse-submodules
    git remote update

then it must also be passed to the "fetch" subprocesses that those
commands use to do their work.  Otherwise there might be a fetch.prune
or remote.<name>.prune configuration setting that causes pruning to
occur, contrary to the user's express wish.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:41 -07:00
8607590e74 builtin/remote.c:update(): use struct argv_array
Use struct argv_array for calling the "git fetch" subprocesses.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:40 -07:00
ce2223fde8 builtin/remote.c: reorder function definitions
Reorder function definitions to remove the need for forward
declarations.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:40 -07:00
049bff8f0e query_refspecs(): move some constants out of the loop
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:40 -07:00
0838bf47b3 fetch --prune: prune only based on explicit refspecs
The old behavior of "fetch --prune" was to prune whatever was being
fetched.  In particular, "fetch --prune --tags" caused tags not only
to be fetched, but also to be pruned.  This is inappropriate because
there is only one tags namespace that is shared among the local
repository and all remotes.  Therefore, if the user defines a local
tag and then runs "git fetch --prune --tags", then the local tag is
deleted.  Moreover, "--prune" and "--tags" can also be configured via
fetch.prune / remote.<name>.prune and remote.<name>.tagopt, making it
even less obvious that an invocation of "git fetch" could result in
tag lossage.

Since the command "git remote update" invokes "git fetch", it had the
same problem.

The command "git remote prune", on the other hand, disregarded the
setting of remote.<name>.tagopt, and so its behavior was inconsistent
with that of the other commands.

So the old behavior made it too easy to lose tags.  To fix this
problem, change "fetch --prune" to prune references based only on
refspecs specified explicitly by the user, either on the command line
or via remote.<name>.fetch.  Thus, tags are no longer made subject to
pruning by the --tags option or the remote.<name>.tagopt setting.

However, tags *are* still subject to pruning if they are fetched as
part of a refspec, and that is good.  For example:

* On the command line,

      git fetch --prune 'refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*'

  causes tags, and only tags, to be fetched and pruned, and is
  therefore a simple way for the user to get the equivalent of the old
  behavior of "--prune --tag".

* For a remote that was configured with the "--mirror" option, the
  configuration is set to include

      [remote "name"]
              fetch = +refs/*:refs/*

  , which causes tags to be subject to pruning along with all other
  references.  This is the behavior that will typically be desired for
  a mirror.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:37 -07:00
c5a84e92a2 fetch --tags: fetch tags *in addition to* other stuff
Previously, fetch's "--tags" option was considered equivalent to
specifying the refspec "refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*" on the command line;
in particular, it caused the remote.<name>.refspec configuration to be
ignored.

But it is not very useful to fetch tags without also fetching other
references, whereas it *is* quite useful to be able to fetch tags *in
addition to* other references.  So change the semantics of this option
to do the latter.

If a user wants to fetch *only* tags, then it is still possible to
specifying an explicit refspec:

    git fetch <remote> 'refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*'

Please note that the documentation prior to 1.8.0.3 was ambiguous
about this aspect of "fetch --tags" behavior.  Commit

    f0cb2f137c 2012-12-14 fetch --tags: clarify documentation

made the documentation match the old behavior.  This commit changes
the documentation to match the new behavior.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:36 -07:00
0281c930f1 fetch: only opportunistically update references based on command line
The old code processed (tags == TAGS_SET) before adding the entries
used to opportunistically update references mentioned on the command
line.  The result was that all tags were also considered candidates
for opportunistic updating.

This is harmless for two reasons: (a) because it would only add
entries if there is a configured refspec that covers tags *and* both
--tags and another refspec appear on the command-line; (b) because any
extra entries would be deleted later by the call to
ref_remove_duplicates() anyway.

But, to avoid extra work and extra memory usage, and to make the
implementation better match the intention, change the algorithm
slightly: compute the opportunistic refspecs based only on the
command-line arguments, storing the results into a separate temporary
list.  Then add the tags (which have to come earlier in the list so
that they are not de-duped in favor of an opportunistic entry).  Then
concatenate the temporary list onto the main list.

This change will also make later changes easier.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:35 -07:00
e31a17f741 get_expanded_map(): avoid memory leak
The old code could leak *expn_name if match_name_with_pattern()
succeeded but ignore_symref_update() returned true.  So make sure that
*expn_name is freed in any case.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:34 -07:00
f166db26af get_expanded_map(): add docstring
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:34 -07:00
a0fbb5a329 builtin/fetch.c: reorder function definitions
Reorder function definitions to avoid the need for a forward
declaration of function find_non_local_tags().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 14:16:33 -07:00
6ca0f80b6c web--browse: Add support for xdg-open
xdg-open is a tool similar to git-web--browse.  It opens a file or URL in the
user's preferred application.  It could probably be made default at least on
Linux with a graphical environment.

Signed-off-by: Rüdiger Sonderfeld <ruediger@c-plusplus.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 13:54:15 -07:00
01e8d327a9 t3200: do not open a HTML manual page when DEFAULT_MAN_FORMAT is html
We have the build configuration option DEFAULT_MAN_FORMAT to choose a
format different from man pages to be used by 'git help' when no format
is requested explicitly. Since 65db0443 (Set the default help format to
html for msys builds, 2013-06-04) we use html on Windows by default.

There is one test in t3200-branch.sh that invokes a help page. The
intent of the redirections applied to the command invocation is to avoid
that the man page viewer interferes with the automated test. But when
the default format is not "man", this does not have the intended effect,
and the HTML manual page is opened during the test run. Request "man"
format explicitly to keep the test silent.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 12:19:57 -07:00
42817b96b1 Git 1.8.5-rc0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 12:17:47 -07:00
05ad292d61 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  t5570: Update for clone-progress-to-stderr branch
2013-10-30 12:11:22 -07:00
149a8134a7 Merge branch 'jk/refs-c-squelch-gcc'
* jk/refs-c-squelch-gcc:
  silence gcc array-bounds warning
2013-10-30 12:11:04 -07:00
7522c589c9 Merge branch 'jk/date-c-double-semicolon'
* jk/date-c-double-semicolon:
  drop redundant semicolon in empty while
2013-10-30 12:11:01 -07:00
c02e1e4a07 Merge branch 'nd/lift-path-max'
* nd/lift-path-max:
  checkout_entry(): clarify the use of topath[] parameter
  entry.c: convert checkout_entry to use strbuf
2013-10-30 12:10:56 -07:00
f989180262 Merge branch 'tr/valgrind-test-fix'
* tr/valgrind-test-fix:
  Revert "test-lib: allow prefixing a custom string before "ok N" etc."
  Revert "test-lib: support running tests under valgrind in parallel"
2013-10-30 12:10:52 -07:00
0040d6eb23 Merge branch 'tr/gitk-doc-update'
* tr/gitk-doc-update:
  Documentation: revamp gitk(1)
2013-10-30 12:10:50 -07:00
832ee79ab8 Merge branch 'jl/pack-transfer-avoid-double-close'
The codepath that send_pack() calls pack_objects() mistakenly
closed the same file descriptor twice, leading to potentially
closing a wrong file descriptor that was opened in the meantime.

* jl/pack-transfer-avoid-double-close:
  Clear fd after closing to avoid double-close error
2013-10-30 12:10:45 -07:00
02882bc834 Merge branch 'sb/git-svn-docs-indent-with-ht'
* sb/git-svn-docs-indent-with-ht:
  git-svn docs: Use tabs consistently within the ascii doc
2013-10-30 12:10:34 -07:00
4cebbe6f55 Merge branch 'nd/magic-pathspec'
All callers to parse_pathspec() must choose between getting no
pathspec or one path that is limited to the current directory
when there is no paths given on the command line, but there were
two callers that violated this rule, triggering a BUG().

* nd/magic-pathspec:
  Fix calling parse_pathspec with no paths nor PATHSPEC_PREFER_* flags
2013-10-30 12:10:33 -07:00
414b7033b1 Merge branch 'nd/gc-lock-against-each-other'
* nd/gc-lock-against-each-other:
  gc: remove gc.pid file at end of execution
2013-10-30 12:10:27 -07:00
779503c5eb Merge branch 'hn/log-graph-color-octopus'
* hn/log-graph-color-octopus:
  graph: fix coloring around octopus merges
2013-10-30 12:10:21 -07:00
f101b888f2 Merge branch 'mm/checkout-auto-track-fix'
"git checkout topic", when there is not yet a local "topic" branch
but there is a unique remote-tracking branch for a remote "topic"
branch, pretended as if "git checkout -t -b topic remote/$r/topic"
(for that unique remote $r) was run. This hack however was not
implemented for "git checkout topic --".

* mm/checkout-auto-track-fix:
  checkout: proper error message on 'git checkout foo bar --'
  checkout: allow dwim for branch creation for "git checkout $branch --"
2013-10-30 12:10:16 -07:00
504c1942a9 Merge branch 'sg/t3600-nul-sha1-fix'
* sg/t3600-nul-sha1-fix:
  t3600: fix broken "choking git rm" test
2013-10-30 12:10:09 -07:00
0bfc7c10d8 Merge branch 'fc/styles'
C coding style fixes.

* fc/styles:
  block-sha1/sha1.c: have SP around arithmetic operators
  base85.c: have SP around arithmetic operators
  archive.c: have SP around arithmetic operators
  alloc.c: have SP around arithmetic operators
  abspath.c: have SP around arithmetic operators
  alias: have SP around arithmetic operators
  C: have space around && and || operators
2013-10-30 12:10:06 -07:00
9907d1359c Merge branch 'jc/upload-pack-send-symref'
One long-standing flaw in the pack transfer protocol used by "git
clone" was that there was no way to tell the other end which branch
"HEAD" points at, and the receiving end needed to guess.  A new
capability has been defined in the pack protocol to convey this
information so that cloning from a repository with more than one
branches pointing at the same commit where the HEAD is at now
reliably sets the initial branch in the resulting repository.

* jc/upload-pack-send-symref:
  t5570: Update for clone-progress-to-stderr branch
  t5570: Update for symref capability
  clone: test the new HEAD detection logic
  connect: annotate refs with their symref information in get_remote_head()
  connect.c: make parse_feature_value() static
  upload-pack: send non-HEAD symbolic refs
  upload-pack: send symbolic ref information as capability
  upload-pack.c: do not pass confusing cb_data to mark_our_ref()
  t5505: fix "set-head --auto with ambiguous HEAD" test
2013-10-30 12:10:06 -07:00
177f0a4009 Merge branch 'jk/http-auth-redirects'
Handle the case where http transport gets redirected during the
authorization request better.

* jk/http-auth-redirects:
  http.c: Spell the null pointer as NULL
  remote-curl: rewrite base url from info/refs redirects
  remote-curl: store url as a strbuf
  remote-curl: make refs_url a strbuf
  http: update base URLs when we see redirects
  http: provide effective url to callers
  http: hoist credential request out of handle_curl_result
  http: refactor options to http_get_*
  http_request: factor out curlinfo_strbuf
  http_get_file: style fixes
2013-10-30 12:09:53 -07:00
95c62fb9ea subtree: add makefile target for html docs
The Makefile currently builds the roff manpage, but not the
html form. As some people may prefer the latter, let's make
it an option to build that, too. We also wire it into "make
doc" so that it is built by default.

This patch does not build or install it as part of
"install-doc"; that would require extra infrastructure to
handle installing the html as we do in git's regular
Documentation/ tree. That can come later if somebody is
interested.

Tested-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 10:47:37 -07:00
d619cfc749 t5570: Update for clone-progress-to-stderr branch
git clone now reports its progress to standard error, which throws off
t5570.  Using test_i18ngrep instead of test_cmp allows the test to be
more flexible by only looking for the expected error and ignoring any
other output from the program.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gernhardt <brian@gernhardtsoftware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 10:39:42 -07:00
53039ab154 Avoid difference in tr semantics between System V and BSD
Solaris' tr (both /usr/bin/ and /usr/xpg4/bin) uses the System V
semantics for tr whereby string1's length is truncated to the length
of string2 if string2 is shorter. The BSD semantics, as used by GNU tr
see string2 padded to the length of string1 using the final character
in string2. POSIX explicitly doesn't specify the correct behavior
here, making both equally valid.

This difference means that Solaris' native tr implementations produce
different results for tr ":\t\n" "\0" than GNU tr. This breaks a few
tests in t0008-ignores.sh.

Possible fixes for this are to make string2 be "\0\0\0" or "[\0*]".

Instead, use perl to perform these transliterations which means we
don't need to worry about the difference at all. Since we're replacing
tr with perl, we also use perl to replace the sed invocations used to
transform the files.

Replace four identical transforms with a function named
broken_c_unquote. Replace the other two identical transforms with a
fuction named broken_c_unquote_verbose.

Signed-off-by: Ben Walton <bdwalton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 10:38:23 -07:00
b74cf64803 for-each-ref: avoid loading objects to print %(objectname)
If you ask for-each-ref to print each ref and its object,
like:

  git for-each-ref --format='%(objectname) %(refname)'

this should involve little more work than looking at the ref
files (and packed-refs) themselves. However, for-each-ref
will actually load each object from disk just to print its
sha1. For most repositories, this isn't a big deal, but it
can be noticeable if you have a large number of refs to
print. Here are best-of-five timings for the command above
on a repo with ~10K refs:

  [before]
  real    0m0.112s
  user    0m0.092s
  sys     0m0.016s

  [after]
  real    0m0.014s
  user    0m0.012s
  sys     0m0.000s

This patch checks for %(objectname) and %(objectname:short)
before we actually parse the object (and the rest of the
code is smart enough to avoid parsing if we have filled all
of our placeholders).

Note that we can't simply move the objectname parsing code
into the early loop. If the "deref" form %(*objectname) is
used, then we do need to parse the object in order to peel
the tag. So instead of moving the code, we factor it out
into a separate function that can be called for both cases.

While we're at it, we add some basic tests for the
dereferenced placeholders, which were not tested at all
before. This helps ensure we didn't regress that case.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 10:33:46 -07:00
9462953ad2 cvsserver: Determinize output to combat Perl 5.18 hash randomization
Perl 5.18 randomizes the seed used by its hash function, so iterating
through hashes results in different orders from run to run:
  http://perldoc.perl.org/perl5180delta.html#Hash-overhaul

This usually broke t9400 (gitcvs.dbname, gitcvs.ext.dbname, when
running cmp on two .sqlite files) and t9402 (check [cvswork3] diff,
when running test_cmp on two diffs).

To fix this, hide the internal order of hashes with sort when sending
output or running database queries.

(An alternative workaround is PERL_HASH_SEED=0, but this seems nicer.)

Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-30 10:30:30 -07:00
d96855ff51 merge-base: teach "--fork-point" mode
The "git pull --rebase" command computes the fork point of the
branch being rebased using the reflog entries of the "base" branch
(typically a remote-tracking branch) the branch's work was based on,
in order to cope with the case in which the "base" branch has been
rewound and rebuilt.  For example, if the history looked like this:

                     o---B1
                    /
    ---o---o---B2--o---o---o---Base
            \
             B3
              \
               Derived

where the current tip of the "base" branch is at Base, but earlier
fetch observed that its tip used to be B3 and then B2 and then B1
before getting to the current commit, and the branch being rebased
on top of the latest "base" is based on commit B3, it tries to find
B3 by going through the output of "git rev-list --reflog base" (i.e.
Base, B1, B2, B3) until it finds a commit that is an ancestor of the
current tip "Derived".

Internally, we have get_merge_bases_many() that can compute this
with one-go.  We would want a merge-base between Derived and a
fictitious merge commit that would result by merging all the
historical tips of "base".  When such a commit exist, we should get
a single result, which exactly match one of the reflog entries of
"base".

Teach "git merge-base" a new mode, "--fork-point", to compute
exactly that.

Helped-by: Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@gmail.com>
Helped-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-29 13:06:08 -07:00
94221d2203 t: use perl instead of "$PERL_PATH" where applicable
As of the last commit, we can use "perl" instead of
"$PERL_PATH" when running tests, as the former is now a
function which uses the latter. As the shorter "perl" is
easier on the eyes, let's switch to using it everywhere.

This is not quite a mechanical s/$PERL_PATH/perl/
replacement, though. There are some places where we invoke
perl from a script we generate on the fly, and those scripts
do not have access to our internal shell functions. The
result can be double-checked by running:

  ln -s /bin/false bin-wrappers/perl
  make test

which continues to pass even after this patch.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-29 12:45:15 -07:00
a0e0ec9f7d t: provide a perl() function which uses $PERL_PATH
Once upon a time, we assumed that calling a bare "perl" in
the test scripts was OK, because we would find the perl from
the user's PATH, and we were only asking that perl to do
basic operations that work even on old versions of perl.

Later, we found that some systems really prefer to use
$PERL_PATH even for these basic cases, because the system
perl misbehaves in some way (e.g., by handling line endings
differently). We then switched "perl" invocations to
"$PERL_PATH" to respect the user's choice.

Having to use "$PERL_PATH" is ugly and cumbersome, though.
Instead, let's provide a perl() shell function that tests
can use, which will transparently do the right thing.

Unfortunately, test writers still have to use $PERL_PATH in
certain situations, so we still need to keep the advice in
the README.

Note that this may fix test failures in t5004, t5503, t6002,
t6003, t6300, t8001, and t8002, depending on your system's
perl setup. All of these can be detected by running:

  ln -s /bin/false bin-wrappers/perl
  make test

which fails before this patch, and passes after.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-29 12:44:39 -07:00
fcb06a8d54 use @@PERL@@ in built scripts
Several of the built shell commands invoke a bare "perl" to
perform some one-liners. This will use the first perl in the
PATH rather than the one specified by the user's SHELL_PATH.
We are not asking these perl invocations to do anything
exotic, so typically any old system perl will do; however,
in some cases the system perl may have unexpected behavior
(e.g., by handling line endings differently). We should err
on the side of using the perl the user pointed us to.

The downside of this is that on systems with a sane perl
setup, we no longer find the perl at runtime, but instead
point to a static perl (like /usr/bin/perl). That means we
will not handle somebody moving perl without rebuilding git,
whereas before we tracked it just fine. This is probably not
a big deal, though, as the built perl scripts already
suffered from this.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-29 12:41:17 -07:00
6d52bc318b doc/howto: warn about (dumb)http server document being too old
Describe when it is still applicable, and tell people where to go
for most normal cases.

Signed-off-by: Sitaram Chamarty <sitaram@atc.tcs.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 13:24:56 -07:00
f8fc0ee314 t/README: tests can use perl even with NO_PERL
The git build system supports a NO_PERL switch to avoid installing
perl bindings or other features (like "git add --patch") that rely on
perl on runtime, but even with NO_PERL it has not been possible for a
long time to run tests without perl.  Helpers such as

	nul_to_q () {
		"$PERL_PATH" -pe 'y/\000/Q/'
	}

use perl as a better tr or sed and are regularly used in tests without
worrying to add a PERL prerequisite.

Perl is portable enough that it seems fine to keep relying on it for
this kind of thing in tests (and more readable than the alternative of
trying to find POSIXy equivalents).  Update the test documentation to
clarify this.

Reported-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 12:32:18 -07:00
0d6cf2471f Almost -rc0 for 1.8.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 10:53:03 -07:00
cfd10568b0 Sync with v1.8.4.2 2013-10-28 10:51:53 -07:00
f43bc33e44 Merge branch 'sb/repack-in-c'
Finishing touches to update documentation.

* sb/repack-in-c:
  Reword repack documentation to no longer state it's a script
2013-10-28 10:43:41 -07:00
9f279af862 Merge branch 'sg/prompt-svn-remote-fix'
Bash portability fix.

* sg/prompt-svn-remote-fix:
  bash prompt: don't use '+=' operator in show upstream code path
2013-10-28 10:43:38 -07:00
2125261b63 Merge branch 'jk/split-broken-ident'
Make the fall-back parsing of commit objects with broken author or
committer lines more robust to pick up the timestamps.

* jk/split-broken-ident:
  split_ident: parse timestamp from end of line
2013-10-28 10:43:32 -07:00
93542d90c0 Merge branch 'jk/remote-literal-string-leakfix'
* jk/remote-literal-string-leakfix:
  remote: do not copy "origin" string literal
2013-10-28 10:43:28 -07:00
bb2fd90c7b Merge branch 'ew/keepalive'
* ew/keepalive:
  http: use curl's tcp keepalive if available
  http: enable keepalive on TCP sockets
2013-10-28 10:43:24 -07:00
2d99baab2f Merge branch 'jc/revision-range-unpeel'
"git rev-list --objects ^v1.0^ v1.0" gave v1.0 tag itself in the
output, but "git rev-list --objects v1.0^..v1.0" did not.

* jc/revision-range-unpeel:
  revision: do not peel tags used in range notation
2013-10-28 10:43:16 -07:00
e22c1c7f19 Merge branch 'jx/relative-path-regression-fix'
* jx/relative-path-regression-fix:
  Use simpler relative_path when set_git_dir
  relative_path should honor dos-drive-prefix
  test: use unambigous leading path (/foo) for MSYS
2013-10-28 10:42:30 -07:00
dcb11cca50 Git 1.8.4.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 10:21:29 -07:00
df1ef917c6 Merge branch 'jk/clone-progress-to-stderr' into maint
"git clone" gave some progress messages to the standard output, not to
the standard error, and did not allow suppressing them with the
"--no-progress" option.

* jk/clone-progress-to-stderr:
  clone: always set transport options
  clone: treat "checking connectivity" like other progress
  clone: send diagnostic messages to stderr
2013-10-28 10:19:24 -07:00
da212eabec Merge branch 'jk/format-patch-from' into maint
"format-patch --from=<whom>" forgot to omit unnecessary in-body from
line, i.e. when <whom> is the same as the real author.

* jk/format-patch-from:
  format-patch: print in-body "From" only when needed
2013-10-28 10:18:43 -07:00
77bc4302dc Merge branch 'jk/shortlog-tolerate-broken-commit' into maint
"git shortlog" used to choke and die when there is a malformed commit
(e.g. missing authors); it now simply ignore such a commit and keeps
going.

* jk/shortlog-tolerate-broken-commit:
  shortlog: ignore commits with missing authors
2013-10-28 10:17:31 -07:00
b28325d3ab Merge branch 'jk/diff-algo' into maint
"git merge-recursive" did not parse its "--diff-algorithm=" command
line option correctly.

* jk/diff-algo:
  merge-recursive: fix parsing of "diff-algorithm" option
2013-10-28 10:16:11 -07:00
4a2d5ae262 pathspec: stop --*-pathspecs impact on internal parse_pathspec() uses
Normally parse_pathspec() is used on command line arguments where it
can do fancy thing like parsing magic on each argument or adding magic
for all pathspecs based on --*-pathspecs options.

There's another use of parse_pathspec(), where pathspec is needed, but
the input is known to be pure paths. In this case we usually don't
want --*-pathspecs to interfere. And we definitely do not want to
parse magic in these paths, regardless of --literal-pathspecs.

Add new flag PATHSPEC_LITERAL_PATH for this purpose. When it's set,
--*-pathspecs are ignored, no magic is parsed. And if the caller
allows PATHSPEC_LITERAL (i.e. the next calls can take literal magic),
then PATHSPEC_LITERAL will be set.

This fixes cases where git chokes when GIT_*_PATHSPECS are set because
parse_pathspec() indicates it won't take any magic. But
GIT_*_PATHSPECS add them anyway. These are

   export GIT_LITERAL_PATHSPECS=1
   git blame -- something
   git log --follow something
   git log --merge

"git ls-files --with-tree=path" (aka parse_pathspec() in
overlay_tree_on_cache()) is safe because the input is empty, and
producing one pathspec due to PATHSPEC_PREFER_CWD does not take any
magic into account.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 09:57:36 -07:00
b2476a60bd sha1_file.c:create_tmpfile(): Fix race when creating loose object dirs
There are cases (e.g. when running concurrent fetches in a repo) where
multiple Git processes concurrently attempt to create loose objects
within the same objects/XX/ dir. The creation of the loose object files
is (AFAICS) safe from races, but the creation of the objects/XX/ dir in
which the loose objects reside is unsafe, for example:

Two concurrent fetches - A and B. As part of its fetch, A needs to store
12aaaaa as a loose object. B, on the other hand, needs to store 12bbbbb
as a loose object. The objects/12 directory does not already exist.
Concurrently, both A and B determine that they need to create the
objects/12 directory (because their first call to git_mkstemp_mode()
within create_tmpfile() fails witn ENOENT). One of them - let's say A -
executes the following mkdir() call before the other. This first call
returns success, and A moves on. When B gets around to calling mkdir(),
it fails with EEXIST, because A won the race. The mkdir() error causes B
to return -1 from create_tmpfile(), which propagates all the way,
resulting in the fetch failing with:

  error: unable to create temporary file: File exists
  fatal: failed to write object
  fatal: unpack-objects failed

Although it's hard to add a testcase reproducing this issue, it's easy
to provoke if we insert a sleep after the

  if (mkdir(buffer, 0777) || adjust_shared_perm(buffer))
      return -1;

block, and then run two concurrent "git fetch"es against the same repo.

The fix is to simply handle mkdir() failing with EEXIST as a success.
If EEXIST is somehow returned for the wrong reasons (because the relevant
objects/XX is not a directory, or is otherwise unsuitable for object
storage), the following call to adjust_shared_perm(), or ultimately the
retried call to git_mkstemp_mode() will fail, and we end up returning
error from create_tmpfile() in any case.

Note that there are still cases where two users with unsuitable umasks
in a shared repo can end up in two races where one user first wins the
mkdir() race to create an objects/XX/ directory, and then the other user
wins the adjust_shared_perms() race to chmod() that directory, but fails
because it is (transiently, until the first users completes its chmod())
unwriteable to the other user. However, (an equivalent of) this race also
exists before this patch, and is made no worse by this patch.

Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 09:50:34 -07:00
90a95301d3 Change sed i\ usage to something Solaris' sed can handle
Solaris' sed was choking on the i\ commands used in
t4015-diff-whitespace as it couldn't parse the program properly.
Modify two uses of sed that worked in GNU sed but not Solaris'
(/usr/bin or /usr/xpg4/bin) to an equivalent form that is handled
properly by both.

Signed-off-by: Ben Walton <bdwalton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 09:27:06 -07:00
3fa366668a test-lib: fix typo in comment
Point test writers to the test_expect_* functions properly.

Signed-off-by: Torstein Hegge <hegge@resisty.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 09:18:25 -07:00
3fc0dca9ce sha1_file: move comment about return value where it belongs
Commit 5b0864070 (sha1_object_info_extended: make type calculation
optional, Jul 12 2013) changed the return value of the
sha1_object_info_extended function to 0/-1 for success/error.

Previously this function returned the object type for success or
-1 for error. But unfortunately the above commit forgot to change
or move the comment above this function that says "returns enum
object_type or negative".

To fix this inconsistency, let's move the comment above the
sha1_object_info function where it is still true.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 09:07:01 -07:00
f94ea11cf2 tests: undo special treatment of CRLF for Windows
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 09:00:38 -07:00
4d715ac05c Windows: a test_cmp that is agnostic to random LF <> CRLF conversions
In a number of tests, output that was produced by a shell script is
compared to expected output using test_cmp. Unfortunately, the MSYS bash--
when invoked via git, such as in hooks--converts LF to CRLF on output
(as produced by echo and printf), which leads to many false positives.

Implements a diff tool that undoes the converted CRLF. To avoid that
sub-processes are spawned (which is very slow on Windows), the tool is
implemented as a shell function. Diff is invoked as usual only when a
difference is detected by the shell code.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 09:00:36 -07:00
ce1a0473e8 t5300-pack-object: do not compare binary data using test_cmp
Users may set test_cmp to a comparison tool of their liking. The intent is
that the tool performs comparison of line-oriented texts. However, t5300
uses it also to compare binary data. Change those tests to use 'cmp'.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 09:00:34 -07:00
84471a1213 cache: remove unused function 'have_git_dir'
This function was added in d2b0708 (2008-09-27, add have_git_dir()
function) as a preparation for adbc0b6 (2008-09-30, cygwin: Use native
Win32 API for stat).

However the second referenced commit was reverted in f66450a (2013-06-22,
cygwin: Remove the Win32 l/stat() implementation), so we don't need to
expose this wrapper function any more as a public API.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 08:56:06 -07:00
746593bdca refs: remove unused function invalidate_ref_cache
The function 'invalidate_ref_cache' was introduced in 79c7ca5 (2011-10-17,
invalidate_ref_cache(): rename function from invalidate_cached_refs())
by a rename and elevated to be publicly usable in 8be8bde (2011-10-17,
invalidate_ref_cache(): expose this function in the refs API)

However it is not used anymore, as 8bf90dc (2011-10-17, write_ref_sha1():
only invalidate the loose ref cache) and (much) later 506a760 (2013-04-22,
refs: change how packed refs are deleted) removed any calls to this
function. So it seems as if we don't need that function any more,
good bye!

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Acked-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-28 08:55:56 -07:00
41dfbb2dbe howto: add article on recovering a corrupted object
This is an asciidoc-ified version of a corruption post-mortem sent to
the git list. It complements the existing howto article, since it covers
a case where the object couldn't be easily recreated or copied from
elsewhere.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-25 14:55:30 -07:00
b3e9ce1332 reset: pass real rev name to add--interactive
The add--interactive --patch mode adjusts the UI based on
whether we are pulling changes from HEAD or elsewhere (in
the former case it asks to unstage the reverse hunk, rather
than apply the forward hunk).

Commit 166ec2e taught reset to work on an unborn branch, but
in doing so, switched to always providing add--interactive
with the sha1 rather than the symbolic name. This meant we
always used the "apply" interface, even for "git reset -p
HEAD".

We can fix this by passing the symbolic name to
add--interactive.  Since it understands unborn branches
these days, we do not even have to cover this special case
ourselves; we can simply pass HEAD.

The tests in t7105 now check that the right interface is
used in each circumstance (and notice the regression from
166ec2e we are fixing). The test in t7106 checks that we
get this right for the unborn case, too (not a regression,
since it didn't work at all before, but a nice improvement).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-25 14:54:18 -07:00
954312a3ff add-interactive: handle unborn branch in patch mode
The list_modified function already knows how to handle an
unborn branch by diffing against the empty tree. However,
the diff we perform to get the actual hunks does not. Let's
use the same logic for both diffs.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-25 14:54:17 -07:00
ec73f5807c sha1_file: export git_open_noatime
The `git_open_noatime` helper can be of general interest for other
consumers of git's different on-disk formats.

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:44:52 -07:00
a330de31d1 revision: allow setting custom limiter function
This commit enables users of `struct rev_info` to peform custom limiting
during a revision walk (i.e. `get_revision`).

If the field `include_check` has been set to a callback, this callback
will be issued once for each commit before it is added to the "pending"
list of the revwalk. If the include check returns 0, the commit will be
marked as added but won't be pushed to the pending list, effectively
limiting the walk.

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:44:52 -07:00
68fb36eb92 pack-objects: factor out name_hash
As the pack-objects system grows beyond the single
pack-objects.c file, more parts (like the soon-to-exist
bitmap code) will need to compute hashes for matching
deltas. Factor out name_hash to make it available to other
files.

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:44:52 -07:00
2834bc27c1 pack-objects: refactor the packing list
The hash table that stores the packing list for a given `pack-objects`
run was tightly coupled to the pack-objects code.

In this commit, we refactor the hash table and the underlying storage
array into a `packing_data` struct. The functionality for accessing and
adding entries to the packing list is hence accessible from other parts
of Git besides the `pack-objects` builtin.

This refactoring is a requirement for further patches in this series
that will require accessing the commit packing list from outside of
`pack-objects`.

The hash table implementation has been minimally altered: we now
use table sizes which are always a power of two, to ensure a uniform
index distribution in the array.

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:44:48 -07:00
92e5c77c37 revindex: export new APIs
Allow users to efficiently lookup consecutive entries that are expected
to be found on the same revindex by exporting `find_revindex_position`:
this function takes a pointer to revindex itself, instead of looking up
the proper revindex for a given packfile on each call.

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:44:45 -07:00
e74435a516 sha1write: make buffer const-correct
We are passed a "void *" and write it out without ever
touching it; let's indicate that by using "const".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:44:18 -07:00
3c62183929 checkout: do not die when leaving broken detached HEAD
If we move away from a detached HEAD that has broken or
corrupted commits, we might die in two places:

  1. Printing the "old HEAD was..." message.

  2. Printing the list of orphaned commits.

In both cases, we ignore the return value of parse_commit
and feed the resulting commit to the pretty-print machinery,
which will die() upon failing to read the commit object
itself.

Since both cases are ancillary to the real operation being
performed, let's be more robust and keep going. This lets
users more easily checkout away from broken history.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:43:51 -07:00
367068e0dd use parse_commit_or_die instead of custom message
Many calls to parse_commit detect errors and die. In some
cases, the custom error messages are more useful than what
parse_commit_or_die could produce, because they give some
context, like which ref the commit came from. Some, however,
just say "invalid commit". Let's convert the latter to use
parse_commit_or_die; its message is slightly more informative,
and it makes the error more consistent throughout git.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:43:51 -07:00
683ff884cc use parse_commit_or_die instead of segfaulting
Some unchecked calls to parse_commit should obviously die on
error, because their next step is to start looking at the
parsed fields, which will cause a segfault. These are
obvious candidates for parse_commit_or_die, which will be a
strict improvement in behavior.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:43:50 -07:00
5e7d4d3e93 assume parse_commit checks for NULL commit
The parse_commit function will check whether it was passed a
NULL commit pointer, and if so, return an error. There is no
need for callers to check this separately.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:43:50 -07:00
0064053bd7 assume parse_commit checks commit->object.parsed
The parse_commit function will check the "parsed" flag of
the object and do nothing if it is set. There is no need
for callers to check the flag themselves, and doing so only
clutters the code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:43:50 -07:00
7059dccc6c log_tree_diff: die when we fail to parse a commit
We currently call parse_commit and then assume we can
dereference the resulting "tree" struct field. If parsing
failed, however, that field is NULL and we end up
segfaulting.

Instead of a segfault, let's print an error message and die
a little more gracefully.

Note that this should never happen in practice, but may
happen in a corrupt repository.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:43:50 -07:00
a4165851e7 silence gcc array-bounds warning
In shorten_unambiguous_ref, we build and cache a reverse-map of the
rev-parse rules like this:

  static char **scanf_fmts;
  static int nr_rules;
  if (!nr_rules) {
	  for (; ref_rev_parse_rules[nr_rules]; nr_rules++)
		  ... generate scanf_fmts ...
  }

where ref_rev_parse_rules is terminated with a NULL pointer.
Compiling with "gcc -O2 -Wall" does not cause any problems, but
compiling with "-O3 -Wall" generates:

  $ make CFLAGS='-O3 -Wall' refs.o
  refs.c: In function ‘shorten_unambiguous_ref’:
  refs.c:3379:29: warning: array subscript is above array bounds [-Warray-bounds]
     for (; ref_rev_parse_rules[nr_rules]; nr_rules++)

Curiously, we can silence this by explicitly nr_rules to 0
in the beginning of the loop, even though the compiler
should be able to tell that we follow this code path only
when nr_rules is already 0.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:41:56 -07:00
38db01b7fb drop redundant semicolon in empty while
The extra semi-colon is harmless, since we really do want
the while loop to do nothing. But it does trigger a warning
from clang.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 15:41:01 -07:00
af2a651d2e checkout_entry(): clarify the use of topath[] parameter
The said function has this signature:

	extern int checkout_entry(struct cache_entry *ce,
				  const struct checkout *state,
				  char *topath);

At first glance, it might appear that the caller of checkout_entry()
can specify to which path the contents are written out by the last
parameter, and it is tempting to add "const" in front of its type.

In reality, however, topath[] is to point at a buffer to store the
temporary path generated by the callchain originating from this
function, and the temporary path is always short, much shorter than
the buffer prepared by its only caller in builtin/checkout-index.c.

Document the code a bit to clarify so that future callers know how
to use the function better.

Noticed-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 14:59:39 -07:00
fd356f6aa8 entry.c: convert checkout_entry to use strbuf
The old code does not do boundary check so any paths longer than
PATH_MAX can cause buffer overflow. Replace it with strbuf to handle
paths of arbitrary length.

The OS may reject if the path is too long though. But in that case we
report the cause (e.g. name too long) and usually move on to checking
out the next entry.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 14:58:37 -07:00
70900eda4a http.c: Spell the null pointer as NULL
Commit 1bbcc224 ("http: refactor options to http_get_*", 28-09-2013)
changed the type of final 'options' argument of the http_get_file()
function from an int to an 'struct http_get_options' pointer.
However, it neglected to update the (single) call site. Since this
call was passing '0' to that argument, it was (correctly) being
interpreted as a null pointer. Change to argument to NULL.

Noticed by sparse. ("Using plain integer as NULL pointer")

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 14:42:26 -07:00
f137a45e0d get_ref_map(): rename local variables
Rename "refs" -> "refspecs" and "ref_count" -> "refspec_count" to
reduce confusion, because they describe an array of "struct refspec",
as opposed to the "struct ref" objects that are also used in this
function.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 13:28:44 -07:00
5b2515f400 api-remote.txt: correct section "struct refspec"
* Replace reference to function parse_ref_spec() with references to
  functions parse_fetch_refspec() and parse_push_refspec().

* Correct description of src and dst: they *do* include the '*'
  characters.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 13:28:28 -07:00
68a304d5fe t5510: check that "git fetch --prune --tags" does not prune branches
"git fetch --prune --tags" is currently interpreted as follows:

* "--tags" is equivalent to specifying a refspec
  "refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*", and supersedes any default refspecs
  configured via remote.$REMOTE.fetch.

* "--prune" only operates on the refspecs being fetched.

Therefore, "git fetch --prune --tags" prunes tags in refs/tags/* but
does not fetch or prune other references.  The fact that this command
does not prune references outside of refs/tags/* was previously
untested.  So add a test that verifies the status quo.

However, the status quo is surprising, so it will be changed later in
this patch series.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 13:27:46 -07:00
d0d06e892a t5510: prepare test refs more straightforwardly
"git fetch" was being used with contrived refspecs to create tags and
remote-tracking branches in test repositories in preparation for the
actual tests.  This is obscure and also makes one wonder whether this
is indeed just preparation or whether some side-effect of "git fetch"
is being tested.

So use the more straightforward commands "git tag" / "git update-ref"
when preparing branches in test repositories.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 13:27:45 -07:00
2004658b19 t5510: use the correct tag name in test
Fix an apparent copy-paste error: A few lines earlier, a tag
"refs/tags/sometag" is created.  Check for the (non-)existence of that
tag, not "somebranch", which is otherwise never mentioned in the
script.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-24 13:27:45 -07:00
16e57aec7f merge-base: use OPT_CMDMODE and clarify the command line parsing
The --octopus, --independent and --is-ancestor are mutually
exclusive command modes (in addition to not giving any of these
options), so represent them as such using the recent OPT_CMDMODE
facility available since 11588263 (parse-options: add OPT_CMDMODE(),
2013-07-30), which is in v1.8.4-82-g366b80b.  --all is compatible
only with plain vanilla mode and --octopus mode, and the minimum
number of arguments the command takes depends on the command modes,
so these are now separately checked in each command mode.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-23 16:25:20 -07:00
3d092bfc6f Update draft release notes to 1.8.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-23 13:37:27 -07:00
ea21efc740 Sync with 'maint' 2013-10-23 13:36:57 -07:00
ca462804c6 Almost 1.8.4.2 ;-)
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-23 13:34:39 -07:00
e03a5010b3 Merge branch 'jc/ls-files-killed-optim' into maint
"git ls-files -k" needs to crawl only the part of the working tree
that may overlap the paths in the index to find killed files, but
shared code with the logic to find all the untracked files, which
made it unnecessarily inefficient.

* jc/ls-files-killed-optim:
  dir.c::test_one_path(): work around directory_exists_in_index_icase() breakage
  t3010: update to demonstrate "ls-files -k" optimization pitfalls
  ls-files -k: a directory only can be killed if the index has a non-directory
  dir.c: use the cache_* macro to access the current index
2013-10-23 13:33:08 -07:00
74051fa805 Merge branch 'jh/checkout-auto-tracking' into maint
"git branch --track" had a minor regression in v1.8.3.2 and later
that made it impossible to base your local work on anything but a
local branch of the upstream repository you are tracking from.

* jh/checkout-auto-tracking:
  t3200: fix failure on case-insensitive filesystems
  branch.c: Relax unnecessary requirement on upstream's remote ref name
  t3200: Add test demonstrating minor regression in 41c21f2
  Refer to branch.<name>.remote/merge when documenting --track
  t3200: Minor fix when preparing for tracking failure
  t2024: Fix &&-chaining and a couple of typos
2013-10-23 13:32:50 -07:00
6ba0d9551a Merge branch 'nd/fetch-into-shallow' into maint
When there is no sufficient overlap between old and new history
during a "git fetch" into a shallow repository, objects that the
sending side knows the receiving end has were unnecessarily sent.

* nd/fetch-into-shallow:
  Add testcase for needless objects during a shallow fetch
  list-objects: mark more commits as edges in mark_edges_uninteresting
  list-objects: reduce one argument in mark_edges_uninteresting
  upload-pack: delegate rev walking in shallow fetch to pack-objects
  shallow: add setup_temporary_shallow()
  shallow: only add shallow graft points to new shallow file
  move setup_alternate_shallow and write_shallow_commits to shallow.c
2013-10-23 13:32:17 -07:00
26145c9c73 Merge branch 'bc/gnome-keyring'
Cleanups and tweaks for credential handling to work with ancient versions
of the gnome-keyring library that are still in use.

* bc/gnome-keyring:
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: support really ancient gnome-keyring
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: support ancient gnome-keyring
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: report failure to store password
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: use glib messaging functions
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: use glib memory allocation functions
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: use secure memory for reading passwords
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: use secure memory functions for passwds
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: use gnome helpers in keyring_object()
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: set Gnome application name
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: ensure buffer is non-empty before accessing
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: strlen() returns size_t, not ssize_t
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: exit non-zero when called incorrectly
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: add static where applicable
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: *style* use "if ()" not "if()" etc.
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: remove unused die() function
  contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: remove unnecessary pre-declarations
2013-10-23 13:21:50 -07:00
f92f068e76 Merge branch 'po/dot-url'
Explain how '.' can be used to refer to the "current repository"
in the documentation.

* po/dot-url:
  doc/cli: make "dot repository" an independent bullet point
  config doc: update dot-repository notes
  doc: command line interface (cli) dot-repository dwimmery
2013-10-23 13:21:48 -07:00
807c895fcb Merge branch 'jc/prompt-upstream'
An enhancement to the GIT_PS1_SHOWUPSTREAM facility.

* jc/prompt-upstream:
  git-prompt.sh: optionally show upstream branch name
2013-10-23 13:21:45 -07:00
f2c1b01c24 Merge branch 'hu/cherry-pick-previous-branch'
"git cherry-pick" without further options would segfault.

Could use a follow-up to handle '-' after argv[1] better.

* hu/cherry-pick-previous-branch:
  cherry-pick: handle "-" after parsing options
2013-10-23 13:21:35 -07:00
4197361e39 Merge branch 'mg/more-textconv'
Make "git grep" and "git show" pay attention to --textconv when
dealing with blob objects.

* mg/more-textconv:
  grep: honor --textconv for the case rev:path
  grep: allow to use textconv filters
  t7008: demonstrate behavior of grep with textconv
  cat-file: do not die on --textconv without textconv filters
  show: honor --textconv for blobs
  diff_opt: track whether flags have been set explicitly
  t4030: demonstrate behavior of show with textconv
2013-10-23 13:21:31 -07:00
eeb8e8373f Merge branch 'jc/pack-objects'
* jc/pack-objects:
  pack-objects: shrink struct object_entry
2013-10-23 13:21:26 -07:00
1136265377 remote-hg: unquote C-style paths when exporting
git-fast-import documentation says that paths can be C-style quoted.
Unfortunately, the current remote-hg helper doesn't unquote quoted
path and pass them as-is to Mercurial when the commit is created.

This results in the following situation:

 - clone a mercurial repository with git
 - add a file with space in a directory: `>dir/foo\ bar`
 - commit that new file, and push the change to mercurial
 - the mercurial repository now has a new directory named '"dir',
   which contains a file named 'foo bar"'

Use Python str.decode('string-escape') to unquote the string if it
starts and ends with ".  It has been tested with quotes, spaces, and
utf-8 encoded file-names.

Signed-off-by: Antoine Pelisse <apelisse@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-23 09:45:53 -07:00
37cb1dd671 Clear fd after closing to avoid double-close error
In send_pack(), clear the fd passed to pack_objects() by setting
it to -1, since pack_objects() closes the fd (via a call to
run_command()).  Likewise, in get_pack(), clear the fd passed to
run_command().

Not doing so risks having git_transport_push(), caller of
send_pack(), closing the fd again, possibly incorrectly closing
some other open file; or similarly with fetch_refs_from_pack(),
indirect caller of get_pack().

Signed-off-by: Jens Lindström <jl@opera.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-23 09:07:09 -07:00
633fe50ab7 Revert "test-lib: allow prefixing a custom string before "ok N" etc."
Now that ad0e623 (test-lib: support running tests under valgrind in
parallel, 2013-06-23) has been reverted, this support code has no
users any more.  Revert it, too.

This reverts commit e939e15d24.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-22 13:28:52 -07:00
26a07309a6 Revert "test-lib: support running tests under valgrind in parallel"
This reverts commit ad0e623332.

--valgrind-parallel was broken from the start: during review I made
the whole valgrind setup code conditional on not being a
--valgrind-parallel worker child.  But even the children crucially
need $GIT_VALGRIND to be set; it should therefore have been set
outside the conditional.

The fix would be a two-liner, but since the introduction of the
feature, almost four months have passed without anyone noticing that
it is broken.  So this feature is not worth the about hundred lines of
test-lib.sh complexity.  Revert it.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-22 13:28:50 -07:00
3c123fb8b8 git-svn docs: Use tabs consistently within the ascii doc
While I can understand 4 or 7 white spaces are fancy, we'd rather want
to use tabs throughout the whole document.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-22 13:27:02 -07:00
360a3261a4 t5570: Update for clone-progress-to-stderr branch
git clone now reports its progress to standard error, which throws off
t5570.  Using test_i18ngrep instead of test_cmp allows the test to be
more flexible by only looking for the expected error and ignoring any
other output from the program.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gernhardt <brian@gernhardtsoftware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-22 11:38:53 -07:00
c4125fccb4 Merge branch 'jk/clone-progress-to-stderr' into jc/upload-pack-send-symref
* jk/clone-progress-to-stderr:
  clone: always set transport options
  clone: treat "checking connectivity" like other progress
  clone: send diagnostic messages to stderr
2013-10-22 11:38:42 -07:00
2ecb573bb3 t5570: Update for symref capability
git-daemon now uses the symref capability to send the correct HEAD
reference, so the test for that in t5570 now passes.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gernhardt <brian@gernhardtsoftware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-22 11:34:23 -07:00
744db23c2d Documentation: revamp gitk(1)
The gitk manpage suffers from a bit of neglect: there have been only
minor changes, and no changes to the set of options documented, since
a2df1fb (Documentation: New GUI configuration and command-line
options., 2008-11-13).  In the meantime, the set of rev-list options
has been expanded several times by options that are useful in gitk,
e.g., --ancestry-path and the optional globbing for --branches, --tags
and --remotes.

Restructure and expand the manpage.  List more options that the author
perceives as useful, while remaining somewhat terse.  Ideally the user
should not have to look up any of the references, but we dispense with
precise explanations in some places and refer to git-log(1) instead.

Note that the options that have an easy GUI equivalent (e.g.,
--word-diff, -S, --grep) are deliberately not listed even in the cases
where they simply fill in the GUI fields.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@inf.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-22 11:23:31 -07:00
35c141768c Reword repack documentation to no longer state it's a script
This updates the documentation regarding the changes introduced
by a1bbc6c01 (2013-09-15, repack: rewrite the shell script in C).

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-22 11:17:15 -07:00
c8556c6213 Fix calling parse_pathspec with no paths nor PATHSPEC_PREFER_* flags
When parse_pathspec() is called with no paths, the behavior could be
either return no paths, or return one path that is cwd. Some commands
do the former, some the latter. parse_pathspec() itself does not make
either the default and requires the caller to specify either flag if
it may run into this situation.

I've grep'd through all parse_pathspec() call sites. Some pass
neither, but those are guaranteed never pass empty path to
parse_pathspec(). There are two call sites that may pass empty path
and are fixed with this patch.

[jc: added a test from Antoine's bug report]

Reported-by: Antoine Pelisse <apelisse@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-22 10:49:43 -07:00
db9bdfbeb0 Update draft release notes to 1.8.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-18 13:53:52 -07:00
82c41a9bfc Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  git-merge: document the -S option
2013-10-18 13:53:48 -07:00
6c2bec96a8 Merge branch 'jc/reflog-doc'
Document rules to use GIT_REFLOG_ACTION variable in the scripted
Porcelain.  git-rebase--interactive locally violates them, but it
is a leaf user that does not call out to or dot-source other
scripts, so it does not urgently need to be fixed.

* jc/reflog-doc:
  setup_reflog_action: document the rules for using GIT_REFLOG_ACTION
2013-10-18 13:50:12 -07:00
dec034a34e Merge branch 'sb/repack-in-c'
Rewrite "git repack" in C.

* sb/repack-in-c:
  repack: improve warnings about failure of renaming and removing files
  repack: retain the return value of pack-objects
  repack: rewrite the shell script in C
2013-10-18 13:49:57 -07:00
f94a84c408 Merge branch 'jk/clone-progress-to-stderr'
Some progress and diagnostic messages from "git clone" were
incorrectly sent to the standard output stream, not to the standard
error stream.

* jk/clone-progress-to-stderr:
  clone: always set transport options
  clone: treat "checking connectivity" like other progress
  clone: send diagnostic messages to stderr
2013-10-18 13:49:51 -07:00
039048e653 Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: fr.po: 2135/2135 messages translated
2013-10-18 13:49:00 -07:00
bca3969534 checkout: proper error message on 'git checkout foo bar --'
The previous code was detecting the presence of "--" by looking only at
argument 1. As a result, "git checkout foo bar --" was interpreted as an
ambiguous file/revision list, and errored out with:

error: pathspec 'foo' did not match any file(s) known to git.
error: pathspec 'bar' did not match any file(s) known to git.
error: pathspec '--' did not match any file(s) known to git.

This patch fixes it by walking through the argument list to find the
"--", and now complains about the number of references given.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-18 12:57:16 -07:00
a047fafc78 checkout: allow dwim for branch creation for "git checkout $branch --"
The "--" notation disambiguates files and branches, but as a side-effect
of the previous implementation, also disabled the branch auto-creation
when $branch does not exist.

A possible scenario is then:

git checkout $branch
=> fails if $branch is both a ref and a file, and suggests --

git checkout $branch --
=> refuses to create the $branch

This patch allows the second form to create $branch, and since the -- is
provided, it does not look for file named $branch.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-18 12:56:06 -07:00
339c17bc76 graph: fix coloring around octopus merges
When drawing the graph of an octopus merge, we draw a horizontal line
from parents 3 and above into the asterisk representing the commit. The
sections of this line should be colored to match the graph lines coming
in from above.

However, if the commit is not in the left-most column we do not take
into account the columns to the left of the commit when calculating
these colors. Fix this by adding the appropriate offset to the column
index used for calculating the color.

Signed-off-by: Hemmo Nieminen <hemmo.nieminen@iki.fi>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-18 12:48:48 -07:00
5f737ac91b git-merge: document the -S option
The option to gpg sign a merge commit is available but was not
documented. Use wording from the git-commit(1) manpage.

Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-18 12:47:33 -07:00
4c5baf0273 gc: remove gc.pid file at end of execution
This file isn't really harmful, but isn't useful either, and can create
minor annoyance for the user:

* It's confusing, as the presence of a *.pid file often implies that a
  process is currently running. A user running "ls .git/" and finding
  this file may incorrectly guess that a "git gc" is currently running.

* Leaving this file means that a "git gc" in an already gc-ed repo is
  no-longer a no-op. A user running "git gc" in a set of repositories,
  and then synchronizing this set (e.g. rsync -av, unison, ...) will see
  all the gc.pid files as changed, which creates useless noise.

This patch unlinks the file after the garbage collection is done, so that
gc.pid is actually present only during execution.

Future versions of Git may want to use the information left in the gc.pid
file (e.g. for policies like "don't attempt to run a gc if one has
already been ran less than X hours ago"). If so, this patch can safely be
reverted. For now, let's not bother the users.

Explained-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Improved-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-18 12:45:24 -07:00
ba1b8cfac1 l10n: fr.po: 2135/2135 messages translated
Signed-off-by: Sebastien Helleu <flashcode@flashtux.org>
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2013-10-18 10:29:33 +08:00
2141c474d0 Update draft release notes to 1.8.5 2013-10-17 15:57:12 -07:00
046180ad9d Merge branch 'jk/format-patch-from'
"format-patch --from=<whom>" forgot to omit unnecessary in-body
from line, i.e. when <whom> is the same as the real author.

* jk/format-patch-from:
  format-patch: print in-body "From" only when needed
2013-10-17 15:55:18 -07:00
d6a58b7773 Merge branch 'es/name-hash-no-trailing-slash-in-dirs'
Clean up the internal of the name-hash mechanism used to work
around case insensitivity on some filesystems to cleanly fix a
long-standing API glitch where the caller of cache_name_exists()
that ask about a directory with a counted string was required to
have '/' at one location past the end of the string.

* es/name-hash-no-trailing-slash-in-dirs:
  dir: revert work-around for retired dangerous behavior
  name-hash: stop storing trailing '/' on paths in index_state.dir_hash
  employ new explicit "exists in index?" API
  name-hash: refactor polymorphic index_name_exists()
2013-10-17 15:55:16 -07:00
be98d915be Merge branch 'jk/trailing-slash-in-pathspec'
Code refactoring.

* jk/trailing-slash-in-pathspec:
  reset: handle submodule with trailing slash
  rm: re-use parse_pathspec's trailing-slash removal
2013-10-17 15:55:14 -07:00
f52752d36a Merge branch 'lc/filter-branch-too-many-refs'
"git filter-branch" in a repository with many refs blew limit of
command line length.

* lc/filter-branch-too-many-refs:
  Allow git-filter-branch to process large repositories with lots of branches.
2013-10-17 15:55:12 -07:00
ff6e1b887f Merge branch 'jc/checkout-detach-doc'
"git checkout [--detach] <commit>" was listed poorly in the
synopsis section of its documentation.

* jc/checkout-detach-doc:
  checkout: update synopsys and documentation on detaching HEAD
2013-10-17 15:55:08 -07:00
83f18cdd71 Sync with maint
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-17 15:54:28 -07:00
92ab409055 Start preparing for 1.8.4.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-17 15:50:45 -07:00
9432c6aaa5 Merge branch 'jk/upload-pack-keepalive' into maint
* jk/upload-pack-keepalive:
  upload-pack: bump keepalive default to 5 seconds
  upload-pack: send keepalive packets during pack computation
2013-10-17 15:46:01 -07:00
968792eeeb Merge branch 'bc/http-backend-allow-405' into maint
* bc/http-backend-allow-405:
  http-backend: provide Allow header for 405
2013-10-17 15:46:00 -07:00
da39d5e0bc Merge branch 'jc/cvsserver-perm-bit-fix' into maint
* jc/cvsserver-perm-bit-fix:
  cvsserver: pick up the right mode bits
2013-10-17 15:45:58 -07:00
fa0963dac7 Merge branch 'js/add-i-mingw' into maint
* js/add-i-mingw:
  add--interactive: fix external command invocation on Windows
2013-10-17 15:45:56 -07:00
f8aeacfa1f Merge branch 'nd/git-dir-pointing-at-gitfile' into maint
* nd/git-dir-pointing-at-gitfile:
  Make setup_git_env() resolve .git file when $GIT_DIR is not specified
2013-10-17 15:45:55 -07:00
7d9dd6da4a Merge branch 'jk/has-sha1-file-retry-packed' into maint
* jk/has-sha1-file-retry-packed:
  has_sha1_file: re-check pack directory before giving up
2013-10-17 15:45:54 -07:00
87b24a42ea Merge branch 'ap/commit-author-mailmap' into maint
* ap/commit-author-mailmap:
  commit: search author pattern against mailmap
2013-10-17 15:45:52 -07:00
f8a3fd28fd Merge branch 'es/rebase-i-no-abbrev' into maint
* es/rebase-i-no-abbrev:
  rebase -i: fix short SHA-1 collision
  t3404: rebase -i: demonstrate short SHA-1 collision
  t3404: make tests more self-contained

Conflicts:
	t/t3404-rebase-interactive.sh
2013-10-17 15:45:50 -07:00
9a3a02b605 Merge branch 'rt/rebase-p-no-merge-summary' into maint
* rt/rebase-p-no-merge-summary:
  rebase --preserve-merges: ignore "merge.log" config
2013-10-17 15:45:45 -07:00
6f89c2714a Merge branch 'es/rebase-i-respect-core-commentchar' into maint
* es/rebase-i-respect-core-commentchar:
  rebase -i: fix cases ignoring core.commentchar
2013-10-17 15:45:24 -07:00
ddeaf7ef0d t4254: modernize tests
- Don't start tests with 'test $? = 0' to catch preparation done
  outside the test_expect_success block.

- Move writing the bogus patch and the expected output into the
  appropriate test_expect_success blocks.

- Use the test_must_fail helper instead of manually checking for
  non-zero exit code.

- Use the debug-friendly test_path_is_file helper instead of 'test -f'.

- No space after '>'.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-17 15:05:53 -07:00
1d25dd416f Update draft release notes to 1.8.5
List notable topics that graduated during Jonathan's interim
maintainership.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 12:27:45 -07:00
056f34bbcd t3600: fix broken "choking git rm" test
The test 'choking "git rm" should not let it die with cruft' is
supposed to check 'git rm's behavior when interrupted by provoking a
SIGPIPE while 'git rm' is busily deleting files from a specially
crafted index.

This test is silently broken for the following reasons:

- The test crafts a special index by feeding a large number of index
  entries with null shas to 'git update-index --index-info'.  It was
  OK back then when this test was introduced in commit 0693f9ddad
  (Make sure lockfiles are unlocked when dying on SIGPIPE,
  2008-12-18), but since commit 4337b5856f (do not write null sha1s to
  on-disk index, 2012-07-28) null shas are not allowed in the on-disk
  index causing 'git update-index' to error out.

- The barfing 'git update-index --index-info' should fail the test,
  but it remains unnoticed because of the severely broken && chain:
  the test's result depends solely on whether there is a stale lock
  file left behind, but after 'git update-index' errors out 'git rm'
  won't be executed at all.

To fix this test feed only non-null shas to 'git update-index' and
restore the && chain (partly by adding a missing && and by using the
test_when_finished helper instead of manual cleanup).

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 12:01:53 -07:00
47ce115370 http: use curl's tcp keepalive if available
Commit a15d069 taught git to use curl's SOCKOPTFUNCTION hook
to turn on TCP keepalives. However, modern versions of curl
have a TCP_KEEPALIVE option, which can do this for us. As an
added bonus, the curl code knows how to turn on keepalive
for a much wider variety of platforms. The only downside to
using this option is that not everybody has a new enough curl.
Let's split our keepalive options into three conditionals:

  1. With curl 7.25.0 and newer, we rely on curl to do it
     right.

  2. With older curl that still knows SOCKOPTFUNCTION, we
     use the code from a15d069.

  3. Otherwise, we are out of luck, and the call is a no-op.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 11:26:09 -07:00
1668b7d78f Merge git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn
* git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn:
  git-svn: Warn about changing default for --prefix in Git v2.0
  Documentation/git-svn: Promote the use of --prefix in docs + examples
  git-svn.txt: elaborate on rev_map files
  git-svn.txt: replace .git with $GIT_DIR
  git-svn.txt: reword description of gc command
  git-svn.txt: fix AsciiDoc formatting error
  git-svn: fix signed commit parsing
2013-10-16 10:45:58 -07:00
6b2dd0e56b block-sha1/sha1.c: have SP around arithmetic operators
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 10:27:27 -07:00
5f050e3c4c base85.c: have SP around arithmetic operators
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 10:27:26 -07:00
b1cdfb54f1 archive.c: have SP around arithmetic operators
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 10:27:26 -07:00
ea6640ec3e alloc.c: have SP around arithmetic operators
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 10:27:26 -07:00
f1e835fa13 abspath.c: have SP around arithmetic operators
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 10:27:26 -07:00
cc10837929 alias: have SP around arithmetic operators
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 10:27:26 -07:00
c01499ef69 C: have space around && and || operators
Correct all hits from

    git grep -e '\(&&\|||\)[^ ]' -e '[^	 ]\(&&\|||\)' -- '*.c'

i.e. && or || operators that are followed by anything but a SP,
or that follow something other than a SP or a HT, so that these
operators have a SP around it when necessary.

We usually refrain from making this kind of a tree-wide change in
order to avoid unnecessary conflicts with other "real work" patches,
but in this case, the end result does not have a potentially
cumbersome tree-wide impact, while this is a tree-wide cleanup.

Fixes to compat/regex/regcomp.c and xdiff/xemit.c are to replace a
HT immediately after && with a SP.

This is based on Felipe's patch to bultin/symbolic-ref.c; I did all
the finding out what other files in the whole tree need to be fixed
and did the fix and also the log message while reviewing that single
liner, so any screw-ups in this version are mine.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 10:26:39 -07:00
15f7221686 contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: support really ancient gnome-keyring
The gnome-keyring lib (0.4) distributed with RHEL 4.X is really ancient
and does not provide most of the synchronous functions that even ancient
releases do.  Thankfully, we're only using one function that is missing.
Let's emulate gnome_keyring_item_delete_sync() by calling the asynchronous
function and then triggering the event loop processing until our
callback is called.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:35:33 -07:00
5a3db11053 contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: support ancient gnome-keyring
The gnome-keyring lib distributed with RHEL 5.X is ancient and does
not provide a few of the functions/defines that more recent versions
do, but mostly the API is the same.  Let's provide the missing bits
via macro definitions and function implementation.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:35:33 -07:00
81c57e2c9d contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: report failure to store password
Produce an error message when we fail to store a password to the keyring.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:35:33 -07:00
3006297a0e contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: use glib messaging functions
Rather than roll our own, let's use the messaging functions provided
by glib.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:35:32 -07:00
68a65f5fe5 contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: use glib memory allocation functions
Rather than roll our own, let's use the memory allocation/free routines
provided by glib.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:35:32 -07:00
da2727f23c contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: use secure memory for reading passwords
gnome-keyring provides functions to allocate non-pageable memory (if
possible).  Let's use them to allocate memory that may be used to hold
secure data read from the keyring.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:35:32 -07:00
9fe3e6cf9e contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: use secure memory functions for passwds
gnome-keyring provides functions for allocating non-pageable memory (if
possible) intended to be used for storing passwords.  Let's use them.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:35:31 -07:00
8bb7a54c57 contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: use gnome helpers in keyring_object()
Rather than carefully allocating memory for sprintf() to write into,
let's make use of the glib helper function g_strdup_printf(), which
makes things a lot easier and less error-prone.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:35:31 -07:00
ff55c47d0f contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: set Gnome application name
Since this is a Gnome application, let's set the application name to
something reasonable.  This will be displayed in Gnome dialog boxes
e.g. the one that prompts for the user's keyring password.

We add an include statement for glib.h and add the glib-2.0 cflags and
libs to the compilation arguments, but both of these are really noops
since glib is already a dependency of gnome-keyring.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:35:31 -07:00
73bbc0796b contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: ensure buffer is non-empty before accessing
Ensure buffer length is non-zero before attempting to access the last
element.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:35:31 -07:00
fb2763746f contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: strlen() returns size_t, not ssize_t
Also, initialization is not necessary since it is assigned before it is
used.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:35:30 -07:00
7a6d6423c5 contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: exit non-zero when called incorrectly
If the correct arguments were not specified, this program should exit
non-zero.  Let's do so.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:35:30 -07:00
18fe5add33 contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: add static where applicable
Mark global variable and functions as static.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:35:29 -07:00
4bc47cc009 contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: *style* use "if ()" not "if()" etc.
Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-16 09:34:26 -07:00
895c5ba3c1 revision: do not peel tags used in range notation
A range notation "A..B" means exactly the same thing as what "^A B"
means, i.e. the set of commits that are reachable from B but not
from A.  But the internal representation after the revision parser
parsed these two notations are subtly different.

 - "rev-list ^A B" leaves A and B in the revs->pending.objects[]
   array, with the former marked as UNINTERESTING and the revision
   traversal machinery propagates the mark to underlying commit
   objects A^0 and B^0.

 - "rev-list A..B" peels tags and leaves A^0 (marked as
   UNINTERESTING) and B^0 in revs->pending.objects[] array before
   the traversal machinery kicks in.

This difference usually does not matter, but starts to matter when
the --objects option is used.  For example, we see this:

    $ git rev-list --objects v1.8.4^1..v1.8.4 | grep $(git rev-parse v1.8.4)
    $ git rev-list --objects v1.8.4 ^v1.8.4^1 | grep $(git rev-parse v1.8.4)
    04f013dc38 v1.8.4

With the former invocation, the revision traversal machinery never
hears about the tag v1.8.4 (it only sees the result of peeling it,
i.e. the commit v1.8.4^0), and the tag itself does not appear in the
output.  The latter does send the tag object itself to the output.

Make the range notation keep the unpeeled objects and feed them to
the traversal machinery to fix this inconsistency.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-15 16:17:09 -07:00
9768648144 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  git-prune-packed.txt: fix reference to GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY
  clone --branch: refuse to clone if upstream repo is empty
2013-10-15 16:15:00 -07:00
3991e91063 git-prune-packed.txt: fix reference to GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY
git-prune-packed operates on GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY, not
GIT_OBJECT_DIR.

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-15 16:01:22 -07:00
6fb02165a3 git.txt: fix asciidoc syntax of --*-pathspecs
Labeled lists require a double colon.

[jc] I eyeballed the output from

        git grep '[^:]:$' Documentation/\*.txt

     and the patch fixes all breakages of this kind.

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-15 15:47:05 -07:00
08f8d5d0c0 doc/cli: make "dot repository" an independent bullet point
The way to spell the current repository with a '.' dot is
independent from how the pathspec allows globs expanded by Git.

Make them two separate bullet items in the enumeration.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-15 14:58:21 -07:00
11a6ba1c01 remote: do not copy "origin" string literal
Our default_remote_name starts at "origin", but may be
overridden by the config file. In the former case, we
allocate a new string, but in the latter case, we point to
the remote name in an existing "struct branch".

This gives the variable inconsistent free() semantics (we
are sometimes responsible for freeing the string and
sometimes pointing to somebody else's storage), and causes a
small leak when the allocated string is overridden by
config.

We can fix both by simply dropping the extra copy and
pointing to the string literal.

Noticed-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-15 14:46:31 -07:00
52ec889d1a bash prompt: don't use '+=' operator in show upstream code path
The '+=' operator is not supported by old Bash versions (3.0) we still
care about.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-15 14:20:37 -07:00
03818a4a94 split_ident: parse timestamp from end of line
Split_ident currently parses left to right. Given this
input:

  Your Name <email@example.com> 123456789 -0500\n

We assume the name starts the line and runs until the first
"<".  That starts the email address, which runs until the
first ">".  Everything after that is assumed to be the
timestamp.

This works fine in the normal case, but is easily broken by
corrupted ident lines that contain an extra ">". Some
examples seen in the wild are:

  1. Name <email>-<> 123456789 -0500\n

  2. Name <email> <Name<email>> 123456789 -0500\n

  3. Name1 <email1>, Name2 <email2> 123456789 -0500\n

Currently each of these produces some email address (which
is not necessarily the one the user intended) and end up
with a NULL date (which is generally interpreted as the
epoch by "git log" and friends).

But in each case we could get the correct timestamp simply
by parsing from the right-hand side, looking backwards for
the final ">", and then reading the timestamp from there.

In general, it's a losing battle to try to automatically
guess what the user meant with their broken crud. But this
particular workaround is probably worth doing.  One, it's
dirt simple, and can't impact non-broken cases. Two, it
doesn't catch a single breakage we've seen, but rather a
large class of errors (i.e., any breakage inside the email
angle brackets may affect the email, but won't spill over
into the timestamp parsing). And three, the timestamp is
arguably more valuable to get right, because it can affect
correctness (e.g., in --until cutoffs).

This patch implements the right-to-left scheme described
above. We adjust the tests in t4212, which generate a commit
with such a broken ident, and now gets the timestamp right.
We also add a test that fsck continues to detect the
breakage.

For reference, here are pointers to the breakages seen (as
numbered above):

[1] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/221441

[2] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/222362

[3] http://perl5.git.perl.org/perl.git/commit/13b79730adea97e660de84bbe67f9d7cbe344302

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-10-15 10:41:49 -07:00
050ef3655c remote-curl: rewrite base url from info/refs redirects
For efficiency and security reasons, an earlier commit in
this series taught http_get_* to re-write the base url based
on redirections we saw while making a specific request.

This commit wires that option into the info/refs request,
meaning that a redirect from

    http://example.com/foo.git/info/refs

to

    https://example.com/bar.git/info/refs

will behave as if "https://example.com/bar.git" had been
provided to git in the first place.

The tests bear some explanation. We introduce two new
hierearchies into the httpd test config:

  1. Requests to /smart-redir-limited will work only for the
     initial info/refs request, but not any subsequent
     requests. As a result, we can confirm whether the
     client is re-rooting its requests after the initial
     contact, since otherwise it will fail (it will ask for
     "repo.git/git-upload-pack", which is not redirected).

  2. Requests to smart-redir-auth will redirect, and require
     auth after the redirection. Since we are using the
     redirected base for further requests, we also update
     the credential struct, in order not to mislead the user
     (or credential helpers) about which credential is
     needed. We can therefore check the GIT_ASKPASS prompts
     to make sure we are prompting for the new location.
     Because we have neither multiple servers nor https
     support in our test setup, we can only redirect between
     paths, meaning we need to turn on
     credential.useHttpPath to see the difference.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 17:01:34 -07:00
b227bbc43a remote-curl: store url as a strbuf
We use a strbuf to generate the string containing the remote
URL, but then detach it to a bare pointer. This makes it
harder to later manipulate the URL, as we have forgotten the
length (and the allocation semantics are not as clear).

Let's instead keep the strbuf around. As a bonus, this
eliminates a confusing double-use of the "buf" strbuf in
main(). Prior to this, it was used both for constructing the
url, and for reading commands from stdin.

The downside is that we have to update each call site to
refer to "url.buf" rather than just "url" when they want the
C string.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 17:01:15 -07:00
c65d5692cd remote-curl: make refs_url a strbuf
In the discover_refs function, we use a strbuf named
"buffer" for multiple purposes. First we build the info/refs
URL in it, and then detach that to a bare pointer. Then, we
use the same strbuf to store the result of fetching the
refs.

Let's instead keep a separate refs_url strbuf. This is less
confusing, as the "buffer" strbuf is now used for only one
thing.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 16:57:04 -07:00
c93c92f309 http: update base URLs when we see redirects
If a caller asks the http_get_* functions to go to a
particular URL and we end up elsewhere due to a redirect,
the effective_url field can tell us where we went.

It would be nice to remember this redirect and short-cut
further requests for two reasons:

  1. It's more efficient. Otherwise we spend an extra http
     round-trip to the server for each subsequent request,
     just to get redirected.

  2. If we end up with an http 401 and are going to ask for
     credentials, it is to feed them to the redirect target.
     If the redirect is an http->https upgrade, this means
     our credentials may be provided on the http leg, just
     to end up redirected to https. And if the redirect
     crosses server boundaries, then curl will drop the
     credentials entirely as it follows the redirect.

However, it, it is not enough to simply record the effective
URL we saw and use that for subsequent requests. We were
originally fed a "base" url like:

   http://example.com/foo.git

and we want to figure out what the new base is, even though
the URLs we see may be:

     original: http://example.com/foo.git/info/refs
    effective: http://example.com/bar.git/info/refs

Subsequent requests will not be for "info/refs", but for
other paths relative to the base. We must ask the caller to
pass in the original base, and we must pass the redirected
base back to the caller (so that it can generate more URLs
from it). Furthermore, we need to feed the new base to the
credential code, so that requests to credential helpers (or
to the user) match the URL we will be requesting.

This patch teaches http_request_reauth to do this munging.
Since it is the caller who cares about making more URLs, it
seems at first glance that callers could simply check
effective_url themselves and handle it. However, since we
need to update the credential struct before the second
re-auth request, we have to do it inside http_request_reauth.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 16:56:47 -07:00
78868962c0 http: provide effective url to callers
When we ask curl to access a URL, it may follow one or more
redirects to reach the final location. We have no idea
this has happened, as curl takes care of the details and
simply returns the final content to us.

The final URL that we ended up with can be accessed via
CURLINFO_EFFECTIVE_URL. Let's make that optionally available
to callers of http_get_*, so that they can make further
decisions based on the redirection.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 16:55:23 -07:00
2501aff8b7 http: hoist credential request out of handle_curl_result
When we are handling a curl response code in http_request or
in the remote-curl RPC code, we use the handle_curl_result
helper to translate curl's response into an easy-to-use
code. When we see an HTTP 401, we do one of two things:

  1. If we already had a filled-in credential, we mark it as
     rejected, and then return HTTP_NOAUTH to indicate to
     the caller that we failed.

  2. If we didn't, then we ask for a new credential and tell
     the caller HTTP_REAUTH to indicate that they may want
     to try again.

Rejecting in the first case makes sense; it is the natural
result of the request we just made. However, prompting for
more credentials in the second step does not always make
sense. We do not know for sure that the caller is going to
make a second request, and nor are we sure that it will be
to the same URL. Logically, the prompt belongs not to the
request we just finished, but to the request we are (maybe)
about to make.

In practice, it is very hard to trigger any bad behavior.
Currently, if we make a second request, it will always be to
the same URL (even in the face of redirects, because curl
handles the redirects internally). And we almost always
retry on HTTP_REAUTH these days. The one exception is if we
are streaming a large RPC request to the server (e.g., a
pushed packfile), in which case we cannot restart. It's
extremely unlikely to see a 401 response at this stage,
though, as we would typically have seen it when we sent a
probe request, before streaming the data.

This patch drops the automatic prompt out of case 2, and
instead requires the caller to do it. This is a few extra
lines of code, and the bug it fixes is unlikely to come up
in practice. But it is conceptually cleaner, and paves the
way for better handling of credentials across redirects.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 16:55:13 -07:00
2b7ca916fc mergetool--lib: Fix typo in the merge/difftool help
The help text for the `tool` flag should mention:

    --tool=<tool>

instead of:

    --tool-<tool>

Signed-off-by: Stefan Saasen <ssaasen@atlassian.com>
Reviewed-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 16:28:38 -07:00
9371322a60 sparse: suppress some "using sizeof on a function" warnings
Sparse issues an "using sizeof on a function" warning for each
call to curl_easy_setopt() which sets an option that takes a
function pointer parameter. (currently 12 such warnings over 4
files.)

The warnings relate to the use of the "typecheck-gcc.h" header
file which adds a layer of type-checking macros to the curl
function invocations (for gcc >= 4.3 and !__cplusplus). As part
of the type-checking layer, 'sizeof' is applied to the function
parameter of curl_easy_setopt(). Note that, in the context of
sizeof, the function to function pointer conversion is not
performed and that sizeof(f) != sizeof(&f).

A simple solution, therefore, would be to replace the function
name in each such call to curl_easy_setopt() with an explicit
function pointer expression (i.e. replace f with &f).

However, the "typecheck-gcc.h" header file is only conditionally
included, in addition to the gcc and C++ checks mentioned above,
depending on the CURL_DISABLE_TYPECHECK preprocessor variable.

In order to suppress the warnings, we use target-specific variable
assignments to add -DCURL_DISABLE_TYPECHECK to SPARSE_FLAGS for
each file affected (http-push.c, http.c, http-walker.c and
remote-curl.c).

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 16:22:28 -07:00
f737684d34 format-patch doc: Thunderbird wraps lines unless mailnews.wraplength=0
The Thunderbird section of the 'MUA-specific hints' contains three
different approaches to setting up the mail client to leave patch
emails unmolested. The second approach (configuration) has a step
missing when configuring the composition window not to wrap. In
particular, the "mailnews.wraplength" configuration variable needs
to be set to zero. Update the documentation to add the missing
setting.

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 16:20:01 -07:00
a43948bae9 Merge branch 'rj/highlight-test-hang'
* rj/highlight-test-hang:
  gitweb test: fix highlight test hang on Linux Mint
2013-10-14 16:19:31 -07:00
7202db8647 gitweb test: fix highlight test hang on Linux Mint
Linux Mint has an implementation of the highlight command (unrelated
to the one from http://www.andre-simon.de) that works as a simple
filter. The script uses 'sed' to add terminal colour escape codes
around text matching a regular expression. When t9500-*.sh attempts
to run "highlight --version", the script simply hangs waiting for
input. (See https://bugs.launchpad.net/linuxmint/+bug/815005).

The tool required by gitweb can be installed from the 'highlight'
package. Unfortunately, given the default $PATH, this leads to the
tool having lower precedence than the script.

In order to avoid hanging the test, add '</dev/null' to the command
line of the highlight invocation. Also, since the 'highlight' tool
requred by gitweb produces '--version' output (and the script does
not), saving the command output allows a simple check for the wrong
'highlight'.

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 16:19:15 -07:00
ec145c9c2e wrapper.c: only define gitmkstemps if needed
When the NO_MKSTEMPS build variable is not set, the gitmkstemps
function is dead code.  Use a preprocessor conditional to only include
the definition when needed.

Noticed by sparse.  ("'gitmkstemps' was not declared. Should it be
static?")

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 16:16:00 -07:00
ce1e846207 refs.c: spell NULL pointer as NULL
A call to update_ref_lock() passes '0' to the 'int *type_p' parameter.
Noticed by sparse.  ("Using plain integer as NULL pointer")

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 16:10:50 -07:00
0b4dc66169 config.c: mark file-local function static
Commit 7192777 refactors git_parse_ulong, which is public, into a more
generic function.  But since we kept the git_parse_ulong wrapper, only
that part needs to be public; nobody outside the file calls the
lower-level git_parse_unsigned.

Noticed with sparse.  ("'git_parse_unsigned' was not declared. Should
it be static?")

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Explained-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 16:00:37 -07:00
b75a6ca7f3 CodingGuidelines: style for multi-line comments
The style for multi-line comments is often mentioned and should be documented
for clarity.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 12:48:06 -07:00
110f415ce8 Merge branch 'nv/doc-config-signingkey'
* nv/doc-config-signingkey:
  config doc: user.signingkey is also used for signed commits
2013-10-14 12:45:50 -07:00
f0551693cc config doc: user.signingkey is also used for signed commits
The description of the user.signingkey option only mentioned its use
when creating a signed tag. Make it clear that is is also used when
creating signed commits.

Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 12:45:22 -07:00
a3552aba55 clone --branch: refuse to clone if upstream repo is empty
Since 920b691 (clone: refuse to clone if --branch
points to bogus ref) we refuse to clone with option
"-b" if the specified branch does not exist in the
(non-empty) upstream. If the upstream repository is empty,
the branch doesn't exist, either. So refuse the clone too.

Reported-by: Robert Mitwicki <robert.mitwicki@opensoftware.pl>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 12:26:15 -07:00
774282d16a Merge branch 'sb/checkout-test-complex-path'
* sb/checkout-test-complex-path:
  checkout test: enable test with complex relative path
2013-10-14 11:09:30 -07:00
0e3b378c3a Merge branch 'rt/cherry-pick-status'
* rt/cherry-pick-status:
  status: show commit sha1 in "You are currently cherry-picking" message
  status test: add missing && to <<EOF blocks
2013-10-14 11:08:47 -07:00
865156a7cb Merge branch 'rj/doc-formatting-fix'
* rj/doc-formatting-fix:
  howto/revert-a-faulty-merge: fix unescaped '^'s
  howto/setup-git-server-over-http: fix unescaped '^'s
2013-10-14 11:07:50 -07:00
c766e6f429 Merge branch 'po/remote-set-head-usage'
* po/remote-set-head-usage:
  remote set-head -h: add long options to synopsis
  remote doc: document long forms of set-head options
2013-10-14 11:07:29 -07:00
cabb411fcf Merge branch 'nd/clone-local-with-colon'
* nd/clone-local-with-colon:
  clone: tighten "local paths with colons" check a bit
2013-10-14 11:06:57 -07:00
13f17f338c Merge branch 'jx/clean-interactive'
* jx/clean-interactive:
  path-utils test: rename mingw_path function to print_path
2013-10-14 11:03:48 -07:00
92d2afd563 Merge branch 'jk/diff-algo'
* jk/diff-algo:
  merge-recursive: fix parsing of "diff-algorithm" option
2013-10-14 10:59:51 -07:00
1f6806cf2d git-prompt.sh: optionally show upstream branch name
When working with multiple remotes, it is common to switch the upstream
from a remote to another. Doing so, the prompt may not be the expected
one. Providing an option to display tracking information sounds useful.

Add a "name" option to GIT_PS1_SHOWUPSTREAM which will show the upstream
abbrev name. This option is ignored if "verbose" is false.

Signed-off-by: Julien Carsique <julien.carsique@gmail.com>
Improved-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 10:24:34 -07:00
7ffd18fce1 path-utils test: rename mingw_path function to print_path
mingw_path was introduced in abd4284 to output a mangled path as it is
passed as an argument to main(). But the name is misleading because
mangling does not come from MinGW, but from MSYS [1]. As abd4284 does not
introduce any MSYS or MinGW specific code but just prints out argv[2] as
it is passed to main(), give the function the more generic and less
confusing name "print_path".

[1] http://www.mingw.org/wiki/Posix_path_conversion

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 07:32:53 -07:00
78bef06589 howto/revert-a-faulty-merge: fix unescaped '^'s
Several uses of the '^' operator are being interpreted by asciidoc
as requests to show the following text as a superscript. In order
to fix this problem, use backticks (`) to quote the text of the
affected git command invocations.

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 07:25:42 -07:00
6430692135 howto/setup-git-server-over-http: fix unescaped '^'s
The text contains two 'grep' invocations which include the 'start
of line' regular expression character '^'. Asciidoc mis-interprets
this use of '^' as a superscript request. In order to fix this
formatting problem, use backticks (`) to quote the text of the
affected 'grep' command invocations.

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 07:23:40 -07:00
a15d069a19 http: enable keepalive on TCP sockets
This is a follow up to commit e47a8583 (enable SO_KEEPALIVE for
connected TCP sockets, 2011-12-06).

Sockets may never receive notification of some link errors,
causing "git fetch" or similar processes to hang forever.
Enabling keepalive messages allows hung processes to error out
after a few minutes/hours depending on the keepalive settings of
the system.

I noticed this problem with some non-interactive cronjobs getting
hung when talking to HTTP servers.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 07:03:59 -07:00
41894ae3a3 Use simpler relative_path when set_git_dir
Using a relative_path as git_dir first appears in v1.5.6-1-g044bbbc.
It will make git_dir shorter only if git_dir is inside work_tree,
and this will increase performance. But my last refactor effort on
relative_path function (commit v1.8.3-rc2-12-ge02ca72) changed that.
Always use relative_path as git_dir may bring troubles like
$gmane/234434.

Because new relative_path is a combination of original relative_path
from path.c and original path_relative from quote.c, so in order to
restore the origin implementation, save the original relative_path
as remove_leading_path, and call it in setup.c.

Suggested-by: Karsten Blees <karsten.blees@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 07:00:33 -07:00
7fbd422162 relative_path should honor dos-drive-prefix
Tvangeste found that the "relative_path" function could not work
properly on Windows if "in" and "prefix" have DOS drive prefix
(such as "C:/windows"). ($gmane/234434)

E.g., When execute: test-path-utils relative_path "C:/a/b" "D:/x/y",
should return "C:/a/b", but returns "../../C:/a/b", which is wrong.

So make relative_path honor DOS drive prefix, and add test cases
for it in t0060.

Reported-by: Tvangeste <i.4m.l33t@yandex.ru>
Helped-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 07:00:26 -07:00
daf19a80fa test: use unambigous leading path (/foo) for MSYS
In test cases for relative_path, path with one leading character
(such as /a, /x) may be recogonized as "a:/" or "x:/" if there is
such DOS drive on MSYS platform. Use an umambigous leading path
"/foo" instead.

Also change two leading slashes (//) to three leading slashes (///),
otherwize it will be recognized as UNC name on MSYS platform.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-14 07:00:01 -07:00
04c1ee576a mv: Fix spurious warning when moving a file in presence of submodules
In commit 0656781fa "git mv" learned to update the submodule path in the
.gitmodules file when moving a submodule in the work tree. But since that
commit update_path_in_gitmodules() gets called no matter if we moved a
submodule or a regular file, which is wrong and leads to a bogus warning
when moving a regular file in a repo containing a .gitmodules file:

    warning: Could not find section in .gitmodules where path=<filename>

Fix that by only calling update_path_in_gitmodules() when moving a
submodule. To achieve that, we introduce the special SUBMODULE_WITH_GITDIR
define to distinguish the cases where we also have to connect work tree
and git directory from those where we only need to update the .gitmodules
setting.

A test for submodules using a .git directory together with a .gitmodules
file has been added to t7001. Even though newer git versions will always
use a gitfile when cloning submodules, repositories cloned with older git
versions will still use this layout.

Reported-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-13 22:35:19 -07:00
c5f424fd01 mergetools/diffmerge: support DiffMerge as a git mergetool
DiffMerge is a non-free (but gratis) tool that supports OS X, Windows and Linux.

    See http://www.sourcegear.com/diffmerge/

DiffMerge includes a script `/usr/bin/diffmerge` that can be used to launch the
graphical compare tool.

This change adds mergetool support for DiffMerge and adds 'diffmerge' as an
option to the mergetool help.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Saasen <ssaasen@atlassian.com>
Acked-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-13 16:00:57 -07:00
22bbddeafe .mailmap: switch to Thomas Rast's personal address
Normalize to my personal address, as my ETH addresses will expire
soon.  Also add my new corp account to be somewhat futureproof.

Note that despite the private address being first, Google owns the
copyright as long as I am employed there.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@inf.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-13 14:28:27 -07:00
f849bb6b3b git-svn: Warn about changing default for --prefix in Git v2.0
In Git v2.0, we will change the default --prefix for init/clone from
none/empty to "origin/" (which causes SVN-tracking branches to be
placed at refs/remotes/origin/* instead of refs/remotes/*).

This patch warns users about the upcoming change, both in the git-svn
manual page, and on stderr when running init/clone in the "multi-mode"
without providing a --prefix.

Cc: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2013-10-12 22:30:53 +00:00
7091a2d0bf Documentation/git-svn: Promote the use of --prefix in docs + examples
Currently, the git-svn defaults to using an empty prefix, which ends
up placing the SVN-tracking refs directly in refs/remotes/*. This
placement runs counter to Git's convention of placing remote-tracking
branches in refs/remotes/$remote/*.

Furthermore, combining git-svn with "regular" Git remotes run the risk
of clobbering refs under refs/remotes (e.g. if you have a git remote
called "tags" with a "v1" branch, it will overlap with the git-svn's
tracking branch for the "v1" tag from Subversion.

Even though the git-svn refs stored in refs/remotes/* are not "proper"
remote-tracking branches (since they are not covered by a proper git
remote's refspec), they clearly represent a similar concept, and would
benefit from following the same convention.

For example, if git-svn tracks Subversion branch "foo" at
refs/remotes/foo, and you create a local branch refs/heads/foo to add
some commits to be pushed back to Subversion (using "git svn dcommit),
then it is clearly unhelpful of Git to throw

  warning: refname 'foo' is ambiguous.

every time you checkout, rebase, or otherwise interact with the branch.

At this time, the user is better off using the --prefix=foo/ (the
trailing slash is important) to git svn init/clone, to cause the
SVN-tracking refs to be placed at refs/remotes/foo/* instead of
refs/remotes/*. This patch updates the documentation to encourage
use of --prefix.

This is also in preparation for changing the default value of --prefix
at some point in the future.

Cc: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2013-10-12 22:30:39 +00:00
bffd809870 status: show commit sha1 in "You are currently cherry-picking" message
Especially helpful when cherry-picking multiple commits.

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-11 10:42:45 -07:00
59c2220528 status test: add missing && to <<EOF blocks
When a test forgets to include && after each command, it is possible
for an early command to succeed but the test to fail, which can hide
bugs.

Checked using the following patch to the test harness:

	--- a/t/test-lib.sh
	+++ b/t/test-lib.sh
	@@ -425,7 +425,17 @@ test_eval_ () {
		eval </dev/null >&3 2>&4 "$*"
	 }

	+check_command_chaining_ () {
	+	eval >&3 2>&4 "(exit 189) && $*"
	+	eval_chain_ret=$?
	+	if test "$eval_chain_ret" != 189
	+	then
	+		error 'bug in test script: missing "&&" in test commands'
	+	fi
	+}
	+
	 test_run_ () {
	+	check_command_chaining_ "$1"
		test_cleanup=:
		expecting_failure=$2
		setup_malloc_check

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-11 10:35:46 -07:00
d644c5502f cherry-pick: handle "-" after parsing options
Currently, we only try converting argv[1] from "-" into "@{-1}".  This
means we do not notice "-" when used together with an option.  Worse,
when "git cherry-pick" is run with no options, we segfault.  Fix this
by doing the substitution after we have checked that there is
something in argv to cherry-pick and know any remaining options are
meant for the revision-listing machinery.

This still does not handle "-" after the first non-cherry-pick option.
For example,

	git cherry-pick foo~2 - bar~5

and

	git cherry-pick --no-merges -

will still dump usage.

Reported-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-10 15:33:46 -07:00
945b9c14ff git-svn.txt: elaborate on rev_map files
The man page for `git svn` describes a situation in which "'git svn'
will not be able to rebuild" your $GIT_DIR/svn/**/.rev_map* files, but
no mention is made of in what circumstances `git svn` *will* be able to
do so, how to get `git svn` to do so, or even what these files are.

This patch adds a FILES section to the man page with a description of
what $GIT_DIR/svn/**/.rev_map* files are and how they are (re)built, and
links to this description from various other parts of the man page.

Signed-off-by: Keshav Kini <keshav.kini@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2013-10-10 06:56:12 +00:00
6fe7a30aec git-svn.txt: replace .git with $GIT_DIR
As $GIT_DIR may not equal '.git', it's usually more generally correct to
refer to files in $GIT_DIR rather than in .git .

This will also allow me to link some of the occurrences of '.git' in
git-svn.txt to a new reference target inside this file in an upcoming
commit, because in AsciiDoc definitions apparently can't start with
a '.' character.

Signed-off-by: Keshav Kini <keshav.kini@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2013-10-10 06:56:05 +00:00
e618c3960a git-svn.txt: reword description of gc command
It's redundant to say that $GIT_DIR/svn/<refname>/unhandled.log or
$GIT_DIR/svn/<refname>/index is in .git/svn when $GIT_DIR is '.git', and
is wrong when $GIT_DIR is not '.git'

Also, a '/' was missing from the pathname $GIT_DIR/svn/<refname>/index .

Signed-off-by: Keshav Kini <keshav.kini@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2013-10-10 06:55:48 +00:00
9ebeb3392b git-svn.txt: fix AsciiDoc formatting error
As asterisks are used to indicate bold text in AsciiDoc, shell glob
expressions must be escaped appropriately.

Signed-off-by: Keshav Kini <keshav.kini@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2013-10-10 06:55:23 +00:00
60786bd41a git-svn: fix signed commit parsing
When parsing a commit object, git-svn wrongly think that a line
containing spaces means the end of headers and the start of the commit
message. In case of signed commit, the gpgsig entry contains a line with
one space, so "git svn dcommit" will include part of the signature in
the commit message.

An example of such problem :
http://svnweb.mageia.org/treasurer?view=revision&revision=86

This commit changes the regex to only match an empty line as separator
between the headers and the commit message.

Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2013-10-10 06:48:10 +00:00
b0afc02649 checkout test: enable test with complex relative path
This test was added, commented out, in fed1b5ca (git-checkout: Test
for relative path use, 2007-11-09).  Later git's path handling was
improved (d089ebaa, setup: sanitize absolute and funny paths in
get_pathspec(), 2008-01-28) but we forgot to enable the now-working
test.

This test expects to run from a subdirectory, so add a 'cd'.  While
we're here, examine the content of the checked-out file instead of
just checking that it exists.  The other checkout tests already do the
same.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-09 12:49:55 -07:00
1e155359bf Merge branch 'tz/credential-netrc'
* tz/credential-netrc:
  git-credential-netrc: fix uninitialized warning
2013-10-08 13:56:50 -07:00
506524aea5 git-credential-netrc: fix uninitialized warning
Simple patch to avoid unitialized warning and log what we'll do.

Signed-off-by: Ted Zlatanov <tzz@lifelogs.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-08 13:56:36 -07:00
0079d6ebd7 Documentation/Makefile: make AsciiDoc dblatex dir configurable
On my system this is in /usr/share/asciidoc/dblatex not
/etc/asciidoc/dblatex.  Extract this portion of the path to a variable
so that is can be set in config.mak.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-10-03 12:21:19 -07:00
1bbcc224cc http: refactor options to http_get_*
Over time, the http_get_strbuf function has grown several
optional parameters. We now have a bitfield with multiple
boolean options, as well as an optional strbuf for returning
the content-type of the response. And a future patch in this
series is going to add another strbuf option.

Treating these as separate arguments has a few downsides:

  1. Most call sites need to add extra NULLs and 0s for the
     options they aren't interested in.

  2. The http_get_* functions are actually wrappers around
     2 layers of low-level implementation functions. We have
     to pass these options through individually.

  3. The http_get_strbuf wrapper learned these options, but
     nobody bothered to do so for http_get_file, even though
     it is backed by the same function that does understand
     the options.

Let's consolidate the options into a single struct. For the
common case of the default options, we'll allow callers to
simply pass a NULL for the options struct.

The resulting code is often a few lines longer, but it ends
up being easier to read (and to change as we add new
options, since we do not need to update each call site).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-30 17:21:59 -07:00
568950388b rebase -i: respect core.abbrev
collapse_todo_ids() uses `git rev-parse --short=7' to abbreviate
commit ids before showing them to the user in a text editor.  Let's
drop argument from --short to the configured value instead (still
defaulting to 7).

Signed-off-by: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com>
Acked-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-30 14:34:50 -07:00
132b70a2ed http_request: factor out curlinfo_strbuf
When we retrieve the content-type of an http response, curl
gives us a pointer to internal storage, which we then copy
into a strbuf. Let's factor out the get-and-copy routine,
which can be used for getting other curl info.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-30 13:04:45 -07:00
3d1fb769b2 http_get_file: style fixes
Besides being ugly, the extra parentheses are idiomatic for
suppressing compiler warnings when we are assigning within a
conditional. We aren't doing that here, and they just
confuse the reader.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-30 13:04:31 -07:00
9cd755b2fc RelNotes/1.8.5: direct script writers to "git status --porcelain"
[jn: with wording tweak from Keshav Kini]

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-27 17:05:02 -07:00
e49c8f33ab remote set-head -h: add long options to synopsis
Document --auto and --delete alongside their short forms -a and -d in
the first line of 'git remote set-head -h' output.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-27 16:51:27 -07:00
159543e831 remote doc: document long forms of set-head options
"git remote set-head" has always supported --add and --delete
as synonyms for the -a and -d option but forgot to document
them.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-27 16:49:18 -07:00
1c4fb136db submodule foreach: skip eval for more than one argument
'eval "$@"' creates an extra layer of shell interpretation, which is
probably not expected by a user who passes multiple arguments to git
submodule foreach:

 $ git grep "'"
 [searches for single quotes]
 $ git submodule foreach git grep "'"
 Entering '[submodule]'
 /usr/lib/git-core/git-submodule: 1: eval: Syntax error: Unterminated quoted string
 Stopping at '[submodule]'; script returned non-zero status.

To fix this, if the user passes more than one argument, execute "$@"
directly instead of passing it to eval.

Examples:

 * Typical usage when adding an extra level of quoting is to pass a
   single argument representing the entire command to be passed to the
   shell.  This doesn't change that.

 * One can imagine someone feeding untrusted input as an argument:

 	git submodule foreach git grep "$variable"

   That currently results in a nonobvious shell code injection
   vulnerability.  Executing the command named by the arguments
   directly, as in this patch, fixes it.

Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Acked-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-27 16:06:44 -07:00
8d3d28f5db clone: tighten "local paths with colons" check a bit
commit 6000334 (clone: allow cloning local paths with colons in them -
2013-05-04) made it possible to specify a path that has colons in it
without file://, e.g. ../foo:bar/somewhere. But the check was a bit
sloppy.

Consider the url '[foo]:bar'. The '[]' unwrapping code will turn the
string to 'foo\0:bar'. In effect this new string is the same as
'foo/:bar' in the check "path < strchrnul(host, '/')", which mistakes
it for a local path (with '/' before the first ':') when it's actually
not.

So disable the check for '/' before ':' when the URL has been mangled
by '[]' unwrapping.

[jn: with tests from Jeff King]

Noticed-by: Morten Stenshorne <mstensho@opera.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-27 14:47:49 -07:00
6dab2781a1 contrib: remove ciabot
Almost a year ago the CIA service irrevocably crashed.  The CIA author
had plans to revive the service, but the effort has since sunk without
trace.

Projects tend to use "irker" instead these days.  Repository hook
scripts for irker ship with the irker distribution.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Acked-by: Eric S. Raymond <esr@thyrsus.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-26 15:49:36 -07:00
8de8e40caa Sync with Git 1.8.4.1 2013-09-26 15:36:57 -07:00
02a110ad43 Git 1.8.4.1
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-26 15:01:41 -07:00
6562928ae9 merge-recursive: fix parsing of "diff-algorithm" option
The "diff-algorithm" option to the recursive merge strategy takes the
name of the algorithm as an option, but it uses strcmp on the option
string to check if it starts with "diff-algorithm=", meaning that this
options cannot actually be used.

Fix this by switching to prefixcmp.  At the same time, clarify the
following line by using strlen instead of a hard-coded length, which
also makes it consistent with nearby code.

Reported-by: Luke Noel-Storr <luke.noel-storr@integrate.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-26 13:52:16 -07:00
437ce600fb Merge branch 'mm/rebase-continue-freebsd-WB' into maint
* mm/rebase-continue-freebsd-WB:
  rebase: fix run_specific_rebase's use of "return" on FreeBSD
2013-09-26 12:41:14 -07:00
76deaab4e8 Merge branch 'km/svn-1.8-serf-only' into maint
* km/svn-1.8-serf-only:
  Git.pm: revert _temp_cache use of temp_is_locked
  git-svn: allow git-svn fetching to work using serf
  Git.pm: add new temp_is_locked function
2013-09-26 12:34:23 -07:00
be5e85016f Merge branch 'js/xread-in-full' into maint
* js/xread-in-full:
  stream_to_pack: xread does not guarantee to read all requested bytes
2013-09-26 12:30:44 -07:00
31d757d512 Merge branch 'bc/send-email-ssl-die-message-fix' into maint
* bc/send-email-ssl-die-message-fix:
  send-email: don't call methods on undefined values
2013-09-26 12:27:29 -07:00
5636a20070 Merge branch 'bc/submodule-status-ignored'
* bc/submodule-status-ignored:
  Improve documentation concerning the status.submodulesummary setting
  submodule: don't print status output with ignore=all
  submodule: fix confusing variable name
2013-09-24 23:36:08 -07:00
80f165a58a Merge branch 'cc/replace-with-the-same-type'
* cc/replace-with-the-same-type:
  Doc: 'replace' merge and non-merge commits
  t6050-replace: use some long option names
  replace: allow long option names
  Documentation/replace: add Creating Replacement Objects section
  t6050-replace: add test to clean up all the replace refs
  t6050-replace: test that objects are of the same type
  Documentation/replace: state that objects must be of the same type
  replace: forbid replacing an object with one of a different type
2013-09-24 23:35:24 -07:00
d0c789084c Merge branch 'kb/msvc-compile'
* kb/msvc-compile:
  Windows: do not redefine _WIN32_WINNT
  MinGW: Fix stat definitions to work with MinGW runtime version 4.0
  MSVC: fix stat definition hell
  MSVC: fix compile errors due to macro redefinitions
  MSVC: fix compile errors due to missing libintl.h
2013-09-24 23:31:58 -07:00
87bcf148d7 Merge branch 'nd/unpack-entry-optim-in-pack-objects'
* nd/unpack-entry-optim-in-pack-objects:
  pack-objects: no crc check when the cached version is used
2013-09-24 23:29:55 -07:00
7f794aab3e Merge branch 'jk/shortlog-tolerate-broken-commit'
* jk/shortlog-tolerate-broken-commit:
  shortlog: ignore commits with missing authors
2013-09-24 23:29:00 -07:00
a301889980 Merge branch 'jc/strcasecmp-pure-inline'
* jc/strcasecmp-pure-inline:
  mailmap: work around implementations with pure inline strcasecmp
2013-09-24 23:28:13 -07:00
b7f571618c Merge branch 'sg/complete-untracked-filter'
* sg/complete-untracked-filter:
  completion: improve untracked directory filtering for filename completion
2013-09-24 23:27:44 -07:00
40b77322d2 Merge branch 'nd/fetch-pack-error-reporting-fix'
* nd/fetch-pack-error-reporting-fix:
  fetch-pack.c: show correct command name that fails
2013-09-24 23:27:02 -07:00
eb34959e10 Merge branch 'es/contacts-in-subdir'
* es/contacts-in-subdir:
  contacts: fix to work in subdirectories
2013-09-24 23:25:23 -07:00
1939ce67ed Merge branch 'jc/push-cas'
* jc/push-cas:
  t5541: mark passing c-a-s test as success
2013-09-24 23:22:03 -07:00
962393b5d9 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  git-remote-mediawiki: bugfix for pages w/ >500 revisions
2013-09-24 23:19:00 -07:00
ccba805681 doc: don't claim that cherry calls patch-id
The id is already different for binary files.  The hash used is an
implementation detail, so let's just document how diffs are compared.

Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-24 15:54:48 -07:00
1d905f74fd git-remote-mediawiki: bugfix for pages w/ >500 revisions
Mediawiki introduces a new API for queries w/ more than 500 results in
version 1.21. That change triggered an infinite loop while cloning a
mediawiki with such a page.

The latest API renamed and moved the "continuing" information in the
response, necessary to build the next query. The code failed to retrieve
that information but still detected that it was in a "continuing
query". As a result, it launched the same query over and over again.

If a "continuing" information is detected in the response (old or new),
the next query is updated accordingly. If not, we quit assuming it's not
a continuing query.

Reported-by: Benjamin Cathey
Signed-off-by: Benoit Person <benoit.person@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-24 12:42:21 -07:00
af1748b31e sample pre-commit hook: use --bool when retrieving config var
Currently if you set

	[hooks]
		allowNonAscii

(or allownonascii = 1, or = yes) in your .git/config then the sample
pre-commit misinterprets the value as "false" and rejects non-ASCII
filenames.  Use "git config --bool" to get the usual nicer boolean
handling.

Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-24 12:26:49 -07:00
debce6ac2a clone: add a period after "done" to end the sentence
We have a period in other places after "done" (see e.g. clone_local), so
we should have one here, too.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-24 12:18:24 -07:00
083afc0ec0 contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: remove unused die() function
Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-23 10:58:07 -07:00
e72aefc9ec contrib/git-credential-gnome-keyring.c: remove unnecessary pre-declarations
These are all defined before they are used, so it is not necessary to
pre-declare them.  Remove the pre-declarations.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2013-09-23 10:58:07 -07:00
128a96c984 Update draft release notes to 1.8.5 for the fifth batch of topics
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-20 12:42:02 -07:00
7b8315bb59 Merge branch 'jk/upload-pack-keepalive'
When running "fetch -q", a long silence while the sender side
computes the set of objects to send can be mistaken by proxies as
dropped connection.  The server side has been taught to send a small
empty messages to keep the connection alive.

* jk/upload-pack-keepalive:
  upload-pack: bump keepalive default to 5 seconds
  upload-pack: send keepalive packets during pack computation
2013-09-20 12:39:05 -07:00
f406140baa Merge branch 'fc/at-head'
Instead of typing four capital letters "HEAD", you can say "@" now,
e.g. "git log @".

* fc/at-head:
  Add new @ shortcut for HEAD
  sha1-name: pass len argument to interpret_branch_name()
2013-09-20 12:38:10 -07:00
005a1de380 Merge branch 'dw/check-ignore-sans-index'
"git check-ignore" follows the same rule as "git add" and "git
status" in that the ignore/exclude mechanism does not take effect
on paths that are already tracked.  With "--no-index" option, it
can be used to diagnose which paths that should have been ignored
have been mistakenly added to the index.

* dw/check-ignore-sans-index:
  check-ignore: Add option to ignore index contents
2013-09-20 12:37:32 -07:00
b4980c63ac Merge branch 'mm/commit-template-squelch-advice-messages'
From the commit log template, remove irrelevant "advice" messages
that are shared with "git status" output.

* mm/commit-template-squelch-advice-messages:
  commit: disable status hints when writing to COMMIT_EDITMSG
  wt-status: turn advice_status_hints into a field of wt_status
  commit: factor status configuration is a helper function
2013-09-20 12:36:32 -07:00
9a86b89941 Merge branch 'bk/refs-multi-update'
Give "update-refs" a "--stdin" option to read multiple update
requests and perform them in an all-or-none fashion.

* bk/refs-multi-update:
  update-ref: add test cases covering --stdin signature
  update-ref: support multiple simultaneous updates
  refs: add update_refs for multiple simultaneous updates
  refs: add function to repack without multiple refs
  refs: factor delete_ref loose ref step into a helper
  refs: factor update_ref steps into helpers
  refs: report ref type from lock_any_ref_for_update
  reset: rename update_refs to reset_refs
2013-09-20 12:36:12 -07:00
087350398e Merge branch 'nr/git-cd-to-a-directory'
Just like "make -C <directory>", make "git -C <directory> ..." to
go there before doing anything else.

* nr/git-cd-to-a-directory:
  t0056: "git -C" test updates
  git: run in a directory given with -C option
2013-09-20 12:35:42 -07:00
f26f250b44 Merge branch 'mm/rebase-continue-freebsd-WB'
Work around a bug in FreeBSD shell that caused a regression to "git
rebase" in v1.8.4.  May need to be later applied to 'maint'.

* mm/rebase-continue-freebsd-WB:
  rebase: fix run_specific_rebase's use of "return" on FreeBSD
2013-09-20 12:34:37 -07:00
b05fc49adc Merge branch 'jh/checkout-auto-tracking'
Fix a minor regression in v1.8.3.2 and later that made it
impossible to base your local work on anything but a local branch
of the upstream repository you are tracking from.

* jh/checkout-auto-tracking:
  t3200: fix failure on case-insensitive filesystems
  branch.c: Relax unnecessary requirement on upstream's remote ref name
  t3200: Add test demonstrating minor regression in 41c21f2
  Refer to branch.<name>.remote/merge when documenting --track
  t3200: Minor fix when preparing for tracking failure
  t2024: Fix &&-chaining and a couple of typos
2013-09-20 12:31:57 -07:00
26e53f8ac0 Merge branch 'bc/http-backend-allow-405'
When the webserver responds with "405 Method Not Allowed", it
should tell the client what methods are allowed with the "Allow"
header.

* bc/http-backend-allow-405:
  http-backend: provide Allow header for 405
2013-09-20 12:30:54 -07:00
3fb9d685db Merge branch 'np/lookup-object-hashing'
Micro optimize hash function used in the object hash table.

* np/lookup-object-hashing:
  lookup_object: remove hashtable_index() and optimize hash_obj()
2013-09-20 12:30:49 -07:00
08092082b7 Merge branch 'hu/cherry-pick-previous-branch'
Just like "git checkout -" knows to check out and "git merge -"
knows to merge the branch you were previously on, "git cherry-pick"
now understands "git cherry-pick -" to pick from the previous
branch.

* hu/cherry-pick-previous-branch:
  cherry-pick: allow "-" as abbreviation of '@{-1}'
2013-09-20 12:29:58 -07:00
6d3e1f2e45 Merge branch 'mm/status-without-comment-char'
"git status" now omits the prefix to make its output a comment in a
commit log editor, which is not necessary for human consumption.

We may want to tighten the output to omit unnecessary trailing blank
lines, but that does not have to be in the scope of this series.

* mm/status-without-comment-char:
  t7508: avoid non-portable sed expression
  status: add missing blank line after list of "other" files
  tests: don't set status.displayCommentPrefix file-wide
  status: disable display of '#' comment prefix by default
  submodule summary: ignore --for-status option
  wt-status: use argv_array API
  builtin/stripspace.c: fix broken indentation
2013-09-20 12:29:01 -07:00
638924fec2 Merge branch 'rh/peeling-tag-to-tag'
Make "foo^{tag}" to peel a tag to itself, i.e. no-op., and fail if
"foo" is not a tag.  "git rev-parse --verify v1.0^{tag}" would be a
more convenient way to say "test $(git cat-file -t v1.0) = tag".

* rh/peeling-tag-to-tag:
  peel_onion: do not assume length of x_type globals
  peel_onion(): add support for <rev>^{tag}
2013-09-20 12:27:18 -07:00
2e6e3e82ee Merge branch 'jx/branch-vv-always-compare-with-upstream'
"git branch -v -v" (and "git status") did not distinguish among a
branch that does not build on any other branch, a branch that is in
sync with the branch it builds on, and a branch that is configured
to build on some other branch that no longer exists.

* jx/branch-vv-always-compare-with-upstream:
  status: always show tracking branch even no change
  branch: report invalid tracking branch as gone
2013-09-20 12:26:57 -07:00
238504b014 Merge branch 'nd/fetch-into-shallow'
When there is no sufficient overlap between old and new history
during a fetch into a shallow repository, we unnecessarily sent
objects the sending side knows the receiving end has.

* nd/fetch-into-shallow:
  Add testcase for needless objects during a shallow fetch
  list-objects: mark more commits as edges in mark_edges_uninteresting
  list-objects: reduce one argument in mark_edges_uninteresting
  upload-pack: delegate rev walking in shallow fetch to pack-objects
  shallow: add setup_temporary_shallow()
  shallow: only add shallow graft points to new shallow file
  move setup_alternate_shallow and write_shallow_commits to shallow.c
2013-09-20 12:25:32 -07:00
42aa29ee12 t5541: mark passing c-a-s test as success
Commit 05c1eb1 (push: teach --force-with-lease to smart-http
transport) fixed the compare-and-swap test in t5541. It
tried to mark the test as passing by teaching the test
helper function to expect an extra "success or failure"
parameter, but forgot to actually use the parameter in the
helper.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-20 11:18:09 -07:00
662cc30cd0 format-patch: print in-body "From" only when needed
Commit a908047 taught format-patch the "--from" option,
which places the author ident into an in-body from header,
and uses the committer ident in the rfc822 from header.  The
documentation claims that it will omit the in-body header
when it is the same as the rfc822 header, but the code never
implemented that behavior.

This patch completes the feature by comparing the two idents
and doing nothing when they are the same (this is the same
as simply omitting the in-body header, as the two are by
definition indistinguishable in this case). This makes it
reasonable to turn on "--from" all the time (if it matches
your particular workflow), rather than only using it when
exporting other people's patches.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-20 11:09:51 -07:00
ea95c7b8f5 completion: improve untracked directory filtering for filename completion
Similar to Bash's default filename completion, our git-aware filename
completion stops at directory boundaries, i.e. it doesn't offer the
full 'path/to/file' at first, but only 'path/'.  To achieve that the
completion script runs 'git ls-files' with specific command line
options to get the list of relevant paths under the current directory,
and then processes each path to strip all but the base directory or
filename (see __git_index_files()).

To offer only modified and untracked files for 'git add' the
completion script runs 'git ls-files --exclude-standard --others
--modified'.  This command lists all non-ignored files in untracked
directories, which leads to a noticeable delay caused by the
processing mentioned above if there are a lot of such files
(__git_index_files() specifies '--exclude-standard' internally):

  $ mkdir untracked-dir
  $ for i in {1..10000} ; do >untracked-dir/$i ; done
  $ time __git_index_files "--others --modified"
  untracked-dir

  real	0m0.537s
  user	0m0.452s
  sys	0m0.160s

Eliminate this delay by additionally passing the '--directory
--no-empty-directory' options to 'git ls-files' to show only the
directory name of non-empty untracked directories instead their whole
content:

  $ time __git_index_files "--others --modified --directory --no-empty-directory"
  untracked-dir

  real	0m0.029s
  user	0m0.020s
  sys	0m0.004s

Filename completion for 'git clean' suffers from the same delay, as it
offers untracked files, too.  The fix could be the same, but since it
actually makes sense to 'git clean' empty directories, in this case we
only pass the '--directory' option to 'git ls-files'.

Reported-by: Isaac Levy <ilevy@google.com>
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-19 13:05:40 -07:00
79e46c9fed Merge branch 'jk/config-int-range-check'
* jk/config-int-range-check:
  compat/mingw.h: define PRId64
2013-09-19 11:04:25 -07:00
1562f3be48 compat/mingw.h: define PRId64
Provide PRId64 alongside PRIuMAX.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-19 11:03:38 -07:00
28a81f8b93 t0056: "git -C" test updates
Instead of repeating the text to record as the commit log message
and string we expect to see in "log" output, use the same variable
to avoid them going out of sync.

Use different names for test files in different directories to
improve our chance to catch future breakages that makes "-C <dir>"
go to a place that is different from what was specified.

Signed-off-by: Nazri Ramliy <ayiehere@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-19 10:15:06 -07:00
cd4f09e383 shortlog: ignore commits with missing authors
Most of git's traversals are robust against minor breakages
in commit data. For example, "git log" will still output an
entry for a commit that has a broken encoding or missing
author, and will not abort the whole operation.

Shortlog, on the other hand, will die as soon as it sees a
commit without an author, meaning that a repository with
a broken commit cannot get any shortlog output at all.

Let's downgrade this fatal error to a warning, and continue
the operation.

We simply ignore the commit and do not count it in the total
(since we do not have any author under which to file it).
Alternatively, we could output some kind of "<empty>" record
to collect these bogus commits. It is probably not worth it,
though; we have already warned to stderr, so the user is
aware that such bogosities exist, and any placeholder we
came up with would either be syntactically invalid, or would
potentially conflict with real data.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-18 14:41:19 -07:00
643f918d13 clone: always set transport options
A clone will always create a transport struct, whether we
are cloning locally or using an actual protocol. In the
local case, we only use the transport to get the list of
refs, and then transfer the objects out-of-band.

However, there are many options that we do not bother
setting up in the local case. For the most part, these are
noops, because they only affect the object-fetching stage
(e.g., the --depth option).  However, some options do have a
visible impact. For example, giving the path to upload-pack
via "-u" does not currently work for a local clone, even
though we need upload-pack to get the ref list.

We can just drop the conditional entirely and set these
options for both local and non-local clones. Rather than
keep track of which options impact the object versus the ref
fetching stage, we can simply let the noops be noops (and
the cost of setting the options in the first place is not
high).

The one exception is that we also check that the transport
provides both a "get_refs_list" and a "fetch" method. We
will now be checking the former for both cases (which is
good, since a transport that cannot fetch refs would not
work for a local clone), and we tweak the conditional to
check for a "fetch" only when we are non-local.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-18 14:36:40 -07:00
2856cbf0ae clone: treat "checking connectivity" like other progress
When stderr does not point to a tty, we typically suppress
"we are now in this phase" progress reporting (e.g., we ask
the server not to send us "counting objects" and the like).

The new "checking connectivity" message is in the same vein,
and should be suppressed. Since clone relies on the
transport code to make the decision, we can simply sneak a
peek at the "progress" field of the transport struct. That
properly takes into account both the verbosity and progress
options we were given, as well as the result of isatty().

Note that we do not set up that progress flag for a local
clone, as we do not fetch using the transport at all. That's
acceptable here, though, because we also do not perform a
connectivity check in that case.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-18 13:34:46 -07:00
68b939b2f0 clone: send diagnostic messages to stderr
Putting messages like "Cloning into.." and "done" on stdout
is un-Unix and uselessly clutters the stdout channel. Send
them to stderr.

We have to tweak two tests to accommodate this:

  1. t5601 checks for doubled output due to forking, and
     doesn't actually care where the output goes; adjust it
     to check stderr.

  2. t5702 is trying to test whether progress output was
     sent to stderr, but naively does so by checking
     whether stderr produced any output. Instead, have it
     look for "%", a token found in progress output but not
     elsewhere (and which lets us avoid hard-coding the
     progress text in the test).

This should not regress any scripts that try to parse the
current output, as the output is already internationalized
and therefore unstable.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-18 13:34:12 -07:00
eeaee045c8 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  Start preparing for 1.8.4.1
2013-09-18 12:08:41 -07:00
a0d3f1090d Start preparing for 1.8.4.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-18 12:08:09 -07:00
ebb9d1968a Merge branch 'bc/completion-for-bash-3.0' into maint
Some people still use rather old versions of bash, which cannot grok
some constructs like 'printf -v varname' the prompt and completion
code started to use recently.

* bc/completion-for-bash-3.0:
  contrib/git-prompt.sh: handle missing 'printf -v' more gracefully
  t9902-completion.sh: old Bash still does not support array+=('') notation
  git-completion.bash: use correct Bash/Zsh array length syntax
2013-09-18 12:00:11 -07:00
b25b9d5939 Merge branch 'mm/no-shell-escape-in-die-message' into maint
Fixes a minor bug in "git rebase -i" (there could be others, as the
root cause is pretty generic) where the code feeds a random, data
dependeant string to 'echo' and expects it to come out literally.

* mm/no-shell-escape-in-die-message:
  die_with_status: use "printf '%s\n'", not "echo"
2013-09-18 11:59:51 -07:00
dd42145b1e Merge branch 'jl/some-submodule-config-are-not-boolean' into maint
* jl/some-submodule-config-are-not-boolean:
  avoid segfault on submodule.*.path set to an empty "true"
2013-09-18 11:59:35 -07:00
6930cd10de Merge branch 'tr/log-full-diff-keep-true-parents' into maint
Output from "git log --full-diff -- <pathspec>" looked strange,
because comparison was done with the previous ancestor that touched
the specified <pathspec>, causing the patches for paths outside the
pathspec to show more than the single commit has changed.

* tr/log-full-diff-keep-true-parents:
  log: use true parents for diff when walking reflogs
  log: use true parents for diff even when rewriting
2013-09-18 11:59:05 -07:00
1e93c28f53 Merge branch 'jc/transport-do-not-use-connect-twice-in-fetch' into maint
The auto-tag-following code in "git fetch" tries to reuse the same
transport twice when the serving end does not cooperate and does
not give tags that point to commits that are asked for as part of
the primary transfer.  Unfortunately, Git-aware transport helper
interface is not designed to be used more than once, hence this
does not work over smart-http transfer.

* jc/transport-do-not-use-connect-twice-in-fetch:
  builtin/fetch.c: Fix a sparse warning
  fetch: work around "transport-take-over" hack
  fetch: refactor code that fetches leftover tags
  fetch: refactor code that prepares a transport
  fetch: rename file-scope global "transport" to "gtransport"
  t5802: add test for connect helper
2013-09-18 11:58:18 -07:00
4b510c385a Merge branch 'sp/clip-read-write-to-8mb' into maint
Send a large request to read(2)/write(2) as a smaller but still
reasonably large chunks, which would improve the latency when the
operation needs to be killed and incidentally works around broken
64-bit systems that cannot take a 2GB write or read in one go.

* sp/clip-read-write-to-8mb:
  Revert "compat/clipped-write.c: large write(2) fails on Mac OS X/XNU"
  xread, xwrite: limit size of IO to 8MB
2013-09-18 11:57:58 -07:00
19230ab8a8 Merge branch 'jk/mailmap-incomplete-line' into maint
* jk/mailmap-incomplete-line:
  mailmap: handle mailmap blobs without trailing newlines
2013-09-18 11:57:33 -07:00
587e0a164a Update draft release notes to 1.8.5 for the fourth batch of topics 2013-09-18 11:55:59 -07:00
34e8d9982a Merge branch 'jc/url-match'
While normalizing a URL, we forgot that the buffer that holds it
could be relocated when it grows, which was a brown-paper-bag bug
that can lead to a crash introduced on 'master' post 1.8.4 release.

* jc/url-match:
  urlmatch.c: recompute pointer after append_normalized_escapes
2013-09-18 11:48:54 -07:00
2f46b53957 Merge branch 'jc/cvsserver-perm-bit-fix'
"git cvsserver" computed the permission mode bits incorrectly for
executable files.

* jc/cvsserver-perm-bit-fix:
  cvsserver: pick up the right mode bits
2013-09-18 11:48:02 -07:00
139189b92e Merge branch 'bc/send-email-ssl-die-message-fix'
When send-email comes up with an error message to die with upon
failure to start an SSL session, it tried to read the error string
from a wrong place.

* bc/send-email-ssl-die-message-fix:
  send-email: don't call methods on undefined values
2013-09-18 11:47:27 -07:00
70c87a9854 Merge branch 'uh/git-svn-serf-fix'
"git-svn" used with SVN 1.8.0 when talking over https:// connection
dumped core due to a bug in the serf library that SVN uses.  Work
it around on our side, even though the SVN side is being fixed.

* uh/git-svn-serf-fix:
  git-svn: fix termination issues for remote svn connections
2013-09-18 11:46:06 -07:00
751e2b3718 Merge branch 'fc/contrib-bzr-hg-fixes'
* fc/contrib-bzr-hg-fixes:
  contrib/remote-helpers: quote variable references in redirection targets
  contrib/remote-helpers: style updates for test scripts
  remote-hg: use notes to keep track of Hg revisions
  remote-helpers: cleanup more global variables
  remote-helpers: trivial style fixes
  remote-hg: improve basic test
  remote-hg: add missing &&s in the test
  remote-hg: fix test
  remote-bzr: make bzr branches configurable per-repo
  remote-bzr: fix export of utf-8 authors
2013-09-18 11:45:49 -07:00
ac4d29550f Merge branch 'js/add-i-mingw'
The implementation of "add -i" has a crippling code to work around
ActiveState Perl limitation but it by mistake also triggered on Git
for Windows where MSYS perl is used.

* js/add-i-mingw:
  add--interactive: fix external command invocation on Windows
2013-09-18 11:45:06 -07:00
34022ba21a Merge branch 'ks/p4-view-spec'
* ks/p4-view-spec:
  git p4: implement view spec wildcards with "p4 where"
  git p4 test: sanitize P4CHARSET
2013-09-18 11:44:50 -07:00
6c34560053 Merge branch 'jk/duplicate-objects-in-packs'
A packfile that stores the same object more than once is broken and
will be rejected by "git index-pack" that is run when receiving data
over the wire.

* jk/duplicate-objects-in-packs:
  t5308: check that index-pack --strict detects duplicate objects
  test index-pack on packs with recoverable delta cycles
  add tests for indexing packs with delta cycles
  sha1-lookup: handle duplicate keys with GIT_USE_LOOKUP
  test-sha1: add a binary output mode
2013-09-18 11:43:47 -07:00
01e0fa2b37 Merge branch 'nd/git-dir-pointing-at-gitfile'
We made sure that we notice the user-supplied GIT_DIR is actually a
gitfile, but did not do the same when the default ".git" is a gitfile.

* nd/git-dir-pointing-at-gitfile:
  Make setup_git_env() resolve .git file when $GIT_DIR is not specified
2013-09-18 11:42:36 -07:00
d5ca1ab395 Merge branch 'jk/pager-bypass-cat-for-default-pager'
If a build-time fallback is set to "cat" instead of "less", we
should apply the same "no subprocess or pipe" optimization as we
apply to user-supplied GIT_PAGER=cat.

* jk/pager-bypass-cat-for-default-pager:
  pager: turn on "cat" optimization for DEFAULT_PAGER
2013-09-18 11:42:16 -07:00
18fe500348 Merge branch 'fc/t3200-fixes'
* fc/t3200-fixes:
  t: branch: fix broken && chains
  t: branch: fix typo
  t: branch: trivial style fix
2013-09-18 11:42:13 -07:00
f5e4b82c6e Merge branch 'fc/rev-parse-test-updates'
Modernize tests.

* fc/rev-parse-test-updates:
  rev-parse test: use standard test functions for setup
  rev-parse test: use test_cmp instead of "test" builtin
  rev-parse test: use test_must_fail, not "if <command>; then false; fi"
  rev-parse test: modernize quoting and whitespace
2013-09-18 11:42:03 -07:00
4727f671b8 fetch-pack.c: show correct command name that fails
When --shallow-file is added to the command line, it has to be
before the subcommand name, the first argument won't be the command
name any more. Stop assuming that and keep track of the command name
explicitly.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-18 11:11:53 -07:00
8fc9f0227e contacts: fix to work in subdirectories
Unlike other git commands which work correctly at the top-level or in a
subdirectory, git-contacts fails when invoked in a subdirectory. This is
because it invokes git-blame with pathnames relative to the top-level,
but git-blame interprets the pathnames as relative to the current
directory. Fix this.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 22:16:22 -07:00
8b27722209 clone: test the new HEAD detection logic
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 21:58:59 -07:00
a45b5f0552 connect: annotate refs with their symref information in get_remote_head()
By doing this, clients of upload-pack can now reliably tell what ref
a symbolic ref points at; the updated test in t5505 used to expect
failure due to the ambiguity and made sure we give diagnostics, but
we no longer need to be so pessimistic. Make sure we correctly learn
which branch HEAD points at from the other side instead.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 21:58:46 -07:00
5d54cffc36 connect.c: make parse_feature_value() static
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 21:52:06 -07:00
5e7dcad771 upload-pack: send non-HEAD symbolic refs
With the same mechanism as used to tell where "HEAD" points at to
the other end, we can tell the target of other symbolic refs as
well.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 21:51:58 -07:00
7171d8c15f upload-pack: send symbolic ref information as capability
One long-standing flaw in the pack transfer protocol was that there
was no way to tell the other end which branch "HEAD" points at.
With a capability "symref=HEAD:refs/heads/master", let the sender to
tell the receiver what symbolic ref points at what ref.

This capability can be repeated more than once to represent symbolic
refs other than HEAD, such as "refs/remotes/origin/HEAD").

Add an infrastructure to collect symbolic refs, format them as extra
capabilities and put it on the wire.  For now, just send information
on the "HEAD" and nothing else.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 21:50:26 -07:00
a4d695de0d upload-pack.c: do not pass confusing cb_data to mark_our_ref()
The callee does not use cb_data, and the caller is an intermediate
function in a callchain that later wants to use the cb_data for its
own use.  Clarify the code by breaking the dataflow explicitly by
not passing cb_data down to mark_our_ref().

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 21:50:02 -07:00
a4dfee0680 t5505: fix "set-head --auto with ambiguous HEAD" test
When two or more branches point at the same commit and HEAD is
pointing at one of them, without the symref extension, there is no
way to remotely tell which one of these branches HEAD points at.
The test in question attempts to make sure that this situation is
diagnosed and results in a failure.

However, even if there _were_ a way to reliably tell which branch
the HEAD points at, "set-head --auto" would fail if there is no
remote tracking branch.  Make sure that this test does not fail
for that "wrong" reason.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 21:45:34 -07:00
0b63c6a5b7 repack: improve warnings about failure of renaming and removing files
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 13:34:57 -07:00
ffc9329f48 repack: retain the return value of pack-objects
During the review process of the previous commit (repack: rewrite the
shell script in C), Johannes Sixt proposed to retain any exit codes from
the sub-process, which makes it probably more obvious in case of failure.

As the commit before should behave as close to the original shell
script, the proposed change is put in this extra commit.
The infrastructure however was already setup in the previous commit.
(Having a local 'ret' variable)

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 13:34:56 -07:00
a1bbc6c017 repack: rewrite the shell script in C
The motivation of this patch is to get closer to a goal of being
able to have a core subset of git functionality built in to git.
That would mean

 * people on Windows could get a copy of at least the core parts
   of Git without having to install a Unix-style shell

 * people using git in on servers with chrooted environments
   do not need to worry about standard tools lacking for shell
   scripts.

This patch is meant to be mostly a literal translation of the
git-repack script; the intent is that later patches would start using
more library facilities, but this patch is meant to be as close to a
no-op as possible so it doesn't do that kind of thing.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 13:34:50 -07:00
8d8387116a Update draft release notes to 1.8.5 for the first half of the fourth batch
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 11:43:58 -07:00
f6070c3956 Merge branch 'jk/remove-remote-helpers-in-python'
Remove now disused remote-helpers framework for helpers written in
Python.

* jk/remove-remote-helpers-in-python:
  git_remote_helpers: remove little used Python library
2013-09-17 11:43:01 -07:00
287c0feeab Merge branch 'ss/doclinks'
When we converted many documents that were traditionally text-only
to be formatted to AsciiDoc, we did not update links that point at
them to refer to the formatted HTML files.

* ss/doclinks:
  Documentation: make AsciiDoc links always point to HTML files
2013-09-17 11:42:54 -07:00
89dde7882f Merge branch 'rh/ishes-doc'
We liberally use "committish" and "commit-ish" (and "treeish" and
"tree-ish"); as these are non-words, let's unify these terms to
their dashed form.  More importantly, clarify the documentation on
object peeling using these terms.

* rh/ishes-doc:
  glossary: fix and clarify the definition of 'ref'
  revisions.txt: fix and clarify <rev>^{<type>}
  glossary: more precise definition of tree-ish (a.k.a. treeish)
  use 'commit-ish' instead of 'committish'
  use 'tree-ish' instead of 'treeish'
  glossary: define commit-ish (a.k.a. committish)
  glossary: mention 'treeish' as an alternative to 'tree-ish'
2013-09-17 11:42:51 -07:00
cd8c891b74 Merge branch 'dw/diff-no-index-doc'
When the user types "git diff" outside a working tree, thinking he
is inside one, the current error message that is a single-liner
"usage: git diff --no-index <path> <path>" may not be sufficient to
make him realize the mistake. Add "Not a git repository" to the
error message when we fell into the "--no-index" mode without an
explicit command line option to instruct us to do so.

* dw/diff-no-index-doc:
  diff --no-index: describe in a separate paragraph
  diff --no-index: clarify operation when not inside a repository
2013-09-17 11:42:44 -07:00
8fbb07e3f3 Merge branch 'ta/user-manual'
Update the user's manual to more recent versions of Git.

* ta/user-manual:
  "git prune" is safe
  Remove irrelevant reference from "Tying it all together"
  Remove unnecessary historical note from "Object storage format"
  Improve section "Merging multiple trees"
  Improve section "Manipulating branches"
  Simplify "How to make a commit"
  Fix some typos and improve wording
  Use "git merge" instead of "git pull ."
  Use current output for "git repack"
  Use current "detached HEAD" message
  Call it "Git User Manual" and remove reference to very old Git version
2013-09-17 11:42:41 -07:00
c8ccfc9cdf Merge branch 'fc/trivial'
* fc/trivial:
  pull: use $curr_branch_short more
  add: trivial style cleanup
  reset: trivial style cleanup
  branch: trivial style fix
  reset: trivial refactoring
2013-09-17 11:42:34 -07:00
984ac91e72 Merge branch 'fc/fast-export'
Code simpification.

* fc/fast-export:
  fast-export: refactor get_tags_and_duplicates()
  fast-export: make extra_refs global
2013-09-17 11:42:31 -07:00
e8717b67fe Merge branch 'ab/gitweb-author-initials'
* ab/gitweb-author-initials:
  gitweb: Fix the author initials in blame for non-ASCII names
2013-09-17 11:42:27 -07:00
5ff9f2351a Merge branch 'jk/has-sha1-file-retry-packed'
When an object is not found after checking the packfiles and then
loose object directory, read_sha1_file() re-checks the packfiles to
prevent racing with a concurrent repacker; teach the same logic to
has_sha1_file().

* jk/has-sha1-file-retry-packed:
  has_sha1_file: re-check pack directory before giving up
2013-09-17 11:41:35 -07:00
541dc4dfa0 Merge branch 'jk/write-broken-index-with-nul-sha1'
Earlier we started rejecting an attempt to add 0{40} object name to
the index and to tree objects, but it sometimes is necessary to
allow so to be able to use tools like filter-branch to correct such
broken tree objects.

* jk/write-broken-index-with-nul-sha1:
  write_index: optionally allow broken null sha1s
2013-09-17 11:40:27 -07:00
9b4aa47e7d Merge branch 'jx/clean-interactive'
Finishing touches to update the document to adjust to a new option
"git clean" learned recently.

* jx/clean-interactive:
  documentation: clarify notes for clean.requireForce
2013-09-17 11:40:23 -07:00
f2ded0f807 Merge branch 'tb/precompose-autodetect-fix'
On MacOS X, we detected if the filesystem needs the "pre-composed
unicode strings" workaround, but did not automatically enable it.
Now we do.

* tb/precompose-autodetect-fix:
  Set core.precomposeunicode to true on e.g. HFS+
2013-09-17 11:39:59 -07:00
22a6f31333 Merge branch 'kk/tests-with-no-perl'
Some tests were not skipped under NO_PERL build.

* kk/tests-with-no-perl:
  reset test: modernize style
  t/t7106-reset-unborn-branch.sh: Add PERL prerequisite
  add -i test: use skip_all instead of repeated PERL prerequisite
  Make test "using invalid commit with -C" more strict
2013-09-17 11:39:35 -07:00
5aebc9a8de Merge branch 'ap/commit-author-mailmap'
"git commit --author=$name", when $name is not in the canonical
"A. U. Thor <au.thor@example.xz>" format, looks for a matching name
from existing history, but did not consult mailmap to grab the
preferred author name.

* ap/commit-author-mailmap:
  commit: search author pattern against mailmap
2013-09-17 11:38:33 -07:00
b8f23112f0 Merge branch 'jk/free-tree-buffer'
* jk/free-tree-buffer:
  clear parsed flag when we free tree buffers
2013-09-17 11:37:33 -07:00
5e3a3a1527 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  t7406-submodule-update: add missing &&
2013-09-17 11:37:13 -07:00
b0f49ff130 t3200: fix failure on case-insensitive filesystems
62d94a3a (t3200: Add test demonstrating minor regression in 41c21f2;
2013-09-08) introduced a test which creates a directory named 'a',
however, on case-insensitive filesystems, this action fails with a
"fatal: cannot mkdir a: File exists" error due to a file named 'A' left
over from earlier tests. Resolve this problem.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 10:18:13 -07:00
2e582df0e0 t7508: avoid non-portable sed expression
2556b996 (status: disable display of '#' comment prefix by default;
2013-09-06) introduced tests which fail on Mac OS X due to unportable
use of \t (for TAB) in a sed expression. POSIX [1][2] also disallows
it. Fix this.

[1]: http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/sed.html#tag_20_116_13_02
[2]: http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap09.html#tag_09_03_02

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Acked-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 10:17:33 -07:00
de372b1b46 dir: revert work-around for retired dangerous behavior
directory_exists_in_index_icase() dangerously assumed that it could
access one character beyond the end of its directory argument, and that
that character would unconditionally be '/'.  2eac2a4c (ls-files -k: a
directory only can be killed if the index has a non-directory,
2013-08-15) added a caller which did not respect this undocumented
assumption, and 680be044 (dir.c::test_one_path(): work around
directory_exists_in_index_icase() breakage, 2013-08-23) added a
work-around which temporarily appends a '/' before invoking
directory_exists_in_index_icase().

Since the dangerous behavior of directory_exists_in_index_icase() has
been eliminated, the work-around is now redundant, so retire it (but not
the tests added by the same commit).

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 10:08:27 -07:00
d28eec2673 name-hash: stop storing trailing '/' on paths in index_state.dir_hash
When 5102c617 (Add case insensitivity support for directories when using
git status, 2010-10-03) added directories to the name-hash there was
only a single hash table in which both real cache entries and leading
directory prefixes were registered. To distinguish between the two types
of entries, directories were stored with a trailing '/'.

2092678c (name-hash.c: fix endless loop with core.ignorecase=true,
2013-02-28), however, moved directories to a separate hash table
(index_state.dir_hash) but retained the (now) redundant trailing '/',
thus callers continue to bear the burden of ensuring the slash's
presence before searching the index for a directory. Eliminate this
redundancy by storing paths in the dir-hash without the trailing '/'.

An important benefit of this change is that it eliminates undocumented
and dangerous behavior of dir.c:directory_exists_in_index_icase() in
which it assumes not only that it can validly access one character
beyond the end of its incoming directory argument, but also that that
character will unconditionally be a '/'. This perilous behavior was
"tolerated" because the string passed in by its lone caller always had a
'/' in that position, however, things broke [1] when 2eac2a4c (ls-files
-k: a directory only can be killed if the index has a non-directory,
2013-08-15) added a new caller which failed to respect the undocumented
assumption.

[1]: http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/232727

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 10:08:07 -07:00
ebbd7439b1 employ new explicit "exists in index?" API
Each caller of index_name_exists() knows whether it is looking for a
directory or a file, and can avoid the unnecessary indirection of
index_name_exists() by instead calling index_dir_exists() or
index_file_exists() directly.

Invoking the appropriate search function explicitly will allow a
subsequent patch to relieve callers of the artificial burden of having
to add a trailing '/' to the pathname given to index_dir_exists().

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 10:07:37 -07:00
db5360f3f4 name-hash: refactor polymorphic index_name_exists()
Depending upon the absence or presence of a trailing '/' on the incoming
pathname, index_name_exists() checks either if a file is present in the
index or if a directory is represented within the index. Each caller
explicitly chooses the mode of operation by adding or removing a
trailing '/' before invoking index_name_exists().

Since these two modes of operations are disjoint and have no code in
common (one searches index_state.name_hash; the other dir_hash), they
can be represented more naturally as distinct functions: one to search
for a file, and one for a directory.

Splitting index searching into two functions relieves callers of the
artificial burden of having to add or remove a slash to select the mode
of operation; instead they just call the desired function. A subsequent
patch will take advantage of this benefit in order to eliminate the
requirement that the incoming pathname for a directory search must have
a trailing slash.

(In order to avoid disturbing in-flight topics, index_name_exists() is
retained as a thin wrapper dispatching either to index_dir_exists() or
index_file_exists().)

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 10:07:13 -07:00
d5b99f35bd t7406-submodule-update: add missing &&
322bb6e (2011 Aug 11) introduced a new subshell at the end of a test
case but omitted a '&&' to join the two; fix this.

Signed-off-by: Tay Ray Chuan <rctay89@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-17 09:44:29 -07:00
b85ecea625 config doc: update dot-repository notes
branch.<name>.remote can be set to '.' (period) as the repository
path (URL) as part of the remote name dwimmery. Tell the reader.

Such relative paths are not 'special'. Correct the branch.<name>.merge
note.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-13 15:30:01 -07:00
431260cc8d doc: command line interface (cli) dot-repository dwimmery
The Git cli will accept dot '.' (period) as the relative path
to the current repository. Explain this action.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-13 15:29:59 -07:00
2c63d6eb46 reset: handle submodule with trailing slash
When using tab-completion, a directory path will often end with a
trailing slash which currently confuses "git reset" when dealing with
submodules.  Now that we have parse_pathspec we can easily handle this
by simply adding the PATHSPEC_STRIP_SUBMODULE_SLASH_CHEAP flag.

To do this, we need to move the read_cache() call before the
parse_pathspec() call.  All of the existing paths through cmd_reset()
that do not die early already call read_cache() at some point, so there
is no performance impact to doing this in the common case.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-13 12:37:35 -07:00
f8bc2ac3bf rm: re-use parse_pathspec's trailing-slash removal
Instead of re-implementing the "remove trailing slashes" loop in
builtin/rm.c just pass PATHSPEC_STRIP_SUBMODULE_SLASH_CHEAP to
parse_pathspec.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-13 12:37:35 -07:00
77965f8b29 pack-objects: no crc check when the cached version is used
Current code makes pack-objects always do check_pack_crc() in
unpack_entry() even if right after that we find out there's a cached
version and pack access is not needed. Swap two code blocks, search
for cached version first, then check crc.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-13 11:28:33 -07:00
8231fa6ae1 check-ignore: Add option to ignore index contents
check-ignore currently shows how .gitignore rules would treat untracked
paths. Tracked paths do not generate useful output.  This prevents
debugging of why a path became tracked unexpectedly unless that path is
first removed from the index with `git rm --cached <path>`.

The option --no-index tells the command to bypass the check for the
path being in the index and hence allows tracked paths to be checked
too.

Whilst this behaviour deviates from the characteristics of `git add` and
`git status` its use case is unlikely to cause any user confusion.

Test scripts are augmented to check this option against the standard
ignores to ensure correct behaviour.

Signed-off-by: Dave Williams <dave@opensourcesolutions.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-12 15:40:29 -07:00
a7f0a0efa5 urlmatch.c: recompute pointer after append_normalized_escapes
When append_normalized_escapes is called, its internal strbuf_add* calls can
cause the strbuf's buf to be reallocated changing the value of the buf pointer.

Do not use the strbuf buf pointer from before any append_normalized_escapes
calls afterwards.  Instead recompute the needed pointer.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@inf.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-12 15:27:01 -07:00
b3e7d24ca1 Sync with maint for l10n updates
* maint:
  l10n: de.po: use "das Tag" instead of "der Tag"
2013-09-12 14:53:47 -07:00
89b1b47b0a Update draft release notes to 1.8.5 for the third batch of topics
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-12 14:42:47 -07:00
d5d0a23dbb Merge branch 'jc/pager-configuration-doc'
It was unclear in the documentation how various configurations and
environment variables determine which pager is eventually used.

* jc/pager-configuration-doc:
  config: rewrite core.pager documentation
2013-09-12 14:41:54 -07:00
7b828a0514 Merge branch 'mm/remote-helpers-doc'
* mm/remote-helpers-doc:
  Documentation/remote-helpers: document common use-case for private ref
2013-09-12 14:41:50 -07:00
8ee9a18300 Merge branch 'mn/doc-pack-heu-remove-dead-pastebin'
* mn/doc-pack-heu-remove-dead-pastebin:
  remove dead pastebin link from pack-heuristics document
2013-09-12 14:41:47 -07:00
07fc8a9944 Merge branch 'mm/fast-import-feature-doc'
* mm/fast-import-feature-doc:
  Documentation/fast-import: clarify summary for `feature` command
2013-09-12 14:41:45 -07:00
100ce1c543 Merge branch 'mm/mediawiki-dumb-push-fix'
* mm/mediawiki-dumb-push-fix:
  git-remote-mediawiki: no need to update private ref in non-dumb push
  git-remote-mediawiki: use no-private-update capability on dumb push
  transport-helper: add no-private-update capability
  git-remote-mediawiki: add test and check Makefile targets
2013-09-12 14:41:41 -07:00
af9a0cade3 Merge branch 'jc/commit-is-spelled-with-two-ems'
* jc/commit-is-spelled-with-two-ems:
  typofix: cherry is spelled with two ars
  typofix: commit is spelled with two ems
2013-09-12 14:41:38 -07:00
c7c377d83f Merge branch 'jk/config-int-range-check'
"git config" did not provide a way to set or access numbers larger
than a native "int" on the platform; it now provides 64-bit signed
integers on all platforms.

* jk/config-int-range-check:
  git-config: always treat --int as 64-bit internally
  config: make numeric parsing errors more clear
  config: set errno in numeric git_parse_* functions
  config: properly range-check integer values
  config: factor out integer parsing from range checks
2013-09-12 14:41:00 -07:00
9ba89f484e Add new @ shortcut for HEAD
Typing 'HEAD' is tedious, especially when we can use '@' instead.

The reason for choosing '@' is that it follows naturally from the
ref@op syntax (e.g. HEAD@{u}), except we have no ref, and no
operation, and when we don't have those, it makes sens to assume
'HEAD'.

So now we can use 'git show @~1', and all that goody goodness.

Until now '@' was a valid name, but it conflicts with this idea, so
let's make it invalid. Probably very few people, if any, used this name.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-12 14:39:34 -07:00
224cce8f9b git-gui: add menu item to launch a bash shell on Windows.
When using git-gui as the primary git application on Windows it can be
awkward obtaining a suitable shell. This commit adds a menu item to the
Repository menu that launches the bash shell provided with the git
installation on Windows.

Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2013-09-12 21:15:19 +01:00
de2f95ebed mailmap: work around implementations with pure inline strcasecmp
On some systems (e.g. MinGW 4.0), string.h has only inline
definition of strcasecmp and no non-inline implementation is
supplied anywhere, which is, eh, "unusual".  We cannot take an
address of such a function to store it in namemap.cmp.

Work it around by introducing our own level of indirection.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-12 12:05:48 -07:00
ea9882bfc4 commit: disable status hints when writing to COMMIT_EDITMSG
This turns the template COMMIT_EDITMSG from e.g

  # [...]
  # Changes to be committed:
  #   (use "git reset HEAD <file>..." to unstage)
  #
  #	modified:   builtin/commit.c
  #
  # Untracked files:
  #   (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
  #
  #	t/foo
  #

to

  # [...]
  # Changes to be committed:
  #	modified:   builtin/commit.c
  #
  # Untracked files:
  #	t/foo
  #

Most status hints were written to be accurate when running "git status"
before running a commit. Many of them are not applicable when the commit
has already been started, and should not be shown in COMMIT_EDITMSG. The
most obvious are hints advising to run "git commit",
"git rebase/am/cherry-pick --continue", which do not make sense when the
command has already been run.

Other messages become slightly inaccurate (e.g. hint to use "git add" to
add untracked files), as the suggested commands are not immediately
applicable during the editing of COMMIT_EDITMSG, but would be applicable
if the commit is aborted. These messages are both potentially helpful and
slightly misleading. This patch chose to remove them too, to avoid
introducing too much complexity in the status code.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-12 11:45:41 -07:00
6a964f57e5 wt-status: turn advice_status_hints into a field of wt_status
No behavior change in this patch, but this makes the display of status
hints more flexible as they can be enabled or disabled for individual
calls to commit.c:run_status().

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-12 11:45:10 -07:00
5c25dfaa79 commit: factor status configuration is a helper function
cmd_commit and cmd_status use very similar code to initialize the
wt_status structure. Factor this code into a function to ensure future
changes will keep both versions consistent.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-12 11:45:03 -07:00
3361a548db Allow git-filter-branch to process large repositories with lots of branches.
A recommended way to move trees between repositories is to use
git-filter-branch to revise the history for a single tree:

However, this can lead to "argument list too long" errors when the
original repository has many retained branches (>6k)

    /usr/local/git/libexec/git-core/git-filter-branch: line 270:
    /usr/local/git/libexec/git-core/git: Argument list too long
    Could not get the commits

Saving the output from rev-parse and feeding it into rev-list from
its standard input avoids this problem, since the rev-parse output
is not processed as a command line argument.

Signed-off-by: Lee Carver <Lee.Carver@servicenow.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-12 11:00:51 -07:00
9247be05cf http-backend: provide Allow header for 405
The HTTP 1.1 standard requires an Allow header for 405 Method Not Allowed:

  The response MUST include an Allow header containing a list of valid methods
  for the requested resource.

So provide such a header when we return a 405 to the user agent.

Signed-off-by: Brian M. Carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-12 08:44:44 -07:00
c26c472e05 Merge branch 'maint' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po into maint
* 'maint' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: use "das Tag" instead of "der Tag"
2013-09-11 21:12:02 -07:00
a194eaddca Update draft release notes to 1.8.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-11 15:05:57 -07:00
4c4d9d9b65 Merge branch 'jc/ls-files-killed-optim'
"git ls-files -k" needs to crawl only the part of the working tree
that may overlap the paths in the index to find killed files, but
shared code with the logic to find all the untracked files, which
made it unnecessarily inefficient.

* jc/ls-files-killed-optim:
  dir.c::test_one_path(): work around directory_exists_in_index_icase() breakage
  t3010: update to demonstrate "ls-files -k" optimization pitfalls
  ls-files -k: a directory only can be killed if the index has a non-directory
  dir.c: use the cache_* macro to access the current index
2013-09-11 15:03:28 -07:00
135be1ee2b Merge branch 'es/rebase-i-no-abbrev'
The commit object names in the insn sheet that was prepared at the
beginning of "rebase -i" session can become ambiguous as the
rebasing progresses and the repository gains more commits. Make
sure the internal record is kept with full 40-hex object names.

* es/rebase-i-no-abbrev:
  rebase -i: fix short SHA-1 collision
  t3404: rebase -i: demonstrate short SHA-1 collision
  t3404: make tests more self-contained
2013-09-11 15:02:29 -07:00
8c731e9c8f Merge branch 'rt/rebase-p-no-merge-summary'
"git rebase -p" internally used the merge machinery, but when
rebasing, there should not be a need for merge summary.

* rt/rebase-p-no-merge-summary:
  rebase --preserve-merges: ignore "merge.log" config
2013-09-11 15:00:56 -07:00
04e3274d6a Merge branch 'tf/gitweb-ss-tweak'
Tweak Gitweb CSS to layout some elements better.

* tf/gitweb-ss-tweak:
  gitweb: make search help link less ugly
  gitweb: omit the repository owner when it is unset
  gitweb: vertically centre contents of page footer
  gitweb: ensure OPML text fits inside its box
2013-09-11 15:00:54 -07:00
e5229b6a61 Merge branch 'sb/mailmap-freeing-NULL-is-ok'
* sb/mailmap-freeing-NULL-is-ok:
  mailmap: remove redundant check for freeing memory
2013-09-11 15:00:43 -07:00
0a3bc7d298 Merge branch 'js/xread-in-full'
A call to xread() was used without a loop around to cope with short
read in the codepath to stream new contents to a pack.

* js/xread-in-full:
  stream_to_pack: xread does not guarantee to read all requested bytes
2013-09-11 14:59:46 -07:00
42e5fb2bf1 Merge branch 'es/rebase-i-respect-core-commentchar'
"rebase -i" forgot that the comment character can be configurable
while reading its insn sheet.

* es/rebase-i-respect-core-commentchar:
  rebase -i: fix cases ignoring core.commentchar
2013-09-11 14:58:52 -07:00
09a373068a Merge branch 'jn/post-receive-utf8'
Update post-receive-email script to make sure the message contents
and pathnames are encoded consistently in UTF-8.

* jn/post-receive-utf8:
  hooks/post-receive-email: set declared encoding to utf-8
  hooks/post-receive-email: force log messages in UTF-8
  hooks/post-receive-email: use plumbing instead of git log/show
2013-09-11 14:58:46 -07:00
6026f68652 Merge branch 'sh/pull-rebase-preserve'
"git pull --rebase" always flattened the history; pull.rebase can
now be set to "preserve" to invoke "rebase --preserve-merges".

* sh/pull-rebase-preserve:
  pull: allow pull to preserve merges when rebasing
2013-09-11 14:57:49 -07:00
2de0f39cd2 Merge branch 'nd/push-no-thin'
"git push --no-thin" was a no-op by mistake.

* nd/push-no-thin:
  push: respect --no-thin
2013-09-11 14:56:59 -07:00
8453c1259a Windows: do not redefine _WIN32_WINNT
With MinGW runtime version 4.0 this interferes with the previous
definition from sdkddkver.h.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-11 14:50:19 -07:00
26776c9737 checkout: update synopsys and documentation on detaching HEAD
In the synopsis, the second form to detach HEAD at the named commit
labelled the argument as '<commit>'.  While this is technically more
correct, because the feature to detach is not limited to the tip of
a named branch, it was found confusing and did not express the fact
that you have to give `--detach` if you are naming the commit you
want to detach HEAD at with a branch name.

Separate this case into two syntactical forms, mimicking the way how
the DESCRIPTION section shows this usage.  Also update the text that
explains the syntax to name the commit to detach HEAD at to clarify.

Suggested-by: Benjamin Bergman <ben@benbergman.ca>
Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-11 12:32:01 -07:00
9f36c9b7f7 lookup_object: remove hashtable_index() and optimize hash_obj()
hashtable_index() appears to be a close duplicate of hash_obj().
Keep only the later and make it usable for all cases.

Also remove the modulus as this is an expensive operation.
The size argument is always a power of 2 anyway, so a simple
mask operation provides the same result.

On a 'git rev-list --all --objects' run this decreased the time spent
in lookup_object from 27.5% to 24.1%.

[jc: with a few comments on "modulus turned into mask" by Peff]

Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-11 12:25:33 -07:00
bb58b696c6 Improve documentation concerning the status.submodulesummary setting
'git status' and 'git commit' can be told to also show the output of "git
submodule summary" by setting the "status.submodulesummary" config option.
But status and commit also honor the "diff.ignoreSubmodules" and the
"submodule.<name>.ignore" settings, which then disable the summary partly
or completely. This - and the fact that the last two settings do not
affect the "git submodule" commands at all - is not well documented.

Extend the documentation in those places where "status.submodulesummary",
"diff.ignoreSubmodules" and "submodule.<name>.ignore" are described to
better explain these dependencies.

Thanks-to: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-11 12:20:41 -07:00
fa93bb20d7 MinGW: Fix stat definitions to work with MinGW runtime version 4.0
For an overview of changes in mingwrt-4.0 see:

    http://sourceforge.net/p/mingw/mingw-org-wsl/ci/4.0.0/tree/NEWS

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-11 11:11:06 -07:00
a2374f58e8 MSVC: fix stat definition hell
In msvc.h, there's a couple of stat related functions defined diffently
from mingw.h. When we remove these definitions, the only problem we get is
"warning C4005: '_stati64' : macro redefinition" for this line in mingw.h:

#define _stati64(x,y) mingw_stat(x,y)

The reason is that as of MSVCR80.dll (distributed with MSVC 2005), the
original _stati64 family of functions was renamed to _stat32i64, and the
former function names became macros (pointing to the appropriate function
based on the definition of _USE_32BIT_TIME_T).

Defining _stati64 works on MinGW because MinGW by default compiles against
the MSVCRT.DLL that is part of Windows (i.e. _stati64 is a function rather
than a macro).

Note: MinGW *can* compile for newer MSVC runtime versions, and MSVC
apparently can also compile for the Windows MSVCRT.DLL via the DDK (see
http://www.syndicateofideas.com/posts/fighting-the-msvcrt-dll-hell ).

Remove the stat definitions from msvc.h, as they are not compiler related.

In mingw.h, determine the runtime version in use from the definitions of
_stati64 and _USE_32BIT_TIME_T, and define stat() accordingly.

This also fixes that stat() in MSVC builds still resolves to mingw_lstat()
instead of mingw_stat().

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Acked-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-11 11:08:52 -07:00
61542f7735 MSVC: fix compile errors due to macro redefinitions
Skip errno.h definitions if they are already defined.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Acked-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-11 11:08:52 -07:00
bad866a29b MSVC: fix compile errors due to missing libintl.h
Set NO_GETTEXT in config.mak.uname to get rid of libintl.h dependency.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Acked-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-11 11:08:52 -07:00
c6268bc008 update-ref: add test cases covering --stdin signature
Extend t/t1400-update-ref.sh to cover cases using the --stdin option.

Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-11 10:38:26 -07:00
1b48d56cfb cvsserver: pick up the right mode bits
When determining the file mode from either ls-tree or diff-tree
output, we used to grab these octal mode string (typically 100644 or
100755) and then did

	$git_perms .= "r" if ( $mode & 4 );
	$git_perms .= "w" if ( $mode & 2 );
	$git_perms .= "x" if ( $mode & 1 );

which was already wrong, as (100644 & 4) is very different from
oct("100644") & 4.  An earlier refactoring 2c3af7e7 (cvsserver:
factor out git-log parsing logic, 2012-10-13) further changed it to
pick the third octal digit (10*0*644 or 10*0*755) from the left and
then do the above conversion, which does not make sense, either.

Let's use the third digit from the last of the octal mode string to
make sure we get the executable and read bits right.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Tested-by: Michael Cronenworth <mike@cchtml.com>
2013-09-11 09:32:30 -07:00
6cb0c88305 send-email: don't call methods on undefined values
If SSL verification is enabled in git send-email, we could attempt to call a
method on an undefined value if the verification failed, since $smtp would end
up being undef.  Look up the error string in a way that will produce a helpful
error message and not cause further errors.

Signed-off-by: Brian M. Carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-10 08:49:22 -07:00
bb80ee0997 Update draft release notes to 1.8.5 for the second batch of topics
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 14:51:42 -07:00
fadf96abaa Merge branch 'nd/magic-pathspec'
Use "struct pathspec" interface in more places, instead of array of
characters, the latter of which cannot express magic pathspecs
(e.g. ":(icase)makefile" that matches both Makefile and makefile).

* nd/magic-pathspec:
  add: lift the pathspec magic restriction on "add -p"
  pathspec: catch prepending :(prefix) on pathspec with short magic
2013-09-09 14:50:44 -07:00
af226bf01e Merge branch 'jk/mailmap-incomplete-line'
* jk/mailmap-incomplete-line:
  mailmap: handle mailmap blobs without trailing newlines
2013-09-09 14:50:41 -07:00
a23274e127 Merge branch 'sp/clip-read-write-to-8mb'
Send a large request to read(2)/write(2) as a smaller but still
reasonably large chunks, which would improve the latency when the
operation needs to be killed and incidentally works around broken
64-bit systems that cannot take a 2GB write or read in one go.

* sp/clip-read-write-to-8mb:
  Revert "compat/clipped-write.c: large write(2) fails on Mac OS X/XNU"
  xread, xwrite: limit size of IO to 8MB
2013-09-09 14:50:39 -07:00
b0d974d6d9 Merge branch 'tg/index-struct-sizes'
The code that reads from a region that mmaps an on-disk index
assumed that "int"/"short" are always 32/16 bits.

* tg/index-struct-sizes:
  read-cache: use fixed width integer types
2013-09-09 14:50:38 -07:00
20419de969 Merge branch 'jc/transport-do-not-use-connect-twice-in-fetch'
The auto-tag-following code in "git fetch" tries to reuse the same
transport twice when the serving end does not cooperate and does
not give tags that point to commits that are asked for as part of
the primary transfer.  Unfortunately, Git-aware transport helper
interface is not designed to be used more than once, hence this
does not work over smart-http transfer.

* jc/transport-do-not-use-connect-twice-in-fetch:
  builtin/fetch.c: Fix a sparse warning
  fetch: work around "transport-take-over" hack
  fetch: refactor code that fetches leftover tags
  fetch: refactor code that prepares a transport
  fetch: rename file-scope global "transport" to "gtransport"
  t5802: add test for connect helper
2013-09-09 14:50:37 -07:00
3b30ba55e4 Merge branch 'es/contacts-blame-L-multi'
* es/contacts-blame-L-multi:
  contacts: reduce git-blame invocations
  contacts: gather all blame sources prior to invoking git-blame
  contacts: validate hunk length earlier
2013-09-09 14:50:36 -07:00
a0a08d48d0 Merge branch 'jc/url-match'
Allow section.<urlpattern>.var configuration variables to be
treated as a "virtual" section.var given a URL, and use the
mechanism to enhance http.* configuration variables.

This is a reroll of Kyle J. McKay's work.

* jc/url-match:
  builtin/config.c: compilation fix
  config: "git config --get-urlmatch" parses section.<url>.key
  builtin/config: refactor collect_config()
  config: parse http.<url>.<variable> using urlmatch
  config: add generic callback wrapper to parse section.<url>.key
  config: add helper to normalize and match URLs
  http.c: fix parsing of http.sslCertPasswordProtected variable
2013-09-09 14:50:36 -07:00
b02f5aeda6 Merge branch 'jl/submodule-mv'
"git mv A B" when moving a submodule A does "the right thing",
inclusing relocating its working tree and adjusting the paths in
the .gitmodules file.

* jl/submodule-mv: (53 commits)
  rm: delete .gitmodules entry of submodules removed from the work tree
  mv: update the path entry in .gitmodules for moved submodules
  submodule.c: add .gitmodules staging helper functions
  mv: move submodules using a gitfile
  mv: move submodules together with their work trees
  rm: do not set a variable twice without intermediate reading.
  t6131 - skip tests if on case-insensitive file system
  parse_pathspec: accept :(icase)path syntax
  pathspec: support :(glob) syntax
  pathspec: make --literal-pathspecs disable pathspec magic
  pathspec: support :(literal) syntax for noglob pathspec
  kill limit_pathspec_to_literal() as it's only used by parse_pathspec()
  parse_pathspec: preserve prefix length via PATHSPEC_PREFIX_ORIGIN
  parse_pathspec: make sure the prefix part is wildcard-free
  rename field "raw" to "_raw" in struct pathspec
  tree-diff: remove the use of pathspec's raw[] in follow-rename codepath
  remove match_pathspec() in favor of match_pathspec_depth()
  remove init_pathspec() in favor of parse_pathspec()
  remove diff_tree_{setup,release}_paths
  convert common_prefix() to use struct pathspec
  ...
2013-09-09 14:36:15 -07:00
de9a25354a Merge branch 'es/blame-L-twice'
Teaches "git blame" to take more than one -L ranges.

* es/blame-L-twice:
  line-range: reject -L line numbers less than 1
  t8001/t8002: blame: add tests of -L line numbers less than 1
  line-range: teach -L^:RE to search from start of file
  line-range: teach -L:RE to search from end of previous -L range
  line-range: teach -L^/RE/ to search from start of file
  line-range-format.txt: document -L/RE/ relative search
  log: teach -L/RE/ to search from end of previous -L range
  blame: teach -L/RE/ to search from end of previous -L range
  line-range: teach -L/RE/ to search relative to anchor point
  blame: document multiple -L support
  t8001/t8002: blame: add tests of multiple -L options
  blame: accept multiple -L ranges
  blame: inline one-line function into its lone caller
  range-set: publish API for re-use by git-blame -L
  line-range-format.txt: clarify -L:regex usage form
  git-log.txt: place each -L option variation on its own line
2013-09-09 14:35:11 -07:00
4ab4a6dfb4 Merge branch 'tr/log-full-diff-keep-true-parents'
Output from "git log --full-diff -- <pathspec>" looked strange,
because comparison was done with the previous ancestor that touched
the specified <pathspec>, causing the patches for paths outside the
pathspec to show more than the single commit has changed.

Tweak "git reflog -p" for the same reason using the same mechanism.

* tr/log-full-diff-keep-true-parents:
  log: use true parents for diff when walking reflogs
  log: use true parents for diff even when rewriting
2013-09-09 14:33:16 -07:00
24703ead4b Merge branch 'jk/cat-file-batch-optim'
Rework the reverted change to `cat-file --batch-check`.

* jk/cat-file-batch-optim:
  cat-file: only split on whitespace when %(rest) is used
2013-09-09 14:33:07 -07:00
118b9d5836 Merge branch 'es/blame-L-more'
More fixes to the code to parse the "-L" option in "log" and "blame".

* es/blame-L-more:
  blame: reject empty ranges -L,+0 and -L,-0
  t8001/t8002: blame: demonstrate acceptance of bogus -L,+0 and -L,-0
  blame: reject empty ranges -LX,+0 and -LX,-0
  t8001/t8002: blame: demonstrate acceptance of bogus -LX,+0 and -LX,-0
  log: fix -L bounds checking bug
  t4211: retire soon-to-be unimplementable tests
  t4211: log: demonstrate -L bounds checking bug
  blame: fix -L bounds checking bug
  t8001/t8002: blame: add empty file & partial-line tests
  t8001/t8002: blame: demonstrate -L bounds checking bug
  t8001/t8002: blame: decompose overly-large test
2013-09-09 14:32:45 -07:00
4301262640 Merge branch 'db/http-savecookies'
* db/http-savecookies:
  t5551: Remove header from curl cookie file
  http: add http.savecookies option to write out HTTP cookies
2013-09-09 14:32:08 -07:00
2233ad4534 Merge branch 'jc/push-cas'
Allow a safer "rewind of the remote tip" push than blind "--force",
by requiring that the overwritten remote ref to be unchanged since
the new history to replace it was prepared.

The machinery is more or less ready.  The "--force" option is again
the big red button to override any safety, thanks to J6t's sanity
(the original round allowed --lockref to defeat --force).

The logic to choose the default implemented here is fragile
(e.g. "git fetch" after seeing a failure will update the
remote-tracking branch and will make the next "push" pass,
defeating the safety pretty easily).  It is suitable only for the
simplest workflows, and it may hurt users more than it helps them.

* jc/push-cas:
  push: teach --force-with-lease to smart-http transport
  send-pack: fix parsing of --force-with-lease option
  t5540/5541: smart-http does not support "--force-with-lease"
  t5533: test "push --force-with-lease"
  push --force-with-lease: tie it all together
  push --force-with-lease: implement logic to populate old_sha1_expect[]
  remote.c: add command line option parser for "--force-with-lease"
  builtin/push.c: use OPT_BOOL, not OPT_BOOLEAN
  cache.h: move remote/connect API out of it
2013-09-09 14:30:29 -07:00
711b276974 Merge branch 'nd/clone-connectivity-shortcut'
* nd/clone-connectivity-shortcut:
  smart http: use the same connectivity check on cloning
2013-09-09 14:30:01 -07:00
01a2a03c56 Merge branch 'jc/diff-filter-negation'
Teach "git diff --diff-filter" to express "I do not want to see
these classes of changes" more directly by listing only the
unwanted ones in lowercase (e.g. "--diff-filter=d" will show
everything but deletion) and deprecate "diff-files -q" which did
the same thing as "--diff-filter=d".

* jc/diff-filter-negation:
  diff: deprecate -q option to diff-files
  diff: allow lowercase letter to specify what change class to exclude
  diff: reject unknown change class given to --diff-filter
  diff: preparse --diff-filter string argument
  diff: factor out match_filter()
  diff: pass the whole diff_options to diffcore_apply_filter()
2013-09-09 14:28:35 -07:00
a5e10f8bc1 Merge branch 'ms/fetch-prune-configuration'
Allow fetch.prune and remote.*.prune configuration variables to be set,
and "git fetch" to behave as if "--prune" is given.

"git fetch" that honors remote.*.prune is fine, but I wonder if we
should somehow make "git push" aware of it as well.  Perhaps
remote.*.prune should not be just a boolean, but a 4-way "none",
"push", "fetch", "both"?

* ms/fetch-prune-configuration:
  fetch: make --prune configurable
2013-09-09 14:27:11 -07:00
182d7dc46b cherry-pick: allow "-" as abbreviation of '@{-1}'
"-" abbreviation is handy for "cherry-pick" like "checkout" and "merge".

It's also good for uniformity that a "-" stands as
the name of the previous branch where a branch name is
accepted and it could not mean any other things like stdin.

Signed-off-by: Hiroshige Umino <hiroshige88@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 11:17:11 -07:00
115dedd722 upload-pack: bump keepalive default to 5 seconds
There is no reason not to turn on keepalives by default.
They take very little bandwidth, and significantly less than
the progress reporting they are replacing. And in the case
that progress reporting is on, we should never need to send
a keepalive anyway, as we will constantly be showing
progress and resetting the keepalive timer.

We do not necessarily know what the client's idea of a
reasonable timeout is, so let's keep this on the low side of
5 seconds. That is high enough that we will always prefer
our normal 1-second progress reports to sending a keepalive
packet, but low enough that no sane client should consider
the connection hung.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 11:15:17 -07:00
05e95155a1 upload-pack: send keepalive packets during pack computation
When upload-pack has started pack-objects, there may be a quiet
period while pack-objects prepares the pack (i.e., counting objects
and delta compression). Normally we would see (and send to the
client) progress information, but if "--quiet" is in effect,
pack-objects will produce nothing at all until the pack data is
ready. On a large repository, this can take tens of seconds (or even
minutes if the system is loaded or the repository is badly packed).
Clients or intermediate proxies can sometimes give up in this
situation, assuming that the server or connection has hung.

This patch introduces a "keepalive" option; if upload-pack sees no
data from pack-objects for a certain number of seconds, it will send
an empty sideband data packet to let the other side know that we are
still working on it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 11:14:37 -07:00
0016024277 git-config: always treat --int as 64-bit internally
When you run "git config --int", the maximum size of integer
you get depends on how git was compiled, and what it
considers to be an "int".

This is almost useful, because your scripts calling "git
config" will behave similarly to git internally. But relying
on this is dubious; you have to actually know how git treats
each value internally (e.g., int versus unsigned long),
which is not documented and is subject to change. And even
if you know it is "unsigned long", we do not have a
git-config option to match that behavior.

Furthermore, you may simply be asking git to store a value
on your behalf (e.g., configuration for a hook). In that
case, the relevant range check has nothing at all to do with
git, but rather with whatever scripting tools you are using
(and git has no way of knowing what the appropriate range is
there).

Not only is the range check useless, but it is actively
harmful, as there is no way at all for scripts to look
at config variables with large values. For instance, one
cannot reliably get the value of pack.packSizeLimit via
git-config. On an LP64 system, git happily uses a 64-bit
"unsigned long" internally to represent the value, but the
script cannot read any value over 2G.

Ideally, the "--int" option would simply represent an
arbitrarily large integer. For practical purposes, however,
a 64-bit integer is large enough, and is much easier to
implement (and if somebody overflows it, we will still
notice the problem, and not simply return garbage).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 11:12:29 -07:00
2f666581bb config: make numeric parsing errors more clear
If we try to parse an integer config argument and get a
number outside of the representable range, we die with the
cryptic message: "bad config value for '%s'".

We can improve two things:

  1. Show the value that produced the error (e.g., bad
     config value '3g' for 'foo.bar').

  2. Mention the reason the value was rejected (e.g.,
     "invalid unit" versus "out of range").

A few tests need to be updated with the new output, but that
should not be representative of real-world breakage, as
scripts should not be depending on the exact text of our
stderr output, which is subject to i18n anyway.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 11:07:07 -07:00
33fdd77e2b config: set errno in numeric git_parse_* functions
When we are parsing an integer or unsigned long, we use
the strto*max functions, which properly set errno to ERANGE
if we get a large value. However, we also do further range
checks after applying our multiplication factor, but do not
set ERANGE. This means that a caller cannot tell if an error
was caused by ERANGE or if the input was simply not a valid
number.

This patch teaches git_parse_signed and git_parse_unsigned to set
ERANGE for range errors, and EINVAL for other errors, so that the
caller can reliably tell these cases apart.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 11:06:38 -07:00
42d194e958 config: properly range-check integer values
When we look at a config value as an integer using the
git_config_int function, we carefully range-check the value
we get and complain if it is out of our range. But the range
we compare to is that of a "long", which we then cast to an
"int" in the function's return value. This means that on
systems where "int" and "long" have different sizes (e.g.,
LP64 systems), we may pass the range check, but then return
nonsense by truncating the value as we cast it to an int.

We can solve this by converting git_parse_long into
git_parse_int, and range-checking the "int" range. Nobody
actually cared that we used a "long" internally, since the
result was truncated anyway. And the only other caller of
git_parse_long is git_config_maybe_bool, which should be
fine to just use int (though we will now forbid out-of-range
nonsense like setting "merge.ff" to "10g" to mean "true",
which is probably a good thing).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 11:04:29 -07:00
7192777d22 config: factor out integer parsing from range checks
When we are parsing integers for config, we use an intmax_t
(or uintmax_t) internally, and then check against the size
of our result type at the end. We can parameterize the
maximum representable value, which will let us re-use the
parsing code for a variety of range checks.

Unfortunately, we cannot combine the signed and unsigned
parsing functions easily, as we have to rely on the signed
and unsigned C types internally.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 11:04:28 -07:00
1d7358c524 branch.c: Relax unnecessary requirement on upstream's remote ref name
When creating an upstream relationship, we use the configured remotes and
their refspecs to determine the upstream configuration settings
branch.<name>.remote and branch.<name>.merge. However, if the matching
refspec does not have refs/heads/<something> on the remote side, we end
up rejecting the match, and failing the upstream configuration.

It could be argued that when we set up an branch's upstream, we want that
upstream to also be a proper branch in the remote repo. Although this is
typically the common case, there are cases (as demonstrated by the previous
patch in this series) where this requirement prevents a useful upstream
relationship from being formed. Furthermore:

 - We have fundamentally no say in how the remote repo have organized its
   branches. The remote repo may put branches (or branch-like constructs
   that are insteresting for downstreams to track) outside refs/heads/*.

 - The user may intentionally want to track a non-branch from a remote
   repo, by using a branch and configured upstream in the local repo.

Relaxing the checking to only require a matching remote/refspec allows the
testcase introduced in the previous patch to succeed, and has no negative
effect on the rest of the test suite.

This patch fixes a behavior (arguably a regression) first introduced in
41c21f2 (branch.c: Validate tracking branches with refspecs instead of
refs/remotes/*) on 2013-04-21 (released in >= v1.8.3.2).

Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 11:03:20 -07:00
62d94a3aa6 t3200: Add test demonstrating minor regression in 41c21f2
In 41c21f2 (branch.c: Validate tracking branches with refspecs instead of
refs/remotes/*), we changed the rules for what is considered a valid tracking
branch (a.k.a. upstream branch). We now use the configured remotes and their
refspecs to determine whether a proposed tracking branch is in fact within
the domain of a remote, and we then use that information to deduce the
upstream configuration (branch.<name>.remote and branch.<name>.merge).

However, with that change, we also check that - in addition to a matching
refspec - the result of mapping the tracking branch through that refspec
(i.e. the corresponding ref name in the remote repo) happens to start with
"refs/heads/". In other words, we require that a tracking branch refers to
a _branch_ in the remote repo.

Now, consider that you are e.g. setting up an automated building/testing
infrastructure for a group of similar "source" repositories. The build/test
infrastructure consists of a central scheduler, and a number of build/test
"slave" machines that perform the actual build/test work. The scheduler
monitors the group of similar repos for changes (e.g. with a periodic
"git fetch"), and triggers builds/tests to be run on one or more slaves.
Graphically the changes flow between the repos like this:

  Source #1 -------v          ----> Slave #1
                             /
  Source #2 -----> Scheduler -----> Slave #2
                             \
  Source #3 -------^          ----> Slave #3

        ...                           ...

The scheduler maintains a single Git repo with each of the source repos set
up as distinct remotes. The slaves also need access to all the changes from
all of the source repos, so they pull from the scheduler repo, but using the
following custom refspec:

  remote.origin.fetch = "+refs/remotes/*:refs/remotes/*"

This makes all of the scheduler's remote-tracking branches automatically
available as identical remote-tracking branches in each of the slaves.

Now, consider what happens if a slave tries to create a local branch with
one of the remote-tracking branches as upstream:

  git branch local_branch --track refs/remotes/source-1/some_branch

Git now looks at the configured remotes (in this case there is only "origin",
pointing to the scheduler's repo) and sees refs/remotes/source-1/some_branch
matching origin's refspec. Mapping through that refspec we find that the
corresponding remote ref name is "refs/remotes/source-1/some_branch".
However, since this remote ref name does not start with "refs/heads/", we
discard it as a suitable upstream, and the whole command fails.

This patch adds a testcase demonstrating this failure by creating two
source repos ("a" and "b") that are forwarded through a scheduler ("c")
to a slave repo ("d"), that then tries create a local branch with an
upstream. See the next patch in this series for the exciting conclusion
to this story...

Reported-by: Per Cederqvist <cederp@opera.com>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 11:03:10 -07:00
fef0e991aa Refer to branch.<name>.remote/merge when documenting --track
Make it easier for readers to find the actual config variables that
implement the "upstream" relationship.

Suggested-by: Per Cederqvist <cederp@opera.com>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 11:03:01 -07:00
81f339dc3d t3200: Minor fix when preparing for tracking failure
We're testing that trying to --track a ref that is not covered by any remote
refspec should fail. For that, we want to have refs/remotes/local/master
present, but we also want the remote.local.fetch refspec to NOT match
refs/remotes/local/master (so that the tracking setup will fail, as intended).
However, when doing "git fetch local" to ensure the existence of
refs/remotes/local/master, we must not already have changed remote.local.fetch
so as to cause refs/remotes/local/master not to be fetched. Therefore, set
remote.local.fetch to refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/local/* BEFORE we fetch, and
then reset it to refs/heads/s:refs/remotes/local/s AFTER we have fetched
(but before we test --track).

Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 11:02:52 -07:00
5a517b1c4c t2024: Fix &&-chaining and a couple of typos
Improved-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 11:02:29 -07:00
c750ba9519 update-ref: support multiple simultaneous updates
Add a --stdin signature to read update instructions from standard input
and apply multiple ref updates together.  Use an input format that
supports any update that could be specified via the command-line,
including object names like "branch:path with space".

Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 09:54:37 -07:00
44e1e4d67d git: run in a directory given with -C option
This is similar in spirit to "make -C dir ..." and "tar -C dir ...".

It takes more keypresses to invoke git command in a different
directory without leaving the current directory:

    1. (cd ~/foo && git status)
       git --git-dir=~/foo/.git --work-dir=~/foo status
       GIT_DIR=~/foo/.git GIT_WORK_TREE=~/foo git status
    2. (cd ../..; git grep foo)
    3. for d in d1 d2 d3; do (cd $d && git svn rebase); done

The methods shown above are acceptable for scripting but are too
cumbersome for quick command line invocations.

With this new option, the above can be done with fewer keystrokes:

    1. git -C ~/foo status
    2. git -C ../.. grep foo
    3. for d in d1 d2 d3; do git -C $d svn rebase; done

A new test script is added to verify the behavior of this option with
other path-related options like --git-dir and --work-tree.

Signed-off-by: Nazri Ramliy <ayiehere@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 09:33:17 -07:00
99855ddf4b rebase: fix run_specific_rebase's use of "return" on FreeBSD
Since a1549e10, git-rebase--am.sh uses the shell's "return" statement, to
mean "return from the current file inclusion", which is POSIXly correct,
but badly interpreted on FreeBSD, which returns from the current
function, hence skips the finish_rebase statement that follows the file
inclusion.

Make the use of "return" portable by using the file inclusion as the last
statement of a function.

Reported-by: Christoph Mallon <christoph.mallon@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 08:46:16 -07:00
9074925341 Doc: 'replace' merge and non-merge commits
Merges are often treated as special case objects so tell users that
they are not special here.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 08:16:30 -07:00
ae34ac126f git_remote_helpers: remove little used Python library
When it was originally added, the git_remote_helpers library was used as
part of the tests of the remote-helper interface, but since commit
fc407f9 (Add new simplified git-remote-testgit, 2012-11-28) a simple
shell script is used for this.

A search on Ohloh [1] indicates that this library isn't used by any
external projects and even the Python remote helpers in contrib/ don't
use this library, so it is only used by its own test suite.

Since this is the only Python library in Git, removing it will make
packaging easier as the Python scripts only need to be installed for one
version of Python, whereas the library should be installed for all
available versions.

[1] http://code.ohloh.net/search?s=%22git_remote_helpers%22

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Acked-by: Sverre Rabbelier <srabbelier@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-09 08:13:07 -07:00
b07f729608 pull: use $curr_branch_short more
One of the first things git-pull.sh does is setting $curr_branch to
the target of HEAD and $curr_branch_short to the same but with the
leading "refs/heads/" removed.  Simplify the code by using
$curr_branch_short instead of setting $curr_branch to the same
shortened value.

The only other use of $curr_branch in that function doesn't have to
be replaced with $curr_branch_short because it just checks if the
string is empty.  That property is the same with or without the prefix
unless HEAD points to "refs/heads/" alone, which is invalid.

Noticed-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-08 11:39:30 -07:00
bd5424f0d6 remote-bzr: reuse bzrlib transports when possible
Pass a list of open bzrlib.transport.Transport objects to each bzrlib
function that might create a transport.  This enables bzrlib to reuse
existing transports when possible, avoiding multiple concurrent
connections to the same remote server.

If the remote server is accessed via ssh, this fixes a couple of
problems:
  * If the user does not have keys loaded into an ssh agent, the user
    may be prompted for a password multiple times.
  * If the user is using OpenSSH and the ControlMaster setting is set
    to auto, git-remote-bzr might hang.  This is because bzrlib closes
    the multiple ssh sessions in an undefined order and might try to
    close the master ssh session before the other sessions.  The
    master ssh process will not exit until the other sessions have
    exited, causing a deadlock.  (The ssh sessions are closed in an
    undefined order because bzrlib relies on the Python garbage
    collector to trigger ssh session termination.)

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Acked-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-08 11:15:33 -07:00
8766343faf l10n: de.po: use "das Tag" instead of "der Tag"
Use "das Tag" to avoid confusion with the German word "Tag" (day).

Reported-by: Dirk Heinrichs <dirk.heinrichs@altum.de>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2013-09-08 18:37:13 +02:00
d5ff3b4be5 Documentation: make AsciiDoc links always point to HTML files
AsciiDoc's "link" is supposed to create hyperlinks for HTML output, so
prefer a "link" to point to an HTML file instead of a text file if an HTML
version of the file is being generated. For RelNotes, keep pointing to
text files as no equivalent HTML files are generated.

If appropriate, also update the link description to not contain the linked
file's extension.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 14:49:06 -07:00
4394faf6e5 git-gui: corrected setup of git worktree under cygwin.
Under cygwin the _gitworktree variable needs to contain the Windows
style path string so the output provided by git rev-parse must
be converted from cygwin path style to native.

Reviewed-by: Jesse Welch <jesse.welch@baml.com>
Signed-off-by: John Patrick Murphy <john.murphy@baml.com>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2013-09-06 22:42:07 +01:00
2f0f7f1ce7 status: add missing blank line after list of "other" files
List of files in other sections ("Changes to be committed", ...) end with
a blank line. It is not the case with the "Untracked files" and "Ignored
files" sections. The issue become particularly visible after the #-prefix
removal, as the last line (e.g. "nothing added to commit but untracked
files present") seems mixed with the untracked files.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 13:33:19 -07:00
2556b9962e status: disable display of '#' comment prefix by default
Historically, "git status" needed to prefix each output line with '#' so
that the output could be added as comment to the commit message. This
prefix comment has no real purpose when "git status" is ran from the
command-line, and this may distract users from the real content.

Disable this prefix comment by default, and make it re-activable for
users needing backward compatibility with status.displayCommentPrefix.

Obviously, "git commit" ignores status.displayCommentPrefix and keeps the
comment unconditionnaly when writing to COMMIT_EDITMSG (but not when
writing to stdout for an error message or with --dry-run).

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 13:33:18 -07:00
1c7969c933 tests: don't set status.displayCommentPrefix file-wide
The previous commit set status.displayCommentPrefix file-wide in
t7060-wtstatus.sh, t7508-status.sh and t/t7512-status-help.sh to make the
patch small. However, now that status.displayCommentPrefix is not the
default, it is better to disable it in tests so that the most common
situation is also the most tested.

While we're there, move the "cat > expect << EOF" blocks inside the
tests.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 13:33:18 -07:00
3ba7407b8b submodule summary: ignore --for-status option
The --for-status option was an undocumented option used only by
wt-status.c, which inserted a header and commented out the output. We can
achieve the same result within wt-status.c, without polluting the
submodule command-line options.

This will make it easier to disable the comments from wt-status.c later.

The --for-status is kept so that another topic in flight
(bc/submodule-status-ignored) can continue relying on it, although it is
currently a no-op.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 13:33:18 -07:00
bb7e32e383 wt-status: use argv_array API
No behavior change, but two slight code reorganization: argv_array_push
doesn't accept NULL strings, and duplicates its argument hence
summary_limit must be written to before being inserted into argv.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 13:33:17 -07:00
1686e2cc87 builtin/stripspace.c: fix broken indentation
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 13:33:17 -07:00
b1ecd8cfdf t6050-replace: use some long option names
So that they are tested a little bit too.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 13:32:34 -07:00
ed0ff80984 replace: allow long option names
It is now standard practice in Git to have both short and long option
names. So let's give a long option name to the git replace options too.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 13:32:24 -07:00
b8fcce1e7f Documentation/replace: add Creating Replacement Objects section
There were no hints in the documentation about how to create
replacement objects.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 13:29:53 -07:00
11aec9556b t6050-replace: add test to clean up all the replace refs
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 13:29:44 -07:00
3e625c8fec t6050-replace: test that objects are of the same type
and that the -f option bypasses the type check

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 13:29:38 -07:00
160df71ef5 Documentation/replace: state that objects must be of the same type
A previous patch ensures that both the replaced and the replacement
objects passed to git replace must be of the same type, except if
-f option is used.

While at it state that there is no other restriction on both objects.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 13:25:21 -07:00
277336a5e0 replace: forbid replacing an object with one of a different type
Users replacing an object with one of a different type were not
prevented to do so, even if it was obvious, and stated in the doc,
that bad things would result from doing that.

To avoid mistakes, it is better to just forbid that though.

If -f option, which means '--force', is used, we can allow an object
to be replaced with one of a different type, as the user should know
what (s)he is doing.

If one object is replaced with one of a different type, the only way
to keep the history valid is to also replace all the other objects
that point to the replaced object. That's because:

* Annotated tags contain the type of the tagged object.

* The tree/parent lines in commits must be a tree and commits, resp.

* The object types referred to by trees are specified in the 'mode'
  field:
    100644 and 100755    blob
    160000               commit
    040000               tree
  (these are the only valid modes)

* Blobs don't point at anything.

The doc will be updated in a later patch.

Acked-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 13:25:12 -07:00
73ffac3b38 git-svn: fix termination issues for remote svn connections
git-svn used in combination with serf to talk to svn repository
served over HTTPS dumps core on termination.

This is caused by a bug in serf, and the most recent serf release
1.3.1 still exhibits the problem; a fix for the bug exists (see
https://code.google.com/p/serf/source/detail?r=2146).

Until the bug is fixed, work around the issue within the git perl
module Ra.pm by freeing the private copy of the remote access object
on termination, which seems to be sufficient to prevent the error
from happening.

Note: Since subversion-1.8.0 and later do require serf-1.2.1 or
later, this issue typically shows up when upgrading to a recent
version of subversion.

Credits go to Jonathan Lambrechts for proposing a fix to Ra.pm,
Evgeny Kotkov and Ivan Zhakov for fixing the issue in serf and
pointing me to that fix.

Signed-off-by: Uli Heller <uli.heller@daemons-point.com>
Tested-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-06 09:44:28 -07:00
7a96c3864e typofix: cherry is spelled with two ars
Do not say chery; it is spelled cherry.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-05 14:51:17 -07:00
d2dbd399fa Sync with maint
* maint:
  Documentation/git-merge.txt: fix formatting of example block
2013-09-05 14:41:40 -07:00
2ea3df68e8 Merge branch 'nd/fetch-pack-shallow-fix' into maint
The recent "short-cut clone connectivity check" topic broke a shallow
repository when a fetch operation tries to auto-follow tags.

* nd/fetch-pack-shallow-fix:
  fetch-pack: do not remove .git/shallow file when --depth is not specified
2013-09-05 14:40:58 -07:00
bda7904746 Merge branch 'hv/config-from-blob' into maint
Compilation fix on platforms with fgetc() and friends defined as
macros.

* hv/config-from-blob:
  config: do not use C function names as struct members
2013-09-05 14:40:18 -07:00
b5699d17c3 Merge branch 'maint-1.8.3' into maint
* maint-1.8.3:
  Documentation/git-merge.txt: fix formatting of example block
2013-09-05 14:24:59 -07:00
69490f3459 Merge branch 'maint-1.8.2' into maint-1.8.3
* maint-1.8.2:
  Documentation/git-merge.txt: fix formatting of example block
2013-09-05 14:24:52 -07:00
625c3304e2 add: lift the pathspec magic restriction on "add -p"
Since 480ca64 (convert run_add_interactive to use struct pathspec -
2013-07-14), we have unconditionally passed :(prefix)xxx to
add-interactive.perl. It implies that all commands
add-interactive.perl calls must be aware of pathspec magic, or
:(prefix) is barfed. The restriction to :/ only becomes unnecessary.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-05 12:25:22 -07:00
bc341c8b61 pathspec: catch prepending :(prefix) on pathspec with short magic
:(prefix) is in the long form. Suppose people pass :!foo with '!'
being the short form of magic 'bar', the code will happily turn it to
:(prefix..)!foo, which makes '!' part of the path and no longer a magic.

The correct form must be ':(prefix..,bar)foo', but as so far we
haven't had any magic in short form yet (*), the code to convert from
short form to long one will be inactive anyway. Let's postpone it
until a real short form magic appears.

(*) The short form magic '/' is a special case and won't be caught by
this die(), which is correct. When '/' magic is detected, prefixlen is
set back to 0 and the whole "if (prefixlen..)" block is skipped.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-05 12:25:19 -07:00
e45bda876a Documentation/git-merge.txt: fix formatting of example block
You need at least four dashes in a line to have it recognized as listing
block delimiter by asciidoc.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-05 10:50:49 -07:00
a316b954ef typofix: commit is spelled with two ems
There are a handful of instances where we say commmit when we mean
commit.  Fix them.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 15:30:03 -07:00
4b6acde543 glossary: fix and clarify the definition of 'ref'
Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 15:04:01 -07:00
abdb54a1d2 revisions.txt: fix and clarify <rev>^{<type>}
If possible, <rev> will be dereferenced even if it is not a tag type
(e.g., commit dereferenced to a tree).

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 15:03:59 -07:00
930f302cdb glossary: more precise definition of tree-ish (a.k.a. treeish)
A tree-ish isn't a ref.  Also, mention dereferencing, and that a
commit dereferences to a tree, to support gitrevisions(7) and
rev-parse's error messages.

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 15:03:49 -07:00
a8a5406ab3 use 'commit-ish' instead of 'committish'
Replace 'committish' in documentation and comments with 'commit-ish'
to match gitglossary(7) and to be consistent with 'tree-ish'.

The only remaining instances of 'committish' are:
  * variable, function, and macro names
  * "(also committish)" in the definition of commit-ish in
    gitglossary[7]

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 15:03:03 -07:00
bb8040f9f9 use 'tree-ish' instead of 'treeish'
Replace 'treeish' in documentation and comments with 'tree-ish' to
match gitglossary(7).

The only remaining instances of 'treeish' are:
  * variable, function, and macro names
  * "(also treeish)" in the definition of tree-ish in gitglossary(7)

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 15:02:56 -07:00
406fde17da glossary: define commit-ish (a.k.a. committish)
Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 15:02:35 -07:00
36a2a54dbf glossary: mention 'treeish' as an alternative to 'tree-ish'
The documentation contains a mix of the two spellings, so include both
in the glossary so that a search for either will lead to the
definition.

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 15:02:25 -07:00
927b26f87a submodule: don't print status output with ignore=all
git status prints information for submodules, but it should ignore the status of
those which have submodule.<name>.ignore set to all.  Fix it so that it does
properly ignore those which have that setting either in .git/config or in
.gitmodules.

Not ignored are submodules that are added, deleted, or moved (which is
essentially a combination of the first two) because it is not easily possible to
determine the old path once a move has occurred, nor is it easily possible to
detect which adds and deletions are moves and which are not.  This also
preserves the previous behavior of always listing modules which are to be
deleted.

Tests are included which verify that this change has no effect on git submodule
summary without the --for-status option.

Signed-off-by: Brian M. Carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Acked-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 13:53:11 -07:00
66713ef3b0 pull: allow pull to preserve merges when rebasing
If a user is working on master, and has merged in their feature branch, but now
has to "git pull" because master moved, with pull.rebase their feature branch
will be flattened into master.

This is because "git pull" currently does not know about rebase's preserve
merges flag, which would avoid this behavior, as it would instead replay just
the merge commit of the feature branch onto the new master, and not replay each
individual commit in the feature branch.

Add a --rebase=preserve option, which will pass along --preserve-merges to
rebase.

Also add 'preserve' to the allowed values for the pull.rebase config setting.

Signed-off-by: Stephen Haberman <stephen@exigencecorp.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 12:45:48 -07:00
57e4c1783f Update draft release notes after merging the first batch of topics 2013-09-04 12:41:05 -07:00
a86a8b9752 Merge branch 'sb/parseopt-boolean-removal'
Convert most uses of OPT_BOOLEAN/OPTION_BOOLEAN that can use
OPT_BOOL/OPTION_BOOLEAN which have much saner semantics, and turn
remaining ones into OPT_SET_INT, OPT_COUNTUP, etc. as necessary.

* sb/parseopt-boolean-removal:
  revert: use the OPT_CMDMODE for parsing, reducing code
  checkout-index: fix negations of even numbers of -n
  config parsing options: allow one flag multiple times
  hash-object: replace stdin parsing OPT_BOOLEAN by OPT_COUNTUP
  branch, commit, name-rev: ease up boolean conditions
  checkout: remove superfluous local variable
  log, format-patch: parsing uses OPT__QUIET
  Replace deprecated OPT_BOOLEAN by OPT_BOOL
  Remove deprecated OPTION_BOOLEAN for parsing arguments
2013-09-04 12:39:03 -07:00
366b80bf0a Merge branch 'jc/parseopt-command-modes'
Many commands use --dashed-option as a operation mode selector
(e.g. "git tag --delete") that the user can use at most one
(e.g. "git tag --delete --verify" is a nonsense) and you cannot
negate (e.g. "git tag --no-delete" is a nonsense).  Make it easier
for users of parse_options() to enforce these restrictions.

* jc/parseopt-command-modes:
  tag: use OPT_CMDMODE
  parse-options: add OPT_CMDMODE()
2013-09-04 12:37:52 -07:00
5fb0e0868c Merge branch 'jl/some-submodule-config-are-not-boolean'
* jl/some-submodule-config-are-not-boolean:
  avoid segfault on submodule.*.path set to an empty "true"
2013-09-04 12:36:51 -07:00
baa8d42f05 Merge branch 'sg/bash-prompt-lf-in-cwd-test'
* sg/bash-prompt-lf-in-cwd-test:
  bash prompt: test the prompt with newline in repository path
2013-09-04 12:36:47 -07:00
7216b1fb5c Merge branch 'sb/diff-delta-remove-needless-comparison'
* sb/diff-delta-remove-needless-comparison:
  create_delta_index: simplify condition always evaluating to true
2013-09-04 12:36:44 -07:00
94f00694e2 Merge branch 'fc/unpack-trees-leakfix'
* fc/unpack-trees-leakfix:
  unpack-trees: plug a memory leak
2013-09-04 12:36:42 -07:00
a62b071d5b Merge branch 'aj/p4-symlink-lose-nl'
* aj/p4-symlink-lose-nl:
  git-p4: Fix occasional truncation of symlink contents.
2013-09-04 12:36:37 -07:00
4f5e9726e1 Merge branch 'fc/remote-hg-shared-setup'
* fc/remote-hg-shared-setup:
  remote-hg: add shared repo upgrade
  remote-hg: ensure shared repo is initialized
2013-09-04 12:36:32 -07:00
2bdd8727d7 Merge branch 'sb/misc-cleanup'
* sb/misc-cleanup:
  rm: remove unneeded null pointer check
  diff: fix a possible null pointer dereference
  diff: remove ternary operator evaluating always to true
2013-09-04 12:36:30 -07:00
05584b2a4e Merge branch 'nd/gc-lock-against-each-other'
* nd/gc-lock-against-each-other:
  gc: reject if another gc is running, unless --force is given
2013-09-04 12:35:34 -07:00
0335b647a2 Merge branch 'ap/remote-hg-tilde-is-home-directory'
* ap/remote-hg-tilde-is-home-directory:
  remote-hg: fix path when cloning with tilde expansion
2013-09-04 12:33:57 -07:00
aaf4d399f4 Merge branch 'mm/no-shell-escape-in-die-message'
Fixes a minor bug in "git rebase -i" (there could be others, as the
root cause is pretty generic) where the code feeds a random, data
dependeant string to 'echo' and expects it to come out literally.

* mm/no-shell-escape-in-die-message:
  die_with_status: use "printf '%s\n'", not "echo"
2013-09-04 12:32:16 -07:00
de5412bc13 Merge branch 'tr/fd-gotcha-fixes'
Finishing touches to an earlier fix already in 'master'.

* tr/fd-gotcha-fixes:
  t0070: test that git_mkstemps correctly checks return value of open()
2013-09-04 12:32:12 -07:00
04fbba0119 Merge branch 'bc/unuse-packfile'
Handle memory pressure and file descriptor pressure separately when
deciding to release pack windows to honor resource limits.

* bc/unuse-packfile:
  Don't close pack fd when free'ing pack windows
  sha1_file: introduce close_one_pack() to close packs on fd pressure
2013-09-04 12:30:21 -07:00
9a7eaad65f Merge branch 'da/darwin'
* da/darwin:
  OS X: Fix redeclaration of die warning
  Makefile: Fix APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO with BLK_SHA1
  imap-send: use Apple's Security framework for base64 encoding
2013-09-04 12:28:15 -07:00
4aa04a8f8d Merge branch 'nd/sq-quote-buf'
Code simplification as a preparatory step to something larger.

* nd/sq-quote-buf:
  quote: remove sq_quote_print()
  tar-tree: remove dependency on sq_quote_print()
  for-each-ref, quote: convert *_quote_print -> *_quote_buf
2013-09-04 12:28:12 -07:00
d9fc248987 Merge branch 'rr/feed-real-path-to-editor'
* rr/feed-real-path-to-editor:
  editor: use canonicalized absolute path
2013-09-04 12:26:54 -07:00
7e39472020 Merge branch 'jk/fast-import-empty-ls'
* jk/fast-import-empty-ls:
  fast-import: allow moving the root tree
  fast-import: allow ls or filecopy of the root tree
  fast-import: set valid mode on root tree in "ls"
  t9300: document fast-import empty path issues
2013-09-04 12:23:35 -07:00
0f7483ee97 Merge branch 'km/svn-1.8-serf-only'
Subversion 1.8.0 that was recently released breaks older subversion
clients coming over http/https in various ways.

* km/svn-1.8-serf-only:
  Git.pm: revert _temp_cache use of temp_is_locked
  git-svn: allow git-svn fetching to work using serf
  Git.pm: add new temp_is_locked function
2013-09-04 12:23:33 -07:00
0db320d023 Merge branch 'jc/check-x-z'
"git check-ignore -z" applied the NUL termination to both its input
(with --stdin) and its output, but "git check-attr -z" ignored the
option on the output side.

This is potentially a backward incompatible fix.  Let's see if
anybody screams before deciding if we want to do anything to help
existing users (there may be none).

* jc/check-x-z:
  check-attr -z: a single -z should apply to both input and output
  check-ignore -z: a single -z should apply to both input and output
  check-attr: the name of the character is NUL, not NULL
  check-ignore: the name of the character is NUL, not NULL
2013-09-04 12:23:25 -07:00
98aee92d5c refs: add update_refs for multiple simultaneous updates
Add 'struct ref_update' to encode the information needed to update or
delete a ref (name, new sha1, optional old sha1, no-deref flag).  Add
function 'update_refs' accepting an array of updates to perform.  First
sort the input array to order locks consistently everywhere and reject
multiple updates to the same ref.  Then acquire locks on all refs with
verified old values.  Then update or delete all refs accordingly.  Fail
if any one lock cannot be obtained or any one old value does not match.

Though the refs themselves cannot be modified together in a single
atomic transaction, this function does enable some useful semantics.
For example, a caller may create a new branch starting from the head of
another branch and rewind the original branch at the same time.  This
transfers ownership of commits between branches without risk of losing
commits added to the original branch by a concurrent process, or risk of
a concurrent process creating the new branch first.

Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 11:10:28 -07:00
61cee0dbac refs: add function to repack without multiple refs
Generalize repack_without_ref as repack_without_refs to support a list
of refs and implement the former in terms of the latter.

Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 11:09:55 -07:00
2ddb5d170a refs: factor delete_ref loose ref step into a helper
Factor loose ref deletion into helper function delete_ref_loose to allow
later use elsewhere.

Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 11:09:09 -07:00
4738a33338 refs: factor update_ref steps into helpers
Factor the lock and write steps and error handling into helper functions
update_ref_lock and update_ref_write to allow later use elsewhere.
Expose lock_any_ref_for_update's type_p to update_ref_lock callers.

While at it, drop "static" from the local "lock" variable as it is not
necessary to keep across invocations.

Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 11:08:36 -07:00
16c159d75a t5308: check that index-pack --strict detects duplicate objects
Commit 68be2fea (receive-pack, fetch-pack: reject bogus pack that
records objects twice, 2011-11-16) taught index-pack to notice and
reject duplicate objects if --strict is given (which it is for
incoming packs, if transfer.fsckObjects is set).  However, it never
tested the code, because we did not have an easy way of generating
such a bogus pack.

Now that we have test infrastructure to handle this, let's confirm
that it works.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 10:52:01 -07:00
df17e77c0a add--interactive: fix external command invocation on Windows
Back in 21e9757e (Hack git-add--interactive to make it work with
ActiveState Perl, 2007-08-01), the invocation of external commands was
changed to use qx{} on Windows. The rationale was that the command
interpreter on Windows is not a POSIX shell, but rather Windows's CMD.
That patch was wrong to include 'msys' in the check whether to use qx{}
or not: 'msys' identifies MSYS perl as shipped with Git for Windows,
which does not need the special treatment; qx{} should be used only with
ActiveState perl, which is identified by 'MSWin32'.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-04 10:35:25 -07:00
9d57c4a697 git p4: implement view spec wildcards with "p4 where"
"git p4" does not support many of the view wildcards, such as * and
%%n.  It only knows the common ... mapping, and exclusions.

Redo the entire wildcard code around the idea of directly querying
the p4 server for the mapping.  For each commit, invoke "p4 where"
with committed file paths as args and use the client mapping to
decide where the file goes in git.

This simplifies a lot of code, and adds support for all wildcards
supported by p4.  Downside is that there is probably a 20%-ish
slowdown with this approach.

[pw: redo code and tests]

Signed-off-by: Kazuki Saitoh <ksaitoh560@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 14:19:20 -07:00
0a41de8f81 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  fix shell syntax error in template
  l10n: fr.po: hotfix for commit 6b388fc
2013-09-03 13:58:16 -07:00
eb76545715 Merge git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po into maint
* git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: fr.po: hotfix for commit 6b388fc
2013-09-03 13:58:03 -07:00
8ed64dfe73 Merge branch 'maint-1.8.3' into maint
* maint-1.8.3:
  fix shell syntax error in template
2013-09-03 13:54:32 -07:00
e5be297279 Merge branch 'maint-1.8.2' into maint-1.8.3
* maint-1.8.2:
  fix shell syntax error in template
2013-09-03 13:54:26 -07:00
c969b6a18d peel_onion: do not assume length of x_type globals
When we are parsing "rev^{foo}", we check "foo" against the
various global type strings, like "commit_type",
"tree_type", etc. This is nicely abstracted, but then we
destroy the abstraction completely by using magic numbers
that must match the length of the type strings.

We could avoid these magic numbers by using skip_prefix. But
taking a step back, we can realize that using the
"commit_type" global is not really buying us anything. It is
not ever going to change from being "commit" without causing
severe breakage to existing uses. And even if it did change
for some crazy reason, we would want to evaluate its effects
on the "rev^{}" syntax, anyway.

Let's just switch these to using a custom string literal, as
we do for "rev^{object}". The resulting code is more robust
to changes in the type strings, and is more readable.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 13:45:38 -07:00
75aa26d34c peel_onion(): add support for <rev>^{tag}
Complete the <rev>^{<type>} family of object descriptors by having
<rev>^{tag} dereference <rev> until a tag object is found (or fail if
unable).

At first glance this may not seem very useful, as commits, trees, and
blobs cannot be peeled to a tag, and a tag would just peel to itself.
However, this can be used to ensure that <rev> names a tag object:

    $ git rev-parse --verify v1.8.4^{tag}
    04f013dc38
    $ git rev-parse --verify master^{tag}
    error: master^{tag}: expected tag type, but the object dereferences to tree type
    fatal: Needed a single revision

Users can already ensure that <rev> is a tag object by checking the
output of 'git cat-file -t <rev>', but:
  * users may expect <rev>^{tag} to exist given that <rev>^{commit},
    <rev>^{tree}, and <rev>^{blob} all exist
  * this syntax is more convenient/natural in some circumstances

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 13:09:17 -07:00
7495a17363 rev-parse test: use standard test functions for setup
Save the reader from learning specialized t6* setup functions
where familiar commands like test_commit, "git checkout --orphan",
and "git merge" will do.

While at it, wrap the setup commands in a test assertion so errors can
be caught and stray output suppressed when running without --verbose
as in other tests.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 13:01:40 -07:00
c812be9d81 rev-parse test: use test_cmp instead of "test" builtin
Use test_cmp instead of passing two command substitutions to the
"test" builtin.  This way:

 - when tests fail, they can print a helpful diff if run with
   "--verbose"

 - the argument order "test_cmp expect actual" feels natural,
   unlike test <known> = <unknown> that seems backwards

 - the exit status from invoking git is checked, so if rev-parse
   starts segfaulting then the test will notice and fail

Use a custom function for this instead of test_cmp_rev to emphasize
that we are testing the output from "git rev-parse" with certain
arguments, not checking that the revisions are equal in abstract.

Reported-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 12:55:30 -07:00
d8f7681337 rev-parse test: use test_must_fail, not "if <command>; then false; fi"
This way, if rev-parse segfaults then the test will fail instead
of treating it the same way as a controlled failure.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 12:54:52 -07:00
dfb1dc5c33 rev-parse test: modernize quoting and whitespace
Instead of cramming everything in one line, put the test body in an
indented block after the opening test_expect_success line and quote
and put the closing quote on a line by itself.

Use single-quote instead of double-quote to quote the test body
for more useful --verbose output.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 12:54:43 -07:00
2be945094e submodule: fix confusing variable name
cmd_summary reads the output of git diff, but reads in the submodule path into a
variable called name.  Since this variable does not contain the name of the
submodule, but the path, rename it to be clearer what data it actually holds.

Signed-off-by: Brian M. Carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Acked-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 12:46:23 -07:00
3e9b9cb117 fast-export: refactor get_tags_and_duplicates()
Split into a separate helper function get_commit() so that the part that
finds the relevant commit, and the part that does something with it
(handle tag object, etc.) are in different places.

No functional changes.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 12:42:25 -07:00
1d844ee7bd fast-export: make extra_refs global
There's no need to pass it around everywhere. This would make easier
further refactoring that makes use of this variable.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 12:39:17 -07:00
d0423ddd77 t: branch: fix broken && chains
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 12:14:29 -07:00
002ba0376b t: branch: fix typo
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 12:14:28 -07:00
140cd84593 t: branch: trivial style fix
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 12:14:26 -07:00
f19f5e60f6 git-remote-mediawiki: no need to update private ref in non-dumb push
We used to update the private ref ourselves, but this update is now
done by default since 664059fb (transport-helper: update remote
helper namespace, 2013-04-17).

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 11:58:17 -07:00
aa38dc68ea git-remote-mediawiki: use no-private-update capability on dumb push
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 11:58:12 -07:00
597b831afb transport-helper: add no-private-update capability
Since 664059fb (transport-helper: update remote helper namespace,
2013-04-17), a 'push' operation on a remote helper updates the
private ref by default. This is often a good thing, but it can also
be desirable to disable this update to force the next 'pull' to
re-import the pushed revisions.

Allow remote-helpers to disable the automatic update by introducing a new
capability.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 11:57:53 -07:00
cf99a761d3 sha1-name: pass len argument to interpret_branch_name()
This is useful to make sure we don't step outside the boundaries of what
we are interpreting at the moment. For example while interpreting
foobar@{u}~1, the job of interpret_branch_name() ends right before ~1,
but there's no way to figure that out inside the function, unless the
len argument is passed.

So let's do that.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 11:33:00 -07:00
487a2b7322 Make setup_git_env() resolve .git file when $GIT_DIR is not specified
This makes reinitializing on a .git file repository work.

This is probably the only case that setup_git_env() (via
set_git_dir()) is called on a .git file. Other cases in
setup_git_dir_gently() and enter_repo() both cover .git file case
explicitly because they need to verify the target repo is valid.

Reported-by: Ximin Luo <infinity0@gmx.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 11:14:58 -07:00
ed016612e6 pager: turn on "cat" optimization for DEFAULT_PAGER
If the user specifies a pager of "cat" (or the empty
string), whether it is in the environment or from config, we
automagically optimize it out to mean "no pager" and avoid
forking at all. We treat an empty pager variable similary.

However, we did not apply this optimization when
DEFAULT_PAGER was set to "cat" (or the empty string). There
is no reason to treat DEFAULT_PAGER any differently. The
optimization should not be user-visible (unless the user has
a bizarre "cat" in their PATH). And even if it is, we are
better off behaving consistently between the compile-time
default and the environment and config settings.

The stray "else" we are removing from this code was
introduced by 402461a (pager: do not fork a pager if PAGER
is set to empty., 2006-04-16). At that time, the line
directly above used:

   if (!pager)
	   pager = "less";

as a fallback, meaning that it could not possibly trigger
the optimization. Later, a3d023d (Provide a build time
default-pager setting, 2009-10-30) turned that constant into
a build-time setting which could be anything, but didn't
loosen the "else" to let DEFAULT_PAGER use the optimization.

Noticed-by: Dale R. Worley <worley@alum.mit.edu>
Suggested-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 10:36:12 -07:00
5d21adcbfe contrib/remote-helpers: quote variable references in redirection targets
Even though it is not required by POSIX to double-quote the
redirection target in a variable, our code does so because some
versions of bash issue a warning without the quotes.

Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 10:25:58 -07:00
ff867963f0 contrib/remote-helpers: style updates for test scripts
During the review of the main series it was noticed that these test
scripts can use updates to conform to our coding style better, but
fixing the style should be done in a patch separate from the main
series.

This updates the test-*.sh scripts only for style issues:

 * We do not leave SP between a redirection operator and the
   filename;

 * We change line before "then", "do", etc. rather than terminating
   the condition for "if"/"while" and list for "for" with a
   semicolon;

 * When HERE document does not use any expansion, we quote the end
   marker (e.g. "cat <<\EOF" not "cat <<EOF") to signal the readers
   that there is no funny substitution to worry about when reading
   the code.

 * We use "test" rather than "[".

Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-09-03 10:25:19 -07:00
d521abf890 add: trivial style cleanup
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-30 20:59:18 -07:00
4e83ab3e8d reset: trivial style cleanup
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-30 20:59:04 -07:00
82a0672f8e branch: trivial style fix
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-30 20:58:49 -07:00
f38798f48d reset: trivial refactoring
After commit 3fde386 (reset [--mixed]: use diff-based reset whether or
not pathspec was given), some code can be moved to the 'reset_type ==
MIXED' check.

Let's move the code that is specific to MIXED.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-30 20:58:43 -07:00
e7b432c521 revision: introduce --exclude=<glob> to tame wildcards
People often find "git log --branches" etc. that includes _all_
branches is cumbersome to use when they want to grab most but except
some.  The same applies to --tags, --all and --glob.

Teach the revision machinery to remember patterns, and then upon the
next such a globbing option, exclude those that match the pattern.

With this, I can view only my integration branches (e.g. maint,
master, etc.) without topic branches, which are named after two
letters from primary authors' names, slash and topic name.

    git rev-list --no-walk --exclude=??/* --branches |
    git name-rev --refs refs/heads/* --stdin

This one shows things reachable from local and remote branches that
have not been merged to the integration branches.

    git log --remotes --branches --not --exclude=??/* --branches

It may be a bit rough around the edges, in that the pattern to give
the exclude option depends on what globbing option follows.  In
these examples, the pattern "??/*" is used, not "refs/heads/??/*",
because the globbing option that follows the -"-exclude=<pattern>"
is "--branches".  As each use of globbing option resets previously
set "--exclude", this may not be such a bad thing, though.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-30 16:37:55 -07:00
9bbb0fa1fd refs: report ref type from lock_any_ref_for_update
Expose lock_ref_sha1_basic's type_p argument to callers of
lock_any_ref_for_update.  Update all call sites to ignore it by passing
NULL for now.

Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-30 14:57:28 -07:00
2be778a8ac reset: rename update_refs to reset_refs
The function resets refs rather than doing arbitrary updates.
Rename it to allow a future general-purpose update_refs function
to be added.

Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-30 14:57:27 -07:00
fd87004e51 gitweb: Fix the author initials in blame for non-ASCII names
Change the @author_initials feature Jakub added in
v1.6.4-rc2-14-ga36817b to match non-ASCII author initials as intended.

The regexp Jakub added was intended to match
non-ASCII (/\b([[:upper:]])\B/g). But in Perl this doesn't actually
match non-ASCII upper-case characters unless the string being matched
against has the UTF8 flag.

So when we open a pipe to "git blame" we need to mark the file
descriptor we're opening as utf8 explicitly.

So as a result it abbreviates me to "AB" not "ÆAB", entirely because "Æ"
isn't /[[:upper:]]/ unless the string being matched against has the UTF8
flag.

Here's something that demonstrates the issue:

    #!/usr/bin/env perl
    use strict;
    use warnings;

    binmode STDOUT, ':utf8' if $ENV{UTF8};
    open my $fd, "-|", "git", "blame", "--incremental", "--", "Makefile" or die "Can't open: $!";
    binmode $fd, ":utf8" if $ENV{UTF8};
    while (my $line = <$fd>) {
    	next unless my ($author) = $line =~ /^author (.*)/;
    	my @author_initials = ($author =~ /\b([[:upper:]])\B/g);
    	printf "%s (%s)\n",  join("", @author_initials), $author;
    }

When that's run with and without UTF8 being true in the environment it
gives, on git.git:

    $ UTF8=0 perl author-initials.pl | sort | uniq -c |
    sort -nr | head -n 5
         99 JH (Junio C Hamano)
         35 JN (Jonathan Nieder)
         35 JK (Jeff King)
         20 JS (Johannes Schindelin)
         16 AB (Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason)
    $ UTF8=1 perl author-initials.pl | sort | uniq -c |
    sort -nr | head -n 5
         99 JH (Junio C Hamano)
         35 JN (Jonathan Nieder)
         35 JK (Jeff King)
         20 JS (Johannes Schindelin)
         16 ÆAB (Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason)

Acked-by: Jakub Narębski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Simon Ruderich <simon@ruderich.org>

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-30 14:55:04 -07:00
45e8a74873 has_sha1_file: re-check pack directory before giving up
When we read a sha1 file, we first look for a packed
version, then a loose version, and then re-check the pack
directory again before concluding that we cannot find it.
This lets us handle a process that is writing to the
repository simultaneously (e.g., receive-pack writing a new
pack followed by a ref update, or git-repack packing
existing loose objects into a new pack).

However, we do not do the same trick with has_sha1_file; we
only check the packed objects once, followed by loose
objects. This means that we might incorrectly report that we
do not have an object, even though we could find it if we
simply re-checked the pack directory.

By itself, this is usually not a big deal. The other process
is running simultaneously, so we may run has_sha1_file
before it writes, anyway. It is a race whether we see the
object or not.  However, we may also see other things
the writing process has done (like updating refs); and in
that case, we must be able to also see the new objects.

For example, imagine we are doing a for_each_ref iteration,
and somebody simultaneously pushes. Receive-pack may write
the pack and update a ref after we have examined the
objects/pack directory, but before the iteration gets to the
updated ref. When we do finally see the updated ref,
for_each_ref will call has_sha1_file to check whether the
ref is broken. If has_sha1_file returns the wrong answer, we
erroneously will think that the ref is broken.

For a normal iteration without DO_FOR_EACH_INCLUDE_BROKEN,
this means that the caller does not see the ref at all
(neither the old nor the new value).  So not only will we
fail to see the new value of the ref (which is acceptable,
since we are running simultaneously with the writer, and we
might well read the ref before the writer commits its
write), but we will not see the old value either. For
programs that act on reachability like pack-objects or
prune, this can cause data loss, as we may see the objects
referenced by the original ref value as dangling (and either
omit them from the pack, or delete them via prune).

There's no test included here, because the success case is
two processes running simultaneously forever. But you can
replicate the issue with:

  # base.sh
  # run this in one terminal; it creates and pushes
  # repeatedly to a repository
  git init parent &&
  (cd parent &&

    # create a base commit that will trigger us looking at
    # the objects/pack directory before we hit the updated ref
    echo content >file &&
    git add file &&
    git commit -m base &&

    # set the unpack limit abnormally low, which
    # lets us simulate full-size pushes using tiny ones
    git config receive.unpackLimit 1
  ) &&
  git clone parent child &&
  cd child &&
  n=0 &&
  while true; do
    echo $n >file && git add file && git commit -m $n &&
    git push origin HEAD:refs/remotes/child/master &&
    n=$(($n + 1))
  done

  # fsck.sh
  # now run this simultaneously in another terminal; it
  # repeatedly fscks, looking for us to consider the
  # newly-pushed ref broken. We cannot use for-each-ref
  # here, as it uses DO_FOR_EACH_INCLUDE_BROKEN, which
  # skips the has_sha1_file check (and if it wants
  # more information on the object, it will actually read
  # the object, which does the proper two-step lookup)
  cd parent &&
  while true; do
    broken=`git fsck 2>&1 | grep remotes/child`
    if test -n "$broken"; then
      echo $broken
      exit 1
    fi
  done

Without this patch, the fsck loop fails within a few seconds
(and almost instantly if the test repository actually has a
large number of refs). With it, the two can run
indefinitely.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-30 14:53:45 -07:00
c587d65512 remote-hg: use notes to keep track of Hg revisions
Keep track of Mercurial revisions as Git notes under the 'refs/notes/hg'
ref.  This way, the user can easily see which Mercurial revision
corresponds to certain Git commit.

Unfortunately, there's no way to efficiently update the notes after
doing an export (push), so they'll have to be updated when importing
(fetching).

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-30 10:37:23 -07:00
992c38644a Start the post-1.8.4 cycle
It is tentatively called 1.8.5, but it should be an easy matter of
renaming the release-notes file and RelNotes symlink to later call
it 1.9 near the end of the cycle if we wanted to.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-30 10:16:16 -07:00
f2be2a51f2 Merge branch 'bc/completion-for-bash-3.0'
Some people still use rather old versions of bash, which cannot
grok some constructs like 'printf -v varname' the prompt and
completion code started to use recently.

* bc/completion-for-bash-3.0:
  contrib/git-prompt.sh: handle missing 'printf -v' more gracefully
  t9902-completion.sh: old Bash still does not support array+=('') notation
  git-completion.bash: use correct Bash/Zsh array length syntax
2013-08-30 10:10:55 -07:00
36d80208c5 Merge branch 'sp/doc-smart-http'
* sp/doc-smart-http:
  Document the HTTP transport protocols
2013-08-30 10:10:52 -07:00
9bb78de519 Merge branch 'mm/war-on-whatchanged'
* mm/war-on-whatchanged:
  whatchanged: document its historical nature
  core-tutorial: trim the section on Inspecting Changes
2013-08-30 10:08:26 -07:00
482bd22d49 Merge branch 'rt/doc-merge-file-diff3'
* rt/doc-merge-file-diff3:
  Documentation/git-merge-file: document option "--diff3"
2013-08-30 10:08:23 -07:00
04d0eb89e3 Merge branch 'mb/docs-favor-en-us'
Declare that the official grammar & spelling of the source of this
project is en_US, but strongly discourage patches only to "fix"
existing en_UK strings to avoid unnecessary churns.

* mb/docs-favor-en-us:
  Provide some linguistic guidance for the documentation.
2013-08-30 10:08:19 -07:00
e30db6dbcf Merge branch 'rj/doc-rev-parse'
* rj/doc-rev-parse:
  rev-parse(1): logically group options
  rev-parse: remove restrictions on some options
2013-08-30 10:08:13 -07:00
55fefe6bbb Merge branch 'hv/config-from-blob'
Portability fix.

* hv/config-from-blob:
  config: do not use C function names as struct members
2013-08-30 10:06:52 -07:00
e250020cd0 Merge branch 'nd/fetch-pack-shallow-fix'
The recent "short-cut clone connectivity check" topic broke a
shallow repository when a fetch operation tries to auto-follow tags.

* nd/fetch-pack-shallow-fix:
  fetch-pack: do not remove .git/shallow file when --depth is not specified
2013-08-30 10:05:55 -07:00
6897a64b65 fix shell syntax error in template
An if clause must not be empty; add a "colon" command.

Signed-off-by: Thorsten Glaser <t.glaser@tarent.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-30 09:56:30 -07:00
21860882c8 l10n: fr.po: hotfix for commit 6b388fc
Fix many typos and add some new translations (1277/2080 messages
translated).

Closes git-l10n/git-po/pull/63.

Signed-off-by: Sebastien Helleu <flashcode@flashtux.org>
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2013-08-30 16:59:29 +08:00
8987cda9e1 git-remote-mediawiki: add test and check Makefile targets
There are a few level 4 and 2 perlcritic issues in the current code. We
make level 5 fatal, and keep level 2 as warnings.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-29 12:07:24 -07:00
97d01f2a88 config: rewrite core.pager documentation
The text mentions core.pager and GIT_PAGER without giving the
overall picture of precedences.  Borrow a better description from
the git-var(1) documentation.

The use of the mechanism to allow system-wide, global and
per-repository configuration files is not limited to this particular
variable.  Remove it to clarify the paragraph.

Rewrite the part that explains how the environment variable LESS is
set to Git's default value, and how to selectively customize it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-29 12:03:08 -07:00
641a2b5bee remote-helpers: cleanup more global variables
They don't need to be specified if they are not going to be set.

Suggested-by: Dusty Phillips <dusty@linux.ca>
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-29 11:40:57 -07:00
670dda85d6 remote-helpers: trivial style fixes
In accordance with pep8.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-29 11:40:56 -07:00
2a6981833d remote-hg: improve basic test
It appears 'let' is not present in all shells.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-29 11:40:55 -07:00
8493fd14b2 remote-hg: add missing &&s in the test
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-29 11:40:54 -07:00
0fdc9b0939 remote-hg: fix test
It wasn't being checked properly before; those refs never existed.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-29 11:40:52 -07:00
a11b0ac9e1 remote-bzr: make bzr branches configurable per-repo
Different repositories have different branches, some are are even
branches themselves.

Reported-by: Peter Niederlag <netservice@niekom.de>
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-29 11:40:51 -07:00
a8c0b74718 remote-bzr: fix export of utf-8 authors
Reported-by: Joakim Verona <joakim@verona.se>
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-29 11:39:45 -07:00
83bd7437ca write_index: optionally allow broken null sha1s
Commit 4337b58 (do not write null sha1s to on-disk index,
2012-07-28) added a safety check preventing git from writing
null sha1s into the index. The intent was to catch errors in
other parts of the code that might let such an entry slip
into the index (or worse, a tree).

Some existing repositories may have invalid trees that
contain null sha1s already, though.  Until 4337b58, a common
way to clean this up would be to use git-filter-branch's
index-filter to repair such broken entries.  That now fails
when filter-branch tries to write out the index.

Introduce a GIT_ALLOW_NULL_SHA1 environment variable to
relax this check and make it easier to recover from such a
history.

It is tempting to not involve filter-branch in this commit
at all, and instead require the user to manually invoke

	GIT_ALLOW_NULL_SHA1=1 git filter-branch ...

to perform an index-filter on a history with trees with null
sha1s.  That would be slightly safer, but requires some
specialized knowledge from the user.  So let's set the
GIT_ALLOW_NULL_SHA1 variable automatically when checking out
the to-be-filtered trees.  Advice on using filter-branch to
remove such entries already exists on places like
stackoverflow, and this patch makes it Just Work again on
recent versions of git.

Further commands that touch the index will still notice and
fail, unless they actually remove the broken entries.  A
filter-branch whose filters do not touch the index at all
will not error out (since we complain of the null sha1 only
on writing, not when making a tree out of the index), but
this is acceptable, as we still print a loud warning, so the
problem is unlikely to go unnoticed.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-28 20:54:43 -07:00
0f73f8bd79 builtin/fetch.c: Fix a sparse warning
Sparse issues an "'prepare_transport' was not declared. Should it
be static?" warning. In order to suppress the warning, since this
symbol only requires file scope, we simply add the static modifier
to it's declaration.

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-28 16:55:23 -07:00
286bc123cd diff --no-index: describe in a separate paragraph
The documentation for "diff-files" mode of "git diff" primarily
talks about how changes in the files in the working tree are shown
relative to the contents previously added to that index, and tucks
explanation on how "--no-index" mode, which works in a quite
different way, may be implicitly used instead.  Instead, add a
separate paragraph to explain what "--no-index" mode does, and also
mention when "--no-index" can be omitted from the command line
(essentially, when it is obvious from the context).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-28 15:17:18 -07:00
f85f7947c3 documentation: clarify notes for clean.requireForce
Add "-i" (interactive clean option) to clarify the documentation for
"clean.requireForce" config variable.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-28 12:51:46 -07:00
f972a1658a mailmap: handle mailmap blobs without trailing newlines
The read_mailmap_buf function reads each line of the mailmap
using strchrnul, like:

    const char *end = strchrnul(buf, '\n');
    unsigned long linelen = end - buf + 1;

But that's off-by-one when we actually hit the NUL byte; our
line does not have a terminator, and so is only "end - buf"
bytes long. As a result, when we subtract the linelen from
the total len, we end up with (unsigned long)-1 bytes left
in the buffer, and we start reading random junk from memory.

We could fix it with:

    unsigned long linelen = end - buf + !!*end;

but let's take a step back for a moment. It's questionable
in the first place for a function that takes a buffer and
length to be using strchrnul. But it works because we only
have one caller (and are only likely to ever have this one),
which is handing us data from read_sha1_file. Which means
that it's always NUL-terminated.

Instead of tightening the assumptions to make the
buffer/length pair work for a caller that doesn't actually
exist, let's let loosen the assumptions to what the real
caller has: a modifiable, NUL-terminated string.

This makes the code simpler and shorter (because we don't
have to correlate strchrnul with the length calculation),
correct (because the code with the off-by-one just goes
away), and more efficient (we can drop the extra allocation
we needed to create NUL-terminated strings for each line,
and just terminate in place).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-28 12:33:32 -07:00
f21d2a786b Add testcase for needless objects during a shallow fetch
This is a testcase that checks for a problem where, during a specific
shallow fetch where the client does not have any commits that are a
successor of the new shallow root (i.e., the fetch creates a new
detached piece of history), the server would simply send over _all_
objects, instead of taking into account the objects already present in
the client.

The actual problem was fixed by a recent patch series by Nguyễn Thái
Ngọc Duy already.

Signed-off-by: Matthijs Kooijman <matthijs@stdin.nl>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-28 11:57:28 -07:00
fbd4a7036d list-objects: mark more commits as edges in mark_edges_uninteresting
The purpose of edge commits is to let pack-objects know what objects
it can use as base, but does not need to include in the thin pack
because the other side is supposed to already have them. So far we
mark uninteresting parents of interesting commits as edges. But even
an unrelated uninteresting commit (that the other side has) may
become a good base for pack-objects and help produce more efficient
packs.

This is especially true for shallow clone, when the client issues a
fetch with a depth smaller or equal to the number of commits the
server is ahead of the client. For example, in this commit history
the client has up to "A" and the server has up to "B":

    -------A---B
     have--^   ^
              /
       want--+

If depth 1 is requested, the commit list to send to the client
includes only B. The way m_e_u is working, it checks if parent
commits of B are uninteresting, if so mark them as edges.  Due to
shallow effect, commit B is grafted to have no parents and the
revision walker never sees A as the parent of B. In fact it marks no
edges at all in this simple case and sends everything B has to the
client even if it could have excluded what A and also the client
already have.

In a slightly different case where A is not a direct parent of B
(iow there are commits in between A and B), marking A as an edge can
still save some because B may still have stuff from the far ancestor
A.

There is another case from the earlier patch, when we deepen a ref
from C->E to A->E:

    ---A---B   C---D---E
     want--^   ^       ^
       shallow-+      /
          have-------+

In this case we need to send A and B to the client, and C (i.e. the
current shallow point that the client informs the server) is a very
good base because it's closet to A and B. Normal m_e_u won't recognize
C as an edge because it only looks back to parents (i.e. A<-B) not the
opposite way B->C even if C is already marked as uninteresting commit
by the previous patch.

This patch includes all uninteresting commits from command line as
edges and lets pack-objects decide what's best to do. The upside is we
have better chance of producing better packs in certain cases. The
downside is we may need to process some extra objects on the server
side.

For the shallow case on git.git, when the client is 5 commits behind
and does "fetch --depth=3", the result pack is 99.26 KiB instead of
4.92 MiB.

Reported-and-analyzed-by: Matthijs Kooijman <matthijs@stdin.nl>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-28 11:54:18 -07:00
e76a5fb459 list-objects: reduce one argument in mark_edges_uninteresting
mark_edges_uninteresting() is always called with this form

  mark_edges_uninteresting(revs->commits, revs, ...);

Remove the first argument and let mark_edges_uninteresting figure that
out by itself. It helps answer the question "are this commit list and
revs related in any way?" when looking at mark_edges_uninteresting
implementation.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-28 11:54:18 -07:00
cdab485853 upload-pack: delegate rev walking in shallow fetch to pack-objects
upload-pack has a special revision walking code for shallow
recipients. It works almost like the similar code in pack-objects
except:

1. in upload-pack, graft points could be added for deepening;

2. also when the repository is deepened, the shallow point will be
   moved further away from the tip, but the old shallow point will be
   marked as edge to produce more efficient packs. See 6523078 (make
   shallow repository deepening more network efficient - 2009-09-03).

Pass the file to pack-objects via --shallow-file. This will override
$GIT_DIR/shallow and give pack-objects the exact repository shape
that upload-pack has.

mark edge commits by revision command arguments. Even if old shallow
points are passed as "--not" revisions as in this patch, they will not
be picked up by mark_edges_uninteresting() because this function looks
up to parents for edges, while in this case the edge is the children,
in the opposite direction. This will be fixed in an later patch when
all given uninteresting commits are marked as edges.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-28 11:52:11 -07:00
08ea65ad13 shallow: add setup_temporary_shallow()
This function is like setup_alternate_shallow() except that it does
not lock $GIT_DIR/shallow.  It is supposed to be used when a program
generates temporary shallow for use by another program, then throw
the shallow file away.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-28 11:51:54 -07:00
6a3bbb4db4 shallow: only add shallow graft points to new shallow file
for_each_commit_graft() goes through all graft points, and shallow
boundaries are just one special kind of grafting.

If $GIT_DIR/shallow and $GIT_DIR/info/grafts are both present,
write_shallow_commits() may catch both sets, accidentally turning
some graft points to shallow boundaries.  Don't do that.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-28 11:51:17 -07:00
ddeb817f25 "git prune" is safe
"git prune" is safe in case of concurrent accesses to a repository
but using it in such a case is not recommended.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-27 15:14:46 -07:00
381183fbc6 Remove irrelevant reference from "Tying it all together"
Sorry Jon, but this might not be of any help to new Git users ;)

Acked-by: Jon Loeliger <jdl@jdl.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-27 15:14:45 -07:00
e14c86156c Remove unnecessary historical note from "Object storage format"
Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-27 15:14:45 -07:00
e8e9964de4 Improve section "Merging multiple trees"
Remove unnecessary quoting.
Simplify description of three-way merge.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-27 15:14:44 -07:00
df47da758e Improve section "Manipulating branches"
Add some missing punctuation.
Simplify description of "git branch -d/-D".

Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-27 15:14:44 -07:00
d39765b12e Simplify "How to make a commit"
Combine the two cases for "git add" into one.
Add verb "use" to "git rm" case.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-27 15:14:44 -07:00
ddd4ddef78 Fix some typos and improve wording
Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-27 15:14:44 -07:00
a7bdee1122 Use "git merge" instead of "git pull ."
"git pull ." works, but "git merge" is the recommended
way for new users to do things. (The old description
also should have read "The former is actually *not* very
commonly used".)

Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-27 15:14:43 -07:00
3e65ac49e7 Use current output for "git repack"
Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-27 15:14:43 -07:00
95f9be556d Use current "detached HEAD" message
Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-27 15:14:42 -07:00
333d7d37b6 Call it "Git User Manual" and remove reference to very old Git version
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-27 15:14:41 -07:00
918dbf5887 git-gui: right half window is paned
For long descriptions it would be nice to be able to resize
the comment text field.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2013-08-27 20:06:43 +01:00
e632b3c0d3 git-gui: Add gui.displayuntracked option
When git is used to track only a subset of a directory, or
there is no sure way to divide files to ignore from files to track,
git user have to live with large number of untracked files. These files
present in file list, and should always be scrolled through
to handle real changes. Situation can become even worse, then number
of the untracked files grows above the maxfilesdisplayed limit. In the
case, even staged can be hidden by git-gui.

This change introduces new configuration variable gui.displayuntracked,
which, when set to false, instructs git-gui not to show untracked files
in files list. They can be staged from commandline or other tools (like
IDE of file manager), then they become visible. Default value of the
option is true, which is compatible with current behavior.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2013-08-27 20:06:42 +01:00
d478056c7d git-gui: show the maxrecentrepo config option in the preferences dialog
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2013-08-27 20:06:42 +01:00
a86560453b git-gui: added gui.maxrecentrepo to extend the number of remembered repos
The list of recently opened repositories shown when launching git-gui from
outside a repository was hard coded to only show a maximum of 10 items.
This config variable allows the user to override this default.

Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2013-08-27 20:06:41 +01:00
317797bce4 git-gui: Improve font rendering on retina macbooks
Signed-off-by: Mads Dørup <mads@dorup.dk>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2013-08-27 20:06:40 +01:00
92b0c8bed0 Set core.precomposeunicode to true on e.g. HFS+
When core.precomposeunicode was introduced in 76759c7d,
it was set to false on a unicode decomposing file system like HFS+
to be compatible with older versions of Git.

The Mac OS users need to find out that this configuration exist
and change it manually from false to true.

A smoother workflow can be achieved,
so set core.precomposeunicode to true on a decomposing file system.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-27 07:41:32 -07:00
49d6cfa5c2 config: do not use C function names as struct members
According to C99, section 7.1.4:

  Any function declared in a header may be additionally
  implemented as a function-like macro defined in the
  header.

Therefore calling our struct member function pointer "fgetc"
may run afoul of unwanted macro expansion when we call:

  char c = cf->fgetc(cf);

This turned out to be a problem on uclibc, which defines
fgetc as a macro and causes compilation failure.

The standard suggests fixing this in a few ways:

  1. Using extra parentheses to inhibit the function-like
     macro expansion. E.g., "(cf->fgetc)(cf)". This is
     undesirable as it's ugly, and each call site needs to
     remember to use it (and on systems without the macro,
     forgetting will compile just fine).

  2. Using #undef (because a conforming implementation must
     also be providing fgetc as a function). This is
     undesirable because presumably the implementation was
     using the macro for a performance benefit, and we are
     dropping that optimization.

Instead, we can simply use non-colliding names.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-26 21:39:57 -07:00
3f36eb4305 Documentation/remote-helpers: document common use-case for private ref
The current documentation mentions the private ref namespace, but does
not really explain why it can be useful.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-26 09:31:04 -07:00
f223459bec status: always show tracking branch even no change
In order to see what the current branch is tracking, one way is using
"git branch -v -v", but branches other than the current are also
reported. Another way is using "git status", such as:

    $ git status
    # On branch master
    # Your branch is ahead of 'origin/master' by 1 commit.
    ...

But this will not work if there is no change between the current
branch and its upstream. Always report upstream tracking info
even if there is no difference, so that "git status" is consistent
for checking tracking info for current branch. E.g.

    $ git status
    # On branch feature1
    # Your branch is up-to-date with 'github/feature1'.
    ...

    $ git status -bs
    ## feature1...github/feature1
    ...

    $ git checkout feature1
    Already on 'feature1'
    Your branch is up-to-date with 'github/feature1'.
    ...

Also add some test cases in t6040.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-26 09:07:53 -07:00
f2e087395b branch: report invalid tracking branch as gone
Command "git branch -vv" will report tracking branches, but invalid
tracking branches are also reported. This is because the function
stat_tracking_info() can not distinguish invalid tracking branch
from other cases which it would not like to report, such as
there is no upstream settings at all, or nothing is changed between
one branch and its upstream.

Junio suggested missing upstream should be reported [1] like:

    $ git branch -v -v
      master    e67ac84 initial
    * topic     3fc0f2a [topicbase: gone] topic

    $ git status
    # On branch topic
    # Your branch is based on 'topicbase', but the upstream is gone.
    #   (use "git branch --unset-upstream" to fixup)
    ...

    $ git status -b -s
    ## topic...topicbase [gone]
    ...

In order to do like that, we need to distinguish these three cases
(i.e. no tracking, with configured but no longer valid tracking, and
with tracking) in function stat_tracking_info(). So the refactored
function stat_tracking_info() has three return values: -1 (with "gone"
base), 0 (no base), and 1 (with base).

If the caller does not like to report tracking info when nothing
changed between the branch and its upstream, simply checks if
num_theirs and num_ours are both 0.

[1]: http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/231830/focus=232288

Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-26 09:05:22 -07:00
75c6976655 rebase -i: fix short SHA-1 collision
The 'todo' sheet for interactive rebase shows abbreviated SHA-1's and
then performs its operations upon those shortened values. This can lead
to an abort if the SHA-1 of a reworded or edited commit is no longer
unique within the abbreviated SHA-1 space and a subsequent SHA-1 in the
todo list has the same abbreviated value.

For example:

  edit f00dfad first
  pick badbeef second

If, after editing, the new SHA-1 of "first" also has prefix badbeef,
then the subsequent 'pick badbeef second' will fail since badbeef is no
longer a unique SHA-1 abbreviation:

  error: short SHA1 badbeef is ambiguous.
  fatal: Needed a single revision
  Invalid commit name: badbeef

Fix this problem by expanding the SHA-1's in the todo list before
performing the operations.

[es: also collapse & expand SHA-1's for --edit-todo; respect
core.commentchar in transform_todo_ids(); compose commit message]

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-25 23:43:40 -07:00
66ae9a57b8 t3404: rebase -i: demonstrate short SHA-1 collision
The 'todo' sheet for interactive rebase shows abbreviated SHA-1's and
then performs its operations upon those shortened values. This can lead
to an abort if the SHA-1 of a reworded or edited commit is no longer
unique within the abbreviated SHA-1 space and a subsequent SHA-1 in the
todo list has the same abbreviated value.

For example:

  edit f00dfad first
  pick badbeef second

If, after editing, the new SHA-1 of "first" also has prefix badbeef,
then the subsequent 'pick badbeef second' will fail since badbeef is no
longer a unique SHA-1 abbreviation:

  error: short SHA1 badbeef is ambiguous.
  fatal: Needed a single revision
  Invalid commit name: badbeef

Demonstrate this problem with a couple of specially crafted commits
which initially have distinct abbreviated SHA-1's, but for which the
abbreviated SHA-1's collide after a simple rewording of the first
commit's message.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-25 23:43:39 -07:00
31cd827525 t3404: make tests more self-contained
As its very first action, t3404 installs (via set_fake_editor) a
specialized $EDITOR which simplifies automated 'rebase -i' testing. Many
tests rely upon this setting, thus tests which need a different editor
must take extra care upon completion to restore $EDITOR in order to
avoid breaking following tests. This places extra burden upon such tests
and requires that they undesirably have extra knowledge about
surrounding tests. Ease this burden by having each test install the
$EDITOR it requires, rather than relying upon a global setting.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-25 23:43:28 -07:00
6da8bdcbbf fetch-pack: do not remove .git/shallow file when --depth is not specified
fetch_pack() can remove .git/shallow file when a shallow repository
becomes a full one again. This behavior is triggered incorrectly when
tags are also fetched because fetch_pack() will be called twice. At
the first fetch_pack() call:

 - shallow_lock is set up
 - alternate_shallow_file points to shallow_lock.filename, which is
   "shallow.lock"
 - commit_lock_file is called, which sets shallow_lock.filename to "".
   alternate_shallow_file also becomes "" because it points to the
   same memory.

At the second call, setup_alternate_shallow() is not called and
alternate_shallow_file remains "". It's mistaken as unshallow case and
.git/shallow is removed. The end result is a broken repository.

Fix this by always initializing alternate_shallow_file when
fetch_pack() is called. As an extra measure, check if args->depth > 0
before commit/rollback shallow file.

Reported-by: Kacper Kornet <kornet@camk.edu.pl>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-25 22:56:03 -07:00
87c9a140d2 Documentation/fast-import: clarify summary for feature command
In most cases, "feature <foo>" does not just require that the feature
exists, but also changes the behavior by enabling it.

Cases where the feature is only requested like cat-blob, notes or ls are
clearly documented below.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-25 22:31:07 -07:00
95728f74b1 reset test: modernize style
Avoid command substitution and pipes to ensure that the exit status
from each git command is tested (and in particular that any segfaults
are caught).

Maintain the test setup (no commits, one file named "a", another named
"b") even after the last test, to make it easier to rearrange tests or
add new tests after the last in the future.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-24 23:58:44 -07:00
c742f870ce t/t7106-reset-unborn-branch.sh: Add PERL prerequisite
The test 'reset -p' uses git-reset -p, so it depends on the perl code.

Signed-off-by: Kacper Kornet <draenog@pld-linux.org>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-24 23:58:44 -07:00
a070221eed add -i test: use skip_all instead of repeated PERL prerequisite
It is too easy to forget to add the PERL prerequisite for new
"add -i" tests, especially given that many people do not test with
NO_PERL so the missing prereq is not always noticed quickly.

The test had used the skip_all mechanism since 1b19ccd2 (2009-04-03)
but switched to explicit PERL prereqs in f0459319 (2010-10-13) in hope
of helping people see how many tests were skipped, perhaps to motivate
them to tweak their platform or tests to improve test coverage.  That
didn't pan out much in practice, so let's move back to the simpler
skip_all method.

Reported-by: Kacper Kornet <draenog@pld-linux.org>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-24 23:58:43 -07:00
0bb0c15533 Make test "using invalid commit with -C" more strict
In the test 'using invalid commit with -C' git-commit would have failed
even if the -C option had been given the correct commit, as there was
nothing to commit. Pass --allow-empty to make sure it would make a commit,
were there no issues with the argument given to the -C option.

Signed-off-by: Kacper Kornet <draenog@pld-linux.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-24 23:58:43 -07:00
b2ef3d9ebb test index-pack on packs with recoverable delta cycles
The previous commit added tests to show that index-pack
correctly bails in unrecoverable situations. There are some
situations where the data could be recovered, but it is not
currently:

  1. If we can break the cycle using an object from another
     pack via --fix-thin.

  2. If we can break the cycle using a duplicate of one of
     the objects found in the same pack.

Note that neither of these is particularly high priority; a
delta cycle within a pack should never occur, and we have no
record of even a buggy git implementation creating such a
pack.

However, it's worth adding these tests for two reasons. One,
to document that we do not currently handle the situation,
even though it is possible. And two, to exercise the code
that runs in this situation; even though it fails, by
running it we can confirm that index-pack detects the
situation and aborts, and does not misbehave (e.g., by
following the cycle in an infinite loop).

In both cases, we hit an assert that aborts index-pack.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-24 22:32:34 -07:00
3b910d0c5e add tests for indexing packs with delta cycles
If we receive a broken or malicious pack from a remote, we
will feed it to index-pack. As index-pack processes the
objects as a stream, reconstructing and hashing each object
to get its name, it is not very susceptible to doing the
wrong with bad data (it simply notices that the data is
bogus and aborts).

However, one question raised on the list is whether it could
be susceptible to problems during the delta-resolution
phase. In particular, can a cycle in the packfile deltas
cause us to go into an infinite loop or cause any other
problem?

The answer is no.

We cannot have a cycle of delta-base offsets, because they
go only in one direction (the OFS_DELTA object mentions its
base by an offset towards the beginning of the file, and we
explicitly reject negative offsets).

We can have a cycle of REF_DELTA objects, which refer to
base objects by sha1 name. However, index-pack does not know
these sha1 names ahead of time; it has to reconstruct the
objects to get their names, and it cannot do so if there is
a delta cycle (in other words, it does not even realize
there is a cycle, but only that there are items that cannot
be resolved).

Even though we can reason out that index-pack should handle
this fine, let's add a few tests to make sure it behaves
correctly.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-24 22:31:47 -07:00
171bdaca69 sha1-lookup: handle duplicate keys with GIT_USE_LOOKUP
The sha1_entry_pos function tries to be smart about
selecting the middle of a range for its binary search by
looking at the value differences between the "lo" and "hi"
constraints. However, it is unable to cope with entries with
duplicate keys in the sorted list.

We may hit a point in the search where both our "lo" and
"hi" point to the same key. In this case, the range of
values between our endpoints is 0, and trying to scale the
difference between our key and the endpoints over that range
is undefined (i.e., divide by zero). The current code
catches this with an "assert(lov < hiv)".

Moreover, after seeing that the first 20 byte of the key are
the same, we will try to establish a value from the 21st
byte. Which is nonsensical.

Instead, we can detect the case that we are in a run of
duplicates, and simply do a final comparison against any one
of them (since they are all the same, it does not matter
which). If the keys match, we have found our entry (or one
of them, anyway).  If not, then we know that we do not need
to look further, as we must be in a run of the duplicate
key.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-24 22:31:20 -07:00
ea16794e43 commit: search author pattern against mailmap
"git commit --author=$name" sets the author to one whose name
matches the given string from existing commits, when $name is not in
the "Name <e-mail>" format. However, it does not honor the mailmap
to use the canonical name for the author found this way.

Fix it by telling the logic to find a matching existing author to
honor the mailmap, and use the name and email after applying the
mailmap.

Signed-off-by: Antoine Pelisse <apelisse@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-24 22:17:39 -07:00
680be044d9 dir.c::test_one_path(): work around directory_exists_in_index_icase() breakage
directory_exists_in_index() takes pathname and its length, but its
helper function directory_exists_in_index_icase() reads one byte
beyond the end of the pathname and expects there to be a '/'.

This needs to be fixed, as that one-byte-beyond-the-end location may
not even be readable, possibly by not registering directories to
name hashes with trailing slashes.  In the meantime, update the new
caller added recently to treat_one_path() to make sure that the path
buffer it gives the function is one byte longer than the path it is
asking the function about by appending a slash to it.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-23 16:26:59 -07:00
4b36374955 remove dead pastebin link from pack-heuristics document
Signed-off-by: Michal Nazarewicz <mina86@mina86.com>
Acked-by: Jon Loeliger <jdl@freescale.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-23 12:09:31 -07:00
54c93cb4af test-sha1: add a binary output mode
The test-sha1 helper program will run our internal sha1
routines over its input and output the 40-byte hex sha1.
Sometimes, however, it is useful to have the binary 20-byte
sha1 (and it's a pain to convert back in the shell). Let's
add a "-b" option to output the binary version.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-22 16:39:46 -07:00
b214eddfb2 diff --no-index: clarify operation when not inside a repository
Clarify documentation for "diff --no-index".  State that when not
inside a repository, --no-index is implied and two arguments are
mandatory.

Clarify error message from diff-no-index to inform user that CWD is
not inside a repository and thus two arguments are mandatory.

Signed-off-by: Dale Worley <worley@ariadne.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-22 13:55:28 -07:00
a44aa6930c contrib/git-prompt.sh: handle missing 'printf -v' more gracefully
Old Bash (3.0) which is distributed with RHEL 4.X and other ancient
platforms that are still in wide use, do not have a printf that
supports -v.  Neither does Zsh (which is already handled in the code).

As suggested by Junio, let's test whether printf supports the -v
option and store the result.  Then later, we can use it to
determine whether 'printf -v' can be used, or whether printf
must be called in a subshell.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-22 09:50:16 -07:00
0ef09702d6 t9902-completion.sh: old Bash still does not support array+=('') notation
Old Bash (3.0) which is distributed with RHEL 4.X and other ancient
platforms that are still in wide use, does not understand the
array+=() notation.  Let's use an explicit assignment to the new array
element which works everywhere, like:

   array[${#array[@]}+1]=''

The right-hand side '' is not strictly necessary, but in this case
I think it is more clear.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-21 16:38:50 -07:00
5d5812f492 git-completion.bash: use correct Bash/Zsh array length syntax
The syntax for retrieving the number of elements in an array is:

   ${#name[@]}

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-21 16:38:47 -07:00
a9f739c111 rebase --preserve-merges: ignore "merge.log" config
When "merge.log" config is set, "rebase --preserve-merges" will add
the log lines to the message of the rebased merge commit.  A rebase
should not modify a commit message automatically.

Teach "git-rebase" to ignore that configuration by passing
"--no-log" to the git-merge call.

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-21 15:44:15 -07:00
4c6fffe2ae Document the HTTP transport protocols
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Revised-by: Tay Ray Chuan <rctay89@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-21 11:37:53 -07:00
af52bd5f58 gitweb: make search help link less ugly
The search help link was a superscript question mark right next to
a drop-down menu, which looks misaligned and is a cramped and
awkward click target. Remove the superscript tags and add some
spacing to fix these nits. Add a title attribute to provide an
explanatory mouseover.

Signed-off-by: Tony Finch <dot@dotat.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-20 13:00:57 -07:00
860ccc605d gitweb: omit the repository owner when it is unset
On the repository summary page, leave the owner line out if the
repo does not have an owner, rather than displaying a labelled empty
field. This does not affect the owner column in the projects list
page, which is present unless $omit_owner is true.

Signed-off-by: Tony Finch <dot@dotat.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-20 13:00:57 -07:00
1201f0a76c gitweb: vertically centre contents of page footer
Signed-off-by: Tony Finch <dot@dotat.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-20 13:00:57 -07:00
682961c162 gitweb: ensure OPML text fits inside its box
The rss_logo CSS style has a fixed width which is too narrow for
the string "OPML". Replace the fixed width with horizontal padding
so the text fits with nice margins.

Signed-off-by: Tony Finch <dot@dotat.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-20 13:00:51 -07:00
7800c1ebcc read-cache: use fixed width integer types
Use the fixed width integer types uint16_t and uint32_t for on-disk
structures; unsigned short and unsigned int do not have a guaranteed
size.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-20 12:29:42 -07:00
e92527c97c stream_to_pack: xread does not guarantee to read all requested bytes
The deflate loop in bulk-checkin::stream_to_pack expects to get all bytes
from a file that it requests to read in a single function call. But it
used xread(), which does not give that guarantee. Replace it by
read_in_full().

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-20 11:20:53 -07:00
a487916dd5 Revert "compat/clipped-write.c: large write(2) fails on Mac OS X/XNU"
This reverts commit 6c642a8786.

The previous commit introduced a size limit on IO chunks on all
platforms.  The compat clipped_write() is not needed anymore.

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-20 11:11:08 -07:00
0b6806b9e4 xread, xwrite: limit size of IO to 8MB
Checking out 2GB or more through an external filter (see test) fails
on Mac OS X 10.8.4 (12E55) for a 64-bit executable with:

    error: read from external filter cat failed
    error: cannot feed the input to external filter cat
    error: cat died of signal 13
    error: external filter cat failed 141
    error: external filter cat failed

The reason is that read() immediately returns with EINVAL when asked
to read more than 2GB.  According to POSIX [1], if the value of
nbyte passed to read() is greater than SSIZE_MAX, the result is
implementation-defined.  The write function has the same restriction
[2].  Since OS X still supports running 32-bit executables, the
32-bit limit (SSIZE_MAX = INT_MAX = 2GB - 1) seems to be also
imposed on 64-bit executables under certain conditions.  For write,
the problem has been addressed earlier [6c642a].

Address the problem for read() and write() differently, by limiting
size of IO chunks unconditionally on all platforms in xread() and
xwrite().  Large chunks only cause problems, like causing latencies
when killing the process, even if OS X was not buggy.  Doing IO in
reasonably sized smaller chunks should have no negative impact on
performance.

The compat wrapper clipped_write() introduced earlier [6c642a] is
not needed anymore.  It will be reverted in a separate commit.  The
new test catches read and write problems.

Note that 'git add' exits with 0 even if it prints filtering errors
to stderr.  The test, therefore, checks stderr.  'git add' should
probably be changed (sometime in another commit) to exit with
nonzero if filtering fails.  The test could then be changed to use
test_must_fail.

Thanks to the following people for suggestions and testing:

    Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
    John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
    Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
    Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
    Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
    Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>

[1] http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/read.html
[2] http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/write.html

[6c642a] commit 6c642a8786
    compate/clipped-write.c: large write(2) fails on Mac OS X/XNU

Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-20 11:10:59 -07:00
c9ba31f592 mailmap: remove redundant check for freeing memory
The condition as it is written in that line has already been checked
in the beginning of the function, which was introduced in
8503ee4 (2007-05-01, Fix read_mailmap to handle a caller uninterested
in repo abbreviation)

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Thomas Rast <trast@inf.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-20 10:10:37 -07:00
4b05440283 avoid segfault on submodule.*.path set to an empty "true"
Git fails due to a segmentation fault if a submodule path is empty.
Here is an example .gitmodules that will cause a segmentation fault:

    [submodule "foo-module"]
      path
      url = http://host/repo.git
    $ git status
    Segmentation fault (core dumped)

This is because the parsing of "submodule.*.path" is not prepared to
see a value-less "true" and assumes that the value is always
non-NULL (parsing of "ignore" has the same problem).

Fix it by checking the NULL-ness of value and complain with
config_error_nonbool().

Signed-off-by: Jharrod LaFon <jlafon@eyesopen.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-19 13:47:56 -07:00
a4889e64bf bash prompt: test the prompt with newline in repository path
Newlines in the path to a git repository were not an issue for the
git-specific bash prompt before commit efaa0c1532 (bash prompt:
combine 'git rev-parse' executions in the main code path, 2013-06-17),
because the path returned by 'git rev-parse --git-dir' was directly
stored in a variable, and this variable was later always accessed
inside double quotes.

Newlines are not an issue after commit efaa0c1532 either, but it's
more subtle.  Since efaa0c1532 we use the following single 'git
rev-parse' execution to query various info about the repository:

  git rev-parse --git-dir --is-inside-git-dir \
          --is-bare-repository --is-inside-work-tree

The results to these queries are separated by a newline character in
the output, e.g.:

  /home/szeder/src/git/.git
  false
  false
  true

A newline in the path to the git repository could potentially break
the parsing of these results and ultimately the bash prompt, unless
the parsing is done right.  Commit efaa0c1532 got it right, as I
consciously started parsing 'git rev-parse's output from the end,
where each record is a single line containing either 'true' or 'false'
or, after e3e0b9378b (bash prompt: combine 'git rev-parse' for
detached head, 2013-06-24), the abbreviated commit object name, and
all what remains at the beginning is the path to the git repository,
no matter how many lines it is.

This subtlety really warrants its own test, especially since I didn't
explain it in the log message or in an in-code comment back then, so
add a test to excercise the prompt with newline characters in the path
to the repository.  Guard this test with the FUNNYNAMES prerequisite,
because not all filesystems support newlines in filenames.  Note that
'git rev-parse --git-dir' prints '.git' or '.' when at the top of the
worktree or the repository, respectively, and only prints the full
path to the repository when in a subdirectory, hence the need for
changing into a subdir in the test.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-18 14:41:21 -07:00
7bca7afeff rebase -i: fix cases ignoring core.commentchar
180bad3d (rebase -i: respect core.commentchar, 2013-02-11) updated
"rebase -i" to honor core.commentchar but missed one instance of
hard-coded '#' comment character in skip_unnecessary_picks().

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-18 13:33:01 -07:00
3125fe528b move setup_alternate_shallow and write_shallow_commits to shallow.c
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-18 13:00:17 -07:00
f7466e9437 create_delta_index: simplify condition always evaluating to true
The code sequence  ' (1u << i) < hsize && i < 31 ' is a multi step
process, whose first step requires that 'i' is already less that 31,
otherwise the result (1u << i)  is undefined (and  'undef_val < hsize'
can therefore be assumed to be 'false'), and so the later test  i < 31
can always be optimized away as dead code ('i' is already less than 31,
or the short circuit 'and' applies).

So we need to get rid of that code. One way would be to exchange the
order of the conditions, so the expression 'i < 31 && (1u << i) < hsize'
would remove that optimized unstable code already.

However when checking the previous lines in that function, we can deduce
that 'hsize' must always be smaller than (1u<<31), since 506049c7df
(fix >4GiB source delta assertion failure), because 'entries' is
capped at an upper bound of 0xfffffffeU, so 'hsize' contains a maximum
value of 0x3fffffff, which is smaller than (1u<<31), so the value of
'i' will never be larger than 31 and we can remove that condition
entirely.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Acked-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-18 12:56:23 -07:00
3c56875176 t3010: update to demonstrate "ls-files -k" optimization pitfalls
An earlier draft of the previous step used cache_name_exists() to
check the directory we were looking at, which missed the second case
described in its log message.  Demonstrate why it is not sufficient.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-15 14:16:00 -07:00
2eac2a4cc4 ls-files -k: a directory only can be killed if the index has a non-directory
"ls-files -o" and "ls-files -k" both traverse the working tree down
to find either all untracked paths or those that will be "killed"
(removed from the working tree to make room) when the paths recorded
in the index are checked out.  It is necessary to traverse the
working tree fully when enumerating all the "other" paths, but when
we are only interested in "killed" paths, we can take advantage of
the fact that paths that do not overlap with entries in the index
can never be killed.

The treat_one_path() helper function, which is called during the
recursive traversal, is the ideal place to implement an
optimization.

When we are looking at a directory P in the working tree, there are
three cases:

 (1) P exists in the index.  Everything inside the directory P in
     the working tree needs to go when P is checked out from the
     index.

 (2) P does not exist in the index, but there is P/Q in the index.
     We know P will stay a directory when we check out the contents
     of the index, but we do not know yet if there is a directory
     P/Q in the working tree to be killed, so we need to recurse.

 (3) P does not exist in the index, and there is no P/Q in the index
     to require P to be a directory, either.  Only in this case, we
     know that everything inside P will not be killed without
     recursing.

Note that this helper is called by treat_leading_path() that decides
if we need to traverse only subdirectories of a single common
leading directory, which is essential for this optimization to be
correct.  This caller checks each level of the leading path
component from shallower directory to deeper ones, and that is what
allows us to only check if the path appears in the index.  If the
call to treat_one_path() weren't there, given a path P/Q/R, the real
traversal may start from directory P/Q/R, even when the index
records P as a regular file, and we would end up having to check if
any leading subpath in P/Q/R, e.g. P, appears in the index.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-15 13:50:34 -07:00
7126102742 dir.c: use the cache_* macro to access the current index
These codepaths always start from the_index and use index_*
functions, but there is no reason to do so.  Use the compatibility
cache_* macro to access the current in-core index like everybody
else.

While at it, fix typo in the comment for a function to check if a
path within a directory appears in the index.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-15 12:08:45 -07:00
e28f764159 unpack-trees: plug a memory leak
Before overwriting the destination index, first let's discard its
contents.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Лежанкин Иван <abyss.7@gmail.com> wrote:
Reviewed-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-13 14:37:30 -07:00
f7c815c3ee push: respect --no-thin
- From the beginning of push.c in 755225d, 2006-04-29, "thin" option
  was enabled by default but could be turned off with --no-thin.

- Then Shawn changed the default to 0 in favor of saving server
  resources in a4503a1, 2007-09-09. --no-thin worked great.

- One day later, in 9b28851 Daniel extracted some code from push.c to
  create transport.c. He (probably accidentally) flipped the default
  value from 0 to 1 in transport_get().

From then on --no-thin is effectively no-op because git-push still
expects the default value to be false and only calls
transport_set_option() when "thin" variable in push.c is true (which
is unnecessary). Correct the code to respect --no-thin by calling
transport_set_option() in both cases.

receive-pack learns about --reject-thin-pack-for-testing option,
which only is for testing purposes, hence no document update.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-13 10:32:26 -07:00
4c70cfbfbc contacts: reduce git-blame invocations
git-contacts invokes git-blame once for each patch hunk it encounters.
No attempt is made to consolidate invocations for multiple hunks
referencing the same file at the same revision. This can become
expensive quickly.

Reduce the number of git-blame invocations by taking advantage of the
ability to specify multiple -L ranges for a single invocation.

Without this patch, on a randomly chosen range of commits:

  % time git-contacts 25fba78d36be6297^..23c339c0f262aad2 >/dev/null
  real  0m6.142s
  user  0m5.429s
  sys   0m0.356s

With this patch:

  % time git-contacts 25fba78d36be6297^..23c339c0f262aad2 >/dev/null
  real  0m2.285s
  user  0m2.093s
  sys   0m0.165s

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-13 09:09:03 -07:00
db8cae7e60 contacts: gather all blame sources prior to invoking git-blame
git-contacts invokes git-blame immediately upon encountering a patch
hunk. No attempt is made to consolidate invocations for multiple hunks
referencing the same file at the same revision. This can become
expensive quickly.

Any effort to reduce the number of times git-blame is run will need to
to know in advance which line ranges to blame per file per revision.
Make this information available by collecting all sources as a distinct
step from invoking git-blame.  A subsequent patch will utilize the
information to optimize git-blame invocations.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-13 09:09:01 -07:00
9ae9ca1f95 contacts: validate hunk length earlier
Rather than calling get_blame() with a zero-length hunk only to have it
rejected immediately, perform hunk-length validation earlier in order to
avoid calling get_blame() unnecessarily.

This is a preparatory step to simplify later patches which reduce the
number of git-blame invocations by collecting together all lines to
blame within a single file at a particular revision. By validating the
blame range early, the subsequent patch can more easily avoid adding
empty ranges at collection time.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-13 09:08:58 -07:00
52f425e1a9 whatchanged: document its historical nature
Encourage new users to use 'log' instead.  These days, these
commands are unified and just have different defaults.

'git log' only allowed you to view the log messages and no diffs
when it was added in early June 2005.  It was only in early April
2006 that the command learned to take diff options.  Because of
this, power users tended to use 'whatchanged' that already existed
since mid May 2005 and supported diff options.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-13 09:01:54 -07:00
627a8b8dcd core-tutorial: trim the section on Inspecting Changes
Back when the core tutorial was written, `log` and `whatchanged`
were scripted Porcelains.  In the "Inspecting Changes" section that
talks about the plumbing commands in the diff family, it made sense
to use `log` and `whatchanged` as good examples of the use of these
plumbing commands, and because even these scripted Porcelains were
novelty (there wasn't the new end-user tutorial written), it made
some sense to illustrate uses of the `git log` (and `git
whatchanged`) scripted Porcelain commands.

But we no longer have scripted `log` and `whatchanged` to serve as
examples, and this document is not where the end users learn what
`git log` command is about.  Stop at briefly mentioning the
possibility of combining rev-list with diff-tree to build your own
log, and leave the end-user documentation of `log` to the new
tutorial and the user manual.

Also resurrect the last version of `git-log`, `git-whatchanged`, and
`git-show` to serve as examples to contrib/examples/ directory.

While at it, remove 'whatchanged' from a list of sample commands
that are affected by GIT_FLUSH environment variable. This is not
meant to be an exhaustive list but as a list of typical ones, and an
old command that is kept primarily for backward compatibility does
not belong to it.

Helped-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-13 09:01:52 -07:00
1292df11e8 git-p4: Fix occasional truncation of symlink contents.
Symlink contents in p4 print sometimes have a trailing
new line character, but sometimes it doesn't. git-p4
should only remove the last character if that character
is '\n'.

Signed-off-by: Alex Juncu <ajuncu@ixiacom.com>
Signed-off-by: Alex Badea <abadea@ixiacom.com>
Acked-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-12 10:10:46 -07:00
799460316b git p4 test: sanitize P4CHARSET
In the tests, p4d is started without using "internationalized
mode".  Make sure this environment variable is unset, otherwise
a mis-matched user setting would break the tests.  The error
message would be "Unicode clients require a unicode enabled server."

[pw: use unset, add commit text]

Signed-off-by: Kazuki Saitoh <ksaitoh560@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-11 23:19:08 -07:00
3baacc5cc6 remote-hg: add shared repo upgrade
If we have an old organization (v1.8.3), and want to upgrade to a newer
one (v1.8.4), the user would have to fetch the whole repository, instead
we can just move the repository, so the user would not notice any
difference.

Also, remove other clones, so in time they get set up as shared.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Antoine Pelisse <apelisse@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-11 23:17:10 -07:00
52f0856a7b remote-hg: ensure shared repo is initialized
6796d49 (remote-hg: use a shared repository store) introduced a bug by
making the shared repository '.git/hg', which is already used before
that patch, so clones that happened before that patch, fail after that
patch, because there's no shared Mercurial repo.

So, instead of simply checking if the directory exists, let's always try
to create an empty shared repository to ensure it's there. This works
because we don't need the initial clone, if the repository is shared,
pulling from the child updates the parent's storage; it's exactly the
same as cloning, so we can simplify the shared repo setup this way while
at the same time fixing the problem.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Antoine Pelisse <apelisse@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-11 23:16:59 -07:00
33f66b25e1 remote-hg: fix path when cloning with tilde expansion
The current code fixes the path to make it absolute when cloning, but
doesn't consider tilde expansion, so that scenario fails throwing an
exception because /home/myuser/~/my/repository doesn't exists:

    $ git clone hg::~/my/repository && cd repository && git fetch

Expand the tilde when checking if the path is absolute, so that we don't
fix a path that doesn't need to be.

Signed-off-by: Antoine Pelisse <apelisse@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-09 15:33:02 -07:00
67ed84f3e2 Documentation/git-merge-file: document option "--diff3"
The option "--diff3" was added to "git merge-file" in e0af48e
(xdiff-merge: optionally show conflicts in "diff3 -m" style)
but it was never documented in "Documentation/git-merge-file.txt".
Add documentation for this option.

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-09 14:19:59 -07:00
f8aae0b517 rm: remove unneeded null pointer check
As of 7612a1efdb (2006-06-09 git-rm: honor -n flag.) the variable
'pathspec' seems to be assumed to be never NULL after calling get_pathspec
There was a NULL pointer check after the seen = NULL assignment, which
was removed by that commit. So if pathspec would be NULL now, we'd segfault
in the line accessing the pathspec:
	for (i = 0; pathspec[i] ; i++)

A few lines later, 'pathspec' still cannot be NULL, but that check was
overlooked, hence removing it now.

As the null pointer check was removed, it makes no sense to assign NULL
to seen and 3 lines later another value as there are no conditions in
between.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-09 12:14:02 -07:00
3b0c18af5c diff: fix a possible null pointer dereference
The condition in the ternary operator was wrong, hence the wrong char
pointer could be used as the parameter for show_submodule_summary.
one->path may be null, but we definitely need a non null path given
to the function.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Acked-By: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-09 12:07:36 -07:00
c189c4f2c4 diff: remove ternary operator evaluating always to true
The line being changed is deep inside the function builtin_diff.
The variable name_b, which is used to evaluate the ternary expression
must evaluate to true at that position, hence the replacement with
just name_b.

The name_b variable only occurs a few times in that lengthy function:
As a parameter to the function itself:
	static void builtin_diff(const char *name_a,
				 const char *name_b,
				...
The next occurrences are at:
	/* Never use a non-valid filename anywhere if at all possible */
	name_a = DIFF_FILE_VALID(one) ? name_a : name_b;
	name_b = DIFF_FILE_VALID(two) ? name_b : name_a;

	a_one = quote_two(a_prefix, name_a + (*name_a == '/'));
	b_two = quote_two(b_prefix, name_b + (*name_b == '/'));

In the last line of this block 'name_b' is dereferenced and compared
to '/'. This would crash if name_b was NULL. Hence in the following code
we can assume name_b being non-null.

The next occurrence is just as a function argument, which doesn't change
the memory, which name_b points to, so the assumption name_b being not
null still holds:
	emit_rewrite_diff(name_a, name_b, one, two,
				textconv_one, textconv_two, o);

The next occurrence would be the line of this patch. As name_b still must
be not null, we can remove the ternary operator.

Inside the emit_rewrite_diff function there is a also a line
	ecbdata.ws_rule = whitespace_rule(name_b ? name_b : name_a);
which was also simplified as there is also a dereference before the
ternary operator.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-09 12:05:16 -07:00
6667a6ac20 builtin/config.c: compilation fix
Do not feed a random string as the first parameter to die(); use "%s"
as the format string instead.

Do the same for test-urlmatch-normalization.c while saving a single
pointer variable by turning a "const char *" constant string into
"const char []", which is sufficient to squelch compilation warning
(the compiler can see usage[] given to die() is a constant and will
never have conversion specifiers that cause trouble).  But for a
good measure, give them the same "%s" treatment as well.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-09 09:20:38 -07:00
64a99eb476 gc: reject if another gc is running, unless --force is given
This may happen when `git gc --auto` is run automatically, then the
user, to avoid wait time, switches to a new terminal, keeps working
and `git gc --auto` is started again because the first gc instance has
not clean up the repository.

This patch tries to avoid multiple gc running, especially in --auto
mode. In the worst case, gc may be delayed 12 hours if a daemon reuses
the pid stored in gc.pid.

kill(pid, 0) support is added to MinGW port so it should work on
Windows too.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-09 09:10:05 -07:00
b26ed4305f fetch: work around "transport-take-over" hack
A Git-aware "connect" transport allows the "transport_take_over" to
redirect generic transport requests like fetch(), push_refs() and
get_refs_list() to the native Git transport handling methods.  The
take-over process replaces transport->data with a fake data that
these method implementations understand.

While this hack works OK for a single request, it breaks when the
transport needs to make more than one requests.  transport->data
that used to hold necessary information for the specific helper to
work correctly is destroyed during the take-over process.

One codepath that this matters is "git fetch" in auto-follow mode;
when it does not get all the tags that ought to point at the history
it got (which can be determined by looking at the peeled tags in the
initial advertisement) from the primary transfer, it internally
makes a second request to complete the fetch.  Because "take-over"
hack has already destroyed the data necessary to talk to the
transport helper by the time this happens, the second request cannot
make a request to the helper to make another connection to fetch
these additional tags.

Mark such a transport as "cannot_reuse", and use a separate
transport to perform the backfill fetch in order to work around
this breakage.

Note that this problem does not manifest itself when running t5802,
because our upload-pack gives you all the necessary auto-followed
tags during the primary transfer.  You would need to step through
"git fetch" in a debugger, stop immediately after the primary
transfer finishes and writes these auto-followed tags, remove the
tag references and repack/prune the repository to convince the
"find-non-local-tags" procedure that the primary transfer failed to
give us all the necessary tags, and then let it continue, in order
to trigger the bug in the secondary transfer this patch fixes.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-07 16:24:30 -07:00
069d503202 fetch: refactor code that fetches leftover tags
Usually the upload-pack process running on the other side will give
us all the reachable tags we need during the primary object transfer
in do_fetch().  If that does not happen (e.g. the other side may be
running a third-party implementation of upload-pack), we will run
another fetch to pick up leftover tags that we know point at the
commits reachable from our updated tips.

Separate out the code to run this second fetch into a helper
function.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-07 16:24:30 -07:00
db5723c628 fetch: refactor code that prepares a transport
Make a helper function prepare_transport() that returns a transport
to talk to a given remote.

The set_option() helper that used to always affect the file-scope
global "gtransport" now takes a transport as its parameter.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-07 16:24:30 -07:00
af23445925 fetch: rename file-scope global "transport" to "gtransport"
Although many functions in this file take a "struct transport" as a
parameter, "fetch_one()" assigns to the global singleton instance
which is a file-scope static, in order to allow a parameterless
signal handler unlock_pack() to access it.

Rename the variable to gtransport to make sure these uses stand out.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-07 16:24:30 -07:00
b9ccf55e06 t5802: add test for connect helper
This is an attempt to reproduce a problem reported for a third-party
custom "connect" remote helper.  The conjecture is that sometimes
"git fetch" wants to make two connections (one for the primary
transfer with 'follow-tags' option set, and then after noticing that
some tags are not packed because the primary transfer did not have
to send any commit that is pointed by them, another to explicitly
ask for the missing tags), and their "connect" helper is not called
in the second request, breaking the "fetch" as a whole.

Unfortunately this test script does not trigger the alleged failure
and happily passes when talking to upload-pack from git-core (see
patch 5/5 for details).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-07 16:24:30 -07:00
89b0230a20 die_with_status: use "printf '%s\n'", not "echo"
Some implementations of 'echo' (e.g. dash's built-in) interpret
backslash sequences in their arguments.

This triggered at least one bug: the error message of "rebase -i" was
turning \t in commit messages into actual tabulations. There may be
others.

Using "printf '%s\n'" instead avoids this bad behavior, and is the form
used by the "say" function.

Noticed-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-07 08:49:49 -07:00
84d83f642a revert: use the OPT_CMDMODE for parsing, reducing code
The revert command comes with their own implementation of checking
for exclusiveness of parameters.
Now that the OPT_CMDMODE is in place, we can also rely on that macro
instead of cooking that solution for each command itself.

This commit also replaces OPT_BOOLEAN, which was deprecated by b04ba2bb
(parse-options: deprecate OPT_BOOLEAN, 2011-09-27). Instead OPT_BOOL is
used.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-07 08:37:12 -07:00
5d4d1440ba checkout-index: fix negations of even numbers of -n
The --no-create was parsed with OPT_BOOLEAN, which has a counting up
logic implemented. Since b04ba2bb (parse-options: deprecate OPT_BOOLEAN,
2011-09-27) the OPT_BOOLEAN is deprecated and is only a define:
	/* Deprecated synonym */
	#define OPTION_BOOLEAN OPTION_COUNTUP

However the variable not_new, which can be counted up by giving
--no-create multiple times, is used to set a bit in the struct checkout
bitfield (defined in cache.h:969, declared at builtin/checkout-index.c:19):

	state.not_new = not_new;

When assigning a value other than 0 or 1 to a bit, all leading digits but
the last are ignored and only the last bit is used for setting the bit
variable.

Hence the following:
	# in git.git:
	$ git status
	# working directory clean
	rm COPYING
	$ git status
	# deleted:    COPYING
	$ git checkout-index -a -n
	$ git status
	# deleted:    COPYING
	# which is expected as we're telling git to not restore or create
	# files, however:
	$ git checkout-index -a -n -n
	$ git status
	# working directory clean, COPYING is restored again!
	# That's the bug, we're fixing here.

By restraining the variable not_new to a value being definitely 0 or 1
by the macro OPT_BOOL the bug is fixed.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-07 08:37:02 -07:00
21e047dcad config parsing options: allow one flag multiple times
This task emerged from b04ba2bb (parse-options: deprecate OPT_BOOLEAN,
2011-09-27).

This commit introduces a change for the users, after this patch
you can pass one of the config level flags multiple times:
Before:
	$ git config --global --global --list
	error: only one config file at a time.
	usage: ...

Afterwards this will work. This is due to the following check in the code:
	if (use_global_config + use_system_config + use_local_config +
	    !!given_config_file + !!given_config_blob > 1) {
		error("only one config file at a time.");
		usage_with_options(builtin_config_usage, builtin_config_options);
	}

With OPT_BOOL instead of OPT_BOOLEAN the variables use_global_config,
use_system_config, use_local_config will only have the value 0 if the
command line option was not passed or 1 no matter how often the
respective command line option was passed.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-07 08:36:58 -07:00
c83e8c1768 hash-object: replace stdin parsing OPT_BOOLEAN by OPT_COUNTUP
This task emerged from b04ba2bb (parse-options: deprecate OPT_BOOLEAN,
2011-09-27). hash-object is a plumbing layer command, so better
not change the input/output behavior for now.

Unfortunately we have these lines relying on the count up mechanism of
OPT_BOOLEAN:

	if (hashstdin > 1)
		errstr = "Multiple --stdin arguments are not supported";

Using OPT_BOOL will make "git hash-object --stdin --stdin" the same
as "git hash-object --stdin", resulting in just one object, which
will surprise users with an expectation to see two objects hashed.

Because it is not good to silently succeed and give an unexpected
result, even when the expectation is unrealistic, we use COUNTUP to
explicitly catch such an error.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-07 08:30:55 -07:00
05efb7b757 branch, commit, name-rev: ease up boolean conditions
Now that the variables are set by OPT_BOOL, which makes sure
to have the values being 0 or 1 after parsing, we do not need
the double negation to map any other value to 1 for integer
variables.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-07 08:30:30 -07:00
5ce922a014 line-range: reject -L line numbers less than 1
Since inception, git-blame -L has been documented as accepting 1-based
line numbers. When handed a line number less than 1, -L's behavior is
undocumented and undefined; it's also nonsensical and should be
diagnosed as an error. Do so.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:48:55 -07:00
9527604f7d t8001/t8002: blame: add tests of -L line numbers less than 1
git-blame -L is documented as accepting 1-based line numbers. When
handed a line number less than 1, -L's behavior is undocumented and
undefined; it's also nonsensical and should be rejected but is
nevertheless accepted. Demonstrate this shortcoming.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:48:29 -07:00
215e76c7ff line-range: teach -L^:RE to search from start of file
The -L:RE option of blame/log searches from the end of the previous -L
range, if any. Add new notation -L^:RE to override this behavior and
search from start of file.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:48:02 -07:00
1ce761a524 line-range: teach -L:RE to search from end of previous -L range
For consistency with -L/RE/, teach -L:RE to search relative to the end
of the previous -L range, if any.

The new behavior invalidates one test in t4211 which assumes that -L:RE
begins searching at start of file. This test will be resurrected in a
follow-up patch which teaches -L:RE how to override the default relative
search behavior.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:47:34 -07:00
a6ac5f9864 line-range: teach -L^/RE/ to search from start of file
The -L/RE/ option of blame/log searches from the end of the previous -L
range, if any. Add new notation -L^/RE/ to override this behavior and
search from start of file.

The new ^/RE/ syntax is valid only as the <start> argument of
-L<start>,<end>. The <end> argument, as usual, is relative to <start>.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:47:04 -07:00
0bc2cdd550 line-range-format.txt: document -L/RE/ relative search
Option -L/RE/ of blame/log now searches relative to the previous -L
range, if any. Document this.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:46:28 -07:00
3e0d79dbe3 log: teach -L/RE/ to search from end of previous -L range
This is complicated slightly by having to remember the previous -L range
for each file specified via -L<range>:file.

The existing implementation coalesces ranges for each file as each -L is
parsed which makes it impossible to refer back to the previous -L range
for any particular file. Re-implement to instead store each file's set
of -L ranges verbatim, and then coalesce the ranges in a post-processing
step.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:46:12 -07:00
52f4d12648 blame: teach -L/RE/ to search from end of previous -L range
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:44:25 -07:00
815834e9aa line-range: teach -L/RE/ to search relative to anchor point
Range specification -L/RE/ for blame/log unconditionally begins
searching at line one. Mailing list discussion [1] suggests that, in the
presence of multiple -L options, -L/RE/ should search relative to the
endpoint of the previous -L range, if any.

Teach the parsing machinery underlying blame's and log's -L options to
accept a start point for -L/RE/ searches. Follow-up patches will upgrade
blame and log to take advantage of this ability.

[1]: http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/229755/focus=229966

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:36:34 -07:00
5bd9b79a20 blame: document multiple -L support
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:34:43 -07:00
91b5494e18 t8001/t8002: blame: add tests of multiple -L options
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:33:45 -07:00
58dbfa2e59 blame: accept multiple -L ranges
git-blame accepts only a single -L option or none. Clients requiring
blame information for multiple disjoint ranges are therefore forced
either to invoke git-blame multiple times, once for each range, or only
once with no -L option to cover the entire file, both of which can be
costly.  Teach git-blame to accept multiple -L ranges.  Overlapping and
out-of-order ranges are accepted.

In this patch, the X in -LX,Y is absolute (for instance, /RE/ patterns
search from line 1), and Y is relative to X. Follow-up patches provide
more flexibility over how X is anchored.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:29:35 -07:00
753935749f blame: inline one-line function into its lone caller
As of 25ed3412 (Refactor parse_loc; 2013-03-28),
blame.c:prepare_blame_range() became effectively a one-line function
which merely passes its arguments along to another function. This
indirection does not bring clarity to the code. Simplify by inlining
prepare_blame_range() into its lone caller.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:28:09 -07:00
c0babbe695 range-set: publish API for re-use by git-blame -L
git-blame is slated to accept multiple -L ranges.  git-log already
accepts multiple -L's but its implementation of range-set, which
organizes and normalizes -L ranges, is private.  Publish the small
subset of range-set API which is needed for git-blame multiple -L
support.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:27:20 -07:00
0ddd47193c line-range-format.txt: clarify -L:regex usage form
blame/log documentation describes -L option as:

  -L<start>,<end>
  -L:<regex>

  <start> and <end> can take one of these forms:

    * number
    * /regex/
    * +offset or -offset
    * :regex

which is incorrect and confusing since :regex is not one of the valid
forms of <start> or <end>; in fact, it must be -L's lone argument.

Clarify by discussing :<regex> at the same indentation level as "<start>
and <end>...":

  -L<start>,<end>
  -L:<regex>

  <start> and <end> can take one of these forms:

    * number
    * /regex/
    * +offset or -offset

  If :<regex> is given in place of <start> and <end> ...

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:26:26 -07:00
1e159833c7 git-log.txt: place each -L option variation on its own line
Standard practice in Git documentation is for each variation of an
option (such as: -p / --porcelain) to be placed on its own line in the
OPTIONS table. The -L option does not follow suit. It cuddles "-L
<start>,<end>:<file>" and "-L :<regex>:<file>", separated by a comma.
This is inconsistent and potentially confusing since the comma
separating them is typeset the same as the comma in "<start>,<end>". Fix
this by placing each variation on its own line.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:25:22 -07:00
95c16418f0 rm: delete .gitmodules entry of submodules removed from the work tree
Currently using "git rm" on a submodule removes the submodule's work tree
from that of the superproject and the gitlink from the index. But the
submodule's section in .gitmodules is left untouched, which is a leftover
of the now removed submodule and might irritate users (as opposed to the
setting in .git/config, this must stay as a reminder that the user showed
interest in this submodule so it will be repopulated later when an older
commit is checked out).

Let "git rm" help the user by not only removing the submodule from the
work tree but by also removing the "submodule.<submodule name>" section
from the .gitmodules file and stage both. This doesn't happen when the
"--cached" option is used, as it would modify the work tree. This also
silently does nothing when no .gitmodules file is found and only issues a
warning when it doesn't have a section for this submodule. This is because
the user might just use plain gitlinks without the .gitmodules file or has
already removed the section by hand before issuing the "git rm" command
(in which case the warning reminds him that rm would have done that for
him). Only when .gitmodules is found and contains merge conflicts the rm
command will fail and tell the user to resolve the conflict before trying
again.

Also extend the man page to inform the user about this new feature. While
at it promote the submodule sub-section to a chapter as it made not much
sense under "REMOVING FILES THAT HAVE DISAPPEARED FROM THE FILESYSTEM".

In t7610 three uses of "git rm submod" had to be replaced with "git rm
--cached submod" because that test expects .gitmodules and the work tree
to stay untouched. Also in t7400 the tests for the remaining settings in
the .gitmodules file had to be changed to assert that these settings are
missing.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:11:00 -07:00
0656781fad mv: update the path entry in .gitmodules for moved submodules
Currently using "git mv" on a submodule moves the submodule's work tree in
that of the superproject. But the submodule's path setting in .gitmodules
is left untouched, which is now inconsistent with the work tree and makes
git commands that rely on the proper path -> name mapping (like status and
diff) behave strangely.

Let "git mv" help here by not only moving the submodule's work tree but
also updating the "submodule.<submodule name>.path" setting from the
.gitmodules file and stage both. This doesn't happen when no .gitmodules
file is found and only issues a warning when it doesn't have a section for
this submodule. This is because the user might just use plain gitlinks
without the .gitmodules file or has already updated the path setting by
hand before issuing the "git mv" command (in which case the warning
reminds him that mv would have done that for him). Only when .gitmodules
is found and contains merge conflicts the mv command will fail and tell
the user to resolve the conflict before trying again.

Also extend the man page to inform the user about this new feature.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 14:10:35 -07:00
253b27f1c9 t0070: test that git_mkstemps correctly checks return value of open()
Signed-off-by: Dale R. Worley <worley@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-06 11:12:46 -07:00
d4770964d5 config: "git config --get-urlmatch" parses section.<url>.key
Using the same urlmatch_config_entry() infrastructure, add a new
mode "--get-urlmatch" to the "git config" command, to learn values
for the "virtual" two-level variables customized for the specific
URL.

    git config [--<type>] --get-urlmatch <section>[.<key>] <url>

With <section>.<key> fully specified, the configuration data for
<section>.<urlpattern>.<key> for <urlpattern> that best matches the
given <url> is sought (and if not found, <section>.<key> is used)
and reported.  For example, with this configuration:

    [http]
        sslVerify
    [http "https://weak.example.com"]
        cookieFile = /tmp/cookie.txt
        sslVerify = false

You would get

    $ git config --bool --get-urlmatch http.sslVerify https://good.example.com
    true
    $ git config --bool --get-urlmatch http.sslVerify https://weak.example.com
    false

With only <section> specified, you can get a list of all variables
in the section with their values that apply to the given URL.  E.g

    $ git config --get-urlmatch http https://weak.example.com
    http.cookiefile /tmp/cookie.txt
    http.sslverify false

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 16:02:28 -07:00
d9b9169b34 builtin/config: refactor collect_config()
In order to reuse the logic to format the configuration value while
honouring the requested type, split this function into two.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 16:02:28 -07:00
6a56993b2e config: parse http.<url>.<variable> using urlmatch
Use the urlmatch_config_entry() to wrap the underlying
http_options() two-level variable parser in order to set
http.<variable> to the value with the most specific URL in the
configuration.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 16:02:03 -07:00
5d57cac6ae blame: reject empty ranges -L,+0 and -L,-0
Empty ranges -L,+0 and -L,-0 are nonsensical in the context of blame yet
they are accepted (in fact, both are interpreted as -L1,Y where Y is
end-of-file). Report them as invalid.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:54:32 -07:00
82cd7e5d3e t8001/t8002: blame: demonstrate acceptance of bogus -L,+0 and -L,-0
Empty ranges -L,+0 and -L,-0 are nonsensical in the context of blame yet
they are accepted. They should be errors. Demonstrate this shortcoming.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:54:32 -07:00
abba35395f blame: reject empty ranges -LX,+0 and -LX,-0
Empty ranges -LX,+0 and -LX,-0 are nonsensical in the context of blame
yet they are accepted (in fact, both are interpreted as -LX,+2).  Report
them as invalid.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:54:32 -07:00
dedb9129d4 t8001/t8002: blame: demonstrate acceptance of bogus -LX,+0 and -LX,-0
Empty ranges -LX,+0 and -LX,-0 are nonsensical in the context of blame
yet they are accepted. They should be errors. Demonstrate this
shortcoming.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:54:32 -07:00
63828b844d log: fix -L bounds checking bug
When 12da1d1f added -L support to git-log, a broken bounds check was
copied from git-blame -L which incorrectly allows -LX to extend one line
past end of file without reporting an error.  Instead, it generates an
empty range.  Fix this bug.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:54:32 -07:00
449f5c751c t4211: retire soon-to-be unimplementable tests
58960978 and 99780b0a added tests which demonstrated bugs (crashes) in
range-set and line-log when handed empty ranges specified via "log
-LX:file" where X is one greater than the last line of the file.  After
these tests were added, it was realized that the ability to specify an
empty range is a loophole due to a bug in -L bounds checking. That bug
is slated to be fixed in a subsequent patch.

Unfortunately, the closure of this loophole makes it impossible to
continue checking range-set and line-log behavior with regard to empty
ranges since there is no other way to specify empty ranges via the
command-line.  APIs of both facilities are private (file static) so
there likewise is no way to test their behaviors programmatically.
Consequently, retire these two tests.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:54:31 -07:00
25fb8ee445 t4211: log: demonstrate -L bounds checking bug
A bounds checking bug allows the X in -LX to extend one line past the
end of file. For example, given a file with 5 lines, -L6 is accepted as
valid. Demonstrate this problem.

While here, also add tests to check that the remaining cases of X and Y
in -LX,Y are handled correctly at and in the vicinity of end-of-file.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:54:31 -07:00
164a9cf430 blame: fix -L bounds checking bug
Since inception, -LX,Y has correctly reported an out-of-range error when
Y is beyond end of file, however, X was not checked, and an out-of-range
X would cause a crash.  92f9e273 (blame: prevent a segv when -L given
start > EOF; 2010-02-08) attempted to rectify this shortcoming but has
its own off-by-one error which allows X to extend one line past end of
file.  For example, given a file with 5 lines:

  git blame -L5 foo  # OK, blames line 5
  git blame -L6 foo  # accepted, no error, no output, huh?
  git blame -L7 foo  # error "fatal: file foo has only 5 lines"

Fix this bug.

In order to avoid regressing "blame foo" when foo is an empty file, the
fix is slightly more complicated than changing '<' to '<='.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:54:31 -07:00
a8fa8eca3f t8001/t8002: blame: add empty file & partial-line tests
Add boundary case tests, with and without -L, for empty file; file with
one partial line; file with one full line.

The empty file test without -L is of particular interest. Historically,
this case has been supported (empty blame output) and this test protects
against regression by a subsequent patch fixing an off-by-one bug which
incorrectly accepts -LX where X is one past end-of-file.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:54:31 -07:00
580b4f3acf t8001/t8002: blame: demonstrate -L bounds checking bug
A bounds checking bug allows the X in -LX to extend one line past the
end of file. For example, given a file with 5 lines, -L6 is accepted as
valid. Demonstrate this problem.

While here, also add tests to check that the remaining cases of X and Y
in -LX,Y are handled correctly at and in the vicinity of end-of-file.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:54:31 -07:00
f350cf9ea5 t8001/t8002: blame: decompose overly-large test
Checking all bogus -L syntax forms in a single test makes it difficult
to identify the offender when one case fails. Decompose this
conglomerate test in order to check each bad syntax case separately.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:54:30 -07:00
d5d09d4754 Replace deprecated OPT_BOOLEAN by OPT_BOOL
This task emerged from b04ba2bb (parse-options: deprecate OPT_BOOLEAN,
2011-09-27). All occurrences of the respective variables have
been reviewed and none of them relied on the counting up mechanism,
but all of them were using the variable as a true boolean.

This patch does not change semantics of any command intentionally.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:32:19 -07:00
f902207550 checkout: remove superfluous local variable
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:32:19 -07:00
b7df098c6d log, format-patch: parsing uses OPT__QUIET
This patch allows users to use the short form -q on
log and format-patch, which was non possible before.

Also the documentation of format-patch mentions -q now.

The documentation of log doesn't even talk about --quiet, so I'll leave
that for more experienced git contributors. ;)
It doesn't seem to change the default behavior, but in combination
with --stat for example it suppresses the actual stats.
however the only relevant code in log is
	if (quiet)
		rev->diffopt.output_format |= DIFF_FORMAT_NO_OUTPUT;

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:32:19 -07:00
4741edd549 Remove deprecated OPTION_BOOLEAN for parsing arguments
As of b04ba2bb4 OPTION_BOOLEAN was deprecated.
This commit removes all occurrences of OPTION_BOOLEAN.
In b04ba2bb4 Junio suggested to replace it with either
OPTION_SET_INT or OPTION_COUNTUP instead. However a pattern, which
occurred often with the OPTION_BOOLEAN was a hidden boolean parameter.
So I defined OPT_HIDDEN_BOOL as an additional possible parse option
in parse-options.h to make life easy.

The OPT_HIDDEN_BOOL was used in checkout, clone, commit, show-ref.
The only exception, where there was need to fiddle with OPTION_SET_INT
was log and notes. However in these two files there is also a pattern,
so we could think of introducing OPT_NONEG_BOOL.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:32:17 -07:00
580cf0a02e t5551: Remove header from curl cookie file
The URL included in the header appears to vary from curl version to
curl version.  Since we only care about the final few lines, only test
them.  However, make sure the blank line after the header is still
included to make sure there are no extra cookie lines.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gernhardt <brian@gernhardtsoftware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:02:53 -07:00
f2be034c69 OS X: Fix redeclaration of die warning
compat/apple-common-crypto.h uses die() in one of its macros, but was
included in git-compat-util.h before the definition of die.

Fix by simply moving the relevant block after the die/error/warning
declarations.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gernhardt <brian@gernhardtsoftware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeremy Huddleston Sequoia <jeremyhu@apple.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 11:01:09 -07:00
c984938f9c Makefile: Fix APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO with BLK_SHA1
It used to be that APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO did nothing when BLK_SHA1 was
set.  But APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO is now used for more than just SHA1 (see
3ef2bca) so make sure that the appropriate libraries are always set.

Signed-off-by: Brian Gernhardt <brian@gernhardtsoftware.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeremy Huddleston Sequoia <jeremyhu@apple.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 10:47:00 -07:00
53a7296e7e hooks/post-receive-email: set declared encoding to utf-8
Some email clients (e.g., claws-mail) display the message body
incorrectly when the charset is not defined explicitly in a
Content-Type header.  "git log" generates logs in UTF-8 encoding by
default, so add a Content-Type header declaring that encoding to
the emails the post-receive-email example hook sends.

[jn: also setting the Content-Transfer-Encoding so MTAs know what
 kind of mangling might be needed when sending to a non 8-bit clean
 SMTP host]

Requested-by: Alexander Gerasiov <gq@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 10:17:38 -07:00
3109bdb0d1 hooks/post-receive-email: force log messages in UTF-8
Git commands write commit messages in UTF-8 by default, but that
default can be overridden by the [i18n] commitEncoding and
logOutputEncoding settings.  With such a setting, the emails written
by the post-receive-email hook use a mixture of encodings:

 1. Log messages use the configured log output encoding, which is
    meant to be whatever encoding works best with local terminals
    (and does not have much to do with what encoding should be used
    for email)

 2. Filenames are left as is: on Linux, usually UTF-8, and in the Mingw
    port (which uses Unicode filesystem APIs), always UTF-8

 3. The "This is an automated email" preface uses a project description
    from .git/description, which is typically in UTF-8 to support
    gitweb.

So (1) is configurable, and (2) and (3) are unconfigurable and
typically UTF-8.  Override the log output encoding to always use UTF-8
when writing the email to get the best chance of a comprehensible
single-encoding email.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 10:17:36 -07:00
1e88f7a277 hooks/post-receive-email: use plumbing instead of git log/show
This way the hook doesn't have to keep being tweaked as porcelain
learns new features like color and pagination.

While at it, replace the "git rev-list | git shortlog" idiom with
plain "git shortlog" for simplicity.

Except for depending less on the value of settings like '[log]
abbrevCommit', no change in output intended.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 10:17:35 -07:00
97be04077f cat-file: only split on whitespace when %(rest) is used
Commit c334b87b (cat-file: split --batch input lines on whitespace,
2013-07-11) taught `cat-file --batch-check` to split input lines on
the first whitespace, and stash everything after the first token
into the %(rest) output format element.  It claimed:

   Object names cannot contain spaces, so any input with
   spaces would have resulted in a "missing" line.

But that is not correct.  Refs, object sha1s, and various peeling
suffixes cannot contain spaces, but some object names can. In
particular:

  1. Tree paths like "[<tree>]:path with whitespace"

  2. Reflog specifications like "@{2 days ago}"

  3. Commit searches like "rev^{/grep me}" or ":/grep me"

To remain backwards compatible, we cannot split on whitespace by
default, hence we will ship 1.8.4 with the commit reverted.

Resurrect its attempt but in a weaker form; only do the splitting
when "%(rest)" is used in the output format. Since that element did
not exist at all before c334b87, old scripts cannot be affected.

The existence of object names with spaces does mean that you
cannot reliably do:

  echo ":path with space and other data" |
  git cat-file --batch-check="%(objectname) %(rest)"

as it would split the path and feed only ":path" to get_sha1. But
that command is nonsensical. If you wanted to see "and other data"
in "%(rest)", git cannot possibly know where the filename ends and
the "rest" begins.

It might be more robust to have something like "-z" to separate the
input elements. But this patch is still a reasonable step before
having that.  It makes the easy cases easy; people who do not care
about %(rest) do not have to consider it, and the %(rest) code
handles the spaces and newlines of "rev-list --objects" correctly.

Hard cases remain hard but possible (if you might get whitespace in
your input, you do not get to use %(rest) and must split and join
the output yourself using more flexible tools). And most
importantly, it does not preclude us from having different splitting
rules later if a "-z" (or similar) option is added.  So we can make
the hard cases easier later, if we choose to.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 09:30:48 -07:00
838f9a1566 log: use true parents for diff when walking reflogs
The reflog walking logic (git log -g) replaces the true parent list
with the preceding commit in the reflog.  This results in bogus commit
diffs when combined with options such as -p; the diff is against the
reflog predecessor, not the parent of the commit.

Save the true parents on the side, extending the functions from the
previous commit.  The diff logic picks them up and uses them to show
the correct diffs.

We do have to be somewhat careful about repeated calling of
save_parents(), since the reflog may list a commit more than once.  We
now store (commit_list*)-1 to distinguish the "not saved yet" and
"root commit" cases.  This lets us preserve an empty parent list even
if save_parents() is repeatedly called.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@inf.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-05 08:27:00 -07:00
05c1eb1034 push: teach --force-with-lease to smart-http transport
We have been passing enough information to enable the
compare-and-swap logic down to the transport layer, but the
transport helper was not passing it to smart-http transport.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-02 16:11:06 -07:00
77aa93481d send-pack: fix parsing of --force-with-lease option
The last argument for parse_push_cas_option() is if it is "unset"
(i.e. --no-force-with-lease), and we are parsing the option with an
explicit value here, so it has to be 0.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-02 16:07:45 -07:00
7c3ecb3254 Don't close pack fd when free'ing pack windows
Now that close_one_pack() has been introduced to handle file
descriptor pressure, it is not strictly necessary to close the
pack file descriptor in unuse_one_window() when we're under memory
pressure.

Jeff King provided a justification for leaving the pack file open:

   If you close packfile descriptors, you can run into racy situations
   where somebody else is repacking and deleting packs, and they go away
   while you are trying to access them. If you keep a descriptor open,
   you're fine; they last to the end of the process. If you don't, then
   they disappear from under you.

   For normal object access, this isn't that big a deal; we just rescan
   the packs and retry. But if you are packing yourself (e.g., because
   you are a pack-objects started by upload-pack for a clone or fetch),
   it's much harder to recover (and we print some warnings).

Let's do so (or uh, not do so).

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-02 09:27:26 -07:00
88d0db5557 sha1_file: introduce close_one_pack() to close packs on fd pressure
When the number of open packs exceeds pack_max_fds, unuse_one_window()
is called repeatedly to attempt to release the least-recently-used
pack windows, which, as a side-effect, will also close a pack file
after closing its last open window.  If a pack file has been opened,
but no windows have been allocated into it, it will never be selected
by unuse_one_window() and hence its file descriptor will not be
closed.  When this happens, git may exceed the number of file
descriptors permitted by the system.

This latter situation can occur in show-ref or receive-pack during ref
advertisement.  During ref advertisement, receive-pack will iterate
over every ref in the repository and advertise it to the client after
ensuring that the ref exists in the local repository.  If the ref is
located inside a pack, then the pack is opened to ensure that it
exists, but since the object is not actually read from the pack, no
mmap windows are allocated.  When the number of open packs exceeds
pack_max_fds, unuse_one_window() will not be able to find any windows to
free and will not be able to close any packs.  Once the per-process
file descriptor limit is exceeded, receive-pack will produce a warning,
not an error, for each pack it cannot open, and will then most likely
fail with an error to spawn rev-list or index-pack like:

   error: cannot create standard input pipe for rev-list: Too many open files
   error: Could not run 'git rev-list'

This may also occur during upload-pack when refs are packed (in the
packed-refs file) and the number of packs that must be opened to
verify that these packed refs exist exceeds the file descriptor
limit.  If the refs are loose, then upload-pack will read each ref
from the object database (if the object is in a pack, allocating one
or more mmap windows for it) in order to peel tags and advertise the
underlying object.  But when the refs are packed and peeled,
upload-pack will use the peeled sha1 in the packed-refs file and
will not need to read from the pack files, so no mmap windows will
be allocated and just like with receive-pack, unuse_one_window()
will never select these opened packs to close.

When we have file descriptor pressure, we just need to find an open
pack to close.  We can leave the existing mmap windows open.  If
additional windows need to be mapped into the pack file, it will be
reopened when necessary.  If the pack file has been rewritten in the
mean time, open_packed_git_1() should notice when it compares the file
size or the pack's sha1 checksum to what was previously read from the
pack index, and reject it.

Let's introduce a new function close_one_pack() designed specifically
for this purpose to search for and close the least-recently-used pack,
where LRU is defined as (in order of preference):

   * pack with oldest mtime and no allocated mmap windows
   * pack with the least-recently-used windows, i.e. the pack
     with the oldest most-recently-used window, where none of
     the windows are in use
   * pack with the least-recently-used windows

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-02 08:53:54 -07:00
42e0fae98e Provide some linguistic guidance for the documentation.
This will hopefully avoid questions over which spelling and grammar should
be used.  Translators are of course free to create localizations for
specific English dialects.

Signed-off-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-01 13:13:52 -07:00
e69fa70f48 t5540/5541: smart-http does not support "--force-with-lease"
The push() method in remote-curl.c is not told and does not pass the
necessary information to underlying send-pack, so this extension
does not yet work.  Leave a note in the test suite.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-01 11:10:36 -07:00
53d00b39ce log: use true parents for diff even when rewriting
When using pathspec filtering in combination with diff-based log
output, parent simplification happens before the diff is computed.
The diff is therefore against the *simplified* parents.

This works okay, arguably by accident, in the normal case:
simplification reduces to one parent as long as the commit is TREESAME
to it.  So the simplified parent of any given commit must have the
same tree contents on the filtered paths as its true (unfiltered)
parent.

However, --full-diff breaks this guarantee, and indeed gives pretty
spectacular results when comparing the output of

  git log --graph --stat ...
  git log --graph --full-diff --stat ...

(--graph internally kicks in parent simplification, much like
--parents).

To fix it, store a copy of the parent list before simplification (in a
slab) whenever --full-diff is in effect.  Then use the stored parents
instead of the simplified ones in the commit display code paths.  The
latter do not actually check for --full-diff to avoid duplicated code;
they just grab the original parents if save_parents() has not been
called for this revision walk.

For ordinary commits it should be obvious that this is the right thing
to do.

Merge commits are a bit subtle.  Observe that with default
simplification, merge simplification is an all-or-nothing decision:
either the merge is TREESAME to one parent and disappears, or it is
different from all parents and the parent list remains intact.
Redundant parents are not pruned, so the existing code also shows them
as a merge.

So if we do show a merge commit, the parent list just consists of the
rewrite result on each parent.  Running, e.g., --cc on this in
--full-diff mode is not very useful: if any commits were skipped, some
hunks will disagree with all sides of the merge (with one side,
because commits were skipped; with the others, because they didn't
have those changes in the first place).  This triggers --cc showing
these hunks spuriously.

Therefore I believe that even for merge commits it is better to show
the diffs wrt. the original parents.

Reported-by: Uwe Kleine-König <u.kleine-koenig@pengutronix.de>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@inf.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-08-01 10:25:48 -07:00
836b6fb5a5 config: add generic callback wrapper to parse section.<url>.key
Existing configuration parsing functions (e.g. http_options() in
http.c) know how to parse two-level configuration variable names.
We would like to exploit them and parse something like this:

	[http]
		sslVerify = true
	[http "https://weak.example.com"]
		sslVerify = false

and pretend as if http.sslVerify were set to false when talking to
"https://weak.example.com/path".

Introduce `urlmatch_config_entry()` wrapper that:

 - is called with the target URL (e.g. "https://weak.example.com/path"),
   and the two-level variable parser (e.g. `http_options`);

 - uses `url_normalize()` and `match_urls()` to see if configuration
   data matches the target URL; and

 - calls the traditional two-level configuration variable parser
   only for the configuration data whose <url> part matches the
   target URL (and if there are multiple matches, only do so if the
   current match is a better match than the ones previously seen).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-31 14:58:42 -07:00
3402a8dc48 config: add helper to normalize and match URLs
Some http.* configuration variables need to take values customized
for the URL we are talking to.  We may want to set http.sslVerify to
true in general but to false only for a certain site, for example,
with a configuration file like this:

	[http]
		sslVerify = true
	[http "https://weak.example.com"]
		sslVerify = false

and let the configuration machinery pick up the latter only when
talking to "https://weak.example.com".  The latter needs to kick in
not only when the URL is exactly "https://weak.example.com", but
also is anything that "match" it, e.g.

	https://weak.example.com/test
	https://me@weak.example.com/test

The <url> in the configuration key consists of the following parts,
and is considered a match to the URL we are attempting to access
under certain conditions:

  . Scheme (e.g., `https` in `https://example.com/`). This field
    must match exactly between the config key and the URL.

  . Host/domain name (e.g., `example.com` in `https://example.com/`).
    This field must match exactly between the config key and the URL.

  . Port number (e.g., `8080` in `http://example.com:8080/`).  This
    field must match exactly between the config key and the URL.
    Omitted port numbers are automatically converted to the correct
    default for the scheme before matching.

  . Path (e.g., `repo.git` in `https://example.com/repo.git`). The
    path field of the config key must match the path field of the
    URL either exactly or as a prefix of slash-delimited path
    elements.  A config key with path `foo/` matches URL path
    `foo/bar`.  A prefix can only match on a slash (`/`) boundary.
    Longer matches take precedence (so a config key with path
    `foo/bar` is a better match to URL path `foo/bar` than a config
    key with just path `foo/`).

  . User name (e.g., `me` in `https://me@example.com/repo.git`). If
    the config key has a user name, it must match the user name in
    the URL exactly. If the config key does not have a user name,
    that config key will match a URL with any user name (including
    none), but at a lower precedence than a config key with a user
    name.

Longer matches take precedence over shorter matches.

This step adds two helper functions `url_normalize()` and
`match_urls()` to help implement the above semantics. The
normalization rules are based on RFC 3986 and should result in any
two equivalent urls being a match.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-31 14:57:57 -07:00
3f4ccd2b0b http.c: fix parsing of http.sslCertPasswordProtected variable
The existing code triggers only when the configuration variable is
set to true.  Once the variable is set to true in a more generic
configuration file (e.g. ~/.gitconfig), it cannot be overriden to
false in the repository specific one (e.g. .git/config).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-31 12:09:13 -07:00
5fee995244 submodule.c: add .gitmodules staging helper functions
Add the new is_staging_gitmodules_ok() and stage_updated_gitmodules()
functions to submodule.c. The first makes it possible for call sites to
see if the .gitmodules file did contain any unstaged modifications they
would accidentally stage in addition to those they intend to stage
themselves. The second function stages all modifications to the
.gitmodules file, both will be used by subsequent patches for the mv
and rm commands.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-30 14:39:56 -07:00
a88c915de9 mv: move submodules using a gitfile
When moving a submodule which uses a gitfile to point to the git directory
stored in .git/modules/<name> of the superproject two changes must be made
to make the submodule work: the .git file and the core.worktree setting
must be adjusted to point from work tree to git directory and back.

Achieve that by remembering which submodule uses a gitfile by storing the
result of read_gitfile() of each submodule. If that is not NULL the new
function connect_work_tree_and_git_dir() is called after renaming the
submodule's work tree which updates the two settings to the new values.

Extend the man page to inform the user about that feature (and while at it
change the description to not talk about a script anymore, as mv is a
builtin for quite some time now).

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-30 13:52:53 -07:00
1150246828 mv: move submodules together with their work trees
Currently the attempt to use "git mv" on a submodule errors out with:

  fatal: source directory is empty, source=<src>, destination=<dest>

The reason is that mv searches for the submodule with a trailing slash in
the index, which it doesn't find (because it is stored without a trailing
slash). As it doesn't find any index entries inside the submodule it
claims the directory would be empty even though it isn't.

Fix that by searching for the name without a trailing slash and continue
if it is a submodule. Then rename() will move the submodule work tree just
like it moves a file.

Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-30 13:52:53 -07:00
e6b722db09 tag: use OPT_CMDMODE
This is just a demonstration of how the code would look like; I do
not think it is particularly easier to read than before myself.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-30 12:31:27 -07:00
1158826394 parse-options: add OPT_CMDMODE()
This can be used to define a set of mutually exclusive "command
mode" options, and automatically catch use of more than one from
that set as an error.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-30 12:23:31 -07:00
912b2acf2f http: add http.savecookies option to write out HTTP cookies
HTTP servers may send Set-Cookie headers in a response and expect them
to be set on subsequent requests. By default, libcurl behavior is to
store such cookies in memory and reuse them across requests within a
single session. However, it may also make sense, depending on the
server and the cookies, to store them across sessions. Provide users
an option to enable this behavior, writing cookies out to the same
file specified in http.cookiefile.

Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-30 09:19:04 -07:00
3ef2bcad02 imap-send: use Apple's Security framework for base64 encoding
Use Apple's supported functions for base64 encoding instead
of the deprecated OpenSSL functions.

Signed-off-by: Jeremy Huddleston <jeremyhu@apple.com>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-30 08:53:24 -07:00
82aae5c1e5 quote: remove sq_quote_print()
Remove sq_quote_print() since it has no callers.

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-30 08:13:38 -07:00
7da2f28c6b tar-tree: remove dependency on sq_quote_print()
By rewriting the loop that formats the argv[] in cmd_tar_tree()
function using sq_quote_argv() for code simplicity, the last use of
sq_quote_print() goes away.

Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-30 08:10:35 -07:00
10d0167fef for-each-ref, quote: convert *_quote_print -> *_quote_buf
The print_value() function in for-each-ref.c prints values to stdout
immediately using {sq|perl|python|tcl}_quote_print().  Change these
lower-level quote functions to instead leave their results in strbuf
so that we can later add post-processing to the results of them.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-30 08:06:27 -07:00
09c5ae5a50 editor: use canonicalized absolute path
By improving the relative_path() algorithm, e02ca72 (path.c:
refactor relative_path(), not only strip prefix, 2013-06-25)
uncovered a latent bug in Emacs.  While most editor applications
like cat and vim handle non-canonicalized relative paths fine, emacs
does not.  This is due to a long-standing bug in emacs, where it
refuses to resolve symlinks in the supplied path:

  #!/bin/sh
  cd /tmp
  mkdir z z/a z/b
  echo moodle >z/a/file
  ln -s z/b
  cd b
  emacs ../a/file # fail: attempts to open /tmp/a/file

Even if emacs were to be patched to fix this bug, it may be nicer to
help users running older versions.

Note that this can potentially regress for users of all editors,
when they ask "what file am I editing?" to the editor, as it is
likely to answer with an unsightly long full path.

Co-authored-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-29 12:15:27 -07:00
9ba380481c smart http: use the same connectivity check on cloning
This is an extension of c6807a4 (clone: open a shortcut for
connectivity check - 2013-05-26) to reduce the cost of connectivity
check at clone time, this time with smart http protocol.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-23 12:18:18 -07:00
4838c81fab rm: do not set a variable twice without intermediate reading.
Just the next line assigns a non-null value to seen.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-23 11:33:03 -07:00
d887cc184d t5533: test "push --force-with-lease"
Prepare two repositories, src and dst, the latter of which is a
clone of the former (with tracking branches), and push from the
latter into the former, with various --force-with-lease options.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-22 22:42:12 -07:00
631b5ef219 push --force-with-lease: tie it all together
This teaches the deepest part of the callchain for "git push" (and
"git send-pack") to enforce "the old value of the ref must be this,
otherwise fail this push" (aka "compare-and-swap" / "--lockref").

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-22 22:33:21 -07:00
91048a9537 push --force-with-lease: implement logic to populate old_sha1_expect[]
This plugs the push_cas_option data collected by the command line
option parser to the transport system with a new function
apply_push_cas(), which is called after match_push_refs() has
already been called.

At this point, we know which remote we are talking to, and what
remote refs we are going to update, so we can fill in the details
that may have been missing from the command line, such as

 (1) what abbreviated refname the user gave us matches the actual
     refname at the remote; and

 (2) which remote-tracking branch in our local repository to read
     the value of the object to expect at the remote.

to populate the old_sha1_expect[] field of each of the remote ref.
As stated in the documentation, the use of remote-tracking branch
as the default is a tentative one, and we may come up with a better
logic as we gain experience.

Still nobody uses this information, which is the topic of the next
patch.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-22 22:18:19 -07:00
28f5d17611 remote.c: add command line option parser for "--force-with-lease"
Update "git push" and "git send-pack" to parse this commnd line
option.

The intended sematics is:

 * "--force-with-lease" alone, without specifying the details, will
   protect _all_ remote refs that are going to be updated by
   requiring their current value to be the same as some reasonable
   default, unless otherwise specified;

 * "--force-with-lease=refname", without specifying the expected
   value, will protect that refname, if it is going to be updated,
   by requiring its current value to be the same as some reasonable
   default.

 * "--force-with-lease=refname:value" will protect that refname, if
   it is going to be updated, by requiring its current value to be
   the same as the specified value; and

 * "--no-force-with-lease" will cancel all the previous --force-with-lease on the
   command line.

For now, "some reasonable default" is tentatively defined as "the
value of the remote-tracking branch we have for the ref of the
remote being updated", and it is an error if we do not have such a
remote-tracking branch.  But this is known to be fragile, its use is
not yet recommended, and hopefully we will find more reasonable
default as we gain experience with this feature.  The manual marks
the feature as experimental unless the expected value is specified
explicitly for this reason.

Because the command line options are parsed _before_ we know which
remote we are pushing to, there needs further processing to the
parsed data after we instantiate the transport object to:

 * expand "refname" given by the user to a full refname to be
   matched with the list of "struct ref" used in match_push_refs()
   and set_ref_status_for_push(); and

 * learning the actual local ref that is the remote-tracking branch
   for the specified remote ref.

Further, some processing need to be deferred until we find the set
of remote refs and match_push_refs() returns in order to find the
ones that need to be checked after explicit ones have been processed
for "--force-with-lease" (no specific details).

These post-processing will be the topic of the next patch.

This option was originally called "cas" (for "compare and swap"),
the name which nobody liked because it was too technical.  The
second attempt called it "lockref" (because it is conceptually like
pushing after taking a lock) but the word "lock" was hated because
it implied that it may reject push by others, which is not the way
this option works.  This round calls it "force-with-lease".  You
assume you took the lease on the ref when you fetched to decide what
the rebased history should be, and you can push back only if the
lease has not been broken.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-22 22:02:55 -07:00
49c639139c rev-parse(1): logically group options
The options section of the git-rev-parse manual page has grown
organically so that there now does not seem to be much logic behind the
ordering of the options.  It also does not make it clear that certain
options must appear first on the command line.

Address this by reorganising the options into groups with subheadings.
The text of option descriptions does not change.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-22 10:43:21 -07:00
68889b416d rev-parse: remove restrictions on some options
The "--local-env-vars" and "--resolve-git-dir" arguments to
git-rev-parse are currently only handled if they appear first on the
command line (in the case of "--local-env-vars", only if it is the only
argument).  While it may not make sense to use these options when any
others are specified, there is no reason for this restriction and it
might confuse users if these arguments appear to be ignored.

There is no need for any documentation change here as the restrictions
on these options are not documented.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-22 10:43:20 -07:00
c48f6816f0 diff: remove "diff-files -q" in a version of Git in a distant future
This was inherited from "show-diff -q" that was invented to tell
comparison between the index and the working tree to ignore only
removals in 2005.

These days, it is spelled as "--diff-filter=d".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-19 15:22:29 -07:00
95a7c546b0 diff: deprecate -q option to diff-files
This reimplements the ancient "-q" option to "git diff-files" that
was inherited from "show-diff -q" in terms of "--diff-filter=d".  We
will be deprecating the "-q" option, so let's issue a warning when
we do so.

Incidentally this also tentatively fixes "git diff --no-index" to
honor "-q" and hide deletions; the use will get the same warning.

We should remove the support for "-q" in a future version but it is
not that urgent.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-19 15:20:47 -07:00
9c0810732c Git.pm: revert _temp_cache use of temp_is_locked
When the temp_is_locked function was introduced, there was
a desire to make _temp_cache use it.  Unfortunately due to the
various tests and logic flow involved changing the _temp_cache
function to use the new temp_is_locked function is problematic
as _temp_cache needs a slightly different test than is provided
by the temp_is_locked function.

This change reverts use of temp_is_locked in the _temp_cache
function and restores the original code that existed there
before the temp_is_locked function was added.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-18 20:31:43 -07:00
737c5a9cde fetch: make --prune configurable
Without "git fetch --prune", remote-tracking branches for a branch
the other side already has removed will stay forever.  Some people
want to always run "git fetch --prune".

To accommodate users who want to either prune always or when fetching
from a particular remote, add two new configuration variables
"fetch.prune" and "remote.<name>.prune":

 - "fetch.prune" allows to enable prune for all fetch operations.

 - "remote.<name>.prune" allows to change the behaviour per remote.

The latter will naturally override the former, and the --[no-]prune
option from the command line will override the configured default.

Since --prune is a potentially destructive operation (Git doesn't
keep reflogs for deleted references yet), we don't want to prune
without users consent, so this configuration will not be on by
default.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Schubert <mschub@elegosoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-18 15:59:46 -07:00
7f2ea5f0f2 diff: allow lowercase letter to specify what change class to exclude
In order to express "we do not care about deletions", we had to say
"--diff-filter=ACMRTXUB", giving all the possible change class
except for the one we do not want, "D".

This is cumbersome.  As all the change classes are in uppercase,
allow their lowercase counterpart to selectively exclude the class
from the output.  When such a negated change class is in the input,
start the filter option with the full bits set.

This would allow us to express the old "show-diff -q" with
"git diff-files --diff-filter=d".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-17 17:17:39 -07:00
bf142ec434 diff: reject unknown change class given to --diff-filter
We used to accept "git diff --diff-filter=Q" (note that there is no
such change class 'Q') silently and showed no output (because there
is no such change class 'Q').

Error out when such an input is given.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-17 16:24:14 -07:00
1ecc1cbd3a diff: preparse --diff-filter string argument
Instead of running strchr() on the list of status characters over
and over again, parse the --diff-filter option into bitfields and
use the bits to see if the change to the filepair matches the status
requested.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-17 16:23:34 -07:00
08578fa13e diff: factor out match_filter()
diffcore_apply_filter() checks if a filepair matches the filter
given with the "--diff-filter" option for each input filepairs with
a fairly complex expression in two places.

Create a helper function and call it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-17 15:09:34 -07:00
949226fe77 diff: pass the whole diff_options to diffcore_apply_filter()
The --diff-filter=<arg> option given by the user is kept as a
string, and passed to the underlying diffcore_apply_filter()
function as a string for each resulting path we run number of
strchr() to see if each class of change among ACDMRTXUB is meant to
be given.

Change the function signature to pass the whole diff_options, so
that we can pre-parse this string in the next patch.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-17 14:19:24 -07:00
db6a6adabf t6131 - skip tests if on case-insensitive file system
This test fails on Cygwin where the default system configuration does not
support case sensitivity (only case retention), so don't run the test on
such systems.

Signed-off-by: Mark Levedahl <mlevedahl@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-17 12:47:59 -07:00
93d9353716 parse_pathspec: accept :(icase)path syntax
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 12:14:38 -07:00
bd30c2e484 pathspec: support :(glob) syntax
:(glob)path differs from plain pathspec that it uses wildmatch with
WM_PATHNAME while the other uses fnmatch without FNM_PATHNAME. The
difference lies in how '*' (and '**') is processed.

With the introduction of :(glob) and :(literal) and their global
options --[no]glob-pathspecs, the user can:

 - make everything literal by default via --noglob-pathspecs
   --literal-pathspecs cannot be used for this purpose as it
   disables _all_ pathspec magic.

 - individually turn on globbing with :(glob)

 - make everything globbing by default via --glob-pathspecs

 - individually turn off globbing with :(literal)

The implication behind this is, there is no way to gain the default
matching behavior (i.e. fnmatch without FNM_PATHNAME). You either get
new globbing or literal. The old fnmatch behavior is considered
deprecated and discouraged to use.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:10 -07:00
a16bf9dd74 pathspec: make --literal-pathspecs disable pathspec magic
--literal-pathspecs and its equivalent environment variable are
probably used for scripting. In that setting, pathspec magic may be
unwanted. Disabling globbing in individual pathspec can be done via
:(literal) magic.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:09 -07:00
5c6933d201 pathspec: support :(literal) syntax for noglob pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:09 -07:00
341003e715 kill limit_pathspec_to_literal() as it's only used by parse_pathspec()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:09 -07:00
233c3e6c59 parse_pathspec: preserve prefix length via PATHSPEC_PREFIX_ORIGIN
The prefix length is passed from one command to another via the new
magic 'prefix'. The magic is for parse_pathspec's internal use only,
not visible to parse_pathspec's callers.

Prefix length is not preserved across commands when --literal-pathspecs
is specified (no magic is allowed, including 'prefix'). That's OK
because we know all paths are literal. No magic, no special treatment
regarding prefix. (This may be no longer true if we make :(glob)
default)

Other options to preserve the prefix include saving it to env variable
or quoting. Env var way (at least _one_ env var) is not suitable
because the prefix is not the same for all pathspecs. Pathspecs
starting with "../" will eat into the prefix part.

We could also preserve 'prefix' across commands by quoting the prefix
part, then dequoting on receiving. But it may not be 100% accurate, we
may dequote longer than the original prefix part, for example. That
may be good or not, but it's not the purpose.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:09 -07:00
645a29c40a parse_pathspec: make sure the prefix part is wildcard-free
Prepending prefix to pathspec is a trick to workaround the fact that
commands can be executed in a subdirectory, but all git commands run
at worktree's root. The prefix part should always be treated as
literal string. Make it so.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:09 -07:00
b3920bbdc5 rename field "raw" to "_raw" in struct pathspec
This patch is essentially no-op. It helps catching new use of this
field though. This field is introduced as an intermediate step for the
pathspec conversion and will be removed eventually. At this stage no
more access sites should be introduced.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:09 -07:00
61588ccf78 tree-diff: remove the use of pathspec's raw[] in follow-rename codepath
Put a checkpoint to guard unsupported pathspec features in future.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:09 -07:00
84b8b5d1fa remove match_pathspec() in favor of match_pathspec_depth()
match_pathspec_depth was created to replace match_pathspec (see
61cf282 (pathspec: add match_pathspec_depth() - 2010-12-15). It took
more than two years, but the replacement finally happens :-)

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:09 -07:00
9a08727443 remove init_pathspec() in favor of parse_pathspec()
While at there, move free_pathspec() to pathspec.c

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:09 -07:00
bd1928df1d remove diff_tree_{setup,release}_paths
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:09 -07:00
827f4d6c21 convert common_prefix() to use struct pathspec
The code now takes advantage of nowildcard_len field.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:09 -07:00
3efe8e4381 convert add_files_to_cache to take struct pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:08 -07:00
7327d3d1b7 convert {read,fill}_directory to take struct pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:08 -07:00
9b2d61499b convert refresh_index to take struct pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:08 -07:00
17ddc66e70 convert report_path_error to take struct pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:08 -07:00
18e4f40599 checkout: convert read_tree_some to take struct pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:08 -07:00
5ab06518a7 convert unmerge_cache to take struct pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:08 -07:00
480ca6449e convert run_add_interactive to use struct pathspec
This passes the pathspec, more or less unmodified, to
git-add--interactive. The command itself does not process pathspec. It
simply passes the pathspec to other builtin commands. So if all those
commands support pathspec, we're good.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:08 -07:00
5ab2a2dabd convert read_cache_preload() to take struct pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:08 -07:00
78a951432d line-log: convert to use parse_pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:08 -07:00
f8144c9fcf reset: convert to use parse_pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:08 -07:00
5a76aff1a6 add: convert to use parse_pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:08 -07:00
931eab64ad check-ignore: convert to use parse_pathspec
check-ignore (at least the test suite) seems to rely on the pattern
order. PATHSPEC_KEEP_ORDER is introduced to explictly express this.
The lack of PATHSPEC_MAXDEPTH_VALID is sufficient because it's the
only flag that reorders pathspecs, but it's less obvious that way.

Cc: Adam Spiers <git@adamspiers.org>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:07 -07:00
f3e743a0d9 archive: convert to use parse_pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:07 -07:00
9e06d6ed76 ls-files: convert to use parse_pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:07 -07:00
29211a93c1 rm: convert to use parse_pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:07 -07:00
817b345aeb checkout: convert to use parse_pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:07 -07:00
01a10b0af9 rerere: convert to use parse_pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:07 -07:00
15b55ae06a status: convert to use parse_pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:07 -07:00
6654c8894e commit: convert to use parse_pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:07 -07:00
893d839970 clean: convert to use parse_pathspec
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:07 -07:00
8f4f8f4579 guard against new pathspec magic in pathspec matching code
GUARD_PATHSPEC() marks pathspec-sensitive code, basically all those
that touch anything in 'struct pathspec' except fields "nr" and
"original". GUARD_PATHSPEC() is not supposed to fail. It's mainly to
help the designers catch unsupported codepaths.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:07 -07:00
dad2586a6b parse_pathspec: support prefixing original patterns
This makes 'original' suitable for passing to an external command
because all pathspec magic is left in place, provided that the
external command understands pathspec. The prefixing is needed because
we usually launch a subcommand at worktree's top directory and the
subcommand can no longer calculate the prefix itself.

This slightly affects the original purpose of 'original'
(i.e. reporting). We should report without prefixing. So only turn
this flag on when you know you are about to pass the result straight
away to an external command.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:07 -07:00
8745024422 parse_pathspec: support stripping/checking submodule paths
PATHSPEC_SYMLINK_LEADING_PATH and _STRIP_SUBMODULE_SLASH_EXPENSIVE are
respectively the alternate implementation of
pathspec.c:die_if_path_beyond_symlink() and
pathspec.c:check_path_for_gitlink(). They are intended to replace
those functions when builtin/add.c and builtin/check-ignore.c are
converted to use parse_pathspec.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:06 -07:00
b69bb3fc27 parse_pathspec: support stripping submodule trailing slashes
This flag is equivalent to builtin/ls-files.c:strip_trailing_slashes()
and is intended to replace that function when ls-files is converted to
use parse_pathspec.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:06 -07:00
6330a17199 parse_pathspec: add special flag for max_depth feature
match_pathspec_depth() and tree_entry_interesting() check max_depth
field in order to support "git grep --max-depth". The feature
activation is tied to "recursive" field, which led to some unwanted
activation, e.g. 5c8eeb8 (diff-index: enable recursive pathspec
matching in unpack_trees - 2012-01-15).

This patch decouples the activation from "recursive" field, puts it in
"magic" field instead. This makes sure that only "git grep" can
activate this feature. And because parse_pathspec knows when the
feature is not used, it does not need to sort pathspec (required for
max_depth to work correctly). A small win for non-grep cases.

Even though a new magic flag is introduced, no magic syntax is. The
magic can be only enabled by parse_pathspec() caller. We might someday
want to support ":(maxdepth:10)src." It all depends on actual use
cases.

max_depth feature cannot be enabled via init_pathspec() anymore. But
that's ok because init_pathspec() is on its way to /dev/null.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:06 -07:00
0fdc2ae512 convert some get_pathspec() calls to parse_pathspec()
These call sites follow the pattern:

   paths = get_pathspec(prefix, argv);
   init_pathspec(&pathspec, paths);

which can be converted into a single parse_pathspec() call.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:06 -07:00
fc12261fea parse_pathspec: add PATHSPEC_PREFER_{CWD,FULL} flags
We have two ways of dealing with empty pathspec:

1. limit it to current prefix
2. match the entire working directory

Some commands go with #1, some #2. get_pathspec() and parse_pathspec()
only support #1. Make parse_pathspec() reject empty pathspec by
default. #1 and #2 can be specified via new flags. This makes it more
expressive about default behavior at command level.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:06 -07:00
d2ce133195 parse_pathspec: save original pathspec for reporting
We usually use pathspec_item's match field for pathspec error
reporting. However "match" (or "raw") does not show the magic part,
which will play more important role later on. Preserve exact user
input for reporting.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:06 -07:00
87323bdace add parse_pathspec() that converts cmdline args to struct pathspec
Currently to fill a struct pathspec, we do:

   const char **paths;
   paths = get_pathspec(prefix, argv);
   ...
   init_pathspec(&pathspec, paths);

"paths" can only carry bare strings, which loses information from
command line arguments such as pathspec magic or the prefix part's
length for each argument.

parse_pathspec() is introduced to combine the two calls into one. The
plan is gradually replace all get_pathspec() and init_pathspec() with
parse_pathspec(). get_pathspec() now becomes a thin wrapper of
parse_pathspec().

parse_pathspec() allows the caller to reject the pathspec magics that
it does not support. When a new pathspec magic is introduced, we can
enable it per command after making sure that all underlying code has no
problem with the new magic.

"flags" parameter is currently unused. But it would allow callers to
pass certain instructions to parse_pathspec, for example forcing
literal pathspec when no magic is used.

With the introduction of parse_pathspec, there are now two functions
that can initialize struct pathspec: init_pathspec and
parse_pathspec. Any semantic changes in struct pathspec must be
reflected in both functions. init_pathspec() will be phased out in
favor of parse_pathspec().

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:06 -07:00
e4d92cdcd9 pathspec: add copy_pathspec
Because free_pathspec wants to free "items" pointer in the pathspec
structure, a simple structure assignment is not enough if you want to
copy an existing pathspec into another.  Freeing the original will
damage the copy unless a deep copy is made.

Note that the strings in pathspec->items->match and the array
pathspec->raw[] are still shared between the original and the copy.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:06 -07:00
f01d9820e7 pathspec: i18n-ize error strings in pathspec parsing code
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:06 -07:00
64acde94ef move struct pathspec and related functions to pathspec.[ch]
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:06 -07:00
5fee4df7f4 clean: remove unused variable "seen"
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-15 10:56:06 -07:00
f7cd8c50b9 check-attr -z: a single -z should apply to both input and output
Unless a command has separate --nul-terminated-{input,output}
options, the --nul-terminated-records (-z) option should apply
to both input and output for consistency.  The caller knows that its
input paths may need to be protected for LF, and the program shows
these problematic paths to its output.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-11 23:10:22 -07:00
d6dcb92a1d check-ignore -z: a single -z should apply to both input and output
Unless a command has separate --nul-terminated-{input,output}
options, the --nul-terminated-records (-z) option should apply
to both input and output for consistency.  The caller knows that its
input paths may need to be protected for LF, and the program shows
these problematic paths to its output.

The code already did the right thing.  Only the help text needs
fixing.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-11 23:07:55 -07:00
94a55e4e9f check-attr: the name of the character is NUL, not NULL
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-11 23:07:55 -07:00
800531a866 check-ignore: the name of the character is NUL, not NULL
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-11 23:07:55 -07:00
ab22d2eb83 builtin/push.c: use OPT_BOOL, not OPT_BOOLEAN
The command line parser of "git push" for "--tags", "--delete", and
"--thin" options still used outdated OPT_BOOLEAN.  Because these
options do not give escalating levels when given multiple times,
they should use OPT_BOOL.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-08 22:19:15 -07:00
47a5918536 cache.h: move remote/connect API out of it
The definition of "struct ref" in "cache.h", a header file so
central to the system, always confused me.  This structure is not
about the local ref used by sha1-name API to name local objects.

It is what refspecs are expanded into, after finding out what refs
the other side has, to define what refs are updated after object
transfer succeeds to what values.  It belongs to "remote.h" together
with "struct refspec".

While we are at it, also move the types and functions related to the
Git transport connection to a new header file connect.h

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-08 14:34:24 -07:00
8ac251b66b git-svn: allow git-svn fetching to work using serf
When attempting to git-svn fetch files from an svn https?: url using
the serf library (the only choice starting with svn 1.8) the following
errors can occur:

Temp file with moniker 'svn_delta' already in use at Git.pm line 1250
Temp file with moniker 'git_blob' already in use at Git.pm line 1250

David Rothenberger <daveroth@acm.org> has determined the cause to
be that ra_serf does not drive the delta editor in a depth-first
manner [...]. Instead, the calls come in this order:

1. open_root
2. open_directory
3. add_file
4. apply_textdelta
5. add_file
6. apply_textdelta

When using the ra_serf access method, git-svn can end up needing
to create several temp files before the first one is closed.

This change causes a new temp file moniker to be generated if the
one that would otherwise have been used is currently locked.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-07 15:43:03 -07:00
4e63dcc86c Git.pm: add new temp_is_locked function
The temp_is_locked function can be used to determine whether
or not a given name previously passed to temp_acquire is
currently locked.

Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-07-07 15:43:02 -07:00
62bfa11cc9 fast-import: allow moving the root tree
Because fast-import.c::tree_content_remove does not check for the empty
path, it is not possible to move the root tree to a subdirectory.
Instead the error "Path  not in branch" is produced (note the double
space where the empty path has been inserted).

Fix this by explicitly checking for the empty path and handling it.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-06-23 14:22:28 -07:00
e0eb6b9720 fast-import: allow ls or filecopy of the root tree
Commit 178e1de (fast-import: don't allow 'ls' of path with empty
components, 2012-03-09) restricted paths which:

    . contain an empty directory component (e.g. foo//bar is invalid),
    . end with a directory separator (e.g. foo/ is invalid),
    . start with a directory separator (e.g. /foo is invalid).

However, the implementation also caught the empty path, which should
represent the root tree.  Relax this restriction so that the empty path
is explicitly allowed and refers to the root tree.

Reported-by: Dave Abrahams <dave@boostpro.com>
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-06-23 14:22:28 -07:00
adefdba536 fast-import: set valid mode on root tree in "ls"
This prevents a failure later when we lift the restriction on ls with
the empty path.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-06-23 14:22:28 -07:00
aca70610b6 t9300: document fast-import empty path issues
When given an empty path, fast-import sometimes reports "missing"
instead of using the root tree object.  On top of this, for "ls" and
file copy (but not move) it dies with "Empty path component found in
input".

Document this behaviour with failing test cases.

Reported-by: Dave Abrahams <dave@boostpro.com>
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-06-23 14:22:28 -07:00
c3e2d18996 setup_reflog_action: document the rules for using GIT_REFLOG_ACTION
The set_reflog_action helper (in git-sh-setup) is designed to be
used once at the very top of a program, like this in "git am", for
example:

	set_reflog_action am

The helper function sets the given string to GIT_REFLOG_ACTION only
when GIT_REFLOG_ACTION is not yet set.  Thanks to this, "git am",
when run as the top-level program, will use "am" in GIT_REFLOG_ACTION
and the reflog entries made by whatever it does will record the
updates of refs done by "am".

Because of the conditional assignment, when "git am" is run as a
subprogram (i.e. an implementation detail) of "git rebase" that
already sets GIT_REFLOG_ACTION to its own name, the call in "git am"
to the helper function at the beginning will *not* have any effect.

So "git rebase" can do this:

	set_reflog_action rebase
	... do its own preparation, like checking out "onto" commit
        ... decide to do "format-patch" to "am" pipeline
        	git format-patch --stdout >mbox
		git am mbox

and the reflog entries made inside "git am" invocation will say
"rebase", not "am".

Calls to "git" commands that update refs would use GIT_REFLOG_ACTION
to record who did that update.  Most such calls in scripted Porcelains
do not define custom reflog message and rely on GIT_REFLOG_ACTION to
contain its (or its caller's, when it is called as a subprogram) name.

If a scripted Porcelain wants to record a custom reflog message for
a single invocation of "git" command (e.g. when "git rebase" uses
"git checkout" to detach HEAD at the commit a series is to be
replayed on), it needs to set GIT_REFLOG_ACTION to the custom
message and export it while calling the "git" command, but such an
assignment must be restricted to that single "git" invocation and
should not be left behind to affect later codepath.

Document the rules to avoid future confusion.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-06-19 10:54:00 -07:00
b2ed944af7 push: switch default from "matching" to "simple"
We promised to change the behaviour of lazy "git push [there]" that
does not say what to push on the command line from "matching" to
"simple" in Git 2.0.

This finally flips that bit.

Helped-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-06-18 12:36:00 -07:00
6e454b9a31 clear parsed flag when we free tree buffers
Many code paths will free a tree object's buffer and set it
to NULL after finishing with it in order to keep memory
usage down during a traversal. However, out of 8 sites that
do this, only one actually unsets the "parsed" flag back.
Those sites that don't are setting a trap for later users of
the tree object; even after calling parse_tree, the buffer
will remain NULL, causing potential segfaults.

It is not known whether this is triggerable in the current
code. Most commands do not do an in-memory traversal
followed by actually using the objects again. However, it
does not hurt to be safe for future callers.

In most cases, we can abstract this out to a
"free_tree_buffer" helper. However, there are two
exceptions:

  1. The fsck code relies on the parsed flag to know that we
     were able to parse the object at one point. We can
     switch this to using a flag in the "flags" field.

  2. The index-pack code sets the buffer to NULL but does
     not free it (it is freed by a caller). We should still
     unset the parsed flag here, but we cannot use our
     helper, as we do not want to free the buffer.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-06-06 10:29:12 -07:00
afa15f3cd8 grep: honor --textconv for the case rev:path
Make "grep" honor the "--textconv" option also for the object case, i.e.
when used with an argument "rev:path".

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-05-10 10:27:34 -07:00
335ec3bf41 grep: allow to use textconv filters
Recently and not so recently, we made sure that log/grep type operations
use textconv filters when a userfacing diff would do the same:

ef90ab6 (pickaxe: use textconv for -S counting, 2012-10-28)
b1c2f57 (diff_grep: use textconv buffers for add/deleted files, 2012-10-28)
0508fe5 (combine-diff: respect textconv attributes, 2011-05-23)

"git grep" currently does not use textconv filters at all, that is
neither for displaying the match and context nor for the actual grepping,
even when requested by --textconv.

Introduce an option "--textconv" which makes git grep use any configured
textconv filters for grepping and output purposes. It is off by default.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-05-10 10:27:31 -07:00
97f6a9c975 t7008: demonstrate behavior of grep with textconv
Currently, "git grep" does not honor any textconv filters, with nor
without --textconv. Demonstrate this in the tests.

The default is expected to remain unchanged.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-05-10 10:27:28 -07:00
3ac21617b0 cat-file: do not die on --textconv without textconv filters
When a command is supposed to use textconv filters (by default or with
"--textconv") and none are configured then the blob is output without
conversion; the only exception to this rule is "cat-file --textconv".

Make it behave like the rest of textconv aware commands.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-05-10 10:27:16 -07:00
083b993109 show: honor --textconv for blobs
Currently, "diff" and "cat-file" for blobs honor "--textconv" options
(with the former defaulting to "--textconv" and the latter to
"--no-textconv") whereas "show" does not honor this option, even though
it takes diff options.

Make "show" on blobs honor "--textconv" when it is asked.  The default
is not to apply textconv, which is in line with what "cat-file" does.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-05-10 10:25:43 -07:00
6c374008b1 diff_opt: track whether flags have been set explicitly
The diff_opt infrastructure sets flags based on defaults and command
line options.  It is impossible to tell whether a flag has been set
as a default or on explicit request.  Update the structure so that
this detection is possible:

 * Add an extra "opt->touched_flags" that keeps track of all the
   fields that have been touched by DIFF_OPT_SET and DIFF_OPT_CLR.

 * You may continue setting the default values to the flags, like
   commands in the "log" family do in cmd_log_init_defaults(), but
   after you finished setting the defaults, you clear the
   touched_flags field;

 * And then you let the usual callchain call diff_opt_parse(),
   allowing the opt->flags be set or unset, while keeping track of
   which bits the user touched;

 * There is an optional callback "opt->set_default" that is called
   at the very beginning to let you inspect touched_flags and update
   opt->flags appropriately, before the remainder of the diffcore
   machinery is set up, taking the opt->flags value into account.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-05-10 10:24:17 -07:00
4bd52d0956 t4030: demonstrate behavior of show with textconv
"git show <commit>" honors the --textconv option while "git show <blob>"
does not. Demonstrate this in the test.

Since the current behavior is supposed to stay as is, we expect the
default for "git show <blob>" to remain --no-textconv.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-05-10 10:23:51 -07:00
c1b5d738bf core.statinfo: remove as promised in Git 2.0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-05-06 22:32:58 -07:00
808d3d717e git add: -u/-A now affects the entire working tree
As promised in 0fa2eb530f (add: warn when -u or -A is used without
pathspec, 2013-01-28), in Git 2.0, "git add -u/-A" that is run
without pathspec in a subdirectory updates all updated paths in the
entire working tree, not just the current directory and its
subdirectories.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-04-26 16:09:21 -07:00
fdc97abd4a git add <pathspec>... defaults to "-A"
Make "git add <pathspec>..." notice paths that have been removed
from the working tree, i.e. the same as "git add -A <pathspec>...".

Given that "git add <pathspec>" is to update the index with the
state of the named part of the working tree as a whole, it makes it
more intuitive, and also makes it possible to simplify the advice we
give while marking the paths the user finished resolving conflicts
with.  We used to say "to record removal as a resolution, remove the
path from the working tree and say 'git rm'; for all other cases,
edit the path in the working tree and say 'git add'", but we can now
say "update the path in the working tree and say 'git add'" instead.

As promised, this merges the temporary update_files_in_cache() helper
function back to add_files_to_cache() function.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-04-22 21:06:06 -07:00
63cdcfa40f pack-objects: shrink struct object_entry
Turn some boolean fields into bitfields and use uint32_t for name
hash.  This shrinks the size of the structure from 128 bytes to 120
bytes.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-02-04 15:23:35 -08:00
1209 changed files with 118523 additions and 54196 deletions

13
.gitignore vendored
View File

@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
/GIT-CFLAGS
/GIT-LDFLAGS
/GIT-PREFIX
/GIT-PERL-DEFINES
/GIT-PYTHON-VARS
/GIT-SCRIPT-DEFINES
/GIT-USER-AGENT
@ -73,9 +74,9 @@
/git-index-pack
/git-init
/git-init-db
/git-interpret-trailers
/git-instaweb
/git-log
/git-lost-found
/git-ls-files
/git-ls-remote
/git-ls-tree
@ -105,7 +106,6 @@
/git-pack-refs
/git-parse-remote
/git-patch-id
/git-peek-remote
/git-prune
/git-prune-packed
/git-pull
@ -131,7 +131,6 @@
/git-remote-testsvn
/git-repack
/git-replace
/git-repo-config
/git-request-pull
/git-rerere
/git-reset
@ -159,7 +158,6 @@
/git-svn
/git-symbolic-ref
/git-tag
/git-tar-tree
/git-unpack-file
/git-unpack-objects
/git-update-index
@ -168,6 +166,7 @@
/git-upload-archive
/git-upload-pack
/git-var
/git-verify-commit
/git-verify-pack
/git-verify-tag
/git-web--browse
@ -180,11 +179,14 @@
/gitweb/static/gitweb.min.*
/test-chmtime
/test-ctype
/test-config
/test-date
/test-delta
/test-dump-cache-tree
/test-dump-split-index
/test-scrap-cache-tree
/test-genrandom
/test-hashmap
/test-index-version
/test-line-buffer
/test-match-trees
@ -198,10 +200,12 @@
/test-revision-walking
/test-run-command
/test-sha1
/test-sha1-array
/test-sigchain
/test-string-list
/test-subprocess
/test-svn-fe
/test-urlmatch-normalization
/test-wildmatch
/common-cmds.h
*.tar.gz
@ -227,6 +231,7 @@
/config.mak.autogen
/config.mak.append
/configure
/unicode
/tags
/TAGS
/cscope*

View File

@ -85,6 +85,7 @@ Jeff King <peff@peff.net> <peff@github.com>
Jeff Muizelaar <jmuizelaar@mozilla.com> <jeff@infidigm.net>
Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk> <axboe@suse.de>
Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk> <jens.axboe@oracle.com>
Jens Lindström <jl@opera.com> Jens Lindstrom <jl@opera.com>
Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> <meyering@redhat.com>
Joachim Berdal Haga <cjhaga@fys.uio.no>
Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de> <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
@ -113,6 +114,7 @@ Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de> <karsten.blees@dcon.de>
Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de> <karsten.blees@gmail.com>
Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@vrfy.org> <kay.sievers@suse.de>
Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@vrfy.org> <kay@mam.(none)>
Kazuki Saitoh <ksaitoh560@gmail.com> kazuki saitoh <ksaitoh560@gmail.com>
Keith Cascio <keith@CS.UCLA.EDU> <keith@cs.ucla.edu>
Kent Engstrom <kent@lysator.liu.se>
Kevin Leung <kevinlsk@gmail.com>
@ -202,6 +204,8 @@ Seth Falcon <seth@userprimary.net> <sfalcon@fhcrc.org>
Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Simon Hausmann <hausmann@kde.org> <simon@lst.de>
Simon Hausmann <hausmann@kde.org> <shausman@trolltech.com>
Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com> <stefanbeller@googlemail.com>
Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com> <sbeller@google.com>
Stefan Naewe <stefan.naewe@gmail.com> <stefan.naewe@atlas-elektronik.com>
Stefan Naewe <stefan.naewe@gmail.com> <stefan.naewe@googlemail.com>
Stefan Sperling <stsp@elego.de> <stsp@stsp.name>
@ -218,7 +222,9 @@ Tay Ray Chuan <rctay89@gmail.com>
Ted Percival <ted@midg3t.net> <ted.percival@quest.com>
Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de> <th.acker66@arcor.de>
Thomas Rast <trast@inf.ethz.ch> <trast@student.ethz.ch>
Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch> <trast@student.ethz.ch>
Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch> <trast@inf.ethz.ch>
Thomas Rast <tr@thomasrast.ch> <trast@google.com>
Timo Hirvonen <tihirvon@gmail.com> <tihirvon@ee.oulu.fi>
Toby Allsopp <Toby.Allsopp@navman.co.nz> <toby.allsopp@navman.co.nz>
Tom Grennan <tmgrennan@gmail.com> <tgrennan@redback.com>
@ -227,6 +233,7 @@ Tommi Virtanen <tv@debian.org> <tv@inoi.fi>
Tommy Thorn <tommy-git@thorn.ws> <tt1729@yahoo.com>
Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>
Tor Arne Vestbø <torarnv@gmail.com> <tavestbo@trolltech.com>
Trần Ngọc Quân <vnwildman@gmail.com> Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
Trent Piepho <tpiepho@gmail.com> <tpiepho@freescale.com>
Trent Piepho <tpiepho@gmail.com> <xyzzy@speakeasy.org>
Uwe Kleine-König <u.kleine-koenig@pengutronix.de> <Uwe.Kleine-Koenig@digi.com>

View File

@ -18,6 +18,14 @@ code. For Git in general, three rough rules are:
judgement call, the decision based more on real world
constraints people face than what the paper standard says.
- Fixing style violations while working on a real change as a
preparatory clean-up step is good, but otherwise avoid useless code
churn for the sake of conforming to the style.
"Once it _is_ in the tree, it's not really worth the patch noise to
go and fix it up."
Cf. http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/943020
Make your code readable and sensible, and don't try to be clever.
As for more concrete guidelines, just imitate the existing code
@ -34,7 +42,17 @@ For shell scripts specifically (not exhaustive):
- We use tabs for indentation.
- Case arms are indented at the same depth as case and esac lines.
- Case arms are indented at the same depth as case and esac lines,
like this:
case "$variable" in
pattern1)
do this
;;
pattern2)
do that
;;
esac
- Redirection operators should be written with space before, but no
space after them. In other words, write 'echo test >"$file"'
@ -43,6 +61,14 @@ For shell scripts specifically (not exhaustive):
redirection target in a variable (as shown above), our code does so
because some versions of bash issue a warning without the quotes.
(incorrect)
cat hello > world < universe
echo hello >$world
(correct)
cat hello >world <universe
echo hello >"$world"
- We prefer $( ... ) for command substitution; unlike ``, it
properly nests. It should have been the way Bourne spelled
it from day one, but unfortunately isn't.
@ -81,23 +107,42 @@ For shell scripts specifically (not exhaustive):
"then" should be on the next line for if statements, and "do"
should be on the next line for "while" and "for".
(incorrect)
if test -f hello; then
do this
fi
(correct)
if test -f hello
then
do this
fi
- We prefer "test" over "[ ... ]".
- We do not write the noiseword "function" in front of shell
functions.
- We prefer a space between the function name and the parentheses. The
opening "{" should also be on the same line.
E.g.: my_function () {
- We prefer a space between the function name and the parentheses,
and no space inside the parentheses. The opening "{" should also
be on the same line.
(incorrect)
my_function(){
...
(correct)
my_function () {
...
- As to use of grep, stick to a subset of BRE (namely, no \{m,n\},
[::], [==], nor [..]) for portability.
[::], [==], or [..]) for portability.
- We do not use \{m,n\};
- We do not use -E;
- We do not use ? nor + (which are \{0,1\} and \{1,\}
- We do not use ? or + (which are \{0,1\} and \{1,\}
respectively in BRE) but that goes without saying as these
are ERE elements not BRE (note that \? and \+ are not even part
of BRE -- making them accessible from BRE is a GNU extension).
@ -106,6 +151,19 @@ For shell scripts specifically (not exhaustive):
interface translatable. See "Marking strings for translation" in
po/README.
- We do not write our "test" command with "-a" and "-o" and use "&&"
or "||" to concatenate multiple "test" commands instead, because
the use of "-a/-o" is often error-prone. E.g.
test -n "$x" -a "$a" = "$b"
is buggy and breaks when $x is "=", but
test -n "$x" && test "$a" = "$b"
does not have such a problem.
For C programs:
- We use tabs to indent, and interpret tabs as taking up to
@ -126,6 +184,17 @@ For C programs:
"char * string". This makes it easier to understand code
like "char *string, c;".
- Use whitespace around operators and keywords, but not inside
parentheses and not around functions. So:
while (condition)
func(bar + 1);
and not:
while( condition )
func (bar+1);
- We avoid using braces unnecessarily. I.e.
if (bla) {
@ -138,16 +207,116 @@ For C programs:
of "else if" statements, it can make sense to add braces to
single line blocks.
- We try to avoid assignments inside if().
- We try to avoid assignments in the condition of an "if" statement.
- Try to make your code understandable. You may put comments
in, but comments invariably tend to stale out when the code
they were describing changes. Often splitting a function
into two makes the intention of the code much clearer.
- Multi-line comments include their delimiters on separate lines from
the text. E.g.
/*
* A very long
* multi-line comment.
*/
Note however that a comment that explains a translatable string to
translators uses a convention of starting with a magic token
"TRANSLATORS: " immediately after the opening delimiter, even when
it spans multiple lines. We do not add an asterisk at the beginning
of each line, either. E.g.
/* TRANSLATORS: here is a comment that explains the string
to be translated, that follows immediately after it */
_("Here is a translatable string explained by the above.");
- Double negation is often harder to understand than no negation
at all.
- There are two schools of thought when it comes to comparison,
especially inside a loop. Some people prefer to have the less stable
value on the left hand side and the more stable value on the right hand
side, e.g. if you have a loop that counts variable i down to the
lower bound,
while (i > lower_bound) {
do something;
i--;
}
Other people prefer to have the textual order of values match the
actual order of values in their comparison, so that they can
mentally draw a number line from left to right and place these
values in order, i.e.
while (lower_bound < i) {
do something;
i--;
}
Both are valid, and we use both. However, the more "stable" the
stable side becomes, the more we tend to prefer the former
(comparison with a constant, "i > 0", is an extreme example).
Just do not mix styles in the same part of the code and mimic
existing styles in the neighbourhood.
- There are two schools of thought when it comes to splitting a long
logical line into multiple lines. Some people push the second and
subsequent lines far enough to the right with tabs and align them:
if (the_beginning_of_a_very_long_expression_that_has_to ||
span_more_than_a_single_line_of ||
the_source_text) {
...
while other people prefer to align the second and the subsequent
lines with the column immediately inside the opening parenthesis,
with tabs and spaces, following our "tabstop is always a multiple
of 8" convention:
if (the_beginning_of_a_very_long_expression_that_has_to ||
span_more_than_a_single_line_of ||
the_source_text) {
...
Both are valid, and we use both. Again, just do not mix styles in
the same part of the code and mimic existing styles in the
neighbourhood.
- When splitting a long logical line, some people change line before
a binary operator, so that the result looks like a parse tree when
you turn your head 90-degrees counterclockwise:
if (the_beginning_of_a_very_long_expression_that_has_to
|| span_more_than_a_single_line_of_the_source_text) {
while other people prefer to leave the operator at the end of the
line:
if (the_beginning_of_a_very_long_expression_that_has_to ||
span_more_than_a_single_line_of_the_source_text) {
Both are valid, but we tend to use the latter more, unless the
expression gets fairly complex, in which case the former tends to
be easier to read. Again, just do not mix styles in the same part
of the code and mimic existing styles in the neighbourhood.
- When splitting a long logical line, with everything else being
equal, it is preferable to split after the operator at higher
level in the parse tree. That is, this is more preferable:
if (a_very_long_variable * that_is_used_in +
a_very_long_expression) {
...
than
if (a_very_long_variable *
that_is_used_in + a_very_long_expression) {
...
- Some clever tricks, like using the !! operator with arithmetic
constructs, can be extremely confusing to others. Avoid them,
unless there is a compelling reason to use them.
@ -235,6 +404,38 @@ For Python scripts:
documentation for version 2.6 does not mention this prefix, it has
been supported since version 2.6.0.
Error Messages
- Do not end error messages with a full stop.
- Do not capitalize ("unable to open %s", not "Unable to open %s")
- Say what the error is first ("cannot open %s", not "%s: cannot open")
Externally Visible Names
- For configuration variable names, follow the existing convention:
. The section name indicates the affected subsystem.
. The subsection name, if any, indicates which of an unbounded set
of things to set the value for.
. The variable name describes the effect of tweaking this knob.
The section and variable names that consist of multiple words are
formed by concatenating the words without punctuations (e.g. `-`),
and are broken using bumpyCaps in documentation as a hint to the
reader.
When choosing the variable namespace, do not use variable name for
specifying possibly unbounded set of things, most notably anything
an end user can freely come up with (e.g. branch names). Instead,
use subsection names or variable values, like the existing variable
branch.<name>.description does.
Writing Documentation:
Most (if not all) of the documentation pages are written in the
@ -242,11 +443,21 @@ Writing Documentation:
processed into HTML and manpages (e.g. git.html and git.1 in the
same directory).
The documentation liberally mixes US and UK English (en_US/UK)
norms for spelling and grammar, which is somewhat unfortunate.
In an ideal world, it would have been better if it consistently
used only one and not the other, and we would have picked en_US
(if you wish to correct the English of some of the existing
documentation, please see the documentation-related advice in the
Documentation/SubmittingPatches file).
Every user-visible change should be reflected in the documentation.
The same general rule as for code applies -- imitate the existing
conventions. A few commented examples follow to provide reference
when writing or modifying command usage strings and synopsis sections
in the manual pages:
conventions.
A few commented examples follow to provide reference when writing or
modifying command usage strings and synopsis sections in the manual
pages:
Placeholders are spelled in lowercase and enclosed in angle brackets:
<file>
@ -296,3 +507,29 @@ Writing Documentation:
Use 'git' (all lowercase) when talking about commands i.e. something
the user would type into a shell and use 'Git' (uppercase first letter)
when talking about the version control system and its properties.
A few commented examples follow to provide reference when writing or
modifying paragraphs or option/command explanations that contain options
or commands:
Literal examples (e.g. use of command-line options, command names, and
configuration variables) are typeset in monospace, and if you can use
`backticks around word phrases`, do so.
`--pretty=oneline`
`git rev-list`
`remote.pushdefault`
Word phrases enclosed in `backtick characters` are rendered literally
and will not be further expanded. The use of `backticks` to achieve the
previous rule means that literal examples should not use AsciiDoc
escapes.
Correct:
`--pretty=oneline`
Incorrect:
`\--pretty=oneline`
If some place in the documentation needs to typeset a command usage
example with inline substitutions, it is fine to use +monospaced and
inline substituted text+ instead of `monospaced literal text`, and with
the former, the part that should not get substituted must be
quoted/escaped.

View File

@ -2,6 +2,10 @@
MAN1_TXT =
MAN5_TXT =
MAN7_TXT =
TECH_DOCS =
ARTICLES =
SP_ARTICLES =
OBSOLETE_HTML =
MAN1_TXT += $(filter-out \
$(addsuffix .txt, $(ARTICLES) $(SP_ARTICLES)), \
@ -23,6 +27,7 @@ MAN7_TXT += gitcore-tutorial.txt
MAN7_TXT += gitcredentials.txt
MAN7_TXT += gitcvs-migration.txt
MAN7_TXT += gitdiffcore.txt
MAN7_TXT += giteveryday.txt
MAN7_TXT += gitglossary.txt
MAN7_TXT += gitnamespaces.txt
MAN7_TXT += gitrevisions.txt
@ -34,15 +39,15 @@ MAN_TXT = $(MAN1_TXT) $(MAN5_TXT) $(MAN7_TXT)
MAN_XML = $(patsubst %.txt,%.xml,$(MAN_TXT))
MAN_HTML = $(patsubst %.txt,%.html,$(MAN_TXT))
OBSOLETE_HTML = git-remote-helpers.html
OBSOLETE_HTML += everyday.html
OBSOLETE_HTML += git-remote-helpers.html
DOC_HTML = $(MAN_HTML) $(OBSOLETE_HTML)
ARTICLES = howto-index
ARTICLES += everyday
ARTICLES += howto-index
ARTICLES += git-tools
ARTICLES += git-bisect-lk2009
# with their own formatting rules.
SP_ARTICLES = user-manual
SP_ARTICLES += user-manual
SP_ARTICLES += howto/new-command
SP_ARTICLES += howto/revert-branch-rebase
SP_ARTICLES += howto/using-merge-subtree
@ -53,13 +58,16 @@ SP_ARTICLES += howto/setup-git-server-over-http
SP_ARTICLES += howto/separating-topic-branches
SP_ARTICLES += howto/revert-a-faulty-merge
SP_ARTICLES += howto/recover-corrupted-blob-object
SP_ARTICLES += howto/recover-corrupted-object-harder
SP_ARTICLES += howto/rebuild-from-update-hook
SP_ARTICLES += howto/rebase-from-internal-branch
SP_ARTICLES += howto/keep-canonical-history-correct
SP_ARTICLES += howto/maintain-git
API_DOCS = $(patsubst %.txt,%,$(filter-out technical/api-index-skel.txt technical/api-index.txt, $(wildcard technical/api-*.txt)))
SP_ARTICLES += $(API_DOCS)
TECH_DOCS = technical/index-format
TECH_DOCS += technical/http-protocol
TECH_DOCS += technical/index-format
TECH_DOCS += technical/pack-format
TECH_DOCS += technical/pack-heuristics
TECH_DOCS += technical/pack-protocol
@ -91,6 +99,13 @@ man7dir = $(mandir)/man7
ASCIIDOC = asciidoc
ASCIIDOC_EXTRA =
ASCIIDOC_HTML = xhtml11
ASCIIDOC_DOCBOOK = docbook
ASCIIDOC_CONF = -f asciidoc.conf
ASCIIDOC_COMMON = $(ASCIIDOC) $(ASCIIDOC_EXTRA) $(ASCIIDOC_CONF) \
-agit_version=$(GIT_VERSION)
TXT_TO_HTML = $(ASCIIDOC_COMMON) -b $(ASCIIDOC_HTML)
TXT_TO_XML = $(ASCIIDOC_COMMON) -b $(ASCIIDOC_DOCBOOK)
MANPAGE_XSL = manpage-normal.xsl
XMLTO = xmlto
XMLTO_EXTRA =
@ -103,6 +118,7 @@ MAKEINFO = makeinfo
INSTALL_INFO = install-info
DOCBOOK2X_TEXI = docbook2x-texi
DBLATEX = dblatex
ASCIIDOC_DBLATEX_DIR = /etc/asciidoc/dblatex
ifndef PERL_PATH
PERL_PATH = /usr/bin/perl
endif
@ -297,14 +313,12 @@ clean:
$(MAN_HTML): %.html : %.txt asciidoc.conf
$(QUIET_ASCIIDOC)$(RM) $@+ $@ && \
$(ASCIIDOC) -b xhtml11 -d manpage -f asciidoc.conf \
$(ASCIIDOC_EXTRA) -agit_version=$(GIT_VERSION) -o $@+ $< && \
$(TXT_TO_HTML) -d manpage -o $@+ $< && \
mv $@+ $@
$(OBSOLETE_HTML): %.html : %.txto asciidoc.conf
$(QUIET_ASCIIDOC)$(RM) $@+ $@ && \
$(ASCIIDOC) -b xhtml11 -f asciidoc.conf \
$(ASCIIDOC_EXTRA) -agit_version=$(GIT_VERSION) -o $@+ $< && \
$(TXT_TO_HTML) -o $@+ $< && \
mv $@+ $@
manpage-base-url.xsl: manpage-base-url.xsl.in
@ -316,13 +330,12 @@ manpage-base-url.xsl: manpage-base-url.xsl.in
%.xml : %.txt asciidoc.conf
$(QUIET_ASCIIDOC)$(RM) $@+ $@ && \
$(ASCIIDOC) -b docbook -d manpage -f asciidoc.conf \
$(ASCIIDOC_EXTRA) -agit_version=$(GIT_VERSION) -o $@+ $< && \
$(TXT_TO_XML) -d manpage -o $@+ $< && \
mv $@+ $@
user-manual.xml: user-manual.txt user-manual.conf
$(QUIET_ASCIIDOC)$(RM) $@+ $@ && \
$(ASCIIDOC) $(ASCIIDOC_EXTRA) -b docbook -d book -o $@+ $< && \
$(TXT_TO_XML) -d article -o $@+ $< && \
mv $@+ $@
technical/api-index.txt: technical/api-index-skel.txt \
@ -331,8 +344,7 @@ technical/api-index.txt: technical/api-index-skel.txt \
technical/%.html: ASCIIDOC_EXTRA += -a git-relative-html-prefix=../
$(patsubst %,%.html,$(API_DOCS) technical/api-index $(TECH_DOCS)): %.html : %.txt asciidoc.conf
$(QUIET_ASCIIDOC)$(ASCIIDOC) -b xhtml11 -f asciidoc.conf \
$(ASCIIDOC_EXTRA) -agit_version=$(GIT_VERSION) $*.txt
$(QUIET_ASCIIDOC)$(TXT_TO_HTML) $*.txt
XSLT = docbook.xsl
XSLTOPTS = --xinclude --stringparam html.stylesheet docbook-xsl.css
@ -354,7 +366,7 @@ user-manual.texi: user-manual.xml
user-manual.pdf: user-manual.xml
$(QUIET_DBLATEX)$(RM) $@+ $@ && \
$(DBLATEX) -o $@+ -p /etc/asciidoc/dblatex/asciidoc-dblatex.xsl -s /etc/asciidoc/dblatex/asciidoc-dblatex.sty $< && \
$(DBLATEX) -o $@+ -p $(ASCIIDOC_DBLATEX_DIR)/asciidoc-dblatex.xsl -s $(ASCIIDOC_DBLATEX_DIR)/asciidoc-dblatex.sty $< && \
mv $@+ $@
gitman.texi: $(MAN_XML) cat-texi.perl
@ -379,14 +391,15 @@ howto-index.txt: howto-index.sh $(wildcard howto/*.txt)
mv $@+ $@
$(patsubst %,%.html,$(ARTICLES)) : %.html : %.txt
$(QUIET_ASCIIDOC)$(ASCIIDOC) $(ASCIIDOC_EXTRA) -b xhtml11 $*.txt
$(QUIET_ASCIIDOC)$(TXT_TO_HTML) $*.txt
WEBDOC_DEST = /pub/software/scm/git/docs
howto/%.html: ASCIIDOC_EXTRA += -a git-relative-html-prefix=../
$(patsubst %.txt,%.html,$(wildcard howto/*.txt)): %.html : %.txt
$(QUIET_ASCIIDOC)$(RM) $@+ $@ && \
sed -e '1,/^$$/d' $< | $(ASCIIDOC) $(ASCIIDOC_EXTRA) -b xhtml11 - >$@+ && \
sed -e '1,/^$$/d' $< | \
$(TXT_TO_HTML) - >$@+ && \
mv $@+ $@
install-webdoc : html

View File

@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ Fixes since v1.7.11.1
* "git diff --no-index" did not work with pagers correctly.
* "git diff COPYING HEAD:COPYING" gave a nonsense error message that
claimed that the treeish HEAD did not have COPYING in it.
claimed that the tree-ish HEAD did not have COPYING in it.
* When "git log" gets "--simplify-merges/by-decoration" together with
"--first-parent", the combination of these options makes the

View File

@ -0,0 +1,71 @@
Git v1.8.4.1 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v1.8.4
------------------
* Some old versions of bash do not grok some constructs like
'printf -v varname' which the prompt and completion code started
to use recently. The completion and prompt scripts have been
adjusted to work better with these old versions of bash.
* In FreeBSD's and NetBSD's "sh", a return in a dot script in a
function returns from the function, not only in the dot script,
breaking "git rebase" on these platforms (regression introduced
in 1.8.4-rc1).
* "git rebase -i" and other scripted commands were feeding a
random, data dependant error message to 'echo' and expecting it
to come out literally.
* Setting the "submodule.<name>.path" variable to the empty
"true" caused the configuration parser to segfault.
* Output from "git log --full-diff -- <pathspec>" looked strange
because comparison was done with the previous ancestor that
touched the specified <pathspec>, causing the patches for paths
outside the pathspec to show more than the single commit has
changed.
* The auto-tag-following code in "git fetch" tries to reuse the
same transport twice when the serving end does not cooperate and
does not give tags that point to commits that are asked for as
part of the primary transfer. Unfortunately, Git-aware transport
helper interface is not designed to be used more than once, hence
this did not work over smart-http transfer. Fixed.
* Send a large request to read(2)/write(2) as a smaller but still
reasonably large chunks, which would improve the latency when the
operation needs to be killed and incidentally works around broken
64-bit systems that cannot take a 2GB write or read in one go.
* A ".mailmap" file that ends with an incomplete line, when read
from a blob, was not handled properly.
* The recent "short-cut clone connectivity check" topic broke a
shallow repository when a fetch operation tries to auto-follow
tags.
* When send-email comes up with an error message to die with upon
failure to start an SSL session, it tried to read the error
string from a wrong place.
* A call to xread() was used without a loop to cope with short
read in the codepath to stream large blobs to a pack.
* On platforms with fgetc() and friends defined as macros, the
configuration parser did not compile.
* New versions of MediaWiki introduced a new API for returning
more than 500 results in response to a query, which would cause
the MediaWiki remote helper to go into an infinite loop.
* Subversion's serf access method (the only one available in
Subversion 1.8) for http and https URLs in skelta mode tells its
caller to open multiple files at a time, which made "git svn
fetch" complain that "Temp file with moniker 'svn_delta' already
in use" instead of fetching.
Also contains a handful of trivial code clean-ups, documentation
updates, updates to the test suite, etc.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,77 @@
Git v1.8.4.2 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v1.8.4.1
--------------------
* "git clone" gave some progress messages to the standard output, not
to the standard error, and did not allow suppressing them with the
"--no-progress" option.
* "format-patch --from=<whom>" forgot to omit unnecessary in-body
from line, i.e. when <whom> is the same as the real author.
* "git shortlog" used to choke and die when there is a malformed
commit (e.g. missing authors); it now simply ignore such a commit
and keeps going.
* "git merge-recursive" did not parse its "--diff-algorithm=" command
line option correctly.
* "git branch --track" had a minor regression in v1.8.3.2 and later
that made it impossible to base your local work on anything but a
local branch of the upstream repository you are tracking from.
* "git ls-files -k" needs to crawl only the part of the working tree
that may overlap the paths in the index to find killed files, but
shared code with the logic to find all the untracked files, which
made it unnecessarily inefficient.
* When there is no sufficient overlap between old and new history
during a "git fetch" into a shallow repository, objects that the
sending side knows the receiving end has were unnecessarily sent.
* When running "fetch -q", a long silence while the sender side
computes the set of objects to send can be mistaken by proxies as
dropped connection. The server side has been taught to send a
small empty messages to keep the connection alive.
* When the webserver responds with "405 Method Not Allowed", "git
http-backend" should tell the client what methods are allowed with
the "Allow" header.
* "git cvsserver" computed the permission mode bits incorrectly for
executable files.
* The implementation of "add -i" has a crippling code to work around
ActiveState Perl limitation but it by mistake also triggered on Git
for Windows where MSYS perl is used.
* We made sure that we notice the user-supplied GIT_DIR is actually a
gitfile, but did not do the same when the default ".git" is a
gitfile.
* When an object is not found after checking the packfiles and then
loose object directory, read_sha1_file() re-checks the packfiles to
prevent racing with a concurrent repacker; teach the same logic to
has_sha1_file().
* "git commit --author=$name", when $name is not in the canonical
"A. U. Thor <au.thor@example.xz>" format, looks for a matching name
from existing history, but did not consult mailmap to grab the
preferred author name.
* The commit object names in the insn sheet that was prepared at the
beginning of "rebase -i" session can become ambiguous as the
rebasing progresses and the repository gains more commits. Make
sure the internal record is kept with full 40-hex object names.
* "git rebase --preserve-merges" internally used the merge machinery
and as a side effect, left merge summary message in the log, but
when rebasing, there should not be a need for merge summary.
* "git rebase -i" forgot that the comment character can be
configurable while reading its insn sheet.
Also contains a handful of trivial code clean-ups, documentation
updates, updates to the test suite, etc.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,54 @@
Git v1.8.4.3 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v1.8.4.2
--------------------
* The interaction between use of Perl in our test suite and NO_PERL
has been clarified a bit.
* A fast-import stream expresses a pathname with funny characters by
quoting them in C style; remote-hg remote helper (in contrib/)
forgot to unquote such a path.
* One long-standing flaw in the pack transfer protocol used by "git
clone" was that there was no way to tell the other end which branch
"HEAD" points at, and the receiving end needed to guess. A new
capability has been defined in the pack protocol to convey this
information so that cloning from a repository with more than one
branches pointing at the same commit where the HEAD is at now
reliably sets the initial branch in the resulting repository.
* We did not handle cases where http transport gets redirected during
the authorization request (e.g. from http:// to https://).
* "git rev-list --objects ^v1.0^ v1.0" gave v1.0 tag itself in the
output, but "git rev-list --objects v1.0^..v1.0" did not.
* The fall-back parsing of commit objects with broken author or
committer lines were less robust than ideal in picking up the
timestamps.
* Bash prompting code to deal with an SVN remote as an upstream
were coded in a way not supported by older Bash versions (3.x).
* "git checkout topic", when there is not yet a local "topic" branch
but there is a unique remote-tracking branch for a remote "topic"
branch, pretended as if "git checkout -t -b topic remote/$r/topic"
(for that unique remote $r) was run. This hack however was not
implemented for "git checkout topic --".
* Coloring around octopus merges in "log --graph" output was screwy.
* We did not generate HTML version of documentation to "git subtree"
in contrib/.
* The synopsis section of "git unpack-objects" documentation has been
clarified a bit.
* An ancient How-To on serving Git repositories on an HTTP server
lacked a warning that it has been mostly superseded with more
modern way.
Also contains a handful of trivial code clean-ups, documentation
updates, updates to the test suite, etc.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
Git v1.8.4.4 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v1.8.4.3
--------------------
* The fix in v1.8.4.3 to the pack transfer protocol to propagate
the target of symbolic refs broke "git clone/git fetch" from a
repository with too many symbolic refs. As a hotfix/workaround,
we transfer only the information on HEAD.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
Git v1.8.4.5 Release Notes
==========================
Fixes since v1.8.4.4
--------------------
* Recent update to remote-hg that attempted to make it work better
with non ASCII pathnames fed Unicode strings to the underlying Hg
API, which was wrong.
* "git submodule init" copied "submodule.$name.update" settings from
.gitmodules to .git/config without making sure if the suggested
value was sensible.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
Git v1.8.5.1 Release Notes
==========================
Fixes since v1.8.5
------------------
* "git submodule init" copied "submodule.$name.update" settings from
.gitmodules to .git/config without making sure if the suggested
value was sensible.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
Git v1.8.5.2 Release Notes
==========================
Fixes since v1.8.5.1
--------------------
* "git diff -- ':(icase)makefile'" was unnecessarily rejected at the
command line parser.
* "git cat-file --batch-check=ok" did not check the existence of
the named object.
* "git am --abort" sometimes complained about not being able to write
a tree with an 0{40} object in it.
* Two processes creating loose objects at the same time could have
failed unnecessarily when the name of their new objects started
with the same byte value, due to a race condition.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code clean-ups.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,27 @@
Git v1.8.5.3 Release Notes
==========================
Fixes since v1.8.5.2
--------------------
* The "--[no-]informative-errors" options to "git daemon" were parsed
a bit too loosely, allowing any other string after these option
names.
* A "gc" process running as a different user should be able to stop a
new "gc" process from starting.
* An earlier "clean-up" introduced an unnecessary memory leak to the
credential subsystem.
* "git mv A B/", when B does not exist as a directory, should error
out, but it didn't.
* "git rev-parse <revs> -- <paths>" did not implement the usual
disambiguation rules the commands in the "git log" family used in
the same way.
* "git cat-file --batch=", an admittedly useless command, did not
behave very well.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code clean-ups.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,48 @@
Git v1.8.5.4 Release Notes
==========================
Fixes since v1.8.5.3
--------------------
* "git fetch --depth=0" was a no-op, and was silently ignored.
Diagnose it as an error.
* Remote repository URL expressed in scp-style host:path notation are
parsed more carefully (e.g. "foo/bar:baz" is local, "[::1]:/~user" asks
to connect to user's home directory on host at address ::1.
* SSL-related options were not passed correctly to underlying socket
layer in "git send-email".
* "git commit -v" appends the patch to the log message before
editing, and then removes the patch when the editor returned
control. However, the patch was not stripped correctly when the
first modified path was a submodule.
* "git mv A B/", when B does not exist as a directory, should error
out, but it didn't.
* When we figure out how many file descriptors to allocate for
keeping packfiles open, a system with non-working getrlimit() could
cause us to die(), but because we make this call only to get a
rough estimate of how many is available and we do not even attempt
to use up all file descriptors available ourselves, it is nicer to
fall back to a reasonable low value rather than dying.
* "git log --decorate" did not handle a tag pointed by another tag
nicely.
* "git add -A" (no other arguments) in a totally empty working tree
used to emit an error.
* There is no reason to have a hardcoded upper limit of the number of
parents for an octopus merge, created via the graft mechanism, but
there was.
* The implementation of 'git stash $cmd "stash@{...}"' did not quote
the stash argument properly and left it split at IFS whitespace.
* The documentation to "git pull" hinted there is an "-m" option
because it incorrectly shared the documentation with "git merge".
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code clean-ups.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,37 @@
Git v1.8.5.5 Release Notes
==========================
Fixes since v1.8.5.4
--------------------
* The pathspec matching code, while comparing two trees (e.g. "git
diff A B -- path1 path2") was too aggressive and failed to match
some paths when multiple pathspecs were involved.
* "git repack --max-pack-size=8g" stopped being parsed correctly when
the command was reimplemented in C.
* A recent update to "git send-email" broke platforms where
/etc/ssl/certs/ directory exists but cannot be used as SSL_ca_path
(e.g. Fedora rawhide).
* A handful of bugs around interpreting $branch@{upstream} notation
and its lookalike, when $branch part has interesting characters,
e.g. "@", and ":", have been fixed.
* "git clone" would fail to clone from a repository that has a ref
directly under "refs/", e.g. "refs/stash", because different
validation paths do different things on such a refname. Loosen the
client side's validation to allow such a ref.
* "git log --left-right A...B" lost the "leftness" of commits
reachable from A when A is a tag as a side effect of a recent
bugfix. This is a regression in 1.8.4.x series.
* "git merge-base --octopus" used to leave cleaning up suboptimal
result to the caller, but now it does the clean-up itself.
* "git mv A B/", when B does not exist as a directory, should error
out, but it didn't.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code clean-ups.

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Git v1.8.5.6 Release Notes
==========================
Fixes since v1.8.5.5
--------------------
* We used to allow committing a path ".Git/config" with Git that is
running on a case sensitive filesystem, but an attempt to check out
such a path with Git that runs on a case insensitive filesystem
would have clobbered ".git/config", which is definitely not what
the user would have expected. Git now prevents you from tracking
a path with ".Git" (in any case combination) as a path component.
* On Windows, certain path components that are different from ".git"
are mapped to ".git", e.g. "git~1/config" is treated as if it were
".git/config". HFS+ has a similar issue, where certain unicode
codepoints are ignored, e.g. ".g\u200cit/config" is treated as if
it were ".git/config". Pathnames with these potential issues are
rejected on the affected systems. Git on systems that are not
affected by this issue (e.g. Linux) can also be configured to
reject them to ensure cross platform interoperability of the hosted
projects.
* "git fsck" notices a tree object that records such a path that can
be confused with ".git", and with receive.fsckObjects configuration
set to true, an attempt to "git push" such a tree object will be
rejected. Such a path may not be a problem on a well behaving
filesystem but in order to protect those on HFS+ and on case
insensitive filesystems, this check is enabled on all platforms.
A big "thanks!" for bringing this issue to us goes to our friends in
the Mercurial land, namely, Matt Mackall and Augie Fackler.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code clean-ups.

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Git v1.8.5 Release Notes
========================
Backward compatibility notes (for Git 2.0)
------------------------------------------
When "git push [$there]" does not say what to push, we have used the
traditional "matching" semantics so far (all your branches were sent
to the remote as long as there already are branches of the same name
over there). In Git 2.0, the default will change to the "simple"
semantics, which pushes:
- only the current branch to the branch with the same name, and only
when the current branch is set to integrate with that remote
branch, if you are pushing to the same remote as you fetch from; or
- only the current branch to the branch with the same name, if you
are pushing to a remote that is not where you usually fetch from.
Use the user preference configuration variable "push.default" to
change this. If you are an old-timer who is used to the "matching"
semantics, you can set the variable to "matching" to keep the
traditional behaviour. If you want to live in the future early, you
can set it to "simple" today without waiting for Git 2.0.
When "git add -u" (and "git add -A") is run inside a subdirectory and
does not specify which paths to add on the command line, it
will operate on the entire tree in Git 2.0 for consistency
with "git commit -a" and other commands. There will be no
mechanism to make plain "git add -u" behave like "git add -u .".
Current users of "git add -u" (without a pathspec) should start
training their fingers to explicitly say "git add -u ."
before Git 2.0 comes. A warning is issued when these commands are
run without a pathspec and when you have local changes outside the
current directory, because the behaviour in Git 2.0 will be different
from today's version in such a situation.
In Git 2.0, "git add <path>" will behave as "git add -A <path>", so
that "git add dir/" will notice paths you removed from the directory
and record the removal. Versions before Git 2.0, including this
release, will keep ignoring removals, but the users who rely on this
behaviour are encouraged to start using "git add --ignore-removal <path>"
now before 2.0 is released.
The default prefix for "git svn" will change in Git 2.0. For a long
time, "git svn" created its remote-tracking branches directly under
refs/remotes, but it will place them under refs/remotes/origin/ unless
it is told otherwise with its --prefix option.
Updates since v1.8.4
--------------------
Foreign interfaces, subsystems and ports.
* "git-svn" has been taught to use the serf library, which is the
only option SVN 1.8.0 offers us when talking the HTTP protocol.
* "git-svn" talking over an https:// connection using the serf library
dumped core due to a bug in the serf library that SVN uses. Work
around it on our side, even though the SVN side is being fixed.
* On MacOS X, we detected if the filesystem needs the "pre-composed
unicode strings" workaround, but did not automatically enable it.
Now we do.
* remote-hg remote helper misbehaved when interacting with a local Hg
repository relative to the home directory, e.g. "clone hg::~/there".
* imap-send ported to OS X uses Apple's security framework instead of
OpenSSL's.
* "git fast-import" treats an empty path given to "ls" as the root of
the tree.
UI, Workflows & Features
* xdg-open can be used as a browser backend for "git web-browse"
(hence to show "git help -w" output), when available.
* "git grep" and "git show" pay attention to the "--textconv" option
when these commands are told to operate on blob objects (e.g. "git
grep -e pattern --textconv HEAD:Makefile").
* "git replace" helper no longer allows an object to be replaced with
another object of a different type to avoid confusion (you can
still manually craft such a replacement using "git update-ref", as an
escape hatch).
* "git status" no longer prints the dirty status information of
submodules for which submodule.$name.ignore is set to "all".
* "git rebase -i" honours core.abbrev when preparing the insn sheet
for editing.
* "git status" during a cherry-pick shows which original commit is
being picked.
* Instead of typing four capital letters "HEAD", you can say "@" now,
e.g. "git log @".
* "git check-ignore" follows the same rule as "git add" and "git
status" in that the ignore/exclude mechanism does not take effect
on paths that are already tracked. With the "--no-index" option, it
can be used to diagnose which paths that should have been ignored
have been mistakenly added to the index.
* Some irrelevant "advice" messages that are shared with "git status"
output have been removed from the commit log template.
* "update-refs" learned a "--stdin" option to read multiple update
requests and perform them in an all-or-none fashion.
* Just like "make -C <directory>", "git -C <directory> ..." tells Git
to go there before doing anything else.
* Just like "git checkout -" knows to check out, and "git merge -"
knows to merge, the branch you were previously on, "git cherry-pick"
now understands "git cherry-pick -" to pick from the previous
branch.
* "git status" now omits the prefix to make its output a comment in a
commit log editor, which is not necessary for human consumption.
Scripts that parse the output of "git status" are advised to use
"git status --porcelain" instead, as its format is stable and easier
to parse.
* The ref syntax "foo^{tag}" (with the literal string "{tag}") peels a
tag ref to itself, i.e. it's a no-op., and fails if
"foo" is not a tag. "git rev-parse --verify v1.0^{tag}" is
a more convenient way than "test $(git cat-file -t v1.0) = tag" to
check if v1.0 is a tag.
* "git branch -v -v" (and "git status") did not distinguish among a
branch that is not based on any other branch, a branch that is in
sync with its upstream branch, and a branch that is configured with an
upstream branch that no longer exists.
* Earlier we started rejecting any attempt to add the 0{40} object name to
the index and to tree objects, but it sometimes is necessary to
allow this to be able to use tools like filter-branch to correct such
broken tree objects. "filter-branch" can again be used to do this.
* "git config" did not provide a way to set or access numbers larger
than a native "int" on the platform; it now provides 64-bit signed
integers on all platforms.
* "git pull --rebase" always chose to do the bog-standard flattening
rebase. You can tell it to run "rebase --preserve-merges" with
"git pull --rebase=preserve" or by
setting "pull.rebase" configuration to "preserve".
* "git push --no-thin" actually disables the "thin pack transfer"
optimization.
* Magic pathspecs like ":(icase)makefile" (matches both Makefile
and makefile) and ":(glob)foo/**/bar" (matches "bar" in "foo"
and any subdirectory of "foo") can be used in more places.
* The "http.*" variables can now be specified for individual URLs.
For example,
[http]
sslVerify = true
[http "https://weak.example.com/"]
sslVerify = false
would flip http.sslVerify off only when talking to that specific
site.
* "git mv A B" when moving a submodule has been taught to
relocate the submodule's working tree and to adjust the paths in the
.gitmodules file.
* "git blame" can now take more than one -L option to discover the
origin of multiple blocks of lines.
* The http transport clients can optionally ask to save cookies
with the http.savecookies configuration variable.
* "git push" learned a more fine grained control over a blunt
"--force" when requesting a non-fast-forward update with the
"--force-with-lease=<refname>:<expected object name>" option.
* "git diff --diff-filter=<classes of changes>" can now take
lowercase letters (e.g. "--diff-filter=d") to mean "show
everything but these classes". "git diff-files -q" is now a
deprecated synonym for "git diff-files --diff-filter=d".
* "git fetch" (hence "git pull" as well) learned to check
"fetch.prune" and "remote.*.prune" configuration variables and
to behave as if the "--prune" command line option was given.
* "git check-ignore -z" applied the NUL termination to both its input
(with --stdin) and its output, but "git check-attr -z" ignored the
option on the output side. Make both honor -z on the input and
output side the same way.
* "git whatchanged" may still be used by old timers, but mention of
it in documents meant for new users will only waste readers' time
wondering what the difference is between it and "git log". Make it
less prominent in the general part of the documentation and explain
that it is merely a "git log" with different default behaviour in
its own document.
Performance, Internal Implementation, etc.
* "git for-each-ref" when asking for merely the object name does not
have to parse the object pointed at by the refs; the codepath has
been optimized.
* The HTTP transport will try to use TCP keepalive when able.
* "git repack" is now written in C.
* Build procedure for MSVC has been updated.
* If a build-time fallback is set to "cat" instead of "less", we
should apply the same "no subprocess or pipe" optimization as we
apply to user-supplied GIT_PAGER=cat.
* Many commands use a --dashed-option as an operation mode selector
(e.g. "git tag --delete") that excludes other operation modes
(e.g. "git tag --delete --verify" is nonsense) and that cannot be
negated (e.g. "git tag --no-delete" is nonsense). The parse-options
API learned a new OPT_CMDMODE macro to make it easier to implement
such a set of options.
* OPT_BOOLEAN() in the parse-options API was misdesigned to be "counting
up" but many subcommands expect it to behave as "on/off". Update
them to use OPT_BOOL() which is a proper boolean.
* "git gc" exits early without doing any work when it detects
that another instance of itself is already running.
* Under memory pressure and/or file descriptor pressure, we used to
close pack windows that are not used and also closed filehandles to
open but unused packfiles. These are now controlled separately
to better cope with the load.
Also contains various documentation updates and code clean-ups.
Fixes since v1.8.4
------------------
Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes since v1.8.4 in the maintenance
track are contained in this release (see the maintenance releases' notes for
details).
* An ancient How-To on serving Git repositories on an HTTP server
lacked a warning that it has been mostly superseded with a more
modern way.
(merge 6d52bc3 sc/doc-howto-dumb-http later to maint).
* The interaction between the use of Perl in our test suite and NO_PERL
has been clarified a bit.
(merge f8fc0ee jn/test-prereq-perl-doc later to maint).
* The synopsis section of the "git unpack-objects" documentation has been
clarified a bit.
(merge 61e2e22 vd/doc-unpack-objects later to maint).
* We did not generate the HTML version of the documentation to "git subtree"
in contrib/.
(merge 95c62fb jk/subtree-install-fix later to maint).
* A fast-import stream expresses a pathname with funny characters by
quoting them in C style; the remote-hg remote helper forgot to unquote
such a path.
(merge 1136265 ap/remote-hg-unquote-cquote later to maint).
* "git reset -p HEAD" has a codepath to special-case it to behave
differently from resetting to contents of other commits, but a
recent change broke it.
* Coloring around octopus merges in "log --graph" output was screwy.
(merge 339c17b hn/log-graph-color-octopus later to maint).
* "git checkout topic", when there is not yet a local "topic" branch
but there is a unique remote-tracking branch for a remote "topic"
branch, pretended as if "git checkout -t -b topic remote/$r/topic"
(for that unique remote $r) was run. This hack however was not
implemented for "git checkout topic --".
(merge bca3969 mm/checkout-auto-track-fix later to maint).
* One long-standing flaw in the pack transfer protocol used by "git
clone" was that there was no way to tell the other end which branch
"HEAD" points at, and the receiving end needed to guess. A new
capability has been defined in the pack protocol to convey this
information so that cloning from a repository with more than one
branch pointing at the same commit where the HEAD is at now
reliably sets the initial branch in the resulting repository.
(merge 360a326 jc/upload-pack-send-symref later to maint).
* We did not handle cases where the http transport gets redirected during
the authorization request (e.g. from http:// to https://).
(merge 70900ed jk/http-auth-redirects later to maint).
* Bash prompting code to deal with an SVN remote as an upstream
was coded in a way unsupported by older Bash versions (3.x).
(merge 52ec889 sg/prompt-svn-remote-fix later to maint).
* The fall-back parsing of commit objects with broken author or
committer lines was less robust than ideal in picking up the
timestamps.
(merge 03818a4 jk/split-broken-ident later to maint).
* "git rev-list --objects ^v1.0^ v1.0" gave the v1.0 tag itself in the
output, but "git rev-list --objects v1.0^..v1.0" did not.
(merge 895c5ba jc/revision-range-unpeel later to maint).
* "git clone" wrote some progress messages to standard output, not
to standard error, and did not suppress them with the
--no-progress option.
(merge 643f918 jk/clone-progress-to-stderr later to maint).
* "format-patch --from=<whom>" forgot to omit an unnecessary in-body
from line, i.e. when <whom> is the same as the real author.
(merge 662cc30 jk/format-patch-from later to maint).
* "git shortlog" used to choke and die when there is a malformed
commit (e.g. missing authors); it now simply ignores such a commit
and keeps going.
(merge cd4f09e jk/shortlog-tolerate-broken-commit later to maint).
* "git merge-recursive" did not parse its "--diff-algorithm=" command
line option correctly.
(merge 6562928 jk/diff-algo later to maint).
* When running "fetch -q", a long silence while the sender side
computes the set of objects to send can be mistaken by proxies as
dropped connection. The server side has been taught to send a
small empty messages to keep the connection alive.
(merge 115dedd jk/upload-pack-keepalive later to maint).
* "git rebase" had a portability regression in v1.8.4 that triggered a
bug in some BSD shell implementations.
(merge 99855dd mm/rebase-continue-freebsd-WB later to maint).
* "git branch --track" had a minor regression in v1.8.3.2 and later
that made it impossible to base your local work on anything but a
local branch of the upstream repository you are tracking.
(merge b0f49ff jh/checkout-auto-tracking later to maint).
* When the web server responds with "405 Method Not Allowed", "git
http-backend" should tell the client what methods are allowed with
the "Allow" header.
(merge 9247be0 bc/http-backend-allow-405 later to maint).
* When there is no sufficient overlap between old and new history
during a "git fetch" into a shallow repository, objects that the
sending side knows the receiving end has were unnecessarily sent.
(merge f21d2a7 nd/fetch-into-shallow later to maint).
* "git cvsserver" computed the permission mode bits incorrectly for
executable files.
(merge 1b48d56 jc/cvsserver-perm-bit-fix later to maint).
* When send-email obtains an error message to die with upon
failure to start an SSL session, it tried to read the error string
from a wrong place.
(merge 6cb0c88 bc/send-email-ssl-die-message-fix later to maint).
* The implementation of "add -i" has some crippling code to work around an
ActiveState Perl limitation but it by mistake also triggered on Git
for Windows where MSYS perl is used.
(merge df17e77 js/add-i-mingw later to maint).
* We made sure that we notice when the user-supplied GIT_DIR is actually a
gitfile, but did not do the same when the default ".git" is a
gitfile.
(merge 487a2b7 nd/git-dir-pointing-at-gitfile later to maint).
* When an object is not found after checking the packfiles and the
loose object directory, read_sha1_file() re-checks the packfiles to
prevent racing with a concurrent repacker; teach the same logic to
has_sha1_file().
(merge 45e8a74 jk/has-sha1-file-retry-packed later to maint).
* "git commit --author=$name", when $name is not in the canonical
"A. U. Thor <au.thor@example.xz>" format, looks for a matching name
from existing history, but did not consult mailmap to grab the
preferred author name.
(merge ea16794 ap/commit-author-mailmap later to maint).
* "git ls-files -k" needs to crawl only the part of the working tree
that may overlap the paths in the index to find killed files, but
shared code with the logic to find all the untracked files, which
made it unnecessarily inefficient.
(merge 680be04 jc/ls-files-killed-optim later to maint).
* The shortened commit object names in the insn sheet that is prepared at the
beginning of a "rebase -i" session can become ambiguous as the
rebasing progresses and the repository gains more commits. Make
sure the internal record is kept with full 40-hex object names.
(merge 75c6976 es/rebase-i-no-abbrev later to maint).
* "git rebase --preserve-merges" internally used the merge machinery
and as a side effect left the merge summary message in the log, but
when rebasing there is no need for the merge summary.
(merge a9f739c rt/rebase-p-no-merge-summary later to maint).
* A call to xread() was used without a loop around it to cope with short
reads in the codepath to stream new contents to a pack.
(merge e92527c js/xread-in-full later to maint).
* "git rebase -i" forgot that the comment character is
configurable while reading its insn sheet.
(merge 7bca7af es/rebase-i-respect-core-commentchar later to maint).
* The mailmap support code read past the allocated buffer when the
mailmap file ended with an incomplete line.
(merge f972a16 jk/mailmap-incomplete-line later to maint).
* We used to send a large request to read(2)/write(2) as a single
system call, which was bad from the latency point of view when
the operation needs to be killed, and also triggered an error on
broken 64-bit systems that refuse to read or write more than 2GB
in one go.
(merge a487916 sp/clip-read-write-to-8mb later to maint).
* "git fetch" that auto-followed tags incorrectly reused the
connection with Git-aware transport helper (like the sample "ext::"
helper shipped with Git).
(merge 0f73f8b jc/transport-do-not-use-connect-twice-in-fetch later to maint).
* "git log --full-diff -- <pathspec>" showed a huge diff for paths
outside the given <pathspec> for each commit, instead of showing
the change relative to the parent of the commit. "git reflog -p"
had a similar problem.
(merge 838f9a1 tr/log-full-diff-keep-true-parents later to maint).
* Setting a submodule.*.path configuration variable to true (without
giving "= value") caused Git to segfault.
(merge 4b05440 jl/some-submodule-config-are-not-boolean later to maint).
* "git rebase -i" (there could be others, as the root cause is pretty
generic) fed a random, data dependent string to 'echo' and
expected it to come out literally, corrupting its error message.
(merge 89b0230 mm/no-shell-escape-in-die-message later to maint).
* Some people still use rather old versions of bash, which cannot
grok some constructs like 'printf -v varname' which the prompt and
completion code started to use recently.
(merge a44aa69 bc/completion-for-bash-3.0 later to maint).
* Code to read configuration from a blob object did not compile on
platforms with fgetc() etc. implemented as macros.
(merge 49d6cfa hv/config-from-blob later to maint-1.8.3).
* The recent "short-cut clone connectivity check" topic broke a
shallow repository when a fetch operation tries to auto-follow tags.
(merge 6da8bdc nd/fetch-pack-shallow-fix later to maint-1.8.3).

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Git v1.9.0 Release Notes
========================
Backward compatibility notes
----------------------------
"git submodule foreach $cmd $args" used to treat "$cmd $args" the same
way "ssh" did, concatenating them into a single string and letting the
shell unquote. Careless users who forget to sufficiently quote $args
get their argument split at $IFS whitespaces by the shell, and got
unexpected results due to this. Starting from this release, the
command line is passed directly to the shell, if it has an argument.
Read-only support for experimental loose-object format, in which users
could optionally choose to write their loose objects for a short
while between v1.4.3 and v1.5.3 era, has been dropped.
The meanings of the "--tags" option to "git fetch" has changed; the
command fetches tags _in addition to_ what is fetched by the same
command line without the option.
The way "git push $there $what" interprets the $what part given on the
command line, when it does not have a colon that explicitly tells us
what ref at the $there repository is to be updated, has been enhanced.
A handful of ancient commands that have long been deprecated are
finally gone (repo-config, tar-tree, lost-found, and peek-remote).
Backward compatibility notes (for Git 2.0.0)
--------------------------------------------
When "git push [$there]" does not say what to push, we have used the
traditional "matching" semantics so far (all your branches were sent
to the remote as long as there already are branches of the same name
over there). In Git 2.0, the default will change to the "simple"
semantics, which pushes:
- only the current branch to the branch with the same name, and only
when the current branch is set to integrate with that remote
branch, if you are pushing to the same remote as you fetch from; or
- only the current branch to the branch with the same name, if you
are pushing to a remote that is not where you usually fetch from.
Use the user preference configuration variable "push.default" to
change this. If you are an old-timer who is used to the "matching"
semantics, you can set the variable to "matching" to keep the
traditional behaviour. If you want to live in the future early, you
can set it to "simple" today without waiting for Git 2.0.
When "git add -u" (and "git add -A") is run inside a subdirectory and
does not specify which paths to add on the command line, it
will operate on the entire tree in Git 2.0 for consistency
with "git commit -a" and other commands. There will be no
mechanism to make plain "git add -u" behave like "git add -u .".
Current users of "git add -u" (without a pathspec) should start
training their fingers to explicitly say "git add -u ."
before Git 2.0 comes. A warning is issued when these commands are
run without a pathspec and when you have local changes outside the
current directory, because the behaviour in Git 2.0 will be different
from today's version in such a situation.
In Git 2.0, "git add <path>" will behave as "git add -A <path>", so
that "git add dir/" will notice paths you removed from the directory
and record the removal. Versions before Git 2.0, including this
release, will keep ignoring removals, but the users who rely on this
behaviour are encouraged to start using "git add --ignore-removal <path>"
now before 2.0 is released.
The default prefix for "git svn" will change in Git 2.0. For a long
time, "git svn" created its remote-tracking branches directly under
refs/remotes, but it will place them under refs/remotes/origin/ unless
it is told otherwise with its --prefix option.
Updates since v1.8.5
--------------------
Foreign interfaces, subsystems and ports.
* The HTTP transport, when talking GSS-Negotiate, uses "100
Continue" response to avoid having to rewind and resend a large
payload, which may not be always doable.
* Various bugfixes to remote-bzr and remote-hg (in contrib/).
* The build procedure is aware of MirBSD now.
* Various "git p4", "git svn" and "gitk" updates.
UI, Workflows & Features
* Fetching from a shallowly-cloned repository used to be forbidden,
primarily because the codepaths involved were not carefully vetted
and we did not bother supporting such usage. This release attempts
to allow object transfer out of a shallowly-cloned repository in a
more controlled way (i.e. the receiver becomes a shallow repository
with a truncated history).
* Just like we give a reasonable default for "less" via the LESS
environment variable, we now specify a reasonable default for "lv"
via the "LV" environment variable when spawning the pager.
* Two-level configuration variable names in "branch.*" and "remote.*"
hierarchies, whose variables are predominantly three-level, were
not completed by hitting a <TAB> in bash and zsh completions.
* Fetching a 'frotz' branch with "git fetch", while a 'frotz/nitfol'
remote-tracking branch from an earlier fetch was still there, would
error out, primarily because the command was not told that it is
allowed to lose any information on our side. "git fetch --prune"
now can be used to remove 'frotz/nitfol' to make room for fetching and
storing the 'frotz' remote-tracking branch.
* "diff.orderfile=<file>" configuration variable can be used to
pretend as if the "-O<file>" option were given from the command
line of "git diff", etc.
* The negative pathspec syntax allows "git log -- . ':!dir'" to tell
us "I am interested in everything but 'dir' directory".
* "git difftool" shows how many different paths there are in total,
and how many of them have been shown so far, to indicate progress.
* "git push origin master" used to push our 'master' branch to update
the 'master' branch at the 'origin' repository. This has been
enhanced to use the same ref mapping "git push origin" would use to
determine what ref at the 'origin' to be updated with our 'master'.
For example, with this configuration
[remote "origin"]
push = refs/heads/*:refs/review/*
that would cause "git push origin" to push out our local branches
to corresponding refs under refs/review/ hierarchy at 'origin',
"git push origin master" would update 'refs/review/master' over
there. Alternatively, if push.default is set to 'upstream' and our
'master' is set to integrate with 'topic' from the 'origin' branch,
running "git push origin" while on our 'master' would update their
'topic' branch, and running "git push origin master" while on any
of our branches does the same.
* "gitweb" learned to treat ref hierarchies other than refs/heads as
if they are additional branch namespaces (e.g. refs/changes/ in
Gerrit).
* "git for-each-ref --format=..." learned a few formatting directives;
e.g. "%(color:red)%(HEAD)%(color:reset) %(refname:short) %(subject)".
* The command string given to "git submodule foreach" is passed
directly to the shell, without being eval'ed. This is a backward
incompatible change that may break existing users.
* "git log" and friends learned the "--exclude=<glob>" option, to
allow people to say "list history of all branches except those that
match this pattern" with "git log --exclude='*/*' --branches".
* "git rev-parse --parseopt" learned a new "--stuck-long" option to
help scripts parse options with an optional parameter.
* The "--tags" option to "git fetch" no longer tells the command to
fetch _only_ the tags. It instead fetches tags _in addition to_
what are fetched by the same command line without the option.
Performance, Internal Implementation, etc.
* When parsing a 40-hex string into the object name, the string is
checked to see if it can be interpreted as a ref so that a warning
can be given for ambiguity. The code kicked in even when the
core.warnambiguousrefs is set to false to squelch this warning, in
which case the cycles spent to look at the ref namespace were an
expensive no-op, as the result was discarded without being used.
* The naming convention of the packfiles has been updated; it used to
be based on the enumeration of names of the objects that are
contained in the pack, but now it also depends on how the packed
result is represented---packing the same set of objects using
different settings (or delta order) would produce a pack with
different name.
* "git diff --no-index" mode used to unnecessarily attempt to read
the index when there is one.
* The deprecated parse-options macro OPT_BOOLEAN has been removed;
use OPT_BOOL or OPT_COUNTUP in new code.
* A few duplicate implementations of prefix/suffix string comparison
functions have been unified to starts_with() and ends_with().
* The new PERLLIB_EXTRA makefile variable can be used to specify
additional directories Perl modules (e.g. the ones necessary to run
git-svn) are installed on the platform when building.
* "git merge-base" learned the "--fork-point" mode, that implements
the same logic used in "git pull --rebase" to find a suitable fork
point out of the reflog entries for the remote-tracking branch the
work has been based on. "git rebase" has the same logic that can be
triggered with the "--fork-point" option.
* A third-party "receive-pack" (the responder to "git push") can
advertise the "no-thin" capability to tell "git push" not to use
the thin-pack optimization. Our receive-pack has always been
capable of accepting and fattening a thin-pack, and will continue
not to ask "git push" to use a non-thin pack.
Also contains various documentation updates and code clean-ups.
Fixes since v1.8.5
------------------
Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes since v1.8.5 in the maintenance
track are contained in this release (see the maintenance releases' notes
for details).
* The pathspec matching code, while comparing two trees (e.g. "git
diff A B -- path1 path2") was too aggressive and failed to match
some paths when multiple pathspecs were involved.
* "git repack --max-pack-size=8g" stopped being parsed correctly when
the command was reimplemented in C.
* An earlier update in v1.8.4.x to "git rev-list --objects" with
negative ref had a performance regression.
(merge 200abe7 jk/mark-edges-uninteresting later to maint).
* A recent update to "git send-email" broke platforms where
/etc/ssl/certs/ directory exists but cannot be used as SSL_ca_path
(e.g. Fedora rawhide).
* A handful of bugs around interpreting $branch@{upstream} notation
and its lookalike, when $branch part has interesting characters,
e.g. "@", and ":", have been fixed.
* "git clone" would fail to clone from a repository that has a ref
directly under "refs/", e.g. "refs/stash", because different
validation paths do different things on such a refname. Loosen the
client side's validation to allow such a ref.
* "git log --left-right A...B" lost the "leftness" of commits
reachable from A when A is a tag as a side effect of a recent
bugfix. This is a regression in 1.8.4.x series.
* documentations to "git pull" hinted there is an "-m" option because
it incorrectly shared the documentation with "git merge".
* "git diff A B submod" and "git diff A B submod/" ought to have done
the same for a submodule "submod", but didn't.
* "git clone $origin foo\bar\baz" on Windows failed to create the
leading directories (i.e. a moral-equivalent of "mkdir -p").
* "submodule.*.update=checkout", when propagated from .gitmodules to
.git/config, turned into a "submodule.*.update=none", which did not
make much sense.
(merge efa8fd7 fp/submodule-checkout-mode later to maint).
* The implementation of 'git stash $cmd "stash@{...}"' did not quote
the stash argument properly and left it split at IFS whitespace.
* The "--[no-]informative-errors" options to "git daemon" were parsed
a bit too loosely, allowing any other string after these option
names.
* There is no reason to have a hardcoded upper limit for the number of
parents of an octopus merge, created via the graft mechanism, but
there was.
* The basic test used to leave unnecessary trash directories in the
t/ directory.
(merge 738a8be jk/test-framework-updates later to maint).
* "git merge-base --octopus" used to leave cleaning up suboptimal
result to the caller, but now it does the clean-up itself.
* A "gc" process running as a different user should be able to stop a
new "gc" process from starting, but it didn't.
* An earlier "clean-up" introduced an unnecessary memory leak.
* "git add -A" (no other arguments) in a totally empty working tree
used to emit an error.
* "git log --decorate" did not handle a tag pointed by another tag
nicely.
* When we figure out how many file descriptors to allocate for
keeping packfiles open, a system with non-working getrlimit() could
cause us to die(), but because we make this call only to get a
rough estimate of how many are available and we do not even attempt
to use up all available file descriptors ourselves, it is nicer to
fall back to a reasonable low value rather than dying.
* read_sha1_file(), that is the workhorse to read the contents given
an object name, honoured object replacements, but there was no
corresponding mechanism to sha1_object_info() that was used to
obtain the metainfo (e.g. type & size) about the object. This led
callers to weird inconsistencies.
(merge 663a856 cc/replace-object-info later to maint).
* "git cat-file --batch=", an admittedly useless command, did not
behave very well.
* "git rev-parse <revs> -- <paths>" did not implement the usual
disambiguation rules the commands in the "git log" family used in
the same way.
* "git mv A B/", when B does not exist as a directory, should error
out, but it didn't.
* A workaround to an old bug in glibc prior to glibc 2.17 has been
retired; this would remove a side effect of the workaround that
corrupts system error messages in non-C locales.
* SSL-related options were not passed correctly to underlying socket
layer in "git send-email".
* "git commit -v" appends the patch to the log message before
editing, and then removes the patch when the editor returned
control. However, the patch was not stripped correctly when the
first modified path was a submodule.
* "git fetch --depth=0" was a no-op, and was silently ignored.
Diagnose it as an error.
* Remote repository URLs expressed in scp-style host:path notation are
parsed more carefully (e.g. "foo/bar:baz" is local, "[::1]:/~user" asks
to connect to user's home directory on host at address ::1.
* "git diff -- ':(icase)makefile'" was unnecessarily rejected at the
command line parser.
* "git cat-file --batch-check=ok" did not check the existence of
the named object.
* "git am --abort" sometimes complained about not being able to write
a tree with an 0{40} object in it.
* Two processes creating loose objects at the same time could have
failed unnecessarily when the name of their new objects started
with the same byte value, due to a race condition.

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Git v1.9.1 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v1.9.0
------------------
* "git clean -d pathspec" did not use the given pathspec correctly
and ended up cleaning too much.
* "git difftool" misbehaved when the repository is bound to the
working tree with the ".git file" mechanism, where a textual file
".git" tells us where it is.
* "git push" did not pay attention to branch.*.pushremote if it is
defined earlier than remote.pushdefault; the order of these two
variables in the configuration file should not matter, but it did
by mistake.
* Codepaths that parse timestamps in commit objects have been
tightened.
* "git diff --external-diff" incorrectly fed the submodule directory
in the working tree to the external diff driver when it knew it is
the same as one of the versions being compared.
* "git reset" needs to refresh the index when working in a working
tree (it can also be used to match the index to the HEAD in an
otherwise bare repository), but it failed to set up the working
tree properly, causing GIT_WORK_TREE to be ignored.
* "git check-attr" when working on a repository with a working tree
did not work well when the working tree was specified via the
--work-tree (and obviously with --git-dir) option.
* "merge-recursive" was broken in 1.7.7 era and stopped working in
an empty (temporary) working tree, when there are renames
involved. This has been corrected.
* "git rev-parse" was loose in rejecting command line arguments
that do not make sense, e.g. "--default" without the required
value for that option.
* include.path variable (or any variable that expects a path that
can use ~username expansion) in the configuration file is not a
boolean, but the code failed to check it.
* "git diff --quiet -- pathspec1 pathspec2" sometimes did not return
correct status value.
* Attempting to deepen a shallow repository by fetching over smart
HTTP transport failed in the protocol exchange, when no-done
extension was used. The fetching side waited for the list of
shallow boundary commits after the sending end stopped talking to
it.
* Allow "git cmd path/", when the 'path' is where a submodule is
bound to the top-level working tree, to match 'path', despite the
extra and unnecessary trailing slash (such a slash is often
given by command line completion).

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Git v1.9.2 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v1.9.1
------------------
* Documentation and in-code comments had many instances of mistaken
use of "nor", which have been corrected.
* "git fetch --prune", when the right-hand-side of multiple fetch
refspecs overlap (e.g. storing "refs/heads/*" to
"refs/remotes/origin/*", while storing "refs/frotz/*" to
"refs/remotes/origin/fr/*"), aggressively thought that lack of
"refs/heads/fr/otz" on the origin site meant we should remove
"refs/remotes/origin/fr/otz" from us, without checking their
"refs/frotz/otz" first.
Note that such a configuration is inherently unsafe (think what
should happen when "refs/heads/fr/otz" does appear on the origin
site), but that is not a reason not to be extra careful.
* "git update-ref --stdin" did not fail a request to create a ref
when the ref already existed.
* "git diff --no-index -Mq a b" fell into an infinite loop.
* When it is not necessary to edit a commit log message (e.g. "git
commit -m" is given a message without specifying "-e"), we used to
disable the spawning of the editor by overriding GIT_EDITOR, but
this means all the uses of the editor, other than to edit the
commit log message, are also affected.
* "git status --porcelain --branch" showed its output with labels
"ahead/behind/gone" translated to the user's locale.
* "git mv" that moves a submodule forgot to adjust the array that
uses to keep track of which submodules were to be moved to update
its configuration.
* Length limit for the pathname used when removing a path in a deep
subdirectory has been removed to avoid buffer overflows.
* The test helper lib-terminal always run an actual test_expect_*
when included, which screwed up with the use of skil-all that may
have to be done later.
* "git index-pack" used a wrong variable to name the keep-file in an
error message when the file cannot be written or closed.
* "rebase -i" produced a broken insn sheet when the title of a commit
happened to contain '\n' (or ended with '\c') due to a careless use
of 'echo'.
* There were a few instances of 'git-foo' remaining in the
documentation that should have been spelled 'git foo'.
* Serving objects from a shallow repository needs to write a
new file to hold the temporary shallow boundaries but it was not
cleaned when we exit due to die() or a signal.
* When "git stash pop" stops after failing to apply the stash
(e.g. due to conflicting changes), the stash is not dropped. State
that explicitly in the output to let the users know.
* The labels in "git status" output that describe the nature of
conflicts (e.g. "both deleted") were limited to 20 bytes, which was
too short for some l10n (e.g. fr).

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Git v1.9.3 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v1.9.2
------------------
* "git p4" dealing with changes in binary files were broken by a
change in 1.9 release.
* The shell prompt script (in contrib/), when using the PROMPT_COMMAND
interface, used an unsafe construct when showing the branch name in
$PS1.
* "git rebase" used a POSIX shell construct FreeBSD /bin/sh does not
work well with.
* Some more Unicode codepoints defined in Unicode 6.3 as having
zero width have been taught to our display column counting logic.
* Some tests used shell constructs that did not work well on
FreeBSD.

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Git v1.9.4 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v1.9.3
------------------
* Commands that take pathspecs on the command line misbehaved when
the pathspec is given as an absolute pathname (which is a
practice not particularly encouraged) that points at a symbolic
link in the working tree.
* An earlier fix to the shell prompt script (in contrib/) for using
the PROMPT_COMMAND interface did not correctly check if the extra
code path needs to trigger, causing the branch name not to appear
when 'promptvars' option is disabled in bash or PROMPT_SUBST is
unset in zsh.

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Git v1.9.5 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v1.9.4
------------------
* We used to allow committing a path ".Git/config" with Git that is
running on a case sensitive filesystem, but an attempt to check out
such a path with Git that runs on a case insensitive filesystem
would have clobbered ".git/config", which is definitely not what
the user would have expected. Git now prevents you from tracking
a path with ".Git" (in any case combination) as a path component.
* On Windows, certain path components that are different from ".git"
are mapped to ".git", e.g. "git~1/config" is treated as if it were
".git/config". HFS+ has a similar issue, where certain unicode
codepoints are ignored, e.g. ".g\u200cit/config" is treated as if
it were ".git/config". Pathnames with these potential issues are
rejected on the affected systems. Git on systems that are not
affected by this issue (e.g. Linux) can also be configured to
reject them to ensure cross platform interoperability of the hosted
projects.
* "git fsck" notices a tree object that records such a path that can
be confused with ".git", and with receive.fsckObjects configuration
set to true, an attempt to "git push" such a tree object will be
rejected. Such a path may not be a problem on a well behaving
filesystem but in order to protect those on HFS+ and on case
insensitive filesystems, this check is enabled on all platforms.
A big "thanks!" for bringing this issue to us goes to our friends in
the Mercurial land, namely, Matt Mackall and Augie Fackler.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code clean-ups.

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Git v2.0 Release Notes
======================
Backward compatibility notes
----------------------------
When "git push [$there]" does not say what to push, we have used the
traditional "matching" semantics so far (all your branches were sent
to the remote as long as there already are branches of the same name
over there). In Git 2.0, the default is now the "simple" semantics,
which pushes:
- only the current branch to the branch with the same name, and only
when the current branch is set to integrate with that remote
branch, if you are pushing to the same remote as you fetch from; or
- only the current branch to the branch with the same name, if you
are pushing to a remote that is not where you usually fetch from.
You can use the configuration variable "push.default" to change
this. If you are an old-timer who wants to keep using the
"matching" semantics, you can set the variable to "matching", for
example. Read the documentation for other possibilities.
When "git add -u" and "git add -A" are run inside a subdirectory
without specifying which paths to add on the command line, they
operate on the entire tree for consistency with "git commit -a" and
other commands (these commands used to operate only on the current
subdirectory). Say "git add -u ." or "git add -A ." if you want to
limit the operation to the current directory.
"git add <path>" is the same as "git add -A <path>" now, so that
"git add dir/" will notice paths you removed from the directory and
record the removal. In older versions of Git, "git add <path>" used
to ignore removals. You can say "git add --ignore-removal <path>" to
add only added or modified paths in <path>, if you really want to.
The "-q" option to "git diff-files", which does *NOT* mean "quiet",
has been removed (it told Git to ignore deletion, which you can do
with "git diff-files --diff-filter=d").
"git request-pull" lost a few "heuristics" that often led to mistakes.
The default prefix for "git svn" has changed in Git 2.0. For a long
time, "git svn" created its remote-tracking branches directly under
refs/remotes, but it now places them under refs/remotes/origin/ unless
it is told otherwise with its "--prefix" option.
Updates since v1.9 series
-------------------------
UI, Workflows & Features
* The "multi-mail" post-receive hook (in contrib/) has been updated
to a more recent version from upstream.
* The "remote-hg/bzr" remote-helper interfaces (used to be in
contrib/) are no more. They are now maintained separately as
third-party plug-ins in their own repositories.
* "git gc --aggressive" learned "--depth" option and
"gc.aggressiveDepth" configuration variable to allow use of a less
insane depth than the built-in default value of 250.
* "git log" learned the "--show-linear-break" option to show where a
single strand-of-pearls is broken in its output.
* The "rev-parse --parseopt" mechanism used by scripted Porcelains to
parse command-line options and to give help text learned to take
the argv-help (the placeholder string for an option parameter,
e.g. "key-id" in "--gpg-sign=<key-id>").
* The pattern to find where the function begins in C/C++ used in
"diff" and "grep -p" has been updated to improve viewing C++
sources.
* "git rebase" learned to interpret a lone "-" as "@{-1}", the
branch that we were previously on.
* "git commit --cleanup=<mode>" learned a new mode, scissors.
* "git tag --list" output can be sorted using "version sort" with
"--sort=version:refname".
* Discard the accumulated "heuristics" to guess from which branch the
result wants to be pulled from and make sure that what the end user
specified is not second-guessed by "git request-pull", to avoid
mistakes. When you pushed out your 'master' branch to your public
repository as 'for-linus', use the new "master:for-linus" syntax to
denote the branch to be pulled.
* "git grep" learned to behave in a way similar to native grep when
"-h" (no header) and "-c" (count) options are given.
* "git push" via transport-helper interface has been updated to
allow forced ref updates in a way similar to the natively
supported transports.
* The "simple" mode is the default for "git push".
* "git add -u" and "git add -A", when run without any pathspec, is a
tree-wide operation even when run inside a subdirectory of a
working tree.
* "git add <path>" is the same as "git add -A <path>" now.
* "core.statinfo" configuration variable, which is a
never-advertised synonym to "core.checkstat", has been removed.
* The "-q" option to "git diff-files", which does *NOT* mean
"quiet", has been removed (it told Git to ignore deletion, which
you can do with "git diff-files --diff-filter=d").
* Server operators can loosen the "tips of refs only" restriction for
the remote archive service with the uploadarchive.allowUnreachable
configuration option.
* The progress indicators from various time-consuming commands have
been marked for i18n/l10n.
* "git notes -C <blob>" diagnoses as an error an attempt to use an
object that is not a blob.
* "git config" learned to read from the standard input when "-" is
given as the value to its "--file" parameter (attempting an
operation to update the configuration in the standard input is
rejected, of course).
* Trailing whitespaces in .gitignore files, unless they are quoted
for fnmatch(3), e.g. "path\ ", are warned and ignored. Strictly
speaking, this is a backward-incompatible change, but very unlikely
to bite any sane user and adjusting should be obvious and easy.
* Many commands that create commits, e.g. "pull" and "rebase",
learned to take the "--gpg-sign" option on the command line.
* "git commit" can be told to always GPG sign the resulting commit
by setting the "commit.gpgsign" configuration variable to "true"
(the command-line option "--no-gpg-sign" should override it).
* "git pull" can be told to only accept fast-forward by setting the
new "pull.ff" configuration variable.
* "git reset" learned the "-N" option, which does not reset the index
fully for paths the index knows about but the tree-ish the command
resets to does not (these paths are kept as intend-to-add entries).
Performance, Internal Implementation, etc.
* The compilation options to port to AIX and to MSVC have been
updated.
* We started using wildmatch() in place of fnmatch(3) a few releases
ago; complete the process and stop using fnmatch(3).
* Uses of curl's "multi" interface and "easy" interface do not mix
well when we attempt to reuse outgoing connections. Teach the RPC
over HTTP code, used in the smart HTTP transport, not to use the
"easy" interface.
* The bitmap-index feature from JGit has been ported, which should
significantly improve performance when serving objects from a
repository that uses it.
* The way "git log --cc" shows a combined diff against multiple
parents has been optimized.
* The prefixcmp() and suffixcmp() functions are gone. Use
starts_with() and ends_with(), and also consider if skip_prefix()
suits your needs better when using the former.
Also contains various documentation updates and code clean-ups. Many
of them came from flurry of activities as GSoC candidate microproject
exercises.
Fixes since v1.9 series
-----------------------
Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes since v1.9 in the maintenance
track are contained in this release (see the maintenance releases'
notes for details).
* "git p4" was broken in 1.9 release to deal with changes in binary
files.
(merge 749b668 cl/p4-use-diff-tree later to maint).
* The shell prompt script (in contrib/), when using the PROMPT_COMMAND
interface, used an unsafe construct when showing the branch name in
$PS1.
(merge 1e4119c8 rh/prompt-pcmode-avoid-eval-on-refname later to maint).
* "git rebase" used a POSIX shell construct FreeBSD's /bin/sh does not
work well with.
(merge 8cd6596 km/avoid-non-function-return-in-rebase later to maint).
* zsh prompt (in contrib/) leaked unnecessary error messages.
* Bash completion (in contrib/) did not complete the refs and remotes
correctly given "git pu<TAB>" when "pu" is aliased to "push".
* Some more Unicode code points, defined in Unicode 6.3 as having zero
width, have been taught to our display column counting logic.
(merge d813ab9 tb/unicode-6.3-zero-width later to maint).
* Some tests used shell constructs that did not work well on FreeBSD
(merge ff7a1c6 km/avoid-bs-in-shell-glob later to maint).
(merge 00764ca km/avoid-cp-a later to maint).
* "git update-ref --stdin" did not fail a request to create a ref
when the ref already existed.
(merge b9d56b5 mh/update-ref-batch-create-fix later to maint).
* "git diff --no-index -Mq a b" fell into an infinite loop.
(merge ad1c3fb jc/fix-diff-no-index-diff-opt-parse later to maint).
* "git fetch --prune", when the right-hand side of multiple fetch
refspecs overlap (e.g. storing "refs/heads/*" to
"refs/remotes/origin/*", while storing "refs/frotz/*" to
"refs/remotes/origin/fr/*"), aggressively thought that lack of
"refs/heads/fr/otz" on the origin site meant we should remove
"refs/remotes/origin/fr/otz" from us, without checking their
"refs/frotz/otz" first.
Note that such a configuration is inherently unsafe (think what
should happen when "refs/heads/fr/otz" does appear on the origin
site), but that is not a reason not to be extra careful.
(merge e6f6371 cn/fetch-prune-overlapping-destination later to maint).
* "git status --porcelain --branch" showed its output with labels
"ahead/behind/gone" translated to the user's locale.
(merge 7a76c28 mm/status-porcelain-format-i18n-fix later to maint).
* A stray environment variable $prefix could have leaked into and
affected the behaviour of the "subtree" script (in contrib/).
* When it is not necessary to edit a commit log message (e.g. "git
commit -m" is given a message without specifying "-e"), we used to
disable the spawning of the editor by overriding GIT_EDITOR, but
this means all the uses of the editor, other than to edit the
commit log message, are also affected.
(merge b549be0 bp/commit-p-editor later to maint).
* "git mv" that moves a submodule forgot to adjust the array that
uses to keep track of which submodules were to be moved to update
its configuration.
(merge fb8a4e8 jk/mv-submodules-fix later to maint).
* Length limit for the pathname used when removing a path in a deep
subdirectory has been removed to avoid buffer overflows.
(merge 2f29e0c mh/remove-subtree-long-pathname-fix later to maint).
* The test helper lib-terminal always run an actual test_expect_*
when included, which screwed up with the use of skil-all that may
have to be done later.
(merge 7e27173 jk/lib-terminal-lazy later to maint).
* "git index-pack" used a wrong variable to name the keep-file in an
error message when the file cannot be written or closed.
(merge de983a0 nd/index-pack-error-message later to maint).
* "rebase -i" produced a broken insn sheet when the title of a commit
happened to contain '\n' (or ended with '\c') due to a careless use
of 'echo'.
(merge cb1aefd us/printf-not-echo later to maint).
* There were a few instances of 'git-foo' remaining in the
documentation that should have been spelled 'git foo'.
(merge 3c3e6f5 rr/doc-merge-strategies later to maint).
* Serving objects from a shallow repository needs to write a
new file to hold the temporary shallow boundaries, but it was not
cleaned when we exit due to die() or a signal.
(merge 7839632 jk/shallow-update-fix later to maint).
* When "git stash pop" stops after failing to apply the stash
(e.g. due to conflicting changes), the stash is not dropped. State
that explicitly in the output to let the users know.
(merge 2d4c993 jc/stash-pop-not-popped later to maint).
* The labels in "git status" output that describe the nature of
conflicts (e.g. "both deleted") were limited to 20 bytes, which was
too short for some l10n (e.g. fr).
(merge c7cb333 jn/wt-status later to maint).
* "git clean -d pathspec" did not use the given pathspec correctly
and ended up cleaning too much.
(merge 1f2e108 jk/clean-d-pathspec later to maint).
* "git difftool" misbehaved when the repository is bound to the
working tree with the ".git file" mechanism, where a textual file
".git" tells us where it is.
(merge fcfec8b da/difftool-git-files later to maint).
* "git push" did not pay attention to "branch.*.pushremote" if it is
defined earlier than "remote.pushdefault"; the order of these two
variables in the configuration file should not matter, but it did
by mistake.
(merge 98b406f jk/remote-pushremote-config-reading later to maint).
* Code paths that parse timestamps in commit objects have been
tightened.
(merge f80d1f9 jk/commit-dates-parsing-fix later to maint).
* "git diff --external-diff" incorrectly fed the submodule directory
in the working tree to the external diff driver when it knew that it
is the same as one of the versions being compared.
(merge aba4727 tr/diff-submodule-no-reuse-worktree later to maint).
* "git reset" needs to refresh the index when working in a working
tree (it can also be used to match the index to the HEAD in an
otherwise bare repository), but it failed to set up the working
tree properly, causing GIT_WORK_TREE to be ignored.
(merge b7756d4 nd/reset-setup-worktree later to maint).
* "git check-attr" when working on a repository with a working tree
did not work well when the working tree was specified via the
"--work-tree" (and obviously with "--git-dir") option.
(merge cdbf623 jc/check-attr-honor-working-tree later to maint).
* "merge-recursive" was broken in 1.7.7 era and stopped working in
an empty (temporary) working tree, when there are renames
involved. This has been corrected.
(merge 6e2068a bk/refresh-missing-ok-in-merge-recursive later to maint.)
* "git rev-parse" was loose in rejecting command-line arguments
that do not make sense, e.g. "--default" without the required
value for that option.
(merge a43219f ds/rev-parse-required-args later to maint.)
* "include.path" variable (or any variable that expects a path that
can use ~username expansion) in the configuration file is not a
boolean, but the code failed to check it.
(merge 67beb60 jk/config-path-include-fix later to maint.)
* Commands that take pathspecs on the command line misbehaved when
the pathspec is given as an absolute pathname (which is a
practice not particularly encouraged) that points at a symbolic
link in the working tree.
(merge 6127ff6 mw/symlinks later to maint.)
* "git diff --quiet -- pathspec1 pathspec2" sometimes did not return
the correct status value.
(merge f34b205 nd/diff-quiet-stat-dirty later to maint.)
* Attempting to deepen a shallow repository by fetching over smart
HTTP transport failed in the protocol exchange, when the no-done
extension was used. The fetching side waited for the list of
shallow boundary commits after the sending side stopped talking to
it.
(merge 0232852 nd/http-fetch-shallow-fix later to maint.)
* Allow "git cmd path/", when the 'path' is where a submodule is
bound to the top-level working tree, to match 'path', despite the
extra and unnecessary trailing slash (such a slash is often
given by command-line completion).
(merge 2e70c01 nd/submodule-pathspec-ending-with-slash later to maint.)
* Documentation and in-code comments had many instances of mistaken
use of "nor", which have been corrected.
(merge 235e8d5 jl/nor-or-nand-and later to maint).

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Git v2.0.1 Release Notes
========================
* We used to unconditionally disable the pager in the pager process
we spawn to feed out output, but that prevented people who want to
run "less" within "less" from doing so.
* Tools that read diagnostic output in our standard error stream do
not want to see terminal control sequence (e.g. erase-to-eol).
Detect them by checking if the standard error stream is connected
to a tty.
* Reworded the error message given upon a failure to open an existing
loose object file due to e.g. permission issues; it was reported as
the object being corrupt, but that is not quite true.
* "git log -2master" is a common typo that shows two commits starting
from whichever random branch that is not 'master' that happens to
be checked out currently.
* The "%<(10,trunc)%s" pretty format specifier in the log family of
commands is used to truncate the string to a given length (e.g. 10
in the example) with padding to column-align the output, but did
not take into account that number of bytes and number of display
columns are different.
* The "mailmap.file" configuration option did not support the tilde
expansion (i.e. ~user/path and ~/path).
* The completion scripts (in contrib/) did not know about quite a few
options that are common between "git merge" and "git pull", and a
couple of options unique to "git merge".
* "--ignore-space-change" option of "git apply" ignored the spaces
at the beginning of line too aggressively, which is inconsistent
with the option of the same name "diff" and "git diff" have.
* "git blame" miscounted number of columns needed to show localized
timestamps, resulting in jaggy left-side-edge of the source code
lines in its output.
* "git blame" assigned the blame to the copy in the working-tree if
the repository is set to core.autocrlf=input and the file used CRLF
line endings.
* "git commit --allow-empty-message -C $commit" did not work when the
commit did not have any log message.
* "git diff --find-copies-harder" sometimes pretended as if the mode
bits have changed for paths that are marked with assume-unchanged
bit.
* "git format-patch" did not enforce the rule that the "--follow"
option from the log/diff family of commands must be used with
exactly one pathspec.
* "git gc --auto" was recently changed to run in the background to
give control back early to the end-user sitting in front of the
terminal, but it forgot that housekeeping involving reflogs should
be done without other processes competing for accesses to the refs.
* "git grep -O" to show the lines that hit in the pager did not work
well with case insensitive search. We now spawn "less" with its
"-I" option when it is used as the pager (which is the default).
* We used to disable threaded "git index-pack" on platforms without
thread-safe pread(); use a different workaround for such
platforms to allow threaded "git index-pack".
* The error reporting from "git index-pack" has been improved to
distinguish missing objects from type errors.
* "git mailinfo" used to read beyond the end of header string while
parsing an incoming e-mail message to extract the patch.
* On a case insensitive filesystem, merge-recursive incorrectly
deleted the file that is to be renamed to a name that is the same
except for case differences.
* "git pack-objects" unnecessarily copied the previous contents when
extending the hashtable, even though it will populate the table
from scratch anyway.
* "git rerere forget" did not work well when merge.conflictstyle
was set to a non-default value.
* "git remote rm" and "git remote prune" can involve removing many
refs at once, which is not a very efficient thing to do when very
many refs exist in the packed-refs file.
* "git log --exclude=<glob> --all | git shortlog" worked as expected,
but "git shortlog --exclude=<glob> --all", which is supposed to be
identical to the above pipeline, was not accepted at the command
line argument parser level.
* The autostash mode of "git rebase -i" did not restore the dirty
working tree state if the user aborted the interactive rebase by
emptying the insn sheet.
* "git show -s" (i.e. show log message only) used to incorrectly emit
an extra blank line after a merge commit.
* "git status", even though it is a read-only operation, tries to
update the index with refreshed lstat(2) info to optimize future
accesses to the working tree opportunistically, but this could
race with a "read-write" operation that modify the index while it
is running. Detect such a race and avoid overwriting the index.
* "git status" (and "git commit") behaved as if changes in a modified
submodule are not there if submodule.*.ignore configuration is set,
which was misleading. The configuration is only to unclutter diff
output during the course of development, and should not to hide
changes in the "status" output to cause the users forget to commit
them.
* The mode to run tests with HTTP server tests disabled was broken.

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Git v2.0.2 Release Notes
========================
* Documentation for "git submodule sync" forgot to say that the subcommand
can take the "--recursive" option.
* Mishandling of patterns in .gitignore that has trailing SPs quoted
with backslashes (e.g. ones that end with "\ ") have been
corrected.
* Recent updates to "git repack" started to duplicate objects that
are in packfiles marked with .keep flag into the new packfile by
mistake.
* "git clone -b brefs/tags/bar" would have mistakenly thought we were
following a single tag, even though it was a name of the branch,
because it incorrectly used strstr().
* "%G" (nothing after G) is an invalid pretty format specifier, but
the parser did not notice it as garbage.
* Code to avoid adding the same alternate object store twice was
subtly broken for a long time, but nobody seems to have noticed.
* A handful of code paths had to read the commit object more than
once when showing header fields that are usually not parsed. The
internal data structure to keep track of the contents of the commit
object has been updated to reduce the need for this double-reading,
and to allow the caller find the length of the object.
* During "git rebase --merge", a conflicted patch could not be
skipped with "--skip" if the next one also conflicted.

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Git v2.0.3 Release Notes
========================
* An ancient rewrite passed a wrong pointer to a curl library
function in a rarely used code path.
* "filter-branch" left an empty single-parent commit that results when
all parents of a merge commit gets mapped to the same commit, even
under "--prune-empty".
* "log --show-signature" incorrectly decided the color to paint a
mergetag that was and was not correctly validated.
* "log --show-signature" did not pay attention to "--graph" option.
Also a lot of fixes to the tests and some updates to the docs are
included.

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Git v2.0.4 Release Notes
========================
* An earlier update to v2.0.2 broken output from "git diff-tree",
which is fixed in this release.

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Git v2.0.5 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.0.4
------------------
* We used to allow committing a path ".Git/config" with Git that is
running on a case sensitive filesystem, but an attempt to check out
such a path with Git that runs on a case insensitive filesystem
would have clobbered ".git/config", which is definitely not what
the user would have expected. Git now prevents you from tracking
a path with ".Git" (in any case combination) as a path component.
* On Windows, certain path components that are different from ".git"
are mapped to ".git", e.g. "git~1/config" is treated as if it were
".git/config". HFS+ has a similar issue, where certain unicode
codepoints are ignored, e.g. ".g\u200cit/config" is treated as if
it were ".git/config". Pathnames with these potential issues are
rejected on the affected systems. Git on systems that are not
affected by this issue (e.g. Linux) can also be configured to
reject them to ensure cross platform interoperability of the hosted
projects.
* "git fsck" notices a tree object that records such a path that can
be confused with ".git", and with receive.fsckObjects configuration
set to true, an attempt to "git push" such a tree object will be
rejected. Such a path may not be a problem on a well behaving
filesystem but in order to protect those on HFS+ and on case
insensitive filesystems, this check is enabled on all platforms.
A big "thanks!" for bringing this issue to us goes to our friends in
the Mercurial land, namely, Matt Mackall and Augie Fackler.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code clean-ups.

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Git v2.1 Release Notes
======================
Backward compatibility notes
----------------------------
* The default value we give to the environment variable LESS has been
changed from "FRSX" to "FRX", losing "S" (chop long lines instead
of wrapping). Existing users who prefer not to see line-wrapped
output may want to set
$ git config core.pager "less -S"
to restore the traditional behaviour. It is expected that people
find output from most subcommands easier to read with the new
default, except for "blame" which tends to produce really long
lines. To override the new default only for "git blame", you can
do this:
$ git config pager.blame "less -S"
* A few disused directories in contrib/ have been retired.
Updates since v2.0
------------------
UI, Workflows & Features
* Since the very beginning of Git, we gave the LESS environment a
default value "FRSX" when we spawn "less" as the pager. "S" (chop
long lines instead of wrapping) has been removed from this default
set of options, because it is more or less a personal taste thing,
as opposed to the others that have good justifications (i.e. "R" is
very much justified because many kinds of output we produce are
colored and "FX" is justified because output we produce is often
shorter than a page).
* The logic and data used to compute the display width needed for
UTF-8 strings have been updated to match Unicode 7.0 better.
* HTTP-based transports learned to better propagate the error messages from
the webserver to the client coming over the HTTP transport.
* The completion script for bash (in contrib/) has been updated to
better handle aliases that define a complex sequence of commands.
* The "core.preloadindex" configuration variable is enabled by default,
allowing modern platforms to take advantage of their
multiple cores.
* "git clone" applies the "if cloning from a local disk, physically
copy the repository using hardlinks, unless otherwise told not to with
--no-local" optimization when the url.*.insteadOf mechanism rewrites a
remote-repository "git clone $URL" into a
clone from a local disk.
* "git commit --date=<date>" option learned more
timestamp formats, including "--date=now".
* The `core.commentChar` configuration variable is used to specify a
custom comment character (other than the default "#") for
the commit message editor. This can be set to `auto` to attempt to
choose a different character that does not conflict with any that
already starts a line in the message being edited, for cases like
"git commit --amend".
* "git format-patch" learned --signature-file=<file> to add the contents
of a file as a signature to the mail message it produces.
* "git grep" learned the grep.fullname configuration variable to force
"--full-name" to be the default. This may cause regressions for
scripted users who do not expect this new behaviour.
* "git imap-send" learned to ask the credential helper for auth
material.
* "git log" and friends now understand the value "auto" for the
"log.decorate" configuration variable to enable the "--decorate"
option automatically when the output is sent to tty.
* "git merge" without an argument, even when there is an upstream
defined for the current branch, refused to run until
merge.defaultToUpstream is set to true. Flip the default of that
configuration variable to true.
* "git mergetool" learned to drive the vimdiff3 backend.
* mergetool.prompt used to default to 'true', always asking "do you
really want to run the tool on this path?". The default has been
changed to 'false'. However, the prompt will still appear if
mergetool used its autodetection system to guess which tool to use.
Users who explicitly specify or configure a tool will no longer see
the prompt by default.
Strictly speaking, this is a backward incompatible change and
users need to explicitly set the variable to 'true' if they want
to be prompted to confirm running the tool on each path.
* "git replace" learned the "--edit" subcommand to create a
replacement by editing an existing object.
* "git replace" learned a "--graft" option to rewrite the parents of a
commit.
* "git send-email" learned "--to-cover" and "--cc-cover" options, to
tell it to copy To: and Cc: headers found in the first input file
when emitting later input files.
* "git svn" learned to cope with malformed timestamps with only one
digit in the hour part, e.g. 2014-01-07T5:01:02.048176Z, emitted
by some broken subversion server implementations.
* "git tag" when editing the tag message shows the name of the tag
being edited as a comment in the editor.
* "git tag" learned to pay attention to "tag.sort" configuration, to
be used as the default sort order when no --sort=<value> option
is given.
* A new "git verify-commit" command, to check GPG signatures in signed
commits, in a way similar to "git verify-tag" is used to check
signed tags, was added.
Performance, Internal Implementation, etc.
* Build procedure for 'subtree' (in contrib/) has been cleaned up.
* Support for the profile-feedback build, which has
bit-rotted for quite a while, has been updated.
* An experimental format to use two files (the base file and
incremental changes relative to it) to represent the index has been
introduced; this may reduce I/O cost of rewriting a large index
when only small part of the working tree changes.
* Effort to shrink the size of patches Windows folks maintain on top
by upstreaming them continues. More tests that are not applicable
to the Windows environment are identified and either skipped or
made more portable.
* Eradication of "test $condition -a $condition" from our scripts
continues.
* The `core.deltabasecachelimit` used to default to 16 MiB , but this
proved to be too small, and has been bumped to 96 MiB.
* "git blame" has been optimized greatly by reorganising the data
structure that is used to keep track of the work to be done.
* "git diff" that compares 3-or-more trees (e.g. parents and the
result of a merge) has been optimized.
* The API to update/delete references are being converted to handle
updates to multiple references in a transactional way. As an
example, "update-ref --stdin [-z]" has been updated to use this
API.
* skip_prefix() and strip_suffix() API functions are used a lot more
widely throughout the codebase now.
* Parts of the test scripts can be skipped by using a range notation,
e.g. "sh t1234-test.sh --run='1-4 6 8-'" to omit test piece 5 and 7
and run everything else.
Also contains various documentation updates and code clean-ups.
Fixes since v2.0
----------------
Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes since v2.0 in the maintenance
track are contained in this release (see the maintenance releases'
notes for details).
* We used to unconditionally disable the pager in the pager process
we spawn to feed out output, but that prevented people who want to
run "less" within "less" from doing so.
(merge c0459ca je/pager-do-not-recurse later to maint).
* Tools that read diagnostic output in our standard error stream do
not want to see terminal control sequence (e.g. erase-to-eol).
Detect them by checking if the standard error stream is connected
to a tty.
(merge 38de156 mn/sideband-no-ansi later to maint).
* Mishandling of patterns in .gitignore that have trailing SPs quoted
with backslashes (e.g. ones that end with "\ ") has been
corrected.
(merge 97c1364be6b pb/trim-trailing-spaces later to maint).
* Reworded the error message given upon a failure to open an existing
loose object file due to e.g. permission issues; it was reported as
the object being corrupt, but that is not quite true.
(merge d6c8a05 jk/report-fail-to-read-objects-better later to maint).
* "git log -2master" is a common typo that shows two commits starting
from whichever random branch that is not 'master' that happens to
be checked out currently.
(merge e3fa568 jc/revision-dash-count-parsing later to maint).
* Code to avoid adding the same alternate object store twice was
subtly broken for a long time, but nobody seems to have noticed.
(merge 80b4785 rs/fix-alt-odb-path-comparison later to maint).
(merge 539e750 ek/alt-odb-entry-fix later to maint).
* The "%<(10,trunc)%s" pretty format specifier in the log family of
commands is used to truncate the string to a given length (e.g. 10
in the example) with padding to column-align the output, but did
not take into account that number of bytes and number of display
columns are different.
(merge 7d50987 as/pretty-truncate later to maint).
* "%G" (nothing after G) is an invalid pretty format specifier, but
the parser did not notice it as garbage.
(merge 958b2eb jk/pretty-G-format-fixes later to maint).
* A handful of code paths had to read the commit object more than
once when showing header fields that are usually not parsed. The
internal data structure to keep track of the contents of the commit
object has been updated to reduce the need for this double-reading,
and to allow the caller find the length of the object.
(merge 218aa3a jk/commit-buffer-length later to maint).
* The "mailmap.file" configuration option did not support tilde
expansion (i.e. ~user/path and ~/path).
(merge 9352fd5 ow/config-mailmap-pathname later to maint).
* The completion scripts (in contrib/) did not know about quite a few
options that are common between "git merge" and "git pull", and a
couple of options unique to "git merge".
(merge 8fee872 jk/complete-merge-pull later to maint).
* The unix-domain socket used by the sample credential cache daemon
tried to unlink an existing stale one at a wrong path, if the path
to the socket was given as an overlong path that does not fit in
the sun_path member of the sockaddr_un structure.
(merge 2869b3e rs/fix-unlink-unix-socket later to maint).
* An ancient rewrite passed a wrong pointer to a curl library
function in a rarely used code path.
(merge 479eaa8 ah/fix-http-push later to maint).
* "--ignore-space-change" option of "git apply" ignored the spaces
at the beginning of lines too aggressively, which is inconsistent
with the option of the same name that "diff" and "git diff" have.
(merge 14d3bb4 jc/apply-ignore-whitespace later to maint).
* "git blame" miscounted the number of columns needed to show localized
timestamps, resulting in a jaggy left-side-edge for the source code
lines in its output.
(merge dd75553 jx/blame-align-relative-time later to maint).
* "git blame" assigned the blame to the copy in the working-tree if
the repository is set to core.autocrlf=input and the file used CRLF
line endings.
(merge 4d4813a bc/blame-crlf-test later to maint).
* "git clone -b brefs/tags/bar" would have mistakenly thought we were
following a single tag, even though it was a name of the branch,
because it incorrectly used strstr().
(merge 60a5f5f jc/fix-clone-single-starting-at-a-tag later to maint).
* "git commit --allow-empty-message -C $commit" did not work when the
commit did not have any log message.
(merge 076cbd6 jk/commit-C-pick-empty later to maint).
* "git diff --find-copies-harder" sometimes pretended as if the mode
bits have changed for paths that are marked with the assume-unchanged
bit.
(merge 5304810 jk/diff-files-assume-unchanged later to maint).
* "filter-branch" left an empty single-parent commit that results when
all parents of a merge commit get mapped to the same commit, even
under "--prune-empty".
(merge 79bc4ef cb/filter-branch-prune-empty-degenerate-merges later to maint).
* "git format-patch" did not enforce the rule that the "--follow"
option from the log/diff family of commands must be used with
exactly one pathspec.
(merge dd63f16 jk/diff-follow-must-take-one-pathspec later to maint).
* "git gc --auto" was recently changed to run in the background to
give control back early to the end-user sitting in front of the
terminal, but it forgot that housekeeping involving reflogs should
be done without other processes competing for accesses to the refs.
(merge 62aad18 nd/daemonize-gc later to maint).
* "git grep -O" to show the lines that hit in the pager did not work
well with case insensitive search. We now spawn "less" with its
"-I" option when it is used as the pager (which is the default).
(merge f7febbe sk/spawn-less-case-insensitively-from-grep-O-i later to maint).
* We used to disable threaded "git index-pack" on platforms without
thread-safe pread(); use a different workaround for such
platforms to allow threaded "git index-pack".
(merge 3953949 nd/index-pack-one-fd-per-thread later to maint).
* The error reporting from "git index-pack" has been improved to
distinguish missing objects from type errors.
(merge 77583e7 jk/index-pack-report-missing later to maint).
* "log --show-signature" incorrectly decided the color to paint a
mergetag that was and was not correctly validated.
(merge 42c55ce mg/fix-log-mergetag-color later to maint).
* "log --show-signature" did not pay attention to the "--graph" option.
(merge cf3983d zk/log-graph-showsig later to maint).
* "git mailinfo" used to read beyond the ends of header strings while
parsing an incoming e-mail message to extract the patch.
(merge b1a013d rs/mailinfo-header-cmp later to maint).
* On a case insensitive filesystem, merge-recursive incorrectly
deleted the file that is to be renamed to a name that is the same
except for case differences.
(merge baa37bf dt/merge-recursive-case-insensitive later to maint).
* Merging changes into a file that ends in an incomplete line made the
last line into a complete one, even when the other branch did not
change anything around the end of file.
(merge ba31180 mk/merge-incomplete-files later to maint).
* "git pack-objects" unnecessarily copied the previous contents when
extending the hashtable, even though it will populate the table
from scratch anyway.
(merge fb79947 rs/pack-objects-no-unnecessary-realloc later to maint).
* Recent updates to "git repack" started to duplicate objects that
are in packfiles marked with the .keep flag into the new packfile by
mistake.
(merge d078d85 jk/repack-pack-keep-objects later to maint).
* "git rerere forget" did not work well when merge.conflictstyle
was set to a non-default value.
(merge de3d8bb fc/rerere-conflict-style later to maint).
* "git remote rm" and "git remote prune" can involve removing many
refs at once, which is not a very efficient thing to do when very
many refs exist in the packed-refs file.
(merge e6bea66 jl/remote-rm-prune later to maint).
* "git log --exclude=<glob> --all | git shortlog" worked as expected,
but "git shortlog --exclude=<glob> --all", which is supposed to be
identical to the above pipeline, was not accepted at the command
line argument parser level.
(merge eb07774 jc/shortlog-ref-exclude later to maint).
* The autostash mode of "git rebase -i" did not restore the dirty
working tree state if the user aborted the interactive rebase by
emptying the insn sheet.
(merge ddb5432 rr/rebase-autostash-fix later to maint).
* "git rebase --fork-point" did not filter out patch-identical
commits correctly.
* During "git rebase --merge", a conflicted patch could not be
skipped with "--skip" if the next one also conflicted.
(merge 95104c7 bc/fix-rebase-merge-skip later to maint).
* "git show -s" (i.e. show log message only) used to incorrectly emit
an extra blank line after a merge commit.
(merge ad2f725 mk/show-s-no-extra-blank-line-for-merges later to maint).
* "git status", even though it is a read-only operation, tries to
update the index with refreshed lstat(2) info to optimize future
accesses to the working tree opportunistically, but this could
race with a "read-write" operation that modifies the index while it
is running. Detect such a race and avoid overwriting the index.
(merge 426ddee ym/fix-opportunistic-index-update-race later to maint).
* "git status" (and "git commit") behaved as if changes in a modified
submodule are not there if submodule.*.ignore configuration is set,
which was misleading. The configuration is only to unclutter diff
output during the course of development, and not to hide
changes in the "status" output to cause the users forget to commit
them.
(merge c215d3d jl/status-added-submodule-is-never-ignored later to maint).
* Documentation for "git submodule sync" forgot to say that the subcommand
can take the "--recursive" option.
(merge 9393ae7 mc/doc-submodule-sync-recurse later to maint).
* "git update-index --cacheinfo" in 2.0 release crashed on a
malformed command line.
(merge c8e1ee4 jc/rev-parse-argh-dashed-multi-words later to maint).
* The mode to run tests with HTTP server tests disabled was broken.
(merge afa53fe na/no-http-test-in-the-middle later to maint).

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Git v2.1.1 Release Notes
========================
* Git 2.0 had a regression where "git fetch" into a shallowly
cloned repository from a repository with bitmap object index
enabled did not work correctly. This has been corrected.
* Git 2.0 had a regression which broke (rarely used) "git diff-tree
-t". This has been corrected.
* "git log --pretty/format=" with an empty format string did not
mean the more obvious "No output whatsoever" but "Use default
format", which was counterintuitive. Now it means "nothing shown
for the log message part".
* "git -c section.var command" and "git -c section.var= command"
should pass the configuration differently (the former should be a
boolean true, the latter should be an empty string), but they
didn't work that way. Now it does.
* Applying a patch not generated by Git in a subdirectory used to
check the whitespace breakage using the attributes for incorrect
paths. Also whitespace checks were performed even for paths
excluded via "git apply --exclude=<path>" mechanism.
* "git bundle create" with date-range specification were meant to
exclude tags outside the range, but it did not work correctly.
* "git add x" where x that used to be a directory has become a
symbolic link to a directory misbehaved.
* The prompt script checked $GIT_DIR/ref/stash file to see if there
is a stash, which was a no-no.
* "git checkout -m" did not switch to another branch while carrying
the local changes forward when a path was deleted from the index.
* With sufficiently long refnames, fast-import could have overflown
an on-stack buffer.
* After "pack-refs --prune" packed refs at the top-level, it failed
to prune them.
* "git gc --auto" triggered from "git fetch --quiet" was not quiet.

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Git v2.1.2 Release Notes
========================
* "git push" over HTTP transport had an artificial limit on number of
refs that can be pushed imposed by the command line length.
* When receiving an invalid pack stream that records the same object
twice, multiple threads got confused due to a race.
* An attempt to remove the entire tree in the "git fast-import" input
stream caused it to misbehave.
* Reachability check (used in "git prune" and friends) did not add a
detached HEAD as a starting point to traverse objects still in use.
* "git config --add section.var val" used to lose existing
section.var whose value was an empty string.
* "git fsck" failed to report that it found corrupt objects via its
exit status in some cases.

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Git v2.1.3 Release Notes
========================
* Some MUAs mangled a line in a message that begins with "From " to
">From " when writing to a mailbox file and feeding such an input to
"git am" used to lose such a line.
* "git daemon" (with NO_IPV6 build configuration) used to incorrectly
use the hostname even when gethostbyname() reported that the given
hostname is not found.
* Newer versions of 'meld' breaks the auto-detection we use to see if
they are new enough to support the `--output` option.
* "git pack-objects" forgot to disable the codepath to generate
object recheability bitmap when it needs to split the resulting
pack.
* "gitweb" used deprecated CGI::startfrom, which was removed from
CGI.pm as of 4.04; use CGI::start_from instead.
* "git log" documentation had an example section marked up not
quite correctly, which passed AsciiDoc but failed with
AsciiDoctor.
Also contains some documentation updates.

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Git v2.1.4 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.1.3
------------------
* We used to allow committing a path ".Git/config" with Git that is
running on a case sensitive filesystem, but an attempt to check out
such a path with Git that runs on a case insensitive filesystem
would have clobbered ".git/config", which is definitely not what
the user would have expected. Git now prevents you from tracking
a path with ".Git" (in any case combination) as a path component.
* On Windows, certain path components that are different from ".git"
are mapped to ".git", e.g. "git~1/config" is treated as if it were
".git/config". HFS+ has a similar issue, where certain unicode
codepoints are ignored, e.g. ".g\u200cit/config" is treated as if
it were ".git/config". Pathnames with these potential issues are
rejected on the affected systems. Git on systems that are not
affected by this issue (e.g. Linux) can also be configured to
reject them to ensure cross platform interoperability of the hosted
projects.
* "git fsck" notices a tree object that records such a path that can
be confused with ".git", and with receive.fsckObjects configuration
set to true, an attempt to "git push" such a tree object will be
rejected. Such a path may not be a problem on a well behaving
filesystem but in order to protect those on HFS+ and on case
insensitive filesystems, this check is enabled on all platforms.
A big "thanks!" for bringing this issue to us goes to our friends in
the Mercurial land, namely, Matt Mackall and Augie Fackler.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code clean-ups.

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Git v2.2 Release Notes
======================
Updates since v2.1
------------------
Ports
* Building on older MacOS X systems automatically sets
the necessary NO_APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO build-time option.
* Building with NO_PTHREADS has been resurrected.
* Compilation options have been updated a bit to better support the
z/OS port.
UI, Workflows & Features
* "git archive" learned to filter what gets archived with a pathspec.
* "git config --edit --global" starts from a skeletal per-user
configuration file contents, instead of a total blank, when the
user does not already have any global config. This immediately
reduces the need to later ask "Have you forgotten to set
core.user?", and we can add more to the template as we gain
more experience.
* "git stash list -p" used to be almost always a no-op because each
stash entry is represented as a merge commit. It learned to show
the difference between the base commit version and the working tree
version, which is in line with what "git stash show" gives.
* Sometimes users want to report a bug they experience on their
repository, but they are not at liberty to share the contents of
the repository. "fast-export" was taught an "--anonymize" option
to replace blob contents, names of people, paths and log
messages with bland and simple strings to help them.
* "git difftool" learned an option to stop feeding paths to the
diff backend when it exits with a non-zero status.
* "git grep" learned to paint (or not paint) partial matches on
context lines when showing "grep -C<num>" output in color.
* "log --date=iso" uses a slight variant of the ISO 8601 format that is
more human readable. A new "--date=iso-strict" option gives
datetime output that conforms more strictly.
* The logic "git prune" uses is more resilient against various corner
cases.
* A broken reimplementation of Git could write an invalid index that
records both stage #0 and higher-stage entries for the same path.
We now notice and reject such an index, as there is no sensible
fallback (we do not know if the broken tool wanted to resolve and
forgot to remove the higher-stage entries, or if it wanted to unresolve
and forgot to remove the stage #0 entry).
* The temporary files "git mergetool" uses are renamed to avoid too
many dots in them (e.g. a temporary file for "hello.c" used to be
named e.g. "hello.BASE.4321.c" but now uses underscore instead,
e.g. "hello_BASE_4321.c", to allow us to have multiple variants).
* The temporary files "git mergetool" uses can be placed in a newly
created temporary directory, instead of the current directory, by
setting the mergetool.writeToTemp configuration variable.
* "git mergetool" understands "--tool bc" now, as version 4 of
BeyondCompare can be driven the same way as its version 3 and it
feels awkward to say "--tool bc3" to run version 4.
* The "pre-receive" and "post-receive" hooks are no longer required
to consume their input fully (not following this requirement used
to result in intermittent errors in "git push").
* The pretty-format specifier "%d", which expands to " (tagname)"
for a tagged commit, gained a cousin "%D" that just gives the
"tagname" without frills.
* "git push" learned "--signed" push, that allows a push (i.e.
request to update the refs on the other side to point at a new
history, together with the transmission of necessary objects) to be
signed, so that it can be verified and audited, using the GPG
signature of the person who pushed, that the tips of branches at a
public repository really point the commits the pusher wanted to,
without having to "trust" the server.
* "git interpret-trailers" is a new filter to programmatically edit
the tail end of the commit log messages, e.g. "Signed-off-by:".
* "git help everyday" shows the "Everyday Git in 20 commands or so"
document, whose contents have been updated to match more modern
Git practice.
* On the "git svn" front, work progresses to reduce memory consumption and
to improve handling of mergeinfo.
Performance, Internal Implementation, Development Support etc.
* The API to manipulate the "refs" has been restructured to make it
more transactional, with the eventual goal to allow all-or-none
atomic updates and migrating the storage to something other than
the traditional filesystem based one (e.g. databases).
* The lockfile API and its users have been cleaned up.
* We no longer attempt to keep track of individual dependencies to
the header files in the build procedure, relying instead on automated
dependency generation support from modern compilers.
* In tests, we have been using NOT_{MINGW,CYGWIN} test prerequisites
long before negated prerequisites e.g. !MINGW were invented.
The former has been converted to the latter to avoid confusion.
* Optimized looking up a remote's configuration in a repository with very many
remotes defined.
* There are cases where you lock and open to write a file, close it
to show the updated contents to an external processes, and then have
to update the file again while still holding the lock; now the
lockfile API has support for such an access pattern.
* The API to allocate the structure to keep track of commit
decoration has been updated to make it less cumbersome to use.
* An in-core caching layer to let us avoid reading the same
configuration files several times has been added. A few commands
have been converted to use this subsystem.
* Various code paths have been cleaned up and simplified by using
the "strbuf", "starts_with()", and "skip_prefix()" APIs more.
* A few codepaths that died when large blobs that would not fit in
core are involved in their operation have been taught to punt
instead, by e.g. marking a too-large blob as not to be diffed.
* A few more code paths in "commit" and "checkout" have been taught
to repopulate the cache-tree in the index, to help speed up later
"write-tree" (used in "commit") and "diff-index --cached" (used in
"status").
* A common programming mistake to assign the same short option name
to two separate options is detected by the parse_options() API to help
developers.
* The code path to write out the packed-refs file has been optimized,
which especially matters in a repository with a large number of
refs.
* The check to see if a ref $F can be created by making sure no
existing ref has $F/ as its prefix has been optimized, which
especially matters in a repository with a large number of existing
refs.
* "git fsck" was taught to check the contents of tag objects a bit more.
* "git hash-object" was taught a "--literally" option to help
debugging.
* When running a required clean filter, we do not have to mmap the
original before feeding the filter. Instead, stream the file
contents directly to the filter and process its output.
* The scripts in the test suite can be run with the "-x" option to show
a shell-trace of each command they run.
* The "run-command" API learned to manage the argv and environment
arrays for child process, alleviating the need for the callers to
allocate and deallocate them.
* Some people use AsciiDoctor, instead of AsciiDoc, to format our
documentation set; the documentation has been adjusted to be usable
by both, as AsciiDoctor is pickier than AsciiDoc about its input
mark-up.
Also contains various documentation updates and code clean-ups.
Fixes since v2.1
----------------
Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes since v2.1 in the maintenance
track are contained in this release (see the maintenance releases'
notes for details).
* "git log --pretty/format=" with an empty format string did not
mean the more obvious "No output whatsoever" but "Use default
format", which was counterintuitive.
* "git -c section.var command" and "git -c section.var= command"
should pass the configuration value differently (the former should be a
boolean true, the latter should be an empty string).
* Applying a patch not generated by Git in a subdirectory used to
check for whitespace breakage using the attributes of incorrect
paths. Also whitespace checks were performed even for paths
excluded via the "git apply --exclude=<path>" mechanism.
* "git bundle create" with a date-range specification was meant to
exclude tags outside the range, but it didn't.
* "git add x" where x used to be a directory and is now a
symbolic link to a directory misbehaved.
* The prompt script checked the $GIT_DIR/ref/stash file to see if there
is a stash, which was a no-no.
* Pack-protocol documentation had a minor typo.
* "git checkout -m" did not switch to another branch while carrying
the local changes forward when a path was deleted from the index.
* "git daemon" (with NO_IPV6 build configuration) used to incorrectly
use the hostname even when gethostbyname() reported that the given
hostname is not found.
(merge 107efbe rs/daemon-fixes later to maint).
* With sufficiently long refnames, "git fast-import" could have
overflowed an on-stack buffer.
* After "pack-refs --prune" packed refs at the top-level, it failed
to prune them.
* Progress output from "git gc --auto" was visible in "git fetch -q".
* We used to pass -1000 to poll(2), expecting it to also mean "no
timeout", which should be spelled as -1.
* "git rebase" documentation was unclear that it is required to
specify on what <upstream> the rebase is to be done when telling it
to first check out <branch>.
(merge 95c6826 so/rebase-doc later to maint).
* "git push" over HTTP transport had an artificial limit on the number of
refs that can be pushed, imposed by the command line length.
(merge 26be19b jk/send-pack-many-refspecs later to maint).
* When receiving an invalid pack stream that records the same object
twice, multiple threads got confused due to a race.
(merge ab791dd jk/index-pack-threading-races later to maint).
* An attempt to remove the entire tree in the "git fast-import" input
stream caused it to misbehave.
(merge 2668d69 mb/fast-import-delete-root later to maint).
* Reachability check (used in "git prune" and friends) did not add a
detached HEAD as a starting point to traverse objects still in use.
(merge c40fdd0 mk/reachable-protect-detached-head later to maint).
* "git config --add section.var val" when section.var already has an
empty-string value used to lose the empty-string value.
(merge c1063be ta/config-add-to-empty-or-true-fix later to maint).
* "git fsck" failed to report that it found corrupt objects via its
exit status in some cases.
(merge 30d1038 jk/fsck-exit-code-fix later to maint).
* Use of the "--verbose" option used to break "git branch --merged".
(merge 12994dd jk/maint-branch-verbose-merged later to maint).
* Some MUAs mangle a line in a message that begins with "From " to
">From " when writing to a mailbox file, and feeding such an input
to "git am" used to lose such a line.
(merge 85de86a jk/mbox-from-line later to maint).
* "rev-parse --verify --quiet $name" is meant to quietly exit with a
non-zero status when $name is not a valid object name, but still
gave error messages in some cases.
* A handful of C source files have been updated to include
"git-compat-util.h" as the first thing, to conform better to our
coding guidelines.
(merge 1c4b660 da/include-compat-util-first-in-c later to maint).
* The t7004 test, which tried to run Git with small stack space, has been
updated to use a bit larger stack to avoid false breakage on some
platforms.
(merge b9a1907 sk/tag-contains-wo-recursion later to maint).
* A few documentation pages had example sections marked up not quite
correctly, which passed AsciiDoc but failed with AsciiDoctor.
(merge c30c43c bc/asciidoc-pretty-formats-fix later to maint).
(merge f8a48af bc/asciidoc later to maint).
* "gitweb" used deprecated CGI::startfrom, which was removed from
CGI.pm as of 4.04; use CGI::start_from instead.
(merge 4750f4b rm/gitweb-start-form later to maint).
* Newer versions of 'meld' break the auto-detection we use to see if
they are new enough to support the `--output` option.
(merge b12d045 da/mergetool-meld later to maint).
* "git pack-objects" forgot to disable the codepath to generate the
object reachability bitmap when it needs to split the resulting
pack.
(merge 2113471 jk/pack-objects-no-bitmap-when-splitting later to maint).
* The code to use cache-tree trusted the on-disk data too much and
fell into an infinite loop upon seeing an incorrectly recorded
index file.
(merge 729dbbd jk/cache-tree-protect-from-broken-libgit2 later to maint).
* "git fetch" into a repository where branch B was deleted earlier,
back when it had reflog enabled, and then branch B/C is fetched
into it without reflog enabled, which is arguably an unlikely
corner case, unnecessarily failed.
(merge aae828b jk/fetch-reflog-df-conflict later to maint).
* "git log --first-parent -L..." used to crash.
(merge a8787c5 tm/line-log-first-parent later to maint).

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Git v2.2.1 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.2
----------------
* We used to allow committing a path ".Git/config" with Git that is
running on a case sensitive filesystem, but an attempt to check out
such a path with Git that runs on a case insensitive filesystem
would have clobbered ".git/config", which is definitely not what
the user would have expected. Git now prevents you from tracking
a path with ".Git" (in any case combination) as a path component.
* On Windows, certain path components that are different from ".git"
are mapped to ".git", e.g. "git~1/config" is treated as if it were
".git/config". HFS+ has a similar issue, where certain unicode
codepoints are ignored, e.g. ".g\u200cit/config" is treated as if
it were ".git/config". Pathnames with these potential issues are
rejected on the affected systems. Git on systems that are not
affected by this issue (e.g. Linux) can also be configured to
reject them to ensure cross platform interoperability of the hosted
projects.
* "git fsck" notices a tree object that records such a path that can
be confused with ".git", and with receive.fsckObjects configuration
set to true, an attempt to "git push" such a tree object will be
rejected. Such a path may not be a problem on a well behaving
filesystem but in order to protect those on HFS+ and on case
insensitive filesystems, this check is enabled on all platforms.
A big "thanks!" for bringing this issue to us goes to our friends in
the Mercurial land, namely, Matt Mackall and Augie Fackler.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code clean-ups.

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Git v2.2.2 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.2.1
------------------
* "git checkout $treeish $path", when $path in the index and the
working tree already matched what is in $treeish at the $path,
still overwrote the $path unnecessarily.
* "git config --get-color" did not parse its command line arguments
carefully.
* open() emulated on Windows platforms did not give EISDIR upon
an attempt to open a directory for writing.
* A few code paths used abs() when they should have used labs() on
long integers.
* "gitweb" used to depend on a behaviour recent CGI.pm deprecated.
* "git init" (hence "git clone") initialized the per-repository
configuration file .git/config with x-bit by mistake.
* Git 2.0 was supposed to make the "simple" mode for the default of
"git push", but it didn't.
* "Everyday" document had a broken link.
* The build procedure did not bother fixing perl and python scripts
when NO_PERL and NO_PYTHON build-time configuration changed.
* The code that reads the reflog from the newer to the older entries
did not handle an entry that crosses a boundary of block it uses to
read them correctly.
* "git apply" was described in the documentation to take --ignore-date
option, which it does not.
* Traditionally we tried to avoid interpreting date strings given by
the user as future dates, e.g. GIT_COMMITTER_DATE=2014-12-10 when
used early November 2014 was taken as "October 12, 2014" because it
is likely that a date in the future, December 10, is a mistake.
This heuristics has been loosened to allow people to express future
dates (most notably, --until=<date> may want to be far in the
future) and we no longer tiebreak by future-ness of the date when
(1) ISO-like format is used, and
(2) the string can make sense interpreted as both y-m-d and y-d-m.
Git may still have to use the heuristics to tiebreak between dd/mm/yy
and mm/dd/yy, though.
* The code to abbreviate an object name to its short unique prefix
has been optimized when no abbreviation was requested.
* "git add --ignore-errors ..." did not ignore an error to
give a file that did not exist.
* Git did not correctly read an overlong refname from a packed refs
file.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code clean-ups.

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Git v2.3 Release Notes
======================
This one ended up to be a release with lots of small corrections and
improvements without big uncomfortably exciting features. The recent
security fix that went to 2.2.1 and older maintenance tracks is also
contained in this update.
Updates since v2.2
------------------
Ports
* Recent gcc toolchain on Cygwin started throwing compilation warning,
which has been squelched.
* A few updates to build on platforms that lack tv_nsec,
clock_gettime, CLOCK_MONOTONIC and HMAC_CTX_cleanup (e.g. older
RHEL) have been added.
UI, Workflows & Features
* It was cumbersome to use "GIT_SSH" mechanism when the user wanted
to pass an extra set of arguments to the underlying ssh. A new
environment variable GIT_SSH_COMMAND can be used for this.
* A request to store an empty note via "git notes" meant to remove
note from the object but with --allow-empty we will store a
(surprise!) note that is empty.
* "git interpret-trailers" learned to properly handle the
"Conflicts:" block at the end.
* "git am" learned "--message-id" option to copy the message ID of
the incoming e-mail to the log message of resulting commit.
* "git clone --reference=<over there>" learned the "--dissociate"
option to go with it; it borrows objects from the reference object
store while cloning only to reduce network traffic and then
dissociates the resulting clone from the reference by performing
local copies of borrowed objects.
* "git send-email" learned "--transfer-encoding" option to force a
non-fault Content-Transfer-Encoding header (e.g. base64).
* "git send-email" normally identifies itself via X-Mailer: header in
the message it sends out. A new command line flag --no-xmailer
allows the user to squelch the header.
* "git push" into a repository with a working tree normally refuses
to modify the branch that is checked out. The command learned to
optionally do an equivalent of "git reset --hard" only when there
is no change to the working tree and the index instead, which would
be useful to "deploy" by pushing into a repository.
* "git new-workdir" (in contrib/) can be used to populate an empty
and existing directory now.
* Credential helpers are asked in turn until one of them give
positive response, which is cumbersome to turn off when you need to
run Git in an automated setting. The credential helper interface
learned to allow a helper to say "stop, don't ask other helpers."
Also GIT_TERMINAL_PROMPT environment can be set to false to disable
our built-in prompt mechanism for passwords.
* "git branch -d" (delete) and "git branch -m" (move) learned to
honor "-f" (force) flag; unlike many other subcommands, the way to
force these have been with separate "-D/-M" options, which was
inconsistent.
* "diff-highlight" filter (in contrib/) allows its color output to be
customized via configuration variables.
* "git imap-send" learned to take "-v" (verbose) and "-q" (quiet)
command line options.
* "git remote add $name $URL" is now allowed when "url.$URL.insteadOf"
is already defined.
* "git imap-send" now can be built to use cURL library to talk to
IMAP servers (if the library is recent enough, of course).
This allows you to use authenticate method other than CRAM-MD5,
among other things.
* "git imap-send" now allows GIT_CURL_VERBOSE environment variable to
control the verbosity when talking via the cURL library.
* The prompt script (in contrib/) learned to optionally hide prompt
when in an ignored directory by setting GIT_PS1_HIDE_IF_PWD_IGNORED
shell variable.
Performance, Internal Implementation, Development Support etc.
* Earlier we made "rev-list --object-edge" more aggressively list the
objects at the edge commits, in order to reduce number of objects 
fetched into a shallow repository, but the change affected cases
other than "fetching into a shallow repository" and made it
unusably slow (e.g. fetching into a normal repository should not
have to suffer the overhead from extra processing). Limit it to a
more specific case by introducing --objects-edge-aggressive, a new
option to rev-list.
* Squelched useless compiler warnings on Mac OS X regarding the
crypto API.
* The procedure to generate unicode table has been simplified.
* Some filesystems assign filemodes in a strange way, fooling then
automatic "filemode trustability" check done during a new
repository creation. The initialization codepath has been hardened
against this issue.
* The codepath in "git remote update --prune" to drop many refs has
been optimized.
* The API into get_merge_bases*() family of functions was easy to
misuse, which has been corrected to make it harder to do so.
* Long overdue departure from the assumption that S_IFMT is shared by
everybody made in 2005, which was necessary to port to z/OS.
* "git push" and "git fetch" did not communicate an overlong refname
correctly. Now it uses 64kB sideband to accommodate longer ones.
* Recent GPG changes the keyring format and drops support for RFC1991
formatted signatures, breaking our existing tests.
* "git-prompt" (in contrib/) used a variable from the global scope,
possibly contaminating end-user's namespace.
Also contains various documentation updates and code clean-ups.
Fixes since v2.2
----------------
Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes since v2.2 in the maintenance
track are contained in this release (see the maintenance releases'
notes for details).
* "git http-push" over WebDAV (aka dumb http-push) was broken in
v2.2.2 when parsing a symbolic ref, resulting in a bogus request
that gets rejected by recent versions of cURL library.
(merge f6786c8 jk/http-push-symref-fix later to maint).
* The logic in "git bisect bad HEAD" etc. to avoid forcing the test
of the common ancestor of bad and good commits was broken.
(merge 07913d5 cc/bisect-rev-parsing later to maint).
* "git checkout-index --temp=$target $path" did not work correctly
for paths outside the current subdirectory in the project.
(merge 74c4de5 es/checkout-index-temp later to maint).
* The report from "git checkout" on a branch that builds on another
local branch by setting its branch.*.merge to branch name (not a
full refname) incorrectly said that the upstream is gone.
(merge 05e7368 jc/checkout-local-track-report later to maint).
* With The git-prompt support (in contrib/), using the exit status of
the last command in the prompt, e.g. PS1='$(__git_ps1) $? ', did
not work well, because the helper function stomped on the exit
status.
(merge 6babe76 tf/prompt-preserve-exit-status later to maint).
* Recent update to "git commit" broke amending an existing commit
with bogus author/committer lines without a valid e-mail address.
(merge c83a509 jk/commit-date-approxidate later to maint).
* The lockfile API used to get confused which file to clean up when
the process moved the $cwd after creating a lockfile.
(merge fa137f6 nd/lockfile-absolute later to maint).
* Traditionally we tried to avoid interpreting date strings given by
the user as future dates, e.g. GIT_COMMITTER_DATE=2014-12-10 when
used early November 2014 was taken as "October 12, 2014" because it
is likely that a date in the future, December 10, is a mistake.
This heuristics has been loosened to allow people to express future
dates (most notably, --until=<date> may want to be far in the
future) and we no longer tiebreak by future-ness of the date when
(1) ISO-like format is used, and
(2) the string can make sense interpreted as both y-m-d and y-d-m.
Git may still have to use the heuristics to tiebreak between dd/mm/yy
and mm/dd/yy, though.
(merge d372395 jk/approxidate-avoid-y-d-m-over-future-dates later to maint).
* Git did not correctly read an overlong refname from a packed refs
file.
(merge ea41783 jk/read-packed-refs-without-path-max later to maint).
* "git apply" was described in the documentation to take --ignore-date
option, which it does not.
(merge 0cef4e7 rw/apply-does-not-take-ignore-date later to maint).
* "git add -i" did not notice when the interactive command input
stream went away and kept asking the same question.
(merge a8bec7a jk/add-i-read-error later to maint).
* "git send-email" did not handle RFC 2047 encoded headers quite
right.
(merge ab47e2a rd/send-email-2047-fix later to maint).
* New tag object format validation added in 2.2 showed garbage after
a tagname it reported in its error message.
(merge a1e920a js/fsck-tag-validation later to maint).
* The code that reads the reflog from the newer to the older entries
did not handle an entry that crosses a boundary of block it uses to
read them correctly.
(merge 69216bf jk/for-each-reflog-ent-reverse later to maint).
* "git diff -B -M" after making a new copy B out of an existing file
A and then editing A extensively ought to report that B was created
by copying A and A was modified, which is what "git diff -C"
reports, but it instead said A was renamed to B and A was edited
heavily in place. This was not just incoherent but also failed to
apply with "git apply". The report has been corrected to match what
"git diff -C" produces for this case.
(merge 6936b58 jc/diff-b-m later to maint).
* In files we pre-populate for the user to edit with commented hints,
a line of hint that is indented with a tab used to show as '#' (or
any comment char), ' ' (space), and then the hint text that began
with the tab, which some editors flag as an indentation error (tab
following space). We now omit the space after the comment char in
such a case.
(merge d55aeb7 jc/strbuf-add-lines-avoid-sp-ht-sequence later to maint).
* "git ls-tree" does not support path selection based on negative
pathspecs, but did not error out when negative pathspecs are given.
(merge f1f6224 nd/ls-tree-pathspec later to maint).
* The function sometimes returned a non-freeable memory and some
other times returned a piece of memory that must be freed, leading
to inevitable leaks.
(merge 59362e5 jc/exec-cmd-system-path-leak-fix later to maint).
* The code to abbreviate an object name to its short unique prefix
has been optimized when no abbreviation was requested.
(merge 61e704e mh/find-uniq-abbrev later to maint).
* "git add --ignore-errors ..." did not ignore an error to
give a file that did not exist.
(merge 1d31e5a mg/add-ignore-errors later to maint).
* "git checkout $treeish $path", when $path in the index and the
working tree already matched what is in $treeish at the $path,
still overwrote the $path unnecessarily.
(merge c5326bd jk/checkout-from-tree later to maint).
* "git config --get-color" did not parse its command line arguments
carefully.
(merge cb35722 jk/colors-fix later to maint).
* open() emulated on Windows platforms did not give EISDIR upon
an attempt to open a directory for writing.
(merge ba6fad0 js/windows-open-eisdir-error later to maint).
* A few code paths used abs() when they should have used labs() on
long integers.
(merge 83915ba rs/maint-config-use-labs later to maint).
(merge 31a8aa1 rs/receive-pack-use-labs later to maint).
* "gitweb" used to depend on a behaviour recent CGI.pm deprecated.
(merge 13dbf46 jk/gitweb-with-newer-cgi-multi-param later to maint).
* "git init" (hence "git clone") initialized the per-repository
configuration file .git/config with x-bit by mistake.
(merge 1f32ecf mh/config-flip-xbit-back-after-checking later to maint).
* Recent update in Git 2.2 started creating objects/info/packs and
info/refs files with permission bits tighter than user's umask.
(merge d91175b jk/prune-packed-server-info later to maint).
* Git 2.0 was supposed to make the "simple" mode for the default of
"git push", but it didn't.
(merge 00a6fa0 jk/push-simple later to maint).
* "Everyday" document had a broken link.
(merge 366c8d4 po/everyday-doc later to maint).
* A few test fixes.
(merge 880ef58 jk/no-perl-tests later to maint).
* The build procedure did not bother fixing perl and python scripts
when NO_PERL and NO_PYTHON build-time configuration changed.
(merge ca2051d jk/rebuild-perl-scripts-with-no-perl-seting-change later to maint).
* The usage string of "git log" command was marked incorrectly for
l10n.
(merge e66dc0c km/log-usage-string-i18n later to maint).
* "git for-each-ref" mishandled --format="%(upstream:track)" when a
branch is marked to have forked from a non-existing branch.
(merge b6160d9 rc/for-each-ref-tracking later to maint).

View File

@ -0,0 +1,52 @@
Git v2.3.1 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.3
----------------
* The interactive "show a list and let the user choose from it"
interface "add -i" used showed and prompted to the user even when
the candidate list was empty, against which the only "choice" the
user could have made was to choose nothing.
* "git apply --whitespace=fix" used to under-allocate the memory
when the fix resulted in a longer text than the original patch.
* "git log --help" used to show rev-list options that are irrelevant
to the "log" command.
* The error message from "git commit", when a non-existing author
name was given as value to the "--author=" parameter, has been
reworded to avoid misunderstanding.
* A broken pack .idx file in the receiving repository prevented the
dumb http transport from fetching a good copy of it from the other
side.
* The documentation incorrectly said that C(opy) and R(ename) are the
only ones that can be followed by the score number in the output in
the --raw format.
* Fix a misspelled conditional that is always true.
* Code to read branch name from various files in .git/ directory
would have misbehaved if the code to write them left an empty file.
* The "git push" documentation made the "--repo=<there>" option
easily misunderstood.
* After attempting and failing a password-less authentication
(e.g. kerberos), libcURL refuses to fall back to password based
Basic authentication without a bit of help/encouragement.
* Setting diff.submodule to 'log' made "git format-patch" produce
broken patches.
* "git rerere" (invoked internally from many mergy operations) did
not correctly signal errors when told to update the working tree
files and failed to do so for whatever reason.
* "git blame HEAD -- missing" failed to correctly say "HEAD" when it
tried to say "No such path 'missing' in HEAD".
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code clean-ups.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,79 @@
Git v2.3.2 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.3.1
------------------
* "update-index --refresh" used to leak when an entry cannot be
refreshed for whatever reason.
* "git fast-import" used to crash when it could not close and
conclude the resulting packfile cleanly.
* "git blame" died, trying to free an uninitialized piece of memory.
* "git merge-file" did not work correctly in a subdirectory.
* "git submodule add" failed to squash "path/to/././submodule" to
"path/to/submodule".
* In v2.2.0, we broke "git prune" that runs in a repository that
borrows from an alternate object store.
* Certain older vintages of cURL give irregular output from
"curl-config --vernum", which confused our build system.
* An earlier workaround to squelch unhelpful deprecation warnings
from the complier on Mac OSX unnecessarily set minimum required
version of the OS, which the user might want to raise (or lower)
for other reasons.
* Longstanding configuration variable naming rules has been added to
the documentation.
* The credential helper for Windows (in contrib/) used to mishandle
a user name with an at-sign in it.
* Older GnuPG implementations may not correctly import the keyring
material we prepare for the tests to use.
* Clarify in the documentation that "remote.<nick>.pushURL" and
"remote.<nick>.URL" are there to name the same repository accessed
via different transports, not two separate repositories.
* The pack bitmap support did not build with older versions of GCC.
* Reading configuration from a blob object, when it ends with a lone
CR, use to confuse the configuration parser.
* We didn't format an integer that wouldn't fit in "int" but in
"uintmax_t" correctly.
* "git push --signed" gave an incorrectly worded error message when
the other side did not support the capability.
* "git fetch" over a remote-helper that cannot respond to "list"
command could not fetch from a symbolic reference e.g. HEAD.
* The insn sheet "git rebase -i" creates did not fully honor
core.abbrev settings.
* The tests that wanted to see that file becomes unreadable after
running "chmod a-r file", and the tests that wanted to make sure it
is not run as root, we used "can we write into the / directory?" as
a cheap substitute, but on some platforms that is not a good
heuristics. The tests and their prerequisites have been updated to
check what they really require.
* The configuration variable 'mailinfo.scissors' was hard to
discover in the documentation.
* Correct a breakage to git-svn around v2.2 era that triggers
premature closing of FileHandle.
* Even though we officially haven't dropped Perl 5.8 support, the
Getopt::Long package that came with it does not support "--no-"
prefix to negate a boolean option; manually add support to help
people with older Getopt::Long package.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code clean-ups.

View File

@ -57,7 +57,8 @@ change, the approach taken by the change, and if relevant how this
differs substantially from the prior version, are all good things
to have.
Make sure that you have tests for the bug you are fixing.
Make sure that you have tests for the bug you are fixing. See
t/README for guidance.
When adding a new feature, make sure that you have new tests to show
the feature triggers the new behaviour when it should, and to show the
@ -65,7 +66,20 @@ feature does not trigger when it shouldn't. Also make sure that the
test suite passes after your commit. Do not forget to update the
documentation to describe the updated behaviour.
Oh, another thing. I am picky about whitespaces. Make sure your
Speaking of the documentation, it is currently a liberal mixture of US
and UK English norms for spelling and grammar, which is somewhat
unfortunate. A huge patch that touches the files all over the place
only to correct the inconsistency is not welcome, though. Potential
clashes with other changes that can result from such a patch are not
worth it. We prefer to gradually reconcile the inconsistencies in
favor of US English, with small and easily digestible patches, as a
side effect of doing some other real work in the vicinity (e.g.
rewriting a paragraph for clarity, while turning en_UK spelling to
en_US). Obvious typographical fixes are much more welcomed ("teh ->
"the"), preferably submitted as independent patches separate from
other documentation changes.
Oh, another thing. We are picky about whitespaces. Make sure your
changes do not trigger errors with the sample pre-commit hook shipped
in templates/hooks--pre-commit. To help ensure this does not happen,
run git diff --check on your changes before you commit.
@ -126,8 +140,15 @@ People on the Git mailing list need to be able to read and
comment on the changes you are submitting. It is important for
a developer to be able to "quote" your changes, using standard
e-mail tools, so that they may comment on specific portions of
your code. For this reason, all patches should be submitted
"inline". If your log message (including your name on the
your code. For this reason, each patch should be submitted
"inline" in a separate message.
Multiple related patches should be grouped into their own e-mail
thread to help readers find all parts of the series. To that end,
send them as replies to either an additional "cover letter" message
(see below), the first patch, or the respective preceding patch.
If your log message (including your name on the
Signed-off-by line) is not writable in ASCII, make sure that
you send off a message in the correct encoding.
@ -155,8 +176,11 @@ message starts, you can put a "From: " line to name that person.
You often want to add additional explanation about the patch,
other than the commit message itself. Place such "cover letter"
material between the three dash lines and the diffstat. Git-notes
can also be inserted using the `--notes` option.
material between the three-dash line and the diffstat. For
patches requiring multiple iterations of review and discussion,
an explanation of changes between each iteration can be kept in
Git-notes and inserted automatically following the three-dash
line via `git format-patch --notes`.
Do not attach the patch as a MIME attachment, compressed or not.
Do not let your e-mail client send quoted-printable. Do not let
@ -234,15 +258,15 @@ pretty simple: if you can certify the below:
person who certified (a), (b) or (c) and I have not modified
it.
(d) I understand and agree that this project and the contribution
are public and that a record of the contribution (including all
personal information I submit with it, including my sign-off) is
maintained indefinitely and may be redistributed consistent with
this project or the open source license(s) involved.
(d) I understand and agree that this project and the contribution
are public and that a record of the contribution (including all
personal information I submit with it, including my sign-off) is
maintained indefinitely and may be redistributed consistent with
this project or the open source license(s) involved.
then you just add a line saying
Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <random@developer.example.org>
Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <random@developer.example.org>
This line can be automatically added by Git if you run the git-commit
command with the -s option.
@ -317,7 +341,7 @@ suggests to the contributors:
spend their time to improve your patch. Go back to step (2).
(4) The list forms consensus that the last round of your patch is
good. Send it to the list and cc the maintainer.
good. Send it to the maintainer and cc the list.
(5) A topic branch is created with the patch and is merged to 'next',
and cooked further and eventually graduates to 'master'.

View File

@ -11,12 +11,12 @@
-L <start>,<end>::
-L :<regex>::
Annotate only the given line range. <start> and <end> are optional.
``-L <start>'' or ``-L <start>,'' spans from <start> to end of file.
``-L ,<end>'' spans from start of file to <end>.
Annotate only the given line range. May be specified multiple times.
Overlapping ranges are allowed.
+
<start> and <end> are optional. ``-L <start>'' or ``-L <start>,'' spans from
<start> to end of file. ``-L ,<end>'' spans from start of file to <end>.
+
<start> and <end> can take one of these forms:
include::line-range-format.txt[]
-l::

View File

@ -78,8 +78,8 @@ be escaped: use `\"` for `"` and `\\` for `\`.
The following escape sequences (beside `\"` and `\\`) are recognized:
`\n` for newline character (NL), `\t` for horizontal tabulation (HT, TAB)
and `\b` for backspace (BS). No other char escape sequence, nor octal
char sequences are valid.
and `\b` for backspace (BS). Other char escape sequences (including octal
escape sequences) are invalid.
Variable values ending in a `\` are continued on the next line in the
customary UNIX fashion.
@ -131,8 +131,13 @@ Variables
Note that this list is non-comprehensive and not necessarily complete.
For command-specific variables, you will find a more detailed description
in the appropriate manual page. You will find a description of non-core
porcelain configuration variables in the respective porcelain documentation.
in the appropriate manual page.
Other git-related tools may and do use their own variables. When
inventing new variables for use in your own tool, make sure their
names do not conflict with those that are used by Git itself and
other popular tools, and describe them in your documentation.
advice.*::
These variables control various optional help messages designed to
@ -142,19 +147,13 @@ advice.*::
--
pushUpdateRejected::
Set this variable to 'false' if you want to disable
'pushNonFFCurrent', 'pushNonFFDefault',
'pushNonFFCurrent',
'pushNonFFMatching', 'pushAlreadyExists',
'pushFetchFirst', and 'pushNeedsForce'
simultaneously.
pushNonFFCurrent::
Advice shown when linkgit:git-push[1] fails due to a
non-fast-forward update to the current branch.
pushNonFFDefault::
Advice to set 'push.default' to 'upstream' or 'current'
when you ran linkgit:git-push[1] and pushed 'matching
refs' by default (i.e. you did not provide an explicit
refspec, and no 'push.default' configuration was set)
and it resulted in a non-fast-forward error.
pushNonFFMatching::
Advice shown when you ran linkgit:git-push[1] and pushed
'matching refs' explicitly (i.e. you used ':', or
@ -170,8 +169,8 @@ advice.*::
pushNeedsForce::
Shown when linkgit:git-push[1] rejects an update that
tries to overwrite a remote ref that points at an
object that is not a committish, or make the remote
ref point at an object that is not a committish.
object that is not a commit-ish, or make the remote
ref point at an object that is not a commit-ish.
statusHints::
Show directions on how to proceed from the current
state in the output of linkgit:git-status[1], in
@ -205,13 +204,26 @@ advice.*::
--
core.fileMode::
If false, the executable bit differences between the index and
the working tree are ignored; useful on broken filesystems like FAT.
See linkgit:git-update-index[1].
Tells Git if the executable bit of files in the working tree
is to be honored.
+
The default is true, except linkgit:git-clone[1] or linkgit:git-init[1]
will probe and set core.fileMode false if appropriate when the
repository is created.
Some filesystems lose the executable bit when a file that is
marked as executable is checked out, or checks out an
non-executable file with executable bit on.
linkgit:git-clone[1] or linkgit:git-init[1] probe the filesystem
to see if it handles the executable bit correctly
and this variable is automatically set as necessary.
+
A repository, however, may be on a filesystem that handles
the filemode correctly, and this variable is set to 'true'
when created, but later may be made accessible from another
environment that loses the filemode (e.g. exporting ext4 via
CIFS mount, visiting a Cygwin created repository with
Git for Windows or Eclipse).
In such a case it may be necessary to set this variable to 'false'.
See linkgit:git-update-index[1].
+
The default is true (when core.filemode is not specified in the config file).
core.ignorecase::
If true, this option enables various workarounds to enable
@ -234,6 +246,17 @@ core.precomposeunicode::
When false, file names are handled fully transparent by Git,
which is backward compatible with older versions of Git.
core.protectHFS::
If set to true, do not allow checkout of paths that would
be considered equivalent to `.git` on an HFS+ filesystem.
Defaults to `true` on Mac OS, and `false` elsewhere.
core.protectNTFS::
If set to true, do not allow checkout of paths that would
cause problems with the NTFS filesystem, e.g. conflict with
8.3 "short" names.
Defaults to `true` on Windows, and `false` elsewhere.
core.trustctime::
If false, the ctime differences between the index and the
working tree are ignored; useful when the inode change time
@ -352,14 +375,19 @@ This is useful for excluding servers inside a firewall from
proxy use, while defaulting to a common proxy for external domains.
core.ignoreStat::
If true, commands which modify both the working tree and the index
will mark the updated paths with the "assume unchanged" bit in the
index. These marked files are then assumed to stay unchanged in the
working tree, until you mark them otherwise manually - Git will not
detect the file changes by lstat() calls. This is useful on systems
where those are very slow, such as Microsoft Windows.
See linkgit:git-update-index[1].
False by default.
If true, Git will avoid using lstat() calls to detect if files have
changed by setting the "assume-unchanged" bit for those tracked files
which it has updated identically in both the index and working tree.
+
When files are modified outside of Git, the user will need to stage
the modified files explicitly (e.g. see 'Examples' section in
linkgit:git-update-index[1]).
Git will not normally detect changes to those files.
+
This is useful on systems where lstat() calls are very slow, such as
CIFS/Microsoft Windows.
+
False by default.
core.preferSymlinkRefs::
Instead of the default "symref" format for HEAD
@ -382,7 +410,7 @@ false), while all other repositories are assumed to be bare (bare
core.worktree::
Set the path to the root of the working tree.
This can be overridden by the GIT_WORK_TREE environment
variable and the '--work-tree' command line option.
variable and the '--work-tree' command-line option.
The value can be an absolute path or relative to the path to
the .git directory, which is either specified by --git-dir
or GIT_DIR, or automatically discovered.
@ -490,7 +518,7 @@ core.deltaBaseCacheLimit::
to avoid unpacking and decompressing frequently used base
objects multiple times.
+
Default is 16 MiB on all platforms. This should be reasonable
Default is 96 MiB on all platforms. This should be reasonable
for all users/operating systems, except on the largest projects.
You probably do not need to adjust this value.
+
@ -500,7 +528,8 @@ core.bigFileThreshold::
Files larger than this size are stored deflated, without
attempting delta compression. Storing large files without
delta compression avoids excessive memory usage, at the
slight expense of increased disk usage.
slight expense of increased disk usage. Additionally files
larger than this size are always treated as binary.
+
Default is 512 MiB on all platforms. This should be reasonable
for most projects as source code and other text files can still
@ -524,7 +553,7 @@ core.askpass::
environment variable. If not set, fall back to the value of the
'SSH_ASKPASS' environment variable or, failing that, a simple password
prompt. The external program shall be given a suitable prompt as
command line argument and write the password on its STDOUT.
command-line argument and write the password on its STDOUT.
core.attributesfile::
In addition to '.gitattributes' (per-directory) and
@ -545,6 +574,9 @@ core.commentchar::
messages consider a line that begins with this character
commented, and removes them after the editor returns
(default '#').
+
If set to "auto", `git-commit` would select a character that is not
the beginning character of any line in existing commit messages.
sequence.editor::
Text editor used by `git rebase -i` for editing the rebase instruction file.
@ -553,22 +585,29 @@ sequence.editor::
When not configured the default commit message editor is used instead.
core.pager::
The command that Git will use to paginate output. Can
be overridden with the `GIT_PAGER` environment
variable. Note that Git sets the `LESS` environment
variable to `FRSX` if it is unset when it runs the
pager. One can change these settings by setting the
`LESS` variable to some other value. Alternately,
these settings can be overridden on a project or
global basis by setting the `core.pager` option.
Setting `core.pager` has no effect on the `LESS`
environment variable behaviour above, so if you want
to override Git's default settings this way, you need
to be explicit. For example, to disable the S option
in a backward compatible manner, set `core.pager`
to `less -+S`. This will be passed to the shell by
Git, which will translate the final command to
`LESS=FRSX less -+S`.
Text viewer for use by Git commands (e.g., 'less'). The value
is meant to be interpreted by the shell. The order of preference
is the `$GIT_PAGER` environment variable, then `core.pager`
configuration, then `$PAGER`, and then the default chosen at
compile time (usually 'less').
+
When the `LESS` environment variable is unset, Git sets it to `FRX`
(if `LESS` environment variable is set, Git does not change it at
all). If you want to selectively override Git's default setting
for `LESS`, you can set `core.pager` to e.g. `less -S`. This will
be passed to the shell by Git, which will translate the final
command to `LESS=FRX less -S`. The environment does not set the
`S` option but the command line does, instructing less to truncate
long lines. Similarly, setting `core.pager` to `less -+F` will
deactivate the `F` option specified by the environment from the
command-line, deactivating the "quit if one screen" behavior of
`less`. One can specifically activate some flags for particular
commands: for example, setting `pager.blame` to `less -S` enables
line truncation only for `git blame`.
+
Likewise, when the `LV` environment variable is unset, Git sets it
to `-c`. You can override this setting by exporting `LV` with
another value or setting `core.pager` to `lv +c`.
core.whitespace::
A comma separated list of common whitespace problems to
@ -612,9 +651,9 @@ core.preloadindex::
+
This can speed up operations like 'git diff' and 'git status' especially
on filesystems like NFS that have weak caching semantics and thus
relatively high IO latencies. With this set to 'true', Git will do the
relatively high IO latencies. When enabled, Git will do the
index comparison to the filesystem data in parallel, allowing
overlapping IO's.
overlapping IO's. Defaults to true.
core.createObject::
You can set this to 'link', in which case a hardlink followed by
@ -644,14 +683,13 @@ core.abbrev::
for abbreviated object names to stay unique for sufficiently long
time.
add.ignore-errors::
add.ignoreErrors::
add.ignore-errors (deprecated)::
Tells 'git add' to continue adding files when some files cannot be
added due to indexing errors. Equivalent to the '--ignore-errors'
option of linkgit:git-add[1]. Older versions of Git accept only
`add.ignore-errors`, which does not follow the usual naming
convention for configuration variables. Newer versions of Git
honor `add.ignoreErrors` as well.
option of linkgit:git-add[1]. `add.ignore-errors` is deprecated,
as it does not follow the usual naming convention for configuration
variables.
alias.*::
Command aliases for the linkgit:git[1] command wrapper - e.g.
@ -660,7 +698,7 @@ alias.*::
confusion and troubles with script usage, aliases that
hide existing Git commands are ignored. Arguments are split by
spaces, the usual shell quoting and escaping is supported.
quote pair and a backslash can be used to quote them.
A quote pair or a backslash can be used to quote them.
+
If the alias expansion is prefixed with an exclamation point,
it will be treated as a shell command. For example, defining
@ -726,6 +764,8 @@ branch.<name>.remote::
overridden by `branch.<name>.pushremote`. If no remote is
configured, or if you are not on any branch, it defaults to
`origin` for fetching and `remote.pushdefault` for pushing.
Additionally, `.` (a period) is the current local repository
(a dot-repository), see `branch.<name>.merge`'s final note below.
branch.<name>.pushremote::
When on branch <name>, it overrides `branch.<name>.remote` for
@ -751,8 +791,8 @@ branch.<name>.merge::
Specify multiple values to get an octopus merge.
If you wish to setup 'git pull' so that it merges into <name> from
another branch in the local repository, you can point
branch.<name>.merge to the desired branch, and use the special setting
`.` (a period) for branch.<name>.remote.
branch.<name>.merge to the desired branch, and use the relative path
setting `.` (a period) for branch.<name>.remote.
branch.<name>.mergeoptions::
Sets default options for merging into branch <name>. The syntax and
@ -765,6 +805,10 @@ branch.<name>.rebase::
instead of merging the default branch from the default remote when
"git pull" is run. See "pull.rebase" for doing this in a non
branch-specific manner.
+
When preserve, also pass `--preserve-merges` along to 'git rebase'
so that locally committed merge commits will not be flattened
by running 'git pull'.
+
*NOTE*: this is a possibly dangerous operation; do *not* use
it unless you understand the implications (see linkgit:git-rebase[1]
@ -787,8 +831,8 @@ browser.<tool>.path::
working repository in gitweb (see linkgit:git-instaweb[1]).
clean.requireForce::
A boolean to make git-clean do nothing unless given -f
or -n. Defaults to true.
A boolean to make git-clean do nothing unless given -f,
-i or -n. Defaults to true.
color.branch::
A boolean to enable/disable color in the output of
@ -809,7 +853,13 @@ accepted are `normal`, `black`, `red`, `green`, `yellow`, `blue`,
`magenta`, `cyan` and `white`; the attributes are `bold`, `dim`, `ul`,
`blink` and `reverse`. The first color given is the foreground; the
second is the background. The position of the attribute, if any,
doesn't matter.
doesn't matter. Attributes may be turned off specifically by prefixing
them with `no` (e.g., `noreverse`, `noul`, etc).
+
Colors (foreground and background) may also be given as numbers between
0 and 255; these use ANSI 256-color mode (but note that not all
terminals may support this). If your terminal supports it, you may also
specify 24-bit RGB values as hex, like `#ff0ab3`.
color.diff::
Whether to use ANSI escape sequences to add color to patches.
@ -819,7 +869,7 @@ color.diff::
commands will only use color when output is to the terminal.
Defaults to false.
+
This does not affect linkgit:git-format-patch[1] nor the
This does not affect linkgit:git-format-patch[1] or the
'git-diff-{asterisk}' plumbing commands. Can be overridden on the
command line with the `--color[=<when>]` option.
@ -856,7 +906,11 @@ color.grep.<slot>::
`linenumber`;;
line number prefix (when using `-n`)
`match`;;
matching text
matching text (same as setting `matchContext` and `matchSelected`)
`matchContext`;;
matching text in context lines
`matchSelected`;;
matching text in selected lines
`selected`;;
non-matching text in selected lines
`separator`;;
@ -984,6 +1038,14 @@ commit.cleanup::
have to remove the help lines that begin with `#` in the commit log
template yourself, if you do this).
commit.gpgsign::
A boolean to specify whether all commits should be GPG signed.
Use of this option when doing operations such as rebase can
result in a large number of commits being signed. It may be
convenient to use an agent to avoid typing your GPG passphrase
several times.
commit.status::
A boolean to enable/disable inclusion of status information in the
commit message template when using an editor to prepare the commit
@ -1061,6 +1123,10 @@ fetch.unpackLimit::
especially on slow filesystems. If not set, the value of
`transfer.unpackLimit` is used instead.
fetch.prune::
If true, fetch will automatically behave as if the `--prune`
option was given on the command line. See also `remote.<name>.prune`.
format.attach::
Enable multipart/mixed attachments as the default for
'format-patch'. The value can also be a double quoted string
@ -1095,6 +1161,10 @@ format.signature::
Set this variable to the empty string ("") to suppress
signature generation.
format.signaturefile::
Works just like format.signature except the contents of the
file specified by this variable will be used as the signature.
format.suffix::
The default for format-patch is to output files with the suffix
`.patch`. Use this variable to change that suffix (make sure to
@ -1137,6 +1207,11 @@ filter.<driver>.smudge::
object to a worktree file upon checkout. See
linkgit:gitattributes[5] for details.
gc.aggressiveDepth::
The depth parameter used in the delta compression
algorithm used by 'git gc --aggressive'. This defaults
to 250.
gc.aggressiveWindow::
The window size parameter used in the delta compression
algorithm used by 'git gc --aggressive'. This defaults
@ -1155,6 +1230,10 @@ gc.autopacklimit::
--auto` consolidates them into one larger pack. The
default value is 50. Setting this to 0 disables it.
gc.autodetach::
Make `git gc --auto` return immediately and run in background
if the system supports it. Default is true.
gc.packrefs::
Running `git pack-refs` in a repository renders it
unclonable by Git versions prior to 1.5.1.2 over dumb
@ -1296,10 +1375,10 @@ grep.extendedRegexp::
gpg.program::
Use this custom program instead of "gpg" found on $PATH when
making or verifying a PGP signature. The program must support the
same command line interface as GPG, namely, to verify a detached
same command-line interface as GPG, namely, to verify a detached
signature, "gpg --verify $file - <$signature" is run, and the
program is expected to signal a good signature by exiting with
code 0, and to generate an ascii-armored detached signature, the
code 0, and to generate an ASCII-armored detached signature, the
standard input of "gpg -bsau $key" is fed with the contents to be
signed, and the program is expected to send the result to its
standard output.
@ -1312,6 +1391,10 @@ gui.diffcontext::
Specifies how many context lines should be used in calls to diff
made by the linkgit:git-gui[1]. The default is "5".
gui.displayuntracked::
Determines if linkgit::git-gui[1] shows untracked files
in the file list. The default is "true".
gui.encoding::
Specifies the default encoding to use for displaying of
file contents in linkgit:git-gui[1] and linkgit:gitk[1].
@ -1445,7 +1528,11 @@ http.cookiefile::
of the file to read cookies from should be plain HTTP headers or
the Netscape/Mozilla cookie file format (see linkgit:curl[1]).
NOTE that the file specified with http.cookiefile is only used as
input. No cookies will be stored in the file.
input unless http.saveCookies is set.
http.savecookies::
If set, store cookies received during requests to the file specified by
http.cookiefile. Has no effect if http.cookiefile is unset.
http.sslVerify::
Whether to verify the SSL certificate when fetching or pushing
@ -1525,6 +1612,51 @@ http.useragent::
of common USER_AGENT strings (but not including those like git/1.7.1).
Can be overridden by the 'GIT_HTTP_USER_AGENT' environment variable.
http.<url>.*::
Any of the http.* options above can be applied selectively to some URLs.
For a config key to match a URL, each element of the config key is
compared to that of the URL, in the following order:
+
--
. Scheme (e.g., `https` in `https://example.com/`). This field
must match exactly between the config key and the URL.
. Host/domain name (e.g., `example.com` in `https://example.com/`).
This field must match exactly between the config key and the URL.
. Port number (e.g., `8080` in `http://example.com:8080/`).
This field must match exactly between the config key and the URL.
Omitted port numbers are automatically converted to the correct
default for the scheme before matching.
. Path (e.g., `repo.git` in `https://example.com/repo.git`). The
path field of the config key must match the path field of the URL
either exactly or as a prefix of slash-delimited path elements. This means
a config key with path `foo/` matches URL path `foo/bar`. A prefix can only
match on a slash (`/`) boundary. Longer matches take precedence (so a config
key with path `foo/bar` is a better match to URL path `foo/bar` than a config
key with just path `foo/`).
. User name (e.g., `user` in `https://user@example.com/repo.git`). If
the config key has a user name it must match the user name in the
URL exactly. If the config key does not have a user name, that
config key will match a URL with any user name (including none),
but at a lower precedence than a config key with a user name.
--
+
The list above is ordered by decreasing precedence; a URL that matches
a config key's path is preferred to one that matches its user name. For example,
if the URL is `https://user@example.com/foo/bar` a config key match of
`https://example.com/foo` will be preferred over a config key match of
`https://user@example.com`.
+
All URLs are normalized before attempting any matching (the password part,
if embedded in the URL, is always ignored for matching purposes) so that
equivalent URLs that are simply spelled differently will match properly.
Environment variable settings always override any matches. The URLs that are
matched against are those given directly to Git commands. This means any URLs
visited as a result of a redirection do not participate in matching.
i18n.commitEncoding::
Character encoding the commit messages are stored in; Git itself
does not care per se, but this information is necessary e.g. when
@ -1540,6 +1672,10 @@ imap::
The configuration variables in the 'imap' section are described
in linkgit:git-imap-send[1].
index.version::
Specify the version with which new index files should be
initialized. This does not affect existing repositories.
init.templatedir::
Specify the directory from which templates will be copied.
(See the "TEMPLATE DIRECTORY" section of linkgit:git-init[1].)
@ -1572,7 +1708,7 @@ interactive.singlekey::
linkgit:git-add[1], linkgit:git-checkout[1], linkgit:git-commit[1],
linkgit:git-reset[1], and linkgit:git-stash[1]. Note that this
setting is silently ignored if portable keystroke input
is not available.
is not available; requires the Perl module Term::ReadKey.
log.abbrevCommit::
If true, makes linkgit:git-log[1], linkgit:git-show[1], and
@ -1603,6 +1739,13 @@ log.mailmap::
If true, makes linkgit:git-log[1], linkgit:git-show[1], and
linkgit:git-whatchanged[1] assume `--use-mailmap`.
mailinfo.scissors::
If true, makes linkgit:git-mailinfo[1] (and therefore
linkgit:git-am[1]) act by default as if the --scissors option
was provided on the command-line. When active, this features
removes everything from the message body before a scissors
line (i.e. consisting mainly of ">8", "8<" and "-").
mailmap.file::
The location of an augmenting mailmap file. The default
mailmap, located in the root of the repository, is loaded
@ -1657,6 +1800,15 @@ mergetool.<tool>.trustExitCode::
if the file has been updated, otherwise the user is prompted to
indicate the success of the merge.
mergetool.meld.hasOutput::
Older versions of `meld` do not support the `--output` option.
Git will attempt to detect whether `meld` supports `--output`
by inspecting the output of `meld --help`. Configuring
`mergetool.meld.hasOutput` will make Git skip these checks and
use the configured value instead. Setting `mergetool.meld.hasOutput`
to `true` tells Git to unconditionally use the `--output` option,
and `false` avoids using `--output`.
mergetool.keepBackup::
After performing a merge, the original file with conflict markers
can be saved as a file with a `.orig` extension. If this variable
@ -1670,6 +1822,12 @@ mergetool.keepTemporaries::
preserved, otherwise they will be removed after the tool has
exited. Defaults to `false`.
mergetool.writeToTemp::
Git writes temporary 'BASE', 'LOCAL', and 'REMOTE' versions of
conflicting files in the worktree by default. Git will attempt
to use a temporary directory for these files when set `true`.
Defaults to `false`.
mergetool.prompt::
Prompt before each invocation of the merge resolution program.
@ -1730,10 +1888,11 @@ pack.depth::
maximum depth is given on the command line. Defaults to 50.
pack.windowMemory::
The window memory size limit used by linkgit:git-pack-objects[1]
when no limit is given on the command line. The value can be
suffixed with "k", "m", or "g". Defaults to 0, meaning no
limit.
The maximum size of memory that is consumed by each thread
in linkgit:git-pack-objects[1] for pack window memory when
no limit is given on the command line. The value can be
suffixed with "k", "m", or "g". When left unconfigured (or
set explicitly to 0), there will be no limit.
pack.compression::
An integer -1..9, indicating the compression level for objects
@ -1801,6 +1960,26 @@ pack.packSizeLimit::
Common unit suffixes of 'k', 'm', or 'g' are
supported.
pack.useBitmaps::
When true, git will use pack bitmaps (if available) when packing
to stdout (e.g., during the server side of a fetch). Defaults to
true. You should not generally need to turn this off unless
you are debugging pack bitmaps.
pack.writebitmaps (deprecated)::
This is a deprecated synonym for `repack.writeBitmaps`.
pack.writeBitmapHashCache::
When true, git will include a "hash cache" section in the bitmap
index (if one is written). This cache can be used to feed git's
delta heuristics, potentially leading to better deltas between
bitmapped and non-bitmapped objects (e.g., when serving a fetch
between an older, bitmapped pack and objects that have been
pushed since the last gc). The downside is that it consumes 4
bytes per object of disk space, and that JGit's bitmap
implementation does not understand it, causing it to complain if
Git and JGit are used on the same repository. Defaults to false.
pager.<cmd>::
If the value is boolean, turns on or off pagination of the
output of a particular Git subcommand when writing to a tty.
@ -1820,11 +1999,25 @@ pretty.<name>::
Note that an alias with the same name as a built-in format
will be silently ignored.
pull.ff::
By default, Git does not create an extra merge commit when merging
a commit that is a descendant of the current commit. Instead, the
tip of the current branch is fast-forwarded. When set to `false`,
this variable tells Git to create an extra merge commit in such
a case (equivalent to giving the `--no-ff` option from the command
line). When set to `only`, only such fast-forward merges are
allowed (equivalent to giving the `--ff-only` option from the
command line).
pull.rebase::
When true, rebase branches on top of the fetched branch, instead
of merging the default branch from the default remote when "git
pull" is run. See "branch.<name>.rebase" for setting this on a
per-branch basis.
+
When preserve, also pass `--preserve-merges` along to 'git rebase'
so that locally committed merge commits will not be flattened
by running 'git pull'.
+
*NOTE*: this is a possibly dangerous operation; do *not* use
it unless you understand the implications (see linkgit:git-rebase[1]
@ -1868,7 +2061,7 @@ When pushing to a remote that is different from the remote you normally
pull from, work as `current`. This is the safest option and is suited
for beginners.
+
This mode will become the default in Git 2.0.
This mode has become the default in Git 2.0.
* `matching` - push all branches having the same name on both ends.
This makes the repository you are pushing to remember the set of
@ -1887,8 +2080,8 @@ suitable for pushing into a shared central repository, as other
people may add new branches there, or update the tip of existing
branches outside your control.
+
This is currently the default, but Git 2.0 will change the default
to `simple`.
This used to be the default, but not since Git 2.0 (`simple` is the
new default).
--
@ -1912,6 +2105,25 @@ receive.autogc::
receiving data from git-push and updating refs. You can stop
it by setting this variable to false.
receive.certnonceseed::
By setting this variable to a string, `git receive-pack`
will accept a `git push --signed` and verifies it by using
a "nonce" protected by HMAC using this string as a secret
key.
receive.certnonceslop::
When a `git push --signed` sent a push certificate with a
"nonce" that was issued by a receive-pack serving the same
repository within this many seconds, export the "nonce"
found in the certificate to `GIT_PUSH_CERT_NONCE` to the
hooks (instead of what the receive-pack asked the sending
side to include). This may allow writing checks in
`pre-receive` and `post-receive` a bit easier. Instead of
checking `GIT_PUSH_CERT_NONCE_SLOP` environment variable
that records by how many seconds the nonce is stale to
decide if they want to accept the certificate, they only
can check `GIT_PUSH_CERT_NONCE_STATUS` is `OK`.
receive.fsckObjects::
If it is set to true, git-receive-pack will check all received
objects. It will abort in the case of a malformed object or a
@ -1945,6 +2157,13 @@ receive.denyCurrentBranch::
print a warning of such a push to stderr, but allow the push to
proceed. If set to false or "ignore", allow such pushes with no
message. Defaults to "refuse".
+
Another option is "updateInstead" which will update the working
directory (must be clean) if pushing into the current branch. This option is
intended for synchronizing working directories when one side is not easily
accessible via interactive ssh (e.g. a live web site, hence the requirement
that the working directory be clean). This mode also comes in handy when
developing inside a VM to test and fix code on different Operating Systems.
receive.denyNonFastForwards::
If set to true, git-receive-pack will deny a ref update which is
@ -1965,6 +2184,10 @@ receive.updateserverinfo::
If set to true, git-receive-pack will run git-update-server-info
after receiving data from git-push and updating refs.
receive.shallowupdate::
If set to true, .git/shallow can be updated when new refs
require new shallow roots. Otherwise those refs are rejected.
remote.pushdefault::
The remote to push to by default. Overrides
`branch.<name>.remote` for all branches, and is overridden by
@ -2024,6 +2247,12 @@ remote.<name>.vcs::
Setting this to a value <vcs> will cause Git to interact with
the remote with the git-remote-<vcs> helper.
remote.<name>.prune::
When set to true, fetching from this remote by default will also
remove any remote-tracking references that no longer exist on the
remote (as if the `--prune` option was given on the command line).
Overrides `fetch.prune` settings, if any.
remotes.<group>::
The list of remotes which are fetched by "git remote update
<group>". See linkgit:git-remote[1].
@ -2036,6 +2265,21 @@ repack.usedeltabaseoffset::
"false" and repack. Access from old Git versions over the
native protocol are unaffected by this option.
repack.packKeptObjects::
If set to true, makes `git repack` act as if
`--pack-kept-objects` was passed. See linkgit:git-repack[1] for
details. Defaults to `false` normally, but `true` if a bitmap
index is being written (either via `--write-bitmap-index` or
`repack.writeBitmaps`).
repack.writeBitmaps::
When true, git will write a bitmap index when packing all
objects to disk (e.g., when `git repack -a` is run). This
index can speed up the "counting objects" phase of subsequent
packs created for clones and fetches, at the cost of some disk
space and extra time spent on the initial repack. Defaults to
false.
rerere.autoupdate::
When set to true, `git-rerere` updates the index with the
resulting contents after it cleanly resolves conflicts using
@ -2059,7 +2303,7 @@ sendemail.smtpencryption::
See linkgit:git-send-email[1] for description. Note that this
setting is not subject to the 'identity' mechanism.
sendemail.smtpssl::
sendemail.smtpssl (deprecated)::
Deprecated alias for 'sendemail.smtpencryption = ssl'.
sendemail.smtpsslcertpath::
@ -2094,10 +2338,12 @@ sendemail.smtpserverport::
sendemail.smtpserveroption::
sendemail.smtpuser::
sendemail.thread::
sendemail.transferencoding::
sendemail.validate::
sendemail.xmailer::
See linkgit:git-send-email[1] for description.
sendemail.signedoffcc::
sendemail.signedoffcc (deprecated)::
Deprecated alias for 'sendemail.signedoffbycc'.
showbranch.default::
@ -2118,12 +2364,19 @@ status.branch::
Set to true to enable --branch by default in linkgit:git-status[1].
The option --no-branch takes precedence over this variable.
status.displayCommentPrefix::
If set to true, linkgit:git-status[1] will insert a comment
prefix before each output line (starting with
`core.commentChar`, i.e. `#` by default). This was the
behavior of linkgit:git-status[1] in Git 1.8.4 and previous.
Defaults to false.
status.showUntrackedFiles::
By default, linkgit:git-status[1] and linkgit:git-commit[1] show
files which are not currently tracked by Git. Directories which
contain only untracked files, are shown with the directory name
only. Showing untracked files means that Git needs to lstat() all
all the files in the whole repository, which might be slow on some
the files in the whole repository, which might be slow on some
systems. So, this variable controls how the commands displays
the untracked files. Possible values are:
+
@ -2142,7 +2395,16 @@ status.submodulesummary::
If this is set to a non zero number or true (identical to -1 or an
unlimited number), the submodule summary will be enabled and a
summary of commits for modified submodules will be shown (see
--summary-limit option of linkgit:git-submodule[1]).
--summary-limit option of linkgit:git-submodule[1]). Please note
that the summary output command will be suppressed for all
submodules when `diff.ignoreSubmodules` is set to 'all' or only
for those submodules where `submodule.<name>.ignore=all`. The only
exception to that rule is that status and commit will show staged
submodule changes. To
also view the summary for ignored submodules you can either use
the --ignore-submodules=dirty command-line option or the 'git
submodule summary' command, which shows a similar output but does
not honor these settings.
submodule.<name>.path::
submodule.<name>.url::
@ -2162,14 +2424,16 @@ submodule.<name>.branch::
submodule.<name>.fetchRecurseSubmodules::
This option can be used to control recursive fetching of this
submodule. It can be overridden by using the --[no-]recurse-submodules
command line option to "git fetch" and "git pull".
command-line option to "git fetch" and "git pull".
This setting will override that from in the linkgit:gitmodules[5]
file.
submodule.<name>.ignore::
Defines under what circumstances "git status" and the diff family show
a submodule as modified. When set to "all", it will never be considered
modified, "dirty" will ignore all changes to the submodules work tree and
modified (but it will nonetheless show up in the output of status and
commit when it has been staged), "dirty" will ignore all changes
to the submodules work tree and
takes only differences between the HEAD of the submodule and the commit
recorded in the superproject into account. "untracked" will additionally
let submodules with modified tracked files in their work tree show up.
@ -2177,7 +2441,13 @@ submodule.<name>.ignore::
submodules that have untracked files in their work tree as changed.
This setting overrides any setting made in .gitmodules for this submodule,
both settings can be overridden on the command line by using the
"--ignore-submodules" option.
"--ignore-submodules" option. The 'git submodule' commands are not
affected by this setting.
tag.sort::
This variable controls the sort ordering of tags when displayed by
linkgit:git-tag[1]. Without the "--sort=<value>" option provided, the
value of this variable will be used as the default.
tar.umask::
This variable can be used to restrict the permission bits of
@ -2201,6 +2471,13 @@ transfer.unpackLimit::
not set, the value of this variable is used instead.
The default value is 100.
uploadarchive.allowUnreachable::
If true, allow clients to use `git archive --remote` to request
any tree, whether reachable from the ref tips or not. See the
discussion in the `SECURITY` section of
linkgit:git-upload-archive[1] for more details. Defaults to
`false`.
uploadpack.hiderefs::
String(s) `upload-pack` uses to decide which refs to omit
from its initial advertisement. Use more than one
@ -2216,6 +2493,17 @@ uploadpack.allowtipsha1inwant::
of a hidden ref (by default, such a request is rejected).
see also `uploadpack.hiderefs`.
uploadpack.keepalive::
When `upload-pack` has started `pack-objects`, there may be a
quiet period while `pack-objects` prepares the pack. Normally
it would output progress information, but if `--quiet` was used
for the fetch, `pack-objects` will output nothing at all until
the pack data begins. Some clients and networks may consider
the server to be hung and give up. Setting this option instructs
`upload-pack` to send an empty keepalive packet every
`uploadpack.keepalive` seconds. Setting this option to 0
disables keepalive packets entirely. The default is 5 seconds.
url.<base>.insteadOf::
Any URL that starts with this value will be rewritten to
start, instead, with <base>. In cases where some site serves a
@ -2251,11 +2539,11 @@ user.name::
environment variables. See linkgit:git-commit-tree[1].
user.signingkey::
If linkgit:git-tag[1] is not selecting the key you want it to
automatically when creating a signed tag, you can override the
default selection with this variable. This option is passed
unchanged to gpg's --local-user parameter, so you may specify a key
using any method that gpg supports.
If linkgit:git-tag[1] or linkgit:git-commit[1] is not selecting the
key you want it to automatically when creating a signed tag or
commit, you can override the default selection with this variable.
This option is passed unchanged to gpg's --local-user parameter,
so you may specify a key using any method that gpg supports.
web.browser::
Specify a web browser that may be used by some commands.

View File

@ -8,9 +8,9 @@ endif::git-commit[]
support the following date formats:
Git internal format::
It is `<unix timestamp> <timezone offset>`, where `<unix
It is `<unix timestamp> <time zone offset>`, where `<unix
timestamp>` is the number of seconds since the UNIX epoch.
`<timezone offset>` is a positive or negative offset from UTC.
`<time zone offset>` is a positive or negative offset from UTC.
For example CET (which is 2 hours ahead UTC) is `+0200`.
RFC 2822::

View File

@ -73,7 +73,11 @@ diff.ignoreSubmodules::
Sets the default value of --ignore-submodules. Note that this
affects only 'git diff' Porcelain, and not lower level 'diff'
commands such as 'git diff-files'. 'git checkout' also honors
this setting when reporting uncommitted changes.
this setting when reporting uncommitted changes. Setting it to
'all' disables the submodule summary normally shown by 'git commit'
and 'git status' when 'status.submodulesummary' is set unless it is
overridden by using the --ignore-submodules command-line option.
The 'git submodule' commands are not affected by this setting.
diff.mnemonicprefix::
If set, 'git diff' uses a prefix pair that is different from the
@ -94,6 +98,11 @@ diff.mnemonicprefix::
diff.noprefix::
If set, 'git diff' does not show any source or destination prefix.
diff.orderfile::
File indicating how to order files within a diff, using
one shell glob pattern per line.
Can be overridden by the '-O' option to linkgit:git-diff[1].
diff.renameLimit::
The number of files to consider when performing the copy/rename
detection; equivalent to the 'git diff' option '-l'.

View File

@ -66,7 +66,8 @@ be committed)
Status letters C and R are always followed by a score (denoting the
percentage of similarity between the source and target of the move or
copy), and are the only ones to be so.
copy). Status letter M may be followed by a score (denoting the
percentage of dissimilarity) for file rewrites.
<sha1> is shown as all 0's if a file is new on the filesystem
and it is out of sync with the index.

View File

@ -174,7 +174,7 @@ added, from the point of view of that parent).
In the above example output, the function signature was changed
from both files (hence two `-` removals from both file1 and
file2, plus `++` to mean one line that was added does not appear
in either file1 nor file2). Also eight other lines are the same
in either file1 or file2). Also eight other lines are the same
from file1 but do not appear in file2 (hence prefixed with `+`).
When shown by `git diff-tree -c`, it compares the parents of a

View File

@ -358,7 +358,7 @@ endif::git-log[]
--irreversible-delete::
Omit the preimage for deletes, i.e. print only the header but not
the diff between the preimage and `/dev/null`. The resulting patch
is not meant to be applied with `patch` nor `git apply`; this is
is not meant to be applied with `patch` or `git apply`; this is
solely for people who want to just concentrate on reviewing the
text after the change. In addition, the output obviously lack
enough information to apply such a patch in reverse, even manually,
@ -432,6 +432,9 @@ endif::git-format-patch[]
-O<orderfile>::
Output the patch in the order specified in the
<orderfile>, which has one shell glob pattern per line.
This overrides the `diff.orderfile` configuration variable
(see linkgit:git-config[1]). To cancel `diff.orderfile`,
use `-O/dev/null`.
ifndef::git-format-patch[]
-R::

View File

@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
Everyday Git With 20 Commands Or So
===================================
This document has been moved to linkgit:giteveryday[1].
Please let the owners of the referring site know so that they can update the
link you clicked to get here.
Thanks.

View File

@ -14,8 +14,18 @@
branch history. Tags for the deepened commits are not fetched.
--unshallow::
Convert a shallow repository to a complete one, removing all
the limitations imposed by shallow repositories.
If the source repository is complete, convert a shallow
repository to a complete one, removing all the limitations
imposed by shallow repositories.
+
If the source repository is shallow, fetch as much as possible so that
the current repository has the same history as the source repository.
--update-shallow::
By default when fetching from a shallow repository,
`git fetch` refuses refs that require updating
.git/shallow. This option updates .git/shallow and accept such
refs.
ifndef::git-pull[]
--dry-run::
@ -41,17 +51,20 @@ ifndef::git-pull[]
-p::
--prune::
After fetching, remove any remote-tracking branches which
no longer exist on the remote.
After fetching, remove any remote-tracking references that no
longer exist on the remote. Tags are not subject to pruning
if they are fetched only because of the default tag
auto-following or due to a --tags option. However, if tags
are fetched due to an explicit refspec (either on the command
line or in the remote configuration, for example if the remote
was cloned with the --mirror option), then they are also
subject to pruning.
endif::git-pull[]
ifdef::git-pull[]
--no-tags::
endif::git-pull[]
ifndef::git-pull[]
-n::
--no-tags::
endif::git-pull[]
--no-tags::
By default, tags that point at objects that are downloaded
from the remote repository are fetched and stored locally.
This option disables this automatic tag following. The default
@ -59,13 +72,22 @@ endif::git-pull[]
setting. See linkgit:git-config[1].
ifndef::git-pull[]
--refmap=<refspec>::
When fetching refs listed on the command line, use the
specified refspec (can be given more than once) to map the
refs to remote-tracking branches, instead of the values of
`remote.*.fetch` configuration variables for the remote
repository. See section on "Configured Remote-tracking
Branches" for details.
-t::
--tags::
This is a short-hand for giving `refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*`
refspec from the command line, to ask all tags to be fetched
and stored locally. Because this acts as an explicit
refspec, the default refspecs (configured with the
remote.$name.fetch variable) are overridden and not used.
Fetch all tags from the remote (i.e., fetch remote tags
`refs/tags/*` into local tags with the same name), in addition
to whatever else would otherwise be fetched. Using this
option alone does not subject tags to pruning, even if --prune
is used (though tags may be pruned anyway if they are also the
destination of an explicit refspec; see '--prune').
--recurse-submodules[=yes|on-demand|no]::
This option controls if and under what conditions new commits of

View File

@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ git-add - Add file contents to the index
SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git add' [-n] [-v] [--force | -f] [--interactive | -i] [--patch | -p]
'git add' [--verbose | -v] [--dry-run | -n] [--force | -f] [--interactive | -i] [--patch | -p]
[--edit | -e] [--[no-]all | --[no-]ignore-removal | [--update | -u]]
[--intent-to-add | -N] [--refresh] [--ignore-errors] [--ignore-missing]
[--] [<pathspec>...]
@ -53,8 +53,14 @@ OPTIONS
Files to add content from. Fileglobs (e.g. `*.c`) can
be given to add all matching files. Also a
leading directory name (e.g. `dir` to add `dir/file1`
and `dir/file2`) can be given to add all files in the
directory, recursively.
and `dir/file2`) can be given to update the index to
match the current state of the directory as a whole (e.g.
specifying `dir` will record not just a file `dir/file1`
modified in the working tree, a file `dir/file2` added to
the working tree, but also a file `dir/file3` removed from
the working tree. Note that older versions of Git used
to ignore removed files; use `--no-all` option if you want
to add modified or new files but ignore removed ones.
-n::
--dry-run::
@ -104,10 +110,10 @@ apply to the index. See EDITING PATCHES below.
<pathspec>. This removes as well as modifies index entries to
match the working tree, but adds no new files.
+
If no <pathspec> is given, the current version of Git defaults to
"."; in other words, update all tracked files in the current directory
and its subdirectories. This default will change in a future version
of Git, hence the form without <pathspec> should not be used.
If no <pathspec> is given when `-u` option is used, all
tracked files in the entire working tree are updated (old versions
of Git used to limit the update to the current directory and its
subdirectories).
-A::
--all::
@ -117,10 +123,10 @@ of Git, hence the form without <pathspec> should not be used.
entry. This adds, modifies, and removes index entries to
match the working tree.
+
If no <pathspec> is given, the current version of Git defaults to
"."; in other words, update all files in the current directory
and its subdirectories. This default will change in a future version
of Git, hence the form without <pathspec> should not be used.
If no <pathspec> is given when `-A` option is used, all
files in the entire working tree are updated (old versions
of Git used to limit the update to the current directory and its
subdirectories).
--no-all::
--ignore-removal::
@ -129,11 +135,9 @@ of Git, hence the form without <pathspec> should not be used.
files that have been removed from the working tree. This
option is a no-op when no <pathspec> is used.
+
This option is primarily to help the current users of Git, whose
"git add <pathspec>..." ignores removed files. In future versions
of Git, "git add <pathspec>..." will be a synonym to "git add -A
<pathspec>..." and "git add --ignore-removal <pathspec>..." will behave like
today's "git add <pathspec>...", ignoring removed files.
This option is primarily to help users who are used to older
versions of Git, whose "git add <pathspec>..." was a synonym
for "git add --no-all <pathspec>...", i.e. ignored removed files.
-N::
--intent-to-add::
@ -296,9 +300,9 @@ patch::
y - stage this hunk
n - do not stage this hunk
q - quit; do not stage this hunk nor any of the remaining ones
q - quit; do not stage this hunk or any of the remaining ones
a - stage this hunk and all later hunks in the file
d - do not stage this hunk nor any of the later hunks in the file
d - do not stage this hunk or any of the later hunks in the file
g - select a hunk to go to
/ - search for a hunk matching the given regex
j - leave this hunk undecided, see next undecided hunk

View File

@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
[--ignore-date] [--ignore-space-change | --ignore-whitespace]
[--whitespace=<option>] [-C<n>] [-p<n>] [--directory=<dir>]
[--exclude=<path>] [--include=<path>] [--reject] [-q | --quiet]
[--[no-]scissors]
[--[no-]scissors] [-S[<keyid>]] [--patch-format=<format>]
[(<mbox> | <Maildir>)...]
'git am' (--continue | --skip | --abort)
@ -52,11 +52,23 @@ OPTIONS
-c::
--scissors::
Remove everything in body before a scissors line (see
linkgit:git-mailinfo[1]).
linkgit:git-mailinfo[1]). Can be activated by default using
the `mailinfo.scissors` configuration variable.
--no-scissors::
Ignore scissors lines (see linkgit:git-mailinfo[1]).
-m::
--message-id::
Pass the `-m` flag to 'git mailinfo' (see linkgit:git-mailinfo[1]),
so that the Message-ID header is added to the commit message.
The `am.messageid` configuration variable can be used to specify
the default behaviour.
--no-message-id::
Do not add the Message-ID header to the commit message.
`no-message-id` is useful to override `am.messageid`.
-q::
--quiet::
Be quiet. Only print error messages.
@ -83,7 +95,6 @@ default. You can use `--no-utf8` to override this.
it is supposed to apply to and we have those blobs
available locally.
--ignore-date::
--ignore-space-change::
--ignore-whitespace::
--whitespace=<option>::
@ -97,6 +108,12 @@ default. You can use `--no-utf8` to override this.
program that applies
the patch.
--patch-format::
By default the command will try to detect the patch format
automatically. This option allows the user to bypass the automatic
detection and specify the patch format that the patch(es) should be
interpreted as. Valid formats are mbox, stgit, stgit-series and hg.
-i::
--interactive::
Run interactively.
@ -119,6 +136,10 @@ default. You can use `--no-utf8` to override this.
Skip the current patch. This is only meaningful when
restarting an aborted patch.
-S[<keyid>]::
--gpg-sign[=<keyid>]::
GPG-sign commits.
--continue::
-r::
--resolved::
@ -189,6 +210,11 @@ commits, like running 'git am' on the wrong branch or an error in the
commits that is more easily fixed by changing the mailbox (e.g.
errors in the "From:" lines).
HOOKS
-----
This command can run `applypatch-msg`, `pre-applypatch`,
and `post-applypatch` hooks. See linkgit:githooks[5] for more
information.
SEE ALSO
--------

View File

@ -65,7 +65,10 @@ OPTIONS
--remote=<repo>::
Instead of making a tar archive from the local repository,
retrieve a tar archive from a remote repository.
retrieve a tar archive from a remote repository. Note that the
remote repository may place restrictions on which sha1
expressions may be allowed in `<tree-ish>`. See
linkgit:git-upload-archive[1] for details.
--exec=<git-upload-archive>::
Used with --remote to specify the path to the

View File

@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ developed and maintained during years or even tens of years by a lot
of people. And as there are often many people who depend (sometimes
critically) on such software, regressions are a really big problem.
One such software is the linux kernel. And if we look at the linux
One such software is the Linux kernel. And if we look at the Linux
kernel, we can see that a lot of time and effort is spent to fight
regressions. The release cycle start with a 2 weeks long merge
window. Then the first release candidate (rc) version is tagged. And
@ -132,7 +132,7 @@ regressions. And this time is more than 80% of the release cycle
time. But this is not the end of the fight yet, as of course it
continues after the release.
And then this is what Ingo Molnar (a well known linux kernel
And then this is what Ingo Molnar (a well known Linux kernel
developer) says about his use of git bisect:
_____________

View File

@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ $ git bisect visualize
`view` may also be used as a synonym for `visualize`.
If the 'DISPLAY' environment variable is not set, 'git log' is used
instead. You can also give command line options such as `-p` and
instead. You can also give command-line options such as `-p` and
`--stat`.
------------

View File

@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git blame' [-c] [-b] [-l] [--root] [-t] [-f] [-n] [-s] [-e] [-p] [-w] [--incremental]
[-L n,m | -L :fn] [-S <revs-file>] [-M] [-C] [-C] [-C] [--since=<date>]
[-L <range>] [-S <revs-file>] [-M] [-C] [-C] [-C] [--since=<date>]
[--abbrev=<n>] [<rev> | --contents <file> | --reverse <rev>] [--] <file>
DESCRIPTION
@ -18,7 +18,8 @@ DESCRIPTION
Annotates each line in the given file with information from the revision which
last modified the line. Optionally, start annotating from the given revision.
The command can also limit the range of lines annotated.
When specified one or more times, `-L` restricts annotation to the requested
lines.
The origin of lines is automatically followed across whole-file
renames (currently there is no option to turn the rename-following
@ -34,7 +35,8 @@ Apart from supporting file annotation, Git also supports searching the
development history for when a code snippet occurred in a change. This makes it
possible to track when a code snippet was added to a file, moved or copied
between files, and eventually deleted or replaced. It works by searching for
a text string in the diff. A small example:
a text string in the diff. A small example of the pickaxe interface
that searches for `blame_usage`:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
$ git log --pretty=oneline -S'blame_usage'
@ -102,7 +104,7 @@ This header line is followed by the following information
at least once for each commit:
- the author name ("author"), email ("author-mail"), time
("author-time"), and timezone ("author-tz"); similarly
("author-time"), and time zone ("author-tz"); similarly
for committer.
- the filename in the commit that the line is attributed to.
- the first line of the commit log message ("summary").
@ -130,7 +132,10 @@ SPECIFYING RANGES
Unlike 'git blame' and 'git annotate' in older versions of git, the extent
of the annotation can be limited to both line ranges and revision
ranges. When you are interested in finding the origin for
ranges. The `-L` option, which limits annotation to a range of lines, may be
specified multiple times.
When you are interested in finding the origin for
lines 40-60 for file `foo`, you can use the `-L` option like so
(they mean the same thing -- both ask for 21 lines starting at
line 40):

View File

@ -48,7 +48,8 @@ working tree to it; use "git checkout <newbranch>" to switch to the
new branch.
When a local branch is started off a remote-tracking branch, Git sets up the
branch so that 'git pull' will appropriately merge from
branch (specifically the `branch.<name>.remote` and `branch.<name>.merge`
configuration entries) so that 'git pull' will appropriately merge from
the remote-tracking branch. This behavior may be changed via the global
`branch.autosetupmerge` configuration flag. That setting can be
overridden by using the `--track` and `--no-track` options, and
@ -156,7 +157,8 @@ This option is only applicable in non-verbose mode.
-t::
--track::
When creating a new branch, set up configuration to mark the
When creating a new branch, set up `branch.<name>.remote` and
`branch.<name>.merge` configuration entries to mark the
start-point branch as "upstream" from the new branch. This
configuration will tell git to show the relationship between the
two branches in `git status` and `git branch -v`. Furthermore,

View File

@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ OPTIONS
--textconv::
Show the content as transformed by a textconv filter. In this case,
<object> has be of the form <treeish>:<path>, or :<path> in order
<object> has be of the form <tree-ish>:<path>, or :<path> in order
to apply the filter to the content recorded in the index at <path>.
--batch::
@ -86,10 +86,9 @@ BATCH OUTPUT
------------
If `--batch` or `--batch-check` is given, `cat-file` will read objects
from stdin, one per line, and print information about them.
Each line is considered as a whole object name, and is parsed as if
given to linkgit:git-rev-parse[1].
from stdin, one per line, and print information about them. By default,
the whole line is considered as an object, as if it were fed to
linkgit:git-rev-parse[1].
You can specify the information shown for each object by using a custom
`<format>`. The `<format>` is copied literally to stdout for each
@ -110,6 +109,18 @@ newline. The available atoms are:
The size, in bytes, that the object takes up on disk. See the
note about on-disk sizes in the `CAVEATS` section below.
`deltabase`::
If the object is stored as a delta on-disk, this expands to the
40-hex sha1 of the delta base object. Otherwise, expands to the
null sha1 (40 zeroes). See `CAVEATS` below.
`rest`::
If this atom is used in the output string, input lines are split
at the first whitespace boundary. All characters before that
whitespace are considered to be the object name; characters
after that first run of whitespace (i.e., the "rest" of the
line) are output in place of the `%(rest)` atom.
If no format is specified, the default format is `%(objectname)
%(objecttype) %(objectsize)`.
@ -146,10 +157,11 @@ should be taken in drawing conclusions about which refs or objects are
responsible for disk usage. The size of a packed non-delta object may be
much larger than the size of objects which delta against it, but the
choice of which object is the base and which is the delta is arbitrary
and is subject to change during a repack. Note also that multiple copies
of an object may be present in the object database; in this case, it is
undefined which copy's size will be reported.
and is subject to change during a repack.
Note also that multiple copies of an object may be present in the object
database; in this case, it is undefined which copy's size or delta base
will be reported.
GIT
---

View File

@ -31,8 +31,9 @@ OPTIONS
Read file names from stdin instead of from the command-line.
-z::
Only meaningful with `--stdin`; paths are separated with a
NUL character instead of a linefeed character.
The output format is modified to be machine-parseable.
If `--stdin` is also given, input paths are separated
with a NUL character instead of a linefeed character.
\--::
Interpret all preceding arguments as attributes and all following
@ -48,6 +49,10 @@ OUTPUT
The output is of the form:
<path> COLON SP <attribute> COLON SP <info> LF
unless `-z` is in effect, in which case NUL is used as delimiter:
<path> NUL <attribute> NUL <info> NUL
<path> is the path of a file being queried, <attribute> is an attribute
being queried and <info> can be either:

View File

@ -21,6 +21,9 @@ the exclude mechanism) that decides if the pathname is excluded or
included. Later patterns within a file take precedence over earlier
ones.
By default, tracked files are not shown at all since they are not
subject to exclude rules; but see `--no-index'.
OPTIONS
-------
-q, --quiet::
@ -45,6 +48,13 @@ OPTIONS
not be possible to distinguish between paths which match a
pattern and those which don't.
--no-index::
Don't look in the index when undertaking the checks. This can
be used to debug why a path became tracked by e.g. `git add .`
and was not ignored by the rules as expected by the user or when
developing patterns including negation to match a path previously
added with `git add -f`.
OUTPUT
------

View File

@ -54,6 +54,8 @@ Git imposes the following rules on how references are named:
. They cannot contain a sequence `@{`.
. They cannot be the single character `@`.
. They cannot contain a `\`.
These rules make it easy for shell script based tools to parse

View File

@ -9,7 +9,8 @@ SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git checkout' [-q] [-f] [-m] [<branch>]
'git checkout' [-q] [-f] [-m] [--detach] [<commit>]
'git checkout' [-q] [-f] [-m] --detach [<branch>]
'git checkout' [-q] [-f] [-m] [--detach] <commit>
'git checkout' [-q] [-f] [-m] [[-b|-B|--orphan] <new_branch>] [<start_point>]
'git checkout' [-f|--ours|--theirs|-m|--conflict=<style>] [<tree-ish>] [--] <paths>...
'git checkout' [-p|--patch] [<tree-ish>] [--] [<paths>...]
@ -62,7 +63,7 @@ that is to say, the branch is not reset/created unless "git checkout" is
successful.
'git checkout' --detach [<branch>]::
'git checkout' <commit>::
'git checkout' [--detach] <commit>::
Prepare to work on top of <commit>, by detaching HEAD at it
(see "DETACHED HEAD" section), and updating the index and the
@ -71,10 +72,11 @@ successful.
tree will be the state recorded in the commit plus the local
modifications.
+
Passing `--detach` forces this behavior in the case of a <branch> (without
the option, giving a branch name to the command would check out the branch,
instead of detaching HEAD at it), or the current commit,
if no <branch> is specified.
When the <commit> argument is a branch name, the `--detach` option can
be used to detach HEAD at the tip of the branch (`git checkout
<branch>` would check out that branch without detaching HEAD).
+
Omitting <branch> detaches HEAD at the tip of the current branch.
'git checkout' [-p|--patch] [<tree-ish>] [--] <pathspec>...::
@ -230,8 +232,8 @@ section of linkgit:git-add[1] to learn how to operate the `--patch` mode.
commit, your HEAD becomes "detached" and you are no longer on
any branch (see below for details).
+
As a special case, the `"@{-N}"` syntax for the N-th last branch
checks out the branch (instead of detaching). You may also specify
As a special case, the `"@{-N}"` syntax for the N-th last branch/commit
checks out branches (instead of detaching). You may also specify
`-` which is synonymous with `"@{-1}"`.
+
As a further special case, you may use `"A...B"` as a shortcut for the

View File

@ -8,7 +8,8 @@ git-cherry-pick - Apply the changes introduced by some existing commits
SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git cherry-pick' [--edit] [-n] [-m parent-number] [-s] [-x] [--ff] <commit>...
'git cherry-pick' [--edit] [-n] [-m parent-number] [-s] [-x] [--ff]
[-S[<key-id>]] <commit>...
'git cherry-pick' --continue
'git cherry-pick' --quit
'git cherry-pick' --abort
@ -100,6 +101,10 @@ effect to your index in a row.
--signoff::
Add Signed-off-by line at the end of the commit message.
-S[<key-id>]::
--gpg-sign[=<key-id>]::
GPG-sign commits.
--ff::
If the current HEAD is the same as the parent of the
cherry-pick'ed commit, then a fast forward to this commit will

View File

@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ git-cherry(1)
NAME
----
git-cherry - Find commits not merged upstream
git-cherry - Find commits yet to be applied to upstream
SYNOPSIS
--------
@ -12,47 +12,26 @@ SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
-----------
The changeset (or "diff") of each commit between the fork-point and <head>
is compared against each commit between the fork-point and <upstream>.
The commits are compared with their 'patch id', obtained from
the 'git patch-id' program.
Determine whether there are commits in `<head>..<upstream>` that are
equivalent to those in the range `<limit>..<head>`.
Every commit that doesn't exist in the <upstream> branch
has its id (sha1) reported, prefixed by a symbol. The ones that have
equivalent change already
in the <upstream> branch are prefixed with a minus (-) sign, and those
that only exist in the <head> branch are prefixed with a plus (+) symbol:
__*__*__*__*__> <upstream>
/
fork-point
\__+__+__-__+__+__-__+__> <head>
If a <limit> has been given then the commits along the <head> branch up
to and including <limit> are not reported:
__*__*__*__*__> <upstream>
/
fork-point
\__*__*__<limit>__-__+__> <head>
Because 'git cherry' compares the changeset rather than the commit id
(sha1), you can use 'git cherry' to find out if a commit you made locally
has been applied <upstream> under a different commit id. For example,
this will happen if you're feeding patches <upstream> via email rather
than pushing or pulling commits directly.
The equivalence test is based on the diff, after removing whitespace
and line numbers. git-cherry therefore detects when commits have been
"copied" by means of linkgit:git-cherry-pick[1], linkgit:git-am[1] or
linkgit:git-rebase[1].
Outputs the SHA1 of every commit in `<limit>..<head>`, prefixed with
`-` for commits that have an equivalent in <upstream>, and `+` for
commits that do not.
OPTIONS
-------
-v::
Verbose.
Show the commit subjects next to the SHA1s.
<upstream>::
Upstream branch to compare against.
Defaults to the first tracked remote branch, if available.
Upstream branch to search for equivalent commits.
Defaults to the upstream branch of HEAD.
<head>::
Working branch; defaults to HEAD.
@ -60,6 +39,103 @@ OPTIONS
<limit>::
Do not report commits up to (and including) limit.
EXAMPLES
--------
Patch workflows
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
git-cherry is frequently used in patch-based workflows (see
linkgit:gitworkflows[7]) to determine if a series of patches has been
applied by the upstream maintainer. In such a workflow you might
create and send a topic branch like this:
------------
$ git checkout -b topic origin/master
# work and create some commits
$ git format-patch origin/master
$ git send-email ... 00*
------------
Later, you can see whether your changes have been applied by saying
(still on `topic`):
------------
$ git fetch # update your notion of origin/master
$ git cherry -v
------------
Concrete example
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In a situation where topic consisted of three commits, and the
maintainer applied two of them, the situation might look like:
------------
$ git log --graph --oneline --decorate --boundary origin/master...topic
* 7654321 (origin/master) upstream tip commit
[... snip some other commits ...]
* cccc111 cherry-pick of C
* aaaa111 cherry-pick of A
[... snip a lot more that has happened ...]
| * cccc000 (topic) commit C
| * bbbb000 commit B
| * aaaa000 commit A
|/
o 1234567 branch point
------------
In such cases, git-cherry shows a concise summary of what has yet to
be applied:
------------
$ git cherry origin/master topic
- cccc000... commit C
+ bbbb000... commit B
- aaaa000... commit A
------------
Here, we see that the commits A and C (marked with `-`) can be
dropped from your `topic` branch when you rebase it on top of
`origin/master`, while the commit B (marked with `+`) still needs to
be kept so that it will be sent to be applied to `origin/master`.
Using a limit
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The optional <limit> is useful in cases where your topic is based on
other work that is not in upstream. Expanding on the previous
example, this might look like:
------------
$ git log --graph --oneline --decorate --boundary origin/master...topic
* 7654321 (origin/master) upstream tip commit
[... snip some other commits ...]
* cccc111 cherry-pick of C
* aaaa111 cherry-pick of A
[... snip a lot more that has happened ...]
| * cccc000 (topic) commit C
| * bbbb000 commit B
| * aaaa000 commit A
| * 0000fff (base) unpublished stuff F
[... snip ...]
| * 0000aaa unpublished stuff A
|/
o 1234567 merge-base between upstream and topic
------------
By specifying `base` as the limit, you can avoid listing commits
between `base` and `topic`:
------------
$ git cherry origin/master topic base
- cccc000... commit C
+ bbbb000... commit B
- aaaa000... commit A
------------
SEE ALSO
--------
linkgit:git-patch-id[1]

View File

@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ clean::
filter by pattern::
This shows the files and directories to be deleted and issues an
"Input ignore patterns>>" prompt. You can input space-seperated
"Input ignore patterns>>" prompt. You can input space-separated
patterns to exclude files and directories from deletion.
E.g. "*.c *.h" will excludes files end with ".c" and ".h" from
deletion. When you are satisfied with the filtered result, press

View File

@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
'git clone' [--template=<template_directory>]
[-l] [-s] [--no-hardlinks] [-q] [-n] [--bare] [--mirror]
[-o <name>] [-b <name>] [-u <upload-pack>] [--reference <repository>]
[--separate-git-dir <git dir>]
[--dissociate] [--separate-git-dir <git dir>]
[--depth <depth>] [--[no-]single-branch]
[--recursive | --recurse-submodules] [--] <repository>
[<directory>]
@ -55,15 +55,12 @@ repository is specified as a URL, then this flag is ignored (and we
never use the local optimizations). Specifying `--no-local` will
override the default when `/path/to/repo` is given, using the regular
Git transport instead.
+
To force copying instead of hardlinking (which may be desirable if you
are trying to make a back-up of your repository), but still avoid the
usual "Git aware" transport mechanism, `--no-hardlinks` can be used.
--no-hardlinks::
Optimize the cloning process from a repository on a
local filesystem by copying files under `.git/objects`
directory.
Force the cloning process from a repository on a local
filesystem to copy the files under the `.git/objects`
directory instead of using hardlinks. This may be desirable
if you are trying to make a back-up of your repository.
--shared::
-s::
@ -101,7 +98,14 @@ objects from the source repository into a pack in the cloned repository.
require fewer objects to be copied from the repository
being cloned, reducing network and local storage costs.
+
*NOTE*: see the NOTE for the `--shared` option.
*NOTE*: see the NOTE for the `--shared` option, and also the
`--dissociate` option.
--dissociate::
Borrow the objects from reference repositories specified
with the `--reference` options only to reduce network
transfer and stop borrowing from them after a clone is made
by making necessary local copies of borrowed objects.
--quiet::
-q::
@ -181,12 +185,7 @@ objects from the source repository into a pack in the cloned repository.
--depth <depth>::
Create a 'shallow' clone with a history truncated to the
specified number of revisions. A shallow repository has a
number of limitations (you cannot clone or fetch from
it, nor push from nor into it), but is adequate if you
are only interested in the recent history of a large project
with a long history, and would want to send in fixes
as patches.
specified number of revisions.
--[no-]single-branch::
Clone only the history leading to the tip of a single branch,
@ -213,7 +212,7 @@ objects from the source repository into a pack in the cloned repository.
--separate-git-dir=<git dir>::
Instead of placing the cloned repository where it is supposed
to be, place the cloned repository at the specified directory,
then make a filesytem-agnostic Git symbolic link to there.
then make a filesystem-agnostic Git symbolic link to there.
The result is Git repository can be separated from working
tree.

View File

@ -43,11 +43,6 @@ OPTIONS
--padding=<N>::
The number of spaces between columns. One space by default.
Author
------
Written by Nguyen Thai Ngoc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
GIT
---
Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite

View File

@ -55,8 +55,13 @@ OPTIONS
from the standard input.
-S[<keyid>]::
--gpg-sign[=<keyid>]::
GPG-sign commit.
--no-gpg-sign::
Countermand `commit.gpgsign` configuration variable that is
set to force each and every commit to be signed.
Commit Information
------------------

View File

@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
[-F <file> | -m <msg>] [--reset-author] [--allow-empty]
[--allow-empty-message] [--no-verify] [-e] [--author=<author>]
[--date=<date>] [--cleanup=<mode>] [--[no-]status]
[-i | -o] [-S[<keyid>]] [--] [<file>...]
[-i | -o] [-S[<key-id>]] [--] [<file>...]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
@ -176,7 +176,7 @@ OPTIONS
--cleanup=<mode>::
This option determines how the supplied commit message should be
cleaned up before committing. The '<mode>' can be `strip`,
`whitespace`, `verbatim`, or `default`.
`whitespace`, `verbatim`, `scissors` or `default`.
+
--
strip::
@ -186,6 +186,12 @@ whitespace::
Same as `strip` except #commentary is not removed.
verbatim::
Do not change the message at all.
scissors::
Same as `whitespace`, except that everything from (and
including) the line
"`# ------------------------ >8 ------------------------`"
is truncated if the message is to be edited. "`#`" can be
customized with core.commentChar.
default::
Same as `strip` if the message is to be edited.
Otherwise `whitespace`.
@ -244,9 +250,10 @@ FROM UPSTREAM REBASE" section in linkgit:git-rebase[1].)
-o::
--only::
Make a commit only from the paths specified on the
Make a commit by taking the updated working tree contents
of the paths specified on the
command line, disregarding any contents that have been
staged so far. This is the default mode of operation of
staged for other paths. This is the default mode of operation of
'git commit' if any paths are given on the command line,
in which case this option can be omitted.
If this option is specified together with '--amend', then
@ -302,6 +309,10 @@ configuration variable documented in linkgit:git-config[1].
--gpg-sign[=<keyid>]::
GPG-sign commit.
--no-gpg-sign::
Countermand `commit.gpgsign` configuration variable that is
set to force each and every commit to be signed.
\--::
Do not interpret any more arguments as options.

View File

@ -15,6 +15,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
'git config' [<file-option>] [type] [-z|--null] --get name [value_regex]
'git config' [<file-option>] [type] [-z|--null] --get-all name [value_regex]
'git config' [<file-option>] [type] [-z|--null] --get-regexp name_regex [value_regex]
'git config' [<file-option>] [type] [-z|--null] --get-urlmatch name URL
'git config' [<file-option>] --unset name [value_regex]
'git config' [<file-option>] --unset-all name [value_regex]
'git config' [<file-option>] --rename-section old_name new_name
@ -95,6 +96,14 @@ OPTIONS
in which section and variable names are lowercased, but subsection
names are not.
--get-urlmatch name URL::
When given a two-part name section.key, the value for
section.<url>.key whose <url> part matches the best to the
given URL is returned (if no such key exists, the value for
section.key is used as a fallback). When given just the
section as name, do so for all the keys in the section and
list them.
--global::
For writing options: write to global `~/.gitconfig` file
rather than the repository `.git/config`, write to
@ -247,7 +256,7 @@ All writing options will per default write to the repository specific
configuration file. Note that this also affects options like '--replace-all'
and '--unset'. *'git config' will only ever change one file at a time*.
You can override these rules either by command line options or by environment
You can override these rules either by command-line options or by environment
variables. The '--global' and the '--system' options will limit the file used
to the global or system-wide file respectively. The GIT_CONFIG environment
variable has a similar effect, but you can specify any filename you want.
@ -295,6 +304,13 @@ Given a .git/config like this:
gitproxy=proxy-command for kernel.org
gitproxy=default-proxy ; for all the rest
; HTTP
[http]
sslVerify
[http "https://weak.example.com"]
sslVerify = false
cookieFile = /tmp/cookie.txt
you can set the filemode to true with
------------
@ -380,6 +396,19 @@ RESET=$(git config --get-color "" "reset")
echo "${WS}your whitespace color or blue reverse${RESET}"
------------
For URLs in `https://weak.example.com`, `http.sslVerify` is set to
false, while it is set to `true` for all others:
------------
% git config --bool --get-urlmatch http.sslverify https://good.example.com
true
% git config --bool --get-urlmatch http.sslverify https://weak.example.com
false
% git config --get-urlmatch http https://weak.example.com
http.cookiefile /tmp/cookie.txt
http.sslverify false
------------
include::config.txt[]
GIT

View File

@ -33,8 +33,8 @@ size-pack: disk space consumed by the packs, in KiB (unless -H is specified)
prune-packable: the number of loose objects that are also present in
the packs. These objects could be pruned using `git prune-packed`.
+
garbage: the number of files in object database that are not valid
loose objects nor valid packs
garbage: the number of files in object database that are neither valid loose
objects nor valid packs
+
size-garbage: disk space consumed by garbage files, in KiB (unless -H is
specified)

View File

@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ git-credential-cache--daemon - Temporarily store user credentials in memory
SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
git credential-cache--daemon <socket>
git credential-cache--daemon [--debug] <socket>
DESCRIPTION
-----------
@ -21,6 +21,10 @@ for `git-credential-cache` clients. Clients may store and retrieve
credentials. Each credential is held for a timeout specified by the
client; once no credentials are held, the daemon exits.
If the `--debug` option is specified, the daemon does not close its
stderr stream, and may output extra diagnostics to it even after it has
begun listening for clients.
GIT
---
Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite

View File

@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ linkgit:gitcredentials[7] or `EXAMPLES` below.
OPTIONS
-------
--store=<path>::
--file=<path>::
Use `<path>` to store credentials. The file will have its
filesystem permissions set to prevent other users on the system

View File

@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ usernames and passwords. The git-credential command exposes this
interface to scripts which may want to retrieve, store, or prompt for
credentials in the same manner as Git. The design of this scriptable
interface models the internal C API; see
link:technical/api-credentials.txt[the Git credential API] for more
link:technical/api-credentials.html[the Git credential API] for more
background on the concepts.
git-credential takes an "action" option on the command-line (one of

View File

@ -21,8 +21,8 @@ DESCRIPTION
*WARNING:* `git cvsimport` uses cvsps version 2, which is considered
deprecated; it does not work with cvsps version 3 and later. If you are
performing a one-shot import of a CVS repository consider using
link:http://cvs2svn.tigris.org/cvs2git.html[cvs2git] or
link:https://github.com/BartMassey/parsecvs[parsecvs].
http://cvs2svn.tigris.org/cvs2git.html[cvs2git] or
https://github.com/BartMassey/parsecvs[parsecvs].
Imports a CVS repository into Git. It will either create a new
repository, or incrementally import into an existing one.
@ -144,7 +144,7 @@ This option can be used several times to provide several detection regexes.
CVS by default uses the Unix username when writing its
commit logs. Using this option and an author-conv-file
maps the name recorded in CVS to author name, e-mail and
optional timezone:
optional time zone:
+
---------
exon=Andreas Ericsson <ae@op5.se>
@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ This option can be used several times to provide several detection regexes.
+
'git cvsimport' will make it appear as those authors had
their GIT_AUTHOR_NAME and GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL set properly
all along. If a timezone is specified, GIT_AUTHOR_DATE will
all along. If a time zone is specified, GIT_AUTHOR_DATE will
have the corresponding offset applied.
+
For convenience, this data is saved to `$GIT_DIR/cvs-authors`
@ -219,7 +219,7 @@ Problems related to tags:
* Multiple tags on the same revision are not imported.
If you suspect that any of these issues may apply to the repository you
want to imort, consider using cvs2git:
want to import, consider using cvs2git:
* cvs2git (part of cvs2svn), `http://subversion.apache.org/`

View File

@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ to allow writes to, for example:
authdb = /etc/cvsserver/passwd
------
The format of these files is username followed by the crypted password,
The format of these files is username followed by the encrypted password,
for example:
------

View File

@ -169,7 +169,7 @@ Git configuration files in that directory are readable by `<user>`.
--forbid-override=<service>::
Allow/forbid overriding the site-wide default with per
repository configuration. By default, all the services
are overridable.
may be overridden.
--[no-]informative-errors::
When informative errors are turned on, git-daemon will report
@ -184,7 +184,7 @@ Git configuration files in that directory are readable by `<user>`.
Every time a client connects, first run an external command
specified by the <path> with service name (e.g. "upload-pack"),
path to the repository, hostname (%H), canonical hostname
(%CH), ip address (%IP), and tcp port (%P) as its command line
(%CH), IP address (%IP), and TCP port (%P) as its command-line
arguments. The external command can decide to decline the
service by exiting with a non-zero status (or to allow it by
exiting with a zero status). It can also look at the $REMOTE_ADDR
@ -204,7 +204,7 @@ SERVICES
--------
These services can be globally enabled/disabled using the
command line options of this command. If a finer-grained
command-line options of this command. If finer-grained
control is desired (e.g. to allow 'git archive' to be run
against only in a few selected repositories the daemon serves),
the per-repository configuration file can be used to enable or

View File

@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ git-describe - Show the most recent tag that is reachable from a commit
SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git describe' [--all] [--tags] [--contains] [--abbrev=<n>] <committish>...
'git describe' [--all] [--tags] [--contains] [--abbrev=<n>] <commit-ish>...
'git describe' [--all] [--tags] [--contains] [--abbrev=<n>] --dirty[=<mark>]
DESCRIPTION
@ -26,8 +26,8 @@ see the -a and -s options to linkgit:git-tag[1].
OPTIONS
-------
<committish>...::
Committish object names to describe.
<commit-ish>...::
Commit-ish object names to describe.
--dirty[=<mark>]::
Describe the working tree.
@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ OPTIONS
--candidates=<n>::
Instead of considering only the 10 most recent tags as
candidates to describe the input committish consider
candidates to describe the input commit-ish consider
up to <n> candidates. Increasing <n> above 10 will take
slightly longer but may produce a more accurate result.
An <n> of 0 will cause only exact matches to be output.
@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ be sufficient to disambiguate these commits.
SEARCH STRATEGY
---------------
For each committish supplied, 'git describe' will first look for
For each commit-ish supplied, 'git describe' will first look for
a tag which tags exactly that commit. Annotated tags will always
be preferred over lightweight tags, and tags with newer dates will
always be preferred over tags with older dates. If an exact match
@ -154,12 +154,12 @@ is found, its name will be output and searching will stop.
If an exact match was not found, 'git describe' will walk back
through the commit history to locate an ancestor commit which
has been tagged. The ancestor's tag will be output along with an
abbreviation of the input committish's SHA-1. If '--first-parent' was
abbreviation of the input commit-ish's SHA-1. If '--first-parent' was
specified then the walk will only consider the first parent of each
commit.
If multiple tags were found during the walk then the tag which
has the fewest commits different from the input committish will be
has the fewest commits different from the input commit-ish will be
selected and output. Here fewest commits different is defined as
the number of commits which would be shown by `git log tag..input`
will be the smallest number of commits possible.

View File

@ -28,10 +28,15 @@ two blob objects, or changes between two files on disk.
words, the differences are what you _could_ tell Git to
further add to the index but you still haven't. You can
stage these changes by using linkgit:git-add[1].
+
If exactly two paths are given and at least one points outside
the current repository, 'git diff' will compare the two files /
directories. This behavior can be forced by --no-index.
'git diff' --no-index [--options] [--] [<path>...]::
This form is to compare the given two paths on the
filesystem. You can omit the `--no-index` option when
running the command in a working tree controlled by Git and
at least one of the paths points outside the working tree,
or when running the command outside a working tree
controlled by Git.
'git diff' [--options] --cached [<commit>] [--] [<path>...]::
@ -39,7 +44,7 @@ directories. This behavior can be forced by --no-index.
commit relative to the named <commit>. Typically you
would want comparison with the latest commit, so if you
do not give <commit>, it defaults to HEAD.
If HEAD does not exist (e.g. unborned branches) and
If HEAD does not exist (e.g. unborn branches) and
<commit> is not given, it shows all staged changes.
--staged is a synonym of --cached.
@ -153,8 +158,8 @@ $ git diff --name-status <2>
$ git diff arch/i386 include/asm-i386 <3>
------------
+
<1> Show only modification, rename and copy, but not addition
nor deletion.
<1> Show only modification, rename, and copy, but not addition
or deletion.
<2> Show only names and the nature of change, but not actual
diff output.
<3> Limit diff output to named subtrees.

View File

@ -91,6 +91,15 @@ instead. `--no-symlinks` is the default on Windows.
the default diff tool will be read from the configured
`diff.guitool` variable instead of `diff.tool`.
--[no-]trust-exit-code::
'git-difftool' invokes a diff tool individually on each file.
Errors reported by the diff tool are ignored by default.
Use `--trust-exit-code` to make 'git-difftool' exit when an
invoked diff tool returns a non-zero exit code.
+
'git-difftool' will forward the exit code of the invoked tool when
'--trust-exit-code' is used.
See linkgit:git-diff[1] for the full list of supported options.
CONFIG VARIABLES
@ -116,6 +125,11 @@ See the `--tool=<tool>` option above for more details.
difftool.prompt::
Prompt before each invocation of the diff tool.
difftool.trustExitCode::
Exit difftool if the invoked diff tool returns a non-zero exit status.
+
See the `--trust-exit-code` option above for more details.
SEE ALSO
--------
linkgit:git-diff[1]::

View File

@ -105,6 +105,15 @@ marks the same across runs.
in the commit (as opposed to just listing the files which are
different from the commit's first parent).
--anonymize::
Anonymize the contents of the repository while still retaining
the shape of the history and stored tree. See the section on
`ANONYMIZING` below.
--refspec::
Apply the specified refspec to each ref exported. Multiple of them can
be specified.
[<git-rev-list-args>...]::
A list of arguments, acceptable to 'git rev-parse' and
'git rev-list', that specifies the specific objects and references
@ -137,6 +146,62 @@ referenced by that revision range contains the string
'refs/heads/master'.
ANONYMIZING
-----------
If the `--anonymize` option is given, git will attempt to remove all
identifying information from the repository while still retaining enough
of the original tree and history patterns to reproduce some bugs. The
goal is that a git bug which is found on a private repository will
persist in the anonymized repository, and the latter can be shared with
git developers to help solve the bug.
With this option, git will replace all refnames, paths, blob contents,
commit and tag messages, names, and email addresses in the output with
anonymized data. Two instances of the same string will be replaced
equivalently (e.g., two commits with the same author will have the same
anonymized author in the output, but bear no resemblance to the original
author string). The relationship between commits, branches, and tags is
retained, as well as the commit timestamps (but the commit messages and
refnames bear no resemblance to the originals). The relative makeup of
the tree is retained (e.g., if you have a root tree with 10 files and 3
trees, so will the output), but their names and the contents of the
files will be replaced.
If you think you have found a git bug, you can start by exporting an
anonymized stream of the whole repository:
---------------------------------------------------
$ git fast-export --anonymize --all >anon-stream
---------------------------------------------------
Then confirm that the bug persists in a repository created from that
stream (many bugs will not, as they really do depend on the exact
repository contents):
---------------------------------------------------
$ git init anon-repo
$ cd anon-repo
$ git fast-import <../anon-stream
$ ... test your bug ...
---------------------------------------------------
If the anonymized repository shows the bug, it may be worth sharing
`anon-stream` along with a regular bug report. Note that the anonymized
stream compresses very well, so gzipping it is encouraged. If you want
to examine the stream to see that it does not contain any private data,
you can peruse it directly before sending. You may also want to try:
---------------------------------------------------
$ perl -pe 's/\d+/X/g' <anon-stream | sort -u | less
---------------------------------------------------
which shows all of the unique lines (with numbers converted to "X", to
collapse "User 0", "User 1", etc into "User X"). This produces a much
smaller output, and it is usually easy to quickly confirm that there is
no private data in the stream.
Limitations
-----------
@ -144,6 +209,10 @@ Since 'git fast-import' cannot tag trees, you will not be
able to export the linux.git repository completely, as it contains
a tag referencing a tree instead of a commit.
SEE ALSO
--------
linkgit:git-fast-import[1]
GIT
---
Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite

View File

@ -231,7 +231,7 @@ Date Formats
~~~~~~~~~~~~
The following date formats are supported. A frontend should select
the format it will use for this import by passing the format name
in the \--date-format=<fmt> command line option.
in the \--date-format=<fmt> command-line option.
`raw`::
This is the Git native format and is `<time> SP <offutc>`.
@ -251,7 +251,7 @@ advisement to help formatting routines display the timestamp.
If the local offset is not available in the source material, use
``+0000'', or the most common local offset. For example many
organizations have a CVS repository which has only ever been accessed
by users who are located in the same location and timezone. In this
by users who are located in the same location and time zone. In this
case a reasonable offset from UTC could be assumed.
+
Unlike the `rfc2822` format, this format is very strict. Any
@ -271,7 +271,7 @@ the malformed string. There are also some types of malformed
strings which Git will parse wrong, and yet consider valid.
Seriously malformed strings will be rejected.
+
Unlike the `raw` format above, the timezone/UTC offset information
Unlike the `raw` format above, the time zone/UTC offset information
contained in an RFC 2822 date string is used to adjust the date
value to UTC prior to storage. Therefore it is important that
this information be as accurate as possible.
@ -287,13 +287,13 @@ format, or its format is easily convertible to it, as there is no
ambiguity in parsing.
`now`::
Always use the current time and timezone. The literal
Always use the current time and time zone. The literal
`now` must always be supplied for `<when>`.
+
This is a toy format. The current time and timezone of this system
This is a toy format. The current time and time zone of this system
is always copied into the identity string at the time it is being
created by fast-import. There is no way to specify a different time or
timezone.
time zone.
+
This particular format is supplied as it's short to implement and
may be useful to a process that wants to create a new commit
@ -348,7 +348,7 @@ and control the current import process. More detailed discussion
`done`::
Marks the end of the stream. This command is optional
unless the `done` feature was requested using the
`--done` command line option or `feature done` command.
`--done` command-line option or `feature done` command.
`cat-blob`::
Causes fast-import to print a blob in 'cat-file --batch'
@ -361,8 +361,8 @@ and control the current import process. More detailed discussion
`--cat-blob-fd` or `stdout` if unspecified.
`feature`::
Require that fast-import supports the specified feature, or
abort if it does not.
Enable the specified feature. This requires that fast-import
supports the specified feature, and aborts if it does not.
`option`::
Specify any of the options listed under OPTIONS that do not
@ -380,8 +380,8 @@ change to the project.
('author' (SP <name>)? SP LT <email> GT SP <when> LF)?
'committer' (SP <name>)? SP LT <email> GT SP <when> LF
data
('from' SP <committish> LF)?
('merge' SP <committish> LF)?
('from' SP <commit-ish> LF)?
('merge' SP <commit-ish> LF)?
(filemodify | filedelete | filecopy | filerename | filedeleteall | notemodify)*
LF?
....
@ -437,7 +437,7 @@ the email address from the other fields in the line. Note that
of bytes, except `LT`, `GT` and `LF`. `<name>` is typically UTF-8 encoded.
The time of the change is specified by `<when>` using the date format
that was selected by the \--date-format=<fmt> command line option.
that was selected by the \--date-format=<fmt> command-line option.
See ``Date Formats'' above for the set of supported formats, and
their syntax.
@ -460,9 +460,9 @@ as the current commit on that branch is automatically assumed to
be the first ancestor of the new commit.
As `LF` is not valid in a Git refname or SHA-1 expression, no
quoting or escaping syntax is supported within `<committish>`.
quoting or escaping syntax is supported within `<commit-ish>`.
Here `<committish>` is any of the following:
Here `<commit-ish>` is any of the following:
* The name of an existing branch already in fast-import's internal branch
table. If fast-import doesn't know the name, it's treated as a SHA-1
@ -483,6 +483,9 @@ Marks must be declared (via `mark`) before they can be used.
* Any valid Git SHA-1 expression that resolves to a commit. See
``SPECIFYING REVISIONS'' in linkgit:gitrevisions[7] for details.
* The special null SHA-1 (40 zeros) specifies that the branch is to be
removed.
The special case of restarting an incremental import from the
current branch value should be written as:
----
@ -509,7 +512,7 @@ additional ancestors (forming a 16-way merge). For this reason
it is suggested that frontends do not use more than 15 `merge`
commands per commit; 16, if starting a new, empty branch.
Here `<committish>` is any of the commit specification expressions
Here `<commit-ish>` is any of the commit specification expressions
also accepted by `from` (see above).
`filemodify`
@ -677,8 +680,8 @@ paths for a commit are encouraged to do so.
`notemodify`
^^^^^^^^^^^^
Included in a `commit` `<notes_ref>` command to add a new note
annotating a `<committish>` or change this annotation contents.
Internally it is similar to filemodify 100644 on `<committish>`
annotating a `<commit-ish>` or change this annotation contents.
Internally it is similar to filemodify 100644 on `<commit-ish>`
path (maybe split into subdirectories). It's not advised to
use any other commands to write to the `<notes_ref>` tree except
`filedeleteall` to delete all existing notes in this tree.
@ -691,7 +694,7 @@ External data format::
commit that is to be annotated.
+
....
'N' SP <dataref> SP <committish> LF
'N' SP <dataref> SP <commit-ish> LF
....
+
Here `<dataref>` can be either a mark reference (`:<idnum>`)
@ -704,13 +707,13 @@ Inline data format::
command.
+
....
'N' SP 'inline' SP <committish> LF
'N' SP 'inline' SP <commit-ish> LF
data
....
+
See below for a detailed description of the `data` command.
In both formats `<committish>` is any of the commit specification
In both formats `<commit-ish>` is any of the commit specification
expressions also accepted by `from` (see above).
`mark`
@ -741,7 +744,7 @@ lightweight (non-annotated) tags see the `reset` command below.
....
'tag' SP <name> LF
'from' SP <committish> LF
'from' SP <commit-ish> LF
'tagger' (SP <name>)? SP LT <email> GT SP <when> LF
data
....
@ -786,11 +789,11 @@ branch from an existing commit without creating a new commit.
....
'reset' SP <ref> LF
('from' SP <committish> LF)?
('from' SP <commit-ish> LF)?
LF?
....
For a detailed description of `<ref>` and `<committish>` see above
For a detailed description of `<ref>` and `<commit-ish>` see above
under `commit` and `from`.
The `LF` after the command is optional (it used to be required).
@ -1085,7 +1088,7 @@ Option commands must be the first commands on the input (not counting
feature commands), to give an option command after any non-option
command is an error.
The following commandline options change import semantics and may therefore
The following command-line options change import semantics and may therefore
not be passed as option:
* date-format
@ -1099,7 +1102,7 @@ not be passed as option:
If the `done` feature is not in use, treated as if EOF was read.
This can be used to tell fast-import to finish early.
If the `--done` command line option or `feature done` command is
If the `--done` command-line option or `feature done` command is
in use, the `done` command is mandatory and marks the end of the
stream.
@ -1438,6 +1441,10 @@ operator can use this facility to peek at the objects and refs from an
import in progress, at the cost of some added running time and worse
compression.
SEE ALSO
--------
linkgit:git-fast-export[1]
GIT
---
Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite

View File

@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
'git fetch-pack' [--all] [--quiet|-q] [--keep|-k] [--thin] [--include-tag]
[--upload-pack=<git-upload-pack>]
[--depth=<n>] [--no-progress]
[-v] [<host>:]<directory> [<refs>...]
[-v] <repository> [<refs>...]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
@ -90,22 +90,25 @@ be in a separate packet, and the list must end with a flush packet.
--no-progress::
Do not show the progress.
--check-self-contained-and-connected::
Output "connectivity-ok" if the received pack is
self-contained and connected.
-v::
Run verbosely.
<host>::
A remote host that houses the repository. When this
part is specified, 'git-upload-pack' is invoked via
ssh.
<directory>::
The repository to sync from.
<repository>::
The URL to the remote repository.
<refs>...::
The remote heads to update from. This is relative to
$GIT_DIR (e.g. "HEAD", "refs/heads/master"). When
unspecified, update from all heads the remote side has.
SEE ALSO
--------
linkgit:git-fetch[1]
GIT
---
Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite

View File

@ -17,26 +17,31 @@ SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
-----------
Fetches named heads or tags from one or more other repositories,
along with the objects necessary to complete them.
Fetch branches and/or tags (collectively, "refs") from one or more
other repositories, along with the objects necessary to complete their
histories. Remote-tracking branches are updated (see the description
of <refspec> below for ways to control this behavior).
The ref names and their object names of fetched refs are stored
in `.git/FETCH_HEAD`. This information is left for a later merge
operation done by 'git merge'.
By default, any tag that points into the histories being fetched is
also fetched; the effect is to fetch tags that
point at branches that you are interested in. This default behavior
can be changed by using the --tags or --no-tags options or by
configuring remote.<name>.tagopt. By using a refspec that fetches tags
explicitly, you can fetch tags that do not point into branches you
are interested in as well.
When <refspec> stores the fetched result in remote-tracking branches,
the tags that point at these branches are automatically
followed. This is done by first fetching from the remote using
the given <refspec>s, and if the repository has objects that are
pointed by remote tags that it does not yet have, then fetch
those missing tags. If the other end has tags that point at
branches you are not interested in, you will not get them.
'git fetch' can fetch from either a single named repository,
'git fetch' can fetch from either a single named repository or URL,
or from several repositories at once if <group> is given and
there is a remotes.<group> entry in the configuration file.
(See linkgit:git-config[1]).
When no remote is specified, by default the `origin` remote will be used,
unless there's an upstream branch configured for the current branch.
The names of refs that are fetched, together with the object names
they point at, are written to `.git/FETCH_HEAD`. This information
may be used by scripts or other git commands, such as linkgit:git-pull[1].
OPTIONS
-------
include::fetch-options.txt[]
@ -46,6 +51,55 @@ include::pull-fetch-param.txt[]
include::urls-remotes.txt[]
CONFIGURED REMOTE-TRACKING BRANCHES[[CRTB]]
-------------------------------------------
You often interact with the same remote repository by
regularly and repeatedly fetching from it. In order to keep track
of the progress of such a remote repository, `git fetch` allows you
to configure `remote.<repository>.fetch` configuration variables.
Typically such a variable may look like this:
------------------------------------------------
[remote "origin"]
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
------------------------------------------------
This configuration is used in two ways:
* When `git fetch` is run without specifying what branches
and/or tags to fetch on the command line, e.g. `git fetch origin`
or `git fetch`, `remote.<repository>.fetch` values are used as
the refspecs---they specify which refs to fetch and which local refs
to update. The example above will fetch
all branches that exist in the `origin` (i.e. any ref that matches
the left-hand side of the value, `refs/heads/*`) and update the
corresponding remote-tracking branches in the `refs/remotes/origin/*`
hierarchy.
* When `git fetch` is run with explicit branches and/or tags
to fetch on the command line, e.g. `git fetch origin master`, the
<refspec>s given on the command line determine what are to be
fetched (e.g. `master` in the example,
which is a short-hand for `master:`, which in turn means
"fetch the 'master' branch but I do not explicitly say what
remote-tracking branch to update with it from the command line"),
and the example command will
fetch _only_ the 'master' branch. The `remote.<repository>.fetch`
values determine which
remote-tracking branch, if any, is updated. When used in this
way, the `remote.<repository>.fetch` values do not have any
effect in deciding _what_ gets fetched (i.e. the values are not
used as refspecs when the command-line lists refspecs); they are
only used to decide _where_ the refs that are fetched are stored
by acting as a mapping.
The latter use of the `remote.<repository>.fetch` values can be
overridden by giving the `--refmap=<refspec>` parameter(s) on the
command line.
EXAMPLES
--------
@ -73,6 +127,19 @@ the local repository by fetching from the branches (respectively)
The `pu` branch will be updated even if it is does not fast-forward,
because it is prefixed with a plus sign; `tmp` will not be.
* Peek at a remote's branch, without configuring the remote in your local
repository:
+
------------------------------------------------
$ git fetch git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git.git maint
$ git log FETCH_HEAD
------------------------------------------------
+
The first command fetches the `maint` branch from the repository at
`git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git.git` and the second command uses
`FETCH_HEAD` to examine the branch with linkgit:git-log[1]. The fetched
objects will eventually be removed by git's built-in housekeeping (see
linkgit:git-gc[1]).
BUGS
----

View File

@ -393,7 +393,7 @@ git filter-branch --index-filter \
Checklist for Shrinking a Repository
------------------------------------
git-filter-branch is often used to get rid of a subset of files,
git-filter-branch can be used to get rid of a subset of files,
usually with some combination of `--index-filter` and
`--subdirectory-filter`. People expect the resulting repository to
be smaller than the original, but you need a few more steps to
@ -429,6 +429,37 @@ warned.
(or if your git-gc is not new enough to support arguments to
`--prune`, use `git repack -ad; git prune` instead).
Notes
-----
git-filter-branch allows you to make complex shell-scripted rewrites
of your Git history, but you probably don't need this flexibility if
you're simply _removing unwanted data_ like large files or passwords.
For those operations you may want to consider
http://rtyley.github.io/bfg-repo-cleaner/[The BFG Repo-Cleaner],
a JVM-based alternative to git-filter-branch, typically at least
10-50x faster for those use-cases, and with quite different
characteristics:
* Any particular version of a file is cleaned exactly _once_. The BFG,
unlike git-filter-branch, does not give you the opportunity to
handle a file differently based on where or when it was committed
within your history. This constraint gives the core performance
benefit of The BFG, and is well-suited to the task of cleansing bad
data - you don't care _where_ the bad data is, you just want it
_gone_.
* By default The BFG takes full advantage of multi-core machines,
cleansing commit file-trees in parallel. git-filter-branch cleans
commits sequentially (i.e. in a single-threaded manner), though it
_is_ possible to write filters that include their own parallelism,
in the scripts executed against each commit.
* The http://rtyley.github.io/bfg-repo-cleaner/#examples[command options]
are much more restrictive than git-filter branch, and dedicated just
to the tasks of removing unwanted data- e.g:
`--strip-blobs-bigger-than 1M`.
GIT
---
Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite

View File

@ -91,7 +91,19 @@ objectname::
upstream::
The name of a local ref which can be considered ``upstream''
from the displayed ref. Respects `:short` in the same way as
`refname` above.
`refname` above. Additionally respects `:track` to show
"[ahead N, behind M]" and `:trackshort` to show the terse
version: ">" (ahead), "<" (behind), "<>" (ahead and behind),
or "=" (in sync). Has no effect if the ref does not have
tracking information associated with it.
HEAD::
'*' if HEAD matches current ref (the checked out branch), ' '
otherwise.
color::
Change output color. Followed by `:<colorname>`, where names
are described in `color.branch.*`.
In addition to the above, for commit and tag objects, the header
field names (`tree`, `parent`, `object`, `type`, and `tag`) can
@ -207,13 +219,9 @@ eval=`git for-each-ref --shell --format="$fmt" \
eval "$eval"
------------
Author
------
Written by Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>.
Documentation
-------------
Documentation by Junio C Hamano and the git-list <git@vger.kernel.org>.
SEE ALSO
--------
linkgit:git-show-ref[1]
GIT
---

View File

@ -14,6 +14,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
[(--attach|--inline)[=<boundary>] | --no-attach]
[-s | --signoff]
[--signature=<signature> | --no-signature]
[--signature-file=<file>]
[-n | --numbered | -N | --no-numbered]
[--start-number <n>] [--numbered-files]
[--in-reply-to=Message-Id] [--suffix=.<sfx>]
@ -233,6 +234,9 @@ configuration options in linkgit:git-notes[1] to use this workflow).
signature option is omitted the signature defaults to the Git version
number.
--signature-file=<file>::
Works just like --signature except the signature is read from a file.
--suffix=.<sfx>::
Instead of using `.patch` as the suffix for generated
filenames, use specified suffix. A common alternative is
@ -242,6 +246,7 @@ configuration options in linkgit:git-notes[1] to use this workflow).
Note that the leading character does not have to be a dot; for example,
you can use `--suffix=-patch` to get `0001-description-of-my-change-patch`.
-q::
--quiet::
Do not print the names of the generated files to standard output.
@ -437,7 +442,8 @@ Edit..Preferences..Composition, wrap plain text messages at 0
In Thunderbird 3:
Edit..Preferences..Advanced..Config Editor. Search for
"mail.wrap_long_lines".
Toggle it to make sure it is set to `false`.
Toggle it to make sure it is set to `false`. Also, search for
"mailnews.wraplength" and set the value to 0.
3. Disable the use of format=flowed:
Edit..Preferences..Advanced..Config Editor. Search for

View File

@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ git-gc - Cleanup unnecessary files and optimize the local repository
SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git gc' [--aggressive] [--auto] [--quiet] [--prune=<date> | --no-prune]
'git gc' [--aggressive] [--auto] [--quiet] [--prune=<date> | --no-prune] [--force]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
@ -72,6 +72,10 @@ automatic consolidation of packs.
--quiet::
Suppress all progress reports.
--force::
Force `git gc` to run even if there may be another `git gc`
instance running on this repository.
Configuration
-------------
@ -120,6 +124,9 @@ the value, the more time is spent optimizing the delta compression. See
the documentation for the --window' option in linkgit:git-repack[1] for
more details. This defaults to 250.
Similarly, the optional configuration variable 'gc.aggressiveDepth'
controls --depth option in linkgit:git-repack[1]. This defaults to 250.
The optional configuration variable 'gc.pruneExpire' controls how old
the unreferenced loose objects have to be before they are pruned. The
default is "2 weeks ago".

View File

@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ git-grep - Print lines matching a pattern
SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git grep' [-a | --text] [-I] [-i | --ignore-case] [-w | --word-regexp]
'git grep' [-a | --text] [-I] [--textconv] [-i | --ignore-case] [-w | --word-regexp]
[-v | --invert-match] [-h|-H] [--full-name]
[-E | --extended-regexp] [-G | --basic-regexp]
[-P | --perl-regexp]
@ -53,6 +53,9 @@ grep.extendedRegexp::
option is ignored when the 'grep.patternType' option is set to a value
other than 'default'.
grep.fullName::
If set to true, enable '--full-name' option by default.
OPTIONS
-------
@ -80,6 +83,13 @@ OPTIONS
--text::
Process binary files as if they were text.
--textconv::
Honor textconv filter settings.
--no-textconv::
Do not honor textconv filter settings.
This is the default.
-i::
--ignore-case::
Ignore case differences between the patterns and the

View File

@ -80,9 +80,9 @@ CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
help.format
~~~~~~~~~~~
If no command line option is passed, the 'help.format' configuration
If no command-line option is passed, the 'help.format' configuration
variable will be checked. The following values are supported for this
variable; they make 'git help' behave as their corresponding command
variable; they make 'git help' behave as their corresponding command-
line option:
* "man" corresponds to '-m|--man',
@ -93,15 +93,15 @@ help.browser, web.browser and browser.<tool>.path
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The 'help.browser', 'web.browser' and 'browser.<tool>.path' will also
be checked if the 'web' format is chosen (either by command line
be checked if the 'web' format is chosen (either by command-line
option or configuration variable). See '-w|--web' in the OPTIONS
section above and linkgit:git-web{litdd}browse[1].
man.viewer
~~~~~~~~~~
The 'man.viewer' config variable will be checked if the 'man' format
is chosen. The following values are currently supported:
The 'man.viewer' configuration variable will be checked if the 'man'
format is chosen. The following values are currently supported:
* "man": use the 'man' program as usual,
* "woman": use 'emacsclient' to launch the "woman" mode in emacs
@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ For example, this configuration:
viewer = woman
------------------------------------------------
will try to use konqueror first. But this may fail (for example if
will try to use konqueror first. But this may fail (for example, if
DISPLAY is not set) and in that case emacs' woman mode will be tried.
If everything fails, or if no viewer is configured, the viewer specified

View File

@ -191,7 +191,7 @@ ScriptAlias /git/ /var/www/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi/
----------------------------------------------------------------
Lighttpd::
Ensure that `mod_cgi`, `mod_alias, `mod_auth`, `mod_setenv` are
Ensure that `mod_cgi`, `mod_alias`, `mod_auth`, `mod_setenv` are
loaded, then set `GIT_PROJECT_ROOT` appropriately and redirect
all requests to the CGI:
+
@ -263,14 +263,6 @@ identifying information of the remote user who performed the push.
All CGI environment variables are available to each of the hooks
invoked by the 'git-receive-pack'.
Author
------
Written by Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>.
Documentation
--------------
Documentation by Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>.
GIT
---
Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite

View File

@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ git-imap-send - Send a collection of patches from stdin to an IMAP folder
SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git imap-send'
'git imap-send' [-v] [-q] [--[no-]curl]
DESCRIPTION
@ -26,6 +26,27 @@ Typical usage is something like:
git format-patch --signoff --stdout --attach origin | git imap-send
OPTIONS
-------
-v::
--verbose::
Be verbose.
-q::
--quiet::
Be quiet.
--curl::
Use libcurl to communicate with the IMAP server, unless tunneling
into it. Ignored if Git was built without the USE_CURL_FOR_IMAP_SEND
option set.
--no-curl::
Talk to the IMAP server using git's own IMAP routines instead of
using libcurl.
CONFIGURATION
-------------
@ -38,18 +59,17 @@ Variables
imap.folder::
The folder to drop the mails into, which is typically the Drafts
folder. For example: "INBOX.Drafts", "INBOX/Drafts" or
"[Gmail]/Drafts". Required to use imap-send.
"[Gmail]/Drafts". Required.
imap.tunnel::
Command used to setup a tunnel to the IMAP server through which
commands will be piped instead of using a direct network connection
to the server. Required when imap.host is not set to use imap-send.
to the server. Required when imap.host is not set.
imap.host::
A URL identifying the server. Use a `imap://` prefix for non-secure
connections and a `imaps://` prefix for secure connections.
Ignored when imap.tunnel is set, but required to use imap-send
otherwise.
Ignored when imap.tunnel is set, but required otherwise.
imap.user::
The username to use when logging in to the server.
@ -76,7 +96,10 @@ imap.preformattedHTML::
imap.authMethod::
Specify authenticate method for authentication with IMAP server.
Current supported method is 'CRAM-MD5' only.
If Git was built with the NO_CURL option, or if your curl version is older
than 7.34.0, or if you're running git-imap-send with the `--no-curl`
option, the only supported method is 'CRAM-MD5'. If this is not set
then 'git imap-send' uses the basic IMAP plaintext LOGIN command.
Examples
~~~~~~~~
@ -97,7 +120,7 @@ Using direct mode:
host = imap://imap.example.com
user = bob
pass = p4ssw0rd
..........................
.........................
Using direct mode with SSL:
@ -109,7 +132,7 @@ Using direct mode with SSL:
pass = p4ssw0rd
port = 123
sslverify = false
..........................
.........................
EXAMPLE

View File

@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ OPTIONS
-q::
--quiet::
Only print error and warning messages, all other output will be suppressed.
Only print error and warning messages; all other output will be suppressed.
--bare::
@ -57,12 +57,12 @@ DIRECTORY" section below.)
--separate-git-dir=<git dir>::
Instead of initializing the repository where it is supposed to be,
place a filesytem-agnostic Git symbolic link there, pointing to the
specified path, and initialize a Git repository at the path. The
result is Git repository can be separated from working tree. If this
is reinitialization, the repository will be moved to the specified
path.
Instead of initializing the repository as a directory to either `$GIT_DIR` or
`./.git/`, create a text file there containing the path to the actual
repository. This file acts as filesystem-agnostic Git symbolic link to the
repository.
+
If this is reinitialization, the repository will be moved to the specified path.
--shared[=(false|true|umask|group|all|world|everybody|0xxx)]::
@ -72,60 +72,65 @@ repository. When specified, the config variable "core.sharedRepository" is
set so that files and directories under `$GIT_DIR` are created with the
requested permissions. When not specified, Git will use permissions reported
by umask(2).
+
The option can have the following values, defaulting to 'group' if no value
is given:
+
--
'umask' (or 'false')::
- 'umask' (or 'false'): Use permissions reported by umask(2). The default,
when `--shared` is not specified.
Use permissions reported by umask(2). The default, when `--shared` is not
specified.
- 'group' (or 'true'): Make the repository group-writable, (and g+sx, since
the git group may be not the primary group of all users).
This is used to loosen the permissions of an otherwise safe umask(2) value.
Note that the umask still applies to the other permission bits (e.g. if
umask is '0022', using 'group' will not remove read privileges from other
(non-group) users). See '0xxx' for how to exactly specify the repository
permissions.
'group' (or 'true')::
- 'all' (or 'world' or 'everybody'): Same as 'group', but make the repository
readable by all users.
Make the repository group-writable, (and g+sx, since the git group may be not
the primary group of all users). This is used to loosen the permissions of an
otherwise safe umask(2) value. Note that the umask still applies to the other
permission bits (e.g. if umask is '0022', using 'group' will not remove read
privileges from other (non-group) users). See '0xxx' for how to exactly specify
the repository permissions.
- '0xxx': '0xxx' is an octal number and each file will have mode '0xxx'.
'0xxx' will override users' umask(2) value (and not only loosen permissions
as 'group' and 'all' does). '0640' will create a repository which is
group-readable, but not group-writable or accessible to others. '0660' will
create a repo that is readable and writable to the current user and group,
but inaccessible to others.
'all' (or 'world' or 'everybody')::
By default, the configuration flag receive.denyNonFastForwards is enabled
Same as 'group', but make the repository readable by all users.
'0xxx'::
'0xxx' is an octal number and each file will have mode '0xxx'. '0xxx' will
override users' umask(2) value (and not only loosen permissions as 'group' and
'all' does). '0640' will create a repository which is group-readable, but not
group-writable or accessible to others. '0660' will create a repo that is
readable and writable to the current user and group, but inaccessible to others.
--
By default, the configuration flag `receive.denyNonFastForwards` is enabled
in shared repositories, so that you cannot force a non fast-forwarding push
into it.
If you name a (possibly non-existent) directory at the end of the command
line, the command is run inside the directory (possibly after creating it).
If you provide a 'directory', the command is run inside it. If this directory
does not exist, it will be created.
--
TEMPLATE DIRECTORY
------------------
The template directory contains files and directories that will be copied to
the `$GIT_DIR` after it is created.
The template directory used will (in order):
The template directory will be one of the following (in order):
- The argument given with the `--template` option.
- the argument given with the `--template` option;
- The contents of the `$GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR` environment variable.
- the contents of the `$GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR` environment variable;
- The `init.templatedir` configuration variable.
- the `init.templatedir` configuration variable; or
- The default template directory: `/usr/share/git-core/templates`.
- the default template directory: `/usr/share/git-core/templates`.
The default template directory includes some directory structure, some
suggested "exclude patterns", and copies of sample "hook" files.
The suggested patterns and hook files are all modifiable and extensible.
The default template directory includes some directory structure, suggested
"exclude patterns" (see linkgit:gitignore[5]), and sample hook files (see linkgit:githooks[5]).
EXAMPLES
--------
@ -136,10 +141,12 @@ Start a new Git repository for an existing code base::
$ cd /path/to/my/codebase
$ git init <1>
$ git add . <2>
$ git commit <3>
----------------
+
<1> prepare /path/to/my/codebase/.git directory
<2> add all existing file to the index
<1> Create a /path/to/my/codebase/.git directory.
<2> Add all existing files to the index.
<3> Record the pristine state as the first commit in the history.
GIT
---

View File

@ -0,0 +1,314 @@
git-interpret-trailers(1)
=========================
NAME
----
git-interpret-trailers - help add structured information into commit messages
SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git interpret-trailers' [--trim-empty] [(--trailer <token>[(=|:)<value>])...] [<file>...]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
Help adding 'trailers' lines, that look similar to RFC 822 e-mail
headers, at the end of the otherwise free-form part of a commit
message.
This command reads some patches or commit messages from either the
<file> arguments or the standard input if no <file> is specified. Then
this command applies the arguments passed using the `--trailer`
option, if any, to the commit message part of each input file. The
result is emitted on the standard output.
Some configuration variables control the way the `--trailer` arguments
are applied to each commit message and the way any existing trailer in
the commit message is changed. They also make it possible to
automatically add some trailers.
By default, a '<token>=<value>' or '<token>:<value>' argument given
using `--trailer` will be appended after the existing trailers only if
the last trailer has a different (<token>, <value>) pair (or if there
is no existing trailer). The <token> and <value> parts will be trimmed
to remove starting and trailing whitespace, and the resulting trimmed
<token> and <value> will appear in the message like this:
------------------------------------------------
token: value
------------------------------------------------
This means that the trimmed <token> and <value> will be separated by
`': '` (one colon followed by one space).
By default the new trailer will appear at the end of all the existing
trailers. If there is no existing trailer, the new trailer will appear
after the commit message part of the output, and, if there is no line
with only spaces at the end of the commit message part, one blank line
will be added before the new trailer.
Existing trailers are extracted from the input message by looking for
a group of one or more lines that contain a colon (by default), where
the group is preceded by one or more empty (or whitespace-only) lines.
The group must either be at the end of the message or be the last
non-whitespace lines before a line that starts with '---'. Such three
minus signs start the patch part of the message.
When reading trailers, there can be whitespaces before and after the
token, the separator and the value. There can also be whitespaces
inside the token and the value.
Note that 'trailers' do not follow and are not intended to follow many
rules for RFC 822 headers. For example they do not follow the line
folding rules, the encoding rules and probably many other rules.
OPTIONS
-------
--trim-empty::
If the <value> part of any trailer contains only whitespace,
the whole trailer will be removed from the resulting message.
This apply to existing trailers as well as new trailers.
--trailer <token>[(=|:)<value>]::
Specify a (<token>, <value>) pair that should be applied as a
trailer to the input messages. See the description of this
command.
CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
-----------------------
trailer.separators::
This option tells which characters are recognized as trailer
separators. By default only ':' is recognized as a trailer
separator, except that '=' is always accepted on the command
line for compatibility with other git commands.
+
The first character given by this option will be the default character
used when another separator is not specified in the config for this
trailer.
+
For example, if the value for this option is "%=$", then only lines
using the format '<token><sep><value>' with <sep> containing '%', '='
or '$' and then spaces will be considered trailers. And '%' will be
the default separator used, so by default trailers will appear like:
'<token>% <value>' (one percent sign and one space will appear between
the token and the value).
trailer.where::
This option tells where a new trailer will be added.
+
This can be `end`, which is the default, `start`, `after` or `before`.
+
If it is `end`, then each new trailer will appear at the end of the
existing trailers.
+
If it is `start`, then each new trailer will appear at the start,
instead of the end, of the existing trailers.
+
If it is `after`, then each new trailer will appear just after the
last trailer with the same <token>.
+
If it is `before`, then each new trailer will appear just before the
first trailer with the same <token>.
trailer.ifexists::
This option makes it possible to choose what action will be
performed when there is already at least one trailer with the
same <token> in the message.
+
The valid values for this option are: `addIfDifferentNeighbor` (this
is the default), `addIfDifferent`, `add`, `overwrite` or `doNothing`.
+
With `addIfDifferentNeighbor`, a new trailer will be added only if no
trailer with the same (<token>, <value>) pair is above or below the line
where the new trailer will be added.
+
With `addIfDifferent`, a new trailer will be added only if no trailer
with the same (<token>, <value>) pair is already in the message.
+
With `add`, a new trailer will be added, even if some trailers with
the same (<token>, <value>) pair are already in the message.
+
With `replace`, an existing trailer with the same <token> will be
deleted and the new trailer will be added. The deleted trailer will be
the closest one (with the same <token>) to the place where the new one
will be added.
+
With `doNothing`, nothing will be done; that is no new trailer will be
added if there is already one with the same <token> in the message.
trailer.ifmissing::
This option makes it possible to choose what action will be
performed when there is not yet any trailer with the same
<token> in the message.
+
The valid values for this option are: `add` (this is the default) and
`doNothing`.
+
With `add`, a new trailer will be added.
+
With `doNothing`, nothing will be done.
trailer.<token>.key::
This `key` will be used instead of <token> in the trailer. At
the end of this key, a separator can appear and then some
space characters. By default the only valid separator is ':',
but this can be changed using the `trailer.separators` config
variable.
+
If there is a separator, then the key will be used instead of both the
<token> and the default separator when adding the trailer.
trailer.<token>.where::
This option takes the same values as the 'trailer.where'
configuration variable and it overrides what is specified by
that option for trailers with the specified <token>.
trailer.<token>.ifexist::
This option takes the same values as the 'trailer.ifexist'
configuration variable and it overrides what is specified by
that option for trailers with the specified <token>.
trailer.<token>.ifmissing::
This option takes the same values as the 'trailer.ifmissing'
configuration variable and it overrides what is specified by
that option for trailers with the specified <token>.
trailer.<token>.command::
This option can be used to specify a shell command that will
be called to automatically add or modify a trailer with the
specified <token>.
+
When this option is specified, the behavior is as if a special
'<token>=<value>' argument were added at the beginning of the command
line, where <value> is taken to be the standard output of the
specified command with any leading and trailing whitespace trimmed
off.
+
If the command contains the `$ARG` string, this string will be
replaced with the <value> part of an existing trailer with the same
<token>, if any, before the command is launched.
+
If some '<token>=<value>' arguments are also passed on the command
line, when a 'trailer.<token>.command' is configured, the command will
also be executed for each of these arguments. And the <value> part of
these arguments, if any, will be used to replace the `$ARG` string in
the command.
EXAMPLES
--------
* Configure a 'sign' trailer with a 'Signed-off-by' key, and then
add two of these trailers to a message:
+
------------
$ git config trailer.sign.key "Signed-off-by"
$ cat msg.txt
subject
message
$ cat msg.txt | git interpret-trailers --trailer 'sign: Alice <alice@example.com>' --trailer 'sign: Bob <bob@example.com>'
subject
message
Signed-off-by: Alice <alice@example.com>
Signed-off-by: Bob <bob@example.com>
------------
* Extract the last commit as a patch, and add a 'Cc' and a
'Reviewed-by' trailer to it:
+
------------
$ git format-patch -1
0001-foo.patch
$ git interpret-trailers --trailer 'Cc: Alice <alice@example.com>' --trailer 'Reviewed-by: Bob <bob@example.com>' 0001-foo.patch >0001-bar.patch
------------
* Configure a 'sign' trailer with a command to automatically add a
'Signed-off-by: ' with the author information only if there is no
'Signed-off-by: ' already, and show how it works:
+
------------
$ git config trailer.sign.key "Signed-off-by: "
$ git config trailer.sign.ifmissing add
$ git config trailer.sign.ifexists doNothing
$ git config trailer.sign.command 'echo "$(git config user.name) <$(git config user.email)>"'
$ git interpret-trailers <<EOF
> EOF
Signed-off-by: Bob <bob@example.com>
$ git interpret-trailers <<EOF
> Signed-off-by: Alice <alice@example.com>
> EOF
Signed-off-by: Alice <alice@example.com>
------------
* Configure a 'fix' trailer with a key that contains a '#' and no
space after this character, and show how it works:
+
------------
$ git config trailer.separators ":#"
$ git config trailer.fix.key "Fix #"
$ echo "subject" | git interpret-trailers --trailer fix=42
subject
Fix #42
------------
* Configure a 'see' trailer with a command to show the subject of a
commit that is related, and show how it works:
+
------------
$ git config trailer.see.key "See-also: "
$ git config trailer.see.ifExists "replace"
$ git config trailer.see.ifMissing "doNothing"
$ git config trailer.see.command "git log -1 --oneline --format=\"%h (%s)\" --abbrev-commit --abbrev=14 \$ARG"
$ git interpret-trailers <<EOF
> subject
>
> message
>
> see: HEAD~2
> EOF
subject
message
See-also: fe3187489d69c4 (subject of related commit)
------------
* Configure a commit template with some trailers with empty values
(using sed to show and keep the trailing spaces at the end of the
trailers), then configure a commit-msg hook that uses
'git interpret-trailers' to remove trailers with empty values and
to add a 'git-version' trailer:
+
------------
$ sed -e 's/ Z$/ /' >commit_template.txt <<EOF
> ***subject***
>
> ***message***
>
> Fixes: Z
> Cc: Z
> Reviewed-by: Z
> Signed-off-by: Z
> EOF
$ git config commit.template commit_template.txt
$ cat >.git/hooks/commit-msg <<EOF
> #!/bin/sh
> git interpret-trailers --trim-empty --trailer "git-version: \$(git describe)" "\$1" > "\$1.new"
> mv "\$1.new" "\$1"
> EOF
$ chmod +x .git/hooks/commit-msg
------------
SEE ALSO
--------
linkgit:git-commit[1], linkgit:git-format-patch[1], linkgit:git-config[1]
GIT
---
Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite

View File

@ -15,9 +15,9 @@ DESCRIPTION
-----------
Shows the commit logs.
The command takes options applicable to the 'git rev-list'
The command takes options applicable to the `git rev-list`
command to control what is shown and how, and options applicable to
the 'git diff-*' commands to control how the changes
the `git diff-*` commands to control how the changes
each commit introduces are shown.
@ -42,28 +42,27 @@ OPTIONS
--use-mailmap::
Use mailmap file to map author and committer names and email
to canonical real names and email addresses. See
addresses to canonical real names and email addresses. See
linkgit:git-shortlog[1].
--full-diff::
Without this flag, "git log -p <path>..." shows commits that
Without this flag, `git log -p <path>...` shows commits that
touch the specified paths, and diffs about the same specified
paths. With this, the full diff is shown for commits that touch
the specified paths; this means that "<path>..." limits only
commits, and doesn't limit diff for those commits.
+
Note that this affects all diff-based output types, e.g. those
produced by --stat etc.
produced by `--stat`, etc.
--log-size::
Before the log message print out its size in bytes. Intended
mainly for porcelain tools consumption. If Git is unable to
produce a valid value size is set to zero.
Note that only message is considered, if also a diff is shown
its size is not included.
-L <start>,<end>:<file>, -L :<regex>:<file>::
Include a line ``log size <number>'' in the output for each commit,
where <number> is the length of that commit's message in bytes.
Intended to speed up tools that read log messages from `git log`
output by allowing them to allocate space in advance.
-L <start>,<end>:<file>::
-L :<regex>:<file>::
Trace the evolution of the line range given by "<start>,<end>"
(or the funcname regex <regex>) within the <file>. You may
not give any pathspec limiters. This is currently limited to
@ -71,8 +70,6 @@ produced by --stat etc.
give zero or one positive revision arguments.
You can specify this option more than once.
+
<start> and <end> can take one of these forms:
include::line-range-format.txt[]
<revision range>::
@ -81,16 +78,16 @@ include::line-range-format.txt[]
whole history leading to the current commit). `origin..HEAD`
specifies all the commits reachable from the current commit
(i.e. `HEAD`), but not from `origin`. For a complete list of
ways to spell <revision range>, see the "Specifying Ranges"
ways to spell <revision range>, see the 'Specifying Ranges'
section of linkgit:gitrevisions[7].
[\--] <path>...::
Show only commits that are enough to explain how the files
that match the specified paths came to be. See "History
Simplification" below for details and other simplification
that match the specified paths came to be. See 'History
Simplification' below for details and other simplification
modes.
+
Paths may need to be prefixed with "\-- " to separate them from
Paths may need to be prefixed with ``\-- '' to separate them from
options or the revision range, when confusion arises.
include::rev-list-options.txt[]
@ -114,12 +111,12 @@ EXAMPLES
`git log v2.6.12.. include/scsi drivers/scsi`::
Show all commits since version 'v2.6.12' that changed any file
in the include/scsi or drivers/scsi subdirectories
in the `include/scsi` or `drivers/scsi` subdirectories
`git log --since="2 weeks ago" -- gitk`::
Show the changes during the last two weeks to the file 'gitk'.
The "--" is necessary to avoid confusion with the *branch* named
The ``--'' is necessary to avoid confusion with the *branch* named
'gitk'
`git log --name-status release..test`::
@ -130,7 +127,7 @@ EXAMPLES
`git log --follow builtin/rev-list.c`::
Shows the commits that changed builtin/rev-list.c, including
Shows the commits that changed `builtin/rev-list.c`, including
those commits that occurred before the file was given its
present name.
@ -148,17 +145,18 @@ EXAMPLES
`git log -p -m --first-parent`::
Shows the history including change diffs, but only from the
"main branch" perspective, skipping commits that come from merged
``main branch'' perspective, skipping commits that come from merged
branches, and showing full diffs of changes introduced by the merges.
This makes sense only when following a strict policy of merging all
topic branches when staying on a single integration branch.
`git log -L '/int main/',/^}/:main.c`::
Shows how the function `main()` in the file 'main.c' evolved
Shows how the function `main()` in the file `main.c` evolved
over time.
`git log -3`::
Limits the number of commits to show to 3.
DISCUSSION
@ -173,12 +171,12 @@ See linkgit:git-config[1] for core variables and linkgit:git-diff[1]
for settings related to diff generation.
format.pretty::
Default for the `--format` option. (See "PRETTY FORMATS" above.)
Defaults to "medium".
Default for the `--format` option. (See 'Pretty Formats' above.)
Defaults to `medium`.
i18n.logOutputEncoding::
Encoding to use when displaying logs. (See "Discussion", above.)
Defaults to the value of `i18n.commitEncoding` if set, UTF-8
Encoding to use when displaying logs. (See 'Discussion' above.)
Defaults to the value of `i18n.commitEncoding` if set, and UTF-8
otherwise.
log.date::
@ -187,7 +185,7 @@ log.date::
dates like `Sat May 8 19:35:34 2010 -0500`.
log.showroot::
If `false`, 'git log' and related commands will not treat the
If `false`, `git log` and related commands will not treat the
initial commit as a big creation event. Any root commits in
`git log -p` output would be shown without a diff attached.
The default is `true`.
@ -198,7 +196,7 @@ mailmap.*::
notes.displayRef::
Which refs, in addition to the default set by `core.notesRef`
or 'GIT_NOTES_REF', to read notes from when showing commit
messages with the 'log' family of commands. See
messages with the `log` family of commands. See
linkgit:git-notes[1].
+
May be an unabbreviated ref name or a glob and may be specified

View File

@ -1,74 +0,0 @@
git-lost-found(1)
=================
NAME
----
git-lost-found - Recover lost refs that luckily have not yet been pruned
SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git lost-found'
DESCRIPTION
-----------
*NOTE*: this command is deprecated. Use linkgit:git-fsck[1] with
the option '--lost-found' instead.
Finds dangling commits and tags from the object database, and
creates refs to them in the .git/lost-found/ directory. Commits and
tags that dereference to commits are stored in .git/lost-found/commit,
and other objects are stored in .git/lost-found/other.
OUTPUT
------
Prints to standard output the object names and one-line descriptions
of any commits or tags found.
EXAMPLE
-------
Suppose you run 'git tag -f' and mistype the tag to overwrite.
The ref to your tag is overwritten, but until you run 'git
prune', the tag itself is still there.
------------
$ git lost-found
[1ef2b196d909eed523d4f3c9bf54b78cdd6843c6] GIT 0.99.9c
...
------------
Also you can use gitk to browse how any tags found relate to each
other.
------------
$ gitk $(cd .git/lost-found/commit && echo ??*)
------------
After making sure you know which the object is the tag you are looking
for, you can reconnect it to your regular `refs` hierarchy by using
the `update-ref` command.
------------
$ git cat-file -t 1ef2b196
tag
$ git cat-file tag 1ef2b196
object fa41bbce8e38c67a218415de6cfa510c7e50032a
type commit
tag v0.99.9c
tagger Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net> 1131059594 -0800
GIT 0.99.9c
This contains the following changes from the "master" branch, since
...
$ git update-ref refs/tags/not-lost-anymore 1ef2b196
$ git rev-parse not-lost-anymore
1ef2b196d909eed523d4f3c9bf54b78cdd6843c6
------------
GIT
---
Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite

View File

@ -185,15 +185,15 @@ specifies the format of exclude patterns.
These exclude patterns come from these places, in order:
1. The command line flag --exclude=<pattern> specifies a
1. The command-line flag --exclude=<pattern> specifies a
single pattern. Patterns are ordered in the same order
they appear in the command line.
2. The command line flag --exclude-from=<file> specifies a
2. The command-line flag --exclude-from=<file> specifies a
file containing a list of patterns. Patterns are ordered
in the same order they appear in the file.
3. The command line flag --exclude-per-directory=<name> specifies
3. The command-line flag --exclude-per-directory=<name> specifies
a name of the file in each directory 'git ls-files'
examines, normally `.gitignore`. Files in deeper
directories take precedence. Patterns are ordered in the

View File

@ -66,6 +66,11 @@ conversion, even with this flag.
-n::
Disable all charset re-coding of the metadata.
-m::
--message-id::
Copy the Message-ID header at the end of the commit message. This
is useful in order to associate commits with mailing list discussions.
--scissors::
Remove everything in body before a scissors line. A line that
mainly consists of scissors (either ">8" or "8<") and perforation

View File

@ -13,6 +13,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
'git merge-base' [-a|--all] --octopus <commit>...
'git merge-base' --is-ancestor <commit> <commit>
'git merge-base' --independent <commit>...
'git merge-base' --fork-point <ref> [<commit>]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
@ -24,8 +25,8 @@ that does not have any better common ancestor is a 'best common
ancestor', i.e. a 'merge base'. Note that there can be more than one
merge base for a pair of commits.
OPERATION MODE
--------------
OPERATION MODES
---------------
As the most common special case, specifying only two commits on the
command line means computing the merge base between the given two commits.
@ -56,6 +57,14 @@ from linkgit:git-show-branch[1] when used with the `--merge-base` option.
and exit with status 0 if true, or with status 1 if not.
Errors are signaled by a non-zero status that is not 1.
--fork-point::
Find the point at which a branch (or any history that leads
to <commit>) forked from another branch (or any reference)
<ref>. This does not just look for the common ancestor of
the two commits, but also takes into account the reflog of
<ref> to see if the history leading to <commit> forked from
an earlier incarnation of the branch <ref> (see discussion
on this mode below).
OPTIONS
-------
@ -137,6 +146,31 @@ In modern git, you can say this in a more direct way:
instead.
Discussion on fork-point mode
-----------------------------
After working on the `topic` branch created with `git checkout -b
topic origin/master`, the history of remote-tracking branch
`origin/master` may have been rewound and rebuilt, leading to a
history of this shape:
o---B1
/
---o---o---B2--o---o---o---B (origin/master)
\
B3
\
Derived (topic)
where `origin/master` used to point at commits B3, B2, B1 and now it
points at B, and your `topic` branch was started on top of it back
when `origin/master` was at B3. This mode uses the reflog of
`origin/master` to find B3 as the fork point, so that the `topic`
can be rebased on top of the updated `origin/master` by:
$ fork_point=$(git merge-base --fork-point origin/master topic)
$ git rebase --onto origin/master $fork_point topic
See also
--------

View File

@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
[verse]
'git merge-file' [-L <current-name> [-L <base-name> [-L <other-name>]]]
[--ours|--theirs|--union] [-p|--stdout] [-q|--quiet] [--marker-size=<n>]
<current-file> <base-file> <other-file>
[--[no-]diff3] <current-file> <base-file> <other-file>
DESCRIPTION
@ -66,6 +66,9 @@ OPTIONS
-q::
Quiet; do not warn about conflicts.
--diff3::
Show conflicts in "diff3" style.
--ours::
--theirs::
--union::

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