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Author SHA1 Message Date
840ed14198 Git 2.10.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-05-05 13:24:10 +09:00
fc92b0878c Merge branch 'maint-2.9' into maint-2.10 2017-05-05 13:21:52 +09:00
d61226c111 Git 2.9.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-05-05 13:19:10 +09:00
c93ab42b74 Merge branch 'maint-2.8' into maint-2.9 2017-05-05 13:13:48 +09:00
cd08873275 Git 2.8.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-05-05 13:08:54 +09:00
a8d93d19a2 Merge branch 'maint-2.7' into maint-2.8 2017-05-05 13:05:03 +09:00
c8dd1e3bb1 Git 2.7.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-05-05 13:03:40 +09:00
dc58c8554a Merge branch 'maint-2.6' into maint-2.7 2017-05-05 12:59:16 +09:00
70fcaef90b Git 2.6.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-05-05 12:56:19 +09:00
ab37a18b60 Merge branch 'maint-2.5' into maint-2.6 2017-05-05 12:52:26 +09:00
ac33201285 Git 2.5.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-05-05 12:50:38 +09:00
531788af95 Merge branch 'maint-2.4' into maint-2.5 2017-05-05 12:46:53 +09:00
4000b40209 Git 2.4.12
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-05-05 12:43:16 +09:00
5a4ffdf587 Merge branch 'jk/shell-no-repository-that-begins-with-dash' into maint-2.4
* jk/shell-no-repository-that-begins-with-dash:
  shell: disallow repo names beginning with dash
2017-05-05 12:17:55 +09:00
3ec804490a shell: disallow repo names beginning with dash
When a remote server uses git-shell, the client side will
connect to it like:

  ssh server "git-upload-pack 'foo.git'"

and we literally exec ("git-upload-pack", "foo.git"). In
early versions of upload-pack and receive-pack, we took a
repository argument and nothing else. But over time they
learned to accept dashed options. If the user passes a
repository name that starts with a dash, the results are
confusing at best (we complain of a bogus option instead of
a non-existent repository) and malicious at worst (the user
can start an interactive pager via "--help").

We could pass "--" to the sub-process to make sure the
user's argument is interpreted as a branch name. I.e.:

  git-upload-pack -- -foo.git

But adding "--" automatically would make us inconsistent
with a normal shell (i.e., when git-shell is not in use),
where "-foo.git" would still be an error. For that case, the
client would have to specify the "--", but they can't do so
reliably, as existing versions of git-shell do not allow
more than a single argument.

The simplest thing is to simply disallow "-" at the start of
the repo name argument. This hasn't worked either with or
without git-shell since version 1.0.0, and nobody has
complained.

Note that this patch just applies to do_generic_cmd(), which
runs upload-pack, receive-pack, and upload-archive. There
are two other types of commands that git-shell runs:

  - do_cvs_cmd(), but this already restricts the argument to
    be the literal string "server"

  - admin-provided commands in the git-shell-commands
    directory. We'll pass along arbitrary arguments there,
    so these commands could have similar problems. But these
    commands might actually understand dashed arguments, so
    we cannot just block them here. It's up to the writer of
    the commands to make sure they are safe. With great
    power comes great responsibility.

Reported-by: Timo Schmid <tschmid@ernw.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-05-05 12:07:27 +09:00
c3808ca698 preparing for 2.10.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-12-05 11:25:02 -08:00
cd1c2e7301 Merge branch 'jk/common-main' into maint-2.10
* jk/common-main:
  common-main: stop munging argv[0] path
  git-compat-util: move content inside ifdef/endif guards
2016-12-05 11:24:28 -08:00
0a79ccaac7 Merge branch 'tk/diffcore-delta-remove-unused' into maint
Code cleanup.

* tk/diffcore-delta-remove-unused:
  diffcore-delta: remove unused parameter to diffcore_count_changes()
2016-11-29 13:28:03 -08:00
af8d6a9821 Merge branch 'jk/create-branch-remove-unused-param' into maint
Code clean-up.

* jk/create-branch-remove-unused-param:
  create_branch: drop unused "head" parameter
2016-11-29 13:28:02 -08:00
797d1a4672 Merge branch 'nd/worktree-lock' into maint
Typofix.

* nd/worktree-lock:
  git-worktree.txt: fix typo "to"/"two", and add comma
2016-11-29 13:28:02 -08:00
d92466ee25 Merge branch 'ps/common-info-doc' into maint
Doc fix.

* ps/common-info-doc:
  doc: fix location of 'info/' with $GIT_COMMON_DIR
2016-11-29 13:28:01 -08:00
e3c4323e23 Merge branch 'rs/cocci' into maint
Improve the rule to convert "unsigned char [20]" into "struct
object_id *" in contrib/coccinelle/

* rs/cocci:
  cocci: avoid self-references in object_id transformations
2016-11-29 13:28:00 -08:00
91207f3784 Merge branch 'nd/test-helpers' into maint
Update to the test framework made in 2.9 timeframe broke running
the tests under valgrind, which has been fixed.

* nd/test-helpers:
  valgrind: support test helpers
2016-11-29 13:28:00 -08:00
6afadbd5ee Merge branch 'sc/fmt-merge-msg-doc-markup-fix' into maint
Documentation fix.

* sc/fmt-merge-msg-doc-markup-fix:
  Documentation/fmt-merge-msg: fix markup in example
2016-11-29 13:28:00 -08:00
c8a3ec37ab Merge branch 'rs/commit-pptr-simplify' into maint
Code simplification.

* rs/commit-pptr-simplify:
  commit: simplify building parents list
2016-11-29 13:27:59 -08:00
50b8276ab9 Merge branch 'jk/rebase-config-insn-fmt-docfix' into maint
Documentation fix.

* jk/rebase-config-insn-fmt-docfix:
  doc: fix missing "::" in config list
2016-11-29 13:27:58 -08:00
e9f74313e7 Merge branch 'ak/pre-receive-hook-template-modefix' into maint
A trivial clean-up to a recently graduated topic.

* ak/pre-receive-hook-template-modefix:
  pre-receive.sample: mark it executable
2016-11-29 13:27:57 -08:00
729fb9ad34 Merge branch 'ls/macos-update' into maint
Portability update and workaround for builds on recent Mac OS X.

* ls/macos-update:
  travis-ci: disable GIT_TEST_HTTPD for macOS
  Makefile: set NO_OPENSSL on macOS by default
2016-11-29 13:27:56 -08:00
25e298d2c9 Merge branch 'as/merge-attr-sleep' into maint
Fix for a racy false-positive test failure.

* as/merge-attr-sleep:
  t6026: clarify the point of "kill $(cat sleep.pid)"
  t6026: ensure that long-running script really is
  Revert "t6026-merge-attr: don't fail if sleep exits early"
  Revert "t6026-merge-attr: ensure that the merge driver was called"
  t6026-merge-attr: ensure that the merge driver was called
  t6026-merge-attr: don't fail if sleep exits early
2016-11-29 13:27:56 -08:00
bb6bc68d22 Merge branch 'ak/sh-setup-dot-source-i18n-fix' into maint
Recent update to git-sh-setup (a library of shell functions that
are used by our in-tree scripted Porcelain commands) included
another shell library git-sh-i18n without specifying where it is,
relying on the $PATH.  This has been fixed to be more explicit by
prefixing $(git --exec-path) output in front.

* ak/sh-setup-dot-source-i18n-fix:
  git-sh-setup: be explicit where to dot-source git-sh-i18n from.
2016-11-29 13:27:56 -08:00
aa22ef8a80 Merge branch 'jk/daemon-path-ok-check-truncation' into maint
"git daemon" used fixed-length buffers to turn URL to the
repository the client asked for into the server side directory
path, using snprintf() to avoid overflowing these buffers, but
allowed possibly truncated paths to the directory.  This has been
tightened to reject such a request that causes overlong path to be
required to serve.

* jk/daemon-path-ok-check-truncation:
  daemon: detect and reject too-long paths
2016-11-29 13:27:56 -08:00
f2ad912f99 Merge branch 'rs/ring-buffer-wraparound' into maint
The code that we have used for the past 10+ years to cycle
4-element ring buffers turns out to be not quite portable in
theoretical world.

* rs/ring-buffer-wraparound:
  hex: make wraparound of the index into ring-buffer explicit
2016-11-29 13:27:55 -08:00
a3f2781dd0 Merge branch 'mm/send-email-cc-cruft-after-address' into maint
"git send-email" attempts to pick up valid e-mails from the
trailers, but people in real world write non-addresses there, like
"Cc: Stable <add@re.ss> # 4.8+", which broke the output depending
on the availability and vintage of Mail::Address perl module.

* mm/send-email-cc-cruft-after-address:
  Git.pm: add comment pointing to t9000
  t9000-addresses: update expected results after fix
  parse_mailboxes: accept extra text after <...> address
2016-11-29 13:27:55 -08:00
fa308cd848 Merge branch 'cp/completion-negative-refs' into maint
The command-line completion script (in contrib/) learned to
complete "git cmd ^mas<HT>" to complete the negative end of
reference to "git cmd ^master".

* cp/completion-negative-refs:
  completion: support excluding refs
2016-11-29 13:27:53 -08:00
bab32da385 Merge branch 'jc/am-read-author-file' into maint
Extract a small helper out of the function that reads the authors
script file "git am" internally uses.
This by itself is not useful until a second caller appears in the
future for "rebase -i" helper.

* jc/am-read-author-file:
  am: refactor read_author_script()
2016-11-29 13:27:53 -08:00
6854a8f5c9 common-main: stop munging argv[0] path
Since 650c44925 (common-main: call git_extract_argv0_path(),
2016-07-01), the argv[0] that is seen in cmd_main() of
individual programs is always the basename of the
executable, as common-main strips off the full path. This
can produce confusing results for git-daemon, which wants to
re-exec itself.

For instance, if the program was originally run as
"/usr/lib/git/git-daemon", it will try just re-execing
"git-daemon", which will find the first instance in $PATH.
If git's exec-path has not been prepended to $PATH, we may
find the git-daemon from a different version (or no
git-daemon at all).

Normally this isn't a problem. Git commands are run as "git
daemon", the git wrapper puts the exec-path at the front of
$PATH, and argv[0] is already "daemon" anyway. But running
git-daemon via its full exec-path, while not really a
recommended method, did work prior to 650c44925. Let's make
it work again.

The real goal of 650c44925 was not to munge argv[0], but to
reliably set the argv0_path global. The only reason it
munges at all is that one caller, the git.c wrapper,
piggy-backed on that computation to find the command
basename.  Instead, let's leave argv[0] untouched in
common-main, and have git.c do its own basename computation.

While we're at it, let's drop the return value from
git_extract_argv0_path(). It was only ever used in this one
callsite, and its dual purposes is what led to this
confusion in the first place.

Note that by changing the interface, the compiler can
confirm for us that there are no other callers storing the
return value. But the compiler can't tell us whether any of
the cmd_main() functions (besides git.c) were relying on the
basename munging. However, we can observe that prior to
650c44925, no other cmd_main() functions did that munging,
and no new cmd_main() functions have been introduced since
then. So we can't be regressing any of those cases.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-11-29 11:01:48 -08:00
974e0044d6 diffcore-delta: remove unused parameter to diffcore_count_changes()
The delta_limit parameter to diffcore_count_changes() has been unused
since commit ba23bbc8e ("diffcore-delta: make change counter to byte
oriented again.", 2006-03-04).

Remove the parameter and adjust all callers.

Signed-off-by: Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-11-14 09:24:04 -08:00
2b090822e8 git-worktree.txt: fix typo "to"/"two", and add comma
Signed-off-by: Ben North <ben@redfrontdoor.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-11-13 17:56:56 -08:00
fdf4f6c79b t6026: clarify the point of "kill $(cat sleep.pid)"
We lengthened the time the leftover process sleeps in the previous
commit to make sure it will be there while 'git merge' runs and
finishes.  It therefore needs to be killed before leaving the test.
And it needs to be killed even when 'git merge' fails, so it has to
be triggered via test_when_finished mechanism.

Explain all that in a large comment, and move the use site of
test_when_finished to immediately before 'git merge' invocation,
where the process is spawned.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-11-11 12:53:21 -08:00
3285b7badb doc: fix location of 'info/' with $GIT_COMMON_DIR
With the introduction of the $GIT_COMMON_DIR variable, the
repository layout manual was changed to reflect the location for
many files in case the variable is set. While adding the new
locations, one typo snuck in regarding the location of the
'info/' folder, which is falsely claimed to reside at
"$GIT_COMMON_DIR/index".

Fix the typo to point to "$GIT_COMMON_DIR/info/" instead.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-11-11 09:37:33 -08:00
a7d6bcc329 t6026: ensure that long-running script really is
When making sure that background tasks are cleaned up in 5babb5b
(t6026-merge-attr: clean up background process at end of test case,
2016-09-07), we considered to let the background task sleep longer, just
to be certain that it will still be running when we want to kill it
after the test.

Sadly, the assumption appears not to hold true that the test case passes
quickly enough to kill the background task within a second.

Simply increase it to an hour. No system can be possibly slow enough to
make above-mentioned assumption incorrect.

Reported by Andreas Schwab.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-11-10 15:57:06 -08:00
b36b716cf6 Revert "t6026-merge-attr: don't fail if sleep exits early"
This reverts commit 734fde2d71.

The point of the test is that the stray process was still running
when 'git merge' did its thing through its completion, so a failure
to "kill" it means we didn't give a condition to the test to trigger
a possible future breakage.  Appending "|| :" to the "kill" is
sweeping a test-bug under the rug.
2016-11-10 15:55:13 -08:00
3b03097d66 Revert "t6026-merge-attr: ensure that the merge driver was called"
This reverts commit c1e0dc59bd.

We are not interested in the stray process in the merge driver
started; we want it to be still around.
2016-11-10 15:54:12 -08:00
c1e0dc59bd t6026-merge-attr: ensure that the merge driver was called
Explicitly check for the existence of the pid file to test that the
merge driver was actually called.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-11-10 11:20:56 -08:00
a296bc0132 travis-ci: disable GIT_TEST_HTTPD for macOS
TravisCI changed their default macOS image from 10.10 to 10.11 [1].
Unfortunately the HTTPD tests do not run out of the box using the
pre-installed Apache web server anymore. Therefore we enable these
tests only for Linux and disable them for macOS.

[1] https://blog.travis-ci.com/2016-10-04-osx-73-default-image-live/

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-11-10 11:13:14 -08:00
f01fe92b82 Makefile: set NO_OPENSSL on macOS by default
Apple removed the OpenSSL header files in macOS 10.11 and above. OpenSSL
was deprecated since macOS 10.7.

Set `NO_OPENSSL` and `APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO` to `YesPlease` as default for
macOS. It is possible to override this and use OpenSSL by defining
`NO_APPLE_COMMON_CRYPTO`.

Original-patch-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-11-10 11:10:36 -08:00
4bd488ea7c create_branch: drop unused "head" parameter
This function used to have the caller pass in the current
value of HEAD, in order to make sure we didn't clobber HEAD.
In 55c4a6730, that logic moved to validate_new_branchname(),
which just resolves HEAD itself. The parameter to
create_branch is now unused.

Since we have to update and re-wrap the docstring describing
the parameters anyway, let's take this opportunity to break
it out into a list, which makes it easier to find the
parameters.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-11-09 14:56:21 -08:00
734fde2d71 t6026-merge-attr: don't fail if sleep exits early
Commit 5babb5bdb3 ("t6026-merge-attr: clean up background process at end
of test case") added a kill command to clean up after the test, but this
can fail if the sleep command exits before the cleanup is executed.
Ignore the error from the kill command.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2016-11-08 15:29:24 -05:00
c2bb0c1d1e cocci: avoid self-references in object_id transformations
The object_id functions oid_to_hex, oid_to_hex_r, oidclr, oidcmp, and
oidcpy are defined as wrappers of their legacy counterparts sha1_to_hex,
sha1_to_hex_r, hashclr, hashcmp, and hashcpy, respectively.  Make sure
that the Coccinelle transformations for converting legacy function calls
are not applied to these wrappers themselves, which would result in
tautological declarations.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-11-01 10:58:39 -07:00
1073094f30 git-sh-setup: be explicit where to dot-source git-sh-i18n from.
d323c6b641 ("i18n: git-sh-setup.sh: mark strings for translation",
2016-06-17) started to dot-source git-sh-i18n shell script library,
assuming that $PATH is already adjusted for our scripts, namely,
$GIT_EXEC_PATH is at the beginning of $PATH.

Old contrib scripts like contrib/convert-grafts-to-replace-refs.sh
and contrib/rerere-train.sh and third-party scripts like guilt may
however be using this as ". $(git --exec-path)/git-sh-setup",
without satisfying that assumption.  Be more explicit by specifying
its path prefixed with "$(git --exec-path)/". to be safe.

While we’re here, move the sourcing of git-sh-i18n below the shell
portability fixes.

Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-30 16:13:49 -07:00
de9f7fa3b0 commit: simplify building parents list
Push pptr down into the FROM_MERGE branch of the if/else statement,
where it's actually used, and call commit_list_append() for appending
elements instead of playing tricks with commit_list_insert().  Call
copy_commit_list() in the amend branch instead of open-coding it.  Don't
bother setting pptr in the final branch as it's not used thereafter.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-30 16:03:25 -07:00
6d834ac8f1 doc: fix missing "::" in config list
The rebase.instructionFormat option is missing its "::" to
tell AsciiDoc that it's a list entry. As a result, the
option name gets lumped into the description in one big
paragraph.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-30 15:26:37 -07:00
5a5749e45b pre-receive.sample: mark it executable
For consistency with other hooks, make the sample hook executable.

Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-28 14:21:11 -07:00
ac84098b7e Git 2.10.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-28 09:02:44 -07:00
020222ef4d Merge branch 'pb/test-parse-options-expect' into maint
Test clean-up.

* pb/test-parse-options-expect:
  t0040: convert all possible tests to use `test-parse-options --expect`
2016-10-28 09:01:24 -07:00
334c2a1959 Merge branch 'jc/cocci-xstrdup-or-null' into maint
Code cleanup.

* jc/cocci-xstrdup-or-null:
  cocci: refactor common patterns to use xstrdup_or_null()
2016-10-28 09:01:23 -07:00
c8fd220175 Merge branch 'rs/cocci' into maint
Code cleanup.

* rs/cocci:
  use strbuf_add_unique_abbrev() for adding short hashes, part 3
  remove unnecessary NULL check before free(3)
  coccicheck: make transformation for strbuf_addf(sb, "...") more precise
  use strbuf_add_unique_abbrev() for adding short hashes, part 2
  use strbuf_addstr() instead of strbuf_addf() with "%s", part 2
  gitignore: ignore output files of coccicheck make target
  use strbuf_addstr() for adding constant strings to a strbuf, part 2
  add coccicheck make target
  contrib/coccinelle: fix semantic patch for oid_to_hex_r()
2016-10-28 09:01:23 -07:00
0582a34f52 Merge branch 'jc/diff-unique-abbrev-comments' into maint
A bit more comments in a tricky code.

* jc/diff-unique-abbrev-comments:
  diff_unique_abbrev(): document its assumption and limitation
2016-10-28 09:01:23 -07:00
4efd8e64d3 Merge branch 'rs/pretty-format-color-doc-fix' into maint
Small doc update.

* rs/pretty-format-color-doc-fix:
  pretty: fix document link for color specification
2016-10-28 09:01:23 -07:00
9a82d8fd0b Merge branch 'js/reset-usage' into maint
Message fix-up.

* js/reset-usage:
  reset: fix usage
2016-10-28 09:01:22 -07:00
311811b39f Merge branch 'po/fix-doc-merge-base-illustration' into maint
Some AsciiDoc formatter mishandles a displayed illustration with
tabs in it.  Adjust a few of them in merge-base documentation to
work around them.

* po/fix-doc-merge-base-illustration:
  doc: fix the 'revert a faulty merge' ASCII art tab spacing
  doc: fix merge-base ASCII art tab spacing
2016-10-28 09:01:21 -07:00
b943a213fe Merge branch 'jk/tap-verbose-fix' into maint
The Travis CI configuration we ship ran the tests with --verbose
option but this risks non-TAP output that happens to be "ok" to be
misinterpreted as TAP signalling a test that passed.  This resulted
in unnecessary failure.  This has been corrected by introducing a
new mode to run our tests in the test harness to send the verbose
output separately to the log file.

* jk/tap-verbose-fix:
  test-lib: bail out when "-v" used under "prove"
  travis: use --verbose-log test option
  test-lib: add --verbose-log option
  test-lib: handle TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY with spaces
2016-10-28 09:01:21 -07:00
dce97d6ec7 Merge branch 'tg/add-chmod+x-fix' into maint
A hot-fix for a test added by a recent topic that went to both
'master' and 'maint' already.

* tg/add-chmod+x-fix:
  t3700: fix broken test under !SANITY
2016-10-28 09:01:19 -07:00
c8386962d6 Merge branch 'bw/submodule-branch-dot-doc' into maint
Recent git allows submodule.<name>.branch to use a special token
"." instead of the branch name; the documentation has been updated
to describe it.

* bw/submodule-branch-dot-doc:
  submodules doc: update documentation for "." used for submodule branches
2016-10-28 09:01:19 -07:00
63cf124c24 Merge branch 'jk/tighten-alloc' into maint
Protect our code from over-eager compilers.

* jk/tighten-alloc:
  inline xalloc_flex() into FLEXPTR_ALLOC_MEM
  avoid pointer arithmetic involving NULL in FLEX_ALLOC_MEM
2016-10-28 09:01:18 -07:00
39000e8499 Merge branch 'jk/fetch-quick-tag-following' into maint
When fetching from a remote that has many tags that are irrelevant
to branches we are following, we used to waste way too many cycles
when checking if the object pointed at by a tag (that we are not
going to fetch!) exists in our repository too carefully.

* jk/fetch-quick-tag-following:
  fetch: use "quick" has_sha1_file for tag following
2016-10-28 09:01:17 -07:00
96ec83ce52 Merge branch 'jk/merge-base-fork-point-without-reflog' into maint
"git rebase" immediately after "git clone" failed to find the fork
point from the upstream.

* jk/merge-base-fork-point-without-reflog:
  merge-base: handle --fork-point without reflog
2016-10-28 09:01:17 -07:00
a5406125cc Merge branch 'dk/worktree-dup-checkout-with-bare-is-ok' into maint
In a worktree connected to a repository elsewhere, created via "git
worktree", "git checkout" attempts to protect users from confusion
by refusing to check out a branch that is already checked out in
another worktree.  However, this also prevented checking out a
branch, which is designated as the primary branch of a bare
reopsitory, in a worktree that is connected to the bare
repository.  The check has been corrected to allow it.

* dk/worktree-dup-checkout-with-bare-is-ok:
  worktree: allow the main brach of a bare repository to be checked out
2016-10-28 09:01:16 -07:00
a42539f7de Merge branch 'sb/submodule-config-doc-drop-path' into maint
The "submodule.<name>.path" stored in .gitmodules is never copied
to .git/config and such a key in .git/config has no meaning, but
the documentation described it and submodule.<name>.url next to
each other as if both belong to .git/config.  This has been fixed.

* sb/submodule-config-doc-drop-path:
  documentation: improve submodule.<name>.{url, path} description
2016-10-28 09:01:16 -07:00
42a9c6c0e2 Merge branch 'jk/ref-symlink-loop' into maint
A stray symbolic link in $GIT_DIR/refs/ directory could make name
resolution loop forever, which has been corrected.

* jk/ref-symlink-loop:
  files_read_raw_ref: prevent infinite retry loops in general
  files_read_raw_ref: avoid infinite loop on broken symlinks
2016-10-28 09:01:15 -07:00
e2f1d2c317 Merge branch 'nd/commit-p-doc' into maint
Documentation for "git commit" was updated to clarify that "commit
-p <paths>" adds to the current contents of the index to come up
with what to commit.

* nd/commit-p-doc:
  git-commit.txt: clarify --patch mode with pathspec
2016-10-28 09:01:15 -07:00
839b993f1f Merge branch 'jk/clone-copy-alternates-fix' into maint
"git clone" of a local repository can be done at the filesystem
level, but the codepath did not check errors while copying and
adjusting the file that lists alternate object stores.

* jk/clone-copy-alternates-fix:
  clone: detect errors in normalize_path_copy
2016-10-28 09:01:14 -07:00
50a6f65c2d Merge branch 'dt/http-empty-auth' into maint
http.emptyauth configuration is a way to allow an empty username to
pass when attempting to authenticate using mechanisms like
Kerberos.  We took an unspecified (NULL) username and sent ":"
(i.e. no username, no password) to CURLOPT_USERPWD, but did not do
the same when the username is explicitly set to an empty string.

* dt/http-empty-auth:
  http: http.emptyauth should allow empty (not just NULL) usernames
2016-10-28 09:01:14 -07:00
c00837c48a Merge branch 'dp/autoconf-curl-ssl' into maint
The ./configure script generated from configure.ac was taught how
to detect support of SSL by libcurl better.

* dp/autoconf-curl-ssl:
  ./configure.ac: detect SSL in libcurl using curl-config
2016-10-28 09:01:13 -07:00
f98180a982 Merge branch 'ak/curl-imap-send-explicit-scheme' into maint
When we started cURL to talk to imap server when a new enough
version of cURL library is available, we forgot to explicitly add
imap(s):// before the destination.  To some folks, that didn't work
and the library tried to make HTTP(s) requests instead.

* ak/curl-imap-send-explicit-scheme:
  imap-send: Tell cURL to use imap:// or imaps://
2016-10-28 09:01:13 -07:00
9338904a5f Merge branch 'jt/fetch-pack-in-vain-count-with-stateless' into maint
When "git fetch" tries to find where the history of the repository
it runs in has diverged from what the other side has, it has a
mechanism to avoid digging too deep into irrelevant side branches.
This however did not work well over the "smart-http" transport due
to a design bug, which has been fixed.

* jt/fetch-pack-in-vain-count-with-stateless:
  fetch-pack: do not reset in_vain on non-novel acks
2016-10-28 09:01:12 -07:00
68eb7b1b52 Merge branch 'js/regexec-buf' into maint
A follow-up to an already graduated topic.

* js/regexec-buf:
  configure.ac: improve description of NO_REGEX test
2016-10-28 09:01:12 -07:00
76796d424a Merge branch 'rs/c-auto-resets-attributes' into maint
When "%C(auto)" appears at the very beginning of the pretty format
string, it did not need to issue the reset sequence, but it did.
This is a small optimization to already graduated topic.

* rs/c-auto-resets-attributes:
  pretty: avoid adding reset for %C(auto) if output is empty
  pretty: let %C(auto) reset all attributes
2016-10-28 09:01:11 -07:00
03969dff8f Merge branch 'yk/git-tag-remove-mention-of-old-layout-in-doc' into maint
Shorten description of auto-following in "git tag" by removing a
mention of historical remotes layout which is not relevant to the
main topic.

* yk/git-tag-remove-mention-of-old-layout-in-doc:
  doc: remove reference to the traditional layout in git-tag.txt
2016-10-28 09:01:10 -07:00
4259d693fc Documentation/fmt-merge-msg: fix markup in example
Use at least 4 delimiting dashes that are required for
ListingBlock to get this block rendered as verbatim text.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Christ <contact@stefanchrist.eu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-28 05:51:51 -07:00
28fab7b23d valgrind: support test helpers
Tests run with --valgrind call git commands through a wrapper script
that invokes valgrind on them.  This script (valgrind.sh) is in turn
invoked through symlinks created for each command in t/valgrind/bin/.

Since e6e7530d (test helpers: move test-* to t/helper/ subdirectory)
these symlinks have been broken for test helpers -- they point to the
old locations in the root of the build directory.  Fix that by teaching
the code for creating the links about the new location of the binaries,
and do the same in the wrapper script to allow it to find its payload.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-27 23:33:53 -07:00
5c238e29a8 git-compat-util: move content inside ifdef/endif guards
Commit 3f2e2297b9 (add an extra level of indirection to
main(), 2016-07-01) added a declaration to git-compat-util.h,
but it was accidentally placed after the final #endif that
guards against multiple inclusions.

This doesn't have any actual impact on the code, since it's
not incorrect to repeat a function declaration in C. But
it's a bad habit, and makes it more likely for somebody else
to make the same mistake. It also defeats gcc's optimization
to avoid opening header files whose contents are completely
guarded.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-27 10:36:45 -07:00
bb84735c80 hex: make wraparound of the index into ring-buffer explicit
Overflow is defined for unsigned integers, but not for signed ones.

We could make the ring-buffer index in sha1_to_hex() and
get_pathname() unsigned to be on the safe side to resolve this, but
let's make it explicit that we are wrapping around at whatever the
number of elements the ring-buffer has.  The compiler is smart enough
to turn modulus into bitmask for these codepaths that use
ring-buffers of a size that is a power of 2.

Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-26 10:54:11 -07:00
6750f62699 doc: fix the 'revert a faulty merge' ASCII art tab spacing
The asciidoctor doc-tool stack does not always respect the 'tab = 8 spaces' rule
expectation, particularly for the Git-for-Windows generated html pages. This
follows on from the 'doc: fix merge-base ASCII art tab spacing' fix.

Use just spaces within the block of the ascii art.

All other *.txt ascii art containing three dashes has been checked.
Asciidoctor correctly formats the other art blocks that do contain tabs.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-24 18:09:46 -07:00
6bdb0083be daemon: detect and reject too-long paths
When we are checking the path via path_ok(), we use some
fixed PATH_MAX buffers. We write into them via snprintf(),
so there's no possibility of overflow, but it does mean we
may silently truncate the path, leading to potentially
confusing errors when the partial path does not exist.

We're better off to reject the path explicitly.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-24 09:59:29 -07:00
614fe01521 test-lib: bail out when "-v" used under "prove"
When there is a TAP harness consuming the output of our test
scripts, the "--verbose" breaks the output by mingling
test command output with TAP. Because the TAP::Harness
module used by "prove" is fairly lenient, this _usually_
works, but it violates the spec, and things get very
confusing if the commands happen to output a line that looks
like TAP (e.g., the word "ok" on its own line).

Let's detect this situation and complain. Just calling
error() isn't great, though; prove will tell us that the
script failed, but the message doesn't make it through to
the user. Instead, we can use the special TAP signal "Bail
out!". This not only shows the message to the user, but
instructs the harness to stop running the tests entirely.
This is exactly what we want here, as the problem is in the
command-line options, and every test script would produce
the same error.

The result looks like this (the first "Bailout called" line
is in red if prove uses color on your terminal):

 $ make GIT_TEST_OPTS='--verbose --tee'
 rm -f -r 'test-results'
 *** prove ***
 Bailout called.  Further testing stopped:  verbose mode forbidden under TAP harness; try --verbose-log
 FAILED--Further testing stopped: verbose mode forbidden under TAP harness; try --verbose-log
 Makefile:39: recipe for target 'prove' failed
 make: *** [prove] Error 255

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-24 09:26:00 -07:00
041c72de10 travis: use --verbose-log test option
Because we run the tests via "prove", the output from
"--verbose" may interfere with our TAP output. Using
"--verbose-log" solves this while letting us retain our
on-disk log.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-21 09:59:31 -07:00
452320f1f5 test-lib: add --verbose-log option
The "--verbose" option redirects output from arbitrary
test commands to stdout. This is useful for examining the
output manually, like:

  ./t5547-push-quarantine.sh -v | less

But it also means that the output is intermingled with the
TAP directives, which can confuse a TAP parser like "prove".
This has always been a potential problem, but became an
issue recently when one test happened to output the word
"ok" on a line by itself, which prove interprets as a test
success:

  $ prove t5547-push-quarantine.sh :: -v
  t5547-push-quarantine.sh .. 1/? To dest.git
   * [new branch]      HEAD -> master
  To dest.git
   ! [remote rejected] reject -> reject (pre-receive hook declined)
  error: failed to push some refs to 'dest.git'
  fatal: git cat-file d08c8eba97f4e683ece08654c7c8d2ba0c03b129: bad file
  t5547-push-quarantine.sh .. Failed -1/4 subtests

  Test Summary Report
  -------------------
  t5547-push-quarantine.sh (Wstat: 0 Tests: 5 Failed: 0)
    Parse errors: Tests out of sequence.  Found (2) but expected (3)
                  Tests out of sequence.  Found (3) but expected (4)
                  Tests out of sequence.  Found (4) but expected (5)
                  Bad plan.  You planned 4 tests but ran 5.
  Files=1, Tests=5,  0 wallclock secs ( 0.01 usr +  0.01 sys =  0.02 CPU)
  Result: FAIL

One answer is "if it hurts, don't do it", but that's not
quite the whole story. The Travis tests use "--verbose
--tee" so that they can get the benefit of prove's parallel
options, along with a verbose log in case there is a
failure. We just need the verbose output to go to the log,
but keep stdout clean.

Getting this right turns out to be surprisingly difficult.
Here's the progression of alternatives I considered:

 1. Add an option to write verbose output to stderr. This is
    hard to capture, though, because we want each test to
    have its own log (because they're all run in parallel
    and the jumbled output would be useless).

 2. Add an option to write verbose output to a file in
    test-results. This works, but the log is missing all of
    the non-verbose output, which gives context.

 3. Like (2), but teach say_color() to additionally output
    to the log. This mostly works, but misses any output
    that happens outside of the say() functions (which isn't
    a lot, but is a potential maintenance headache).

 4. Like (2), but make the log file the same as the "--tee"
    file. That almost works, but now we have two processes
    opening the same file. That gives us two separate
    descriptors, each with their own idea of the current
    position. They'll each start writing at offset 0, and
    overwrite each other's data.

 5. Like (4), but in each case open the file for appending.
    That atomically positions each write at the end of the
    file.

    It's possible we may still get sheared writes between
    the two processes, but this is already the case when
    writing to stdout. It's not a problem in practice
    because the test harness generally waits for snippets to
    finish before writing the TAP output.

    We can ignore buffering issues with tee, because POSIX
    mandates that it does not buffer. Likewise, POSIX
    specifies "tee -a", so it should be available
    everywhere.

This patch implements option (5), which seems to work well
in practice.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-21 09:54:35 -07:00
925bdc928e test-lib: handle TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY with spaces
We are careful in test_done to handle a results directory
with a space in it, but the "--tee" code path does not.
Doing:

  export TEST_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY='/tmp/path with spaces'
  ./t000-init.sh --tee

results in errors. Let's consistently double-quote our path
variables so that this works.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-21 09:54:34 -07:00
dcfafc5214 Git.pm: add comment pointing to t9000
parse_mailboxes should probably eventually be completely equivalent to
Mail::Address, and if this happens we can drop the Mail::Address
dependency. Add a comment in the code reminding the current state of the
code, and point to the corresponding failing test to help future
contributors to get it right.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-21 09:48:26 -07:00
8a420edbd2 t9000-addresses: update expected results after fix
e3fdbcc8e1 (parse_mailboxes: accept extra text after <...> address,
2016-10-13) improved our in-house address parser and made it closer to
Mail::Address. As a consequence, some tests comparing it to
Mail::Address now pass, but e3fdbcc8e1 forgot to update the test.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-21 09:47:51 -07:00
5dd05ebf6f doc: fix merge-base ASCII art tab spacing
The doc-tool stack does not always respect the 'tab = 8 spaces' rule,
particularly the git-scm doc pages https://git-scm.com/docs/git-merge-base
and the Git generated html pages.

Use just spaces within the block of the ascii art.

Noticed when reviewing Junio's suggested update to `git merge-base`
https://public-inbox.org/git/xmqqmvi2sj8f.fsf@gitster.mtv.corp.google.com/T/#u

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-21 09:46:48 -07:00
749a2279a4 doc: remove reference to the traditional layout in git-tag.txt
This is the only place in the documentation that the traditional layout
is mentioned, and it is confusing. Remove it.

* Documentation/git-tag.txt: Here.

Signed-off-by: Younes Khoudli <younes.khoudli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-20 09:31:42 -07:00
76e368c378 t3700: fix broken test under !SANITY
An "add --chmod=+x" test recently added by 610d55af0f ("add: modify
already added files when --chmod is given", 2016-09-14) used "xfoo3"
as a test file.  The paths xfoo[1-3] were used by earlier tests for
symbolic links but they were expected to have been removed by the
time the execution reached this new test.

The removal with "git reset --hard" however happened in a pair of
earlier tests, both of which are protected by POSIXPERM,SANITY
prerequisites.  Platforms and test environments that lacked these
would have seen xfoo3 as a leftover symbolic link that points at
somewhere else at this point of the sequence, and the chmod test
would have given a wrong result.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-20 09:19:05 -07:00
15ef78008a submodules doc: update documentation for "." used for submodule branches
4d7bc52b17 ("submodule update: allow '.' for branch value",
2016-08-03) adopted from Gerrit a feature to set "." as a special
value of "submodule.<name>.branch" in .gitmodules file to indicate
that the tracking branch in the submodule should be the same as the
current branch in the superproject.

Update the documentation to describe this.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Williams <bmwill@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-19 14:58:53 -07:00
86009f32bb t0040: convert all possible tests to use test-parse-options --expect
Use "test-parse-options --expect" to rewrite the tests to avoid checking
the whole variable dump by just testing what is required.

This commit is a follow-up to 8ca65aebad ("t0040: convert a few
tests to use test-parse-options --expect", 2016-05-06).

Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-17 14:45:01 -07:00
0ac52a38e8 inline xalloc_flex() into FLEXPTR_ALLOC_MEM
Allocate and copy directly in FLEXPTR_ALLOC_MEM and remove the now
unused helper function xalloc_flex().  The resulting code is shorter
and the offset arithmetic is a bit simpler.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-17 14:42:56 -07:00
e9451782cf avoid pointer arithmetic involving NULL in FLEX_ALLOC_MEM
Calculating offsets involving a NULL pointer is undefined.  It works in
practice (for now?), but we should not rely on it.  Allocate first and
then simply refer to the flexible array member by its name instead of
performing pointer arithmetic up front.  The resulting code is slightly
shorter, easier to read and doesn't rely on undefined behaviour.

NB: The cast to a (non-const) void pointer is necessary to keep support
for flexible array members declared as const.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-17 14:42:31 -07:00
23415c26fe Merge tag 'l10n-2.10.0-rnd2.4' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po into maint
l10n-2.10.0-rnd2.4

* tag 'l10n-2.10.0-rnd2.4' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: translate 260 new messages
  l10n: de.po: fix translation of autostash
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
2016-10-17 13:27:38 -07:00
4dc2ce92fa Merge branch 'russian-l10n' of https://github.com/DJm00n/git-po-ru
* 'russian-l10n' of https://github.com/DJm00n/git-po-ru:
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
2016-10-16 20:11:41 +08:00
5827a03545 fetch: use "quick" has_sha1_file for tag following
When we auto-follow tags in a fetch, we look at all of the
tags advertised by the remote and fetch ones where we don't
already have the tag, but we do have the object it peels to.
This involves a lot of calls to has_sha1_file(), some of
which we can reasonably expect to fail. Since 45e8a74
(has_sha1_file: re-check pack directory before giving up,
2013-08-30), this may cause many calls to
reprepare_packed_git(), which is potentially expensive.

This has gone unnoticed for several years because it
requires a fairly unique setup to matter:

  1. You need to have a lot of packs on the client side to
     make reprepare_packed_git() expensive (the most
     expensive part is finding duplicates in an unsorted
     list, which is currently quadratic).

  2. You need a large number of tag refs on the server side
     that are candidates for auto-following (i.e., that the
     client doesn't have). Each one triggers a re-read of
     the pack directory.

  3. Under normal circumstances, the client would
     auto-follow those tags and after one large fetch, (2)
     would no longer be true. But if those tags point to
     history which is disconnected from what the client
     otherwise fetches, then it will never auto-follow, and
     those candidates will impact it on every fetch.

So when all three are true, each fetch pays an extra
O(nr_tags * nr_packs^2) cost, mostly in string comparisons
on the pack names. This was exacerbated by 47bf4b0
(prepare_packed_git_one: refactor duplicate-pack check,
2014-06-30) which uses a slightly more expensive string
check, under the assumption that the duplicate check doesn't
happen very often (and it shouldn't; the real problem here
is how often we are calling reprepare_packed_git()).

This patch teaches fetch to use HAS_SHA1_QUICK to sacrifice
accuracy for speed, in cases where we might be racy with a
simultaneous repack. This is similar to the fix in 0eeb077
(index-pack: avoid excessive re-reading of pack directory,
2015-06-09). As with that case, it's OK for has_sha1_file()
occasionally say "no I don't have it" when we do, because
the worst case is not a corruption, but simply that we may
fail to auto-follow a tag that points to it.

Here are results from the included perf script, which sets
up a situation similar to the one described above:

Test            HEAD^               HEAD
----------------------------------------------------------
5550.4: fetch   11.21(10.42+0.78)   0.08(0.04+0.02) -99.3%

Reported-by: Vegard Nossum <vegard.nossum@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-14 11:31:32 -07:00
e3fdbcc8e1 parse_mailboxes: accept extra text after <...> address
The test introduced in this commit succeeds without the patch to Git.pm
if Mail::Address is installed, but fails otherwise because our in-house
parser does not accept any text after the email address. They succeed
both with and without Mail::Address after this commit.

Mail::Address accepts extra text and considers it as part of the name,
iff the address is surrounded with <...>. The implementation mimics
this behavior as closely as possible.

This mostly restores the behavior we had before b1c8a11 (send-email:
allow multiple emails using --cc, --to and --bcc, 2015-06-30), but we
keep the possibility to handle comma-separated lists.

Reported-by: Larry Finger <Larry.Finger@lwfinger.net>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-14 10:06:09 -07:00
171c646f8c worktree: allow the main brach of a bare repository to be checked out
In bare repositories, get_worktrees() still returns the main repository,
so git worktree list can show it. ignore it in find_shared_symref so we
can still check out the main branch.

Signed-off-by: Dennis Kaarsemaker <dennis@kaarsemaker.net>
Acked-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-14 09:58:58 -07:00
4f21454b55 merge-base: handle --fork-point without reflog
The --fork-point option looks in the reflog to try to find
where a derived branch forked from a base branch. However,
if the reflog for the base branch is totally empty (as it
commonly is right after cloning, which does not write a
reflog entry), then our for_each_reflog call will not find
any entries, and we will come up with no merge base, even
though there may be one with the current tip of the base.

We can fix this by just adding the current tip to
our list of collected entries.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-12 14:30:16 -07:00
13092a916d cocci: refactor common patterns to use xstrdup_or_null()
d64ea0f83b ("git-compat-util: add xstrdup_or_null helper",
2015-01-12) added a handy wrapper that allows us to get a duplicate
of a string or NULL if the original is NULL, but a handful of
codepath predate its introduction or just weren't aware of it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-12 11:22:10 -07:00
6fcf786e11 l10n: de.po: translate 260 new messages
Translate 260 new message came from git.pot updates in 9fa976f (l10n:
git.pot: v2.10.0 round 1 (248 new, 56 removed)) and 5bd166d (l10n:
git.pot: v2.10.0 round 2 (12 new, 44 removed)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthias Rüster <matthias.ruester@gmail.com>
2016-10-12 18:31:13 +02:00
74eeaf7b72 Start preparing for 2.10.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-11 14:24:02 -07:00
6823506f36 Merge branch 'jk/verify-packfile-gently' into maint
A low-level function verify_packfile() was meant to show errors
that were detected without dying itself, but under some conditions
it didn't and died instead, which has been fixed.

* jk/verify-packfile-gently:
  verify_packfile: check pack validity before accessing data
2016-10-11 14:21:36 -07:00
fdb70b16a0 Merge branch 'jc/worktree-config' into maint
"git worktree", even though it used the default_abbrev setting that
ought to be affected by core.abbrev configuration variable, ignored
the variable setting.  The command has been taught to read the
default set of configuration variables to correct this.

* jc/worktree-config:
  worktree: honor configuration variables
2016-10-11 14:21:17 -07:00
f7f0a87e0a Merge branch 'jc/verify-loose-object-header' into maint
Codepaths that read from an on-disk loose object were too loose in
validating what they are reading is a proper object file and
sometimes read past the data they read from the disk, which has
been corrected.  H/t to Gustavo Grieco for reporting.

* jc/verify-loose-object-header:
  unpack_sha1_header(): detect malformed object header
  streaming: make sure to notice corrupt object
2016-10-11 14:21:03 -07:00
0bc409dab9 Merge branch 'rs/git-gui-use-modern-git-merge-syntax' into maint
The original command line syntax for "git merge", which was "git
merge <msg> HEAD <parent>...", has been deprecated for quite some
time, and "git gui" was the last in-tree user of the syntax.  This
is finally fixed, so that we can move forward with the deprecation.

* rs/git-gui-use-modern-git-merge-syntax:
  git-gui: stop using deprecated merge syntax
2016-10-11 14:20:37 -07:00
e1eb84cccb Merge branch 'kd/mailinfo-quoted-string' into maint
An author name, that spelled a backslash-quoted double quote in the
human readable part "My \"double quoted\" name", was not unquoted
correctly while applying a patch from a piece of e-mail.

* kd/mailinfo-quoted-string:
  mailinfo: unescape quoted-pair in header fields
  t5100-mailinfo: replace common path prefix with variable
2016-10-11 14:20:32 -07:00
54a9f14743 Merge branch 'pb/rev-list-reverse-with-count' into maint
Doc update to clarify what "log -3 --reverse" does.

* pb/rev-list-reverse-with-count:
  rev-list-options: clarify the usage of --reverse
2016-10-11 14:20:06 -07:00
9534df9868 Merge branch 'jc/blame-abbrev' into maint
Almost everybody uses DEFAULT_ABBREV to refer to the default
setting for the abbreviation, but "git blame" peeked into
underlying variable bypassing the macro for no good reason.

* jc/blame-abbrev:
  blame: use DEFAULT_ABBREV macro
2016-10-11 14:19:52 -07:00
18fd96f1d7 Merge branch 'jk/graph-padding-fix' into maint
The "graph" API used in "git log --graph" miscounted the number of
output columns consumed so far when drawing a padding line, which
has been fixed; this did not affect any existing code as nobody
tried to write anything after the padding on such a line, though.

* jk/graph-padding-fix:
  graph: fix extra spaces in graph_padding_line
2016-10-11 14:19:03 -07:00
1f253d88fa Merge branch 'sg/ref-filter-parse-optim' into maint
The code that parses the format parameter of for-each-ref command
has seen a micro-optimization.

* sg/ref-filter-parse-optim:
  ref-filter: strip format option after a field name only once while parsing
2016-10-11 14:18:57 -07:00
a813b19190 Merge branch 'rs/copy-array' into maint
Code cleanup.

* rs/copy-array:
  use COPY_ARRAY
  add COPY_ARRAY
2016-10-11 14:18:32 -07:00
f7e2e592cf Merge branch 'dt/mailinfo' into maint
* dt/mailinfo:
  add David Turner's Two Sigma address
2016-10-11 14:17:52 -07:00
641c900b2c reset: fix usage
The <tree-ish> parameter is actually optional (see man page).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-11 12:27:39 -07:00
30cfe72d37 pretty: fix document link for color specification
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-11 10:07:09 -07:00
72710165c9 documentation: improve submodule.<name>.{url, path} description
Unlike the url variable a user cannot override the the path variable,
as it is part of the content together with the gitlink at the given
path. To avoid confusion do not mention the .path variable in the config
section and rely on the documentation provided in gitmodules[5].

Enhance the description of submodule.<name>.url and mention its two use
cases separately.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-11 10:03:36 -07:00
842a516cb0 configure.ac: improve description of NO_REGEX test
The commit 2f8952250a ("regex: add regexec_buf() that can work on a
non NUL-terminated string", 2016-09-21) changed description of
NO_REGEX build config variable to be more neutral, and actually say
that it is about support for REG_STARTEND.  Change description in
configure.ac to match.

Change also the test message and variable name to match.  The test
just checks that REG_STARTEND is #defined.

Issue-found-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narębski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-10 16:15:15 -07:00
a94bb68397 use strbuf_add_unique_abbrev() for adding short hashes, part 3
Call strbuf_add_unique_abbrev() to add abbreviated hashes to strbufs
instead of taking detours through find_unique_abbrev() and its static
buffer.  This is shorter in most cases and a bit more efficient.

The changes here are not easily handled by a semantic patch because
they involve removing temporary variables and deconstructing format
strings for strbuf_addf().

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-10 11:58:25 -07:00
39ea59a257 remove unnecessary NULL check before free(3)
free(3) handles NULL pointers just fine.  Add a semantic patch for
removing unnecessary NULL checks before calling this function, and
apply it on the code base.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-10 11:37:41 -07:00
e8c42cb9ce files_read_raw_ref: prevent infinite retry loops in general
Limit the number of retries to 3. That should be adequate to
prevent any races, while preventing the possibility of
infinite loops if the logic fails to handle any other
possible error modes correctly.

After the fix in the previous commit, there's no known way
to trigger an infinite loop, but I did manually verify that
this fixes the test in that commit even when the code change
is not applied.

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>
2016-10-10 10:53:33 -07:00
3f7bd767ed files_read_raw_ref: avoid infinite loop on broken symlinks
Our ref resolution first runs lstat() on any path we try to
look up, because we want to treat symlinks specially (by
resolving them manually and considering them symrefs). But
if the results of `readlink` do _not_ look like a ref, we
fall through to treating it like a normal file, and just
read the contents of the linked path.

Since fcb7c76 (resolve_ref_unsafe(): close race condition
reading loose refs, 2013-06-19), that "normal file" code
path will stat() the file and if we see ENOENT, will jump
back to the lstat(), thinking we've seen inconsistent
results between the two calls. But for a symbolic ref, this
isn't a race: the lstat() found the symlink, and the stat()
is looking at the path it points to. We end up in an
infinite loop calling lstat() and stat().

We can fix this by avoiding the retry-on-inconsistent jump
when we know that we found a symlink. While we're at it,
let's add a comment explaining why the symlink case gets to
this code in the first place; without that, it is not
obvious that the correct solution isn't to avoid the stat()
code path entirely.

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>
2016-10-10 10:53:16 -07:00
22d3b8de1b clone: detect errors in normalize_path_copy
When we are copying the alternates from the source
repository, if we find a relative path that is too deep for
the source (e.g., "../../../objects" from "/repo.git/objects"),
then normalize_path_copy will report an error and leave
trash in the buffer, which we will add to our new alternates
file. Instead, let's detect the error, print a warning, and
skip copying that alternate.

There's no need to die. The relative path is probably just
broken cruft in the source repo. If it turns out to have
been important for accessing some objects, we rely on other
parts of the clone to detect that, just as they would with a
missing object in the source repo itself (though note that
clones with "-s" are inherently local, which may do fewer
object-quality checks in the first place).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-05 10:44:39 -07:00
7431596ab1 git-commit.txt: clarify --patch mode with pathspec
How pathspec is used, with and without --interactive/--patch, is
different. But this is not clear from the document. These changes hint
the user to keep reading (to option #5) instead of stopping at #2 and
assuming --patch/--interactive behaves the same way.

And since all the options listed here always mention how the index is
involved (or not) in the final commit, add that bit for #5 as well. This
"on top of the index" is implied when you head over git-add(1), but if
you just go straight to the "Interactive mode" and not read what git-add
is for, you may miss it.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-05 10:17:40 -07:00
5275c3081c http: http.emptyauth should allow empty (not just NULL) usernames
When using Kerberos authentication with newer versions of libcurl,
CURLOPT_USERPWD must be set to a value, even if it is an empty value.
The value is never sent to the server.  Previous versions of libcurl
did not require this variable to be set.  One way that some users
express the empty username/password is http://:@gitserver.example.com,
which http.emptyauth was designed to support.  Another, equivalent,
URL is http://@gitserver.example.com.  The latter leads to a username
of zero-length, rather than a NULL username, but CURLOPT_USERPWD still
needs to be set (if http.emptyauth is set).  Do so.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twosigma.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-04 12:02:00 -07:00
6406bdc0b9 Git 2.10.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-03 13:24:18 -07:00
11738ddf48 Merge branch 'jk/ident-ai-canonname-could-be-null' into maint
In the codepath that comes up with the hostname to be used in an
e-mail when the user didn't tell us, we looked at ai_canonname
field in struct addrinfo without making sure it is not NULL first.

* jk/ident-ai-canonname-could-be-null:
  ident: handle NULL ai_canonname
2016-10-03 13:22:32 -07:00
3d0049ea35 Merge branch 'jk/doc-cvs-update' into maint
Documentation around tools to import from CVS was fairly outdated.

* jk/doc-cvs-update:
  docs/cvs-migration: mention cvsimport caveats
  docs/cvs-migration: update link to cvsps homepage
  docs/cvsimport: prefer cvs-fast-export to parsecvs
2016-10-03 13:22:25 -07:00
f4315eed7f Merge branch 'jk/pack-tag-of-tag' into maint
"git pack-objects --include-tag" was taught that when we know that
we are sending an object C, we want a tag B that directly points at
C but also a tag A that points at the tag B.  We used to miss the
intermediate tag B in some cases.

* jk/pack-tag-of-tag:
  pack-objects: walk tag chains for --include-tag
  t5305: simplify packname handling
  t5305: use "git -C"
  t5305: drop "dry-run" of unpack-objects
  t5305: move cleanup into test block
2016-10-03 13:22:13 -07:00
e94ce1394e ref-filter: strip format option after a field name only once while parsing
When parse_ref_filter_atom() iterates over a list of valid atoms to
check that a field name is one of them, it has to strip the optional
colon-separated format option suffix that might follow the field name.
However, it does so inside the loop, i.e. it performs the exact same
stripping over and over again.

Move stripping the format option suffix out of that loop, so it's only
performed once for each parsed field name.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-03 12:47:19 -07:00
353d84c537 coccicheck: make transformation for strbuf_addf(sb, "...") more precise
We can replace strbuf_addf() calls that just add a simple string with
calls to strbuf_addstr() to make the intent clearer.  We need to be
careful if that string contains printf format specifications like %%,
though, as a simple replacement would change the output.

Add checks to the semantic patch to make sure we only perform the
transformation if the second argument is a string constant (possibly
translated) that doesn't contain any percent signs.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-03 12:20:20 -07:00
d709f1fb9d diff_unique_abbrev(): document its assumption and limitation
This function is used to add "..." to displayed object names in
"diff --raw --abbrev[=<n>]" output.  It bases its behaviour on an
untold assumption that the abbreviation length requested by the
caller is "reasonble", i.e. most of the objects will abbreviate
within the requested length and the resulting length would never
exceed it by more than a few hexdigits (otherwise the resulting
columns would not align).  Explain that in a comment.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-30 18:06:50 -07:00
82b83da8d3 pretty: avoid adding reset for %C(auto) if output is empty
We emit an escape sequence for resetting color and attribute for
%C(auto) to make sure automatic coloring is displayed as intended.
Stop doing that if the output strbuf is empty, i.e. when %C(auto)
appears at the start of the format string, because then there is no
need for a reset and we save a few bytes in the output.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-29 20:44:09 -07:00
92d426662b Prepare for 2.10.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-29 16:52:15 -07:00
36f64036f6 Merge branch 'tg/add-chmod+x-fix' into maint
"git add --chmod=+x <pathspec>" added recently only toggled the
executable bit for paths that are either new or modified. This has
been corrected to flip the executable bit for all paths that match
the given pathspec.

* tg/add-chmod+x-fix:
  t3700-add: do not check working tree file mode without POSIXPERM
  t3700-add: create subdirectory gently
  add: modify already added files when --chmod is given
  read-cache: introduce chmod_index_entry
  update-index: add test for chmod flags
2016-09-29 16:49:47 -07:00
bf3a55a21b Merge branch 'et/add-chmod-x' into maint
"git add --chmod=+x" added recently lacked documentation, which has
been corrected.

* et/add-chmod-x:
  add: document the chmod option
2016-09-29 16:49:46 -07:00
cec5f0bf80 Merge branch 'rt/rebase-i-broken-insn-advise' into maint
When "git rebase -i" is given a broken instruction, it told the
user to fix it with "--edit-todo", but didn't say what the step
after that was (i.e. "--continue").

* rt/rebase-i-broken-insn-advise:
  rebase -i: improve advice on bad instruction lines
2016-09-29 16:49:46 -07:00
d2a4131ec4 Merge branch 'ls/travis-homebrew-path-fix' into maint
The procedure to build Git on Mac OS X for Travis CI hardcoded the
internal directory structure we assumed HomeBrew uses, which was a
no-no.  The procedure has been updated to ask HomeBrew things we
need to know to fix this.

* ls/travis-homebrew-path-fix:
  travis-ci: ask homebrew for its path instead of hardcoding it
2016-09-29 16:49:45 -07:00
300e95f7df Merge branch 'js/regexec-buf' into maint
Some codepaths in "git diff" used regexec(3) on a buffer that was
mmap(2)ed, which may not have a terminating NUL, leading to a read
beyond the end of the mapped region.  This was fixed by introducing
a regexec_buf() helper that takes a <ptr,len> pair with REG_STARTEND
extension.

* js/regexec-buf:
  regex: use regexec_buf()
  regex: add regexec_buf() that can work on a non NUL-terminated string
  regex: -G<pattern> feeds a non NUL-terminated string to regexec() and fails
2016-09-29 16:49:45 -07:00
d336b67568 Merge branch 'nd/checkout-disambiguation' into maint
"git checkout <word>" does not follow the usual disambiguation
rules when the <word> can be both a rev and a path, to allow
checking out a branch 'foo' in a project that happens to have a
file 'foo' in the working tree without having to disambiguate.
This was poorly documented and the check was incorrect when the
command was run from a subdirectory.

* nd/checkout-disambiguation:
  checkout: fix ambiguity check in subdir
  checkout.txt: document a common case that ignores ambiguation rules
  checkout: add some spaces between code and comment
2016-09-29 16:49:44 -07:00
7106584137 Merge branch 'ep/doc-check-ref-format-example' into maint
A shell script example in check-ref-format documentation has been
fixed.

* ep/doc-check-ref-format-example:
  git-check-ref-format.txt: fixup documentation
2016-09-29 16:49:43 -07:00
a74a3b7a0b Merge branch 'mm/config-color-ui-default-to-auto' into maint
Documentation for individual configuration variables to control use
of color (like `color.grep`) said that their default value is
'false', instead of saying their default is taken from `color.ui`.
When we updated the default value for color.ui from 'false' to
'auto' quite a while ago, all of them broke.  This has been
corrected.

* mm/config-color-ui-default-to-auto:
  Documentation/config: default for color.* is color.ui
2016-09-29 16:49:42 -07:00
eb293ac8d6 Merge branch 'jk/reduce-gc-aggressive-depth' into maint
"git gc --aggressive" used to limit the delta-chain length to 250,
which is way too deep for gaining additional space savings and is
detrimental for runtime performance.  The limit has been reduced to
50.

* jk/reduce-gc-aggressive-depth:
  gc: default aggressive depth to 50
2016-09-29 16:49:42 -07:00
e25e6f3947 Merge branch 'jk/rebase-i-drop-ident-check' into maint
Even when "git pull --rebase=preserve" (and the underlying "git
rebase --preserve") can complete without creating any new commit
(i.e. fast-forwards), it still insisted on having a usable ident
information (read: user.email is set correctly), which was less
than nice.  As the underlying commands used inside "git rebase"
would fail with a more meaningful error message and advice text
when the bogus ident matters, this extra check was removed.

* jk/rebase-i-drop-ident-check:
  rebase-interactive: drop early check for valid ident
2016-09-29 16:49:41 -07:00
7b7e977b96 Merge branch 'jt/format-patch-base-info-above-sig' into maint
"git format-patch --base=..." feature that was recently added
showed the base commit information after "-- " e-mail signature
line, which turned out to be inconvenient.  The base information
has been moved above the signature line.

* jt/format-patch-base-info-above-sig:
  format-patch: show base info before email signature
2016-09-29 16:49:40 -07:00
08d0f7a531 Merge branch 'ks/perf-build-with-autoconf' into maint
Performance tests done via "t/perf" did not use the same set of
build configuration if the user relied on autoconf generated
configuration.

* ks/perf-build-with-autoconf:
  t/perf/run: copy config.mak.autogen & friends to build area
2016-09-29 16:49:40 -07:00
ef4f0cad4b Merge branch 'rs/xdiff-merge-overlapping-hunks-for-W-context' into maint
"git diff -W" output needs to extend the context backward to
include the header line of the current function and also forward to
include the body of the entire current function up to the header
line of the next one.  This process may have to merge to adjacent
hunks, but the code forgot to do so in some cases.

* rs/xdiff-merge-overlapping-hunks-for-W-context:
  xdiff: fix merging of hunks with -W context and -u context
2016-09-29 16:49:39 -07:00
e007a094d4 Merge branch 'ew/http-do-not-forget-to-call-curl-multi-remove-handle' into maint
The http transport (with curl-multi option, which is the default
these days) failed to remove curl-easy handle from a curlm session,
which led to unnecessary API failures.

* ew/http-do-not-forget-to-call-curl-multi-remove-handle:
  http: always remove curl easy from curlm session on release
  http: consolidate #ifdefs for curl_multi_remove_handle
  http: warn on curl_multi_add_handle failures
2016-09-29 16:49:39 -07:00
35ca3e538d Merge branch 'jk/patch-ids-no-merges' into maint
"git log --cherry-pick" used to include merge commits as candidates
to be matched up with other commits, resulting a lot of wasted time.
The patch-id generation logic has been updated to ignore merges to
avoid the wastage.

* jk/patch-ids-no-merges:
  patch-ids: refuse to compute patch-id for merge commit
  patch-ids: turn off rename detection
2016-09-29 16:49:38 -07:00
d7e74c940b Merge branch 'js/git-gui-commit-gpgsign' into maint
"git commit-tree" stopped reading commit.gpgsign configuration
variable that was meant for Porcelain "git commit" in Git 2.9; we
forgot to update "git gui" to look at the configuration to match
this change.

* js/git-gui-commit-gpgsign:
  git-gui: respect commit.gpgsign again
2016-09-29 16:49:38 -07:00
35ec7fd479 Merge branch 'jk/fix-remote-curl-url-wo-proto' into maint
"git fetch http::/site/path" did not die correctly and segfaulted
instead.

* jk/fix-remote-curl-url-wo-proto:
  remote-curl: handle URLs without protocol
2016-09-29 16:49:38 -07:00
8183592601 Merge branch 'sy/git-gui-i18n-ja' into maint
Update Japanese translation for "git-gui".

* sy/git-gui-i18n-ja:
  git-gui: update Japanese information
  git-gui: update Japanese translation
  git-gui: add Japanese language code
  git-gui: apply po template to Japanese translation
  git-gui: consistently use the same word for "blame" in Japanese
  git-gui: consistently use the same word for "remote" in Japanese
2016-09-29 16:49:37 -07:00
73336299e1 Merge branch 'mr/vcs-svn-printf-ulong' into maint
Code cleanup.

* mr/vcs-svn-printf-ulong:
  vcs-svn/fast_export: fix timestamp fmt specifiers
2016-09-29 16:49:37 -07:00
633212b246 Merge branch 'rs/unpack-trees-reduce-file-scope-global' into maint
Code cleanup.

* rs/unpack-trees-reduce-file-scope-global:
  unpack-trees: pass checkout state explicitly to check_updates()
2016-09-29 16:49:36 -07:00
b0af481993 Merge branch 'rs/strbuf-remove-fix' into maint
Code cleanup.

* rs/strbuf-remove-fix:
  strbuf: use valid pointer in strbuf_remove()
2016-09-29 16:49:35 -07:00
3a3bb36514 Merge branch 'rs/checkout-some-states-are-const' into maint
Code cleanup.

* rs/checkout-some-states-are-const:
  checkout: constify parameters of checkout_stage() and checkout_merged()
2016-09-29 16:49:35 -07:00
9e2c4fa5d3 Merge branch 'bw/pathspec-remove-unused-extern-decl' into maint
Code cleanup.

* bw/pathspec-remove-unused-extern-decl:
  pathspec: remove unnecessary function prototypes
2016-09-29 16:49:34 -07:00
1647793524 graph: fix extra spaces in graph_padding_line
The graph_padding_line() function outputs a series of "|"
columns, and then pads with spaces to graph->width by
calling graph_pad_horizontally(). However, we tell the
latter that we wrote graph->num_columns characters, which is
not true; we also needed spaces between the columns. Let's
keep a count of how many characters we've written, which is
what all the other callers of graph_pad_horizontally() do.

Without this, any output that is written at the end of a
padding line will be bumped out by at least an extra
graph->num_columns spaces. Presumably nobody ever noticed
the bug because there's no code path that actually writes to
the end of a padding line.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-29 16:43:47 -07:00
5293284b4d blame: use DEFAULT_ABBREV macro
This does not make any practical difference in today's code, but
everybody else accesses the default abbreviation length via the
DEFAULT_ABBREV macro.  Make sure this oddball codepath does not
stray from the convention.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-28 14:56:00 -07:00
f357e5de31 mailinfo: unescape quoted-pair in header fields
rfc2822 has provisions for quoted strings in structured header fields,
but also allows for escaping these with so-called quoted-pairs.

The only thing git currently does is removing exterior quotes, but
quotes within are left alone.

Remove exterior quotes and remove escape characters so that they don't
show up in the author field.

Signed-off-by: Kevin Daudt <me@ikke.info>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-28 13:21:18 -07:00
ee4d679f57 t5100-mailinfo: replace common path prefix with variable
Many tests need to store data in a file, and repeat the same pattern to
refer to that path:

    "$TEST_DIRECTORY"/t5100/

Create a variable that contains this path, and use that instead.

While we're making this change, make sure the quotes are not just around
the variable, but around the entire string to not give the impression
we want shell splitting to affect the other variables.

Signed-off-by: Kevin Daudt <me@ikke.info>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-28 13:16:59 -07:00
04be69478f rev-list-options: clarify the usage of --reverse
Users often wonder if the oldest or the newest n commits are shown
by `log -n --reverse`.  Clarify that --reverse kicks in only after
deciding which commits are to be shown to unconfuse them.

Reported-by: Ruediger Meier <sweet_f_a@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-27 15:09:07 -07:00
f937d78553 use strbuf_add_unique_abbrev() for adding short hashes, part 2
Call strbuf_add_unique_abbrev() to add abbreviated hashes to strbufs
instead of taking detours through find_unique_abbrev() and its static
buffer.  This is shorter and a bit more efficient.

1eb47f167d already converted six cases,
this patch covers three more.

A semantic patch for Coccinelle is included for easier checking for
new cases that might be introduced in the future.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-27 14:02:40 -07:00
92d52fab3a use strbuf_addstr() instead of strbuf_addf() with "%s", part 2
Replace uses of strbuf_addf() for adding strings with more lightweight
strbuf_addstr() calls.  This is shorter and makes the intent clearer.

bc57b9c0cc already converted three cases,
this patch covers two more.

A semantic patch for Coccinelle is included for easier checking for
new cases that might be introduced in the future.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-27 14:02:40 -07:00
7f2817daef gitignore: ignore output files of coccicheck make target
Helped-by: Jakub Narębski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-27 14:02:19 -07:00
d49028e6e7 worktree: honor configuration variables
The command accesses default_abbrev (defined in environment.c and is
updated via core.abbrev configuration), but never makes any call to
git_config().  The output from "worktree list" ignores the abbrev
setting for this reason.

Make a call to git_config() to read the default set of configuration
variables at the beginning of the command.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-27 10:51:33 -07:00
8201688ecd add David Turner's Two Sigma address
Signed-off-by: David Turner <novalis@novalis.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-26 17:46:44 -07:00
d21f842690 unpack_sha1_header(): detect malformed object header
When opening a loose object file, we often do this sequence:

 - prepare a short buffer for the object header (on stack)

 - call unpack_sha1_header() and have early part of the object data
   inflated, enough to fill the buffer

 - parse that data in the short buffer, assuming that the first part
   of the object is <typename> SP <length> NUL

Because the parsing function parse_sha1_header_extended() is not
given the number of bytes inflated into the header buffer, it you
craft a file whose early part inflates a garbage sequence without SP
or NUL, and replace a loose object with it, it will end up reading
past the end of the inflated data.

To correct this, do the following four things:

 - rename unpack_sha1_header() to unpack_sha1_short_header() and
   have unpack_sha1_header_to_strbuf() keep calling that as its
   helper function.  This will detect and report zlib errors, but is
   not aware of the format of a loose object (as before).

 - introduce unpack_sha1_header() that calls the same helper
   function, and when zlib reports it inflated OK into the buffer,
   check if the inflated data has NUL.  This would ensure that
   parsing function will terminate within the buffer that holds the
   inflated header.

 - update unpack_sha1_header_to_strbuf() to check if the resulting
   buffer has NUL for the same effect.

 - update parse_sha1_header_extended() to make sure that its loop to
   find the SP that terminates the <typename> stops at NUL.

Essentially, this makes unpack_*() functions that are asked to
unpack a loose object header to be a bit more strict and detect an
input that cannot possibly be a valid object header, even before the
parsing function kicks in.

Reported-by: Gustavo Grieco <gustavo.grieco@imag.fr>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-26 10:48:22 -07:00
97026fe9a6 streaming: make sure to notice corrupt object
The streaming read interface from a loose object called
parse_sha1_header() but discarded its return value, without noticing
a potential error.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-26 10:48:03 -07:00
ff65e796f0 Merge branch 'rs/use-modern-git-merge-syntax' of git-gui into rs/git-gui-use-modern-git-merge-syntax
* 'rs/use-modern-git-merge-syntax' of git-gui:
  git-gui: stop using deprecated merge syntax
2016-09-26 07:16:48 -07:00
b5f325cb4a git-gui: stop using deprecated merge syntax
Starting with v2.5.0 git merge can handle FETCH_HEAD internally and
warns when it's called like 'git merge <message> HEAD <commit>' because
that syntax is deprecated.  Use this feature in git-gui and get rid of
that warning.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Tested-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-26 07:15:28 -07:00
45ccef87b3 use COPY_ARRAY
Add a semantic patch for converting certain calls of memcpy(3) to
COPY_ARRAY() and apply that transformation to the code base.  The result
is
 shorter and safer code.  For now only consider calls where source and
destination have the same type, or in other words: easy cases.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-25 16:44:13 -07:00
60566cbb58 add COPY_ARRAY
Add COPY_ARRAY, a safe and convenient helper for copying arrays,
complementing ALLOC_ARRAY and REALLOC_ARRAY.  Users just specify source,
destination and the number of elements; the size of an element is
inferred automatically.

It checks if the multiplication of size and element count overflows.
The inferred size is passed first to st_mult, which allows the division
there to be done at compilation time.

As a basic type safety check it makes sure the sizes of source and
destination elements are the same.  That's evaluated at compilation time
as well.

COPY_ARRAY is safe to use with NULL as source pointer iff 0 elements are
to be copied.  That convention is used in some cases for initializing
arrays.  Raw memcpy(3) does not support it -- compilers are allowed to
assume that only valid pointers are passed to it and can optimize away
NULL checks after such a call.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-25 16:44:12 -07:00
06b3d386e0 fetch-pack: do not reset in_vain on non-novel acks
The MAX_IN_VAIN mechanism was introduced in commit f061e5f ("fetch-pack:
give up after getting too many "ack continue"", 2006-05-24) to stop ref
negotiation if a number of consecutive "have"s have been sent with no
corresponding new acks. This is to stop the client from digging too deep
in an irrelevant side branch in vain without ever finding a common
ancestor. A use case (as described in that commit) is the scenario in
which the local repository has more roots than the remote repository.

However, during a negotiation in which stateless RPCs are used,
MAX_IN_VAIN will (almost) never trigger (in the more-roots scenario
above and others) because in each new request, the client has to inform
the server of objects it already has and knows the server has (to remind
the server of the state), which the server then acks.

Make fetch-pack only consider, as new acks for the purpose of
MAX_IN_VAIN, acks for objects for which the client has never received an
ack before in this session.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-23 12:37:45 -07:00
c375a7efa3 ident: handle NULL ai_canonname
We call getaddrinfo() to try to convert a short hostname
into a fully-qualified one (to use it as an email domain).
If there isn't a canonical name, getaddrinfo() will
generally return either a NULL addrinfo list, or one in
which ai->ai_canonname is a copy of the original name.

However, if the result of gethostname() looks like an IP
address, then getaddrinfo() behaves differently on some
systems. On OS X, it will return a "struct addrinfo" with a
NULL ai_canonname, and we segfault feeding it to strchr().

This is hard to test reliably because it involves not only a
system where we we have to fallback to gethostname() to come
up with an ident, but also where the hostname is a number
with no dots. But I was able to replicate the bug by faking
a hostname, like:

    diff --git a/ident.c b/ident.c
    index e20a772..b790d28 100644
    --- a/ident.c
    +++ b/ident.c
    @@ -128,6 +128,7 @@ static void add_domainname(struct strbuf *out, int *is_bogus)
                     *is_bogus = 1;
                     return;
             }
    +        xsnprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "1");
             if (strchr(buf, '.'))
                     strbuf_addstr(out, buf);
             else if (canonical_name(buf, out) < 0) {

and running "git var GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT" on an OS X system.

Before this patch it segfaults, and after we correctly
complain of the bogus "user@1.(none)" address (though this
bogus address would be suitable for non-object uses like
writing reflogs).

Reported-by: Jonas Thiel <jonas.lierschied@gmx.de>
Diagnosed-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-23 10:01:15 -07:00
106b672ade docs/cvs-migration: mention cvsimport caveats
Back when this guide was written, cvsimport was the only
game in town. These days it is probably not the best option.
Rather than go into details, let's point people to the note
at the top of cvsimport which gives other options.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-22 11:23:45 -07:00
72e0877a1d docs/cvs-migration: update link to cvsps homepage
The old page gives a 404 now. Searching for "cvsps" via
Google returns a GitHub project page as the top hit.

Reported-by: Dan Pritts
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-22 11:23:45 -07:00
1eba3e5147 docs/cvsimport: prefer cvs-fast-export to parsecvs
parsecvs maintenance was taken over by ESR, and the name
changed to cvs-fast-export as it learned to support that
output format. Let's point to cvs-fast-export, as it should
have additional bug-fixes and be more convenient to use.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-22 11:23:45 -07:00
a9445d859e verify_packfile: check pack validity before accessing data
The verify_packfile() does not explicitly open the packfile;
instead, it starts with a sha1 checksum over the whole pack,
and relies on use_pack() to open the packfile as a side
effect.

If the pack cannot be opened for whatever reason (either
because its header information is corrupted, or perhaps
because a simultaneous repack deleted it), then use_pack()
will die(), as it has no way to return an error. This is not
ideal, as verify_packfile() otherwise tries to gently return
an error (this lets programs like git-fsck go on to check
other packs).

Instead, let's check is_pack_valid() up front, and return an
error if it fails. This will open the pack as a side effect,
and then use_pack() will later rely on our cached
descriptor, and avoid calling die().

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-22 11:18:13 -07:00
f86f49bee9 travis-ci: ask homebrew for its path instead of hardcoding it
The TravisCI macOS build is broken because homebrew (a macOS dependency
manager) changed its internal directory structure [1]. This is a problem
because we modify the Perforce dependencies in the homebrew repository
before installing them.

Fix it by asking homebrew for its path instead of hardcoding it.

[1] 0a09ae30f8

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-22 10:23:01 -07:00
40e0dc17ce t3700-add: do not check working tree file mode without POSIXPERM
A recently introduced test checks the result of 'git status' after
setting the executable bit on a file. This check does not yield the
expected result when the filesystem does not support the executable
bit.

What we care about is that a file added with "--chmod=+x" has
executable bit in the index and that "--chmod=+x" (or any other
options for that matter) does not muck with working tree files.
The former is tested by other existing tests, so let's check the
latter more explicitly and only under POSIXPERM prerequisite.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-21 14:09:54 -07:00
b7d36ffca0 regex: use regexec_buf()
The new regexec_buf() function operates on buffers with an explicitly
specified length, rather than NUL-terminated strings.

We need to use this function whenever the buffer we want to pass to
regexec(3) may have been mmap(2)ed (and is hence not NUL-terminated).

Note: the original motivation for this patch was to fix a bug where
`git diff -G <regex>` would crash. This patch converts more callers,
though, some of which allocated to construct NUL-terminated strings,
or worse, modified buffers to temporarily insert NULs while calling
regexec(3).  By converting them to use regexec_buf(), the code has
become much cleaner.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-21 13:56:15 -07:00
2f8952250a regex: add regexec_buf() that can work on a non NUL-terminated string
We just introduced a test that demonstrates that our sloppy use of
regexec() on a mmap()ed area can result in incorrect results or even
hard crashes.

So what we need to fix this is a function that calls regexec() on a
length-delimited, rather than a NUL-terminated, string.

Happily, there is an extension to regexec() introduced by the NetBSD
project and present in all major regex implementation including
Linux', MacOSX' and the one Git includes in compat/regex/: by using
the (non-POSIX) REG_STARTEND flag, it is possible to tell the
regexec() function that it should only look at the offsets between
pmatch[0].rm_so and pmatch[0].rm_eo.

That is exactly what we need.

Since support for REG_STARTEND is so widespread by now, let's just
introduce a helper function that always uses it, and tell people
on a platform whose regex library does not support it to use the
one from our compat/regex/ directory.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-21 13:56:15 -07:00
db5dfa3314 regex: -G<pattern> feeds a non NUL-terminated string to regexec() and fails
When our pickaxe code feeds file contents to regexec(), it implicitly
assumes that the file contents are read into implicitly NUL-terminated
buffers (i.e. that we overallocate by 1, appending a single '\0').

This is not so.

In particular when the file contents are simply mmap()ed, we can be
virtually certain that the buffer is preceding uninitialized bytes, or
invalid pages.

Note that the test we add here is known to be flakey: we simply cannot
know whether the byte following the mmap()ed ones is a NUL or not.

Typically, on Linux the test passes. On Windows, it fails virtually
every time due to an access violation (that's a segmentation fault for
you Unix-y people out there). And Windows would be correct: the
regexec() call wants to operate on a regular, NUL-terminated string,
there is no NUL in the mmap()ed memory range, and it is undefined
whether the next byte is even legal to access.

When run with --valgrind it demonstrates quite clearly the breakage, of
course.

Being marked with `test_expect_failure`, this test will sometimes be
declare "TODO fixed", even if it only passes by mistake.

This test case represents a Minimal, Complete and Verifiable Example of
a breakage reported by Chris Sidi.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-21 13:56:15 -07:00
92dece7024 git-check-ref-format.txt: fixup documentation
die is not a standard shell function. Use
a different shell code for the example.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-21 11:12:41 -07:00
b07ad46432 t3700-add: create subdirectory gently
The subdirectory 'sub' is created early in the test file. Later, a test
case removes it during its clean-up actions. However, this test case is
protected by POSIXPERM. Consequently, 'sub' remains when the POSIXPERM
prerequisite is not satisfied. Later, a recently introduced test case
creates 'sub' again. Use -p with mkdir so that it does not fail if 'sub'
already exists.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-21 11:05:35 -07:00
b829b9439a checkout: fix ambiguity check in subdir
The two functions in parse_branchname_arg(), verify_non_filename and
check_filename, need correct prefix in order to reconstruct the paths
and check for their existence. With NULL prefix, they just check paths
at top dir instead.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-21 08:44:41 -07:00
19e5656345 checkout.txt: document a common case that ignores ambiguation rules
Normally we err on the safe side: if something can be seen as both an
SHA1 and a pathspec, we stop and scream. In checkout, there is one
exception added in 859fdab (git-checkout: improve error messages, detect
ambiguities. - 2008-07-23), to allow the common case "git checkout
branch". Let's document this exception.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-21 08:44:41 -07:00
7c0304af62 Start preparing for 2.10.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-19 13:54:50 -07:00
ddf8ee859f Merge branch 'sb/diff-cleanup' into maint
Code cleanup.

* sb/diff-cleanup:
  diff: remove dead code
  diff: omit found pointer from emit_callback
  diff.c: use diff_options directly
2016-09-19 13:51:45 -07:00
9f3d73e8cb Merge branch 'ah/misc-message-fixes' into maint
Message cleanup.

* ah/misc-message-fixes:
  unpack-trees: do not capitalize "working"
  git-merge-octopus: do not capitalize "octopus"
  git-rebase--interactive: fix English grammar
  cat-file: put spaces around pipes in usage string
  am: put spaces around pipe in usage string
2016-09-19 13:51:45 -07:00
0303939009 Merge branch 'sb/transport-report-missing-submodule-on-stderr' into maint
Message cleanup.

* sb/transport-report-missing-submodule-on-stderr:
  transport: report missing submodule pushes consistently on stderr
2016-09-19 13:51:45 -07:00
51673a71e3 Merge branch 'sb/xdiff-remove-unused-static-decl' into maint
Code cleanup.

* sb/xdiff-remove-unused-static-decl:
  xdiff: remove unneeded declarations
2016-09-19 13:51:45 -07:00
294573e6d7 Merge branch 'js/t9903-chaining' into maint
Test fix.

* js/t9903-chaining:
  t9903: fix broken && chain
2016-09-19 13:51:44 -07:00
c3befaeab9 Merge branch 'rs/hex2chr' into maint
Code cleanup.

* rs/hex2chr:
  introduce hex2chr() for converting two hexadecimal digits to a character
2016-09-19 13:51:43 -07:00
815a73f714 Merge branch 'rs/compat-strdup' into maint
Code cleanup.

* rs/compat-strdup:
  compat: move strdup(3) replacement to its own file
2016-09-19 13:51:42 -07:00
3d54b93f40 Merge branch 'jk/squelch-false-warning-from-gcc-o3' into maint
Compilation fix.

* jk/squelch-false-warning-from-gcc-o3:
  color_parse_mem: initialize "struct color" temporary
  error_errno: use constant return similar to error()
2016-09-19 13:51:41 -07:00
1e28677e5b Merge branch 'ep/use-git-trace-curl-in-tests' into maint
Update a few tests that used to use GIT_CURL_VERBOSE to use the
newer GIT_TRACE_CURL.

* ep/use-git-trace-curl-in-tests:
  t5551-http-fetch-smart.sh: use the GIT_TRACE_CURL environment var
  t5550-http-fetch-dumb.sh: use the GIT_TRACE_CURL environment var
  test-lib.sh: preserve GIT_TRACE_CURL from the environment
  t5541-http-push-smart.sh: use the GIT_TRACE_CURL environment var
2016-09-19 13:51:41 -07:00
8e26535866 Merge branch 'js/t6026-clean-up' into maint
A test spawned a short-lived background process, which sometimes
prevented the test directory from getting removed at the end of the
script on some platforms.

* js/t6026-clean-up:
  t6026-merge-attr: clean up background process at end of test case
2016-09-19 13:51:41 -07:00
d6645312ff Merge branch 'jc/forbid-symbolic-ref-d-HEAD' into maint
"git symbolic-ref -d HEAD" happily removes the symbolic ref, but
the resulting repository becomes an invalid one.  Teach the command
to forbid removal of HEAD.

* jc/forbid-symbolic-ref-d-HEAD:
  symbolic-ref -d: do not allow removal of HEAD
2016-09-19 13:51:41 -07:00
4c10c31137 Merge branch 'jc/submodule-anchor-git-dir' into maint
Having a submodule whose ".git" repository is somehow corrupt
caused a few commands that recurse into submodules loop forever.

* jc/submodule-anchor-git-dir:
  submodule: avoid auto-discovery in prepare_submodule_repo_env()
2016-09-19 13:51:40 -07:00
79b51ebf6f Merge branch 'jk/test-lib-drop-pid-from-results' into maint
The test framework left the number of tests and success/failure
count in the t/test-results directory, keyed by the name of the
test script plus the process ID.  The latter however turned out not
to serve any useful purpose.  The process ID part of the filename
has been removed.

* jk/test-lib-drop-pid-from-results:
  test-lib: drop PID from test-results/*.count
2016-09-19 13:51:39 -07:00
276661ff85 Merge branch 'bh/diff-highlight-graph' into maint
"diff-highlight" script (in contrib/) learned to work better with
"git log -p --graph" output.

* bh/diff-highlight-graph:
  diff-highlight: avoid highlighting combined diffs
  diff-highlight: add multi-byte tests
  diff-highlight: ignore test cruft
  diff-highlight: add support for --graph output
  diff-highlight: add failing test for handling --graph output
  diff-highlight: add some tests
2016-09-19 13:51:38 -07:00
f0b2db228b Merge branch 'po/range-doc' into maint
Clarify various ways to specify the "revision ranges" in the
documentation.

* po/range-doc:
  doc: revisions: sort examples and fix alignment of the unchanged
  doc: revisions: show revision expansion in examples
  doc: revisions - clarify reachability examples
  doc: revisions - define `reachable`
  doc: gitrevisions - clarify 'latter case' is revision walk
  doc: gitrevisions - use 'reachable' in page description
  doc: revisions: single vs multi-parent notation comparison
  doc: revisions: extra clarification of <rev>^! notation effects
  doc: revisions: give headings for the two and three dot notations
  doc: show the actual left, right, and boundary marks
  doc: revisions - name the left and right sides
  doc: use 'symmetric difference' consistently
2016-09-19 13:51:38 -07:00
c99ad274b1 pretty: let %C(auto) reset all attributes
Reset colors and attributes upon %C(auto) to enable full automatic
control over them; otherwise attributes like bold or reverse could
still be in effect from previous %C placeholders.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-19 10:50:32 -07:00
14d16e2b35 Documentation/config: default for color.* is color.ui
Since 4c7f181 (make color.ui default to 'auto', 2013-06-10), the
default for color.* when nothing is set is 'auto' and we still claimed
that the default was 'false'. Be more precise by saying explicitly
that the default is to follow color.ui, and recall that the default is
'auto' to avoid one indirection for the reader.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-16 12:34:14 -07:00
cd5c2812b6 t/perf/run: copy config.mak.autogen & friends to build area
Otherwise for people who use autotools-based configure in main worktree,
the performance testing results will be inconsistent as work and build
trees could be using e.g. different optimization levels.

See e.g.

	http://public-inbox.org/git/20160818175222.bmm3ivjheokf2qzl@sigill.intra.peff.net/

for example.

NOTE config.status has to be copied because otherwise without it the build
would want to run reconfigure this way loosing just copied config.mak.autogen.

Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@nexedi.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-15 13:41:11 -07:00
a22ae753cb use strbuf_addstr() for adding constant strings to a strbuf, part 2
Replace uses of strbuf_addf() for adding strings with more lightweight
strbuf_addstr() calls.  This makes the intent clearer and avoids
potential issues with printf format specifiers.

02962d3684 already converted six cases,
this patch covers eleven more.

A semantic patch for Coccinelle is included for easier checking for
new cases that might be introduced in the future.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-15 12:23:38 -07:00
63f0a758a0 add coccicheck make target
Provide a simple way to run Coccinelle against all source files, in the
form of a Makefile target.  Running "make coccicheck" applies each
.cocci file in contrib/coccinelle/ on all source files.  It generates
a .patch file for each .cocci file, containing the actual changes for
effecting the transformations described by the semantic patches.

Non-empty .patch files are reported.  They can be applied to the work
tree using "patch -p0", but should be checked to e.g. make sure they
don't screw up formatting or create circular references.

Coccinelle's diagnostic output (stderr) is piped into .log files.

Linux has a much more elaborate make target of the same name; let's
start nice and easy.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-15 12:23:37 -07:00
76d156766f contrib/coccinelle: fix semantic patch for oid_to_hex_r()
Both sha1_to_hex_r() and oid_to_hex_r() take two parameters, so use two
expressions in the semantic patch for transforming calls of the former
to the latter one.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-15 12:23:33 -07:00
610d55af0f add: modify already added files when --chmod is given
When the chmod option was added to git add, it was hooked up to the diff
machinery, meaning that it only works when the version in the index
differs from the version on disk.

As the option was supposed to mirror the chmod option in update-index,
which always changes the mode in the index, regardless of the status of
the file, make sure the option behaves the same way in git add.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-15 12:13:54 -07:00
d9d7096662 read-cache: introduce chmod_index_entry
As there are chmod options for both add and update-index, introduce a
new chmod_index_entry function to do the work.  Use it in update-index,
while it will be used in add in the next patch.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-15 12:13:54 -07:00
480871e09e format-patch: show base info before email signature
Any text below the "-- " for the email signature gets treated as part of
the signature, and many mail clients will trim it from the quoted text
for a reply.  Move it above the signature, so people can reply to it
more easily.

Similarly, when producing the patch as a MIME attachment, the
original code placed the base info after the attached part, which
would be discarded.  Move the base info to the end of the part,
still inside the part boundary.

Add tests for the exact format of the email signature, and add tests
to ensure that the base info appears before the email signature when
producing a plain-text output, and that it appears before the part
boundary when producing a MIME attachment.

Signed-off-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-15 10:07:10 -07:00
45d2f75f91 xdiff: fix merging of hunks with -W context and -u context
If the function context for a hunk (with -W) reaches the beginning of
the next hunk then we need to merge these two -- otherwise we'd show
some lines twice, which looks strange and even confuses git apply.  We
already do this checking and merging in xdl_emit_diff(), but forget to
consider regular context (with -u or -U).

Fix that by merging hunks already if function context of the first one
touches or overlaps regular context of the second one.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-14 16:07:21 -07:00
22433ce461 update-index: add test for chmod flags
Currently there is no test checking the expected behaviour when multiple
chmod flags with different arguments are passed.  As argument handling
is not in line with other git commands it's easy to miss and
accidentally change the current behaviour.

While there, fix the argument type of chmod_path, which takes an int,
but had a char passed in.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-14 15:03:49 -07:00
840529d52c Merge branch 'ib/t3700-add-chmod-x-updates' into tg/add-chmod+x-fix
Newly added tests to this topic uses helper functions that did not
exist back when the bug being fixed by the topic was introduced.

* ib/t3700-add-chmod-x-updates:
  t3700: add a test_mode_in_index helper function
  t3700: merge two tests into one
  t3700: remove unwanted leftover files before running new tests
2016-09-14 15:02:25 -07:00
5efc60c12f vcs-svn/fast_export: fix timestamp fmt specifiers
Two instances of %ld being used for unsigned longs

Signed-off-by: Mike Ralphson <mike.ralphson@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-14 08:56:50 -07:00
b56aa5b268 unpack-trees: pass checkout state explicitly to check_updates()
Add a parameter for the struct checkout variable to check_updates()
instead of using a static global variable.  Passing it explicitly makes
object ownership and usage more easily apparent.  And we get rid of a
static variable; those can be problematic in library-like code.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-13 16:26:12 -07:00
ce25e4c78d checkout: constify parameters of checkout_stage() and checkout_merged()
Document the fact that checkout_stage() and checkout_merged() don't
change the objects passed to them by adding the modifier const.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-13 16:12:28 -07:00
e78d57ec8e pathspec: remove unnecessary function prototypes
A few functions were removed in 5a76aff1 ("add: convert to use
parse_pathspec", 2013-07-14), but we forgot to remove their external
declarations from pathspec.h while doing so.

Signed-off-by: Brandon Williams <bmwill@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-13 16:10:03 -07:00
a8342a417e strbuf: use valid pointer in strbuf_remove()
The fourth argument of strbuf_splice() is passed to memcpy(3), which is
not supposed to handle NULL pointers.  Let's be extra careful and use a
valid empty string instead.  It even shortens the source code. :)

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-13 16:07:37 -07:00
2abc848d54 http: always remove curl easy from curlm session on release
We must call curl_multi_remove_handle when releasing the slot to
prevent subsequent calls to curl_multi_add_handle from failing
with CURLM_ADDED_ALREADY (in curl 7.32.1+; older versions
returned CURLM_BAD_EASY_HANDLE)

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-13 13:34:04 -07:00
d8b6b84df0 http: consolidate #ifdefs for curl_multi_remove_handle
I find #ifdefs makes code difficult-to-follow.

An early version of this patch had error checking for
curl_multi_remove_handle calls, but caused some tests (e.g.
t5541) to fail under curl 7.26.0 on old Debian wheezy.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-13 13:34:03 -07:00
9f1b58842a http: warn on curl_multi_add_handle failures
This will be useful for tracking down curl usage errors.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-13 13:34:01 -07:00
91942260a2 Merge tag 'l10n-2.10.0-rnd2.3' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po into maint
l10n-2.10.0-rnd2.3

* tag 'l10n-2.10.0-rnd2.3' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: zh_CN: review for git v2.10.0 l10n
  l10n: zh_CN: fixed some typos for git 2.10.0
  l10n: pt_PT: update Portuguese repository info
  l10n: pt_PT: update Portuguese translation
2016-09-12 15:23:42 -07:00
7ef7903e60 add: document the chmod option
The git add --chmod option was introduced in 4e55ed3 ("add: add
--chmod=+x / --chmod=-x options", 2016-05-31), but was never
documented.  Document the feature.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-12 15:03:32 -07:00
7c81040792 patch-ids: refuse to compute patch-id for merge commit
The patch-id code which powers "log --cherry-pick" doesn't
look at whether each commit is a merge or not. It just feeds
the commit's first parent to the diff, and ignores any
additional parents.

In theory, this might be useful if you wanted to find
equivalence between, say, a merge commit and a squash-merge
that does the same thing.  But it also promotes a false
equivalence between distinct merges. For example, every
"merge -s ours" would look identical to an empty commit
(which is true in a sense, but presumably there was a value
in merging in the discarded history). Since patch-ids are
meant for throwing away duplicates, we should err on the
side of _not_ matching such merges.

Moreover, we may spend a lot of extra time computing these
merge diffs. In the case that inspired this patch, a "git
format-patch --cherry-pick" dropped from over 3 minutes to
less than 3 seconds.

This seems pretty drastic, but is easily explained. The
command was invoked by a "git rebase" of an older topic
branch; there had been tens of thousands of commits on the
upstream branch in the meantime. In addition, this project
used a topic-branch workflow with occasional "back-merges"
from "master" to each topic (to resolve conflicts on the
topics rather than in the merge commits). So there were not
only extra merges, but the diffs for these back-merges were
generally quite large (because they represented _everything_
that had been merged to master since the topic branched).

This patch treats a merge fed to commit_patch_id() or
add_commit_patch_id() as an error, and a lookup for such a
merge via has_commit_patch_id() will always return NULL.
An earlier version of the patch tried to distinguish between
"error" and "patch id for merges not defined", but that
becomes unnecessarily complicated. The only callers are:

  1. revision traversals which want to do --cherry-pick;
     they call add_commit_patch_id(), but do not care if it
     fails. They only want to add what we can, look it up
     later with has_commit_patch_id(), and err on the side
     of not-matching.

  2. format-patch --base, which calls commit_patch_id().
     This _does_ notice errors, but should never feed a
     merge in the first place (and if it were to do so
     accidentally, then this patch is a strict improvement;
     we notice the bug rather than generating a bogus
     patch-id).

So in both cases, this does the right thing.

Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-12 13:45:01 -07:00
0ff597830f l10n: de.po: fix translation of autostash
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthias Rüster <matthias.ruester@gmail.com>
2016-09-12 09:49:36 +02:00
f14a310e8b Merge branch 'js/commit-gpgsign' of ../git-gui into js/git-gui-commit-gpgsign
* 'js/commit-gpgsign' of ../git-gui:
  git-gui: respect commit.gpgsign again
2016-09-11 14:54:46 -07:00
2afe6b733e git-gui: respect commit.gpgsign again
As of v2.9.0, `git commit-tree` no longer heeds the `commit.gpgsign`
config setting. This broke committing with GPG signature in Git GUI.

This fixes https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/850

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-11 14:52:27 -07:00
9a4b694c53 l10n: zh_CN: review for git v2.10.0 l10n
Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
2016-09-11 21:34:23 +08:00
7665d45926 l10n: zh_CN: fixed some typos for git 2.10.0
Reviewed-by: Ray <tvvocold@163.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2016-09-11 21:31:51 +08:00
5a29cbc6e9 patch-ids: turn off rename detection
The patch-id code may be running inside another porcelain
like "git log" or "git format-patch", and therefore may have
set diff_detect_rename_default, either via the diff-ui
config, or by default since 5404c11 (diff: activate
diff.renames by default, 2016-02-25). This is the case even
if a command is run with `--no-renames`, as that is applied
only to the diff-options used by the command itself.

Rename detection doesn't help the patch-id results. It
_may_ actually hurt, as minor differences in the files that
would be overlooked by patch-id's canonicalization might
result in different renames (though I'd doubt that it ever
comes up in practice).

But mostly it is just a waste of CPU to compute these
renames.

Note that this does have one user-visible impact: the
prerequisite patches listed by "format-patch --base". There
may be some confusion between different versions of git as
older ones will enable renames, but newer ones will not.
However, this was already a problem, as people with
different settings for the "diff.renames" config would get
different results. After this patch, everyone should get the
same results, regardless of their config.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-09 14:13:53 -07:00
49981d8a25 Start maintenance track for 2.10.x series 2016-09-08 21:39:38 -07:00
0202c411ed Prepare for 2.9.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-08 21:37:59 -07:00
3e8e69a695 Merge branch 'hv/doc-commit-reference-style' into maint
A small doc update.

* hv/doc-commit-reference-style:
  SubmittingPatches: use gitk's "Copy commit summary" format
  SubmittingPatches: document how to reference previous commits
2016-09-08 21:36:03 -07:00
b5abd302ef Merge branch 'sg/reflog-past-root' into maint
A small test clean-up for a topic introduced in v2.9.1 and later.

* sg/reflog-past-root:
  t1410: remove superfluous 'git reflog' from the 'walk past root' test
2016-09-08 21:36:02 -07:00
71165f027f Merge branch 'rs/mailinfo-lib' into maint
Small code clean-up.

* rs/mailinfo-lib:
  mailinfo: recycle strbuf in check_header()
2016-09-08 21:36:01 -07:00
9bef642236 Merge branch 'jk/tighten-alloc' into maint
Small code and comment clean-up.

* jk/tighten-alloc:
  receive-pack: use FLEX_ALLOC_MEM in queue_command()
  correct FLEXPTR_* example in comment
2016-09-08 21:36:00 -07:00
5e469ab66c Merge branch 'rs/use-strbuf-add-unique-abbrev' into maint
A small code clean-up.

* rs/use-strbuf-add-unique-abbrev:
  use strbuf_add_unique_abbrev() for adding short hashes
2016-09-08 21:36:00 -07:00
f14883b972 Merge branch 'rs/merge-recursive-string-list-init' into maint
A small code clean-up.

* rs/merge-recursive-string-list-init:
  merge-recursive: use STRING_LIST_INIT_NODUP
2016-09-08 21:35:59 -07:00
24c88ad8d1 Merge branch 'rs/merge-add-strategies-simplification' into maint
A small code clean-up.

* rs/merge-add-strategies-simplification:
  merge: use string_list_split() in add_strategies()
2016-09-08 21:35:58 -07:00
a75341c75a Merge branch 'ls/packet-line-protocol-doc-fix' into maint
Correct an age-old calco (is that a typo-like word for calc)
in the documentation.

* ls/packet-line-protocol-doc-fix:
  pack-protocol: fix maximum pkt-line size
2016-09-08 21:35:57 -07:00
c0e8b3b444 Merge branch 'bw/mingw-avoid-inheriting-fd-to-lockfile' into maint
The tempfile (hence its user lockfile) API lets the caller to open
a file descriptor to a temporary file, write into it and then
finalize it by first closing the filehandle and then either
removing or renaming the temporary file.  When the process spawns a
subprocess after obtaining the file descriptor, and if the
subprocess has not exited when the attempt to remove or rename is
made, the last step fails on Windows, because the subprocess has
the file descriptor still open.  Open tempfile with O_CLOEXEC flag
to avoid this (on Windows, this is mapped to O_NOINHERIT).

* bw/mingw-avoid-inheriting-fd-to-lockfile:
  mingw: ensure temporary file handles are not inherited by child processes
  t6026-merge-attr: child processes must not inherit index.lock handles
2016-09-08 21:35:56 -07:00
15a27298fc Merge branch 'dg/document-git-c-in-git-config-doc' into maint
The "git -c var[=val] cmd" facility to append a configuration
variable definition at the end of the search order was described in
git(1) manual page, but not in git-config(1), which was more likely
place for people to look for when they ask "can I make a one-shot
override, and if so how?"

* dg/document-git-c-in-git-config-doc:
  doc: mention `git -c` in git-config(1)
2016-09-08 21:35:56 -07:00
ba22efd8f5 Merge branch 'js/no-html-bypass-on-windows' into maint
On Windows, help.browser configuration variable used to be ignored,
which has been corrected.

* js/no-html-bypass-on-windows:
  Revert "display HTML in default browser using Windows' shell API"
2016-09-08 21:35:55 -07:00
bde42f081e Merge branch 'jk/difftool-command-not-found' into maint
"git difftool" by default ignores the error exit from the backend
commands it spawns, because often they signal that they found
differences by exiting with a non-zero status code just like "diff"
does; the exit status codes 126 and above however are special in
that they are used to signal that the command is not executable,
does not exist, or killed by a signal.  "git difftool" has been
taught to notice these exit status codes.

* jk/difftool-command-not-found:
  difftool: always honor fatal error exit codes
2016-09-08 21:35:54 -07:00
7c96471947 Merge branch 'sb/checkout-explit-detach-no-advice' into maint
"git checkout --detach <branch>" used to give the same advice
message as that is issued when "git checkout <tag>" (or anything
that is not a branch name) is given, but asking with "--detach" is
an explicit enough sign that the user knows what is going on.  The
advice message has been squelched in this case.

* sb/checkout-explit-detach-no-advice:
  checkout: do not mention detach advice for explicit --detach option
2016-09-08 21:35:54 -07:00
69307312d1 Merge branch 'rs/pull-signed-tag' into maint
When "git merge-recursive" works on history with many criss-cross
merges in "verbose" mode, the names the command assigns to the
virtual merge bases could have overwritten each other by unintended
reuse of the same piece of memory.

* rs/pull-signed-tag:
  commit: use FLEX_ARRAY in struct merge_remote_desc
  merge-recursive: fix verbose output for multiple base trees
  commit: factor out set_merge_remote_desc()
  commit: use xstrdup() in get_merge_parent()
2016-09-08 21:35:54 -07:00
86df11b1a4 Merge branch 'js/test-lint-pathname' into maint
The "t/" hierarchy is prone to get an unusual pathname; "make test"
has been taught to make sure they do not contain paths that cannot
be checked out on Windows (and the mechanism can be reusable to
catch pathnames that are not portable to other platforms as need
arises).

* js/test-lint-pathname:
  t/Makefile: ensure that paths are valid on platforms we care
2016-09-08 21:35:54 -07:00
8e7c580e34 Merge branch 'js/mv-dir-to-new-directory' into maint
"git mv dir non-existing-dir/" did not work in some environments
the same way as existing mainstream platforms.  The code now moves
"dir" to "non-existing-dir", without relying on rename("A", "B/")
that strips the trailing slash of '/'.

* js/mv-dir-to-new-directory:
  git mv: do not keep slash in `git mv dir non-existing-dir/`
2016-09-08 21:35:54 -07:00
5e09f1dd30 Merge branch 'js/import-tars-hardlinks' into maint
"import-tars" fast-import script (in contrib/) used to ignore a
hardlink target and replaced it with an empty file, which has been
corrected to record the same blob as the other file the hardlink is
shared with.

* js/import-tars-hardlinks:
  import-tars: support hard links
2016-09-08 21:35:54 -07:00
c343e4919e Merge branch 'ms/document-pack-window-memory-is-per-thread' into maint
* ms/document-pack-window-memory-is-per-thread:
  document git-repack interaction of pack.threads and pack.windowMemory
2016-09-08 21:35:53 -07:00
f34d900aa7 Merge branch 'jk/push-force-with-lease-creation' into maint
"git push --force-with-lease" already had enough logic to allow
ensuring that such a push results in creation of a ref (i.e. the
receiving end did not have another push from sideways that would be
discarded by our force-pushing), but didn't expose this possibility
to the users.  It does so now.

* jk/push-force-with-lease-creation:
  t5533: make it pass on case-sensitive filesystems
  push: allow pushing new branches with --force-with-lease
  push: add shorthand for --force-with-lease branch creation
  Documentation/git-push: fix placeholder formatting
2016-09-08 21:35:53 -07:00
f59c6e6ccb Merge branch 'jk/reflog-date' into maint
The reflog output format is documented better, and a new format
--date=unix to report the seconds-since-epoch (without timezone)
has been added.

* jk/reflog-date:
  date: clarify --date=raw description
  date: add "unix" format
  date: document and test "raw-local" mode
  doc/pretty-formats: explain shortening of %gd
  doc/pretty-formats: describe index/time formats for %gd
  doc/rev-list-options: explain "-g" output formats
  doc/rev-list-options: clarify "commit@{Nth}" for "-g" option
2016-09-08 21:35:52 -07:00
7f5885ad2a Merge branch 'jc/renormalize-merge-kill-safer-crlf' into maint
"git merge" with renormalization did not work well with
merge-recursive, due to "safer crlf" conversion kicking in when it
shouldn't.

* jc/renormalize-merge-kill-safer-crlf:
  merge: avoid "safer crlf" during recording of merge results
  convert: unify the "auto" handling of CRLF
2016-09-08 21:35:52 -07:00
faacc8efe5 Merge branch 'jk/common-main' into maint
There are certain house-keeping tasks that need to be performed at
the very beginning of any Git program, and programs that are not
built-in commands had to do them exactly the same way as "git"
potty does.  It was easy to make mistakes in one-off standalone
programs (like test helpers).  A common "main()" function that
calls cmd_main() of individual program has been introduced to
make it harder to make mistakes.

* jk/common-main:
  mingw: declare main()'s argv as const
  common-main: call git_setup_gettext()
  common-main: call restore_sigpipe_to_default()
  common-main: call sanitize_stdfds()
  common-main: call git_extract_argv0_path()
  add an extra level of indirection to main()
2016-09-08 21:35:51 -07:00
ca9b37e5a8 diff: remove dead code
When `len < 1`, len has to be 0 or negative, emit_line will then remove the
first character and by then `len` would be negative. As this doesn't
happen, it is safe to assume it is dead code.

This continues to simplify the code, which was started in b8d9c1a66b
(2009-09-03,  diff.c: the builtin_diff() deals with only two-file
comparison).

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-08 13:54:37 -07:00
ba16233ccd diff: omit found pointer from emit_callback
We keep the actual data in the diff options, which are just as accessible.
Remove the pointer stored in struct emit_callback for readability.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-08 13:54:23 -07:00
fb33b62ca6 diff.c: use diff_options directly
The value of `ecbdata->opt` is accessible via the short variable `o`
already, so let's use that instead.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-08 13:46:46 -07:00
5cb5fe4ae0 transport: report missing submodule pushes consistently on stderr
The surrounding advice is printed to stderr, but the list of submodules
is not. Make the report consistent by reporting everything to stderr.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-08 13:28:15 -07:00
7f82b24e30 checkout: add some spaces between code and comment
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-08 12:55:51 -07:00
a1c8044662 unpack-trees: do not capitalize "working"
In English, only proper nouns are capitalized.

Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-08 12:17:23 -07:00
1c67d534d9 git-merge-octopus: do not capitalize "octopus"
In English, only proper nouns are capitalized.

Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-08 12:17:10 -07:00
7c406bd8a7 git-rebase--interactive: fix English grammar
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-08 12:17:03 -07:00
88c782942c cat-file: put spaces around pipes in usage string
This makes the style a little more consistent with other usage strings,
and will resolve a warning at
https://www.softcatala.org/recursos/quality/git.html

Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-08 12:16:38 -07:00
d65fdc9c5d am: put spaces around pipe in usage string
This makes the style a little more consistent with other usage strings,
and will resolve a warning at
https://www.softcatala.org/recursos/quality/git.html

Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-08 12:13:28 -07:00
d63ed6ef24 remote-curl: handle URLs without protocol
Generally remote-curl would never see a URL that did not
have "proto:" at the beginning, as that is what tells git to
run the "git-remote-proto" helper (and git-remote-http, etc,
are aliases for git-remote-curl).

However, the special syntax "proto::something" will run
git-remote-proto with only "something" as the URL. So a
malformed URL like:

  http::/example.com/repo.git

will feed the URL "/example.com/repo.git" to
git-remote-http. The resulting URL has no protocol, but the
code added by 372370f (http: use credential API to handle
proxy authentication, 2016-01-26) does not handle this case
and segfaults.

For the purposes of this code, we don't really care what the
exact protocol; only whether or not it is https. So let's
just assume that a missing protocol is not, and curl will
handle the real error (which is that the URL is nonsense).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-08 11:23:43 -07:00
37875b4733 rebase -i: improve advice on bad instruction lines
If we found bad instruction lines in the instruction sheet
of interactive rebase, we give the user advice on how to
fix it.  However, we don't tell the user what to do afterwards.
Give the user advice to run 'git rebase --continue' after
the fix.

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 11:56:05 -07:00
b773ddea2c pack-objects: walk tag chains for --include-tag
When pack-objects is given --include-tag, it peels each tag
ref down to a non-tag object, and if that non-tag object is
going to be packed, we include the tag, too. But what
happens if we have a chain of tags (e.g., tag "A" points to
tag "B", which points to commit "C")?

We'll peel down to "C" and realize that we want to include
tag "A", but we do not ever consider tag "B", leading to a
broken pack (assuming "B" was not otherwise selected).
Instead, we have to walk the whole chain, adding any tags we
find to the pack.

Interestingly, it doesn't seem possible to trigger this
problem with "git fetch", but you can with "git clone
--single-branch". The reason is that we generate the correct
pack when the client explicitly asks for "A" (because we do
a real reachability analysis there), and "fetch" is more
willing to do so. There are basically two cases:

  1. If "C" is already a ref tip, then the client can deduce
     that it needs "A" itself (via find_non_local_tags), and
     will ask for it explicitly rather than relying on the
     include-tag capability. Everything works.

  2. If "C" is not already a ref tip, then we hope for
     include-tag to send us the correct tag. But it doesn't;
     it generates a broken pack. However, the next step is
     to do a follow-up run of find_non_local_tags(),
     followed by fetch_refs() to backfill any tags we
     learned about.

     In the normal case, fetch_refs() calls quickfetch(),
     which does a connectivity check and sees we have no
     new objects to fetch. We just write the refs.

     But for the broken-pack case, the connectivity check
     fails, and quickfetch will follow-up with the remote,
     asking explicitly for each of the ref tips. This picks
     up the missing object in a new pack.

For a regular "git clone", we are similarly OK, because we
explicitly request all of the tag refs, and get a correct
pack. But with "--single-branch", we kick in tag
auto-following via "include-tag", but do _not_ do a
follow-up backfill. We just take whatever the server sent us
via include-tag and write out tag refs for any tag objects
we were sent. So prior to c6807a4 (clone: open a shortcut
for connectivity check, 2013-05-26), we actually claimed the
clone was a success, but the result was silently
corrupted!  Since c6807a4, index-pack's connectivity
check catches this case, and we correctly complain.

The included test directly checks that pack-objects does not
generate a broken pack, but also confirms that "clone
--single-branch" does not hit the bug.

Note that tag chains introduce another interesting question:
if we are packing the tag "B" but not the commit "C", should
"A" be included?

Both before and after this patch, we do not include "A",
because the initial peel_ref() check only knows about the
bottom-most level, "C". To realize that "B" is involved at
all, we would have to switch to an incremental peel, in
which we examine each tagged object, asking if it is being
packed (and including the outer tag if so).

But that runs contrary to the optimizations in peel_ref(),
which avoid accessing the objects at all, in favor of using
the value we pull from packed-refs. It's OK to walk the
whole chain once we know we're going to include the tag (we
have to access it anyway, so the effort is proportional to
the pack we're generating). But for the initial selection,
we have to look at every ref. If we're only packing a few
objects, we'd still have to parse every single referenced
tag object just to confirm that it isn't part of a tag
chain.

This could be addressed if packed-refs stored the complete
tag chain for each peeled ref (in most cases, this would be
the same cost as now, as each "chain" is only a single
link). But given the size of that project, it's out of scope
for this fix (and probably nobody cares enough anyway, as
it's such an obscure situation). This commit limits itself
to just avoiding the creation of a broken pack.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 11:45:31 -07:00
ab5178356c t5305: simplify packname handling
We generate a series of packfiles test-1-$pack,
test-2-$pack, with different properties and then examine
them. However we always store the packname generated by
pack-objects in the variable packname_1. This probably was
meant to be packname_2 in the second test, but it turns out
that it doesn't matter: once we are done with the first
pack, we can just keep using the same $packname variable.

So let's drop the confusing "_1" parameter. At the same
time, let's give test-1 and test-2 more descriptive names,
which can help keep them straight (note that we _could_
likewise overwrite the packfiles in each test, but by using
separate filenames, we are sure that test 2 does not
accidentally use the packfile from test 1).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 11:45:29 -07:00
948a7fd242 t5305: use "git -C"
This test unpacks objects into a separate repository, and
accesses it by setting GIT_DIR in a subshell. We can do the
same thing these days by using "git init <repo>" and "git
-C". In most cases this is shorter, though when there are
multiple commands, we may end up repeating the "-C".

However, this repetition can actually be a good thing. This
patch also fixes a bug introduced by 512477b (tests: use
"env" to run commands with temporary env-var settings,
2014-03-18). That commit essentially converted:

   (GIT_DIR=...; export GIT_DIR
    cmd1 &&
    cmd2)

into:

   (GIT_DIR=... cmd1 &&
    cmd2)

which obviously loses the GIT_DIR setting for cmd2 (we never
noticed the bug because it simply runs "cmd2" in the parent
repo, which means we were simply failing to test anything
interesting). By using "git -C" rather than a subshell, it
becomes quite obvious where each command is supposed to be
running.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 11:45:28 -07:00
2076353f47 t5305: drop "dry-run" of unpack-objects
For each test we do a dry-run of unpack-objects, followed by
a real run, followed by confirming that it contained the
objects we expected. The dry-run is telling us nothing, as
any errors it encounters would be found in the real run.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 11:45:27 -07:00
1962d9fbe3 t5305: move cleanup into test block
We usually try to avoid doing any significant actions
outside of test blocks. Although "rm -rf" is unlikely to
either fail or to generate output, moving these to the
point of use makes it more clear that they are part of the
overall setup of "clone.git".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 11:45:26 -07:00
14e24114d9 t5551-http-fetch-smart.sh: use the GIT_TRACE_CURL environment var
Use the new GIT_TRACE_CURL environment variable instead
of the deprecated GIT_CURL_VERBOSE.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 11:41:45 -07:00
81590bf77d t5550-http-fetch-dumb.sh: use the GIT_TRACE_CURL environment var
Use the new GIT_TRACE_CURL environment variable instead
of the deprecated GIT_CURL_VERBOSE.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 11:41:42 -07:00
4527aa10a6 test-lib.sh: preserve GIT_TRACE_CURL from the environment
Turning on this variable can be useful when debugging http
tests. It can break a few tests in t5541 if not set
to an absolute path but it is not a variable
that the user is likely to have enabled accidentally.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 11:41:40 -07:00
4eee6c6ddc t5541-http-push-smart.sh: use the GIT_TRACE_CURL environment var
Use the new GIT_TRACE_CURL environment variable instead
of the deprecated GIT_CURL_VERBOSE.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 11:41:39 -07:00
5babb5bdb3 t6026-merge-attr: clean up background process at end of test case
The process spawned in the hook uses the test's trash directory as CWD.
As long as it is alive, the directory cannot be removed on Windows.
Although the test succeeds, the 'test_done' that follows produces an
error message and leaves the trash directory around. Kill the process
before the test case advances.

Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 11:40:22 -07:00
c00bfc9d1b t9903: fix broken && chain
We might wonder why our && chain check does not catch this case:
The && chain check uses a strange exit code with the expectation that
the second or later part of a broken && chain would not exit with this
particular code.

This expectation does not work in this case because __git_ps1, being
the first command in the second part of the broken && chain, records
the current exit code, does its work, and finally returns to the caller
with the recorded exit code. This fools our && chain check.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 11:35:08 -07:00
d23309733a introduce hex2chr() for converting two hexadecimal digits to a character
Add and use a helper function that decodes the char value of two
hexadecimal digits.  It returns a negative number on error, avoids
running over the end of the given string and doesn't shift negative
values.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 10:42:46 -07:00
ca2baa3f75 compat: move strdup(3) replacement to its own file
Move our implementation of strdup(3) out of compat/nedmalloc/ and
allow it to be used independently from USE_NED_ALLOCATOR.  The
original nedmalloc doesn't come with strdup() and doesn't need it.
Only _users_ of nedmalloc need it, which was added when we imported
it to our compat/ hierarchy.

This reduces the difference of our copy of nedmalloc from the
original, making it easier to update, and allows for easier testing
and reusing of our version of strdup().

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 10:41:45 -07:00
02748bc7bb Merge branch 'sy/i18n' of git-gui
* 'sy/i18n' of git-gui:
  git-gui: update Japanese information
  git-gui: update Japanese translation
  git-gui: add Japanese language code
  git-gui: apply po template to Japanese translation
  git-gui: consistently use the same word for "blame" in Japanese
  git-gui: consistently use the same word for "remote" in Japanese
2016-09-07 10:24:25 -07:00
52285c8312 git-gui: update Japanese information
Signed-off-by: Satoshi Yasushima <s.yasushima@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 10:21:36 -07:00
8d5db27639 git-gui: update Japanese translation
Signed-off-by: Satoshi Yasushima <s.yasushima@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 10:21:36 -07:00
f3c18da3bb git-gui: add Japanese language code
Signed-off-by: Satoshi Yasushima <s.yasushima@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 10:21:36 -07:00
b4012d7599 git-gui: apply po template to Japanese translation
Signed-off-by: Satoshi Yasushima <s.yasushima@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 10:21:36 -07:00
5085c8a6d8 git-gui: consistently use the same word for "blame" in Japanese
Signed-off-by: Satoshi Yasushima <s.yasushima@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 10:21:35 -07:00
f86d4c1b8a git-gui: consistently use the same word for "remote" in Japanese
Signed-off-by: Satoshi Yasushima <s.yasushima@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 10:21:35 -07:00
5e4e5bb539 xdiff: remove unneeded declarations
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-07 09:26:42 -07:00
a1277f2071 l10n: pt_PT: update Portuguese repository info
Change Portuguese l10n leadership to Vasco Almeida.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
2016-09-03 12:16:19 +00:00
bb7106334c l10n: pt_PT: update Portuguese translation
Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
2016-09-03 12:02:22 +00:00
6ebdac1bab Git 2.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-02 09:05:47 -07:00
12cfa792b8 symbolic-ref -d: do not allow removal of HEAD
If you delete the symbolic-ref HEAD from a repository, Git no longer
considers the repository valid, and even "git symbolic-ref HEAD
refs/heads/master" would not be able to recover from that state
(although "git init" can, but that is a sure sign that you are
talking about a "broken" repository).

In the spirit similar to afe5d3d5 ("symbolic ref: refuse non-ref
targets in HEAD", 2009-01-29), forbid removal of HEAD to avoid
corrupting a repository.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-02 09:01:38 -07:00
dd39dfcf8a Merge tag 'l10n-2.10.0-rnd2.2' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
l10n-2.10.0-rnd2.2

* tag 'l10n-2.10.0-rnd2.2' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation for v2.10.0-rc2 (2757t)
2016-09-02 08:48:14 -07:00
e8e349249c Merge branch 'master' of https://github.com/vnwildman/git
* 'master' of https://github.com/vnwildman/git:
  l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation for v2.10.0-rc2 (2757t)
2016-09-02 21:29:48 +08:00
10f5c52656 submodule: avoid auto-discovery in prepare_submodule_repo_env()
The function is used to set up the environment variable used in a
subprocess we spawn in a submodule directory.  The callers set up a
child_process structure, find the working tree path of one submodule
and set .dir field to it, and then use start_command() API to spawn
the subprocess like "status", "fetch", etc.

When this happens, we expect that the ".git" (either a directory or
a gitfile that points at the real location) in the current working
directory of the subprocess MUST be the repository for the submodule.

If this ".git" thing is a corrupt repository, however, because
prepare_submodule_repo_env() unsets GIT_DIR and GIT_WORK_TREE, the
subprocess will see ".git", thinks it is not a repository, and
attempt to find one by going up, likely to end up in finding the
repository of the superproject.  In some codepaths, this will cause
a command run with the "--recurse-submodules" option to recurse
forever.

By exporting GIT_DIR=.git, disable the auto-discovery logic in the
subprocess, which would instead stop it and report an error.

The test illustrates existing problems in a few callsites of this
function.  Without this fix, "git fetch --recurse-submodules", "git
status" and "git diff" keep recursing forever.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-09-01 14:01:29 -07:00
3e1952ed96 color_parse_mem: initialize "struct color" temporary
Compiling color.c with gcc 6.2.0 using -O3 produces some
-Wmaybe-uninitialized false positives:

    color.c: In function ‘color_parse_mem’:
    color.c:189:10: warning: ‘bg.blue’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
       out += xsnprintf(out, len, "%c8;2;%d;%d;%d", type,
              ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
          c->red, c->green, c->blue);
          ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    color.c:208:15: note: ‘bg.blue’ was declared here
      struct color bg = { COLOR_UNSPECIFIED };
                   ^~
    [ditto for bg.green, bg.red, fg.blue, etc]

This is doubly confusing, because the declaration shows it
being initialized! Even though we do not explicitly
initialize the color components, an incomplete initializer
sets the unmentioned members to zero.

What the warning doesn't show is that we later do this:

  struct color c;
  if (!parse_color(&c, ...)) {
          if (fg.type == COLOR_UNSPECIFIED)
                fg = c;
          ...
  }

gcc is clever enough to realize that a struct assignment
from an uninitialized variable taints the destination. But
unfortunately it's _not_ clever enough to realize that we
only look at those members when type is set to COLOR_RGB, in
which case they are always initialized.

With -O2, gcc does not look into parse_color() and must
assume that "c" emerges fully initialized. With -O3, it
inlines parse_color(), and learns just enough to get
confused.

We can silence the false positive by initializing the
temporary "c". This also future-proofs us against
violating the type assumptions (the result would probably
still be buggy, but in a deterministic way).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-31 11:11:55 -07:00
4df5e91867 error_errno: use constant return similar to error()
Commit e208f9c (make error()'s constant return value more
visible, 2012-12-15) introduced some macro trickery to make
the constant return from error() more visible to callers,
which in turn can help gcc produce better warnings (and
possibly even better code).

Later, fd1d672 (usage.c: add warning_errno() and
error_errno(), 2016-05-08) introduced another variant, and
subsequent commits converted some uses of error() to
error_errno(), losing the magic from e208f9c for those
sites.

As a result, compiling vcs-svn/svndiff.c with "gcc -O3"
produces -Wmaybe-uninitialized false positives (at least
with gcc 6.2.0). Let's give error_errno() the same
treatment, which silences these warnings.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-31 11:11:54 -07:00
5b18e70009 A few more fixes before the final 2.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-31 10:21:05 -07:00
934b1caa7a Merge tag 'l10n-2.10.0-rnd2' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
l10n-2.10.0-rnd2

* tag 'l10n-2.10.0-rnd2' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.10.0 l10n round 2
  l10n: ca.po: update translation
  l10n: fr.po v2.10.0-rc2
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2757t0f0u)
  l10n: git.pot: v2.10.0 round 2 (12 new, 44 removed)
  l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation for v2.10.0 (2789t)
  l10n: pt_PT: update Portuguese translation
  l10n: pt_PT: merge git.pot
  l10n: ko.po: Update Korean translation
  l10n: git.pot: v2.10.0 round 1 (248 new, 56 removed)
2016-08-31 10:04:14 -07:00
58e72a2179 Merge branch 'ls/packet-line-protocol-doc-fix'
Correct an age-old calco (is that a typo-like word for calc)
in the documentation.

* ls/packet-line-protocol-doc-fix:
  pack-protocol: fix maximum pkt-line size
2016-08-31 10:03:51 -07:00
4762bf36d9 Merge branch 'mh/blame-worktree'
* mh/blame-worktree:
  blame: fix segfault on untracked files
2016-08-31 10:03:50 -07:00
9010077be2 Merge branch 'kw/patch-ids-optim'
* kw/patch-ids-optim:
  p3400: make test script executable
2016-08-31 10:03:49 -07:00
3dbfe2b8ae diff-highlight: avoid highlighting combined diffs
The algorithm in diff-highlight only understands how to look
at two sides of a diff; it cannot correctly handle combined
diffs with multiple preimages. Often highlighting does not
trigger at all for these diffs because the line counts do
not match up.  E.g., if we see:

  - ours
   -theirs
  ++resolved

we would not bother highlighting; it naively looks like a
single line went away, and then a separate hunk added
another single line.

But of course there are exceptions. E.g., if the other side
deleted the line, we might see:

  - ours
  ++resolved

which looks like we dropped " ours" and added "+resolved".
This is only a small highlighting glitch (we highlight the
space and the "+" along with the content), but it's also the
tip of the iceberg. Even if we learned to find the true
content here (by noticing we are in a 3-way combined diff
and marking _two_ characters from the front of the line as
uninteresting), there are other more complicated cases where
we really do need to handle a 3-way hunk.

Let's just punt for now; we can recognize combined diffs by
the presence of extra "@" symbols in the hunk header, and
treat them as non-diff content.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-31 09:59:53 -07:00
1b5290b125 diff-highlight: add multi-byte tests
Now that we have a test suite for diff highlight, we can
show off the improvements from 8d00662 (diff-highlight: do
not split multibyte characters, 2015-04-03).

While we're at it, we can also add another case that
_doesn't_ work: combining code points are treated as their
own unit, which means that we may stick colors between them
and the character they are modifying (with the result that
the color is not shown in an xterm, though it's possible
that other terminals err the other way, and show the color
but not the accent).  There's no fix here, but let's
document it as a failure.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-31 09:58:43 -07:00
9f76e52002 diff-highlight: ignore test cruft
These are the same as in the normal t/.gitignore, with the
exception of ".prove", as our Makefile does not support it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-31 09:58:27 -07:00
a77598ef44 am: refactor read_author_script()
By splitting the part that reads from a file and the part that
parses the variable definitions from the contents, make the latter
can be more reusable in the future.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-30 12:36:42 -07:00
5c885c1b53 test-lib: drop PID from test-results/*.count
Each test run generates a "count" file in t/test-results
that stores the number of successful, failed, etc tests.
If you run "t1234-foo.sh", that file is named as
"t/test-results/t1234-foo-$$.count"

The addition of the PID there is serving no purpose, and
makes analysis of the count files harder.

The presence of the PID dates back to 2d84e9f (Modify
test-lib.sh to output stats to t/test-results/*,
2008-06-08), but no reasoning is given there. Looking at the
current code, we can see that other files we write to
test-results (like *.exit and *.out) do _not_ have the PID
included. So the presence of the PID does not meaningfully
allow one to store the results from multiple runs anyway.

Moreover, anybody wishing to read the *.count files to
aggregate results has to deal with the presence of multiple
files for a given test (and figure out which one is the most
recent based on their timestamps!). The only consumer of
these files is the aggregate.sh script, which arguably gets
this wrong. If a test is run multiple times, its counts will
appear multiple times in the total (I say arguably only
because the desired semantics aren't documented anywhere,
but I have trouble seeing how this behavior could be
useful).

So let's just drop the PID, which fixes aggregate.sh, and
will make new features based around the count files easier
to write.

Note that since the count-file may already exist (when
re-running a test), we also switch the "cat" from appending
to truncating. The use of append here was pointless in the
first place, as we expected to always write to a unique file.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-30 12:08:58 -07:00
7841c4801c pack-protocol: fix maximum pkt-line size
According to LARGE_PACKET_MAX in pkt-line.h the maximal length of a
pkt-line packet is 65520 bytes. The pkt-line header takes 4 bytes and
therefore the pkt-line data component must not exceed 65516 bytes.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-30 11:00:29 -07:00
5c57d7622e l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.10.0 l10n round 2
Update 215 translations (2757t0f0u) for git v2.10.0-rc2.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2016-08-31 00:11:13 +08:00
ba67504fa8 p3400: make test script executable
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-29 12:57:16 -07:00
7e4ffb4c17 diff-highlight: add support for --graph output
Signed-off-by: Brian Henderson <henderson.bj@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-29 12:20:50 -07:00
caf5ea707c diff-highlight: add failing test for handling --graph output
Signed-off-by: Brian Henderson <henderson.bj@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-29 12:20:18 -07:00
23b250ab0f diff-highlight: add some tests
Signed-off-by: Brian Henderson <henderson.bj@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-29 12:18:50 -07:00
bc6b13a7d2 blame: fix segfault on untracked files
Since 3b75ee9 ("blame: allow to blame paths freshly added to the index",
2016-07-16) git blame also looks at the index to determine if there is a
file that was freshly added to the index.

cache_name_pos returns -pos - 1 in case there is no match is found, or
if the name matches, but the entry has a stage other than 0.  As git
blame should work for unmerged files, it uses strcmp to determine
whether the name of the returned position matches, in which case the
file exists, but is merely unmerged, or if the file actually doesn't
exist in the index.

If the repository is empty, or if the file would lexicographically be
sorted as the last file in the repository, -cache_name_pos - 1 is
outside of the length of the active_cache array, causing git blame to
segfault.  Guard against that, and die() normally to restore the old
behaviour.

Reported-by: Simon Ruderich <simon@ruderich.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-29 11:57:33 -07:00
63b8265402 l10n: ca.po: update translation
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
2016-08-28 10:32:56 -06:00
b67e63067d l10n: fr.po v2.10.0-rc2
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2016-08-28 11:36:14 +02:00
800d88e2b3 l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation for v2.10.0-rc2 (2757t)
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2016-08-28 07:23:30 +07:00
8ed2d3fb15 l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2757t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2016-08-27 20:42:50 +01:00
b30eec1a69 Merge branch 'master' of https://github.com/vnwildman/git
* 'master' of https://github.com/vnwildman/git:
  l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation for v2.10.0 (2789t)
2016-08-27 23:36:16 +08:00
5bd166d8af l10n: git.pot: v2.10.0 round 2 (12 new, 44 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.10.0-rc2 for git v2.10.0 l10n round 2.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2016-08-27 23:23:26 +08:00
fe1280decc Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: pt_PT: update Portuguese translation
  l10n: pt_PT: merge git.pot
  l10n: ko.po: Update Korean translation
  l10n: git.pot: v2.10.0 round 1 (248 new, 56 removed)
2016-08-27 23:14:27 +08:00
b9252573c4 l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation for v2.10.0 (2789t)
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2016-08-27 09:15:28 +07:00
4369523b4b SubmittingPatches: use gitk's "Copy commit summary" format
Update the suggestion in 175d38ca ("SubmittingPatches: document how
to reference previous commits", 2016-07-28) on the format to refer
to a commit to match what gitk has been giving since last year with
its "Copy commit summary" command; also mention this as one of the
ways to obtain a commit reference in this format.

Signed-off-by: Beat Bolli <dev+git@drbeat.li>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-26 15:58:10 -07:00
d5cb9cbd64 Git 2.10-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-26 13:59:20 -07:00
e28eae3184 gitattributes: Document the unified "auto" handling
Update the documentation about text=auto:
text=auto now follows the core.autocrlf handling when files are not
normalized in the repository.

For a cross platform project recommend the usage of attributes for
line-ending conversions.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-26 13:54:16 -07:00
5cb0d5ad05 Prepare for 2.10.0-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-25 13:56:51 -07:00
0fd6c99bdf Merge branch 'ja/i18n'
The recent i18n patch we added during this cycle did a bit too much
refactoring of the messages to avoid word-legos; the repetition has
been reduced to help translators.

* ja/i18n:
  i18n: simplify numeric error reporting
  i18n: fix git rebase interactive commit messages
  i18n: fix typos for translation
2016-08-25 13:55:07 -07:00
3dc01702df Merge branch 'bw/mingw-avoid-inheriting-fd-to-lockfile'
The tempfile (hence its user lockfile) API lets the caller to open
a file descriptor to a temporary file, write into it and then
finalize it by first closing the filehandle and then either
removing or renaming the temporary file.  When the process spawns a
subprocess after obtaining the file descriptor, and if the
subprocess has not exited when the attempt to remove or rename is
made, the last step fails on Windows, because the subprocess has
the file descriptor still open.  Open tempfile with O_CLOEXEC flag
to avoid this (on Windows, this is mapped to O_NOINHERIT).

* bw/mingw-avoid-inheriting-fd-to-lockfile:
  mingw: ensure temporary file handles are not inherited by child processes
  t6026-merge-attr: child processes must not inherit index.lock handles
2016-08-25 13:55:07 -07:00
a8998453be Merge branch 'dg/document-git-c-in-git-config-doc'
The "git -c var[=val] cmd" facility to append a configuration
variable definition at the end of the search order was described in
git(1) manual page, but not in git-config(1), which was more likely
place for people to look for when they ask "can I make a one-shot
override, and if so how?"

* dg/document-git-c-in-git-config-doc:
  doc: mention `git -c` in git-config(1)
2016-08-25 13:55:07 -07:00
13e11ff707 Merge branch 'js/no-html-bypass-on-windows'
On Windows, help.browser configuration variable used to be ignored,
which has been corrected.

* js/no-html-bypass-on-windows:
  Revert "display HTML in default browser using Windows' shell API"
2016-08-25 13:55:06 -07:00
a1f0b4e286 Merge branch 'hv/doc-commit-reference-style'
A small doc update.

* hv/doc-commit-reference-style:
  SubmittingPatches: document how to reference previous commits
2016-08-25 13:55:06 -07:00
41a616dada git ls-files: text=auto eol=lf is supported in Git 2.10
The man page for `git ls-files --eol` mentions the combination
of text attributes "text=auto eol=lf" or "text=auto eol=crlf" as not
supported yet, but may be in the future.

Now they are supported.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-25 13:38:18 -07:00
9d83143621 l10n: pt_PT: update Portuguese translation
Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
2016-08-25 13:33:17 +00:00
587dae416d l10n: pt_PT: merge git.pot
Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
2016-08-25 13:33:17 +00:00
49416ad22a completion: support excluding refs
Allow completion of refs with a ^ prefix. This allows completion of
commands like 'git log HEAD ^origin/master'.

Signed-off-by: Chris Packham <judge.packham@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-24 09:51:05 -07:00
078fe30523 i18n: simplify numeric error reporting
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-24 08:47:20 -07:00
8aa6dc1d9e i18n: fix git rebase interactive commit messages
For proper i18n, the logic cannot embed english specific processing.

Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-24 08:43:27 -07:00
cd3e4677cf i18n: fix typos for translation
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-24 08:41:22 -07:00
ae1f7094f7 doc: mention git -c in git-config(1)
Signed-off-by: David Glasser <glasser@davidglasser.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-23 10:55:58 -07:00
05d1ed6148 mingw: ensure temporary file handles are not inherited by child processes
When the index is locked and child processes inherit the handle to
said lock and the parent process wants to remove the lock before the
child process exits, on Windows there is a problem: it won't work
because files cannot be deleted if a process holds a handle on them.
The symptom:

    Rename from 'xxx/.git/index.lock' to 'xxx/.git/index' failed.
    Should I try again? (y/n)

Spawning child processes with bInheritHandles==FALSE would not work
because no file handles would be inherited, not even the hStdXxx
handles in STARTUPINFO (stdin/stdout/stderr).

Opening every file with O_NOINHERIT does not work, either, as e.g.
git-upload-pack expects inherited file handles.

This leaves us with the only way out: creating temp files with the
O_NOINHERIT flag. This flag is Windows-specific, however. For our
purposes, it is equivalent to O_CLOEXEC (which does not exist on
Windows), so let's just open temporary files with the O_CLOEXEC flag and
map that flag to O_NOINHERIT on Windows.

As Eric Wong pointed out, we need to be careful to handle the case where
the Linux headers used to compile Git support O_CLOEXEC but the Linux
kernel used to run Git does not: it returns an EINVAL.

This fixes the test that we just introduced to demonstrate the problem.

Signed-off-by: Ben Wijen <ben@wijen.net>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-23 09:09:55 -07:00
ec584cd69a l10n: ko.po: Update Korean translation
Signed-off-by: Changwoo Ryu <cwryu@debian.org>
2016-08-22 00:41:23 +09:00
2632c897f7 Git 2.10-rc1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-19 15:39:33 -07:00
83d9eb0ad8 Merge branch 'lt/gpg-show-long-key-in-signature-verification'
"git log --show-signature" and other commands that display the
verification status of PGP signature now shows the longer key-id,
as 32-bit key-id is so last century.

* lt/gpg-show-long-key-in-signature-verification:
  gpg-interface: prefer "long" key format output when verifying pgp signatures
2016-08-19 15:34:16 -07:00
d05d0e9966 Merge branch 'ab/hooks'
"git rev-parse --git-path hooks/<hook>" learned to take
core.hooksPath configuration variable (introduced during 2.9 cycle)
into account.

* ab/hooks:
  rev-parse: respect core.hooksPath in --git-path
2016-08-19 15:34:16 -07:00
331f06d6f1 Merge branch 'jk/difftool-command-not-found'
"git difftool" by default ignores the error exit from the backend
commands it spawns, because often they signal that they found
differences by exiting with a non-zero status code just like "diff"
does; the exit status codes 126 and above however are special in
that they are used to signal that the command is not executable,
does not exist, or killed by a signal.  "git difftool" has been
taught to notice these exit status codes.

* jk/difftool-command-not-found:
  difftool: always honor fatal error exit codes
2016-08-19 15:34:15 -07:00
e6dab9f62f Merge branch 'sb/checkout-explit-detach-no-advice'
"git checkout --detach <branch>" used to give the same advice
message as that is issued when "git checkout <tag>" (or anything
that is not a branch name) is given, but asking with "--detach" is
an explicit enough sign that the user knows what is going on.  The
advice message has been squelched in this case.

* sb/checkout-explit-detach-no-advice:
  checkout: do not mention detach advice for explicit --detach option
2016-08-19 15:34:15 -07:00
643b62213e Merge branch 'tb/t0027-raciness-fix'
The t0027 test for CRLF conversion was timing dependent and flaky.

* tb/t0027-raciness-fix:
  convert: Correct NNO tests and missing `LF will be replaced by CRLF`
2016-08-19 15:34:14 -07:00
aeb1b7f55d Merge branch 'rs/pull-signed-tag'
When "git merge-recursive" works on history with many criss-cross
merges in "verbose" mode, the names the command assigns to the
virtual merge bases could have overwritten each other by unintended
reuse of the same piece of memory.

* rs/pull-signed-tag:
  commit: use FLEX_ARRAY in struct merge_remote_desc
  merge-recursive: fix verbose output for multiple base trees
  commit: factor out set_merge_remote_desc()
  commit: use xstrdup() in get_merge_parent()
2016-08-19 15:34:14 -07:00
6db5967d4e Revert "display HTML in default browser using Windows' shell API"
Since 4804aab (help (Windows): Display HTML in default browser using
Windows' shell API, 2008-07-13), Git for Windows used to call
`ShellExecute()` to launch the default Windows handler for `.html`
files.

The idea was to avoid going through a shell script, for performance
reasons.

However, this change ignores the `help.browser` config setting. Together
with browsing help not being a performance-critical operation, let's
just revert that patch.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-19 13:47:28 -07:00
ad65f7e3b7 t6026-merge-attr: child processes must not inherit index.lock handles
On Windows, a file cannot be removed unless all file handles to it have
been released. Hence it is particularly important to close handles when
spawning children (which would probably not even know that they hold on
to those handles).

The example chosen for this test is a custom merge driver that indeed
has no idea that it blocks the deletion of index.lock. The full use case
is a daemon that lives on after the merge, with subsequent invocations
handing off to the daemon, thereby avoiding hefty start-up costs. We
simulate this behavior by simply sleeping one second.

Note that the test only fails on Windows, due to the file locking issue.
Since we have no way to say "expect failure with MINGW, success
otherwise", we simply skip this test on Windows for now.

Signed-off-by: Ben Wijen <ben@wijen.net>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-18 13:56:45 -07:00
d63263a4de RelNotes: final batch of topics before -rc1 2016-08-17 14:09:17 -07:00
187c80ba93 Merge branch 'js/test-lint-pathname'
The "t/" hierarchy is prone to get an unusual pathname; "make test"
has been taught to make sure they do not contain paths that cannot
be checked out on Windows (and the mechanism can be reusable to
catch pathnames that are not portable to other platforms as need
arises).

* js/test-lint-pathname:
  t/Makefile: ensure that paths are valid on platforms we care
2016-08-17 14:07:48 -07:00
3f5ad0a090 Merge branch 'sg/reflog-past-root'
A small test clean-up for a topic introduced in v2.9.1 and later.

* sg/reflog-past-root:
  t1410: remove superfluous 'git reflog' from the 'walk past root' test
2016-08-17 14:07:48 -07:00
4a78871152 Merge branch 'rs/mailinfo-lib'
Small code clean-up.

* rs/mailinfo-lib:
  mailinfo: recycle strbuf in check_header()
2016-08-17 14:07:47 -07:00
2f664566c5 Merge branch 'jk/tighten-alloc'
Small code and comment clean-up.

* jk/tighten-alloc:
  receive-pack: use FLEX_ALLOC_MEM in queue_command()
  correct FLEXPTR_* example in comment
2016-08-17 14:07:46 -07:00
a6711ed714 Merge branch 'va/i18n'
A handful of tests that were broken under gettext-poison build have
been fixed.

* va/i18n:
  t7411: become resilient to GETTEXT_POISON
  t5520: become resilient to GETTEXT_POISON
  t3404: become resilient to GETTEXT_POISON
2016-08-17 14:07:45 -07:00
d2d07ab861 imap-send: Tell cURL to use imap:// or imaps://
Right now the imap:// or imaps:// part of imap.host is not being
passed on to cURL.  Perhaps it was able to guess correctly under some
circumstances, but I was not able to find one; it was just trying to
make HTTP requests for me.  It’s better to be explicit in any case.

Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-17 12:46:10 -07:00
7c5543115e git-multimail: update to release 1.4.0
Changes are described in CHANGES.

Contributions-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Contributions-by: Irfan Adilovic <irfanadilovic@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-17 11:36:08 -07:00
07d1a42bad relnotes: redo the description of text=auto fix
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-17 11:31:40 -07:00
175d38ca23 SubmittingPatches: document how to reference previous commits
To reference previous commits people used to put just the
abbreviated SHA-1 into commit messages.  This is what has evolved as
a more stable format for referencing commits.  So lets document it
for everyone to look-up when needed.

Signed-off-by: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-17 10:47:33 -07:00
af2b21ec3c Merge branch 'lt/gpg-show-long-key-in-signature-verification-maint' into lt/gpg-show-long-key-in-signature-verification
Linus's original was rebased to apply to the maintenance track just
in case binary distributors that are stuck in the past want to take
it to their older codebase.  Let's merge it up to more modern
codebase that has Peff's gpg-interface clean-up topic that appeared
after Git 2.9 was tagged.

* lt/gpg-show-long-key-in-signature-verification-maint:
  gpg-interface: prefer "long" key format output when verifying pgp signatures
2016-08-16 15:04:13 -07:00
b624a3e67f gpg-interface: prefer "long" key format output when verifying pgp signatures
Yes, gpg2 already uses the long format by default, but most
distributions seem to still have "gpg" be the older 1.x version due to
compatibility reasons.  And older versions of gpg only show the 32-bit
short ID, which is quite insecure.

This doesn't actually matter for the _verification_ itself: if the
verification passes, the pgp signature is good.  But if you don't
actually have the key yet, and want to fetch it, or you want to check
exactly which key was used for verification and want to check it, we
should specify the key with more precision.

In fact, we should preferentially specify the whole key fingerprint, but
gpg doesn't actually support that.  Which is really quite sad.

Showing the "long" format improves things to at least show 64 bits of
the fingerprint.  That's a lot better, even if it's not perfect.

This change the log format for "git log --show-signature" from

    commit 2376d31787
    merged tag 'v2.9.3'
    gpg: Signature made Fri 12 Aug 2016 09:17:59 AM PDT using RSA key ID 96AFE6CB
    gpg: Good signature from "Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>"
    gpg:                 aka "Junio C Hamano <jch@google.com>"
    gpg:                 aka "Junio C Hamano <junio@pobox.com>"
    Merge: 2807cd7b25 e0c1ceafc5
    Author: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
    Date:   Fri Aug 12 10:02:18 2016 -0700

to

    commit 2376d31787
    merged tag 'v2.9.3'
    gpg: Signature made Fri 12 Aug 2016 09:17:59 AM PDT
    gpg:                using RSA key B0B5E88696AFE6CB
    gpg: Good signature from "Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>"
    gpg:                 aka "Junio C Hamano <jch@google.com>"
    gpg:                 aka "Junio C Hamano <junio@pobox.com>"
    Merge: 2807cd7b25 e0c1ceafc5
    Author: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
    Date:   Fri Aug 12 10:02:18 2016 -0700

(note the longer key ID, but also the reflowing of the text) and also
changes the format in the merge messages when merging a signed
tag.

If you already use gpg2 (either because it's installed by default, or
because you have set your gpg_program configuration to point to gpg2),
that already used the long format, you'll also see a change: it will now
have the same formatting as gpg 1.x, and the verification string looks
something like

    gpg: Signature made Sun 24 Jul 2016 12:24:02 PM PDT
    gpg:                using RSA key 79BE3E4300411886
    gpg: Good signature from "Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>" [ultimate]

where it used to be on one line:

    gpg: Signature made Sun 24 Jul 2016 12:24:02 PM PDT using RSA key ID 79BE3E4300411886
    gpg: Good signature from "Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>" [ultimate]

so there is certainly a chance this could break some automated scripting.
But the 32-bit key ID's really are broken. Also note that because of the
differences between gpg-1.x and gpg-2.x, hopefully any scripted key ID
parsing code (if such code exists) is already flexible enough to not care.

This was triggered by the fact that the "evil32" project keys ended up
leaking to the public key servers, so now there are 32-bit aliases for
just about every open source developer that you can easily get by
mistake if you use the 32-bit short ID format.

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-16 15:02:22 -07:00
9445b4921e rev-parse: respect core.hooksPath in --git-path
The idea of the --git-path option is not only to avoid having to
prefix paths with the output of --git-dir all the time, but also to
respect overrides for specific common paths inside the .git directory
(e.g. `git rev-parse --git-path objects` will report the value of the
environment variable GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY, if set).

When introducing the core.hooksPath setting, we forgot to adjust
git_path() accordingly. This patch fixes that.

While at it, revert the special-casing of core.hooksPath in
run-command.c, as it is now no longer needed.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-16 12:03:26 -07:00
c2cafd39bc t/Makefile: ensure that paths are valid on platforms we care
Some pathnames that are okay on ext4 and on HFS+ cannot be checked
out on Windows. Tests that want to see operations on such paths on
filesystems that support them must do so behind appropriate test
prerequisites, and must not include them in the source tree (instead
they should create them when they run). Otherwise, the source tree
cannot even be checked out.

Make sure that double-quotes, asterisk, colon, greater/less-than,
question-mark, backslash, tab, vertical-bar, as well as any non-ASCII
characters never appear in the pathnames with a new test-lint-* target
as part of a `make test`. To that end, we call `git ls-files` (ensuring
that the paths are quoted properly), relying on the fact that paths
containing non-ASCII characters are quoted within double-quotes.

In case that the source code does not actually live in a Git
repository (e.g. when extracted from a .zip file), or that the `git`
executable cannot be executed, we simply ignore the error for now; In
that case, our trusty Continuous Integration will be the last line of
defense and catch any problematic file name.

Noticed when a topic wanted to add a pathname with '>' in it.  A
check like this will prevent a similar problems from happening in the
future.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-16 11:56:42 -07:00
45a4f5d9f9 difftool: always honor fatal error exit codes
At the moment difftool's "trust exit code" logic always suppresses the
exit status of the diff utility we invoke.  This is useful because we
don't want to exit just because diff returned "1" because the files
differ, but it's confusing if the shell returns an error because the
selected diff utility is not found.

POSIX specifies 127 as the exit status for "command not found", 126 for
"command found but is not executable" and values greater than 128 if the
command terminated because it received a signal [1] and at least bash
and dash follow this specification, while diff utilities generally use
"1" for the exit status we want to ignore.

Handle any value of 126 or greater as a special value indicating that
some form of fatal error occurred.

[1] http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/V3_chap02.html#tag_18_08_02

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-15 15:24:05 -07:00
779b88a91f checkout: do not mention detach advice for explicit --detach option
When a user asked for a detached HEAD specifically with `--detach`,
we do not need to give advice on what a detached HEAD state entails as
we can assume they know what they're getting into as they asked for it.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-15 15:01:45 -07:00
07c92928f2 Relnotes: decribe the updates to the "text=auto" attribute
Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-15 13:15:49 -07:00
0eb75ce827 t1410: remove superfluous 'git reflog' from the 'walk past root' test
The test added in 71abeb753f (reflog: continue walking the reflog
past root commits, 2016-06-03) contains an unnecessary 'git reflog'
execution, which was part of my debug/tracing instrumentation that I
somehow didn't manage to remove before submitting.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-15 09:21:39 -07:00
9fa976fffe l10n: git.pot: v2.10.0 round 1 (248 new, 56 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.10.0-rc0 for git v2.10.0 l10n round 1.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2016-08-15 22:45:20 +08:00
726cc2ba12 Git 2.10-rc0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-14 14:48:06 -07:00
a0ad53c181 convert: Correct NNO tests and missing LF will be replaced by CRLF
When a non-reversible CRLF conversion is done in "git add",
a warning is printed on stderr (or Git dies, depending on checksafe)

The function commit_chk_wrnNNO() in t0027 was written to test this,
but did the wrong thing: Instead of looking at the warning
from "git add", it looked at the warning from "git commit".

This is racy because "git commit" may not have to do CRLF conversion
at all if it can use the sha1 value from the index (which depends on
whether "add" and "commit" run in a single second).

Correct t0027 and replace the commit for each and every file with a commit
of all files in one go.
The function commit_chk_wrnNNO() should be renamed in a separate commit.

Now that t0027 does the right thing, it detects a bug in covert.c:
This sequence should generate the warning `LF will be replaced by CRLF`,
but does not:

$ git init
$ git config core.autocrlf false
$ printf "Line\r\n" >file
$ git add file
$ git commit -m "commit with CRLF"
$ git config core.autocrlf true
$ printf "Line\n" >file
$ git add file

"git add" calls crlf_to_git() in convert.c, which calls check_safe_crlf().
When has_cr_in_index(path) is true, crlf_to_git() returns too early and
check_safe_crlf() is not called at all.

Factor out the code which determines if "git checkout" converts LF->CRLF
into will_convert_lf_to_crlf().

Update the logic around check_safe_crlf() and "simulate" the possible
LF->CRLF conversion at "git checkout" with help of will_convert_lf_to_crlf().
Thanks to Jeff King <peff@peff.net> for analyzing t0027.

Reported-By: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-14 13:45:52 -07:00
ddd0bfac7c receive-pack: use FLEX_ALLOC_MEM in queue_command()
Use the macro FLEX_ALLOC_MEM instead of open-coding it.  This shortens
and simplifies the code a bit.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:49:30 -07:00
5447a76aad commit: use FLEX_ARRAY in struct merge_remote_desc
Convert the name member of struct merge_remote_desc to a FLEX_ARRAY and
use FLEX_ALLOC_STR to build the struct.  This halves the number of
memory allocations, saves the storage for a pointer and avoids an
indirection when reading the name.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:48:07 -07:00
a25716535b merge-recursive: fix verbose output for multiple base trees
One of the indirect callers of make_virtual_commit() passes the result of
oid_to_hex() as the name, i.e. a pointer to a static buffer.  Since the
function uses that string pointer directly in building a struct
merge_remote_desc, multiple entries can end up sharing the same name
inadvertently.

Fix that by calling set_merge_remote_desc(), which creates a copy of the
string, instead of building the struct by hand.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:48:04 -07:00
beb518c985 commit: factor out set_merge_remote_desc()
Export a helper function for allocating, populating and attaching a
merge_remote_desc to a commit.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:48:00 -07:00
c089320cf6 commit: use xstrdup() in get_merge_parent()
Handle allocation errors for the name member just like we already do
for the struct merge_remote_desc itself.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:47:49 -07:00
ecf30b237c mailinfo: recycle strbuf in check_header()
handle_message_id() duplicates the contents of the strbuf that is passed
to it.  Its only caller proceeds to release the strbuf immediately after
that.  Reuse it instead and make that change of object ownership more
obvious by inlining this short function.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:45:24 -07:00
0bb1519f05 correct FLEXPTR_* example in comment
This section is about "The FLEXPTR_* variants", so use FLEXPTR_ALLOC_STR
in the example.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:44:03 -07:00
a117be4d34 doc: revisions: sort examples and fix alignment of the unchanged
The previous commit adjusted the column alignment for revision
examples which show expansion. Fix the unchanged examples and sort
those that show expansions to the end of the list.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:36:45 -07:00
7a5370e612 doc: revisions: show revision expansion in examples
The revisions examples show the revison arguments and the selected
commits, but do not show the intermediate step of the expansion of
the special 'range' notations. Extend the examples, including an
all-parents multi-parent merge commit example.

Sort the examples and fix the alignment for those unaffected
in the next commit.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:36:44 -07:00
1afe13b98a doc: revisions - clarify reachability examples
For the r1..r2 case, the exclusion of r1, rather than inclusion of r2,
 would be the unexpected case in natural language for a simple linear
 development, i.e. start..end excludes start.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:36:44 -07:00
0b451248b3 doc: revisions - define reachable
Do not self-define `reachable`, which can lead to misunderstanding.
Instead define `reachability` explictly.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:36:44 -07:00
8cf5739426 doc: gitrevisions - clarify 'latter case' is revision walk
The prior sentence has too many clauses for easy parsing.
Replace 'the latter case' with a direct quote.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:36:44 -07:00
6cb4f785ae doc: gitrevisions - use 'reachable' in page description
Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:36:44 -07:00
39b4d85e5b doc: revisions: single vs multi-parent notation comparison
Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:36:44 -07:00
59841a3900 doc: revisions: extra clarification of <rev>^! notation effects
Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-13 19:36:44 -07:00
3126732e39 t7411: become resilient to GETTEXT_POISON
The concerned test greps the error message in git_parse_source() which
contains "bad config line %d in submodule-blob %s".

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-12 15:12:33 -07:00
0955ab4654 t5520: become resilient to GETTEXT_POISON
Use test_i18ngrep function instead of grep for grepping strings.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-12 15:12:33 -07:00
7ca79dca06 t3404: become resilient to GETTEXT_POISON
The concerned test greps the output of exit_with_patch() in
git-rebase--interactive.sh script.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-12 15:12:33 -07:00
391a3c70c3 doc: revisions: give headings for the two and three dot notations
While there, also break out the other shorthand notations and
add a title for the revision range summary (which also appears
in git-rev-parse, so keep it mixed case).

We do not quote the notation within the headings as the asciidoc ->
docbook -> groff man viewer toolchain, particularly the docbook-groff
step, does not cope with two font changes, failing to return the heading
font to bold after the quotation of the notation.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-12 13:57:46 -07:00
2376d31787 Sync with 2.9.3
* tag 'v2.9.3':
  Git 2.9.3
2016-08-12 10:02:18 -07:00
2807cd7b25 Final batch before 2.10-rc0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-12 10:01:48 -07:00
dd610aeda6 Merge branch 'kw/patch-ids-optim'
When "git rebase" tries to compare set of changes on the updated
upstream and our own branch, it computes patch-id for all of these
changes and attempts to find matches. This has been optimized by
lazily computing the full patch-id (which is expensive) to be
compared only for changes that touch the same set of paths.

* kw/patch-ids-optim:
  rebase: avoid computing unnecessary patch IDs
  patch-ids: add flag to create the diff patch id using header only data
  patch-ids: replace the seen indicator with a commit pointer
  patch-ids: stop using a hand-rolled hashmap implementation
2016-08-12 09:47:39 -07:00
3787e3c16c Merge branch 'ew/http-backend-batch-headers'
The http-backend (the server-side component of smart-http
transport) used to trickle the HTTP header one at a time.  Now
these write(2)s are batched.

* ew/http-backend-batch-headers:
  http-backend: buffer headers before sending
2016-08-12 09:47:38 -07:00
7575c12321 Merge branch 'va/i18n'
* va/i18n:
  i18n: git-stash: mark messages for translation
  i18n: archive: mark errors for translation
  i18n: setup: mark error messages for translation
2016-08-12 09:47:38 -07:00
e6b8f80653 Merge branch 'vs/typofix'
* vs/typofix:
  Spelling fixes
2016-08-12 09:47:37 -07:00
2c44b7a53b Merge branch 'js/mv-dir-to-new-directory'
"git mv dir non-existing-dir/" did not work in some environments
the same way as existing mainstream platforms.  The code now moves
"dir" to "non-existing-dir", without relying on rename("A", "B/")
that strips the trailing slash of '/'.

* js/mv-dir-to-new-directory:
  git mv: do not keep slash in `git mv dir non-existing-dir/`
2016-08-12 09:47:37 -07:00
0a315befa7 Merge branch 'rs/use-strbuf-add-unique-abbrev'
A small code clean-up.

* rs/use-strbuf-add-unique-abbrev:
  use strbuf_add_unique_abbrev() for adding short hashes
2016-08-12 09:47:37 -07:00
57734b4e88 Merge branch 'jk/big-and-future-archive-tar'
A small code clean-up.

* jk/big-and-future-archive-tar:
  archive-tar: make write_extended_header() void
2016-08-12 09:47:37 -07:00
6d4960ac7d Merge branch 'jk/trace-fixup'
Various small fixups to the "GIT_TRACE" facility.

* jk/trace-fixup:
  trace: do not fall back to stderr
  write_or_die: drop write_or_whine_pipe()
  trace: disable key after write error
  trace: correct variable name in write() error message
  trace: cosmetic fixes for error messages
  trace: use warning() for printing trace errors
  trace: stop using write_or_whine_pipe()
  trace: handle NULL argument in trace_disable()
2016-08-12 09:47:36 -07:00
8a5ad2ba5b Merge branch 'rs/merge-recursive-string-list-init'
A small code clean-up.

* rs/merge-recursive-string-list-init:
  merge-recursive: use STRING_LIST_INIT_NODUP
2016-08-12 09:47:36 -07:00
b32d7c524b Merge branch 'rs/merge-add-strategies-simplification'
A small code clean-up.

* rs/merge-add-strategies-simplification:
  merge: use string_list_split() in add_strategies()
2016-08-12 09:47:36 -07:00
18f3ce8841 Merge branch 'rs/child-process-init'
A small code clean-up.

* rs/child-process-init:
  use CHILD_PROCESS_INIT to initialize automatic variables
2016-08-12 09:47:36 -07:00
bb876eb371 Merge branch 'js/import-tars-hardlinks'
"import-tars" fast-import script (in contrib/) used to ignore a
hardlink target and replaced it with an empty file, which has been
corrected to record the same blob as the other file the hardlink is
shared with.

* js/import-tars-hardlinks:
  import-tars: support hard links
2016-08-12 09:47:36 -07:00
62134efdba Merge branch 'ms/document-pack-window-memory-is-per-thread'
* ms/document-pack-window-memory-is-per-thread:
  document git-repack interaction of pack.threads and pack.windowMemory
2016-08-12 09:47:35 -07:00
7d4d742c23 Merge branch 'vs/completion-branch-fully-spelled-d-m-r'
* vs/completion-branch-fully-spelled-d-m-r:
  completion: complete --delete, --move, and --remotes for git branch
2016-08-12 09:47:35 -07:00
2f9c615efb Merge branch 'sb/submodule-clone-retry'
Fix-up to an error codepath in a topic already in 'master'.

* sb/submodule-clone-retry:
  submodule--helper: use parallel processor correctly
2016-08-12 09:47:34 -07:00
e0c1ceafc5 Git 2.9.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-12 09:17:51 -07:00
9b601eafd1 Merge branch 'jk/difftool-in-subdir' into maint
"git difftool <paths>..." started in a subdirectory failed to
interpret the paths relative to that directory, which has been
fixed.

* jk/difftool-in-subdir:
  difftool: use Git::* functions instead of passing around state
  difftool: avoid $GIT_DIR and $GIT_WORK_TREE
  difftool: fix argument handling in subdirs
2016-08-12 09:16:57 -07:00
f4fd627661 Merge branch 'jk/reset-ident-time-per-commit' into maint
Not-so-recent rewrite of "git am" that started making internal
calls into the commit machinery had an unintended regression, in
that no matter how many seconds it took to apply many patches, the
resulting committer timestamp for the resulting commits were all
the same.

* jk/reset-ident-time-per-commit:
  am: reset cached ident date for each patch
2016-08-12 09:16:56 -07:00
b3dfeebb92 rebase: avoid computing unnecessary patch IDs
The `rebase` family of Git commands avoid applying patches that were
already integrated upstream. They do that by using the revision walking
option that computes the patch IDs of the two sides of the rebase
(local-only patches vs upstream-only ones) and skipping those local
patches whose patch ID matches one of the upstream ones.

In many cases, this causes unnecessary churn, as already the set of
paths touched by a given commit would suffice to determine that an
upstream patch has no local equivalent.

This hurts performance in particular when there are a lot of upstream
patches, and/or large ones.

Therefore, let's introduce the concept of a "diff-header-only" patch ID,
compare those first, and only evaluate the "full" patch ID lazily.

Please note that in contrast to the "full" patch IDs, those
"diff-header-only" patch IDs are prone to collide with one another, as
adjacent commits frequently touch the very same files. Hence we now
have to be careful to allow multiple hash entries with the same hash.
We accomplish that by using the hashmap_add() function that does not even
test for hash collisions.  This also allows us to evaluate the full patch ID
lazily, i.e. only when we found commits with matching diff-header-only
patch IDs.

We add a performance test that demonstrates ~1-6% improvement.  In
practice this will depend on various factors such as how many upstream
changes and how big those changes are along with whether file system
caches are cold or warm.  As Git's test suite has no way of catching
performance regressions, we also add a regression test that verifies
that the full patch ID computation is skipped when the diff-header-only
computation suffices.

Signed-off-by: Kevin Willford <kcwillford@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-11 14:39:16 -07:00
2e3a16b279 Spelling fixes
<BAD>                     <CORRECTED>
    accidently                accidentally
    commited                  committed
    dependancy                dependency
    emtpy                     empty
    existance                 existence
    explicitely               explicitly
    git-upload-achive         git-upload-archive
    hierachy                  hierarchy
    indegee                   indegree
    intial                    initial
    mulitple                  multiple
    non-existant              non-existent
    precendence.              precedence.
    priviledged               privileged
    programatically           programmatically
    psuedo-binary             pseudo-binary
    soemwhere                 somewhere
    successfull               successful
    transfering               transferring
    uncommited                uncommitted
    unkown                    unknown
    usefull                   useful
    writting                  writing

Signed-off-by: Ville Skyttä <ville.skytta@iki.fi>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-11 14:35:42 -07:00
07e7dbf0db gc: default aggressive depth to 50
This commit message is long and has lots of background and
numbers. The summary is: the current default of 250 doesn't
save much space, and costs CPU. It's not a good tradeoff.
Read on for details.

The "--aggressive" flag to git-gc does three things:

  1. use "-f" to throw out existing deltas and recompute from
     scratch

  2. use "--window=250" to look harder for deltas

  3. use "--depth=250" to make longer delta chains

Items (1) and (2) are good matches for an "aggressive"
repack. They ask the repack to do more computation work in
the hopes of getting a better pack. You pay the costs during
the repack, and other operations see only the benefit.

Item (3) is not so clear. Allowing longer chains means fewer
restrictions on the deltas, which means potentially finding
better ones and saving some space. But it also means that
operations which access the deltas have to follow longer
chains, which affects their performance. So it's a tradeoff,
and it's not clear that the tradeoff is even a good one.

The existing "250" numbers for "--aggressive" come
originally from this thread:

  http://public-inbox.org/git/alpine.LFD.0.9999.0712060803430.13796@woody.linux-foundation.org/

where Linus says:

  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.

There are some numbers in that thread, but they're mostly
focused on the improved window size, and measure the
improvement from --depth=250 and --window=250 together.
E.g.:

  http://public-inbox.org/git/9e4733910712062006l651571f3w7f76ce64c6650dff@mail.gmail.com/

talks about the improved run-time of "git-blame", which
comes from the reduced pack size. But most of that reduction
is coming from --window=250, whereas most of the extra costs
come from --depth=250. There's a link in that thread showing
that increasing the depth beyond 50 doesn't seem to help
much with the size:

  https://vcscompare.blogspot.com/2008/06/git-repack-parameters.html

but again, no discussion of the timing impact.

In an earlier thread from Ted Ts'o which discussed setting
the non-aggressive default (from 10 to 50):

  http://public-inbox.org/git/20070509134958.GA21489%40thunk.org/

we have more numbers, with the conclusion that going past 50
does not help size much, and hurts the speed of normal
operations.

So from that, we might guess that 50 is actually a sweet
spot, even for aggressive, if we interpret aggressive to
"spend time now to make a better pack". It is not clear that
"--depth=250" is actually a better pack. It may be slightly
_smaller_, but it carries a run-time penalty.

Here are some more recent timings I did to verify that. They
show three things:

  - the size of the resulting pack (so disk saved to store,
    bandwidth saved on clones/fetches)

  - the cost of "rev-list --objects --all", which shows the
    effect of the delta chains on trees (commits typically
    don't delta, and the command doesn't touch the blobs at
    all)

  - the cost of "log -Sfoo", which will additionally access
    each blob

All cases were repacked with "git repack -adf --depth=$d
--window=250" (so basically, what would happen if we tweaked
the "gc --aggressive" default depth).

The timings are all wall-clock best-of-3. The machine itself
has plenty of RAM compared to the repositories (which is
probably typical of most workstations these days), so we're
really measuring CPU usage, as the whole thing will be in
disk cache after the first run.

The core.deltaBaseCacheLimit is at its default of 96MiB.
It's possible that tweaking it would have some impact on the
tests, as some of them (especially "log -S" on a large repo)
are likely to overflow that. But bumping that carries a
run-time memory cost, so for these tests, I focused on what
we could do just with the on-disk pack tradeoffs.

Each test is done for four depths: 250 (the current value),
50 (the current default that tested well previously), 100
(to show something on the larger side, which previous tests
showed was not a good tradeoff), and 10 (the very old
default, which previous tests showed was worse than 50).

Here are the numbers for linux.git:

   depth |  size |  %    | rev-list |  %     | log -Sfoo |   %
  -------+-------+-------+----------+--------+-----------+-------
    250  | 967MB |  n/a  | 48.159s  |   n/a  | 378.088   |   n/a
    100  | 971MB | +0.4% | 41.471s  | -13.9% | 342.060   |  -9.5%
     50  | 979MB | +1.2% | 37.778s  | -21.6% | 311.040s  | -17.7%
     10  | 1.1GB | +6.6% | 32.518s  | -32.5% | 279.890s  | -25.9%

and for git.git:

   depth |  size |  %    | rev-list |  %     | log -Sfoo |   %
  -------+-------+-------+----------+--------+-----------+-------
    250  |  48MB |  n/a  |  2.215s  |   n/a  |  20.922s  |   n/a
    100  |  49MB | +0.5% |  2.140s  |  -3.4% |  17.736s  | -15.2%
     50  |  49MB | +1.7% |  2.099s  |  -5.2% |  15.418s  | -26.3%
     10  |  53MB | +9.3% |  2.001s  |  -9.7% |  12.677s  | -39.4%

You can see that that the CPU savings for regular operations improves as we
decrease the depth. The savings are less for "rev-list" on a smaller repository
than they are for blob-accessing operations, or even rev-list on a larger
repository. This may mean that a larger delta cache would help (though setting
core.deltaBaseCacheLimit by itself doesn't).

But we can also see that the space savings are not that great as the depth goes
higher. Saving 5-10% between 10 and 50 is probably worth the CPU tradeoff.
Saving 1% to go from 50 to 100, or another 0.5% to go from 100 to 250 is
probably not.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-11 11:53:19 -07:00
a42d7b6a5b Sync with maint
* maint:
  Yet another batch for 2.9.3
2016-08-10 12:38:02 -07:00
27b0ea4038 Twelfth batch for 2.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-10 12:37:53 -07:00
11b53957ac Merge branch 'sb/submodule-update-dot-branch'
A few updates to "git submodule update".

Use of "| wc -l" break with BSD variant of 'wc'.

* sb/submodule-update-dot-branch:
  t7406: fix breakage on OSX
  submodule update: allow '.' for branch value
  submodule--helper: add remote-branch helper
  submodule-config: keep configured branch around
  submodule--helper: fix usage string for relative-path
  submodule update: narrow scope of local variable
  submodule update: respect depth in subsequent fetches
  t7406: future proof tests with hard coded depth
2016-08-10 12:33:20 -07:00
1a5f1a3f25 Merge branch 'js/am-3-merge-recursive-direct'
"git am -3" calls "git merge-recursive" when it needs to fall back
to a three-way merge; this call has been turned into an internal
subroutine call instead of spawning a separate subprocess.

* js/am-3-merge-recursive-direct:
  merge-recursive: flush output buffer even when erroring out
  merge_trees(): ensure that the callers release output buffer
  merge-recursive: offer an option to retain the output in 'obuf'
  merge-recursive: write the commit title in one go
  merge-recursive: flush output buffer before printing error messages
  am -3: use merge_recursive() directly again
  merge-recursive: switch to returning errors instead of dying
  merge-recursive: handle return values indicating errors
  merge-recursive: allow write_tree_from_memory() to error out
  merge-recursive: avoid returning a wholesale struct
  merge_recursive: abort properly upon errors
  prepare the builtins for a libified merge_recursive()
  merge-recursive: clarify code in was_tracked()
  die(_("BUG")): avoid translating bug messages
  die("bug"): report bugs consistently
  t5520: verify that `pull --rebase` shows the helpful advice when failing
2016-08-10 12:33:20 -07:00
7a3ea66633 Merge branch 'js/commit-slab-decl-fix'
* js/commit-slab-decl-fix:
  commit-slab.h: avoid duplicated global static variables
  config.c: avoid duplicated global static variables
2016-08-10 12:33:20 -07:00
483ca933f8 Merge branch 'jk/completion-diff-submodule'
* jk/completion-diff-submodule:
  completion: add completion for --submodule=* diff option
2016-08-10 12:33:19 -07:00
2dceb92231 Merge branch 'cc/mailmap-tuxfamily'
* cc/mailmap-tuxfamily:
  .mailmap: use Christian Couder's Tuxfamily address
2016-08-10 12:33:18 -07:00
db40a62239 Merge branch 'jt/format-patch-from-config'
"git format-patch" learned format.from configuration variable to
specify the default settings for its "--from" option.

* jt/format-patch-from-config:
  format-patch: format.from gives the default for --from
2016-08-10 12:33:18 -07:00
e674762786 Merge branch 'jk/push-force-with-lease-creation'
"git push --force-with-lease" already had enough logic to allow
ensuring that such a push results in creation of a ref (i.e. the
receiving end did not have another push from sideways that would be
discarded by our force-pushing), but didn't expose this possibility
to the users.  It does so now.

* jk/push-force-with-lease-creation:
  t5533: make it pass on case-sensitive filesystems
  push: allow pushing new branches with --force-with-lease
  push: add shorthand for --force-with-lease branch creation
  Documentation/git-push: fix placeholder formatting
2016-08-10 12:33:18 -07:00
24fbe00490 Merge branch 'jk/reset-ident-time-per-commit'
Not-so-recent rewrite of "git am" that started making internal
calls into the commit machinery had an unintended regression, in
that no matter how many seconds it took to apply many patches, the
resulting committer timestamp for the resulting commits were all
the same.

* jk/reset-ident-time-per-commit:
  am: reset cached ident date for each patch
2016-08-10 12:33:17 -07:00
8e4b75a97b Yet another batch for 2.9.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-10 11:56:56 -07:00
019d8a409f Merge branch 'jh/clean-smudge-f-doc' into maint
A minor documentation update.

This was split out from a stalled jh/clean-smudge-annex topic
before discarding it.

* jh/clean-smudge-f-doc:
  clarify %f documentation
2016-08-10 11:55:34 -07:00
574a31b5b7 Merge branch 'rs/use-strbuf-addstr' into maint
* rs/use-strbuf-addstr:
  use strbuf_addstr() instead of strbuf_addf() with "%s"
  use strbuf_addstr() for adding constant strings to a strbuf
2016-08-10 11:55:34 -07:00
9a54075c80 Merge branch 'cp/completion-clone-recurse-submodules' into maint
* cp/completion-clone-recurse-submodules:
  completion: add option '--recurse-submodules' to 'git clone'
2016-08-10 11:55:33 -07:00
66d6511c53 Merge branch 'jk/t4205-cleanup' into maint
Test modernization.

* jk/t4205-cleanup:
  t4205: indent here documents
  t4205: drop top-level &&-chaining
2016-08-10 11:55:32 -07:00
33481c1e59 Merge branch 'jc/hashmap-doc-init' into maint
The API documentation for hashmap was unclear if hashmap_entry
can be safely discarded without any other consideration.  State
that it is safe to do so.

* jc/hashmap-doc-init:
  hashmap: clarify that hashmap_entry can safely be discarded
2016-08-10 11:55:31 -07:00
05a6d0e9d0 Merge branch 'js/nedmalloc-gcc6-warnings' into maint
Squelch compiler warnings for netmalloc (in compat/) library.

* js/nedmalloc-gcc6-warnings:
  nedmalloc: work around overzealous GCC 6 warning
  nedmalloc: fix misleading indentation
2016-08-10 11:55:31 -07:00
f7fb6e21b8 Merge branch 'nd/fbsd-lazy-mtime' into maint
FreeBSD can lie when asked mtime of a directory, which made the
untracked cache code to fall back to a slow-path, which in turn
caused tests in t7063 to fail because it wanted to verify the
behaviour of the fast-path.

* nd/fbsd-lazy-mtime:
  t7063: work around FreeBSD's lazy mtime update feature
2016-08-10 11:55:30 -07:00
1dc4aa67d6 Merge branch 'ab/gitweb-link-html-escape' into maint
The characters in the label shown for tags/refs for commits in
"gitweb" output are now properly escaped for proper HTML output.

* ab/gitweb-link-html-escape:
  gitweb: escape link body in format_ref_marker
2016-08-10 11:55:30 -07:00
85b2ea29e8 Merge branch 'js/t4130-rename-without-ino' into maint
Windows port was failing some tests in t4130, due to the lack of
inum in the returned values by its lstat(2) emulation.

* js/t4130-rename-without-ino:
  t4130: work around Windows limitation
2016-08-10 11:55:30 -07:00
7b163e9187 Merge branch 'jc/grep-commandline-vs-configuration' into maint
"git -c grep.patternType=extended log --basic-regexp" misbehaved
because the internal API to access the grep machinery was not
designed well.

* jc/grep-commandline-vs-configuration:
  grep: further simplify setting the pattern type
2016-08-10 11:55:29 -07:00
cee6c5b47b Merge branch 'jk/diff-do-not-reuse-wtf-needs-cleaning' into maint
There is an optimization used in "git diff $treeA $treeB" to borrow
an already checked-out copy in the working tree when it is known to
be the same as the blob being compared, expecting that open/mmap of
such a file is faster than reading it from the object store, which
involves inflating and applying delta.  This however kicked in even
when the checked-out copy needs to go through the convert-to-git
conversion (including the clean filter), which defeats the whole
point of the optimization.  The optimization has been disabled when
the conversion is necessary.

* jk/diff-do-not-reuse-wtf-needs-cleaning:
  diff: do not reuse worktree files that need "clean" conversion
2016-08-10 11:55:28 -07:00
d1d9c3cc60 Merge branch 'pm/build-persistent-https-with-recent-go' into maint
The build procedure for "git persistent-https" helper (in contrib/)
has been updated so that it can be built with more recent versions
of Go.

* pm/build-persistent-https-with-recent-go:
  contrib/persistent-https: use Git version for build label
  contrib/persistent-https: update ldflags syntax for Go 1.7+
2016-08-10 11:55:27 -07:00
366d2d5f48 Merge branch 'da/subtree-2.9-regression' into maint
"git merge" in Git v2.9 was taught to forbid merging an unrelated
lines of history by default, but that is exactly the kind of thing
the "--rejoin" mode of "git subtree" (in contrib/) wants to do.
"git subtree" has been taught to use the "--allow-unrelated-histories"
option to override the default.

* da/subtree-2.9-regression:
  subtree: fix "git subtree split --rejoin"
  t7900-subtree.sh: fix quoting and broken && chains
2016-08-10 11:55:26 -07:00
d9d7ab3b1d Merge branch 'os/no-verify-skips-commit-msg-too' into maint
"git commit --help" said "--no-verify" is only about skipping the
pre-commit hook, and failed to say that it also skipped the
commit-msg hook.

* os/no-verify-skips-commit-msg-too:
  commit: describe that --no-verify skips the commit-msg hook in the help text
2016-08-10 11:55:25 -07:00
b7fb136bf6 Merge branch 'rs/rm-strbuf-optim' into maint
The use of strbuf in "git rm" to build filename to remove was a bit
suboptimal, which has been fixed.

* rs/rm-strbuf-optim:
  rm: reuse strbuf for all remove_dir_recursively() calls
2016-08-10 11:55:24 -07:00
60b84ba26c Merge branch 'jk/parse-options-concat' into maint
Users of the parse_options_concat() API function need to allocate
extra slots in advance and fill them with OPT_END() when they want
to decide the set of supported options dynamically, which makes the
code error-prone and hard to read.  This has been corrected by tweaking
the API to allocate and return a new copy of "struct option" array.

* jk/parse-options-concat:
  parse_options: allocate a new array when concatenating
2016-08-10 11:55:24 -07:00
dbc5276fed Merge branch 'ls/travis-enable-httpd-tests' into maint
Allow http daemon tests in Travis CI tests.

* ls/travis-enable-httpd-tests:
  travis-ci: enable web server tests t55xx on Linux
2016-08-10 11:55:23 -07:00
f98a20c50a Merge branch 'ew/autoconf-pthread' into maint
Existing autoconf generated test for the need to link with pthread
library did not check all the functions from pthread libraries;
recent FreeBSD has some functions in libc but not others, and we
mistakenly thought linking with libc is enough when it is not.

* ew/autoconf-pthread:
  configure.ac: stronger test for pthread linkage
2016-08-10 11:55:21 -07:00
e223c2c77f Merge branch 'rs/help-c-source-with-gitattributes' into maint
The .c/.h sources are marked as such in our .gitattributes file so
that "git diff -W" and friends would work better.

* rs/help-c-source-with-gitattributes:
  .gitattributes: set file type for C files
2016-08-10 11:55:20 -07:00
61efc5c2d8 Merge branch 'mm/status-suggest-merge-abort' into maint
"git status" learned to suggest "merge --abort" during a conflicted
merge, just like it already suggests "rebase --abort" during a
conflicted rebase.

* mm/status-suggest-merge-abort:
  status: suggest 'git merge --abort' when appropriate
2016-08-10 11:55:19 -07:00
967d7f898c t7406: fix breakage on OSX
On OSX `wc` prefixes the output of numbers with whitespace, such
that the `commit_count` would be "SP <NUMBER>". When using that in

    git submodule update --init --depth=$commit_count

the depth would be empty and the number is interpreted as the
pathspec.  Fix this by not using `wc` and rather instruct rev-list
to count.

Another way to fix this is to remove the `=` sign after the
`--depth` argument as then we are allowed to have more than just one
whitespace between `--depth` and the actual number.  Prefer the
solution of rev-list counting as that is expected to be slightly
faster and more self-contained within Git.

Reported-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>,
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-10 11:27:22 -07:00
954176c128 document git-repack interaction of pack.threads and pack.windowMemory
Signed-off-by: Michael Stahl <mstahl@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-10 10:55:13 -07:00
599e7a0b9e i18n: git-stash: mark messages for translation
Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-10 10:50:18 -07:00
b36045c1dc http-backend: buffer headers before sending
Avoid waking up the readers for unnecessary context switches for
each line of header data being written, as all the headers are
written in short succession.

It is unlikely any HTTP/1.x server would want to read a CGI
response one-line-at-a-time and trickle each to the client.
Instead, I'd expect HTTP servers want to minimize syscall and
TCP/IP framing overhead by trying to send all of its response
headers in a single syscall or even combining the headers and
first chunk of the body with MSG_MORE or writev.

Verified by strace-ing response parsing on the CGI side.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-10 09:27:26 -07:00
2201ee09b5 submodule--helper: use parallel processor correctly
When developing another patch series I had a temporary state in
which git-clone would segfault, when the call was prepared in
prepare_to_clone_next_submodule. This lead to the call failing,
i.e. in `update_clone_task_finished` the task was scheduled to be
tried again.  The second call to prepare_to_clone_next_submodule
would return 0, as the segfaulted clone did create the .git file
already, such that was not considered to need to be cloned again. I
was seeing the "BUG: ce was a submodule before?\n" message, which
was the correct behavior at the time as my local code was
buggy. When trying to debug this failure, I tried to use printing
messages into the strbuf that is passed around, but these messages
were never printed as the die(..) doesn't flush the `err` strbuf.

When implementing the die() in 665b35ecc (2016-06-09, "submodule--helper:
initial clone learns retry logic"), I considered this condition to be
a severe condition, which should lead to an immediate abort as we do not
trust ourselves any more. However the queued messages in `err` are valuable
so let's not toss them out by immediately dying, but a graceful return.

Another thing to note: The error message itself was misleading. A return
value of 0 doesn't indicate the passed in `ce` is not a submodule any more,
but just that we do not consider cloning it any more.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-09 14:54:16 -07:00
ac76fd54a8 completion: add completion for --submodule=* diff option
Teach git-completion.bash to complete --submodule= for git commands
which take diff options. Also teach completion for git-log to support
--diff-algorithms as well.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-09 12:51:50 -07:00
5a36d00cf2 i18n: archive: mark errors for translation
Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-09 12:44:59 -07:00
2ff30e67d9 i18n: setup: mark error messages for translation
Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-09 12:44:59 -07:00
2703c22fc2 completion: complete --delete, --move, and --remotes for git branch
Signed-off-by: Ville Skyttä <ville.skytta@iki.fi>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-09 11:30:23 -07:00
af920e3697 commit-slab.h: avoid duplicated global static variables
The gigantic define_commit_slab() macro repeats the definition of a
static variable that occurs earlier in the macro text. The purpose of
the repeated definition at the end of the macro is that it takes the
semicolon that occurs where the macro is used.

We cannot just remove the first definition of the variable because it
is referenced elsewhere in the macro text, and defining the macro later
would produce undefined identifier errors. We cannot have a "forward"
declaration, either. (This works only with "extern" global variables.)

The solution is to use a declaration of a struct that is already defined
earlier. This language construct can serve the same purpose as the
duplicated static variable definition, but without the confusion.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-09 10:20:06 -07:00
dc29ddebb9 config.c: avoid duplicated global static variables
Repeating the definition of a static variable seems to be valid in C.
Nevertheless, it is bad style because it can cause confusion, definitely
when it becomes necessary to change the type.

d64ec16 (git config: reorganize to use parseopt, 2009-02-21) added two
static variables near the top of the file config.c without removing the
definitions of the two variables that occurs later in the file.

The two variables were needed earlier in the file in the newly
introduced parseopt structure. These references were removed later in
d0e08d6 (config: fix parsing of "git config --get-color some.key -1",
2014-11-20).

Remove the redundant, younger, definitions near the top of the file and
keep the original definitions that occur later.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-09 10:19:24 -07:00
b3cbdd41cd .mailmap: use Christian Couder's Tuxfamily address
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-08 15:17:24 -07:00
a0a1831b03 Sync with maint
* maint:
  Hopefully final batch for 2.9.3
2016-08-08 14:52:17 -07:00
0aaf2500f1 Eleventh batch for 2.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-08 14:52:08 -07:00
16f0cb2dd8 Merge branch 'jc/hashmap-doc-init'
The API documentation for hashmap was unclear if hashmap_entry
can be safely discarded without any other consideration.  State
that it is safe to do so.

* jc/hashmap-doc-init:
  hashmap: clarify that hashmap_entry can safely be discarded
2016-08-08 14:48:45 -07:00
43a42aa403 Merge branch 'ew/build-time-pager-tweaks'
The build procedure learned PAGER_ENV knob that lists what default
environment variable settings to export for popular pagers.  This
mechanism is used to tweak the default settings to MORE on FreeBSD.

* ew/build-time-pager-tweaks:
  pager: move pager-specific setup into the build
2016-08-08 14:48:44 -07:00
dc7e09a3e0 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-recommend-shallowness'
Doc update.

* sb/submodule-recommend-shallowness:
  gitmodules: document shallow recommendation
2016-08-08 14:48:44 -07:00
19492555ca Merge branch 'jk/parseopt-string-list'
A small memory leak in the command line parsing of "git blame"
has been plugged.

* jk/parseopt-string-list:
  blame: drop strdup of string literal
2016-08-08 14:48:44 -07:00
104985c59e Merge branch 'jh/clean-smudge-f-doc'
A minor documentation update.

* jh/clean-smudge-f-doc:
  clarify %f documentation
2016-08-08 14:48:43 -07:00
ffdcac4bc5 Merge branch 'js/nedmalloc-gcc6-warnings'
Squelch compiler warnings for netmalloc (in compat/) library.

* js/nedmalloc-gcc6-warnings:
  nedmalloc: work around overzealous GCC 6 warning
  nedmalloc: fix misleading indentation
2016-08-08 14:48:43 -07:00
17501ba1cd Merge branch 'nd/fbsd-lazy-mtime'
FreeBSD can lie when asked mtime of a directory, which made the
untracked cache code to fall back to a slow-path, which in turn
caused tests in t7063 to fail because it wanted to verify the
behaviour of the fast-path.

* nd/fbsd-lazy-mtime:
  t7063: work around FreeBSD's lazy mtime update feature
2016-08-08 14:48:42 -07:00
3a3338d373 Merge branch 'nd/log-decorate-color-head-arrow'
An entry "git log --decorate" for the tip of the current branch is
shown as "HEAD -> name" (where "name" is the name of the branch);
paint the arrow in the same color as "HEAD", not in the color for
commits.

* nd/log-decorate-color-head-arrow:
  log: decorate HEAD -> branch with the same color for arrow and HEAD
2016-08-08 14:48:42 -07:00
940622bc8b Merge branch 'rs/use-strbuf-addstr'
* rs/use-strbuf-addstr:
  use strbuf_addstr() instead of strbuf_addf() with "%s"
  use strbuf_addstr() for adding constant strings to a strbuf
2016-08-08 14:48:41 -07:00
68e80da479 Merge branch 'rs/st-mult'
Micro optimization of st_mult() facility used to check the integer
overflow coming from multiplication to compute size of memory
allocation.

* rs/st-mult:
  pass constants as first argument to st_mult()
2016-08-08 14:48:41 -07:00
09ee6444f2 Merge branch 'ib/t3700-add-chmod-x-updates'
The t3700 test about "add --chmod=-x" have been made a bit more
robust and generally cleaned up.

* ib/t3700-add-chmod-x-updates:
  t3700: add a test_mode_in_index helper function
  t3700: merge two tests into one
  t3700: remove unwanted leftover files before running new tests
2016-08-08 14:48:40 -07:00
ae674b0130 Merge branch 'ab/gitweb-link-html-escape'
The characters in the label shown for tags/refs for commits in
"gitweb" output are now properly escaped for proper HTML output.

* ab/gitweb-link-html-escape:
  gitweb: escape link body in format_ref_marker
2016-08-08 14:48:40 -07:00
78849622ec Merge branch 'jk/pack-objects-optim'
"git pack-objects" has a few options that tell it not to pack
objects found in certain packfiles, which require it to scan .idx
files of all available packs.  The codepaths involved in these
operations have been optimized for a common case of not having any
non-local pack and/or any .kept pack.

* jk/pack-objects-optim:
  pack-objects: compute local/ignore_pack_keep early
  pack-objects: break out of want_object loop early
  find_pack_entry: replace last_found_pack with MRU cache
  add generic most-recently-used list
  sha1_file: drop free_pack_by_name
  t/perf: add tests for many-pack scenarios
2016-08-08 14:48:39 -07:00
7647537e3e Merge branch 'jk/difftool-in-subdir'
"git difftool <paths>..." started in a subdirectory failed to
interpret the paths relative to that directory, which has been
fixed.

* jk/difftool-in-subdir:
  difftool: use Git::* functions instead of passing around state
  difftool: avoid $GIT_DIR and $GIT_WORK_TREE
  difftool: fix argument handling in subdirs
2016-08-08 14:48:39 -07:00
768ededa9c Merge branch 'va/i18n'
More i18n marking.

* va/i18n:
  i18n: config: unfold error messages marked for translation
  i18n: notes: mark comment for translation
2016-08-08 14:48:38 -07:00
6b9114c649 Merge branch 'js/rebase-i-progress-tidy'
Regression fix for an i18n topic already in 'master'.

* js/rebase-i-progress-tidy:
  rebase-interactive: trim leading whitespace from progress count
2016-08-08 14:48:38 -07:00
0d3279962a Merge branch 'jk/reflog-date'
The reflog output format is documented better, and a new format
--date=unix to report the seconds-since-epoch (without timezone)
has been added.

* jk/reflog-date:
  date: clarify --date=raw description
  date: add "unix" format
  date: document and test "raw-local" mode
  doc/pretty-formats: explain shortening of %gd
  doc/pretty-formats: describe index/time formats for %gd
  doc/rev-list-options: explain "-g" output formats
  doc/rev-list-options: clarify "commit@{Nth}" for "-g" option
2016-08-08 14:48:37 -07:00
4c30ad8cc6 Merge branch 'cp/completion-clone-recurse-submodules'
* cp/completion-clone-recurse-submodules:
  completion: add option '--recurse-submodules' to 'git clone'
2016-08-08 14:48:37 -07:00
4d7f59aece Merge branch 'jk/t4205-cleanup'
Test modernization.

* jk/t4205-cleanup:
  t4205: indent here documents
  t4205: drop top-level &&-chaining
2016-08-08 14:48:36 -07:00
f2be3b73e0 Merge branch 'da/subtree-modernize'
Style fixes for "git subtree" (in contrib/).

* da/subtree-modernize:
  subtree: adjust function definitions to match CodingGuidelines
  subtree: adjust style to match CodingGuidelines
2016-08-08 14:48:35 -07:00
abbf7bd495 Merge branch 'nd/fetch-ref-summary'
Hotfix of a test in a topic that has already been merged to 'master'.

* nd/fetch-ref-summary:
  t5510: skip tests under GETTEXT_POISON build
2016-08-08 14:48:35 -07:00
612c3dfb06 Merge branch 'ew/git-svn-http-tests'
Tests for "git svn" have been taught to reuse the lib-httpd test
infrastructure when testing the subversion integration that
interacts with subversion repositories served over the http://
protocol.

* ew/git-svn-http-tests:
  git svn: migrate tests to use lib-httpd
  t/t91*: do not say how to avoid the tests
2016-08-08 14:48:34 -07:00
3819fb9ab4 Merge branch 'js/t4130-rename-without-ino'
Windows port was failing some tests in t4130, due to the lack of
inum in the returned values by its lstat(2) emulation.

* js/t4130-rename-without-ino:
  t4130: work around Windows limitation
2016-08-08 14:48:33 -07:00
00f27feb6a Hopefully final batch for 2.9.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-08 14:22:36 -07:00
593be730f2 Merge branch 'sb/pack-protocol-doc-nak' into maint
A doc update.

* sb/pack-protocol-doc-nak:
  Documentation: pack-protocol correct NAK response
2016-08-08 14:21:47 -07:00
f7b01d3eb7 Merge branch 'rs/submodule-config-code-cleanup' into maint
Code cleanup.

* rs/submodule-config-code-cleanup:
  submodule-config: fix test binary crashing when no arguments given
  submodule-config: combine early return code into one goto
  submodule-config: passing name reference for .gitmodule blobs
  submodule-config: use explicit empty string instead of strbuf in config_from()
2016-08-08 14:21:46 -07:00
6a024a249f Merge branch 'sb/submodule-deinit-all' into maint
A comment update for a topic that was merged to Git v2.8.

* sb/submodule-deinit-all:
  submodule deinit: remove outdated comment
2016-08-08 14:21:46 -07:00
5131967e4a Merge branch 'rs/worktree-use-strbuf-absolute-path' into maint
Code simplification.

* rs/worktree-use-strbuf-absolute-path:
  worktree: use strbuf_add_absolute_path() directly
2016-08-08 14:21:45 -07:00
2f8c654edb Merge branch 'jc/doc-diff-filter-exclude' into maint
Belated doc update for a feature added in v1.8.5.

* jc/doc-diff-filter-exclude:
  diff: document diff-filter exclusion
2016-08-08 14:21:44 -07:00
970994deb1 Merge branch 'nd/test-helpers' into maint
Build clean-up.

* nd/test-helpers:
  t/test-lib.sh: fix running tests with --valgrind
  Makefile: use VCSSVN_LIB to refer to svn library
  Makefile: drop extra dependencies for test helpers
2016-08-08 14:21:43 -07:00
48aa37ed42 Merge branch 'rs/use-strbuf-addbuf' into maint
Code cleanup.

* rs/use-strbuf-addbuf:
  strbuf: avoid calling strbuf_grow() twice in strbuf_addbuf()
  use strbuf_addbuf() for appending a strbuf to another
2016-08-08 14:21:42 -07:00
ee7fd70edf Merge branch 'lf/recv-sideband-cleanup' into maint
Code simplification.

* lf/recv-sideband-cleanup:
  sideband.c: small optimization of strbuf usage
  sideband.c: refactor recv_sideband()
2016-08-08 14:21:41 -07:00
e69771c3af Merge branch 'ah/unpack-trees-advice-messages' into maint
Grammofix.

* ah/unpack-trees-advice-messages:
  unpack-trees: fix English grammar in do-this-before-that messages
2016-08-08 14:21:40 -07:00
26256c017f Merge branch 'lf/sideband-returns-void' into maint
A small internal API cleanup.

* lf/sideband-returns-void:
  upload-pack.c: make send_client_data() return void
  sideband.c: make send_sideband() return void
2016-08-08 14:21:40 -07:00
1e274ef2ba Merge branch 'jk/send-pack-stdio' into maint
Code clean-up.

* jk/send-pack-stdio:
  write_or_die: remove the unused write_or_whine() function
  send-pack: use buffered I/O to talk to pack-objects
2016-08-08 14:21:39 -07:00
a220e2bbbf Merge branch 'pb/commit-editmsg-path' into maint
Code clean-up.

* pb/commit-editmsg-path:
  builtin/commit.c: memoize git-path for COMMIT_EDITMSG
2016-08-08 14:21:38 -07:00
8d64216807 Merge branch 'ew/find-perl-on-freebsd-in-local' into maint
Recent FreeBSD stopped making perl available at /usr/bin/perl;
switch the default the built-in path to /usr/local/bin/perl on not
too ancient FreeBSD releases.

* ew/find-perl-on-freebsd-in-local:
  config.mak.uname: correct perl path on FreeBSD
2016-08-08 14:21:38 -07:00
172b811322 Merge branch 'ew/daemon-socket-keepalive' into maint
Recent update to "git daemon" tries to enable the socket-level
KEEPALIVE, but when it is spawned via inetd, the standard input
file descriptor may not necessarily be connected to a socket.
Suppress an ENOTSOCK error from setsockopt().

* ew/daemon-socket-keepalive:
  Windows: add missing definition of ENOTSOCK
  daemon: ignore ENOTSOCK from setsockopt
2016-08-08 14:21:37 -07:00
aa9136a87e Merge branch 'nd/pack-ofs-4gb-limit' into maint
"git pack-objects" and "git index-pack" mostly operate with off_t
when talking about the offset of objects in a packfile, but there
were a handful of places that used "unsigned long" to hold that
value, leading to an unintended truncation.

* nd/pack-ofs-4gb-limit:
  fsck: use streaming interface for large blobs in pack
  pack-objects: do not truncate result in-pack object size on 32-bit systems
  index-pack: correct "offset" type in unpack_entry_data()
  index-pack: report correct bad object offsets even if they are large
  index-pack: correct "len" type in unpack_data()
  sha1_file.c: use type off_t* for object_info->disk_sizep
  pack-objects: pass length to check_pack_crc() without truncation
2016-08-08 14:21:36 -07:00
743fba85f7 Merge branch 'rs/notes-merge-no-toctou' into maint
"git notes merge" had a code to see if a path exists (and fails if
it does) and then open the path for writing (when it doesn't).
Replace it with open with O_EXCL.

* rs/notes-merge-no-toctou:
  notes-merge: use O_EXCL to avoid overwriting existing files
2016-08-08 14:21:35 -07:00
a52fb9b8f3 Merge branch 'js/ignore-space-at-eol' into maint
An age old bug that caused "git diff --ignore-space-at-eol"
misbehave has been fixed.

* js/ignore-space-at-eol:
  diff: fix a double off-by-one with --ignore-space-at-eol
  diff: demonstrate a bug with --patience and --ignore-space-at-eol
2016-08-08 14:21:35 -07:00
71076e11cd Merge branch 'jk/push-scrub-url' into maint
"git fetch http://user:pass@host/repo..." scrubbed the userinfo
part, but "git push" didn't.

* jk/push-scrub-url:
  t5541: fix url scrubbing test when GPG is not set
  push: anonymize URL in status output
2016-08-08 14:21:34 -07:00
880b3fee51 Merge branch 'nd/cache-tree-ita' into maint
"git add -N dir/file && git write-tree" produced an incorrect tree
when there are other paths in the same directory that sorts after
"file".

* nd/cache-tree-ita:
  cache-tree: do not generate empty trees as a result of all i-t-a subentries
  cache-tree.c: fix i-t-a entry skipping directory updates sometimes
  test-lib.sh: introduce and use $EMPTY_BLOB
  test-lib.sh: introduce and use $EMPTY_TREE
2016-08-08 14:21:33 -07:00
327b3f8459 Merge branch 'mh/blame-worktree' into maint
"git blame file" allowed the lineage of lines in the uncommitted,
unadded contents of "file" to be inspected, but it refused when
"file" did not appear in the current commit.  When "file" was
created by renaming an existing file (but the change has not been
committed), this restriction was unnecessarily tight.

* mh/blame-worktree:
  t/t8003-blame-corner-cases.sh: Use here documents
  blame: allow to blame paths freshly added to the index
2016-08-08 14:21:32 -07:00
189d035e67 git mv: do not keep slash in git mv dir non-existing-dir/
When calling `rename("dir", "non-existing-dir/")` on Linux, it silently
succeeds, stripping the trailing slash of the second argument.

This is all good and dandy but this behavior disagrees with the specs at

http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/rename.html

that state clearly regarding the 2nd parameter (called `new`):

	If the `new` argument does not resolve to an existing directory
	entry for a file of type directory and the `new` argument
	contains at least one non- <slash> character and ends with one
	or more trailing <slash> characters after all symbolic links
	have been processed, `rename()` shall fail.

Of course, we would like `git mv dir non-existing-dir/` to succeed (and
rename the directory "dir" to "non-existing-dir"). Let's be extra
careful to remove the trailing slash in that case.

This lets t7001-mv.sh pass in Bash on Windows.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-08 10:43:20 -07:00
1eb47f167d use strbuf_add_unique_abbrev() for adding short hashes
Call strbuf_add_unique_abbrev() to add abbreviated hashes to strbufs
instead of taking detours through find_unique_abbrev() and its static
buffer.  This is shorter and a bit more efficient.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-06 10:33:57 -07:00
560b0e8f52 archive-tar: make write_extended_header() void
The function write_extended_header() only ever returns 0.  Simplify
it and its caller by dropping its return value, like we did with
write_global_extended_header() earlier.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-06 10:31:51 -07:00
c6c9e1885c nedmalloc: work around overzealous GCC 6 warning
With GCC 6, the strdup() function is declared with the "nonnull"
attribute, stating that it is not allowed to pass a NULL value as
parameter.

In nedmalloc()'s reimplementation of strdup(), Postel's Law is heeded
and NULL parameters are handled gracefully. GCC 6 complains about that
now because it thinks that NULL cannot be passed to strdup() anyway.

Because the callers in this project of strdup() must be prepared to
call any implementation of strdup() supplied by the platform, so it
is pointless to pretend that it is OK to call it with NULL.

Remove the conditional based on NULL-ness of the input; this
squelches the warning.  Check the return value of malloc() instead
to make sure we actually got the memory to write to.

See https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-6/porting_to.html for details.

Diagnosed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-05 15:37:47 -07:00
02a8cfa478 merge: use string_list_split() in add_strategies()
Call string_list_split() for cutting a space separated list into pieces
instead of reimplementing it based on struct strategy.  The attr member
of struct strategy was not used split_merge_strategies(); it was a pure
string operation.  Also be nice and clean up once we're done splitting;
the old code didn't bother freeing any of the allocated memory.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-05 15:11:06 -07:00
af4941d444 merge-recursive: use STRING_LIST_INIT_NODUP
Initialize a string_list right when it's defined.  That's shorter, saves
a function call and makes it more obvious that we're using the NODUP
variant here.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-05 15:10:35 -07:00
542aa25d97 use CHILD_PROCESS_INIT to initialize automatic variables
Initialize struct child_process variables already when they're defined.
That's shorter and saves a function call.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-05 15:10:05 -07:00
bc57b9c0cc use strbuf_addstr() instead of strbuf_addf() with "%s"
Call strbuf_addstr() for adding a simple string to a strbuf instead of
using the heavier strbuf_addf().  This is shorter and documents the
intent more clearly.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-05 15:09:25 -07:00
6f25305799 trace: do not fall back to stderr
If the trace code cannot open a specified file, or does not
understand the contents of the GIT_TRACE variable, it falls
back to printing trace output to stderr.

This is an attempt to be helpful, but in practice it just
ends up annoying. The user was trying to get the output to
go somewhere else, so spewing it to stderr does not really
accomplish that. And as it's intended for debugging, they
can presumably re-run the command with their error
corrected.

So instead of falling back, this patch disables bogus trace
keys for the rest of the program, just as we do for write
errors. We can drop the "Defaulting to..." part of the error
message entirely; after seeing "cannot open '/foo'", the
user can assume that tracing is skipped.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-05 09:28:17 -07:00
ca5c701ca5 write_or_die: drop write_or_whine_pipe()
This function has no callers, and is not likely to gain any
because it's confusing to use.

It unconditionally complains to stderr, but _doesn't_ die.
Yet any caller which wants a "gentle" write would generally
want to suppress the error message, because presumably
they're going to write a better one, and/or try the
operation again.

And the check_pipe() call leads to confusing behaviors. It
means we die for EPIPE, but not for other errors, which is
confusing and pointless.

On top of all that, it has unusual error return semantics,
which makes it easy for callers to get it wrong.

Let's drop the function, and if somebody ever needs to
resurrect something like it, they can fix these warts.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-05 09:28:17 -07:00
46ac74b716 trace: disable key after write error
If we get a write error writing to a trace descriptor, the
error isn't likely to go away if we keep writing. Instead,
you'll just get the same error over and over. E.g., try:

  GIT_TRACE_PACKET=42 git ls-remote >/dev/null

You don't really need to see:

  warning: unable to write trace for GIT_TRACE_PACKET: Bad file descriptor

hundreds of times. We could fallback to tracing to stderr,
as we do in the error code-path for open(), but there's not
much point. If the user fed us a bogus descriptor, they're
probably better off fixing their invocation. And if they
didn't, and we saw a transient error (e.g., ENOSPC writing
to a file), it probably doesn't help anybody to have half of
the trace in a file, and half on stderr.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-05 09:28:16 -07:00
3b0c3ab777 trace: correct variable name in write() error message
Our error message for write() always mentions GIT_TRACE,
even though we may be writing for a different variable
entirely. It's also not quite accurate to say "fd given by
GIT_TRACE environment variable", as we may hit this error
based on a filename the user put in the variable (we do
complain and switch to stderr if the file cannot be opened,
but it's still possible to hit a write() error on the
descriptor later).

So let's fix those things, and switch to our more usual
"unable to do X: Y" format for the error.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-05 09:28:16 -07:00
b3a1c5da02 trace: cosmetic fixes for error messages
The error messages for the trace code are often multi-line;
the first line gets a nice "warning:", but the rest are
left-aligned. Let's give them an indentation to make sure
they stand out as a unit.

While we're here, let's also downcase the first letter of
each error (our usual style), and break up a long line of
advice (since we're already using multiple lines, one more
doesn't hurt).

We also replace "What does 'foo' for GIT_TRACE mean?". While
cute, it's probably a good idea to give more context, and
follow our usual styles. So it's now "unknown trace value
for 'GIT_TRACE': foo".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-05 09:28:16 -07:00
38f460caa2 trace: use warning() for printing trace errors
Right now we just fprintf() straight to stderr, which can
make the output hard to distinguish. It would be helpful to
give it one of our usual prefixes like "error:", "warning:",
etc.

It doesn't make sense to use error() here, as the trace code
is "optional" debugging code. If something goes wrong, we
should warn the user, but saying "error" implies the actual
git operation had a problem. So warning() is the only sane
choice.

Note that this does end up calling warn_routine() to do the
formatting. This is probably a good thing, since they are
clearly trying to hook messages before they make it to
stderr. However, it also means that in theory somebody who
tries to trace from their warn_routine() could cause a loop.
This seems rather unlikely in practice (we've never even
overridden the default warn_builtin routine before, and
recent discussions to do so would just install a noop
routine).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-05 09:27:34 -07:00
c6b0597e9a Tenth batch for 2.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-04 14:40:34 -07:00
b422d99658 Merge branch 'jc/grep-commandline-vs-configuration'
"git -c grep.patternType=extended log --basic-regexp" misbehaved
because the internal API to access the grep machinery was not
designed well.

* jc/grep-commandline-vs-configuration:
  grep: further simplify setting the pattern type
2016-08-04 14:39:18 -07:00
1e9a4856fb Merge branch 'sb/submodule-clone-retry'
An earlier tweak to make "submodule update" retry a failing clone
of submodules was buggy and caused segfault, which has been fixed.

* sb/submodule-clone-retry:
  submodule-helper: fix indexing in clone retry error reporting path
  git-submodule: forward exit code of git-submodule--helper more faithfully
2016-08-04 14:39:17 -07:00
10881f076e Merge branch 'sb/pack-protocol-doc-nak'
A doc update.

* sb/pack-protocol-doc-nak:
  Documentation: pack-protocol correct NAK response
2016-08-04 14:39:16 -07:00
995bc22d7f pager: move pager-specific setup into the build
Allowing PAGER_ENV to be set at build-time allows us to move
pager-specific knowledge out of our build.  This allows us to
set a better default for FreeBSD more(1), which pretends not to
understand ANSI color escapes if the MORE environment variable
is left empty, but accepts the same variables as less(1)

Originally-from:
 https://public-inbox.org/git/xmqq61piw4yf.fsf@gitster.dls.corp.google.com/

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-04 13:51:02 -07:00
c0222e762e trace: stop using write_or_whine_pipe()
The write_or_whine_pipe function does two things:

  1. it checks for EPIPE and converts it into a signal death

  2. it prints a message to stderr on error

The first thing does not help us, and actively hurts.
Generally we would simply die from SIGPIPE in this case,
unless somebody has taken the time to ignore SIGPIPE for the
whole process.  And if they _did_ do that, it seems rather
silly for the trace code, which otherwise takes pains to
continue even in the face of errors (e.g., by not using
write_or_die!), to take down the whole process for one
specific type of error.

Nor does the second thing help us; it just makes it harder
to write our error message, because we have to feed bits of
it as an argument to write_or_whine_pipe(). Translators
never get to see the full message, and it's hard for us to
customize it.

Let's switch to just using write_in_full() and writing our
own error string. For now, the error is identical to what
write_or_whine_pipe() would say, but now that it's more
under our control, we can improve it in future patches.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-04 13:33:27 -07:00
c81539b5f6 trace: handle NULL argument in trace_disable()
All of the trace functions treat a NULL key as a synonym for
the default GIT_TRACE key. Except for trace_disable(), which
will segfault.

Fortunately, this can't cause any bugs, as the function has
no callers. But rather than drop it, let's fix the bug, as I
plan to add a caller.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-04 13:33:27 -07:00
1e70105954 nedmalloc: fix misleading indentation
Some code in nedmalloc is indented in a funny way that could be
misinterpreted as if a line after a for loop was included in the loop
body, when it is not.

GCC 6 complains about this in DEVELOPER=YepSure mode.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-04 10:42:05 -07:00
9eed4f3711 t5533: make it pass on case-sensitive filesystems
The newly-added test case wants to commit a file "c.t" (note the lower
case) when a previous test case already committed a file "C.t". This
confuses Git to the point that it thinks "c.t" was not staged when "git
add c.t" was called.

Simply make the naming of the test commits consistent with the previous
test cases: use upper-case, and advance in the alphabet.

This came up in local work to rebase the Windows-specific patches to the
current `next` branch. An identical fix was suggested by John Keeping.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-04 10:18:36 -07:00
6b7728db81 t7063: work around FreeBSD's lazy mtime update feature
Let's start with the commit message of [1] from freebsd.git [2]

    Sync timestamp changes for inodes of special files to disk as late
    as possible (when the inode is reclaimed).  Temporarily only do
    this if option UFS_LAZYMOD configured and softupdates aren't
    enabled.  UFS_LAZYMOD is intentionally left out of
    /sys/conf/options.

    This is mainly to avoid almost useless disk i/o on battery powered
    machines.  It's silly to write to disk (on the next sync or when
    the inode becomes inactive) just because someone hit a key or
    something wrote to the screen or /dev/null.

    PR:             5577 [3]

The short version of that, in the context of t7063, is that when a
directory is updated, its mtime may be updated later, not
immediately. This can be shown with a simple command sequence

    date; sleep 1; touch abc; rm abc; sleep 10; ls -lTd .

One would expect that the date shown in `ls` would be one second from
`date`, but it's 10 seconds later. If we put another `ls -lTd .` in
front of `sleep 10`, then the date of the last `ls` comes as
expected. The first `ls` somehow forces mtime to be updated.

t7063 is really sensitive to directory mtime. When mtime is too "new",
git code suspects racy timestamps and will not trigger the shortcut in
untracked cache, in t7063.24 and eventually be detected in t7063.27

We have two options thanks to this special FreeBSD feature:

1) Stop supporting untracked cache on FreeBSD. Skip t7063 entirely
   when running on FreeBSD

2) Work around this problem (using the same 'ls' trick) and continue
   to support untracked cache on FreeBSD

I initially wanted to go with 1) because I didn't know the exact
nature of this feature and feared that it would make untracked cache
work unreliably, using the cached version when it should not.

Since the behavior of this thing is clearer now. The picture is not
that bad. If this indeed happens often, untracked cache would assume
racy condition more often and _fall back_ to non-untracked cache code
paths. Which means it may be less effective, but it will not show
wrong things.

This patch goes with option 2.

PS. For those who want to look further in FreeBSD source code, this
flag is now called IN_LAZYMOD. I can see it's effective in ext2 and
ufs. zfs is not affected.

[1] 660e6408e6df99a20dacb070c5e7f9739efdf96d
[2] git://github.com/freebsd/freebsd.git
[3] https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=5577

Reported-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-04 09:51:42 -07:00
4d7bc52b17 submodule update: allow '.' for branch value
Gerrit has a "superproject subscription" feature[1], that triggers a
commit in a superproject that is subscribed to its submodules.
Conceptually this Gerrit feature can be done on the client side with
Git via (except for raciness, error handling etc):

  while [ true ]; do
    git -C <superproject> submodule update --remote --force
    git -C <superproject> commit -a -m "Update submodules"
    git -C <superproject> push
  done

for each branch in the superproject. To ease the configuration in Gerrit
a special value of "." has been introduced for the submodule.<name>.branch
to mean the same branch as the superproject[2], such that you can create a
new branch on both superproject and the submodule and this feature
continues to work on that new branch.

Now we find projects in the wild with such a .gitmodules file.
The .gitmodules used in these Gerrit projects do not conform
to Gits understanding of how .gitmodules should look like.
This teaches Git to deal gracefully with this syntax as well.

The redefinition of "." does no harm to existing projects unaware of
this change, as "." is an invalid branch name in Git, so we do not
expect such projects to exist.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-03 16:13:22 -07:00
92bbe7ccf1 submodule--helper: add remote-branch helper
In a later patch we want to enhance the logic for the branch selection.
Rewrite the current logic to be in C, so we can directly use C when
we enhance the logic.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-03 16:11:35 -07:00
80460f513e Ninth batch of topics for 2.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-03 15:13:16 -07:00
767da54bf8 Merge branch 'jk/diff-do-not-reuse-wtf-needs-cleaning'
There is an optimization used in "git diff $treeA $treeB" to borrow
an already checked-out copy in the working tree when it is known to
be the same as the blob being compared, expecting that open/mmap of
such a file is faster than reading it from the object store, which
involves inflating and applying delta.  This however kicked in even
when the checked-out copy needs to go through the convert-to-git
conversion (including the clean filter), which defeats the whole
point of the optimization.  The optimization has been disabled when
the conversion is necessary.

* jk/diff-do-not-reuse-wtf-needs-cleaning:
  diff: do not reuse worktree files that need "clean" conversion
2016-08-03 15:10:29 -07:00
f4fa8a9b18 Merge branch 'rs/submodule-config-code-cleanup'
Code cleanup.

* rs/submodule-config-code-cleanup:
  submodule-config: fix test binary crashing when no arguments given
  submodule-config: combine early return code into one goto
  submodule-config: passing name reference for .gitmodule blobs
  submodule-config: use explicit empty string instead of strbuf in config_from()
2016-08-03 15:10:28 -07:00
a58a8e3f71 Merge branch 'jk/push-progress'
"git push" and "git clone" learned to give better progress meters
to the end user who is waiting on the terminal.

* jk/push-progress:
  receive-pack: send keepalives during quiet periods
  receive-pack: turn on connectivity progress
  receive-pack: relay connectivity errors to sideband
  receive-pack: turn on index-pack resolving progress
  index-pack: add flag for showing delta-resolution progress
  clone: use a real progress meter for connectivity check
  check_connected: add progress flag
  check_connected: relay errors to alternate descriptor
  check_everything_connected: use a struct with named options
  check_everything_connected: convert to argv_array
  rev-list: add optional progress reporting
  check_everything_connected: always pass --quiet to rev-list
2016-08-03 15:10:28 -07:00
67b3a5d4c0 Merge branch 'jt/fetch-large-handshake-window-on-http'
"git fetch" exchanges batched have/ack messages between the sender
and the receiver, initially doubling every time and then falling
back to enlarge the window size linearly.  The "smart http"
transport, being an half-duplex protocol, outgrows the preset limit
too quickly and becomes inefficient when interacting with a large
repository.  The internal mechanism learned to grow the window size
more aggressively when working with the "smart http" transport.

* jt/fetch-large-handshake-window-on-http:
  fetch-pack: grow stateless RPC windows exponentially
2016-08-03 15:10:27 -07:00
5569c01be8 Merge branch 'jk/git-jump'
"git jump" script (in contrib/) has been updated a bit.

* jk/git-jump:
  contrib/git-jump: fix typo in README
  contrib/git-jump: add whitespace-checking mode
  contrib/git-jump: fix greedy regex when matching hunks
2016-08-03 15:10:27 -07:00
5a2f4d3eef Merge branch 'mm/status-suggest-merge-abort'
"git status" learned to suggest "merge --abort" during a conflicted
merge, just like it already suggests "rebase --abort" during a
conflicted rebase.

* mm/status-suggest-merge-abort:
  status: suggest 'git merge --abort' when appropriate
2016-08-03 15:10:26 -07:00
d083d420b7 Merge branch 'jk/parse-options-concat'
Users of the parse_options_concat() API function need to allocate
extra slots in advance and fill them with OPT_END() when they want
to decide the set of supported options dynamically, which makes the
code error-prone and hard to read.  This has been corrected by tweaking
the API to allocate and return a new copy of "struct option" array.

* jk/parse-options-concat:
  parse_options: allocate a new array when concatenating
2016-08-03 15:10:25 -07:00
cf27c7996e Merge branch 'sb/push-options'
"git push" learned to accept and pass extra options to the
receiving end so that hooks can read and react to them.

* sb/push-options:
  add a test for push options
  push: accept push options
  receive-pack: implement advertising and receiving push options
  push options: {pre,post}-receive hook learns about push options
2016-08-03 15:10:24 -07:00
4067a45438 Merge branch 'ew/http-walker'
Dumb http transport on the client side has been optimized.

* ew/http-walker:
  list: avoid incompatibility with *BSD sys/queue.h
  http-walker: reduce O(n) ops with doubly-linked list
  http: avoid disconnecting on 404s for loose objects
  http-walker: remove unused parameter from fetch_object
2016-08-03 15:10:24 -07:00
6395499a68 Merge branch 'pm/build-persistent-https-with-recent-go'
The build procedure for "git persistent-https" helper (in contrib/)
has been updated so that it can be built with more recent versions
of Go.

* pm/build-persistent-https-with-recent-go:
  contrib/persistent-https: use Git version for build label
  contrib/persistent-https: update ldflags syntax for Go 1.7+
2016-08-03 15:10:23 -07:00
c0728edfb6 Merge branch 'da/subtree-2.9-regression'
"git merge" in Git v2.9 was taught to forbid merging an unrelated
lines of history by default, but that is exactly the kind of thing
the "--rejoin" mode of "git subtree" (in contrib/) wants to do.
"git subtree" has been taught to use the "--allow-unrelated-histories"
option to override the default.

* da/subtree-2.9-regression:
  subtree: fix "git subtree split --rejoin"
  t7900-subtree.sh: fix quoting and broken && chains
2016-08-03 15:10:22 -07:00
a35031240b Merge branch 'os/no-verify-skips-commit-msg-too'
"git commit --help" said "--no-verify" is only about skipping the
pre-commit hook, and failed to say that it also skipped the
commit-msg hook.

* os/no-verify-skips-commit-msg-too:
  commit: describe that --no-verify skips the commit-msg hook in the help text
2016-08-03 15:10:22 -07:00
52db4b0467 clarify %f documentation
It's natural to expect %f to be an actual file on disk; help avoid that
mistake.

Signed-off-by: Joey Hess <joeyh@joeyh.name>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-03 10:10:35 -07:00
04e0869876 import-tars: support hard links
Previously, we simply treated hard links as if they were plain files
with size 0, ignoring the link type "1" and hence the link target.

What we should do instead, of course, is to use the link target to get
at the import mark for the contents, even if we cannot recreate the hard
link per se, as Git has no concept of hard links.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-03 09:46:11 -07:00
f6fb30a01d gitmodules: document shallow recommendation
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-03 08:53:52 -07:00
aa59e14b23 blame: drop strdup of string literal
This strdup was added as part of 58dbfa2 (blame: accept
multiple -L ranges, 2013-08-06) to be consistent with
parse_opt_string_list(), which appends to the same list.

But as of 7a7a517 (parse_opt_string_list: stop allocating
new strings, 2016-06-13), we should stop using strdup (to
match parse_opt_string_list, and for all the reasons
described in that commit; namely that it does nothing useful
and causes us to leak the memory).

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-03 08:52:46 -07:00
54956df9bc t4130: work around Windows limitation
On Windows, it is already pretty expensive to try to recreate the stat()
data that Git assumes is cheap to obtain. To make things halfway decent
in performance, we even have to skip emulating the inode and to
determine the number of hard links.

This is not a huge problem, usually, as either the size or the mtime or
the ctime are tell-tale enough to say when a file has changed, and even
if not, those changes are typically made after the index file was
written, triggering a rehashing of the files' contents.

The t4130-apply-criss-cross-rename test case, however, requires the
inode to determine that files of equal size were swapped, as renaming
files does not update their mtime. Every once in a while, t4130 fails
on Windows because of this missing piece.

Equal file sizes are not crucial for the test cases, however. Hence,
generate files with different sizes so that there is some property that
the swapped files can be discovered reliably even on Windows.

Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-03 08:47:38 -07:00
54ba5a1a16 hashmap: clarify that hashmap_entry can safely be discarded
The API documentation said that the hashmap_entry structure to be
embedded in the caller's structure is to be treated as opaque, which
left the reader wondering if it can safely be discarded when it no
longer is necessary.  If the hashmap_entry structure had references
to external resources such as allocated memory or an open file
descriptor, merely free(3)ing the containing structure (when the
caller's structure is on the heap) or letting it go out of scope
(when it is on the stack) would end up leaking the external
resource.

Document that there is no need for hashmap_entry_clear() that
corresponds to hashmap_entry_init() to give the API users a little
bit of peace of mind.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-02 14:34:17 -07:00
4d9c7e6f45 am: reset cached ident date for each patch
When we compute the date to go in author/committer lines of
commits, or tagger lines of tags, we get the current date
once and then cache it for the rest of the program.  This is
a good thing in some cases, like "git commit", because it
means we do not racily assign different times to the
author/committer fields of a single commit object.

But as more programs start to make many commits in a single
process (e.g., the recently builtin "git am"), it means that
you'll get long strings of commits with identical committer
timestamps (whereas before, we invoked "git commit" many
times and got true timestamps).

This patch addresses it by letting callers reset the cached
time, which means they'll get a fresh time on their next
call to git_committer_info() or git_author_info(). The first
caller to do so is "git am", which resets the time for each
patch it applies.

It would be nice if we could just do this automatically
before filling in the ident fields of commit and tag
objects. Unfortunately, it's hard to know where a particular
logical operation begins and ends.

For instance, if commit_tree_extended() were to call
reset_ident_date() before getting the committer/author
ident, that doesn't quite work; sometimes the author info is
passed in to us as a parameter, and it may or may not have
come from a previous call to ident_default_date(). So in
those cases, we lose the property that the committer and the
author timestamp always match.

You could similarly put a date-reset at the end of
commit_tree_extended(). That actually works in the current
code base, but it's fragile. It makes the assumption that
after commit_tree_extended() finishes, the caller has no
other operations that would logically want to fall into the
same timestamp.

So instead we provide the tool to easily do the reset, and
let the high-level callers use it to annotate their own
logical operations.

There's no automated test, because it would be inherently
racy (it depends on whether the program takes multiple
seconds to run). But you can see the effect with something
like:

  # make a fake 100-patch series
  top=$(git rev-parse HEAD)
  bottom=$(git rev-list --first-parent -100 HEAD | tail -n 1)
  git log --format=email --reverse --first-parent \
          --binary -m -p $bottom..$top >patch

  # now apply it; this presumably takes multiple seconds
  git checkout --detach $bottom
  git am <patch

  # now count the number of distinct committer times;
  # prior to this patch, there would only be one, but
  # now we'd typically see several.
  git log --format=%ct $bottom.. | sort -u

Suggested-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Helped-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 14:49:41 -07:00
b5944f3476 submodule-config: keep configured branch around
The branch field will be used in a later patch by `submodule update`.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 14:42:07 -07:00
2de26ae1dc submodule--helper: fix usage string for relative-path
Internally we call the underscore version of relative_path, but externally
we present an API with no underscores.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 14:41:53 -07:00
341238ebc4 submodule update: narrow scope of local variable
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 14:41:51 -07:00
6cbf454a2e submodule update: respect depth in subsequent fetches
When depth is given the user may have a reasonable expectation that
any remote operation is using the given depth. Add a test to demonstrate
we still get the desired sha1 even if the depth is too short to
include the actual commit.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 14:41:02 -07:00
d4470c5a46 t7406: future proof tests with hard coded depth
The prior hard coded depth was chosen to be exactly the length from the
recorded gitlink to the tip of the remote, so if you add more commits
to the remote before, this test will not test its intention any more.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 14:40:56 -07:00
766cdc4147 t3700: add a test_mode_in_index helper function
The case statement to check the file mode of a staged file appears
a number of times.

Simplify the test by utilizing a test_mode_in_index helper function.

Signed-off-by: Ingo Brückl <ib@wupperonline.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 14:25:30 -07:00
b38ab197c2 t3700: merge two tests into one
Depending on the underlying platform a chmod may be a noop. Although it
wouldn't harm the result of the '--chmod=-x' test, there is a more
robust way to make sure the --chmod option works both ways.

Merge the two separate tests for the --chmod option into one, checking
both permissions on the same file.

Signed-off-by: Ingo Brückl <ib@wupperonline.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 14:20:53 -07:00
c0fa44d8f1 t3700: remove unwanted leftover files before running new tests
When an earlier test that has prerequisite is skipped, files
used by later tests may be left in the working tree in an
unexpected state.  For example, a test runs this sequence:

        echo foo >xfoo1 && chmod 755 xfoo1

to create an executable file xfoo1, expecting that xfoo1
does not exist before it runs in the test sequence.
However, the absence of this file depends on "git reset
--hard" done in an earlier test, that is skipped when SANITY
prerequisite is not met, and worse yet, xfoo1 originally is
created as a symbolic link, which means the chmod does not
affect the modes of xfoo1 as this test expects.

Fix this by starting the test with "rm -f xfoo1" to make
sure the file is created from scratch, and do the same to
other similar tests.

Signed-off-by: Ingo Brückl <ib@wupperonline.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 14:20:51 -07:00
50492f7b38 pass constants as first argument to st_mult()
The result of st_mult() is the same no matter the order of its
arguments.  It invokes the macro unsigned_mult_overflows(), which
divides the second parameter by the first one.  Pass constants
first to allow that division to be done already at compile time.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 14:01:03 -07:00
02962d3684 use strbuf_addstr() for adding constant strings to a strbuf
Replace uses of strbuf_addf() for adding strings with more lightweight
strbuf_addstr() calls.

In http-push.c it becomes easier to see what's going on without having
to verfiy that the definition of PROPFIND_ALL_REQUEST doesn't contain
any format specifiers.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 13:42:10 -07:00
6bc6b6c0dc format-patch: format.from gives the default for --from
This helps users who would prefer format-patch to default to --from,
and makes it easier to change the default in the future.

Signed-off-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 13:13:02 -07:00
77947bbe24 gitweb: escape link body in format_ref_marker
Fix a case where an html link can be generated from unescaped input
resulting in invalid strict xhtml or potentially injected code.

An overview of a repo with a tag "1.0.0&0.0.1" would previously result
in an unescaped ampersand in the link body.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Brauchli <a.brauchli@elementarea.net>
Acked-by: Jakub Narębski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 12:55:40 -07:00
6999bc7074 merge-recursive: flush output buffer even when erroring out
Ever since 66a155b (Enable output buffering in merge-recursive.,
2007-01-14), we had a problem: When the merge failed in a fatal way, all
regular output was swallowed because we called die() and did not get a
chance to drain the output buffers.

To fix this, several modifications were necessary:

- we needed to stop die()ing, to give callers a chance to do something
  when an error occurred (in this case, flush the output buffers),

- we needed to delay printing the error message so that the caller can
  print the buffered output before that, and

- we needed to make sure that the output buffers are flushed even when
  the return value indicates an error.

The first two changes were introduced through earlier commits in this
patch series, and this commit addresses the third one.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 11:45:30 -07:00
548009c0d5 merge_trees(): ensure that the callers release output buffer
The recursive merge machinery accumulates its output in an output
buffer, to be flushed at the end of merge_recursive(). At this point,
we forgot to release the output buffer.

When calling merge_trees() (i.e. the non-recursive part of the recursive
merge) directly, the output buffer is never flushed because the caller
may be merge_recursive() which wants to flush the output itself.

For the same reason, merge_trees() cannot release the output buffer: it
may still be needed.

Forgetting to release the output buffer did not matter much when running
git-checkout, or git-merge-recursive, because we exited after the
operation anyway. Ever since cherry-pick learned to pick a commit range,
however, this memory leak had the potential of becoming a problem.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 11:45:30 -07:00
f1e2426b28 merge-recursive: offer an option to retain the output in 'obuf'
Since 66a155b (Enable output buffering in merge-recursive., 2007-01-14),
we already accumulate the output in a buffer. The idea was to avoid
interfering with the progress output that goes to stderr, which is
unbuffered, when we write to stdout, which is buffered.

We extend that buffering to allow the caller to handle the output
(possibly suppressing it). This will help us when extending the
sequencer to do rebase -i's brunt work: it does not want the picks to
print anything by default but instead determine itself whether to print
the output or not.

Note that we also redirect the error messages into the output buffer
when the caller asked not to flush the output buffer, for two reasons:
1) to retain the correct output order, and 2) to allow the caller to
suppress *all* output.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 11:45:30 -07:00
dde75cb056 merge-recursive: write the commit title in one go
In 66a155b (Enable output buffering in merge-recursive., 2007-01-14), we
changed the code such that it prints the output in one go, to avoid
interfering with the progress output.

Let's make sure that the same holds true when outputting the commit
title: previously, we used several printf() statements to stdout and
assumed that stdout's buffer is large enough to hold the entire
commit title.

Apart from making that speculation unnecessary, we change the code to
add the message to the output buffer before flushing for another reason:
the next commit will introduce a new level of output buffering, where
the caller can request the output not to be flushed, but to be retained
for further processing.

This latter feature will be needed when teaching the sequencer to do
rebase -i's brunt work: it wants to control the output of the
cherry-picks (i.e. recursive merges).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 11:45:28 -07:00
bc9204d4ef merge-recursive: flush output buffer before printing error messages
The data structure passed to the recursive merge machinery has a feature
where the caller can ask for the output to be buffered into a strbuf, by
setting the field 'buffer_output'.

Previously, we died without flushing, losing accumulated output.  With
this patch, we show the output first, and only then print the error
message.

Currently, the only user of that buffering is merge_recursive() itself,
to avoid the progress output to interfere.

In the next patches, we will introduce a new buffer_output mode that
forces merge_recursive() to retain the output buffer for further
processing by the caller. If the caller asked for that, we will then
also write the error messages into the output buffer. This is necessary
to give the caller more control not only how to react in case of errors
but also control how/if to display the error messages.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-01 11:45:27 -07:00
1e461c4f1f rebase-interactive: drop early check for valid ident
Since the very inception of interactive-rebase in 1b1dce4
(Teach rebase an interactive mode, 2007-06-25), there has
been a preemptive check, before looking at any commits, to
see whether the user has a valid name/email combination.

This is convenient, because it means that we abort the
operation before even beginning (rather than just
complaining that we are unable to pick a particular commit).

However, it does the wrong thing when the rebase does not
actually need to generate any new commits (e.g., a
fast-forward with no commits to pick, or one where the base
stays the same, and we just pick the same commits without
rewriting anything). In this case it may complain about the
lack of ident, even though one would not be needed to
complete the operation.

This may seem like mere nit-picking, but because interactive
rebase underlies the "preserve-merges" rebase, somebody who
has set "pull.rebase" to "preserve" cannot make even a
fast-forward pull without a valid ident, as we bail before
even realizing the fast-forward nature.

This commit drops the extra ident check entirely. This means
we rely on individual commands that generate commit objects
to complain. So we will continue to notice and prevent cases
that actually do create commits, but with one important
difference: we fail while actually executing the "pick"
operations, and leave the rebase in a conflicted, half-done
state.

In some ways this is less convenient, but in some ways it is
more so; the user can then manually commit or even "git
rebase --continue" after setting up their ident (or
providing it as a one-off on the command line).

Reported-by: Dakota Hawkins <dakotahawkins@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-29 15:47:06 -07:00
3e8e32c32e patch-ids: add flag to create the diff patch id using header only data
This will allow a diff patch id to be created using only the header data
so that the contents of the file will not have to be loaded.

Signed-off-by: Kevin Willford <kcwillford@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-29 14:10:01 -07:00
683f17ec44 patch-ids: replace the seen indicator with a commit pointer
The cherry_pick_list was looping through the original side checking the
seen indicator and setting the cherry_flag on the commit.  If we save
off the commit in the patch_id we can set the cherry_flag on the correct
commit when running through the other side when a patch_id match is found.

Signed-off-by: Kevin Willford <kcwillford@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-29 13:23:03 -07:00
dfb7a1b4d0 patch-ids: stop using a hand-rolled hashmap implementation
This change will use the hashmap from the hashmap.h to keep track of the
patch_ids that have been encountered instead of using an internal
implementation.  This simplifies the implementation of the patch ids.

Signed-off-by: Kevin Willford <kcwillford@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-29 13:23:03 -07:00
56dfeb6263 pack-objects: compute local/ignore_pack_keep early
In want_object_in_pack(), we can exit early from our loop if
neither "local" nor "ignore_pack_keep" are set. If they are,
however, we must examine each pack to see if it has the
object and is non-local or has a ".keep".

It's quite common for there to be no non-local or .keep
packs at all, in which case we know ahead of time that
looking further will be pointless. We can pre-compute this
by simply iterating over the list of packs ahead of time,
and dropping the flags if there are no packs that could
match.

Another similar strategy would be to modify the loop in
want_object_in_pack() to notice that we have already found
the object once, and that we are looping only to check for
"local" and "keep" attributes. If a pack has neither of
those, we can skip the call to find_pack_entry_one(), which
is the expensive part of the loop.

This has two advantages:

  - it isn't all-or-nothing; we still get some improvement
    when there's a small number of kept or non-local packs,
    and a large number of non-kept local packs

  - it eliminates any possible race where we add new
    non-local or kept packs after our initial scan. In
    practice, I don't think this race matters; we already
    cache the packed_git information, so somebody who adds a
    new pack or .keep file after we've started will not be
    noticed at all, unless we happen to need to call
    reprepare_packed_git() because a lookup fails.

    In other words, we're already racy, and the race is not
    a big deal (losing the race means we might include an
    object in the pack that would not otherwise be, which is
    an acceptable outcome).

However, it also has a disadvantage: we still loop over the
rest of the packs for each object to check their flags. This
is much less expensive than doing the object lookup, but
still not free. So if we wanted to implement that strategy
to cover the non-all-or-nothing cases, we could do so in
addition to this one (so you get the most speedup in the
all-or-nothing case, and the best we can do in the other
cases). But given that the all-or-nothing case is likely the
most common, it is probably not worth the trouble, and we
can revisit this later if evidence points otherwise.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-29 11:05:08 -07:00
cd37996795 pack-objects: break out of want_object loop early
When pack-objects collects the list of objects to pack
(either from stdin, or via its internal rev-list), it
filters each one through want_object_in_pack().

This function loops through each existing packfile, looking
for the object. When we find it, we mark the pack/offset
combo for later use. However, we can't just return "yes, we
want it" at that point. If --honor-pack-keep is in effect,
we must keep looking to find it in _all_ packs, to make sure
none of them has a .keep. Likewise, if --local is in effect,
we must make sure it is not present in any non-local pack.

As a result, the sum effort of these calls is effectively
O(nr_objects * nr_packs). In an ordinary repository, we have
only a handful of packs, and this doesn't make a big
difference. But in pathological cases, it can slow the
counting phase to a crawl.

This patch notices the case that we have neither "--local"
nor "--honor-pack-keep" in effect and breaks out of the loop
early, after finding the first instance. Note that our worst
case is still "objects * packs" (i.e., we might find each
object in the last pack we look in), but in practice we will
often break out early. On an "average" repo, my git.git with
8 packs, this shows a modest 2% (a few dozen milliseconds)
improvement in the counting-objects phase of "git
pack-objects --all <foo" (hackily instrumented by sticking
exit(0) right after list_objects).

But in a much more pathological case, it makes a bigger
difference. I ran the same command on a real-world example
with ~9 million objects across 1300 packs. The counting time
dropped from 413s to 45s, an improvement of about 89%.

Note that this patch won't do anything by itself for a
normal "git gc", as it uses both --honor-pack-keep and
--local.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-29 11:05:07 -07:00
a73cdd21c4 find_pack_entry: replace last_found_pack with MRU cache
Each pack has an index for looking up entries in O(log n)
time, but if we have multiple packs, we have to scan through
them linearly. This can produce a measurable overhead for
some operations.

We dealt with this long ago in f7c22cc (always start looking
up objects in the last used pack first, 2007-05-30), which
keeps what is essentially a 1-element most-recently-used
cache. In theory, we should be able to do better by keeping
a similar but longer cache, that is the same length as the
pack-list itself.

Since we now have a convenient generic MRU structure, we can
plug it in and measure. Here are the numbers for running
p5303 against linux.git:

Test                      HEAD^                HEAD
------------------------------------------------------------------------
5303.3: rev-list (1)      31.56(31.28+0.27)    31.30(31.08+0.20) -0.8%
5303.4: repack (1)        40.62(39.35+2.36)    40.60(39.27+2.44) -0.0%
5303.6: rev-list (50)     31.31(31.06+0.23)    31.23(31.00+0.22) -0.3%
5303.7: repack (50)       58.65(69.12+1.94)    58.27(68.64+2.05) -0.6%
5303.9: rev-list (1000)   38.74(38.40+0.33)    31.87(31.62+0.24) -17.7%
5303.10: repack (1000)    367.20(441.80+4.62)  342.00(414.04+3.72) -6.9%

The main numbers of interest here are the rev-list ones
(since that is exercising the normal object lookup code
path).  The single-pack case shouldn't improve at all; the
260ms speedup there is just part of the run-to-run noise
(but it's important to note that we didn't make anything
worse with the overhead of maintaining our cache). In the
50-pack case, we see similar results. There may be a slight
improvement, but it's mostly within the noise.

The 1000-pack case does show a big improvement, though. That
carries over to the repack case, as well. Even though we
haven't touched its pack-search loop yet, it does still do a
lot of normal object lookups (e.g., for the internal
revision walk), and so improves.

As a point of reference, I also ran the 1000-pack test
against a version of HEAD^ with the last_found_pack
optimization disabled. It takes ~60s, so that gives an
indication of how much even the single-element cache is
helping.

For comparison, here's a smaller repository, git.git:

Test                      HEAD^               HEAD
---------------------------------------------------------------------
5303.3: rev-list (1)      1.56(1.54+0.01)    1.54(1.51+0.02) -1.3%
5303.4: repack (1)        1.84(1.80+0.10)    1.82(1.80+0.09) -1.1%
5303.6: rev-list (50)     1.58(1.55+0.02)    1.59(1.57+0.01) +0.6%
5303.7: repack (50)       2.50(3.18+0.04)    2.50(3.14+0.04) +0.0%
5303.9: rev-list (1000)   2.76(2.71+0.04)    2.24(2.21+0.02) -18.8%
5303.10: repack (1000)    13.21(19.56+0.25)  11.66(18.01+0.21) -11.7%

You can see that the percentage improvement is similar.
That's because the lookup we are optimizing is roughly
O(nr_objects * nr_packs). Since the number of packs is
constant in both tests, we'd expect the improvement to be
linear in the number of objects. But the whole process is
also linear in the number of objects, so the improvement
is a constant factor.

The exact improvement does also depend on the contents of
the packs. In p5303, the extra packs all have 5 first-parent
commits in them, which is a reasonable simulation of a
pushed-to repository. But it also means that only 250
first-parent commits are in those packs (compared to almost
50,000 total in linux.git), and the rest are in the huge
"base" pack. So once we start looking at history in taht big
pack, that's where we'll find most everything, and even the
1-element cache gets close to 100% cache hits.  You could
almost certainly show better numbers with a more
pathological case (e.g., distributing the objects more
evenly across the packs). But that's simply not that
realistic a scenario, so it makes more sense to focus on
these numbers.

The implementation itself is a straightforward application
of the MRU code. We provide an MRU-ordered list of packs
that shadows the packed_git list. This is easy to do because
we only create and revise the pack list in one place. The
"reprepare" code path actually drops the whole MRU and
replaces it for simplicity. It would be more efficient to
just add new entries, but there's not much point in
optimizing here; repreparing happens rarely, and only after
doing a lot of other expensive work.  The key things to keep
optimized are traversal (which is just a normal linked list,
albeit with one extra level of indirection over the regular
packed_git list), and marking (which is a constant number of
pointer assignments, though slightly more than the old
last_found_pack was; it doesn't seem to create a measurable
slowdown, though).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-29 11:05:07 -07:00
002f206faf add generic most-recently-used list
There are a few places in Git that would benefit from a fast
most-recently-used cache (e.g., the list of packs, which we
search linearly but would like to order based on locality).
This patch introduces a generic list that can be used to
store arbitrary pointers in most-recently-used order.

The implementation is just a doubly-linked list, where
"marking" an item as used moves it to the front of the list.
Insertion and marking are O(1), and iteration is O(n).

There's no lookup support provided; if you need fast
lookups, you are better off with a different data structure
in the first place.

There is also no deletion support. This would not be hard to
do, but it's not necessary for handling pack structs, which
are created and never removed.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-29 11:05:07 -07:00
3157c880f6 sha1_file: drop free_pack_by_name
The point of this function is to drop an entry from the
"packed_git" cache that points to a file we might be
overwriting, because our contents may not be the same (and
hence the only caller was pack-objects as it moved a
temporary packfile into place).

In older versions of git, this could happen because the
names of packfiles were derived from the set of objects they
contained, not the actual bits on disk. But since 1190a1a
(pack-objects: name pack files after trailer hash,
2013-12-05), the name reflects the actual bits on disk, and
any two packfiles with the same name can be used
interchangeably.

Dropping this function not only saves a few lines of code,
it makes the lifetime of "struct packed_git" much easier to
reason about: namely, we now do not ever free these structs.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-29 11:05:06 -07:00
77023ea3c3 t/perf: add tests for many-pack scenarios
Git's pack storage does efficient (log n) lookups in a
single packfile's index, but if we have multiple packfiles,
we have to linearly search each for a given object.  This
patch introduces some timing tests for cases where we have a
large number of packs, so that we can measure any
improvements we make in the following patches.

The main thing we want to time is object lookup. To do this,
we measure "git rev-list --objects --all", which does a
fairly large number of object lookups (essentially one per
object in the repository).

However, we also measure the time to do a full repack, which
is interesting for two reasons. One is that in addition to
the usual pack lookup, it has its own linear iteration over
the list of packs. And two is that because it it is the tool
one uses to go from an inefficient many-pack situation back
to a single pack, we care about its performance not only at
marginal numbers of packs, but at the extreme cases (e.g.,
if you somehow end up with 5,000 packs, it is the only way
to get back to 1 pack, so we need to make sure it performs
well).

We measure the performance of each command in three
scenarios: 1 pack, 50 packs, and 1,000 packs.

The 1-pack case is a baseline; any optimizations we do to
handle multiple packs cannot possibly perform better than
this.

The 50-pack case is as far as Git should generally allow
your repository to go, if you have auto-gc enabled with the
default settings. So this represents the maximum performance
improvement we would expect under normal circumstances.

The 1,000-pack case is hopefully rare, though I have seen it
in the wild where automatic maintenance was broken for some
time (and the repository continued to receive pushes). This
represents cases where we care less about general
performance, but want to make sure that a full repack
command does not take excessively long.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-29 11:05:06 -07:00
f8f7adce9f Sync with maint
* maint:
  Some fixes for 2.9.3
2016-07-28 14:21:18 -07:00
8213178c86 Eighth batch of topics for 2.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-28 14:20:48 -07:00
2a96d39824 t9100: portability fix
Do not say "export VAR=VAL"; "VAR=VAL && export VAR" is always more
portable.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-28 14:20:13 -07:00
32b8c581ec difftool: use Git::* functions instead of passing around state
Call Git::command() and friends directly wherever possible.
This makes it clear that these operations can be invoked directly
without needing to manage the current directory and related GIT_*
environment variables.

Eliminate find_repository() since we can now use wc_path() and
not worry about side-effects involving environment variables.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-28 14:01:55 -07:00
98f917ed42 difftool: avoid $GIT_DIR and $GIT_WORK_TREE
Environment variables are global and hard to reason about.
Use the `--git-dir` and `--work-tree` arguments when invoking `git`
instead of relying on the environment.

Add a test to ensure that difftool's dir-diff feature works when these
variables are present in the environment.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-28 14:01:55 -07:00
d949751859 rebase-interactive: trim leading whitespace from progress count
Interactive rebase uses 'wc -l' to write the current patch number
in a progress report. Some implementations of 'wc -l' produce spaces
before the number, leading to ugly output such as

  Rebasing (     3/8)

Remove the spaces using a trivial arithmetic evaluation.

Before 9588c52 (i18n: rebase-interactive: mark strings for
translation) this was not a problem because printf was used to
generate the text. Since that commit, the count is interpolated
directly from a shell variable into the text, where the spaces
remain. The total number of patches does not have this problem
even though it is interpolated from a shell variable in the same
manner, because the variable is set by an arithmetic evaluation.

Later in the script, there is a virtually identical case where
leading spaces are trimmed, but it uses a pattern substitution:

todocount=$(git stripspace --strip-comments <"$todo" | wc -l)
todocount=${todocount##* }

I did not choose this idiom because it adds a line of code, and
there is already an arithmetic evaluation in the vicinity of the
line that is changed here.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-28 13:22:46 -07:00
0f3d855efc Merge branch 'master' of git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn
* 'master' of git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn:
  git-svn: allow --version to work anywhere
  git-svn: document svn.authorsProg in config
2016-07-28 13:13:53 -07:00
55cbe18e11 submodule-config: fix test binary crashing when no arguments given
Since arg[0] will be NULL without any argument here and starts_with()
does not like NULL-pointers.

Signed-off-by: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-28 13:05:36 -07:00
0918e25077 submodule-config: combine early return code into one goto
So we have simpler return handling code and all the cleanup code in
almost one place.

Signed-off-by: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-28 13:05:31 -07:00
514dea905a submodule-config: passing name reference for .gitmodule blobs
Commit 959b5455 (submodule: implement a config API for lookup of
.gitmodules values, 2015-08-18) implemented the initial version of the
submodule config cache. During development of that initial version we
extracted the function gitmodule_sha1_from_commit(). During that process
we missed that the strbuf rev was still used in config_from() and now is
left empty. Lets fix this by also returning this string.

This means that now when reading .gitmodules from revisions, the error
messages also contain a reference to the blob they are from.

Signed-off-by: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-28 13:05:14 -07:00
08df31eecc Some fixes for 2.9.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-28 11:28:32 -07:00
1ecc6b291c Merge branch 'ak/lazy-prereq-mktemp' into maint
A test that unconditionally used "mktemp" learned that the command
is not necessarily available everywhere.

* ak/lazy-prereq-mktemp:
  t7610: test for mktemp before test execution
2016-07-28 11:26:03 -07:00
6cbec0da47 Merge branch 'nd/icase' into maint
"git grep -i" has been taught to fold case in non-ascii locales
correctly.

* nd/icase:
  grep.c: reuse "icase" variable
  diffcore-pickaxe: support case insensitive match on non-ascii
  diffcore-pickaxe: Add regcomp_or_die()
  grep/pcre: support utf-8
  gettext: add is_utf8_locale()
  grep/pcre: prepare locale-dependent tables for icase matching
  grep: rewrite an if/else condition to avoid duplicate expression
  grep/icase: avoid kwsset when -F is specified
  grep/icase: avoid kwsset on literal non-ascii strings
  test-regex: expose full regcomp() to the command line
  test-regex: isolate the bug test code
  grep: break down an "if" stmt in preparation for next changes
2016-07-28 11:26:03 -07:00
8e4571e57a Merge branch 'sb/submodule-parallel-fetch' into maint
Fix recently introduced codepaths that are involved in parallel
submodule operations, which gave up on reading too early, and
could have wasted CPU while attempting to write under a corner
case condition.

* sb/submodule-parallel-fetch:
  hoist out handle_nonblock function for xread and xwrite
  xwrite: poll on non-blocking FDs
  xread: retry after poll on EAGAIN/EWOULDBLOCK
2016-07-28 11:26:02 -07:00
c81d283675 Merge branch 'dk/blame-move-no-reason-for-1-line-context' into maint
"git blame -M" missed a single line that was moved within the file.

* dk/blame-move-no-reason-for-1-line-context:
  blame: require 0 context lines while finding moved lines with -M
2016-07-28 11:26:01 -07:00
e5a730a1c3 Merge branch 'jk/test-match-signal' into maint
The test framework learned a new helper test_match_signal to
check an exit code from getting killed by an expected signal.

* jk/test-match-signal:
  t/lib-git-daemon: use test_match_signal
  test_must_fail: use test_match_signal
  t0005: use test_match_signal as appropriate
  tests: factor portable signal check out of t0005
2016-07-28 11:26:00 -07:00
174f9e622f Merge branch 'js/am-call-theirs-theirs-in-fallback-3way' into maint
One part of "git am" had an oddball helper function that called
stuff from outside "his" as opposed to calling what we have "ours",
which was not gender-neutral and also inconsistent with the rest of
the system where outside stuff is usuall called "theirs" in
contrast to "ours".

* js/am-call-theirs-theirs-in-fallback-3way:
  am: counteract gender bias
2016-07-28 11:25:59 -07:00
8a81d5f5f8 Merge branch 'js/t3404-grammo-fix' into maint
Grammofix.

* js/t3404-grammo-fix:
  t3404: fix a grammo (commands are ran -> commands are run)
2016-07-28 11:25:59 -07:00
dcfb9d7d30 Merge branch 'nd/doc-new-command' into maint
Typofix in a doc.

* nd/doc-new-command:
  new-command.txt: correct the command description file
2016-07-28 11:25:57 -07:00
87be95b6f9 Merge branch 'ew/gc-auto-pack-limit-fix' into maint
"gc.autoPackLimit" when set to 1 should not trigger a repacking
when there is only one pack, but the code counted poorly and did
so.

* ew/gc-auto-pack-limit-fix:
  gc: fix off-by-one error with gc.autoPackLimit
2016-07-28 11:25:56 -07:00
52d637c422 Merge branch 'js/color-on-windows-comment' into maint
For a long time, we carried an in-code comment that said our
colored output would work only when we use fprintf/fputs on
Windows, which no longer is the case for the past few years.

* js/color-on-windows-comment:
  color.h: remove obsolete comment about limitations on Windows
2016-07-28 11:25:55 -07:00
1032eb9c2a Merge branch 'mm/doc-tt' into maint
More mark-up updates to typeset strings that are expected to
literally typed by the end user in fixed-width font.

* mm/doc-tt:
  doc: typeset HEAD and variants as literal
  CodingGuidelines: formatting HEAD in documentation
  doc: typeset long options with argument as literal
  doc: typeset '--' as literal
  doc: typeset long command-line options as literal
  doc: typeset short command-line options as literal
  Documentation/git-mv.txt: fix whitespace indentation
2016-07-28 11:25:54 -07:00
475495ff5e Merge branch 'js/sign-empty-commit-fix' into maint
"git commit --amend --allow-empty-message -S" for a commit without
any message body could have misidentified where the header of the
commit object ends.

* js/sign-empty-commit-fix:
  commit -S: avoid invalid pointer with empty message
2016-07-28 11:25:53 -07:00
ae8daba601 Merge branch 'ps/rebase-i-auto-unstash-upon-abort' into maint
"git rebase -i --autostash" did not restore the auto-stashed change
when the operation was aborted.

* ps/rebase-i-auto-unstash-upon-abort:
  rebase -i: restore autostash on abort
2016-07-28 11:25:52 -07:00
c12c71fabb Merge branch 'nd/ita-cleanup' into maint
Git does not know what the contents in the index should be for a
path added with "git add -N" yet, so "git grep --cached" should not
show hits (or show lack of hits, with -L) in such a path, but that
logic does not apply to "git grep", i.e. searching in the working
tree files.  But we did so by mistake, which has been corrected.

* nd/ita-cleanup:
  grep: fix grepping for "intent to add" files
  t7810-grep.sh: fix a whitespace inconsistency
  t7810-grep.sh: fix duplicated test name
2016-07-28 11:25:51 -07:00
4966b58f3e Merge branch 'js/find-commit-subject-ignore-leading-blanks' into maint
A helper function that takes the contents of a commit object and
finds its subject line did not ignore leading blank lines, as is
commonly done by other codepaths.  Make it ignore leading blank
lines to match.

* js/find-commit-subject-ignore-leading-blanks:
  reset --hard: skip blank lines when reporting the commit subject
  sequencer: use skip_blank_lines() to find the commit subject
  commit -C: skip blank lines at the beginning of the message
  commit.c: make find_commit_subject() more robust
  pretty: make the skip_blank_lines() function public
2016-07-28 11:25:50 -07:00
053e2fb579 Merge branch 'dg/subtree-rebase-test' into maint
Add a test to specify the desired behaviour that currently is not
available in "git rebase -Xsubtree=...".

* dg/subtree-rebase-test:
  contrib/subtree: Add a test for subtree rebase that loses commits
2016-07-28 11:25:49 -07:00
b8307836d2 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-deinit-all'
A comment update for a topic that was merged to Git v2.8.

* sb/submodule-deinit-all:
  submodule deinit: remove outdated comment
2016-07-28 10:34:45 -07:00
36f99a40a8 Merge branch 'ew/find-perl-on-freebsd-in-local'
Recent FreeBSD stopped making perl available at /usr/bin/perl;
switch the default the built-in path to /usr/local/bin/perl on not
too ancient FreeBSD releases.

* ew/find-perl-on-freebsd-in-local:
  config.mak.uname: correct perl path on FreeBSD
2016-07-28 10:34:44 -07:00
b48dfd86c9 Merge branch 'ew/daemon-socket-keepalive'
Recent update to "git daemon" tries to enable the socket-level
KEEPALIVE, but when it is spawned via inetd, the standard input
file descriptor may not necessarily be connected to a socket.
Suppress an ENOTSOCK error from setsockopt().

* ew/daemon-socket-keepalive:
  Windows: add missing definition of ENOTSOCK
  daemon: ignore ENOTSOCK from setsockopt
2016-07-28 10:34:43 -07:00
ad2d777604 Merge branch 'nd/pack-ofs-4gb-limit'
"git pack-objects" and "git index-pack" mostly operate with off_t
when talking about the offset of objects in a packfile, but there
were a handful of places that used "unsigned long" to hold that
value, leading to an unintended truncation.

* nd/pack-ofs-4gb-limit:
  fsck: use streaming interface for large blobs in pack
  pack-objects: do not truncate result in-pack object size on 32-bit systems
  index-pack: correct "offset" type in unpack_entry_data()
  index-pack: report correct bad object offsets even if they are large
  index-pack: correct "len" type in unpack_data()
  sha1_file.c: use type off_t* for object_info->disk_sizep
  pack-objects: pass length to check_pack_crc() without truncation
2016-07-28 10:34:42 -07:00
2c608e0f7c Merge branch 'nd/worktree-lock'
"git worktree prune" protected worktrees that are marked as
"locked" by creating a file in a known location.  "git worktree"
command learned a dedicated command pair to create and remove such
a file, so that the users do not have to do this with editor.

* nd/worktree-lock:
  worktree.c: find_worktree() search by path suffix
  worktree: add "unlock" command
  worktree: add "lock" command
  worktree.c: add is_worktree_locked()
  worktree.c: add is_main_worktree()
  worktree.c: add find_worktree()
2016-07-28 10:34:42 -07:00
d0b6966e3d Merge branch 'rs/notes-merge-no-toctou'
"git notes merge" had a code to see if a path exists (and fails if
it does) and then open the path for writing (when it doesn't).
Replace it with open with O_EXCL.

* rs/notes-merge-no-toctou:
  notes-merge: use O_EXCL to avoid overwriting existing files
2016-07-28 10:34:41 -07:00
c97268c822 Merge branch 'js/rebase-i-tests'
A few tests that specifically target "git rebase -i" have been
added.

* js/rebase-i-tests:
  rebase -i: we allow extra spaces after fixup!/squash!
  rebase -i: demonstrate a bug with --autosquash
  t3404: add a test for the --gpg-sign option
2016-07-28 10:34:40 -07:00
1b8132d99d i18n: config: unfold error messages marked for translation
Introduced in 473166b ("config: add 'origin_type' to config_source
struct", 2016-02-19), Git can inform the user about the origin of a
config error, but the implementation does not allow translators to
translate the keywords 'file', 'blob, 'standard input', and
'submodule-blob'. Moreover, for the second message, a reason for the
error is appended to the message, not allowing translators to translate
that reason either.

Unfold the message into several templates for each known origin_type.
That would result in better translation at the expense of code
verbosity.

Add enum config_oringin_type to ease management of the various
configuration origin types (blob, file, etc).  Previously origin type
was considered from command line if cf->origin_type == NULL, i.e.,
uninitialized. Now we set origin_type to CONFIG_ORIGIN_CMDLINE in
git_config_from_parameters() and configset_add_value().

For error message in git_parse_source(), use xstrfmt() function to
prepare the message string, instead of doing something like it's done
for die_bad_number(), because intelligibility and code conciseness are
improved for that instance.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-28 09:11:09 -07:00
996ee6d27a i18n: notes: mark comment for translation
Mark comment displayed when editing a note for translation.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-28 09:09:18 -07:00
d7fd792e1b subtree: adjust function definitions to match CodingGuidelines
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.

Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-27 19:10:24 -07:00
6ae6a23318 subtree: adjust style to match CodingGuidelines
Prefer "test" over "[ ... ]", use double-quotes around variables, break
long lines, and properly indent "case" statements.

Helped-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
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>
2016-07-27 19:10:22 -07:00
442f6fd3d6 date: clarify --date=raw description
"... in the internal raw Git format `%s %z` format." was clunky in
repeating "format" twice, and would not have helped those who do not
immediately get that these are strftime(3) conversion specifiers.

Explain them with words, and demote the mention of `%s %z` to a
hint to help those who know them.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-27 14:15:51 -07:00
642833db78 date: add "unix" format
We already have "--date=raw", which is a Unix epoch
timestamp plus a contextual timezone (either the author's or
the local). But one may not care about the timezone and just
want the epoch timestamp by itself. It's not hard to parse
the two apart, but if you are using a pretty-print format,
you may want git to show the "finished" form that the user
will see.

We can accomodate this by adding a new date format, "unix",
which is basically "raw" without the timezone.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-27 14:15:51 -07:00
1a2a1e8eb9 date: document and test "raw-local" mode
The "raw" format shows a Unix epoch timestamp, but with a
timezone tacked on. The timestamp is not _in_ that zone, but
it is extra information about the time (by default, the zone
the author was in).

The documentation claims that "raw-local" does not work. It
does, but the end result is rather subtle. Let's describe it
in better detail, and test to make sure it works (namely,
the epoch time doesn't change, but the zone does).

While we are rewording the documentation in this area, let's
not use the phrase "does not work" for the remaining option,
"--date=relative". It's vague; do we accept it or not? We do
accept it, but it has no effect (which is a reasonable
outcome). We should also refer to the option not as
"--relative" (which is the historical synonym, and does not
take "-local" at all), but as "--date=relative".

Helped-by: Jakub Narębski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-27 14:15:50 -07:00
9d1ca1dac0 t4205: indent here documents
Our usual style in the test scripts is to indent here
documents with tabs, and use "<<-" to strip the tabs. The
result is easier to read.

This old test script did not do so in its inception, and
further tests added onto it followed the local style. Let's
bring it in line with our usual style.

Some of the tests actually care quite a bit about
whitespace, but none of them do so at the beginning of the
line (because they use things like qz_to_tab_space to avoid
depending on the literal whitespace), so we can do a fairly
mechanical conversion.

Most of the here-docs also use interpolation, so they have
been left as "<<-EOF". In a few cases, though, where
interpolation was not in use, I've converted them to
"<<-\EOF" to match our usual "don't interpolate unless you
need to" style.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-27 12:28:16 -07:00
1bd37509ca t4205: drop top-level &&-chaining
The test currently does something like:

  do_one() &&
  do_two() &&
  test_expect_success ...

We generally avoid performing actions at the top-level of
the script (outside of a test_expect block) for two reasons:

  1. The test harness is not checking and reporting if they
     fail.

  2. Their output is not handled correctly (not hidden by
     default, nor shown with "-v").

Using &&-chains seems like it should help with (1), but it
doesn't. If either of the commands fails, we simply skip
running the follow-on test entirely, and the test harness
has no idea.

We can fix this by pushing that setup into its own block.
It _could_ go into the following test block, but since the
result in this case is used by multiple tests, it's more
clear to mark it explicitly as a distinct setup step.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-27 12:27:37 -07:00
5f072e0017 completion: add option '--recurse-submodules' to 'git clone'
Signed-off-by: Chris Packham <judge.packham@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-27 10:22:47 -07:00
0f12c7d4d1 subtree: fix "git subtree split --rejoin"
"git merge" in v2.9 prevents merging unrelated histories.

"git subtree split --rejoin" creates unrelated histories when
creating a split repo from a raw sub-directory that did not
originate from an invocation of "git subtree add".

Restore the original behavior by passing --allow-unrelated-histories
when merging subtrees.  This ensures that the synthetic history
created by "git subtree split" can be merged.

Add a test to ensure that this feature works as advertised.

Reported-by: Brett Cundal <brett.cundal@iugome.com>
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 13:57:00 -07:00
fbd3199a6d t7900-subtree.sh: fix quoting and broken && chains
Allow whitespace in arguments to subtree_test_create_repo.
Add missing && chains.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 13:56:57 -07:00
406621f43d submodule deinit: remove outdated comment
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 13:52:14 -07:00
64ac39af70 push: allow pushing new branches with --force-with-lease
If there is no upstream information for a branch, it is likely that it
is newly created and can safely be pushed under the normal fast-forward
rules.  Relax the --force-with-lease check so that we do not reject
these branches immediately but rather attempt to push them as new
branches, using the null SHA-1 as the expected value.

In fact, it is already possible to push new branches using the explicit
--force-with-lease=<branch>:<expect> syntax, so all we do here is make
this behaviour the default if no explicit "expect" value is specified.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 13:48:28 -07:00
eee98e74f9 push: add shorthand for --force-with-lease branch creation
Allow the empty string to stand in for the null SHA-1 when pushing a new
branch, like we do when deleting branches.

This means that the following command ensures that `new-branch` is
created on the remote (that is, is must not already exist):

	git push --force-with-lease=new-branch: origin new-branch

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 13:48:09 -07:00
def480fe99 commit: describe that --no-verify skips the commit-msg hook in the help text
This brings the short help in line with the documentation.

Signed-off-by: Orgad Shaneh <orgads@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 13:44:55 -07:00
3f338f43b0 am -3: use merge_recursive() directly again
Last October, we had to change this code to run `git merge-recursive`
in a child process: git-am wants to print some helpful advice when the
merge failed, but the code in question was not prepared to return, it
die()d instead.

We are finally at a point when the code *is* prepared to return errors,
and can avoid the child process again.

This reverts commit c63d4b2 (am -3: do not let failed merge from
completing the error codepath, 2015-10-09), with the necessary changes
to adjust for the fact that Git's source code changed in the meantime
(such as: using OIDs instead of hashes in the recursive merge, and a
removed gender bias).

Note: the code now calls merge_recursive_generic() again. Unlike
merge_trees() and merge_recursive(), this function returns 0 upon success,
as most of Git's functions. Therefore, the error value -1 naturally is
handled correctly, and we do not have to take care of it specifically.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 11:13:44 -07:00
6003303a1e merge-recursive: switch to returning errors instead of dying
The recursive merge machinery is supposed to be a library function, i.e.
it should return an error when it fails. Originally the functions were
part of the builtin "merge-recursive", though, where it was simpler to
call die() and be done with error handling.

The existing callers were already prepared to detect negative return
values to indicate errors and to behave as previously: exit with code 128
(which is the same thing that die() does, after printing the message).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 11:13:44 -07:00
75456f96d4 merge-recursive: handle return values indicating errors
We are about to libify the recursive merge machinery, where we only
die() in case of a bug or memory contention. To that end, we must heed
negative return values as indicating errors.

This requires our functions to be careful to pass through error
conditions in call chains, and for quite a few functions this means
that they have to return values to begin with.

The next step will be to convert the places where we currently die() to
return negative values (read: -1) instead.

Note that we ignore errors reported by make_room_for_path(), consistent
with the previous behavior (update_file_flags() used the return value of
make_room_for_path() only to indicate an early return, but not a fatal
error): if the error is really a fatal error, we will notice later; If
not, it was not that serious a problem to begin with. (Witnesses in
favor of this reasoning are t4151-am-abort and t7610-mergetool, which
would start failing if we stopped on errors reported by
make_room_for_path()).

Also note: while this patch makes the code slightly less readable in
update_file_flags() (we introduce a new "goto free_buf;" instead of
an explicit "free(buf); return;"), it is a preparatory change for
the next patch where we will convert all of the die() calls in the same
function to go through the free_buf return path instead.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 11:13:44 -07:00
fbc87eb544 merge-recursive: allow write_tree_from_memory() to error out
It is possible that a tree cannot be written (think: disk full). We
will want to give the caller a chance to clean up instead of letting
the program die() in such a case.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 11:13:44 -07:00
3c8a51e89a merge-recursive: avoid returning a wholesale struct
It is technically allowed, as per C89, for functions' return type to
be complete structs (i.e. *not* just pointers to structs).

However, it was just an oversight of this developer when converting
Python code to C code in 6d297f8 (Status update on merge-recursive in
C, 2006-07-08) which introduced such a return type.

Besides, by converting this construct to pass in the struct, we can now
start returning a value that can indicate errors in future patches. This
will help the current effort to libify merge-recursive.c.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 11:13:44 -07:00
de8946de16 merge_recursive: abort properly upon errors
There are a couple of places where return values never indicated errors
before, as we simply died instead of returning.

But now negative return values mean that there was an error and we have to
abort the operation. Let's do exactly that.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 11:13:44 -07:00
f241ff0d0a prepare the builtins for a libified merge_recursive()
Previously, callers of merge_trees() or merge_recursive() expected that
code to die() with an error message. This used to be okay because we
called those commands from scripts, and had a chance to print out a
message in case the command failed fatally (read: with exit code 128).

As scripting incurs its own set of problems (portability, speed,
idiosyncrasies of different shells, limited data structures leading to
inefficient code), we are converting more and more of these scripts into
builtins, using library functions directly.

We already tried to use merge_recursive() directly in the builtin
git-am, for example. Unfortunately, we had to roll it back temporarily
because some of the code in merge-recursive.c still deemed it okay to
call die(), when the builtin am code really wanted to print out a useful
advice after the merge failed fatally. In the next commits, we want to
fix that.

The code touched by this commit expected merge_trees() to die() with
some useful message when there is an error condition, but merge_trees()
is going to be improved by converting all die() calls to return error()
instead (i.e. return value -1 after printing out the message as before),
so that the caller can react more flexibly.

This is a step to prepare for the version of merge_trees() that no
longer dies,  even if we just imitate the previous behavior by calling
exit(128): this is what callers of e.g. `git merge` have come to expect.

Note that the callers of the sequencer (revert and cherry-pick) already
fail fast even for the return value -1; The only difference is that they
now get a chance to say "<command> failed".

A caller of merge_trees() might want handle error messages themselves
(or even suppress them). As this patch is already complex enough, we
leave that change for a later patch.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 11:13:44 -07:00
f8d83fb66c merge-recursive: clarify code in was_tracked()
It can be puzzling to see that was_tracked() asks to get an index entry
by name, but does not take a negative return value for an answer.

The reason we have to do this is that cache_name_pos() only looks for
entries in stage 0, even if nobody asked for any stage in particular.

Let's rewrite the logic a little bit, to handle the easy case early: if
cache_name_pos() returned a non-negative position, we know it is a match,
and we do not even have to compare the name again (cache_name_pos() did
that for us already). We can say right away: yes, this file was tracked.

Only if there was no exact match do we need to look harder for any
matching entry in stage 2.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 11:13:44 -07:00
7e97e10033 die(_("BUG")): avoid translating bug messages
While working on the patch series that avoids die()ing in recursive
merges, the issue came up that bug reports (i.e. die("BUG: ...")
constructs) should never be translated, as the target audience is the
Git developer community, not necessarily the current user, and hence
a translated message would make it *harder* to address the problem.

So let's stop translating the obvious ones. As it is really, really
outside the purview of this patch series to see whether there are more
die() statements that report bugs and are currently translated, that
task is left for another day and patch.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 11:13:44 -07:00
ef1177d18e die("bug"): report bugs consistently
The vast majority of error messages in Git's source code which report a
bug use the convention to prefix the message with "BUG:".

As part of cleaning up merge-recursive to stop die()ing except in case of
detected bugs, let's just make the remainder of the bug reports consistent
with the de facto rule.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 11:13:44 -07:00
3be18b47e4 t5520: verify that pull --rebase shows the helpful advice when failing
It was noticed by Brendan Forster last October that the builtin `git am`
regressed on that. Our hot fix reverted to spawning the recursive merge
instead of using it as a library function.

As we are about to revert that hot fix, after making the recursive merge a
true library function (i.e. a function that does not die() in case of
"normal" errors), let's add a test that verifies that we do not regress on
the same problem which made the hot fix necessary in the first place.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 11:13:44 -07:00
377d7ded18 t5510: skip tests under GETTEXT_POISON build
Skip tests when running under GETTEXT_POISON build and run them with
C_LOCALE_OUTPUT prerequisite.

These tests are irrelevant under GETTEXT_POISON because they test text
output alignment which GETTEXT_POISON turns useless.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 09:55:18 -07:00
259f22af90 config.mak.uname: correct perl path on FreeBSD
It looks the the symlink /usr/bin/perl (to /usr/local/bin/perl) has
been removed at least on FreeBSD 10.3. See [1] for more information.

[1] https://svnweb.freebsd.org/ports/head/UPDATING?r1=386270&r2=386269&pathrev=386270&diff_format=c

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-26 09:43:06 -07:00
d132b32b4e Documentation/git-push: fix placeholder formatting
Format the placeholder as monospace to match other occurrences in this
file and obey CodingGuidelines.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-25 15:21:32 -07:00
8c6d1f9807 Seventh batch of topics for 2.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-25 14:17:28 -07:00
b4e8a847ba Merge branch 'rs/use-strbuf-addbuf'
Code cleanup.

* rs/use-strbuf-addbuf:
  strbuf: avoid calling strbuf_grow() twice in strbuf_addbuf()
  use strbuf_addbuf() for appending a strbuf to another
2016-07-25 14:13:47 -07:00
7b01ab562a Merge branch 'ew/autoconf-pthread'
Existing autoconf generated test for the need to link with pthread
library did not check all the functions from pthread libraries;
recent FreeBSD has some functions in libc but not others, and we
mistakenly thought linking with libc is enough when it is not.

* ew/autoconf-pthread:
  configure.ac: stronger test for pthread linkage
2016-07-25 14:13:46 -07:00
37e9c7f5e1 Merge branch 'mh/blame-worktree'
"git blame file" allowed the lineage of lines in the uncommitted,
unadded contents of "file" to be inspected, but it refused when
"file" did not appear in the current commit.  When "file" was
created by renaming an existing file (but the change has not been
committed), this restriction was unnecessarily tight.

* mh/blame-worktree:
  t/t8003-blame-corner-cases.sh: Use here documents
  blame: allow to blame paths freshly added to the index
2016-07-25 14:13:45 -07:00
9db3979784 Merge branch 'js/fsck-name-object'
When "git fsck" reports a broken link (e.g. a tree object contains
a blob that does not exist), both containing object and the object
that is referred to were reported with their 40-hex object names.
The command learned the "--name-objects" option to show the path to
the containing object from existing refs (e.g. "HEAD~24^2:file.txt").

* js/fsck-name-object:
  fsck: optionally show more helpful info for broken links
  fsck: give the error function a chance to see the fsck_options
  fsck_walk(): optionally name objects on the go
  fsck: refactor how to describe objects
2016-07-25 14:13:44 -07:00
3cc75c10d7 Merge branch 'nd/cache-tree-ita'
"git add -N dir/file && git write-tree" produced an incorrect tree
when there are other paths in the same directory that sorts after
"file".

* nd/cache-tree-ita:
  cache-tree: do not generate empty trees as a result of all i-t-a subentries
  cache-tree.c: fix i-t-a entry skipping directory updates sometimes
  test-lib.sh: introduce and use $EMPTY_BLOB
  test-lib.sh: introduce and use $EMPTY_TREE
2016-07-25 14:13:44 -07:00
0d54ad9cd4 Merge branch 'jk/push-scrub-url'
"git fetch http://user:pass@host/repo..." scrubbed the userinfo
part, but "git push" didn't.

* jk/push-scrub-url:
  t5541: fix url scrubbing test when GPG is not set
  push: anonymize URL in status output
2016-07-25 14:13:43 -07:00
ae9ca20c85 Merge branch 'nd/test-helpers'
Build clean-up.

* nd/test-helpers:
  t/test-lib.sh: fix running tests with --valgrind
  Makefile: use VCSSVN_LIB to refer to svn library
  Makefile: drop extra dependencies for test helpers
2016-07-25 14:13:42 -07:00
c3531e0385 Merge branch 'jc/doc-diff-filter-exclude'
Belated doc update for a feature added in v1.8.5.

* jc/doc-diff-filter-exclude:
  diff: document diff-filter exclusion
2016-07-25 14:13:41 -07:00
976809a8e2 Merge branch 'ls/travis-enable-httpd-tests'
Allow http daemon tests in Travis CI tests.

* ls/travis-enable-httpd-tests:
  travis-ci: enable web server tests t55xx on Linux
2016-07-25 14:13:40 -07:00
21bed620cd Merge branch 'jc/renormalize-merge-kill-safer-crlf'
"git merge" with renormalization did not work well with
merge-recursive, due to "safer crlf" conversion kicking in when it
shouldn't.

* jc/renormalize-merge-kill-safer-crlf:
  merge: avoid "safer crlf" during recording of merge results
  convert: unify the "auto" handling of CRLF
2016-07-25 14:13:39 -07:00
fc08d2d4ad Merge branch 'rs/worktree-use-strbuf-absolute-path'
Code simplification.

* rs/worktree-use-strbuf-absolute-path:
  worktree: use strbuf_add_absolute_path() directly
2016-07-25 14:13:37 -07:00
03f25e85d9 Merge branch 'rs/rm-strbuf-optim'
The use of strbuf in "git rm" to build filename to remove was a bit
suboptimal, which has been fixed.

* rs/rm-strbuf-optim:
  rm: reuse strbuf for all remove_dir_recursively() calls
2016-07-25 14:13:36 -07:00
937be62993 Merge branch 'rw/make-needs-librt'
Makefile assumed that -lrt is always available on platforms that
want to use clock_gettime() and CLOCK_MONOTONIC, which is not a
case for recent Mac OS X.  The necessary symbols are often found in
libc on many modern systems and having -lrt on the command line, as
long as the library exists, had no effect, but when the platform
removes librt.a that is a different matter--having -lrt will break
the linkage.

This change could be seen as a regression for those who do need to
specify -lrt, as they now specifically ask for NEEDS_LIBRT when
building. Hopefully they are in the minority these days.

* rw/make-needs-librt:
  config.mak.uname: define NEEDS_LIBRT under Linux, for now
  Makefile: add NEEDS_LIBRT to optionally link with librt
2016-07-25 14:13:36 -07:00
f2cfb8fcc9 Merge branch 'js/ignore-space-at-eol'
An age old bug that caused "git diff --ignore-space-at-eol"
misbehave has been fixed.

* js/ignore-space-at-eol:
  diff: fix a double off-by-one with --ignore-space-at-eol
  diff: demonstrate a bug with --patience and --ignore-space-at-eol
2016-07-25 14:13:35 -07:00
87492cb24d Merge branch 'mh/ref-iterators'
The API to iterate over all the refs (i.e. for_each_ref(), etc.)
has been revamped.

* mh/ref-iterators:
  for_each_reflog(): reimplement using iterators
  dir_iterator: new API for iterating over a directory tree
  for_each_reflog(): don't abort for bad references
  do_for_each_ref(): reimplement using reference iteration
  refs: introduce an iterator interface
  ref_resolves_to_object(): new function
  entry_resolves_to_object(): rename function from ref_resolves_to_object()
  get_ref_cache(): only create an instance if there is a submodule
  remote rm: handle symbolic refs correctly
  delete_refs(): add a flags argument
  refs: use name "prefix" consistently
  do_for_each_ref(): move docstring to the header file
  refs: remove unnecessary "extern" keywords
2016-07-25 14:13:33 -07:00
702ebbf4e2 Merge branch 'mh/update-ref-errors'
Error handling in the codepaths that updates refs has been
improved.

* mh/update-ref-errors:
  lock_ref_for_update(): avoid a symref resolution
  lock_ref_for_update(): make error handling more uniform
  t1404: add more tests of update-ref error handling
  t1404: document function test_update_rejected
  t1404: remove "prefix" argument to test_update_rejected
  t1404: rename file to t1404-update-ref-errors.sh
2016-07-25 14:13:33 -07:00
6b34ce90a7 Merge branch 'mh/split-under-lock'
Further preparatory work on the refs API before the pluggable
backend series can land.

* mh/split-under-lock: (33 commits)
  lock_ref_sha1_basic(): only handle REF_NODEREF mode
  commit_ref_update(): remove the flags parameter
  lock_ref_for_update(): don't resolve symrefs
  lock_ref_for_update(): don't re-read non-symbolic references
  refs: resolve symbolic refs first
  ref_transaction_update(): check refname_is_safe() at a minimum
  unlock_ref(): move definition higher in the file
  lock_ref_for_update(): new function
  add_update(): initialize the whole ref_update
  verify_refname_available(): adjust constness in declaration
  refs: don't dereference on rename
  refs: allow log-only updates
  delete_branches(): use resolve_refdup()
  ref_transaction_commit(): correctly report close_ref() failure
  ref_transaction_create(): disallow recursive pruning
  refs: make error messages more consistent
  lock_ref_sha1_basic(): remove unneeded local variable
  read_raw_ref(): move docstring to header file
  read_raw_ref(): improve docstring
  read_raw_ref(): rename symref argument to referent
  ...
2016-07-25 14:13:32 -07:00
a8a5d25118 git svn: migrate tests to use lib-httpd
This allows us to use common test infrastructure and parallelize
the tests.  For now, GIT_SVN_TEST_HTTPD=true needs to be set to
enable the SVN HTTP tests because we reuse the same test cases
for both file:// and http:// SVN repositories.  SVN_HTTPD_PORT
is no longer honored.

Tested under Apache 2.2 and 2.4 on Debian 7.x (wheezy) and
8.x (jessie), respectively.

Cc: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>
Cc: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-25 10:42:34 -07:00
7b232add79 t/t91*: do not say how to avoid the tests
Some of the tests "say" how to stop the svn tests from running, some do
not.

The test suite is directed at people reading t/README where we keep all
information about running the test suite (partly, with options etc.).

Remove said "say" occurences.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-25 10:42:33 -07:00
8465541e8c grep: further simplify setting the pattern type
When c5c31d33 (grep: move pattern-type bits support to top-level
grep.[ch], 2012-10-03) introduced grep_commit_pattern_type() helper
function, the intention was to allow the users of grep API to having
to fiddle only with .pattern_type_option (which can be set to "fixed",
"basic", "extended", and "pcre"), and then immediately before compiling
the pattern strings for use, call grep_commit_pattern_type() to have
it prepare various bits in the grep_opt structure (like .fixed,
.regflags, etc.).

However, grep_set_pattern_type_option() helper function the grep API
internally uses were left as an external function by mistake.  This
function shouldn't have been made callable by the users of the API.

Later when the grep API was used in revision traversal machinery,
the caller then mistakenly started calling the function around
34a4ae55 (log --grep: use the same helper to set -E/-F options as
"git grep", 2012-10-03), instead of setting the .pattern_type_option
field and letting the grep_commit_pattern_type() to take care of the
details.

This caused an unnecessary bug that made a configured
grep.patternType take precedence over the command line options
(e.g. --basic-regexp, --fixed-strings) in "git log" family of
commands.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-25 09:16:18 -07:00
d38c7b2c2c doc/pretty-formats: explain shortening of %gd
The actual shortening rules aren't that interesting and
probably not worth getting into (I gloss over them here as
"shortened for human readability"). But the fact that %gD
shows whatever you gave on the command line is subtle and
worth mentioning. Since most people will feed a shortened
refname in the first place, it otherwise makes it hard to
understand the difference between the two.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 13:47:33 -07:00
522259dc3a doc/pretty-formats: describe index/time formats for %gd
The "reflog selector" format changes based on a series of
heuristics, and that applies equally to both stock "log -g"
output, as well as "--format=%gd". The documentation for
"%gd" doesn't cover this. Let's mention the multiple formats
and refer the user back to the "-g" section for the complete
rules.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 13:47:33 -07:00
83c9f95cce doc/rev-list-options: explain "-g" output formats
We document that asking for HEAD@{now} will switch the
output to show HEAD@{timestamp}, but not that specifying
`--date` has a similar effect, or that it can be overridden
with HEAD@{0}. Let's do so.

These rules come from 794151e (reflog-walk: always make
HEAD@{0} show indexed selectors, 2012-05-04), though that is
simply the culmination of years of these heuristics growing
organically.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 13:47:33 -07:00
2b68222d72 doc/rev-list-options: clarify "commit@{Nth}" for "-g" option
When "log -g" shows "HEAD@{1}", "HEAD@{2}", etc, calling
that "commit@{Nth}" is not really accurate. The "HEAD" part
is really the refname. By saying "commit", a reader may
misunderstand that to mean something related to the specific
commit we are showing, not the ref whose reflog we are
traversing.

While we're here, let's also switch these instances to use
literal backticks, as our style guide recommends. As a
bonus, that lets us drop some asciidoc quoting.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 13:47:33 -07:00
eb09121b74 submodule-helper: fix indexing in clone retry error reporting path
'git submodule--helper update-clone' has logic to retry failed clones
a second time. For this purpose, there is a list of submodules to clone,
and a second list that is filled with the submodules to retry. Within
these lists, the submodules are identified by an index as if both lists
were just appended.

This works nicely except when the second clone attempt fails as well. To
report an error, the identifying index must be adjusted by an offset so
that it can be used as an index into the second list. However, the
calculation uses the logical total length of the lists so that the result
always points one past the end of the second list.

Pick the correct index.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Acked-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 13:43:53 -07:00
c4c02bf16c git-submodule: forward exit code of git-submodule--helper more faithfully
git-submodule--helper is invoked as the upstream of a pipe in several
places. Usually, the failure of a program in this position is not
detected by the shell. For this reason, the code inserts a token in the
output stream when git-submodule--helper fails that is detected
downstream, where the shell script is quit with exit code 1.

There happens to be a bug in git-submodule--helper that leads to a
segmentation fault. The test suite triggers the crash in several places,
all of which are protected by 'test_must_fail'. But due to the inspecific
exit code 1, the crash remains undiagnosed.

Extend the failure protocol such that git-submodule--helper's exit code
is passed downstream (only in the case of failure). This enables the
downstream to use it as its own exit code, and 'test_must_fail' to
identify the segmentation fault as an unexpected failure.

The bug itself is fixed in the next commit.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Acked-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 13:43:50 -07:00
c0071ae5dc git-svn: allow --version to work anywhere
Checking the version of the installed SVN libraries should not
require a git repository at all.  This matches the behavior of
"git --version".

Add a test for "git svn help" for the same behavior while we're
at it, too.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
2016-07-22 20:38:11 +00:00
280abfd4f5 Documentation: pack-protocol correct NAK response
In the transport protocol we use NAK to signal the non existence of a
common base, so fix the documentation. This helps readers of the document,
as they don't have to wonder about the difference between NAK and NACK.
As NACK is used in git archive and upload-archive, this is easy to get
wrong.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 13:31:55 -07:00
a91e6925f6 contrib/git-jump: fix typo in README
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 12:34:51 -07:00
1af9c6096a contrib/git-jump: add whitespace-checking mode
If you have whitespace errors in lines you've introduced, it
can be convenient to be able to jump directly to them for
fixing.  You can't quite use "git jump diff" for this,
because though it passes arbitrary options to "git diff", it
expects to see an actual unified diff in the output.

Whereas "git diff --check" actually produces lines that look
like compiler quickfix lines already, meaning we just need
to run it and feed the output directly to the editor.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 12:33:58 -07:00
74a7fa44d3 contrib/git-jump: fix greedy regex when matching hunks
The hunk-header regex looks for "\+\d+" to find the
post-image line numbers, but it skips the pre-image line
numbers with a simple ".*". That means we may greedily eat
the post-image numbers and match a "\+\d" further on, in the
funcname text.

For example, commit 6b9c38e has this hunk header:

  diff --git a/t/t0006-date.sh b/t/t0006-date.sh
  [...]
  @@ -50,8 +50,8 @@ check_show iso-local "$TIME" '2016-06-15 14:13:20 +0000'

If you run:

  git checkout 6b9c38e
  git jump diff HEAD^ t/

it will erroneously match "+0000" as the starting line
number and jump there, rather than line 50.

We can fix it by just making the "skip" regex non-greedy,
taking the first "+" we see, which should be the post-image
line information.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 12:33:45 -07:00
06dec439a3 diff: do not reuse worktree files that need "clean" conversion
When accessing a blob for a diff, we may try to reuse file
contents in the working tree, under the theory that it is
faster to mmap those file contents than it would be to
extract the content from the object database.

When we have to filter those contents, though, that
assumption does not hold. Even for our internal conversions
like CRLF, we have to allocate and fill a new buffer anyway.
But much worse, for external clean filters we have to exec
an arbitrary script, and we have no idea how expensive it
may be to run.

So let's skip this optimization when conversion into git's
"clean" form is required. This applies whenever the
"want_file" flag is false. When it's true, the caller
actually wants the smudged worktree contents, which the
reused file by definition already has (in fact, this is a
key optimization going the other direction, since reusing
the worktree file there lets us skip smudge filters).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 12:31:24 -07:00
fab6027480 Windows: add missing definition of ENOTSOCK
The previous commit introduced the first use of ENOTSOCK. This macro is
not available on Windows. Define it as WSAENOTSOCK because that is the
corresponding error value reported by the Windows versions of socket
functions.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 12:28:24 -07:00
accb613afd contrib/persistent-https: use Git version for build label
The previous method simply used the UNIX timestamp of when the binary was
built as its build label.

    $ make && ./git-remote-persistent-http -print_label
    1469061546

This patch aims to align the label for this binary with the Git version
contained in the GIT-VERSION-FILE. This gives a better sense of the version
of the binary as it can be mapped to a particular revision or release of
Git itself. For example:

    $ make && ./git-remote-persistent-http -print_label
    2.9.1.275.g75676c8

Discussion of this patch is available on a related thread in the mailing
list surrounding this package called "contrib/persistent-https: update
ldflags syntax for Go 1.7+". The gmane.org link is:
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/299653/

Signed-off-by: Parker Moore <parkrmoore@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 10:59:03 -07:00
dbd1294401 contrib/persistent-https: update ldflags syntax for Go 1.7+
Running `make all` in `contrib/persistent-https` results in a
failure on Go 1.7 and above.

Specifically, the error is:

    go build -o git-remote-persistent-https \
   -ldflags "-X main._BUILD_EMBED_LABEL 1468613136"
    # _/Users/parkr/github/git/contrib/persistent-https
    /usr/local/Cellar/go/1.7rc1/libexec/pkg/tool/darwin_amd64/link: -X
flag requires argument of the form importpath.name=value
    make: *** [git-remote-persistent-https] Error 2

This `name=value` syntax for the -X flag was introduced in Go v1.5
(released Aug 19, 2015):

 - release notes: https://golang.org/doc/go1.5#link
 - commit: 12795c02f3

In Go v1.7, support for the old syntax was removed:

 - release notes: https://tip.golang.org/doc/go1.7#compiler
 - commit: 51b624e6a2

Add '=' between the symbol and its value for recent versions of Go,
while leaving it out for older ones.

Signed-off-by: Parker Moore <parkrmoore@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 10:54:11 -07:00
b0a61ab23c status: suggest 'git merge --abort' when appropriate
We already suggest 'git rebase --abort' during a conflicted rebase.
Similarly, suggest 'git merge --abort' during conflict resolution on
'git merge'.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 10:20:27 -07:00
31471ba21e strbuf: avoid calling strbuf_grow() twice in strbuf_addbuf()
Implement strbuf_addbuf() as a normal function in order to avoid calling
strbuf_grow() twice, with the second callinside strbud_add() being a
no-op.  This is slightly faster and also reduces the text size a bit.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-22 09:22:26 -07:00
c6eff44d0d doc: show the actual left, right, and boundary marks
Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 15:15:16 -07:00
b3d3ea0672 doc: revisions - name the left and right sides
The terms left and right side originate from the symmetric
difference. Name them there.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 15:15:16 -07:00
27ac83718c doc: use 'symmetric difference' consistently
Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 15:15:16 -07:00
68f3c079fe t5541: fix url scrubbing test when GPG is not set
When the GPG prereq is not set, we do not run test 34. That
test changes the directory of the test script as a side
effect (something we usually frown on, but which matches the
style of the rest of this script). When test 35 (the
url-scrubbing test) runs, it expects to be in the directory
from test 34. If it's not, the test fails; we are in a
different sub-repo, our test-commit is built on a different
history, and the push becomes a non-fast-forward.

We can fix this by unconditionally moving to the directory
we expect (again, against our usual style but matching how
the rest of the script operates).

As an additional protection, let's also switch from "make a
new commit and push to master" to just "push to a new
branch". We don't care about the branch name; we just want
_some_ ref update to trigger the status output. Pushing to a
new branch is less likely to run into problems with
force-updates, changing the checked-out branch, etc.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 15:08:40 -07:00
83558686ce receive-pack: send keepalives during quiet periods
After a client has sent us the complete pack, we may spend
some time processing the data and running hooks. If the
client asked us to be quiet, receive-pack won't send any
progress data during the index-pack or connectivity-check
steps. And hooks may or may not produce their own progress
output. In these cases, the network connection is totally
silent from both ends.

Git itself doesn't care about this (it will wait forever),
but other parts of the system (e.g., firewalls,
load-balancers, etc) might hang up the connection. So we'd
like to send some sort of keepalive to let the network and
the client side know that we're still alive and processing.

We can use the same trick we did in 05e9515 (upload-pack:
send keepalive packets during pack computation, 2013-09-08).
Namely, we will send an empty sideband data packet every `N`
seconds that we do not relay any stderr data over the
sideband channel. As with 05e9515, this means that we won't
bother sending keepalives when there's actual progress data,
but will kick in when it has been disabled (or if there is a
lull in the progress data).

The concept is simple, but the details are subtle enough
that they need discussing here.

Before the client sends us the pack, we don't want to do any
keepalives. We'll have sent our ref advertisement, and we're
waiting for them to send us the pack (and tell us that they
support sidebands at all).

While we're receiving the pack from the client (or waiting
for it to start), there's no need for keepalives; it's up to
them to keep the connection active by sending data.
Moreover, it would be wrong for us to do so. When we are the
server in the smart-http protocol, we must treat our
connection as half-duplex. So any keepalives we send while
receiving the pack would potentially be buffered by the
webserver. Not only does this make them useless (since they
would not be delivered in a timely manner), but it could
actually cause a deadlock if we fill up the buffer with
keepalives. (It wouldn't be wrong to send keepalives in this
phase for a full-duplex connection like ssh; it's simply
pointless, as it is the client's responsibility to speak).

As soon as we've gotten all of the pack data, then the
client is waiting for us to speak, and we should start
keepalives immediately. From here until the end of the
connection, we send one any time we are not otherwise
sending data.

But there's a catch. Receive-pack doesn't know the moment
we've gotten all the data. It passes the descriptor to
index-pack, who reads all of the data, and then starts
resolving the deltas. We have to communicate that back.

To make this work, we instruct the sideband muxer to enable
keepalives in three phases:

  1. In the beginning, not at all.

  2. While reading from index-pack, wait for a signal
     indicating end-of-input, and then start them.

  3. Afterwards, always.

The signal from index-pack in phase 2 has to come over the
stderr channel which the muxer is reading. We can't use an
extra pipe because the portable run-command interface only
gives us stderr and stdout.

Stdout is already used to pass the .keep filename back to
receive-pack. We could also send a signal there, but then we
would find out about it in the main thread. And the
keepalive needs to be done by the async muxer thread (since
it's the one writing sideband data back to the client). And
we can't reliably signal the async thread from the main
thread, because the async code sometimes uses threads and
sometimes uses forked processes.

Therefore the signal must come over the stderr channel,
where it may be interspersed with other random
human-readable messages from index-pack. This patch makes
the signal a single NUL byte.  This is easy to parse, should
not appear in any normal stderr output, and we don't have to
worry about any timing issues (like seeing half the signal
bytes in one read(), and half in a subsequent one).

This is a bit ugly, but it's simple to code and should work
reliably.

Another option would be to stop using an async thread for
muxing entirely, and just poll() both stderr and stdout of
index-pack from the main thread. This would work for
index-pack (because we aren't doing anything useful in the
main thread while it runs anyway). But it would make the
connectivity check and the hook muxers much more
complicated, as they need to simultaneously feed the
sub-programs while reading their stderr.

The index-pack phase is the only one that needs this
signaling, so it could simply behave differently than the
other two. That would mean having two separate
implementations of copy_to_sideband (and the keepalive
code), though. And it still doesn't get rid of the
signaling; it just means we can write a nicer message like
"END_OF_INPUT" or something on stdout, since we don't have
to worry about separating it from the stderr cruft.

One final note: this signaling trick is only done with
index-pack, not with unpack-objects. There's no point in
doing it for the latter, because by definition it only kicks
in for a small number of objects, where keepalives are not
as useful (and this conveniently lets us avoid duplicating
the implementation).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 12:11:11 -07:00
6b4cd2f827 receive-pack: turn on connectivity progress
When we receive a large push, the server side of the
connection may spend a lot of time (30s or more for a full
push of linux.git) walking the object graph without
producing any output. Let's give the user some indication
that we're actually working.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 12:11:11 -07:00
d415092ac4 receive-pack: relay connectivity errors to sideband
If the connectivity check encounters a problem when
receiving a push, the error output goes to receive-pack's
stderr, whose destination depends on the protocol used
(ssh tends to send it to the user, though without a "remote"
prefix; http will generally eat it in the server's error
log).

The information should consistently go back to the user, as
there is a reasonable chance their client is buggy and
generating a bad pack.

We can do so by muxing it over the sideband as we do with
other sub-process stderr.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 12:11:10 -07:00
d06303bb9a receive-pack: turn on index-pack resolving progress
When we receive a large push, the server side may have to
spend a lot of CPU processing the incoming packfile.

During the "receiving" phase, we are typically network
bound, and the client is writing its own progress to the
user. But during the delta resolution phase, we may spend
minutes (e.g., for a full push of linux.git) without
making any indication to the user that the connection has
not hung.

Let's ask index-pack to produce progress output for this
phase (unless the client asked us to be quiet, of course).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 12:11:10 -07:00
e376f17fd1 index-pack: add flag for showing delta-resolution progress
The index-pack command has two progress meters: one for
"receiving objects", and one for "resolving deltas". You get
neither by default, or both with "-v".

But for a push through receive-pack, we would want only the
"resolving deltas" phase, _not_ the "receiving objects"
progress. There are two reasons for this.

One is simply that existing clients are already printing
"writing objects" progress at the same time.  Arguably
"receiving" from the far end is more useful, because it
tells you what has actually gotten there, as opposed to what
might be stuck in a buffer somewhere between the client and
server. But that would require a protocol extension to tell
clients not to print their progress. Possible, but
complexity for little gain.

The second reason is much more important. In a full-duplex
connection like git-over-ssh, we can print progress while
the pack is incoming, and it will immediately get to the
client. But for a half-duplex connection like git-over-http,
we should not say anything until we have received the full
request.  Anything we write is subject to being stuck in a
buffer by the webserver.  Worse, we can end up in a deadlock
if that buffer fills up.

So our best bet is to avoid writing anything that isn't a
small fixed size until we've received the full pack.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 12:11:10 -07:00
38e590ea12 clone: use a real progress meter for connectivity check
Because the initial connectivity check for a cloned
repository can be slow, 0781aa4 (clone: let the user know
when check_everything_connected is run, 2013-05-03) added a
"fake" progress meter; we simply say "Checking connectivity"
when it starts, and "done" at the end, with nothing between.

Since check_connected() now knows how to do a real progress
meter, we can drop our fake one and use that one instead.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 12:11:09 -07:00
70d5e2d77b check_connected: add progress flag
Connectivity checks have to traverse the entire object graph
in the worst case (e.g., a full clone or a full push). For
large repositories like linux.git, this can take 30-60
seconds, during which time git may produce little or no
output.

Let's add the option of showing progress, which is taken
care of by rev-list.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 12:11:09 -07:00
e0331849a0 check_connected: relay errors to alternate descriptor
Unless the "quiet" flag is given, check_connected sends any
errors to the stderr of the caller (because the child
rev-list inherits that descriptor). However, server-side
callers may want to send these over a sideband channel
instead.  Let's make that possible.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 12:11:01 -07:00
7043c7071c check_everything_connected: use a struct with named options
The number of variants of check_everything_connected has
grown over the years, so that the "real" function takes
several possibly-zero, possibly-NULL arguments. We hid the
complexity behind some wrapper functions, but this doesn't
scale well when we want to add new options.

If we add more wrapper variants to handle the new options,
then we can get a combinatorial explosion when those options
might be used together (right now nobody wants to use both
"shallow" and "transport" together, so we get by with just a
few wrappers).

If instead we add new parameters to each function, each of
which can have a default value, then callers who want the
defaults end up with confusing invocations like:

  check_everything_connected(fn, 0, data, -1, 0, NULL);

where it is unclear which parameter is which (and every
caller needs updated when we add new options).

Instead, let's add a struct to hold all of the optional
parameters. This is a little more verbose for the callers
(who have to declare the struct and fill it in), but it
makes their code much easier to follow, because every option
is named as it is set (and unused options do not have to be
mentioned at all).

Note that we could also stick the iteration function and its
callback data into the option struct, too. But since those
are required for each call, by avoiding doing so, we can let
very simple callers just pass "NULL" for the options and not
worry about the struct at all.

While we're touching each site, let's also rename the
function to check_connected(). The existing name was quite
long, and not all of the wrappers even used the full name.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 12:10:53 -07:00
3be89f9b86 check_everything_connected: convert to argv_array
This avoids the magic "9" array-size which we must avoid
overflowing, making further patches simpler.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 12:10:51 -07:00
434ea3cdad rev-list: add optional progress reporting
It's easy to ask rev-list to do a traversal that may takes
many seconds (e.g., by calling "--objects --all"). In theory
you can monitor its progress by the output you get to
stdout, but this isn't always easy.

Some operations, like "--count", don't make any output until
the end.

And some callers, like check_everything_connected(), are
using it just for the error-checking of the traversal, and
throw away stdout entirely.

This patch adds a "--progress" option which can be used to
give some eye-candy for a user waiting for a long traversal.
This is just a rev-list option and not a regular traversal
option, because it needs cooperation from the callbacks in
builtin/rev-list.c to do the actual count.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 12:10:44 -07:00
f26eef302f check_everything_connected: always pass --quiet to rev-list
The check_everything_connected function takes a "quiet"
parameter which does two things if non-zero:

  1. redirect rev-list's stderr to /dev/null to avoid
     showing errors to the user

  2. pass "--quiet" to rev-list

Item (1) is obviously useful. But item (2) is
surprisingly not. For rev-list, "--quiet" does not have
anything to do with chattiness on stderr; it tells rev-list
not to bother writing the list of traversed objects to
stdout, for efficiency.  And since we always redirect
rev-list's stdout to /dev/null in this function, there is no
point in asking it to ever write anything to stdout.

The efficiency gains are modest; a best-of-five run of "git
rev-list --objects --all" on linux.git dropped from 32.013s
to 30.502s when adding "--quiet". That's only about 5%, but
given how easy it is, it's worth doing.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-20 12:09:31 -07:00
da470981de fetch-pack: grow stateless RPC windows exponentially
When updating large repositories, the LARGE_FLUSH limit (that is, the
limit at which the window growth strategy switches from exponential to
linear) is reached quite quickly. Use a conservative exponential growth
strategy when that limit is reached instead (and increase LARGE_FLUSH so
that there is no regression in window size).

This optimization is only applied during stateless RPCs to avoid the
issue raised and fixed in commit 44d8dc54 (Fix potential local
deadlock during fetch-pack, 2011-03-29).

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-19 13:27:22 -07:00
08bb3500a2 Sixth batch of topics for 2.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-19 13:26:16 -07:00
36cafe4444 Merge branch 'ls/p4-tmp-refs'
"git p4" used a location outside $GIT_DIR/refs/ to place its
temporary branches, which has been moved to refs/git-p4-tmp/.

* ls/p4-tmp-refs:
  git-p4: place temporary refs used for branch import under refs/git-p4-tmp
2016-07-19 13:22:24 -07:00
3d55eea805 Merge branch 'js/am-call-theirs-theirs-in-fallback-3way'
One part of "git am" had an oddball helper function that called
stuff from outside "his" as opposed to calling what we have "ours",
which was not gender-neutral and also inconsistent with the rest of
the system where outside stuff is usuall called "theirs" in
contrast to "ours".

* js/am-call-theirs-theirs-in-fallback-3way:
  am: counteract gender bias
2016-07-19 13:22:23 -07:00
2b6456b808 Merge branch 'jk/write-file'
General code clean-up around a helper function to write a
single-liner to a file.

* jk/write-file:
  branch: use write_file_buf instead of write_file
  use write_file_buf where applicable
  write_file: add format attribute
  write_file: add pointer+len variant
  write_file: use xopen
  write_file: drop "gently" form
  branch: use non-gentle write_file for branch description
  am: ignore return value of write_file()
  config: fix bogus fd check when setting up default config
2016-07-19 13:22:23 -07:00
96e08010ee Merge branch 'jk/printf-format'
Code clean-up to avoid using a variable string that compilers may
feel untrustable as printf-style format given to write_file()
helper function.

* jk/printf-format:
  commit.c: remove print_commit_list()
  avoid using sha1_to_hex output as printf format
  walker: let walker_say take arbitrary formats
2016-07-19 13:22:22 -07:00
f5236a776f Merge branch 'rs/help-c-source-with-gitattributes'
The .c/.h sources are marked as such in our .gitattributes file so
that "git diff -W" and friends would work better.

* rs/help-c-source-with-gitattributes:
  .gitattributes: set file type for C files
2016-07-19 13:22:21 -07:00
566fdaf611 Merge branch 'nd/fetch-ref-summary'
Improve the look of the way "git fetch" reports what happened to
each ref that was fetched.

* nd/fetch-ref-summary:
  fetch: reduce duplicate in ref update status lines with placeholder
  fetch: align all "remote -> local" output
  fetch: change flag code for displaying tag update and deleted ref
  fetch: refactor ref update status formatting code
  git-fetch.txt: document fetch output
2016-07-19 13:22:21 -07:00
39cadeec0d Merge branch 'jk/test-match-signal'
The test framework learned a new helper test_match_signal to
check an exit code from getting killed by an expected signal.

* jk/test-match-signal:
  t/lib-git-daemon: use test_match_signal
  test_must_fail: use test_match_signal
  t0005: use test_match_signal as appropriate
  tests: factor portable signal check out of t0005
2016-07-19 13:22:20 -07:00
d4c6375fd8 Merge branch 'jk/common-main'
There are certain house-keeping tasks that need to be performed at
the very beginning of any Git program, and programs that are not
built-in commands had to do them exactly the same way as "git"
potty does.  It was easy to make mistakes in one-off standalone
programs (like test helpers).  A common "main()" function that
calls cmd_main() of individual program has been introduced to
make it harder to make mistakes.

* jk/common-main:
  mingw: declare main()'s argv as const
  common-main: call git_setup_gettext()
  common-main: call restore_sigpipe_to_default()
  common-main: call sanitize_stdfds()
  common-main: call git_extract_argv0_path()
  add an extra level of indirection to main()
2016-07-19 13:22:19 -07:00
df9da64a7c Merge branch 'ak/lazy-prereq-mktemp'
A test that unconditionally used "mktemp" learned that the command
is not necessarily available everywhere.

* ak/lazy-prereq-mktemp:
  t7610: test for mktemp before test execution
2016-07-19 13:22:18 -07:00
a883c31af6 Merge branch 'nd/icase'
"git grep -i" has been taught to fold case in non-ascii locales
correctly.

* nd/icase:
  grep.c: reuse "icase" variable
  diffcore-pickaxe: support case insensitive match on non-ascii
  diffcore-pickaxe: Add regcomp_or_die()
  grep/pcre: support utf-8
  gettext: add is_utf8_locale()
  grep/pcre: prepare locale-dependent tables for icase matching
  grep: rewrite an if/else condition to avoid duplicate expression
  grep/icase: avoid kwsset when -F is specified
  grep/icase: avoid kwsset on literal non-ascii strings
  test-regex: expose full regcomp() to the command line
  test-regex: isolate the bug test code
  grep: break down an "if" stmt in preparation for next changes
2016-07-19 13:22:17 -07:00
a63d31b4d3 Merge branch 'bc/cocci'
Conversion from unsigned char sha1[20] to struct object_id
continues.

* bc/cocci:
  diff: convert prep_temp_blob() to struct object_id
  merge-recursive: convert merge_recursive_generic() to object_id
  merge-recursive: convert leaf functions to use struct object_id
  merge-recursive: convert struct merge_file_info to object_id
  merge-recursive: convert struct stage_data to use object_id
  diff: rename struct diff_filespec's sha1_valid member
  diff: convert struct diff_filespec to struct object_id
  coccinelle: apply object_id Coccinelle transformations
  coccinelle: convert hashcpy() with null_sha1 to hashclr()
  contrib/coccinelle: add basic Coccinelle transforms
  hex: add oid_to_hex_r()
2016-07-19 13:22:16 -07:00
63641fb071 Merge branch 'js/log-to-diffopt-file'
The commands in the "log/diff" family have had an FILE* pointer in the
data structure they pass around for a long time, but some codepaths
used to always write to the standard output.  As a preparatory step
to make "git format-patch" available to the internal callers, these
codepaths have been updated to consistently write into that FILE*
instead.

* js/log-to-diffopt-file:
  mingw: fix the shortlog --output=<file> test
  diff: do not color output when --color=auto and --output=<file> is given
  t4211: ensure that log respects --output=<file>
  shortlog: respect the --output=<file> setting
  format-patch: use stdout directly
  format-patch: avoid freopen()
  format-patch: explicitly switch off color when writing to files
  shortlog: support outputting to streams other than stdout
  graph: respect the diffopt.file setting
  line-log: respect diffopt's configured output file stream
  log-tree: respect diffopt's configured output file stream
  log: prepare log/log-tree to reuse the diffopt.close_file attribute
2016-07-19 13:22:15 -07:00
7725bebe21 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-parallel-fetch'
Fix recently introduced codepaths that are involved in parallel
submodule operations, which gave up on reading too early, and
could have wasted CPU while attempting to write under a corner
case condition.

* sb/submodule-parallel-fetch:
  hoist out handle_nonblock function for xread and xwrite
  xwrite: poll on non-blocking FDs
  xread: retry after poll on EAGAIN/EWOULDBLOCK
2016-07-19 13:22:15 -07:00
e0e56cbf7f Merge branch 'lf/recv-sideband-cleanup'
Code simplification.

* lf/recv-sideband-cleanup:
  sideband.c: small optimization of strbuf usage
  sideband.c: refactor recv_sideband()
2016-07-19 13:22:14 -07:00
7418a6b1a0 Merge branch 'dk/blame-move-no-reason-for-1-line-context'
"git blame -M" missed a single line that was moved within the file.

* dk/blame-move-no-reason-for-1-line-context:
  blame: require 0 context lines while finding moved lines with -M
2016-07-19 13:22:13 -07:00
dc21164e66 Merge branch 'nd/connect-ssh-command-config'
A new configuration variable core.sshCommand has been added to
specify what value for GIT_SSH_COMMAND to use per repository.

* nd/connect-ssh-command-config:
  connect: read $GIT_SSH_COMMAND from config file
2016-07-19 13:22:12 -07:00
508a285cea submodule-config: use explicit empty string instead of strbuf in config_from()
Use a string constant instead of an empty strbuf to shorten the code
and make it easier to read.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-19 12:16:57 -07:00
8109984d61 use strbuf_addbuf() for appending a strbuf to another
Use strbuf_addbuf() where possible; it's shorter and more efficient.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-19 11:48:35 -07:00
9ec26e7977 difftool: fix argument handling in subdirs
When in a subdirectory of a repository, path arguments should be
interpreted relative to the current directory not the root of the
working tree.

The Git::repository object passed into setup_dir_diff() is configured to
handle this correctly but we create a new Git::repository here without
setting the WorkingSubdir argument.  By simply using the existing
repository, path arguments are handled relative to the current
directory.

Reported-by: Bernhard Kirchen <bernhard.kirchen@rwth-aachen.de>
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Acked-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-19 11:12:27 -07:00
cec9264f17 git-svn: document svn.authorsProg in config
This has always been supported since we read config variables
based on the command-line option parser.  Document it explicitly
since users usually want to maintain the same program across
invocations.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
2016-07-19 10:07:19 +00:00
90cf590f53 fsck: optionally show more helpful info for broken links
When reporting broken links between commits/trees/blobs, it would be
quite helpful at times if the user would be told how the object is
supposed to be reachable.

With the new --name-objects option, git-fsck will try to do exactly
that: name the objects in a way that shows how they are reachable.

For example, when some reflog got corrupted and a blob is missing that
should not be, the user might want to remove the corresponding reflog
entry. This option helps them find that entry: `git fsck` will now
report something like this:

	broken link from    tree b5eb6ff...  (refs/stash@{<date>}~37:)
	              to    blob ec5cf80...

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-18 15:15:59 -07:00
c66b470082 t/t8003-blame-corner-cases.sh: Use here documents
Somehow, this test was using:

{
	echo A
	echo B
} > file

block to feed file contents. This changes those to the form most common
in git test scripts:

cat >file <<-\EOF
A
B
EOF

Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-18 14:33:38 -07:00
3b75ee9327 blame: allow to blame paths freshly added to the index
When blaming files, changes in the work tree are taken into account
and displayed as being "Not Committed Yet".

However, when blaming a file that is not known to the current HEAD,
git blame fails with `no such path 'foo' in HEAD`, even when the file
was git add'ed.

Allowing such a blame is useful when the new file added to the index
(not yet committed) was created by renaming an existing file.  It
also is useful when the new file was created from pieces already in
HEAD, moved or copied from other files and blaming with copy
detection (i.e. "-C").

Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-18 14:33:38 -07:00
6d6a782fbf cache-tree: do not generate empty trees as a result of all i-t-a subentries
If a subdirectory contains nothing but i-t-a entries, we generate an
empty tree object and add it to its parent tree. Which is wrong. Such
a subdirectory should not be added.

Note that this has a cascading effect. If subdir 'a/b/c' contains
nothing but i-t-a entries, we ignore it. But then if 'a/b' contains
only (the non-existing) 'a/b/c', then we should ignore 'a/b' while
building 'a' too. And it goes all the way up to top directory.

Noticed-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>
2016-07-18 13:45:33 -07:00
c041d54a74 cache-tree.c: fix i-t-a entry skipping directory updates sometimes
Commit 3cf773e (cache-tree: fix writing cache-tree when CE_REMOVE is
present - 2012-12-16) skips i-t-a entries when building trees objects
from the index. Unfortunately it may skip too much.

The code in question checks if an entry is an i-t-a one, then no tree
entry will be written. But it does not take into account that
directories can also be written with the same code. Suppose we have
this in the index.

    a-file
    subdir/file1
    subdir/file2
    subdir/file3
    the-last-file

We write an entry for a-file as normal and move on to subdir/file1,
where we realize the entry name for this level is simply just
"subdir", write down an entry for "subdir" then jump three items ahead
to the-last-file.

That is what happens normally when the first file in subdir is not an
i-t-a entry. If subdir/file1 is an i-t-a, because of the broken
condition in this code, we still think "subdir" is an i-t-a file and
not writing "subdir" down and jump to the-last-file. The result tree
now only has two items: a-file and the-last-file. subdir should be
there too (even though it only records two sub-entries, file2 and
file3).

If the i-t-a entry is subdir/file2 or subdir/file3, this is not a
problem because we jump over them anyway. Which may explain why the
bug is hidden for nearly four years.

Fix it by making sure we only skip i-t-a entries when the entry in
question is actual an index entry, not a directory.

Reported-by: Yuri Kanivetsky <yuri.kanivetsky@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-18 13:45:33 -07:00
378932d3c3 test-lib.sh: introduce and use $EMPTY_BLOB
Similar to $EMPTY_TREE this makes it easier to recognize this special
SHA-1 and change hash later.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-18 13:45:32 -07:00
f9e7d9f8c3 test-lib.sh: introduce and use $EMPTY_TREE
This is a special SHA1. Let's keep it at one place, easier to replace
later when the hash change comes, easier to recognize.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-18 13:45:32 -07:00
1cd772cc41 fsck: give the error function a chance to see the fsck_options
We will need this in the next commit, where fsck will be taught to
optionally name the objects when reporting issues about them.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-18 11:35:00 -07:00
7b35efd734 fsck_walk(): optionally name objects on the go
If fsck_options->name_objects is initialized, and if it already has
name(s) for the object(s) that are to be the starting point(s) for
fsck_walk(), then that function will now add names for the objects
that were walked.

This will be highly useful for teaching git-fsck to identify root causes
for broken links, which is the task for the next patch in this series.

Note that this patch opts for decorating the objects with plain strings
instead of full-blown structs (à la `struct rev_name` in the code of
the `git name-rev` command), for several reasons:

- the code is much simpler than if it had to work with structs that
  describe arbitrarily long names such as "master~14^2~5:builtin/am.c",

- the string processing is actually quite light-weight compared to the
  rest of fsck's operation,

- the caller of fsck_walk() is expected to provide names for the
  starting points, and using plain and simple strings is just the
  easiest way to do that.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-18 11:35:00 -07:00
993a21b0a0 fsck: refactor how to describe objects
In many places, we refer to objects via their SHA-1s. Let's abstract
that into a function.

For the moment, it does nothing else than what we did previously: print
out the 40-digit hex string. But that will change over the course of the
next patches.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-18 11:35:00 -07:00
a9b02de8b7 configure.ac: stronger test for pthread linkage
We need to test linkage of pthread_create and pthread_join,
as pthread_mutex_* and pthread_key_* functions do not need
extra linkage under FreeBSD 10.3, leading to a false-positive
of the empty case.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-18 11:22:35 -07:00
49c58d86ce daemon: ignore ENOTSOCK from setsockopt
In inetd mode, we are not guaranteed stdin or stdout is a
socket; callers could filter the data through a pipe
or be testing with regular files.

This prevents t5802 from polluting syslog.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-18 11:09:52 -07:00
ecba19531a list: avoid incompatibility with *BSD sys/queue.h
The OS X build pulls in sys/queue.h, which pollutes the preprocessor
namespace with a macro generically named LIST_HEAD, and clashes with
the name we use here.

ref: http://mid.gmane.org/FB76544F-16F7-45CA-9649-FD62EE44B0DE@gmail.com

Reported-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-18 11:06:51 -07:00
29493589e9 archive-tar: huge offset and future timestamps would not work on 32-bit
As we are not yet moving everything to size_t but still using ulong
internally when talking about the size of object, platforms with
32-bit long will not be able to produce tar archive with 4GB+ file,
and cannot grok 077777777777UL as a constant.  Disable the extended
header feature and do not test it on them.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-15 10:51:55 -07:00
82246e075e Sync with 2.9.2
* maint:
  Git 2.9.2
  t0006: skip "far in the future" test when unsigned long is not long enough
2016-07-15 10:49:23 -07:00
e634160bf4 Git 2.9.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-15 10:48:16 -07:00
33eacd3ff4 Merge branch 'jk/tzoffset-fix' into maint
Skip tests that are unrunnable on platforms without 64-bit long
to avoid unnecessary test failures.

* jk/tzoffset-fix:
  t0006: skip "far in the future" test when unsigned long is not long enough
2016-07-15 09:43:42 -07:00
6b9c38e14c t0006: skip "far in the future" test when unsigned long is not long enough
Git's source code refers to timestamps as unsigned longs.  On 32-bit
platforms, as well as on Windows, unsigned long is not large enough
to capture dates that are "absurdly far in the future".

While we can fix this issue properly by replacing unsigned long with
a larger type, we want to be a bit more conservative and just skip
those tests on the maint track.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-15 09:05:53 -07:00
3ac870300a add a test for push options
The functions `mk_repo_pair` as well as `test_refs` are borrowed from
t5543-atomic-push, with additional hooks installed.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-14 15:50:41 -07:00
f6a4e61fbb push: accept push options
This implements everything that is required on the client side to make use
of push options from the porcelain push command.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-14 15:50:41 -07:00
c714e45f87 receive-pack: implement advertising and receiving push options
The pre/post receive hook may be interested in more information from the
user. This information can be transmitted when both client and server
support the "push-options" capability, which when used is a phase directly
after update commands ended by a flush pkt.

Similar to the atomic option, the server capability can be disabled via
the `receive.advertisePushOptions` config variable. While documenting
this, fix a nit in the `receive.advertiseAtomic` wording.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-14 15:50:40 -07:00
77a9745d19 push options: {pre,post}-receive hook learns about push options
The environment variable GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT is set to the number of
push options sent, and GIT_PUSH_OPTION_{0,1,..} is set to the transmitted
option.

The code is not executed as the push options are set to NULL, nor is the
new capability advertised.

There was some discussion back and forth how to present these push options
to the user as there are some ways to do it:

Keep all options in one environment variable
============================================
+ easiest way to implement in Git
- This would make things hard to parse correctly in the hook.

Put the options in files instead,
filenames are in GIT_PUSH_OPTION_FILES
======================================
+ After a discussion about environment variables and shells, we may not
  want to put user data into an environment variable (see [1] for example).
+ We could transmit binaries, i.e. we're not bound to C strings as
  we are when using environment variables to the user.
+ Maybe easier to parse than constructing environment variable names
  GIT_PUSH_OPTION_{0,1,..} yourself
- cleanup of the temporary files is hard to do reliably
- we have race conditions with multiple clients pushing, hence we'd need
  to use mkstemp. That's not too bad, but still.

Use environment variables, but restrict to key/value pairs
==========================================================
(When the user pushes a push option `foo=bar`, we'd
GIT_PUSH_OPTION_foo=bar)
+ very easy to parse for a simple model of push options
- it's not sufficient for more elaborate models, e.g.
  it doesn't allow doubles (e.g. cc=reviewer@email)

Present the options in different environment variables
======================================================
(This is implemented)
* harder to parse as a user, but we have a sample hook for that.
- doesn't allow binary files
+ allows the same option twice, i.e. is not restrictive about
  options, except for binary files.
+ doesn't clutter a remote directory with (possibly stale)
  temporary files

As we first want to focus on getting simple strings to work
reliably, we go with the last option for now. If we want to
do transmission of binaries later, we can just attach a
'side-channel', e.g. "any push option that contains a '\0' is
put into a file instead of the environment variable and we'd
have new GIT_PUSH_OPTION_FILES, GIT_PUSH_OPTION_FILENAME_{0,1,..}
environment variables".

[1] 'Shellshock' https://lwn.net/Articles/614218/

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-14 15:50:17 -07:00
16726cfa0c diff: document diff-filter exclusion
In v1.8.5 days, 7f2ea5f0 (diff: allow lowercase letter to specify
what change class to exclude, 2013-07-17) taught the "--diff-filter"
mechanism to take lowercase letters as exclusion, but we forgot to
document it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-14 12:17:47 -07:00
75676c8c8b Merge branch 'jk/upload-pack-hook'
A hot-fix to make a test working in mingw again.

* jk/upload-pack-hook:
  mingw: fix regression in t1308-config-set
2016-07-14 10:38:57 -07:00
b738396cfd mingw: fix regression in t1308-config-set
When we tried to fix in 58461bd (t1308: do not get fooled by symbolic
links to the source tree, 2016-06-02) an obscure case where the user
cd's into Git's source code via a symbolic link, a regression was
introduced that affects all test runs on Windows.

The original patch introducing the test case in question was careful to
use `$(pwd)` instead of `$PWD`.

This was done to account for the fact that Git's test suite uses shell
scripting even on Windows, where the shell's Unix-y paths are
incompatible with the main Git executable's idea of paths: it only
accepts Windows paths.

It is an awkward but necessary thing, then, to use `$(pwd)` (which gives
us a Windows path) when interacting with the Git executable and `$PWD`
(which gives the shell's idea of the current working directory in Unix-y
form) for shell scripts, including the test suite itself.

Obviously this broke the use case of the Git maintainer when changing
the working directory into Git's source code directory via a symlink,
i.e. when `$(pwd)` does not agree with `$PWD`.

However, we must not fix that use case at the expense of regressing
another use case.

Let's special-case Windows here, even if it is ugly, for lack of a more
elegant solution.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-14 10:38:28 -07:00
882d49ca5c push: anonymize URL in status output
Commit 47abd85 (fetch: Strip usernames from url's before
storing them, 2009-04-17) taught fetch to anonymize URLs.
The primary purpose there was to avoid sticking passwords in
merge-commit messages, but as a side effect, we also avoid
printing them to stderr.

The push side does not have the merge-commit problem, but it
probably should avoid printing them to stderr. We can reuse
the same anonymizing function.

Note that for this to come up, the credentials would have to
appear either on the command line or in a git config file,
neither of which is particularly secure. So people _should_
be switching to using credential helpers instead, which
makes this problem go away. But that's no excuse not to
improve the situation for people who for whatever reason end
up using credentials embedded in the URL.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-14 09:23:20 -07:00
79ed43c28f Fifth batch of topics for 2.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-13 11:30:25 -07:00
7a23f7367d Merge branch 'jk/big-and-future-archive-tar'
"git archive" learned to handle files that are larger than 8GB and
commits far in the future than expressible by the traditional US-TAR
format.

* jk/big-and-future-archive-tar:
  archive-tar: drop return value
  archive-tar: write extended headers for far-future mtime
  archive-tar: write extended headers for file sizes >= 8GB
  t5000: test tar files that overflow ustar headers
  t9300: factor out portable "head -c" replacement
2016-07-13 11:24:18 -07:00
42bd66816b Merge branch 'nd/ita-cleanup'
Git does not know what the contents in the index should be for a
path added with "git add -N" yet, so "git grep --cached" should not
show hits (or show lack of hits, with -L) in such a path, but that
logic does not apply to "git grep", i.e. searching in the working
tree files.  But we did so by mistake, which has been corrected.

* nd/ita-cleanup:
  grep: fix grepping for "intent to add" files
  t7810-grep.sh: fix a whitespace inconsistency
  t7810-grep.sh: fix duplicated test name
2016-07-13 11:24:18 -07:00
5eb1e9f1a0 Merge branch 'ps/rebase-i-auto-unstash-upon-abort'
"git rebase -i --autostash" did not restore the auto-stashed change
when the operation was aborted.

* ps/rebase-i-auto-unstash-upon-abort:
  rebase -i: restore autostash on abort
2016-07-13 11:24:17 -07:00
6c35952a08 Merge branch 'js/t3404-grammo-fix'
Grammofix.

* js/t3404-grammo-fix:
  t3404: fix a grammo (commands are ran -> commands are run)
2016-07-13 11:24:16 -07:00
c510926691 Merge branch 'js/sign-empty-commit-fix'
"git commit --amend --allow-empty-message -S" for a commit without
any message body could have misidentified where the header of the
commit object ends.

* js/sign-empty-commit-fix:
  commit -S: avoid invalid pointer with empty message
2016-07-13 11:24:15 -07:00
ce18123cec Merge branch 'mm/doc-tt'
More mark-up updates to typeset strings that are expected to
literally typed by the end user in fixed-width font.

* mm/doc-tt:
  doc: typeset HEAD and variants as literal
  CodingGuidelines: formatting HEAD in documentation
  doc: typeset long options with argument as literal
  doc: typeset '--' as literal
  doc: typeset long command-line options as literal
  doc: typeset short command-line options as literal
  Documentation/git-mv.txt: fix whitespace indentation
2016-07-13 11:24:14 -07:00
fc8a3a6072 Merge branch 'dg/subtree-rebase-test'
Add a test to specify the desired behaviour that currently is not
available in "git rebase -Xsubtree=...".

* dg/subtree-rebase-test:
  contrib/subtree: Add a test for subtree rebase that loses commits
2016-07-13 11:24:13 -07:00
7aa46d2bc8 Merge branch 'nd/doc-new-command'
Typofix in a doc.

* nd/doc-new-command:
  new-command.txt: correct the command description file
2016-07-13 11:24:12 -07:00
97865e83c7 Merge branch 'ew/gc-auto-pack-limit-fix'
"gc.autoPackLimit" when set to 1 should not trigger a repacking
when there is only one pack, but the code counted poorly and did
so.

* ew/gc-auto-pack-limit-fix:
  gc: fix off-by-one error with gc.autoPackLimit
2016-07-13 11:24:12 -07:00
67166a8da6 Merge branch 'ah/unpack-trees-advice-messages'
Grammofix.

* ah/unpack-trees-advice-messages:
  unpack-trees: fix English grammar in do-this-before-that messages
2016-07-13 11:24:11 -07:00
2703572b3a Merge branch 'va/i18n-even-more'
More markings of messages for i18n, with updates to various tests
to pass GETTEXT_POISON tests.

One patch from the original submission dropped due to conflicts
with jk/upload-pack-hook, which is still in flux.

* va/i18n-even-more: (38 commits)
  t5541: become resilient to GETTEXT_POISON
  i18n: branch: mark comment when editing branch description for translation
  i18n: unmark die messages for translation
  i18n: submodule: escape shell variables inside eval_gettext
  i18n: submodule: join strings marked for translation
  i18n: init-db: join message pieces
  i18n: remote: allow translations to reorder message
  i18n: remote: mark URL fallback text for translation
  i18n: standardise messages
  i18n: sequencer: add period to error message
  i18n: merge: change command option help to lowercase
  i18n: merge: mark messages for translation
  i18n: notes: mark options for translation
  i18n: notes: mark strings for translation
  i18n: transport-helper.c: change N_() call to _()
  i18n: bisect: mark strings for translation
  t5523: use test_i18ngrep for negation
  t4153: fix negated test_i18ngrep call
  t9003: become resilient to GETTEXT_POISON
  tests: unpack-trees: update to use test_i18n* functions
  ...
2016-07-13 11:24:10 -07:00
ec9d224903 fsck: use streaming interface for large blobs in pack
For blobs, we want to make sure the on-disk data is not corrupted
(i.e. can be inflated and produce the expected SHA-1). Blob content is
opaque, there's nothing else inside to check for.

For really large blobs, we may want to avoid unpacking the entire blob
in memory, just to check whether it produces the same SHA-1. On 32-bit
systems, we may not have enough virtual address space for such memory
allocation. And even on 64-bit where it's not a problem, allocating a
lot more memory could result in kicking other parts of systems to swap
file, generating lots of I/O and slowing everything down.

For this particular operation, not unpacking the blob and letting
check_sha1_signature, which supports streaming interface, do the job
is sufficient. check_sha1_signature() is not shown in the diff,
unfortunately. But if will be called when "data_valid && !data" is
false.

We will call the callback function "fn" with NULL as "data". The only
callback of this function is fsck_obj_buffer(), which does not touch
"data" at all if it's a blob.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-13 09:15:29 -07:00
af92a645d3 pack-objects: do not truncate result in-pack object size on 32-bit systems
A typical diff will not show what's going on and you need to see full
functions. The core code is like this, at the end of of write_one()

	e->idx.offset = *offset;
	size = write_object(f, e, *offset);
	if (!size) {
		e->idx.offset = recursing;
		return WRITE_ONE_BREAK;
	}
	written_list[nr_written++] = &e->idx;

	/* make sure off_t is sufficiently large not to wrap */
	if (signed_add_overflows(*offset, size))
		die("pack too large for current definition of off_t");
	*offset += size;

Here we can see that the in-pack object size is returned by
write_object (or indirectly by write_reuse_object). And it's used to
calculate object offsets, which end up in the pack index file,
generated at the end.

If "size" overflows (on 32-bit sytems, unsigned long is 32-bit while
off_t can be 64-bit), we got wrong offsets and produce incorrect .idx
file, which may make it look like the .pack file is corrupted.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-13 09:15:17 -07:00
da49a7da3a index-pack: correct "offset" type in unpack_entry_data()
unpack_entry_data() receives an off_t value from unpack_raw_entry(),
which could be larger than unsigned long on 32-bit systems with large
file support. Correct the type so truncation does not happen. This
only affects bad object reporting though.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-13 09:15:08 -07:00
fd3e67474c index-pack: report correct bad object offsets even if they are large
Use the right type for offsets in this case, off_t, which makes a
difference on 32-bit systems with large file support, and change
formatting code accordingly.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-13 09:14:47 -07:00
7171a0b0cf index-pack: correct "len" type in unpack_data()
On 32-bit systems with large file support, one entry could be larger
than 4GB and overflow "len". Correct it so we can unpack a full entry.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-13 09:14:38 -07:00
166df26f28 sha1_file.c: use type off_t* for object_info->disk_sizep
This field, filled by sha1_object_info() contains the on-disk size of
an object, which could go over 4GB limit of unsigned long on 32-bit
systems. Use off_t for it instead and update all callers.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-13 09:14:20 -07:00
94e99012fc http-walker: reduce O(n) ops with doubly-linked list
Using the a Linux-kernel-derived doubly-linked list
implementation from the Userspace RCU library allows us to
enqueue and delete items from the object request queue in
constant time.

This change reduces enqueue times in the prefetch() function
where object request queue could grow to several thousand
objects.

I left out the list_for_each_entry* family macros from list.h
which relied on the __typeof__ operator as we support platforms
without it.  Thus, list_entry (aka "container_of") needs to be
called explicitly inside macro-wrapped for loops.

The downside is this costs us an additional pointer per object
request, but this is offset by reduced overhead on queue
operations leading to improved performance and shorter queue
depths.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-12 15:17:42 -07:00
17966c0a63 http: avoid disconnecting on 404s for loose objects
404s are common when fetching loose objects on static HTTP
servers, and reestablishing a connection for every single
404 adds additional latency.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-12 15:17:42 -07:00
43b8bba6b6 http-walker: remove unused parameter from fetch_object
This parameter has not been used since commit 1d389ab65d
("Add support for parallel HTTP transfers") back in 2005

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-12 15:17:41 -07:00
fd2e7dafde worktree: use strbuf_add_absolute_path() directly
absolute_path() is a wrapper for strbuf_add_absolute_path().  Call the
latter directly for adding absolute paths to a strbuf.  That's shorter
and avoids an extra string copy.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-12 15:11:01 -07:00
deb8e15a19 rm: reuse strbuf for all remove_dir_recursively() calls
Don't throw the memory allocated for remove_dir_recursively() away after
a single call, use it for the other entries as well instead.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-12 15:09:21 -07:00
a903e233f6 log: decorate HEAD -> branch with the same color for arrow and HEAD
Commit 76c61fb (log: decorate HEAD with branch name under
--decorate=full, too - 2015-05-13) adds "HEAD -> branch" decoration to
show current branch vs detached HEAD. The sign of whether HEAD is
detached or not is "->" (vs ",") because the branch is always colored
by type. Color the arrow the same as HEAD to visually emphasize that
the following branch is HEAD, without paying too much attention to the
actual separators "->" or ","

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-12 15:08:26 -07:00
1335d76e45 merge: avoid "safer crlf" during recording of merge results
When merge_recursive() decides what the correct blob object merge
result for a path should be, it uses update_file_flags() helper
function to write it out to a working tree file and then calls
add_cacheinfo().  The add_cacheinfo() function in turn calls
make_cache_entry() to create a new cache entry to replace the
higher-stage entries for the path that represents the conflict.

The make_cache_entry() function calls refresh_cache_entry() to fill
in the cached stat information.  To mark a cache entry as
up-to-date, the data is re-read from the file in the working tree,
and goes through convert_to_git() conversion to be compared with the
blob object name the new cache entry records.

It is important to note that this happens while the higher-stage
entries, which are going to be replaced with the new entry, are
still in the index.  Unfortunately, the convert_to_git() conversion
has a misguided "safer crlf" mechanism baked in, and looks at the
existing cache entry for the path to decide how to convert the
contents in the working tree file.  If our side (i.e. stage#2)
records a text blob with CRLF in it, even when the system is
configured to record LF in blobs and convert them to CRLF upon
checkout (and back to LF upon checkin), the "safer crlf" mechanism
stops us doing so.

This especially poses a problem during a renormalizing merge, where
the merge result for the path is computed by first "normalizing" the
blobs involved in the merge by using convert_to_working_tree()
followed by convert_to_git() with "safer crlf" disabled.  The merge
result that is computed correctly and fed to add_cacheinfo() via
update_file_flags() does _not_ match what refresh_cache_entry() sees
by converting the working tree file via convert_to_git().

We can work this around by not refreshing the new cache entry in
make_cache_entry() called by add_cacheinfo().  After add_cacheinfo()
adds the new entry, we can call refresh_cache_entry() on that,
knowing that addition of this new cache entry would have removed the
stale cache entries that had CRLF in stage #2 that were carried over
before the renormalizing merge started and will not interfere with
the correct recording of the result.

The test update was taken from a series by Torsten Bögershausen
that attempted to fix this with a different approach.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
2016-07-12 13:06:43 -07:00
211c61c6cf pack-objects: pass length to check_pack_crc() without truncation
On 32 bit systems with large file support, unsigned long is 32-bit
while the two offsets in the subtraction expression (pack-objects has
the exact same expression as in sha1_file.c but not shown in diff) are
in 64-bit. If an in-pack object is larger than 2^32 len/datalen is
truncated and we get a misleading "error: bad packed object CRC for
..." as a result.

Use off_t for len and datalen. check_pack_crc() already accepts this
argument as off_t and can deal with 4+ GB.

Noticed-by: Christoph Michelbach <michelbach94@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-12 10:14:29 -07:00
d9d1426830 travis-ci: enable web server tests t55xx on Linux
Install the "apache" package to run the Git web server tests on
Travis-CI Linux build machines. The tests are already executed on OS X
build machines since the apache web server is installed by default.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-12 09:43:44 -07:00
231a4b7785 l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
Signed-off-by: Dimitriy Ryazantcev <dimitriy.ryazantcev@gmail.com>
2016-07-12 11:50:32 +03:00
bac233f2c2 mingw: fix the shortlog --output=<file> test
Adjust t4201 to pass on Windows; a couple of test cases need to be
skipped on Windows which leads to a different shortlog than on Linux.

Let's just fix that by limiting the shortlog's commit range to traverse
only one commit: that guarantees that it does not matter how many test
cases were skipped.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-11 12:32:02 -07:00
503e224180 t/test-lib.sh: fix running tests with --valgrind
We forgot to adjust this code path after moving the test helpers to
t/helper/.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Acked-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-11 12:26:39 -07:00
044fb190f7 diff: fix a double off-by-one with --ignore-space-at-eol
When comparing two lines, ignoring any whitespace at the end, we first
try to match as many bytes as possible and break out of the loop only
upon mismatch, to let the remainder be handled by the code shared with
the other whitespace-ignoring code paths.

When comparing the bytes, however, we incremented the counters always,
even if the bytes did not match. And because we fall through to  the
space-at-eol handling at that point, it is as if that mismatch never
happened.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-11 11:55:53 -07:00
a5229cc951 diff: demonstrate a bug with --patience and --ignore-space-at-eol
When a single character is added to a line, the combination of these
two options results in an empty diff.

This bug was noticed and reported by Naja Melan.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-11 11:55:08 -07:00
52fcec75ce config.mak.uname: define NEEDS_LIBRT under Linux, for now
My Debian wheezy LTS system is still on glibc 2.13; and LTS
distros may use older glibc, still, so lets not unnecessarily
break things out-of-the-box.

We seem to assume Linux is using glibc in our Makefiles anyways,
so I don't think this will introduce new breakage for users of
alternative libc implementations.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-11 11:44:18 -07:00
b1ec08fda8 Sync with v2.9.1
* maint:
  Git 2.9.1
2016-07-11 10:46:39 -07:00
5c9159de87 Git 2.9.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-11 10:45:50 -07:00
3a30c14b9b Merge branch 'jc/t2300-setup' into maint
Portability fix for Windows.

* jc/t2300-setup:
  t2300: "git --exec-path" is not usable in $PATH on Windows as-is
2016-07-11 10:44:19 -07:00
438d4e7583 Merge branch 'cb/t7810-test-label-fix' into maint
Test clean-up.

* cb/t7810-test-label-fix:
  t7810: fix duplicated test title
2016-07-11 10:44:18 -07:00
3e69d1b6cd Merge branch 'sb/t5614-modernize' into maint
Test clean-up.

* sb/t5614-modernize:
  t5614: don't use subshells
2016-07-11 10:44:17 -07:00
9f0aa036e9 Merge branch 'jn/preformatted-doc-url' into maint
The top level documentation "git help git" still pointed at the
documentation set hosted at now-defunct google-code repository.
Update it to point to https://git.github.io/htmldocs/git.html
instead.

* jn/preformatted-doc-url:
  doc: git-htmldocs.googlecode.com is no more
2016-07-11 10:44:16 -07:00
8e3e28b2f3 Merge branch 'ao/p4-has-branch-prefix-fix' into maint
A bug, which caused "git p4" while running under verbose mode to
report paths that are omitted due to branch prefix incorrectly, has
been fixed; the command said "Ignoring file outside of prefix" for
paths that are _inside_.

* ao/p4-has-branch-prefix-fix:
  git-p4: correct hasBranchPrefix verbose output
2016-07-11 10:44:16 -07:00
ce22ea22e8 Merge branch 'js/perf-on-apple' into maint
t/perf needs /usr/bin/time with GNU extension; the invocation of it
is updated to "gtime" on Darwin.

* js/perf-on-apple:
  perf: accommodate for MacOSX
2016-07-11 10:44:15 -07:00
c4cdde45f0 Merge branch 'ak/t7800-wo-readlink' into maint
One among four invocations of readlink(1) in our test suite has
been rewritten so that the test can run on systems without the
command (others are in valgrind test framework and t9802).

* ak/t7800-wo-readlink:
  t7800: readlink may not be available
2016-07-11 10:44:15 -07:00
0c72d6da31 Merge branch 'jk/tzoffset-fix' into maint
The internal code used to show local timezone offset is not
prepared to handle timestamps beyond year 2100, and gave a
bogus offset value to the caller.  Use a more benign looking
+0000 instead and let "git log" going in such a case, instead
of aborting.

* jk/tzoffset-fix:
  local_tzoffset: detect errors from tm_to_time_t
  t0006: test various date formats
  t0006: rename test-date's "show" to "relative"
2016-07-11 10:44:14 -07:00
76180a2ba4 Merge branch 'js/mingw-parameter-less-c-functions' into maint
Some platform-specific code had non-ANSI strict declarations of C
functions that do not take any parameters, which has been
corrected.

* js/mingw-parameter-less-c-functions:
  mingw: let the build succeed with DEVELOPER=1
2016-07-11 10:44:13 -07:00
5220b7589b Merge branch 'lc/shell-default-value-noexpand' into maint
Fix unnecessarily waste in the idiomatic use of ': ${VAR=default}'
to set the default value, without enclosing it in double quotes.

* lc/shell-default-value-noexpand:
  sh-setup: enclose setting of ${VAR=default} in double-quotes
2016-07-11 10:44:13 -07:00
1a88ca99db Merge branch 'sb/clone-shallow-passthru' into maint
Fix an unintended regression in v2.9 that breaks "clone --depth"
that recurses down to submodules by forcing the submodules to also
be cloned shallowly, which many server instances that host upstream
of the submodules are not prepared for.

* sb/clone-shallow-passthru:
  clone: do not let --depth imply --shallow-submodules
2016-07-11 10:44:12 -07:00
4212e483a9 Merge branch 'mg/signature-doc' into maint
Formats of the various data (and how to validate them) where we use
GPG signature have been documented.

* mg/signature-doc:
  Documentation/technical: signed merge tag format
  Documentation/technical: signed commit format
  Documentation/technical: signed tag format
  Documentation/technical: describe signature formats
2016-07-11 10:44:11 -07:00
b853030443 Merge branch 'jk/bisect-show-tree' into maint
"git bisect" makes an internal call to "git diff-tree" when
bisection finds the culprit, but this call did not initialize the
data structure to pass to the diff-tree API correctly.

* jk/bisect-show-tree:
  bisect: always call setup_revisions after init_revisions
2016-07-11 10:44:11 -07:00
1401236842 Merge branch 'km/fetch-do-not-free-remote-name' into maint
The ownership rule for the piece of memory that hold references to
be fetched in "git fetch" was screwy, which has been cleaned up.

* km/fetch-do-not-free-remote-name:
  builtin/fetch.c: don't free remote->name after fetch
2016-07-11 10:44:10 -07:00
5f30bb4a81 Merge branch 'nd/graph-width-padded' into maint
"log --graph --format=" learned that "%>|(N)" specifies the width
relative to the terminal's left edge, not relative to the area to
draw text that is to the right of the ancestry-graph section.  It
also now accepts negative N that means the column limit is relative
to the right border.

* nd/graph-width-padded:
  pretty.c: support <direction>|(<negative number>) forms
  pretty: pass graph width to pretty formatting for use in '%>|(N)'
2016-07-11 10:44:09 -07:00
52debb6831 Merge branch 'jk/add-i-diff-compact-heuristics' into maint
"git add -i/-p" learned to honor diff.compactionHeuristic
experimental knob, so that the user can work on the same hunk split
as "git diff" output.

* jk/add-i-diff-compact-heuristics:
  add--interactive: respect diff.compactionHeuristic
2016-07-11 10:44:09 -07:00
d0ccc82ad8 Fourth batch of topics for 2.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-11 10:36:29 -07:00
3f933701dc Merge branch 'master' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn
* 'master' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn:
  git-svn: warn instead of dying when commit data is missing
  git-svn: clone: Fail on missing url argument
2016-07-11 10:31:52 -07:00
627c9f2487 Merge branch 'js/color-on-windows-comment'
For a long time, we carried an in-code comment that said our
colored output would work only when we use fprintf/fputs on
Windows, which no longer is the case for the past few years.

* js/color-on-windows-comment:
  color.h: remove obsolete comment about limitations on Windows
2016-07-11 10:31:09 -07:00
369dc4081c Merge branch 'mj/log-show-signature-conf'
"git log" learns log.showSignature configuration variable, and a
command line option "--no-show-signature" to countermand it.

* mj/log-show-signature-conf:
  log: add log.showSignature configuration variable
  log: add "--no-show-signature" command line option
  t4202: refactor test
2016-07-11 10:31:08 -07:00
62e5e83f8d Merge branch 'js/find-commit-subject-ignore-leading-blanks'
A helper function that takes the contents of a commit object and
finds its subject line did not ignore leading blank lines, as is
commonly done by other codepaths.  Make it ignore leading blank
lines to match.

* js/find-commit-subject-ignore-leading-blanks:
  reset --hard: skip blank lines when reporting the commit subject
  sequencer: use skip_blank_lines() to find the commit subject
  commit -C: skip blank lines at the beginning of the message
  commit.c: make find_commit_subject() more robust
  pretty: make the skip_blank_lines() function public
2016-07-11 10:31:08 -07:00
493ddea54d Merge branch 'jn/preformatted-doc-url'
The top level documentation "git help git" still pointed at the
documentation set hosted at now-defunct google-code repository.
Update it to point to https://git.github.io/htmldocs/git.html
instead.

* jn/preformatted-doc-url:
  doc: git-htmldocs.googlecode.com is no more
2016-07-11 10:31:07 -07:00
e9a6d71331 Merge branch 'jk/perf-any-version'
Allow t/perf framework to use the features from the most recent
version of Git even when testing an older installed version.

* jk/perf-any-version:
  p4211: explicitly disable renames in no-rename test
  t/perf: fix regression in testing older versions of git
2016-07-11 10:31:06 -07:00
3c5de5c77b Merge branch 'jk/ansi-color'
The output coloring scheme learned two new attributes, italic and
strike, in addition to existing bold, reverse, etc.

* jk/ansi-color:
  color: support strike-through attribute
  color: support "italic" attribute
  color: allow "no-" for negating attributes
  color: refactor parse_attr
  add skip_prefix_mem helper
  doc: refactor description of color format
  color: fix max-size comment
2016-07-11 10:31:05 -07:00
bb2d8a817d Merge branch 'sb/submodule-clone-retry'
"git submodule update" that drives many "git clone" could
eventually hit flaky servers/network conditions on one of the
submodules; the command learned to retry the attempt.

* sb/submodule-clone-retry:
  submodule update: continue when a clone fails
  submodule--helper: initial clone learns retry logic
2016-07-11 10:31:04 -07:00
89b8710fce Merge branch 'jc/send-email-skip-backup'
A careless invocation of "git send-email directory/" after editing
0001-change.patch with an editor often ends up sending both
0001-change.patch and its backup file, 0001-change.patch~, causing
embarrassment and a minor confusion.  Detect such an input and
offer to skip the backup files when sending the patches out.

* jc/send-email-skip-backup:
  send-email: detect and offer to skip backup files
2016-07-11 10:31:04 -07:00
d751dd11ae hoist out handle_nonblock function for xread and xwrite
At least for me, this improves the readability of xread and
xwrite; hopefully allowing missing "continue" statements to
be spotted more easily.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-11 09:51:45 -07:00
2af7da9f8f git-svn: warn instead of dying when commit data is missing
It is possible to have refs globbed by git-svn which stores data
purely in git; gently skip those instead of dying and assuming
user error.

ref: http://mid.gmane.org/CALi1mtdtNF_GtzyPTbfb7N51wwxsFY7zm8hsgwxr3tHcZZboyg@mail.gmail.com

Suggested-by: Jacob Godserv <jacobgodserv@gmail.com>
Cc: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-09 22:53:54 +00:00
080739ba1d worktree.c: find_worktree() search by path suffix
This allows the user to do something like "worktree lock foo" or
"worktree lock to/foo" instead of "worktree lock /long/path/to/foo" if
it's unambiguous.

With completion support it could be quite convenient. While this base
name search can be done in the same worktree iteration loop, the code is
split into a separate function for clarity.

Suggested-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>
2016-07-08 15:31:04 -07:00
6d308627ca worktree: add "unlock" command
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 15:31:04 -07:00
58142c09a4 worktree: add "lock" command
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>
2016-07-08 15:31:04 -07:00
d604176d23 git-p4: place temporary refs used for branch import under refs/git-p4-tmp
Git-P4 used to place temporary refs under "git-p4-tmp". Since 3da1f37
Git checks that all refs are placed under "refs". Instruct Git-P4 to
place temporary refs under "refs/git-p4-tmp". There are no backwards
compatibility considerations as these refs are transient.

Use "git show-ref --verify" to check the (non-)existience of the refs
instead of file checks assuming the file-based ref backend.

All refs under "refs" are shared across all worktrees. This is not
desired for temporary Git-P4 refs and will be adressed in a later patch.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Vitor Antunes <vitor.hda@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 15:28:16 -07:00
715a51bcaf am: counteract gender bias
Since 47f0b6d5 (Fall back to three-way merge when applying a patch.,
2005-10-06), i.e. for almost 11 years already, we used a male form
to describe "the other tree".

While it was unintended, this gave the erroneous impression as if
the Git developers thought of users as male, and were unaware of the
important role in software development played by female actors such
as Ada Lovelace, Grace Hopper and Margaret Hamilton. In fact, the
first professional software developers were all female.

Let's change those unfortunate references to the gender neutral
"their tree".  Doing so also makes the fallback_merge_recursive(),
which is an oddball, more in line with the other parts of the system
where we contrast what we have vs what we obtain from others by
saying "ours" vs "theirs".  This inconsistency was also unintended.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 14:39:48 -07:00
54307ea7c3 commit.c: remove print_commit_list()
The helper function tries to offer a way to conveniently show the
last one differently from others, presumably to allow you to say
something like

	A, B, and C.

while iterating over a list that has these three elements.

However, there is only one caller, and it passes the same format
string "%s\n" for both the last one and the other ones.  Retire the
helper function and update the caller with a simplified version.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 10:11:36 -07:00
dabd35f4cd avoid using sha1_to_hex output as printf format
We know that it should not contain any percent-signs, but
it's a good habit not to feed non-literals to printf
formatters.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 10:11:27 -07:00
fa262cac76 walker: let walker_say take arbitrary formats
We take a printf-style format and a single "char *"
parameter, and the format must therefore have at most one
"%s" in it. Besides being error-prone (and tickling
-Wformat-nonliteral), this is unnecessarily restrictive. We
can just provide the usual varargs interface.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 10:11:23 -07:00
7eb6e10c9d branch: use write_file_buf instead of write_file
If we already have a strbuf, then using write_file_buf is a
little nicer to read (no wondering whether "%s" will eat
your NULs), and it's more efficient (no extra formatting
step).

We don't care about the newline magic of write_file(), as we
have our own multi-line content.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 09:47:29 -07:00
e78d5d4993 use write_file_buf where applicable
There are several places where we open a file, write some
content from a strbuf, and close it. These can be simplified
with write_file_buf(). As a bonus, many of these did not
catch write problems at close() time.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 09:47:29 -07:00
e04d08a4b3 write_file: add format attribute
This gives us compile-time checking of our format strings,
which is a good thing.

I had also hoped it would help with confusing write_file()
and write_file_buf(), since the former's "..." can make it
match the signature of the latter. But given that the buffer
for write_file_buf() is generally not a string literal, the
compiler won't complain unless -Wformat-nonliteral is on,
and that creates a ton of false positives elsewhere in the
code base.

While we're there, let's also give the function a docstring,
which it never had.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 09:47:29 -07:00
52563d7ecc write_file: add pointer+len variant
There are many callsites which could use write_file, but for
which it is a little awkward because they have a strbuf or
other pointer/len combo. Specifically:

 1. write_file() takes a format string, so we have to use
    "%s" or "%.*s", which are ugly.

 2. Using any form of "%s" does not handle embedded NULs in
    the output. That probably doesn't matter for our
    call-sites, but it's nicer not to have to worry.

 3. It's less efficient; we format into another strbuf
    just to do the write. That's probably not measurably
    slow for our uses, but it's simply inelegant.

We can fix this by providing a helper to write out the
formatted buffer, and just calling it from write_file().

Note that we don't do the usual "complete with a newline"
that write_file does. If the caller has their own buffer,
there's a reasonable chance they're doing something more
complicated than a single line, and they can call
strbuf_complete_line() themselves.

We could go even further and add strbuf_write_file(), but it
doesn't save much:

  -  write_file_buf(path, sb.buf, sb.len);
  +  strbuf_write_file(&sb, path);

It would also be somewhat asymmetric with strbuf_read_file,
which actually returns errors rather than dying (and the
error handling is most of the benefit of write_file() in the
first place).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 09:47:29 -07:00
ee861e0f78 write_file: use xopen
This simplifies the code a tiny bit, and provides consistent
error messages with other users of xopen().

While we're here, let's also switch to using O_WRONLY. We
know we're only going to open/write/close the file, so
there's no point in asking for O_RDWR.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 09:47:29 -07:00
ef22318cff write_file: drop "gently" form
There are no callers left of write_file_gently(). Let's drop
it, as it doesn't seem likely for new callers to be added
(since its inception, the only callers who wanted the gentle
form generally just died immediately themselves, and have
since been converted).

While we're there, let's also drop the "int" return from
write_file, as it is never meaningful (in the non-gentle
form, we always either die or return 0).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 09:47:29 -07:00
3d75bba28d branch: use non-gentle write_file for branch description
We use write_file_gently() to do this job currently.
However, if we see an error, we simply complain via
error_errno() and then end up exiting with an error code.

By switching to the non-gentle form, the function will die
for us, with a better error. It is more specific about which
syscall caused the error, and that mentions the
actual filename we're trying to write.

Our exit code for the error case does switch from "1" to
"128", but that's OK; it wasn't a meaningful documented code
(and in fact it was odd that it was a different exit code
than most other error conditions).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 09:47:28 -07:00
1dad879a7b am: ignore return value of write_file()
write_file() either returns 0 or dies, so there is no point in checking
its return value.  The callers of the wrappers write_state_text(),
write_state_count() and write_state_bool() consequently already ignore
their return values.  Stop pretending we care and make them void.

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>
2016-07-08 09:47:28 -07:00
aabbd3f3c9 config: fix bogus fd check when setting up default config
Since 9830534 (config --global --edit: create a template
file if needed, 2014-07-25), an edit of the global config
file will try to open() it with O_EXCL, and wants to handle
three cases:

  1. We succeeded; the user has no config file, and we
     should fill in the default template.

  2. We got EEXIST; they have a file already, proceed as usual.

  3. We got another error; we should complain.

However, the check for case 1 does "if (fd)", which will
generally _always_ be true (except for the oddball case that
somehow our stdin got closed and opening really did give us
a new descriptor 0).

So in the EEXIST case, we tried to write the default config
anyway! Fortunately, this turns out to be a noop, since we
just end up writing to and closing "-1", which does nothing.

But in case 3, we would fail to notice any other errors, and
just silently continue (given that we don't actually notice
write errors for the template either, it's probably not that
big a deal; we're about to spawn the editor, so it would
notice any problems. But the code is clearly _trying_ to hit
cover this case and failing).

We can fix it easily by using "fd >= 0" for case 1.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-08 09:47:28 -07:00
cbcd2cbd59 rebase -i: we allow extra spaces after fixup!/squash!
This new test case ensures that we handle commit messages that start
with fixup! or squash! followed by more than one space. While we do
not generate such messages when committing with --fixup/--squash, it
is perfectly legal for users to hand-craft their own fixup messages,
and we heed Postel's law by being lenient.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-07 15:40:59 -07:00
c94e963b53 rebase -i: demonstrate a bug with --autosquash
When rearranging the edit script, we happily mistake the comment
character for a command, and the command for a SHA-1. As a consequence,
when we move fixup! and squash! commits, our logic to skip lines with
already handled SHA-1s mistakenly skips anything but the first
commented-out pick line, too.

The upcoming rebase--helper patches will address this bug, therefore we
do not need to make the current autosquash code even more complex than
it already is, just to fix this bug.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-07 15:40:23 -07:00
6672b9f962 t3404: add a test for the --gpg-sign option
For the upcoming rebase--helper work (which will accelerate the
interactive rebase noticably), it is important to verify that the
--gpg-sign option is handled properly.

Please note that this patch does this on the cheap, by verifying that
the expected option is printed in the message of the 'edit' operation.

We really should test that the interactive rebase signs the commits
properly, iff GPG is available. This test is left for later.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-07 15:36:56 -07:00
deb9c1575c notes-merge: use O_EXCL to avoid overwriting existing files
Use the open(2) flag O_EXCL to ensure the file doesn't already exist
instead of (racily) calling stat(2) through file_exists().  While at it
switch to xopen() to reduce code duplication and get more consistent
error messages.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-07 14:16:26 -07:00
d19e3a5b21 Makefile: add NEEDS_LIBRT to optionally link with librt
We unconditionally link with librt, when HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME is defined.
But clock_gettime() has been available in most libc implementations for
some time now (e.g., for glibc since version 2.17) and no longer
requires linking with librt. Furthermore, commit a6c3c63 (configure.ac:
check for clock_gettime() and CLOCK_MONOTONIC) will automatically
determined which library (libc or librt) is required for linking when
checking for clock_gettime().

The assumption to unconditionally link with librt was OK, since either
almost every Unix-like system provides a version of librt for backwards
compatibility or other systems, namely Windows or OS X, never provided
clock_gettime(). However, in the latest release of OS X (macOS Sierra),
this function has been added to OS X libc version. As a result, when
running the configuration script, HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME is set and since
librt is not present, it causes a linker error.

This patches requires those not building via the configuration scripts
to define NEEDS_LIBRT in addition to HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME, if needed.

Signed-off-by: Ronald Wampler <rdwampler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-07 14:15:08 -07:00
e82675a040 .gitattributes: set file type for C files
Set the diff attribute for C source file to "cpp" in order to improve
git's ability to determine hunk headers.  In particular it helps avoid
showing unindented labels in hunk headers.  That in turn is useful for
git diff -W and git grep -W, which show whole functions now instead of
stopping at a label.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-07 14:11:15 -07:00
c61b2af7bd sideband.c: small optimization of strbuf usage
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 14:09:32 -07:00
3c8ede3ff3 connect: read $GIT_SSH_COMMAND from config file
Similar to $GIT_ASKPASS or $GIT_PROXY_COMMAND, we also read from
config file first then fall back to $GIT_SSH_COMMAND.

This is useful for selecting different private keys targetting the
same host (e.g. github)

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 14:04:09 -07:00
5c589a73de Third batch of topics for 2.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 13:42:58 -07:00
789808fe48 Sync with maint
* maint:
  More fixes for 2.9.1
  mailmap: use main email address for dturner
2016-07-06 13:42:37 -07:00
afb516e364 Merge branch 'jc/t2300-setup'
Portability fix for Windows.

* jc/t2300-setup:
  t2300: "git --exec-path" is not usable in $PATH on Windows as-is
2016-07-06 13:38:20 -07:00
3efeb51328 Merge branch 'ao/p4-has-branch-prefix-fix'
A bug, which caused "git p4" while running under verbose mode to
report paths that are omitted due to branch prefix incorrectly, has
been fixed; the command said "Ignoring file outside of prefix" for
paths that are _inside_.

* ao/p4-has-branch-prefix-fix:
  git-p4: correct hasBranchPrefix verbose output
2016-07-06 13:38:19 -07:00
4cea655a47 Merge branch 'cb/t7810-test-label-fix'
Test clean-up.

* cb/t7810-test-label-fix:
  t7810: fix duplicated test title
2016-07-06 13:38:18 -07:00
8db528cf5a Merge branch 'sb/t5614-modernize'
Test clean-up.

* sb/t5614-modernize:
  t5614: don't use subshells
2016-07-06 13:38:17 -07:00
3437017fec Merge branch 'js/perf-on-apple'
t/perf needs /usr/bin/time with GNU extension; the invocation of it
is updated to "gtime" on Darwin.

* js/perf-on-apple:
  perf: accommodate for MacOSX
2016-07-06 13:38:16 -07:00
3edaee74fd Merge branch 'ak/t7800-wo-readlink'
One among four invocations of readlink(1) in our test suite has
been rewritten so that the test can run on systems without the
command (others are in valgrind test framework and t9802).

* ak/t7800-wo-readlink:
  t7800: readlink may not be available
2016-07-06 13:38:16 -07:00
f6a729f344 Merge branch 'jk/tzoffset-fix'
The internal code used to show local timezone offset is not
prepared to handle timestamps beyond year 2100, and gave a
bogus offset value to the caller.  Use a more benign looking
+0000 instead and let "git log" going in such a case, instead
of aborting.

* jk/tzoffset-fix:
  local_tzoffset: detect errors from tm_to_time_t
  t0006: test various date formats
  t0006: rename test-date's "show" to "relative"
2016-07-06 13:38:15 -07:00
fd4df42275 Merge branch 'js/mingw-parameter-less-c-functions'
Some platform-specific code had non-ANSI strict declarations of C
functions that do not take any parameters, which has been
corrected.

* js/mingw-parameter-less-c-functions:
  mingw: let the build succeed with DEVELOPER=1
2016-07-06 13:38:14 -07:00
5854b36c4a Merge branch 'lc/shell-default-value-noexpand'
Fix unnecessarily waste in the idiomatic use of ': ${VAR=default}'
to set the default value, without enclosing it in double quotes.

* lc/shell-default-value-noexpand:
  sh-setup: enclose setting of ${VAR=default} in double-quotes
2016-07-06 13:38:14 -07:00
9f1027d18a Merge branch 'sb/clone-shallow-passthru'
Fix an unintended regression in v2.9 that breaks "clone --depth"
that recurses down to submodules by forcing the submodules to also
be cloned shallowly, which many server instances that host upstream
of the submodules are not prepared for.

* sb/clone-shallow-passthru:
  clone: do not let --depth imply --shallow-submodules
2016-07-06 13:38:13 -07:00
ed0f7bdec9 Merge branch 'jk/gpg-interface-cleanup'
A new run-command API function pipe_command() is introduced to
sanely feed data to the standard input while capturing data from
the standard output and the standard error of an external process,
which is cumbersome to hand-roll correctly without deadlocking.

The codepath to sign data in a prepared buffer with GPG has been
updated to use this API to read from the status-fd to check for
errors (instead of relying on GPG's exit status).

* jk/gpg-interface-cleanup:
  gpg-interface: check gpg signature creation status
  sign_buffer: use pipe_command
  verify_signed_buffer: use pipe_command
  run-command: add pipe_command helper
  verify_signed_buffer: use tempfile object
  verify_signed_buffer: drop pbuf variable
  gpg-interface: use child_process.args
2016-07-06 13:38:12 -07:00
1d77bed8b0 Merge branch 'mg/signature-doc'
Formats of the various data (and how to validate them) where we use
GPG signature have been documented.

* mg/signature-doc:
  Documentation/technical: signed merge tag format
  Documentation/technical: signed commit format
  Documentation/technical: signed tag format
  Documentation/technical: describe signature formats
2016-07-06 13:38:12 -07:00
f2140c3890 Merge branch 'nd/graph-width-padded'
"log --graph --format=" learned that "%>|(N)" specifies the width
relative to the terminal's left edge, not relative to the area to
draw text that is to the right of the ancestry-graph section.  It
also now accepts negative N that means the column limit is relative
to the right border.

* nd/graph-width-padded:
  pretty.c: support <direction>|(<negative number>) forms
  pretty: pass graph width to pretty formatting for use in '%>|(N)'
2016-07-06 13:38:12 -07:00
979f030359 Merge branch 'jk/repack-keep-unreachable'
"git repack" learned the "--keep-unreachable" option, which sends
loose unreachable objects to a pack instead of leaving them loose.
This helps heuristics based on the number of loose objects
(e.g. "gc --auto").

* jk/repack-keep-unreachable:
  repack: extend --keep-unreachable to loose objects
  repack: add --keep-unreachable option
  repack: document --unpack-unreachable option
2016-07-06 13:38:11 -07:00
e25a4ded8a Merge branch 'ew/mboxrd-format-am'
Teach format-patch and mailsplit (hence "am") how a line that
happens to begin with "From " in the e-mail message is quoted with
">", so that these lines can be restored to their original shape.

* ew/mboxrd-format-am:
  am: support --patch-format=mboxrd
  mailsplit: support unescaping mboxrd messages
  pretty: support "mboxrd" output format
2016-07-06 13:38:11 -07:00
1e4bf90789 Merge branch 'jk/upload-pack-hook'
"upload-pack" allows a custom "git pack-objects" replacement when
responding to "fetch/clone" via the uploadpack.packObjectsHook.

* jk/upload-pack-hook:
  upload-pack: provide a hook for running pack-objects
  t1308: do not get fooled by symbolic links to the source tree
  config: add a notion of "scope"
  config: return configset value for current_config_ functions
  config: set up config_source for command-line config
  git_config_parse_parameter: refactor cleanup code
  git_config_with_options: drop "found" counting
2016-07-06 13:38:11 -07:00
7a738b40f6 Merge branch 'nd/worktree-cleanup-post-head-protection'
Further preparatory clean-up for "worktree" feature continues.

* nd/worktree-cleanup-post-head-protection:
  worktree: simplify prefixing paths
  worktree: avoid 0{40}, too many zeroes, hard to read
  worktree.c: use is_dot_or_dotdot()
  git-worktree.txt: keep subcommand listing in alphabetical order
  worktree.c: rewrite mark_current_worktree() to avoid strbuf
  completion: support git-worktree
2016-07-06 13:38:11 -07:00
f1e80a12a4 Merge branch 'jk/bisect-show-tree'
"git bisect" makes an internal call to "git diff-tree" when
bisection finds the culprit, but this call did not initialize the
data structure to pass to the diff-tree API correctly.

* jk/bisect-show-tree:
  bisect: always call setup_revisions after init_revisions
2016-07-06 13:38:10 -07:00
35d213c87c Merge branch 'lf/sideband-returns-void'
A small internal API cleanup.

* lf/sideband-returns-void:
  upload-pack.c: make send_client_data() return void
  sideband.c: make send_sideband() return void
2016-07-06 13:38:09 -07:00
054d949ffb Merge branch 'jk/add-i-diff-compact-heuristics'
"git add -i/-p" learned to honor diff.compactionHeuristic
experimental knob, so that the user can work on the same hunk split
as "git diff" output.

* jk/add-i-diff-compact-heuristics:
  add--interactive: respect diff.compactionHeuristic
2016-07-06 13:38:09 -07:00
845351c99b Merge branch 'km/fetch-do-not-free-remote-name'
The ownership rule for the piece of memory that hold references to
be fetched in "git fetch" was screwy, which has been cleaned up.

* km/fetch-do-not-free-remote-name:
  builtin/fetch.c: don't free remote->name after fetch
2016-07-06 13:38:08 -07:00
34bf3bbb30 Merge branch 'nd/test-lib-httpd-show-error-log-in-verbose'
HTTPd tests learned to show the server error log to help diagnosing
a failing tests.

* nd/test-lib-httpd-show-error-log-in-verbose:
  lib-httpd.sh: print error.log on error
2016-07-06 13:38:08 -07:00
b8b6365a8a Merge branch 'jk/string-list-static-init'
Instead of taking advantage of a struct string_list that is
allocated with all NULs happens to be STRING_LIST_INIT_NODUP kind,
initialize them explicitly as such, to document their behaviour
better.

* jk/string-list-static-init:
  use string_list initializer consistently
  blame,shortlog: don't make local option variables static
  interpret-trailers: don't duplicate option strings
  parse_opt_string_list: stop allocating new strings
2016-07-06 13:38:08 -07:00
7e58b8166e Merge branch 'jk/send-pack-stdio'
Code clean-up.

* jk/send-pack-stdio:
  write_or_die: remove the unused write_or_whine() function
  send-pack: use buffered I/O to talk to pack-objects
2016-07-06 13:38:07 -07:00
7758b02b44 Merge branch 'pb/commit-editmsg-path'
Code clean-up.

* pb/commit-editmsg-path:
  builtin/commit.c: memoize git-path for COMMIT_EDITMSG
2016-07-06 13:38:06 -07:00
2f84df2ca0 Merge branch 'ep/http-curl-trace'
HTTP transport gained an option to produce more detailed debugging
trace.

* ep/http-curl-trace:
  imap-send.c: introduce the GIT_TRACE_CURL enviroment variable
  http.c: implement the GIT_TRACE_CURL environment variable
2016-07-06 13:38:06 -07:00
674d38f55b More fixes for 2.9.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 13:08:02 -07:00
f838198357 Merge branch 'jc/deref-tag' into maint
Code clean-up.

* jc/deref-tag:
  blame, line-log: do not loop around deref_tag()
2016-07-06 13:06:46 -07:00
f7927316cf Merge branch 'pb/strbuf-read-file-doc' into maint
Minor doc update.

* pb/strbuf-read-file-doc:
  strbuf: describe the return value of strbuf_read_file
2016-07-06 13:06:45 -07:00
1c22105f2c Merge branch 'jk/fetch-prune-doc' into maint
Minor doc update.

* jk/fetch-prune-doc:
  fetch: document that pruning happens before fetching
2016-07-06 13:06:44 -07:00
9d3d0dbb14 Merge branch 'pc/occurred' into maint
Typofix.

* pc/occurred:
  config.c: fix misspelt "occurred" in an error message
  refs.h: fix misspelt "occurred" in a comment
2016-07-06 13:06:43 -07:00
25227f0bea Merge branch 'mg/cherry-pick-multi-on-unborn' into maint
"git cherry-pick A" worked on an unborn branch, but "git
cherry-pick A..B" didn't.

* mg/cherry-pick-multi-on-unborn:
  cherry-pick: allow to pick to unborn branches
2016-07-06 13:06:42 -07:00
af3a43cb11 Merge branch 'em/newer-freebsd-shells-are-fine-with-returns' into maint
Comments about misbehaving FreeBSD shells have been clarified with
the version number (9.x and before are broken, newer ones are OK).

* em/newer-freebsd-shells-are-fine-with-returns:
  rebase: update comment about FreeBSD /bin/sh
2016-07-06 13:06:41 -07:00
89aef71d0e Merge branch 'lv/status-say-working-tree-not-directory' into maint
"git status" used to say "working directory" when it meant "working
tree".

* lv/status-say-working-tree-not-directory:
  Use "working tree" instead of "working directory" for git status
2016-07-06 13:06:40 -07:00
1729853432 Merge branch 'nb/gnome-keyring-build' into maint
Build improvements for gnome-keyring (in contrib/)

* nb/gnome-keyring-build:
  gnome-keyring: Don't hard-code pkg-config executable
2016-07-06 13:06:40 -07:00
c8b080af71 Merge branch 'et/add-chmod-x' into maint
"git update-index --add --chmod=+x file" may be usable as an escape
hatch, but not a friendly thing to force for people who do need to
use it regularly.  "git add --chmod=+x file" can be used instead.

* et/add-chmod-x:
  add: add --chmod=+x / --chmod=-x options
2016-07-06 13:06:39 -07:00
1f5d429e4a Merge branch 'jk/avoid-unbounded-alloca' into maint
A codepath that used alloca(3) to place an unbounded amount of data
on the stack has been updated to avoid doing so.

* jk/avoid-unbounded-alloca:
  tree-diff: avoid alloca for large allocations
2016-07-06 13:06:39 -07:00
c0144452ef Merge branch 'rj/compat-regex-size-max-fix' into maint
A compilation fix.

* rj/compat-regex-size-max-fix:
  regex: fix a SIZE_MAX macro redefinition warning
2016-07-06 13:06:38 -07:00
8162401fb0 Merge branch 'vs/prompt-avoid-unset-variable' into maint
The git-prompt scriptlet (in contrib/) was not friendly with those
who uses "set -u", which has been fixed.

* vs/prompt-avoid-unset-variable:
  git-prompt.sh: Don't error on null ${ZSH,BASH}_VERSION, $short_sha
2016-07-06 13:06:38 -07:00
7949837520 Merge branch 'sg/reflog-past-root' into maint
"git reflog" stopped upon seeing an entry that denotes a branch
creation event (aka "unborn"), which made it appear as if the
reflog was truncated.

* sg/reflog-past-root:
  reflog: continue walking the reflog past root commits
2016-07-06 13:06:37 -07:00
17eb7a7858 Merge branch 'dn/gpg-doc' into maint
The documentation tries to consistently spell "GPG"; when
referring to the specific program name, "gpg" is used.

* dn/gpg-doc:
  Documentation: GPG capitalization
2016-07-06 13:06:36 -07:00
7f223b108d Merge branch 'ap/git-svn-propset-doc' into maint
"git svn propset" subcommand that was added in 2.3 days is
documented now.

* ap/git-svn-propset-doc:
  git-svn: document the 'git svn propset' command
2016-07-06 13:06:35 -07:00
073d0b0914 Merge branch 'tr/doc-tt' into maint
The documentation set has been updated so that literal commands,
configuration variables and environment variables are consistently
typeset in fixed-width font and bold in manpages.

* tr/doc-tt:
  doc: change configuration variables format
  doc: more consistency in environment variables format
  doc: change environment variables format
  doc: clearer rule about formatting literals
2016-07-06 13:06:34 -07:00
c578a09bd6 t7610: test for mktemp before test execution
mktemp is not available on all platforms, so the test
'temporary filenames are used with mergetool.writeToTemp'
fails there.
This patch does not replace mktemp but just disables
the test that otherwise would fail.
mergetool checks itself before executing mktemp and
reports an error.

Signed-off-by: Armin Kunaschik <megabreit@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 12:18:09 -07:00
6523728499 convert: unify the "auto" handling of CRLF
Before this change,
$ echo "* text=auto" >.gitattributes
$ echo "* eol=crlf" >>.gitattributes

would have the same effect as
$ echo "* text" >.gitattributes
$ git config core.eol crlf

Since the 'eol' attribute had higher priority than 'text=auto', this may
corrupt binary files and is not what most users expect to happen.

Make the 'eol' attribute to obey 'text=auto' and now
$ echo "* text=auto" >.gitattributes
$ echo "* eol=crlf" >>.gitattributes
behaves the same as
$ echo "* text=auto" >.gitattributes
$ git config core.eol crlf

In other words,
$ echo "* text=auto eol=crlf" >.gitattributes
has the same effect as
$ git config core.autocrlf true

and
$ echo "* text=auto eol=lf" >.gitattributes
has the same effect as
$ git config core.autocrlf input

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 11:53:51 -07:00
4df7c8a037 Makefile: use VCSSVN_LIB to refer to svn library
We have an abstracted variable; let's use it consistently.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 11:51:03 -07:00
1be36b60f1 Makefile: drop extra dependencies for test helpers
A few test-helpers have Makefile dependencies on specific
object files. But since these files are part of libgit.a
(which all of the helpers link against), the inclusion is
simply redundant.

These were once necessary, but became redundant due to
5c5ba73 (Makefile: Use generic rule to build test programs,
2007-05-31), which added the $(GITLIBS) dependency (but
didn't prune the extra dependency lines). Later commits then
cargo-culted the practice (e.g., b4285c7).

Note that we _do_ need to leave the dependencies on the svn
library, as that is not part of the usual link command.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 11:50:48 -07:00
bc437d1020 fetch: reduce duplicate in ref update status lines with placeholder
In the "remote -> local" line, if either ref is a substring of the
other, the common part in the other string is replaced with "*". For
example

    abc                -> origin/abc
    refs/pull/123/head -> pull/123

become

    abc         -> origin/*
    refs/*/head -> pull/123

Activated with fetch.output=compact.

For the record, this output is not perfect. A single giant ref can
push all refs very far to the right and likely be wrapped around. We
may have a few options:

 - exclude these long lines smarter

 - break the line after "->", exclude it from column width calculation

 - implement a new format, { -> origin/}foo, which makes the problem
   go away at the cost of a bit harder to read

 - reverse all the arrows so we have "* <- looong-ref", again still
   hard to read.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 11:48:25 -07:00
6bc91f23a6 fetch: align all "remote -> local" output
We do align "remote -> local" output by allocating 10 columns to
"remote". That produces aligned output only for short refs. An extra
pass is performed to find the longest remote ref name (that does not
produce a line longer than terminal width) to produce better aligned
output.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 11:48:25 -07:00
a199a7c9d0 mailmap: use main email address for dturner
Signed-off-by: David Turner <novalis@novalis.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 10:57:01 -07:00
023ff39b29 parse_options: allocate a new array when concatenating
In exactly one callers (builtin/revert.c), we build up the
options list dynamically from multiple arrays. We do so by
manually inserting "filler" entries into one array, and then
copying the other array into the allocated space.

This is tedious and error-prone, as you have to adjust the
filler any time the second array is modified (although we do
at least check and die() when the counts do not match up).

Instead, let's just allocate a new array.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 10:11:08 -07:00
de61cebde7 Merge branch 'jk/common-main-2.8' into jk/common-main
* jk/common-main-2.8:
  mingw: declare main()'s argv as const
  common-main: call git_setup_gettext()
  common-main: call restore_sigpipe_to_default()
  common-main: call sanitize_stdfds()
  common-main: call git_extract_argv0_path()
  add an extra level of indirection to main()
2016-07-06 10:02:57 -07:00
08aade7080 mingw: declare main()'s argv as const
In 84d32bf (sparse: Fix mingw_main() argument number/type errors,
2013-04-27), we addressed problems identified by the 'sparse' tool where
argv was declared inconsistently. The way we addressed it was by casting
from the non-const version to the const-version.

This patch is long overdue, fixing compat/mingw.h's declaration to
make the "argv" parameter const.  This also allows us to lose the
"const" trickery introduced earlier to common-main.c:main().

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 08:11:47 -07:00
03c39b3458 t/lib-git-daemon: use test_match_signal
When git-daemon exits, we expect it to be with the SIGTERM
we just sent it. If we see anything else, we'll complain.
But our check against exit code "143" is not portable. For
example:

  $ ksh93 t5570-git-daemon.sh
  [...]
  error: git daemon exited with status: 271

We can fix this by using test_match_signal.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 07:44:25 -07:00
2472448c88 test_must_fail: use test_match_signal
In 8bf4bec (add "ok=sigpipe" to test_must_fail and use it to
fix flaky tests, 2015-11-27), test_must_fail learned to
recognize "141" as a sigpipe failure. However, testing for
a signal is more complicated than that; we should use
test_match_signal to implement more portable checking.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 07:44:25 -07:00
6f5f9d7476 t0005: use test_match_signal as appropriate
The first test already uses this more portable construct
(that was where it was factored from initially), but the
later tests do a raw comparison against 141 to look for
SIGPIPE, which can fail on some shells and platforms.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 07:44:25 -07:00
9b67c9942e tests: factor portable signal check out of t0005
In POSIX shells, a program which exits due to a signal
generally has an exit code of 128 plus the signal number.
However, ksh uses 256 plus the signal number.  We've
accounted for that in t0005, but not in other tests.  Let's
pull out the logic so we can use it elsewhere.

It would be nice for debugging if this additionally printed
errors to stderr, like our other test_* helpers. But we're
going to need to use it in other places besides the innards
of a test_expect block. So let's leave it as generic as
possible.

Note that we also leave the magic "3" for Windows out of the
generic helper. This is an artifact of the way we use
raise() to kill ourselves in test-sigchain.c, and will not
necessarily apply to all programs. So it's better to keep it
out of the helper, to reduce the chance of confusing it with
a real call to exit(3).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-06 07:43:29 -07:00
19e9542fa2 git-svn: clone: Fail on missing url argument
cmd_clone should detect a missing $url arg before using it otherwise
an uninitialized value error is emitted in even the simplest case of
'git svn clone' without arguments.

Signed-off-by: Christopher Layne <clayne@anodized.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
2016-07-03 06:04:47 +00:00
5ce5f5fa5a common-main: call git_setup_gettext()
This should be part of every program, as otherwise users do
not get translated error messages. However, some external
commands forgot to do so (e.g., git-credential-store). This
fixes them, and eliminates the repeated code in programs
that did remember to use it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 15:09:10 -07:00
12e0437f23 common-main: call restore_sigpipe_to_default()
This is another safety/sanity setup that should be in force
everywhere, but which we only applied in git.c. This did
catch most cases, since even external commands are typically
run via "git ..." (and the restoration applies to
sub-processes, too). But there were cases we missed, such as
somebody calling git-upload-pack directly via ssh, or
scripts which use dashed external commands directly.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 15:09:10 -07:00
57f5d52a94 common-main: call sanitize_stdfds()
This is setup that should be done in every program for
safety, but we never got around to adding it everywhere (so
builtins benefited from the call in git.c, but any external
commands did not). Putting it in the common main() gives us
this safety everywhere.

Note that the case in daemon.c is a little funny. We wait
until we know whether we want to daemonize, and then either:

 - call daemonize(), which will close stdio and reopen it to
   /dev/null under the hood

 - sanitize_stdfds(), to fix up any odd cases

But that is way too late; the point of sanitizing is to give
us reliable descriptors on 0/1/2, and we will already have
executed code, possibly called die(), etc. The sanitizing
should be the very first thing that happens.

With this patch, git-daemon will sanitize first, and can
remove the call in the non-daemonize case. It does mean that
daemonize() may just end up closing the descriptors we
opened, but that's not a big deal (it's not wrong to do so,
nor is it really less optimal than the case where our parent
process redirected us from /dev/null ahead of time).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 15:09:10 -07:00
650c449250 common-main: call git_extract_argv0_path()
Every program which links against libgit.a must call this
function, or risk hitting an assert() in system_path() that
checks whether we have configured argv0_path (though only
when RUNTIME_PREFIX is defined, so essentially only on
Windows).

Looking at the diff, you can see that putting it into the
common main() saves us having to do it individually in each
of the external commands. But what you can't see are the
cases where we _should_ have been doing so, but weren't
(e.g., git-credential-store, and all of the t/helper test
programs).

This has been an accident-waiting-to-happen for a long time,
but wasn't triggered until recently because it involves one
of those programs actually calling system_path(). That
happened with git-credential-store in v2.8.0 with ae5f677
(lazily load core.sharedrepository, 2016-03-11). The
program:

  - takes a lock file, which...

  - opens a tempfile, which...

  - calls adjust_shared_perm to fix permissions, which...

  - lazy-loads the config (as of ae5f677), which...

  - calls system_path() to find the location of
    /etc/gitconfig

On systems with RUNTIME_PREFIX, this means credential-store
reliably hits that assert() and cannot be used.

We never noticed in the test suite, because we set
GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM there, which skips the system_path()
lookup entirely.  But if we were to tweak git_config() to
find /etc/gitconfig even when we aren't going to open it,
then the test suite shows multiple failures (for
credential-store, and for some other test helpers). I didn't
include that tweak here because it's way too specific to
this particular call to be worth carrying around what is
essentially dead code.

The implementation is fairly straightforward, with one
exception: there is exactly one caller (git.c) that actually
cares about the result of the function, and not the
side-effect of setting up argv0_path. We can accommodate
that by simply replacing the value of argv[0] in the array
we hand down to cmd_main().

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 15:09:10 -07:00
3f2e2297b9 add an extra level of indirection to main()
There are certain startup tasks that we expect every git
process to do. In some cases this is just to improve the
quality of the program (e.g., setting up gettext()). In
others it is a requirement for using certain functions in
libgit.a (e.g., system_path() expects that you have called
git_extract_argv0_path()).

Most commands are builtins and are covered by the git.c
version of main(). However, there are still a few external
commands that use their own main(). Each of these has to
remember to include the correct startup sequence, and we are
not always consistent.

Rather than just fix the inconsistencies, let's make this
harder to get wrong by providing a common main() that can
run this standard startup.

We basically have two options to do this:

 - the compat/mingw.h file already does something like this by
   adding a #define that replaces the definition of main with a
   wrapper that calls mingw_startup().

   The upside is that the code in each program doesn't need
   to be changed at all; it's rewritten on the fly by the
   preprocessor.

   The downside is that it may make debugging of the startup
   sequence a bit more confusing, as the preprocessor is
   quietly inserting new code.

 - the builtin functions are all of the form cmd_foo(),
   and git.c's main() calls them.

   This is much more explicit, which may make things more
   obvious to somebody reading the code. It's also more
   flexible (because of course we have to figure out _which_
   cmd_foo() to call).

   The downside is that each of the builtins must define
   cmd_foo(), instead of just main().

This patch chooses the latter option, preferring the more
explicit approach, even though it is more invasive. We
introduce a new file common-main.c, with the "real" main. It
expects to call cmd_main() from whatever other objects it is
linked against.

We link common-main.o against anything that links against
libgit.a, since we know that such programs will need to do
this setup. Note that common-main.o can't actually go inside
libgit.a, as the linker would not pick up its main()
function automatically (it has no callers).

The rest of the patch is just adjusting all of the various
external programs (mostly in t/helper) to use cmd_main().
I've provided a global declaration for cmd_main(), which
means that all of the programs also need to match its
signature. In particular, many functions need to switch to
"const char **" instead of "char **" for argv. This effect
ripples out to a few other variables and functions, as well.

This makes the patch even more invasive, but the end result
is much better. We should be treating argv strings as const
anyway, and now all programs conform to the same signature
(which also matches the way builtins are defined).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 15:09:10 -07:00
b8e47d1acf grep: fix grepping for "intent to add" files
This reverts commit 4d5520053 (grep: make it clear i-t-a entries are
ignored, 2015-12-27) and adds an alternative fix to maintain the -L
--cached behavior.

4d5520053 caused 'git grep' to no longer find matches in new files in
the working tree where the corresponding index entry had the "intent to
add" bit set, despite the fact that these files are tracked.

The content in the index of a file for which the "intent to add" bit is
set is considered indeterminate and not empty. For most grep queries we
want these to behave the same, however for -L --cached (files without a
match) we don't want to respond positively for "intent to add" files as
their contents are indeterminate. This is in contrast to files with
empty contents in the index (no lines implies no matches for any grep
query expression) which should be reported in the output of a grep -L
--cached invocation.

Add tests to cover this case and a few related cases which previously
lacked coverage.

Helped-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 13:27:41 -07:00
89e64100f4 t7810-grep.sh: fix a whitespace inconsistency
Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <charles@hashpling.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 13:27:38 -07:00
878452b966 t7810-grep.sh: fix duplicated test name
Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <charles@hashpling.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 13:26:30 -07:00
5e5be9e257 sideband.c: refactor recv_sideband()
We used character buffer manipulations to split messages from the
sideband at line breaks and insert "remote: " at the beginning of
each line, using the packet size to determine the end of a message.

However, since it is safe to assume that diagnostic messages from
the sideband never contain NUL characters, we can also NUL-terminate
the buffer, use strpbrk() for splitting lines and use format strings
to insert the prefix, to make the code easier to read and maintain.

A strbuf is used for accumulating the output which is then printed
using a single write(2) call to ensure the atomicity of the output.
See 9ac13ec (atomic write for sideband remote messages, 2006-10-11)
for details.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@lfos.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 13:09:37 -07:00
415c7dd026 t5541: become resilient to GETTEXT_POISON
Use test_i18n* functions for testing text already marked for
translation.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 12:47:30 -07:00
695f95ba5d grep.c: reuse "icase" variable
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 12:44:57 -07:00
b51a9c1479 diffcore-pickaxe: support case insensitive match on non-ascii
Similar to the "grep -F -i" case, we can't use kws on icase search
outside ascii range, so we quote the string and pass it to regcomp as
a basic regexp and let regex engine deal with case sensitivity.

The new test is put in t7812 instead of t4209-log-pickaxe because
lib-gettext.sh might cause problems elsewhere, probably.

Noticed-by: Plamen Totev <plamen.totev@abv.bg>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 12:44:57 -07:00
3d5b23a362 diffcore-pickaxe: Add regcomp_or_die()
There's another regcomp code block coming in this function that needs
the same error handling. This function can help avoid duplicating
error handling code.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 12:44:57 -07:00
18547aacf5 grep/pcre: support utf-8
In the previous change in this function, we add locale support for
single-byte encodings only. It looks like pcre only supports utf-* as
multibyte encodings, the others are left in the cold (which is
fine).

We need to enable PCRE_UTF8 so pcre can find character boundary
correctly. It's needed for case folding (when --ignore-case is used)
or '*', '+' or similar syntax is used.

The "has_non_ascii()" check is to be on the conservative side. If
there's non-ascii in the pattern, the searched content could still be
in utf-8, but we can treat it just like a byte stream and everything
should work. If we force utf-8 based on locale only and pcre validates
utf-8 and the file content is in non-utf8 encoding, things break.

Noticed-by: Plamen Totev <plamen.totev@abv.bg>
Helped-by: Plamen Totev <plamen.totev@abv.bg>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 12:44:57 -07:00
e8c1672655 gettext: add is_utf8_locale()
This function returns true if git is running under an UTF-8
locale. pcre in the next patch will need this.

is_encoding_utf8() is used instead of strcmp() to catch both "utf-8"
and "utf8" suffixes.

When built with no gettext support, we peek in several env variables
to detect UTF-8. pcre library might support utf-8 even if libc is
built without locale support.. The peeking code is a copy from
compat/regex/regcomp.c

Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 12:44:57 -07:00
9d9babb84d grep/pcre: prepare locale-dependent tables for icase matching
The default tables are usually built with C locale and only suitable
for LANG=C or similar.  This should make case insensitive search work
correctly for all single-byte charsets.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 12:44:57 -07:00
e944d9d932 grep: rewrite an if/else condition to avoid duplicate expression
"!icase || ascii_only" is repeated twice in this if/else chain as this
series evolves. Rewrite it (and basically revert the first if
condition back to before the "grep: break down an "if" stmt..." commit).

Helped-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>
2016-07-01 12:44:57 -07:00
793dc676e0 grep/icase: avoid kwsset when -F is specified
Similar to the previous commit, we can't use kws on icase search
outside ascii range. But we can't simply pass the pattern to
regcomp/pcre like the previous commit because it may contain regex
special characters, so we need to quote the regex first.

To avoid misquote traps that could lead to undefined behavior, we
always stick to basic regex engine in this case. We don't need fancy
features for grepping a literal string anyway.

basic_regex_quote_buf() assumes that if the pattern is in a multibyte
encoding, ascii chars must be unambiguously encoded as single
bytes. This is true at least for UTF-8. For others, let's wait until
people yell up. Chances are nobody uses multibyte, non utf-8 charsets
anymore.

Noticed-by: Plamen Totev <plamen.totev@abv.bg>
Helped-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
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>
2016-07-01 12:44:30 -07:00
5caeeb83bc archive-tar: drop return value
We never do any error checks, and so never return anything
but "0". Let's just drop this to simplify the code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 10:26:28 -07:00
6e8e0991e5 archive-tar: write extended headers for far-future mtime
The ustar format represents timestamps as seconds since the
epoch, but only has room to store 11 octal digits.  To
express anything larger, we need to use an extended header.
This is exactly the same case we fixed for the size field in
the previous commit, and the solution here follows the same
pattern.

This is even mentioned as an issue in f2f0267 (archive-tar:
use xsnprintf for trivial formatting, 2015-09-24), but since
it only affected things far in the future, it wasn't deemed
worth dealing with. But note that my calculations claiming
thousands of years were off there; because our xsnprintf
produces a NUL byte, we only have until the year 2242 to fix
this.

Given that this is just around the corner (geologically
speaking, anyway), and because it's easy to fix, let's just
make it work. Unlike the previous fix for "size", where we
had to write an individual extended header for each file, we
can write one global header (since we have only one mtime
for the whole archive).

There's a slight bit of trickiness there. We may already be
writing a global header with a "comment" field for the
commit sha1. So we need to write our new field into the same
header. To do this, we push the decision of whether to write
such a header down into write_global_extended_header(),
which will now assemble the header as it sees fit, and will
return early if we have nothing to write (in practice, we'll
only have a large mtime if it comes from a commit, but this
makes it also work if you set your system clock ahead such
that time() returns a huge value).

Note that we don't (and never did) handle negative
timestamps (i.e., before 1970). This would probably not be
too hard to support in the same way, but since git does not
support negative timestamps at all, I didn't bother here.

After writing the extended header, we munge the timestamp in
the ustar headers to the maximum-allowable size. This is
wrong, but it's the least-wrong thing we can provide to a
tar implementation that doesn't understand pax headers (it's
also what GNU tar does).

Helped-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>
2016-07-01 10:26:01 -07:00
d1657b570a archive-tar: write extended headers for file sizes >= 8GB
The ustar format has a fixed-length field for the size of
each file entry which is supposed to contain up to 11 bytes
of octal-formatted data plus a NUL or space terminator.

These means that the largest size we can represent is
077777777777, or 1 byte short of 8GB. The correct solution
for a larger file, according to POSIX.1-2001, is to add an
extended pax header, similar to how we handle long
filenames. This patch does that, and writes zero for the
size field in the ustar header (the last bit is not
mentioned by POSIX, but it matches how GNU tar behaves with
--format=pax).

This should be a strict improvement over the current
behavior, which is to die in xsnprintf with a "BUG".
However, there's some interesting history here.

Prior to f2f0267 (archive-tar: use xsnprintf for trivial
formatting, 2015-09-24), we silently overflowed the "size"
field. The extra bytes ended up in the "mtime" field of the
header, which was then immediately written itself,
overwriting our extra bytes. What that means depends on how
many bytes we wrote.

If the size was 64GB or greater, then we actually overflowed
digits into the mtime field, meaning our value was
effectively right-shifted by those lost octal digits. And
this patch is again a strict improvement over that.

But if the size was between 8GB and 64GB, then our 12-byte
field held all of the actual digits, and only our NUL
terminator overflowed. According to POSIX, there should be a
NUL or space at the end of the field. However, GNU tar seems
to be lenient here, and will correctly parse a size up 64GB
(minus one) from the field. So sizes in this range might
have just worked, depending on the implementation reading
the tarfile.

This patch is mostly still an improvement there, as the 8GB
limit is specifically mentioned in POSIX as the correct
limit. But it's possible that it could be a regression
(versus the pre-f2f0267 state) if all of the following are
true:

  1. You have a file between 8GB and 64GB.

  2. Your tar implementation _doesn't_ know about pax
     extended headers.

  3. Your tar implementation _does_ parse 12-byte sizes from
     the ustar header without a delimiter.

It's probably not worth worrying about such an obscure set
of conditions, but I'm documenting it here just in case.

Helped-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>
2016-07-01 10:25:46 -07:00
e51217e15c t5000: test tar files that overflow ustar headers
The ustar format only has room for 11 (or 12, depending on
some implementations) octal digits for the size and mtime of
each file. For values larger than this, we have to add pax
extended headers to specify the real data, and git does not
yet know how to do so.

Before fixing that, let's start off with some test
infrastructure, as designing portable and efficient tests
for this is non-trivial.

We want to use the system tar to check our output (because
what we really care about is interoperability), but we can't
rely on it:

  1. being able to read pax headers

  2. being able to handle huge sizes or mtimes

  3. supporting a "t" format we can parse

So as a prerequisite, we can feed the system tar a reference
tarball to make sure it can handle these features. The
reference tar here was created with:

  dd if=/dev/zero seek=64G bs=1 count=1 of=huge
  touch -d @68719476737 huge
  tar cf - --format=pax |
  head -c 2048

using GNU tar. Note that this is not a complete tarfile, but
it's enough to contain the headers we want to examine.

Likewise, we need to convince git that it has a 64GB blob to
output. Running "git add" on that 64GB file takes many
minutes of CPU, and even compressed, the result is 64MB. So
again, I pre-generated that loose object, and then took only
the first 2k of it. That should be enough to generate 2MB of
data before hitting an inflate error, which is plenty for us
to generate the tar header (and then die of SIGPIPE while
streaming the rest out).

The tests are split so that we test as much as we can even
with an uncooperative system tar. This actually catches the
current breakage (which is that we die("BUG") trying to
write the ustar header) on every system, and then on systems
where we can, we go farther and actually verify the result.

Helped-by: Robin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 10:24:18 -07:00
48860819e8 t9300: factor out portable "head -c" replacement
It is sometimes useful to be able to read exactly N bytes from a
pipe. Doing this portably turns out to be surprisingly difficult
in shell scripts.

We want a solution that:

  - is portable

  - never reads more than N bytes due to buffering (which
    would mean those bytes are not available to the next
    program to read from the same pipe)

  - handles partial reads by looping until N bytes are read
    (or we see EOF)

  - is resilient to stray signals giving us EINTR while
    trying to read (even though we don't send them, things
    like SIGWINCH could cause apparently-random failures)

Some possible solutions are:

  - "head -c" is not portable, and implementations may
    buffer (though GNU head does not)

  - "read -N" is a bash-ism, and thus not portable

  - "dd bs=$n count=1" does not handle partial reads. GNU dd
    has iflags=fullblock, but that is not portable

  - "dd bs=1 count=$n" fixes the partial read problem (all
    reads are 1-byte, so there can be no partial response).
    It does make a lot of write() calls, but for our tests
    that's unlikely to matter.  It's fairly portable. We
    already use it in our tests, and it's unlikely that
    implementations would screw up any of our criteria. The
    most unknown one would be signal handling.

  - perl can do a sysread() loop pretty easily. On my Linux
    system, at least, it seems to restart the read() call
    automatically. If that turns out not to be portable,
    though, it would be easy for us to handle it.

That makes the perl solution the least bad (because we
conveniently omitted "length of code" as a criterion).
It's also what t9300 is currently using, so we can just pull
the implementation from there.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-01 10:17:39 -07:00
3324dd8f26 commit -S: avoid invalid pointer with empty message
While it is not recommended, fsck.c says:

	Not having a body is not a crime [...]

... which means that we cannot assume that the commit buffer
contains an empty line to separate header from body.  A commit
object with only a header without any body, not even without
a blank line after the header, is valid.

So let's tread carefully here.  strstr("\n\n") may find nothing
and return NULL.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-29 15:07:02 -07:00
054a5aee6f reset --hard: skip blank lines when reporting the commit subject
When there are blank lines at the beginning of a commit message, the
pretty printing machinery already skips them when showing a commit
subject (or the complete commit message). We shall henceforth do the
same when reporting the commit subject after the user called

	git reset --hard <commit>

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-29 15:03:36 -07:00
88ef402f9c sequencer: use skip_blank_lines() to find the commit subject
Just like we already taught the find_commit_subject() function (to make
it consistent with the code in pretty.c), we now simply skip leading
blank lines of the commit message.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-29 15:03:06 -07:00
84e213a30a commit -C: skip blank lines at the beginning of the message
Consistent with the pretty-printing machinery, we skip leading blank
lines (if any) of existing commit messages.

While Git itself only produces commit objects with a single empty line
between commit header and commit message, it is legal to have more than
one blank line (i.e. lines containing only white space, or no
characters) at the beginning of the commit message, and the
pretty-printing code already handles that.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-29 14:56:37 -07:00
fa90ab4a45 t3404: fix a grammo (commands are ran -> commands are run)
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-29 12:43:44 -07:00
33ba9c648b rebase -i: restore autostash on abort
When we abort an interactive rebase we do so by calling
`die_abort`, which cleans up after us by removing the rebase
state directory. If the user has requested to use the autostash
feature, though, the state directory may also contain a reference
to the autostash, which will now be deleted.

Fix the issue by trying to re-apply the autostash in `die_abort`.
This will also handle the case where the autostash does not apply
cleanly anymore by recording it in a user-visible stash.

Reported-by: Daniel Hahler <git@thequod.de>
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-29 09:51:00 -07:00
09bdff29e1 diff: convert prep_temp_blob() to struct object_id
All of the callers of this function use struct object_id, so convert it
to use struct object_id in its arguments and internally.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 11:39:02 -07:00
4e8161a82e merge-recursive: convert merge_recursive_generic() to object_id
Convert this function and the git merge-recursive subcommand to use
struct object_id.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 11:39:02 -07:00
b4da9d62f9 merge-recursive: convert leaf functions to use struct object_id
Convert all but two of the static functions in this file to use struct
object_id.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 11:39:02 -07:00
9b56149996 merge-recursive: convert struct merge_file_info to object_id
Convert struct merge_file_info to use struct object_id.  The following
Coccinelle semantic patch was used to implement this, followed by the
transformations in object_id.cocci:

@@
struct merge_file_info o;
@@
- o.sha
+ o.oid.hash

@@
struct merge_file_info *p;
@@
- p->sha
+ p->oid.hash

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 11:39:02 -07:00
fd429e986d merge-recursive: convert struct stage_data to use object_id
Convert the anonymous struct within struct stage_data to use struct
object_id.  The following Coccinelle semantic patch was used to
implement this, followed by the transformations in object_id.cocci:

@@
struct stage_data o;
expression E1;
@@
- o.stages[E1].sha
+ o.stages[E1].oid.hash

@@
struct stage_data *p;
expression E1;
@@
- p->stages[E1].sha
+ p->stages[E1].oid.hash

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 11:39:02 -07:00
41c9560ee5 diff: rename struct diff_filespec's sha1_valid member
Now that this struct's sha1 member is called "oid", update the comment
and the sha1_valid member to be called "oid_valid" instead.  The
following Coccinelle semantic patch was used to implement this, followed
by the transformations in object_id.cocci:

@@
struct diff_filespec o;
@@
- o.sha1_valid
+ o.oid_valid

@@
struct diff_filespec *p;
@@
- p->sha1_valid
+ p->oid_valid

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 11:39:02 -07:00
a0d12c4433 diff: convert struct diff_filespec to struct object_id
Convert struct diff_filespec's sha1 member to use a struct object_id
called "oid" instead.  The following Coccinelle semantic patch was used
to implement this, followed by the transformations in object_id.cocci:

@@
struct diff_filespec o;
@@
- o.sha1
+ o.oid.hash

@@
struct diff_filespec *p;
@@
- p->sha1
+ p->oid.hash

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 11:39:02 -07:00
c368dde924 coccinelle: apply object_id Coccinelle transformations
Apply the set of semantic patches from contrib/coccinelle to convert
some leftover places using struct object_id's hash member to instead
use the wrapper functions that take struct object_id natively.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 11:39:02 -07:00
f449198e58 coccinelle: convert hashcpy() with null_sha1 to hashclr()
hashcpy with null_sha1 as the source is equivalent to hashclr.  In
addition to being simpler, using hashclr may give the compiler a chance
to optimize better.  Convert instances of hashcpy with the source
argument of null_sha1 to hashclr.

This transformation was implemented using the following semantic patch:

@@
expression E1;
@@
-hashcpy(E1, null_sha1);
+hashclr(E1);

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 11:39:02 -07:00
db1d80b8fa contrib/coccinelle: add basic Coccinelle transforms
Coccinelle (http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/) is a program which performs
mechanical transformations on C programs using semantic patches.  These
semantic patches can be used to implement automatic refactoring and
maintenance tasks.

Add a set of basic semantic patches to convert common patterns related
to the struct object_id transformation, as well as a README.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 11:39:02 -07:00
55c529a700 hex: add oid_to_hex_r()
This function works just like sha1_to_hex_r, except that it takes a
pointer to struct object_id instead of a pointer to unsigned char.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 11:39:02 -07:00
afc676f2c9 diff: do not color output when --color=auto and --output=<file> is given
"git diff --output=<file> --color=auto" used to show the ANSI color
sequence in the resulting file when the standard output is connected
to a terminal, because --color=auto check always checks the standard
output, not the actual file that receives the output.

We could correct this by using freopen(3) to redirect the standard
output to the specified file, which is in like with how format-patch
used to match the world order, but following the same reasoning as
the earlier "format-patch: explicitly switch off color when writing
to files", let's be more strict by bypassing the "auto" check when
the --output=<file> option is in use.

Strictly speaking, this is a backwards-incompatible change, but
it is highly unlikely that any user would want to see ANSI color
sequences in a file.

The reason this was not caught earlier is most likely that either
--output=<file> is not used, or only when stdout is redirected
anyway.

Users can still give --color=always if they want a colored diff in
the resulting file.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 11:26:47 -07:00
924b7eb1c9 ./configure.ac: detect SSL in libcurl using curl-config
The API of libcurl does not mention Curl_ssl_init() and when curl is
built with -flto, the Curl_ssl_init symbol is not exported.

https://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/using/ suggests calling

  curl-config --feature | grep SSL

to see, if the installed curl has SSL support.  Another approach
would be calling curl_version_info and checking the returned struct.

This patch removes the check for the Curl_ssl_init exported symbol
from libcurl and uses curl-config to detect SSL support in libcurl.

Signed-off-by: Дилян Палаузов <git-dpa@aegee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 09:25:06 -07:00
5f35900849 contrib/subtree: Add a test for subtree rebase that loses commits
This test merges an external tree in as a subtree, makes some commits
on top of it and splits it back out.  In the process the added commits
are lost or the rebase aborts with an internal error.  The tests are
marked to expect failure so that we don't forget to fix it.

Signed-off-by: David A. Greene <greened@obbligato.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 09:21:28 -07:00
3d0a83382f color.h: remove obsolete comment about limitations on Windows
Originally, ANSI color sequences were supported on Windows only by
overriding the printf() and fprintf() functions, as mentioned in e7821d7
(Add a notice that only certain functions can print color escape codes,
2009-11-27).

As of eac14f8 (Win32: Thread-safe windows console output, 2012-01-14),
however, this is no longer the case, as the ANSI color sequence support
code needed to be replaced with a thread-safe version, one side effect
being that stdout and stderr handled no matter which function is used to
write to it.

So let's just remove the comment that is now obsolete.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 09:18:50 -07:00
661c3e9bc0 doc: typeset HEAD and variants as literal
This is an application of the newly added CodingGuidelines to HEAD and
variants like FETCH_HEAD. It was obtained with:

  perl -pi -e "s/'([A-Z_]*HEAD)'/\`\$1\`/g" *.txt

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 08:36:45 -07:00
57103dbf70 CodingGuidelines: formatting HEAD in documentation
The current practice is:

git/Documentation$ git grep "'HEAD'" | wc -l
24
git/Documentation$ git grep "\`HEAD\`" | wc -l
66

Let's adopt the majority as a guideline.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 08:36:45 -07:00
bb72e10a41 doc: typeset long options with argument as literal
We previously reformatted '--option' to `--option`. This patch reformats
'--option <arg>' to `--option <arg>`. Obtained with:

  perl -pi -e "s/'(--[a-z][a-z=<>-]* <[^>]*>)'/\`\$1\`/g" *.txt

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 08:36:45 -07:00
04b125de7e doc: typeset '--' as literal
This was obtained with:

  perl -pi -e "s/'--'/\`--\`/g" *.txt

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 08:36:45 -07:00
bcf9626a71 doc: typeset long command-line options as literal
Similarly to the previous commit, use backquotes instead of
forward-quotes, for long options.

This was obtained with:

  perl -pi -e "s/'(--[a-z][a-z=<>-]*)'/\`\$1\`/g" *.txt

and manual tweak to remove false positive in ascii-art (o'--o'--o' to
describe rewritten history).

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 08:36:45 -07:00
23f8239bbe doc: typeset short command-line options as literal
It was common in our documentation to surround short option names with
forward quotes, which renders as italic in HTML. Instead, use backquotes
which renders as monospace. This is one more step toward conformance to
Documentation/CodingGuidelines.

This was obtained with:

  perl -pi -e "s/'(-[a-z])'/\`\$1\`/g" *.txt

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 08:20:52 -07:00
46e22b70df Documentation/git-mv.txt: fix whitespace indentation
Replace spaces with tabs to avoid a warning when further patches change
these lines.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-28 08:20:52 -07:00
2cb040baa6 fetch: change flag code for displaying tag update and deleted ref
This makes the fetch flag code consistent with push, where '-' means
deleted ref.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-27 10:58:02 -07:00
d0b39a03cd fetch: refactor ref update status formatting code
This makes it easier to change the formatting later. And it makes sure
translators cannot mess up format specifiers and break Git.

There are a couple call sites where the length of the second column is
TRANSPORT_SUMMARY_WIDTH instead of calculated by TRANSPORT_SUMMARY(),
which is enforced now. The result should be the same because these call
sites do not contain characters outside ASCII range.

The two strbuf_addf() calls instead of one is mostly to reduce
diff-noise in a future patch where "ref -> ref" is reformatted
differently.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-27 10:58:02 -07:00
a52397cce6 git-fetch.txt: document fetch output
This documents the ref update status of fetch. The structure of this
output is defined in [1]. The ouput content is refined a bit in [2]
[3] [4].

This patch is a copy from git-push.txt, modified a bit because the
flag '-' means different things in push (delete) and fetch (tag
update).

PS. For code archaeologists, the discussion mentioned in [1] is
probably [5].

[1] 165f390 (git-fetch: more terse fetch output - 2007-11-03)
[2] 6315472 (fetch: report local storage errors ... - 2008-06-26)
[3] f360d84 (builtin-fetch: add --prune option - 2009-11-10)
[4] 0997ada (fetch: describe new refs based on where... - 2012-04-16)
[5] http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/61657

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-27 10:58:02 -07:00
cf4c2cfe52 Second batch of topics for 2.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-27 10:07:08 -07:00
e1658495be Sync with maint
* maint:
  Start preparing for 2.9.1
2016-06-27 10:00:15 -07:00
2ff7dff01e Start preparing for 2.9.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-27 09:59:51 -07:00
deee904aac Merge branch 'tb/complete-status'
The completion script (in contrib/) learned to complete "git
status" options.

* tb/complete-status:
  completion: add git status
  completion: add __git_get_option_value helper
  completion: factor out untracked file modes into a variable
2016-06-27 09:56:54 -07:00
db8128fee0 Merge branch 'mg/cherry-pick-multi-on-unborn'
"git cherry-pick A" worked on an unborn branch, but "git
cherry-pick A..B" didn't.

* mg/cherry-pick-multi-on-unborn:
  cherry-pick: allow to pick to unborn branches
2016-06-27 09:56:53 -07:00
8579c4ebee Merge branch 'lf/receive-pack-auto-gc-to-client'
Allow messages that are generated by auto gc during "git push" on
the receiving end to be explicitly passed back to the sending end
over sideband, so that they are shown with "remote: " prefix to
avoid confusing the users.

* lf/receive-pack-auto-gc-to-client:
  receive-pack: send auto-gc output over sideband 2
2016-06-27 09:56:52 -07:00
3ec9150a8c Merge branch 'em/newer-freebsd-shells-are-fine-with-returns'
Comments about misbehaving FreeBSD shells have been clarified with
the version number (9.x and before are broken, newer ones are OK).

* em/newer-freebsd-shells-are-fine-with-returns:
  rebase: update comment about FreeBSD /bin/sh
2016-06-27 09:56:52 -07:00
a010d61e88 Merge branch 'lv/status-say-working-tree-not-directory'
"git status" used to say "working directory" when it meant "working
tree".

* lv/status-say-working-tree-not-directory:
  Use "working tree" instead of "working directory" for git status
2016-06-27 09:56:51 -07:00
880c267a24 Merge branch 'nb/gnome-keyring-build'
Build improvements for gnome-keyring (in contrib/)

* nb/gnome-keyring-build:
  gnome-keyring: Don't hard-code pkg-config executable
2016-06-27 09:56:51 -07:00
2a5618ec78 Merge branch 'jc/deref-tag'
Code clean-up.

* jc/deref-tag:
  blame, line-log: do not loop around deref_tag()
2016-06-27 09:56:50 -07:00
c49fd57bf4 Merge branch 'et/add-chmod-x'
"git update-index --add --chmod=+x file" may be usable as an escape
hatch, but not a friendly thing to force for people who do need to
use it regularly.  "git add --chmod=+x file" can be used instead.

* et/add-chmod-x:
  add: add --chmod=+x / --chmod=-x options
2016-06-27 09:56:49 -07:00
269085e16e Merge branch 'jk/avoid-unbounded-alloca'
* jk/avoid-unbounded-alloca:
  tree-diff: avoid alloca for large allocations
2016-06-27 09:56:48 -07:00
2380db5b28 Merge branch 'rj/compat-regex-size-max-fix'
A compilation fix.

* rj/compat-regex-size-max-fix:
  regex: fix a SIZE_MAX macro redefinition warning
2016-06-27 09:56:47 -07:00
be099661f4 Merge branch 'vs/prompt-avoid-unset-variable'
The git-prompt scriptlet (in contrib/) was not friendly with those
who uses "set -u", which has been fixed.

* vs/prompt-avoid-unset-variable:
  git-prompt.sh: Don't error on null ${ZSH,BASH}_VERSION, $short_sha
2016-06-27 09:56:47 -07:00
3873075a12 Merge branch 'sg/reflog-past-root'
"git reflog" stopped upon seeing an entry that denotes a branch
creation event (aka "unborn"), which made it appear as if the
reflog was truncated.

* sg/reflog-past-root:
  reflog: continue walking the reflog past root commits
2016-06-27 09:56:46 -07:00
ed319fca33 Merge branch 'pb/strbuf-read-file-doc'
* pb/strbuf-read-file-doc:
  strbuf: describe the return value of strbuf_read_file
2016-06-27 09:56:46 -07:00
3a76459922 Merge branch 'dn/gpg-doc'
The documentation tries to consistently spell "GPG"; when
referring to the specific program name, "gpg" is used.

* dn/gpg-doc:
  Documentation: GPG capitalization
2016-06-27 09:56:45 -07:00
4764053815 Merge branch 'jk/fetch-prune-doc'
* jk/fetch-prune-doc:
  fetch: document that pruning happens before fetching
2016-06-27 09:56:44 -07:00
0c068afd8c Merge branch 'ap/git-svn-propset-doc'
"git svn propset" subcommand that was added in 2.3 days is
documented now.

* ap/git-svn-propset-doc:
  git-svn: document the 'git svn propset' command
2016-06-27 09:56:43 -07:00
94c61d25da Merge branch 'tr/doc-tt'
The documentation set has been updated so that literal commands,
configuration variables and environment variables are consistently
typeset in fixed-width font and bold in manpages.

* tr/doc-tt:
  doc: change configuration variables format
  doc: more consistency in environment variables format
  doc: change environment variables format
  doc: clearer rule about formatting literals
2016-06-27 09:56:42 -07:00
af325b0f9a Merge branch 'pc/occurred'
* pc/occurred:
  config.c: fix misspelt "occurred" in an error message
  refs.h: fix misspelt "occurred" in a comment
2016-06-27 09:56:42 -07:00
0bbda4bac7 Merge branch 'cc/apply-introduce-state'
The "git apply" standalone program is being libified; this is the
first step to move many state variables into a structure that can
be explicitly (re)initialized to make the machinery callable more
than once.

The next step that moves some remaining state variables into the
structure and turns die()s into an error return that propagates up
to the caller is not queued yet but in flight.  It would be good to
review the above first and give the remainder of the series a solid
base to build on.

* cc/apply-introduce-state: (50 commits)
  builtin/apply: remove misleading comment on lock_file field
  builtin/apply: move 'newfd' global into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: add 'lock_file' pointer into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: move applying patches into apply_all_patches()
  builtin/apply: move 'state' check into check_apply_state()
  builtin/apply: move 'symlink_changes' global into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: move 'fn_table' global into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: move 'state_linenr' global into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: move 'max_change' and 'max_len' into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: move 'ws_ignore_action' into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: move 'ws_error_action' into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: move 'applied_after_fixing_ws' into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: move 'squelch_whitespace_errors' into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: remove whitespace_option arg from set_default_whitespace_mode()
  builtin/apply: move 'whitespace_option' into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: move 'whitespace_error' global into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: move 'root' global into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: move 'p_value_known' global into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: move 'p_value' global into 'struct apply_state'
  builtin/apply: move 'has_include' global into 'struct apply_state'
  ...
2016-06-27 09:56:42 -07:00
fda65fadb6 Merge branch 'rs/xdiff-hunk-with-func-line' into maint
"git show -W" (extend hunks to cover the entire function, delimited
by lines that match the "funcname" pattern) used to show the entire
file when a change added an entire function at the end of the file,
which has been fixed.

* rs/xdiff-hunk-with-func-line:
  xdiff: fix merging of appended hunk with -W
  grep: -W: don't extend context to trailing empty lines
  t7810: add test for grep -W and trailing empty context lines
  xdiff: don't trim common tail with -W
  xdiff: -W: don't include common trailing empty lines in context
  xdiff: ignore empty lines before added functions with -W
  xdiff: handle appended chunks better with -W
  xdiff: factor out match_func_rec()
  t4051: rewrite, add more tests
2016-06-27 09:56:24 -07:00
df5a925523 Merge branch 'jk/rev-list-count-with-bitmap' into maint
"git rev-list --count" whose walk-length is limited with "-n"
option did not work well with the counting optimized to look at the
bitmap index.

* jk/rev-list-count-with-bitmap:
  rev-list: disable bitmaps when "-n" is used with listing objects
  rev-list: "adjust" results of "--count --use-bitmap-index -n"
2016-06-27 09:56:24 -07:00
fbb4138cb2 Merge branch 'et/pretty-format-c-auto' into maint
The commands in `git log` family take %C(auto) in a custom format
string.  This unconditionally turned the color on, ignoring
--no-color or with --color=auto when the output is not connected to
a tty; this was corrected to make the format truly behave as
"auto".

* et/pretty-format-c-auto:
  format_commit_message: honor `color=auto` for `%C(auto)`
2016-06-27 09:56:23 -07:00
0a20325a01 Merge branch 'ew/daemon-socket-keepalive' into maint
When "git daemon" is run without --[init-]timeout specified, a
connection from a client that silently goes offline can hang around
for a long time, wasting resources.  The socket-level KEEPALIVE has
been enabled to allow the OS to notice such failed connections.

* ew/daemon-socket-keepalive:
  daemon: enable SO_KEEPALIVE for all sockets
2016-06-27 09:56:22 -07:00
ef1cf0167a xwrite: poll on non-blocking FDs
write(2) can hit the same EAGAIN/EWOULDBLOCK errors as read(2),
so busy-looping on a non-blocking FD is a waste of resources.

Currently, I do not know of a way for this happen:

* the NonBlocking directive in systemd does not apply to stdin,
  stdout, or stderr.

* xinetd provides no way to set the non-blocking flag at all

But theoretically, it's possible a careless C10K HTTP server
could use pipe2(..., O_NONBLOCK) to setup a pipe for
git-http-backend with only the intent to use non-blocking reads;
but accidentally leave non-blocking set on the write end passed
as stdout to git-upload-pack.

Followup-to: 1079c4be0b ("xread: poll on non blocking fds")

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-27 08:34:15 -07:00
c22f620205 xread: retry after poll on EAGAIN/EWOULDBLOCK
We should continue to loop after EAGAIN/EWOULDBLOCK as the
intent of xread is to try until there is available data,
EOF, or an unrecoverable error.

Fixes: 1079c4be0b ("xread: poll on non blocking fds")

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-27 08:33:21 -07:00
c2691e2add unpack-trees: fix English grammar in do-this-before-that messages
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-27 08:29:36 -07:00
5f4e3bf536 gc: fix off-by-one error with gc.autoPackLimit
This matches the documentation and allows gc.autoPackLimit=1
to maintain a single pack without attempting a repack on every
"git gc --auto" invocation.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-27 08:28:47 -07:00
5c1ebcca4d grep/icase: avoid kwsset on literal non-ascii strings
When we detect the pattern is just a literal string, we avoid heavy
regex engine and use fast substring search implemented in kwsset.c.
But kws uses git-ctype which is locale-independent so it does not know
how to fold case properly outside ascii range. Let regcomp or pcre
take care of this case instead. Slower, but accurate.

Noticed-by: Plamen Totev <plamen.totev@abv.bg>
Helped-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
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>
2016-06-27 07:31:35 -07:00
d8acfe1eaf test-regex: expose full regcomp() to the command line
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-27 07:31:35 -07:00
949782d860 test-regex: isolate the bug test code
This is in preparation to turn test-regex into some generic regex
testing command.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-27 07:31:35 -07:00
60452a30f5 grep: break down an "if" stmt in preparation for next changes
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-27 07:31:35 -07:00
82f6178af6 new-command.txt: correct the command description file
It has always been command-list.txt even at the time this
new-command.txt document is added.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-27 06:11:57 -07:00
c1496934cf t4211: ensure that log respects --output=<file>
The test script t4202-log.sh is already pretty long, and it is a good
idea to test --output with a more obscure option, anyway. So let's
test it in conjunction with line-log.

The most important part of this test, of course, is to ensure that the
file is not closed after writing the diff, but only at the very end
of the log output. That is the entire reason why the test tries to
generate a log that covers more than one commit.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-24 15:20:47 -07:00
7f7d712bcf shortlog: respect the --output=<file> setting
Thanks to the diff option parsing, we already know about this option.
We just have to make use of it.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-24 15:20:47 -07:00
36a4d905c3 format-patch: use stdout directly
Earlier, we freopen()ed stdout in order to write patches to files.
That forced us to duplicate stdout (naming it "realstdout") because we
*still* wanted to be able to report the file names.

As we do not abuse stdout that way anymore, we no longer need to
duplicate stdout, either.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-24 15:20:47 -07:00
95235f5ba1 format-patch: avoid freopen()
We just taught the relevant functions to respect the diffopt.file field,
to allow writing somewhere else than stdout. Let's make use of it.

Technically, we do not need to avoid that call in a builtin: we assume
that builtins (as opposed to library functions) are stand-alone programs
that may do with their (global) state. Yet, we want to be able to reuse
that code in properly lib-ified code, e.g. when converting scripts into
builtins.

Further, while we did not *have* to touch the cmd_show() and cmd_cherry()
code paths (because they do not want to write anywhere but stdout as of
yet), it just makes sense to be consistent, making it easier and safer to
move the code later.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-24 15:20:47 -07:00
11f4eb1984 format-patch: explicitly switch off color when writing to files
The --color=auto handling is done by seeing if file descriptor 1
(the standard output) is connected to a terminal.  format-patch
used freopen() to reuse the standard output stream even when sending
its output to an on-disk file, and this check is appropriate.

In the next step, however, we will stop reusing "FILE *stdout", and
instead start using arbitrary file descriptor obtained by doing an
fopen(3) ourselves.  The check --color=auto does will become useless,
as we no longer are writing to the standard output stream.

But then, we do not need to guess to begin with. As argued in the commit
message of 7787570c (format-patch: ignore ui.color, 2011-09-13), we do not
allow the ui.color setting to affect format-patch's output. The only time,
therefore, that we allow color sequences to be written to the output files
is when the user specified the --color=always command-line option explicitly.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-24 15:15:55 -07:00
0a7b357737 shortlog: support outputting to streams other than stdout
This will be needed to avoid freopen() in `git format-patch`.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-24 14:25:49 -07:00
c61008fdfb graph: respect the diffopt.file setting
When the caller overrides diffopt.file (which defaults to stdout),
the diff machinery already redirects its output, and the graph display
should also write to that file.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-24 14:07:52 -07:00
179795e511 line-log: respect diffopt's configured output file stream
The diff machinery can optionally output to a file stream other than
stdout, by overriding diffopt.file. In such a case, the rest of the
log tree machinery should also write to that stream.

Currently, there is no user of the line level log that wants to
redirect output to a file. Therefore, one might argue that it is
superfluous to support that now. However, it is better to be
consistent now, rather than to face hard-to-debug problems later.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-24 13:59:58 -07:00
4d7b0efc5e log-tree: respect diffopt's configured output file stream
The diff options already know how to print the output anywhere else
than stdout. The same is needed for log output in general, e.g.
when writing patches to files in `git format-patch`. Let's allow
users to use log_tree_commit() *without* changing global state via
freopen().

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-24 13:56:50 -07:00
6ea57703f6 log: prepare log/log-tree to reuse the diffopt.close_file attribute
We are about to teach the log-tree machinery to reuse the diffopt.file
field to output to a file stream other than stdout, in line with the
diff machinery already writing to diffopt.file.

However, we might want to write something after the diff in
log_tree_commit() (e.g. with the --show-linear-break option), therefore
we must not let the diff machinery close the file (as per
diffopt.close_file.

This means that log_tree_commit() itself must override the
diffopt.close_file flag and close the file, and if log_tree_commit() is
called in a loop, the caller is responsible to do the same.

Note: format-patch has an `--output-directory` option. Due to the fact
that format-patch's options are parsed first, and that the parse-options
machinery accepts uniquely abbreviated options, the diff options
`--output` (and `-o`) are shadowed. Therefore close_file is not set to 1
so that cmd_format_patch() does *not* need to handle the close_file flag
differently, even if it calls log_tree_commit() in a loop.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-24 13:50:45 -07:00
fce04c3ca6 log: add log.showSignature configuration variable
Users may want to always use "--show-signature" while using git-log and
related commands.

When log.showSignature is set to true, git-log and related commands will
behave as if "--show-signature" was given to them.

Note that this config variable is meant to affect git-log, git-show,
git-whatchanged and git-reflog. Other commands like git-format-patch,
git-rev-list are not to be affected by this config variable.

Signed-off-by: Mehul Jain <mehul.jain2029@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-24 13:01:13 -07:00
aa3799996c log: add "--no-show-signature" command line option
If an user creates an alias with "--show-signature" early in command
line, e.g.
	[alias] logss = log --show-signature

then there is no way to countermand it through command line.

Teach git-log and related commands about "--no-show-signature" command
line option. This will make "git logss --no-show-signature" run
without showing GPG signature.

Signed-off-by: Mehul Jain <mehul.jain2029@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-24 13:01:13 -07:00
aefc81ad38 t4202: refactor test
Subsequent patches will want to reuse the 'signed' branch that the
'log --graph --show-signature' test creates and uses.

Split the set-up part into a test of its own, and make the existing
test into a separate one that only inspects the history on the 'signed'
branch. This way, it becomes clearer that tests added by subsequent
patches reuse the 'signed' branch in the same way.

Signed-off-by: Mehul Jain <mehul.jain2029@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-24 13:00:39 -07:00
9dc3515cf0 color: support strike-through attribute
This is the only remaining attribute that is commonly
supported (at least by xterm) that we don't support. Let's
add it for completeness.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-23 11:32:51 -07:00
54590a0eda color: support "italic" attribute
We already support bold, underline, and similar attributes.
Let's add italic to the mix.  According to the Wikipedia
page on ANSI colors, this attribute is "not widely
supported", but it does seem to work on my xterm.

We don't have to bump the maximum color size because we were
already over-allocating it (but we do adjust the comment
appropriately).

Requested-by: Simon Courtois <scourtois@cubyx.fr>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-23 11:32:51 -07:00
5621068f3d color: allow "no-" for negating attributes
Using "no-bold" rather than "nobold" is easier to read and
more natural to type (to me, anyway, even though I was the
person who introduced "nobold" in the first place). It's
easy to allow both.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-23 11:32:51 -07:00
df8e472cc1 color: refactor parse_attr
The list of attributes we recognize is a bit unwieldy, as we
actually have two arrays that must be kept in sync. Instead,
let's have a single array-of-struct to represent our
mapping. That means we can never have an accident that
causes us to read off the end of an array, and it makes
diffs for adding new attributes much easier to read.

This also makes it easy to handle the "no" cases without
having to repeat each attribute (this shortens the list,
making it easier to read, but also also cuts the size of our
linear search in half). Technically this makes it impossible
for us to add an attribute that starts with "no" (we could
confuse "nobody" for the negation of "body"), but since this
is a constrained set of attributes, that's OK.

Since we can also store the length of each name in the
struct, that makes it easy for us to avoid reading past the
"len" parameter given to us (though in practice it was not a
bug, since all of our current callers are interested in a
subset of a NUL-terminated buffer, not a true undelimited
range of memory).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-23 11:32:51 -07:00
ae989a61da add skip_prefix_mem helper
The skip_prefix function has been very useful for
simplifying pointer arithmetic and avoiding repeated magic
numbers, but we have no equivalent for length-limited
buffers. So we're stuck with:

  if (3 <= len && skip_prefix(buf, "foo", &buf))
	  len -= 3;

That's not that complicated, but it needs to use magic
numbers for the length of the prefix (or else write out
strlen("foo"), repeating the string). By using a helper, we
can get the string length behind the scenes (and often at
compile time for string literals).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-23 11:32:51 -07:00
adb3356664 doc: refactor description of color format
This is a general cleanup of the description of colors in
git-config, mostly to address inaccuracies and confusion
that had grown over time:

  - you can have many attributes, not just one

  - the discussion flip-flopped between colors and
    attributes; now we discuss everything about colors, then
    everything about attributes

  - many concepts were lumped into the first paragraph,
    making it hard to read, and especially to find the
    actual lists of colors and attributes. I stopped short
    of breaking those out into their own lists, as it seemed
    like an excessive use of vertical screen real estate.

  - we introduced negated attributes, but then the next
    paragraph basically explains how each item starts off
    with no attributes. So why would one need negated
    attributes? We now explain.

  - minor typo, language, and typography fixes

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-23 11:32:51 -07:00
0111681ecf color: fix max-size comment
We use fixed-size buffers for colors, because we know our
parsing cannot grow beyond a particular bound. However, our
comment description has two issues:

  1. It has the description in two forms: a short one, and
     one with more explanation. Over time the latter has
     been updated, but the former has not. Let's just drop
     the short one (after making sure everything it says
     is in the long one).

  2. As of ff40d18 (parse_color: recognize "no$foo" to clear
     the $foo attribute, 2014-11-20), the per-attribute size
     bumped to "3" (because "nobold" is actually "21;"). But
     that's not quite enough, as somebody may use both
     "bold" and "nobold", requiring 5 characters.

     This wasn't a problem for the final count, because we
     over-estimated in other ways, but let's clarify how we
     got to the final number.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-23 11:32:51 -07:00
6d523a3ab7 git-svn: skip mergeinfo handling with --no-follow-parent
For repositories without parent following enabled, finding
git parents through svn:mergeinfo or svk::parents can be
expensive and pointless.

Reported-by: Александр Овчинников <proff@proff.email>
	http://mid.gmane.org/4094761466408188@web24o.yandex.ru

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
2016-06-22 22:48:54 +00:00
412b9a16a0 t2300: "git --exec-path" is not usable in $PATH on Windows as-is
The "git" command prepends the exec-path to the PATH environment
variable for processes it spawns.  That is how ". git-sh-setup" in
our scripted Porcelains can find the dot-sourced file in the
exec-path location that is not usually on user's PATH.

When t2300 runs, because it is not spawned by the "git" command, the
scriptlet being tested did not run with a realistic setting of PATH
environment.  It lacked the exec-path on the PATH, and failed to
find the dot-sourced file.  A recent update to t2300 attempted to
fix this, with "PATH=$(git --exec-path):$PATH", which has been the
recommended way around v1.6.0 days (a script whose original was
written before that release that survives to this day is likely to
have such a line).

However, the "git --exec-path" command outputs C:\path\to\exec\dir
(not /c/path/to/exec/dir) on Windows; the recent update failed to
consider the problem that comes from it.

Even though Git itself, when doing the equivalent internally, does
so in a platform native way (i.e. on Windows, C:\path\to\exec\dir is
prepended to the existing value of %PATH% using ';' as a component
separator), the result is further massaged by bash and gets turned
into $PATH that uses /c/path/to/exec/dir with ':' separating the
components, which is the form understood by bash, so scripted
Porcelains find commands from PATH correctly.

An end user script written in shell, however, cannot prepend
"C:\path\to\exec\dir:" to the existing value of $PATH and expect
bash to magically turn it into the form it understands.  In other
words, "PATH=$(git --exec-path):$PATH" does not work as an emulation
of what "Git" internally does to the PATH on Windows.

To correctly emulate how exec-path is prepended to the PATH
environment internally on Windows, we'd need to convert
C:\git-sdk-64\usr\src\git to at least /c\git-sdk-64\usr\src\git
ourselves before prepending it to PATH.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-22 14:47:36 -07:00
85a727895d p4211: explicitly disable renames in no-rename test
p4211 tests line-log performance both with and without "-M".
In v2.9.0, the case without "-M" appears to have regressed
badly, but that is only because we flipped on renames by
default.

Let's have the test explicitly disable renames to get
consistent timings (and to match the presumed intent of the
test, which is to see the effects with and without renames).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-22 13:47:55 -07:00
1a0962dee5 t/perf: fix regression in testing older versions of git
Commit 7501b59 (perf: make the tests work in worktrees,
2016-05-13) introduced the use of "git rev-parse --git-path"
in the perf-lib setup code. Because the to-be-tested version
of git is at the front of the $PATH when this code runs,
this means we cannot use modern versions of t/perf to test
versions of git older than v2.5.0 (when that option was
introduced).

This is a symptom of a more general problem. The t/perf
suite is essentially independent of git versions, and
ideally we would be able to run the most modern and complete
set of tests across many historical versions (to see how
they compare). But any setup code they run is therefore
required to use the lowest common denominator we expect to
test.

So let's introduce a new variable, $MODERN_GIT, that we can
use both in perf-lib and in the test setup to get a reliable
set of git features (we might change git and break some
tests, of course, but $MODERN_GIT is tied to the same
version of git as the t/perf scripts, so they can be fixed
or adjusted together).

This commit fixes the "--git-path" case, but does not
mass-convert existing setup code to use $MODERN_GIT. Most
setup code is fairly vanilla and will work with effectively
all versions. But now the tool is there to fix any other
issues we find going forward.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-22 13:47:16 -07:00
4e1b06da25 commit.c: make find_commit_subject() more robust
Just like the pretty printing machinery, we should simply ignore
blank lines at the beginning of the commit messages.

This discrepancy was noticed when an early version of the
rebase--helper produced commit objects with more than one empty line
between the header and the commit message.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-22 13:24:17 -07:00
7735612244 pretty: make the skip_blank_lines() function public
This function will be used also in the find_commit_subject()
function.

While at it, rename the function to reflect that it skips not only
empty lines, but any lines consisting of only whitespace, too.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-22 13:23:56 -07:00
f79358279c doc: git-htmldocs.googlecode.com is no more
http://git-htmldocs.googlecode.com/git/git.html says

 There was no service found for the uri requested.

Link to the rendered documentation on Jekyll instead.

Reported-by: Andrea Stacchiotti <andreastacchiotti@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-22 12:37:33 -07:00
09667d013c git-p4: correct hasBranchPrefix verbose output
The logic here was inverted, you got a message saying the file is
ignored for each file that is not ignored.

Signed-off-by: Andrew Oakley <aoakley@roku.com>
Acked-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-22 09:45:15 -07:00
fe0537aa6e t7810: fix duplicated test title
Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <charles@hashpling.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-21 15:33:34 -07:00
5819c2eeff t5614: don't use subshells
Using a subshell for just one git command is both a waste in compute
overhead (create a new process) as well as in line count.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-21 12:08:38 -07:00
d2addc3b96 t7800: readlink may not be available
The readlink(1) command is not available on all platforms (notably
not on AIX and HP-UX) and can be replaced in this test with the
"workaround"

ls -ld <name> | sed -e 's/.* -> //'

This is no universal readlink replacement but works in the
controlled test environment well enough.

Signed-off-by: Armin Kunaschik <megabreit@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-21 11:41:31 -07:00
e3efa94be9 perf: accommodate for MacOSX
As this developer has no access to MacOSX developer setups anymore,
Travis becomes the best bet to run performance tests on that OS.

However, on MacOSX /usr/bin/time is that good old BSD executable that
no Linux user cares about, as demonstrated by the perf-lib.sh's use
of GNU-ish extensions. And by the hard-coded path.

Let's just work around this issue by using gtime on MacOSX, the
Homebrew-provided GNU implementation onto which pretty much every
MacOSX power user falls back anyway.

To help other developers use Travis to run performance tests on
MacOSX, the .travis.yml file now sports a commented-out line that
installs GNU time via Homebrew.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-21 11:18:17 -07:00
bab748371a local_tzoffset: detect errors from tm_to_time_t
When we want to know the local timezone offset at a given
timestamp, we compute it by asking for localtime() at the
given time, and comparing the offset to GMT at that time.
However, there's some juggling between time_t and "struct
tm" which happens, which involves calling our own
tm_to_time_t().

If that function returns an error (e.g., because it only
handles dates up to the year 2099), it returns "-1", which
we treat as a time_t, and is clearly bogus, leading to
bizarre timestamps (that seem to always adjust the time back
to (time_t)(uint32_t)-1, in the year 2106).

It's not a good idea for local_tzoffset() to simply die
here; it would make it hard to run "git log" on a repository
with funny timestamps. Instead, let's just treat such cases
as "zero offset".

Reported-by: Norbert Kiesel <nkiesel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 15:08:07 -07:00
36d6792157 t0006: test various date formats
We ended up testing some of these date formats throughout
the rest of the suite (e.g., via for-each-ref's
"$(authordate:...)" format), but we never did so
systematically. t0006 is the right place for unit-testing of
our date-handling code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 15:08:07 -07:00
fdba2cdec4 t0006: rename test-date's "show" to "relative"
The "show" tests are really only checking relative formats;
we should make that more clear.

This also frees up the "show" name to later check other
formats. We could later fold "relative" into a more generic
"show" command, but it's not worth it.  Relative times are a
special case already because we have to munge the concept of
"now" in our tests.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 15:08:07 -07:00
0767172b90 mingw: let the build succeed with DEVELOPER=1
The recently introduced developer flags identified a couple of
old-style function declarations in the Windows-specific code where
the parameter list was left empty instead of specifying "void"
explicitly. Let's just fix them.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 12:12:12 -07:00
841caad903 lock_ref_for_update(): avoid a symref resolution
If we're overwriting a symref with a SHA-1, we need to resolve the value
of the symref (1) to check against update->old_sha1 and (2) to write to
its reflog. However, we've already read the symref itself and know its
referent. So there is no need to read the symref's value through the
symref; we can read the referent directly.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:49:00 -07:00
e3f510393c lock_ref_for_update(): make error handling more uniform
To aid the effort, extract a new function, check_old_oid(), and use it
in the two places where the read value of the reference has to be
checked against update->old_sha1.

Update tests to reflect the improvements.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:49:00 -07:00
c5119dcf49 t1404: add more tests of update-ref error handling
Some of the error messages will be improved in subsequent commits.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:49:00 -07:00
017f7221ab t1404: document function test_update_rejected
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:49:00 -07:00
0e4b63b5a8 t1404: remove "prefix" argument to test_update_rejected
The tests already set a variable called prefix and passed its value as
the first argument to this function. The old argument handling was
overwriting the global variable with its same value rather than creating
a local variable.

So change test_update_rejected to refer to the global variable rather
than taking the prefix as an argument.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:49:00 -07:00
bf0c6603ff t1404: rename file to t1404-update-ref-errors.sh
I want to broaden the scope of this test file, so rename it accordingly.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:49:00 -07:00
2880d16f09 for_each_reflog(): reimplement using iterators
Allow references with reflogs to be iterated over using a ref_iterator.
The latter is implemented as a files_reflog_iterator, which in turn uses
dir_iterator to read the "logs" directory.

Note that reflog iteration doesn't correctly handle per-worktree
reflogs (either before or after this patch).

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:38:21 -07:00
0fe5043dad dir_iterator: new API for iterating over a directory tree
The iterator interface is modeled on that for references, though no
vtable is necessary because there is (so far?) only one type of
dir_iterator.

There are obviously a lot of features that could easily be added to this
class:

* Skip/include directory paths in the iteration
* Shallow/deep iteration
* Letting the caller decide which subdirectories to recurse into (e.g.,
  via a dir_iterator_advance_into() function)
* Option to iterate in sorted order
* Option to iterate over directory paths before vs. after their contents

But these are not needed for the current patch series, so I refrain.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:38:21 -07:00
d24b21e9fc for_each_reflog(): don't abort for bad references
If there is a file under "$GIT_DIR/logs" with no corresponding
reference, the old code was emitting an error message, aborting the
reflog iteration, and returning -1. But

* None of the callers was checking the exit value

* The callers all want to find all legitimate reflogs (sometimes for the
  purpose of determining object reachability!) and wouldn't benefit from
  a truncated iteration anyway.

So instead, emit an error message and skip the "broken" reflog, but
continue with the iteration.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:38:20 -07:00
4c4de89573 do_for_each_ref(): reimplement using reference iteration
Use the reference iterator interface to implement do_for_each_ref().
Delete a bunch of code supporting the old for_each_ref() implementation.
And now that do_for_each_ref() is generic code (it is no longer tied to
the files backend), move it to refs.c.

The implementation is via a new function, do_for_each_ref_iterator(),
which takes a reference iterator as argument and calls a callback
function for each of the references in the iterator.

This change requires the current_ref performance hack for peel_ref() to
be implemented via ref_iterator_peel() rather than peel_entry() because
we don't have a ref_entry handy (it is hidden under three layers:
file_ref_iterator, merge_ref_iterator, and cache_ref_iterator). So:

* do_for_each_ref_iterator() records the active iterator in
  current_ref_iter while it is running.

* peel_ref() checks whether current_ref_iter is pointing at the
  requested reference. If so, it asks the iterator to peel the
  reference (which it can do efficiently via its "peel" virtual
  function). For extra safety, we do the optimization only if the
  refname *addresses* are the same, not only if the refname *strings*
  are the same, to forestall possible mixups between refnames that come
  from different ref_iterators.

Please note that this optimization of peel_ref() is only available when
iterating via do_for_each_ref_iterator() (including all of the
for_each_ref() functions, which call it indirectly). It would be
complicated to implement a similar optimization when iterating directly
using a reference iterator, because multiple reference iterators can be
in use at the same time, with interleaved calls to
ref_iterator_advance(). (In fact we do exactly that in
merge_ref_iterator.)

But that is not necessary. peel_ref() is only called while iterating
over references. Callers who iterate using the for_each_ref() functions
benefit from the optimization described above. Callers who iterate using
reference iterators directly have access to the ref_iterator, so they
can call ref_iterator_peel() themselves to get an analogous optimization
in a more straightforward manner.

If we rewrite all callers to use the reference iteration API, then we
can remove the current_ref_iter hack permanently.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:38:20 -07:00
3bc581b940 refs: introduce an iterator interface
Currently, the API for iterating over references is via a family of
for_each_ref()-type functions that invoke a callback function for each
selected reference. All of these eventually call do_for_each_ref(),
which knows how to do one thing: iterate in parallel through two
ref_caches, one for loose and one for packed refs, giving loose
references precedence over packed refs. This is rather complicated code,
and is quite specialized to the files backend. It also requires callers
to encapsulate their work into a callback function, which often means
that they have to define and use a "cb_data" struct to manage their
context.

The current design is already bursting at the seams, and will become
even more awkward in the upcoming world of multiple reference storage
backends:

* Per-worktree vs. shared references are currently handled via a kludge
  in git_path() rather than iterating over each part of the reference
  namespace separately and merging the results. This kludge will cease
  to work when we have multiple reference storage backends.

* The current scheme is inflexible. What if we sometimes want to bypass
  the ref_cache, or use it only for packed or only for loose refs? What
  if we want to store symbolic refs in one type of storage backend and
  non-symbolic ones in another?

In the future, each reference backend will need to define its own way of
iterating over references. The crux of the problem with the current
design is that it is impossible to compose for_each_ref()-style
iterations, because the flow of control is owned by the for_each_ref()
function. There is nothing that a caller can do but iterate through all
references in a single burst, so there is no way for it to interleave
references from multiple backends and present the result to the rest of
the world as a single compound backend.

This commit introduces a new iteration primitive for references: a
ref_iterator. A ref_iterator is a polymorphic object that a reference
storage backend can be asked to instantiate. There are three functions
that can be applied to a ref_iterator:

* ref_iterator_advance(): move to the next reference in the iteration
* ref_iterator_abort(): end the iteration before it is exhausted
* ref_iterator_peel(): peel the reference currently being looked at

Iterating using a ref_iterator leaves the flow of control in the hands
of the caller, which means that ref_iterators from multiple
sources (e.g., loose and packed refs) can be composed and presented to
the world as a single compound ref_iterator.

It also means that the backend code for implementing reference iteration
will sometimes be more complicated. For example, the
cache_ref_iterator (which iterates over a ref_cache) can't use the C
stack to recurse; instead, it must manage its own stack internally as
explicit data structures. There is also a lot of boilerplate connected
with object-oriented programming in C.

Eventually, end-user callers will be able to be written in a more
natural way—managing their own flow of control rather than having to
work via callbacks. Since there will only be a few reference backends
but there are many consumers of this API, this is a good tradeoff.

More importantly, we gain composability, and especially the possibility
of writing interchangeable parts that can work with any ref_iterator.

For example, merge_ref_iterator implements a generic way of merging the
contents of any two ref_iterators. It is used to merge loose + packed
refs as part of the implementation of the files_ref_iterator. But it
will also be possible to use it to merge other pairs of reference
sources (e.g., per-worktree vs. shared refs).

Another example is prefix_ref_iterator, which can be used to trim a
prefix off the front of reference names before presenting them to the
caller (e.g., "refs/heads/master" -> "master").

In this patch, we introduce the iterator abstraction and many utilities,
and implement a reference iterator for the files ref storage backend.
(I've written several other obvious utilities, for example a generic way
to filter references being iterated over. These will probably be useful
in the future. But they are not needed for this patch series, so I am
not including them at this time.)

In a moment we will rewrite do_for_each_ref() to work via reference
iterators (allowing some special-purpose code to be discarded), and do
something similar for reflogs. In future patch series, we will expose
the ref_iterator abstraction in the public refs API so that callers can
use it directly.

Implementation note: I tried abstracting this a layer further to allow
generic iterators (over arbitrary types of objects) and generic
utilities like a generic merge_iterator. But the implementation in C was
very cumbersome, involving (in my opinion) too much boilerplate and too
much unsafe casting, some of which would have had to be done on the
caller side. However, I did put a few iterator-related constants in a
top-level header file, iterator.h, as they will be useful in a moment to
implement iteration over directory trees and possibly other types of
iterators in the future.

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:38:20 -07:00
a873924483 ref_resolves_to_object(): new function
Extract new function ref_resolves_to_object() from
entry_resolves_to_object(). It can be used even if there is no ref_entry
at hand.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:38:19 -07:00
ffeef64231 entry_resolves_to_object(): rename function from ref_resolves_to_object()
Free up the old name for a more general purpose.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:38:19 -07:00
2eed2780f0 get_ref_cache(): only create an instance if there is a submodule
If there is not a nonbare repository where a submodule is supposedly
located, then don't instantiate a ref_cache for it.

The analogous check can be removed from resolve_gitlink_ref().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:38:19 -07:00
29a7cf9644 remote rm: handle symbolic refs correctly
In the modern world of reference backends, it is not OK to delete a
symref by unlink()ing the file directly. This must be done via the refs
API.

We do so by adding the symref to the list of references to delete along
with the non-symbolic references, then calling delete_refs() with the
new flags option set to REF_NODEREF.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:38:18 -07:00
c5f04dddb6 delete_refs(): add a flags argument
This will be useful for passing REF_NODEREF through.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:38:18 -07:00
4633a846f5 refs: use name "prefix" consistently
In the context of the for_each_ref() functions, call the prefix that
references must start with "prefix". (In some places it was called
"base".) This is clearer, and also prevents confusion with another
planned use of the word "base".

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:38:18 -07:00
067622b0e8 do_for_each_ref(): move docstring to the header file
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:38:17 -07:00
18a74a092b clone: do not let --depth imply --shallow-submodules
In v2.9.0, we prematurely flipped the default to force cloning
submodules shallowly, when the superproject is getting cloned
shallowly.  This is likely to fail when the upstream repositories
submodules are cloned from a repository that is not prepared to
serve histories that ends at a commit that is not at the tip of a
branch, and we know the world is not yet ready.

Use a safer default to clone the submodules fully, unless the user
tells us that she knows that the upstream repository of the
submodules are willing to cooperate with "--shallow-submodules"
option.

Noticed-by: Vadim Eisenberg <VADIME@il.ibm.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:35:28 -07:00
ab7797dbe9 Start the post-2.9 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-20 11:06:49 -07:00
d15c05a5d0 Merge branch 'rs/xdiff-hunk-with-func-line'
"git show -W" (extend hunks to cover the entire function, delimited
by lines that match the "funcname" pattern) used to show the entire
file when a change added an entire function at the end of the file,
which has been fixed.

* rs/xdiff-hunk-with-func-line:
  xdiff: fix merging of appended hunk with -W
  grep: -W: don't extend context to trailing empty lines
  t7810: add test for grep -W and trailing empty context lines
  xdiff: don't trim common tail with -W
  xdiff: -W: don't include common trailing empty lines in context
  xdiff: ignore empty lines before added functions with -W
  xdiff: handle appended chunks better with -W
  xdiff: factor out match_func_rec()
  t4051: rewrite, add more tests
2016-06-20 11:01:04 -07:00
6d8c5454b6 Merge branch 'jk/rev-list-count-with-bitmap'
"git rev-list --count" whose walk-length is limited with "-n"
option did not work well with the counting optimized to look at the
bitmap index.

* jk/rev-list-count-with-bitmap:
  rev-list: disable bitmaps when "-n" is used with listing objects
  rev-list: "adjust" results of "--count --use-bitmap-index -n"
2016-06-20 11:01:03 -07:00
8699b74ae1 Merge branch 'wd/userdiff-css'
Update the funcname definition to support css files.

* wd/userdiff-css:
  userdiff: add built-in pattern for CSS
2016-06-20 11:01:02 -07:00
1958a17fe4 Merge branch 'jc/clear-pathspec'
We usually call a function that clears the contents a data
structure X without freeing the structure itself clear_X(), and
call a function that does clear_X() and also frees it free_X().
free_pathspec() function has been renamed to clear_pathspec()
to avoid confusion.

* jc/clear-pathspec:
  pathspec: rename free_pathspec() to clear_pathspec()
2016-06-20 11:01:02 -07:00
0196c75e14 Merge branch 'aq/upload-pack-use-parse-options'
"git upload-pack" command has been updated to use the parse-options
API.

* aq/upload-pack-use-parse-options:
  upload-pack.c: use parse-options API
2016-06-20 11:01:02 -07:00
6d41eb685a Merge branch 'jg/dash-is-last-branch-in-worktree-add'
"git worktree add" learned that '-' can be used as a short-hand for
"@{-1}", the previous branch.

* jg/dash-is-last-branch-in-worktree-add:
  worktree: allow "-" short-hand for @{-1} in add command
2016-06-20 11:01:02 -07:00
1b3d14c1c8 Merge branch 'et/pretty-format-c-auto'
The commands in `git log` family take %C(auto) in a custom format
string.  This unconditionally turned the color on, ignoring
--no-color or with --color=auto when the output is not connected to
a tty; this was corrected to make the format truly behave as
"auto".

* et/pretty-format-c-auto:
  format_commit_message: honor `color=auto` for `%C(auto)`
2016-06-20 11:01:01 -07:00
3807098cd6 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-recommend-shallowness'
An upstream project can make a recommendation to shallowly clone
some submodules in the .gitmodules file it ships.

* sb/submodule-recommend-shallowness:
  submodule update: learn `--[no-]recommend-shallow` option
  submodule-config: keep shallow recommendation around
2016-06-20 11:01:01 -07:00
de76eb69d2 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-misc-cleanups'
Minor simplification.

* sb/submodule-misc-cleanups:
  submodule update: make use of the existing fetch_in_submodule function
2016-06-20 11:01:01 -07:00
349e0c1adc Merge branch 'ew/daemon-socket-keepalive'
When "git daemon" is run without --[init-]timeout specified, a
connection from a client that silently goes offline can hang around
for a long time, wasting resources.  The socket-level KEEPALIVE has
been enabled to allow the OS to notice such failed connections.

* ew/daemon-socket-keepalive:
  daemon: enable SO_KEEPALIVE for all sockets
2016-06-20 11:01:01 -07:00
73bc4b4928 Merge branch 'ah/no-verify-signature-with-pull-rebase'
"git pull --rebase --verify-signature" learned to warn the user
that "--verify-signature" is a no-op when rebasing.

* ah/no-verify-signature-with-pull-rebase:
  pull: warn on --verify-signatures with --rebase
2016-06-20 11:01:00 -07:00
8d6a7e9a19 Merge branch 'ew/fast-import-unpack-limit'
"git fast-import" learned the same performance trick to avoid
creating too small a packfile as "git fetch" and "git push" have,
using *.unpackLimit configuration.

* ew/fast-import-unpack-limit:
  fast-import: invalidate pack_id references after loosening
  fast-import: implement unpack limit
2016-06-20 11:01:00 -07:00
01247e0299 sh-setup: enclose setting of ${VAR=default} in double-quotes
We often make sure an environment variable is set to
something, either set by the user (in which case we do not
molest it) or set it to our default value (otherwise), with

	: ${VAR=default value}

i.e. running the no-op command ":" with ${VAR} as its
parameters (or the default value we supply), relying on that
":" is a no-op.

This pattern, even though it is no-op from correctness point
of view, still can be expensive if the existing value in VAR
has shell glob (because they will be expanded against
filesystem entities) and IFS whitespaces (because the value
need to be split into multiple parameters).  Our invocation
of ":" command does not care if the parameter given to it is
after the value in VAR goes through these processing.

Enclosing the whole thing in double-quote, i.e.

	: "${VAR=default value}"

avoids paying the unnecessary cost, so let's do so.

Signed-off-by: LE Manh Cuong <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-19 14:07:04 -07:00
efee9553a4 gpg-interface: check gpg signature creation status
When we create a signature, it may happen that gpg returns with
"success" but not with an actual detached signature on stdout.

Check for the correct signature creation status to catch these cases
better. Really, --status-fd parsing is the only way to check gpg status
reliably. We do the same for verify already.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 17:03:57 -07:00
0581b54641 sign_buffer: use pipe_command
Similar to the prior commit for verify_signed_buffer, the
motivation here is both to make the code simpler, and to
avoid any possible deadlocks with gpg.

In this case we have the same "write to stdin, then read
from stdout" that the verify case had. This is unlikely to
be a problem in practice, since stdout has the detached
signature, which it cannot compute until it has read all of
stdin (if it were a non-detached signature, that would be a
problem, though).

We don't read from stderr at all currently. However, we will
want to in a future patch, so this also prepares us there
(and in that case gpg _does_ write before reading all of the
input, though again, it is unlikely that a key uid will fill
up a pipe buffer).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 17:03:57 -07:00
0d2b664efd verify_signed_buffer: use pipe_command
This is shorter and should make the function easier to
follow. But more importantly, it removes the possibility of
any deadlocks based on reading or writing to gpg.

It's not clear if such a deadlock is possible in practice.

We do write the whole payload before reading anything, so we
could deadlock there. However, in practice gpg will need to
read our whole input to verify the signature, so it will
drain our payload first. It could write an error to stderr
before reading, but it's unlikely that such an error
wouldn't be followed by it immediately exiting, or that the
error would actually be larger than a pipe buffer.

On the writing side, we drain stderr (with the
human-readable output) in its entirety before reading stdout
(with the status-fd data). Running strace on "gpg --verify"
does show interleaved output on the two descriptors:

  write(2, "gpg: ", 5)                    = 5
  write(2, "Signature made Thu 16 Jun 2016 0"..., 73) = 73
  write(1, "[GNUPG:] SIG_ID tQw8KGcs9rBfLvAj"..., 66) = 66
  write(1, "[GNUPG:] GOODSIG 69808639F9430ED"..., 60) = 60
  write(2, "gpg: ", 5)                    = 5
  write(2, "Good signature from \"Jeff King <"..., 47) = 47
  write(2, "\n", 1)                       = 1
  write(2, "gpg: ", 5)                    = 5
  write(2, "                aka \"Jeff King <"..., 49) = 49
  write(2, "\n", 1)                       = 1
  write(1, "[GNUPG:] VALIDSIG C49CE24156AF08"..., 135) = 135
  write(1, "[GNUPG:] TRUST_ULTIMATE\n", 24) = 24

The second line written to stdout there contains the
signer's UID, which can be arbitrarily long. If it fills the
pipe buffer, then gpg would block writing to its stdout,
while we are blocked trying to read its stderr.

In practice, GPG seems to limit UIDs to 2048 bytes, so
unless your pipe buffer size is quite small, or unless gpg
does not enforce the limit under some conditions, this seems
unlikely in practice.

Still, it is not hard for us to be cautious and just use
pipe_command.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 17:03:57 -07:00
96335bcf4d run-command: add pipe_command helper
We already have capture_command(), which captures the stdout
of a command in a way that avoids deadlocks. But sometimes
we need to do more I/O, like capturing stderr as well, or
sending data to stdin. It's easy to write code that
deadlocks racily in these situations depending on how fast
the command reads its input, or in which order it writes its
output.

Let's give callers an easy interface for doing this the
right way, similar to what capture_command() did for the
simple case.

The whole thing is backed by a generic poll() loop that can
feed an arbitrary number of buffers to descriptors, and fill
an arbitrary number of strbufs from other descriptors. This
seems like overkill, but the resulting code is actually a
bit cleaner than just handling the three descriptors
(because the output code for stdout/stderr is effectively
duplicated, so being able to loop is a benefit).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 17:03:56 -07:00
4322353bfb verify_signed_buffer: use tempfile object
We use git_mkstemp to create a temporary file, and try to
clean it up in all exit paths from the function. But that
misses any cases where we die by signal, or by calling die()
in a sub-function. In addition, we missed one of the exit
paths.

Let's convert to using a tempfile object, which handles the
hard cases for us, and add the missing cleanup call. Note
that we would not simply want to rely on program exit to
catch our missed cleanup, as this function may be called
many times in a single program (for the same reason, we use
a static tempfile instead of heap-allocating a new one; that
gives an upper bound on our memory usage).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 17:03:56 -07:00
c752fcc8e0 verify_signed_buffer: drop pbuf variable
If our caller gave us a non-NULL gpg_status parameter, we
write the gpg status into their strbuf. If they didn't, then
we write it to a temporary local strbuf (since we still need
to look at it).  The variable "pbuf" adds an extra layer of
indirection so that the rest of the function can just access
whichever is appropriate.

However, the name "pbuf" isn't very descriptive, and it's
easy to get confused about what is supposed to be in it
(especially because we are reading both "status" and
"output" from gpg).

Rather than give it a more descriptive name, we can just use
gpg_status as our indirection pointer. Either it points to
the caller's input, or we can point it directly to our
temporary buffer.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 17:03:56 -07:00
aedb5dc343 gpg-interface: use child_process.args
Our argv allocations are relatively straightforward, but
this avoids us having to manually keep the count up to date
(or create new to-be-replaced slots in the declaration) when
we add new arguments.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 17:03:55 -07:00
b18237f4e3 i18n: branch: mark comment when editing branch description for translation
When one issues git branch --edit-description branch_name, a edit with
that message commented out is opened. Mark that message for translation
in to order to be localized.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:46:10 -07:00
f813fb41fc i18n: unmark die messages for translation
These messages are relevant for the programmer only, not for the end
user.  Thus, they can be unmarked for translation, saving translator
some work.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:46:10 -07:00
c87302bfe4 i18n: submodule: escape shell variables inside eval_gettext
According to the gettext manual [1], references to shell variables inside
eval_gettext call must be escaped so that eval_gettext receives the
translatable string before the variable values are substituted into it.

[1] http://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/manual/html_node/Preparing-Shell-Scripts.html

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:46:10 -07:00
0d71dbfd50 i18n: submodule: join strings marked for translation
Join strings marked for translation since that would facilitate and
improve translations result.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:46:10 -07:00
c30364d080 i18n: init-db: join message pieces
Join message displayed during repository initialization in one entire
sentence.  That would improve translations since it's easier translate
an entire sentence than translating each piece.

Update Icelandic translation to reflect the changes.  The Icelandic
translation of these messages is used with test
t0204-gettext-reencode-sanity.sh and not updating the translation would
fail the test.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:46:10 -07:00
a1b467a4ee i18n: remote: allow translations to reorder message
Before this patch, translations couldn't place the branch name
where it was better fit in the message "and with remote <branch_name>".
Allow translations that, instead of forcing the branch name to display
right of the message.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:46:10 -07:00
7ba7b9abcc i18n: remote: mark URL fallback text for translation
Marks fallback text for translation that may be displayed in git remote
show output.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:46:10 -07:00
e923a8abe9 i18n: standardise messages
Standardise messages in order to save translators some work.

Nuances fixed in this commit:
"failed to read %s"
"read of %s failed"

"detach the HEAD at named commit"
"detach HEAD at named commit"

"removing '%s' failed"
"failed to remove '%s'"

"index file corrupt"
"corrupt index file"

"failed to read %s"
"read of %s failed"

"detach the HEAD at named commit"
"detach HEAD at named commit"

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:46:10 -07:00
62d09ef319 i18n: sequencer: add period to error message
Add a period to error message so it matches others instances in
sequencer.c. Now translator would have to translate such message only
once.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:46:10 -07:00
c8bb9d2e5a i18n: merge: change command option help to lowercase
Change command option description to lowercase, matching pull
counterpart option. Translators would have to translate such message
only once.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:46:10 -07:00
bef4830e88 i18n: merge: mark messages for translation
Mark messages shown to the user for translation.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:46:10 -07:00
b34c77e33e i18n: notes: mark options for translation
Mark options description of git prune for translation.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:49 -07:00
5313827f7e i18n: notes: mark strings for translation
Mark strings of messages for the user as translatable.

Update tests t3310-notes-merge-manual-resolve.sh and
t3320-notes-merge-worktrees.sh to reflect new translatable messages.

Tests that grep for .git/NOTES_MERGE_WORKTREE reflect the translatable
string "Automatic notes merge failed. Fix conflicts in %s and [...]".

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:49 -07:00
3c5077fe33 i18n: transport-helper.c: change N_() call to _()
The N_() no-op call currently marks the string to be extracted by
xgettext but doesn't trigger the retrieval of the translation at run
time, whereas _() does both. Meaning that, in spite of having
translations available, they were never retrieved to make use of them.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:49 -07:00
9588c52b75 i18n: rebase-interactive: mark strings for translation
Mark strings in git-rebase--interactive.sh for translation. There is no
need to source git-sh-i18n since git-rebase.sh already does so.

Add git-rebase--interactive.sh to LOCALIZED_SH in Makefile in order to
enable extracting strings marked for translation by xgettext.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
14dc4899e5 i18n: bisect: mark strings for translation
In the last message, involving Q_(), try to mark the message in such way
that is suited for RTL (Right to Left) languages.

Update test t6030-bisect-porcelain.sh to reflect the changes.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
d323c6b641 i18n: git-sh-setup.sh: mark strings for translation
Positional arguments, such as $0, $1, etc, need to be stored on shell
variables for use in translatable strings, according to gettext manual
[1].

Add git-sh-setup.sh to LOCALIZED_SH variable in Makefile to enable
extraction of string marked for translation by xgettext.

Source git-sh-i18n in git-sh-setup.sh for gettext support.
git-sh-setup.sh is a shell library to be sourced by other shell scripts.
In order to avoid other scripts from sourcing git-sh-i18n twice, remove
line that sources it from them.  Not sourcing git-sh-i18n in any script
that uses gettext would lead to failure due to, for instance, gettextln
not being found.

[1] http://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/manual/html_node/Preparing-Shell-Scripts.html

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
a1347dc00c t5523: use test_i18ngrep for negation
Replace the first form with the second one:

	! grep expected actual
	test_i18ngrep ! expected actual

The latter syntax is supported by test_i18ngrep defined in
t/test-lib.sh.

Although the test already passes whether GETTEXT_POSION is enabled, use
the i18n grep variant for the sake of consistency and also to make
obvious that those strings are subject to i18n.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
c9e6ce41da t6030: update to use test_i18ncmp
Since the git bisect output tested here is subject to translation, the
helper function test_i18ncmp should be used over test_cmp.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
de5ea4c6f8 t4153: fix negated test_i18ngrep call
The function test_i18ngrep fakes success when run under GETTEXT_POISON.
Hence, running in the following manner will always fail under gettext
poison:

	! test_i18ngrep expected actual

Use correct syntax: test_i18ngrep ! expected actual

For other instance of this issue see 41ca19b ("tests: fix negated
test_i18ngrep calls", 2014-08-13).

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
57984dd9fc i18n: bisect: simplify error message for i18n
The message was not being extracted by xgettext, although it was marked
for translation, seemingly because it contained a command substitution.
Moreover, eval_gettext should be used instead of gettext for strings
with substitution.

See step 4. of section 15.5.2.1 Preparing Shell Scripts for
Internationalization from gettext manual [1]:
"Simplify translatable strings so that they don't contain command
substitution ("`...`" or "$(...)") [...]"

[1] http://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/manual/html_node/Preparing-Shell-Scripts.html

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
f9b32424dc t9003: become resilient to GETTEXT_POISON
The test t9003-help-autocorrect.sh fails when run under GETTEXT_POISON,
because it's expecting to filter out the original output. Accommodate
gettext poison case by also filtering out the default simulated output.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
c36d8eee49 i18n: rebase: mark placeholder for translation
Mark placeholder "<branch>" in git-rebase.sh for translation. The string
containing the named placeholder is passed to shell function
error_on_missing_default_upstream in git-parse-remote.sh which uses it
to display a command hint for the user.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
e5c1272c07 tests: unpack-trees: update to use test_i18n* functions
Use functions test_i18ncmp and test_i18ngrep to successfully pass tests
running under GETTEXT_POISON.

The output strings compared to in these test were marked for translation
in ed47fdf ("i18n: unpack-trees: mark strings for translation",
2016-04-09) and later improved in 2e3926b ("i18n: unpack-trees: avoid
substituting only a verb in sentences", 2016-05-12).

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
24a6df489a i18n: rebase: fix marked string to use eval_gettext variant
The string message marked for translation should use eval_gettext
variant instead of the gettext one, since we want to dollar-substitute
$head_name in the result.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
1edbaac3bb tests: use test_i18n* functions to suppress false positives
The test functions test_i18ncmp and test_i18ngrep pretend success if run
under GETTEXT_POISON. By using those functions to test output which is
correctly marked as translatable, enables one to detect if the strings
newly marked for translation are from plumbing output. If they are
indeed from plumbing, the test would fail, and the string should be
unmarked, since it is not seen by users.

Thus, it is productive to not have false positives when running the test
under GETTEXT_POISON. This commit replaces normal test functions by
their i18n aware variants in use-cases know to be correctly marked for
translation, suppressing false positives.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
ff3b018d2f merge-octopus: use die shell function from git-sh-setup.sh
Source git-sh-setup in order to use die shell function from
git-sh-setup.sh library instead of using the one defined in
git-merge-octopus.sh. Remove the former die function.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
ab33a76ec5 i18n: setup: mark strings for translation
Update tests that compare the strings newly marked for translation to
succeed when running under GETTEXT_POISON.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
6a4eb91a73 i18n: merge-octopus: mark messages for translation
Mark messages in git-merge-octopus.sh for translation.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
f2d17068fd i18n: rebase-interactive: mark comments of squash for translation
Mark comment messages of squash/fixup file ($squash_msg) for
translation.

Helper functions this_nth_commit_message and skip_nth_commit_message
replace the previous method of making the comment messages (such as
"This is the 2nd commit message:") aided by nth_string helper function.
This step was taken as a workaround to enabled translation of entire
sentences. However, doesn't change any text seen in English by the user,
except for string "The first commit's message is:" which was changed to
match the style of other instances.

The test t3404-rebase-interactive.sh resorts to set_fake_editor which
didn't account for GETTEXT_POISON. Fix it by assuming success when we
find dummy gettext poison output where was supposed to find the first
comment line "This is a combination of $count commits.".

For that same message, use plural aware eval_ngettext instead of
eval_gettext, since other languages have more complex plural forms.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
e8d7c3909d i18n: sequencer: mark string for translation
Mark informative string "<action_name>: fast-forward" for translation.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
b8fc9e43a7 i18n: rebase-interactive: mark here-doc strings for translation
Use pipe to send gettext output to git stripspace instead of the
original method of using shell here-document, because command
substitution '$(...)' would not take place inside the here-documents.
The exception is the case of the last here-document redirecting to cat,
in which commands substitution works and, thus, is preserved in this
commit.

t3404: adapt test to the strings newly marked for translation
Test t3404-rebase-interactive.sh would fail under GETTEXT_POISON unless
using test_i18ngrep.

Add eval_ngettext fallback functions to be called when running, for
instance, under GETTEXT_POISON. Otherwise, tests would fail under
GETTEXT_POISON, or other build that doesn't support the GNU gettext,
because that function could not be found.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
9b0df093f6 i18n: sequencer: mark entire sentences for translation
Mark entire sentences of error message rather than assembling one using
placeholders (e.g. "Cannot %s during a %s").

That would facilitate translation work because it is easier to translate
a entire sentence than translating pieces. We would have better
translations at the expense of source code verbosity.

Moreover, translators can now 1) translate the terms "revert" and
"cherry-pick" if they please 2) have more leeway to adapt their
translations.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
7ab1d44f33 i18n: transport: mark strings for translation
Mark one printf string and one error string for translation.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
8785c42532 i18n: advice: internationalize message for conflicts
Mark message for translation telling the user she has conflicts to
resolve. Expose each particular use case, in order to enable translating
entire sentences which would facilitate translating into other
languages.

Change "Pull" to lowercase to match other instances. Update test
t5520-pull.sh, that relied on the old error message, to use the new one.

Although we loose in source code conciseness, we would gain better
translations because translators can 1) translate the entire sentence,
including those terms concerning Git (committing, merging, etc) 2) have
leeway to adapt to their languages.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:48 -07:00
e9f3cec494 i18n: advice: mark string about detached head for translation
Mark string with advice seen by the user when in detached head.

Update test t7201-co.sh to pass under GETTEXT_POISON build. Pretend
success if the number of lines of "git checkout renamer^" output is not
greater than 1 and test are running under GETTEXT_POISON.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:47 -07:00
070b7e4416 i18n: builtin/remote.c: fix mark for translation
The second string inside _() was not being extracted for translation by
xgettext, meaning that, although the string was passed to gettext, there
was no translation available.

Mark each individual string instead of marking the result of ternary if.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 15:45:47 -07:00
cc6ee97cb3 Documentation/technical: signed merge tag format
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 12:10:48 -07:00
eda2f11ee3 Documentation/technical: signed commit format
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 12:10:30 -07:00
5f1abfeb69 Documentation/technical: signed tag format
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 11:40:58 -07:00
76f9d8bac8 Documentation/technical: describe signature formats
We use different types of signature formats in different places.
Set up the infrastructure and overview to describe them systematically
in our technical documentation.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 11:39:05 -07:00
9b35cadc2c rebase: update comment about FreeBSD /bin/sh
Commit 9f50d32 introduced a fix for FreeBSD /bin/sh misbehaviour
when dot-sourcing a file containing "return" statements outside of
any function, from a function in another shell script. That issue
affects FreeBSD 9.x, and is not present in the /bin/sh in FreeBSD
10.3 and later. Update the comment to clarify this.

The example from 9f50d32's commit message produces the expected output
on FreeBSD 10.3 and -CURRENT (the upcoming 11.0):

% sh script1.sh
only this line should show
%

Signed-off-by: Ed Maste <emaste@freebsd.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-17 11:04:38 -07:00
bc91316781 Documentation: GPG capitalization
When "GPG" is used in a sentence it is now consistently capitalized.
When referring to the binary it is left as "gpg".

Signed-off-by: David Nicolson <david.nicolson@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-16 17:32:28 -07:00
43ec550915 bisect: always call setup_revisions after init_revisions
init_revisions() initializes the rev_info struct to default
values, and setup_revisions() parses any command-line
arguments and finalizes the struct.

In e22278c (bisect: display first bad commit without forking
a new process, 2009-05-28), a show_diff_tree() was added
that calls the former but not the latter. It doesn't have
any arguments to parse, but it still should do the
finalizing step.

This may have caused other minor bugs over the years, but it
became much more prominent after fe37a9c (pretty: allow
tweaking tabwidth in --expand-tabs, 2016-03-29). That leaves
the expected tab width as "-1", rather than the true default
of "8". When we see a commit with tabs to be expanded, we
end up trying to add (size_t)-1 spaces to a strbuf, which
complains about the integer overflow.

The fix is easy: just call setup_revisions() with no
arguments.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-16 17:21:48 -07:00
066790d7cb pretty.c: support <direction>|(<negative number>) forms
%>|(num), %><|(num) and %<|(num), where num is a positive number, sets a
fixed column from the screen's left border. There is no way for us to
specifiy a column relative to the right border, which is useful when you
want to make use of all terminal space (on big screens). Use negative
num for that. Inspired by Go's array syntax (*).

(*) I know Python has this first (or before Go, at least) but the idea
didn't occur to me until I learned Go.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-16 11:43:37 -07:00
3ad87c807c pretty: pass graph width to pretty formatting for use in '%>|(N)'
Pass graph width to pretty formatting, to make N in '%>|(N)'
include columns consumed by graph rendered when --graph option
is in use.

For example, in the output of

  git log --all --graph --pretty='format: [%>|(20)%h] %ar%d'

this change will make all commit hashes align at 20th column from
the edge of the terminal, not from the edge of the graph.

Signed-off-by: Josef Kufner <josef@kufner.cz>
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>
2016-06-16 11:43:36 -07:00
fcf0fe9e69 upload-pack.c: make send_client_data() return void
The send_client_data() function uses write_or_die() for writing data
which immediately terminates the process on errors. If no such error
occurred, send_client_data() always returned the value that was passed
as third parameter prior to this commit. This value is already known to
the caller in any case, so let's turn send_client_data() into a void
function instead.

Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@lfos.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-16 11:40:31 -07:00
4c4b7d1d3b sideband.c: make send_sideband() return void
The send_sideband() function uses write_or_die() for writing data which
immediately terminates the process on errors. If no such error occurred,
send_sideband() always returned the value that was passed as fourth
parameter prior to this commit. This value is already known to the
caller in any case, so let's turn send_sideband() into a void function
instead.

Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@lfos.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-16 11:40:19 -07:00
46e3d17f57 add--interactive: respect diff.compactionHeuristic
We use plumbing to generate the diff, so it doesn't
automatically pick up UI config like compactionHeuristic.
Let's forward it on, since interactive adding is porcelain.

Note that we only need to handle the "true" case. There's no
point in passing --no-compaction-heuristic when the variable
is false, since nothing else could have turned it on.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-16 11:38:58 -07:00
19a7f24b6f git-svn: document the 'git svn propset' command
Add example usage to the git-svn documentation.

Reported-by: Joseph Pecoraro <pecoraro@apple.com>
Signed-off-by: Alfred Perlstein <alfred@freebsd.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-15 13:21:11 -07:00
e26a8c4721 repack: extend --keep-unreachable to loose objects
If you use "repack -adk" currently, we will pack all objects
that are already packed into the new pack, and then drop the
old packs. However, loose unreachable objects will be left
as-is. In theory these are meant to expire eventually with
"git prune". But if you are using "repack -k", you probably
want to keep things forever and therefore do not run "git
prune" at all. Meaning those loose objects may build up over
time and end up fooling any object-count heuristics (such as
the one done by "gc --auto", though since git-gc does not
support "repack -k", this really applies to whatever custom
scripts people might have driving "repack -k").

With this patch, we instead stuff any loose unreachable
objects into the pack along with the already-packed
unreachable objects. This may seem wasteful, but it is
really no more so than using "repack -k" in the first place.
We are at a slight disadvantage, in that we have no useful
ordering for the result, or names to hand to the delta code.
However, this is again no worse than what "repack -k" is
already doing for the packed objects. The packing of these
objects doesn't matter much because they should not be
accessed frequently (unless they actually _do_ become
referenced, but then they would get moved to a different
part of the packfile during the next repack).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-14 13:57:45 -07:00
905f27b86a repack: add --keep-unreachable option
The usual way to do a full repack (and what is done by
git-gc) is to run "repack -Ad --unpack-unreachable=<when>",
which will loosen any unreachable objects newer than
"<when>", and drop any older ones.

This is a safer alternative to "repack -ad", because
"<when>" becomes a grace period during which we will not
drop any new objects that are about to be referenced.
However, it isn't perfectly safe. It's always possible that
a process is about to reference an old object. Even if that
process were to take care to update the timestamp on the
object, there is no atomicity with a simultaneously running
"repack" process.

So while unlikely, there is a small race wherein we may drop
an object that is in the process of being referenced. If you
do automated repacking on a large number of active
repositories, you may hit it eventually, and the result is a
corrupted repository.

It would be nice to fix that race in the long run, but it's
complicated.  In the meantime, there is a much simpler
strategy for automated repository maintenance: do not drop
objects at all. We already have a "--keep-unreachable"
option in pack-objects; we just need to plumb it through
from git-repack.

Note that this _isn't_ plumbed through from git-gc, so at
this point it's strictly a tool for people doing their own
advanced repository maintenance strategy.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-14 13:57:42 -07:00
6a7bcb5471 repack: document --unpack-unreachable option
This was added back in 7e52f56 (gc: do not explode objects
which will be immediately pruned, 2012-04-07), but not
documented at the time, since it was an internal detail
between git-gc and git-repack. However, as people with
complicated setups may want to effectively reimplement the
steps of git-gc themselves, it is nice for us to document
these interfaces.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-14 13:57:38 -07:00
31da121f2d blame, line-log: do not loop around deref_tag()
These callers appear to expect that deref_tag() is to peel one layer
of a tag, but the function does not work that way; it has its own
loop to unwrap tags until an object that is not a tag appears.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-14 13:38:14 -07:00
3cddb008c1 gnome-keyring: Don't hard-code pkg-config executable
Helpful if your pkg-config executable has a prefix based on the
architecture, for example.

Signed-off-by: Heiko Becker <heirecka@exherbo.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-14 13:06:10 -07:00
b7410f616e builtin/fetch.c: don't free remote->name after fetch
Make fetch's string_list of remote names own all of its string items
(strdup'ing when necessary) so that it can deallocate them safely
when clearing.

Signed-off-by: Keith McGuigan <kmcguigan@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-14 11:58:05 -07:00
ed008d7bb9 strbuf: describe the return value of strbuf_read_file
Mentored-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-14 10:57:21 -07:00
9e70233a17 fetch: document that pruning happens before fetching
This was changed in 10a6cc8 (fetch --prune: Run prune before
fetching, 2014-01-02), but it seems that nobody in that
discussion realized we were advertising the "after"
explicitly.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-14 10:56:27 -07:00
346ef53058 worktree.c: add is_worktree_locked()
We need this later to avoid double locking a worktree, or unlocking one
when it's not even locked.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-13 11:53:14 -07:00
44f243d356 lib-httpd.sh: print error.log on error
Failure to bring up httpd for testing is not considered an error, so the
trash directory, which contains this error.log file, is removed and we
don't know what made httpd fail to start. Improve the situation a bit,
print error.log but only in verbose mode.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-13 11:50:44 -07:00
05219a1276 Git 2.9
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-13 10:42:13 -07:00
2721ce21e4 use string_list initializer consistently
There are two types of string_lists: those that own the
string memory, and those that don't. You can tell the
difference by the strdup_strings flag, and one should use
either STRING_LIST_INIT_DUP, or STRING_LIST_INIT_NODUP as an
initializer.

Historically, the normal all-zeros initialization has
corresponded to the NODUP case. Many sites use no
initializer at all, and that works as a shorthand for that
case. But for a reader of the code, it can be hard to
remember which is which. Let's be more explicit and actually
have each site declare which type it means to use.

This is a fairly mechanical conversion; I assumed each site
was correct as-is, and just switched them all to NODUP.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-13 10:37:51 -07:00
7013220d2b Merge branch 'jk/parseopt-string-list' into jk/string-list-static-init
* jk/parseopt-string-list:
  blame,shortlog: don't make local option variables static
  interpret-trailers: don't duplicate option strings
  parse_opt_string_list: stop allocating new strings
2016-06-13 10:37:48 -07:00
64093fc06a blame,shortlog: don't make local option variables static
There's no need for these option variables to be static,
except that they are referenced by the options array itself,
which is static. But having all of this static is simply
unnecessary and confusing (and inconsistent with most other
commands, which either use a static global option list or a
true function-local one).

Note that in some cases we may need to actually initialize
the variables (since we cannot rely on BSS to do so). This
is a net improvement to readability, though, as we can use
the more verbose initializers for our string_lists.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-13 10:33:33 -07:00
7c4b169585 interpret-trailers: don't duplicate option strings
There's no need to do so; the argv strings will last until
the end of the program.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-13 10:33:14 -07:00
7a7a517a2f parse_opt_string_list: stop allocating new strings
The parse_opt_string_list callback is basically a thin
wrapper to string_list_append() any string options we get.
However, it calls:

  string_list_append(v, xstrdup(arg));

which duplicates the option value. This is wrong for two
reasons:

  1. If the string list has strdup_strings set, then we are
     making an extra copy, which is simply leaked.

  2. If the string list does not have strdup_strings set,
     then we pass memory ownership to the string list, but
     it does not realize this. If we later call
     string_list_clear(), which can happen if "--no-foo" is
     passed, then we will leak all of the existing entries.

Instead, we should just pass the argument straight to
string_list_append, and it can decide whether to copy or not
based on its strdup_strings flag.

It's possible that some (buggy) caller could be relying on
this extra copy (e.g., because it parses some options from
an allocated argv array and then frees the array), but it's
not likely. For one, we generally only use parse_options on
the argv given to us in main(). And two, such a caller is
broken anyway, because other option types like OPT_STRING()
do not make such a copy.  This patch brings us in line with
them.

Noticed-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>
2016-06-13 10:33:08 -07:00
bb9d91b4ed submodule update: continue when a clone fails
In 15ffb7cde4 (2011-06-13, submodule update: continue when a checkout
fails), we reasoned it is ok to continue, when there is not much of
a mental burden by the failure. If a recursive submodule fails to clone
because a .gitmodules file is broken (e.g. :
fatal: No url found for submodule path 'foo/bar' in .gitmodules
Failed to recurse into submodule path 'foo', signaled by exit code 128),
this is one of the cases where the user is not expected to have much of
a burden afterwards, so we can also continue in that case.

This means we only want to stop for updating submodules in case of rebase,
merge or custom update command failures, which are all signaled with
exit code 2.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-13 10:29:06 -07:00
665b35eccd submodule--helper: initial clone learns retry logic
Each submodule that is attempted to be cloned, will be retried once in
case of failure after all other submodules were cloned. This helps to
mitigate ephemeral server failures and increases chances of a reliable
clone of a repo with hundreds of submodules immensely.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-13 10:28:38 -07:00
1354c9b2de refs: remove unnecessary "extern" keywords
There's continuing work in this area, so clean up unneeded "extern"
keywords rather than schlepping them around. Also split up some overlong
lines and add parameter names in a couple of places.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:35:32 +02:00
7a418f3a17 lock_ref_sha1_basic(): only handle REF_NODEREF mode
Now lock_ref_sha1_basic() is only called with flags==REF_NODEREF. So we
don't have to handle other cases anymore.

This enables several simplifications, the most interesting of which come
from the fact that ref_lock::orig_ref_name is now always the same as
ref_lock::ref_name:

* Remove ref_lock::orig_ref_name
* Remove local variable orig_refname from lock_ref_sha1_basic()
* ref_name can be initialize once and its value reused
* commit_ref_update() never has to write to the reflog for
  lock->orig_ref_name

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:50 +02:00
5d9b2de4ef commit_ref_update(): remove the flags parameter
commit_ref_update() is now only called with flags=0. So remove the flags
parameter entirely.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:50 +02:00
6e30b2f652 lock_ref_for_update(): don't resolve symrefs
If a transaction includes a non-NODEREF update to a symbolic reference,
we don't have to look it up in lock_ref_for_update(). The reference will
be dereferenced anyway when the split-off update is processed.

This change requires that we store a backpointer from the split-off
update to its parent update, for two reasons:

* We still want to report the original reference name in error messages.
  So if an error occurs when checking the split-off update's old_sha1,
  walk the parent_update pointers back to find the original reference
  name, and report that one.

* We still need to write the old_sha1 of the symref to its reflog. So
  after we read the split-off update's reference value, walk the
  parent_update pointers back and fill in their old_sha1 fields.

Aside from eliminating unnecessary reads, this change fixes a
subtle (though not very serious) race condition: in the old code, the
old_sha1 of the symref was resolved before the reference that it pointed
at was locked. So it was possible that the old_sha1 value logged to the
symref's reflog could be wrong if another process changed the downstream
reference before it was locked.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:50 +02:00
8169d0d06a lock_ref_for_update(): don't re-read non-symbolic references
Before the previous patch, our first read of the reference happened
before the reference was locked, so we couldn't trust its value and had
to read it again. But now that our first read of the reference happens
after acquiring the lock, there is no need to read it a second time. So
move the read_ref_full() call into the (update->type & REF_ISSYMREF)
block.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:50 +02:00
92b1551b1d refs: resolve symbolic refs first
Before committing ref updates, split symbolic ref updates into two
parts: an update to the underlying ref, and a log-only update to the
symbolic ref. This ensures that both references are locked correctly
during the transaction, including while their reflogs are updated.

Similarly, if the reference pointed to by HEAD is modified directly, add
a separate log-only update to HEAD, rather than leaving the job of
updating HEAD's reflog to commit_ref_update(). This change ensures that
HEAD is locked correctly while its reflog is being modified, as well as
being cheaper (HEAD only needs to be resolved once).

This makes use of a new function, lock_raw_ref(), which is analogous to
read_raw_ref(), but acquires a lock on the reference before reading it.

This change still has two problems:

* There are redundant read_ref_full() reference lookups.

* It is still possible to get incorrect reflogs for symbolic references
  if there is a concurrent update by another process, since the old_oid
  of a symref is determined before the lock on the pointed-to ref is
  held.

Both problems will soon be fixed.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>

WIP
2016-06-13 11:23:50 +02:00
8a679de6f1 ref_transaction_update(): check refname_is_safe() at a minimum
If the user has asked that a new value be set for a reference, we use
check_refname_format() to verify that the reference name satisfies all
of the rules. But in other cases, at least check that refname_is_safe().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:50 +02:00
8415d24746 unlock_ref(): move definition higher in the file
This avoids the need for a forward declaration in the next patch.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
165056b2fc lock_ref_for_update(): new function
Extract a new function, lock_ref_for_update(), from
ref_transaction_commit().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
71564516de add_update(): initialize the whole ref_update
Change add_update() to initialize all of the fields in the new
ref_update object. Rename the function to ref_transaction_add_update(),
and increase its visibility to all of the refs-related code.

All of this makes the function more useful for other future callers.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
3a8af7be8f verify_refname_available(): adjust constness in declaration
The two string_list arguments can be const.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
12fd3496d1 refs: don't dereference on rename
When renaming refs, don't dereference either the origin or the destination
before renaming.

The origin does not need to be dereferenced because it is presently
forbidden to rename symbolic refs.

Not dereferencing the destination fixes a bug where renaming on top of
a broken symref would use the pointed-to ref name for the moved
reflog.

Add a test for the reflog bug.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
d99aa884df refs: allow log-only updates
The refs infrastructure learns about log-only ref updates, which only
update the reflog.  Later, we will use this to separate symbolic
reference resolution from ref updating.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
8bb0455367 delete_branches(): use resolve_refdup()
The return value of resolve_ref_unsafe() is not guaranteed to stay
around as long as we need it, so use resolve_refdup() instead.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
5a563d4ad1 ref_transaction_commit(): correctly report close_ref() failure
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
c52ce248d6 ref_transaction_create(): disallow recursive pruning
It is nonsensical (and a little bit dangerous) to use REF_ISPRUNING
without REF_NODEREF. Forbid it explicitly. Change the one REF_ISPRUNING
caller to pass REF_NODEREF too.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
0568c8e9dc refs: make error messages more consistent
* Always start error messages with a lower-case letter.

* Always enclose reference names in single quotes.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
bcb497d0f8 lock_ref_sha1_basic(): remove unneeded local variable
resolve_ref_unsafe() can cope with being called with NULL passed to its
flags argument. So lock_ref_sha1_basic() can just hand its own type
parameter through.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
cf596442c6 read_raw_ref(): move docstring to header file
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
bb462b0028 read_raw_ref(): improve docstring
Among other things, document the (important!) requirement that input
refname be checked for safety before calling this function.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
92b380931e read_raw_ref(): rename symref argument to referent
After all, it doesn't hold the symbolic reference, but rather the
reference referred to.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
fa96ea1b88 read_raw_ref(): clear *type at start of function
This is more convenient and less error-prone for callers.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
3a0b6b9aba read_raw_ref(): rename flags argument to type
This will hopefully reduce confusion with the "flags" arguments that are
used in many functions in this module as an input parameter to choose
how the function should operate.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:49 +02:00
efe472813d ref_transaction_commit(): remove local variables n and updates
These microoptimizations don't make a significant difference in speed.
And they cause problems if somebody ever wants to modify the function to
add updates to a transaction as part of processing it, as will happen
shortly.

Make the same changes in initial_ref_transaction_commit().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-06-13 11:23:26 +02:00
25c7aeb1ad Merge tag 'l10n-2.9.0-rc0' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
l10n-2.9.0-rc0

* tag 'l10n-2.9.0-rc0' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: ko.po: Update Korean translation
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
  l10n: de.po: translate 104 new messages
  l10n: zh_CN: review for git v2.9.0 l10n round 1
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.9.0 l10n round 1
  l10n: pt_PT: update Portuguese translation
  l10n: pt_PT: update according to git-gui glossary
  l10n: pt_PT: merge git.pot file
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2597t,0f,0u)
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2597t0f0u)
  l10n: fr.po v2.9.0rnd1
  l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation (2597t)
  l10n: git.pot: v2.9.0 round 1 (104 new, 37 removed)
  l10n: fr.po Fixed grammar mistake
2016-06-12 18:00:57 -07:00
ad583ebe08 l10n: ko.po: Update Korean translation 2016-06-12 01:25:58 +09:00
091a8f769d Merge branch 'russian-l10n' of https://github.com/DJm00n/git-po-ru
* 'russian-l10n' of https://github.com/DJm00n/git-po-ru:
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
2016-06-11 20:21:52 +08:00
92c28525f6 l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
Signed-off-by: Dimitriy Ryazantcev <dimitriy.ryazantcev@gmail.com>
2016-06-11 12:53:43 +03:00
a28705da92 Hopefully the final last-minute update before 2.9 final
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-10 15:30:19 -07:00
e5f7675544 Merge branch 'jk/diff-compact-heuristic'
It turns out that the earlier effort to update the heuristics may
want to use a bit more time to mature.  Turn it off by default.

* jk/diff-compact-heuristic:
  diff: disable compaction heuristic for now
2016-06-10 15:26:06 -07:00
45c0c21eb9 Merge branch 'jk/shell-portability'
test fixes.

* jk/shell-portability:
  t5500 & t7403: lose bash-ism "local"
  test-lib: add in-shell "env" replacement
2016-06-10 15:26:05 -07:00
8ffc9d26e4 Merge branch 'jc/t2300-setup'
A test fix.

* jc/t2300-setup:
  t2300: run git-sh-setup in an environment that better mimics the real life
2016-06-10 15:26:04 -07:00
3a39f61e04 config.c: fix misspelt "occurred" in an error message
Signed-off-by: Peter Colberg <peter@colberg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-10 14:53:39 -07:00
dc72b5006f refs.h: fix misspelt "occurred" in a comment
Signed-off-by: Peter Colberg <peter@colberg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-10 14:53:32 -07:00
5580b271af diff: disable compaction heuristic for now
http://lkml.kernel.org/g/20160610075043.GA13411@sigill.intra.peff.net
reports that a change to add a new "function" with common ending
with the existing one at the end of the file is shown like this:

    def foo
      do_foo_stuff()

   +  common_ending()
   +end
   +
   +def bar
   +  do_bar_stuff()
   +
      common_ending()
    end

when the new heuristic is in use.  In reality, the change is to add
the blank line before "def bar" and everything below, which is what
the code without the new heuristic shows.

Disable the heuristics by default, and resurrect the documentation
for the option and the configuration variables, while clearly
marking the feature as still experimental.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-10 13:45:23 -07:00
634d2344e6 completion: add git status
Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@virtuell-zuhause.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-10 11:55:00 -07:00
7c599e92aa completion: add __git_get_option_value helper
This function allows to search the commmand line and config
files for an option, long and short, with mandatory value.

The function would return e.g. for the command line
"git status -uno --untracked-files=all" the result
"all" regardless of the config option.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@virtuell-zuhause.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-10 11:54:57 -07:00
21d2a9e3cc completion: factor out untracked file modes into a variable
Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@virtuell-zuhause.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-10 11:54:49 -07:00
b333d0d6f4 write_or_die: remove the unused write_or_whine() function
Now the last caller of this function is gone, and new ones are
unlikely to appear, because this function is doing very little that
a regular if() does not besides obfuscating the error message (and
if we ever did want something like it, we would probably prefer the
function to come back with more "normal" return value semantics).

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-10 10:54:27 -07:00
b0e098ce46 l10n: de.po: translate 104 new messages
Translate 104 new messages came from git.pot update in f517e50
(l10n: git.pot: v2.9.0 round 1 (104 new, 37 removed)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2016-06-10 18:00:46 +02:00
6f8d9bccb2 xdiff: fix merging of appended hunk with -W
When -W is given we search the lines between the end of the current
context and the next change for a function line.  If there is none then
we merge those two hunks as they must be part of the same function.

If the next change is an appended chunk we abort the search early in
get_func_line(), however, because its line number is out of range.  Fix
that by searching from the end of the pre-image in that case instead.

Reported-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-09 15:27:26 -07:00
2a0e6cdeda Use "working tree" instead of "working directory" for git status
Working directory can be easily confused with the current directory.
In one of my patches I already updated the usage of working directory
with working tree for the man page but I noticed that git status also
uses this incorrect term.

Signed-off-by: Lars Vogel <Lars.Vogel@vogella.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-09 12:21:52 -07:00
e51b0dfc97 builtin/commit.c: memoize git-path for COMMIT_EDITMSG
This is a follow up commit for f932729c (memoize common git-path
"constant" files, 10-Aug-2015).

The many function calls to git_path() are replaced by
git_path_commit_editmsg() and which thus eliminates the need to repeatedly
compute the location of "COMMIT_EDITMSG".

Mentored-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-09 10:03:10 -07:00
aef18cc606 l10n: zh_CN: review for git v2.9.0 l10n round 1
Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2016-06-09 22:08:39 +08:00
f0bca72dc7 send-pack: use buffered I/O to talk to pack-objects
We start a pack-objects process and then write all of the
positive and negative sha1s to it over a pipe. We do so by
formatting each item into a fixed-size buffer and then
writing each individually. This has two drawbacks:

  1. There's some manual computation of the buffer size,
     which is not immediately obvious is correct (though it
     is).

  2. We write() once per sha1, which means a lot more system
     calls than are necessary.

We can solve both by wrapping the pipe descriptor in a stdio
handle; this is the same technique used by upload-pack when
serving fetches.

Note that we can also simplify and improve the error
handling here. The original detected a single write error
and broke out of the loop (presumably to avoid writing the
error message over and over), but never actually acted on
seeing an error; we just fed truncated input and took
whatever pack-objects returned.

In practice, this probably didn't matter, as the likely
errors would be caused by pack-objects dying (and we'd
probably just die with SIGPIPE anyway). But we can easily
make this simpler and more robust; the stdio handle keeps an
error flag, which we can check at the end.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-08 16:02:40 -07:00
ae9f6311e9 doc: change configuration variables format
This change configuration variables that where in italic style
to monospace font according to the guideline. It was obtained with

	grep '[[:alpha:]]*\.[[:alpha:]]*::$' config.txt | \
	sed -e 's/::$//' -e 's/\./\\\\./' | \
	xargs -iP perl -pi -e "s/\'P\'/\`P\`/g" ./*.txt

Signed-off-by: Tom Russello <tom.russello@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Erwan Mathoniere <erwan.mathoniere@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Samuel Groot <samuel.groot@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-08 12:04:55 -07:00
47d81b5c7a doc: more consistency in environment variables format
Wrap with backticks (monospaced font) unwrapped or single-quotes wrapped
(italic type) environment variables which are followed by the word
"environment". It was obtained with:

perl -pi -e "s/\'?(\\\$?[0-9A-Z\_]+)\'?(?= environment ?)/\`\1\`/g" *.txt

One of the main purposes is to stick to the CodingGuidelines as possible so
that people writting new documentation by mimicking the existing are more likely
to have it right (even if they didn't read the CodingGuidelines).

Signed-off-by: Tom Russello <tom.russello@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Erwan Mathoniere <erwan.mathoniere@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Samuel Groot <samuel.groot@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-08 12:04:37 -07:00
eee7f4a233 doc: change environment variables format
This change GIT_* variables that where in italic style to monospaced font
according to the guideline. It was obtained with

	perl -pi -e "s/\'(GIT_.*?)\'/\`\1\`/g" *.txt

One of the main purposes is to stick to the CodingGuidelines as possible so
that people writting new documentation by mimicking the existing are more likely
to have it right (even if they didn't read the CodingGuidelines).

Signed-off-by: Tom Russello <tom.russello@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Erwan Mathoniere <erwan.mathoniere@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Samuel Groot <samuel.groot@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-08 12:04:37 -07:00
41f5b21f84 doc: clearer rule about formatting literals
Make the guideline text that we want for our documentation clearer.

Signed-off-by: Tom Russello <tom.russello@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Erwan Mathoniere <erwan.mathoniere@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Samuel Groot <samuel.groot@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-08 12:04:37 -07:00
b8ba412bf7 tree-diff: avoid alloca for large allocations
Commit 72441af (tree-diff: rework diff_tree() to generate
diffs for multiparent cases as well, 2014-04-07) introduced
the use of alloca so that the common cases of commits with 1
or 2 parents would not be adversely affected by going
through the multi-parent code.

However, our xalloca is not ideal when the number of parents
grows very large:

  1. If the requested size is too large for our stack,
     alloca() has no way to tell us, and we simply segfault
     while trying to access the memory.

  2. It does not use our usual memory_limit_check() logic.

I measured, and alloca is indeed buying us a very small
speedup over xmalloc()/free(). So we'd want to keep
something like it.

This patch simply puts a conditional in place at each
callsite: we use alloca for common known-small numbers of
parents, and otherwise use the heap. We are technically
still vulnerable to (1), but no more so than if we simply
put a few dozen bytes on the stack, which we must do all the
time anyway. And likewise, we technically miss a memory
limit check if it is tiny, but such a limit is pointless.

An alternative to this would be implement something like:

  struct tree *tp, tp_fallback[2];
  if (nparent <= ARRAY_SIZE(tp_fallback))
          tp = tp_fallback;
  else
	  ALLOC_ARRAY(tp, nparent);
  ...
  if (tp != tp_fallback)
	  free(tp);

That would let us drop our xalloca() portability code
entirely. But in my measurements, this seemed to perform
slightly worse than the xalloca solution.

Note in the example above, and in the patch below, I've used
ALLOC_ARRAY() to replace the manual xmalloc(nr * sizeof(*x)).
Besides being shorter, this has the bonus that one cannot
accidentally overflow a size_t during that computation.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-07 17:47:34 -07:00
4e55ed32db add: add --chmod=+x / --chmod=-x options
The executable bit will not be detected (and therefore will not be
set) for paths in a repository with `core.filemode` set to false,
though the users may still wish to add files as executable for
compatibility with other users who _do_ have `core.filemode`
functionality.  For example, Windows users adding shell scripts may
wish to add them as executable for compatibility with users on
non-Windows.

Although this can be done with a plumbing command
(`git update-index --add --chmod=+x foo`), teaching the `git-add`
command allows users to set a file executable with a command that
they're already familiar with.

Signed-off-by: Edward Thomson <ethomson@edwardthomson.com>
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-07 17:43:39 -07:00
7bafc6758c Merge branch 'jc/t2300-setup' into HEAD
* jc/t2300-setup:
  t2300: run git-sh-setup in an environment that better mimics the real life
  More topics for 2.8.4
2016-06-07 14:28:53 -07:00
bd8f005583 regex: fix a SIZE_MAX macro redefinition warning
Since commit 56a1a3ab ("Silence GCC's \"cast of pointer to integer of a
different size\" warning", 26-10-2015), sparse has been issuing a macro
redefinition warning for the SIZE_MAX macro. However, gcc did not issue
any such warning.

After commit 56a1a3ab, in terms of the order of #includes and #defines,
the code looked something like:

  $ cat -n junk.c
       1	#include <stddef.h>
       2
       3	#define SIZE_MAX ((size_t) -1)
       4
       5	#include <stdint.h>
       6
       7	int main(int argc, char *argv[])
       8	{
       9		return 0;
      10	}
  $
  $ gcc junk.c
  $

However, if you compile that file with -Wsystem-headers, then it will
also issue a warning. Having set -Wsystem-headers in CFLAGS, using the
config.mak file, then (on cygwin):

  $ make compat/regex/regex.o
      CC compat/regex/regex.o
  In file included from /usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-pc-cygwin/4.9.3/include/stdint.h:9:0,
                   from compat/regex/regcomp.c:21,
                   from compat/regex/regex.c:77:
  /usr/include/stdint.h:362:0: warning: "SIZE_MAX" redefined
   #define SIZE_MAX (__SIZE_MAX__)
   ^
  In file included from compat/regex/regex.c:69:0:
  compat/regex/regex_internal.h:108:0: note: this is the location of the previous definition
   # define SIZE_MAX ((size_t) -1)
   ^
  $

The compilation of the compat/regex code is somewhat unusual in that the
regex.c file directly #includes the other c files (regcomp.c, regexec.c
and regex_internal.c). Commit 56a1a3ab added an #include of <stdint.h>
to the regcomp.c file, which results in the redefinition, since this is
included after the regex_internal.h header. This header file contains a
'fallback' definition for SIZE_MAX, in order to support systems which do
not have the <stdint.h> header (the HAVE_STDINT_H macro is not defined).

In order to suppress the warning, we move the #include of <stdint.h>
from regcomp.c to the start of the compilation unit, close to the top
of regex.c, prior to the #include of the regex_internal.h header.

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-06 19:22:00 -07:00
71abeb753f reflog: continue walking the reflog past root commits
If a repository contains more than one root commit, then its HEAD
reflog may contain multiple "creation events", i.e. entries whose
"from" value is the null sha1.  Listing such a reflog currently stops
prematurely at the first such entry, even when the reflog still
contains older entries.  This can scare users into thinking that their
reflog got truncated after 'git checkout --orphan'.

Continue walking the reflog past such creation events based on the
preceeding reflog entry's "new" value.

The test 'symbolic-ref writes reflog entry' in t1401-symbolic-ref
implicitly relies on the current behavior of the reflog walker to stop
at a root commit and thus to list only the reflog entries that are
relevant for that test.  Adjust the test to explicitly specify the
number of relevant reflog entries to be listed.

Reported-by: Patrik Gustafsson <pvn@textalk.se>
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-06 15:06:44 -07:00
49fa3dc761 Git 2.9-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-06 14:34:52 -07:00
c42b5d8e69 Sync with 2.8.4
* maint:
  Git 2.8.4
2016-06-06 14:30:49 -07:00
0b65a8dbdb Git 2.8.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-06 14:29:32 -07:00
1676827c85 Merge branch 'kb/msys2-tty' into maint
The "are we talking with TTY, doing an interactive session?"
detection has been updated to work better for "Git for Windows".

* kb/msys2-tty:
  mingw: make isatty() recognize MSYS2's pseudo terminals (/dev/pty*)
2016-06-06 14:27:38 -07:00
389c3289cf Merge branch 'da/difftool' into maint
"git difftool" learned to handle unmerged paths correctly in
dir-diff mode.

* da/difftool:
  difftool: handle unmerged files in dir-diff mode
  difftool: initialize variables for readability
2016-06-06 14:27:37 -07:00
7dcbf891d9 Merge branch 'tb/core-eol-fix' into maint
A couple of bugs around core.autocrlf have been fixed.

* tb/core-eol-fix:
  convert.c: ident + core.autocrlf didn't work
  t0027: test cases for combined attributes
  convert: allow core.autocrlf=input and core.eol=crlf
  t0027: make commit_chk_wrnNNO() reliable
2016-06-06 14:27:36 -07:00
05781d37fa Merge branch 'ar/diff-args-osx-precompose' into maint
Many commands normalize command line arguments from NFD to NFC
variant of UTF-8 on OSX, but commands in the "diff" family did
not, causing "git diff $path" to complain that no such path is
known to Git.  They have been taught to do the normalization.

* ar/diff-args-osx-precompose:
  diff: run arguments through precompose_argv
2016-06-06 14:27:35 -07:00
283badc38e Merge branch 'sb/submodule-helper-relative-path'
A bash-ism "local" has been removed from "git submodule" scripted
Porcelain.

* sb/submodule-helper-relative-path:
  submodule: remove bashism from shell script
2016-06-06 14:18:55 -07:00
f6136f3c39 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-helper-list-signal-unmatch-via-exit-status'
The way how "submodule--helper list" signals unmatch error to its
callers has been updated.

* sb/submodule-helper-list-signal-unmatch-via-exit-status:
  submodule--helper: offer a consistent API
2016-06-06 14:18:55 -07:00
a7d4c49a82 builtin/apply: remove misleading comment on lock_file field
Just like pointer field like prefix, the piece of memory pointed at
by lock_file field is not owned by the apply_state structure.  It is
true that the caller needs to be careful about the lifetime rule for
lockfile instances, but that is none of this API's business.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-06 13:11:02 -07:00
34d8f5a8aa git-prompt.sh: Don't error on null ${ZSH,BASH}_VERSION, $short_sha
When the shell is in "nounset" or "set -u" mode, referencing unset or
null variables results in an error. Protect $ZSH_VERSION and
$BASH_VERSION against that, and initialize $short_sha before use.

Signed-off-by: Ville Skyttä <ville.skytta@iki.fi>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-06 13:09:07 -07:00
0f974e2124 cherry-pick: allow to pick to unborn branches
cherry-pick allows to pick single commits to an empty HEAD, but not
multiple commits.

Allow the multiple commit case, too.

Reported-by: Fabrizio Cucci <fabrizio.cucci@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-06 12:59:28 -07:00
d9925d1a71 am: support --patch-format=mboxrd
Combined with "git format-patch --pretty=mboxrd", this should
allow us to round-trip commit messages with embedded mbox
"From " lines without corruption.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-06 11:40:15 -07:00
c88098d7f1 mailsplit: support unescaping mboxrd messages
This will allow us to parse the output of --pretty=mboxrd
and the output of other mboxrd generators.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-06 11:14:43 -07:00
9f23e04061 pretty: support "mboxrd" output format
This output format prevents format-patch output from breaking
readers if somebody copy+pasted an mbox into a commit message.

Unlike the traditional "mboxo" format, "mboxrd" is designed to
be fully-reversible.  "mboxrd" also gracefully degrades to
showing extra ">" in existing "mboxo" readers.

This degradation is preferable to breaking message splitting
completely, a problem I've seen in "mboxcl" due to having
multiple, non-existent, or inaccurate Content-Length headers.

"mboxcl2" is a non-starter since it's inherits the problems
of "mboxcl" while being completely incompatible with existing
tooling based around mailsplit.

ref: http://homepage.ntlworld.com/jonathan.deboynepollard/FGA/mail-mbox-formats.html

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-06 11:14:14 -07:00
860a2ebecd receive-pack: send auto-gc output over sideband 2
Redirect auto-gc output to the sideband such that it is visible to all
clients. As a side effect, all auto-gc error messages are now prefixed
with "remote: " before being printed to stderr on the client-side which
makes it easier to understand that those error messages originate from
the server.

Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@lfos.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-06 10:58:55 -07:00
5b04ee3b95 l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.9.0 l10n round 1
Update 104 new translations (2596t1f0u) for git v2.9.0-rc0.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2016-06-06 22:33:59 +08:00
984ad9e56c worktree.c: add is_main_worktree()
Main worktree _is_ different. You can lock (*) a linked worktree but not
the main one, for example. Provide an API for checking that.

(*) Add the file $GIT_DIR/worktrees/xxx/locked to avoid worktree xxx
from being removed or moved.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-03 21:58:35 -07:00
6835314459 worktree.c: add find_worktree()
So far we haven't needed to identify an existing worktree from command
line. Future commands such as lock or move will need it. The current
implementation identifies worktrees by path (*). In future, the function
could learn to identify by $(basename $path) or tags...

(*) We could probably go cheaper with comparing inode number (and
probably more reliable than paths when unicode enters the game). But not
all systems have good inode that so let's stick to something simple for
now.

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>
2016-06-03 21:58:18 -07:00
0719f3eecd userdiff: add built-in pattern for CSS
CSS is widely used, motivating it being included as a built-in pattern.

It must be noted that the word_regex for CSS (i.e. the regex defining
what is a word in the language) does not consider '.' and '#' characters
(in CSS selectors) to be part of the word. This behavior is documented
by the test t/t4018/css-rule.
The logic behind this behavior is the following: identifiers in CSS
selectors are identifiers in a HTML/XML document. Therefore, the '.'/'#'
character are not part of the identifier, but an indicator of the nature
of the identifier in HTML/XML (class or id). Diffing ".class1" and
".class2" must show that the class name is changed, but we still are
selecting a class.

Logic behind the "pattern" regex is:
    1. reject lines ending with a colon/semicolon (properties)
    2. if a line begins with a name in column 1, pick the whole line

Credits to Johannes Sixt (j6t@kdbg.org) for the pattern regex and most
of the tests.

Signed-off-by: William Duclot <william.duclot@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-03 14:45:56 -07:00
6326f19925 Almost ready for 2.9-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-03 14:38:35 -07:00
bf523da2a2 Merge branch 'rs/apply-name-terminate'
Code clean-up.

* rs/apply-name-terminate:
  apply: remove unused parameters from name_terminate()
2016-06-03 14:38:04 -07:00
29e54b019f Merge branch 'rs/patch-id-use-skip-prefix'
Code clean-up.

* rs/patch-id-use-skip-prefix:
  patch-id: use starts_with() and skip_prefix()
2016-06-03 14:38:03 -07:00
fb14575e10 Merge branch 'bd/readme.markdown-more'
The mark-up in the top-level README.md file has been updated to
typeset CLI command names differently from the body text.

* bd/readme.markdown-more:
  README.md: format CLI commands with code syntax
2016-06-03 14:38:02 -07:00
ec5ad66ee2 Merge branch 'mm/makefile-developer-can-be-in-config-mak'
"make DEVELOPER=1" worked as expected; setting DEVELOPER=1 in
config.mak didn't.

* mm/makefile-developer-can-be-in-config-mak:
  Makefile: add $(DEVELOPER_CFLAGS) variable
  Makefile: move 'ifdef DEVELOPER' after config.mak* inclusion
2016-06-03 14:38:02 -07:00
a8398b952d Merge branch 'em/man-bold-literal'
The manpage output of our documentation did not render well in
terminal; typeset literals in bold by default to make them stand
out more.

* em/man-bold-literal:
  Documentation: bold literals in man
2016-06-03 14:38:02 -07:00
1df2d6e8df Merge branch 'pa/cherry-pick-doc-typo'
"git cherry-pick --help" had three instances of word "behavior",
one of which was spelled "behaviour", which is updated to match the
other two.

* pa/cherry-pick-doc-typo:
  git-cherry-pick.txt: correct a small typo
2016-06-03 14:38:02 -07:00
160ef79cec Merge branch 'mr/send-email-doc-gmail-2fa'
Typofix.

* mr/send-email-doc-gmail-2fa:
  Documentation/git-send-email: fix typo in gmail 2FA section
2016-06-03 14:38:01 -07:00
7267404dc5 Merge branch 'js/rebase-i-dedup-call-to-rerere'
"git rebase -i", after it fails to auto-resolve the conflict, had
an unnecessary call to "git rerere" from its very early days, which
was spotted recently; the call has been removed.

* js/rebase-i-dedup-call-to-rerere:
  rebase -i: remove an unnecessary 'rerere' invocation
2016-06-03 14:38:01 -07:00
be3ac81f0c Merge branch 'js/perf-rebase-i'
The one in 'master' has a brown-paper-bag bug that breaks the perf
test when used inside a usual Git repository with a working tree.

* js/perf-rebase-i:
  perf: make the tests work without a worktree
2016-06-03 14:38:00 -07:00
a1bc3dd464 builtin/apply: move 'newfd' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'newfd' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-03 10:31:56 -07:00
8f31fac365 builtin/apply: add 'lock_file' pointer into 'struct apply_state'
We cannot have a 'struct lock_file' allocated on the stack, as lockfile.c
keeps a linked list of all created lock_file structures.

Also 'struct apply_state' users might later want the same 'struct lock_file'
instance to be reused by different series of calls to the apply api.

So let's add a 'struct lock_file *lock_file' pointer into 'struct apply_state'
and have the user of 'struct apply_state' allocate memory for the actual
'struct lock_file' instance.

Let's also add an argument to init_apply_state(), so that the caller can
easily supply a pointer to the allocated instance.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-03 10:30:16 -07:00
fb85db84dc rev-list: disable bitmaps when "-n" is used with listing objects
You can ask rev-list to use bitmaps to speed up an --objects
traversal, which should generally give you your answers much
faster.

Likewise, you can ask rev-list to limit such a traversal
with `-n`, in which case we'll show only a limited set of
commits (and only the tree and commit objects directly
reachable from those commits).

But if you do both together, the results are nonsensical. We
end up limiting any fallback traversal we do to _find_ the
bitmaps, but the actual set of objects we output will be
picked arbitrarily from the union of any bitmaps we do find,
and will involve the objects of many more commits.

It's possible that somebody might want this as a "show me
what you can, but limit the amount of work you do" flag.
But as with the prior commit clamping "--count", the results
are basically non-deterministic; you'll get the values from
some commits between `n` and the total number, and you can't
tell which.

And unlike the `--count` case, we can't easily generate the
"real" value from the bitmap values (you can't just walk
back `-n` commits and subtract out the reachable objects
from the boundary commits; the bitmaps for `X` record its
total reachability, so you don't know which objects are
directly from `X` itself, which from `X^`, and so on).

So let's just fallback to the non-bitmap code path in this
case, so we always give a sane answer.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-03 09:01:02 -07:00
5c9f9bf313 rev-list: "adjust" results of "--count --use-bitmap-index -n"
If you ask rev-list for:

    git rev-list --count --use-bitmap-index HEAD

we optimize out the actual traversal and just give you the
number of bits set in the commit bitmap. This is faster,
which is good.

But if you ask to limit the size of the traversal, like:

    git rev-list --count --use-bitmap-index -n 100 HEAD

we'll still output the full bitmapped number we found. On
the surface, that might even seem OK. You explicitly asked
to use the bitmap index, and it was cheap to compute the
real answer, so we gave it to you.

But there's something much more complicated going on under
the hood. If we don't have a bitmap directly for HEAD, then
we have to actually traverse backwards, looking for a
bitmapped commit. And _that_ traversal is bounded by our
`-n` count.

This is a good thing, because it bounds the work we have to
do, which is probably what the user wanted by asking for
`-n`. But now it makes the output quite confusing. You might
get many values:

  - your `-n` value, if we walked back and never found a
    bitmap (or fewer if there weren't that many commits)

  - the actual full count, if we found a bitmap root for
    every path of our traversal with in the `-n` limit

  - any number in between! We might have walked back and
    found _some_ bitmaps, but then cut off the traversal
    early with some commits not accounted for in the result.

So you cannot even see a value higher than your `-n` and say
"OK, bitmaps kicked in, this must be the real full count".
The only sane thing is for git to just clamp the value to a
maximum of the `-n` value, which means we should output the
exact same results whether bitmaps are in use or not.

The test in t5310 demonstrates this by using `-n 1`.
Without this patch we fail in the full-bitmap case (where we
do not have to traverse at all) but _not_ in the
partial-bitmap case (where we have to walk down to find an
actual bitmap). With this patch, both cases just work.

I didn't implement the crazy in-between case, just because
it's complicated to set up, and is really a subset of the
full-count case, which we do cover.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-03 09:00:59 -07:00
20b20a22f8 upload-pack: provide a hook for running pack-objects
When upload-pack serves a client request, it turns to
pack-objects to do the heavy lifting of creating a
packfile. There's no easy way to intercept the call to
pack-objects, but there are a few good reasons to want to do
so:

  1. If you're debugging a client or server issue with
     fetching, you may want to store a copy of the generated
     packfile.

  2. If you're gathering data from real-world fetches for
     performance analysis or debugging, storing a copy of
     the arguments and stdin lets you replay the pack
     generation at your leisure.

  3. You may want to insert a caching layer around
     pack-objects; it is the most CPU- and memory-intensive
     part of serving a fetch, and its output is a pure
     function[1] of its input, making it an ideal place to
     consolidate identical requests.

This patch adds a simple "hook" interface to intercept calls
to pack-objects. The new test demonstrates how it can be
used for debugging (using it for caching is a
straightforward extension; the tricky part is writing the
actual caching layer).

This hook is unlike the normal hook scripts found in the
"hooks/" directory of a repository. Because we promise that
upload-pack is safe to run in an untrusted repository, we
cannot execute arbitrary code or commands found in the
repository (neither in hooks/, nor in the config). So
instead, this hook is triggered from a config variable that
is explicitly ignored in the per-repo config.

The config variable holds the actual shell command to run as
the hook.  Another approach would be to simply treat it as a
boolean: "should I respect the upload-pack hooks in this
repo?", and then run the script from "hooks/" as we usually
do. However, that isn't as flexible; there's no way to run a
hook approved by the site administrator (e.g., in
"/etc/gitconfig") on a repository whose contents are not
trusted. The approach taken by this patch is more
fine-grained, if a little less conventional for git hooks
(it does behave similar to other configured commands like
diff.external, etc).

[1] Pack-objects isn't _actually_ a pure function. Its
    output depends on the exact packing of the object
    database, and if multi-threading is used for delta
    compression, can even differ racily. But for the
    purposes of caching, that's OK; of the many possible
    outputs for a given input, it is sufficient only that we
    output one of them.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-02 15:22:24 -07:00
58461bdf15 t1308: do not get fooled by symbolic links to the source tree
When your $PWD does not match $(/bin/pwd), e.g. you have your copy
of the git source tree in one place, point it with a symbolic link,
and then "cd" to that symbolic link before running 'make test', one
of the tests in t1308 expects that the per-user configuration was
reported to have been read from the true path (i.e. relative to the
target of such a symbolic link), but the test-config program reports
a path relative to $PWD (i.e. the symbolic link).

Instead, expect a path relative to $HOME (aka $TRASH_DIRECTORY), as
per-user configuration is read from $HOME/.gitconfig and the test
framework sets these shell variables up in such a way to avoid this
problem.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-02 15:22:24 -07:00
ed6e8038f9 pathspec: rename free_pathspec() to clear_pathspec()
The function takes a pointer to a pathspec structure, and releases
the resources held by it, but does not free() the structure itself.
Such a function should be called "clear", not "free".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-02 14:09:22 -07:00
1df036ea25 Documentation/git-send-email: fix typo in gmail 2FA section
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 17:23:38 -07:00
fe17fc0006 t2300: run git-sh-setup in an environment that better mimics the real life
When we run scripted Porcelains, "git" potty has set up the $PATH by
prepending $GIT_EXEC_PATH, the path given by "git --exec-path=$there
$cmd", etc. already.  Because of this, scripted Porcelains can
dot-source shell script library like git-sh-setup with simple dot
without specifying any path.

t2300 however dot-sources git-sh-setup without adjusting $PATH like
the real "git" potty does.  This has not been a problem so far, but
once git-sh-setup wants to rely on the $PATH adjustment, just like
any scripted Porcelains already do, it would become one.  It cannot
for example dot-source another shell library without specifying the
full path to it by prefixing $(git --exec-path).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 14:15:17 -07:00
e256eec79d t5500 & t7403: lose bash-ism "local"
In t5500::check_prot_host_port_path(), diagport is not a variable
used elsewhere and the function is not recursively called so this
can simply lose the "local", which may not be supported by shell
(besides, the function liberally clobbers other variables without
making them "local").

t7403::reset_submodule_urls() overrides the "root" variable used
in the test framework for no good reason; its use is not about
temporarily relocating where the test repositories are created.
This assignment can be made not to clobber the variable by moving
them into the subshells it already uses.  Its value is always
$TRASH_DIRECTORY, so we could use it instead there, and this
function that is called only once and its two subshells may not be
necessary (instead, the caller can use "git -C $there config" and
set a value that is derived from $TRASH_DIRECTORY), but this is a
minimum fix that is needed to lose "local".

Helped-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 14:00:33 -07:00
44431df024 submodule: remove bashism from shell script
Junio pointed out `relative_path` was using bashisms via the
local variables. As the longer term goal is to rewrite most of the
submodule code in C, do it now.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 11:32:53 -07:00
b0f4b40846 submodule--helper: offer a consistent API
In 48308681 (2016-02-29, git submodule update: have a dedicated helper
for cloning), the helper communicated errors back only via exit code,
and dance with printing '#unmatched' in case of error was left to
git-submodule.sh as it uses the output of the helper and pipes it into
shell commands. This change makes the helper consistent by never
printing '#unmatched' in the helper but always handling these piping
issues in the actual shell script.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 11:31:49 -07:00
91b769c48f builtin/apply: move applying patches into apply_all_patches()
To libify the apply functionality we should provide a function to
apply many patches. Let's move the code to do that into a new
apply_all_patches() function.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
c84a86c995 builtin/apply: move 'state' check into check_apply_state()
To libify the apply functionality we should provide a function
to check that the values in a 'struct apply_state' instance are
coherent. Let's move the code to do that into a new
check_apply_state() function.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
2f63cea963 builtin/apply: move 'symlink_changes' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'symlink_changes' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
71dac5cef5 builtin/apply: move 'fn_table' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'fn_table' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

As fn_table is cleared at the end of apply_patch(), it is not
necessary to clear it in clear_apply_state().

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
d7263d097c builtin/apply: move 'state_linenr' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'state_linenr' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
1ffec303ab builtin/apply: move 'max_change' and 'max_len' into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'max_change' and 'max_len'
variables should not be static and global to the file. Let's move
them into 'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
10a9ddba2c builtin/apply: move 'ws_ignore_action' into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'ws_ignore_action' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
e9c6b279b8 builtin/apply: move 'ws_error_action' into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'ws_error_action' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
7243f5f350 builtin/apply: move 'applied_after_fixing_ws' into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'applied_after_fixing_ws' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
70e1d53df1 builtin/apply: move 'squelch_whitespace_errors' into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'squelch_whitespace_errors' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
8bcba3d0d6 builtin/apply: remove whitespace_option arg from set_default_whitespace_mode()
A previous change has move the whitespace_option variable from cmd_apply
into 'struct apply_state', so that we can now avoid passing it separately
to set_default_whitespace_mode().

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
161fcbe988 builtin/apply: move 'whitespace_option' into 'struct apply_state'
This will enable further refactoring, and it is more coherent and
simpler if all the option_parse_*() functions are passed a
'struct apply_state' instance in opt->value.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
5460cd0b10 builtin/apply: move 'whitespace_error' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'whitespace_error' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
36371e4c7e builtin/apply: move 'root' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'root' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
b76184e410 builtin/apply: move 'p_value_known' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'p_value_known' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
dbd23433e7 builtin/apply: move 'p_value' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'p_value' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
0c1138cbdb builtin/apply: move 'has_include' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'has_include' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
82f0dfca54 builtin/apply: move 'limit_by_name' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'limit_by_name' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
b802355863 builtin/apply: move 'patch_input_file' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'patch_input_file' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
574f5a59d8 builtin/apply: move 'apply' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'apply' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
a48f9bb1b3 builtin/apply: move 'p_context' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'p_context' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
a0bfaf0796 builtin/apply: move 'fake_ancestor' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'fake_ancestor' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

By the way remove a comment about '--index-info' that was renamed
'--build-fake-ancestor' in commit 26b2800768
(apply: get rid of --index-info in favor of --build-fake-ancestor,
Sep 17 2007).

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
f4c9eaa49c builtin/apply: move 'line_termination' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'line_termination' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
6c0c2bf56c builtin/apply: move 'unsafe_paths' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'unsafe_paths' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
1ff36a107f builtin/apply: move 'no_add' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'no_add' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
b12e888f7a builtin/apply: move 'threeway' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'threeway' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
79a3efda79 builtin/apply: move 'summary' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'summary' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
179070b91c builtin/apply: move 'numstat' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'numstat' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
c4f5c39862 builtin/apply: move 'diffstat' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'diffstat' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
885eefb12d builtin/apply: move 'cached' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'cached' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
6ca4c39093 builtin/apply: move 'allow_overlap' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'allow_overlap' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
901f9c6d42 builtin/apply: move 'update_index' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'update_index' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
5cae882d27 builtin/apply: move 'apply_verbosely' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'apply_verbosely' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
30b5ae4d41 builtin/apply: move 'apply_with_reject' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'apply_with_reject' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
2595a8b146 builtin/apply: move 'apply_in_reverse' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'apply_in_reverse' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
ee87a6e740 builtin/apply: move 'check_index' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'check_index' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
22a7233584 builtin/apply: move 'check' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'check' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
1da16e1ed8 builtin/apply: move 'unidiff_zero' global into 'struct apply_state'
To libify the apply functionality the 'unidiff_zero' variable should
not be static and global to the file. Let's move it into
'struct apply_state'.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
6f27b941f2 builtin/apply: move 'state' init into init_apply_state()
When the apply functionality will be libified, the 'struct apply_state'
will be used by different pieces of code.

To properly initialize a 'struct apply_state', let's provide a nice
and easy to use init_apply_state() function.

Let's also provide clear_apply_state() to release memory used by
'struct apply_state' members, so that a 'struct apply_state' instance
can be easily reused without leaking memory.

Note that clear_apply_state() does nothing for now, but it will later.

While at it, let's rename 'prefix_' parameter to 'prefix'.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 10:10:16 -07:00
51dd3e81d4 Makefile: add $(DEVELOPER_CFLAGS) variable
This does not change the behavior, but allows the user to tweak
DEVELOPER_CFLAGS on the command-line or in a config.mak* file if
needed.

This also makes the code somewhat cleaner as it follows the pattern

<initialisation of variables>
<include statements>
<actual build logic>

by specifying which flags to activate in the first part, and actually
activating them in the last one.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 08:17:15 -07:00
d2554c7207 test-lib: add in-shell "env" replacement
The one-shot environment variable syntax:

  FOO=BAR some-program

is unportable when some-program is actually a shell
function, like test_must_fail (on some shells FOO remains
set after the function returns, and on others it does not).

We sometimes get around this by using env, like:

  test_must_fail env FOO=BAR some-program

But that only works because test_must_fail's arguments are
themselves a command which can be run. You can't run:

  env FOO=BAR test_must_fail some-program

because env does not know about our shell functions. So
there is no equivalent for test_commit, for example, and one
must resort to:

  (
    FOO=BAR
    export FOO
    test_commit
  )

which is a bit verbose.  Let's add a version of "env" that
works _inside_ the shell, by creating a subshell, exporting
variables from its argument list, and running the command.

Its use is demonstrated on a currently-unportable case in
t4014.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-01 08:04:08 -07:00
60bd4b1c51 Git 2.9-rc1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 14:12:15 -07:00
257f6f404b Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  More topics for 2.8.4
2016-05-31 14:12:08 -07:00
4b0891ffe4 More topics for 2.8.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 14:11:38 -07:00
3296e1a93a Merge branch 'sb/submodule-deinit-all' into maint
Correct faulty recommendation to use "git submodule deinit ." when
de-initialising all submodules, which would result in a strange
error message in a pathological corner case.

* sb/submodule-deinit-all:
  submodule deinit: require '--all' instead of '.' for all submodules
2016-05-31 14:09:46 -07:00
e646a82ce2 Merge branch 'bn/http-cookiefile-config' into maint
"http.cookieFile" configuration variable clearly wants a pathname,
but we forgot to treat it as such by e.g. applying tilde expansion.

* bn/http-cookiefile-config:
  http: expand http.cookieFile as a path
  Documentation: config: improve word ordering for http.cookieFile
2016-05-31 14:08:28 -07:00
68a6e976a8 Merge branch 'jk/test-send-sh-x-trace-elsewhere' into maint
Running tests with '-x' option to trace the individual command
executions is a useful way to debug test scripts, but some tests
that capture the standard error stream and check what the command
said can be broken with the trace output mixed in.  When running
our tests under "bash", however, we can redirect the trace output
to another file descriptor to keep the standard error of programs
being tested intact.

* jk/test-send-sh-x-trace-elsewhere:
  test-lib: set BASH_XTRACEFD automatically
2016-05-31 14:08:27 -07:00
9ee8f9409c Merge branch 'js/name-rev-use-oldest-ref' into maint
"git describe --contains" often made a hard-to-justify choice of
tag to give name to a given commit, because it tried to come up
with a name with smallest number of hops from a tag, causing an old
commit whose close descendant that is recently tagged were not
described with respect to an old tag but with a newer tag.  It did
not help that its computation of "hop" count was further tweaked to
penalize being on a side branch of a merge.  The logic has been
updated to favor using the tag with the oldest tagger date, which
is a lot easier to explain to the end users: "We describe a commit
in terms of the (chronologically) oldest tag that contains the
commit."

* js/name-rev-use-oldest-ref:
  name-rev: include taggerdate in considering the best name
2016-05-31 14:08:26 -07:00
7063693d51 rebase -i: remove an unnecessary 'rerere' invocation
Interactive rebase uses 'git cherry-pick' and 'git merge' to replay
commits. Both invoke the 'rerere' machinery when they fail due to merge
conflicts. Note that all code paths with these two commands also invoke
the shell function die_with_patch when the commands fail.

Since commit 629716d2 ("rerere: do use multiple variants") the second
operation of the rerere machinery can be observed by a duplicated
message "Recorded preimage for 'file'". This second operation records
the same preimage as the first one and, hence, only wastes cycles.
Remove the 'git rerere' invocation from die_with_patch.

Shell function die_with_patch can be called after the failure of
"git commit", too, which also calls into the rerere machinery, but it
does so only after a successful commit to record the resolution.
Therefore, it is wrong to call 'git rerere' from die_with_patch after
"git commit" fails.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 13:47:18 -07:00
e2522f2aca perf: make the tests work without a worktree
In regular repositories $source_git and $objects_dir contain relative
paths based on $source.  Go there to allow cp to resolve them.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 13:44:59 -07:00
4aa2c4753d grep: -W: don't extend context to trailing empty lines
Empty lines between functions are shown by grep -W, as it considers them
to be part of the function preceding them.  They are not interesting in
most languages.  The previous patches stopped showing them for diff -W.

Stop showing empty lines trailing a function with grep -W.  Grep scans
the lines of a buffer from top to bottom and prints matching lines
immediately.  Thus we need to peek ahead in order to determine if an
empty line is part of a function body and worth showing or not.

Remember how far ahead we peeked in order to avoid having to do so
repeatedly when handling multiple consecutive empty lines.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 13:08:56 -07:00
799e09e5fb t7810: add test for grep -W and trailing empty context lines
Add a test demonstrating that git grep -W prints empty lines following
the function context we're actually interested in.  The modified test
file makes it necessary to adjust three unrelated test cases.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 13:08:56 -07:00
e0876bca4d xdiff: don't trim common tail with -W
The function trim_common_tail() exits early if context lines are
requested.  If -U0 and -W are specified together then it can still trim
context lines that might belong to a changed function.  As a result
that function is shown incompletely.

Fix that by calling trim_common_tail() only if no function context or
fixed context is requested.  The parameter ctx is no longer needed now;
remove it.

While at it fix an outdated comment as well.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 13:08:56 -07:00
9e6a4cfc38 xdiff: -W: don't include common trailing empty lines in context
Empty lines between functions are shown by diff -W, as it considers them
to be part of the function preceding them.  They are not interesting in
most languages.  The previous patch stopped showing them in the special
case of a function added at the end of a file.

Stop extending context to those empty lines by skipping back over them
from the start of the next function.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 13:08:56 -07:00
392f6d3166 xdiff: ignore empty lines before added functions with -W
If a new function and a preceding empty line is appended, diff -W shows
the previous function in full in order to provide context for that empty
line.  In most languages empty lines between sections are not
interesting in and off themselves and showing a whole extra function for
them is not what we want.

Skip empty lines when checking of the appended chunk starts with a
function line, thereby avoiding to extend the context just for them.

Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 13:08:56 -07:00
6d5badb238 xdiff: handle appended chunks better with -W
If lines are added at the end of a file, diff -W shows the whole file.
That's because get_func_line() only considers the pre-image and gives up
if it sees a record index beyond its end.

Consider the post-image as well to see if the added lines already make
up a full function.  If it doesn't then search for the previous function
line by starting from the bottom of the pre-image, thereby avoiding to
confuse get_func_line().

Reuse the existing label called "again", as it's exactly where we need
to jump to when we're done handling the pre-context, but rename it to
"post_context_calculation" in order to document its new purpose better.

Reported-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Initial-patch-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 13:08:56 -07:00
ff2981f724 xdiff: factor out match_func_rec()
Add match_func_rec(), a helper that wraps accessing a record and calling
the appropriate function for checking if it contains a function line.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 13:08:56 -07:00
d3621de789 t4051: rewrite, add more tests
Remove the tests that checked against a fixed result and replace them
with more focused checks of desired properties of the created diffs.
That way we get more detailed and meaningful diagnostics.

Store test file contents in files in a subdirectory in order to avoid
cluttering the test script with them.

Use tagged commits to store the changes to test diff -W against instead
of using changes to the worktree.  Use the worktree instead to try and
apply the generated patch in order to validate it.

Document unwanted features: trailing empty lines, too much context for
appended functions, insufficient context at the end with -U0.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 13:07:58 -07:00
39fbe92248 Merge branch 'es/t1500-modernize'
test updates to make it more readable and maintainable.

* es/t1500-modernize:
  t1500: avoid setting environment variables outside of tests
  t1500: avoid setting configuration options outside of tests
  t1500: avoid changing working directory outside of tests
  t1500: test_rev_parse: facilitate future test enhancements
  t1500: be considerate to future potential tests
2016-05-31 12:40:55 -07:00
628991391d Merge branch 'jk/cat-file-buffered-batch-all'
"git cat-file --batch-all" has been sped up, by taking advantage
of the fact that it does not have to read a list of objects, in two
ways.

* jk/cat-file-buffered-batch-all:
  cat-file: default to --buffer when --batch-all-objects is used
  cat-file: avoid noop calls to sha1_object_info_extended
2016-05-31 12:40:54 -07:00
bc4b9247df Merge branch 'fc/fast-import-broken-marks-file'
"git fast-import --export-marks" would overwrite the existing marks
file even when it makes a dump from its custom die routine.
Prevent it from doing so when we have an import-marks file but
haven't finished reading it.

* fc/fast-import-broken-marks-file:
  fast-import: do not truncate exported marks file
2016-05-31 12:40:53 -07:00
1a450e2fd1 worktree: allow "-" short-hand for @{-1} in add command
Since `git worktree add` uses `git checkout` when `[<branch>]` is used,
and `git checkout -` is already supported, it makes sense to allow the
same shortcut in `git worktree add`.

Signed-off-by: Jordan DE GEA <jordan.de-gea@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 12:28:25 -07:00
5945717009 Documentation: bold literals in man
Backticks are emphasized through monospaced styling in the HTML
version of Git documentation. But they were left unstyled in the
manual pages.

To make the man pages more comfortably read, `MAN_BOLD_LITERAL` was
added by 5121a6d (Documentation: option to render literal text as
bold for manpages, 2009-03-27).  It allowed the user to build the
manpages with literals in bold style.

For precaution it was not set by default back then.

Since 79c461d (docs: default to more modern toolset, 2010-11-19), it
is assumed ASCIIDOC 8 and at least docbook-xsl 1.73 are used, so the
need for compatibility concern is much lessor now.

Remove `MAN_BOLD_LITERAL`, and typeset literals as bold by default .
Add `NO_MAN_BOLD_LITERAL`, a new Makefile option, disabling this
feature when defined.

Signed-off-by: Erwan MATHONIERE <erwan.mathoniere@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Samuel GROOT <samuel.groot@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Tom RUSSELLO <tom.russello@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu MOY <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 11:42:30 -07:00
f086c2576c l10n: pt_PT: update Portuguese translation
Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
2016-05-31 18:17:40 +00:00
ef04f0dcbb l10n: pt_PT: update according to git-gui glossary
Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
2016-05-31 18:16:03 +00:00
ca1a7872ee l10n: pt_PT: merge git.pot file
Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
2016-05-31 18:15:56 +00:00
9812f2136b upload-pack.c: use parse-options API
Use the parse-options API rather than a hand-rolled option parser.

Description for --stateless-rpc and --advertise-refs come from
42526b4 (Add stateless RPC options to upload-pack,
receive-pack, 2009-10-30).

Signed-off-by: Antoine Queru <antoine.queru@grenoble-inp.org>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 10:17:20 -07:00
d615628c35 Makefile: move 'ifdef DEVELOPER' after config.mak* inclusion
The DEVELOPER knob was introduced in 658df95 (add DEVELOPER makefile
knob to check for acknowledged warnings, 2016-02-25), and works well
when used as "make DEVELOPER=1", and when the configure script was not
used.

However, the advice given in CodingGuidelines to add DEVELOPER=1 to
config.mak does not: config.mak is included after testing for
DEVELOPER in the Makefile, and at least GNU Make's manual specifies
"Conditional directives are parsed immediately", hence the config.mak
declaration is not visible at the time the conditional is evaluated.

Also, when using the configure script to generate a
config.mak.autogen, the later file contained a "CFLAGS = <flags>"
initialization, which overrode the "CFLAGS += -W..." triggered by
DEVELOPER.

This patch fixes both issues.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 10:01:51 -07:00
a299e3a396 README.md: format CLI commands with code syntax
CLI commands which are mentioned in the readme are now formatted with
the Markdown code syntax to make the documentation more readable.

Signed-off-by: Benjamin Dopplinger <b.dopplinger@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-31 08:54:24 -07:00
f3913c2d03 Final batch before 2.9-rc1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-29 18:08:26 -07:00
c6c655fdb1 Merge branch 'ak/t0008-ksh88-workaround'
Test portability workaround.

* ak/t0008-ksh88-workaround:
  t0008: 4 tests fail with ksh88
2016-05-29 18:06:44 -07:00
10184b2718 Merge branch 'js/t6044-use-test-seq'
Test portability fix.

* js/t6044-use-test-seq:
  t6044: replace seq by test_seq
2016-05-29 18:06:43 -07:00
b586d8c733 Merge branch 'ak/t4204-shell-portability'
Update a test to run also under ksh88.

* ak/t4204-shell-portability:
  t4204: do not let $name variable clobbered
2016-05-29 18:06:43 -07:00
5b67f9a028 Merge branch 'rj/log-decorate-auto'
We forgot to add "git log --decorate=auto" to documentation when we
added the feature back in v2.1.0 timeframe.

* rj/log-decorate-auto:
  log: document the --decorate=auto option
2016-05-29 18:06:43 -07:00
3a79d4251b Merge branch 'mr/send-email-doc-gmail-2fa'
Give hints to GMail users with two-factor auth enabled that
they need app-specific-password when using send-email.

* mr/send-email-doc-gmail-2fa:
  Documentation: add instructions to help setup gmail 2FA
2016-05-29 18:06:42 -07:00
07ffe8716f Merge branch 'kb/msys2-tty'
The "are we talking with TTY, doing an interactive session?"
detection has been updated to work better for "Git for Windows".

* kb/msys2-tty:
  mingw: make isatty() recognize MSYS2's pseudo terminals (/dev/pty*)
2016-05-29 18:06:41 -07:00
d2986d0f29 fast-import: invalidate pack_id references after loosening
When loosening a pack, the current pack_id gets reused when
checkpointing and the import does not terminate.  This causes
problems after checkpointing as the object table, branch, and
tag lists still contains pre-checkpoint references to the
recycled pack_id.

Merely clearing the object_table as suggested by Jeff King in
http://mid.gmane.org/20160517121330.GA7346@sigill.intra.peff.net
is insufficient as the marks set still contains references
to object entries.

Wrong pack_id references branch and tags lists do not cause
errors, but can lead to misleading crash reports and core dumps,
so they are also invalidated.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-29 17:58:34 -07:00
cd82b7a0f7 git-cherry-pick.txt: correct a small typo
Most of the document mentions `behavior` instead of the British
variation, `behaviour`. This change makes it consistent.

Signed-off-by: Pablo Santiago Blum de Aguiar <scorphus@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-29 17:32:12 -07:00
2bb73ae803 patch-id: use starts_with() and skip_prefix()
Get rid of magic numbers and avoid running over the end of a NUL
terminated string by using starts_with() and skip_prefix() instead
of memcmp().

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-29 17:10:05 -07:00
aa20cbc2e6 apply: remove unused parameters from name_terminate()
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-29 17:05:38 -07:00
17a07e2ae2 blame: require 0 context lines while finding moved lines with -M
The core part of git blame -M required 1 context line, but
there is no rationale to be found in the code; it causes artifacts
like discussed in the thread:

  <http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/255289/>.

<http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/295795>
sheds some more light on the history of the previous choice.

Signed-off-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-29 17:04:23 -07:00
0d670e7818 l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2597t,0f,0u)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2016-05-29 16:13:24 +03:00
6dfee07643 Merge branch 'v2.9.0_rnd1_fr' of git://github.com/jnavila/git
* 'v2.9.0_rnd1_fr' of git://github.com/jnavila/git:
  l10n: fr.po v2.9.0rnd1
2016-05-29 19:55:26 +08:00
6640988123 Documentation: add instructions to help setup gmail 2FA
For those who use two-factor authentication with gmail, git-send-email
will not work unless it is setup with an app-specific password. The
example for setting up git-send-email for use with gmail will now
include information on generating and storing the app-specific password.

Signed-off-by: Michael Rappazzo <rappazzo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-27 14:49:02 -07:00
462cbb415e log: document the --decorate=auto option
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-27 13:16:47 -07:00
b15a3e005a format_commit_message: honor color=auto for %C(auto)
git-log(1) documents that when specifying the `%C(auto)` format
placeholder will "turn on auto coloring on the next %placeholders
until the color is switched again."

However, when `%C(auto)` is used, the present implementation will turn
colors on unconditionally (even if the color configuration is turned off
for the current context - for example, `--no-color` was specified or the
color is `auto` and the output is not a tty).

Update `format_commit_one` to examine the current context when a format
string of `%C(auto)` is specified, which ensures that we will not
unconditionally write colors.  This brings that behavior in line with
the behavior of `%C(auto,<colorname>)`, and allows the user the ability
to specify that color should be displayed only when the output is a
tty.

Additionally, add a test for `%C(auto)` and update the existing tests
for `%C(auto,...)` as they were misidentified as being applicable to
`%C(auto)`.

Tests from Jeff King.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Edward Thomson <ethomson@edwardthomson.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-27 11:24:54 -07:00
9acc591111 config: add a notion of "scope"
A config callback passed to git_config() doesn't know very
much about the context in which it sees a variable. It can
ask whether the variable comes from a file, and get the file
name. But without analyzing the filename (which is hard to
do accurately), it cannot tell whether it is in system-level
config, user-level config, or repo-specific config.

Generally this doesn't matter; the point of not passing this
to the callback is that it should treat the config the same
no matter where it comes from. But some programs, like
upload-pack, are a special case: we should be able to run
them in an untrusted repository, which means we cannot use
any "dangerous" config from the repository config file (but
it is OK to use it from system or user config).

This patch teaches the config code to record the "scope" of
each variable, and make it available inside config
callbacks, similar to how we give access to the filename.
The scope is the starting source for a particular parsing
operation, and remains the same even if we include other
files (so a .git/config which includes another file will
remain CONFIG_SCOPE_REPO, as it would be similarly
untrusted).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-27 10:45:40 -07:00
0d44a2dacc config: return configset value for current_config_ functions
When 473166b (config: add 'origin_type' to config_source
struct, 2016-02-19) added accessor functions for the origin
type and name, it taught them only to look at the "cf"
struct that is filled in while we are parsing the config.
This is sufficient to make it work with git-config, which
uses git_config_with_options() under the hood. That function
freshly parses the config files and triggers the callback
when it parses each key.

Most git programs, however, use git_config(). This interface
will populate a cache during the actual parse, and then
serve values from the cache. Calling current_config_filename()
in a callback here will find a NULL cf and produce an error.
There are no such callers right now, but let's prepare for
adding some by making this work.

We already record source information in a struct attached to
each value. We just need to make it globally available and
then consult it from the accessor functions.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-27 10:44:54 -07:00
abed000aca submodule update: learn --[no-]recommend-shallow option
Sometimes the history of a submodule is not considered important by
the projects upstream. To make it easier for downstream users, allow
a boolean field 'submodule.<name>.shallow' in .gitmodules, which can
be used to recommend whether upstream considers the history important.

This field is honored in the initial clone by default, it can be
ignored by giving the `--no-recommend-shallow` option.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-27 10:40:46 -07:00
37f52e9344 submodule-config: keep shallow recommendation around
The shallow field will be used in a later patch by `submodule update`.
To differentiate between the actual depth (which may be different),
we name it `recommend_shallow` as the field in the .gitmodules file
is only a recommendation by the project.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-27 10:40:45 -07:00
5ed5b8d87a l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2597t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2016-05-27 14:04:42 +01:00
955efd65f1 l10n: fr.po v2.9.0rnd1
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2016-05-26 22:46:41 +02:00
7777322816 Sync with maint
* maint:
  Start preparing for 2.8.4
  archive-tar: convert snprintf to xsnprintf
2016-05-26 13:28:24 -07:00
b051c59a00 Start preparing for 2.8.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-26 13:21:00 -07:00
6396212d1c Merge branch 'jc/linkgit-fix' into maint
Many 'linkgit:<git documentation page>' references were broken,
which are all fixed with this.

* jc/linkgit-fix:
  Documentation: fix linkgit references
2016-05-26 13:17:26 -07:00
5deca53908 Merge branch 'ls/travis-build-doc' into maint
CI test was taught to build documentation pages.

* ls/travis-build-doc:
  travis-ci: build documentation
2016-05-26 13:17:25 -07:00
f14acabf3a Merge branch 'jc/fsck-nul-in-commit' into maint
"git fsck" learned to catch NUL byte in a commit object as
potential error and warn.

* jc/fsck-nul-in-commit:
  fsck: detect and warn a commit with embedded NUL
  fsck_commit_buffer(): do not special case the last validation
2016-05-26 13:17:24 -07:00
cca92531e3 Merge branch 'jk/rebase-interative-eval-fix' into maint
Portability enhancement for "rebase -i" to help platforms whose
shell does not like "for i in <empty>" (which is not POSIX-kosher).

* jk/rebase-interative-eval-fix:
  rebase--interactive: avoid empty list in shell for-loop
2016-05-26 13:17:24 -07:00
e29300d69f Merge branch 'js/windows-dotgit' into maint
On Windows, .git and optionally any files whose name starts with a
dot are now marked as hidden, with a core.hideDotFiles knob to
customize this behaviour.

* js/windows-dotgit:
  mingw: remove unnecessary definition
  mingw: introduce the 'core.hideDotFiles' setting
2016-05-26 13:17:23 -07:00
968004c39c Merge branch 'kf/gpg-sig-verification-doc' into maint
Documentation for "git merge --verify-signatures" has been updated
to clarify that the signature of only the commit at the tip is
verified.  Also the phrasing used for signature and key validity is
adjusted to align with that used by OpenPGP.

* kf/gpg-sig-verification-doc:
  Documentation: clarify signature verification
2016-05-26 13:17:22 -07:00
d07211b5fa Merge branch 'lp/typofixes' into maint
Typofixes.

* lp/typofixes:
  typofix: assorted typofixes in comments, documentation and messages
2016-05-26 13:17:21 -07:00
1f62b9256d Merge branch 'sb/z-is-gnutar-ism' into maint
Test fix.

* sb/z-is-gnutar-ism:
  t6041: do not compress backup tar file
  t3513: do not compress backup tar file
2016-05-26 13:17:21 -07:00
b262b8f889 Merge branch 'va/i18n-misc-updates' into maint
Mark several messages for translation.

* va/i18n-misc-updates:
  i18n: unpack-trees: avoid substituting only a verb in sentences
  i18n: builtin/pull.c: split strings marked for translation
  i18n: builtin/pull.c: mark placeholders for translation
  i18n: git-parse-remote.sh: mark strings for translation
  i18n: branch: move comment for translators
  i18n: branch: unmark string for translation
  i18n: builtin/rm.c: remove a comma ',' from string
  i18n: unpack-trees: mark strings for translation
  i18n: builtin/branch.c: mark option for translation
  i18n: index-pack: use plural string instead of normal one
2016-05-26 13:17:20 -07:00
57b76d3379 Merge branch 'bn/config-doc-tt-varnames' into maint
Doc formatting fixes.

* bn/config-doc-tt-varnames:
  config: consistently format $variables in monospaced font
  config: describe 'pathname' value type
2016-05-26 13:17:19 -07:00
4e327bb4c2 Merge branch 'nd/remote-plural-ours-plus-theirs' into maint
Message fix.

* nd/remote-plural-ours-plus-theirs:
  remote.c: specify correct plural form in "commit diverge" message
2016-05-26 13:17:18 -07:00
e8c7b8cf68 Merge branch 'ak/t4151-ls-files-could-be-empty' into maint
Test fix.

* ak/t4151-ls-files-could-be-empty:
  t4151: make sure argument to 'test -z' is given
2016-05-26 13:17:17 -07:00
6de6aba9f2 Merge branch 'jc/test-seq' into maint
Test fix.

* jc/test-seq:
  test-lib-functions.sh: rewrite test_seq without Perl
  test-lib-functions.sh: remove misleading comment on test_seq
2016-05-26 13:17:16 -07:00
86a1d147e8 Merge branch 'tb/t5601-sed-fix' into maint
Test fix.

* tb/t5601-sed-fix:
  t5601: Remove trailing space in sed expression
2016-05-26 13:17:15 -07:00
6db5205148 Merge branch 'va/i18n-remote-comment-to-align' into maint
Message fix.

* va/i18n-remote-comment-to-align:
  i18n: remote: add comment for translators
2016-05-26 13:17:14 -07:00
31efe2a8a8 Merge branch 'va/mailinfo-doc-typofix' into maint
Typofix.

* va/mailinfo-doc-typofix:
  Documentation/git-mailinfo: fix typo
2016-05-26 13:17:14 -07:00
adbcfe6547 Merge branch 'maint-2.7' into maint
* maint-2.7:
  archive-tar: convert snprintf to xsnprintf
2016-05-26 13:16:51 -07:00
f7f90e0f4f mingw: make isatty() recognize MSYS2's pseudo terminals (/dev/pty*)
MSYS2 emulates pseudo terminals via named pipes, and isatty() returns 0
for such file descriptors. Therefore, some interactive functionality
(such as launching a pager, asking if a failed unlink should be repeated
etc.) doesn't work when run in a terminal emulator that uses MSYS2's
ptys (such as mintty).

However, MSYS2 uses special names for its pty pipes ('msys-*-pty*'),
which allows us to distinguish them from normal piped input / output.

On startup, check if stdin / stdout / stderr are connected to such pipes
using the NtQueryObject API from NTDll.dll. If the names match, adjust
the flags in MSVCRT's ioinfo structure accordingly.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-26 13:12:02 -07:00
50b4a7807f Merge branch 'jk/war-on-sprintf' into maint-2.7
* jk/war-on-sprintf:
  archive-tar: convert snprintf to xsnprintf
2016-05-26 10:45:37 -07:00
9e6c1e91a3 archive-tar: convert snprintf to xsnprintf
Commit f2f0267 (archive-tar: use xsnprintf for trivial
formatting, 2015-09-24) converted cases of "sprintf" to
"xsnprintf", but accidentally left one as just "snprintf".
This meant that we could silently truncate the resulting
buffer instead of flagging an error.

In practice, this is impossible to achieve, as we are
formatting a ustar checksum, which can be at most 7
characters. But the point of xsnprintf is to document and
check for "should be impossible" conditions; this site was
just accidentally mis-converted during f2f0267.

Noticed-by: Paul Green <Paul.Green@stratus.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-26 10:44:26 -07:00
e890b29b3e Merge branch 'fix_fr' of git://github.com/jnavila/git
* 'fix_fr' of git://github.com/jnavila/git:
  l10n: fr.po Fixed grammar mistake
2016-05-26 23:40:48 +08:00
a87bcd6d47 submodule update: make use of the existing fetch_in_submodule function
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-25 15:39:50 -07:00
a43b68a196 daemon: enable SO_KEEPALIVE for all sockets
While --init-timeout and --timeout options exist and I've never
run git-daemon without them, some users may forget to set them
and encounter hung daemon processes when connections fail.
Enable socket-level timeouts so the kernel can send keepalive
probes as necessary to detect failed connections.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-25 09:42:53 -07:00
72e3c7a85f l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation (2597t)
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2016-05-25 07:42:13 +07:00
5c63920190 t4204: do not let $name variable clobbered
test_patch_id_file_order shell function uses $name variable to hold
one filename, and calls another shell function calc_patch_id as a
downstream of one pipeline.  The called function, however, also uses
the same $name variable.  With a shell implementation that runs the
callee in the current shell environment, the caller's $name would
be clobbered by the callee's use of the same variable.

This hasn't been an issue with dash and bash.  ksh93 reveals the
breakage in the test script.

Fix it by using a distinct variable name in the callee.

Reported-by: Armin Kunaschik <megabreit@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-24 15:49:02 -07:00
73e57aaf4d imap-send.c: introduce the GIT_TRACE_CURL enviroment variable
Permit the use of the GIT_TRACE_CURL environment variable calling
the setup_curl_trace http.c helper routine.

Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-24 15:48:18 -07:00
74c682d3c6 http.c: implement the GIT_TRACE_CURL environment variable
Implement the GIT_TRACE_CURL environment variable to allow a
greater degree of detail of GIT_CURL_VERBOSE, in particular
the complete transport header and all the data payload exchanged.
It might be useful if a particular situation could require a more
thorough debugging analysis. Document the new GIT_TRACE_CURL
environment variable.

Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-24 15:48:18 -07:00
3258258f51 config: set up config_source for command-line config
When we parse a config file, we set up the global "cf"
variable as a pointer to a "struct config_source" describing
the file we are parsing. This is used for error messages, as
well as for lookup functions like current_config_name().

The "cf" variable is NULL in two cases:

  1. When we are parsing command-line config, in which case
     there is no source file.

  2. When we are not parsing any config at all.

Callers like current_config_name() must assume we are in
case 1 if they see a NULL "cf". However, this means that if
they are accidentally used outside of a config parsing
callback, they will quietly return a bogus answer.

This might seem like an unlikely accident (why would you ask
for the current config file if you are not parsing config?),
but it's actually an easy mistake to make due to the
configset caching. git_config() serves the answers from a
configset cache, and any calls to current_config_name() will
claim that we are parsing command-line config, no matter
what the original source.

So let's distinguish these cases by having the command-line
config parser set up a config_source with a NULL name (which
callers already handle properly). We can use this to catch
programming errors in some cases, and to give better
messages to the user in others.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-24 13:21:59 -07:00
a77d6db69b git_config_parse_parameter: refactor cleanup code
We have several exits from the function, each of which has
to do some cleanup. Let's consolidate these in an "out"
label we can jump to. This doesn't save us much now, but it
will help as we add more things that need cleanup.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-24 13:21:59 -07:00
c72ee44bf4 git_config_with_options: drop "found" counting
Prior to 1f2baa7 (config: treat non-existent config files as
empty, 2010-10-21), we returned an error if any config files
were missing. That commit made this a non-error, but
returned the number of sources found, in case any caller
wanted to distinguish this case.

In the past 5+ years, no caller has; the only two places
which bother to check the return value care only about the
error case.  Let's drop this code, which complicates the
function. Similarly, let's drop the "found anything" return
from git_config_from_parameters, which was present only to
support this (and similarly has never had other callers care
for the past 5+ years).

Note that we do need to update a comment in one of the
callers, even though the code immediately below it doesn't
care about this case.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-24 13:21:58 -07:00
0409e0b6dc worktree: simplify prefixing paths
This also makes slash conversion always happen on Windows (a side effect
of prefix_filename). Which is a good thing.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-24 13:19:23 -07:00
ef23c347cf worktree: avoid 0{40}, too many zeroes, hard to read
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-24 13:19:22 -07:00
afb9e30b2c worktree.c: use is_dot_or_dotdot()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-24 13:19:22 -07:00
7b722d906b git-worktree.txt: keep subcommand listing in alphabetical order
This is probably not the best order. But it makes it no-brainer to know
where to insert new commands. At some point we might want to reorder at
least the synopsis part again, grouping commonly use subcommands together.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-24 13:19:22 -07:00
360af2dada worktree.c: rewrite mark_current_worktree() to avoid strbuf
strbuf is a bit overkill for this function. What we need is to call
absolute_path() twice and make sure the second call does not destroy the
result of the first. One buffer allocation is enough.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-24 13:19:22 -07:00
b462c02402 completion: support git-worktree
This adds bare-bone completion support for git-worktree. More advanced
completion (e.g. ref completion in git-worktree-add) can be added later.

--force completion in "worktree add" is left out because that option
should be handled with care.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-24 13:19:21 -07:00
f517e50dba l10n: git.pot: v2.9.0 round 1 (104 new, 37 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.9.0-rc0 for git v2.9.0 l10n round 1.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2016-05-24 23:43:14 +08:00
3a0f269e7c Git 2.9-rc0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-23 15:02:48 -07:00
f4d7b2e4d5 Merge branch 'svn-travis' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn
* 'svn-travis' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn:
  travis-ci: enable Git SVN tests t91xx on Linux
2016-05-23 15:01:03 -07:00
ec34a8b135 Merge branch 'jc/rerere-multi'
* jc/rerere-multi:
  rerere: remove an null statement
  rerere: plug memory leaks upon "rerere forget" failure
2016-05-23 14:54:38 -07:00
f895dd7422 Merge branch 'da/difftool'
"git difftool" learned to handle unmerged paths correctly in
dir-diff mode.

* da/difftool:
  difftool: handle unmerged files in dir-diff mode
  difftool: initialize variables for readability
2016-05-23 14:54:36 -07:00
dca05bb591 Merge branch 'jk/test-z-n-unquoted'
t9xxx series has been updated primarily for readability, while
fixing small bugs in it.  A few scripted Porcelains have also been
updated to fix possible bugs around their use of "test -z" and
"test -n".

* jk/test-z-n-unquoted:
  always quote shell arguments to test -z/-n
  t9103: modernize test style
  t9107: switch inverted single/double quotes in test
  t9107: use "return 1" instead of "exit 1"
  t9100,t3419: enclose all test code in single-quotes
  t/lib-git-svn: drop $remote_git_svn and $git_svn_id
2016-05-23 14:54:35 -07:00
53c4b3ed0e Merge branch 'ar/diff-args-osx-precompose'
Many commands normalize command line arguments from NFD to NFC
variant of UTF-8 on OSX, but commands in the "diff" family did
not, causing "git diff $path" to complain that no such path is
known to Git.  They have been taught to do the normalization.

* ar/diff-args-osx-precompose:
  diff: run arguments through precompose_argv
2016-05-23 14:54:35 -07:00
fa4f29b8a8 Merge branch 'jc/doc-lint'
Find common mistakes when writing gitlink: in our documentation and
drive the check from "make check-docs".

I am not entirely happy with the way the script chooses what input
file to validate, but it is not worse than not having anything, so
let's move it forward and have the logic improved later when people
care about it deeply.

* jc/doc-lint:
  ci: validate "linkgit:" in documentation
2016-05-23 14:54:34 -07:00
7b02771b4f Merge branch 'js/perf-rebase-i'
Add perf test for "rebase -i"

* js/perf-rebase-i:
  perf: run "rebase -i" under perf
  perf: make the tests work in worktrees
  perf: let's disable symlinks when they are not available
2016-05-23 14:54:33 -07:00
2997ea960f Merge branch 'jc/test-parse-options-expect'
t0040 had too many unnecessary repetitions in its test data.  Teach
test-parse-options program so that a caller can tell what it
expects in its output, so that these repetitions can be cleaned up.

* jc/test-parse-options-expect:
  t0040: convert a few tests to use test-parse-options --expect
  t0040: remove unused test helpers
  test-parse-options: --expect=<string> option to simplify tests
  test-parse-options: fix output when callback option fails
2016-05-23 14:54:32 -07:00
5d5f1c236b Merge branch 'pb/commit-verbose-config'
"git commit" learned to pay attention to "commit.verbose"
configuration variable and act as if "--verbose" option was
given from the command line.

* pb/commit-verbose-config:
  commit: add a commit.verbose config variable
  t7507-commit-verbose: improve test coverage by testing number of diffs
  parse-options.c: make OPTION_COUNTUP respect "unspecified" values
  t/t7507: improve test coverage
  t0040-parse-options: improve test coverage
  test-parse-options: print quiet as integer
  t0040-test-parse-options.sh: fix style issues
2016-05-23 14:54:32 -07:00
72ce3ff7b5 Merge branch 'xy/format-patch-base'
"git format-patch" learned a new "--base" option to record what
(public, well-known) commit the original series was built on in
its output.

* xy/format-patch-base:
  format-patch: introduce format.useAutoBase configuration
  format-patch: introduce --base=auto option
  format-patch: add '--base' option to record base tree info
  patch-ids: make commit_patch_id() a public helper function
2016-05-23 14:54:31 -07:00
8e34225522 Merge branch 'tb/core-eol-fix'
A couple of bugs around core.autocrlf have been fixed.

* tb/core-eol-fix:
  convert.c: ident + core.autocrlf didn't work
  t0027: test cases for combined attributes
  convert: allow core.autocrlf=input and core.eol=crlf
  t0027: make commit_chk_wrnNNO() reliable
2016-05-23 14:54:30 -07:00
352d72a30e Merge branch 'nd/worktree-various-heads'
The experimental "multiple worktree" feature gains more safety to
forbid operations on a branch that is checked out or being actively
worked on elsewhere, by noticing that e.g. it is being rebased.

* nd/worktree-various-heads:
  branch: do not rename a branch under bisect or rebase
  worktree.c: check whether branch is bisected in another worktree
  wt-status.c: split bisect detection out of wt_status_get_state()
  worktree.c: check whether branch is rebased in another worktree
  worktree.c: avoid referencing to worktrees[i] multiple times
  wt-status.c: make wt_status_check_rebase() work on any worktree
  wt-status.c: split rebase detection out of wt_status_get_state()
  path.c: refactor and add worktree_git_path()
  worktree.c: mark current worktree
  worktree.c: make find_shared_symref() return struct worktree *
  worktree.c: store "id" instead of "git_dir"
  path.c: add git_common_path() and strbuf_git_common_path()
  dir.c: rename str(n)cmp_icase to fspath(n)cmp
2016-05-23 14:54:29 -07:00
9ce2824e4b Merge branch 'ss/commit-dry-run-resolve-merge-to-no-op'
"git commit --dry-run" reported "No, no, you cannot commit." in one
case where "git commit" would have allowed you to commit, and this
improves it a little bit ("git commit --dry-run --short" still does
not give you the correct answer, for example).  This is a stop-gap
measure in that "commit --short --dry-run" still gives an incorrect
result.

* ss/commit-dry-run-resolve-merge-to-no-op:
  wt-status.c: set commitable bit if there is a meaningful merge.
2016-05-23 14:54:28 -07:00
e7e9f5e7a1 travis-ci: enable Git SVN tests t91xx on Linux
Install the "git-svn" package to make the Perl SVN libraries available
to the Git SVN tests on Travis-CI Linux build machines.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
2016-05-22 20:20:28 +00:00
c57e501c51 pull: warn on --verify-signatures with --rebase
git-pull silently ignores the --verify-signatures option when
running --rebase, potentially leaving users in the belief that
the rebase operation would check for valid GPG signatures.

Implementing --verify-signatures for git-rebase was talked about,
but doubts for a valid workflow rose up.  Since you usually merge
other's branches into your branch you might have an interest that
their side has a valid GPG signature.

Rebasing, on the other hand, is to rebuild your branch on top of
other's work, in order to push the result back, and it is too late
to reject their work even if you find their commits lack acceptable
signature.

Let's warn users that the --verify-signatures option is ignored
during "pull --rebase"; users do not wonder what would happen if
their commits lack acceptable signature that way.

Signed-off-by: Alexander Hirsch <1zeeky@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-20 15:01:00 -07:00
e9980419cb t0008: 4 tests fail with ksh88
In t0008, we have

	cat <<-EOF
	...
	a/b/.gitignore:8:!on*	"a/b/one\"three"
	...
	EOF

and expect that the backslash-dq is passed through literally.

ksh88 eats the backslash and produces a wrong expect file to
compare the actual output with.

Using \\" works this around without breaking other POSIX shells
(which collapse backslash-backslash to a single backslash), and
ksh88 does so, too.

It makes it easier to read, too, because the reason why we are
writing backslash there is *not* because we think dq is special and
want to quote it (if that were the case we would have two more
backslashes on that line).  It is simply because we want a single
literal backslash there.  Since backslash is treated specially in
unquoted here-document, explicitly doubling it to quote it expresses
our intent better than relying on the character that immediately
comes after it (i.e. '"') not being a special character.

Signed-off-by: Armin Kunaschik <megabreit@googlemail.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-20 14:11:42 -07:00
d9d501b068 rerere: remove an null statement
J6t spotted that previous commit added an empty statement by
mistake.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-19 12:51:22 -07:00
3916adf997 Sync with 2.8.3
* maint:
  Git 2.8.3
2016-05-18 15:33:57 -07:00
0f8e831356 Git 2.8.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-18 15:32:41 -07:00
b153d2ae92 Merge branch 'jk/push-client-deadlock-fix'
Some Windows SDK lacks pthread_sigmask() implementation and fails
to compile the recently updated "git push" codepath that uses it.

* jk/push-client-deadlock-fix:
  Windows: only add a no-op pthread_sigmask() when needed
  Windows: add pthread_sigmask() that does nothing
2016-05-18 15:11:46 -07:00
66106691a1 Merge branch 'sb/misc-cleanups' into HEAD
* sb/misc-cleanups:
  submodule-config: don't shadow `cache`
  config.c: drop local variable
  credential-cache, send_request: close fd when done
  bundle: don't leak an fd in case of early return
  abbrev_sha1_in_line: don't leak memory
  notes: don't leak memory in git_config_get_notes_strategy
2016-05-18 14:40:15 -07:00
989cbd4556 Merge branch 'ew/doc-split-pack-disables-bitmap' into HEAD
Doc update.

* ew/doc-split-pack-disables-bitmap:
  pack-objects: warn on split packs disabling bitmaps
2016-05-18 14:40:15 -07:00
10b6646afc Merge branch 'sb/clean-test-fix' into HEAD
* sb/clean-test-fix:
  t7300: mark test with SANITY
2016-05-18 14:40:14 -07:00
8d61f0f07d Merge branch 'rn/glossary-typofix' into HEAD
* rn/glossary-typofix:
  Documentation: fix typo 'In such these cases'
2016-05-18 14:40:14 -07:00
977cb3e2c5 Merge branch 'ew/normal-to-e' into HEAD
* ew/normal-to-e:
  .mailmap: update to my shorter email address
2016-05-18 14:40:12 -07:00
258b862edb Merge branch 'sb/config-exit-status-list' into HEAD
Doc update.

* sb/config-exit-status-list:
  config doc: improve exit code listing
2016-05-18 14:40:12 -07:00
87c594471d Merge branch 'rt/string-list-lookup-cleanup' into HEAD
Code cleanup.

* rt/string-list-lookup-cleanup:
  string_list: use string-list API in unsorted_string_list_lookup()
2016-05-18 14:40:12 -07:00
9ba3b14c64 Merge branch 'jk/fix-attribute-macro-in-2.5' into HEAD
Code fixup.

* jk/fix-attribute-macro-in-2.5:
  remote.c: spell __attribute__ correctly
2016-05-18 14:40:12 -07:00
777dec64bd Merge branch 'sg/test-lib-simplify-expr-away' into HEAD
Code cleanup.

* sg/test-lib-simplify-expr-away:
  test-lib: simplify '--option=value' parsing
2016-05-18 14:40:11 -07:00
14af79b93d Merge branch 'nd/remove-unused' into HEAD
Code cleanup.

* nd/remove-unused:
  wrapper.c: delete dead function git_mkstemps()
  dir.c: remove dead function fnmatch_icase()
2016-05-18 14:40:11 -07:00
13af774e26 Merge branch 'sk/gitweb-highlight-encoding' into HEAD
Some multi-byte encoding can have a backslash byte as a later part
of one letter, which would confuse "highlight" filter used in
gitweb.

* sk/gitweb-highlight-encoding:
  gitweb: apply fallback encoding before highlight
2016-05-18 14:40:10 -07:00
09687585d1 Merge branch 'ls/travis-submitting-patches' into HEAD
* ls/travis-submitting-patches:
  Documentation: add setup instructions for Travis CI
2016-05-18 14:40:09 -07:00
1cfb225aba Merge branch 'js/close-packs-before-gc' into HEAD
* js/close-packs-before-gc:
  t5510: run auto-gc in the foreground
2016-05-18 14:40:09 -07:00
803fd70cee Merge branch 'ls/p4-lfs' into HEAD
Recent update to Git LFS broke "git p4" by changing the output from
its "lfs pointer" subcommand.

* ls/p4-lfs:
  git-p4: fix Git LFS pointer parsing
  travis-ci: express Linux/OS X dependency versions more clearly
  travis-ci: update Git-LFS and P4 to the latest version
2016-05-18 14:40:08 -07:00
7ab6da3c40 Merge branch 'ls/p4-lfs-test-fix-2.7.0' into HEAD
Fix a broken test.

* ls/p4-lfs-test-fix-2.7.0:
  t9824: fix wrong reference value
  t9824: fix broken &&-chain in a subshell
2016-05-18 14:40:08 -07:00
f735a50ffd Merge branch 'nf/mergetool-prompt' into HEAD
UI consistency improvements.

* nf/mergetool-prompt:
  difftool/mergetool: make the form of yes/no questions consistent
2016-05-18 14:40:07 -07:00
1f7b196e21 Merge branch 'jd/send-email-to-whom' into HEAD
A question by "git send-email" to ask the identity of the sender
has been updated.

* jd/send-email-to-whom:
  send-email: fix grammo in the prompt that asks e-mail recipients
2016-05-18 14:40:07 -07:00
f12fffd347 Merge branch 'js/win32-mmap' into HEAD
mmap emulation on Windows has been optimized and work better without
consuming paging store when not needed.

* js/win32-mmap:
  mmap(win32): avoid expensive fstat() call
  mmap(win32): avoid copy-on-write when it is unnecessary
  win32mmap: set errno appropriately
2016-05-18 14:40:06 -07:00
c555e529ac Merge branch 'jk/push-client-deadlock-fix' into HEAD
Some Windows SDK lacks pthread_sigmask() implementation and fails
to compile the recently updated "git push" codepath that uses it.

* jk/push-client-deadlock-fix:
  Windows: only add a no-op pthread_sigmask() when needed
  Windows: add pthread_sigmask() that does nothing
  t5504: drop sigpipe=ok from push tests
  fetch-pack: isolate sigpipe in demuxer thread
  send-pack: isolate sigpipe in demuxer thread
  run-command: teach async threads to ignore SIGPIPE
  send-pack: close demux pipe before finishing async process
2016-05-18 14:40:06 -07:00
920f2ea33b Merge branch 'sb/mv-submodule-fix' into HEAD
"git mv old new" did not adjust the path for a submodule that lives
as a subdirectory inside old/ directory correctly.

* sb/mv-submodule-fix:
  mv: allow moving nested submodules
2016-05-18 14:40:05 -07:00
e9ef83a299 Merge branch 'da/user-useconfigonly' into HEAD
The "user.useConfigOnly" configuration variable makes it an error
if users do not explicitly set user.name and user.email.  However,
its check was not done early enough and allowed another error to
trigger, reporting that the default value we guessed from the
system setting was unusable.  This was a suboptimal end-user
experience as we want the users to set user.name/user.email without
relying on the auto-detection at all.

* da/user-useconfigonly:
  ident: give "please tell me" message upon useConfigOnly error
  ident: check for useConfigOnly before auto-detection of name/email
2016-05-18 14:40:05 -07:00
787a490cee Merge branch 'ld/p4-test-py3' into HEAD
The test scripts for "git p4" (but not "git p4" implementation
itself) has been updated so that they would work even on a system
where the installed version of Python is python 3.

* ld/p4-test-py3:
  git-p4 tests: time_in_seconds should use $PYTHON_PATH
  git-p4 tests: work with python3 as well as python2
  git-p4 tests: cd to / before running python
2016-05-18 14:40:04 -07:00
6a36e1e7bb cat-file: default to --buffer when --batch-all-objects is used
Traditionally cat-file's batch-mode does not do any output
buffering. The reason is that a caller may have pipes
connected to its input and output, and would want to use
cat-file interactively, getting output immediately for each
input it sends.

This may involve a lot of small write() calls, which can be
slow. So we introduced --buffer to improve this, but we
can't turn it on by default, as it would break the
interactive case above.

However, when --batch-all-objects is used, we do not read
stdin at all. We generate the output ourselves as quickly as
possible, and then exit. In this case buffering is a strict
win, and it is simply a hassle for the user to have to
remember to specify --buffer.

This patch makes --buffer the default when --batch-all-objects
is used. Specifying "--buffer" manually is still OK, and you
can even override it with "--no-buffer" if you're a
masochist (or debugging).

For some real numbers, running:

  git cat-file --batch-all-objects --batch-check='%(objectname)'

on torvalds/linux goes from:

  real    0m1.464s
  user    0m1.208s
  sys     0m0.252s

to:

  real    0m1.230s
  user    0m1.172s
  sys     0m0.056s

for a 16% speedup.

Suggested-by: Charles Bailey <charles@hashpling.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-18 14:17:39 -07:00
845de33a5b cat-file: avoid noop calls to sha1_object_info_extended
It is not unreasonable to ask cat-file for a batch-check
format of simply "%(objectname)". At first glance this seems
like a noop (you are generally already feeding the object
names on stdin!), but it has a few uses:

  1. With --batch-all-objects, you can generate a listing of
     the sha1s present in the repository, without any input.

  2. You do not have to feed sha1s; you can feed arbitrary
     sha1 expressions and have git resolve them en masse.

  3. You can even feed a raw sha1, with the result that git
     will tell you whether we actually have the object or
     not.

In case 3, the call to sha1_object_info is useful; it tells
us whether the object exists or not (technically we could
swap this out for has_sha1_file, but the cost is roughly the
same).

In case 2, the existence check is of debatable value. A
mass-resolution might prefer performance to safety (against
outputting a value for a corrupted ref, for example).
However, the object lookup cost is likely not as noticeable
compared to the resolution cost. And since we have provided
that safety in the past, the conservative choice is to keep
it.

In case 1, though, the object lookup is a definite noop; we
know about the object because we found it in the object
database. There is no new information gained by making the
call.

This patch detects that case and optimizes out the call.
Here are best-of-five timings for linux.git:

  [before]
  $ time git cat-file --buffer \
                      --batch-all-objects \
                      --batch-check='%(objectname)'
  real    0m2.117s
  user    0m2.044s
  sys     0m0.072s

  [after]
  $ time git cat-file --buffer \
                      --batch-all-objects \
                      --batch-check='%(objectname)'
  real    0m1.230s
  user    0m1.176s
  sys     0m0.052s

There are two implementation details to note here.

One is that we detect the noop case by seeing that "struct
object_info" does not request any information. But besides
object existence, there is one other piece of information
which sha1_object_info may fill in: whether the object is
cached, loose, or packed. We don't currently provide that
information in the output, but if we were to do so later,
we'd need to take note and disable the optimization in that
case.

And that leads to the second note. If we were to output
that information, a better implementation would be to
remember where we saw the object in --batch-all-objects in
the first place, and avoid looking it up again by sha1.

In fact, we could probably squeeze out some extra
performance for less-trivial cases, too, by remembering the
pack location where we saw the object, and going directly
there to find its information (like type, size, etc). That
would in theory make this optimization unnecessary.

I didn't pursue that path here for two reasons:

  1. It's non-trivial to implement, and has memory
     implications. Because we sort and de-dup the list of
     output sha1s, we'd have to record the pack information
     for each object, too.

  2. It doesn't save as much as you might hope. It saves the
     find_pack_entry() call, but getting the size and type
     for deltified objects requires walking down the delta
     chain (for the real type) or reading the delta data
     header (for the size). These costs tend to dominate the
     non-trivial cases.

By contrast, this optimization is easy and self-contained,
and speeds up a real-world case I've used.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-18 14:17:38 -07:00
e6273f4da5 t1500: avoid setting environment variables outside of tests
Ideally, each test should be responsible for setting up state it needs
rather than relying upon transient global state. Toward this end, teach
test_rev_parse() to accept a "-g <dir>" option to allow callers to
specify the value of the GIT_DIR environment variable explicitly. Take
advantage of this new option to avoid polluting the global scope with
GIT_DIR assignments.

Implementation note: Typically, tests avoid polluting the global state
by wrapping transient environment variable assignments within a
subshell, however, this technique doesn't work here since test_config()
and test_unconfig() need to know GIT_DIR, as well, but neither function
can be used within a subshell. Consequently, GIT_DIR is instead cleared
manually via test_when_finished().

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-18 14:15:36 -07:00
1dea0dc9e0 t1500: avoid setting configuration options outside of tests
Ideally, each test should be responsible for setting up state it needs
rather than relying upon transient global state. Toward this end, teach
test_rev_parse() to accept a "-b <value>" option to allow callers to set
"core.bare" explicitly or undefine it. Take advantage of this new option
to avoid setting "core.bare" outside of tests.

Under the hood, "-b <value>" invokes "test_config -C <dir>" (or
"test_unconfig -C <dir>"), thus git-config knows explicitly where to
find its configuration file. Consequently, the global GIT_CONFIG
environment variable required by the manual git-config invocations
outside of tests is no longer needed, and is thus dropped.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-18 14:15:10 -07:00
1e043cff78 t1500: avoid changing working directory outside of tests
Ideally, each test should be responsible for setting up state it needs
rather than relying upon transient global state. Toward this end, teach
test_rev_parse() to accept a "-C <dir>" option to allow callers to
instruct it explicitly in which directory its tests should be run. Take
advantage of this new option to avoid changing the working directory
outside of tests.

Implementation note: test_rev_parse() passes "-C <dir>" along to
git-rev-parse with <dir> properly quoted. The natural and POSIX way to
do so is via ${dir:+-C "$dir"}, however, with some older broken shells,
this expression evaluates incorrectly to a single argument ("-C <dir>")
rather than the expected two (-C and "<dir>"). Work around this problem
with the slightly ungainly expression: ${dir:+-C} ${dir:+"$dir"}

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-18 14:14:31 -07:00
12f7526c66 t1500: test_rev_parse: facilitate future test enhancements
Tests run by test_rev_parse() are nearly identical; each invokes
git-rev-parse with a single option and compares the result against an
expected value. Such duplication makes it onerous to extend the tests
since any change needs to be repeated in each test. Avoid the
duplication by parameterizing the test and driving it via a for-loop.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-18 14:14:04 -07:00
3f215b0328 t6044: replace seq by test_seq
seq is not available everywhere.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-18 08:48:06 -07:00
f4beed60d5 fast-import: do not truncate exported marks file
Certain lines of the marks file might be corrupted (or the objects
missing due to a garbage collection), but that's no reason to truncate
the file and essentially destroy the rest of it.

Ideally missing objects should not cause a crash, we could just skip
them, but that's another patch.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-17 15:02:25 -07:00
1f66975deb Thirteenth batch for 2.9
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-17 14:47:06 -07:00
be6ec17822 Merge branch 'kf/gpg-sig-verification-doc'
Documentation for "git merge --verify-signatures" has been updated
to clarify that the signature of only the commit at the tip is
verified.  Also the phrasing used for signature and key validity is
adjusted to align with that used by OpenPGP.

* kf/gpg-sig-verification-doc:
  Documentation: clarify signature verification
2016-05-17 14:38:39 -07:00
bfc99b63fe Merge branch 'js/windows-dotgit'
On Windows, .git and optionally any files whose name starts with a
dot are now marked as hidden, with a core.hideDotFiles knob to
customize this behaviour.

* js/windows-dotgit:
  mingw: remove unnecessary definition
  mingw: introduce the 'core.hideDotFiles' setting
2016-05-17 14:38:39 -07:00
5bfc50d6fe Merge branch 'va/mailinfo-doc-typofix'
Typofix.

* va/mailinfo-doc-typofix:
  Documentation/git-mailinfo: fix typo
2016-05-17 14:38:38 -07:00
372731810e Merge branch 'jk/test-send-sh-x-trace-elsewhere'
Running tests with '-x' option to trace the individual command
executions is a useful way to debug test scripts, but some tests
that capture the standard error stream and check what the command
said can be broken with the trace output mixed in.  When running
our tests under "bash", however, we can redirect the trace output
to another file descriptor to keep the standard error of programs
being tested intact.

* jk/test-send-sh-x-trace-elsewhere:
  test-lib: set BASH_XTRACEFD automatically
2016-05-17 14:38:36 -07:00
848b99b14e Merge branch 'js/http-custom-headers'
Update tests for "http.extraHeaders=<header>" to be portable back
to Apache 2.2 (the original depended on <RequireAll/> which is a
more recent feature).

* js/http-custom-headers:
  submodule: ensure that -c http.extraheader is heeded
  t5551: make the test for extra HTTP headers more robust
  tests: adjust the configuration for Apache 2.2
2016-05-17 14:38:35 -07:00
fd704b16f1 Merge branch 'jk/rebase-interative-eval-fix'
Portability enhancement for "rebase -i" to help platforms whose
shell does not like "for i in <empty>" (which is not POSIX-kosher).

* jk/rebase-interative-eval-fix:
  rebase--interactive: avoid empty list in shell for-loop
2016-05-17 14:38:35 -07:00
6bfb7de89e Merge branch 'jc/fsck-nul-in-commit'
"git fsck" learned to catch NUL byte in a commit object as
potential error and warn.

* jc/fsck-nul-in-commit:
  fsck: detect and warn a commit with embedded NUL
  fsck_commit_buffer(): do not special case the last validation
2016-05-17 14:38:34 -07:00
ef687dbd9d Merge branch 'nd/test-helpers'
Switching between 'master' and 'next', between which the paths to
test helper binaries have changed, did not update bin-wrappers/*
scripts used in tests, causing false test failures.

* nd/test-helpers:
  wrap-for-bin.sh: regenerate bin-wrappers when switching branches
2016-05-17 14:38:33 -07:00
a04694138a Merge branch 'ls/travis-build-doc'
CI test was taught to build documentation pages.

* ls/travis-build-doc:
  travis-ci: build documentation
2016-05-17 14:38:33 -07:00
243a7f0557 Merge branch 'jc/ll-merge-internal'
"git rerere" can get confused by conflict markers deliberately left
by the inner merge step, because they are indistinguishable from
the real conflict markers left by the outermost merge which are
what the end user and "rerere" need to look at.  This was fixed by
making the conflict markers left by the inner merges a bit longer.

* jc/ll-merge-internal:
  t6036: remove pointless test that expects failure
  ll-merge: use a longer conflict marker for internal merge
  ll-merge: fix typo in comment
2016-05-17 14:38:32 -07:00
5f232ecfdf Merge branch 'jc/linkgit-fix'
Many 'linkgit:<git documentation page>' references were broken,
which are all fixed with this.

* jc/linkgit-fix:
  Documentation: fix linkgit references
2016-05-17 14:38:31 -07:00
b7f6142667 Merge branch 'va/i18n-remote-comment-to-align'
Message fix.

* va/i18n-remote-comment-to-align:
  i18n: remote: add comment for translators
2016-05-17 14:38:30 -07:00
a736214df3 Merge branch 'tb/t5601-sed-fix'
Test fix.

* tb/t5601-sed-fix:
  t5601: Remove trailing space in sed expression
2016-05-17 14:38:29 -07:00
40cfc95856 Merge branch 'nd/error-errno'
The code for warning_errno/die_errno has been refactored and a new
error_errno() reporting helper is introduced.

* nd/error-errno: (41 commits)
  wrapper.c: use warning_errno()
  vcs-svn: use error_errno()
  upload-pack.c: use error_errno()
  unpack-trees.c: use error_errno()
  transport-helper.c: use error_errno()
  sha1_file.c: use {error,die,warning}_errno()
  server-info.c: use error_errno()
  sequencer.c: use error_errno()
  run-command.c: use error_errno()
  rerere.c: use error_errno() and warning_errno()
  reachable.c: use error_errno()
  mailmap.c: use error_errno()
  ident.c: use warning_errno()
  http.c: use error_errno() and warning_errno()
  grep.c: use error_errno()
  gpg-interface.c: use error_errno()
  fast-import.c: use error_errno()
  entry.c: use error_errno()
  editor.c: use error_errno()
  diff-no-index.c: use error_errno()
  ...
2016-05-17 14:38:28 -07:00
8648eacc1d Merge branch 'jc/test-seq'
Test fix.

* jc/test-seq:
  test-lib-functions.sh: rewrite test_seq without Perl
  test-lib-functions.sh: remove misleading comment on test_seq
2016-05-17 14:38:28 -07:00
36d2b9a8bc Merge branch 'es/test-gpg-tags'
Test fix.

* es/test-gpg-tags:
  t6302: simplify non-gpg cases
2016-05-17 14:38:27 -07:00
d130bf4bfd Merge branch 'ak/t4151-ls-files-could-be-empty'
Test fix.

* ak/t4151-ls-files-could-be-empty:
  t4151: make sure argument to 'test -z' is given
2016-05-17 14:38:26 -07:00
e059388fb2 Merge branch 'jk/submodule-c-credential'
An earlier addition of "sanitize_submodule_env" with 14111fc4 (git:
submodule honor -c credential.* from command line, 2016-02-29)
turned out to be a convoluted no-op; implement what it wanted to do
correctly, and stop filtering settings given via "git -c var=val".

* jk/submodule-c-credential:
  submodule: stop sanitizing config options
  submodule: use prepare_submodule_repo_env consistently
  submodule--helper: move config-sanitizing to submodule.c
  submodule: export sanitized GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS
  t5550: break submodule config test into multiple sub-tests
  t5550: fix typo in $HTTPD_URL
2016-05-17 14:38:25 -07:00
7a7d0854ff Merge branch 'nd/remote-plural-ours-plus-theirs'
Message fix.

* nd/remote-plural-ours-plus-theirs:
  remote.c: specify correct plural form in "commit diverge" message
2016-05-17 14:38:24 -07:00
34698baa5b Merge branch 'bn/config-doc-tt-varnames'
Doc formatting fixes.

* bn/config-doc-tt-varnames:
  config: consistently format $variables in monospaced font
2016-05-17 14:38:23 -07:00
e5e7a9115d Merge branch 'va/i18n-misc-updates'
Mark several messages for translation.

* va/i18n-misc-updates:
  i18n: unpack-trees: avoid substituting only a verb in sentences
  i18n: builtin/pull.c: split strings marked for translation
  i18n: builtin/pull.c: mark placeholders for translation
  i18n: git-parse-remote.sh: mark strings for translation
  i18n: branch: move comment for translators
  i18n: branch: unmark string for translation
  i18n: builtin/rm.c: remove a comma ',' from string
  i18n: unpack-trees: mark strings for translation
  i18n: builtin/branch.c: mark option for translation
  i18n: index-pack: use plural string instead of normal one
2016-05-17 14:38:23 -07:00
b232439be1 Merge branch 'js/t3404-typofix'
* js/t3404-typofix:
  t3404: fix typo
2016-05-17 14:38:22 -07:00
2049e7e19a Merge branch 'sb/z-is-gnutar-ism'
* sb/z-is-gnutar-ism:
  t6041: do not compress backup tar file
  t3513: do not compress backup tar file
2016-05-17 14:38:21 -07:00
3241d4f6fb Merge branch 'lp/typofixes'
* lp/typofixes:
  typofix: assorted typofixes in comments, documentation and messages
2016-05-17 14:38:20 -07:00
21b2e60400 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-deinit-all'
Correct faulty recommendation to use "git submodule deinit ." when
de-initialising all submodules, which would result in a strange
error message in a pathological corner case.

* sb/submodule-deinit-all:
  submodule deinit: require '--all' instead of '.' for all submodules
2016-05-17 14:38:20 -07:00
fd87e705b3 Merge branch 'jc/config-pathname-type'
Consolidate description of tilde-expansion that is done to
configuration variables that take pathname to a single place.

* jc/config-pathname-type:
  config: describe 'pathname' value type
2016-05-17 14:38:19 -07:00
459000ef63 Merge branch 'bn/http-cookiefile-config'
"http.cookieFile" configuration variable clearly wants a pathname,
but we forgot to treat it as such by e.g. applying tilde expansion.

* bn/http-cookiefile-config:
  http: expand http.cookieFile as a path
  Documentation: config: improve word ordering for http.cookieFile
2016-05-17 14:38:18 -07:00
6675f501f6 Merge branch 'ab/hooks'
A new configuration variable core.hooksPath allows customizing
where the hook directory is.

* ab/hooks:
  hooks: allow customizing where the hook directory is
  githooks.txt: minor improvements to the grammar & phrasing
  githooks.txt: amend dangerous advice about 'update' hook ACL
  githooks.txt: improve the intro section
2016-05-17 14:38:17 -07:00
f2c96ceb57 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-init'
Update of "git submodule" to move pieces of logic to C continues.

* sb/submodule-init:
  submodule init: redirect stdout to stderr
  submodule--helper update-clone: abort gracefully on missing .gitmodules
  submodule init: fail gracefully with a missing .gitmodules file
  submodule: port init from shell to C
  submodule: port resolve_relative_url from shell to C
2016-05-17 14:38:17 -07:00
d66f68ff98 t1500: be considerate to future potential tests
The final batch of git-rev-parse tests work against a non-local object
database named repo.git. This is done by renaming .git to repo.git and
pointing GIT_DIR at it, but the name is never restored to .git at the
end of the script, which can be problematic for tests added in the
future. Be more friendly by instead making repo.git a copy of .git.

Furthermore, make it clear that tests in repo.git will be independent
from the results of earlier tests done in .git by initializing repo.git
earlier in the test sequence.

Likewise, bundle remaining preparation (such as directory creation) into
a common setup test consistent with modern practice.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-17 13:33:20 -07:00
366f9cea18 difftool: handle unmerged files in dir-diff mode
When files are unmerged they can show up as both unmerged and
modified in the output of `git diff --raw`.  This causes
difftool's dir-diff to create filesystem entries for the same
path twice, which fails when it encounters a duplicate path.

Ensure that each worktree path is only processed once.
Add a test to demonstrate the breakage.

Reported-by: Jan Smets <jan@smets.cx>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-16 14:53:05 -07:00
951b551d0f difftool: initialize variables for readability
The code always goes into one of the two conditional blocks but make it
clear that not doing so is an error condition by setting $ok to 0.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-16 14:53:03 -07:00
268ef4d3d0 always quote shell arguments to test -z/-n
In shell code like:

  test -z $foo
  test -n $foo

that does not quote its arguments, it's easy to think that
it is actually looking at the contents of $foo in each case.
But if $foo is empty, then "test" does not see any argument
at all! The results are quite subtle.

POSIX specifies that test's behavior depends on the number
of arguments it sees, and if $foo is empty, it sees only
one. The behavior in this case is:

  1 argument: Exit true (0) if $1 is not null; otherwise,
              exit false.

So in the "-z $foo" case, if $foo is empty, then we check
that "-z" is non-null, and it returns success. Which happens
to match what we expected.  But for "-n $foo", if $foo is
empty, we'll see that "-n" is non-null and still return
success. That's the opposite of what we intended!

Furthermore, if $foo contains whitespace, we'll end up with
more than 2 arguments. The results in this case are
generally unspecified (unless the first part of $foo happens
to be a valid binary operator, in which case the results are
specified but certainly not what we intended).

And on top of this, even though "test -z $foo" _should_ work
for the empty case, some older shells (reportedly ksh88)
complain about the missing argument.

So let's make sure we consistently quote our variable
arguments to "test". After this patch, the results of:

  git grep 'test -[zn] [^"]'

are empty.

Reported-by: Armin Kunaschik <megabreit@googlemail.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-14 10:37:29 -07:00
2a86cb6dc4 t9103: modernize test style
The main goal here was to avoid double-quotes for
surrounding the test snippet, since it makes the code hard
to read (and to grep for common problems).

But while we're here, we can fix a few other things:

  - use test_path_* helpers, which are more robust and give
    better error messages

  - only "cd" inside a subshell, which leaves the
    environment pristine if further tests are added

  - consistently quote shell arguments. These aren't wrong
    if we assume find-rev output doesn't have any
    whitespace, but it doesn't hurt to be careful.

  - replace the old-style 'test x$foo = x' with 'test -z
    "$foo"'. Besides the quoting fix, this is the form we
    generally use in our test suite.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-14 10:37:29 -07:00
9874576995 t9107: switch inverted single/double quotes in test
One of the test snippets in t9107 is enclosed in double
quotes, but then uses single quotes to surround an
interpolated variable inside the snippet, like:

  test_expect_success '...' "
	test -n '$head'
  "

This happens to work because the variable is interpolated
_before_ the snippet is run, and the result is eval'd. So as
long as the variable does not contain any single quotes, the
two are equivalent. And it doesn't, as we know it is a sha1
from rev-parse above.  But this construct is unnecessarily
confusing.

But we can go a step further in cleaning up. The test is
really checking that a particular ref has a value. Rather
than checking if rev-parse produced output, we can just move
rev-parse into the test itself, and rely on the exit code
from --verify. Nobody else cares about the $head variable at
all.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-14 10:37:29 -07:00
f831acc6c6 t9107: use "return 1" instead of "exit 1"
When a test runs a loop, it cannot rely on the usual
&&-chaining to propagate a failure inside the loop; it needs
to break out with a failure signal. However, unless you are
in a subshell, doing so with "exit 1" will exit the entire
test script, not just the test snippet we are in (and cause
the harness to complain that test_done was never reached).

So the fundamental point of this patch is s/exit/return/.
But while we're there, let's fix a number of style and
readability issues:

  - snippets in double-quotes need an extra layer of quoting
    for their meta-characters; let's avoid that by using
    single quotes

  - accumulating loop output by appending to a file in each
    iteration is brittle, as it can be affected by content
    left in the file by earlier tests. Instead, it's better
    to redirect stdout for the whole loop, so we know the
    output only comes from that loop.

  - using "test -z" to check that diff output is empty is
    overly verbose; we can just ask diff to use --exit-code.

  - we can factor out long lists of refs to make it more
    obvious we're using the same ones in each loop

  - subshells are unnecessary when ending an &&-chain with
    "|| return 1"

  - minor style fixups like space-after-redirection, and
    "do" and "done" on their own lines

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-14 10:37:17 -07:00
90a78b83e0 diff: run arguments through precompose_argv
When running diff commands, a pathspec containing decomposed
unicode code points is not converted to precomposed unicode form
under Mac OS X, but we normalize the paths in the index and the
history to precomposed form on that platform.  As a result, the
pathspec would not match and no diff is shown.

Unlike many builtin commands, the "diff" family of commands do
not use parse_options(), which is how other builtin commands
indirectly call precompose_argv() to normalize argv[] into
precomposed form on Mac OSX.  Teach these commands to call
precompose_argv() themselves.

Note that precomopose_argv() normalizes not just paths but all
command line arguments, so things like "git diff -G $string"
when $string has the decomposed form would first be normalized
into the precomposed form and would stop hitting the same string
in the decomposed form in the diff output with this change.

It is not a problem per-se, as "log" family of commands already use
parse_options() and call precompose_argv()--we can think of this
change as making the "diff" family of commands behave in a similar
way as the commands in the "log" family.

Signed-off-by: Alexander Rinass <alex@fournova.com>
Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-13 14:35:49 -07:00
577dfd0302 t9100,t3419: enclose all test code in single-quotes
A few tests here use double-quotes around the snippets of
shell code to run the tests. None of these tests wants to do
any interpolation at all, and it just leads to an extra
layer of quoting around all double-quotes and dollar signs
inside the snippet.  Let's switch to single quotes, like
most other test scripts.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-13 14:00:03 -07:00
e1c0c158b1 t/lib-git-svn: drop $remote_git_svn and $git_svn_id
These variables were added in 16805d3 (t/t91XX-svn: start
removing use of "git-" from these tests, 2008-09-08) so that
running:

  git grep git-

would return fewer hits. At the time, we were transitioning
away from the use of the "dashed" git-foo form.

That transition has been over for years, and grepping for
"git-" in the test suite yields thousands of hits anyway
(all presumably false positives).

With their original purpose gone, these variables serve only
to obfuscate the tests. Let's get rid of them.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-13 13:59:58 -07:00
edec3709db Twelfth batch for 2.9
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-13 13:23:24 -07:00
4f5067010d Merge branch 'sb/submodule-module-list-pathspec-fix'
* sb/submodule-module-list-pathspec-fix:
  submodule deinit test: fix broken && chain in subshell
2016-05-13 13:18:28 -07:00
50b26f5612 Merge branch 'jc/commit-tree-ignore-commit-gpgsign'
"git commit-tree" plumbing command required the user to always sign
its result when the user sets the commit.gpgsign configuration
variable, which was an ancient mistake.  Rework "git rebase" that
relied on this mistake so that it reads commit.gpgsign and pass (or
not pass) the -S option to "git commit-tree" to keep the end-user
expectation the same, while teaching "git commit-tree" to ignore
the configuration variable.  This will stop requiring the users to
sign commit objects used internally as an implementation detail of
"git stash".

* jc/commit-tree-ignore-commit-gpgsign:
  commit-tree: do not pay attention to commit.gpgsign
2016-05-13 13:18:27 -07:00
17130a7046 git-multimail: update to release 1.3.1
The changes are described in CHANGES.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-13 12:54:06 -07:00
05a5869a01 Documentation: clarify signature verification
Clarify that "merge --verify-signatures" checks the signature on the
tip commit of the history being merged.

Uniformise the vocabulary used wrt. key/signature validity with OpenPGP:
- a signature is valid if made by a key with a valid uid;
- in the default trust-model, a uid is valid if signed by a trusted key;
- a key is trusted if the (local) user set a trust level for it.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Keller Fuchs   <KellerFuchs@hashbang.sh>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-13 12:37:44 -07:00
e4cfe74cd0 perf: run "rebase -i" under perf
This developer spent a lot of time trying to speed up the interactive
rebase, in particular on Windows. And will continue to do so.

To make it easier to demonstrate the performance improvement, let's have
a reproducible performance test.

The topic branch we use to test performance was found using these shell
commands (essentially searching for a long-enough topic branch in Git's
own history that touched the same file multiple times):

	git rev-list --parents origin/master |
	grep ' .* ' |
	while read commit rest
	do
		patch_count=$(git rev-list --count $commit^..$commit^2)
		test $patch_count -gt 20 || continue

		merges="$(git rev-list --parents $commit^..$commit^2 |
			grep ' .* ')"
		test -z "$merges" || continue

		patches_per_file="$(git log --pretty=%H --name-only \
				$commit^..$commit^2 |
			grep -v '^$' |
			sort |
			uniq -c -d |
			sort -n -r)"
		test -n "$patches_per_file" &&
		test 20 -lt $(echo "$patches_per_file" |
			sed -n '1s/^ *\([0-9]*\).*/\1/p') || continue

		printf 'commit %s\n%s\n' "$commit" "$patches_per_file"
	done

Note that we can get away with *not* having to reset to the original
branch tip before rebasing: we switch the first two "pick" lines every
time, so we end up with the same patch order after two rebases, and the
complexity of both rebases is equivalent.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-13 11:07:12 -07:00
7501b59210 perf: make the tests work in worktrees
This patch makes perf-lib.sh more robust so that it can run correctly
even inside a worktree. For example, it assumed that $GIT_DIR/objects is
the objects directory (which is not the case for worktrees) and it used
the commondir file verbatim, even if it contained a relative path.

Furthermore, the setup code expected `git rev-parse --git-dir` to spit
out a relative path, which is also not true for worktrees. Let's just
change the code to accept both relative and absolute paths, by avoiding
the `cd` into the copied working directory.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-13 11:04:07 -07:00
fd9dbdfb3d perf: let's disable symlinks when they are not available
We already have a perfectly fine prereq to tell us whether it is safe to
use symlinks. So let's use it.

This fixes the performance tests in Git for Windows' SDK, where symlinks
are not really available ([*1*]). This is not an issue with Git for
Windows itself because it configures core.symlinks=false in its system
config.  However, the system config is disabled for the performance
tests, for obvious reasons: we want them to be independent of the
vagaries of any local configuration.

Footnote *1*: Windows has symbolic links. Git for Windows disables them
by default, though (for example: in standard setups, non-admins lack the
privilege to create symbolic links). For details, see
https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/wiki/Symbolic-Links

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-13 11:03:11 -07:00
2e3926b948 i18n: unpack-trees: avoid substituting only a verb in sentences
Instead of reusing the same set of message templates for checkout
and other actions and substituting the verb with "%s", prepare
separate message templates for each known action. That would make
it easier for translation into languages where the same verb may
conjugate differently depending on the message we are giving.

See gettext documentation for details:
http://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/manual/html_node/Preparing-Strings.html

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-12 16:28:43 -07:00
2fc0f1849b builtin/apply: introduce 'struct apply_state' to start libifying
Currently commands that want to use the apply functionality have to launch
a "git apply" process which can be bad for performance.

Let's start libifying the apply functionality and to do that we first need
to get rid of the global variables in "builtin/apply.c".

This patch introduces "struct apply_state" into which all the previously
global variables will be moved. A new parameter called "state" that is a
pointer to the "apply_state" structure will come at the beginning of the
helper functions that need it and will be passed around the call chain.

To start let's move the "prefix" and "prefix_length" global variables into
"struct apply_state".

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-12 12:21:25 -07:00
dcde8b3dcd builtin/apply: move 'read_stdin' global into cmd_apply()
The 'read_stdin' variable doesn't need to be static and global to the
file. It can be local to cmd_apply(), so let's move it there.

This will make it easier to libify the apply functionality.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-12 12:21:24 -07:00
d1b27ced9a builtin/apply: move 'options' variable into cmd_apply()
The 'options' variable doesn't need to be static and global to the
file. It can be local to cmd_apply(), so let's move it there.

This will make it easier to libify the apply functionality.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-12 12:21:19 -07:00
7a3eb9e222 builtin/apply: extract line_by_line_fuzzy_match() from match_fragment()
The match_fragment() function is very big and contains a big special case
algorithm that does line by line fuzzy matching. So let's extract this
algorithm in a separate line_by_line_fuzzy_match() function.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-12 12:12:48 -07:00
bb0ba99743 builtin/apply: avoid local variable shadowing 'len' parameter
This is just a cleanup to avoid errors when compiling with -Wshadow and
to make it safer to later move global variables into a "state" struct.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-12 12:11:14 -07:00
eb8fdbff3c builtin/apply: avoid parameter shadowing 'linenr' global
Let's just rename the global 'state_linenr' as it will become
'state->linenr' in a following patch.

This also avoid errors when compiling with -Wshadow and makes
it safer to later move global variables into a "state" struct.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-12 12:09:43 -07:00
560e35468f builtin/apply: avoid parameter shadowing 'p_value' global
Let's just rename the global 'state_p_value' as it will become
'state->p_value' in a following patch.

This also avoid errors when compiling with -Wshadow and makes
it safer to later move global variables into a "state" struct.

Helped-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-12 12:07:15 -07:00
12913a78ce builtin/apply: make gitdiff_verify_name() return void
As the value returned by gitdiff_verify_name() is put into the
same variable that is passed as a parameter to this function,
it is simpler to pass the address of the variable and have
gitdiff_verify_name() change the variable itself.

This also makes it possible to later have this function return
-1 instead of die()ing in case of error.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-12 12:07:11 -07:00
8f4496148b rerere: plug memory leaks upon "rerere forget" failure
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-11 16:25:32 -07:00
d9545c7f46 fast-import: implement unpack limit
With many incremental imports, small packs become highly
inefficient due to the need to readdir scan and load many
indices to locate even a single object.  Frequent repacking and
consolidation may be prohibitively expensive in terms of disk
I/O, especially in large repositories where the initial packs
were aggressively optimized and marked with .keep files.

In those cases, users may be better served with loose objects
and relying on "git gc --auto".

This changes the default behavior of fast-import for small
imports found in test cases, so adjustments to t9300 were
necessary.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-11 14:56:00 -07:00
dee2303b1a Documentation/git-mailinfo: fix typo
Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-11 14:35:52 -07:00
d88785e424 test-lib: set BASH_XTRACEFD automatically
Passing "-x" to a test script enables the shell's "set -x"
tracing, which can help with tracking down the command that
is causing a failure. Unfortunately, it can also _cause_
failures in some tests that redirect the stderr of a shell
function.  Inside the function the shell continues to
respect "set -x", and the trace output is collected along
with whatever stderr is generated normally by the function.

You can see an example of this by running:

  ./t0040-parse-options.sh -x -i

which will fail immediately in the first test, as it
expects:

  test_must_fail some-cmd 2>output.err

to leave output.err empty (but with "-x" it has our trace
output).

Unfortunately there isn't a portable or scalable solution to
this. We could teach test_must_fail to disable "set -x", but
that doesn't help any of the other functions or subshells.

However, we can work around it by pointing the "set -x"
output to our descriptor 4, which always points to the
original stderr of the test script. Unfortunately this only
works for bash, but it's better than nothing (and other
shells will just ignore the BASH_XTRACEFD variable).

The patch itself is a simple one-liner, but note the caveats
in the accompanying comments.

Automatic tests for our "-x" option may be a bit too meta
(and a pain, because they are bash-specific), but I did
confirm that it works correctly both with regular "-x" and
with "--verbose-only=1". This works because the latter flips
"set -x" off and on for particular tests (if it didn't, we
would get tracing for all tests, as going to descriptor 4
effectively circumvents the verbose flag).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-11 14:03:14 -07:00
ed84387a6b Windows: only add a no-op pthread_sigmask() when needed
In f924b52 (Windows: add pthread_sigmask() that does nothing,
2016-05-01), we introduced a no-op for Windows. However, this breaks
building Git in Git for Windows' SDK because pthread_sigmask() is
already a no-op there, #define'd in the pthread_signal.h header in
/mingw64/x86_64-w64-mingw32/include/.

Let's wrap the definition of pthread_sigmask() in a guard that skips
it when compiling with MinGW-w64' headers.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-11 14:02:10 -07:00
ebf31e70bb mingw: remove unnecessary definition
For some reason, the definition of the MINGW version of
`mark_as_git_dir()` slipped into this developer's patch series to
support building Git for Windows.

As the `mark_as_git_dir()` function is not needed at all anymore (it was
used originally to support the core.hideDotFiles = gitDirOnly setting,
but we now use a different method to support that case), let's just
remove it.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-11 13:55:05 -07:00
f30afdabbf mingw: introduce the 'core.hideDotFiles' setting
On Unix (and Linux), files and directories whose names start with a dot
are usually not shown by default. This convention is used by Git: the
.git/ directory should be left alone by regular users, and only accessed
through Git itself.

On Windows, no such convention exists. Instead, there is an explicit flag
to mark files or directories as hidden.

In the early days, Git for Windows did not mark the .git/ directory (or
for that matter, any file or directory whose name starts with a dot)
hidden. This lead to quite a bit of confusion, and even loss of data.

Consequently, Git for Windows introduced the core.hideDotFiles setting,
with three possible values: true, false, and dotGitOnly, defaulting to
marking only the .git/ directory as hidden.

The rationale: users do not need to access .git/ directly, and indeed (as
was demonstrated) should not really see that directory, either. However,
not all dot files should be hidden by default, as e.g. Eclipse does not
show them (and the user would therefore be unable to see, say, a
.gitattributes file).

In over five years since the last attempt to bring this patch into core
Git, a slightly buggy version of this patch has served Git for Windows'
users well: no single report indicated problems with the hidden .git/
directory, and the stream of problems caused by the previously non-hidden
.git/ directory simply stopped. The bugs have been fixed during the
process of getting this patch upstream.

Note that there is a funny quirk we have to pay attention to when
creating hidden files: we use Win32's _wopen() function which
transmogrifies its arguments and hands off to Win32's CreateFile()
function. That latter function errors out with ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED (the
equivalent of EACCES) when the equivalent of the O_CREAT flag was passed
and the file attributes (including the hidden flag) do not match an
existing file's. And _wopen() accepts no parameter that would be
transmogrified into said hidden flag. Therefore, we simply try again
without O_CREAT.

A slightly different method is required for our fopen()/freopen()
function as we cannot even *remove* the implicit O_CREAT flag.
Therefore, we briefly mark existing files as unhidden when opening them
via fopen()/freopen().

The ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED error can also be triggered by opening a file
that is marked as a system file (which is unlikely to be tracked in
Git), and by trying to create a file that has *just* been deleted and is
awaiting the last open handles to be released (which would be handled
better by the "Try again?" logic, a story for a different patch series,
though). In both cases, it does not matter much if we try again without
the O_CREAT flag, read: it does not hurt, either.

For details how ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED can be triggered, see
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa363858

Original-patch-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Initial-Test-By: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-11 13:54:53 -07:00
8e98b35f87 rebase--interactive: avoid empty list in shell for-loop
The $strategy_opts variable contains a space-separated list
of strategy options, each individually shell-quoted. To loop
over each, we "unwrap" them by doing an eval like:

  eval '
    for opt in '"$strategy_opts"'
    do
       ...
    done
  '

Note the quoting that means we expand $strategy_opts inline
in the code to be evaluated (which is the right thing
because we want the IFS-split and de-quoting). If the
variable is empty, however, we ask the shell to eval the
following code:

  for opt in
  do
     ...
  done

without anything between "in" and "do".  Most modern shells
are happy to treat that like a noop, but reportedly ksh88 on
AIX considers it a syntax error. So let's catch the case
that the variable is empty and skip the eval altogether
(since we know the loop would be a noop anyway).

Reported-by: Armin Kunaschik <megabreit@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 14:11:27 -07:00
5fe494c54a Eleventh batch for 2.9
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 13:46:57 -07:00
e79dd64cbe Merge branch 'svn/bad-ref' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn
* 'svn/bad-ref' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn:
  Git/SVN: die when there is no commit metadata
2016-05-10 13:40:57 -07:00
04bd6da2dc Merge branch 'sk/gitweb-highlight-encoding'
Some multi-byte encoding can have a backslash byte as a later part
of one letter, which would confuse "highlight" filter used in
gitweb.

* sk/gitweb-highlight-encoding:
  gitweb: apply fallback encoding before highlight
2016-05-10 13:40:33 -07:00
c5d782bef5 Merge branch 'sb/clean-test-fix'
* sb/clean-test-fix:
  t7300: mark test with SANITY
2016-05-10 13:40:32 -07:00
5a2906812b Merge branch 'rn/glossary-typofix'
* rn/glossary-typofix:
  Documentation: fix typo 'In such these cases'
2016-05-10 13:40:32 -07:00
d5e0d54319 Merge branch 'ls/travis-submitting-patches'
* ls/travis-submitting-patches:
  Documentation: add setup instructions for Travis CI
2016-05-10 13:40:30 -07:00
1fab5e53fc Merge branch 'js/close-packs-before-gc'
* js/close-packs-before-gc:
  t5510: run auto-gc in the foreground
2016-05-10 13:40:30 -07:00
231cc94899 Merge branch 'ew/normal-to-e'
* ew/normal-to-e:
  .mailmap: update to my shorter email address
2016-05-10 13:40:29 -07:00
7a959426b6 Merge branch 'ls/p4-lfs'
Recent update to Git LFS broke "git p4" by changing the output from
its "lfs pointer" subcommand.

* ls/p4-lfs:
  git-p4: fix Git LFS pointer parsing
  travis-ci: express Linux/OS X dependency versions more clearly
  travis-ci: update Git-LFS and P4 to the latest version
2016-05-10 13:40:29 -07:00
934908ae5b Merge branch 'sb/misc-cleanups'
* sb/misc-cleanups:
  submodule-config: don't shadow `cache`
  config.c: drop local variable
2016-05-10 13:40:29 -07:00
54c2af5aa3 Merge branch 'ew/doc-split-pack-disables-bitmap'
Doc update.

* ew/doc-split-pack-disables-bitmap:
  pack-objects: warn on split packs disabling bitmaps
2016-05-10 13:40:28 -07:00
2ec075d903 wrap-for-bin.sh: regenerate bin-wrappers when switching branches
Commit e6e7530 (test helpers: move test-* to t/helper/ subdirectory -
2016-04-13) moves test-* to t/helper. However because bin-wrappers/*
only depend on wrap-for-bin.sh, when switching between a branch that has
this commit and one that does not, bin-wrappers/* may not be regenerated
and point to the old/outdated test programs.

This commit makes a non-functional change in wrap-for-bin.sh, just
enough for 'make' to detect and re-execute wrap-for-bin.sh. When
switching between a branch containing both this commit and e6e7530 and
one containing neither, bin-wrappers/*, we should get fresh bin-wrappers/*.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 13:23:34 -07:00
8ca65aebad t0040: convert a few tests to use test-parse-options --expect
As a small example of using "test-parse-options --expect",
rewrite the "check" helper using it, instead of comparing
the whole variable dump.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 12:57:48 -07:00
32d51d473f t0040: remove unused test helpers
9a001381 (Fix tests under GETTEXT_POISON on parseopt, 2012-08-27)
introduced check_i18n, but the helper was never used from the
beginning.

The same commit also introduced check_unknown_i18n to replace the
helper check_unknown and changed all users of the latter to use the
former, but failed to remove check_unknown itself.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 12:57:48 -07:00
ab6b28b02f test-parse-options: --expect=<string> option to simplify tests
Existing tests in t0040 follow a rather verbose pattern:

        cat >expect <<\EOF
        boolean: 0
        integer: 0
        magnitude: 0
        timestamp: 0
        string: (not set)
        abbrev: 7
        verbose: 0
        quiet: 3
        dry run: no
        file: (not set)
        EOF

        test_expect_success 'multiple quiet levels' '
                test-parse-options -q -q -q >output 2>output.err &&
                test_must_be_empty output.err &&
                test_cmp expect output
        '

But the only thing this test cares about is if "quiet: 3" is in the
output.  We should be able to write the above 18 lines with just
four lines, like this:

	test_expect_success 'multiple quiet levels' '
		test-parse-options --expect="quiet: 3" -q -q -q
	'

Teach the new --expect=<string> option to test-parse-options helper.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 12:57:48 -07:00
accac4199c test-parse-options: fix output when callback option fails
When test-parse-options detects an error on the command line, it
gives the usage string just like any parse-options API users do,
without showing any "variable dump".  An exception is the callback
test, where a "variable dump" for the option is done before the
command line options are fully parsed.

Do not expose this implementation detail by separating the handling
of callback test into two phases, one to capture the fact that an
option was given during the option parsing phase, and the other to
show that fact as a part of normal "variable dump".

The effect of this fix is seen in the patch to t/t0040 where it
tried "test-parse-options --no-length" where "--length" is a callback
that does not take a negative form.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 12:57:48 -07:00
0bbe731714 submodule: ensure that -c http.extraheader is heeded
To support this developer's use case of allowing build agents token-based
access to private repositories, we introduced the http.extraheader
feature, allowing extra HTTP headers to be sent along with every HTTP
request.

This patch verifies that we can configure these extra HTTP headers via the
command-line for use with `git submodule update`, too. Example: git -c
http.extraheader="Secret: Sauce" submodule update --init

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 12:56:28 -07:00
386aad5a93 t3404: fix typo
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 12:30:15 -07:00
b98712b9aa travis-ci: build documentation
Build documentation as separate Travis CI job to check for
documentation errors.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 11:19:07 -07:00
ab81411ced ci: validate "linkgit:" in documentation
It is easy to add incorrect "linkgit:<page>[<section>]" references
to our documentation suite.  Catch these common classes of errors:

 * Referring to Documentation/<page>.txt that does not exist.

 * Referring to a <page> outside the Git suite.  In general, <page>
   must begin with "git".

 * Listing the manual <section> incorrectly.  The first line of the
   Documentation/<page>.txt must end with "(<section>)".

with a new script "ci/lint-gitlink", and drive it from "make check-docs".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 11:15:04 -07:00
8ab8d959c6 Merge branch 'jk/submodule-c-credential' into js/http-custom-headers
* jk/submodule-c-credential:
  submodule: stop sanitizing config options
  submodule: use prepare_submodule_repo_env consistently
  submodule--helper: move config-sanitizing to submodule.c
  submodule: export sanitized GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS
  t5550: break submodule config test into multiple sub-tests
  t5550: fix typo in $HTTPD_URL
  git_config_push_parameter: handle empty GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS
  git: submodule honor -c credential.* from command line
  quote: implement sq_quotef()
  submodule: fix segmentation fault in submodule--helper clone
  submodule: fix submodule--helper clone usage
  submodule: check argc count for git submodule--helper clone
  submodule: don't pass empty string arguments to submodule--helper clone
2016-05-10 10:38:31 -07:00
e31165ce69 t5551: make the test for extra HTTP headers more robust
To test that extra HTTP headers are passed correctly, t5551 verifies that
a fetch succeeds when two required headers are passed, and that the fetch
does not succeed when those headers are not passed.

However, this test would also succeed if the configuration required only
one header. As Apache's configuration is notoriously tricky (this
developer frequently requires StackOverflow's help to understand Apache's
documentation), especially when still supporting the 2.2 line, let's just
really make sure that the test verifies what we want it to verify.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 10:28:01 -07:00
f1f2b45be0 tests: adjust the configuration for Apache 2.2
Lars Schneider noticed that the configuration introduced to test the
extra HTTP headers cannot be used with Apache 2.2 (which is still
actively maintained, as pointed out by Junio Hamano).

To let the tests pass with Apache 2.2 again, let's substitute the
offending <RequireAll> and `expr` by using old school RewriteCond
statements.

As RewriteCond does not allow testing for *non*-matches, we simply match
the desired case first and let it pass by marking the RewriteRule as
'[L]' ("last rule, do not process any other matching RewriteRules after
this"), and then have another RewriteRule that matches all other cases
and lets them fail via '[F]' ("fail").

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Tested-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 10:27:42 -07:00
aaab84203b commit: add a commit.verbose config variable
Add commit.verbose configuration variable as a convenience for those
who always prefer --verbose.

Add tests to check the behavior introduced by this commit and also to
verify that behavior of status doesn't break because of this commit.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 10:25:52 -07:00
6d2d780f63 fsck: detect and warn a commit with embedded NUL
Even though a Git commit object is designed to be capable of storing
any binary data as its payload, in practice people use it to describe
the changes in textual form, and tools like "git log" are designed to
treat the payload as text.

Detect and warn when we see any commit object with a NUL byte in
it.

Note that a NUL byte in the header part is already detected as a
grave error.  This change is purely about the message part.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-10 10:02:06 -07:00
1cca17dfff Documentation: fix linkgit references
There are a handful of incorrect "linkgit:<page>[<section>]"
instances in our documentation set.

 * Some have an extra colon after "linkgit:"; fix them by removing
   the extra colon;

 * Some refer to a page outside the Git suite, namely curl(1); fix
   them by using the `curl(1)` that already appears on the same page
   for the same purpose of referring the readers to its manual page.

 * Some spell the name of the page incorrectly, e.g. "rev-list" when
   they mean "git-rev-list"; fix them.

 * Some list the manual section incorrectly; fix them to make sure
   they match what is at the top of the target of the link.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 15:44:14 -07:00
0f9fd5c917 t6036: remove pointless test that expects failure
One test in t6036 prepares a file whose contents contain these
lines:

	<<<<<<< Temporary merge branch 1
	C
	=======
	B
	>>>>>>> Temporary merge branch 2

and uses recursive merge strategy to run criss-cross merge with it.

Manual merge resolution by users fundamentally depends on being able
to distinguish the tracked contents from the separator lines added
by "git merge" in order to allow users to tell which block of lines
came from where.  You can deliberately craft a file with lines that
resemble conflict marker lines to make it impossible for the user
(the outer merge of merge-recursive counts as a user of the result
of "virtual parent" merge) to tell which part is which, and write a
test to demonstrate that with such a file that "git merge" cannot
fundamentally work well and has to fail.

It however is pointless and waste of time and resource to run such a
test that asserts the obvious.

In real life, people who do need to track files with such lines that
have <<<< ==== >>>> as their prefixes set the conflict-marker-size
attribute to make sure they will be able to tell between the tracked
lines that happen to begin with these (confusing) prefixes and the
marker lines that are added by "git merge".

Remove the test as pointless waste of resource.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 15:42:55 -07:00
d694a17986 ll-merge: use a longer conflict marker for internal merge
The primary use of conflict markers is to help the user who resolves
the final (outer) merge by hand to show which part came from which
branch by separating the blocks of lines apart.  When the conflicted
parts from a "virtual ancestor" merge created by merge-recursive
remains in the common ancestor part in the final result, however,
the conflict markers that are the same size as the final merge
become harder to see.

Increase the conflict marker size slightly for these inner merges so
that the markers from the final merge and cruft from internal merge
can be distinguished more easily.

This would help reduce the common issue that prevents "rerere" from
being used on a really complex conflict.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 15:42:16 -07:00
4df4313532 test-lib-functions.sh: rewrite test_seq without Perl
Rewrite the 'seq' imitation using only commands and features that
are typically found built into modern POSIX shells, instead of
relying on Perl to run a single-liner script.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 14:21:57 -07:00
2bb0518617 t4151: make sure argument to 'test -z' is given
88d50724 (am --skip: revert changes introduced by failed 3way merge,
2015-06-06), unlike all the other patches in the series, forgot to
quote the output from "$(git ls-files -u)" when using it as the
argument to "test -z", leading to a syntax error on platforms whose
test does not interpret "test -z" (no other arguments) as testing if
a string "-z" is the null string (which GNU test and test that is
built into bash and dash seem to do).

Note that $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) is deliberately left unquoted,
as some implementations of "wc -l" includes extra blank characters
in its output and cannot be compared as string, i.e. "test 0 = $(...)".

Signed-off-by: Armin Kunaschik <megabreit@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 13:45:22 -07:00
55672a39b4 test-lib-functions.sh: remove misleading comment on test_seq
We never used the "letters" form since we came up with "test_seq" to
replace use of non-portable "seq" in our test script, which we
introduced it at d17cf5f3 (tests: Introduce test_seq, 2012-08-04).

We use this helper to either iterate for N times (i.e. the values on
the lines do not even matter), or just to get N distinct strings
(i.e. the values on the lines themselves do not really matter, but
we care that they are different from each other and reproducible).

Stop promising that we may allow using "letters"; this would open an
easier reimplementation that does not rely on $PERL, if somebody
later wants to.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:32:42 -07:00
1da045fb9d wrapper.c: use warning_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
1c8ead97f8 vcs-svn: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
d2b6afa2cb upload-pack.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
43c728e2c2 unpack-trees.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
1fee1dce71 transport-helper.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
7616c6ca9d sha1_file.c: use {error,die,warning}_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
02382f51b3 server-info.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
6c979c74b2 sequencer.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
fbcb0e0659 run-command.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
033e011e64 rerere.c: use error_errno() and warning_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
9a3acba1ca reachable.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
60901e4c22 mailmap.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
a26f4ed682 ident.c: use warning_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
d2e255eefa http.c: use error_errno() and warning_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
7645d8f119 grep.c: use error_errno()
While at there, improve the error message a bit (what operation failed?)

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
ddf362a2a9 gpg-interface.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
6c223e4958 fast-import.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
e1ebb3c25b entry.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
9f9a522c15 editor.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
a1f06be3ff diff-no-index.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
26604f9f62 credential-cache--daemon.c: use warning_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
37653a130a copy.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
5cc026e218 connected.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
f0658ec9ea config.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
df8e31391d compat/win32/syslog.c: use warning_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
4b94ec9b20 combine-diff.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
eb031a5801 check-racy.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
8d19e93094 builtin/worktree.c: use error_errno()
While at there, improve the error message to say _what_ failed to
remove.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
17bef17ef8 builtin/upload-archive.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
23d05364fc builtin/update-index.c: prefer "err" to "errno" in process_lstat_error
"errno" is already passed in as "err". Here we should use err instead of
errno. errno is probably a copy/paste mistake in e011054 (Teach
git-update-index about gitlinks - 2007-04-12)

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
7dcf3d97fa builtin/rm.c: use warning_errno()
While at there, improve the message a bit (what operation failed?) and
mark it for translation since the format string is now a sentence.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
54d47394b4 builtin/pack-objects.c: use die_errno() and warning_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
62f94d54a9 builtin/merge-file.c: use error_errno()
All these error() calls do not print error message previously, but
because when they are called, errno should be set. Use error_errno()
instead to give more information.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
880c0aef0f builtin/mailsplit.c: use error_errno()
There's one change, in split_mbox(), where an error() without strerror()
as argument is converted to error_errno(). This is correct because the
previous call is fopen (not shown in the context lines), which should
set errno if it returns NULL.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
574774980c builtin/help.c: use warning_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
6da31d7f75 builtin/fetch.c: use error_errno()
A couple of newlines are also removed, because both error() and
error_errno() automatically append a newline.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
896ba1d112 builtin/branch.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
6e59e9c0a6 builtin/am.c: use error_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
23e7a312e1 bisect.c: use die_errno() and warning_errno()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
fd1d672300 usage.c: add warning_errno() and error_errno()
Similar to die_errno(), these functions will append strerror()
automatically.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
58e4e5118a usage.c: move format processing out of die_errno()
fmt_with_err() will be shared with the coming error_errno() and
warning_errno().

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:29:08 -07:00
6c1fbe1e41 i18n: remote: add comment for translators
Add comment drawing translator attention in order to align "Push
URL:" and "Fetch URL:" fields translation of git remote show output.

Aligning both fields makes the output more appealing and easier to
grasp.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:20:40 -07:00
f30721807f t6302: simplify non-gpg cases
When commit 618310a taught t6302 to run without the GPG
prerequisite, it did so by conditionally creating the signed
tags only when gpg is available. As a result, further tests
need to take this into account, which they can do with the
test_prepare_expect helper. This is a minor hassle, though,
as the helper cannot easily cover all cases (it just matches
"signed" in the output, so all output must include the
actual refname).

Instead, let's take a different approach. We'll always
create the tags, and only conditionally sign them. This does
mean our tag-names are a minor lie, but it lets the tests
which do not care about signing easily behave the same in
all settings. We'll include a comment to document our lie
and avoid confusing further test-writers.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 12:18:41 -07:00
f5ee54aab1 t6041: do not compress backup tar file
The test uses the 'z' option, i.e. "compress the output while at
it", which is GNUism and not portable.

Reported-by: Armin Kunaschik <megabreit@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 11:49:19 -07:00
95f0539edf t3513: do not compress backup tar file
The test uses the 'z' option, i.e. "compress the output while at
it", which is GNUism and not portable.

Reported-by: Armin Kunaschik <megabreit@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 11:49:14 -07:00
a75a30816d t5601: Remove trailing space in sed expression
The sed expression for IPv6, "Tested User And Host" or "tuah" used a wrong
sed expression, which doesn't work under all versions of sed.

Reported-By: Armin Kunaschik <megabreit@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-09 11:39:05 -07:00
523a33ca17 Git/SVN: die when there is no commit metadata
When passing a bad --trunk option to `git svn clone`, like for example the
same URL that we are cloning:

  C:\Windows\system32>git svn clone
  https://mycompany.svn.beanstalkapp.com/myproject --no-metadata -A
  c:\temp\svn_to_git_users.txt
  --trunk=https://mycompany.svn.beanstalkapp.com/myproject
  --tags=https://mycompany.svn.beanstalkapp.com/myproject/tags
  --branches=https://mycompany.svn.beanstalkapp.com/myproject/branches
  c:\code\Git_myproject

One gets an "Use of uninitialized value $u in substitution (s///)" error:

  [...]
  W: +empty_dir: branches/20080918_DBDEPLOY/vendor/src/csharp/MS WCSF
  Contrib/src/Services
  W: +empty_dir: branches/20080918_DBDEPLOY/vendor/src/csharp/RealWorldControls/References
  r530 = c276e3b039d8e38759c6fb17443349732552d7a2 (refs/remotes/origin/trunk)
  Found possible branch point:
  https://mycompany.svn.beanstalkapp.com/myproject/trunk =>
  https://mycompany.svn.beanstalkapp.com/myproject/branches/20080918_DBDEPLOY,
  529
  Use of uninitialized value $u in substitution (s///) at
  /mingw32/share/perl5/site_perl/Git/SVN.pm line 101.
  Use of uninitialized value $u in concatenation (.) or string at
  /mingw32/share/perl5/site_perl/Git/SVN.pm line 101.
  refs/remotes/origin/trunk:
  'https://mycompany.svn.beanstalkapp.com/myproject' not found in ''
  C:\Windows\system32>

Let's fix that by just die()ing when we have an uninitialized value because we
cannot get commit metadata from a ref.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
2016-05-08 00:50:19 +00:00
63a35025b1 Sync with maint
* maint:
  Almost ready for 2.8.3
2016-05-06 14:53:45 -07:00
d92347f59f Almost ready for 2.8.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-06 14:53:36 -07:00
cc601901a7 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-path-misc-bugs' into maint
"git submodule" reports the paths of submodules the command
recurses into, but this was incorrect when the command was not run
from the root level of the superproject.

* sb/submodule-path-misc-bugs:
  t7407: make expectation as clear as possible
  submodule update: test recursive path reporting from subdirectory
  submodule update: align reporting path for custom command execution
  submodule status: correct path handling in recursive submodules
  submodule update --init: correct path handling in recursive submodules
  submodule foreach: correct path display in recursive submodules
2016-05-06 14:53:25 -07:00
a0c9cf51c0 Merge branch 'ky/imap-send-openssl-1.1.0' into maint
Upcoming OpenSSL 1.1.0 will break compilation b updating a few APIs
we use in imap-send, which has been adjusted for the change.

* ky/imap-send-openssl-1.1.0:
  configure: remove checking for HMAC_CTX_cleanup
  imap-send: avoid deprecated TLSv1_method()
  imap-send: check NULL return of SSL_CTX_new()
  imap-send: use HMAC() function provided by OpenSSL
2016-05-06 14:53:24 -07:00
8854ded7af Merge branch 'js/replace-edit-use-editor-configuration' into maint
"git replace -e" did not honour "core.editor" configuration.

* js/replace-edit-use-editor-configuration:
  replace --edit: respect core.editor
2016-05-06 14:53:24 -07:00
b450a39bea Merge branch 'cc/apply' into maint
Minor code clean-up.

* cc/apply:
  builtin/apply: free patch when parse_chunk() fails
  builtin/apply: handle parse_binary() failure
  apply: remove unused call to free() in gitdiff_{old,new}name()
  builtin/apply: get rid of useless 'name' variable
2016-05-06 14:53:23 -07:00
c75fb77d9a Merge branch 'kn/for-each-tag-branch' into maint
A minor documentation update.

* kn/for-each-tag-branch:
  for-each-ref: fix description of '--contains' in manpage
2016-05-06 14:53:23 -07:00
a3fe55458a Tenth batch for 2.9
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-06 14:51:51 -07:00
0018da1088 Merge branch 'jk/diff-compact-heuristic'
Patch output from "git diff" and friends has been tweaked to be
more readable by using a blank line as a strong hint that the
contents before and after it belong to a logically separate unit.

* jk/diff-compact-heuristic:
  diff: undocument the compaction heuristic knobs for experimentation
  xdiff: implement empty line chunk heuristic
  xdiff: add recs_match helper function
2016-05-06 14:45:46 -07:00
21b4ae74b4 Merge branch 'ls/p4-lfs-test-fix-2.7.0'
Fix a broken test.

* ls/p4-lfs-test-fix-2.7.0:
  t9824: fix wrong reference value
  t9824: fix broken &&-chain in a subshell
2016-05-06 14:45:45 -07:00
8429f2b42d Merge branch 'bc/object-id'
Move from unsigned char[20] to struct object_id continues.

* bc/object-id:
  match-trees: convert several leaf functions to use struct object_id
  tree-walk: convert tree_entry_extract() to use struct object_id
  struct name_entry: use struct object_id instead of unsigned char sha1[20]
  match-trees: convert shift_tree() and shift_tree_by() to use object_id
  test-match-trees: convert to use struct object_id
  sha1-name: introduce a get_oid() function
2016-05-06 14:45:44 -07:00
89d3eafe90 Merge branch 'bw/rebase-merge-entire-branch'
"git rebase -m" could be asked to rebase an entire branch starting
from the root, but failed by assuming that there always is a parent
commit to the first commit on the branch.

* bw/rebase-merge-entire-branch:
  git-rebase--merge: don't include absent parent as a base
2016-05-06 14:45:44 -07:00
54b0ac57ab Merge branch 'jc/drop-git-spec-in'
As nobody maintains our in-tree git.spec.in and distros use their
own spec file, we stopped pretending that we support "make rpm".

* jc/drop-git-spec-in:
  Makefile: remove dependency on git.spec
  Makefile: stop pretending to support rpmbuild
2016-05-06 14:45:44 -07:00
e250f495b2 Merge branch 'js/http-custom-headers'
HTTP transport clients learned to throw extra HTTP headers at the
server, specified via http.extraHeader configuration variable.

* js/http-custom-headers:
  http: support sending custom HTTP headers
2016-05-06 14:45:43 -07:00
5f3b21c111 Merge branch 'sb/clone-shallow-passthru'
"git clone" learned "--shallow-submodules" option.

* sb/clone-shallow-passthru:
  clone: add `--shallow-submodules` flag
2016-05-06 14:45:43 -07:00
ca158f4633 Merge branch 'ld/p4-test-py3'
The test scripts for "git p4" (but not "git p4" implementation
itself) has been updated so that they would work even on a system
where the installed version of Python is python 3.

* ld/p4-test-py3:
  git-p4 tests: time_in_seconds should use $PYTHON_PATH
  git-p4 tests: work with python3 as well as python2
  git-p4 tests: cd to / before running python
2016-05-06 14:45:42 -07:00
3b577581ab Merge branch 'sb/config-exit-status-list'
Doc update.

* sb/config-exit-status-list:
  config doc: improve exit code listing
2016-05-06 14:45:42 -07:00
832c0e5e63 typofix: assorted typofixes in comments, documentation and messages
Many instances of duplicate words (e.g. "the the path") and
a few typoes are fixed, originally in multiple patches.

    wildmatch: fix duplicate words of "the"
    t: fix duplicate words of "output"
    transport-helper: fix duplicate words of "read"
    Git.pm: fix duplicate words of "return"
    path: fix duplicate words of "look"
    pack-protocol.txt: fix duplicate words of "the"
    precompose-utf8: fix typo of "sequences"
    split-index: fix typo
    worktree.c: fix typo
    remote-ext: fix typo
    utf8: fix duplicate words of "the"
    git-cvsserver: fix duplicate words

Signed-off-by: Li Peng <lip@dtdream.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-06 13:16:37 -07:00
89044baa8b submodule: stop sanitizing config options
The point of having a whitelist of command-line config
options to pass to submodules was two-fold:

  1. It prevented obvious nonsense like using core.worktree
     for multiple repos.

  2. It could prevent surprise when the user did not mean
     for the options to leak to the submodules (e.g.,
     http.sslverify=false).

For case 1, the answer is mostly "if it hurts, don't do
that". For case 2, we can note that any such example has a
matching inverted surprise (e.g., a user who meant
http.sslverify=true to apply everywhere, but it didn't).

So this whitelist is probably not giving us any benefit, and
is already creating a hassle as people propose things to put
on it. Let's just drop it entirely.

Note that we still need to keep a special code path for
"prepare the submodule environment", because we still have
to take care to pass through $GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS (and
block the rest of the repo-specific environment variables).

We can do this easily from within the submodule shell
script, which lets us drop the submodule--helper option
entirely (and it's OK to do so because as a "--" program, it
is entirely a private implementation detail).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-06 12:54:27 -07:00
f54bea44a5 remote.c: specify correct plural form in "commit diverge" message
We need to count both "ours" and "theirs" commits when selecting plural
form for this message. Note that even though in this block, both ours
and theirs must be positive (i.e. can't be in singular form), we still
keep Q_(singular, plural) because languages other than English may have
more than one plural form.

Reported-by: Alfonsogonzalez, Ernesto (GE Digital) <ernesto.alfonsogonzalez@ge.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-06 12:52:58 -07:00
f212dcc7d3 config: consistently format $variables in monospaced font
We don't consistently use `backticks` for formatting shell variables.
This patch improves the consistency on shell variables (and a few nearby
mentions of "gpg" commands), though it still doesn't straighten out the
use of "quotes."

Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <computersforpeace@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-05 15:29:06 -07:00
f6a5279977 submodule deinit: require '--all' instead of '.' for all submodules
The discussion in [1] pointed out that '.' is a faulty suggestion as
there is a corner case where it fails:

> "submodule deinit ." may have "worked" in the sense that you would
> have at least one path in your tree and avoided this "nothing
> matches" most of the time.  It would have still failed with the
> exactly same error if run in an empty repository, i.e.
>
>        $ E=/var/tmp/x/empty && rm -fr "$E" && mkdir -p "$E" && cd "$E"
>        $ git init
>        $ rungit v2.6.6 submodule deinit .
>        error: pathspec '.' did not match any file(s) known to git.
>        Did you forget to 'git add'?
>        $ >file && git add file
>        $ rungit v2.6.6 submodule deinit .
>        $ echo $?
>        0

So instead of a pathspec add the '--all' option to deinit all submodules
and add a test to check for the corner case of an empty repository.

The code only needs to learn about the '--all' option and doesn't
require further changes as `git submodule--helper list "$@"` will list
all submodules when "$@" is empty.

[1] http://news.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/289535

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-05 14:51:26 -07:00
de45dbb818 t7507-commit-verbose: improve test coverage by testing number of diffs
Make the fake "editor" store output of grep in a file so that we can
see how many diffs were contained in the message and use them in
individual tests where ever it is required. A subsequent commit will
introduce scenarios where it is important to be able to exactly
determine how many diffs were present.

The fake "editor" is always made to succeed regardless of whether grep
found diff headers or not so that we don't have to use 'test_must_fail'
for which 'test_line_count = 0' is an easy substitute and also helps in
maintaining the consistency.

Also use write_script() to create the fake "editor".

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-05 11:52:45 -07:00
e0070e8bd5 parse-options.c: make OPTION_COUNTUP respect "unspecified" values
OPT_COUNTUP() merely increments the counter upon --option, and resets it
to 0 upon --no-option, which means that there is no "unspecified" value
with which a client can initialize the counter to determine whether or
not --[no]-option was seen at all.

Make OPT_COUNTUP() treat any negative number as an "unspecified" value
to address this shortcoming. In particular, if a client initializes the
counter to -1, then if it is still -1 after parse_options(), then
neither --option nor --no-option was seen; if it is 0, then --no-option
was seen last, and if it is 1 or greater, than --option was seen last.

This change does not affect the behavior of existing clients because
they all use the initial value of 0 (or more).

Note that builtin/clean.c initializes the variable used with
OPT__FORCE (which uses OPT_COUNTUP()) to a negative value, but it is set
to either 0 or 1 by reading the configuration before the code calls
parse_options(), i.e. as far as parse_options() is concerned, the
initial value of the variable is not negative.

To test this behavior, in test-parse-options.c, "verbose" is set to
"unspecified" while quiet is set to 0 which will test the new behavior
with all sets of values.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-05 11:52:45 -07:00
98baeb794d t/t7507: improve test coverage
git-commit and git-status share the same implementation thus it is
necessary to ensure that changes specific to git-commit don't
accidentally impact git-status.

This test verifies that changes made to verbose in git-commit does not
impact git-status.

Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-05 11:52:45 -07:00
7d1771524c t0040-parse-options: improve test coverage
Include tests to check for multiple levels of quiet and to check the
behavior of '--no-quiet'.

Include tests to check for multiple levels of verbose and to check the
behavior of '--no-verbose'.

Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-05 11:52:45 -07:00
e711b1af2e rename_ref(): remove unneeded local variable
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-05-05 16:37:30 +02:00
76fc394d50 commit_ref_update(): write error message to *err, not stderr
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-05-05 16:37:30 +02:00
e40f3557f7 refname_is_safe(): insist that the refname already be normalized
The reference name is going to be compared to other reference names, so
it should be in its normalized form.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-05-05 16:37:30 +02:00
35db25c65f refname_is_safe(): don't allow the empty string
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-05-05 16:37:30 +02:00
39950fef8b refname_is_safe(): use skip_prefix()
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-05-05 16:37:30 +02:00
728af2832c remove_dir_recursively(): add docstring
Add a docstring for the remove_dir_recursively() function and the
REMOVE_DIR_* flags that can be passed to it.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-05-05 16:37:30 +02:00
e95792e532 safe_create_leading_directories(): improve docstring
Document the difference between this function and
safe_create_leading_directories_const(), and that the former restores
path before returning.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-05-05 16:37:30 +02:00
e167a5673e read_raw_ref(): don't get confused by an empty directory
Even if there is an empty directory where we look for the loose version
of a reference, check for a packed reference before giving up. This
fixes the failing test that was introduced two commits ago.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-05-05 16:37:04 +02:00
5387c0d883 commit_ref(): if there is an empty dir in the way, delete it
Part of the bug revealed in the last commit is that resolve_ref_unsafe()
incorrectly returns EISDIR if it finds a directory in the place where it
is looking for a loose reference, even if the corresponding packed
reference exists. lock_ref_sha1_basic() notices the bogus EISDIR, and
use it as an indication that it should call remove_empty_directories()
and call resolve_ref_unsafe() again.

But resolve_ref_unsafe() shouldn't report EISDIR in this case. If we
would simply make that change, then remove_empty_directories() wouldn't
get called anymore, and the empty directory would get in the way when
commit_ref() calls commit_lock_file() to rename the lockfile into place.

So instead of relying on lock_ref_sha1_basic() to delete empty
directories, teach commit_ref(), just before calling commit_lock_file(),
to check whether a directory is in the way, and if so, try to delete it.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-05-05 16:31:17 +02:00
19dd7d06e5 t1404: demonstrate a bug resolving references
Add some tests checking that it is possible to work with a reference
even if there is an empty directory where the loose ref would be stored.

One of the new tests demonstrates a bug that has been with us since at
least 2.5.0--single reference lookup gives up when it sees the
directory, even if the reference exists as a packed ref. This probably
hasn't been reported before because Git usually cleans up empty
directories when packing references.

This bug will be fixed shortly.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2016-05-05 16:30:56 +02:00
867ad08a26 hooks: allow customizing where the hook directory is
Change the hardcoded lookup for .git/hooks/* to optionally lookup in
$(git config core.hooksPath)/* instead.

This is essentially a more intrusive version of the git-init ability to
specify hooks on init time via init templates.

The difference between that facility and this feature is that this can
be set up after the fact via e.g. ~/.gitconfig or /etc/gitconfig to
apply for all your personal repositories, or all repositories on the
system.

I plan on using this on a centralized Git server where users can create
arbitrary repositories under /gitroot, but I'd like to manage all the
hooks that should be run centrally via a unified dispatch mechanism.

Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-04 16:25:13 -07:00
de0824ed8f githooks.txt: minor improvements to the grammar & phrasing
Change:

 * Sentences that needed "the" or "a" to either add those or change them
   so they don't need them.

 * The little tangent about "You can use this to do X (if your project
   wants to do X)" can just be shortened to "if you want to do X".

 * s/parameter/parameters/ when the plural made more sense.

Most of this goes all the way back to the initial introduction of
hooks.txt in 6d35cc76 (Document hooks., 2005-09-02).

Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-04 16:23:36 -07:00
bf7d977f8c githooks.txt: amend dangerous advice about 'update' hook ACL
Any ACL you implement via an 'update' hook isn't actual access control
if the user has login access to the machine running git, because they
can trivially just build their own version of Git which doesn't run the
hook.

Change the documentation to take this dangerous edge case into account,
and remove the mention of the advice originating on the mailing list,
the users reading this don't care where the idea came up.

Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-04 16:22:48 -07:00
49fa52fd00 githooks.txt: improve the intro section
Change the documentation so that:

 * We don't talk about "little scripts". Hooks can be as big as you
   want, and don't have to be scripts, just call them "programs".

 * We note that we change the working directory before a hook is called,
   nothing documented this explicitly, but the current behavior is
   predictable. It helps a lot to know what directory these hooks will
   be executed from.

 * We don't make claims about the example hooks which may not be true
   depending on the configuration of 'init.templateDir'. Clarify that
   we're talking about the default settings of git-init in those cases,
   and move some of this documentation into git-init's documentation
   about the default templates.

 * We briefly note in the intro that hooks can get their arguments in
   various different ways, and that how exactly is described below for
   each hook.

Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-04 16:22:23 -07:00
e5a39ad8e6 http: expand http.cookieFile as a path
This should handle .gitconfig files that specify things like:

[http]
	cookieFile = "~/.gitcookies"

Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <computersforpeace@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-04 15:59:26 -07:00
06ea368bb1 Documentation: config: improve word ordering for http.cookieFile
Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <computersforpeace@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-04 15:59:25 -07:00
dca83abde2 config: describe 'pathname' value type
We have a dedicated section for various value-types used in the
configuration variables already, because we needed to describe how
booleans and scaled integers can be spelled, and the pathname type
would fit there.

Adjust the description of `include.path`, `core.excludesFile` and
`commit.template` variables slightly to clarify that these variables
are of this type.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-04 15:58:51 -07:00
4bb51aed1e Sync with maint
* maint:
  git-multimail: update to release 1.3.0
2016-05-03 14:52:30 -07:00
69d4380b47 Ninth batch for 2.9
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-03 14:15:10 -07:00
b974143527 Merge branch 'nf/mergetool-prompt'
UI consistency improvements.

* nf/mergetool-prompt:
  difftool/mergetool: make the form of yes/no questions consistent
2016-05-03 14:08:17 -07:00
9b782d297c Merge branch 'jd/send-email-to-whom'
A question by "git send-email" to ask the identity of the sender
has been updated.

* jd/send-email-to-whom:
  send-email: fix grammo in the prompt that asks e-mail recipients
2016-05-03 14:08:16 -07:00
b342567b2e Merge branch 'rt/string-list-lookup-cleanup'
Code cleanup.

* rt/string-list-lookup-cleanup:
  string_list: use string-list API in unsorted_string_list_lookup()
2016-05-03 14:08:15 -07:00
643318913f Merge branch 'jk/fix-attribute-macro-in-2.5'
Code fixup.

* jk/fix-attribute-macro-in-2.5:
  remote.c: spell __attribute__ correctly
2016-05-03 14:08:15 -07:00
3944f903eb Merge branch 'sg/test-lib-simplify-expr-away'
Code cleanup.

* sg/test-lib-simplify-expr-away:
  test-lib: simplify '--option=value' parsing
2016-05-03 14:08:14 -07:00
51a92bf547 Merge branch 'nd/remove-unused'
Code cleanup.

* nd/remove-unused:
  wrapper.c: delete dead function git_mkstemps()
  dir.c: remove dead function fnmatch_icase()
2016-05-03 14:08:13 -07:00
309ca68e5a Merge branch 'js/name-rev-use-oldest-ref'
"git describe --contains" often made a hard-to-justify choice of
tag to give name to a given commit, because it tried to come up
with a name with smallest number of hops from a tag, causing an old
commit whose close descendant that is recently tagged were not
described with respect to an old tag but with a newer tag.  It did
not help that its computation of "hop" count was further tweaked to
penalize being on a side branch of a merge.  The logic has been
updated to favor using the tag with the oldest tagger date, which
is a lot easier to explain to the end users: "We describe a commit
in terms of the (chronologically) oldest tag that contains the
commit."

* js/name-rev-use-oldest-ref:
  name-rev: include taggerdate in considering the best name
2016-05-03 14:08:13 -07:00
e61f75fe19 Merge branch 'jd/p4-jobs-in-commit'
"git p4" learned to record P4 jobs in Git commit that imports from
the history in Perforce.

* jd/p4-jobs-in-commit:
  git-p4: add P4 jobs to git commit message
  git-p4: clean-up code style in tests
2016-05-03 14:08:12 -07:00
10b8084ee1 Merge branch 'en/merge-fixes'
"merge-recursive" strategy incorrectly checked if a path that is
involved in its internal merge exists in the working tree.

* en/merge-fixes:
  merge-recursive: do not check working copy when creating a virtual merge base
  merge-recursive: remove duplicate code
2016-05-03 14:08:12 -07:00
4453d76c6a git-multimail: update to release 1.3.0
The changes are described in CHANGES.

Contributions-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Contributions-by: Stefan Tatschner <rumpelsepp@sevenbyte.org>
Contributions-by: Simon P <simon.git@le-huit.fr>
Contributions-by: Leander Hasty <leander@1stplayable.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-03 14:04:27 -07:00
cadfbef980 t7300: mark test with SANITY
The test runs `chmod 0` on a file to test a case where Git fails to
read it, but that would not work if it is run as root.

Reported-by: Jan Keromnes <janx@linux.com>
Fix-proposed-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-03 13:20:27 -07:00
029f37217c gitweb: apply fallback encoding before highlight
Some multi-byte character encodings (such as Shift_JIS and GBK) have
characters whose final bytes is an ASCII '\' (0x5c), and they
will be displayed as funny-characters even if $fallback_encoding is
correct.  This is because `highlight` command always expects UTF-8
encoded strings from STDIN.

    $ echo 'my $v = "申";' | highlight --syntax perl | w3m -T text/html -dump
    my $v = "申";

    $ echo 'my $v = "申";' | iconv -f UTF-8 -t Shift_JIS | highlight \
        --syntax perl | iconv -f Shift_JIS -t UTF-8 | w3m -T text/html -dump

    iconv: (stdin):9:135: cannot convert
    my $v = "

This patch prepare git blob objects to be encoded into UTF-8 before
highlighting in the manner of `to_utf8` subroutine.

Signed-off-by: Shin Kojima <shin@kojima.org>
Reviewed-by: Jakub Narębski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-03 11:32:31 -07:00
6694856153 commit-tree: do not pay attention to commit.gpgsign
ba3c69a9 (commit: teach --gpg-sign option, 2011-10-05) introduced a
"signed commit" by teaching the --[no]-gpg-sign option and the
commit.gpgsign configuration variable to various commands that
create commits.

Teaching these to "git commit" and "git merge", both of which are
end-user facing Porcelain commands, was perfectly fine.  Allowing
the plumbing "git commit-tree" to suddenly change the behaviour to
surprise the scripts by paying attention to commit.gpgsign was not.

Among the in-tree scripts, filter-branch, quiltimport, rebase and
stash are the commands that run "commit-tree".  If any of these
wants to allow users to always sign every single commit, they should
offer their own configuration (e.g. "filterBranch.gpgsign") with an
option to disable signing (e.g. "git filter-branch --no-gpgsign").

Ignoring commit.gpgsign option _obviously_ breaks the backward
compatibility, but it is easy to follow the standard pattern in
scripts to honor whatever configuration variable they choose to
follow.  E.g.

	case $(git config --bool commit.gpgsign) in
	true) sign=-S ;;
	*) sign= ;;
	esac &&
	git commit-tree $sign ...whatever other args...

Do so to make sure that "git rebase" keeps paying attention to the
configuration variable, which unfortunately is a documented mistake.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-03 10:59:25 -07:00
c66410ed32 submodule init: redirect stdout to stderr
Reroute the output of stdout to stderr as it is just informative
messages, not to be consumed by machines.

This should not regress any scripts that try to parse the
current output, as the output is already internationalized
and therefore unstable.

We want to init submodules from the helper for `submodule update`
in a later patch and the stdout output of said helper is consumed
by the parts of `submodule update` which are still written in shell.
So we have to be careful which messages are on stdout.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-03 09:39:45 -07:00
14544dd215 submodule deinit test: fix broken && chain in subshell
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-03 09:16:41 -07:00
ee88674f24 Sync with maint
* maint:
  Start preparing for 2.8.3
2016-05-02 15:50:34 -07:00
5b618c1c8d Start preparing for 2.8.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-02 14:24:36 -07:00
6671346c66 Merge branch 'jk/use-write-script-more' into maint
Code clean-up.

* jk/use-write-script-more:
  t3404: use write_script
  t1020: do not overuse printf and use write_script
  t5532: use write_script
2016-05-02 14:24:14 -07:00
97d5165780 Merge branch 'jc/xstrfmt-null-with-prec-0' into maint
Code cleanup.

* jc/xstrfmt-null-with-prec-0:
  setup.c: do not feed NULL to "%.*s" even with precision 0
2016-05-02 14:24:14 -07:00
037438a533 Merge branch 'ew/send-email-drop-data-dumper' into maint
Code clean-up.

* ew/send-email-drop-data-dumper:
  send-email: do not load Data::Dumper
2016-05-02 14:24:13 -07:00
1c07e3eaaf Merge branch 'ad/cygwin-wants-rename' into maint
On Cygwin, object creation uses the "create a temporary and then
rename it to the final name" pattern, not "create a temporary,
hardlink it to the final name and then unlink the temporary"
pattern.

This is necessary to use Git on Windows shared directories, and is
already enabled for the MinGW and plain Windows builds.  It also
has been used in Cygwin packaged versions of Git for quite a while.
See http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/291853
($gmane/275680, $gmane/291853).

* ad/cygwin-wants-rename:
  config.mak.uname: Cygwin needs OBJECT_CREATION_USES_RENAMES
2016-05-02 14:24:12 -07:00
d406f681fe Merge branch 'jk/do-not-printf-NULL' into maint
"git config" had a codepath that tried to pass a NULL to
printf("%s"), which nobody seems to have noticed.

* jk/do-not-printf-NULL:
  git_config_set_multivar_in_file: handle "unset" errors
  git_config_set_multivar_in_file: all non-zero returns are errors
  config: lower-case first word of error strings
2016-05-02 14:24:10 -07:00
6b9eee2bb2 Merge branch 'jc/http-socks5h' into maint
The socks5:// proxy support added back in 2.6.4 days was not aware
that socks5h:// proxies behave differently.

* jc/http-socks5h:
  http: differentiate socks5:// and socks5h://
2016-05-02 14:24:10 -07:00
e18ace0951 Merge branch 'ky/imap-send' into maint
Support for CRAM-MD5 authentication method in "git imap-send" did
not work well.

* ky/imap-send:
  imap-send: fix CRAM-MD5 response calculation
  imap-send: check for NOLOGIN capability only when using LOGIN command
2016-05-02 14:24:10 -07:00
12c5cd774e Merge branch 'ad/commit-have-m-option' into maint
"git commit" misbehaved in a few minor ways when an empty message
is given via -m '', all of which has been corrected.

* ad/commit-have-m-option:
  commit: do not ignore an empty message given by -m ''
  commit: --amend -m '' silently fails to wipe message
2016-05-02 14:24:09 -07:00
f5e16b2a7b Merge branch 'sb/submodule-helper-clone-regression-fix' into maint
A partial rewrite of "git submodule" in the 2.7 timeframe changed
the way the gitdir: pointer in the submodules point at the real
repository location to use absolute paths by accident.  This has
been corrected.

* sb/submodule-helper-clone-regression-fix:
  submodule--helper, module_clone: catch fprintf failure
  submodule--helper: do not borrow absolute_path() result for too long
  submodule--helper, module_clone: always operate on absolute paths
  submodule--helper clone: create the submodule path just once
  submodule--helper: fix potential NULL-dereference
  recursive submodules: test for relative paths
2016-05-02 14:24:08 -07:00
75375ea337 Merge branch 'jk/branch-shortening-funny-symrefs' into maint
A change back in version 2.7 to "git branch" broke display of a
symbolic ref in a non-standard place in the refs/ hierarchy (we
expect symbolic refs to appear in refs/remotes/*/HEAD to point at
the primary branch the remote has, and as .git/HEAD to point at the
branch we locally checked out).

* jk/branch-shortening-funny-symrefs:
  branch: fix shortening of non-remote symrefs
2016-05-02 14:24:07 -07:00
a3fa565327 Merge branch 'es/format-patch-doc-hide-no-patch' into maint
"git format-patch --help" showed `-s` and `--no-patch` as if these
are valid options to the command.  We already hide `--patch` option
from the documentation, because format-patch is about showing the
diff, and the documentation now hides these options as well.

* es/format-patch-doc-hide-no-patch:
  git-format-patch.txt: don't show -s as shorthand for multiple options
2016-05-02 14:24:06 -07:00
3c383a30c8 Merge branch 'ky/branch-m-worktree' into maint
When "git worktree" feature is in use, "git branch -m" renamed a
branch that is checked out in another worktree without adjusting
the HEAD symbolic ref for the worktree.

* ky/branch-m-worktree:
  set_worktree_head_symref(): fix error message
  branch -m: update all per-worktree HEADs
  refs: add a new function set_worktree_head_symref
2016-05-02 14:24:05 -07:00
a4127142c6 Merge branch 'ky/branch-d-worktree' into maint
When "git worktree" feature is in use, "git branch -d" allowed
deletion of a branch that is checked out in another worktree

* ky/branch-d-worktree:
  branch -d: refuse deleting a branch which is currently checked out
2016-05-02 14:24:05 -07:00
8591654998 Merge branch 'jk/check-repository-format' into maint
The repository set-up sequence has been streamlined (the biggest
change is that there is no longer git_config_early()), so that we
do not attempt to look into refs/* when we know we do not have a
Git repository.

* jk/check-repository-format:
  verify_repository_format: mark messages for translation
  setup: drop repository_format_version global
  setup: unify repository version callbacks
  init: use setup.c's repo version verification
  setup: refactor repo format reading and verification
  config: drop git_config_early
  check_repository_format_gently: stop using git_config_early
  lazily load core.sharedrepository
  wrap shared_repository global in get/set accessors
  setup: document check_repository_format()
2016-05-02 14:24:04 -07:00
ffaa7c5d4f Merge branch 'ew/send-email-readable-message-id' into maint
"git send-email" now uses a more readable timestamps when
formulating a message ID.

* ew/send-email-readable-message-id:
  send-email: more meaningful Message-ID
2016-05-02 14:24:04 -07:00
fa7224589f .mailmap: update to my shorter email address
Following f916ab0ccc ("send-email: more meaningful Message-ID"),
my own email address is too long :x

While I could have an even shorter address by one character with
"yhbt.net", "80x24.org" is more representative of my
hacking-related pursuits.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-02 13:29:42 -07:00
2e39a24607 Documentation: fix typo 'In such these cases'
Signed-off-by: René Nyffenegger <mail@renenyffenegger.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-02 12:45:02 -07:00
0e5d028a7a Documentation: add setup instructions for Travis CI
Also change UK english "behaviour" to US english "behavior".

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-02 11:31:44 -07:00
bb05510e55 t5510: run auto-gc in the foreground
The last test added to 't5510-fetch' in 0898c96281 (fetch: release
pack files before garbage-collecting, 2016-01-13) may sporadically
trigger following error message from the test harness:

  rm: cannot remove 'trash directory.t5510-fetch/auto-gc/.git': Directory not empty

The test in question forces an auto-gc, which, if the system supports
it, runs in the background by default, and occasionally takes long
enough for the test to finish and for 'test_done' to start
housekeeping.  This can lead to the test's 'git gc --auto' in the
background and 'test_done's 'rm -rf $trash' in the foreground racing
each other to create and delete files and directories.  It might just
happen that 'git gc' re-creates a directory that 'rm -rf' already
visited and removed, which ultimately triggers the above error.

Disable detaching the auto-gc process to ensure that it finishes
before the test can continue, thus avoiding this racy situation.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-02 11:28:04 -07:00
f924b52a77 Windows: add pthread_sigmask() that does nothing
A previous change introduced a call to pthread_sigmask() in order to block
SIGPIPE in a thread. Since there are no signal facilities on Windows that
are similar to POSIX signals, just ignore the request to block the signal.
In the particular case, the effect of blocking SIGPIPE on POSIX is that
write() calls return EPIPE when the reader closes the pipe. This is how
write() behaves on Windows.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-02 11:22:24 -07:00
77085a616b diff: undocument the compaction heuristic knobs for experimentation
It seems that people around here are all happy with the updated
heuristics used to decide where the hunks are separated.  Let's keep
that as the default.  Even though we do not expect too much trouble
from the difference between the old and the new algorithms, just in
case let's leave the implementation of the knobs to turn it off for
emergencies.  There is no longer need for documenting them, though.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-05-02 10:36:36 -07:00
bbc6168016 Eighth batch for 2.9
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-29 14:21:09 -07:00
cc00d9cfff Sync with 2.8.2 2016-04-29 14:20:47 -07:00
60115f54bd Git 2.8.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-29 14:19:11 -07:00
0c1a8ec8da Merge branch 'js/mingw-tests-2.8' into maint
Code clean-up.

* js/mingw-tests-2.8:
  Windows: shorten code by re-using convert_slashes()
2016-04-29 14:16:01 -07:00
4dda133385 Merge branch 'ep/trace-doc-sample-fix' into maint
Fix a typo in an example in the trace API documentation.

* ep/trace-doc-sample-fix:
  api-trace.txt: fix typo
2016-04-29 14:16:00 -07:00
98eef48257 Merge branch 'jc/makefile-redirection-stderr' into maint
A minor fix in the Makefile.

* jc/makefile-redirection-stderr:
  Makefile: fix misdirected redirections
2016-04-29 14:15:59 -07:00
a4708391d3 Merge branch 'ak/use-hashmap-iter-first-in-submodule-config' into maint
Minor code cleanup.

* ak/use-hashmap-iter-first-in-submodule-config:
  submodule-config: use hashmap_iter_first()
2016-04-29 14:15:58 -07:00
002dd773b0 Merge branch 'tb/blame-force-read-cache-to-workaround-safe-crlf' into maint
When running "git blame $path" with unnormalized data in the index
for the path, the data in the working tree was blamed, even though
"git add" would not have changed what is already in the index, due
to "safe crlf" that disables the line-end conversion.  It has been
corrected.

* tb/blame-force-read-cache-to-workaround-safe-crlf:
  correct blame for files commited with CRLF
2016-04-29 14:15:58 -07:00
18c554b272 Merge branch 'sk/send-pack-all-fix' into maint
"git send-pack --all <there>" was broken when its command line
option parsing was written in the 2.6 timeframe.

* sk/send-pack-all-fix:
  git-send-pack: fix --all option when used with directory
2016-04-29 14:15:57 -07:00
b96c396cce Merge branch 'sg/diff-multiple-identical-renames' into maint
"git diff -M" used to work better when two originally identical
files A and B got renamed to X/A and X/B by pairing A to X/A and B
to X/B, but this was broken in the 2.0 timeframe.

* sg/diff-multiple-identical-renames:
  diffcore: fix iteration order of identical files during rename detection
2016-04-29 14:15:55 -07:00
3bb56a91be Merge branch 'ss/msvc' into maint
Build updates for MSVC.

* ss/msvc:
  MSVC: use shipped headers instead of fallback definitions
  MSVC: vsnprintf in Visual Studio 2015 doesn't need SNPRINTF_SIZE_CORR any more
2016-04-29 14:15:54 -07:00
b559121e3c Merge branch 'st/verify-tag'
Unify internal logic between "git tag -v" and "git verify-tag"
commands by making one directly call into the other.

* st/verify-tag:
  tag -v: verify directly rather than exec-ing verify-tag
  verify-tag: move tag verification code to tag.c
  verify-tag: prepare verify_tag for libification
  verify-tag: update variable name and type
  t7030: test verifying multiple tags
  builtin/verify-tag.c: ignore SIGPIPE in gpg-interface
2016-04-29 12:59:09 -07:00
f9dd74134a Merge branch 'js/win32-mmap'
mmap emulation on Windows has been optimized and work better without
consuming paging store when not needed.

* js/win32-mmap:
  mmap(win32): avoid expensive fstat() call
  mmap(win32): avoid copy-on-write when it is unnecessary
  win32mmap: set errno appropriately
2016-04-29 12:59:09 -07:00
175008d454 Merge branch 'jc/merge-refuse-new-root'
"git pull" has been taught to pass --allow-unrelated-histories
option to underlying "git merge".

* jc/merge-refuse-new-root:
  pull: pass --allow-unrelated-histories to "git merge"
  t3033: avoid 'ambiguous refs' warning
2016-04-29 12:59:08 -07:00
d689301043 Merge branch 'jk/push-client-deadlock-fix'
"git push" from a corrupt repository that attempts to push a large
number of refs deadlocked; the thread to relay rejection notices
for these ref updates blocked on writing them to the main thread,
after the main thread at the receiving end notices that the push
failed and decides not to read these notices and return a failure.

* jk/push-client-deadlock-fix:
  t5504: drop sigpipe=ok from push tests
  fetch-pack: isolate sigpipe in demuxer thread
  send-pack: isolate sigpipe in demuxer thread
  run-command: teach async threads to ignore SIGPIPE
  send-pack: close demux pipe before finishing async process
2016-04-29 12:59:08 -07:00
60b3e9b959 Merge branch 'js/replace-edit-use-editor-configuration'
"git replace -e" did not honour "core.editor" configuration.

* js/replace-edit-use-editor-configuration:
  replace --edit: respect core.editor
2016-04-29 12:59:07 -07:00
9cb50a3ca6 Merge branch 'sb/mv-submodule-fix'
"git mv old new" did not adjust the path for a submodule that lives
as a subdirectory inside old/ directory correctly.

* sb/mv-submodule-fix:
  mv: allow moving nested submodules
2016-04-29 12:59:07 -07:00
e0b5851907 Merge branch 'nd/test-helpers'
Sources to many test helper binaries (and the generated helpers)
have been moved to t/helper/ subdirectory to reduce clutter at the
top level of the tree.

* nd/test-helpers:
  test helpers: move test-* to t/helper/ subdirectory
  Makefile: clean *.o files we create
2016-04-29 12:59:06 -07:00
e7e6826514 Merge branch 'da/user-useconfigonly'
The "user.useConfigOnly" configuration variable makes it an error
if users do not explicitly set user.name and user.email.  However,
its check was not done early enough and allowed another error to
trigger, reporting that the default value we guessed from the
system setting was unusable.  This was a suboptimal end-user
experience as we want the users to set user.name/user.email without
relying on the auto-detection at all.

* da/user-useconfigonly:
  ident: give "please tell me" message upon useConfigOnly error
  ident: check for useConfigOnly before auto-detection of name/email
2016-04-29 12:59:06 -07:00
9e220fedf8 t9824: fix wrong reference value
0492eb48 (t9824: fix broken &&-chain in a subshell, 2016-04-24)
revealed a test that was broken from the beginning, as it expected a
wrong size.  The expected size of the file under test is 39
bytes. The test checked that the size is 13 bytes, but this was not
noticed because it was breaking the &&-chain.

Fix the reference value to make the test pass.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-29 10:34:32 -07:00
08fdbdb153 submodule--helper update-clone: abort gracefully on missing .gitmodules
When there is no .gitmodules file availabe to initialize a submodule
from, `submodule_from_path` just returns NULL. We need to check for
that and abort gracefully.

When `git submodule update` was implemented in shell, this error out
with the warning

    Submodule path '%s' not initialized
    Maybe you want to use 'update --init'?

Replicate that behavior for now instead of crashing.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-29 10:07:13 -07:00
d92028a575 submodule init: fail gracefully with a missing .gitmodules file
When there is no .gitmodules file availabe to initialize a submodule
from, `submodule_from_path` just returns NULL. We need to check for
that and abort gracefully. When `submodule init` was implemented in shell,
a missing .gitmodules file would result in an error message

    No url found for submodule path '%s' in .gitmodules

Replicate that error message for now.

When the .gitmodules file is missing we can probably fail even earlier
for all of the submodules with an improved error message.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-29 10:05:24 -07:00
c12e865670 submodule: use prepare_submodule_repo_env consistently
Before 14111fc (git: submodule honor -c credential.* from
command line, 2016-02-29), it was sufficient for code which
spawned a process in a submodule to just set the child
process's "env" field to "local_repo_env" to clear the
environment of any repo-specific variables.

That commit introduced a more complicated procedure, in
which we clear most variables but allow through sanitized
config. For C code, we used that procedure only for cloning,
but not for any of the programs spawned by submodule.c. As a
result, things like "git fetch --recurse-submodules" behave
differently than "git clone --recursive"; the former will
not pass through the sanitized config.

We can fix this by using prepare_submodule_repo_env()
everywhere in submodule.c.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-28 12:15:29 -07:00
4638728c63 submodule--helper: move config-sanitizing to submodule.c
These functions should be used by any code which spawns a
submodule process, which may happen in submodule.c (e.g.,
for spawning fetch). Let's move them there and make them
public so that submodule--helper can continue to use them.

Since they're now public, let's also provide a basic overview
of their intended use.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-28 12:15:21 -07:00
52492b4ae2 l10n: fr.po Fixed grammar mistake
"tous le dépôts distants" -> "tous les dépôts distants"

Signed-off-by:	Antonin <antonin@delpeuch.eu>
2016-04-28 21:09:14 +02:00
860cba61a3 submodule: export sanitized GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS
Commit 14111fc (git: submodule honor -c credential.* from
command line, 2016-02-29) taught git-submodule.sh to save
the sanitized value of $GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS when clearing
the environment for a submodule. However, it failed to
export the result, meaning that it had no effect for any
sub-programs.

We didn't catch this in our initial tests because we checked
only the "clone" case, which does not go through the shell
script at all. Provoking "git submodule update" to do a
fetch demonstrates the bug.

Noticed-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-28 10:47:34 -07:00
455d22c1c6 t5550: break submodule config test into multiple sub-tests
Right now we test only the cloning case, but there are other
interesting cases (e.g., fetching). Let's pull the setup
bits into their own test, which will make things flow more
logically once we start adding more tests which use the
setup.

Let's also introduce some whitespace to the clone-test to
split the two parts: making sure it fails without our
cmdline config, and that it succeeds with it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-28 10:47:34 -07:00
1149ee214e t5550: fix typo in $HTTPD_URL
Commit 14111fc (git: submodule honor -c credential.* from
command line, 2016-02-29) accidentally wrote $HTTP_URL. It
happened to work because we ended up with "credential..helper",
which we treat the same as "credential.helper", applying it
to all URLs.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-28 10:47:34 -07:00
82f2567e3d git-p4: fix Git LFS pointer parsing
Git LFS 1.2.0 removed a preamble from the output of the 'git lfs pointer'
command [1] which broke the parsing of this output. Adjust the parser
to support the old and the new format.

Please note that this patch slightly changes the second return parameter
from a list of LF terminated strings to a single string that contains
a number of LF characters.

[1] da2935d9a7

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Ben Woosley <ben.woosley@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-28 10:03:13 -07:00
3d319f2c63 travis-ci: express Linux/OS X dependency versions more clearly
The Git Travis CI OSX build always installs the latest versions of Git LFS and
Perforce via brew and the Linux build installs fixed versions. Consequently new
LFS/Perforce versions can break the OS X build even if there is no change in
Git.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-28 10:03:09 -07:00
9cea46cdda pack-objects: warn on split packs disabling bitmaps
It can be tempting for a server admin to want a stable set of
long-lived packs for dumb clients; but also want to enable bitmaps
to serve smart clients more quickly.

Unfortunately, such a configuration is impossible; so at least warn
users of this incompatibility since commit 21134714 (pack-objects:
turn off bitmaps when we split packs, 2014-10-16).

Tested the warning by inspecting the output of:

	make -C t t5310-pack-bitmaps.sh GIT_TEST_OPTS=-v

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-28 09:58:14 -07:00
99dab16863 submodule-config: don't shadow cache
Lots of internal functions in submodule-confic.c have a first parameter
`struct submodule_cache *cache`, which currently always refers to the
global variable `cache` in the file. To avoid confusion rename the
global `cache` variable.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-28 09:56:16 -07:00
270cd9eaf4 config.c: drop local variable
As `ret` is not used for anything except determining an early return,
we don't need a variable for that. Drop it.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-28 09:56:14 -07:00
8cb01e2fd3 http: support sending custom HTTP headers
We introduce a way to send custom HTTP headers with all requests.

This allows us, for example, to send an extra token from build agents
for temporary access to private repositories. (This is the use case that
triggered this patch.)

This feature can be used like this:

	git -c http.extraheader='Secret: sssh!' fetch $URL $REF

Note that `curl_easy_setopt(..., CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER, ...)` takes only
a single list, overriding any previous call. This means we have to
collect _all_ of the headers we want to use into a single list, and
feed it to cURL in one shot. Since we already unconditionally set a
"pragma" header when initializing the curl handles, we can add our new
headers to that list.

For callers which override the default header list (like probe_rpc),
we provide `http_copy_default_headers()` so they can do the same
trick.

Big thanks to Jeff King and Junio Hamano for their outstanding help and
patient reviews.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-27 14:02:33 -07:00
ef642ff07c Makefile: remove dependency on git.spec
ab214331 (Makefile: stop pretending to support rpmbuild, 2016-04-04)
dropped support for rpmbuild using our own specfile by removing
git.spec.in, but forgot to remove the dependency of the dist target
on git.spec.

Signed-off-by: Dennis Kaarsemaker <dennis@kaarsemaker.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-27 13:25:44 -07:00
376eb604c2 config doc: improve exit code listing
The possible reasons for exiting are now ordered by the exit code value.
While at it, rewrite the `can not write to the config file` to
`the config file cannot be written` to be grammatically correct and a
proper sentence.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-26 11:32:24 -07:00
bb52995f3e format-patch: introduce format.useAutoBase configuration
This allows to record the base commit automatically, it is equivalent
to set --base=auto in cmdline.

The format.useAutoBase has lower priority than command line option,
so if user set format.useAutoBase and pass the command line option in
the meantime, base_commit will be the one passed to command line
option.

Signed-off-by: Xiaolong Ye <xiaolong.ye@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-26 10:52:57 -07:00
3de665175f format-patch: introduce --base=auto option
Introduce --base=auto to record the base commit info automatically, the
base_commit will be the merge base of tip commit of the upstream branch
and revision-range specified in cmdline.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Wu Fengguang <fengguang.wu@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Xiaolong Ye <xiaolong.ye@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-26 10:51:50 -07:00
fa2ab86d18 format-patch: add '--base' option to record base tree info
Maintainers or third party testers may want to know the exact base tree
the patch series applies to. Teach git format-patch a '--base' option
to record the base tree info and append it at the end of the first
message (either the cover letter or the first patch in the series).

The base tree info consists of the "base commit", which is a well-known
commit that is part of the stable part of the project history everybody
else works off of, and zero or more "prerequisite patches", which are
well-known patches in flight that is not yet part of the "base commit"
that need to be applied on top of "base commit" in topological order
before the patches can be applied.

The "base commit" is shown as "base-commit: " followed by the 40-hex of
the commit object name.  A "prerequisite patch" is shown as
"prerequisite-patch-id: " followed by the 40-hex "patch id", which can
be obtained by passing the patch through the "git patch-id --stable"
command.

Imagine that on top of the public commit P, you applied well-known
patches X, Y and Z from somebody else, and then built your three-patch
series A, B, C, the history would be like:

---P---X---Y---Z---A---B---C

With "git format-patch --base=P -3 C" (or variants thereof, e.g. with
"--cover-letter" of using "Z..C" instead of "-3 C" to specify the
range), the base tree information block is shown at the end of the
first message the command outputs (either the first patch, or the
cover letter), like this:

base-commit: P
prerequisite-patch-id: X
prerequisite-patch-id: Y
prerequisite-patch-id: Z

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Wu Fengguang <fengguang.wu@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Xiaolong Ye <xiaolong.ye@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-26 10:50:13 -07:00
ded2c097ba patch-ids: make commit_patch_id() a public helper function
Make commit_patch_id() available to other builtins.

Signed-off-by: Xiaolong Ye <xiaolong.ye@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-26 10:49:57 -07:00
1fb3fb4e6d git-p4 tests: time_in_seconds should use $PYTHON_PATH
The time_in_seconds script should use $PYTHON_PATH, rather than
just hard-coded python, so that users can override which version
gets used, as is done for other python invocations.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-26 10:48:32 -07:00
84096814a8 git-p4 tests: work with python3 as well as python2
Update the git-p4 tests so that they work with both
Python2 and Python3.

We have to be explicit about the difference between
Unicode text strings (Python3 default) and raw binary
strings which will be exchanged with Perforce.

Additionally, print always takes parentheses in Python3.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-26 10:48:13 -07:00
d1deaf4d02 git-p4 tests: cd to / before running python
The python one-liner for getting the current time prints out
error messages if the current directory is deleted while it is
running if using python3.

Avoid these messages by switching to "/" before running it.

This problem does not arise if using python2.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-26 10:47:02 -07:00
d22eb04475 clone: add --shallow-submodules flag
When creating a shallow clone of a repository with submodules, the depth
argument does not influence the submodules, i.e. the submodules are done
as non-shallow clones. It is unclear what the best default is for the
depth of submodules of a shallow clone, so we need to have the possibility
to do all kinds of combinations:

* shallow super project with shallow submodules
  e.g. build bots starting always from scratch. They want to transmit
  the least amount of network data as well as using the least amount
  of space on their hard drive.
* shallow super project with unshallow submodules
  e.g. The superproject is just there to track a collection of repositories
  and it is not important to have the relationship between the repositories
  intact. However the history of the individual submodules matter.
* unshallow super project with shallow submodules
  e.g. The superproject is the actual project and the submodule is a
  library which is rarely touched.

The new switch to select submodules to be shallow or unshallow supports
all of these three cases.

It is easy to transition from the first to the second case by just
unshallowing the submodules (`git submodule foreach git fetch
--unshallow`), but it is not possible to transition from the second to the
first case (as we would have already transmitted the non shallow over
the network). That is why we want to make the first case the default in
case of a shallow super project. This leads to the inconvenience in the
second case with the shallow super project and unshallow submodules,
as you need to pass `--no-shallow-submodules`.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-26 10:43:11 -07:00
060e7766ba remote.c: spell __attribute__ correctly
We want to tell the compiler that error_buf() uses
printf()-style arguments via the __attribute__ mechanism,
but the original commit (3a429d0), forgot the trailing "__".
This happens to work with real GNUC-compatible compilers
like gcc and clang, but confuses our fallback macro in
git-compat-util.h, which only matches the official name (and
thus the build fails on compilers like Visual Studio).

Reported-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-25 15:32:23 -07:00
3ad15fd5e1 Sync with maint
* maint:
  l10n: fr: don't translate "merge" as a parameter
  l10n: fr: change "id de clé" to match "id-clé"
  l10n: fr: fix wrongly translated option name
  l10n: fr: fix transcation of "dir"
2016-04-25 15:18:41 -07:00
e1f0df79a8 Seventh batch for post 2.8 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-25 15:18:35 -07:00
6a0f105a21 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-path-misc-bugs'
"git submodule" reports the paths of submodules the command
recurses into, but this was incorrect when the command was not run
from the root level of the superproject.

* sb/submodule-path-misc-bugs:
  t7407: make expectation as clear as possible
  submodule update: test recursive path reporting from subdirectory
  submodule update: align reporting path for custom command execution
  submodule status: correct path handling in recursive submodules
  submodule update --init: correct path handling in recursive submodules
  submodule foreach: correct path display in recursive submodules
2016-04-25 15:17:16 -07:00
f276cae187 Merge branch 'en/merge-trivial-fix'
When "git merge" notices that the merge can be resolved purely at
the tree level (without having to merge blobs) and the resulting
tree happens to already exist in the object store, it forgot to
update the index, which lead to an inconsistent state for later
operations.

* en/merge-trivial-fix:
  builtin/merge.c: fix a bug with trivial merges
  t7605: add a testcase demonstrating a bug with trivial merges
2016-04-25 15:17:15 -07:00
9058b8f043 Merge branch 'en/merge-octopus-fix'
"merge-octopus" strategy did not ensure that the index is clean
when merge begins.

* en/merge-octopus-fix:
  merge-octopus: abort if index does not match HEAD
  t6044: new merge testcases for when index doesn't match HEAD
2016-04-25 15:17:15 -07:00
edc2f715bd Merge branch 'dt/pre-refs-backend'
Code restructuring around the "refs" area to prepare for pluggable
refs backends.

* dt/pre-refs-backend: (24 commits)
  refs: on symref reflog expire, lock symref not referrent
  refs: move resolve_ref_unsafe into common code
  show_head_ref(): check the result of resolve_ref_namespace()
  check_aliased_update(): check that dst_name is non-NULL
  checkout_paths(): remove unneeded flag variable
  cmd_merge(): remove unneeded flag variable
  fsck_head_link(): remove unneeded flag variable
  read_raw_ref(): change flags parameter to unsigned int
  files-backend: inline resolve_ref_1() into resolve_ref_unsafe()
  read_raw_ref(): manage own scratch space
  files-backend: break out ref reading
  resolve_ref_1(): eliminate local variable "bad_name"
  resolve_ref_1(): reorder code
  resolve_ref_1(): eliminate local variable
  resolve_ref_unsafe(): ensure flags is always set
  resolve_ref_unsafe(): use for loop to count up to MAXDEPTH
  resolve_missing_loose_ref(): simplify semantics
  t1430: improve test coverage of deletion of badly-named refs
  t1430: test for-each-ref in the presence of badly-named refs
  t1430: don't rely on symbolic-ref for creating broken symrefs
  ...
2016-04-25 15:17:15 -07:00
5b715ec48f Merge branch 'jc/rerere-multi'
"git rerere" can encounter two or more files with the same conflict
signature that have to be resolved in different ways, but there was
no way to record these separate resolutions.

* jc/rerere-multi:
  rerere: adjust 'forget' to multi-variant world order
  rerere: split code to call ll_merge() further
  rerere: move code related to "forget" together
  rerere: gc and clear
  rerere: do use multiple variants
  t4200: rerere a merge with two identical conflicts
  rerere: allow multiple variants to exist
  rerere: delay the recording of preimage
  rerere: handle leftover rr-cache/$ID directory and postimage files
  rerere: scan $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID when instantiating a rerere_id
  rerere: split conflict ID further
2016-04-25 15:17:15 -07:00
cce076e371 difftool/mergetool: make the form of yes/no questions consistent
Every yes/no question in difftool/mergetool scripts has slightly
different form, and none of them is consistent with the form git
itself uses.

Make the form of all the questions consistent with the form used
by git.

Reviewed-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Nikola Forró <nforro@redhat.com>
Acked-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-25 15:15:17 -07:00
b6aec868af match-trees: convert several leaf functions to use struct object_id
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-25 14:26:29 -07:00
ce6663a9da tree-walk: convert tree_entry_extract() to use struct object_id
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-25 14:26:28 -07:00
7d924c9139 struct name_entry: use struct object_id instead of unsigned char sha1[20]
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-25 14:23:42 -07:00
625efa9dec Merge tag 'l10n-2.8.0-rnd3-fr' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po into maint
l10n-2.8.0-rnd3-fr

* tag 'l10n-2.8.0-rnd3-fr' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: fr: don't translate "merge" as a parameter
  l10n: fr: change "id de clé" to match "id-clé"
  l10n: fr: fix wrongly translated option name
  l10n: fr: fix transcation of "dir"
2016-04-25 13:36:26 -07:00
0d6b21e781 send-email: fix grammo in the prompt that asks e-mail recipients
The message, which dates back to the very original version 83b24437
made in 2005, sounds clumsy, grammatically incorrect, and is hard to
understand.

Reported-by: John Darrington <john@darrington.wattle.id.au>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-25 13:35:38 -07:00
caa47adc5a convert.c: ident + core.autocrlf didn't work
When the ident attributes is set, get_stream_filter() did not obey
core.autocrlf=true, and the file was checked out with LF.

Change the rule when a streaming filter can be used:
- if an external filter is specified, don't use a stream filter.
- if the worktree eol is CRLF and "auto" is active, don't use a stream filter.
- Otherwise the stream filter can be used.

Add test cases in t0027.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-25 12:12:03 -07:00
67e9bff06a t0027: test cases for combined attributes
Add more test cases for the not normalized files ("NNO"). The
"text" attribute is most important, use it as the first parameter.
"ident", if set, is the second paramater followed by the eol
attribute.  The eol attribute overrides core.autocrlf, which
overrides core.eol.
indent is not yet used, this will be done in the next commit.

Use loops to test more combinations of attributes, like
"* text eol=crlf" or especially "*text=auto eol=crlf".

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-25 12:12:03 -07:00
70ad8c8d8c convert: allow core.autocrlf=input and core.eol=crlf
Even though the configuration parser errors out when core.autocrlf
is set to 'input' when core.eol is set to 'crlf', there is no need
to do so, because the core.autocrlf setting trumps core.eol.

Allow all combinations of core.crlf and core.eol and document
that core.autocrlf overrides core.eol.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-25 12:11:45 -07:00
ded2444ad8 t0027: make commit_chk_wrnNNO() reliable
When the content of a commited file is unchanged and the attributes
are changed, Git may not detect that the next commit must treat the
file as changed.  This happens when lstat() doesn't detect a change,
since neither inode, mtime nor size are changed.

Add a single "Z" character to change the file size and content.
When the files are compared later in checkout_files(), the "Z" is
removed before the comparison.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-25 12:10:48 -07:00
d16df0c062 string_list: use string-list API in unsorted_string_list_lookup()
Using the string-list API in function unsorted_string_list_lookup()
makes the code more readable.

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-25 11:48:27 -07:00
0492eb48c4 t9824: fix broken &&-chain in a subshell
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Acked-by: Lars Shneider
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-24 12:36:19 -07:00
79f43447d2 git-rebase--merge: don't include absent parent as a base
Absent this fix, attempts to rebase an orphan branch using "rebase -m"
fails with:

    $ git rebase -m ORPHAN_TARGET_BASE
    First, rewinding head to replay your work on top of it...
    fatal: Could not parse object 'ORPHAN_ROOT_SHA^'
    Unknown exit code (128) from command: git-merge-recursive ORPHAN_ROOT_SHA^ -- HEAD ORPHAN_ROOT_SHA

To fix, this will only include the rebase root's parent as a base if it exists,
so that in cases of rebasing an orphan branch, it is a simple two-way merge.

Note the default rebase behavior does not fail:

    $ git rebase ORPHAN_TARGET_BASE
    First, rewinding head to replay your work on top of it...
    Applying: ORPHAN_ROOT_COMMIT_MSG
    Using index info to reconstruct a base tree...

A few tests were expecting the old behaviour to forbid rebasing such
a history with "rebase -m", which now need to expect them to succeed.

Signed-off-by: Ben Woosley <ben.woosley@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-24 12:05:08 -07:00
2ee0fca122 Merge branch 'fr_v2.8.0_r3' of git://github.com/jnavila/git into maint
* 'fr_v2.8.0_r3' of git://github.com/jnavila/git:
  l10n: fr: don't translate "merge" as a parameter
  l10n: fr: change "id de clé" to match "id-clé"
  l10n: fr: fix wrongly translated option name
  l10n: fr: fix transcation of "dir"
2016-04-24 20:36:34 +08:00
a0c4ddf677 Sixth batch for post 2.8 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 15:48:03 -07:00
66a80c333e Merge branch 'ad/cygwin-wants-rename'
On Cygwin, object creation uses the "create a temporary and then
rename it to the final name" pattern, not "create a temporary,
hardlink it to the final name and then unlink the temporary"
pattern.

This is necessary to use Git on Windows shared directories, and is
already enabled for the MinGW and plain Windows builds.  It also
has been used in Cygwin packaged versions of Git for quite a while.
See http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/291853

($gmane/275680, $gmane/291853).

* ad/cygwin-wants-rename:
  config.mak.uname: Cygwin needs OBJECT_CREATION_USES_RENAMES
2016-04-22 15:45:10 -07:00
2416803b6c Merge branch 'jk/use-write-script-more'
Code clean-up.

* jk/use-write-script-more:
  t3404: use write_script
  t1020: do not overuse printf and use write_script
  t5532: use write_script
2016-04-22 15:45:09 -07:00
fd9b37cfde Merge branch 'jk/do-not-printf-NULL'
"git config" had a codepath that tried to pass a NULL to
printf("%s"), which nobody seems to have noticed.

* jk/do-not-printf-NULL:
  git_config_set_multivar_in_file: handle "unset" errors
  git_config_set_multivar_in_file: all non-zero returns are errors
  config: lower-case first word of error strings
2016-04-22 15:45:09 -07:00
1c4f476900 Merge branch 'jc/http-socks5h'
The socks5:// proxy support added back in 2.6.4 days was not aware
that socks5h:// proxies behave differently.

* jc/http-socks5h:
  http: differentiate socks5:// and socks5h://
2016-04-22 15:45:09 -07:00
33e4ec89d9 Merge branch 'ky/imap-send-openssl-1.1.0'
Upcoming OpenSSL 1.1.0 will break compilation b updating a few APIs
we use in imap-send, which has been adjusted for the change.

* ky/imap-send-openssl-1.1.0:
  configure: remove checking for HMAC_CTX_cleanup
  imap-send: avoid deprecated TLSv1_method()
  imap-send: check NULL return of SSL_CTX_new()
  imap-send: use HMAC() function provided by OpenSSL
2016-04-22 15:45:08 -07:00
886c76d021 Merge branch 'ky/imap-send'
Support for CRAM-MD5 authentication method in "git imap-send" did
not work well.

* ky/imap-send:
  imap-send: fix CRAM-MD5 response calculation
  imap-send: check for NOLOGIN capability only when using LOGIN command
2016-04-22 15:45:08 -07:00
3f80d16c1c Merge branch 'jc/xstrfmt-null-with-prec-0'
* jc/xstrfmt-null-with-prec-0:
  setup.c: do not feed NULL to "%.*s" even with precision 0
2016-04-22 15:45:08 -07:00
0709261a83 Merge branch 'ad/commit-have-m-option'
"git commit" misbehaved in a few minor ways when an empty message
is given via -m '', all of which has been corrected.

* ad/commit-have-m-option:
  commit: do not ignore an empty message given by -m ''
  commit: --amend -m '' silently fails to wipe message
2016-04-22 15:45:07 -07:00
56b5a915e9 Merge branch 'ew/send-email-drop-data-dumper'
Code clean-up.

* ew/send-email-drop-data-dumper:
  send-email: do not load Data::Dumper
2016-04-22 15:45:06 -07:00
18dff3dde5 Merge branch 'ew/send-email-readable-message-id'
"git send-email" now uses a more readable timestamps when
formulating a message ID.

* ew/send-email-readable-message-id:
  send-email: more meaningful Message-ID
2016-04-22 15:45:05 -07:00
deef3cdc08 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-helper-clone-regression-fix'
A partial rewrite of "git submodule" in the 2.7 timeframe changed
the way the gitdir: pointer in the submodules point at the real
repository location to use absolute paths by accident.  This has
been corrected.

* sb/submodule-helper-clone-regression-fix:
  submodule--helper, module_clone: catch fprintf failure
  submodule--helper: do not borrow absolute_path() result for too long
  submodule--helper, module_clone: always operate on absolute paths
  submodule--helper clone: create the submodule path just once
  submodule--helper: fix potential NULL-dereference
  recursive submodules: test for relative paths
2016-04-22 15:45:04 -07:00
d5425d10ca mmap(win32): avoid expensive fstat() call
On Windows, we have to emulate the fstat() call to fill out information
that takes extra effort to obtain, such as the file permissions/type.

If all we want is the file size, we can use the much cheaper
GetFileSizeEx() function (available since Windows XP).

Suggested by Philip Kelley.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 15:01:16 -07:00
7ce7ee2d82 mmap(win32): avoid copy-on-write when it is unnecessary
Often we are mmap()ing read-only. In those cases, it is wasteful to map in
copy-on-write mode. Even worse: it can cause errors where we run out of
space in the page file.

So let's be extra careful to map files in read-only mode whenever
possible.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 15:01:15 -07:00
6a730e10a7 win32mmap: set errno appropriately
It is not really helpful when a `git fetch` fails with the message:

	fatal: mmap failed: No error

In the particular instance encountered by a colleague of yours truly,
the Win32 error code was ERROR_COMMITMENT_LIMIT which means that the
page file is not big enough.

Let's make the message

	fatal: mmap failed: File too large

instead, which is only marginally better, but which can be associated
with the appropriate work-around: setting `core.packedGitWindowSize` to
a relatively small value.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 15:01:14 -07:00
14ace5b77b branch: do not rename a branch under bisect or rebase
The branch name in that case could be saved in rebase's head_name or
bisect's BISECT_START files. Ideally we should try to update them as
well. But it's trickier (*). Let's play safe and see if the user
complains about inconveniences before doing that.

(*) If we do it, bisect and rebase need to provide an API to rename
branches. We can't do it in worktree.c or builtin/branch.c because
when other people change rebase/bisect code, they may not be aware of
this code and accidentally break it (e.g. rename the branch file, or
refer to the branch in new files). It's a lot more work.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:09:39 -07:00
04a3dfb8b5 worktree.c: check whether branch is bisected in another worktree
Similar to the rebase case, we want to detect if "HEAD" in some worktree
is being bisected because

1) we do not want to checkout this branch in another worktree, after
   bisect is done it will want to go back to this branch

2) we do not want to delete the branch is either or git bisect will
   fail to return to the (long gone) branch

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:09:39 -07:00
f5d067a2b2 wt-status.c: split bisect detection out of wt_status_get_state()
And make it work with any given worktree, in preparation for (again)
find_shared_symref(). read_and_strip_branch() is deleted because it's
no longer used.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:09:39 -07:00
8d9fdd7087 worktree.c: check whether branch is rebased in another worktree
This function find_shared_symref() is used in a couple places:

1) in builtin/branch.c: it's used to detect if a branch is checked out
   elsewhere and refuse to delete the branch.

2) in builtin/notes.c: it's used to detect if a note is being merged in
   another worktree

3) in branch.c, the function die_if_checked_out() is actually used by
   "git checkout" and "git worktree add" to see if a branch is already
   checked out elsewhere and refuse the operation.

In cases 1 and 3, if a rebase is ongoing, "HEAD" will be in detached
mode, find_shared_symref() fails to detect it and declares "no branch is
checked out here", which is not really what we want.

This patch tightens the test. If the given symref is "HEAD", we try to
detect if rebase is ongoing. If so return the branch being rebased. This
makes checkout and branch delete operations safer because you can't
checkout a branch being rebased in another place, or delete it.

Special case for checkout. If the current branch is being rebased,
git-rebase.sh may use "git checkout" to abort and return back to the
original branch. The updated test in find_shared_symref() will prevent
that and "git rebase --abort" will fail as a result.
find_shared_symref() and die_if_checked_out() have to learn a new
option ignore_current_worktree to loosen the test a bit.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:09:38 -07:00
c8717148d0 worktree.c: avoid referencing to worktrees[i] multiple times
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:09:38 -07:00
81eff27b0f wt-status.c: make wt_status_check_rebase() work on any worktree
This is a preparation step for find_shared_symref() to detect if any
worktree is being rebased.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:09:38 -07:00
bcd522a149 wt-status.c: split rebase detection out of wt_status_get_state()
worktree.c:find_shared_symref() later needs to know if a branch is being
rebased, and only rebase, no cherry-pick, do detached branch... Split
this code so it can be used independently from other in-progress tests.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:09:38 -07:00
2e641d5825 path.c: refactor and add worktree_git_path()
do_git_path(), which is the common code for all git_path* functions, is
modified to take a worktree struct and can produce paths for any
worktree.

worktree_git_path() is the first function that makes use of this. It can
be used to write code that can examine any worktree. For example,
wt_status_get_state() will be converted using this to take
am/rebase/... state of any worktree.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:09:38 -07:00
750e8a60d6 worktree.c: mark current worktree
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:09:38 -07:00
d3b9ac07eb worktree.c: make find_shared_symref() return struct worktree *
This gives the caller more information and they can answer things like,
"is it the main worktree" or "is it the current worktree". The latter
question is needed for the "checkout a rebase branch" case later.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:09:37 -07:00
69dfe3b942 worktree.c: store "id" instead of "git_dir"
We can reconstruct git_dir from id quite easily. It's a bit hackier to
do the reverse.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:09:37 -07:00
15cdfea734 path.c: add git_common_path() and strbuf_git_common_path()
These are mostly convenient functions to reduce code duplication. Most
of the time, we should be able to get by with git_path() which handles
$GIT_COMMON_DIR internally. However there are a few cases where we need
to construct paths manually, for example some paths from a specific
worktree. These functions will enable that.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:09:37 -07:00
ba0897e6ae dir.c: rename str(n)cmp_icase to fspath(n)cmp
These functions compare two paths that are taken from file system.
Depending on the running file system, paths may need to be compared
case-sensitively or not, and maybe even something else in future. The
current names do not convey that well.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:09:37 -07:00
659488326c wrapper.c: delete dead function git_mkstemps()
Its last call site was replaced by mks_tempfile_ts() in 284098f (diff:
use tempfile module - 2015-08-12) and there's a good chance
mks_tempfile_ts will continue to successfully handle this job. Delete
it.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:07:55 -07:00
423b592a06 dir.c: remove dead function fnmatch_icase()
It was largely replaced by fnmatch_icase_mem() and its last use was in
84b8b5d (remove match_pathspec() in favor of match_pathspec_depth() -
2013-07-14).

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:07:45 -07:00
bef234b09e tag -v: verify directly rather than exec-ing verify-tag
Instead of having tag -v fork to run verify-tag, use the
gpg_verify_tag() function directly.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Santiago Torres <santiago@nyu.edu>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:06:46 -07:00
45a227ef76 verify-tag: move tag verification code to tag.c
The PGP verification routine for tags could be accessed by other modules
that require to do so.

Publish the verify_tag function in tag.c and rename it to gpg_verify_tag
so it does not conflict with builtin/mktag's static function.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Santiago Torres <santiago@nyu.edu>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:06:46 -07:00
78ccd44195 verify-tag: prepare verify_tag for libification
The current interface of verify_tag() resolves reference names to SHA1,
however, the plan is to make this functionality public and the current
interface is cumbersome for callers: they are expected to supply the
textual representation of a sha1/refname. In many cases, this requires
them to turn the sha1 to hex representation, just to be converted back
inside verify_tag.

Add a SHA1 parameter to use instead of the name parameter, and rename
the name parameter to "name_to_report" for reporting purposes only.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Santiago Torres <santiago@nyu.edu>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 14:06:46 -07:00
0ff74101dc test-lib: simplify '--option=value' parsing
To get the 'value' from '--option=value', test-lib.sh parses said
option running 'expr' with a regexp.  This involves a subshell, an
external process, and a lot of non-alphanumeric characters in the
regexp.

Use a much simpler POSIX-defined shell parameter expansion instead to
do the same.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 13:55:28 -07:00
7550424804 name-rev: include taggerdate in considering the best name
We most likely want the oldest tag that contained the commit to be
reported. So let's remember the taggerdate, and make it more important
than anything else when choosing the best name for a given commit.

Suggested by Linus Torvalds.

Note that we need to update t9903 because it tested for the old behavior
(which preferred the description "b1~1" over "tags/t2~1").

We might want to introduce a --heed-taggerdate option, and make the new
behavior dependent on that, if it turns out that some scripts rely on the
old name-rev method.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-22 13:07:10 -07:00
09c2cb877a pull: pass --allow-unrelated-histories to "git merge"
The previous commit said:

    We could add the same option to "git pull" and have it passed
    through to underlying "git merge".  I do not have a fundamental
    opposition against such a feature, but this commit does not do
    so and instead leaves it as low-hanging fruit for others,
    because such a "two project merge" would be done after fetching
    the other project into some location in the working tree of an
    existing project and making sure how well they fit together, it
    is sufficient to allow a local merge without such an option
    pass-through from "git pull" to "git merge".

Prepare a patch to make it a reality, just in case it is needed.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-21 11:58:51 -07:00
de22496214 t3033: avoid 'ambiguous refs' warning
Because "test_commit five" creates a commit and point it with a tag
'five', doing so on a branch whose name is 'five' will later result
in an 'ambiguous refs' warning.  Even though it is harmless because
all the later references are for the tag, there is no reason for the
branch to be called 'five'.  Give it a name that describes its
purpose more clearly, i.e. "newroot".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-21 11:52:33 -07:00
c4b27511ab t5504: drop sigpipe=ok from push tests
These were added by 8bf4bec (add "ok=sigpipe" to
test_must_fail and use it to fix flaky tests, 2015-11-27)
because we would racily die via SIGPIPE when the pack was
rejected by the other side.

But since we have recently de-flaked send-pack, we should be
able to tighten up these tests (including re-adding the
expected output checks).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-20 13:33:59 -07:00
df85757244 fetch-pack: isolate sigpipe in demuxer thread
In commit 9ff18fa (fetch-pack: ignore SIGPIPE in sideband
demuxer, 2016-02-24), we started using sigchain_push() to
ignore SIGPIPE in the async demuxer thread. However, this is
rather clumsy, as it ignores SIGPIPE for the entire process,
including the main thread. At the time we didn't have any
per-thread signal support, but we now we do. Let's use it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-20 13:33:56 -07:00
3e8b06d09c send-pack: isolate sigpipe in demuxer thread
If we get an error from pack-objects, we may exit
send_pack() early, before reading the server's status
response. In such a case, we may racily see SIGPIPE from our
async demuxer (which is trying to write that status back to
us), and we'd prefer to continue pushing the error up the
call stack, rather than taking down the whole process with
signal death.

This is safe to do because our demuxer just calls
recv_sideband, whose data writes are all done with
write_or_die(), which will notice SIGPIPE.

We do also write sideband 2 to stderr, and we would no
longer die on SIGPIPE there (if it were piped in the first
place, and if the piped program went away). But that's
probably a good thing, as it likewise should not abort the
push process at all (neither immediately by signal, nor
eventually by reporting failure back to the main thread).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-20 13:33:53 -07:00
c792d7b6ce run-command: teach async threads to ignore SIGPIPE
Async processes can be implemented as separate forked
processes, or as threads (depending on the NO_PTHREADS
setting). In the latter case, if an async thread gets
SIGPIPE, it takes down the whole process. This is obviously
bad if the main process was not otherwise going to die, but
even if we were going to die, it means the main process does
not have a chance to report a useful error message.

There's also the small matter that forked async processes
will not take the main process down on a signal, meaning git
will behave differently depending on the NO_PTHREADS
setting.

This patch fixes it by adding a new flag to "struct async"
to block SIGPIPE just in the async thread. In theory, this
should always be on (which makes async threads behave more
like async processes), but we would first want to make sure
that each async process we spawn is careful about checking
return codes from write() and would not spew endlessly into
a dead pipe. So let's start with it as optional, and we can
enable it for specific sites in future patches.

The natural name for this option would be "ignore_sigpipe",
since that's what it does for the threaded case. But since
that name might imply that we are ignoring it in all cases
(including the separate-process one), let's call it
"isolate_sigpipe". What we are really asking for is
isolation. I.e., not to have our main process taken down by
signals spawned by the async process. How that is
implemented is up to the run-command code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-20 13:33:53 -07:00
739cf49161 send-pack: close demux pipe before finishing async process
This fixes a deadlock on the client side when pushing a
large number of refs from a corrupted repo.  There's a
reproduction script below, but let's start with a
human-readable explanation.

The client side of a push goes something like this:

  1. Start an async process to demux sideband coming from
     the server.

  2. Run pack-objects to send the actual pack, and wait for
     its status via finish_command().

  3. If pack-objects failed, abort immediately.

  4. If pack-objects succeeded, read the per-ref status from
     the server, which is actually coming over a pipe from
     the demux process started in step 1.

We run finish_async() to wait for and clean up the demux
process in two places. In step 3, if we see an error, we
want it to end early. And after step 4, it should be done
writing any data and we are just cleaning it up.

Let's focus on the error case first. We hand the output
descriptor to the server over to pack-objects. So by the
time it has returned an error to us, it has closed the
descriptor and the server has gotten EOF. The server will
mark all refs as failed with "unpacker error" and send us
back the status for each (followed by EOF).

This status goes to the demuxer thread, which relays it over
a pipe to the main thread. But the main thread never even
tries reading the status. It's trying to bail because of the
pack-objects error, and is waiting for the demuxer thread to
finish. If there are a small number of refs, that's OK; the
demuxer thread writes into the pipe buffer, sees EOF from
the server, and quits. But if there are a large number of
refs, it may block on write() back to the main thread,
leading to a deadlock (the main thread is waiting for the
demuxer to finish, the demuxer is waiting for the main
thread to read).

We can break this deadlock by closing the pipe between the
demuxer and the main thread before calling finish_async().
Then the demuxer gets a write() error and exits.

The non-error case usually just works, because we will have
read all of the data from the other side. We do close
demux.out already, but we only do so _after_ calling
finish_async(). This is OK because there shouldn't be any
more data coming from the server. But technically we've only
read to a flush packet, and a broken or malicious server
could be sending more cruft. In such a case, we would hit
the same deadlock. Closing the pipe first doesn't affect the
normal case, and means that for a cruft-sending server,
we'll notice a write() error rather than deadlocking.

Note that when write() sees this error, we'll actually
deliver SIGPIPE to the thread, which will take down the
whole process (unless we're compiled with NO_PTHREADS). This
isn't ideal, but it's an improvement over the status quo,
which is deadlocking. And SIGPIPE handling in async threads
is a bigger problem that we can deal with separately.

A simple reproduction for the error case is below. It's
technically racy (we could exit the main process and take
down the async thread with us before it even reads the
status), though in practice it seems to fail pretty
consistently.

    git init repo &&
    cd repo &&

    # make some commits; we need two so we can simulate corruption
    # in the history later.
    git commit --allow-empty -m one &&
    one=$(git rev-parse HEAD) &&
    git commit --allow-empty -m two &&
    two=$(git rev-parse HEAD) &&

    # now make a ton of refs; our goal here is to overflow the pipe buffer
    # when reporting the ref status, which will cause the demuxer to block
    # on write()
    for i in $(seq 20000); do
    	echo "create refs/heads/this-is-a-really-long-branch-name-$i $two"
    done |
    git update-ref --stdin &&

    # now make a corruption in the history such that pack-objects will fail
    rm -vf .git/objects/$(echo $one | sed 's}..}&/}') &&

    # and then push the result
    git init --bare dst.git &&
    git push --mirror dst.git

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-20 13:33:53 -07:00
36b14370db replace --edit: respect core.editor
We simply need to read the config, is all.

This fixes https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/733

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-20 09:11:36 -07:00
82db3d44e7 match-trees: convert shift_tree() and shift_tree_by() to use object_id
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 15:33:06 -07:00
c9baaf9db9 test-match-trees: convert to use struct object_id
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 15:30:19 -07:00
2764fd93ad sha1-name: introduce a get_oid() function
The get_oid() function is equivalent to the get_sha1() function, but
uses a struct object_id instead.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 15:28:58 -07:00
36e6a5baf1 test-parse-options: print quiet as integer
We would want to see how multiple --quiet options affect the value of
the underlying variable (we may want "--quiet --quiet" to still be 1, or
we may want to see the value incremented to 2). Show the value as
integer to allow us to inspect it.

Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 15:06:17 -07:00
8425b7ea6a t0040-test-parse-options.sh: fix style issues
Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 15:06:17 -07:00
26e6a27d69 git-p4: add P4 jobs to git commit message
When migrating from Perforce to git the information about P4 jobs
associated with P4 changelists is lost.

Having these jobs listed on messages of related git commits enables smooth
migration for projects that take advantage of e.g. JIRA integration
(which uses jobs on Perforce side and parses commit messages on git side).

The jobs are added to the message in the same format as is expected when
migrating in the reverse direction.

Signed-off-by: Jan Durovec <jan.durovec@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 13:41:00 -07:00
a98772c63f git-p4: clean-up code style in tests
Preliminary clean-up of testing libraries for git-p4.

* spaces added to both sides of () in function definitions in lib-git-p4
* tab indentation added to git-p4 tests when <<- redirection is used

Signed-off-by: Jan Durovec <jan.durovec@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 13:40:59 -07:00
31f3c86b43 travis-ci: update Git-LFS and P4 to the latest version
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 13:39:36 -07:00
20972f54d3 verify-tag: update variable name and type
The run_gpg_verify() function has two variables, size and len.

This may come off as confusing when reading the code. Clarify which one
pertains to the length of the tag headers by renaming len to
payload_size. Additionally, change the type of payload_size to size_t to
match the return type of parse_signature.

Signed-off-by: Santiago Torres <santiago@nyu.edu>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 12:52:15 -07:00
daf9f6499f i18n: builtin/pull.c: split strings marked for translation
Split string "If you wish to set tracking information
for this branch you can do so with:\n" to match occurring string in
git-parse-remote.sh. In this case, the translator handles it only once.

On the other hand, the translations of the string that were already made
are mark as fuzzy and the translator needs to correct it herself.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 12:07:49 -07:00
8a0de58a2a i18n: builtin/pull.c: mark placeholders for translation
Some translations might also translate "<remote>" and "<branch>".

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 12:07:49 -07:00
045fac5845 i18n: git-parse-remote.sh: mark strings for translation
Change Makefile to include git-parse-remote.sh in LOCALIZED_SH.

TODO: remove 3rd argument of error_on_missing_default_upstream function
that is no longer required.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 12:07:49 -07:00
a127331cd8 mv: allow moving nested submodules
When directories are moved using `git mv` all files in the directory
have been just moved, but no further action was taken on them. This
was done by assigning the mode = WORKING_DIRECTORY to the files
inside a moved directory.

submodules however need to update their link to the git directory as
well as updates to the .gitmodules file. By removing the condition of
`mode != INDEX` (the remaining modes are BOTH and WORKING_DIRECTORY) for
the required submodule actions, we perform these for submodules in a
moved directory.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 11:54:50 -07:00
d634d61ed6 xdiff: implement empty line chunk heuristic
In order to produce the smallest possible diff and combine several diff
hunks together, we implement a heuristic from GNU Diff which moves diff
hunks forward as far as possible when we find common context above and
below a diff hunk. This sometimes produces less readable diffs when
writing C, Shell, or other programming languages, ie:

...
 /*
+ *
+ *
+ */
+
+/*
...

instead of the more readable equivalent of

...
+/*
+ *
+ *
+ */
+
 /*
...

Implement the following heuristic to (optionally) produce the desired
output.

  If there are diff chunks which can be shifted around, shift each hunk
  such that the last common empty line is below the chunk with the rest
  of the context above.

This heuristic appears to resolve the above example and several other
common issues without producing significantly weird results. However, as
with any heuristic it is not really known whether this will always be
more optimal. Thus, it can be disabled via diff.compactionHeuristic.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.e.keller@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-19 10:53:34 -07:00
3e1e7454cc t7030: test verifying multiple tags
The verify-tag command supports multiple tag names to verify, but
existing tests only test for invocation with a single tag.

Add a test invoking it with multiple tags.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Santiago Torres <santiago@nyu.edu>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-18 13:06:15 -07:00
92e5b62fec xdiff: add recs_match helper function
It is a common pattern in xdl_change_compact to check that hashes and
strings match. The resulting code to perform this change causes very
long lines and makes it hard to follow the intention. Introduce a helper
function recs_match which performs both checks to increase
code readability.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.e.keller@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-18 11:47:08 -07:00
e6ac6e1f7d Fifth batch for post 2.8 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-18 10:51:09 -07:00
f5cc612916 Merge branch 'jk/branch-shortening-funny-symrefs'
A change back in version 2.7 to "git branch" broke display of a
symbolic ref in a non-standard place in the refs/ hierarchy (we
expect symbolic refs to appear in refs/remotes/*/HEAD to point at
the primary branch the remote has, and as .git/HEAD to point at the
branch we locally checked out).

* jk/branch-shortening-funny-symrefs:
  branch: fix shortening of non-remote symrefs
2016-04-18 10:49:14 -07:00
741a6942eb Merge branch 'ky/branch-m-worktree'
When "git worktree" feature is in use, "git branch -m" renamed a
branch that is checked out in another worktree without adjusting
the HEAD symbolic ref for the worktree.

* ky/branch-m-worktree:
  set_worktree_head_symref(): fix error message
  branch -m: update all per-worktree HEADs
  refs: add a new function set_worktree_head_symref
2016-04-18 10:48:11 -07:00
3604242f08 submodule: port init from shell to C
By having the `submodule init` functionality in C, we can reference it
easier from other parts in the code in later patches. The code is split
up to have one function to initialize one submodule and a calling function
that takes care of the rest, such as argument handling and translating the
arguments to the paths of the submodules.

This is the first submodule subcommand that is fully converted to C
except for the usage string, so this is actually removing a call to
the `submodule--helper list` function, which is supposed to be used in
this transition. Instead we'll make a direct call to `module_list_compute`.

An explanation why we need to edit the prefixes in cmd_update in
git-submodule.sh in this patch:

By having no processing in the shell part, we need to convey the notion
of wt_prefix and prefix to the C parts, which former patches punted on
and did the processing of displaying path in the shell.

`wt_prefix` used to hold the path from the repository root to the current
directory, e.g. wt_prefix would be t/ if the user invoked the
`git submodule` command in ~/repo/t and ~repo is the GIT_DIR.

`prefix` used to hold the relative path from the repository root to the
operation, e.g. if you have recursive submodules, the shell script would
modify the `prefix` in each recursive step by adding the submodule path.

We will pass `wt_prefix` into the C helper via `git -C <dir>` as that
will setup git in the directory the user actually called git-submodule.sh
from. The `prefix` will be passed in via the `--prefix` option.

Having `prefix` and `wt_prefix` relative to the GIT_DIR of the
calling superproject is unfortunate with this patch as the C code doesn't
know about a possible recursion from a superproject via `submodule update
--init --recursive`.

To fix this, we change the meaning of `wt_prefix` to point to the current
project instead of the superproject and `prefix` to include any relative
paths issues in the superproject. That way `prefix` will become the leading
part for displaying paths and `wt_prefix` will be empty in recursive
calls for now.

The new notion of `wt_prefix` and `prefix` still allows us to reconstruct
the calling directory in the superproject by just traveling reverse of
`prefix`.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-16 23:45:18 -07:00
63e95beb08 submodule: port resolve_relative_url from shell to C
Later on we want to automatically call `git submodule init` from
other commands, such that the users don't have to initialize the
submodule themselves.  As these other commands are written in C
already, we'd need the init functionality in C, too.  The
`resolve_relative_url` function is a large part of that init
functionality, so start by porting this function to C.

To create the tests in t0060, the function `resolve_relative_url`
was temporarily enhanced to write all inputs and output to disk
when running the test suite. The added tests in this patch are
a small selection thereof.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-16 23:44:01 -07:00
e6e7530d10 test helpers: move test-* to t/helper/ subdirectory
This keeps top dir a bit less crowded. And because these programs are
for testing purposes, it makes sense that they stay somewhere in t/

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-15 10:12:19 -07:00
7897d84b82 Makefile: clean *.o files we create
The part that removes object files in the 'clean' target predates
various Makefile macros that list object files we create, and
instead removes the objects with shell glob, perpetually requiring
updates whenever a new location that builds object files is added.

Simplify the target by removing $(OBJECTS), which is supposed to
have all the objects we create during the build.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-15 10:07:35 -07:00
b8b4d93100 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  Prepare for 2.8.2
  Start preparing for 2.8.2
2016-04-14 18:59:09 -07:00
6a6636270f Prepare for 2.8.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-14 18:58:11 -07:00
a5953f6818 Merge branch 'jv/merge-nothing-into-void' into maint
"git merge FETCH_HEAD" dereferenced NULL pointer when merging
nothing into an unborn history (which is arguably unusual usage,
which perhaps was the reason why nobody noticed it).

* jv/merge-nothing-into-void:
  merge: fix NULL pointer dereference when merging nothing into void
2016-04-14 18:57:49 -07:00
ea7fefbd7b Merge branch 'ss/commit-squash-msg' into maint
When "git merge --squash" stopped due to conflict, the concluding
"git commit" failed to read in the SQUASH_MSG that shows the log
messages from all the squashed commits.

* ss/commit-squash-msg:
  commit: do not lose SQUASH_MSG contents
2016-04-14 18:57:48 -07:00
8cad7fcfbc Merge branch 'jk/send-email-rtrim-mailrc-alias' into maint
"git send-email" had trouble parsing alias file in mailrc format
when lines in it had trailing whitespaces on them.

* jk/send-email-rtrim-mailrc-alias:
  send-email: ignore trailing whitespace in mailrc alias file
2016-04-14 18:57:47 -07:00
517736ffcf Merge branch 'da/mergetool-delete-delete-conflict' into maint
"git mergetool" did not work well with conflicts that both sides
deleted.

* da/mergetool-delete-delete-conflict:
  mergetool: honor tempfile configuration when resolving delete conflicts
  mergetool: support delete/delete conflicts
2016-04-14 18:57:47 -07:00
237e6db5c0 Merge branch 'jk/startup-info' into maint
The startup_info data, which records if we are working inside a
repository (among other things), are now uniformly available to Git
subcommand implementations, and Git avoids attempting to touch
references when we are not in a repository.

* jk/startup-info:
  use setup_git_directory() in test-* programs
  grep: turn off gitlink detection for --no-index
  mailmap: do not resolve blobs in a non-repository
  remote: don't resolve HEAD in non-repository
  setup: set startup_info->have_repository more reliably
  setup: make startup_info available everywhere
2016-04-14 18:57:46 -07:00
f55f97cb33 Merge branch 'jk/getwholeline-getdelim-empty' into maint
strbuf_getwholeline() did not NUL-terminate the buffer on certain
corner cases in its error codepath.

* jk/getwholeline-getdelim-empty:
  strbuf_getwholeline: NUL-terminate getdelim buffer on error
2016-04-14 18:57:46 -07:00
183ecc3e49 Merge branch 'rj/xdiff-prepare-plug-leak-on-error-codepath' into maint
A small memory leak in an error codepath has been plugged in xdiff
code.

* rj/xdiff-prepare-plug-leak-on-error-codepath:
  xdiff/xprepare: fix a memory leak
  xdiff/xprepare: use the XDF_DIFF_ALG() macro to access flag bits
2016-04-14 18:57:46 -07:00
dc66371cdf Merge branch 'gf/fetch-pack-direct-object-fetch' into maint
Fetching of history by naming a commit object name directly didn't
work across remote-curl transport.

* gf/fetch-pack-direct-object-fetch:
  fetch-pack: update the documentation for "<refs>..." arguments
  fetch-pack: fix object_id of exact sha1
2016-04-14 18:57:44 -07:00
7488c2f65a Merge branch 'jk/rev-parse-local-env-vars' into maint
The "--local-env-vars" and "--resolve-git-dir" options of "git
rev-parse" failed to work outside a repository when the command's
option parsing was rewritten in 1.8.5 era.

* jk/rev-parse-local-env-vars:
  rev-parse: let some options run outside repository
  t1515: add tests for rev-parse out-of-repo helpers
2016-04-14 18:57:44 -07:00
0759dfdd9c Merge branch 'jk/config-get-urlmatch' into maint
"git config --get-urlmatch", unlike other variants of the "git
config --get" family, did not signal error with its exit status
when there was no matching configuration.

* jk/config-get-urlmatch:
  Documentation/git-config: fix --get-all description
  Documentation/git-config: use bulleted list for exit codes
  config: fail if --get-urlmatch finds no value
2016-04-14 18:57:43 -07:00
f1cfacff51 Merge branch 'pb/t7502-drop-dup' into maint
Code clean-up.

* pb/t7502-drop-dup:
  t/t7502 : drop duplicate test
2016-04-14 18:37:18 -07:00
b5d7308a80 Merge branch 'jk/test-httpd-config-nosystem' into maint
The tests that involve running httpd leaked the system-wide
configuration in /etc/gitconfig to the tested environment.

* jk/test-httpd-config-nosystem:
  t/lib-httpd: pass through GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM env
2016-04-14 18:37:17 -07:00
5859f04f08 Merge branch 'sb/clone-t57-t56' into maint
Rename bunch of tests on "git clone" for better organization.

* sb/clone-t57-t56:
  clone tests: rename t57* => t56*
2016-04-14 18:37:17 -07:00
485c7ade03 Merge branch 'jk/credential-cache-comment-exit' into maint
A code clarification.

* jk/credential-cache-comment-exit:
  credential-cache--daemon: clarify "exit" action semantics
2016-04-14 18:37:16 -07:00
1d1cbe224f Merge branch 'jc/index-pack' into maint
Code clean-up.

* jc/index-pack:
  index-pack: add a helper function to derive .idx/.keep filename
  index-pack: correct --keep[=<msg>]
2016-04-14 18:37:16 -07:00
9fabc70832 Merge branch 'ss/exc-flag-is-a-collection-of-bits' into maint
Code clean-up.

* ss/exc-flag-is-a-collection-of-bits:
  dir: store EXC_FLAG_* values in unsigned integers
2016-04-14 18:37:15 -07:00
e0735442ee Merge branch 'mp/upload-pack-use-embedded-args' into maint
The embedded args argv-array in the child process is used to build
the command line to run pack-objects instead of using a separate
array of strings.

* mp/upload-pack-use-embedded-args:
  upload-pack: use argv_array for pack_objects
2016-04-14 18:37:14 -07:00
2bbaad82bb Merge branch 'oa/doc-diff-check' into maint
A minor documentation update.

* oa/doc-diff-check:
  Documentation: git diff --check detects conflict markers
2016-04-14 18:37:14 -07:00
48adfa18bc Merge branch 'pb/opt-cmdmode-doc' into maint
Minor API documentation update.

* pb/opt-cmdmode-doc:
  api-parse-options.txt: document OPT_CMDMODE()
2016-04-14 18:37:13 -07:00
f0acaa6b1c Merge branch 'nd/apply-doc' into maint
A minor documentation update.

* nd/apply-doc:
  git-apply.txt: mention the behavior inside a subdir
  git-apply.txt: remove a space
2016-04-14 18:37:13 -07:00
e919f55964 Merge branch 'cc/doc-recommend-performance-trace-to-file' into maint
A minor documentation update.

* cc/doc-recommend-performance-trace-to-file:
  Documentation: talk about pager in api-trace.txt
2016-04-14 18:37:12 -07:00
bb0b4a9b5e Merge branch 'mm/lockfile-error-message' into maint
* mm/lockfile-error-message:
  lockfile: improve error message when lockfile exists
  lockfile: mark strings for translation
2016-04-14 18:37:12 -07:00
ed34567c7b ll-merge: fix typo in comment
When a944af1d (merge: teach -Xours/-Xtheirs to binary ll-merge
driver, 2012-09-08) introduced FAVOR_OURS/FAVOR_THEIRS to the binary
ll-merge driver, it changed what happens to the merge result for the
outer merge, and updated the comment from:

    The tentative merge result is "ours" for the final round, or
    common ancestor for an internal merge.  Still return "conflicted
    merge" status.

to

    The tentative merge result is the or common ancestor for an
    internal merge.

What happened is obvious.  I noticed the lack of definitive article
in front of "common" but failed to remove "or".  Also I forgot to
describe what I did for the final merge, probably because I was
satisified by the description in the log message.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-14 15:17:56 -07:00
ee30f17805 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-path-misc-bugs' into sb/submodule-init
"git submodule" reports the paths of submodules the command
recurses into, but this was incorrect when the command was not run
from the root level of the superproject.

Any further comments?  Otherwise will merge to 'next'.

* sb/submodule-path-misc-bugs: (600 commits)
  t7407: make expectation as clear as possible
  submodule update: test recursive path reporting from subdirectory
  submodule update: align reporting path for custom command execution
  submodule status: correct path handling in recursive submodules
  submodule update --init: correct path handling in recursive submodules
  submodule foreach: correct path display in recursive submodules
  Git 2.8
  Documentation: fix git-p4 AsciiDoc formatting
  mingw: skip some tests in t9115 due to file name issues
  t1300: fix the new --show-origin tests on Windows
  t1300-repo-config: make it resilient to being run via 'sh -x'
  config --show-origin: report paths with forward slashes
  submodule: fix regression for deinit without submodules
  l10n: pt_PT: Update and add new translations
  l10n: ca.po: update translation
  Git 2.8-rc4
  Documentation: fix broken linkgit to git-config
  Documentation: use ASCII quotation marks in git-p4
  Revert "config.mak.uname: use clang for Mac OS X 10.6"
  git-compat-util: st_add4: work around gcc 4.2.x compiler crash
  ...
2016-04-14 12:47:45 -07:00
7307dd8989 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-helper-clone-regression-fix' into sb/submodule-init
* sb/submodule-helper-clone-regression-fix:
  submodule--helper, module_clone: catch fprintf failure
  submodule--helper: do not borrow absolute_path() result for too long
  submodule--helper, module_clone: always operate on absolute paths
  submodule--helper clone: create the submodule path just once
  submodule--helper: fix potential NULL-dereference
  recursive submodules: test for relative paths
2016-04-14 12:46:11 -07:00
5af297185e fsck_commit_buffer(): do not special case the last validation
The pattern taken by all the validations in this function is:

	if (notice a violation exists) {
		err = report(... VIOLATION_KIND ...);
		if (err)
			return err;
	}

where report() returns zero if specified kind of violation is set to
be ignored, and otherwise shows an error message and returns non-zero.

The last validation in the function immediately before the function
returns 0 to declare "all good" can cheat and directly return the
return value from report(), and the current code does so, i.e.

	if (notice a violation exists)
		return report(... VIOLATION_KIND ...);
	return 0;

But that is a selfish code that declares it is the ultimate and
final form of the function, never to be enhanced later.  To allow
and invite future enhancements, make the last test follow the same
pattern.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-14 11:15:48 -07:00
167259bf83 Start preparing for 2.8.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-13 16:30:00 -07:00
eb94ee7f0f imap-send: fix CRAM-MD5 response calculation
Remove extra + 1 from resp_len, the length of the byte sequence to be
Base64 encoded and passed to the server as the response. Or the response
incorrectly contains an extra \0.

Signed-off-by: Kazuki Yamaguchi <k@rhe.jp>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-13 15:28:09 -07:00
6c50a57595 imap-send: check for NOLOGIN capability only when using LOGIN command
Don't check for NOLOGIN (LOGINDISABLED) capability when imap.authMethod
is specified.

LOGINDISABLED capability doesn't forbid using AUTHENTICATE, so it should
be allowed, or we can't connect to IMAP servers which only accepts
AUTHENTICATE command.

Signed-off-by: Kazuki Yamaguchi <k@rhe.jp>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-13 15:28:09 -07:00
dc0db2c0b9 Fourth batch for post 2.8 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-13 14:19:47 -07:00
6680016e9d Merge branch 'tb/blame-force-read-cache-to-workaround-safe-crlf'
When running "git blame $path" with unnormalized data in the index
for the path, the data in the working tree was blamed, even though
"git add" would not have changed what is already in the index, due
to "safe crlf" that disables the line-end conversion.  It has been
corrected.

* tb/blame-force-read-cache-to-workaround-safe-crlf:
  correct blame for files commited with CRLF
2016-04-13 14:12:41 -07:00
f044297614 Merge branch 'mg/complete-cherry-mark-to-log'
The completion scripts (in contrib/) did not include the
"--cherry-mark" option when completing "git log <HT>".

* mg/complete-cherry-mark-to-log:
  completion: complete --cherry-mark for git log
2016-04-13 14:12:40 -07:00
b330051982 Merge branch 'ep/trace-doc-sample-fix'
Fix a typo in an example in the trace API documentation.

* ep/trace-doc-sample-fix:
  api-trace.txt: fix typo
2016-04-13 14:12:39 -07:00
8c9dec985e Merge branch 'jc/makefile-redirection-stderr'
A minor fix in the Makefile.

* jc/makefile-redirection-stderr:
  Makefile: fix misdirected redirections
2016-04-13 14:12:38 -07:00
cafef3d7ad Merge branch 'lt/pretty-expand-tabs'
When "git log" shows the log message indented by 4-spaces, the
remainder of a line after a HT does not align in the way the author
originally intended.  The command now expands tabs by default in
such a case, and allows the users to override it with a new option,
'--no-expand-tabs'.

* lt/pretty-expand-tabs:
  pretty: test --expand-tabs
  pretty: allow tweaking tabwidth in --expand-tabs
  pretty: enable --expand-tabs by default for selected pretty formats
  pretty: expand tabs in indented logs to make things line up properly
2016-04-13 14:12:36 -07:00
7c137bb531 Merge branch 'mj/pull-rebase-autostash'
"git pull --rebase" learned "--[no-]autostash" option, so that
the rebase.autostash configuration variable set to true can be
overridden from the command line.

* mj/pull-rebase-autostash:
  t5520: test --[no-]autostash with pull.rebase=true
  t5520: reduce commom lines of code
  t5520: factor out common "failing autostash" code
  t5520: factor out common "successful autostash" code
  t5520: use better test to check stderr output
  t5520: ensure consistent test conditions
  t5520: use consistent capitalization in test titles
  pull --rebase: add --[no-]autostash flag
  git-pull.c: introduce git_pull_config()
2016-04-13 14:12:36 -07:00
34e859d372 Merge branch 'jn/mergetools-examdiff'
"git mergetools" learned to drive ExamDiff.

* jn/mergetools-examdiff:
  mergetools: add support for ExamDiff
  mergetools: create mergetool_find_win32_cmd() helper function for winmerge
2016-04-13 14:12:36 -07:00
7929674916 Merge branch 'es/format-patch-doc-hide-no-patch'
"git format-patch --help" showed `-s` and `--no-patch` as if these
are valid options to the command.  We already hide `--patch` option
from the documentation, because format-patch is about showing the
diff, and the documentation now hides these options as well.

* es/format-patch-doc-hide-no-patch:
  git-format-patch.txt: don't show -s as shorthand for multiple options
2016-04-13 14:12:35 -07:00
dd27384c36 Merge branch 'js/mingw-tests-2.8'
Code clean-up.

* js/mingw-tests-2.8:
  Windows: shorten code by re-using convert_slashes()
2016-04-13 14:12:34 -07:00
5b3b015999 Merge branch 'cc/apply'
Minor code clean-up.

* cc/apply:
  builtin/apply: free patch when parse_chunk() fails
  builtin/apply: handle parse_binary() failure
  apply: remove unused call to free() in gitdiff_{old,new}name()
  builtin/apply: get rid of useless 'name' variable
2016-04-13 14:12:34 -07:00
fc452aeac2 Merge branch 'sb/misc-cleanups'
Assorted minor clean-ups.

* sb/misc-cleanups:
  credential-cache, send_request: close fd when done
  bundle: don't leak an fd in case of early return
  abbrev_sha1_in_line: don't leak memory
  notes: don't leak memory in git_config_get_notes_strategy
2016-04-13 14:12:34 -07:00
5250af49f0 Merge branch 'sk/send-pack-all-fix'
"git send-pack --all <there>" was broken when its command line
option parsing was written in the 2.6 timeframe.

* sk/send-pack-all-fix:
  git-send-pack: fix --all option when used with directory
2016-04-13 14:12:33 -07:00
26effb8487 Merge branch 'sg/diff-multiple-identical-renames'
"git diff -M" used to work better when two originally identical
files A and B got renamed to X/A and X/B by pairing A to X/A and B
to X/B, but this was broken in the 2.0 timeframe.

* sg/diff-multiple-identical-renames:
  diffcore: fix iteration order of identical files during rename detection
2016-04-13 14:12:32 -07:00
69d65bc7a3 Merge branch 'kn/for-each-tag-branch'
A minor documentation update.

* kn/for-each-tag-branch:
  for-each-ref: fix description of '--contains' in manpage
2016-04-13 14:12:31 -07:00
4fca4e37db Merge branch 'ky/branch-d-worktree'
When "git worktree" feature is in use, "git branch -d" allowed
deletion of a branch that is checked out in another worktree

* ky/branch-d-worktree:
  branch -d: refuse deleting a branch which is currently checked out
2016-04-13 14:12:30 -07:00
0d8683c552 Merge branch 'rz/worktree-no-checkout'
"git worktree add" can be given "--no-checkout" option to only
create an empty worktree without checking out the files.

* rz/worktree-no-checkout:
  worktree: add: introduce --checkout option
2016-04-13 14:12:30 -07:00
5c788e7746 Merge branch 'rt/rebase-i-shorten-stop-report'
The commit object name reported when "rebase -i" stops has been
shortened.

* rt/rebase-i-shorten-stop-report:
  rebase-i: print an abbreviated hash when stop for editing
2016-04-13 14:12:30 -07:00
8b7475aefc Merge branch 'rt/completion-help'
Shell completion (in contrib/) updates.

* rt/completion-help:
  completion: add 'revisions' and 'everyday' to 'git help'
  completion: add option '--guides' to 'git help'
2016-04-13 14:12:29 -07:00
73385f20e1 Merge branch 'ak/use-hashmap-iter-first-in-submodule-config'
Minor code cleanup.

* ak/use-hashmap-iter-first-in-submodule-config:
  submodule-config: use hashmap_iter_first()
2016-04-13 14:12:29 -07:00
907c416534 Merge branch 'jk/check-repository-format'
The repository set-up sequence has been streamlined (the biggest
change is that there is no longer git_config_early()), so that we
do not attempt to look into refs/* when we know we do not have a
Git repository.

* jk/check-repository-format:
  verify_repository_format: mark messages for translation
  setup: drop repository_format_version global
  setup: unify repository version callbacks
  init: use setup.c's repo version verification
  setup: refactor repo format reading and verification
  config: drop git_config_early
  check_repository_format_gently: stop using git_config_early
  lazily load core.sharedrepository
  wrap shared_repository global in get/set accessors
  setup: document check_repository_format()
2016-04-13 14:12:28 -07:00
60ea78b8a1 i18n: branch: move comment for translators
Move and split comment for translators (marked by TRANSLATORS) to be
immediately above the strings marked for translation.

As a result, the comment can now be extracted by xgettext.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-13 13:23:27 -07:00
2010aabd91 i18n: branch: unmark string for translation
Unmark strings for translation for command help/hint.
These strings can not be translated, just copied.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-13 13:23:27 -07:00
531220ba50 send-email: detect and offer to skip backup files
Diligent people save output from format-patch to files, proofread
and edit them and then finally send the result out.  If the
resulting files are sent out with "git send-email 0*", this ends up
sending backup files (e.g. 0001-X.patch.backup or 0001-X.patch~)
left by their editors next to the final version.  Sending them with
"git send-email 0*.patch" (if format-patch was run with the standard
suffix) would avoid such an embarrassment, but not everybody is
careful.

After collecting files to be sent (and sorting them if read from a
directory), notice when the file being sent out has the same name as
the previous file, plus some suffix (e.g. 0001-X.patch was sent, and
we are looking at 0001-X.patch.backup or 0001-X.patch~), and the
suffix begins with a non-alnum (e.g. ".backup" or "~") and ask if
the user really wants to send it out.  Once the user skips sending
such a "backup" file, remember the suffix and stop asking the same
question (e.g. after skipping 0001-X.patch~, skip 0002-Y.patch~
without asking).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-12 18:45:45 -07:00
a6ee883b8e t6044: new merge testcases for when index doesn't match HEAD
With one exception, we require the index to exactly match the
current HEAD commit at the time git merge is invoked.  This
expectation was even documented in git-merge.txt until commit
ebef7e5 (Documentation: simplify How Merge Works, 2010-01-23).

Most merge strategies enforced this requirement, but it turns out
not all did.  The current exceptions were the following two:

  * ff updates
  * octopus merges

ff updates actually will error out if the staged change is to a path
modified between HEAD and the commit being merged.  If the path(s)
that are staged are files unrelated to the changes between these two
commits, though, then an ff update will just keep these staged
changes around after the merge.  This is the one exception we
expected to the abort-merge-if- index-doesn't-match-HEAD rule.

For octopus merges, the rule should be enforced.  Unfortunately, the
current behavior of the code is to ignore the difference and use the
staged changes in place of whatever is in HEAD as it proceeds to
perform the merge.  So if the staged changes can be cleanly merged
with all the other heads, then the staged changes will just be
incorported into the resulting commit.  If the staged changes cannot
be cleanly merged with all the other heads, the merge is not aborted
-- merge conflicts are simply reported as if HEAD had originally
contained whatever the index did.

Add testcases that check our expectations.  A subsequent commit will
correct the erroneous octopus merge behavior.

Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-12 18:39:43 -07:00
3ec62ad9ff merge-octopus: abort if index does not match HEAD
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-12 18:39:43 -07:00
40d71940b6 builtin/merge.c: fix a bug with trivial merges
If read_tree_trivial() succeeds and produces a tree that is already
in the object store, then the index is not written to disk, leaving
it out-of-sync with both HEAD and the working tree.

In order to write the index back out to disk after a merge,
write_index_locked() needs to be called.  For most merge strategies, this
is done from try_merge_strategy().  For fast forward updates, this is
done from checkout_fast_forward().  When trivial merges work, the call to
write_index_locked() is buried a little deeper:

  merge_trivial()
  -> write_tree_trivial()
     -> write_cache_as_tree()
        -> write_index_as_tree()
           -> write_locked_index()

However, it is only called when !cache_tree_fully_valid(), which is how
this bug is triggered.  But that also shows why this bug doesn't affect
any other merge strategies or cases.

Add a direct call to write_index_locked() from merge_trivial() to fix
this issue.  Since the indirect call to write_locked_index() was
conditional on cache_tree_fully_valid(), it won't be written twice.

Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-12 18:33:59 -07:00
ef7d3621d7 t7605: add a testcase demonstrating a bug with trivial merges
Repeating a trivial merge more than once will leave the index out of
sync, despite being clean before the merge and operating on the
exact same heads as the first run.  The recorded merge has the
correct tree and the working tree is brought up to date, it is just
the index that is left as it was before the merge.  Every attempt to
repeat the merge beyond the first will leave the index in the same
weird out-of-sync state.

Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-12 18:33:59 -07:00
8e1b62f174 merge-recursive: do not check working copy when creating a virtual merge base
There were a few cases in merge-recursive that could result in a
check for the presence of files in the working copy while trying to
create a virtual merge base.  These were rare and innocuous, but
somewhat illogical.  The two cases were:

  * When there was naming conflicts (e.g. a D/F conflict) and we had to
    pick a new unique name for a file.  Since the new name is somewhat
    arbitrary, it didn't matter that we consulted the working copy to
    avoid picking a filename it has, but since the virtual merge base is
    never checked out, it's a waste of time and slightly odd to do so.

  * When two different files get renamed to the same name (on opposite
    sides of the merge), we needed to delete the original filenames from
    the cache and possibly also the working directory.  The caller's check
    for determining whether to delete from the working directory was a
    call to would_lose_untracked().  It turns out this didn't matter
    because remove_file() had logic to avoid modifying the working
    directory when creating a virtual merge base, but there is no reason
    for the caller to check the working directory in such circumstances.
    It's a waste of time, if not also a bit weird.

Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-12 18:23:46 -07:00
3efc61add5 merge-recursive: remove duplicate code
In commit 51931bf (merge-recursive: Improve handling of rename
target vs. directory addition, 2011-08-11), I apparently added two
lines of code that were immediately duplicated a few lines later.
No idea why, other than it seems pretty clear this was a mistake:
there is no need to remove the same file twice; removing it once is
sufficient...especially since the intervening line was working with
a different file entirely.

Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-12 18:23:23 -07:00
8ae51c4128 i18n: builtin/rm.c: remove a comma ',' from string
Remove a comma from string marked for translation. Make the string match the
one in builtin/mv.c. Now translators have do handle this string only once.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-12 10:48:28 -07:00
ed47fdf7fa i18n: unpack-trees: mark strings for translation
Mark strings seen by the user inside setup_unpack_trees_porcelain() and
display_error_msgs() functions for translation.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-12 10:29:16 -07:00
7bec7f50ae t3404: use write_script
The test uses hardcoded #!/bin/sh to create a pre-commit hook
script.  Because the generated script uses $(command substitution),
which is not supported by /bin/sh on some platforms (e.g. Solaris),
the resulting pre-commit always fails.

Which is not noticeable as the test that uses the hook is about
checking the behaviour of the command when the hook fails ;-), but
nevertheless it is not testing what we wanted to test.

Use write_script so that the resulting script is run under the same
shell our scripted Porcelain commands are run, which must support
the necessary $(construct).

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-12 09:59:59 -07:00
a3bb8ca74c t1020: do not overuse printf and use write_script
The test prepares a sample file "dir/two" with a single incomplete
line in it with "printf", and also prepares a small helper script
"diff" to create a file with a single incomplete line in it, again
with "printf".  The output from the latter is compared with an
expected output, again prepared with "printf" hence lacking the
final LF.  There is no reason for this test to be using files with
an incomplete line at the end, and these look more like a mistake
of not using

	printf "%s\n" "string to be written"

and using

	printf "string to be written"

Depending on what would be in $GIT_PREFIX, using the latter form
could be a bug waiting to happen.  Correct them.

Also, the test uses hardcoded #!/bin/sh to create a small helper
script.  For a small task like what the generated script does, it
does not matter too much in that what appears as /bin/sh would not
be _so_ broken, but while we are at it, use write_script instead,
which happens to make the result easier to read by reducing need
of one level of quoting.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-11 09:41:40 -07:00
ca386ee177 t5532: use write_script
The recent cleanup in b7cbbff switched t5532's use of
backticks to $(). This matches our normal shell style, which
is good. But it also breaks the test on Solaris, where
/bin/sh does not understand $().

Our normal shell style assumes a modern-ish shell which
knows about $(). However, some tests create small helper
scripts and just write "#!/bin/sh" into them. These scripts
either need to go back to using backticks, or they need to
respect $SHELL_PATH. The easiest way to do the latter is to
use write_script.

While we're at it, let's also stick the script creation
inside a test_expect block (our usual style), and split the
perl snippet into its own script (to prevent quoting
madness).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:46:43 -07:00
41d796ed5c refs: on symref reflog expire, lock symref not referrent
When locking a symbolic ref to expire a reflog, lock the symbolic
ref (using REF_NODEREF) instead of its referent.

Add a test for this.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:46 -07:00
2d0663b216 refs: move resolve_ref_unsafe into common code
Now that resolve_ref_unsafe's only interaction with the backend is
through read_raw_ref, we can move it into the common code. Later,
we'll replace read_raw_ref with a backend function.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:41 -07:00
7fd12bfbef show_head_ref(): check the result of resolve_ref_namespace()
Only use the result of resolve_ref_namespace() if it is non-NULL.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:39 -07:00
ded8393610 check_aliased_update(): check that dst_name is non-NULL
If there is an error in resolve_ref_unsafe(), it returns NULL. We check
for this case, but not until after calling strip_namespace(). Instead,
call strip_namespace() *after* the NULL check.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:37 -07:00
be7651a347 checkout_paths(): remove unneeded flag variable
It is never read, so we can pass NULL to resolve_ref_unsafe().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:36 -07:00
17377b6252 cmd_merge(): remove unneeded flag variable
It is never read, so we can pass NULL to resolve_ref_unsafe().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:34 -07:00
95ae2c7490 fsck_head_link(): remove unneeded flag variable
It is never read, so we can pass NULL to resolve_ref_unsafe().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:33 -07:00
89e8238965 read_raw_ref(): change flags parameter to unsigned int
read_raw_ref() is going to be part of the vtable for reference backends,
so clean up its interface to use "unsigned int flags" rather than "int
flags". Its caller still uses signed int for its flags arguments. But
changing that would touch a lot of code, so leave it for now.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:31 -07:00
8c346fb1d7 files-backend: inline resolve_ref_1() into resolve_ref_unsafe()
resolve_ref_unsafe() wasn't doing anything useful anymore.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:29 -07:00
42a38cf788 read_raw_ref(): manage own scratch space
Instead of creating scratch space in resolve_ref_unsafe() and passing
it down through resolve_ref_1 to read_raw_ref(), teach read_raw_ref()
to manage its own scratch space. This reduces coupling across the
functions at the cost of some extra allocations.

Also, when read_raw_ref() is implemented for different reference
backends, the other implementations might have different scratch
space requirements.

Note that we now preserve errno across the calls to strbuf_release(),
which calls free() and can thus theoretically overwrite errno.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:26 -07:00
7048653a73 files-backend: break out ref reading
Refactor resolve_ref_1 in terms of a new function read_raw_ref, which
is responsible for reading ref data from the ref storage.

Later, we will make read_raw_ref a pluggable backend function, and make
resolve_ref_unsafe common.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Helped-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:24 -07:00
afbe782fa3 resolve_ref_1(): eliminate local variable "bad_name"
We can use (*flags & REF_BAD_NAME) for that purpose.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:22 -07:00
e6702e570b resolve_ref_1(): reorder code
There is no need to adjust *flags if we're just about to fail.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:21 -07:00
90c28ae11c resolve_ref_1(): eliminate local variable
In place of `buf`, use `refname`, which is anyway a better description
of what is being pointed at.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:19 -07:00
a70a93b794 resolve_ref_unsafe(): ensure flags is always set
If the caller passes flags==NULL, then set it to point at a local
scratch variable. This removes the need for a lot of "if (flags)"
guards in resolve_ref_1() and resolve_missing_loose_ref().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:17 -07:00
37da4227b2 resolve_ref_unsafe(): use for loop to count up to MAXDEPTH
The loop's there anyway; we might as well use it.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:15 -07:00
419c6f4c76 resolve_missing_loose_ref(): simplify semantics
Make resolve_missing_loose_ref() only responsible for looking up a
packed reference, without worrying about whether we want to read or
write the reference and without setting errno on failure. Move the other
logic to the caller.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:13 -07:00
757552db57 t1430: improve test coverage of deletion of badly-named refs
Check "branch -d broken...ref"

Check various combinations of

* Deleting using "update-ref -d"
* Deleting using "update-ref --no-deref -d"
* Deleting using "branch -d"

in the following combinations of symref -> ref:

* badname -> broken...ref
* badname -> broken...ref (dangling)
* broken...symref -> master
* broken...symref -> idonotexist (dangling)

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:08 -07:00
b78ceced0c t1430: test for-each-ref in the presence of badly-named refs
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:07 -07:00
6141a6dcdc t1430: don't rely on symbolic-ref for creating broken symrefs
It's questionable whether it should even work.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:05 -07:00
45669a79b1 t1430: clean up broken refs/tags/shadow
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:35:03 -07:00
f86d8350c8 t1430: test the output and error of some commands more carefully
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:34:59 -07:00
937705901b refs: move for_each_*ref* functions into common code
Make do_for_each_ref take a submodule as an argument instead of a
ref_cache.  Since all for_each_*ref* functions are defined in terms of
do_for_each_ref, we can then move them into the common code.

Later, we can simply make do_for_each_ref into a backend function.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:34:55 -07:00
2bf68ed5aa refs: move head_ref{,_submodule} to the common code
These don't use any backend-specific functions.  These were previously
defined in terms of the do_head_ref helper function, but since they
are otherwise identical, we don't need that function.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:34:41 -07:00
1cae428e29 git_config_set_multivar_in_file: handle "unset" errors
We pass off to the "_gently" form to do the real work, and
just die() if it returned an error. However, our die message
de-references "value", which may be NULL if the request was
to unset a variable. Nobody using glibc noticed, because it
simply prints "(null)", which is good enough for the test
suite (and presumably very few people run across this in
practice). But other libc implementations (like Solaris) may
segfault.

Let's not only fix that, but let's make the message more
clear about what is going on in the "unset" case.

Reported-by: "Tom G. Christensen" <tgc@jupiterrise.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:14:59 -07:00
9c14bb08a4 git_config_set_multivar_in_file: all non-zero returns are errors
This function is just a thin wrapper for the "_gently" form
of the function. But the gently form is designed to feed
builtin/config.c, which passes our return code directly to
its exit status, and thus uses positive error values for
some cases. We check only negative values, meaning we would
fail to die in some cases (e.g., a malformed key).

This may or may not be triggerable in practice; we tend to
use this non-gentle form only when setting internal
variables, which would not have malformed keys.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:14:45 -07:00
8c3ca351cb config: lower-case first word of error strings
This follows our usual style (both throughout git, and
throughout the rest of this file).

This covers the whole file, but note that I left the capitalization in
the multi-sentence:

  error: malformed value...
  error: Must be one of ...

because it helps make it clear that we are starting a new sentence in
the second one.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:14:02 -07:00
87f8a0b279 http: differentiate socks5:// and socks5h://
Felix Ruess <felix.ruess@gmail.com> noticed that with configuration

    $ git config --global 'http.proxy=socks5h://127.0.0.1:1080'

connections to remote sites time out, waiting for DNS resolution.

The logic to detect various flavours of SOCKS proxy and ask the
libcurl layer to use appropriate one understands the proxy string
that begin with socks5, socks4a, etc., but does not know socks5h,
and we end up using CURLPROXY_SOCKS5.  The correct one to use is
CURLPROXY_SOCKS5_HOSTNAME.

https://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/CURLOPT_PROXY.html says

  ..., socks5h:// (the last one to enable socks5 and asking the
  proxy to do the resolving, also known as CURLPROXY_SOCKS5_HOSTNAME
  type).

which is consistent with the way the breakage was reported.

Tested-by: Felix Ruess <felix.ruess@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-10 11:03:17 -07:00
ab86885a61 i18n: builtin/branch.c: mark option for translation
Mark description and parameter for option "set-upstream-to" for translation.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-08 15:18:13 -07:00
71d99b81da i18n: index-pack: use plural string instead of normal one
Git could output "completed with 1 local objects", but in this
case using "object" instead of "objects" is the correct form.

Use Q_() instead of _().

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-08 15:15:54 -07:00
7b0d47b3b6 Third batch for post 2.8 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-08 14:34:11 -07:00
4af4612466 Merge branch 'ss/msvc'
Build updates for MSVC.

* ss/msvc:
  MSVC: use shipped headers instead of fallback definitions
  MSVC: vsnprintf in Visual Studio 2015 doesn't need SNPRINTF_SIZE_CORR any more
2016-04-08 14:29:13 -07:00
b0fbcf0003 Merge branch 'oa/doc-diff-check'
A minor documentation update.

* oa/doc-diff-check:
  Documentation: git diff --check detects conflict markers
2016-04-08 14:29:13 -07:00
8fdfaf0b2f Merge branch 'pb/opt-cmdmode-doc'
Minor API documentation update.

* pb/opt-cmdmode-doc:
  api-parse-options.txt: document OPT_CMDMODE()
2016-04-08 14:29:13 -07:00
11cfcc579a Merge branch 'nd/apply-report-skip'
"git apply -v" learned to report paths in the patch that were
skipped via --include/--exclude mechanism or being outside the
current working directory.

* nd/apply-report-skip:
  apply: report patch skipping in verbose mode
2016-04-08 14:29:12 -07:00
efe778c5ce Merge branch 'nd/apply-doc'
A minor documentation update.

* nd/apply-doc:
  git-apply.txt: mention the behavior inside a subdir
  git-apply.txt: remove a space
2016-04-08 14:29:12 -07:00
d04aa7ec47 Merge branch 'jc/merge-refuse-new-root'
"git merge" used to allow merging two branches that have no common
base by default, which led to a brand new history of an existing
project created and then get pulled by an unsuspecting maintainer,
which allowed an unnecessary parallel history merged into the
existing project.  The command has been taught not to allow this by
default, with an escape hatch "--allow-unrelated-histories" option
to be used in a rare event that merges histories of two projects
that started their lives independently.

* jc/merge-refuse-new-root:
  merge: refuse to create too cool a merge by default
2016-04-08 14:29:11 -07:00
1245c74936 configure: remove checking for HMAC_CTX_cleanup
We don't need it, as we no longer use HMAC_CTX_cleanup() directly.

Signed-off-by: Kazuki Yamaguchi <k@rhe.jp>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-08 11:46:36 -07:00
b51c0d4b4c imap-send: avoid deprecated TLSv1_method()
Use SSLv23_method always and disable SSL if needed.

TLSv1_method() function is deprecated in OpenSSL 1.1.0 and the compiler
emits a warning.

SSLv23_method() is also deprecated, but the alternative, TLS_method(),
is new in OpenSSL 1.1.0 so requires checking by configure. Stick to
SSLv23_method() for now (this is aliased to TLS_method()).

Signed-off-by: Kazuki Yamaguchi <k@rhe.jp>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-08 11:46:33 -07:00
6738a33b31 imap-send: check NULL return of SSL_CTX_new()
SSL_CTX_new() may fail with return value NULL.

Signed-off-by: Kazuki Yamaguchi <k@rhe.jp>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-08 11:46:22 -07:00
1ed2c7b115 imap-send: use HMAC() function provided by OpenSSL
Fix compile errors with OpenSSL 1.1.0.

HMAC_CTX is made opaque and HMAC_CTX_cleanup is removed in OpenSSL
1.1.0. But since we just want to calculate one HMAC, we can use HMAC()
here, which exists since OpenSSL 0.9.6 at least.

Signed-off-by: Kazuki Yamaguchi <k@rhe.jp>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-08 11:45:47 -07:00
18eb3a9ce7 set_worktree_head_symref(): fix error message
Emit an informative error when failed to hold lock of HEAD.

2233066e (refs: add a new function set_worktree_head_symref,
2016-03-27) added set_worktree_head_symref(), but this is missing a
call to unable_to_lock_message() after hold_lock_file_for_update()
fails, so it emits an empty error message:

  % git branch -m oldname newname
  error:
  error: HEAD of working tree /path/to/wt is not updated
  fatal: Branch renamed to newname, but HEAD is not updated!

Thanks to Eric Sunshine for pointing this out.

Signed-off-by: Kazuki Yamaguchi <k@rhe.jp>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-08 10:26:23 -07:00
27014cbc04 commit: do not ignore an empty message given by -m ''
When f9568530 (builtin-commit: resurrect behavior for multiple -m
options, 2007-11-11) converted a "char *message" to "struct strbuf
message" to hold the messages given with the "-m" option, it
incorrectly changed the checks "did we get a message with the -m
option?" to "is message.len 0?".  Later, we noticed one breakage
from this change and corrected it with 25206778 (commit: don't start
editor if empty message is given with -m, 2013-05-25).

However, "we got a message with -m, even though an empty one, so we
shouldn't be launching an editor" was not the only breakage.

 * "git commit --amend -m '' --allow-empty", even though it looks
   strange, is a valid request to amend the commit to have no
   message at all.  Due to the misdetection of the presence of -m on
   the command line, we ended up keeping the log messsage from the
   original commit.

 * "git commit -m "$msg" -F file" should be rejected whether $msg is
   an empty string or not, but due to the same bug, was not rejected
   when $msg is empty.

 * "git -c template=file -m "$msg"" should ignore the template even
   when $msg is empty, but it didn't and instead used the contents
   from the template file.

Correct these by checking have_option_m, which the earlier 25206778
introduced to fix the same bug.

Reported-by: Adam Dinwoodie <adam@dinwoodie.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-07 13:25:12 -07:00
178e8143b4 commit: --amend -m '' silently fails to wipe message
`git commit --amend -m ''` seems to be an unambiguous request to blank a
commit message, but it actually leaves the commit message as-is.  That's
the case regardless of whether `--allow-empty-message` is specified, and
doesn't so much as drop a non-zero return code.

Add failing tests to show this behaviour.

Signed-off-by: Adam Dinwoodie <adam@dinwoodie.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-07 13:21:43 -07:00
24041d6be5 setup.c: do not feed NULL to "%.*s" even with precision 0
A recent update 75faa45a (replace trivial malloc + sprintf / strcpy
calls with xstrfmt, 2015-09-24) rewrote

	prepare an empty buffer
	if (len)
        	append the first len bytes of "prefix" to the buffer
	append "path" to the buffer

that computed "path", optionally prefixed by "prefix", into

	xstrfmt("%.*s%s", len, prefix, path);

However, passing a NULL pointer to the printf(3) family of functions
to format it with %s conversion, even with the precision set to 0,
i.e.

	xstrfmt("%.*s", 0, NULL)

yields undefined results, at least on some platforms.

Avoid this problem by substituting prefix with "" when len==0, as
prefix can legally be NULL in that case.  This would mimick the
intent of the original code better.

Reported-by: Tom G. Christensen <tgc@jupiterrise.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-07 12:40:15 -07:00
890fca84be rerere: adjust 'forget' to multi-variant world order
Because conflicts with the same contents inside conflict blocks
enclosed by "<<<<<<<" and ">>>>>>>" can now have multiple variants
to help three-way merge to adjust to the differences outside the
conflict blocks, "rerere forget $path" needs to be taught that there
may be multiple recorded resolutions that share the same conflict
hash (which groups the conflicts with "the same contents inside
conflict blocks"), among which there are some that would not be
relevant to the conflict we are looking at.  These "other variants"
that happen to share the same conflict hash should not be cleared,
and the variant that would apply to the current conflict may not be
the zero-th one (which is the only one that is cleared by the
current code).

After finding the conflict hash, iterate over the existing variants
and try to resolve the conflict using each of them to find the one
that "cleanly" resolves the current conflict.  That is the one we
want to forget and record the preimage for, so that the user can
record the corrected resolution.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-06 15:54:41 -07:00
0ce02b3620 rerere: split code to call ll_merge() further
The merge() helper function is given an existing rerere ID (i.e. the
name of the .git/rr-cache/* subdirectory, and the variant number)
that identifies one <preimage, postimage> pair, try to see if the
conflicted state in the given path can be resolved by using the pair,
and if this succeeds, then update the conflicted path with the
result in the working tree.

To implement rerere_forget() in the multiple variant world, we'd
need a helper to do the "see if a <preimage, postimage> pair cleanly
resolves a conflicted state we have in-core" part, without actually
touching any file in the working tree, in order to identify which
variant(s) to remove.  Split the logic to do so into a separate
helper function try_merge() out of merge().

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-06 15:52:40 -07:00
3d730ed9b2 rerere: move code related to "forget" together
"rerere forget" is the only user of handle_cache() helper, which in
turn is the only user of rerere_io that reads from an in-core buffer
whose getline method is implemented as rerere_mem_getline().  Gather
them together.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-06 15:52:40 -07:00
1be1e85115 rerere: gc and clear
Adjust "git rerere gc" and "git rerere clear" to the new world order
with rerere database with multiple variants for the same shape of
conflicts.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-06 15:52:22 -07:00
ef8c95e985 send-email: do not load Data::Dumper
We never used Data::Dumper in this script.  The only reference
of it was always commented out and removed over a decade ago in
commit 4bc87a28be
("send-email: Change from Mail::Sendmail to Net::SMTP")

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-06 13:40:01 -07:00
f916ab0ccc send-email: more meaningful Message-ID
Using a YYYYmmddHHMMSS date representation is more meaningful to
humans, especially when used for lookups on NNTP servers or linking
to archive sites via Message-ID (e.g. mid.gmane.org or
mid.mail-archive.com).  This timestamp format more easily gives a
reader of the URL itself a rough date of a linked message compared
to having them calculate the seconds since the Unix epoch.

Furthermore, having the MUA name in the Message-ID seems to be a
rare oddity I haven't noticed outside of git-send-email.  We
already have an optional X-Mailer header field to advertise for
us, so extending the Message-ID by 15 characters can make for
unpleasant Message-ID-based URLs to archive sites.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-06 13:16:09 -07:00
ab214331cf Makefile: stop pretending to support rpmbuild
Nobody in the active development community seems to watch breakages
in the rpmbuild target.  As most major RPM based distros use their
own specfile when packaging us, they aren't looking after us as
their pristine upstream tree, either.  At this point, it is turning
to be a disservice to the users to pretend that our tree natively
supports "make rpmbuild" target when we do not properly maintain it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-06 11:56:22 -07:00
72d917a7f9 Second batch for post 2.8 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-06 11:44:24 -07:00
a2595f05c7 Merge branch 'la/tag-force-signing-annotated-tags'
"git tag" can create an annotated tag without explicitly given an
"-a" (or "-s") option (i.e. when a tag message is given).  A new
configuration variable, tag.forceSignAnnotated, can be used to tell
the command to create signed tag in such a situation.

* la/tag-force-signing-annotated-tags:
  tag: add the option to force signing of annotated tags
2016-04-06 11:39:13 -07:00
01e1d54418 Merge branch 'jk/submodule-c-credential'
"git -c credential.<var>=<value> submodule" can now be used to
propagate configuration variables related to credential helper
down to the submodules.

* jk/submodule-c-credential:
  git_config_push_parameter: handle empty GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS
  git: submodule honor -c credential.* from command line
  quote: implement sq_quotef()
  submodule: fix segmentation fault in submodule--helper clone
  submodule: fix submodule--helper clone usage
  submodule: check argc count for git submodule--helper clone
  submodule: don't pass empty string arguments to submodule--helper clone
2016-04-06 11:39:12 -07:00
aad627e3c0 Merge branch 'jv/merge-nothing-into-void'
"git merge FETCH_HEAD" dereferenced NULL pointer when merging
nothing into an unborn history (which is arguably unusual usage,
which perhaps was the reason why nobody noticed it).

* jv/merge-nothing-into-void:
  merge: fix NULL pointer dereference when merging nothing into void
2016-04-06 11:39:11 -07:00
a6822e4172 Merge branch 'ss/commit-squash-msg'
When "git merge --squash" stopped due to conflict, the concluding
"git commit" failed to read in the SQUASH_MSG that shows the log
messages from all the squashed commits.

* ss/commit-squash-msg:
  commit: do not lose SQUASH_MSG contents
2016-04-06 11:39:10 -07:00
2c657edce7 Merge branch 'sb/rebase-x'
"git rebase -x" can be used without passing "-i" option.

* sb/rebase-x:
  t3404: cleanup double empty lines between tests
  rebase: decouple --exec from --interactive
2016-04-06 11:39:09 -07:00
3e95e47c5d Merge branch 'jk/test-httpd-config-nosystem'
The tests that involve running httpd leaked the system-wide
configuration in /etc/gitconfig to the tested environment.

* jk/test-httpd-config-nosystem:
  t/lib-httpd: pass through GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM env
2016-04-06 11:39:08 -07:00
f4ee510684 Merge branch 'jk/send-email-rtrim-mailrc-alias'
"git send-email" had trouble parsing alias file in mailrc format
when lines in it had trailing whitespaces on them.

* jk/send-email-rtrim-mailrc-alias:
  send-email: ignore trailing whitespace in mailrc alias file
2016-04-06 11:39:07 -07:00
67827f582f Merge branch 'jk/credential-cache-comment-exit'
A code clarification.

* jk/credential-cache-comment-exit:
  credential-cache--daemon: clarify "exit" action semantics
2016-04-06 11:39:06 -07:00
2f03d174f0 Merge branch 'sb/clone-t57-t56'
Rename bunch of tests on "git clone" for better organization.

* sb/clone-t57-t56:
  clone tests: rename t57* => t56*
2016-04-06 11:39:05 -07:00
1d851b9d30 Merge branch 'ls/p4-map-user'
"git p4" now allows P4 author names to be mapped to Git author
names.

* ls/p4-map-user:
  git-p4: map a P4 user to Git author name and email address
2016-04-06 11:39:05 -07:00
5e533f8ffd Merge branch 'cc/doc-recommend-performance-trace-to-file'
A minor documentation update.

* cc/doc-recommend-performance-trace-to-file:
  Documentation: talk about pager in api-trace.txt
2016-04-06 11:39:04 -07:00
235bdc8c89 Merge branch 'pb/t7502-drop-dup'
Code clean-up.

* pb/t7502-drop-dup:
  t/t7502 : drop duplicate test
2016-04-06 11:39:04 -07:00
e094194f08 Merge branch 'da/mergetool-delete-delete-conflict'
"git mergetool" did not work well with conflicts that both sides
deleted.

* da/mergetool-delete-delete-conflict:
  mergetool: honor tempfile configuration when resolving delete conflicts
  mergetool: support delete/delete conflicts
2016-04-06 11:39:02 -07:00
bdebbeb334 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-parallel-update'
A major part of "git submodule update" has been ported to C to take
advantage of the recently added framework to run download tasks in
parallel.

* sb/submodule-parallel-update:
  clone: allow an explicit argument for parallel submodule clones
  submodule update: expose parallelism to the user
  submodule helper: remove double 'fatal: ' prefix
  git submodule update: have a dedicated helper for cloning
  run_processes_parallel: rename parameters for the callbacks
  run_processes_parallel: treat output of children as byte array
  submodule update: direct error message to stderr
  fetching submodules: respect `submodule.fetchJobs` config option
  submodule-config: drop check against NULL
  submodule-config: keep update strategy around
2016-04-06 11:39:01 -07:00
77e075124a Merge branch 'ss/receive-pack-parse-options'
The command line argument parser for "receive-pack" has been
rewritten to use parse-options.

* ss/receive-pack-parse-options:
  builtin/receive-pack.c: use parse_options API
2016-04-06 11:38:59 -07:00
12508a8354 Merge branch 'ss/exc-flag-is-a-collection-of-bits'
Code clean-up.

* ss/exc-flag-is-a-collection-of-bits:
  dir: store EXC_FLAG_* values in unsigned integers
2016-04-06 11:38:59 -07:00
d281b45d75 builtin/verify-tag.c: ignore SIGPIPE in gpg-interface
The verify_signed_buffer() function may trigger a SIGPIPE when the
GPG child process terminates early (due to a bad keyid, for example)
and Git tries to write to it afterwards.  Previously, ignoring
SIGPIPE was done in builtin/verify-tag.c to avoid this issue.

However, any other caller who wants to call verify_signed_buffer()
would have to do the same.

Use sigchain_push(SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN) in verify_signed_buffer(),
pretty much like in sign_buffer(), so that any caller is not
required to perform this task.

This will avoid possible mistakes by further developers using
verify_signed_buffer().

Signed-off-by: Santiago Torres <santiago@nyu.edu>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-06 09:02:02 -07:00
a08feb8ef0 correct blame for files commited with CRLF
git blame reports lines as not "Not Committed Yet" when they have
CRLF in the index, CRLF in the worktree and core.autocrlf is true.

Since commit c4805393 (autocrlf: Make it work also for un-normalized
repositories, 2010-05-12), files that have CRLF in the index are not
normalized at commit when core.autocrl is set.

Add a call to read_cache() early in fake_working_tree_commit(),
before calling convert_to_git().

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-05 13:55:30 -07:00
d3bfbf91df completion: complete --cherry-mark for git log
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-05 13:53:54 -07:00
4232b21f77 api-trace.txt: fix typo
The correct api is trace_printf_key(), not trace_print_key().

Also do not throw a random string at printf(3)-like function;
instead, feed it as a parameter that is fed to a "%s" conversion
specifier.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-05 13:51:25 -07:00
d55de70a1e Makefile: fix misdirected redirections
In general "echo 2>&1 $msg" to redirect a possible error message
that comes from 'echo' itself into the same standard output stream
$msg is getting written to does not make any sense; it is not like
we are expecting to see any errors out of 'echo' in these statements,
and even if it were the case, there is no reason to prevent the
error messages from being sent to the standard error stream.

These are clearly meant to send the argument given to echo to the
standard error stream as error messages.  Correctly redirect by
saying "send what is written to the standard output to the standard
error", i.e. "1>&2" aka ">&2".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-05 00:03:05 -07:00
95c38fb0ed branch: fix shortening of non-remote symrefs
Commit aedcb7d (branch.c: use 'ref-filter' APIs, 2015-09-23)
adjusted the symref-printing code to look like this:

    if (item->symref) {
	    skip_prefix(item->symref, "refs/remotes/", &desc);
	    strbuf_addf(&out, " -> %s", desc);
    }

This has three bugs in it:

  1. It always skips past "refs/remotes/", instead of
     skipping past the prefix associated with the branch we
     are showing (so commonly we see "refs/remotes/" for the
     refs/remotes/origin/HEAD symref, but the previous code
     would skip "refs/heads/" when showing a symref it found
     in refs/heads/.

  2. If skip_prefix() does not match, it leaves "desc"
     untouched, and we show whatever happened to be in it
     (which is the refname from a call to skip_prefix()
     earlier in the function).

  3. If we do match with skip_prefix(), we stomp on the
     "desc" variable, which is later passed to
     add_verbose_info(). We probably want to retain the
     original refname there (though it likely doesn't matter
     in practice, since after all, one points to the other).

The fix to match the original code is fairly easy: record
the prefix to strip based on item->kind, and use it here.
However, since we already have a local variable named "prefix",
let's give the two prefixes verbose names so we don't
confuse them.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 23:35:05 -07:00
915c96df38 pretty: test --expand-tabs
The test prepares a simple commit with HT on its log message lines,
and makes sure that

 - formats that should or should not expand tabs by default do or do
   not expand tabs respectively,

 - with explicit --expand-tabs=<N> and short-hands --expand-tabs
   (equivalent to --expand-tabs=8) and --no-expand-tabs (equivalent
   to --expand-tabs=0) before or after the explicit --pretty=$fmt,
   the tabs are expanded (or not expanded) accordingly.

The tests use the second line of the log message for formats other
than --pretty=short, primarily because the first line of the email
format is handled specially to add the [PATCH] prefix, etc. in a
separate codepath (--pretty=short uses the first line because there
is no other line to test).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 23:31:13 -07:00
8e9b20804a Windows: shorten code by re-using convert_slashes()
Make a few more spots more readable by using the recently introduced,
Windows-specific helper.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 18:03:02 -07:00
b73a1bcc1a git-format-patch.txt: don't show -s as shorthand for multiple options
git-format-patch recognizes -s as shorthand only for --signoff, however,
its documentation shows -s as shorthand for both --signoff and
--no-patch. Resolve this confusion by suppressing the bogus -s shorthand
for --no-patch.

While here, also avoid showing the --no-patch option in git-format-patch
documentation since it doesn't make sense to ask to suppress the patch
while at the same time explicitly asking to format the patch (which,
after all, is the purpose of git-format-patch).

Reported-by: Kevin Brodsky <corax26@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 13:46:54 -07:00
70999e9cec branch -m: update all per-worktree HEADs
When renaming a branch, currently only the HEAD of current working tree
is updated, but it must update HEADs of all working trees which point at
the old branch.

This is the current behavior, /path/to/wt's HEAD is not updated:

  % git worktree list
  /path/to     2c3c5f2 [master]
  /path/to/wt  2c3c5f2 [oldname]
  % git branch -m master master2
  % git worktree list
  /path/to     2c3c5f2 [master2]
  /path/to/wt  2c3c5f2 [oldname]
  % git branch -m oldname newname
  % git worktree list
  /path/to     2c3c5f2 [master2]
  /path/to/wt  0000000 [oldname]

This patch fixes this issue by updating all relevant worktree HEADs
when renaming a branch.

Signed-off-by: Kazuki Yamaguchi <k@rhe.jp>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 12:57:22 -07:00
2233066e77 refs: add a new function set_worktree_head_symref
Add a new function set_worktree_head_symref, to update HEAD symref for
the specified worktree.

To update HEAD of a linked working tree,
create_symref("worktrees/$work_tree/HEAD", "refs/heads/$branch", msg)
could be used. However when it comes to updating HEAD of the main
working tree, it is unusable because it uses $GIT_DIR for
worktree-specific symrefs (HEAD).

The new function takes git_dir (real directory) as an argument, and
updates HEAD of the working tree. This function will be used when
renaming a branch.

Signed-off-by: Kazuki Yamaguchi <k@rhe.jp>
Acked-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 12:57:21 -07:00
450dd1dce1 t5520: test --[no-]autostash with pull.rebase=true
The "--[no-]autostash" options for git-pull are only valid in
rebase mode (i.e. either --rebase is used or pull.rebase=true).
Existing tests already check the cases when --rebase is used but
fail to check for pull.rebase=true case.

Add two new tests to check that the --[no-]autostash options work
with pull.rebase=true.

Signed-off-by: Mehul Jain <mehul.jain2029@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 11:15:02 -07:00
16622979f8 t5520: reduce commom lines of code
These two tests are almost similar and thus can be folded in a for-loop.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Mehul Jain <mehul.jain2029@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 11:15:01 -07:00
44a59fff45 t5520: factor out common "failing autostash" code
Three tests contains repetitive lines of code.

Factor out common code into test_pull_autostash_fail() and then call it in
these tests.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Mehul Jain <mehul.jain2029@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 11:14:58 -07:00
5c82bcddf4 t5520: factor out common "successful autostash" code
Four tests contains repetitive lines of code.

Factor out common code into test_pull_autostash() and then call it in
these tests.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Mehul Jain <mehul.jain2029@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 11:13:54 -07:00
6ddc97c7dc t5520: use better test to check stderr output
Checking stderr output using test_i18ncmp may lead to test failure as
some shells write trace output to stderr when run under 'set -x'.

Use test_i18ngrep instead of test_i18ncmp.

Signed-off-by: Mehul Jain <mehul.jain2029@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 11:07:58 -07:00
eff960b3af t5520: ensure consistent test conditions
Test title says that tests are done with rebase.autostash unset,
but does not take any action to make sure that it is indeed unset.
This may lead to test failure if future changes somehow pollutes
the configuration globally.

Ensure consistent test conditions by explicitly unsetting
rebase.autostash.

Signed-off-by: Mehul Jain <mehul.jain2029@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 11:07:33 -07:00
efa195d5b3 t5520: use consistent capitalization in test titles
Signed-off-by: Mehul Jain <mehul.jain2029@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 11:07:01 -07:00
35d62bbe3e mergetools: add support for ExamDiff
Signed-off-by: Jacob Nisnevich <jacob.nisnevich@gmail.com>
Acked-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 09:15:14 -07:00
e36d716751 mergetools: create mergetool_find_win32_cmd() helper function for winmerge
Signed-off-by: Jacob Nisnevich <jacob.nisnevich@gmail.com>
Acked-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-04 09:15:00 -07:00
6a269e52a5 First batch for post 2.8 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-03 10:55:36 -07:00
9494c396f3 Sync with Git 2.8.1 2016-04-03 10:54:38 -07:00
05bf1cdccd Merge branch 'jk/startup-info'
The startup_info data, which records if we are working inside a
repository (among other things), are now uniformly available to Git
subcommand implementations, and Git avoids attempting to touch
references when we are not in a repository.

* jk/startup-info:
  use setup_git_directory() in test-* programs
  grep: turn off gitlink detection for --no-index
  mailmap: do not resolve blobs in a non-repository
  remote: don't resolve HEAD in non-repository
  setup: set startup_info->have_repository more reliably
  setup: make startup_info available everywhere
2016-04-03 10:29:36 -07:00
7ce0bee4c4 Merge branch 'es/test-gpg-tags'
A test for tags has been restructured so that more parts of it can
easily be run on a platform without a working GnuPG.

* es/test-gpg-tags:
  t6302: skip only signed tags rather than all tests when GPG is missing
  t6302: also test annotated in addition to signed tags
  t6302: normalize names and descriptions of signed tags
  lib-gpg: drop unnecessary "missing GPG" warning
2016-04-03 10:29:35 -07:00
087f171f14 Merge branch 'jk/getwholeline-getdelim-empty'
strbuf_getwholeline() did not NUL-terminate the buffer on certain
corner cases in its error codepath.

* jk/getwholeline-getdelim-empty:
  strbuf_getwholeline: NUL-terminate getdelim buffer on error
2016-04-03 10:29:34 -07:00
aa3a2c2af6 Merge branch 'rj/xdiff-prepare-plug-leak-on-error-codepath'
A small memory leak in an error codepath has been plugged in xdiff
code.

* rj/xdiff-prepare-plug-leak-on-error-codepath:
  xdiff/xprepare: fix a memory leak
  xdiff/xprepare: use the XDF_DIFF_ALG() macro to access flag bits
2016-04-03 10:29:33 -07:00
3583bf594d Merge branch 'jc/index-pack'
Code clean-up.

* jc/index-pack:
  index-pack: add a helper function to derive .idx/.keep filename
2016-04-03 10:29:31 -07:00
9081cffd1e Merge branch 'gf/fetch-pack-direct-object-fetch'
Fetching of history by naming a commit object name directly didn't
work across remote-curl transport.

* gf/fetch-pack-direct-object-fetch:
  fetch-pack: update the documentation for "<refs>..." arguments
  fetch-pack: fix object_id of exact sha1
2016-04-03 10:29:29 -07:00
d4a22303ab Merge branch 'jc/maint-index-pack-keep'
"git index-pack --keep[=<msg>] pack-$name.pack" simply did not work.

* jc/maint-index-pack-keep:
  index-pack: correct --keep[=<msg>]
2016-04-03 10:29:29 -07:00
3b8c4b727f Merge branch 'mm/lockfile-error-message'
* mm/lockfile-error-message:
  lockfile: improve error message when lockfile exists
  lockfile: mark strings for translation
2016-04-03 10:29:27 -07:00
fbebb5cd07 Merge branch 'jk/rev-parse-local-env-vars'
The "--local-env-vars" and "--resolve-git-dir" options of "git
rev-parse" failed to work outside a repository when the command's
option parsing was rewritten in 1.8.5 era.

* jk/rev-parse-local-env-vars:
  rev-parse: let some options run outside repository
  t1515: add tests for rev-parse out-of-repo helpers
2016-04-03 10:29:27 -07:00
c832cef8aa Merge branch 'jk/config-get-urlmatch'
"git config --get-urlmatch", unlike other variants of the "git
config --get" family, did not signal error with its exit status
when there was no matching configuration.

* jk/config-get-urlmatch:
  Documentation/git-config: fix --get-all description
  Documentation/git-config: use bulleted list for exit codes
  config: fail if --get-urlmatch finds no value
2016-04-03 10:29:26 -07:00
2052c52d9a Merge branch 'jk/add-i-highlight'
* jk/add-i-highlight:
  add--interactive: allow custom diff highlighting programs
2016-04-03 10:29:25 -07:00
1b68962b29 Merge branch 'jk/credential-clear-config'
The credential.helper configuration variable is cumulative and
there is no good way to override it from the command line.  As
a special case, giving an empty string as its value now serves
as the signal to clear the values specified in various files.

* jk/credential-clear-config:
  credential: let empty credential specs reset helper list
2016-04-03 10:29:24 -07:00
e13de0bdd8 Merge branch 'mp/upload-pack-use-embedded-args'
The embedded args argv-array in the child process is used to build
the command line to run pack-objects instead of using a separate
array of strings.

* mp/upload-pack-use-embedded-args:
  upload-pack: use argv_array for pack_objects
2016-04-03 10:29:24 -07:00
5d2a30d7d8 Merge branch 'mm/diff-renames-default'
The end-user facing Porcelain level commands like "diff" and "log"
now enables the rename detection by default.

* mm/diff-renames-default:
  diff: activate diff.renames by default
  log: introduce init_log_defaults()
  t: add tests for diff.renames (true/false/unset)
  t4001-diff-rename: wrap file creations in a test
  Documentation/diff-config: fix description of diff.renames
2016-04-03 10:29:22 -07:00
f66a5bd923 Merge branch 'mm/readme-markdown'
Fix a few broken links in README.md and also teach rpmbuild
that there is no README.

* mm/readme-markdown:
  README.md: don't take 'commandname' literally
  git.spec.in: use README.md, not README
2016-04-03 10:27:22 -07:00
d95553a6b8 Git 2.8.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-03 10:14:12 -07:00
6e4de7fca3 Merge branch 'mm/readme-markdown' into maint
* 'mm/readme-markdown':
  git.spec.in: use README.md, not README
2016-04-03 10:13:09 -07:00
c9a014e38e README.md: don't take 'commandname' literally
The link to Documentation/git-commandname.txt was obviously broken.
Remove the link and make it clear that it is not a literal path name by
using *italics* in makdown.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-03 10:12:48 -07:00
c7089e0ee9 git.spec.in: use README.md, not README
The file was renamed in 4ad21f5 (README: use markdown syntax,
2016-02-25), but that commit forgot to update git.spec.in, which
caused the rpmbuild target in the Makefile to fail.

Reported-by: Ron Isaacson <isaacson.ljits@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-03 10:12:48 -07:00
d3c06c1969 ident: give "please tell me" message upon useConfigOnly error
The env_hint message applies perfectly to the case when
user.useConfigOnly is set and at least one of the user.name and the
user.email are not provided.

Additionally, use a less descriptive error message to discourage
users from disabling user.useConfigOnly configuration variable to
work around this error condition.  We want to encourage them to set
user.name or user.email instead.

Signed-off-by: Marios Titas <redneb@gmx.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-01 15:01:20 -07:00
734c7789aa ident: check for useConfigOnly before auto-detection of name/email
If user.useConfigOnly is set, it does not make sense to try to
auto-detect the name and/or the email.  The auto-detection may
even result in a bogus name and trigger an error message.

Check if the use-config-only is set and die if no explicit name was
given, before attempting to auto-detect, to correct this.

Signed-off-by: Marios Titas <redneb@gmx.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-01 14:57:55 -07:00
1f15ba1f3c submodule--helper, module_clone: catch fprintf failure
The return value of fprintf is unchecked, which may lead to
unreported errors. Use fprintf_or_die to report the error to the user.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-01 14:04:33 -07:00
1ea4d9b7c8 submodule--helper: do not borrow absolute_path() result for too long
absolute_path() is designed to allow its callers to take a brief
peek of the result (typically, to be fed to functions like
strbuf_add() and relative_path() as a parameter) without having to
worry about freeing it, but the other side of the coin of that
memory model is that the caller shouldn't rely too much on the
result living forever--there may be a helper function the caller
subsequently calls that makes its own call to absolute_path(),
invalidating the earlier result.

Use xstrdup() to make our own copy, and free(3) it when we are done.
While at it, remove an unnecessary sm_gitdir_rel variable that was
only used to as a parameter to call absolute_path() and never used
again.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-01 14:04:23 -07:00
f8eaa0ba98 submodule--helper, module_clone: always operate on absolute paths
When giving relative paths to `relative_path` to compute a relative path
from one directory to another, this may fail in `relative_path`.
Make sure both arguments to `relative_path` are always absolute.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-01 12:21:34 -07:00
9c60d9faab credential-cache, send_request: close fd when done
No need to keep it open any further.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-01 10:33:18 -07:00
f5ff5fb564 bundle: don't leak an fd in case of early return
In successful operation `write_pack_data` will close the `bundle_fd`,
but when we exit early, we need to take care of the file descriptor
as well as the lock file ourselves. The lock file may be deleted at the
end of running the program, but we are in library code, so we should
not rely on that.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-01 10:33:18 -07:00
6eb6078bf5 abbrev_sha1_in_line: don't leak memory
`split` is of type `struct strbuf **`, and currently we are leaking split
itself as well as each element in split[i]. We have a dedicated free
function for `struct strbuf **`, which takes care of freeing all
related memory.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-01 10:32:43 -07:00
344b548475 notes: don't leak memory in git_config_get_notes_strategy
This function asks for the value of a configuration and after
using the value does not have to retain ownership of it.
git_config_get_string_const() however is a function to get a
copy of the value, but we forget to free it before we return.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-01 10:31:42 -07:00
7a6a44c2dc builtin/apply: free patch when parse_chunk() fails
When parse_chunk() fails it can return -1, for example
when find_header() doesn't find a patch header.

In this case it's better in apply_patch() to free the
"struct patch" that we just allocated instead of
leaking it.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-01 10:21:55 -07:00
484e776158 builtin/apply: handle parse_binary() failure
In parse_binary() there is:

	forward = parse_binary_hunk(&buffer, &size, &status, &used);
	if (!forward && !status)
		/* there has to be one hunk (forward hunk) */
		return error(_("unrecognized binary patch at line %d"), linenr-1);

so parse_binary() can return -1, because that's what error() returns.

Also parse_binary_hunk() sets "status" to -1 in case of error and
parse_binary() does "if (status) return status;".

In this case parse_chunk() should not add -1 to the patchsize it computes.
It is better for future libification efforts to make it just return -1.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-01 10:21:19 -07:00
47d5d64879 submodule--helper clone: create the submodule path just once
We make sure that the parent directory of path exists (or create it
otherwise) and then do the same for path + "/.git".

That is equivalent to just making sure that the parent directory of
path + "/.git" exists (or create it otherwise).

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-31 15:19:55 -07:00
3c0663e166 submodule--helper: fix potential NULL-dereference
Don't dereference NULL 'path' if it was never assigned.  Also
protect against an empty --path argument.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-31 15:19:01 -07:00
3fea121df3 recursive submodules: test for relative paths
"git submodule update --init --recursive" uses full path to refer to
the true location of the repository in the "gitdir:" pointer for
nested submodules; the command used to use relative paths.

This was reported by Norio Nomura in $gmane/290280.

The root cause for that bug is in using recursive submodules as
their relative path handling was broken in ee8838d (2015-09-08,
submodule: rewrite `module_clone` shell function in C).

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-31 15:18:28 -07:00
c6777563cd git-send-pack: fix --all option when used with directory
When using git send-pack with --all option
and a target repository specification ([<host>:]<directory>),
usage message is being displayed instead of performing
the actual transmission.

The reason for this issue is that destination and refspecs are being set
in the same conditional and are populated from argv. When a target
repository is passed, refspecs is being populated as well with its value.
This makes the check for refspecs not being NULL to always return true,
which, in conjunction with the check for --all or --mirror options,
is always true as well and returns usage message instead of proceeding.

This ensures that send-pack will stop execution only when --all
or --mirror switch is used in conjunction with any refspecs passed.

Signed-off-by: Stanislav Kolotinskiy <stanislav@assembla.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-31 14:58:26 -07:00
8b5a3e9828 for-each-ref: fix description of '--contains' in manpage
'git for-each-ref's manpage says that '--contains' only lists tags,
but it lists all kinds of refs.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-30 13:58:21 -07:00
ca4e3ca029 diffcore: fix iteration order of identical files during rename detection
If the two paths 'dir/A/file' and 'dir/B/file' have identical content
and the parent directory is renamed, e.g. 'git mv dir other-dir', then
diffcore reports the following exact renames:

    renamed:    dir/B/file -> other-dir/A/file
    renamed:    dir/A/file -> other-dir/B/file

While technically not wrong, this is confusing not only for the user,
but also for git commands that make decisions based on rename
information, e.g. 'git log --follow other-dir/A/file' follows
'dir/B/file' past the rename.

This behavior is a side effect of commit v2.0.0-rc4~8^2~14
(diffcore-rename.c: simplify finding exact renames, 2013-11-14): the
hashmap storing sources returns entries from the same bucket, i.e.
sources matching the current destination, in LIFO order.  Thus the
iteration first examines 'other-dir/A/file' and 'dir/B/file' and, upon
finding identical content and basename, reports an exact rename.

Other hashmap users are apparently happy with the current iteration
order over the entries of a bucket.  Changing the iteration order
would risk upsetting other hashmap users and would increase the memory
footprint of each bucket by a pointer to the tail element.

Fill the hashmap with source entries in reverse order to restore the
original exact rename detection behavior.

Reported-by: Bill Okara <billokara@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-30 13:46:04 -07:00
2ab56603bf t7407: make expectation as clear as possible
Not everyone (including me) grasps the sed expression in a split second as
they would grasp the 4 lines printed as is.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-30 13:09:57 -07:00
c1e06d11c7 submodule update: test recursive path reporting from subdirectory
This patch is just a test and fixes no bug as there is currently no bug
in the path handling of `submodule update`.

In `submodule update` we make a call to `submodule--helper list --prefix
"$wt_prefix"` which looks a bit brittle and likely to introduce a bug
for the path handling. It is not a bug as the prefix is ignored inside
the submodule helper for now. If this test breaks eventually, we want
to make sure the `wt_prefix` is passed correctly into recursive submodules.
Hint: In recursive submodules we expect `wt_prefix` to be empty.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-30 13:09:48 -07:00
b08238ac3f submodule update: align reporting path for custom command execution
In the predefined actions (merge, rebase, none, checkout), we use
the display path, which is relative to the current working directory.
Also use the display path when running a custom command.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-30 13:09:36 -07:00
10450cf72b submodule status: correct path handling in recursive submodules
The new test which is a replica of the previous test except
that it executes from a sub directory. Prior to this patch
the test failed by having too many '../' prefixed:

  --- expect	2016-03-29 19:02:33.087336115 +0000
  +++ actual	2016-03-29 19:02:33.359343311 +0000
  @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
    b23f134787d96fae589a6b76da41f4db112fc8db ../nested1 (heads/master)
  -+25d56d1ddfb35c3e91ff7d8f12331c2e53147dcc ../nested1/nested2 (file2)
  - 5ec83512b76a0b8170b899f8e643913c3e9b72d9 ../nested1/nested2/nested3 (heads/master)
  - 509f622a4f36a3e472affcf28fa959174f3dd5b5 ../nested1/nested2/nested3/submodule (heads/master)
  ++25d56d1ddfb35c3e91ff7d8f12331c2e53147dcc ../../nested1/nested2 (file2)
  + 5ec83512b76a0b8170b899f8e643913c3e9b72d9 ../../../nested1/nested2/nested3 (heads/master)
  + 509f622a4f36a3e472affcf28fa959174f3dd5b5 ../../../../nested1/nested2/nested3/submodule (heads/master)
    0c90624ab7f1aaa301d3bb79f60dcfed1ec4897f ../sub1 (0c90624)
    0c90624ab7f1aaa301d3bb79f60dcfed1ec4897f ../sub2 (0c90624)
    509f622a4f36a3e472affcf28fa959174f3dd5b5 ../sub3 (heads/master)

The path code in question:
  displaypath=$(relative_path "$prefix$sm_path")
  prefix=$displaypath
  if recursive:
    eval cmd_status

That way we change `prefix` each iteration to contain another
'../', because of the the relative_path computation is done
on an already computed relative path.

We must call relative_path exactly once with `wt_prefix` non empty.
Further calls in recursive instances to to calculate the displaypath
already incorporate the correct prefix from before. Fix the issue by
clearing `wt_prefix` in recursive calls.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-30 13:07:23 -07:00
c1ab00fb26 submodule update --init: correct path handling in recursive submodules
When calling `git submodule init` from a recursive instance of
`git submodule update --recursive`, the reported path is wrong as it
skips the nested submodules.

The new test demonstrates a failure in the code prior to this patch.
Instead of getting the expected
    Submodule 'submodule' (${pwd}/submodule) registered for path '../super/submodule'
the `super` directory is omitted and you get
    Submodule 'submodule' (${pwd}/submodule) registered for path '../submodule'
instead.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-30 13:06:05 -07:00
ea2fa1040d submodule foreach: correct path display in recursive submodules
The `prefix` was put in front of the display path unconditionally.
This is wrong as any relative path computation would need to be at
the front, so include the prefix into the display path.

The new test replicates the previous test with the difference of executing
from a sub directory. By executing from a sub directory all we would
expect all displayed paths to be prefixed by '../'.

Prior to this patch the test would report
    Entering 'nested1/nested2/../nested3'
instead of the expected
    Entering '../nested1/nested2/nested3'

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-30 13:03:57 -07:00
fe37a9c586 pretty: allow tweaking tabwidth in --expand-tabs
When the local convention of the project is to use tab width that is
not 8, it may make sense to allow "git log --expand-tabs=<n>" to
tweak the output to match it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-30 12:52:26 -07:00
0893eec85f pretty: enable --expand-tabs by default for selected pretty formats
"git log --pretty={medium,full,fuller}" and "git log" by default
prepend 4 spaces to the log message, so it makes sense to enable
the new "expand-tabs" facility by default for these formats.
Add --no-expand-tabs option to override the new default.

The change alone breaks a test in t4201 that runs "git shortlog"
on the output from "git log", and expects that the output from
"git log" does not do such a tab expansion.  Adjust the test to
explicitly disable expand-tabs with --no-expand-tabs.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-30 12:39:29 -07:00
7cc13c717b pretty: expand tabs in indented logs to make things line up properly
A commit log message sometimes tries to line things up using tabs,
assuming fixed-width font with the standard 8-place tab settings.
Viewing such a commit however does not work well in "git log", as
we indent the lines by prefixing 4 spaces in front of them.

This should all line up:

  Column 1	Column 2
  --------	--------
  A		B
  ABCD		EFGH
  SPACES        Instead of Tabs

Even with multi-byte UTF8 characters:

  Column 1	Column 2
  --------	--------
  Ä		B
  åäö		100
  A Møøse	once bit my sister..

Tab-expand the lines in "git log --expand-tabs" output before
prefixing 4 spaces.

This is based on the patch by Linus Torvalds, but at this step, we
require an explicit command line option to enable the behaviour.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-30 11:25:35 -07:00
0ef60afdd4 MSVC: use shipped headers instead of fallback definitions
VS2010 comes with stdint.h [1]
VS2013 comes with inttypes.h [2]

[1] https://stackoverflow.com/a/2628014/3906760
[2] https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/vcblog/2013/07/19/c99-library-support-in-visual-studio-2013/

Signed-off-by: Sven Strickroth <sven@cs-ware.de>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Acked-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-30 11:16:20 -07:00
dae26d30f4 MSVC: vsnprintf in Visual Studio 2015 doesn't need SNPRINTF_SIZE_CORR any more
In MSVC2015 the behavior of vsnprintf was changed.
W/o this fix there is one character missing at the end.

Signed-off-by: Sven Strickroth <sven@cs-ware.de>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Acked-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-30 11:13:01 -07:00
30211fb68d Documentation: git diff --check detects conflict markers
Signed-off-by: Ori Avtalion <ori@avtalion.name>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-29 13:14:50 -07:00
f292244c04 branch -d: refuse deleting a branch which is currently checked out
When a branch is checked out by current working tree, deleting the
branch is forbidden. However when the branch is checked out only by
other working trees, deleting incorrectly succeeds.
Use find_shared_symref() to check if the branch is in use, not just
comparing with the current working tree's HEAD.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Kazuki Yamaguchi <k@rhe.jp>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-29 13:05:53 -07:00
ef2a0ac9a0 worktree: add: introduce --checkout option
By adding this option which defaults to true, we can use the
corresponding --no-checkout to make some customizations before
the checkout, like sparse checkout, etc.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Ray Zhang <zhanglei002@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-29 11:12:36 -07:00
90f7b16b3a Git 2.8
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-28 12:19:45 -07:00
14c793e8f4 rebase-i: print an abbreviated hash when stop for editing
The message that is shown when rebase-i stops for editing prints
the full hash of the commit where it stopped which makes the message
overflow to the next line on smaller terminal windows.  Print an
abbreviated hash instead.

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-28 10:49:40 -07:00
c3f6b853bf api-parse-options.txt: document OPT_CMDMODE()
OPT_CMDMODE mechanism was introduced in the release of 1.8.5 to actively
notice when multiple "operation mode" options that specify mutually
incompatible operation modes are given.

Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-25 13:17:43 -07:00
47caafddc3 Merge pull request #9 from vascool/fr
Fix inconsistencies
2016-03-25 17:11:20 +01:00
bb31072246 l10n: fr: don't translate "merge" as a parameter
At builtin/checkout.c:1154, merge is a parameter to --conflict=<style>
(git checkout --conflict=merge).

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
2016-03-25 14:04:58 -01:00
abf5795592 l10n: fr: change "id de clé" to match "id-clé"
At builtin/tag.c:23 French message translation, "<key-id>" was
translated to "<id-clé>", but at builtin/tag.c:355 "key-id" was
translated to "id de clé", hence an inconsistency in git tag -h output.

Translate "key-id" to "id-clé".
Alternatively, both places could use "id de clé" instead of "id-clé".

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
2016-03-25 14:04:58 -01:00
a0f3d92b52 l10n: fr: fix wrongly translated option name
In the original source, tags and heads refer to that options (--head and
--tags) for git show-ref.

Don't translate that terms, since they refer to actual option names.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
2016-03-25 14:04:58 -01:00
794b1d2ee1 l10n: fr: fix transcation of "dir"
"dir" was translated to the same string at builtin/log.c:1236,
but, also at that code line, "<dir>" was translate to "<répertoire>".

Before this commit, git format-patch -h would output "-o,
--output-directory <dir>" and <répertoire> in its description.

Use <répertoire> in both the parameter and description.

Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
2016-03-25 14:04:58 -01:00
4d10b7e1bc completion: add 'revisions' and 'everyday' to 'git help'
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-24 13:09:08 -07:00
716b29db91 completion: add option '--guides' to 'git help'
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-24 13:09:05 -07:00
56331f8727 Merge branch 'ls/p4-doc-markup'
* ls/p4-doc-markup:
  Documentation: fix git-p4 AsciiDoc formatting
  Documentation: use ASCII quotation marks in git-p4
2016-03-24 12:28:06 -07:00
269fe3aed4 Merge branch 'js/mingw-tests-2.8'
* js/mingw-tests-2.8:
  mingw: skip some tests in t9115 due to file name issues
  t1300: fix the new --show-origin tests on Windows
  t1300-repo-config: make it resilient to being run via 'sh -x'
  config --show-origin: report paths with forward slashes
2016-03-24 12:27:58 -07:00
2a4c8c36a7 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-module-list-pathspec-fix'
A fix for a small regression in "module_list" helper that was
rewritten in C (also applies to 2.7.x).

* sb/submodule-module-list-pathspec-fix:
  submodule: fix regression for deinit without submodules
2016-03-24 12:27:13 -07:00
3f5794493c apply: report patch skipping in verbose mode
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-24 10:18:31 -07:00
16a86d4329 git-apply.txt: mention the behavior inside a subdir
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-24 10:16:52 -07:00
d725fbde4f git-apply.txt: remove a space
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-24 10:16:50 -07:00
01d98e8a5d submodule-config: use hashmap_iter_first()
The hashmap API provides hashmap_iter_first() helper for initialion
and getting the first entry of a hashmap. Let's use it instead of
doing initialization manually and then get the first entry.

There are no functional changes, just cleanup.

Signed-off-by: Alexander Kuleshov <kuleshovmail@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-23 13:39:13 -07:00
7e4ba3686a Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: pt_PT: Update and add new translations
  l10n: ca.po: update translation
  l10n: vi.po (2530t): Update translation
2016-03-23 12:22:42 -07:00
e379fdf34f merge: refuse to create too cool a merge by default
While it makes sense to allow merging unrelated histories of two
projects that started independently into one, in the way "gitk" was
merged to "git" itself aka "the coolest merge ever", such a merge is
still an unusual event.	 Worse, if somebody creates an independent
history by starting from a tarball of an established project and
sends a pull request to the original project, "git merge" however
happily creates such a merge without any sign of something unusual
is happening.

Teach "git merge" to refuse to create such a merge by default,
unless the user passes a new "--allow-unrelated-histories" option to
tell it that the user is aware that two unrelated projects are
merged.

Because such a "two project merge" is a rare event, a configuration
option to always allow such a merge is not added.

We could add the same option to "git pull" and have it passed
through to underlying "git merge".  I do not have a fundamental
opposition against such a feature, but this commit does not do so
and instead leaves it as low-hanging fruit for others, because such
a "two project merge" would be done after fetching the other project
into some location in the working tree of an existing project and
making sure how well they fit together, it is sufficient to allow a
local merge without such an option pass-through from "git pull" to
"git merge".  Many tests that are updated by this patch does the
pass-through manually by turning:

	git pull something

into its equivalent:

	git fetch something &&
	git merge --allow-unrelated-histories FETCH_HEAD

If somebody is inclined to add such an option, updated tests in this
change need to be adjusted back to:

	git pull --allow-unrelated-histories something

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-23 12:04:48 -07:00
b84e65d409 merge: fix NULL pointer dereference when merging nothing into void
When we are on an unborn branch and merging only one foreign parent,
we allow "git merge" to fast-forward to that foreign parent commit.

This codepath incorrectly attempted to dereference the list of
parents that the merge is going to record even when the list is
empty.  It must refuse to operate instead when there is no parent.

All other codepaths make sure the list is not empty before they
dereference it, and are safe.

Reported-by: Jose Ivan B. Vilarouca Filho
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-23 10:12:10 -07:00
887523ebb8 Documentation: fix git-p4 AsciiDoc formatting
Noticed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-23 10:09:11 -07:00
d1f884986d git_config_push_parameter: handle empty GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS
The "git -c var=value" option stuffs the config value into
$GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS, so that sub-processes can see it.
When the config is later read via git_config() or similar,
we parse it back out of that variable.  The parsing end is a
little bit picky; it assumes that each entry was generated
with sq_quote_buf(), and that there is no extraneous
whitespace.

On the generating end, we are careful to append to an
existing $GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS variable if it exists.
However, our test for "should we add a space separator" is
too liberal: it will add one even if the environment
variable exists but is empty. As a result, you might end up
with:

   GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS=" 'core.foo=bar'"

which the parser will choke on.

This was hard to trigger in older versions of git, since we
only set the variable when we had something to put into it
(though you could certainly trigger it manually). But since
14111fc (git: submodule honor -c credential.* from command
line, 2016-02-29), the submodule code will unconditionally
put the $GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS variable into the environment
of any operation in the submodule, whether it is empty or
not. So any of those operations which themselves use "git
-c" will generate the unparseable value and fail.

We can easily fix it by catching this case on the generating
side. While we're adding a test, let's also check that
multiple layers of "git -c" work, which was previously not
tested at all.

Reported-by: Shin Fan <shinfan@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-23 10:04:58 -07:00
8257d3b458 mingw: skip some tests in t9115 due to file name issues
These two tests wanted to write file names which are incompatible with
Windows' file naming rules (even if they pass using Cygwin due to
Cygwin's magic path mangling).

While at it, skip the same tests also on MacOSX/HFS, as pointed out by
Torsten Bögershausen.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-23 10:03:37 -07:00
45bf32971c t1300: fix the new --show-origin tests on Windows
On Windows, we have that funny situation where the test script can refer
to POSIX paths because it runs in a shell that uses a POSIX emulation
layer ("MSYS2 runtime"). Yet, git.exe does *not* understand POSIX paths
at all but only pure Windows paths.

So let's just convert the POSIX paths to Windows paths before passing
them on to Git, using `pwd` (which is already modified on Windows to
output Windows paths).

While fixing the new tests on Windows, we also have to exclude the tests
that want to write a file with a name that is illegal on Windows
(unfortunately, there is more than one test trying to make use of that
file).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-23 10:02:46 -07:00
2ec20212c5 t1300-repo-config: make it resilient to being run via 'sh -x'
One way to diagnose broken regression tests is to run the test
script using 'sh -x t... -i -v' to find out which call actually
demonstrates the symptom.

Hence it is pretty counterproductive if the test script behaves
differently when being run via 'sh -x', in particular when using
test_cmp or test_i18ncmp on redirected stderr.  A more recent way
"sh tXXXX -i -v -x" has the same issue.

So let's use test_i18ngrep (as suggested by Jonathan Nieder) instead of
test_cmp/test_i18ncmp to verify that stderr looks as expected.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-23 09:59:21 -07:00
5ca6b7bb47 config --show-origin: report paths with forward slashes
On Windows, the backslash is the native directory separator, but all
supported Windows versions also accept the forward slash in most
circumstances.

Our tests expect forward slashes.

Relative paths are generated by Git using forward slashes.

So let's try to be consistent and use forward slashes in the $HOME part
of the paths reported by `git config --show-origin`, too.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-23 09:58:48 -07:00
103ee5c21e Merge branch 'master' of https://github.com/vnwildman/git
* 'master' of https://github.com/vnwildman/git:
  l10n: vi.po (2530t): Update translation
2016-03-23 23:01:51 +08:00
70749562fb Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/alexhenrie/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/alexhenrie/git-po:
  l10n: ca.po: update translation
2016-03-23 22:48:14 +08:00
84ba959bbd submodule: fix regression for deinit without submodules
Per Cederqvist wrote:
> It used to be possible to run
>
>    git submodule deinit -f .
>
> to remove any submodules, no matter how many submodules you had.  That
> is no longer possible in projects that don't have any submodules at
> all.  The command will fail with:
>
>     error: pathspec '.' did not match any file(s) known to git.

This regression was introduced in 74703a1e4d (submodule: rewrite
`module_list` shell function in C, 2015-09-02), as we changed the
order of checking in new module listing to first check whether it is
a gitlin before feeding it to match_pathspec().  It used to be that
a pathspec that does not match any path were diagnosed as an error,
but the new code complains for a pathspec that does not match any
submodule path.

Arguably the new behaviour may give us a better diagnosis, but that
is inconsistent with the suggestion "deinit" gives, and also this
was an unintended accident.  The new behaviour hopefully can be
redesigned and implemented better in future releases, but for now,
switch these two checks to restore the same behavior as before.  In
an empty repository, giving the pathspec '.' will still get the same
"did not match" error, but that is the same bug we had before 1.7.0.

Reported-by: Per Cederqvist <cederp@opera.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-22 19:26:43 -07:00
61c2fe0c29 tag: add the option to force signing of annotated tags
The `tag.forcesignannotated` configuration variable makes "git tag"
that would implicitly create an annotated tag to instead create a
signed tag.  For example

	$ git tag -m "This is a message" tag-with-message
	$ git tag -F message-file tag-with-message

would create a signed tag if the configuration variable is in
effect.  To override this from the command line, the user can
explicitly ask for an annotated tag, like so:

	$ git tag -a -m "This is a message" tag-with-message
	$ git tag -a -F message-file tag-with-message

Creation of a light-weight tag, i.e.

	$ git tag lightweight

is not affected.

Signed-off-by: Laurent Arnoud <laurent@spkdev.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-22 15:13:40 -07:00
db354b7f1b apply: remove unused call to free() in gitdiff_{old,new}name()
These two functions keep a copy of filename it was given, let
gitdiff_verify_name() to rewrite it to a new filename and then free
the original if they receive a newly minted filename.

However

 (1) when the original name is NULL, gitdiff_verify_name() returns
     either NULL or a newly minted value.  Either case, we do not
     have to worry about calling free() on the original NULL.

 (2) when the original name is not NULL, gitdiff_verify_name()
     either returns that as-is, or calls die() when it finds
     inconsistency in the patch.  When the function returns, we know
     that "if ()" statement always is false.

Noticed by Christian Couder.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-22 14:41:08 -07:00
fda3e2cf01 builtin/apply: get rid of useless 'name' variable
While at it put an 'else' on the same line as the previous '}'.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-22 14:21:07 -07:00
b3076a0920 l10n: pt_PT: Update and add new translations
Signed-off-by: Vasco Almeida <vascomalmeida@sapo.pt>
2016-03-22 16:23:56 -01:00
4ee278bb34 l10n: ca.po: update translation
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
2016-03-21 23:04:22 -06:00
b64c1e0718 commit: do not lose SQUASH_MSG contents
When concluding a conflicted "git merge --squash", the command
failed to read SQUASH_MSG that was prepared by "git merge", and
showed only the "# Conflicts:" list of conflicted paths.

Place the contents from SQUASH_MSG at the beginning, just like we
show the commit log skeleton first when concluding a normal merge,
and then show the "# Conflicts:" list, to help the user write the
log message for the resulting commit.

Test by Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>.

Signed-off-by: Sven Strickroth <sven@cs-ware.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-21 15:32:24 -07:00
808ecd4cca Git 2.8-rc4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-21 13:41:37 -07:00
fb238fb4ba Sync with maint
* maint:
  Documentation: fix broken linkgit to git-config
  git-compat-util: st_add4: work around gcc 4.2.x compiler crash
2016-03-21 13:32:42 -07:00
a0feb1b187 Merge branch 'mm/doc-hooks-linkgit-fix' into maint
* mm/doc-hooks-linkgit-fix:
  Documentation: fix broken linkgit to git-config
2016-03-21 13:32:18 -07:00
ad52148a7d Documentation: fix broken linkgit to git-config
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-21 13:31:57 -07:00
f66398eb57 pull --rebase: add --[no-]autostash flag
If rebase.autoStash configuration variable is set, there is no way to
override it for "git pull --rebase" from the command line.

Teach "git pull --rebase" the --[no-]autostash command line flag which
overrides the current value of rebase.autoStash, if set. As "git rebase"
understands the --[no-]autostash option, it's just a matter of passing
the option to underlying "git rebase" when "git pull --rebase" is called.

Helped-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Mehul Jain <mehul.jain2029@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-21 13:30:36 -07:00
c48d73bdec git-pull.c: introduce git_pull_config()
git-pull makes a seperate call to git_config_get_bool() to read the value
of "rebase.autostash". This can be reduced as a call to git_config() is
already there in the code.

Introduce a callback function git_pull_config() to read "rebase.autostash"
along with other variables.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Mehul Jain <mehul.jain2029@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-21 13:23:44 -07:00
c6a896b65e Documentation: use ASCII quotation marks in git-p4
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-21 11:14:24 -07:00
074677315c Merge branch 'tb/avoid-gcc-on-darwin-10-6'
* tb/avoid-gcc-on-darwin-10-6:
  Revert "config.mak.uname: use clang for Mac OS X 10.6"
2016-03-21 09:20:13 -07:00
c0ed7590ce Revert "config.mak.uname: use clang for Mac OS X 10.6"
This reverts commit 7b6daf8d2f.

Now that st_add4() has been patched to work around the gcc 4.2.x
compiler crash, revert the sledge-hammer approach of forcing Mac OS X
10.6 to unconditionally use 'clang' rather than the default compiler
(gcc).

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-21 09:20:02 -07:00
2ab5c88642 Merge branch 'es/st-add4-gcc-4.2-workaround' into maint
* es/st-add4-gcc-4.2-workaround:
  git-compat-util: st_add4: work around gcc 4.2.x compiler crash
2016-03-21 09:19:27 -07:00
d616fbf256 git-compat-util: st_add4: work around gcc 4.2.x compiler crash
Although changes by 5b442c4 (tree-diff: catch integer overflow in
combine_diff_path allocation, 2016-02-19) are perfectly valid, they
unfortunately trigger an internal compiler error in gcc 4.2.x:

    combine-diff.c: In function 'diff_tree_combined':
    combine-diff.c:1391: internal compiler error: Segmentation fault: 11

Experimentation reveals that changing st_add4()'s argument evaluation
order is sufficient to sidestep this problem.

Although st_add3() does not trigger the compiler bug, for style
consistency, change its argument evaluation order to match.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-21 09:18:07 -07:00
b552ff8c67 Merge tag 'l10n-2.8.0-rnd3' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
l10n-2.8.0-rnd3

* tag 'l10n-2.8.0-rnd3' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: zh_CN: review for git v2.8.0 l10n round 2
  l10n: de.po: add missing newlines
  l10n: de.po: translate 22 new messages
  l10n: ko.po: Update Korean translation
  l10n: fr.po v2.8.0 round 3
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2530t0f0u)
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
2016-03-20 18:06:05 -07:00
257000c617 Merge branch 'master' of git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk
* 'master' of git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk:
  gitk: Follow themed bgcolor in help dialogs
  gitk: fr.po: Sync translations with git
  gitk: Update French translation (311t)
  gitk: Update German translation
  gitk: Update Bulgarian translation (311t)
2016-03-20 18:05:10 -07:00
c2d674031f l10n: vi.po (2530t): Update translation
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2016-03-21 07:21:04 +07:00
26e4cbec45 l10n: zh_CN: review for git v2.8.0 l10n round 2
Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
2016-03-20 18:46:02 +08:00
22a713c72d gitk: Follow themed bgcolor in help dialogs
Make Help > About & Key bindings dialogs readable if theme
has changed font color to something incompatible with white.

Signed-off-by: Guillermo S. Romero <gsromero@infernal-iceberg.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2016-03-19 14:12:21 +11:00
ffbd0d77eb gitk: fr.po: Sync translations with git
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2016-03-19 14:08:52 +11:00
3782d70676 gitk: Update French translation (311t)
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2016-03-19 14:08:52 +11:00
fec7b51ec4 gitk: Update German translation
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2016-03-19 14:07:34 +11:00
37afa4010f gitk: Update Bulgarian translation (311t)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2016-03-19 14:06:37 +11:00
1fad5033ad t/lib-httpd: pass through GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM env
We set GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM in our test scripts so that we do
not accidentally read /etc/gitconfig and have it influence
the outcome of the tests. But when running smart-http tests,
Apache will clean the environment, including this variable,
and the "server" side of our http operations will read it.

You can see this breakage by doing something like:

  make
  ./git config --system http.getanyfile false
  make test

which will cause t5561 to fail when it tests the
fallback-to-dumb operation.

We can fix this by instructing Apache to pass through the
variable. Unlike with other variables (e.g., 89c57ab3's
GIT_TRACE), we don't need to set a dummy value to prevent
warnings from Apache. test-lib.sh already makes sure that
GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM is set and exported.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-18 15:37:58 -07:00
7d5e9c9849 credential-cache--daemon: clarify "exit" action semantics
When this code was originally written, there wasn't much
thought given to the timing between a client asking for
"exit", the daemon signaling that the action is done (with
EOF), and the actual cleanup of the socket.

However, we need to care about this so that our test scripts
do not end up racy (e.g., by asking for an exit and checking
that the socket was cleaned up). The code that is already
there happens to behave very reasonably; let's add a comment
to make it clear that any changes should retain the same
behavior.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-18 14:48:36 -07:00
a277d1efa3 send-email: ignore trailing whitespace in mailrc alias file
The regex for parsing mailrc considers everything after the
second whitespace to be the email address, up to the end of
the line. We have to include whitespace there, because you
may have multiple space-separated addresses, each with their
own internal quoting.

But if there is trailing whitespace, we include that, too.
This confuses quotewords() when we try to split the
individual addresses, and we end up storing "undef" in our
alias list. Later parts of the code then access that,
generating perl warnings.

Let's tweak our regex to throw away any trailing whitespace
on each line.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-18 14:47:10 -07:00
8172c421d2 t3404: cleanup double empty lines between tests
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-18 14:44:32 -07:00
78ec240020 rebase: decouple --exec from --interactive
In the later steps of preparing a patch series I do not want to
edit or reorder the patches any more, but just make sure the
test suite passes after each patch and also to fix breakage
right there if some of the steps fail.  I could run

    EDITOR=true git rebase -i <anchor> -x "make test"

but it would be simpler if it can be spelled like so:

    git rebase <anchor> -x "make test"

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-18 14:35:31 -07:00
047057bb41 RelNotes: remove the mention of !reinclusion
We will be postponing this to a later cycle.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-18 11:10:53 -07:00
5cee349370 Revert "Merge branch 'nd/exclusion-regression-fix'"
This reverts commit 5e57f9c3df, reversing
changes made to e79112d210.

We will be postponing nd/exclusion-regression-fix topic to later
cycle.
2016-03-18 11:06:15 -07:00
8ad3cb0869 Revert "Merge branch 'jc/exclusion-doc'"
This reverts commit e80aae51f2, reversing
changes made to 68846a92ea.

We will be postponing nd/exclusion-regression-fix topic to later
cycle.
2016-03-18 11:05:23 -07:00
44915db935 Sync with Git 2.7.4
* maint:
  Git 2.7.4
  Git 2.6.6
  Git 2.5.5
  Git 2.4.11
2016-03-17 12:54:17 -07:00
937978e0f3 Git 2.7.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-17 11:32:13 -07:00
29a382db05 l10n: de.po: add missing newlines
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2016-03-17 19:31:33 +01:00
8e9cc5f3e2 Sync with Git 2.6.6
* maint-2.6:
  Git 2.6.6
  Git 2.5.5
  Git 2.4.11
2016-03-17 11:28:52 -07:00
e46579643d Git 2.6.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-17 11:26:41 -07:00
ce4d4e763c Merge branch 'maint-2.5' into maint-2.6
* maint-2.5:
  Git 2.5.5
  Git 2.4.11
  list-objects: pass full pathname to callbacks
  list-objects: drop name_path entirely
  list-objects: convert name_path to a strbuf
  show_object_with_name: simplify by using path_name()
  http-push: stop using name_path
  tree-diff: catch integer overflow in combine_diff_path allocation
  add helpers for detecting size_t overflow
2016-03-17 11:26:18 -07:00
e568e563ad Git 2.5.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-17 11:24:59 -07:00
c638f3e4d5 Merge branch 'maint-2.4' into maint-2.5
* maint-2.4:
  Git 2.4.11
  list-objects: pass full pathname to callbacks
  list-objects: drop name_path entirely
  list-objects: convert name_path to a strbuf
  show_object_with_name: simplify by using path_name()
  http-push: stop using name_path
  tree-diff: catch integer overflow in combine_diff_path allocation
  add helpers for detecting size_t overflow
2016-03-17 11:24:14 -07:00
765428699a Git 2.4.11
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-17 11:23:05 -07:00
32c6dca8c4 Merge branch 'jk/path-name-safety-2.4' into maint-2.4
Bugfix patches were backported from the 'master' front to plug heap
corruption holes, to catch integer overflow in the computation of
pathname lengths, and to get rid of the name_path API.  Both of
these would have resulted in writing over an under-allocated buffer
when formulating pathnames while tree traversal.

* jk/path-name-safety-2.4:
  list-objects: pass full pathname to callbacks
  list-objects: drop name_path entirely
  list-objects: convert name_path to a strbuf
  show_object_with_name: simplify by using path_name()
  http-push: stop using name_path
  tree-diff: catch integer overflow in combine_diff_path allocation
  add helpers for detecting size_t overflow
2016-03-17 11:22:24 -07:00
603b3ac355 l10n: de.po: translate 22 new messages
Translate 22 new messages came from git.pot update in f1522b2
(l10n: git.pot: v2.8.0 round 2 (21 new, 1 removed)) and a5a4168
(l10n: git.pot: Add one new message for Git 2.8.0).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthias Rüster <matthias.ruester@gmail.com>
2016-03-17 18:57:34 +01:00
d9c691a759 Git 2.8-rc3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-16 14:13:37 -07:00
a0e305c236 Merge branch 'master' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn
* 'master' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn:
  git-svn: fix URL canonicalization during init w/ SVN 1.7+
  t9117: test specifying full url to git svn init -T
2016-03-16 14:13:25 -07:00
3f97853a4d Sync with maint
* maint:
  list-objects: pass full pathname to callbacks
  list-objects: drop name_path entirely
  list-objects: convert name_path to a strbuf
  show_object_with_name: simplify by using path_name()
  http-push: stop using name_path
  tree-diff: catch integer overflow in combine_diff_path allocation
  add helpers for detecting size_t overflow
2016-03-16 13:17:38 -07:00
2df13639e7 Merge branch 'jc/sane-grep'
Recent versions of GNU grep is pickier than before to decide if a
file is "binary" and refuse to give line-oriented hits when we
expect it to, unless explicitly told with "-a" option.  As our
scripted Porcelains use sane_grep wrapper for line-oriented data,
even when the line may contain non-ASCII payload we took from
end-user data, use "grep -a" to implement sane_grep wrapper when
using an implementation of "grep" that takes the "-a" option.

* jc/sane-grep:
  rebase-i: clarify "is this commit relevant?" test
  sane_grep: pass "-a" if grep accepts it
2016-03-16 13:16:54 -07:00
9e689802e3 Merge branch 'cn/deprecate-ssh-git-url'
The two alternative ways to spell "ssh://" transport have been
deprecated for a long time.  The last mention of them has finally
removed from the documentation.

* cn/deprecate-ssh-git-url:
  Disown ssh+git and git+ssh
2016-03-16 13:16:40 -07:00
b557165311 git-svn: fix URL canonicalization during init w/ SVN 1.7+
URL canonicalization when full URLs are passed became broken
when using SVN::_Core::svn_dirent_canonicalize under SVN 1.7.

Ensure we canonicalize paths and URLs with appropriate functions
for each type from now on as the path/URL-agnostic
SVN::_Core::svn_path_canonicalize function is deprecated in SVN.

Tested with the following commands:

  git svn init -T svn://svn.code.sf.net/p/squirrelmail/code/trunk
  git svn init -b svn://svn.code.sf.net/p/squirrelmail/code/branches

Reported-by: Adam Dinwoodie <adam@dinwoodie.org>
  http://mid.gmane.org/20160315162344.GM29016@dinwoodie.org
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2016-03-16 20:16:23 +00:00
d79db92483 Merge branch 'jk/path-name-safety-2.7' into maint
* jk/path-name-safety-2.7:
  list-objects: pass full pathname to callbacks
  list-objects: drop name_path entirely
  list-objects: convert name_path to a strbuf
  show_object_with_name: simplify by using path_name()
  http-push: stop using name_path
  tree-diff: catch integer overflow in combine_diff_path allocation
  add helpers for detecting size_t overflow
2016-03-16 13:15:04 -07:00
4be4d55063 t9117: test specifying full url to git svn init -T
According to the documentation, full URLs can be specified in the `-T`
argument to `git svn init`.  However, the canonicalization of such
arguments squashes together consecutive "/"s, which unsurprisingly
breaks http://, svn://, etc URLs.  Add a failing test case to provide
evidence of that.

On systems where Subversion provides svn_path_canonicalize but not
svn_dirent_canonicalize (Subversion 1.6 and earlier?), this test passes,
as svn_path_canonicalize doesn't mangle the consecutive "/"s.

[ew: fixed whitespace]

Signed-off-by: Adam Dinwoodie <adam@dinwoodie.org>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2016-03-16 19:24:37 +00:00
55c45a7325 Merge branch 'jk/path-name-safety-2.6' into jk/path-name-safety-2.7
* jk/path-name-safety-2.6:
  list-objects: pass full pathname to callbacks
  list-objects: drop name_path entirely
  list-objects: convert name_path to a strbuf
  show_object_with_name: simplify by using path_name()
  http-push: stop using name_path
  tree-diff: catch integer overflow in combine_diff_path allocation
  add helpers for detecting size_t overflow
2016-03-16 10:42:32 -07:00
717e3551b9 Merge branch 'jk/path-name-safety-2.5' into jk/path-name-safety-2.6
* jk/path-name-safety-2.5:
  list-objects: pass full pathname to callbacks
  list-objects: drop name_path entirely
  list-objects: convert name_path to a strbuf
  show_object_with_name: simplify by using path_name()
  http-push: stop using name_path
  tree-diff: catch integer overflow in combine_diff_path allocation
  add helpers for detecting size_t overflow
2016-03-16 10:42:02 -07:00
253ce7a15c Merge branch 'jk/path-name-safety-2.4' into jk/path-name-safety-2.5
* jk/path-name-safety-2.4:
  list-objects: pass full pathname to callbacks
  list-objects: drop name_path entirely
  list-objects: convert name_path to a strbuf
  show_object_with_name: simplify by using path_name()
  http-push: stop using name_path
  tree-diff: catch integer overflow in combine_diff_path allocation
  add helpers for detecting size_t overflow
2016-03-16 10:41:43 -07:00
2824e1841b list-objects: pass full pathname to callbacks
When we find a blob at "a/b/c", we currently pass this to
our show_object_fn callbacks as two components: "a/b/" and
"c". Callbacks which want the full value then call
path_name(), which concatenates the two. But this is an
inefficient interface; the path is a strbuf, and we could
simply append "c" to it temporarily, then roll back the
length, without creating a new copy.

So we could improve this by teaching the callsites of
path_name() this trick (and there are only 3). But we can
also notice that no callback actually cares about the
broken-down representation, and simply pass each callback
the full path "a/b/c" as a string. The callback code becomes
even simpler, then, as we do not have to worry about freeing
an allocated buffer, nor rolling back our modification to
the strbuf.

This is theoretically less efficient, as some callbacks
would not bother to format the final path component. But in
practice this is not measurable. Since we use the same
strbuf over and over, our work to grow it is amortized, and
we really only pay to memcpy a few bytes.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-16 10:41:04 -07:00
dc06dc8800 list-objects: drop name_path entirely
In the previous commit, we left name_path as a thin wrapper
around a strbuf. This patch drops it entirely. As a result,
every show_object_fn callback needs to be adjusted. However,
none of their code needs to be changed at all, because the
only use was to pass it to path_name(), which now handles
the bare strbuf.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-16 10:41:03 -07:00
f3badaed51 list-objects: convert name_path to a strbuf
The "struct name_path" data is examined in only two places:
we generate it in process_tree(), and we convert it to a
single string in path_name(). Everyone else just passes it
through to those functions.

We can further note that process_tree() already keeps a
single strbuf with the leading tree path, for use with
tree_entry_interesting().

Instead of building a separate name_path linked list, let's
just use the one we already build in "base". This reduces
the amount of code (especially tricky code in path_name()
which did not check for integer overflows caused by deep
or large pathnames).

It is also more efficient in some instances.  Any time we
were using tree_entry_interesting, we were building up the
strbuf anyway, so this is an immediate and obvious win
there. In cases where we were not, we trade off storing
"pathname/" in a strbuf on the heap for each level of the
path, instead of two pointers and an int on the stack (with
one pointer into the tree object). On a 64-bit system, the
latter is 20 bytes; so if path components are less than that
on average, this has lower peak memory usage.  In practice
it probably doesn't matter either way; we are already
holding in memory all of the tree objects leading up to each
pathname, and for normal-depth pathnames, we are only
talking about hundreds of bytes.

This patch leaves "struct name_path" as a thin wrapper
around the strbuf, to avoid disrupting callbacks. We should
fix them, but leaving it out makes this diff easier to view.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-16 10:41:03 -07:00
8eee9f9277 show_object_with_name: simplify by using path_name()
When "git rev-list" shows an object with its associated path
name, it does so by walking the name_path linked list and
printing each component (stopping at any embedded NULs or
newlines).

We'd like to eventually get rid of name_path entirely in
favor of a single buffer, and dropping this custom printing
code is part of that. As a first step, let's use path_name()
to format the list into a single buffer, and print that.
This is strictly less efficient than the original, but it's
a temporary step in the refactoring; our end game will be to
get the fully formatted name in the first place.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-16 10:41:03 -07:00
935de81289 add helpers for detecting size_t overflow
Performing computations on size_t variables that we feed to
xmalloc and friends can be dangerous, as an integer overflow
can cause us to allocate a much smaller chunk than we
realized.

We already have unsigned_add_overflows(), but let's add
unsigned_mult_overflows() to that. Furthermore, rather than
have each site manually check and die on overflow, we can
provide some helpers that will:

  - promote the arguments to size_t, so that we know we are
    doing our computation in the same size of integer that
    will ultimately be fed to xmalloc

  - check and die on overflow

  - return the result so that computations can be done in
    the parameter list of xmalloc.

These functions are a lot uglier to use than normal
arithmetic operators (you have to do "st_add(foo, bar)"
instead of "foo + bar"). To at least limit the damage, we
also provide multi-valued versions. So rather than:

  st_add(st_add(a, b), st_add(c, d));

you can write:

  st_add4(a, b, c, d);

This isn't nearly as elegant as a varargs function, but it's
a lot harder to get it wrong. You don't have to remember to
add a sentinel value at the end, and the compiler will
complain if you get the number of arguments wrong. This
patch adds only the numbered variants required to convert
the current code base; we can easily add more later if
needed.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-16 10:41:02 -07:00
c6bd2a1dec http-push: stop using name_path
The graph traversal code here passes along a name_path to
build up the pathname at which we find each blob. But we
never actually do anything with the resulting names, making
it a waste of code and memory.

This usage came in aa1dbc9 (Update http-push functionality,
2006-03-07), and originally the result was passed to
"add_object" (which stored it, but didn't really use it,
either). But we stopped using that function in 1f1e895 (Add
"named object array" concept, 2006-06-19) in favor of
storing just the objects themselves.

Moreover, the generation of the name in process_tree() is
buggy. It sticks "name" onto the end of the name_path linked
list, and then passes it down again as it recurses (instead
of "entry.path"). So it's a good thing this was unused, as
the resulting path for "a/b/c/d" would end up as "a/a/a/a".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-16 10:41:02 -07:00
d770187872 tree-diff: catch integer overflow in combine_diff_path allocation
A combine_diff_path struct has two "flex" members allocated
alongside the struct: a string to hold the pathname, and an
array of parent pointers. We use an "int" to compute this,
meaning we may easily overflow it if the pathname is
extremely long.

We can fix this by using size_t, and checking for overflow
with the st_add helper.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-16 10:41:02 -07:00
8fbb03a180 clone tests: rename t57* => t56*
When trying to find a good spot for testing clone with submodules, I
got confused where to add a new test file. There are both tests in t560*
as well as t57* both testing the clone command. t/README claims the
second digit is to indicate the command, which is inconsistent to the
current naming structure.

Rename all t57* tests to be in t56* to follow the pattern of the digits
as laid out in t/README.

It would have been less work to rename t56* => t57* because there are less
files, but the tests in t56* look more basic and I assumed the higher the
last digits the more complicated niche details are tested, so with the patch
now it looks more in order to me.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-16 09:41:07 -07:00
dcb941ee47 Merge branch 'fr_v2.8.0_r3' of git://github.com/jnavila/git
* 'fr_v2.8.0_r3' of git://github.com/jnavila/git:
  l10n: fr.po v2.8.0 round 3
2016-03-17 00:11:54 +08:00
13857b23e2 Merge branch 'ko/merge-l10n' of https://github.com/changwoo/git-l10n-ko
* 'ko/merge-l10n' of https://github.com/changwoo/git-l10n-ko:
  l10n: ko.po: Update Korean translation
2016-03-17 00:11:13 +08:00
6821537c25 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 (2530t0f0u)
2016-03-17 00:10:23 +08:00
0cb61997a4 l10n: ko.po: Update Korean translation
Signed-off-by: Changwoo Ryu <cwryu@debian.org>
2016-03-16 10:33:12 +09:00
629716d256 rerere: do use multiple variants
This enables the multiple-variant support for real.  Multiple
conflicts of the same shape can have differences in contexts where
they appear, interfering the replaying of recorded resolution of one
conflict to another, and in such a case, their resolutions are
recorded as different variants under the same conflict ID.

We still need to adjust garbage collection codepaths for this
change, but the basic "replay" functionality is functional with
this change.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-15 15:32:40 -07:00
82efa6e27e t4200: rerere a merge with two identical conflicts
When the context of multiple identical conflicts are different, two
seemingly the same conflict resolution cannot be safely applied.

In such a case, at least we should be able to record these two
resolutions separately in the rerere database, and reuse them when
we see the same conflict later.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-15 15:32:19 -07:00
a13d13700b rerere: allow multiple variants to exist
The shape of the conflict in a path determines the conflict ID.  The
preimage and postimage pair that was recorded for the conflict ID
previously may or may not replay well for the conflict we just saw.

Currently, we punt when the previous resolution does not cleanly
replay, but ideally we should then be able to record the currently
conflicted path by assigning a new 'variant', and then record the
resolution the user is going to make.

Introduce a mechanism to have more than one variant for a given
conflict ID; we do not actually assign any variant other than 0th
variant yet at this step.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-15 15:30:58 -07:00
c0a5423b6f rerere: delay the recording of preimage
We record the preimage only when there is no directory to record the
conflict we encountered, i.e. when $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID does not
exist.  As the plan is to allow multiple <preimage,postimage> pairs
as variants for the same conflict ID eventually, this logic needs to
go.

As the first step in that direction, stop the "did we create the
directory?  Then we record the preimage" logic.  Instead, we record
if a preimage does not exist when we saw a conflict in a path.  Also
make sure that we remove a stale postimage, which most likely is
totally unrelated to the resolution of this new conflict, when we
create a new preimage under $ID when $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID already
exists.

In later patches, we will further update this logic to be "do we
have <preimage,postimage> pair that cleanly resolve the current
conflicts?  If not, record a new preimage as a new variant", but
that does not happen at this stage yet.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-15 15:29:54 -07:00
05dd9f139d rerere: handle leftover rr-cache/$ID directory and postimage files
If by some accident there is only $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID directory
existed, we wouldn't have recorded a preimage for a conflict that
is newly encountered, which would mean after a manual resolution,
we wouldn't have recorded it by storing the postimage, because the
logic used to be "if there is no rr-cache/$ID directory, then we are
the first so record the preimage".  Instead, record preimage if we
do not have one.

In addition, if there is only $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID/postimage
without corresponding preimage, we would have tried to call into
merge() and punted.

These would have been a situation frustratingly hard to recover
from.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-15 15:29:30 -07:00
23508cbbc2 l10n: fr.po v2.8.0 round 3
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2016-03-15 23:01:59 +01:00
aaa89ad442 l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2530t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2016-03-15 22:37:55 +01:00
da0e97de21 l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
Signed-off-by: Dimitriy Ryazantcev <dimitriy.ryazantcev@gmail.com>
2016-03-15 20:55:36 +02:00
10d08a149d git-p4: map a P4 user to Git author name and email address
Map a P4 user to a specific name and email address in Git with the
"git-p4.mapUser" config. The config value must be a string adhering
to the format "p4user = First Lastname <email@address.com>".

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-15 11:45:13 -07:00
c2c5f6b1e4 RelNotes for 2.8.0: typofix
Helped-by: Max Horn
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-15 10:58:59 -07:00
a7206ba7f3 Merge branch 'svn-glob' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn
* 'svn-glob' of git://bogomips.org/git-svn:
  git-svn: shorten glob error message
  git-svn: loosen config globs limitations
2016-03-15 10:32:20 -07:00
e7c1132c0f Merge tag 'l10n-2.8.0-rnd2' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
l10n-2.8.0-rnd2

* tag 'l10n-2.8.0-rnd2' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po: (22 commits)
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.8.0 l10n round 3
  l10n: git.pot: Add one new message for Git 2.8.0
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.8.0 l10n round 2
  l10n: fr.po v2.8.0 round 2
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
  l10n: ko: Update Korean translation
  l10n: git.pot: v2.8.0 round 2 (21 new, 1 removed)
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.8.0 l10n round 1
  l10n: de.po: translate 48 new messages
  l10n: de.po: translate "command" as "Befehl"
  l10n: de.po: fix interactive rebase message
  l10n: de.po: add space to abbreviation "z. B."
  l10n: de.po: fix typo
  l10n: TEAMS: update Ralf Thielow's email address
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2509t0f0u)
  l10n: sv.po: Fix inconsistent translation of "progress meter"
  l10n: ko.po: Update Korean translation
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
  l10n: vi.po (2509t): Updated Vietnamese translation
  l10n: fr.po v2.8.0 round 1 2509t
  ...
2016-03-15 10:13:15 -07:00
5c0c220c53 l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.8.0 l10n round 3
Update 1 new translations (2530t0f0u) for git v2.8.0-rc2.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2016-03-16 00:27:40 +08:00
a5a41683dc l10n: git.pot: Add one new message for Git 2.8.0
Add one new message came from this commit:

* df22724 wt-status: allow "ahead " to be picked up by l10n

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2016-03-16 00:20:14 +08:00
531f756a36 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.8.0 l10n round 2
  l10n: fr.po v2.8.0 round 2
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
  l10n: ko: Update Korean translation
  l10n: git.pot: v2.8.0 round 2 (21 new, 1 removed)
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.8.0 l10n round 1
  l10n: de.po: translate 48 new messages
  l10n: de.po: translate "command" as "Befehl"
  l10n: de.po: fix interactive rebase message
  l10n: de.po: add space to abbreviation "z. B."
  l10n: de.po: fix typo
  l10n: TEAMS: update Ralf Thielow's email address
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2509t0f0u)
  l10n: sv.po: Fix inconsistent translation of "progress meter"
  l10n: ko.po: Update Korean translation
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
  l10n: vi.po (2509t): Updated Vietnamese translation
  l10n: fr.po v2.8.0 round 1 2509t
  l10n: fr.po: Correct case in sentence
  l10n: git.pot: v2.8.0 round 1 (48 new, 16 removed)
2016-03-16 00:15:59 +08:00
3495628d4b l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.8.0 l10n round 2
Update 21 new translations (2529t0f0u) for git v2.8.0-rc2.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2016-03-16 00:07:06 +08:00
62335bbbc7 git-svn: shorten glob error message
Error messages should attempt to fit within the confines of
an 80-column terminal to avoid compatibility and accessibility
problems.  Furthermore the word "directories" can be misleading
when used in the context of git refnames.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2016-03-15 01:35:39 +00:00
e4e5dd94e6 git-svn: loosen config globs limitations
Expand the area of globs applicability for branches and tags
in git-svn. It is now possible to use globs like 'a*e', or 'release_*'.
This allows users to avoid long lines in config like:

	branches = branches/{release_20,release_21,release_22,...}

In favor of:

	branches = branches/release_*

[ew: amended commit message, minor formatting and style fixes]

Signed-off-by: Victor Leschuk <vleschuk@accesssoftek.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2016-03-15 01:35:38 +00:00
7a2c7e58dc l10n: fr.po v2.8.0 round 2
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2016-03-14 20:29:04 +01:00
db6696f653 Merge branch 'mg/wt-status-mismarked-i18n'
* mg/wt-status-mismarked-i18n:
  wt-status: allow "ahead " to be picked up by l10n
2016-03-14 10:46:17 -07:00
df227241dd wt-status: allow "ahead " to be picked up by l10n
The extra pair of parentheses keeps the l10n engine from picking up the
string. Remove them so that "ahead " ends up in git.pot.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-14 10:45:04 -07:00
a08823768e Merge branch 'russian-l10n' of https://github.com/DJm00n/git-po-ru
* 'russian-l10n' of https://github.com/DJm00n/git-po-ru:
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
2016-03-13 21:41:46 +08:00
f3aeef1170 l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
Signed-off-by: Dimitriy Ryazantcev <dimitriy.ryazantcev@gmail.com>
2016-03-13 02:07:09 +02:00
03ac0e5fff l10n: ko: Update Korean translation
Signed-off-by: Changwoo Ryu <cwryu@debian.org>
2016-03-13 02:32:52 +09:00
f1522b2770 l10n: git.pot: v2.8.0 round 2 (21 new, 1 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.8.0-rc2 for git v2.8.0 l10n round 2.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2016-03-12 22:05:35 +08:00
7174c116bb Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.8.0 l10n round 1
  l10n: de.po: translate 48 new messages
  l10n: de.po: translate "command" as "Befehl"
  l10n: de.po: fix interactive rebase message
  l10n: de.po: add space to abbreviation "z. B."
  l10n: de.po: fix typo
  l10n: TEAMS: update Ralf Thielow's email address
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2509t0f0u)
  l10n: sv.po: Fix inconsistent translation of "progress meter"
  l10n: ko.po: Update Korean translation
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
  l10n: vi.po (2509t): Updated Vietnamese translation
  l10n: fr.po v2.8.0 round 1 2509t
  l10n: fr.po: Correct case in sentence
  l10n: git.pot: v2.8.0 round 1 (48 new, 16 removed)
2016-03-12 22:04:39 +08:00
276ceeaa49 l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.8.0 l10n round 1
Update 48 new translations (2509t0f0u) for git v2.8.0-rc0.

Reviewed-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>

l10n: zh_CN: review for git v2.8.0 l10n round 1
2016-03-12 22:00:34 +08:00
274db840b4 verify_repository_format: mark messages for translation
These messages are human-readable and should be translated.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-11 15:02:24 -08:00
c90e5293d1 setup: drop repository_format_version global
Nobody reads this anymore, and they're not likely to; the
interesting thing is whether or not we passed
check_repository_format(), and possibly the individual
"extension" variables.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-11 15:02:24 -08:00
652f18ee87 setup: unify repository version callbacks
Once upon a time, check_repository_format_gently would parse
the config with a single callback, and that callback would
set up a bunch of global variables. But now that we have
separate workdirs, we have to be more careful. Commit
31e26eb (setup.c: support multi-checkout repo setup,
2014-11-30) introduced a reduced callback which omits some
values like core.worktree. In the "main" callback we call
the reduced one, and then add back in the missing variables.

Now that we have split the config-parsing from the munging
of the global variables, we can do it all with a single
callback, and keep all of the "are we in a separate workdir"
logic together.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-11 15:02:23 -08:00
94ce167249 init: use setup.c's repo version verification
We check our templates to make sure they are from a
version of git we understand (otherwise we would init a
repository we cannot ourselves run in!). But our simple
integer check has fallen behind the times. Let's use the
helpers that setup.c provides to do it right.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-11 15:02:23 -08:00
2cc7c2c737 setup: refactor repo format reading and verification
When we want to know if we're in a git repository of
reasonable vintage, we can call check_repository_format_gently(),
which does three things:

  1. Reads the config from the .git/config file.

  2. Verifies that the version info we read is sane.

  3. Writes some global variables based on this.

There are a few things we could improve here.

One is that steps 1 and 3 happen together. So if the
verification in step 2 fails, we still clobber the global
variables. This is especially bad if we go on to try another
repository directory; we may end up with a state of mixed
config variables.

The second is there's no way to ask about the repository
version for anything besides the main repository we're in.
git-init wants to do this, and it's possible that we would
want to start doing so for submodules (e.g., to find out
which ref backend they're using).

We can improve both by splitting the first two steps into
separate functions. Now check_repository_format_gently()
calls out to steps 1 and 2, and does 3 only if step 2
succeeds.

Note that the public interface for read_repository_format()
and what check_repository_format_gently() needs from it are
not quite the same, leading us to have an extra
read_repository_format_1() helper. The extra needs from
check_repository_format_gently() will go away in a future
patch, and we can simplify this then to just the public
interface.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-11 15:02:23 -08:00
801818680a config: drop git_config_early
There are no more callers, and it's a rather confusing
interface. This could just be folded into
git_config_with_options(), but for the sake of readability,
we'll leave it as a separate (static) helper function.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-11 15:02:23 -08:00
21627f9b6d check_repository_format_gently: stop using git_config_early
There's a chicken-and-egg problem with using the regular
git_config during the repository setup process. We get
around it here by using a special interface that lets us
specify the per-repo config, and avoid calling
git_pathdup().

But this interface doesn't actually make sense. It will look
in the system and per-user config, too; we definitely would
not want to accept a core.repositoryformatversion from
there.

The git_config_from_file interface is a better match, as it
lets us look at a single file.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-11 15:02:22 -08:00
ae5f67763b lazily load core.sharedrepository
The "shared_repository" config is loaded as part of
check_repository_format_version, but it's not quite like the
other values we check there. Something like
core.repositoryformatversion only makes sense in per-repo
config, but core.sharedrepository can be set in a per-user
config (e.g., to make all "git init" invocations shared by
default).

So it would make more sense as part of git_default_config.
Commit 457f06d (Introduce core.sharedrepository, 2005-12-22)
says:

  [...]the config variable is set in the function which
  checks the repository format. If this were done in
  git_default_config instead, a lot of programs would need
  to be modified to call git_config(git_default_config)
  first.

This is still the case today, but we have one extra trick up
our sleeve. Now that we have the git_configset
infrastructure, it's not so expensive for us to ask for a
single value. So we can simply lazy-load it on demand.

This should be OK to do in general. There are some problems
with loading config before setup_git_directory() is called,
but we shouldn't be accessing the value before then (if we
were, then it would already be broken, as the variable would
not have been set by check_repository_format_version!). The
trickiest caller is git-init, but it handles the values
manually itself.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-11 15:02:19 -08:00
7875acb6ec wrap shared_repository global in get/set accessors
It would be useful to control access to the global
shared_repository, so that we can lazily load its config.
The first step to doing so is to make sure all access
goes through a set of functions.

This step is purely mechanical, and should result in no
change of behavior.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-11 15:02:17 -08:00
4b0d1eebe9 setup: document check_repository_format()
This function's interface is rather enigmatic, so let's
document it further.

While we're here, let's also drop the return value. It will
always either be "0" or the function will die (consequently,
neither of its two callers bothered to check the return).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-11 15:02:13 -08:00
dde7891094 t/t7502 : drop duplicate test
This extra test was introduced erroneously by
f9c0181 (t7502: test commit.status, --status and
--no-status, 2010-01-13)

Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-11 12:42:26 -08:00
214123c645 rebase-i: clarify "is this commit relevant?" test
While I was checking all the call sites of sane_grep and sane_egrep,
I noticed this one is somewhat strangely written.  The lines in the
file sane_grep works on all begin with 40-hex object name, so there
is no real risk of confusing "test $(...) = ''" by finding something
that begins with a dash, but using the status from sane_grep makes
it a lot clearer what is going on.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-10 15:35:48 -08:00
71b401032b sane_grep: pass "-a" if grep accepts it
Newer versions of GNU grep is reported to be pickier when we feed a
non-ASCII input and break some Porcelain scripts.  As we know we do
not feed random binary file to our own sane_grep wrapper, allow us
to always pass "-a" by setting SANE_TEXT_GREP=-a Makefile variable
to work it around.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-10 15:35:43 -08:00
a2986045e3 mergetool: honor tempfile configuration when resolving delete conflicts
Teach resolve_deleted_merge() to honor the mergetool.keepBackup and
mergetool.keepTemporaries configuration knobs.

This ensures that the worktree is kept pristine when resolving deletion
conflicts with the variables both set to false.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-10 14:07:57 -08:00
faaab8d571 mergetool: support delete/delete conflicts
If two branches each move a file into different directories then
mergetool will fail because it assumes that the file being merged, and
its parent directory, are present in the worktree.

Create the merge file's parent directory to allow using the
deleted base version of the file for merge resolution when
encountering a delete/delete conflict.

The end result is that a delete/delete conflict is presented for the
user to resolve.

Reported-by: Joe Einertson <joe@kidblog.org>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-10 14:07:13 -08:00
ed9067f705 Git 2.8-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-10 11:16:23 -08:00
5d1847b760 Sync with 2.7.3 2016-03-10 11:15:50 -08:00
594730e980 Git 2.7.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-10 11:14:08 -08:00
2e1e569d0e Merge branch 'ma/update-hooks-sample-typofix' into maint
* ma/update-hooks-sample-typofix:
  templates/hooks: fix minor typo in the sample update-hook
2016-03-10 11:13:50 -08:00
3e6e43e130 Merge branch 'dt/initial-ref-xn-commit-doc' into maint
* dt/initial-ref-xn-commit-doc:
  refs: document transaction semantics
2016-03-10 11:13:49 -08:00
4da402695d Merge branch 'ps/plug-xdl-merge-leak' into maint
* ps/plug-xdl-merge-leak:
  xdiff/xmerge: fix memory leak in xdl_merge
2016-03-10 11:13:49 -08:00
08e21c9b5f Merge branch 'ak/git-strip-extension-from-dashed-command' into maint
Code simplification.

* ak/git-strip-extension-from-dashed-command:
  git.c: simplify stripping extension of a file in handle_builtin()
2016-03-10 11:13:48 -08:00
c6f399c96f Merge branch 'ak/extract-argv0-last-dir-sep' into maint
Code simplification.

* ak/extract-argv0-last-dir-sep:
  exec_cmd.c: use find_last_dir_sep() for code simplification
2016-03-10 11:13:47 -08:00
80047fa084 Merge branch 'jk/pack-idx-corruption-safety' into maint
The code to read the pack data using the offsets stored in the pack
idx file has been made more carefully check the validity of the
data in the idx.

* jk/pack-idx-corruption-safety:
  sha1_file.c: mark strings for translation
  use_pack: handle signed off_t overflow
  nth_packed_object_offset: bounds-check extended offset
  t5313: test bounds-checks of corrupted/malicious pack/idx files
2016-03-10 11:13:46 -08:00
0e58b47d15 Merge branch 'js/config-set-in-non-repository' into maint
"git config section.var value" to set a value in per-repository
configuration file failed when it was run outside any repository,
but didn't say the reason correctly.

* js/config-set-in-non-repository:
  git config: report when trying to modify a non-existing repo config
2016-03-10 11:13:45 -08:00
1191d606bb Merge branch 'sb/submodule-module-list-fix' into maint
A helper function "git submodule" uses since v2.7.0 to list the
modules that match the pathspec argument given to its subcommands
(e.g. "submodule add <repo> <path>") has been fixed.

* sb/submodule-module-list-fix:
  submodule helper list: respect correct path prefix
2016-03-10 11:13:45 -08:00
7f18fadcbc Merge branch 'jk/grep-binary-workaround-in-test' into maint
Recent versions of GNU grep are pickier when their input contains
arbitrary binary data, which some of our tests uses.  Rewrite the
tests to sidestep the problem.

* jk/grep-binary-workaround-in-test:
  t9200: avoid grep on non-ASCII data
  t8005: avoid grep on non-ASCII data
2016-03-10 11:13:45 -08:00
d4e7b9bcb0 Merge branch 'mm/push-simple-doc' into maint
The documentation did not clearly state that the 'simple' mode is
now the default for "git push" when push.default configuration is
not set.

* mm/push-simple-doc:
  Documentation/git-push: document that 'simple' is the default
2016-03-10 11:13:44 -08:00
b7a6ec609f Merge branch 'jk/tighten-alloc' into maint
* jk/tighten-alloc: (23 commits)
  compat/mingw: brown paper bag fix for 50a6c8e
  ewah: convert to REALLOC_ARRAY, etc
  convert ewah/bitmap code to use xmalloc
  diff_populate_gitlink: use a strbuf
  transport_anonymize_url: use xstrfmt
  git-compat-util: drop mempcpy compat code
  sequencer: simplify memory allocation of get_message
  test-path-utils: fix normalize_path_copy output buffer size
  fetch-pack: simplify add_sought_entry
  fast-import: simplify allocation in start_packfile
  write_untracked_extension: use FLEX_ALLOC helper
  prepare_{git,shell}_cmd: use argv_array
  use st_add and st_mult for allocation size computation
  convert trivial cases to FLEX_ARRAY macros
  use xmallocz to avoid size arithmetic
  convert trivial cases to ALLOC_ARRAY
  convert manual allocations to argv_array
  argv-array: add detach function
  add helpers for allocating flex-array structs
  harden REALLOC_ARRAY and xcalloc against size_t overflow
  ...
2016-03-10 11:13:43 -08:00
aa6c22ec43 Merge branch 'jk/more-comments-on-textconv' into maint
The memory ownership rule of fill_textconv() API, which was a bit
tricky, has been documented a bit better.

* jk/more-comments-on-textconv:
  diff: clarify textconv interface
2016-03-10 11:13:43 -08:00
6044329cf1 Merge branch 'jk/no-diff-emit-common' into maint
"git merge-tree" used to mishandle "both sides added" conflict with
its own "create a fake ancestor file that has the common parts of
what both sides have added and do a 3-way merge" logic; this has
been updated to use the usual "3-way merge with an empty blob as
the fake common ancestor file" approach used in the rest of the
system.

* jk/no-diff-emit-common:
  xdiff: drop XDL_EMIT_COMMON
  merge-tree: drop generate_common strategy
  merge-one-file: use empty blob for add/add base
2016-03-10 11:13:42 -08:00
28eec80b60 Merge branch 'jc/am-i-v-fix' into maint
The "v(iew)" subcommand of the interactive "git am -i" command was
broken in 2.6.0 timeframe when the command was rewritten in C.

* jc/am-i-v-fix:
  am -i: fix "v"iew
  pager: factor out a helper to prepare a child process to run the pager
  pager: lose a separate argv[]
2016-03-10 11:13:41 -08:00
9c17ccaa49 Merge branch 'nd/git-common-dir-fix' into maint
"git rev-parse --git-common-dir" used in the worktree feature
misbehaved when run from a subdirectory.

* nd/git-common-dir-fix:
  rev-parse: take prefix into account in --git-common-dir
2016-03-10 11:13:40 -08:00
8834ea375a Merge branch 'nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs' into maint
"git show 'HEAD:Foo[BAR]Baz'" did not interpret the argument as a
rev, i.e. the object named by the the pathname with wildcard
characters in a tree object.

* nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs:
  get_sha1: don't die() on bogus search strings
  check_filename: tighten dwim-wildcard ambiguity
  checkout: reorder check_filename conditional
2016-03-10 11:13:39 -08:00
fbef03d6ab Merge branch 'jk/epipe-in-async' into maint
Handling of errors while writing into our internal asynchronous
process has been made more robust, which reduces flakiness in our
tests.

* jk/epipe-in-async:
  t5504: handle expected output from SIGPIPE death
  test_must_fail: report number of unexpected signal
  fetch-pack: ignore SIGPIPE in sideband demuxer
  write_or_die: handle EPIPE in async threads
2016-03-10 11:13:38 -08:00
2d5ff66c13 Merge branch 'ps/config-error' into maint
Many codepaths forget to check return value from git_config_set();
the function is made to die() to make sure we do not proceed when
setting a configuration variable failed.

* ps/config-error:
  config: rename git_config_set_or_die to git_config_set
  config: rename git_config_set to git_config_set_gently
  compat: die when unable to set core.precomposeunicode
  sequencer: die on config error when saving replay opts
  init-db: die on config errors when initializing empty repo
  clone: die on config error in cmd_clone
  remote: die on config error when manipulating remotes
  remote: die on config error when setting/adding branches
  remote: die on config error when setting URL
  submodule--helper: die on config error when cloning module
  submodule: die on config error when linking modules
  branch: die on config error when editing branch description
  branch: die on config error when unsetting upstream
  branch: report errors in tracking branch setup
  config: introduce set_or_die wrappers
2016-03-10 11:13:38 -08:00
9bb71036f3 Merge branch 'mg/work-tree-tests' into maint
Traditionally, the tests that try commands that work on the
contents in the working tree were named with "worktree" in their
filenames, but with the recent addition of "git worktree"
subcommand, whose tests are also named similarly, it has become
harder to tell them apart.  The traditional tests have been renamed
to use "work-tree" instead in an attempt to differentiate them.

* mg/work-tree-tests:
  tests: rename work-tree tests to *work-tree*
2016-03-10 11:13:38 -08:00
33b81b2d2e Merge branch 'sp/remote-curl-ssl-strerror' into maint
Help those who debug http(s) part of the system.

* sp/remote-curl-ssl-strerror:
  remote-curl: include curl_errorstr on SSL setup failures
2016-03-10 11:13:37 -08:00
f4a48e8708 Merge branch 'jx/http-no-proxy'
* jx/http-no-proxy:
  http: honor no_http env variable to bypass proxy
2016-03-10 10:56:43 -08:00
e80aae51f2 Merge branch 'jc/exclusion-doc'
* jc/exclusion-doc:
  gitignore: document that unignoring a directory unignores everything in it
2016-03-10 10:56:43 -08:00
68846a92ea Merge branch 'js/close-packs-before-gc'
A small future-proofing of a test added recently.

* js/close-packs-before-gc:
  t5510: do not leave changed cwd
2016-03-10 10:56:42 -08:00
9ed1d90589 Merge branch 'sb/rebase-summary'
* sb/rebase-summary:
  Documentation: reword rebase summary
2016-03-10 10:56:41 -08:00
07c7782cc8 Disown ssh+git and git+ssh
Some people argue that these were silly from the beginning (see
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/285590/focus=285601
for example), but we have to support them for compatibility.

That doesn't mean we have to show them in the documentation.  These
were already left out of the main list, but a reference in the main
manpage was left, so remove that.

Also add a note to discourage their use if anybody goes looking for them
in the source code.

Signed-off-by: Carlos Martín Nieto <cmn@dwim.me>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-09 13:54:38 -08:00
6f6d1f41da gitignore: document that unignoring a directory unignores everything in it
Also document another limitation coming from a bug in handling the
basename match with a directory for 're-inclusion'.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-08 10:10:49 -08:00
11e6b3f6d5 use setup_git_directory() in test-* programs
Some of the test-* programs rely on examining refs, but did
not bother to make sure we are actually in a git repository.
Let's have them call setup_git_directory() to do so.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-07 12:27:35 -08:00
85975c0c7f grep: turn off gitlink detection for --no-index
If we are running "git grep --no-index" outside of a git
repository, we behave roughly like "grep -r", examining all
files in the current directory and its subdirectories.
However, because we use fill_directory() to do the
recursion, it will skip over any directories which look like
sub-repositories.

For a normal git operation (like "git grep" in a repository)
this makes sense; we do not want to cross the boundary out
of our current repository into a submodule. But for
"--no-index" without a repository, we should look at all
files, including embedded repositories.

There is one exception, though: we probably should _not_
descend into ".git" directories. Doing so is inefficient and
unlikely to turn up useful hits.

This patch drops our use of dir.c's gitlink-detection, but
we do still avoid ".git". That makes us more like tools such
as "ack" or "ag", which also know to avoid cruft in .git.

As a bonus, this also drops our usage of the ref code
when we are outside of a repository, making the transition
to pluggable ref backends cleaner.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-07 12:27:28 -08:00
3bd1b51d3a Documentation: talk about pager in api-trace.txt
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-07 12:23:45 -08:00
618310a3df t6302: skip only signed tags rather than all tests when GPG is missing
The primary purpose of these tests is to check filtering, sorting, and
formatting behavior of git-for-each-ref, so it is unfortunate that the
entire test script is skipped when GPG is not present. Rather than
skipping all tests, let's instead just skip testing against signed tags
when GPG is missing.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-06 18:51:38 -08:00
7bc734eed2 t6302: also test annotated in addition to signed tags
It is conceivable, if not highly plausible, that a change to the
git-for-each-ref code that does the filtering and formatting can become
buggy because a payload with GPG signature looks somewhat different from
what is in an annotated but not signed tag. Thus, let's test unsigned
tags, as well.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-06 18:51:23 -08:00
ef93c7dbce t6302: normalize names and descriptions of signed tags
An upcoming patch will increase test coverage by testing annotated but
not signed tags, as well, so normalize names and descriptions of signed
tags to make it easy to give the upcoming unsigned tags similarly
patterned names and descriptions.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-06 18:50:35 -08:00
f9e9c0d104 lib-gpg: drop unnecessary "missing GPG" warning
When 37d3e85 (t7004: factor out gpg setup, 2011-09-07) pulled gpg
detection code out of t7004-tag.sh and turned it into a standard test
prerequisite, it added an unconditional "missing GPG" warning when gpg
is not detected.

However, this is redundant since all tests which require GPG already
warn via either 'test_expect_success GPG' ("skipping: missing GPG") on a
test-by-test basis, or when skipping all tests in a script ("skipping
all foobar tests; missing GPG").  Consequently, the extra warning from
lib-gpg.sh is unnecessary, so retire it.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-06 18:50:32 -08:00
5735dc5a0d mailmap: do not resolve blobs in a non-repository
The mailmap code may be triggered outside of a repository by
git-shortlog. There is no point in looking up a name like
"HEAD:.mailmap" there; without a repository, we have no
refs.

This is unlikely to matter much in practice for the current
code, as we would simply fail to find the ref. But as the
refs code learns about new backends, this is more important;
without a repository, we do not even know which backend to
look at.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-06 17:19:11 -08:00
f2f12d169a remote: don't resolve HEAD in non-repository
The remote-config code wants to look at HEAD to mark the
current branch specially. But if we are not in a repository
(e.g., running "git archive --remote"), this makes no sense;
there is no HEAD to look at, and we have no current branch.

This doesn't really cause any bugs in practice (if you are
not in a repo, you probably don't have a .git/HEAD file),
but we should be more careful about triggering the refs code
at all in a non-repo. As we grow new ref backends, we would
not even know which backend to use.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-06 17:18:40 -08:00
f1c126bd8b setup: set startup_info->have_repository more reliably
When setup_git_directory() is called, we set a flag in
startup_info to indicate we have a repository. But there are
a few other mechanisms by which we might set up a repo:

  1. When creating a new repository via init_db(), we
     transition from no-repo to being in a repo. We should
     tweak this flag at that moment.

  2. In enter_repo(), a stricter form of
     setup_git_directory() used by server-side programs, we
     check the repository format config. After doing so, we
     know we're in a repository, and can set the flag.

With these changes, library code can now reliably tell
whether we are in a repository and act accordingly. We'll
leave the "prefix" field as NULL, which is what happens when
setup_git_directory() finds there is no prefix.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-06 17:18:16 -08:00
46c3cd44d7 setup: make startup_info available everywhere
Commit a60645f (setup: remember whether repository was
found, 2010-08-05) introduced the startup_info structure,
which records some parts of the setup_git_directory()
process (notably, whether we actually found a repository or
not).

One of the uses of this data is for functions to behave
appropriately based on whether we are in a repo. But the
startup_info struct is just a pointer to storage provided by
the main program, and the only program that sets it up is
the git.c wrapper. Thus builtins have access to
startup_info, but externally linked programs do not.

Worse, library code which is accessible from both has to be
careful about accessing startup_info. This can be used to
trigger a die("BUG") via get_sha1():

	$ git fast-import <<-\EOF
	tag foo
	from HEAD:./whatever
	EOF

	fatal: BUG: startup_info struct is not initialized.

Obviously that's fairly nonsensical input to feed to
fast-import, but we should never hit a die("BUG"). And there
may be other ways to trigger it if other non-builtins
resolve sha1s.

So let's point the storage for startup_info to a static
variable in setup.c, making it available to all users of the
library code. We _could_ turn startup_info into a regular
extern struct, but doing so would mean tweaking all of the
existing use sites. So let's leave the pointer indirection
in place.  We can, however, drop any checks for NULL, as
they will always be false (and likewise, we can drop the
test covering this case, which was a rather artificial
situation using one of the test-* programs).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-06 17:17:37 -08:00
b70904306f strbuf_getwholeline: NUL-terminate getdelim buffer on error
Commit 0cc30e0 (strbuf_getwholeline: use getdelim if it is
available, 2015-04-16) tries to clean up after getdelim()
returns EOF, but gets one case wrong, which can lead in some
obscure cases to us reading uninitialized memory.

After getdelim() returns -1, we re-initialize the strbuf
only if sb->buf is NULL. The thinking was that either:

  1. We fed an existing allocated buffer to getdelim(), and
     at most it would have realloc'd, leaving our NUL in
     place.

  2. We didn't have a buffer to feed, so we gave getdelim()
     NULL; sb->buf will remain NULL, and we just want to
     restore the empty slopbuf.

But that second case isn't quite right. getdelim() may
allocate a buffer, write nothing into it, and then return
EOF. The resulting strbuf rightfully has sb->len set to "0",
but is missing the NUL terminator in the first byte.

Most call-sites are fine with this. They see the EOF and
don't bother looking at the strbuf. Or they notice that
sb->len is empty, and don't look at the contents. But
there's at least one case that does neither, and relies on
parsing the resulting (possibly zero-length) string:
fast-import. You can see this in action with the new test
(though we probably only notice failure there when run with
--valgrind or ASAN).

We can fix this by unconditionally resetting the strbuf when
we have a buffer after getdelim(). That fixes case 2 above.
Case 1 is probably already fine in practice, but it does not
hurt for us to re-assert our invariants (especially because
we are relying on whatever getdelim() happens to do, which
may vary from platform to platform). Our fix covers that
case, too.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-05 10:57:37 -08:00
754ecb1ce5 fetch-pack: update the documentation for "<refs>..." arguments
When we started allowing an exact object name to be fetched from the
command line, we forgot to update the documentation.

Signed-off-by: Gabriel Souza Franco <gabrielfrancosouza@gmail.com>
--
 Documentation/git-fetch-pack.txt | 4 ++++
 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+)
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-05 10:54:35 -08:00
1d30f899e2 l10n: de.po: translate 48 new messages
Translate 48 new messages came from git.pot update in
9eb3984 (l10n: git.pot: v2.8.0 round 1 (48 new, 16 removed)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthias Rüster <matthias.ruester@gmail.com>
2016-03-05 08:20:16 +01:00
ae45b9aca8 l10n: de.po: translate "command" as "Befehl"
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Phillip Sz <phillip.szelat@gmail.com>
2016-03-05 08:20:16 +01:00
28ab8b234e l10n: de.po: fix interactive rebase message
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2016-03-05 08:20:15 +01:00
384905ead7 l10n: de.po: add space to abbreviation "z. B."
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Phillip Sz <phillip.szelat@gmail.com>
2016-03-05 08:20:15 +01:00
9410812bd6 l10n: de.po: fix typo
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hoopmann <christophhoopmann@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2016-03-05 08:20:15 +01:00
48f977ebb7 l10n: TEAMS: update Ralf Thielow's email address
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2016-03-05 11:07:28 +08:00
7f941a0216 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 (2509t0f0u)
  l10n: sv.po: Fix inconsistent translation of "progress meter"
2016-03-05 10:06:20 +08:00
269cbc6ee0 Merge branch 'ko/merge-l10n' of https://github.com/changwoo/git-l10n-ko
* 'ko/merge-l10n' of https://github.com/changwoo/git-l10n-ko:
  l10n: ko.po: Update Korean translation
2016-03-05 10:05:32 +08:00
87f1625836 xdiff/xprepare: fix a memory leak
The xdl_prepare_env() function may initialise an xdlclassifier_t
data structure via xdl_init_classifier(), which allocates memory
to several fields, for example 'rchash', 'rcrecs' and 'ncha'.
If this function later exits due to the failure of xdl_optimize_ctxs(),
then this xdlclassifier_t structure, and the memory allocated to it,
is not cleaned up.

In order to fix the memory leak, insert a call to xdl_free_classifier()
before returning.

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-04 15:51:08 -08:00
5cd6978a9c xdiff/xprepare: use the XDF_DIFF_ALG() macro to access flag bits
Commit 307ab20b3 ("xdiff: PATIENCE/HISTOGRAM are not independent option
bits", 19-02-2012) introduced the XDF_DIFF_ALG() macro to access the
flag bits used to represent the diff algorithm requested. In addition,
code which had used explicit manipulation of the flag bits was changed
to use the macros.

However, one example of direct manipulation remains. Update this code to
use the XDF_DIFF_ALG() macro.

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-04 15:51:06 -08:00
ab5d01a29e Git 2.8-rc1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-04 13:48:55 -08:00
28ab768afa Merge branch 'nd/clear-gitenv-upon-use-of-alias'
Hotfix for a test breakage made between 2.7 and 'master'.

* nd/clear-gitenv-upon-use-of-alias:
  t0001: fix GIT_* environment variable check under --valgrind
2016-03-04 13:46:44 -08:00
3978cd06ff Merge branch 'js/pthread-exit-emu-windows'
* js/pthread-exit-emu-windows:
  Mark win32's pthread_exit() as NORETURN
2016-03-04 13:46:39 -08:00
bbe90e7950 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-parallel-fetch'
Simplify the two callback functions that are triggered when the
child process terminates to avoid misuse of the child-process
structure that has already been cleaned up.

* sb/submodule-parallel-fetch:
  run-command: do not pass child process data into callbacks
2016-03-04 13:46:30 -08:00
6dd0a37c34 Merge branch 'jk/tighten-alloc'
* jk/tighten-alloc:
  compat/mingw: brown paper bag fix for 50a6c8e
2016-03-04 13:46:25 -08:00
49a4352197 Merge branch 'nd/i18n-2.8.0'
* nd/i18n-2.8.0:
  trailer.c: mark strings for translation
  ref-filter.c: mark strings for translation
  builtin/clone.c: mark strings for translation
  builtin/checkout.c: mark strings for translation
2016-03-04 13:46:20 -08:00
01942002b3 Merge branch 'tb/avoid-gcc-on-darwin-10-6'
Out-of-maintenance gcc on OSX 10.6 fails to compile the code in
'master'; work it around by using clang by default on the platform.

* tb/avoid-gcc-on-darwin-10-6:
  config.mak.uname: use clang for Mac OS X 10.6
2016-03-04 13:46:08 -08:00
090de6b289 Merge branch 'jk/pack-idx-corruption-safety'
The code to read the pack data using the offsets stored in the pack
idx file has been made more carefully check the validity of the
data in the idx.

* jk/pack-idx-corruption-safety:
  sha1_file.c: mark strings for translation
  use_pack: handle signed off_t overflow
  nth_packed_object_offset: bounds-check extended offset
  t5313: test bounds-checks of corrupted/malicious pack/idx files
2016-03-04 13:45:47 -08:00
bc0ffd41b9 Merge branch 'mg/httpd-tests-update-for-apache-2.4'
The way the test scripts configure the Apache web server has been
updated to work also for Apache 2.4 running on RedHat derived
distros.

* mg/httpd-tests-update-for-apache-2.4:
  t/lib-httpd: load mod_unixd
2016-03-04 13:45:42 -08:00
816c19308b t5510: do not leave changed cwd
t5510 carefully keeps the cwd at the test root by using either subshells
or explicit cd'ing back to the root. Use a subshell for the last
subtest, too.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-04 10:22:55 -08:00
2e7b6afcba Merge branch 'js/mingw-tests'
* js/mingw-tests:
  t9700: fix test for perl older than 5.14
2016-03-04 10:14:39 -08:00
839b6397be t9700: fix test for perl older than 5.14
Commit d53c2c6 (mingw: fix t9700's assumption about
directory separators, 2016-01-27) uses perl's "/r" regex
modifier to do a non-destructive replacement on a string,
leaving the original unmodified and returning the result.

This feature was introduced in perl 5.14, but systems with
older perl are still common (e.g., CentOS 6.5 still has perl
5.10). Let's work around it by providing a helper function
that does the same thing using older syntax.

While we're at it, let's switch to using an alternate regex
separator, which is slightly more readable.

Reported-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Dennis Kaarsemaker <dennis@kaarsemaker.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-04 10:14:30 -08:00
7f278d8381 l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2509t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2016-03-04 15:22:46 +01:00
c674d82673 l10n: sv.po: Fix inconsistent translation of "progress meter"
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2016-03-04 15:06:59 +01:00
d285ab0a41 documentation: fix some typos
Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-03 13:43:36 -08:00
bfee614a2f index-pack: add a helper function to derive .idx/.keep filename
These are automatically named by replacing .pack suffix in the
name of the packfile.  Add a small helper to do so, as I'll be
adding another one soonish.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-03 13:16:53 -08:00
13f0a6ddb9 Merge branch 'jc/maint-index-pack-keep' into jc/index-pack
* jc/maint-index-pack-keep:
  index-pack: correct --keep[=<msg>]
2016-03-03 13:16:45 -08:00
0e94242df1 index-pack: correct --keep[=<msg>]
When 592ce208 (index-pack: use strip_suffix to avoid magic numbers,
2014-06-30) refactored the code to derive names of .idx and .keep
files from the name of .pack file, a copy-and-paste typo crept in,
mistakingly attempting to create and store the keep message file in
the .idx file we just created, instead of .keep file.

As we create the .keep file with O_CREAT|O_EXCL, and we do so after
we write the .idx file, we luckily do not clobber the .idx file, but
because we deliberately ignored EEXIST when creating .keep file
(which is justifiable because only the existence of .keep file
matters), nobody noticed this mistake so far.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-03 11:06:01 -08:00
f3858f8edc t0001: fix GIT_* environment variable check under --valgrind
When a test case is run without --valgrind, the wrap-for-bin.sh
helper script inserts the environment variable GIT_TEXTDOMAINDIR, but
when run with --valgrind, the variable is missing. A recently
introduced test case expects the presence of the variable, though, and
fails under --valgrind.

Rewrite the test case to strip conditially defined environment variables
from both expected and actual output.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-03 08:55:13 -08:00
207294269b l10n: ko.po: Update Korean translation
Signed-off-by: Changwoo Ryu <cwryu@debian.org>
2016-03-03 13:14:52 +09:00
b385085bf9 Documentation: reword rebase summary
The wording is introduced in c3f0baaca (Documentation: sync git.txt
command list and manual page title, 2007-01-18), but rebase has evolved
since then, capture the modern usage by being more generic about the
rebase command in the summary.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-02 15:37:50 -08:00
296d673733 Mark win32's pthread_exit() as NORETURN
The pthread_exit() function is not expected to return. Ever. On Windows,
we call ExitThread() whose documentation claims: "Ends the calling
thread", i.e. there is no condition in which this function simply
returns: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms682659

While at it, fix the return type to be void, as per
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/pthread_exit.html

Pointed out by Jeff King, helped by Stefan Naewe, Junio Hamano &
Johannes Sixt.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-02 12:33:43 -08:00
03eb39a61a l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
Signed-off-by: Dimitriy Ryazantcev <dimitriy.ryazantcev@gmail.com>
2016-03-02 17:37:55 +02:00
1b68387e02 builtin/receive-pack.c: use parse_options API
Make receive-pack use the parse_options API,
bringing it more in line with send-pack and push.

Helped-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Sidhant Sharma [:tk] <tigerkid001@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 13:38:45 -08:00
14111fc492 git: submodule honor -c credential.* from command line
Due to the way that the git-submodule code works, it clears all local
git environment variables before entering submodules. This is normally
a good thing since we want to clear settings such as GIT_WORKTREE and
other variables which would affect the operation of submodule commands.
However, GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS is special, and we actually do want to
preserve these settings. However, we do not want to preserve all
configuration as many things should be left specific to the parent
project.

Add a git submodule--helper function, sanitize-config, which shall be
used to sanitize GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS, removing all key/value pairs
except a small subset that are known to be safe and necessary.

Replace all the calls to clear_local_git_env with a wrapped function
that filters GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS using the new helper and then
restores it to the filtered subset after clearing the rest of the
environment.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 12:24:22 -08:00
e70986d725 quote: implement sq_quotef()
Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 12:24:15 -08:00
7dad263334 submodule: fix segmentation fault in submodule--helper clone
The git submodule--helper clone command will fail with a segmentation
fault when given a null url or null path variable. Since these are
required for proper functioning of the submodule--helper clone
subcommand, add checks to prevent running and fail gracefully when
missing.

Update the usage string to reflect the requirement that the --url and
--path "options" are required.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 12:24:10 -08:00
717416ca87 submodule: fix submodule--helper clone usage
git submodule--helper clone usage stated that paths were added after the
[--] argument. The actual implementation required use of --path argument
and only supports one path at a time. Update the usage string to match
the current implementation.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 12:24:05 -08:00
08e0970a86 submodule: check argc count for git submodule--helper clone
Extra unused arguments to git submodule--helper clone subcommand were
being silently ignored. Add a check to the argc count after options
handling to ensure that no extra arguments were left on the argv array.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 12:24:03 -08:00
d10e3b4260 submodule: don't pass empty string arguments to submodule--helper clone
When --reference or --depth are unused, the current git-submodule.sh
results in empty "" arguments appended to the end of the argv array
inside git submodule--helper clone. This is not caught because the argc
count is not checked today.

Fix git-submodule.sh to only pass an argument when --reference or
--depth are used, preventing the addition of two empty string arguments
on the tail of the argv array.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 12:23:58 -08:00
72290d6a1d clone: allow an explicit argument for parallel submodule clones
Just pass it along to "git submodule update", which may pick reasonable
defaults if you don't specify an explicit number.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 11:57:21 -08:00
2335b870fa submodule update: expose parallelism to the user
Expose possible parallelism either via the "--jobs" CLI parameter or
the "submodule.fetchJobs" setting.

By having the variable initialized to -1, we make sure 0 can be passed
into the parallel processing machine, which will then pick as many parallel
workers as there are CPUs.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 11:57:20 -08:00
cdc04b65b4 submodule helper: remove double 'fatal: ' prefix
The prefix is added by die(...), so we don't have to do it.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 11:57:20 -08:00
48308681b0 git submodule update: have a dedicated helper for cloning
This introduces a new helper function in git submodule--helper
which takes care of cloning all submodules, which we want to
parallelize eventually.

Some tests (such as empty URL, update_mode=none) are required in the
helper to make the decision for cloning. These checks have been
moved into the C function as well (no need to repeat them in the
shell script).

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 11:57:20 -08:00
aa71049485 run_processes_parallel: rename parameters for the callbacks
The refs code has a similar pattern of passing around 'struct strbuf *err',
which is strictly used for error reporting. This is not the case here,
as the strbuf is used to accumulate all the output (whether it is error
or not) for the user. Rename it to 'out'.

Suggested-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 11:57:19 -08:00
2dac9b5637 run_processes_parallel: treat output of children as byte array
We do not want the output to be interrupted by a NUL byte, so we
cannot use raw fputs. Introduce strbuf_write to avoid having long
arguments in run-command.c.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 11:57:19 -08:00
8c6b549118 submodule update: direct error message to stderr
Reroute the error message for specified but initialized submodules
to stderr instead of stdout.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 11:57:18 -08:00
a028a1930c fetching submodules: respect submodule.fetchJobs config option
This allows to configure fetching and updating in parallel
without having the command line option.

This moved the responsibility to determine how many parallel processes
to start from builtin/fetch to submodule.c as we need a way to communicate
"The user did not specify the number of parallel processes in the command
line options" in the builtin fetch. The submodule code takes care of
the precedence (CLI > config > default).

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 11:57:18 -08:00
f73da11024 submodule-config: drop check against NULL
Adhere to the common coding style of Git and not check explicitly
for NULL throughout the file. There are still other occurrences in the
code base but that is usually inside of conditions with side effects.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 11:57:17 -08:00
ea2fa5a338 submodule-config: keep update strategy around
Currently submodule.<name>.update is only handled by git-submodule.sh.
C code will start to need to make use of that value as more of the
functionality of git-submodule.sh moves into library code in C.

Add the update field to 'struct submodule' and populate it so it can
be read as sm->update or from sm->update_command.

Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 11:57:17 -08:00
4a8d202c4e fetch-pack: fix object_id of exact sha1
Commit 58f2ed0 (remote-curl: pass ref SHA-1 to fetch-pack as well,
2013-12-05) added support for specifying a SHA-1 as well as a ref name.
Add support for specifying just a SHA-1 and set the ref name to the same
value in this case.

Signed-off-by: Gabriel Souza Franco <gabrielfrancosouza@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 11:19:19 -08:00
f870899864 dir: store EXC_FLAG_* values in unsigned integers
The values defined by the macro EXC_FLAG_* (1, 4, 8, 16) are stored
in fields of the structs "pattern" and "exclude", some functions
arguments and a local variable.  None of these uses its most
significant bit in any special way and there is no good reason to
use a signed integer for them.

And while we're at it, document "flags" of "exclude" to explicitly
state the values it's supposed to take on.

Signed-off-by: Saurav Sachidanand <sauravsachidanand@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 10:20:22 -08:00
aed7480ca4 lockfile: improve error message when lockfile exists
A common mistake leading a user to see this message is to launch "git
commit", let the editor open (and forget about it), and try again to
commit.

The previous message was going too quickly to "a git process crashed"
and to the advice "remove the file manually".

This patch modifies the message in two ways: first, it considers that
"another process is running" is the norm, not the exception, and it
explicitly hints the user to look at text editors.

The message is 2 lines longer, but this is not a problem since
experienced users do not see the message often.

Helped-by: Moritz Neeb <lists@moritzneeb.de>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 10:16:46 -08:00
3030c295ba lockfile: mark strings for translation
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 10:16:45 -08:00
2a73b3dad0 run-command: do not pass child process data into callbacks
The expected way to pass data into the callback is to pass them via
the customizable callback pointer. The error reporting in
default_{start_failure, task_finished} is not user friendly enough, that
we want to encourage using the child data for such purposes.

Furthermore the struct child data is cleaned by the run-command API,
before we access them in the callbacks, leading to use-after-free
situations.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-03-01 09:42:01 -08:00
13ad56f848 trailer.c: mark strings for translation
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-29 14:27:58 -08:00
1823c619e9 ref-filter.c: mark strings for translation
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-29 14:27:58 -08:00
39ad4f39cc builtin/clone.c: mark strings for translation
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-29 14:27:58 -08:00
4636f65123 builtin/checkout.c: mark strings for translation
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-29 14:27:58 -08:00
d445fda44d http: honor no_http env variable to bypass proxy
Curl and its families honor several proxy related environment variables:

* http_proxy and https_proxy define proxy for http/https connections.
* no_proxy (a comma separated hosts) defines hosts bypass the proxy.

This command will bypass the bad-proxy and connect to the host directly:

    no_proxy=* https_proxy=http://bad-proxy/ \
    curl -sk https://google.com/

Before commit 372370f (http: use credential API to handle proxy auth...),
Environment variable "no_proxy" will take effect if the config variable
"http.proxy" is not set.  So the following comamnd won't fail if not
behind a firewall.

    no_proxy=* https_proxy=http://bad-proxy/ \
    git ls-remote https://github.com/git/git

But commit 372370f not only read git config variable "http.proxy", but
also read "http_proxy" and "https_proxy" environment variables, and set
the curl option using:

    curl_easy_setopt(result, CURLOPT_PROXY, proxy_auth.host);

This caused "no_proxy" environment variable not working any more.

Set extra curl option "CURLOPT_NOPROXY" will fix this issue.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <xin.jiang@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-29 11:28:39 -08:00
8d5b3325e7 compat/mingw: brown paper bag fix for 50a6c8e
Commit 50a6c8e (use st_add and st_mult for allocation size
computation, 2016-02-22) fixed up many xmalloc call-sites
including ones in compat/mingw.c.

But I screwed up one of them, which was half-converted to
ALLOC_ARRAY, using a very early prototype of the function.
And I never caught it because I don't build on Windows.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-29 11:04:23 -08:00
fc7d47f0dd rev-parse: let some options run outside repository
Once upon a time, you could use "--local-env-vars" and
"--resolve-git-dir" outside of any git repository, but they
had to come first on the command line. Commit 68889b4
(rev-parse: remove restrictions on some options, 2013-07-21)
put them into the normal option-parsing loop, fixing the
latter. But it inadvertently broke the former, as we call
setup_git_directory() before starting that loop.

We can note that those options don't care even conditionally
about whether we are in a git repo. So it's fine if we
simply wait to setup the repo until we see an option that
needs it.

However, there is one special exception we should make:
historically, rev-parse will set up the repository and read
config even if there are _no_ options. Some of the
tests in t1300 rely on this to check "git -c $config"
parsing. That's not mirroring real-world use, and we could
tweak the test.  But t0002 uses a bare "git rev-parse" to
check "are we in a git repository?". It's plausible that
real-world scripts are relying on this.

So let's cover this case specially, and treat an option-less
"rev-parse" as "see if we're in a repo".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-29 09:24:47 -08:00
75b01c2190 Merge branch 'master' of https://github.com/vnwildman/git
* 'master' of https://github.com/vnwildman/git:
  l10n: vi.po (2509t): Updated Vietnamese translation
2016-02-29 23:31:58 +08:00
0c966d8450 l10n: vi.po (2509t): Updated Vietnamese translation
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2016-02-29 07:47:45 +07:00
7b6daf8d2f config.mak.uname: use clang for Mac OS X 10.6
Gcc under Mac OX 10.6 throws an internal compiler error:

CC combine-diff.o
    combine-diff.c: In function ‘diff_tree_combined’:
    combine-diff.c:1391: internal compiler error: Segmentation fault

while attempting to build Git at 5b442c4f (tree-diff: catch integer
overflow in combine_diff_path allocation, 2016-02-19).

As clang that ships with the version does not have the same bug,
make Git compile under Mac OS X 10.6 by using clang instead of gcc
to work this around, as it is unlikely that we will see fixed GCC
on that platform.

Later versions of Mac OSX/Xcode only provide clang, and gcc is a
wrapper to it.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-28 16:34:23 -08:00
3d8b14c2bc l10n: fr.po v2.8.0 round 1 2509t
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2016-02-28 22:44:35 +01:00
24990b2feb Documentation/git-config: fix --get-all description
--get does not fail if a key is multi-valued, it returns the last value
as described in its documentation.  Clarify the description of --get-all
to avoid implying that --get does fail in this case.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-28 12:01:45 -08:00
94c5b0e8b9 Documentation/git-config: use bulleted list for exit codes
Using a numbered list is confusing because the exit codes are not listed
in order so the numbers at the start of each line do not match the exit
codes described by the following text.  Switch to a bulleted list so
that the only number appearing on each line is the exit code described.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-28 12:01:45 -08:00
27b30be686 config: fail if --get-urlmatch finds no value
The --get, --get-all and --get-regexp options to git-config exit with
status 1 if the key is not found but --get-urlmatch succeeds in this
case.

Change --get-urlmatch to behave in the same way as the other --get*
options so that all four are consistent.  --get-color is a special case
because it accepts a default value to return and so should not return an
error if the key is not found.

Also clarify this behaviour in the documentation.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-28 12:01:45 -08:00
01143847db add--interactive: allow custom diff highlighting programs
The patch hunk selector of add--interactive knows how ask
git for colorized diffs, and correlate them with the
uncolored diffs we apply. But there's not any way for
somebody who uses a diff-filter tool like contrib's
diff-highlight to see their normal highlighting.

This patch lets users define an arbitrary shell command to
pipe the colorized diff through. The exact output shouldn't
matter (since we just show the result to humans) as long as
it is line-compatible with the original diff (so that
hunk-splitting can split the colorized version, too).

I left two minor issues with the new system that I don't
think are worth fixing right now, but could be done later:

  1. We only filter colorized diffs. Theoretically a user
     could want to filter a non-colorized diff, but I find
     it unlikely in practice. Users who are doing things
     like diff-highlighting are likely to want color, too.

  2. add--interactive will re-colorize a diff which has been
     hand-edited, but it won't have run through the filter.
     Fixing this is conceptually easy (just pipe the diff
     through the filter), but practically hard to do without
     using tempfiles (it would need to feed data to and read
     the result from the filter without deadlocking; this
     raises portability questions with respect to Windows).

I've punted on both issues for now, and if somebody really
cares later, they can do a patch on top.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-28 10:53:54 -08:00
a4e21fb4dc t1515: add tests for rev-parse out-of-repo helpers
The git-rev-parse command is a dumping ground for helpers
that let scripts make various queries of git. Many of these
are conceptually independent of being inside a git
repository.

With the exception of --parseopt, we do not directly test
most of these features in our test suite. Let's give them
some basic sanity checks, which reveals that some of them
have been broken for some time when run from outside a
repository.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-28 10:35:26 -08:00
a56b3a9676 l10n: fr.po: Correct case in sentence
Signed-off-by: Audric Schiltknecht <storm@chemicalstorm.org>
2016-02-28 16:59:18 +01:00
9eb3984b81 l10n: git.pot: v2.8.0 round 1 (48 new, 16 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.8.0-rc0 for git v2.8.0 l10n round 1.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2016-02-28 20:32:52 +08:00
7465feba51 sha1_file.c: mark strings for translation
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-27 09:54:57 -08:00
f02fbc4f94 Git 2.8-rc0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-26 13:45:26 -08:00
b52cb95a13 Merge branch 'mm/readme-markdown'
README has been renamed to README.md and its contents got tweaked
slightly to make it easier on the eyes.

* mm/readme-markdown:
  README.md: move down historical explanation about the name
  README.md: don't call git stupid in the title
  README.md: move the link to git-scm.com up
  README.md: add hyperlinks on filenames
  README: use markdown syntax
2016-02-26 13:37:28 -08:00
2e55d300f2 Merge branch 'ma/update-hooks-sample-typofix'
* ma/update-hooks-sample-typofix:
  templates/hooks: fix minor typo in the sample update-hook
2016-02-26 13:37:28 -08:00
0f0dd370c8 Merge branch 'ls/makefile-cflags-developer-tweak'
There is a new DEVELOPER knob that enables many compiler warning
options in the Makefile.

* ls/makefile-cflags-developer-tweak:
  add DEVELOPER makefile knob to check for acknowledged warnings
2016-02-26 13:37:27 -08:00
69616f7436 Merge branch 'dt/initial-ref-xn-commit-doc'
* dt/initial-ref-xn-commit-doc:
  refs: document transaction semantics
2016-02-26 13:37:27 -08:00
d3faba840e Merge branch 'js/config-set-in-non-repository'
"git config section.var value" to set a value in per-repository
configuration file failed when it was run outside any repository,
but didn't say the reason correctly.

* js/config-set-in-non-repository:
  git config: report when trying to modify a non-existing repo config
2016-02-26 13:37:26 -08:00
8ef250c559 Merge branch 'jk/epipe-in-async'
Handling of errors while writing into our internal asynchronous
process has been made more robust, which reduces flakiness in our
tests.

* jk/epipe-in-async:
  t5504: handle expected output from SIGPIPE death
  test_must_fail: report number of unexpected signal
  fetch-pack: ignore SIGPIPE in sideband demuxer
  write_or_die: handle EPIPE in async threads
2016-02-26 13:37:26 -08:00
15be621072 Merge branch 'mm/push-default-warning'
Across the transition at around Git version 2.0, the user used to
get a pretty loud warning when running "git push" without setting
push.default configuration variable.  We no longer warn, given that
the transition is over long time ago.

* mm/push-default-warning:
  push: remove "push.default is unset" warning message
2016-02-26 13:37:25 -08:00
4ce064dd81 Merge branch 'fa/merge-recursive-no-rename'
"git merge-recursive" learned "--no-renames" option to disable its
rename detection logic.

* fa/merge-recursive-no-rename:
  t3034: test deprecated interface
  t3034: test option to disable renames
  t3034: add rename threshold tests
  merge-recursive: find-renames resets threshold
  merge-strategies.txt: fix typo
  merge-recursive: more consistent interface
  merge-recursive: option to disable renames
2016-02-26 13:37:25 -08:00
9671a76c17 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-fetch-nontip'
When "git submodule update" did not result in fetching the commit
object in the submodule that is referenced by the superproject, the
command learned to retry another fetch, specifically asking for
that commit that may not be connected to the refs it usually
fetches.

* sb/submodule-fetch-nontip:
  submodule: try harder to fetch needed sha1 by direct fetching sha1
2016-02-26 13:37:24 -08:00
03f682bf74 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-module-list-fix'
A helper function "git submodule" uses since v2.7.0 to list the
modules that match the pathspec argument given to its subcommands
(e.g. "submodule add <repo> <path>") has been fixed.

* sb/submodule-module-list-fix:
  submodule helper list: respect correct path prefix
2016-02-26 13:37:24 -08:00
c6b94eb009 Merge branch 'tb/conversion'
Code simplification.

* tb/conversion:
  convert.c: correct attr_action()
  convert.c: simplify text_stat
  convert.c: refactor crlf_action
  convert.c: use text_eol_is_crlf()
  convert.c: remove input_crlf_action()
  convert.c: remove unused parameter 'path'
  t0027: add tests for get_stream_filter()
2016-02-26 13:37:23 -08:00
316336379c Merge branch 'jk/grep-binary-workaround-in-test'
Recent versions of GNU grep are pickier when their input contains
arbitrary binary data, which some of our tests uses.  Rewrite the
tests to sidestep the problem.

* jk/grep-binary-workaround-in-test:
  t9200: avoid grep on non-ASCII data
  t8005: avoid grep on non-ASCII data
2016-02-26 13:37:23 -08:00
c1fa85ff8c Merge branch 'ps/plug-xdl-merge-leak'
* ps/plug-xdl-merge-leak:
  xdiff/xmerge: fix memory leak in xdl_merge
2016-02-26 13:37:22 -08:00
1e4c08ff7e Merge branch 'mm/push-simple-doc'
The documentation did not clearly state that the 'simple' mode is
now the default for "git push" when push.default configuration is
not set.

* mm/push-simple-doc:
  Documentation/git-push: document that 'simple' is the default
2016-02-26 13:37:21 -08:00
2a24444aae Merge branch 'jg/credential-cache-chdir-to-sockdir'
The "credential-cache" daemon process used to run in whatever
directory it happened to start in, but this made umount(2)ing the
filesystem that houses the repository harder; now the process
chdir()s to the directory that house its own socket on startup.

* jg/credential-cache-chdir-to-sockdir:
  credential-cache--daemon: change to the socket dir on startup
  credential-cache--daemon: disallow relative socket path
  credential-cache--daemon: refactor check_socket_directory
2016-02-26 13:37:20 -08:00
225caa73f2 Merge branch 'ps/config-error'
Many codepaths forget to check return value from git_config_set();
the function is made to die() to make sure we do not proceed when
setting a configuration variable failed.

* ps/config-error:
  config: rename git_config_set_or_die to git_config_set
  config: rename git_config_set to git_config_set_gently
  compat: die when unable to set core.precomposeunicode
  sequencer: die on config error when saving replay opts
  init-db: die on config errors when initializing empty repo
  clone: die on config error in cmd_clone
  remote: die on config error when manipulating remotes
  remote: die on config error when setting/adding branches
  remote: die on config error when setting URL
  submodule--helper: die on config error when cloning module
  submodule: die on config error when linking modules
  branch: die on config error when editing branch description
  branch: die on config error when unsetting upstream
  branch: report errors in tracking branch setup
  config: introduce set_or_die wrappers
2016-02-26 13:37:19 -08:00
56d4e7e6c3 Merge branch 'mg/work-tree-tests'
Traditionally, the tests that try commands that work on the
contents in the working tree were named with "worktree" in their
filenames, but with the recent addition of "git worktree"
subcommand, whose tests are also named similarly, it has become
harder to tell them apart.  The traditional tests have been renamed
to use "work-tree" instead in an attempt to differentiate them.

* mg/work-tree-tests:
  tests: rename work-tree tests to *work-tree*
2016-02-26 13:37:18 -08:00
dd0f567f10 Merge branch 'ls/config-origin'
The configuration system has been taught to phrase where it found a
bad configuration variable in a better way in its error messages.
"git config" learnt a new "--show-origin" option to indicate where
the values come from.

* ls/config-origin:
  config: add '--show-origin' option to print the origin of a config value
  config: add 'origin_type' to config_source struct
  rename git_config_from_buf to git_config_from_mem
  t: do not hide Git's exit code in tests using 'nul_to_q'
2016-02-26 13:37:17 -08:00
11529ecec9 Merge branch 'jk/tighten-alloc'
Update various codepaths to avoid manually-counted malloc().

* jk/tighten-alloc: (22 commits)
  ewah: convert to REALLOC_ARRAY, etc
  convert ewah/bitmap code to use xmalloc
  diff_populate_gitlink: use a strbuf
  transport_anonymize_url: use xstrfmt
  git-compat-util: drop mempcpy compat code
  sequencer: simplify memory allocation of get_message
  test-path-utils: fix normalize_path_copy output buffer size
  fetch-pack: simplify add_sought_entry
  fast-import: simplify allocation in start_packfile
  write_untracked_extension: use FLEX_ALLOC helper
  prepare_{git,shell}_cmd: use argv_array
  use st_add and st_mult for allocation size computation
  convert trivial cases to FLEX_ARRAY macros
  use xmallocz to avoid size arithmetic
  convert trivial cases to ALLOC_ARRAY
  convert manual allocations to argv_array
  argv-array: add detach function
  add helpers for allocating flex-array structs
  harden REALLOC_ARRAY and xcalloc against size_t overflow
  tree-diff: catch integer overflow in combine_diff_path allocation
  ...
2016-02-26 13:37:16 -08:00
3ed26a44b3 Merge branch 'jk/more-comments-on-textconv'
The memory ownership rule of fill_textconv() API, which was a bit
tricky, has been documented a bit better.

* jk/more-comments-on-textconv:
  diff: clarify textconv interface
2016-02-26 13:37:15 -08:00
18b26b18c5 Merge branch 'jk/no-diff-emit-common'
"git merge-tree" used to mishandle "both sides added" conflict with
its own "create a fake ancestor file that has the common parts of
what both sides have added and do a 3-way merge" logic; this has
been updated to use the usual "3-way merge with an empty blob as
the fake common ancestor file" approach used in the rest of the
system.

* jk/no-diff-emit-common:
  xdiff: drop XDL_EMIT_COMMON
  merge-tree: drop generate_common strategy
  merge-one-file: use empty blob for add/add base
2016-02-26 13:37:14 -08:00
dede29612a Merge branch 'ak/git-strip-extension-from-dashed-command'
Code simplification.

* ak/git-strip-extension-from-dashed-command:
  git.c: simplify stripping extension of a file in handle_builtin()
2016-02-26 13:37:13 -08:00
7943cba1de Merge branch 'ak/extract-argv0-last-dir-sep'
Code simplification.

* ak/extract-argv0-last-dir-sep:
  exec_cmd.c: use find_last_dir_sep() for code simplification
2016-02-26 13:37:12 -08:00
26f7b5c79a Merge branch 'kn/ref-filter-atom-parsing'
The ref-filter's format-parsing code has been refactored, in
preparation for "branch --format" and friends.

* kn/ref-filter-atom-parsing:
  ref-filter: introduce objectname_atom_parser()
  ref-filter: introduce contents_atom_parser()
  ref-filter: introduce remote_ref_atom_parser()
  ref-filter: align: introduce long-form syntax
  ref-filter: introduce align_atom_parser()
  ref-filter: introduce parse_align_position()
  ref-filter: introduce color_atom_parser()
  ref-filter: introduce parsing functions for each valid atom
  ref-filter: introduce struct used_atom
  ref-filter: bump 'used_atom' and related code to the top
  ref-filter: use string_list_split over strbuf_split
2016-02-26 13:37:10 -08:00
ae2f25542f Merge branch 'tg/git-remote'
The internal API to interact with "remote.*" configuration
variables has been streamlined.

* tg/git-remote:
  remote: use remote_is_configured() for add and rename
  remote: actually check if remote exits
  remote: simplify remote_is_configured()
  remote: use parse_config_key
2016-02-26 13:37:09 -08:00
24321375cd credential: let empty credential specs reset helper list
Sine the credential.helper key is a multi-valued config
list, there's no way to "unset" a helper once it's been set.
So if your system /etc/gitconfig sets one, you can never
avoid running it, but only add your own helpers on top.

Since an empty value for credential.helper is nonsensical
(it would just try to run "git-credential-"), we can assume
nobody is using it. Let's define it to reset the helper
list, letting you override lower-priority instances which
have come before.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-26 10:58:14 -08:00
59223223f4 t/lib-httpd: load mod_unixd
In contrast to apache 2.2, apache 2.4 does not load mod_unixd in its
default configuration (because there are choices). Thus, with the
current config, apache 2.4.10 will not be started and the httpd tests
will not run on distros with default apache config (RedHat type).

Enable mod_unixd to make the httpd tests run. This does not affect
distros negatively which have that config already in their default
(Debian type). httpd tests will run on these before and after this patch.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 15:25:16 -08:00
65a3629ea3 upload-pack: use argv_array for pack_objects
Use the argv_array in the child_process structure, to avoid having to
manually maintain an array size.

Signed-off-by: Michael Procter <michael@procter.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 14:20:25 -08:00
43f3afc6bc t5504: handle expected output from SIGPIPE death
Commit 8bf4bec (add "ok=sigpipe" to test_must_fail and use
it to fix flaky tests, 2015-11-27) taught t5504 to handle
"git push" racily exiting with SIGPIPE rather than failing.

However, one of the tests checks the output of the command,
as well. In the SIGPIPE case, we will not have produced any
output. If we want the test to be truly non-flaky, we have
to accept either output.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 13:51:47 -08:00
f3ed0b372d test_must_fail: report number of unexpected signal
If a command is marked as test_must_fail but dies with a
signal, we consider that a problem and report the error to
stderr. However, we don't say _which_ signal; knowing that
can make debugging easier. Let's share as much as we know.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 13:51:47 -08:00
9ff18faf2f fetch-pack: ignore SIGPIPE in sideband demuxer
If the other side feeds us a bogus pack, index-pack (or
unpack-objects) may die early, before consuming all of its
input. As a result, the sideband demuxer may get SIGPIPE
(racily, depending on whether our data made it into the pipe
buffer or not). If this happens and we are compiled with
pthread support, it will take down the main thread, too.

This isn't the end of the world, as the main process will
just die() anyway when it sees index-pack failed. But it
does mean we don't get a chance to say "fatal: index-pack
failed" or similar. And it also means that we racily fail
t5504, as we sometimes die() and sometimes are killed by
SIGPIPE.

So let's ignore SIGPIPE while demuxing the sideband. We are
already careful to check the return value of write(), so we
won't waste time writing to a broken pipe. The caller will
notice the error return from the async thread, though in
practice we don't even get that far, as we die() as soon as
we see that index-pack failed.

The non-sideband case is already fine; we let index-pack
read straight from the socket, so there is no SIGPIPE at
all. Technically the non-threaded async case is also OK
without this (the forked async process gets SIGPIPE), but
it's not worth distinguishing from the threaded case here.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 13:51:47 -08:00
9658846ce3 write_or_die: handle EPIPE in async threads
When write_or_die() sees EPIPE, it treats it specially by
converting it into a SIGPIPE death. We obviously cannot
ignore it, as the write has failed and the caller expects us
to die. But likewise, we cannot just call die(), because
printing any message at all would be a nuisance during
normal operations.

However, this is a problem if write_or_die() is called from
a thread. Our raised signal ends up killing the whole
process, when logically we just need to kill the thread
(after all, if we are ignoring SIGPIPE, there is good reason
to think that the main thread is expecting to handle it).

Inside an async thread, the die() code already does the
right thing, because we use our custom die_async() routine,
which calls pthread_join(). So ideally we would piggy-back
on that, and simply call:

  die_quietly_with_code(141);

or similar. But refactoring the die code to do this is
surprisingly non-trivial. The die_routines themselves handle
both printing and the decision of the exit code. Every one
of them would have to be modified to take new parameters for
the code, and to tell us to be quiet.

Instead, we can just teach write_or_die() to check for the
async case and handle it specially. We do have to build an
interface to abstract the async exit, but it's simple and
self-contained. If we had many call-sites that wanted to do
this die_quietly_with_code(), this approach wouldn't scale
as well, but we don't. This is the only place where do this
weird exit trick.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 13:51:45 -08:00
658df95a4a add DEVELOPER makefile knob to check for acknowledged warnings
We assume Git developers have a reasonably modern compiler and recommend
them to enable the DEVELOPER makefile knob to ensure their patches are
clear of all compiler warnings the Git core project cares about.

Enable the DEVELOPER makefile knob in the Travis-CI build.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 12:49:45 -08:00
49386868de refs: document transaction semantics
Add some comments on ref transaction semantics to refs.h

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 12:35:31 -08:00
13e0b0d3dc use_pack: handle signed off_t overflow
A v2 pack index file can specify an offset within a packfile
of up to 2^64-1 bytes. On a system with a signed 64-bit
off_t, we can represent only up to 2^63-1. This means that a
corrupted .idx file can end up with a negative offset in the
pack code. Our bounds-checking use_pack function looks for
too-large offsets, but not for ones that have wrapped around
to negative. Let's do so, which fixes an out-of-bounds
access demonstrated in t5313.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 11:32:46 -08:00
47fe3f6ef0 nth_packed_object_offset: bounds-check extended offset
If a pack .idx file has a corrupted offset for an object, we
may try to access an offset in the .idx or .pack file that
is larger than the file's size.  For the .pack case, we have
use_pack() to protect us, which realizes the access is out
of bounds. But if the corrupted value asks us to look in the
.idx file's secondary 64-bit offset table, we blindly add it
to the mmap'd index data and access arbitrary memory.

We can fix this with a simple bounds-check compared to the
size we found when we opened the .idx file.

Note that there's similar code in index-pack that is
triggered only during "index-pack --verify". To support
both, we pull the bounds-check into a separate function,
which dies when it sees a corrupted file.

It would be nice if we could return an error, so that the
pack code could try to find a good copy of the object
elsewhere. Currently nth_packed_object_offset doesn't have
any way to return an error, but it could probably use "0" as
a sentinel value (since no object can start there). This is
the minimal fix, and we can improve the resilience later on
top.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 11:32:43 -08:00
a1283866ba t5313: test bounds-checks of corrupted/malicious pack/idx files
Our on-disk .pack and .idx files may reference other data by
offset. We should make sure that we are not fooled by
corrupt data into accessing memory outside of our mmap'd
boundaries.

This patch adds a series of tests for offsets found in .pack
and .idx files. For the most part we get this right, but
there are two tests of .idx files marked as failures: we do
not bounds-check offsets in the v2 index's extended offset
table, nor do we handle .idx offsets that overflow a signed
off_t.

With these tests, we should have good coverage of all
offsets found in these files. Note that this doesn't cover
.bitmap files, which may have similar bugs.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 11:32:41 -08:00
5404c116aa diff: activate diff.renames by default
Rename detection is a very convenient feature, and new users shouldn't
have to dig in the documentation to benefit from it.

Potential objections to activating rename detection are that it
sometimes fail, and it is sometimes slow. But rename detection is
already activated by default in several cases like "git status" and "git
merge", so activating diff.renames does not fundamentally change the
situation. When the rename detection fails, it now fails consistently
between "git diff" and "git status".

This setting does not affect plumbing commands, hence well-written
scripts will not be affected.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 11:31:02 -08:00
9501d191ad log: introduce init_log_defaults()
This is currently a wrapper around init_grep_defaults(), but will allow
adding more initialization in further patches.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 11:31:00 -08:00
638fa623d5 git config: report when trying to modify a non-existing repo config
It is a pilot error to call `git config section.key value` outside of
any Git worktree. The message

	error: could not lock config file .git/config: No such file or
	directory

is not very helpful in that situation, though. Let's print a helpful
message instead.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 10:52:32 -08:00
2f275207ce push: remove "push.default is unset" warning message
The warning was important before the 2.0 transition, and remained
important for a while after, so that new users get push.default
explicitly in their configuration and do not experience inconsistent
behavior if they ever used an older version of Git.

The warning has been there since version 1.8.0 (Oct 2012), hence we can
expect the vast majority of current Git users to have been exposed to
it, and most of them have already set push.default explicitly. The
switch from 'matching' to 'simple' was planned for 2.0 (May 2014), but
actually happened only for 2.3 (Feb 2015).

Today, the warning is mostly seen by beginners, who have not set their
push.default configuration (yet). For many of them, the warning is
confusing because it talks about concepts that they have not learned and
asks them a choice that they are not able to make yet. See for example

  http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13148066/warning-push-default-is-unset-its-implicit-value-is-changing-in-git-2-0

(1260 votes for the question, 1824 for the answer as of writing)

Remove the warning completely to avoid disturbing beginners. People who
still occasionally use an older version of Git will be exposed to the
warning through this old version.

Eventually, versions of Git without the warning will be deployed enough
and tutorials will not need to advise setting push.default anymore.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 09:56:42 -08:00
a9276a69ca t: add tests for diff.renames (true/false/unset)
The underlying machinery is well-tested, but the configuration option
itself was tested only in t3400-rebase.sh.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 09:54:20 -08:00
f07fc9e753 t4001-diff-rename: wrap file creations in a test
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 09:54:20 -08:00
62df1e68e0 Documentation/diff-config: fix description of diff.renames
The description was misleading, since "set to any boolean value" include
"set to false", and diff.renames=false does not enable basic detection,
but actually disables it. Also, document that diff.renames only affects
Porcelain.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 09:54:06 -08:00
a217f07388 README.md: move down historical explanation about the name
The explanations about why the name was chosen are secondary compared to
the description and link to the documentation.

Some consider these explanations as good computer scientists joke, but
other see it as needlessly offensive vocabulary.

This patch preserves the historical joke, but gives it less importance
by moving it to the end of the README, and makes it clear that it is a
historical explanation, that does not necessarily reflect the state of
mind of current developers.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 09:33:58 -08:00
28513c4f56 README.md: don't call git stupid in the title
"the stupid content tracker" was true in the early days of Git, but
hardly applicable these days. "fast, scalable, distributed" describes
Git more accuralety.

Also, "stupid" can be seen as offensive by some people. Let's not use it
in the very first words of the README.

The new formulation is taken from the description of the Debian package.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 09:33:58 -08:00
d9b297db70 README.md: move the link to git-scm.com up
The documentation available on git-scm.com is nicely formatted. It's
better to point users to it than to the source code of the
documentation.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 09:33:58 -08:00
6164972018 README.md: add hyperlinks on filenames
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 09:33:57 -08:00
4ad21f5d59 README: use markdown syntax
This allows repository browsers like GitHub to display the content of
the file nicely formatted.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 09:33:57 -08:00
9537f21b55 templates/hooks: fix minor typo in the sample update-hook
Signed-off-by: Martin Mosegaard Amdisen <martin.amdisen@praqma.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-25 09:32:20 -08:00
fb43e31f2b submodule: try harder to fetch needed sha1 by direct fetching sha1
When reviewing a change that also updates a submodule in Gerrit, a
common review practice is to download and cherry-pick the patch
locally to test it. However when testing it locally, the 'git
submodule update' may fail fetching the correct submodule sha1 as
the corresponding commit in the submodule is not yet part of the
project history, but also just a proposed change.

If $sha1 was not part of the default fetch, we try to fetch the $sha1
directly. Some servers however do not support direct fetch by sha1,
which leads git-fetch to fail quickly. We can fail ourselves here as
the still missing sha1 would lead to a failure later in the checkout
stage anyway, so failing here is as good as we can get.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-24 15:24:49 -08:00
44c74ecade t3034: test deprecated interface
--find-renames= and --rename-threshold= should be aliases.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Gonçalves Assis <felipegassis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-24 14:48:55 -08:00
2307211349 t3034: test option to disable renames
Signed-off-by: Felipe Gonçalves Assis <felipegassis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-24 14:48:34 -08:00
63651e1a13 t3034: add rename threshold tests
10ae752 (merge-recursive: option to specify rename threshold,
2010-09-27) introduced this feature but did not include any tests.

The tests use the new option --find-renames, which replaces the then
introduced and now deprecated option --rename-threshold.

Also update name and description of t3032 for consistency:
"merge-recursive options" -> "merge-recursive space options"

Signed-off-by: Felipe Gonçalves Assis <felipegassis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-24 14:45:28 -08:00
2b56bb7a87 submodule helper list: respect correct path prefix
This is a regression introduced by 74703a1e4d (submodule: rewrite
`module_list` shell function in C, 2015-09-02).

Add a test to ensure we list the right submodule when giving a
specific pathspec.

Reported-By: Caleb Jorden <cjorden@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-24 14:33:02 -08:00
56f37fda51 Eighth batch for 2.8
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-24 13:31:57 -08:00
c3b1e8d851 Merge branch 'jc/am-i-v-fix'
The "v(iew)" subcommand of the interactive "git am -i" command was
broken in 2.6.0 timeframe when the command was rewritten in C.

* jc/am-i-v-fix:
  am -i: fix "v"iew
  pager: factor out a helper to prepare a child process to run the pager
  pager: lose a separate argv[]
2016-02-24 13:26:01 -08:00
595bfefa6c Merge branch 'nd/worktree-add-B'
"git worktree add -B <branchname>" did not work.

* nd/worktree-add-B:
  worktree add -B: do the checkout test before update branch
  worktree: fix "add -B"
2016-02-24 13:26:00 -08:00
5e57f9c3df Merge branch 'nd/exclusion-regression-fix'
Another try to add support to the ignore mechanism that lets you
say "this is excluded" and then later say "oh, no, this part (that
is a subset of the previous part) is not excluded".

* nd/exclusion-regression-fix:
  dir.c: don't exclude whole dir prematurely
  dir.c: support marking some patterns already matched
  dir.c: support tracing exclude
  dir.c: fix match_pathname()
2016-02-24 13:25:59 -08:00
e79112d210 Merge branch 'ce/https-public-key-pinning'
You can now set http.[<url>.]pinnedpubkey to specify the pinned
public key when building with recent enough versions of libcURL.

* ce/https-public-key-pinning:
  http: implement public key pinning
2016-02-24 13:25:58 -08:00
65ba75ba7d Merge branch 'bc/http-empty-auth'
Some authentication methods do not need username or password, but
libcurl needs some hint that it needs to perform authentication.
Supplying an empty username and password string is a valid way to
do so, but you can set the http.[<url>.]emptyAuth configuration
variable to achieve the same, if you find it cleaner.

* bc/http-empty-auth:
  http: add option to try authentication without username
2016-02-24 13:25:57 -08:00
97c49af6a7 Merge branch 'sp/remote-curl-ssl-strerror'
Help those who debug http(s) part of the system.

* sp/remote-curl-ssl-strerror:
  remote-curl: include curl_errorstr on SSL setup failures
2016-02-24 13:25:56 -08:00
9831e92bfa Merge branch 'jk/lose-name-path'
The "name_path" API was an attempt to reduce the need to construct
the full path out of a series of path components while walking a
tree hierarchy, but over time made less efficient because the path
needs to be flattened, e.g. to be compared with another path that
is already flat.  The API has been removed and its users have been
rewritten to simplify the overall code complexity.

* jk/lose-name-path:
  list-objects: pass full pathname to callbacks
  list-objects: drop name_path entirely
  list-objects: convert name_path to a strbuf
  show_object_with_name: simplify by using path_name()
  http-push: stop using name_path
2016-02-24 13:25:55 -08:00
e84d5e9fa1 Merge branch 'ew/force-ipv4'
"git fetch" and friends that make network connections can now be
told to only use ipv4 (or ipv6).

* ew/force-ipv4:
  connect & http: support -4 and -6 switches for remote operations
2016-02-24 13:25:54 -08:00
8020803f50 Merge branch 'nd/git-common-dir-fix'
"git rev-parse --git-common-dir" used in the worktree feature
misbehaved when run from a subdirectory.

* nd/git-common-dir-fix:
  rev-parse: take prefix into account in --git-common-dir
2016-02-24 13:25:53 -08:00
e6a6a768ca Merge branch 'nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs'
"git show 'HEAD:Foo[BAR]Baz'" did not interpret the argument as a
rev, i.e. the object named by the the pathname with wildcard
characters in a tree object.

* nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs:
  get_sha1: don't die() on bogus search strings
  check_filename: tighten dwim-wildcard ambiguity
  checkout: reorder check_filename conditional
2016-02-24 13:25:52 -08:00
87892f605b merge-recursive: find-renames resets threshold
Make the find-renames option follow the behaviour in git-diff, where it
resets the threshold when none is given. So, for instance,
"--find-renames=25 --find-renames" should result in the default
threshold (50%) instead of 25%.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Gonçalves Assis <felipegassis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-24 10:39:02 -08:00
3b1442d5d2 t9200: avoid grep on non-ASCII data
GNU grep 2.23 detects the input used in this test as binary data so it
does not work for extracting lines from a file.  We could add the "-a"
option to force grep to treat the input as text, but not all
implementations support that.  Instead, use sed to extract the desired
lines since it will always treat its input as text.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-23 15:03:43 -08:00
0be43dedbc t8005: avoid grep on non-ASCII data
GNU grep 2.23 detects the input used in this test as binary data so it
does not work for extracting lines from a file.  We could add the "-a"
option to force grep to treat the input as text, but not all
implementations support that.  Instead, use sed to extract the desired
lines since it will always treat its input as text.

While touching these lines, modernize the test style to avoid hiding the
exit status of "git blame" and remove a space following a redirection
operator.  Also swap the order of the expected and actual output
files given to test_cmp; we compare expect and actual to show how
actual output differs from what is expected.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-23 15:00:12 -08:00
6e61449051 credential-cache--daemon: change to the socket dir on startup
Changing to the socket path stops the daemon holding open
the directory the user was in when it was started,
preventing umount from working. We're already holding open a
socket in that directory, so there's no downside.

Thanks-to: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jon Griffiths <jon_p_griffiths@yahoo.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-23 14:48:03 -08:00
f6b1fb372e Documentation/git-push: document that 'simple' is the default
The default behavior is well documented already in git-config(1), but
git-push(1) itself did not mention it at all. For users willing to learn
how "git push" works but not how to configure it, this makes the
documentation cumbersome to read.

Make the git-push(1) page self-contained by adding a short summary of
what 'push.default=simple' does, early in the page.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-23 13:35:10 -08:00
4867f1184c xdiff/xmerge: fix memory leak in xdl_merge
When building the script for the second file that is to be merged
we have already allocated memory for data structures related to
the first file. When we encounter an error in building the second
script we only free allocated memory related to the second file
before erroring out.

Fix this memory leak by also releasing allocated memory related
to the first file.

Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-23 12:58:26 -08:00
bd93b8d9be credential-cache--daemon: disallow relative socket path
Relative socket paths are dangerous since the user cannot generally
control when the daemon starts (initially, after a timeout, kill or
crash). Since the daemon creates but does not delete the socket
directory, this could lead to spurious directory creation relative
to the users cwd.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jon Griffiths <jon_p_griffiths@yahoo.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-23 12:56:27 -08:00
a6e5e2864f credential-cache--daemon: refactor check_socket_directory
This function does an early return, and therefore has to
repeat its cleanup. We can stick the later bit of the
function into an "else" and avoid duplicating the shared
part (which will get bigger in a future patch).

Let's also rename the function to init_socket_directory. It
not only checks the directory but also creates it. Saying
"init" is more accurate.

Signed-off-by: Jon Griffiths <jon_p_griffiths@yahoo.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-23 12:56:26 -08:00
7c0da37d7b tests: remove no-op full-svn-test target
git-svn has not supported GIT_SVN_NO_OPTIMIZE_COMMITS for
the "set-tree" sub-command in 9 years since commit 490f49ea58
("git-svn: remove optimized commit stuff for set-tree").

So remove this target and TSVN variable to avoid confusion.

ref: http://mid.gmane.org/56C9B7B7.7030406@f2.dion.ne.jp

Helped-by: Kazutoshi Satoda <k_satoda@f2.dion.ne.jp>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-23 12:55:03 -08:00
817a0c7968 convert.c: correct attr_action()
df747b81 (convert.c: refactor crlf_action, 2016-02-10) introduced a
bug to "git ls-files --eol".

The "text" attribute was shown as "text eol=lf" or "text eol=crlf",
depending on core.autocrlf or core.eol.

Correct this and add test cases in t0027.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-23 12:53:15 -08:00
907681e940 xdiff: drop XDL_EMIT_COMMON
There are no more callers that use this mode, and none
likely to be added (as our xdl_merge() eliminates the common
use of it for generating 3-way merge bases).

This is effectively a revert of a9ed376 (xdiff: generate
"anti-diffs" aka what is common to two files, 2006-06-28),
though of course trying to revert that ancient commit
directly produces many textual conflicts.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 22:36:09 -08:00
b779b3a199 merge-tree: drop generate_common strategy
When merge_blobs sees an add/add conflict, it tries to
create a virtual base object for the 3-way merge that
consists of the common lines of each file. It inherited this
strategy from merge-one-file in 0c79938 (Improved three-way
blob merging code, 2006-06-28), and the point is to minimize
the size of the conflict hunks. That commit talks about "if
libxdiff were to ever grow a compatible three-way merge, it
could probably be directly plugged in".

That has long since happened. So as with merge-one-file in
the previous commit, this extra step is no longer necessary.
Our 3-way merge code is smart enough to do the minimizing
itself if we simply feed it an empty base, which is what the
more modern merge-recursive strategy already does.

Not only does this let us drop some code, but it removes an
overflow bug in generate_common_file(). We allocate a buffer
as large as the smallest of the two blobs, under the
assumption that there cannot be more common content than
what is in the smaller blob. However, xdiff may feed us
more: if neither file ends in a newline, it feeds us the
"\nNo newline at end of file" marker as common content, and
we write it into the output. If the differences between the
files are small than that string, we overflow the output
buffer.  This patch solves it by simply dropping the buggy
code entirely.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 22:36:07 -08:00
1a92e53ba3 merge-one-file: use empty blob for add/add base
When we see an add/add conflict on a file, we generate the
conflicted content by doing a 3-way merge with a "virtual"
base consisting of the common lines of the two sides. This
strategy dates back to cb93c19 (merge-one-file: use common
as base, instead of emptiness., 2005-11-09).

Back then, the next step was to call rcs merge to generate
the 3-way conflicts. Using the virtual base produced much
better results, as rcs merge does not attempt to minimize
the hunks. As a result, you'd get a conflict with the
entirety of the files on either side.

Since then, though, we've switched to using git-merge-file,
which uses xdiff's "zealous" merge. This will find the
minimal hunks even with just the simple, empty base.

Let's switch to using that empty base. It's simpler, more
efficient, and reduces our dependencies (we no longer need a
working diff binary). It's also how the merge-recursive
strategy handles this same case.

We can almost get rid of git-sh-setup's create_virtual_base,
but we don't here, for two reasons:

  1. The functions in git-sh-setup are part of our public
     interface, so it's possible somebody is depending on
     it. We'd at least need to deprecate it first.

  2. It's also used by mergetool's p4merge driver. It's
     unknown whether its 3-way merge is as capable as git's;
     if not, then it is benefiting from the function.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 22:36:05 -08:00
08c95df8fa ewah: convert to REALLOC_ARRAY, etc
Now that we're built around xmalloc and friends, we can use
helpers like REALLOC_ARRAY, ALLOC_GROW, and so on to make
the code shorter and protect against integer overflow.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
fb7dbf3e7a convert ewah/bitmap code to use xmalloc
This code was originally written with the idea that it could
be spun off into its own ewah library, and uses the
overrideable ewah_malloc to do allocations.

We plug in xmalloc as our ewah_malloc, of course. But over
the years the ewah code itself has become more entangled
with git, and the return value of many ewah_malloc sites is
not checked.

Let's just drop the level of indirection and use xmalloc and
friends directly. This saves a few lines, and will let us
adapt these sites to our more advanced malloc helpers.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
b1ddfb9151 diff_populate_gitlink: use a strbuf
We allocate 100 bytes to hold the "Submodule commit ..."
text. This is enough, but it's not immediately obvious that
this is the case, and we have to repeat the magic 100 twice.

We could get away with xstrfmt here, but we want to know the
size, as well, so let's use a real strbuf. And while we're
here, we can clean up the logic around size_only. It
currently sets and clears the "data" field pointlessly, and
leaves the "should_free" flag on even after we have cleared
the data.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
21f9d0f6f2 transport_anonymize_url: use xstrfmt
This function uses xcalloc and two memcpy calls to
concatenate two strings. We can do this as an xstrfmt
one-liner, and then it is more clear that we are allocating
the correct amount of memory.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
7eb45b5f78 git-compat-util: drop mempcpy compat code
There are no callers of this left, as the last one was
dropped in the previous patch. And there are not likely to
be new ones, as the function has been around since 2010
without gaining any new callers.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
7b35eaf8c5 sequencer: simplify memory allocation of get_message
For a commit with sha1 "1234abcd" and subject "foo", this
function produces a struct with three strings:

 1. "foo"

 2. "1234abcd... foo"

 3. "parent of 1234abcd... foo"

It takes advantage of the fact that these strings are
subsets of each other, and allocates only _one_ string, with
pointers into the various parts. Unfortunately, this makes
the string allocation complicated and hard to follow.

Since we keep only one of these in memory at a time, we can
afford to simply allocate three strings. This lets us build
on tools like xstrfmt and avoid manual computation.

While we're here, we can also drop the ad-hoc
reimplementation of get_git_commit_encoding(), and simply
call that function.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
62f17513e7 test-path-utils: fix normalize_path_copy output buffer size
The normalize_path_copy function needs an output buffer that
is at least as long as its input (it may shrink the path,
but never expand it). However, this test program feeds it
static PATH_MAX-sized buffers, which have no relation to the
input size.

In the normalize_ceiling_entry case, we do at least check
the size against PATH_MAX and die(), but that case is even
more convoluted. We normalize into a fixed-size buffer, free
the original, and then replace it with a strdup'd copy of
the result. But normalize_path_copy explicitly allows
normalizing in-place, so we can simply do that.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
5545f057d4 fetch-pack: simplify add_sought_entry
We have two variants of this function, one that takes a
string and one that takes a ptr/len combo. But we only call
the latter with the length of a NUL-terminated string, so
our first simplification is to drop it in favor of the
string variant.

Since we know we have a string, we can also replace the
manual memory computation with a call to alloc_ref().

Furthermore, we can rely on get_oid_hex() to complain if it
hits the end of the string. That means we can simplify the
check for "<sha1> <ref>" versus just "<ref>". Rather than
manage the ptr/len pair, we can just bump the start of our
string forward. The original code over-allocated based on
the original "namelen" (which wasn't _wrong_, but was simply
wasteful and confusing).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
a78c188a32 fast-import: simplify allocation in start_packfile
This function allocate a packed_git flex-array, and adds a
mysterious 2 bytes to the length of the pack_name field. One
is for the trailing NUL, but the other has no purpose. This
is probably cargo-culted from add_packed_git, which gets the
".idx" path and needed to allocate enough space to hold the
matching ".pack" (though since 48bcc1c, we calculate the
size there differently).

This site, however, is using the raw path of a tempfile, and
does not need the extra byte. We can just replace the
allocation with FLEX_ALLOC_STR, which handles the allocation
and the NUL for us.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
e0b8373510 write_untracked_extension: use FLEX_ALLOC helper
We perform unchecked additions when computing the size of a
"struct ondisk_untracked_cache". This is unlikely to have an
integer overflow in practice, but we'd like to avoid this
dangerous pattern to make further audits easier.

Note that there's one subtlety here, though.  We protect
ourselves against a NULL exclude_per_dir entry in our
source, and avoid calling strlen() on it, keeping "len" at
0. But later, we unconditionally memcpy "len + 1" bytes to
get the trailing NUL byte. If we did have a NULL
exclude_per_dir, we would read from bogus memory.

As it turns out, though, we always create this field
pointing to a string literal, so there's no bug. We can just
get rid of the pointless extra conditional.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
20574f551b prepare_{git,shell}_cmd: use argv_array
These functions transform an existing argv into one suitable
for exec-ing or spawning via git or a shell. We can use an
argv_array in each to avoid dealing with manual counting and
allocation.

This also makes the memory allocation more clear and fixes
some leaks. In prepare_shell_cmd, we would sometimes
allocate a new string with "$@" in it and sometimes not,
meaning the caller could not correctly free it. On the
non-Windows side, we are in a child process which will
exec() or exit() immediately, so the leak isn't a big deal.
On Windows, though, we use spawn() from the parent process,
and leak a string for each shell command we run. On top of
that, the Windows code did not free the allocated argv array
at all (but does for the prepare_git_cmd case!).

By switching both of these functions to write into an
argv_array, we can consistently free the result as
appropriate.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
50a6c8efa2 use st_add and st_mult for allocation size computation
If our size computation overflows size_t, we may allocate a
much smaller buffer than we expected and overflow it. It's
probably impossible to trigger an overflow in most of these
sites in practice, but it is easy enough convert their
additions and multiplications into overflow-checking
variants. This may be fixing real bugs, and it makes
auditing the code easier.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
96ffc06f72 convert trivial cases to FLEX_ARRAY macros
Using FLEX_ARRAY macros reduces the amount of manual
computation size we have to do. It also ensures we don't
overflow size_t, and it makes sure we write the same number
of bytes that we allocated.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
3733e69464 use xmallocz to avoid size arithmetic
We frequently allocate strings as xmalloc(len + 1), where
the extra 1 is for the NUL terminator. This can be done more
simply with xmallocz, which also checks for integer
overflow.

There's no case where switching xmalloc(n+1) to xmallocz(n)
is wrong; the result is the same length, and malloc made no
guarantees about what was in the buffer anyway. But in some
cases, we can stop manually placing NUL at the end of the
allocated buffer. But that's only safe if it's clear that
the contents will always fill the buffer.

In each case where this patch does so, I manually examined
the control flow, and I tried to err on the side of caution.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
b32fa95fd8 convert trivial cases to ALLOC_ARRAY
Each of these cases can be converted to use ALLOC_ARRAY or
REALLOC_ARRAY, which has two advantages:

  1. It automatically checks the array-size multiplication
     for overflow.

  2. It always uses sizeof(*array) for the element-size,
     so that it can never go out of sync with the declared
     type of the array.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:51:09 -08:00
850d2fec53 convert manual allocations to argv_array
There are many manual argv allocations that predate the
argv_array API. Switching to that API brings a few
advantages:

  1. We no longer have to manually compute the correct final
     array size (so it's one less thing we can screw up).

  2. In many cases we had to make a separate pass to count,
     then allocate, then fill in the array. Now we can do it
     in one pass, making the code shorter and easier to
     follow.

  3. argv_array handles memory ownership for us, making it
     more obvious when things should be free()d and and when
     not.

Most of these cases are pretty straightforward. In some, we
switch from "run_command_v" to "run_command" which lets us
directly use the argv_array embedded in "struct
child_process".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:50:32 -08:00
b992657ed0 argv-array: add detach function
The usual pattern for an argv array is to initialize it,
push in some strings, and then clear it when done. Very
occasionally, though, we must do other exotic things with
the memory, like freeing the list but keeping the strings.
Let's provide a detach function so that callers can make use
of our API to build up the array, and then take ownership of
it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:50:32 -08:00
3689539127 add helpers for allocating flex-array structs
Allocating a struct with a flex array is pretty simple in
practice: you over-allocate the struct, then copy some data
into the over-allocation. But it can be a slight pain to
make sure you're allocating and copying the right amounts.

This patch adds a few helpers to turn simple cases of
flex-array struct allocation into a one-liner that properly
checks for overflow. See the embedded documentation for
details.

Ideally we could provide a more flexible version that could
handle multiple strings, like:

  FLEX_ALLOC_FMT(ref, name, "%s%s", prefix, name);

But we have to implement this as a macro (because of the
offset calculation of the flex member), which means we would
need all compilers to support variadic macros.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:50:32 -08:00
e7792a74bc harden REALLOC_ARRAY and xcalloc against size_t overflow
REALLOC_ARRAY inherently involves a multiplication which can
overflow size_t, resulting in a much smaller buffer than we
think we've allocated. We can easily harden it by using
st_mult() to check for overflow.  Likewise, we can add
ALLOC_ARRAY to do the same thing for xmalloc calls.

xcalloc() should already be fine, because it takes the two
factors separately, assuming the system calloc actually
checks for overflow. However, before we even hit the system
calloc(), we do our memory_limit_check, which involves a
multiplication. Let's check for overflow ourselves so that
this limit cannot be bypassed.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 14:50:32 -08:00
70bd996071 Sync with 2.7.2 2016-02-22 13:16:12 -08:00
4091558cfe Merge branch 'js/git-remote-add-url-insteadof-test'
* js/git-remote-add-url-insteadof-test:
  t5505: 'remote add x y' should work when url.y.insteadOf = x
2016-02-22 13:15:01 -08:00
895f20de9e Merge branch 'jk/config-include'
* jk/config-include:
  git-config: better document default behavior for `--include`
2016-02-22 13:14:48 -08:00
d7145ef275 Merge branch 'ew/connect-verbose'
* ew/connect-verbose:
  t5570: add tests for "git {clone,fetch,pull} -v"
2016-02-22 13:14:33 -08:00
326e5bc91e Git 2.7.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 13:12:56 -08:00
2bbea5c8f2 Merge branch 'nd/ita-cleanup' into maint
Paths that have been told the index about with "add -N" are not
quite yet in the index, but a few commands behaved as if they
already are in a harmful way.

* nd/ita-cleanup:
  grep: make it clear i-t-a entries are ignored
  add and use a convenience macro ce_intent_to_add()
  blame: remove obsolete comment
2016-02-22 13:10:21 -08:00
47847c756b Merge branch 'pw/completion-stash' into maint
* pw/completion-stash:
  completion: fix mis-indentation in _git_stash()
2016-02-22 13:10:20 -08:00
924459c516 Merge branch 'mm/clean-doc-fix' into maint
The documentation for "git clean" has been corrected; it mentioned
that .git/modules/* are removed by giving two "-f", which has never
been the case.

* mm/clean-doc-fix:
  Documentation/git-clean.txt: don't mention deletion of .git/modules/*
2016-02-22 13:10:20 -08:00
2263a05907 Merge branch 'dw/mergetool-vim-window-shuffle' into maint
The vimdiff backend for "git mergetool" has been tweaked to arrange
and number buffers in the order that would match the expectation of
majority of people who read left to right, then top down and assign
buffers 1 2 3 4 "mentally" to local base remote merge windows based
on that order.

* dw/mergetool-vim-window-shuffle:
  mergetool: reorder vim/gvim buffers in three-way diffs
2016-02-22 13:10:20 -08:00
fa7b63d2f1 Merge branch 'ah/stripspace-optstring' into maint
* ah/stripspace-optstring:
  stripspace: call U+0020 a "space" instead of a "blank"
2016-02-22 13:10:19 -08:00
83837ec0b4 merge-strategies.txt: fix typo
Signed-off-by: Felipe Gonçalves Assis <felipegassis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:42:52 -08:00
a64e6a44c6 diff: clarify textconv interface
The memory allocation scheme for the textconv interface is a
bit tricky, and not well documented. It was originally
designed as an internal part of diff.c (matching
fill_mmfile), but gradually was made public.

Refactoring it is difficult, but we can at least improve the
situation by documenting the intended flow and enforcing it
with an in-code assertion.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:40:35 -08:00
d4bd6781de Merge branch 'ks/svn-pathnameencoding-4' of git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn
* 'ks/svn-pathnameencoding-4' of git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn:
  git-svn: apply "svn.pathnameencoding" before URL encoding
  git-svn: enable "svn.pathnameencoding" on dcommit
  git-svn: hoist out utf8 prep from t9129 to lib-git-svn
2016-02-22 10:29:46 -08:00
8716bdca26 Merge branch 'pw/completion-stash'
* pw/completion-stash:
  completion: fix mis-indentation in _git_stash()
2016-02-22 10:27:24 -08:00
59305aeeba completion: fix mis-indentation in _git_stash()
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:26:04 -08:00
3d1806487a config: rename git_config_set_or_die to git_config_set
Rename git_config_set_or_die functions to git_config_set, leading
to the new default behavior of dying whenever a configuration
error occurs.

By now all callers that shall die on error have been transitioned
to the _or_die variants, thus making this patch a simple rename
of the functions.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:55 -08:00
30598ad06f config: rename git_config_set to git_config_set_gently
The desired default behavior for `git_config_set` is to die
whenever an error occurs. Dying is the default for a lot of
internal functions when failures occur and is in this case the
right thing to do for most callers as otherwise we might run into
inconsistent repositories without noticing.

As some code may rely on the actual return values for
`git_config_set` we still require the ability to invoke these
functions without aborting. Rename the existing `git_config_set`
functions to `git_config_set_gently` to keep them available for
those callers.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:55 -08:00
2f29c1bf34 compat: die when unable to set core.precomposeunicode
When calling `git_config_set` to set 'core.precomposeunicode' we
ignore the return value of the function, which may indicate that
we were unable to write the value back to disk. As the function
is only called by init-db we can and should die when an error
occurs.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:54 -08:00
6c24dfb67e sequencer: die on config error when saving replay opts
When we start picking a range of revisions we save the replay
options that are required to restore state when interrupting and
later continuing picking the revisions. However, we do not check
the return values of the `git_config_set` functions, which may
lead us to store incomplete information. As this may lead us to
fail when trying to continue the sequence the error can be fatal.

Fix this by dying immediately when we are unable to write back
any replay option.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:54 -08:00
695009bc09 init-db: die on config errors when initializing empty repo
When creating an empty repository with `git init-db` we do not
check for error codes returned by `git_config_set` functions.
This may cause the user to end up with an inconsistent repository
without any indication for the user.

Fix this problem by dying early with an error message when we are
unable to write the configuration files to disk.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:54 -08:00
2ee35c428e clone: die on config error in cmd_clone
The clone command does not check for error codes returned by
`git_config_set` functions. This may cause the user to end up
with an inconsistent repository without any indication with what
went wrong.

Fix this problem by dying with an error message when we are
unable to write the configuration files to disk.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:53 -08:00
c397debf3d remote: die on config error when manipulating remotes
When manipulating remotes we try to set various configuration
values without checking if the values were persisted correctly,
possibly leaving the remote in an inconsistent state.

Fix this issue by dying early and notifying the user about the
error.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:53 -08:00
ab5e4b67e1 remote: die on config error when setting/adding branches
When we add or set new branches (e.g. by `git remote add -f` or
`git remote set-branches`) we do not check for error codes when
writing the branches to the configuration file. When persisting
the configuration failed we are left with a remote that has none
or not all of the branches that should have been set without
notifying the user.

Fix this issue by dying early on configuration error.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:53 -08:00
45ebdcc99a remote: die on config error when setting URL
When invoking `git-remote --set-url` we do not check the return
value when writing the actual new URL to the configuration file,
pretending to the user that the configuration has been set while
it was in fact not persisted.

Fix this problem by dying early when setting the config fails.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:52 -08:00
15b92fc052 submodule--helper: die on config error when cloning module
When setting the 'core.worktree' option for a newly cloned
submodule we ignore the return value of `git_config_set_in_file`.
As this leaves the submodule in an inconsistent state, we instead
want to inform the user that something has gone wrong by printing
an error and aborting the program.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:52 -08:00
1a90dfe8a7 submodule: die on config error when linking modules
When trying to connect a submodule with its corresponding
repository in '.git/modules' we try to set the core.worktree
setting in the submodule, which may fail due to an error
encountered in `git_config_set_in_file`.

The function is used in the git-mv command when trying to move a
submodule to another location. We already die when renaming a
file fails but do not pay attention to the case where updating
the connection between submodule and its repository fails. As
this leaves the repository in an inconsistent state, as well,
abort the program by dying early and presenting the failure to
the user.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:52 -08:00
bd25f89014 branch: die on config error when editing branch description
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:52 -08:00
b81842cbbb branch: die on config error when unsetting upstream
When we try to unset upstream configurations we do not check
return codes for the `git_config_set` functions. As those may
indicate that we were unable to unset the respective
configuration we may exit successfully without any error message
while in fact the upstream configuration was not unset.

Fix this by dying with an error message when we cannot unset the
configuration.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:45 -08:00
27852b2c53 branch: report errors in tracking branch setup
When setting up a new tracking branch fails due to issues with
the configuration file we do not report any errors to the user
and pretend setting the tracking branch succeeded.

Setting up the tracking branch is handled by the
`install_branch_config` function. We do not want to simply die
there as the function is not only invoked when explicitly setting
upstream information with `git branch --set-upstream-to=`, but
also by `git push --set-upstream` and `git clone`. While it is
reasonable to die in the explict first case, we would lose
information in the latter two cases, so we only print the error
message but continue the program as usual.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 10:23:30 -08:00
70bd879ab6 config: add '--show-origin' option to print the origin of a config value
If config values are queried using 'git config' (e.g. via --get,
--get-all, --get-regexp, or --list flag) then it is sometimes hard to
find the configuration file where the values were defined.

Teach 'git config' the '--show-origin' option to print the source
configuration file for every printed value.

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 09:43:48 -08:00
473166b990 config: add 'origin_type' to config_source struct
Use the config origin_type to print more detailed error messages that
inform the user about the origin of a config error (file, stdin, blob).

Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-22 09:36:33 -08:00
63ca1c099c git.c: simplify stripping extension of a file in handle_builtin()
The handle_builtin() starts from stripping of command extension if
STRIP_EXTENSION is enabled. Actually STRIP_EXTENSION does not used
anywhere else.

This patch introduces strip_extension() helper to strip STRIP_EXTENSION
extension from argv[0] with the strip_suffix() instead of manually
stripping.

Signed-off-by: Alexander Kuleshov <kuleshovmail@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-21 23:52:43 -08:00
1b42f45255 git-svn: apply "svn.pathnameencoding" before URL encoding
The conversion from "svn.pathnameencoding" to UTF-8 should be applied
first, and then URL encoding should be applied on the resulting UTF-8
path. The reversed order of these transforms (used before this fix)
makes non-UTF-8 URL which causes error from Subversion such as
"Filesystem has no item: '...' path not found" when sending a rename (or
a copy) from non-ASCII path.

[ew: t9115 test case added (requires SVN_HTTPD_PORT set to test),
 squash LC_ALL=$a_utf8_locale export from Kazutoshi for Cygwin]

Signed-off-by: Kazutoshi SATODA <k_satoda@f2.dion.ne.jp>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2016-02-22 02:29:36 +00:00
40f47448a9 git-svn: enable "svn.pathnameencoding" on dcommit
Without the initialization of $self->{pathnameencoding}, conversion in
repo_path() is always skipped as $self->{pathnameencoding} is undefined
even if "svn.pathnameencoding" is configured.

The lack of conversion results in mysterious failure of dcommit (e.g.
"Malformed XML") which happen only when a commit involves a change on
non-ASCII path.

[ew: add test case to t9115,
 squash LC_ALL=$a_utf8_locale export from Kazutoshi for Cygwin]

Signed-off-by: Kazutoshi SATODA <k_satoda@f2.dion.ne.jp>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2016-02-22 02:28:34 +00:00
3df0d26ca6 git-svn: hoist out utf8 prep from t9129 to lib-git-svn
We will be reusing this in t9115.

Suggested-by: Kazutoshi Satoda <k_satoda@f2.dion.ne.jp>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2016-02-22 02:21:19 +00:00
5549029427 tests: rename work-tree tests to *work-tree*
"Work tree" or "working tree" is the name of a checked out tree,
"worktree" the name of the command which manages several working trees.
The naming of tests mixes these two, currently:

$ls t/*worktree*
t/t1501-worktree.sh
t/t1509-root-worktree.sh
t/t2025-worktree-add.sh
t/t2026-worktree-prune.sh
t/t2027-worktree-list.sh
t/t2104-update-index-skip-worktree.sh
t/t3320-notes-merge-worktrees.sh
t/t7011-skip-worktree-reading.sh
t/t7012-skip-worktree-writing.sh
t/t7409-submodule-detached-worktree.sh

$grep -l "git worktree" t/*.sh
t/t0002-gitfile.sh
t/t1400-update-ref.sh
t/t2025-worktree-add.sh
t/t2026-worktree-prune.sh
t/t2027-worktree-list.sh
t/t3320-notes-merge-worktrees.sh
t/t7410-submodule-checkout-to.sh

Rename t1501, t1509 and t7409 to make it clear on first glance that they
test work tree related behavior, rather than the worktree command.

t2104, t7011 and t7012 are about the "skip-worktree" flag so that their
name should remain unchanged.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-20 23:37:29 -08:00
f45982337a exec_cmd.c: use find_last_dir_sep() for code simplification
We are trying to extract dirname from argv0 in the git_extract_argv0_path().
But in the same time, the <git-compat-util.h> provides find_last_dir_sep()
to get dirname from a given path.  Let's use it instead of loop for the code
simplification.

Signed-off-by: Alexander Kuleshov <kuleshovmail@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-19 13:26:38 -08:00
7454ee3c62 rename git_config_from_buf to git_config_from_mem
This matches the naming used in the index_{fd,mem,...} functions.

Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-19 10:08:12 -08:00
5b442c4f27 tree-diff: catch integer overflow in combine_diff_path allocation
A combine_diff_path struct has two "flex" members allocated
alongside the struct: a string to hold the pathname, and an
array of parent pointers. We use an "int" to compute this,
meaning we may easily overflow it if the pathname is
extremely long.

We can fix this by using size_t, and checking for overflow
with the st_add helper.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-19 09:40:37 -08:00
320d0b493a add helpers for detecting size_t overflow
Performing computations on size_t variables that we feed to
xmalloc and friends can be dangerous, as an integer overflow
can cause us to allocate a much smaller chunk than we
realized.

We already have unsigned_add_overflows(), but let's add
unsigned_mult_overflows() to that. Furthermore, rather than
have each site manually check and die on overflow, we can
provide some helpers that will:

  - promote the arguments to size_t, so that we know we are
    doing our computation in the same size of integer that
    will ultimately be fed to xmalloc

  - check and die on overflow

  - return the result so that computations can be done in
    the parameter list of xmalloc.

These functions are a lot uglier to use than normal
arithmetic operators (you have to do "st_add(foo, bar)"
instead of "foo + bar"). To at least limit the damage, we
also provide multi-valued versions. So rather than:

  st_add(st_add(a, b), st_add(c, d));

you can write:

  st_add4(a, b, c, d);

This isn't nearly as elegant as a varargs function, but it's
a lot harder to get it wrong. You don't have to remember to
add a sentinel value at the end, and the compiler will
complain if you get the number of arguments wrong. This
patch adds only the numbered variants required to convert
the current code base; we can easily add more later if
needed.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-19 09:40:37 -08:00
c3a700fba1 reflog_expire_cfg: NUL-terminate pattern field
You can tweak the reflog expiration for a particular subset
of refs by configuring gc.foo.reflogexpire. We keep a linked
list of reflog_expire_cfg structs, each of which holds the
pattern and a "len" field for the length of the pattern. The
pattern itself is _not_ NUL-terminated.

However, we feed the pattern directly to wildmatch(), which
expects a NUL-terminated string, meaning it may keep reading
random junk after our struct.

We can fix this by allocating an extra byte for the NUL
(which is already zero because we use xcalloc). Let's also
drop the misleading "len" field, which is no longer
necessary. The existing use of "len" can be converted to use
strncmp().

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-19 09:40:37 -08:00
fe63c4d110 ref-filter: introduce objectname_atom_parser()
Introduce objectname_atom_parser() which will parse the
'%(objectname)' atom and store information into the 'used_atom'
structure based on the modifiers used along with the atom.

Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <Karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 14:06:45 -08:00
452db3973c ref-filter: introduce contents_atom_parser()
Introduce contents_atom_parser() which will parse the '%(contents)'
atom and store information into the 'used_atom' structure based on the
modifiers used along with the atom. Also introduce body_atom_parser()
and subject_atom_parser() for parsing atoms '%(body)' and '%(subject)'
respectively.

Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <Karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 14:06:45 -08:00
5339bdad96 ref-filter: introduce remote_ref_atom_parser()
Introduce remote_ref_atom_parser() which will parse the '%(upstream)'
and '%(push)' atoms and store information into the 'used_atom'
structure based on the modifiers used along with the corresponding
atom.

Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <Karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 14:06:45 -08:00
395fb8f9f4 ref-filter: align: introduce long-form syntax
Introduce optional prefixes "width=" and "position=" for the align atom
so that the atom can be used as "%(align:width=<width>,position=<position>)".

Add Documentation and tests for the same.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <Karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 14:06:45 -08:00
5bd881d998 ref-filter: introduce align_atom_parser()
Introduce align_atom_parser() which will parse an 'align' atom and
store the required alignment position and width in the 'used_atom'
structure for further usage in populate_value().

Since this patch removes the last usage of match_atom_name(), remove
the function from ref-filter.c.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <Karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 14:06:45 -08:00
25a8d79e00 ref-filter: introduce parse_align_position()
Extract parse_align_position() from populate_value(), which, given a
string, would give us the alignment position. This is a preparatory
patch as to introduce prefixes for the %(align) atom and avoid
redundancy in the code.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <Karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 14:06:45 -08:00
fd935cc7e8 ref-filter: introduce color_atom_parser()
Introduce color_atom_parser() which will parse a "color" atom and
store its color in the "used_atom" structure for further usage in
populate_value().

Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <Karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 14:06:45 -08:00
4de707ea4f ref-filter: introduce parsing functions for each valid atom
Parsing atoms is done in populate_value(), this is repetitive and
hence expensive. Introduce a parsing function which would let us parse
atoms beforehand and store the required details into the 'used_atom'
structure for further usage.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Helped-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <Karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 14:06:45 -08:00
b072add7fb ref-filter: introduce struct used_atom
Introduce the 'used_atom' structure to replace the existing
implementation of 'used_atom' (which is a list of atoms). This helps
us parse atoms beforehand and store required details into the
'used_atom' for future usage.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <Karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 14:06:45 -08:00
50cd83dca1 ref-filter: bump 'used_atom' and related code to the top
Bump code to the top for usage in further patches.

Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <Karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 14:06:45 -08:00
132676478c ref-filter: use string_list_split over strbuf_split
We don't do any post-processing on the resulting strbufs, so it is
simpler to just use string_list_split, which takes care of removing
the delimiter for us.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <Karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 14:06:45 -08:00
a0578e0382 t: do not hide Git's exit code in tests using 'nul_to_q'
Git should not be on the left-hand side of a pipe, because it hides the exit
code, and we want to make sure git does not fail.

Fix all invocations of 'nul_to_q' (defined in /t/test-lib-functions.sh) using
this pattern. There is one more occurrence of the pattern in t9010-svn-fe.sh
which is too evolved to change it easily.

All remaining test code that does not adhere to the pattern can be found with
the following command:
git grep -E 'git.*[^|]\|($|[^|])'

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 11:10:43 -08:00
1b47ad160b merge-recursive: more consistent interface
Add strategy option find-renames, following git-diff interface. This
makes the option rename-threshold redundant.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Gonçalves Assis <felipegassis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 10:20:52 -08:00
d2b11eca7e merge-recursive: option to disable renames
The recursive strategy turns on rename detection by default. Add a
strategy option to disable rename detection even for exact renames.

Signed-off-by: Felipe Gonçalves Assis <felipegassis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 10:20:51 -08:00
0233b800c8 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  Start preparing for 2.7.2
  git-cvsserver.perl: fix typo
2016-02-17 10:14:39 -08:00
6343832797 Seventh batch for the 2.8 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 10:13:57 -08:00
82c17b7a9a Merge branch 'dw/mergetool-vim-window-shuffle'
The vimdiff backend for "git mergetool" has been tweaked to arrange
and number buffers in the order that would match the expectation of
majority of people who read left to right, then top down and assign
buffers 1 2 3 4 "mentally" to local base remote merge windows based
on that order.

* dw/mergetool-vim-window-shuffle:
  mergetool: reorder vim/gvim buffers in three-way diffs
2016-02-17 10:13:34 -08:00
d6a5088f67 Merge branch 'ah/stripspace-optstring'
* ah/stripspace-optstring:
  stripspace: call U+0020 a "space" instead of a "blank"
2016-02-17 10:13:34 -08:00
8c7124c9ac Merge branch 'mm/clean-doc-fix'
The documentation for "git clean" has been corrected; it mentioned
that .git/modules/* are removed by giving two "-f", which has never
been the case.

* mm/clean-doc-fix:
  Documentation/git-clean.txt: don't mention deletion of .git/modules/*
2016-02-17 10:13:33 -08:00
b1a90b68cf Merge branch 'jk/rerere-xsnprintf'
Some calls to strcpy(3) triggers a false warning from static
analysers that are less intelligent than humans, and reducing the
number of these false hits helps us notice real issues.  A few
calls to strcpy(3) in "git rerere" that are already safe has been
rewritten to avoid false wanings.

* jk/rerere-xsnprintf:
  rerere: replace strcpy with xsnprintf
2016-02-17 10:13:33 -08:00
790dd332c6 Merge branch 'jk/test-path-utils-xsnprintf'
Some calls to strcpy(3) triggers a false warning from static
analysers that are less intelligent than humans, and reducing the
number of these false hits helps us notice real issues.  A few
calls to strcpy(3) in test-path-utils that are already safe has
been rewritten to avoid false wanings.

* jk/test-path-utils-xsnprintf:
  test-path-utils: use xsnprintf in favor of strcpy
2016-02-17 10:13:32 -08:00
c37f9a1bc3 Merge branch 'da/user-useconfigonly'
The "user.useConfigOnly" configuration variable can be used to
force the user to always set user.email & user.name configuration
variables, serving as a reminder for those who work on multiple
projects and do not want to put these in their $HOME/.gitconfig.

* da/user-useconfigonly:
  ident: add user.useConfigOnly boolean for when ident shouldn't be guessed
  fmt_ident: refactor strictness checks
2016-02-17 10:13:31 -08:00
dbda66b0e2 Merge branch 'nd/clear-gitenv-upon-use-of-alias'
The automatic typo correction applied to an alias was broken
with a recent change already in 'master'.

* nd/clear-gitenv-upon-use-of-alias:
  restore_env(): free the saved environment variable once we are done
  git: simplify environment save/restore logic
  git: protect against unbalanced calls to {save,restore}_env()
  git: remove an early return from save_env_before_alias()
2016-02-17 10:13:31 -08:00
4b589e5b28 Merge branch 'js/mingw-tests'
Test scripts have been updated to remove assumptions that are not
portable between Git for POSIX and Git for Windows, or to skip ones
with expectations that are not satisfiable on Git for Windows.

* js/mingw-tests: (21 commits)
  gitignore: ignore generated test-fake-ssh executable
  mingw: do not bother to test funny file names
  mingw: skip a test in t9130 that cannot pass on Windows
  mingw: handle the missing POSIXPERM prereq in t9124
  mingw: avoid illegal filename in t9118
  mingw: mark t9100's test cases with appropriate prereqs
  t0008: avoid absolute path
  mingw: work around pwd issues in the tests
  mingw: fix t9700's assumption about directory separators
  mingw: skip test in t1508 that fails due to path conversion
  tests: turn off git-daemon tests if FIFOs are not available
  mingw: disable mkfifo-based tests
  mingw: accomodate t0060-path-utils for MSYS2
  mingw: fix t5601-clone.sh
  mingw: let lstat() fail with errno == ENOTDIR when appropriate
  mingw: try to delete target directory before renaming
  mingw: prepare the TMPDIR environment variable for shell scripts
  mingw: factor out Windows specific environment setup
  Git.pm: stop assuming that absolute paths start with a slash
  mingw: do not trust MSYS2's MinGW gettext.sh
  ...
2016-02-17 10:13:29 -08:00
f60ccdd98c Merge branch 'mg/mingw-test-fix'
An earlier adjustment of test mistakenly used write_script
to prepare a file whose exact content matters for the test;
reverting that part fixes the breakage for those who use
SHELL_PATH that is different from /bin/sh.

* mg/mingw-test-fix:
  t9100: fix breakage when SHELL_PATH is not /bin/sh
2016-02-17 10:13:29 -08:00
9f03176ef6 Merge branch 'jk/drop-rsync-transport'
It turns out "git clone" over rsync transport has been broken when
the source repository has packed references for a long time, and
nobody noticed nor complained about it.

* jk/drop-rsync-transport:
  transport: drop support for git-over-rsync
2016-02-17 10:13:28 -08:00
8a71d90b7e Start preparing for 2.7.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 10:05:44 -08:00
7516977b4a Merge branch 'js/test-lib-windows-emulated-yes' into maint
The emulated "yes" command used in our test scripts has been
tweaked not to spend too much time generating unnecessary output
that is not used, to help those who test on Windows where it would
not stop until it fills the pipe buffer due to lack of SIGPIPE.

* js/test-lib-windows-emulated-yes:
  test-lib: limit the output of the yes utility
2016-02-17 10:03:41 -08:00
0eefe108ec Merge branch 'aw/push-force-with-lease-reporting' into maint
"git push --force-with-lease" has been taught to report if the push
needed to force (or fast-forwarded).

* aw/push-force-with-lease-reporting:
  push: fix ref status reporting for --force-with-lease
2016-02-17 10:03:40 -08:00
88221d92cb Merge branch 'nd/do-not-move-worktree-manually' into maint
"git worktree" had a broken code that attempted to auto-fix
possible inconsistency that results from end-users moving a
worktree to different places without telling Git (the original
repository needs to maintain backpointers to its worktrees, but
"mv" run by end-users who are not familiar with that fact will
obviously not adjust them), which actually made things worse
when triggered.

* nd/do-not-move-worktree-manually:
  worktree: stop supporting moving worktrees manually
  worktree.c: fix indentation
2016-02-17 10:03:40 -08:00
ab2c107eab Merge branch 'js/xmerge-marker-eol' into maint
The low-level merge machinery has been taught to use CRLF line
termination when inserting conflict markers to merged contents that
are themselves CRLF line-terminated.

* js/xmerge-marker-eol:
  merge-file: ensure that conflict sections match eol style
  merge-file: let conflict markers match end-of-line style of the context
2016-02-17 10:03:39 -08:00
527d4a638e git-cvsserver.perl: fix typo
Signed-off-by: GyuYong Jung <obliviscence@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 10:00:53 -08:00
d8ff76cf17 t5505: 'remote add x y' should work when url.y.insteadOf = x
This is the test missing from fb86e32 (git remote: allow adding
remotes agreeing with url.<...>.insteadOf, 2014-12-23): we should
allow adding a remote with the URL when it agrees with the
url.<...>.insteadOf setting.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 09:52:56 -08:00
708b8cc9a1 am -i: fix "v"iew
The 'v'iew subcommand of the interactive mode of "git am -i" was
broken by the rewrite to C we did at around 2.6.0 timeframe at
7ff26832 (builtin-am: implement -i/--interactive, 2015-08-04); we
used to spawn the pager via the shell, accepting things like

	PAGER='less -S'

in the environment, but the rewrite forgot and tried to directly
spawn a command whose name is the entire string.

The previous refactoring of the new helper function makes it easier
for us to do the right thing.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 09:52:20 -08:00
3e3a4a41b0 pager: factor out a helper to prepare a child process to run the pager
When running a pager, we need to run the program git_pager() gave
us, but we need to make sure we spawn it via the shell (i.e. it is
valid to say PAGER='less -S', for example) and give default values
to $LESS and $LV environment variables.  Factor out these details
to a separate helper function.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 09:19:15 -08:00
8dc874b2ee wt-status.c: set commitable bit if there is a meaningful merge.
The 'commit --dry-run' and 'commit' return values differed if a
conflicted merge had been resolved and the resulting commit would
record the same tree as the parent.

Update show_merge_in_progress to set the commitable bit if conflicts
have been resolved and a merge is in progress.

Signed-off-by: Stephen P. Smith <ischis2@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-17 08:53:11 -08:00
43b0190224 pager: lose a separate argv[]
These days, using the embedded args array in the child_process
structure is the norm.  Follow that practice.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-16 14:26:40 -08:00
b4c8aba659 config: introduce set_or_die wrappers
A lot of call-sites for the existing family of `git_config_set`
functions do not check for errors that may occur, e.g. when the
configuration file is locked. In many cases we simply want to die
when such a situation arises.

Introduce wrappers that will cause the program to die in those
cases. These wrappers are temporary only to ease the transition
to let `git_config_set` die by default. They will be removed
later on when `git_config_set` itself has been replaced by
`git_config_set_gently`.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-16 14:14:14 -08:00
a31eeae27f remote: use remote_is_configured() for add and rename
Both remote add and remote rename use a slightly different hand-rolled
check if the remote exits.  The hand-rolled check may have some subtle
cases in which it might fail to detect when a remote already exists.
One such case was fixed in fb86e32 ("git remote: allow adding remotes
agreeing with url.<...>.insteadOf").  Another case is when a remote is
configured as follows:

  [remote "foo"]
    vcs = bar

If we try to run `git remote add foo bar` with the above remote
configuration, git segfaults.  This change fixes it.

In addition, git remote rename $existing foo with the configuration for
foo as above silently succeeds, even though foo already exists,
modifying its configuration.  With this patch it fails with "remote foo
already exists".

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-16 13:33:12 -08:00
cc8e538d45 remote: actually check if remote exits
When converting the git remote command to a builtin in 211c89 ("Make
git-remote a builtin"), a few calls to check if a remote exists were
converted from:
       if (!exists $remote->{$name}) {
       	  [...]
to:
       remote = remote_get(argv[1]);
       if (!remote)
          [...]

The new check is not quite correct, because remote_get() never returns
NULL if a name is given.  This leaves us with the somewhat cryptic error
message "error: Could not remove config section 'remote.test'", if we
are trying to remove a remote that does not exist, or a similar error if
we try to rename a remote.

Use the remote_is_configured() function to check whether the remote
actually exists, and die with a more sensible error message ("No such
remote: $remotename") instead if it doesn't.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-16 13:33:12 -08:00
674468b364 remote: simplify remote_is_configured()
The remote_is_configured() function allows checking whether a remote
exists or not.  The function however only works if remote_get() wasn't
called before calling it.  In addition, it only checks the configuration
for remotes, but not remotes or branches files.

Make use of the origin member of struct remote instead, which indicates
where the remote comes from.  It will be set to some value if the remote
is configured in any file in the repository, but is initialized to 0 if
the remote is only created in make_remote().

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-16 13:33:12 -08:00
bc60f8a77c remote: use parse_config_key
95b567c7 ("use skip_prefix to avoid repeating strings") transformed
calls using starts_with() and then skipping the length of the prefix to
skip_prefix() calls.  In remote.c there are a few calls like:

  if (starts_with(foo, "bar"))
      foo += 3

These calls weren't touched by the aformentioned commit, but can be
replaced by calls to parse_config_key(), to simplify the code and
clarify the intentions.  Do that.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-16 13:33:12 -08:00
aeff8a6121 http: implement public key pinning
Add the http.pinnedpubkey configuration option for public key
pinning. It allows any string supported by libcurl --
base64(sha256(pubkey)) or filename of the full public key.

If cURL does not support pinning (is too old) output a warning to the
user.

Signed-off-by: Christoph Egger <christoph@christoph-egger.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-15 19:21:48 -08:00
beb6f24bee worktree add -B: do the checkout test before update branch
If --force is not given but -B is, we should not proceed if the given
branch is already checked out elsewhere. add_worktree() has this test,
but it kicks in too late when "git branch --force" is already
executed. As a result, even though we correctly refuse to create a new
worktree, we have already updated the branch and mess up the other
checkout.

Repeat the die_if_checked_out() test again for this specific case before
"git branch" runs.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-15 15:54:13 -08:00
0ebf4a2af3 worktree: fix "add -B"
Current code does not update "symref" when -B is used. This string
contains the new HEAD. Because it's empty "git worktree add -B" fails at
symbolic-ref step.

Because branch creation is already done before calling add_worktree(),
-B is equivalent to -b from add_worktree() point of view. We do not need
the special case for -B.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-15 15:49:33 -08:00
d589a67ece dir.c: don't exclude whole dir prematurely
If there is a pattern "!foo/bar", this patch makes it not exclude
"foo" right away. This gives us a chance to examine "foo" and
re-include "foo/bar".

Helped-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Helped-by: Micha Wiedenmann <mw-u2@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-15 15:32:33 -08:00
c62a91736a dir.c: support marking some patterns already matched
Given path "a" and the pattern "a", it's matched. But if we throw path
"a/b" to pattern "a", the code fails to realize that if "a" matches
"a" then "a/b" should also be matched.

When the pattern is matched the first time, we can mark it "sticky", so
that all files and dirs inside the matched path also matches. This is a
simpler solution than modify all match scenarios to fix that.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-15 15:32:32 -08:00
bac65a2be5 dir.c: support tracing exclude
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-15 15:32:32 -08:00
a60ea8fb66 dir.c: fix match_pathname()
Given the pattern "1/2/3/4" and the path "1/2/3/4/f", the pattern
prefix is "1/2/3/4". We will compare and remove the prefix from both
pattern and path and come to this code

	/*
	 * If the whole pattern did not have a wildcard,
	 * then our prefix match is all we need; we
	 * do not need to call fnmatch at all.
	 */
	if (!patternlen && !namelen)
		return 1;

where patternlen is zero (full pattern consumed) and the remaining
path in "name" is "/f". We fail to realize it's matched in this case
and fall back to fnmatch(), which also fails to catch it. Fix it.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-15 15:32:32 -08:00
121061f67f http: add option to try authentication without username
Performing GSS-Negotiate authentication using Kerberos does not require
specifying a username or password, since that information is already
included in the ticket itself.  However, libcurl refuses to perform
authentication if it has not been provided with a username and password.
Add an option, http.emptyAuth, that provides libcurl with an empty
username and password to make it attempt authentication anyway.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-15 14:13:37 -08:00
00540458a8 remote-curl: include curl_errorstr on SSL setup failures
For curl error 35 (CURLE_SSL_CONNECT_ERROR) users need the
additional text stored in CURLOPT_ERRORBUFFER to debug why
the connection did not start. This is curl_errorstr inside
of http.c, so include that in the message if it is non-empty.

Sometimes HTTP response codes aren't yet available, such as
when the SSL setup fails. Don't include HTTP 0 in the message.

Signed-off-by: Shawn Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-15 13:21:43 -08:00
25bb90b103 t5570: add tests for "git {clone,fetch,pull} -v"
Now that git_connect is more information about connectivity
progress after: ("pass transport verbosity down to git_connect")
we should ensure it remains so for future users who need to
to diagnose networking problems.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-15 13:19:33 -08:00
753a2cda11 git-config: better document default behavior for --include
As described in the commit message of 9b25a0b (config: add
include directive, 2012-02-06), the `--include` option is
only on by default in some cases. But our documentation
described it as just "defaults to on", which doesn't tell
the whole story.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-13 12:51:31 -08:00
17f1365dbc rev-parse: take prefix into account in --git-common-dir
Most of the time, get_git_common_dir() returns an absolute path so
prefix is irrelevant. If it returns a relative path (e.g. from the
main worktree) then prefixing is required.

Noticed-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-12 16:01:47 -08:00
de1e67d070 list-objects: pass full pathname to callbacks
When we find a blob at "a/b/c", we currently pass this to
our show_object_fn callbacks as two components: "a/b/" and
"c". Callbacks which want the full value then call
path_name(), which concatenates the two. But this is an
inefficient interface; the path is a strbuf, and we could
simply append "c" to it temporarily, then roll back the
length, without creating a new copy.

So we could improve this by teaching the callsites of
path_name() this trick (and there are only 3). But we can
also notice that no callback actually cares about the
broken-down representation, and simply pass each callback
the full path "a/b/c" as a string. The callback code becomes
even simpler, then, as we do not have to worry about freeing
an allocated buffer, nor rolling back our modification to
the strbuf.

This is theoretically less efficient, as some callbacks
would not bother to format the final path component. But in
practice this is not measurable. Since we use the same
strbuf over and over, our work to grow it is amortized, and
we really only pay to memcpy a few bytes.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-12 12:51:17 -08:00
bd64516aca list-objects: drop name_path entirely
In the previous commit, we left name_path as a thin wrapper
around a strbuf. This patch drops it entirely. As a result,
every show_object_fn callback needs to be adjusted. However,
none of their code needs to be changed at all, because the
only use was to pass it to path_name(), which now handles
the bare strbuf.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-12 12:51:15 -08:00
13528ab37c list-objects: convert name_path to a strbuf
The "struct name_path" data is examined in only two places:
we generate it in process_tree(), and we convert it to a
single string in path_name(). Everyone else just passes it
through to those functions.

We can further note that process_tree() already keeps a
single strbuf with the leading tree path, for use with
tree_entry_interesting().

Instead of building a separate name_path linked list, let's
just use the one we already build in "base". This reduces
the amount of code (especially tricky code in path_name()
which did not check for integer overflows caused by deep
or large pathnames).

It is also more efficient in some instances.  Any time we
were using tree_entry_interesting, we were building up the
strbuf anyway, so this is an immediate and obvious win
there. In cases where we were not, we trade off storing
"pathname/" in a strbuf on the heap for each level of the
path, instead of two pointers and an int on the stack (with
one pointer into the tree object). On a 64-bit system, the
latter is 20 bytes; so if path components are less than that
on average, this has lower peak memory usage.  In practice
it probably doesn't matter either way; we are already
holding in memory all of the tree objects leading up to each
pathname, and for normal-depth pathnames, we are only
talking about hundreds of bytes.

This patch leaves "struct name_path" as a thin wrapper
around the strbuf, to avoid disrupting callbacks. We should
fix them, but leaving it out makes this diff easier to view.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-12 12:51:10 -08:00
f9fb9d0e3c show_object_with_name: simplify by using path_name()
When "git rev-list" shows an object with its associated path
name, it does so by walking the name_path linked list and
printing each component (stopping at any embedded NULs or
newlines).

We'd like to eventually get rid of name_path entirely in
favor of a single buffer, and dropping this custom printing
code is part of that. As a first step, let's use path_name()
to format the list into a single buffer, and print that.
This is strictly less efficient than the original, but it's
a temporary step in the refactoring; our end game will be to
get the fully formatted name in the first place.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-12 12:51:08 -08:00
415959387e http-push: stop using name_path
The graph traversal code here passes along a name_path to
build up the pathname at which we find each blob. But we
never actually do anything with the resulting names, making
it a waste of code and memory.

This usage came in aa1dbc9 (Update http-push functionality,
2006-03-07), and originally the result was passed to
"add_object" (which stored it, but didn't really use it,
either). But we stopped using that function in 1f1e895 (Add
"named object array" concept, 2006-06-19) in favor of
storing just the objects themselves.

Moreover, the generation of the name in process_tree() is
buggy. It sticks "name" onto the end of the name_path linked
list, and then passes it down again as it recurses (instead
of "entry.path"). So it's a good thing this was unused, as
the resulting path for "a/b/c/d" would end up as "a/a/a/a".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-12 12:51:05 -08:00
c915f11eb4 connect & http: support -4 and -6 switches for remote operations
Sometimes it is necessary to force IPv4-only or IPv6-only operation
on networks where name lookups may return a non-routable address and
stall remote operations.

The ssh(1) command has an equivalent switches which we may pass when
we run them.  There may be old ssh(1) implementations out there
which do not support these switches; they should report the
appropriate error in that case.

rsync support is untouched for now since it is deprecated and
scheduled to be removed.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Reviewed-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-12 11:34:14 -08:00
2300328cb2 mergetool: reorder vim/gvim buffers in three-way diffs
When invoking default (g)vimdiff three-way merge, the merged file is
loaded as the first buffer but moved to the bottom as the fourth window.
This causes a disconnect between vim commands that operate on window
positions (e.g. CTRL-W_w) and those that operate on buffer index (e.g.
do/dp).

This change reorders the buffers to have the same index as windows while
keeping the cursor default to the merged result as the bottom window.

Signed-off-by: Dickson Wong <dicksonwong@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Acked-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-12 10:14:09 -08:00
6e336a530b convert.c: simplify text_stat
Simplify the statistics:
lonecr counts the CR which is not followed by a LF,
lonelf counts the LF which is not preceded by a CR,
crlf counts CRLF combinations.
This simplifies the evaluation of the statistics.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-10 15:54:20 -08:00
df747b818f convert.c: refactor crlf_action
Refactor the determination and usage of crlf_action.
Today, when no "crlf" attribute are set on a file, crlf_action is set to
CRLF_GUESS. Use CRLF_UNDEFINED instead, and search for "text" or "eol" as
before.
After searching for line ending attributes, save the value in
struct conv_attrs.crlf_action attr_action,
so that get_convert_attr_ascii() is able report the attributes.

Replace the old CRLF_GUESS usage:
CRLF_GUESS && core.autocrlf=true -> CRLF_AUTO_CRLF
CRLF_GUESS && core.autocrlf=false -> CRLF_BINARY
CRLF_GUESS && core.autocrlf=input -> CRLF_AUTO_INPUT

Save the action in conv_attrs.crlf_action (as before) and change
all callers.

Make more clear, what is what, by defining:

- CRLF_UNDEFINED : No attributes set. Temparally used, until core.autocrlf
                   and core.eol is evaluated and one of CRLF_BINARY,
                   CRLF_AUTO_INPUT or CRLF_AUTO_CRLF is selected
- CRLF_BINARY    : No processing of line endings.
- CRLF_TEXT      : attribute "text" is set, line endings are processed.
- CRLF_TEXT_INPUT: attribute "input" or "eol=lf" is set. This implies text.
- CRLF_TEXT_CRLF : attribute "eol=crlf" is set. This implies text.
- CRLF_AUTO      : attribute "auto" is set.
- CRLF_AUTO_INPUT: core.autocrlf=input (no attributes)
- CRLF_AUTO_CRLF : core.autocrlf=true  (no attributes)

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-10 15:53:35 -08:00
4943984737 Sixth batch for the 2.8 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-10 14:24:14 -08:00
4ecc59aa42 Merge branch 'js/test-lib-windows-emulated-yes'
The emulated "yes" command used in our test scripts has been
tweaked not to spend too much time generating unnecessary output
that is not used, to help those who test on Windows where it would
not stop until it fills the pipe buffer due to lack of SIGPIPE.

* js/test-lib-windows-emulated-yes:
  test-lib: limit the output of the yes utility
2016-02-10 14:20:10 -08:00
fb795323ce Merge branch 'wp/sha1-name-negative-match'
A new "<branch>^{/!-<pattern>}" notation can be used to name a
commit that is reachable from <branch> that does not match the
given <pattern>.

* wp/sha1-name-negative-match:
  object name: introduce '^{/!-<negative pattern>}' notation
  test for '!' handling in rev-parse's named commits
2016-02-10 14:20:10 -08:00
722c924445 Merge branch 'jk/options-cleanup'
Various clean-ups to the command line option parsing.

* jk/options-cleanup:
  apply, ls-files: simplify "-z" parsing
  checkout-index: disallow "--no-stage" option
  checkout-index: handle "--no-index" option
  checkout-index: handle "--no-prefix" option
  checkout-index: simplify "-z" option parsing
  give "nbuf" strbuf a more meaningful name
2016-02-10 14:20:08 -08:00
24abb31727 Merge branch 'aw/push-force-with-lease-reporting'
"git push --force-with-lease" has been taught to report if the push
needed to force (or fast-forwarded).

* aw/push-force-with-lease-reporting:
  push: fix ref status reporting for --force-with-lease
2016-02-10 14:20:08 -08:00
a3764e7da7 Merge branch 'ls/clean-smudge-override-in-config'
Clean/smudge filters defined in a configuration file of lower
precedence can now be overridden to be a pass-through no-op by
setting the variable to an empty string.

* ls/clean-smudge-override-in-config:
  convert: treat an empty string for clean/smudge filters as "cat"
2016-02-10 14:20:07 -08:00
fbf4bdfbf1 Merge branch 'ew/connect-verbose'
There were a few "now I am doing this thing" progress messages in
the TCP connection code that can be triggered by setting a verbose
option internally in the code, but "git fetch -v" and friends never
passed the verbose option down to that codepath.

There was a brief discussion about the impact on the end-user
experience by not limiting this to "fetch -v -v", but I think the
conclusion is that this is OK to enable with a single "-v" as it is
not too noisy.

* ew/connect-verbose:
  pass transport verbosity down to git_connect
2016-02-10 14:20:07 -08:00
0e35fcb412 Merge branch 'cc/untracked'
Update the untracked cache subsystem and change its primary UI from
"git update-index" to "git config".

* cc/untracked:
  t7063: add tests for core.untrackedCache
  test-dump-untracked-cache: don't modify the untracked cache
  config: add core.untrackedCache
  dir: simplify untracked cache "ident" field
  dir: add remove_untracked_cache()
  dir: add {new,add}_untracked_cache()
  update-index: move 'uc' var declaration
  update-index: add untracked cache notifications
  update-index: add --test-untracked-cache
  update-index: use enum for untracked cache options
  dir: free untracked cache when removing it
2016-02-10 14:20:06 -08:00
81ad6a9c53 Merge branch 'js/xmerge-marker-eol'
The low-level merge machinery has been taught to use CRLF line
termination when inserting conflict markers to merged contents that
are themselves CRLF line-terminated.

* js/xmerge-marker-eol:
  merge-file: ensure that conflict sections match eol style
  merge-file: let conflict markers match end-of-line style of the context
2016-02-10 14:20:06 -08:00
d0a1cbccab Merge branch 'nd/do-not-move-worktree-manually'
"git worktree" had a broken code that attempted to auto-fix
possible inconsistency that results from end-users moving a
worktree to different places without telling Git (the original
repository needs to maintain backpointers to its worktrees, but
"mv" run by end-users who are not familiar with that fact will
obviously not adjust them), which actually made things worse
when triggered.

* nd/do-not-move-worktree-manually:
  worktree: stop supporting moving worktrees manually
  worktree.c: fix indentation
2016-02-10 14:20:05 -08:00
aac4fac168 get_sha1: don't die() on bogus search strings
The get_sha1() function generally returns an error code
rather than dying, and we sometimes speculatively call it
with something that may be a revision or a pathspec, in
order to see which one it might be.

If it sees a bogus ":/" search string, though, it complains,
without giving the caller the opportunity to recover. We can
demonstrate this in t6133 by looking for ":/*.t", which
should mean "*.t at the root of the tree", but instead dies
because of the invalid regex (the "*" has nothing to operate
on).

We can fix this by returning an error rather than calling
die(). Unfortunately, the tradeoff is that the error message
is slightly worse in cases where we _do_ know we have a rev.
E.g., running "git log ':/*.t' --" before yielded:

  fatal: Invalid search pattern: *.t

and now we get only:

  fatal: bad revision ':/*.t'

There's not a simple way to fix this short of passing a
"quiet" flag all the way through the get_sha1() stack.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-10 13:53:21 -08:00
df714f81a7 check_filename: tighten dwim-wildcard ambiguity
When specifying both revisions and pathnames, we allow
"<rev> -- <pathspec>" to be spelled without the "--" as long
as it is not ambiguous. The original logic was something
like:

  1. Resolve each item with get_sha1(). If successful,
     we know it can be a <rev>. Verify that it _isn't_ a
     filename, using verify_non_filename(), and complain of
     ambiguity otherwise.

  2. If get_sha1() didn't succeed, make sure that it _is_
     a file, using verify_filename(). If not, complain
     that it is neither a <rev> nor a <pathspec>.

Both verify_filename() and verify_non_filename() rely on
check_filename(), which definitely said "yes, this is a
file" or "no, it is not" using lstat().

Commit 28fcc0b (pathspec: avoid the need of "--" when
wildcard is used, 2015-05-02) introduced a convenience
feature: check_filename() will consider anything with
wildcard meta-characters as a possible filename, without
even checking the filesystem.

This works well for case 2. For such a wildcard, we would
previously have died and said "it is neither". Post-28fcc0b,
we assume it's a pathspec and proceed.

But it makes some instances of case 1 worse. We may have an
extended sha1 expression that contains meta-characters
(e.g., "HEAD^{/foo.*bar}"), and we now complain that it's
also a filename, due to the wildcard characters (even though
that wildcard would not match anything in the filesystem).

One solution would be to actually expand the pathname and
see if it matches anything on the filesystem. But that's
potentially expensive, and we do not have to be so rigorous
for this DWIM magic (if you want rigor, use "--").

Instead, we can just use different rules for cases 1 and 2.
When we know something is a rev, we will complain only if it
meets a much higher standard for "this is also a file";
namely that it actually exists in the filesystem. Case 2
remains the same: we use the looser "it could be a filename"
standard introduced by 28fcc0b.

We can accomplish this by pulling the wildcard logic out of
check_filename() and putting it into verify_filename(). Its
partner verify_non_filename() does not need a change, since
check_filename() goes back to implementing the "higher
standard".

Besides these two callers of check_filename(), there is one
other: git-checkout does a similar DWIM itself. It hits this
code path only after get_sha1() has returned failure, making
it case 2, which gets the special wildcard treatment.

Note that we drop the tests in t2019 in favor of a more
complete set in t6133. t2019 was not the right place for
them (it's about refname ambiguity, not dwim parsing
ambiguity), and the second test explicitly checked for the
opposite result of the case we are fixing here (which didn't
really make any sense; as shown by the test_must_fail in the
test, it would only serve to annoy people).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-10 13:53:20 -08:00
1cc777de6f checkout: reorder check_filename conditional
If we have a "--" flag, we should not be doing DWIM magic
based on whether arguments can be filenames. Reorder the
conditional to avoid the check_filename() call entirely in
this case. The outcome is the same, but the short-circuit
makes the dependency more clear.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-10 13:53:18 -08:00
31e3c2d7f8 Documentation/git-clean.txt: don't mention deletion of .git/modules/*
The latter half of this sentence, the removal of the submodules, was
never done with (or without) double -f back when it was written, and
we still do not do so.

Signed-off-by: Matt McCutchen <matt@mattmccutchen.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-09 10:07:34 -08:00
2c7929b133 rerere: scan $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID when instantiating a rerere_id
This will help fixing bootstrap corner-case issues, e.g. having an
empty $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID directory would fail to record a
preimage, in later changes in this series.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-08 15:01:19 -08:00
1869bbe1ce rerere: split conflict ID further
The plan is to keep assigning the backward compatible conflict ID
based on the hash of the (normalized) text of conflicts, keep using
that conflict ID as the directory name under $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/, but
allow each conflicted path to use a separate "variant" to record
resolutions, i.e. having more than one <preimage,postimage> pairs
under $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID/ directory.  As the first step in that
direction, separate the shared "conflict ID" out of the rerere_id
structure.

The plan is to keep information per $ID in rerere_dir, that can be
shared among rerere_id that is per conflicted path.

When we are done with rerere(), which can be directly called from
other programs like "git apply", "git commit" and "git merge", the
shared rerere_dir structures can be freed entirely, so they are not
reference-counted and they are not freed when we release rerere_id's
that reference them.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-08 15:01:15 -08:00
f58316db0e rerere: replace strcpy with xsnprintf
This shouldn't overflow, as we are copying a sha1 hex into a
41-byte buffer. But it does not hurt to use a bound-checking
function, which protects us and makes auditing for overflows
easier.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-08 14:55:28 -08:00
2605e959f8 t9100: fix breakage when SHELL_PATH is not /bin/sh
bcb11f1 (mingw: mark t9100's test cases with appropriate prereqs, 2016-01-27)
replaced "/bin/sh" in exec.sh by the shell specified in SHELL_PATH, but
that breaks the subtest which checks for a specific checksum of a tree
containing.

Revert that change that was not explained in the commit message anyways
(exec.sh is never executed).

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-08 14:52:36 -08:00
7b11a18a2e test-path-utils: use xsnprintf in favor of strcpy
This strcpy will never overflow because it's copying from
baked-in test data. But we would prefer to avoid strcpy
entirely, as it makes it harder to audit for real security
bugs.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-08 14:42:32 -08:00
80ce6c25a4 gitignore: ignore generated test-fake-ssh executable
In "mingw: fix t5601-clone.sh", this developer introduced a new test
executable, test-fake-ssh but forgot to update the .gitignore file
accordingly. Fix that.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-08 12:18:51 -08:00
4d5c295696 ident: add user.useConfigOnly boolean for when ident shouldn't be guessed
It used to be that:

   git config --global user.email "(none)"

was a viable way for people to force themselves to set user.email in
each repository.  This was helpful for people with more than one
email address, targeting different email addresses for different
clones, as it barred git from creating a commit unless the user.email
config was set in the per-repo config to the correct email address.

A recent change, 19ce497c (ident: keep a flag for bogus
default_email, 2015-12-10), however, declared that an explicitly
configured user.email is not bogus, no matter what its value is, so
this hack no longer works.

Provide the same functionality by adding a new configuration
variable user.useConfigOnly; when this variable is set, the
user must explicitly set user.email configuration.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Dan Aloni <alonid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-08 11:06:28 -08:00
4b4024f5dd convert.c: use text_eol_is_crlf()
Add a helper function to find out, which line endings text files
should get at checkout, depending on core.autocrlf and core.eol
configuration variables.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-08 10:02:12 -08:00
bb211b4de8 convert.c: remove input_crlf_action()
Integrate the code of input_crlf_action() into convert_attrs(),
so that ca.crlf_action is always valid after calling convert_attrs().
Keep a copy of crlf_action in attr_action, this is needed for
get_convert_attr_ascii().

Remove eol_attr from struct conv_attrs, as it is now used temporally.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-08 10:01:40 -08:00
92cce1355e convert.c: remove unused parameter 'path'
Some functions get a parameter path, but don't use it.
Remove the unused parameter.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-08 09:59:43 -08:00
320d39cdb0 t0027: add tests for get_stream_filter()
When a filter is configured, a different code-path is used in convert.c
and entry.c via get_stream_filter(), but there are no test cases yet.

Add tests for the filter API by configuring the ident filter.
The result of the SHA1 conversion is not checked, this is already
done in other TC.

Add a parameter to checkout_files() in t0027.
While changing the signature, add another parameter for the eol= attribute.
This is currently unused, tests for e.g.
"* text=auto eol=lf" will be added in a separate commit.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-08 09:51:10 -08:00
ff4ea6004f Sync with 2.7.1 2016-02-05 15:24:02 -08:00
a08595f761 Git 2.7.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-05 14:54:56 -08:00
5276be848b Merge branch 'lv/add-doc-working-tree' into maint
* lv/add-doc-working-tree:
  git-add doc: do not say working directory when you mean working tree
2016-02-05 14:54:23 -08:00
2db7d79be9 Merge branch 'ss/clone-depth-single-doc' into maint
Documentation for "git fetch --depth" has been updated for clarity.

* ss/clone-depth-single-doc:
  docs: clarify that --depth for git-fetch works with newly initialized repos
  docs: say "commits" in the --depth option wording for git-clone
  docs: clarify that passing --depth to git-clone implies --single-branch
2016-02-05 14:54:22 -08:00
0298675ac4 Merge branch 'sg/t6050-failing-editor-test-fix' into maint
* sg/t6050-failing-editor-test-fix:
  t6050-replace: make failing editor test more robust
2016-02-05 14:54:21 -08:00
01517bd26f Merge branch 'ew/for-each-ref-doc' into maint
* ew/for-each-ref-doc:
  for-each-ref: document `creatordate` and `creator` fields
2016-02-05 14:54:20 -08:00
353f685572 Merge branch 'ss/user-manual' into maint
Drop a few old "todo" items by deciding that the change one of them
suggests is not such a good idea, and doing the change the other
one suggested to do.

* ss/user-manual:
  user-manual: add addition gitweb information
  user-manual: add section documenting shallow clones
  glossary: define the term shallow clone
  user-manual: remove temporary branch entry from todo list
2016-02-05 14:54:19 -08:00
e2d7739051 Merge branch 'jk/ref-cache-non-repository-optim' into maint
The underlying machinery used by "ls-files -o" and other commands
have been taught not to create empty submodule ref cache for a
directory that is not a submodule.  This removes a ton of wasted
CPU cycles.

* jk/ref-cache-non-repository-optim:
  resolve_gitlink_ref: ignore non-repository paths
  clean: make is_git_repository a public function
2016-02-05 14:54:17 -08:00
07be1da216 Merge branch 'js/dirname-basename' into maint
dirname() emulation has been added, as Msys2 lacks it.

* js/dirname-basename:
  mingw: avoid linking to the C library's isalpha()
  t0060: loosen overly strict expectations
  t0060: verify that basename() and dirname() work as expected
  compat/basename.c: provide a dirname() compatibility function
  compat/basename: make basename() conform to POSIX
  Refactor skipping DOS drive prefixes
2016-02-05 14:54:17 -08:00
081363dde2 Merge branch 'tb/complete-word-diff-regex' into maint
* tb/complete-word-diff-regex:
  completion: complete "diff --word-diff-regex="
2016-02-05 14:54:17 -08:00
0a8748d8e1 Merge branch 'pw/completion-stash' into maint
* pw/completion-stash:
  completion: update completion arguments for stash
2016-02-05 14:54:16 -08:00
39abb2ed48 Merge branch 'pw/completion-show-branch' into maint
* pw/completion-show-branch:
  completion: complete show-branch "--date-order"
2016-02-05 14:54:16 -08:00
d509fa44ed Merge branch 'jk/completion-rebase' into maint
* jk/completion-rebase:
  completion: add missing git-rebase options
2016-02-05 14:54:16 -08:00
02dab5d399 Merge branch 'nd/diff-with-path-params' into maint
A few options of "git diff" did not work well when the command was
run from a subdirectory.

* nd/diff-with-path-params:
  diff: make -O and --output work in subdirectory
  diff-no-index: do not take a redundant prefix argument
2016-02-05 14:54:15 -08:00
6a65bdcc8c Merge branch 'dw/subtree-split-do-not-drop-merge' into maint
The "split" subcommand of "git subtree" (in contrib/) incorrectly
skipped merges when it shouldn't, which was corrected.

* dw/subtree-split-do-not-drop-merge:
  contrib/subtree: fix "subtree split" skipped-merge bug
2016-02-05 14:54:15 -08:00
0244713db1 Merge branch 'ew/svn-1.9.0-auth' into maint
* ew/svn-1.9.0-auth:
  git-svn: fix auth parameter handling on SVN 1.9.0+
2016-02-05 14:54:15 -08:00
88ec75dba4 Merge branch 'jk/list-tag-2.7-regression' into maint
"git tag" started listing a tag "foo" as "tags/foo" when a branch
named "foo" exists in the same repository; remove this unnecessary
disambiguation, which is a regression introduced in v2.7.0.

* jk/list-tag-2.7-regression:
  tag: do not show ambiguous tag names as "tags/foo"
  t6300: use test_atom for some un-modern tests
2016-02-05 14:54:15 -08:00
913c2c7c7b Merge branch 'jk/sanity' into maint
The description for SANITY prerequisite the test suite uses has
been clarified both in the comment and in the implementation.

* jk/sanity:
  test-lib: clarify and tighten SANITY
2016-02-05 14:54:14 -08:00
16f5e26833 Merge branch 'jk/filter-branch-no-index' into maint
A recent optimization to filter-branch in v2.7.0 introduced a
regression when --prune-empty filter is used, which has been
corrected.

* jk/filter-branch-no-index:
  filter-branch: resolve $commit^{tree} in no-index case
2016-02-05 14:54:13 -08:00
f748e69167 Merge branch 'js/close-packs-before-gc' into maint
Many codepaths that run "gc --auto" before exiting kept packfiles
mapped and left the file descriptors to them open, which was not
friendly to systems that cannot remove files that are open.  They
now close the packs before doing so.

* js/close-packs-before-gc:
  receive-pack: release pack files before garbage-collecting
  merge: release pack files before garbage-collecting
  am: release pack files before garbage-collecting
  fetch: release pack files before garbage-collecting
2016-02-05 14:54:13 -08:00
b11a3badf2 Merge branch 'jk/ok-to-fail-gc-auto-in-rebase' into maint
"git rebase", unlike all other callers of "gc --auto", did not
ignore the exit code from "gc --auto".

* jk/ok-to-fail-gc-auto-in-rebase:
  rebase: ignore failures from "gc --auto"
2016-02-05 14:54:13 -08:00
15f409643e Merge branch 'ho/gitweb-squelch-undef-warning' into maint
Asking gitweb for a nonexistent commit left a warning in the server
log.

Somebody may want to follow this up with a new test, perhaps?
IIRC, we do test that no Perl warnings are given to the server log,
so this should have been caught if our test coverage were good.

* ho/gitweb-squelch-undef-warning:
  gitweb: squelch "uninitialized value" warning
2016-02-05 14:54:12 -08:00
da07df3ee3 Merge branch 'js/fopen-harder' into maint
Some codepaths used fopen(3) when opening a fixed path in $GIT_DIR
(e.g. COMMIT_EDITMSG) that is meant to be left after the command is
done.  This however did not work well if the repository is set to
be shared with core.sharedRepository and the umask of the previous
user is tighter.  They have been made to work better by calling
unlink(2) and retrying after fopen(3) fails with EPERM.

* js/fopen-harder:
  Handle more file writes correctly in shared repos
  commit: allow editing the commit message even in shared repos
2016-02-05 14:54:11 -08:00
9496acc144 Merge branch 'nd/exclusion-regression-fix' into maint
The ignore mechanism saw a few regressions around untracked file
listing and sparse checkout selection areas in 2.7.0; the change
that is responsible for the regression has been reverted.

* nd/exclusion-regression-fix:
  Revert "dir.c: don't exclude whole dir prematurely if neg pattern may match"
2016-02-05 14:54:11 -08:00
90b99869d4 Merge branch 'dk/reflog-walk-with-non-commit' into maint
"git reflog" incorrectly assumed that all objects that used to be
at the tip of a ref must be commits, which caused it to segfault.

* dk/reflog-walk-with-non-commit:
  reflog-walk: don't segfault on non-commit sha1's in the reflog
2016-02-05 14:54:10 -08:00
7aae9ba661 Merge branch 'dw/signoff-doc' into maint
The documentation has been updated to hint the connection between
the '--signoff' option and DCO.

* dw/signoff-doc:
  Expand documentation describing --signoff
2016-02-05 14:54:09 -08:00
6e29ac2302 Merge branch 'jk/clang-pedantic' into maint
A few unportable C construct have been spotted by clang compiler
and have been fixed.

* jk/clang-pedantic:
  bswap: add NO_UNALIGNED_LOADS define
  avoid shifting signed integers 31 bits
2016-02-05 14:54:09 -08:00
25b1166ab2 Merge branch 'ew/send-email-mutt-alias-fix' into maint
"git send-email" was confused by escaped quotes stored in the alias
files saved by "mutt", which has been corrected.

* ew/send-email-mutt-alias-fix:
  git-send-email: do not double-escape quotes from mutt
2016-02-05 14:54:09 -08:00
af3e464a60 Merge branch 'nd/dir-exclude-cleanup' into maint
The "exclude_list" structure has the usual "alloc, nr" pair of
fields to be used by ALLOC_GROW(), but clear_exclude_list() forgot
to reset 'alloc' to 0 when it cleared 'nr' to discard the managed
array.

* nd/dir-exclude-cleanup:
  dir.c: clean the entire struct in clear_exclude_list()
2016-02-05 14:54:08 -08:00
d6998341d8 Merge branch 'nd/stop-setenv-work-tree' into maint
An earlier change in 2.5.x-era broke users' hooks and aliases by
exporting GIT_WORK_TREE to point at the root of the working tree,
interfering when they tried to use a different working tree without
setting GIT_WORK_TREE environment themselves.

* nd/stop-setenv-work-tree:
  Revert "setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when work tree is set, like $GIT_DIR"
2016-02-05 14:54:07 -08:00
59f929596b fmt_ident: refactor strictness checks
This function has evolved quite a bit over time, and as a
result, the logic for "is this an OK ident" has been
sprinkled throughout. This ends up with a lot of redundant
conditionals, like checking want_name repeatedly. Worse,
we want to know in many cases whether we are using the
"default" ident, and we do so by comparing directly to the
global strbuf, which violates the abstraction of the
ident_default_* functions.

Let's reorganize the function into a hierarchy of
conditionals to handle similar cases together. The only
case that doesn't just work naturally for this is that of an
empty name, where our advice is different based on whether
we came from ident_default_name() or not. We can use a
simple flag to cover this case.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-04 13:18:48 -08:00
563e38491e Fifth batch for 2.8 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-03 14:31:13 -08:00
30f302f7e7 Merge branch 'kf/http-proxy-auth-methods'
New http.proxyAuthMethod configuration variable can be used to
specify what authentication method to use, as a way to work around
proxies that do not give error response expected by libcurl when
CURLAUTH_ANY is used.  Also, the codepath for proxy authentication
has been taught to use credential API to store the authentication
material in user's keyrings.

* kf/http-proxy-auth-methods:
  http: use credential API to handle proxy authentication
  http: allow selection of proxy authentication method
2016-02-03 14:16:08 -08:00
48c39e98c6 Merge branch 'ls/travis-prove-order'
Automated tests in Travis CI environment has been optimized by
persisting runtime statistics of previous "prove" run, executing
tests that take longer before other ones; this reduces the total
wallclock time.

* ls/travis-prove-order:
  travis-ci: explicity use container-based infrastructure
  travis-ci: run previously failed tests first, then slowest to fastest
2016-02-03 14:16:07 -08:00
ad25723e69 Merge branch 'jk/ref-cache-non-repository-optim'
The underlying machinery used by "ls-files -o" and other commands
have been taught not to create empty submodule ref cache for a
directory that is not a submodule.  This removes a ton of wasted
CPU cycles.

* jk/ref-cache-non-repository-optim:
  resolve_gitlink_ref: ignore non-repository paths
  clean: make is_git_repository a public function
2016-02-03 14:16:07 -08:00
e01c6b15c9 Merge branch 'js/dirname-basename'
dirname() emulation has been added, as Msys2 lacks it.

* js/dirname-basename:
  mingw: avoid linking to the C library's isalpha()
  t0060: loosen overly strict expectations
  t0060: verify that basename() and dirname() work as expected
  compat/basename.c: provide a dirname() compatibility function
  compat/basename: make basename() conform to POSIX
  Refactor skipping DOS drive prefixes
2016-02-03 14:16:06 -08:00
201155cd11 Merge branch 'dt/unpack-compare-entry-optim'
"git checkout $branch" (and other operations that share the same
underlying machinery) has been optimized.

* dt/unpack-compare-entry-optim:
  unpack-trees: fix accidentally quadratic behavior
  do_compare_entry: use already-computed path
2016-02-03 14:16:06 -08:00
ebcdd635c5 Merge branch 'pw/completion-stash'
* pw/completion-stash:
  completion: update completion arguments for stash
2016-02-03 14:16:06 -08:00
47c33b45d1 Merge branch 'pw/completion-show-branch'
* pw/completion-show-branch:
  completion: complete show-branch "--date-order"
2016-02-03 14:16:05 -08:00
103c95dbfb Merge branch 'jk/completion-rebase'
* jk/completion-rebase:
  completion: add missing git-rebase options
2016-02-03 14:16:05 -08:00
c167a96e68 Merge branch 'nd/diff-with-path-params'
A few options of "git diff" did not work well when the command was
run from a subdirectory.

* nd/diff-with-path-params:
  diff: make -O and --output work in subdirectory
  diff-no-index: do not take a redundant prefix argument
2016-02-03 14:16:04 -08:00
465c30a9c6 Merge branch 'lv/add-doc-working-tree'
* lv/add-doc-working-tree:
  git-add doc: do not say working directory when you mean working tree
2016-02-03 14:16:04 -08:00
dd65a9e5e3 Merge branch 'dw/subtree-split-do-not-drop-merge'
The "split" subcommand of "git subtree" (in contrib/) incorrectly
skipped merges when it shouldn't, which was corrected.

* dw/subtree-split-do-not-drop-merge:
  contrib/subtree: fix "subtree split" skipped-merge bug
2016-02-03 14:16:03 -08:00
cc329f65a3 Merge branch 'tb/complete-word-diff-regex'
* tb/complete-word-diff-regex:
  completion: complete "diff --word-diff-regex="
2016-02-03 14:16:03 -08:00
619ef648de Merge branch 'mk/asciidoctor-bq-workaround'
* mk/asciidoctor-bq-workaround:
  Documentation: remove unnecessary backslashes
2016-02-03 14:16:01 -08:00
da94a08967 Merge branch 'dg/subtree-test'
* dg/subtree-test:
  contrib/subtree: Make testing easier
2016-02-03 14:16:00 -08:00
bd6934af9b Merge branch 'tg/ls-remote-symref'
"ls-remote" learned an option to show which branch the remote
repository advertises as its primary by pointing its HEAD at.

* tg/ls-remote-symref:
  ls-remote: add support for showing symrefs
  ls-remote: use parse-options api
  ls-remote: fix synopsis
  ls-remote: document --refs option
  ls-remote: document --quiet option
2016-02-03 14:16:00 -08:00
05f1539b7f Merge branch 'tb/ls-files-eol'
"git ls-files" learned a new "--eol" option to help diagnose
end-of-line problems.

* tb/ls-files-eol:
  ls-files: add eol diagnostics
2016-02-03 14:15:59 -08:00
1cb3ed308d Merge branch 'jk/notes-merge-from-anywhere'
"git notes merge" used to limit the source of the merged notes tree
to somewhere under refs/notes/ hierarchy, which was too limiting
when inventing a workflow to exchange notes with remote
repositories using remote-tracking notes trees (located in e.g.
refs/remote-notes/ or somesuch).

* jk/notes-merge-from-anywhere:
  notes: allow merging from arbitrary references
2016-02-03 14:15:59 -08:00
017565525f Merge branch 'jc/peace-with-crlf'
Many commands that read files that are expected to contain text
that is generated (or can be edited) by the end user to control
their behaviour (e.g. "git grep -f <filename>") have been updated
to be more tolerant to lines that are terminated with CRLF (they
used to treat such a line to contain payload that ends with CR,
which is usually not what the users expect).

* jc/peace-with-crlf:
  test-sha1-array: read command stream with strbuf_getline()
  grep: read -f file with strbuf_getline()
  send-pack: read list of refs with strbuf_getline()
  column: read lines with strbuf_getline()
  cat-file: read batch stream with strbuf_getline()
  transport-helper: read helper response with strbuf_getline()
  clone/sha1_file: read info/alternates with strbuf_getline()
  remote.c: read $GIT_DIR/remotes/* with strbuf_getline()
  ident.c: read /etc/mailname with strbuf_getline()
  rev-parse: read parseopt spec with strbuf_getline()
  revision: read --stdin with strbuf_getline()
  hash-object: read --stdin-paths with strbuf_getline()
2016-02-03 14:15:58 -08:00
8384c139cb restore_env(): free the saved environment variable once we are done
Just like we free orig_cwd, which is the value of the original
working directory saved in save_env_before_alias(), once we are
done with it, the contents of orig_env[] array, saved in the
save_env_before_alias() function should be freed; otherwise,
the second and subsequent calls to save/restore pair will leak
the memory allocated in save_env_before_alias().

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-02 15:42:59 -08:00
6129c930b2 test-lib: limit the output of the yes utility
On Windows, there is no SIGPIPE. A consequence of this is that the
upstream process of a pipe does not notice the death of the downstream
process until the pipe buffer is full and writing more data returns an
error. This behavior is the reason for an annoying delay during the
execution of t7610-mergetool.sh: There are a number of test cases where
'yes' is invoked upstream. Since the utility is basically an endless
loop it runs, on Windows, until the pipe buffer is full. This does take
a few seconds.

The test suite has its own implementation of 'yes'. Modify it to produce
only a limited amount of output that is sufficient for the test suite.
The amount chosen should be sufficiently high for any test case, assuming
that future test cases will not exaggerate their demands of input from
an upstream 'yes' invocation.

[j6t: commit message]

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-02 12:27:59 -08:00
07c314d22d Getting closer to 2.7.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-01 15:17:29 -08:00
8bad3de2c8 Merge branch 'jk/list-tag-2.7-regression'
"git tag" started listing a tag "foo" as "tags/foo" when a branch
named "foo" exists in the same repository; remove this unnecessary
disambiguation, which is a regression introduced in v2.7.0.

* jk/list-tag-2.7-regression:
  tag: do not show ambiguous tag names as "tags/foo"
  t6300: use test_atom for some un-modern tests
2016-02-01 15:14:24 -08:00
6d579a0de6 Merge branch 'ew/svn-1.9.0-auth'
* ew/svn-1.9.0-auth:
  git-svn: fix auth parameter handling on SVN 1.9.0+
2016-02-01 15:14:23 -08:00
b2e93f88cb push: fix ref status reporting for --force-with-lease
The --force--with-lease push option leads to less
detailed status information than --force. In particular,
the output indicates that a reference was fast-forwarded,
even when it was force-updated.

Modify the --force-with-lease ref status logic to leverage
the --force ref status logic when the "lease" conditions
are met.

Also, enhance tests to validate output status reporting.

Signed-off-by: Andrew Wheeler <awheeler@motorola.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-01 15:03:50 -08:00
1f3c79a9d6 apply, ls-files: simplify "-z" parsing
As a short option, we cannot handle negation. Thus a callback
handling "unset" is overkill, and we can just use OPT_SET_INT
instead to handle setting the option.

Anybody who adds "--nul" synonym to this later would need to be
careful not to break "--no-nul", which should mean that lines are
terminated with LF at the end.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-01 14:14:20 -08:00
2239617526 checkout-index: disallow "--no-stage" option
We do not really expect people to use "--no-stage", but if
they do, git currently segfaults. We could instead have it
undo the effects of a previous "--stage", but this gets
tricky around the "to_tempfile" flag. We cannot simply reset
it to 0, because we don't know if it was set by a previous
"--stage=all" or an explicit "--temp" option.

We could solve this by setting a flag and resolving
to_tempfile later, but it's not worth the effort. Nobody
actually wants to use "--no-stage"; we are just trying to
fix a potential segfault here.

While we're in the area, let's improve the user-facing
messages for this option. The error string should be
translatable, and we should give some hint in the "-h"
output about what can go in the argument field.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-01 13:43:49 -08:00
6a6df8aa45 checkout-index: handle "--no-index" option
The parsing of "--index" is done in a callback, but it does
not handle an "unset" option. We don't necessarily expect
anyone to use this, but the current behavior is to treat it
exactly like "--index", which would probably be surprising.

Instead, let's just turn it into an OPT_BOOL, and handle it
after we're done parsing. This makes "--no-index" just work
(it cancels a previous "--index").

As a bonus, this makes the logic easier to follow. The old
code opened the index during the option parsing, leaving the
reader to wonder if there was some timing issue (there
isn't; none of the other options care that we've opened it).
And then if we found that "--prefix" had been given, we had
to rollback the index. Now we can simply avoid opening it in
the first place.

Note that it might make more sense for checkout-index to
complain when "--index --prefix=foo" is given (rather than
silently ignoring "--index"), but since it has been that way
since 415e96c ([PATCH] Implement git-checkout-cache -u to
update stat information in the cache., 2005-05-15), it's
safer to leave it as-is.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-01 13:43:43 -08:00
5ed5f671c4 checkout-index: handle "--no-prefix" option
We use a custom callback to parse "--prefix", but it does
not handle the "unset" case. As a result, passing
"--no-prefix" will cause a segfault.

We can fix this by switching it to an OPT_STRING, which
makes "--no-prefix" counteract a previous "--prefix". Note
that this assigns NULL, so we bump our default-case
initialization to lower in the main function.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-01 13:43:30 -08:00
9096ee162b checkout-index: simplify "-z" option parsing
Now that we act as a simple bool, there's no need to use a
custom callback.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-01 13:43:16 -08:00
0d4cc1b45b give "nbuf" strbuf a more meaningful name
It's a common pattern in our code to read paths from stdin,
separated either by newlines or NULs, and unquote as
necessary. In each of these five cases we use "nbuf" to
temporarily store the unquoted value. Let's give it the more
meaningful name "unquoted", which makes it easier to
understand the purpose of the variable.

While we're at it, let's also static-initialize all of our
strbufs. It's not wrong to call strbuf_init, but it
increases the cognitive load on the reader, who might wonder
"do we sometimes avoid initializing them?  why?".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-01 13:43:02 -08:00
0769854f3d object name: introduce '^{/!-<negative pattern>}' notation
To name a commit, you can now use the :/!-<negative pattern> regex
style, and consequentially, say

    $ git rev-parse HEAD^{/!-foo}

and it will return the hash of the first commit reachable from HEAD,
whose commit message does not contain "foo". This is the opposite of the
existing <rev>^{/<pattern>} syntax.

The specific use-case this is intended for is to perform an operation,
excluding the most-recent commits containing a particular marker. For
example, if you tend to make "work in progress" commits, with messages
beginning with "WIP", you work, then it could be useful to diff against
"the most recent commit which was not a WIP commit". That sort of thing
now possible, via commands such as:

    $ git diff @^{/!-^WIP}

The leader '/!-', rather than simply '/!', to denote a negative match,
is chosen to leave room for additional modifiers in the future.

Signed-off-by: Will Palmer <wmpalmer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stephen P. Smith <ischis2@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-01 13:40:37 -08:00
0d0bac67ce transport: drop support for git-over-rsync
The git-over-rsync protocol is inefficient and broken, and
has been for a long time. It transfers way more objects than
it needs (grabbing all of the remote's "objects/",
regardless of which objects we need). It does its own ad-hoc
parsing of loose and packed refs from the remote, but
doesn't properly override packed refs with loose ones,
leading to garbage results (e.g., expecting the other side
to have an object pointed to by a stale packed-refs entry,
or complaining that the other side has two copies of the
refs[1]).

This latter breakage means that nobody could have
successfully pulled from a moderately active repository
since cd547b4 (fetch/push: readd rsync support, 2007-10-01).

We never made an official deprecation notice in the release
notes for git's rsync protocol, but the tutorial has marked
it as such since 914328a (Update tutorial., 2005-08-30).
And on the mailing list as far back as Oct 2005, we can find
Junio mentioning it as having "been deprecated for quite
some time."[2,3,4]. So it was old news then; cogito had
deprecated the transport in July of 2005[5] (though it did
come back briefly when Linus broke git-http-pull!).

Of course some people professed their love of rsync through
2006, but Linus clarified in his usual gentle manner[6]:

  > Thanks!  This is why I still use rsync, even though
  > everybody and their mother tells me "Linus says rsync is
  > deprecated."

  No. You're using rsync because you're actively doing
  something _wrong_.

The deprecation sentiment was reinforced in 2008, with a
mention that cloning via rsync is broken (with no fix)[7].

Even the commit porting rsync over to C from shell (cd547b4)
lists it as deprecated! So between the 10 years of informal
warnings, and the fact that it has been severely broken
since 2007, it's probably safe to simply remove it without
further deprecation warnings.

[1] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/285101
[2] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/10093
[3] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/17734
[4] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/18911
[5] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/5617
[6] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/19354
[7] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/103635

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-02-01 13:07:41 -08:00
f562d7de32 stripspace: call U+0020 a "space" instead of a "blank"
I couldn't find any other examples of people referring to this
character as a "blank".

Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-29 16:02:34 -08:00
1a8630dc3b convert: treat an empty string for clean/smudge filters as "cat"
Once a lower-priority configuration file defines a clean or smudge
filter, there is no convenient way to override it to produce as-is
output.  Even though the configuration mechanism implements "the
last one wins" semantics, you cannot set them to an empty string and
expect them to work, as apply_filter() would try to run the empty
string as an external command and fail.  The conversion is not done,
but the function would still report a failure to convert.

Even though resetting the variable to "cat" (i.e. pass the data back
as-is and report success) is an obvious and a viable way to solve
this, it is wasteful to spawn an external process just as a
workaround.

Instead, teach apply_filter() to treat an empty string as a no-op
filter that always returns successfully its input as-is without
conversion.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-29 11:04:27 -08:00
701fa7fe35 Fourth batch for 2.8.cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-28 16:14:25 -08:00
a1c5405a52 Merge branch 'jk/shortlog'
"git shortlog" used to accumulate various pieces of information
regardless of what was asked to be shown in the final output.  It
has been optimized by noticing what need not to be collected
(e.g. there is no need to collect the log messages when showing
only the number of changes).

* jk/shortlog:
  shortlog: don't warn on empty author
  shortlog: optimize out useless string list
  shortlog: optimize out useless "<none>" normalization
  shortlog: optimize "--summary" mode
  shortlog: replace hand-parsing of author with pretty-printer
  shortlog: use strbufs to read from stdin
  shortlog: match both "Author:" and "author" on stdin
2016-01-28 16:10:14 -08:00
b62624b51a Merge branch 'jc/strbuf-getline'
The preliminary clean-up for jc/peace-with-crlf topic.

* jc/strbuf-getline:
  strbuf: give strbuf_getline() to the "most text friendly" variant
  checkout-index: there are only two possible line terminations
  update-index: there are only two possible line terminations
  check-ignore: there are only two possible line terminations
  check-attr: there are only two possible line terminations
  mktree: there are only two possible line terminations
  strbuf: introduce strbuf_getline_{lf,nul}()
  strbuf: make strbuf_getline_crlf() global
  strbuf: miniscule style fix
2016-01-28 16:10:14 -08:00
116a866bf5 Merge branch 'js/msys2'
Beginning of the upstreaming process of Git for Windows effort.

* js/msys2:
  mingw: uglify (a, 0) definitions to shut up warnings
  mingw: squash another warning about a cast
  mingw: avoid warnings when casting HANDLEs to int
  mingw: avoid redefining S_* constants
  compat/winansi: support compiling with MSys2
  compat/mingw: support MSys2-based MinGW build
  nedmalloc: allow compiling with MSys2's compiler
  config.mak.uname: supporting 64-bit MSys2
  config.mak.uname: support MSys2
2016-01-28 16:10:14 -08:00
4f3aa9da70 Merge branch 'tk/interpret-trailers-in-place'
"interpret-trailers" has been taught to optionally update a file in
place, instead of always writing the result to the standard output.

* tk/interpret-trailers-in-place:
  interpret-trailers: add option for in-place editing
  trailer: allow to write to files other than stdout
2016-01-28 16:10:13 -08:00
4b16573ce9 Merge branch 'jk/sanity'
The description for SANITY prerequisite the test suite uses has
been clarified both in the comment and in the implementation.

* jk/sanity:
  test-lib: clarify and tighten SANITY
2016-01-28 16:10:13 -08:00
a2ec9484c1 Merge branch 'jk/filter-branch-no-index'
A recent optimization to filter-branch in v2.7.0 introduced a
regression when --prune-empty filter is used, which has been
corrected.

* jk/filter-branch-no-index:
  filter-branch: resolve $commit^{tree} in no-index case
2016-01-28 16:10:12 -08:00
f3ee9ca53b pass transport verbosity down to git_connect
While working in connect.c to perform non-blocking connections,
I noticed calling "git fetch -v" was not causing the progress
messages inside git_tcp_connect_sock to be emitted as I
expected.

Looking at history, it seems connect_setup has never been called
with the verbose parameter.  Since transport already has a
"verbose" field, use that field instead of another parameter
in connect_setup.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-28 15:43:08 -08:00
4539a8982c mingw: do not bother to test funny file names
MSYS2 actually allows to create files or directories whose names contain
tabs, newlines or colors, even if plain Win32 API cannot access them.
As we are using an MSYS2 bash to run the tests, such files or
directories are created successfully, but Git itself has no chance to
work with them because it is a regular Windows program, hence limited by
the Win32 API.

With this change, on Windows otherwise failing tests in
t3300-funny-names.sh, t3600-rm.sh, t3703-add-magic-pathspec.sh,
t3902-quoted.sh, t4016-diff-quote.sh, t4135-apply-weird-filenames.sh,
t9200-git-cvsexportcommit.sh, and t9903-bash-prompt.sh are skipped.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-28 13:36:11 -08:00
b9f3560c1e mingw: skip a test in t9130 that cannot pass on Windows
On Windows, Git itself has no clue about POSIX paths, but its shell
scripts do. In this instance, we get mixed paths as a result, and when
comparing the path of the author file, we get a mismatch that is
entirely due to the POSIX path vs Windows path clash.

Let's just skip this test so that t9130-git-svn-authors-file.sh passes
in Git for Windows' SDK.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-28 13:36:11 -08:00
b2fe065722 mingw: handle the missing POSIXPERM prereq in t9124
On Windows, the permission system works completely differently than
expected by some of the tests. So let's make sure that we do not test
POSIX functionality on Windows.

This lets t9124-git-svn-dcommit-auto-props.sh pass in Git for Windows'
SDK.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-28 13:36:11 -08:00
75e005ec54 mingw: avoid illegal filename in t9118
On Windows' file systems, file names with trailing dots are forbidden.
The POSIX emulation layer used by Git for Windows' Subversion emulates
those file names, therefore the test adding the file would actually
succeed, but when we would ask git.exe (which does not leverage the
POSIX emulation layer) to check out the tree, it would fail.

Let's just guard the test using a filename that is illegal on Windows
by the MINGW prereq.

This lets t9118-git-svn-funky-branch-names.sh pass in Git for Windows'
SDK.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-28 13:36:10 -08:00
bcb11f19e0 mingw: mark t9100's test cases with appropriate prereqs
Many a test requires either POSIXPERM (to change the executable bit) or
SYMLINKS, and neither are available on Windows.

This lets t9100-git-svn-basic.sh pass in Git for Windows' SDK.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-28 13:36:10 -08:00
2b3abd45bd t0008: avoid absolute path
The colon is used by check-ignore to separate paths from other output
values. If we use an absolute path, however, on Windows it will be
converted into a Windows path that very much contains a colon.

It is actually not at all necessary to make the path of the global
excludes absolute, so let's just not even do that.

Based on suggestions by Karsten Blees and Junio Hamano.

Suggested-by: Karsten Blees <karsten.blees@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-28 13:35:56 -08:00
fd318a941d mingw: work around pwd issues in the tests
In Git for Windows' SDK, the tests are run using a Bash that relies on
the POSIX emulation layer MSYS2 (itself a friendly fork of Cygwin). As
such, paths in tests can be POSIX paths. As soon as those paths are
passed to git.exe (which does *not* use the POSIX emulation layer),
those paths are converted into Windows paths, though. This happens
for command-line parameters, but not when reading, say, config variables.

To help with that, the `pwd` command is overridden to return the Windows
path of the current working directory when testing Git on Windows.

However, when talking to anything using the POSIX emulation layer, it is
really much better to use POSIX paths because Windows paths contain a
colon after the drive letter that will easily be mistaken for the common
separator in path lists.

So let's just use the $PWD variable when the POSIX path is needed.

This lets t7800-difftool.sh, t9400-git-cvsserver-server.sh,
t9402-git-cvsserver-refs.sh and t9401-git-cvsserver-crlf.sh pass in Git
for Windows' SDK.

Note: the cvsserver tests require not only the `cvs` package (install
it into Git for Windows' SDK via `pacman -S cvs`) but also the Perl
SQLite bindings (install them into Git for Windows' SDK via
`cpan DBD::SQLite`).

This patch is based on earlier work by 마누엘 and Karsten Blees.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-28 13:35:56 -08:00
d53c2c6738 mingw: fix t9700's assumption about directory separators
This test assumed that there is only one directory separator (the
forward slash), not two equivalent directory separators.
However, on Windows, the back slash and the forward slash *are*
equivalent.

Let's paper over this issue by converting the backward slashes to
forward ones in the test that fails with MSYS2 otherwise.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-28 13:35:56 -08:00
8facec08fe mingw: skip test in t1508 that fails due to path conversion
In Git for Windows, the MSYS2 POSIX emulation layer used by the Bash
converts command-line arguments that looks like they refer to a POSIX
path containing a file list (i.e. @<absolute-path>) into a Windows path
equivalent when calling non-MSYS2 executables, such as git.exe.

Let's just skip the test that uses the parameter `@/at-test` that
confuses the MSYS2 runtime.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-28 13:35:56 -08:00
a390d7e8f9 tests: turn off git-daemon tests if FIFOs are not available
The Git daemon tests create a FIFO first thing and will hang if said
FIFO is not available.

This is a problem with Git for Windows, where `mkfifo` is an MSYS2
program that leverages MSYS2's POSIX emulation layer, but
`git-daemon.exe` is a MINGW program that has not the first clue about
that POSIX emulation layer and therefore blinks twice when it sees
MSYS2's emulated FIFOs and then just stares into space.

This lets t5570-git-daemon.sh and t5811-proto-disable-git.sh pass.

Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-28 13:35:54 -08:00
441981bc85 git: simplify environment save/restore logic
The only code that cares about the value of the global variable
saved_env_before_alias after the previous fix is handle_builtin()
that turns into a glorified no-op when the variable is true, so the
logic could safely be lifted to its caller, i.e. the caller can
refrain from calling it when the variable is set.

This variable tells us if save_env_before_alias() was called (with
or without matching restore_env()), but the sole caller of the
function, handle_alias(), always calls it as the first thing, so we
can consider that the variable essentially keeps track of the fact
that handle_alias() has ever been called.

It turns out that handle_builtin() and handle_alias() are called
only from one function in a way that the value of the variable
matters, which is run_argv(), and it already keeps track of the
fact that it already called handle_alias().

So we can simplify the whole thing by:

- Change handle_builtin() to always make a direct call to the
  builtin implementation it finds, and make sure the caller
  refrains from calling it if handle_alias() has ever been
  called;

- Remove saved_env_before_alias variable, and instead use the
  local "done_alias" variable maintained inside run_argv() to
  make the same decision.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-27 15:45:55 -08:00
2e1175d43d git: protect against unbalanced calls to {save,restore}_env()
We made sure that save_env_before_alias() does not skip saving the
environment when asked to (which led to use-after-free of orig_cwd
in restore_env() in the buggy version) with the previous step.

Protect against future breakage where somebody adds new callers of
these functions in an unbalanced fashion.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-27 15:19:03 -08:00
9d1d2b7fad git: remove an early return from save_env_before_alias()
When help.autocorrect is in effect, an attempt to auto-execute an
uniquely corrected result of a misspelt alias will result in an
irrelevant error message.  The codepath that causes this calls
save_env_before_alias() and restore_env() in handle_alias(), and
that happens twice.  A global variable orig_cwd is allocated to hold
the return value of getcwd() in save_env_before_alias(), which is
then used in restore_env() to go back to that directory and finally
free(3)'d there.

However, save_env_before_alias() is not prepared to be called twice.
It returns early when it knows it has already been called, leaving
orig_cwd undefined, which is then checked in the second call to
restore_env(), and by that time, the memory that used to hold the
contents of orig_cwd is either freed or reused to hold something
else, and this is fed to chdir(2), causing it to fail.  Even if it
did not fail (i.e. reading of the already free'd piece of memory
yielded a directory path that we can chdir(2) to), it then gets
free(3)'d.

Fix this by making sure save_env() does do the saving when called.

While at it, add a minimal test for help.autocorrect facility.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-27 15:12:37 -08:00
a1f32964da mingw: disable mkfifo-based tests
MSYS2 (the POSIX emulation layer used by Git for Windows' Bash) actually
has a working mkfifo. The only problem is that it is only emulating
named pipes through the MSYS2 runtime; The Win32 API has no idea about
named pipes, hence the Git executable cannot access those pipes either.

The symptom is that Git fails with a '<name>: No such file or directory'
because MSYS2 emulates named pipes through special-crafted '.lnk' files.

The solution is to tell the test suite explicitly that we cannot use
named pipes when we want to test on Windows.

This lets t4056-diff-order.sh, t9010-svn-fe.sh and t9300-fast-import.sh
pass.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-27 14:27:19 -08:00
fc56c7b34b mingw: accomodate t0060-path-utils for MSYS2
On Windows, there are no POSIX paths, only Windows ones (an absolute
Windows path looks like "C:\Program Files\Git\ReleaseNotes.html", under
most circumstances, forward slashes are also allowed and synonymous to
backslashes).

So when a POSIX shell (such as MSYS2's Bash, which is used by Git for
Windows to execute all those shell scripts that are part of Git) passes
a POSIX path to test-path-utils.exe (which is not POSIX-aware), the path
is translated into a Windows path. For example, /etc/profile becomes
C:/Program Files/Git/etc/profile.

This path translation poses a problem when passing the root directory as
parameter to test-path-utils.exe, as it is not well defined whether the
translated root directory should end in a slash or not. MSys1 stripped
the trailing slash, but MSYS2 does not.

Originally, the Git for Windows project patched MSYS2's runtime to
accomodate Git's regression test, but we really should do it the other
way round.

To work with both of MSys1's and MSYS2's behaviors, we simply test what
the current system does in the beginning of t0060-path-utils.sh and then
adjust the expected longest ancestor length accordingly.

It looks quite a bit tricky what we actually do in this patch: first, we
adjust the expected length for the trailing slash we did not originally
expect (subtracting one). So far, so good.

But now comes the part where things work in a surprising way: when the
expected length was 0, the prefix to match is the root directory. If the
root directory is converted into a path with a trailing slash, however,
we know that the logic in longest_ancestor_length() cannot match: to
avoid partial matches of the last directory component, it verifies that
the character after the matching prefix is a slash (but because the
slash was part of the matching prefix, the next character cannot be a
slash). So the return value is -1. Alas, this is exactly what the
expected length is after subtracting the value of $rootslash! So we skip
adding the $rootoff value in that case (and only in that case).

Directories other than the root directory are handled fine (as they are
specified without a trailing slash, something not possible for the root
directory, and MSYS2 converts them into Windows paths that also lack
trailing slashes), therefore we do not need any more special handling.

Thanks to Ray Donnelly for his patient help with this issue.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-27 14:27:19 -08:00
3064d5a38c mingw: fix t5601-clone.sh
Since baaf233 (connect: improve check for plink to reduce false
positives, 2015-04-26), t5601 writes out a `plink.exe` for testing that
is actually a shell script. So the assumption that the `.exe` extension
implies that the file is *not* a shell script is now wrong.

Since there was no love for the idea of allowing `.exe` files to be
shell scripts on Windows, let's go the other way round: *make*
`plink.exe` a real `.exe`.

This fixes t5601-clone.sh in Git for Windows' SDK.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-27 14:27:19 -08:00
7c121788f4 t7063: add tests for core.untrackedCache
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-27 12:30:17 -08:00
dae6c322fa test-dump-untracked-cache: don't modify the untracked cache
To correctly perform its testing function,
test-dump-untracked-cache should not change the state of the
untracked cache in the index.

As a previous patch makes read_index_from() change the state of
the untracked cache and as test-dump-untracked-cache indirectly
calls this function, we need a mechanism to prevent
read_index_from() from changing the untracked cache state when
it's called from test-dump-untracked-cache.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-27 12:30:07 -08:00
435ec090ec config: add core.untrackedCache
When we know that mtime on directory as given by the environment
is usable for the purpose of untracked cache, we may want the
untracked cache to be always used without any mtime test or
kernel name check being performed.

Also when we know that mtime is not usable for the purpose of
untracked cache, for example because the repo is shared over a
network file system, we may want the untracked-cache to be
automatically removed from the index.

Allow the user to express such preference by setting the
'core.untrackedCache' configuration variable, which can take
'keep', 'false', or 'true' and default to 'keep'.

When read_index_from() is called, it now adds or removes the
untracked cache in the index to respect the value of this
variable. So it does nothing if the value is `keep` or if the
variable is unset; it adds the untracked cache if the value is
`true`; and it removes the cache if the value is `false`.

`git update-index --[no-|force-]untracked-cache` still adds the
untracked cache to, or removes it, from the index, but this
shows a warning if it goes against the value of
core.untrackedCache, because the next time the index is read
the untracked cache will be added or removed if the
configuration is set to do so.

Also `--untracked-cache` used to check that the underlying
operating system and file system change `st_mtime` field of a
directory if files are added or deleted in that directory. But
because those tests take a long time, `--untracked-cache` no
longer performs them. Instead, there is now
`--test-untracked-cache` to perform the tests. This change
makes `--untracked-cache` the same as `--force-untracked-cache`.

This last change is backward incompatible and should be
mentioned in the release notes.

Helped-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Helped-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>

read-cache: Duy'sfixup

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-27 12:30:00 -08:00
15980deab9 merge-file: ensure that conflict sections match eol style
In the previous patch, we made sure that the conflict markers themselves
match the end-of-line style of the input files. However, this still left
out the conflicting text itself: if it lacks a trailing newline, we
add one, and should add a carriage return when appropriate, too.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-27 10:21:53 -08:00
86efa21527 merge-file: let conflict markers match end-of-line style of the context
When merging files with CR/LF line endings, the conflict markers should
match those, lest the output file has mixed line endings.

This is particularly of interest on Windows, where some editors get
*really* confused by mixed line endings.

The original version of this patch by Beat Bolli respected core.eol, and
a subsequent improvement by this developer also respected gitattributes.
This approach was suboptimal, though: `git merge-file` was invented as a
drop-in replacement for GNU merge and as such has no problem operating
outside of any repository at all!

Another problem with the original approach was pointed out by Junio
Hamano: legacy repositories might have their text files committed using
CR/LF line endings (and core.eol and the gitattributes would give us a
false impression there). Therefore, the much superior approach is to
simply match the context's line endings, if any.

We actually do not have to look at the *entire* context at all: if the
files are all LF-only, or if they all have CR/LF line endings, it is
sufficient to look at just a *single* line to match that style. And if
the line endings are mixed anyway, it is *still* okay to imitate just a
single line's eol: we will just add to the pile of mixed line endings,
and there is nothing we can do about that.

So what we do is: we look at the line preceding the conflict, falling
back to the line preceding that in case it was the last line and had no
line ending, falling back to the first line, first in the first
post-image, then the second post-image, and finally the pre-image.
If we find consistent CR/LF (or undecided) end-of-line style, we match
that, otherwise we use LF-only line endings for the conflict markers.

Note that while it is true that there have to be at least two lines we
can look at (otherwise there would be no conflict), the same is not true
for line *endings*: the three files in question could all consist of a
single line without any line ending, each. In this case we fall back to
using LF-only.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-27 10:21:26 -08:00
0b6641557c git-svn: fix auth parameter handling on SVN 1.9.0+
For users with "store-passwords = no" set in the "[auth]" section of
their ~/.subversion/config, SVN 1.9.0+ would fail with the
following message when attempting to call svn_auth_set_parameter:

  Value is not a string (or undef) at Git/SVN/Ra.pm

Ironically, this breakage was caused by r1553823 in subversion:

  "Make svn_auth_set_parameter() usable from Perl bindings."

Since 2007 (602015e0e6), git-svn has used a workaround to make
svn_auth_set_parameter usable internally.  However this workaround
breaks under SVN 1.9+, which deals properly with the type mapping
and fails to recognize our workaround.

For pre-1.9.0 SVN, we continue to use the existing workaround for
the lack of proper type mapping in the bindings.

Tested under subversion 1.6.17 and 1.9.3.

I've also verified r1553823 was not backported to SVN 1.8.x:

  BRANCH=http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/subversion/branches/1.8.x
  svn log -v $BRANCH/subversion/bindings/swig/core.i

ref: https://bugs.debian.org/797705
Cc: 797705@bugs.debian.org
Reported-by: Thierry Vignaud <thierry.vignaud@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Tested-by: Thierry Vignaud <thierry.vignaud@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 22:30:02 -08:00
d10e2cb9d0 Third batch for 2.8 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 15:41:04 -08:00
90ce285a42 Merge branch 'jk/symbolic-ref'
The low-level code that is used to create symbolic references has
been updated to share more code with the code that deals with
normal references.

* jk/symbolic-ref:
  lock_ref_sha1_basic: handle REF_NODEREF with invalid refs
  lock_ref_sha1_basic: always fill old_oid while holding lock
  checkout,clone: check return value of create_symref
  create_symref: write reflog while holding lock
  create_symref: use existing ref-lock code
  create_symref: modernize variable names
2016-01-26 15:40:30 -08:00
b2ed5ae80a Merge branch 'ak/format-patch-odir-config'
"git format-patch" learned to notice format.outputDirectory
configuration variable.  This allows "-o <dir>" option to be
omitted on the command line if you always use the same directory in
your workflow.

* ak/format-patch-odir-config:
  format-patch: introduce format.outputDirectory configuration
2016-01-26 15:40:30 -08:00
c7dd1c5818 Merge branch 'rp/p4-filetype-change'
* rp/p4-filetype-change:
  git-p4.py: add support for filetype change
2016-01-26 15:40:29 -08:00
3c809405cb Merge branch 'js/close-packs-before-gc'
Many codepaths that run "gc --auto" before exiting kept packfiles
mapped and left the file descriptors to them open, which was not
friendly to systems that cannot remove files that are open.  They
now close the packs before doing so.

* js/close-packs-before-gc:
  receive-pack: release pack files before garbage-collecting
  merge: release pack files before garbage-collecting
  am: release pack files before garbage-collecting
  fetch: release pack files before garbage-collecting
2016-01-26 15:40:29 -08:00
eefc461ce3 Merge branch 'jk/ok-to-fail-gc-auto-in-rebase'
"git rebase", unlike all other callers of "gc --auto", did not
ignore the exit code from "gc --auto".

* jk/ok-to-fail-gc-auto-in-rebase:
  rebase: ignore failures from "gc --auto"
2016-01-26 15:40:29 -08:00
f9219c0b32 Merge branch 'js/pull-rebase-i'
"git pull --rebase" has been extended to allow invoking
"rebase -i".

* js/pull-rebase-i:
  completion: add missing branch.*.rebase values
  remote: handle the config setting branch.*.rebase=interactive
  pull: allow interactive rebase with --rebase=interactive
2016-01-26 15:40:28 -08:00
4b0abd5c69 mingw: let lstat() fail with errno == ENOTDIR when appropriate
POSIX semantics requires lstat() to fail with ENOTDIR when "[a]
component of the path prefix names an existing file that is neither a
directory nor a symbolic link to a directory".

See http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/lstat.html

This behavior is expected by t1404-update-ref-df-conflicts now.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 13:42:59 -08:00
4426fb5142 mingw: try to delete target directory before renaming
When the rename() function tries to move a directory it fails if the
target directory exists. It should check if it can delete the (possibly
empty) target directory and then try again to move the directory.

This partially fixes t9100-git-svn-basic.sh.

Signed-off-by: 마누엘 <nalla@hamal.uberspace.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 13:42:59 -08:00
1fc7bf79e5 mingw: prepare the TMPDIR environment variable for shell scripts
When shell scripts access a $TMPDIR variable containing backslashes,
they will be mistaken for escape characters. Let's not let that happen
by converting them to forward slashes.

This partially fixes t7800 with MSYS2.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 13:42:59 -08:00
02e6edc082 mingw: factor out Windows specific environment setup
We will add more environment-related code to that new function
in the next patch.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 13:42:59 -08:00
888ab716ad Git.pm: stop assuming that absolute paths start with a slash
On Windows, absolute paths never start with a slash, unless a POSIX
emulation layer is used. The latter is the case for MSYS2's Perl that
Git for Windows leverages. However, in the tests we also go through
plain `git.exe`, which does *not* leverage the POSIX emulation layer,
and therefore the paths we pass to Perl may actually be DOS-style paths
such as C:/Program Files/Git.

So let's just use Perl's own way to test whether a given path is
absolute or not instead of home-brewing our own.

This patch partially fixes t7800 and t9700 when running in Git for
Windows' SDK.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 13:42:59 -08:00
b640b77fea mingw: do not trust MSYS2's MinGW gettext.sh
It does not quite work because it produces DOS line endings which the
shell does not like at all.

This lets t0200-gettext-basic.sh, t0204-gettext-reencode-sanity.sh,
t3406-rebase-message.sh, t3903-stash.sh, t7400-submodule-basic.sh,
t7401-submodule-summary.sh, t7406-submodule-update.sh and
t7407-submodule-foreach.sh pass in Git for Windows' SDK.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 13:42:59 -08:00
f9206ce268 mingw: let's use gettext with MSYS2
This solves two problems:

- we now have proper localisation even on Windows

- we sidestep the infamous "BUG: your vsnprintf is broken (returned -1)"
  message when running "git init" (which otherwise prevents the entire
  test suite from running) because libintl.h overrides vsnprintf() with
  libintl_vsnprintf() [*1*]

The latter issue is rather crucial, as *no* test passes in Git for
Windows without this fix.

Footnote *1*: gettext_git=http://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/gettext.git
$gettext_git/tree/gettext-runtime/intl/libgnuintl.in.h#n380

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 13:42:59 -08:00
0571979bd6 tag: do not show ambiguous tag names as "tags/foo"
Since b7cc53e9 (tag.c: use 'ref-filter' APIs, 2015-07-11),
git-tag has started showing tags with ambiguous names (i.e.,
when both "heads/foo" and "tags/foo" exists) as "tags/foo"
instead of just "foo". This is both:

  - pointless; the output of "git tag" includes only
    refs/tags, so we know that "foo" means the one in
    "refs/tags".

and

  - ambiguous; in the original output, we know that the line
    "foo" means that "refs/tags/foo" exists. In the new
    output, it is unclear whether we mean "refs/tags/foo" or
    "refs/tags/tags/foo".

The reason this happens is that commit b7cc53e9 switched
git-tag to use ref-filter's "%(refname:short)" output
formatting, which was adapted from for-each-ref. This more
general code does not know that we care only about tags, and
uses shorten_unambiguous_ref to get the short-name. We need
to tell it that we care only about "refs/tags/", and it
should shorten with respect to that value.

In theory, the ref-filter code could figure this out by us
passing FILTER_REFS_TAGS. But there are two complications
there:

  1. The handling of refname:short is deep in formatting
     code that does not even have our ref_filter struct, let
     alone the arguments to the filter_ref struct.

  2. In git v2.7.0, we expose the formatting language to the
     user. If we follow this path, it will mean that
     "%(refname:short)" behaves differently for "tag" versus
     "for-each-ref" (including "for-each-ref refs/tags/"),
     which can lead to confusion.

Instead, let's add a new modifier to the formatting
language, "strip", to remove a specific set of prefix
components. This fixes "git tag", and lets users invoke the
same behavior from their own custom formats (for "tag" or
"for-each-ref") while leaving ":short" with its same
consistent meaning in all places.

We introduce a test in t7004 for "git tag", which fails
without this patch. We also add a similar test in t3203 for
"git branch", which does not actually fail. But since it is
likely that "branch" will eventually use the same formatting
code, the test helps defend against future regressions.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 13:34:10 -08:00
372370f167 http: use credential API to handle proxy authentication
Currently, the only way to pass proxy credentials to curl is by including them
in the proxy URL. Usually, this means they will end up on disk unencrypted, one
way or another (by inclusion in ~/.gitconfig, shell profile or history). Since
proxy authentication often uses a domain user, credentials can be security
sensitive; therefore, a safer way of passing credentials is desirable.

If the configured proxy contains a username but not a password, query the
credential API for one. Also, make sure we approve/reject proxy credentials
properly.

For consistency reasons, add parsing of http_proxy/https_proxy/all_proxy
environment variables, which would otherwise be evaluated as a fallback by curl.
Without this, we would have different semantics for git configuration and
environment variables.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Knut Franke <k.franke@science-computing.de>
Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 10:53:25 -08:00
ef976395e2 http: allow selection of proxy authentication method
CURLAUTH_ANY does not work with proxies which answer unauthenticated requests
with a 307 redirect to an error page instead of a 407 listing supported
authentication methods. Therefore, allow the authentication method to be set
using the environment variable GIT_HTTP_PROXY_AUTHMETHOD or configuration
variables http.proxyAuthmethod and remote.<name>.proxyAuthmethod (in analogy
to http.proxy and remote.<name>.proxy).

The following values are supported:

* anyauth (default)
* basic
* digest
* negotiate
* ntlm

Signed-off-by: Knut Franke <k.franke@science-computing.de>
Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 10:53:09 -08:00
ce59dffb34 travis-ci: explicity use container-based infrastructure
Set `sudo: false` to explicitly use the (faster) container-based
infrastructure for the Travis-CI Linux build.

More info:
https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/ci-environment/#Virtualization-environments

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 10:44:28 -08:00
6272ed3194 travis-ci: run previously failed tests first, then slowest to fastest
The Travis-CI machines are in a clean state in the beginning of every run
(transient by default). Use the Travis-CI cache feature to make the prove
state persistent across consecutive Travis-CI runs on the same branch.
This allows to run previously failed tests first and run remaining tests
in slowest to fastest order. As a result it is less likely that Travis-CI
needs to wait for a single test at the end which speeds up the test suite
execution by ~2 min.

Travis-CI can only cache entire directories. Prove stores the .prove file
always in the t/ directory but we don't want to cache the entire t/ directory.
Therefore we create a symlink from $HOME/travis-cache/.prove to t/.prove and
cache the $HOME/travis-cache directory.

Unfortunately the cache feature is only available (for free) on the
Travis-CI Linux environment.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 10:38:11 -08:00
d7d4ca87a9 completion: update completion arguments for stash
Add --all and --include-untracked to the git stash save completions.
Add --quiet to the git stash drop completions.
Update git stash branch so that the first argument expands out to the
possible branch names, and the other arguments expand to the stash
names.

Signed-off-by: Paul Wagland <paul@kungfoocoder.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-26 10:37:11 -08:00
f7c2e1a042 completion: complete show-branch "--date-order"
Signed-off-by: Paul Wagland <paul@kungfoocoder.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-25 15:15:26 -08:00
fa4b5e3a35 completion: add missing git-rebase options
This adds the --no-* variants where those are documented in
git-rebase(1).

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-25 15:13:54 -08:00
e7d5ce8165 mingw: avoid linking to the C library's isalpha()
The implementation of mingw_skip_dos_drive_prefix() calls isalpha() via
has_dos_drive_prefix(). Since the definition occurs long before isalpha()
is defined in git-compat-util.h, my build environment reports:

    CC alloc.o
In file included from git-compat-util.h:186,
                 from cache.h:4,
                 from alloc.c:12:
compat/mingw.h: In function 'mingw_skip_dos_drive_prefix':
compat/mingw.h:365: warning: implicit declaration of function 'isalpha'

Dscho does not see a similar warning in his build and suspects that
ctype.h is included somehow behind the scenes. This implies that his build
links to the C library's isalpha() and does not use git's isalpha().

To fix both the warning in my build and the inconsistency in Dscho's
build, move the function definition to mingw.c. Then it picks up git's
isalpha() because git-compat-util.h is included at the top of the file.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-25 14:04:14 -08:00
0e0f761842 dir: simplify untracked cache "ident" field
It is not a good idea to compare kernel versions and disable
the untracked cache if it changes, as people may upgrade and
still want the untracked cache to work. So let's just
compare work tree locations and kernel name to decide if we
should disable it.

Also storing many locations in the ident field and comparing
to any of them can be dangerous if GIT_WORK_TREE is used with
different values. So let's just store one location, the
location of the current work tree.

The downside is that untracked cache can only be used by one
type of OS for now. Exporting a git repo to different clients
via a network to e.g. Linux and Windows means that only one
can use the untracked cache.

If the location changed in the ident field and we still want
an untracked cache, let's delete the cache and recreate it.

Note that if an untracked cache has been created by a
previous Git version, then the kernel version is stored in
the ident field. As we now compare with just the kernel
name the comparison will fail and the untracked cache will
be disabled until it's recreated.

Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-25 12:40:17 -08:00
07b29bfd8d dir: add remove_untracked_cache()
Factor out code into remove_untracked_cache(), which will be used
in a later commit.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-25 12:40:11 -08:00
4a4ca4796d dir: add {new,add}_untracked_cache()
Factor out code into new_untracked_cache() and
add_untracked_cache(), which will be used
in later commits.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-25 12:39:58 -08:00
e7c0c5354b update-index: move 'uc' var declaration
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-25 12:39:46 -08:00
6d19db1491 update-index: add untracked cache notifications
Attempting to flip the untracked-cache feature on for a random index
file with

    cd /random/unrelated/place
    git --git-dir=/somewhere/else/.git update-index --untracked-cache

would not work as you might expect. Because flipping the feature on
in the index also records the location of the corresponding working
tree (/random/unrelated/place in the above example), when the index
is subsequently used to keep track of files in the working tree in
/somewhere/else, the feature is disabled.

With this patch "git update-index --[test-]untracked-cache" tells the
user in which directory tests are performed. This makes it easy to
spot any problem.

Also in verbose mode, let's tell the user when the cache is enabled
or disabled.

Helped-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-25 12:39:34 -08:00
eaab83d0e5 update-index: add --test-untracked-cache
It is nice to just be able to test if untracked cache is
supported without enabling it.

Helped-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-25 12:39:22 -08:00
113e641318 update-index: use enum for untracked cache options
Helped-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-25 12:39:13 -08:00
1d094db936 t6300: use test_atom for some un-modern tests
Because this script has to test so many formatters, we have
the nice "test_atom" helper, but we don't use it
consistently. Let's do so. This is shorter, gets rid of some
tests that have their "expected" setup outside of a
test_expect_success block, and lets us organize the changes
better (e.g., putting "refname:short" near "refname").

We also expand the "%(push)" tests a little to match the
"%(upstream)" ones.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-25 12:33:45 -08:00
a2d5156c2b resolve_gitlink_ref: ignore non-repository paths
When we want to look up a submodule ref, we use
get_ref_cache(path) to find or auto-create its ref cache.
But if we feed a path that isn't actually a git repository,
we blindly create the ref cache, and then may die deeper in
the code when we try to access it. This is a problem because
many callers speculatively feed us a path that looks vaguely
like a repository, and expect us to tell them when it is
not.

This patch teaches resolve_gitlink_ref to reject
non-repository paths without creating a ref_cache. This
avoids the die(), and also performs better if you have a
large number of these faux-submodule directories (because
the ref_cache lookup is linear, under the assumption that
there won't be a large number of submodules).

To accomplish this, we also break get_ref_cache into two
pieces: the lookup and auto-creation (the latter is lumped
into create_ref_cache). This lets us first cheaply ask our
cache "is it a submodule we know about?" If so, we can avoid
repeating our filesystem lookup. So lookups of real
submodules are not penalized; they examine the submodule's
.git directory only once.

The test in t3000 demonstrates a case where this improves
correctness (we used to just die). The new perf case in
p7300 shows off the speed improvement in an admittedly
pathological repository:

Test                  HEAD^               HEAD
----------------------------------------------------------------
7300.4: ls-files -o   66.97(66.15+0.87)   0.33(0.08+0.24) -99.5%

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-25 11:42:13 -08:00
ffd036b128 clean: make is_git_repository a public function
We have always had is_git_directory(), for looking at a
specific directory to see if it contains a git repo. In
0179ca7 (clean: improve performance when removing lots of
directories, 2015-06-15), we added is_git_repository() which
checks for a non-bare repository by looking at its ".git"
entry.

However, the fix in 0179ca7 needs to be applied other
places, too. Let's make this new helper globally available.
We need to give it a better name, though, to avoid confusion
with is_git_directory(). This patch does that, documents
both functions with a comment to reduce confusion, and
removes the clean-specific references in the comments.

Based-on-a-patch-by: Andreas Krey <a.krey@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-25 11:41:53 -08:00
618244e160 worktree: stop supporting moving worktrees manually
The current update_linked_gitdir() has a bug that can create "gitdir"
file in non-multi-worktree setup. Worse, sometimes it can write relative
path to "gitdir" file, which will not work (e.g. "git worktree list"
will display the worktree's location incorrectly)

Instead of fixing this, we step back a bit. The original design was
probably not well thought out. For now, if the user manually moves a
worktree, they have to fix up "gitdir" file manually or the worktree
will get pruned.

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>
2016-01-22 14:28:42 -08:00
e572fef9d4 Merge branch 'ep/shell-command-substitution-style'
A shell script style update to change `command substitution` into
$(command substitution).  Coverts contrib/ and much of the t/
directory contents.

* ep/shell-command-substitution-style: (92 commits)
  t9901-git-web--browse.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9501-gitweb-standalone-http-status.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9350-fast-export.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9300-fast-import.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9150-svk-mergetickets.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9145-git-svn-master-branch.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9138-git-svn-authors-prog.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9137-git-svn-dcommit-clobber-series.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9132-git-svn-broken-symlink.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9130-git-svn-authors-file.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9129-git-svn-i18n-commitencoding.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9119-git-svn-info.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9118-git-svn-funky-branch-names.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9114-git-svn-dcommit-merge.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9110-git-svn-use-svm-props.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9109-git-svn-multi-glob.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9108-git-svn-glob.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9107-git-svn-migrate.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9105-git-svn-commit-diff.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  t9104-git-svn-follow-parent.sh: use the $( ... ) construct for command substitution
  ...
2016-01-22 13:08:46 -08:00
a039a79e9d Merge branch 'rm/subtree-unwrap-tags'
"git subtree" (in contrib/) records the tag object name in the
commit log message when a subtree is added using a tag, without
peeling it down to the underlying commit.  The tag needs to be
peeled when "git subtree split" wants to work on the commit, but
the command forgot to do so.

* rm/subtree-unwrap-tags:
  contrib/subtree: unwrap tag refs
2016-01-22 13:08:45 -08:00
a6720955f1 unpack-trees: fix accidentally quadratic behavior
While unpacking trees (e.g. during git checkout), when we hit a cache
entry that's past and outside our path, we cut off iteration.

This provides about a 45% speedup on git checkout between master and
master^20000 on Twitter's monorepo.  Speedup in general will depend on
repostitory structure, number of changes, and packfile packing
decisions.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-22 13:03:10 -08:00
a97262c62f diff: make -O and --output work in subdirectory
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-21 10:45:13 -08:00
e5f7a5d16f diff-no-index: do not take a redundant prefix argument
Prefix is already set up in "revs". The same prefix should be used for
all options parsing. So kill the last argument. This patch does not
actually change anything because the only caller does use the same
prefix for init_revisions() and diff_no_index().

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-21 10:45:11 -08:00
bd02e97f68 git-add doc: do not say working directory when you mean working tree
The usage of working directory is inconsistent in the git add help.
Also http://git-scm.com/docs/git-clone speaks only about working tree.
Remaining entry found by "git grep -B1 '^directory' git-add.txt" really
relates to a directory.

Signed-off-by: Lars Vogel <Lars.Vogel@vogella.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-21 09:06:35 -08:00
e6414b4645 completion: complete "diff --word-diff-regex="
Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@virtuell-zuhause.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-20 16:18:02 -08:00
c200deb829 Documentation: remove unnecessary backslashes
asciidoctor does not remove backslashes used to escape curly brackets from
the HTML output if the contents of the curly brackets are empty or contain
at least a <, -, or space.  asciidoc does not require the backslashes in
these cases, so just remove them.

Signed-off-by: Matthew Kraai <matt.kraai@abbott.com>
Reported-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-20 16:15:14 -08:00
933cfeb90b contrib/subtree: fix "subtree split" skipped-merge bug
'git subtree split' can incorrectly skip a merge even when both parents
act on the subtree, provided the merge results in a tree identical to
one of the parents. Fix by copying the merge if at least one parent is
non-identical, and the non-identical parent is not an ancestor of the
identical parent.

Also, add a test case which checks that a descendant remains a
descendent on the subtree in this case.

Signed-off-by: Dave Ware <davidw@realtimegenomics.com>
Reviewed-by: David A. Greene <greened@obbligato.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-20 14:53:18 -08:00
3ee1e0fe11 Second batch for 2.8 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-20 11:54:46 -08:00
52bae62f78 Merge branch 'tg/grep-no-index-fallback'
"git grep" by default does not fall back to its "--no-index"
behaviour outside a directory under Git's control (otherwise the
user may by mistake end up running a huge recursive search); with a
new configuration (set in $HOME/.gitconfig--by definition this
cannot be set in the config file per project), this safety can be
disabled.

* tg/grep-no-index-fallback:
  builtin/grep: add grep.fallbackToNoIndex config
  t7810: correct --no-index test
2016-01-20 11:43:39 -08:00
569ff48deb Merge branch 'ho/gitweb-squelch-undef-warning'
Asking gitweb for a nonexistent commit left a warning in the server
log.

Somebody may want to follow this up with a new test, perhaps?
IIRC, we do test that no Perl warnings are given to the server log,
so this should have been caught if our test coverage were good.

* ho/gitweb-squelch-undef-warning:
  gitweb: squelch "uninitialized value" warning
2016-01-20 11:43:36 -08:00
7a63c9e3da Merge branch 'js/fopen-harder'
Some codepaths used fopen(3) when opening a fixed path in $GIT_DIR
(e.g. COMMIT_EDITMSG) that is meant to be left after the command is
done.  This however did not work well if the repository is set to
be shared with core.sharedRepository and the umask of the previous
user is tighter.  They have been made to work better by calling
unlink(2) and retrying after fopen(3) fails with EPERM.

* js/fopen-harder:
  Handle more file writes correctly in shared repos
  commit: allow editing the commit message even in shared repos
2016-01-20 11:43:35 -08:00
85705cfb57 Merge branch 'ss/clone-depth-single-doc'
Documentation for "git fetch --depth" has been updated for clarity.

* ss/clone-depth-single-doc:
  docs: clarify that --depth for git-fetch works with newly initialized repos
  docs: say "commits" in the --depth option wording for git-clone
  docs: clarify that passing --depth to git-clone implies --single-branch
2016-01-20 11:43:35 -08:00
76b620d816 Merge branch 'nd/exclusion-regression-fix'
The ignore mechanism saw a few regressions around untracked file
listing and sparse checkout selection areas in 2.7.0; the change
that is responsible for the regression has been reverted.

* nd/exclusion-regression-fix:
  Revert "dir.c: don't exclude whole dir prematurely if neg pattern may match"
2016-01-20 11:43:33 -08:00
ceef512e79 Merge branch 'dk/reflog-walk-with-non-commit'
"git reflog" incorrectly assumed that all objects that used to be
at the tip of a ref must be commits, which caused it to segfault.

* dk/reflog-walk-with-non-commit:
  reflog-walk: don't segfault on non-commit sha1's in the reflog
2016-01-20 11:43:32 -08:00
1576f78342 Merge branch 'sg/t6050-failing-editor-test-fix'
* sg/t6050-failing-editor-test-fix:
  t6050-replace: make failing editor test more robust
2016-01-20 11:43:31 -08:00
108cb77c86 Merge branch 'ew/for-each-ref-doc'
* ew/for-each-ref-doc:
  for-each-ref: document `creatordate` and `creator` fields
2016-01-20 11:43:30 -08:00
d512c864c3 Merge branch 'dw/signoff-doc'
The documentation has been updated to hint the connection between
the '--signoff' option and DCO.

* dw/signoff-doc:
  Expand documentation describing --signoff
2016-01-20 11:43:29 -08:00
a736764a7b Merge branch 'jk/clang-pedantic'
A few unportable C construct have been spotted by clang compiler
and have been fixed.

* jk/clang-pedantic:
  bswap: add NO_UNALIGNED_LOADS define
  avoid shifting signed integers 31 bits
2016-01-20 11:43:29 -08:00
63aeeba993 Merge branch 'ew/send-email-mutt-alias-fix'
"git send-email" was confused by escaped quotes stored in the alias
files saved by "mutt", which has been corrected.

* ew/send-email-mutt-alias-fix:
  git-send-email: do not double-escape quotes from mutt
2016-01-20 11:43:28 -08:00
7e3e80a881 Merge branch 'ss/user-manual'
Drop a few old "todo" items by deciding that the change one of them
suggests is not such a good idea, and doing the change the other
one suggested to do.

* ss/user-manual:
  user-manual: add addition gitweb information
  user-manual: add section documenting shallow clones
  glossary: define the term shallow clone
  user-manual: remove temporary branch entry from todo list
2016-01-20 11:43:28 -08:00
5135d1c3d2 Merge branch 'nd/clear-gitenv-upon-use-of-alias'
d95138e6 (setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when work tree is set, like
$GIT_DIR, 2015-06-26) attempted to work around a glitch in alias
handling by overwriting GIT_WORK_TREE environment variable to
affect subprocesses when set_git_work_tree() gets called, which
resulted in a rather unpleasant regression to "clone" and "init".
Try to address the same issue by always restoring the environment
and respawning the real underlying command when handling alias.

* nd/clear-gitenv-upon-use-of-alias:
  run-command: don't warn on SIGPIPE deaths
  git.c: make sure we do not leak GIT_* to alias scripts
  setup.c: re-fix d95138e (setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when ..
  git.c: make it clear save_env() is for alias handling only
2016-01-20 11:43:26 -08:00
cc14ea8cf4 Merge branch 'nd/ita-cleanup'
Paths that have been told the index about with "add -N" are not
quite yet in the index, but a few commands behaved as if they
already are in a harmful way.

* nd/ita-cleanup:
  grep: make it clear i-t-a entries are ignored
  add and use a convenience macro ce_intent_to_add()
  blame: remove obsolete comment
2016-01-20 11:43:25 -08:00
7a450b48e7 Merge branch 'nd/dir-exclude-cleanup'
The "exclude_list" structure has the usual "alloc, nr" pair of
fields to be used by ALLOC_GROW(), but clear_exclude_list() forgot
to reset 'alloc' to 0 when it cleared 'nr'to discard the managed
array.

* nd/dir-exclude-cleanup:
  dir.c: clean the entire struct in clear_exclude_list()
2016-01-20 11:43:24 -08:00
4fd1359158 Merge branch 'jk/pack-revindex'
In-core storage of the reverse index for .pack files (which lets
you go from a pack offset to an object name) has been streamlined.

* jk/pack-revindex:
  pack-revindex: store entries directly in packed_git
  pack-revindex: drop hash table
2016-01-20 11:43:23 -08:00
b4e8e0ed2d Merge branch 'mh/notes-allow-reading-treeish'
Some "git notes" operations, e.g. "git log --notes=<note>", should
be able to read notes from any tree-ish that is shaped like a notes
tree, but the notes infrastructure required that the argument must
be a ref under refs/notes/.  Loosen it to require a valid ref only
when the operation would update the notes (in which case we must
have a place to store the updated notes tree, iow, a ref).

* mh/notes-allow-reading-treeish:
  notes: allow treeish expressions as notes ref
2016-01-20 11:43:21 -08:00
1dc413ebe5 filter-branch: resolve $commit^{tree} in no-index case
Commit 348d4f2 (filter-branch: skip index read/write when
possible, 2015-11-06) taught filter-branch to optimize out
the final "git write-tree" when we know we haven't touched
the tree with any of our filters. It does by simply putting
the literal text "$commit^{tree}" into the "$tree" variable,
avoiding a useless rev-parse call.

However, when we pass this to git_commit_non_empty_tree(),
it gets confused; it resolves "$commit^{tree}" itself, and
compares our string to the 40-hex sha1, which obviously
doesn't match. As a result, "--prune-empty" (or any custom
filter using git_commit_non_empty_tree) will fail to drop
an empty commit (when filter-branch is used without a tree
or index filter).

Let's resolve $tree to the 40-hex ourselves, so that
git_commit_non_empty_tree can work. Unfortunately, this is a
bit slower due to the extra process overhead:

  $ cd t/perf && ./run 348d4f2 HEAD p7000-filter-branch.sh
  [...]
  Test                  348d4f2           HEAD
  --------------------------------------------------------------
  7000.2: noop filter   3.76(0.24+0.26)   4.54(0.28+0.24) +20.7%

We could try to make git_commit_non_empty_tree more clever.
However, the value of $tree here is technically
user-visible. The user can provide arbitrary shell code at
this stage, which could itself have a similar assumption to
what is in git_commit_non_empty_tree. So the conservative
choice to fix this regression is to take the 20% hit and
give the pre-348d4f2 behavior. We still end up much faster
than before the optimization:

  $ cd t/perf && ./run 348d4f2^ HEAD p7000-filter-branch.sh
  [...]
  Test                  348d4f2^          HEAD
  --------------------------------------------------------------
  7000.2: noop filter   9.51(4.32+0.40)   4.51(0.28+0.23) -52.6%

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 14:20:56 -08:00
719c3da2f1 test-lib: clarify and tighten SANITY
f400e51c (test-lib.sh: set prerequisite SANITY by testing what we
really need, 2015-01-27) improved the way SANITY prerequisite was
determined, but made the resulting code (incorrectly) imply that
SANITY is all about effects of permission bits of the containing
directory has on the files contained in it by the comment it added,
its log message and the actual tests.

State what SANITY is about more clearly in the comment, and test
that a file whose permission bits says should be unreadble truly
cannot be read.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 14:18:20 -08:00
d4cddd66d7 worktree.c: fix indentation
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 11:22:29 -08:00
43cce5c8ed contrib/subtree: Make testing easier
Add some Makefile dependencies to ensure an updated git-subtree
gets copied to the main area before testing begins.

Signed-off-by: David A. Greene <greened@obbligato.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 10:15:20 -08:00
99c08d4eb2 ls-remote: add support for showing symrefs
Sometimes it's useful to know the main branch of a git repository
without actually downloading the repository.  This can be done by
looking at the symrefs stored in the remote repository.  Currently git
doesn't provide a simple way to show the symrefs stored on the remote
repository, even though the information is available.  Add a --symref
command line argument to the ls-remote command, which shows the symrefs
in the remote repository.

While there, replace a literal tab in the format string with \t to make
it more obvious to the reader.

Suggested-by: pedro rijo <pedrorijo91@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 10:07:56 -08:00
ba5f28bf79 ls-remote: use parse-options api
Currently ls-remote uses a hand rolled parser for its command line
arguments.  Use the parse-options api instead of the hand rolled parser
to simplify the code and make it easier to add new arguments.  In
addition this improves the help message.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 10:07:56 -08:00
80b17e5831 ls-remote: fix synopsis
git ls-remote takes an optional get-url argument, and specifying the
repository is optional.  Fix the synopsis in the documentation to
reflect this.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 10:07:55 -08:00
40a8852908 ls-remote: document --refs option
The --refs option was originally introduced in 2718ff0 ("Improve
git-peek-remote").  The ls-remote command was first documented in
972b6fe ("ls-remote: drop storing operation and add documentation."),
but the --refs option was never documented.  Fix this.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 10:07:55 -08:00
54813bdd2c ls-remote: document --quiet option
cefb2a5e3 ("ls-remote: print URL when no repo is specified") added a
quiet option to ls-remote, but didn't add it to the documentation.  Add
it.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 10:07:55 -08:00
d6b16ce914 shortlog: don't warn on empty author
Git tries to avoid creating a commit with an empty author
name or email. However, commits created by older, less
strict versions of git may still be in the history.  There's
not much point in issuing a warning to stderr for an empty
author. The user can't do anything about it now, and we are
better off to simply include it in the shortlog output as an
empty name/email, and let the caller process it however they
see fit.

Older versions of shortlog differentiated between "author
header not present" (which complained) and "author
name/email are blank" (which included the empty ident in the
output).  But since switching to format_commit_message, we
complain to stderr about either case (linux.git has a blank
author deep in its history which triggers this).

We could try to restore the older behavior (complaining only
about the missing header), but in retrospect, there's not
much point in differentiating these cases. A missing
author header is bogus, but as for the "blank" case, the
only useful behavior is to add it to the "empty name"
collection.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 09:55:06 -08:00
9b21a34a96 shortlog: optimize out useless string list
If we are in "--summary" mode, then we do not care about the
actual list of subject onelines associated with each author.
We care only about the number. So rather than store a
string-list for each author full of "<none>", let's just
keep a count.

This drops my best-of-five for "git shortlog -ns HEAD" on
linux.git from:

  real    0m5.194s
  user    0m5.028s
  sys     0m0.168s

to:

  real    0m5.057s
  user    0m4.916s
  sys     0m0.144s

That's about 2.5%.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 09:55:04 -08:00
ed7eba9022 shortlog: optimize out useless "<none>" normalization
If we are in --summary mode, we will always pass <none> to
insert_one_record, which will then do some normalization
(e.g., cutting out "[PATCH]"). There's no point in doing so
if we aren't going to use the result anyway.

This drops my best-of-five for "git shortlog -ns HEAD" on
linux.git from:

  real    0m5.257s
  user    0m5.104s
  sys     0m0.156s

to:

  real    0m5.194s
  user    0m5.028s
  sys     0m0.168s

That's only 1%, but arguably the result is clearer to read,
as we're able to group our variable declarations inside the
conditional block. It also opens up further optimization
possibilities for future patches.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 09:55:03 -08:00
4e1d1a2eea shortlog: optimize "--summary" mode
If the user asked us only to show counts for each author,
rather than the individual summary lines, then there is no
point in us generating the summaries only to throw them
away. With this patch, I measured the following speedup for
"git shortlog -ns HEAD" on linux.git (best-of-five):

  [before]
  real    0m5.644s
  user    0m5.472s
  sys     0m0.176s

  [after]
  real    0m5.257s
  user    0m5.104s
  sys     0m0.156s

That's only ~7%, but it's so easy to do, there's no good
reason not to. We don't have to touch any downstream code,
since we already fill in the magic string "<none>" to handle
commits without a message.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 09:55:01 -08:00
2db6b83d18 shortlog: replace hand-parsing of author with pretty-printer
When gathering the author and oneline subject for each
commit, we hand-parse the commit headers to find the
"author" line, and then continue past to the blank line at
the end of the header.

We can replace this tricky hand-parsing by simply asking the
pretty-printer for the relevant items. This also decouples
the author and oneline parsing, opening up some new
optimizations in further commits.

One reason to avoid the pretty-printer is that it might be
less efficient than hand-parsing. However, I measured no
slowdown at all running "git shortlog -ns HEAD" on
linux.git.

As a bonus, we also fix a memory leak in the (uncommon) case
that the author field is blank.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 09:54:14 -08:00
50250491bd shortlog: use strbufs to read from stdin
We currently use fixed-size buffers with fgets(), which
could lead to incorrect results in the unlikely event that a
line had something like "Author:" at exactly its 1024th
character.

But it's easy to convert this to a strbuf, and because we
can reuse the same buffer through the loop, we don't even
pay the extra allocation cost.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 09:53:08 -08:00
5c3894c39d shortlog: match both "Author:" and "author" on stdin
The original git-shortlog could read both the normal "git
log" output as well as "git log --format=raw". However, when
it was converted to C by b8ec592 (Build in shortlog,
2006-10-22), the trailing colon became mandatory, and we no
longer matched the raw output.

Given the amount of intervening time without any bug
reports, it's probable that nobody cares. But it's
relatively easy to fix, and the end result is hopefully more
readable than the original.

Note that this no longer matches "author: ", which we did
before, but that has never been a format generated by git.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-19 09:53:00 -08:00
a7630bd427 ls-files: add eol diagnostics
When working in a cross-platform environment, a user may want to
check if text files are stored normalized in the repository and
if .gitattributes are set appropriately.

Make it possible to let Git show the line endings in the index and
in the working tree and the effective text/eol attributes.

The end of line ("eolinfo") are shown like this:

    "-text"        binary (or with bare CR) file
    "none"         text file without any EOL
    "lf"           text file with LF
    "crlf"         text file with CRLF
    "mixed"        text file with mixed line endings.

The effective text/eol attribute is one of these:

    "", "-text", "text", "text=auto", "text eol=lf", "text eol=crlf"

git ls-files --eol gives an output like this:

    i/none   w/none   attr/text=auto      t/t5100/empty
    i/-text  w/-text  attr/-text          t/test-binary-2.png
    i/lf     w/lf     attr/text eol=lf    t/t5100/rfc2047-info-0007
    i/lf     w/crlf   attr/text eol=crlf  doit.bat
    i/mixed  w/mixed  attr/               locale/XX.po

to show what eol convention is used in the data in the index ('i'),
and in the working tree ('w'), and what attribute is in effect,
for each path that is shown.

Add test cases in t0027.

Helped-By: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-18 19:48:43 -08:00
b3715b7522 notes: allow merging from arbitrary references
Create a new expansion function, expand_loose_notes_ref which will first
check whether the ref can be found using get_sha1. If it can't be found
then it will fallback to using expand_notes_ref. The content of the
strbuf will not be changed if the notes ref can be located using
get_sha1. Otherwise, it may be updated as done by expand_notes_ref.

Since we now support merging from non-notes refs, remove the test case
associated with that behavior. Add a test case for merging from a
non-notes ref.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-17 13:59:01 -08:00
2921600afb mingw: uglify (a, 0) definitions to shut up warnings
When the result of a (a, 0) expression is not used, MSys2's GCC version
finds it necessary to complain with a warning:

	right-hand operand of comma expression has no effect

Let's just pretend to use the 0 value and have a peaceful and quiet life
again.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 14:02:39 -08:00
83c90da3c1 mingw: squash another warning about a cast
MSys2's compiler is correct that casting a "void *" to a "DWORD" loses
precision, but in the case of pthread_exit() we know that the value
fits into a DWORD.

Just like casting handles to DWORDs, let's work around this issue by
casting to "intrptr_t" first, and immediately cast to the final type.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 14:02:37 -08:00
7c00bc39eb mingw: avoid warnings when casting HANDLEs to int
HANDLE is defined internally as a void *, but in many cases it is
actually guaranteed to be a 32-bit integer. In these cases, GCC should
not warn about a cast of a pointer to an integer of a different type
because we know exactly what we are doing.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 14:01:52 -08:00
59de49f80d mingw: avoid redefining S_* constants
When compiling with MSys2's compiler, these constants are already defined.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 14:01:10 -08:00
f06068c961 test-sha1-array: read command stream with strbuf_getline()
The input to this command comes from a pipeline in t0064, whose
upstream has bunch of "echo"s.  It is not unreasonable to expect
that it may be fed CRLF lines on DOSsy systems.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:35:08 -08:00
a551843129 grep: read -f file with strbuf_getline()
List of patterns file could come from a DOS editor.

This is iffy; you may actually be trying to find a line with ^M in
it on a system whose line ending is LF.  You can of course work it
around by having a line that has "^M^M^J", let the strbuf_getline()
eat the last "^M^J", leaving just the single "^M" as the pattern.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:35:07 -08:00
933bea922c send-pack: read list of refs with strbuf_getline()
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:35:07 -08:00
1536dd9c1d column: read lines with strbuf_getline()
Multiple lines read here are concatenated on a single line to form a
multi-column output line.  We do not want to have a CR at the end,
even if the input file consists of CRLF terminated lines.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:35:07 -08:00
b42ca3dd0f cat-file: read batch stream with strbuf_getline()
It is possible to prepare a text file with a DOS editor and feed it
as a batch command stream to the command.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:35:06 -08:00
692dfdfa62 transport-helper: read helper response with strbuf_getline()
Our implementation of helpers never use CRLF line endings, and they
do not depend on the ability to place a CR as payload at the end of
the line, so this is essentially a no-op for in-tree users.  However,
this allows third-party implementation of helpers to give us their
line with CRLF line ending (they cannot expect us to feed CRLF to
them, though).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:35:06 -08:00
3f16396228 clone/sha1_file: read info/alternates with strbuf_getline()
$GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY/info/alternates is a text file that can be
edited with a DOS editor.  We do not want to use the real path with
CR appended at the end.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:34:53 -08:00
18814d0e2d remote.c: read $GIT_DIR/remotes/* with strbuf_getline()
These files can be edited with a DOS editor, leaving CR at the end
of the line if read with strbuf_getline().

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:34:42 -08:00
1f3b1efd18 ident.c: read /etc/mailname with strbuf_getline()
Just in case /etc/mailname file was edited with a DOS editor,
read it with strbuf_getline() so that a stray CR is not included
as the last character of the mail hostname.

We _might_ want to more aggressively discard whitespace characters
around the line with strbuf_trim(), but that is a bit outside the
scope of this series.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:34:41 -08:00
72e37b6ac8 rev-parse: read parseopt spec with strbuf_getline()
"rev-parse --parseopt" specification is clearly text and we
should anticipate that we may be fed CRLF lines.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:34:41 -08:00
6e8d46f9d4 revision: read --stdin with strbuf_getline()
Reading with getwholeline() and manually stripping the terminating
'\n' would leave CR at the end of the line if the input comes from
a DOS editor.

Constrasting this with the other changes around "--stdin" in this
series, one may realize that the way "log" family of commands read
the paths with "--stdin" looks inconsistent and sloppy.  It does not
allow us to C-quote a textual input, neither does it accept records
that are NUL-terminated.  These are unfortunately way too late to
fix X-<.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:33:28 -08:00
c0353c78e8 hash-object: read --stdin-paths with strbuf_getline()
The list of paths could have been written with a DOS editor.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:24:34 -08:00
1a0c8dfd89 strbuf: give strbuf_getline() to the "most text friendly" variant
Now there is no direct caller to strbuf_getline(), we can demote it
to file-scope static that is private to strbuf.c and rename it to
strbuf_getdelim().  Rename strbuf_getline_crlf(), which is designed
to be the most "text friendly" variant, and allow it to take over
this simplest name, strbuf_getline(), so we can add more uses of it
without having to type _crlf over and over again in the coming
steps.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:23:57 -08:00
a392f57daf checkout-index: there are only two possible line terminations
The program by default reads LF terminated lines, with an option to
use NUL terminated records.  Instead of pretending that there can be
other useful values for line_termination, use a boolean variable,
nul_term_line, to tell if NUL terminated records are used, and
switch between strbuf_getline_{lf,nul} based on it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:12:58 -08:00
7e07ed8418 update-index: there are only two possible line terminations
The program by default reads LF terminated lines, with an option to
use NUL terminated records.  Instead of pretending that there can be
other useful values for line_termination, use a boolean variable,
nul_term_line, to tell if NUL terminated records are used, and
switch between strbuf_getline_{lf,nul} based on it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:12:58 -08:00
dca90031fb check-ignore: there are only two possible line terminations
The program by default reads LF terminated lines, with an option to
use NUL terminated records.  Instead of pretending that there can be
other useful values for line_termination, use a boolean variable,
nul_term_line, to tell if NUL terminated records are used, and
switch between strbuf_getline_{lf,nul} based on it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:12:58 -08:00
f418afa98a check-attr: there are only two possible line terminations
The program by default reads LF terminated lines, with an option to
use NUL terminated records.  Instead of pretending that there can be
other useful values for line_termination, use a boolean variable,
nul_term_line, to tell if NUL terminated records are used, and
switch between strbuf_getline_{lf,nul} based on it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:12:58 -08:00
b4df87b8ca mktree: there are only two possible line terminations
The program by default reads LF terminated lines, with an option to
use NUL terminated records.  Instead of pretending that there can be
other useful values for line_termination, use a boolean variable,
nul_term_line, to tell if NUL terminated records are used, and
switch between strbuf_getline_{lf,nul} based on it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:12:58 -08:00
8f309aeb82 strbuf: introduce strbuf_getline_{lf,nul}()
The strbuf_getline() interface allows a byte other than LF or NUL as
the line terminator, but this is only because I wrote these
codepaths anticipating that there might be a value other than NUL
and LF that could be useful when I introduced line_termination long
time ago.  No useful caller that uses other value has emerged.

By now, it is clear that the interface is overly broad without a
good reason.  Many codepaths have hardcoded preference to read
either LF terminated or NUL terminated records from their input, and
then call strbuf_getline() with LF or NUL as the third parameter.

This step introduces two thin wrappers around strbuf_getline(),
namely, strbuf_getline_lf() and strbuf_getline_nul(), and
mechanically rewrites these call sites to call either one of
them.  The changes contained in this patch are:

 * introduction of these two functions in strbuf.[ch]

 * mechanical conversion of all callers to strbuf_getline() with
   either '\n' or '\0' as the third parameter to instead call the
   respective thin wrapper.

After this step, output from "git grep 'strbuf_getline('" would
become a lot smaller.  An interim goal of this series is to make
this an empty set, so that we can have strbuf_getline_crlf() take
over the shorter name strbuf_getline().

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 10:12:51 -08:00
371471cea3 t0060: loosen overly strict expectations
The dirname() tests file were developed and tested on only the five
platforms available to the developer at the time, namely: Linux (both 32
and 64bit), Windows XP 32-bit (MSVC), MinGW 32-bit and Cygwin 32-bit.

http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/basename.html
(i.e. the POSIX spec) says, in part:

	If the string pointed to by path consists entirely of the '/'
	character, basename() shall return a pointer to the string "/".
	If the string pointed to by path is exactly "//", it is
	implementation-defined whether "/" or "//" is returned.

The thinking behind testing precise, OS-dependent output values was to
document that different setups produce different values. However, as the
test failures on MacOSX illustrated eloquently: hardcoding pretty much each
and every setup's expectations is pretty fragile.

This is not limited to the "//" vs "/" case, of course, other inputs are
also allowed to produce multiple outputs by the POSIX specs.

So let's just test for all allowed values and be done with it. This still
documents that Git cannot rely on one particular output value in those
cases, so the intention of the original tests is still met.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-15 09:26:20 -08:00
c8aa9fdf5d strbuf: make strbuf_getline_crlf() global
Often we read "text" files that are supplied by the end user
(e.g. commit log message that was edited with $GIT_EDITOR upon 'git
commit -e'), and in some environments lines in a text file are
terminated with CRLF.  Existing strbuf_getline() knows to read a
single line and then strip the terminating byte from the result, but
it is handy to have a version that is more tailored for a "text"
input that takes both '\n' and '\r\n' as line terminator (aka
<newline> in POSIX lingo) and returns the body of the line after
stripping <newline>.

Recently reimplemented "git am" uses such a function implemented
privately; move it to strbuf.[ch] and make it available for others.

Note that we do not blindly replace calls to strbuf_getline() that
uses LF as the line terminator with calls to strbuf_getline_crlf()
and this is very much deliberate.  Some callers may want to treat an
incoming line that ends with CR (and terminated with LF) to have a
payload that includes the final CR, and such a blind replacement
will result in misconversion when done without code audit.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-14 15:05:55 -08:00
dce80bd18c strbuf: miniscule style fix
We write one SP on each side of an operator, even inside an [] pair
that computes the array index.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-14 15:05:55 -08:00
e1f898639e interpret-trailers: add option for in-place editing
Add a command line option --in-place to support in-place editing akin to
sed -i.  This allows to write commands like the following:

  git interpret-trailers --trailer "X: Y" a.txt > b.txt && mv b.txt a.txt

in a more concise way:

  git interpret-trailers --trailer "X: Y" --in-place a.txt

Signed-off-by: Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-14 12:22:17 -08:00
d0d2344ad8 trailer: allow to write to files other than stdout
Use fprintf instead of printf in trailer.c in order to allow printing
to a file other than stdout. This will be needed to support in-place
editing in git interpret-trailers.

Signed-off-by: Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-14 12:22:10 -08:00
466931d9e1 compat/winansi: support compiling with MSys2
MSys2 already defines the _CONSOLE_FONT_INFOEX structure.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-14 12:21:00 -08:00
3ecd153a3b compat/mingw: support MSys2-based MinGW build
The excellent MSys2 project brings a substantially updated MinGW
environment including newer GCC versions and new headers. To support
compiling Git, let's special-case the new MinGW (tell-tale: the
_MINGW64_VERSION_MAJOR constant is defined).

Note: this commit only addresses compile failures, not compile warnings
(that task is left for a future patch).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-14 12:20:54 -08:00
9e2af084d4 nedmalloc: allow compiling with MSys2's compiler
With MSys2's GCC, `ReadWriteBarrier` is already defined, and FORCEINLINE
unfortunately gets defined incorrectly.

Let's work around both problems, using the MSys2-specific
__MINGW64_VERSION_MAJOR constant to guard the FORCEINLINE definition so
as not to affect other platforms.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-14 12:20:33 -08:00
17c4ddbbaf completion: add missing branch.*.rebase values
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 13:00:48 -08:00
b5496d484d remote: handle the config setting branch.*.rebase=interactive
The config variable branch.<branchname>.rebase is not only used by `git
pull`, but also by `git remote` when showing details about a remote.
Therefore, it needs to be taught to accept the newly-introduced
`interactive` value of said variable.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 13:00:01 -08:00
f5eb87b98d pull: allow interactive rebase with --rebase=interactive
A couple of years ago, I found the need to collaborate on topic
branches that were rebased all the time, and I really needed to see
what I was rebasing when pulling, so I introduced an
interactively-rebasing pull.

The way builtin pull works, this change also supports the value
'interactive' for the 'branch.<name>.rebase' config variable, which
is a neat thing because users can now configure given branches for
interactively-rebasing pulls without having to type out the complete
`--rebase=interactive` option every time they pull.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 12:59:15 -08:00
8c24f5b022 rebase: ignore failures from "gc --auto"
After rebasing, we call "gc --auto" to clean up if we
created a lot of loose objects. However, we do so inside an
&&-chain. If "gc --auto" fails (e.g., because a previous
background gc blocked us by leaving "gc.log" in place),
then:

  1. We will fail to clean up the state directory, leaving
     the user stuck in the rebase forever (even "git am
     --abort" doesn't work, because it calls "gc --auto"!).

  2. In some cases, we may return a bogus exit code from
     rebase, indicating failure when everything except the
     auto-gc succeeded.

We can fix this by ignoring the exit code of "gc --auto".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 12:04:53 -08:00
d5621020c1 receive-pack: release pack files before garbage-collecting
Before auto-gc'ing, we need to make sure that the pack files are
released in case they need to be repacked and garbage-collected.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 11:36:28 -08:00
dcacb1b2ee merge: release pack files before garbage-collecting
Before auto-gc'ing, we need to make sure that the pack files are
released in case they need to be repacked and garbage-collected.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 11:36:28 -08:00
df617b529e am: release pack files before garbage-collecting
Before auto-gc'ing, we need to make sure that the pack files are
released in case they need to be repacked and garbage-collected.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 11:36:28 -08:00
0898c96281 fetch: release pack files before garbage-collecting
Before auto-gc'ing, we need to make sure that the pack files are
released in case they need to be repacked and garbage-collected.

This fixes https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/500

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 11:36:27 -08:00
7b40ae86a3 config.mak.uname: supporting 64-bit MSys2
This just makes things compile, the test suite needs extra tender loving
care in addition to this change. We will address these issues in later
commits.

While at it, also allow building MSys2 Git (i.e. a Git that uses MSys2's
POSIX emulation layer).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 11:26:35 -08:00
df5218b4c3 config.mak.uname: support MSys2
For a long time, Git for Windows lagged behind Git's 2.x releases because
the Git for Windows developers wanted to let that big jump coincide with
a well-needed jump away from MSys to MSys2.

To understand why this is such a big issue, it needs to be noted that
many parts of Git are not written in portable C, but instead Git relies
on a POSIX shell and Perl to be available.

To support the scripts, Git for Windows has to ship a minimal POSIX
emulation layer with Bash and Perl thrown in, and when the Git for
Windows effort started in August 2007, this developer settled on using
MSys, a stripped down version of Cygwin. Consequently, the original name
of the project was "msysGit" (which, sadly, caused a *lot* of confusion
because few Windows users know about MSys, and even less care).

To compile the C code of Git for Windows, MSys was used, too: it sports
two versions of the GNU C Compiler: one that links implicitly to the
POSIX emulation layer, and another one that targets the plain Win32 API
(with a few convenience functions thrown in).  Git for Windows'
executables are built using the latter, and therefore they are really
just Win32 programs. To discern executables requiring the POSIX
emulation layer from the ones that do not, the latter are called MinGW
(Minimal GNU for Windows) when the former are called MSys executables.

This reliance on MSys incurred challenges, too, though: some of our
changes to the MSys runtime -- necessary to support Git for Windows
better -- were not accepted upstream, so we had to maintain our own
fork. Also, the MSys runtime was not developed further to support e.g.
UTF-8 or 64-bit, and apart from lacking a package management system
until much later (when mingw-get was introduced), many packages provided
by the MSys/MinGW project lag behind the respective source code
versions, in particular Bash and OpenSSL. For a while, the Git for
Windows project tried to remedy the situation by trying to build newer
versions of those packages, but the situation quickly became untenable,
especially with problems like the Heartbleed bug requiring swift action
that has nothing to do with developing Git for Windows further.

Happily, in the meantime the MSys2 project (https://msys2.github.io/)
emerged, and was chosen to be the base of the Git for Windows 2.x. Just
like MSys, MSys2 is a stripped down version of Cygwin, but it is
actively kept up-to-date with Cygwin's source code.  Thereby, it already
supports Unicode internally, and it also offers the 64-bit support that
we yearned for since the beginning of the Git for Windows project.

MSys2 also ported the Pacman package management system from Arch Linux
and uses it heavily. This brings the same convenience to which Linux
users are used to from `yum` or `apt-get`, and to which MacOSX users are
used to from Homebrew or MacPorts, or BSD users from the Ports system,
to MSys2: a simple `pacman -Syu` will update all installed packages to
the newest versions currently available.

MSys2 is also *very* active, typically providing package updates
multiple times per week.

It still required a two-month effort to bring everything to a state
where Git's test suite passes, many more months until the first official
Git for Windows 2.x was released, and a couple of patches still await
their submission to the respective upstream projects. Yet without MSys2,
the modernization of Git for Windows would simply not have happened.

This commit lays the ground work to supporting MSys2-based Git builds.

Assisted-by: Waldek Maleska <weakcamel@users.github.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 11:26:24 -08:00
bc6bf2d764 format-patch: introduce format.outputDirectory configuration
We can pass -o/--output-directory to the format-patch command to store
patches in some place other than the working directory. This patch
introduces format.outputDirectory configuration option for same
purpose.

The case of usage of this configuration option can be convenience
to not pass every time -o/--output-directory if an user has pattern
to store all patches in the /patches directory for example.

The format.outputDirectory has lower priority than command line
option, so if user will set format.outputDirectory and pass the
command line option, a result will be stored in a directory that
passed to command line option.

Signed-off-by: Alexander Kuleshov <kuleshovmail@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stephen P. Smith <ischis2@cox.net>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 10:55:01 -08:00
a02b8bc4d7 git-p4.py: add support for filetype change
After changing the type of a file in the git repository, it is not possible to
"git p4 publish" the commit to perforce. This is due to the fact that the git
"T" status is not handled in git-p4.py. This can typically occur when replacing
an existing file with a symbolic link.

The "T" modifier is now supported in git-p4.py. When a file type has changed,
inform perforce with the "p4 edit -f auto" command.

Signed-off-by: Romain Picard <romain.picard@oakbits.com>
Acked-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 09:06:54 -08:00
2859dcd4c8 lock_ref_sha1_basic: handle REF_NODEREF with invalid refs
We sometimes call lock_ref_sha1_basic with REF_NODEREF
to operate directly on a symbolic ref. This is used, for
example, to move to a detached HEAD, or when updating
the contents of HEAD via checkout or symbolic-ref.

However, the first step of the function is to resolve the
refname to get the "old" sha1, and we do so without telling
resolve_ref_unsafe() that we are only interested in the
symref. As a result, we may detect a problem there not with
the symref itself, but with something it points to.

The real-world example I found (and what is used in the test
suite) is a HEAD pointing to a ref that cannot exist,
because it would cause a directory/file conflict with other
existing refs.  This situation is somewhat broken, of
course, as trying to _commit_ on that HEAD would fail. But
it's not explicitly forbidden, and we should be able to move
away from it. However, neither "git checkout" nor "git
symbolic-ref" can do so. We try to take the lock on HEAD,
which is pointing to a non-existent ref. We bail from
resolve_ref_unsafe() with errno set to EISDIR, and the lock
code thinks we are attempting to create a d/f conflict.

Of course we're not. The problem is that the lock code has
no idea what level we were at when we got EISDIR, so trying
to diagnose or remove empty directories for HEAD is not
useful.

To make things even more complicated, we only get EISDIR in
the loose-ref case. If the refs are packed, the resolution
may "succeed", giving us the pointed-to ref in "refname",
but a null oid. Later, we say "ah, the null oid means we are
creating; let's make sure there is room for it", but
mistakenly check against the _resolved_ refname, not the
original.

We can fix this by making two tweaks:

  1. Call resolve_ref_unsafe() with RESOLVE_REF_NO_RECURSE
     when REF_NODEREF is set. This means any errors
     we get will be from the orig_refname, and we can act
     accordingly.

     We already do this in the REF_DELETING case, but we
     should do it for update, too.

  2. If we do get a "refname" return from
     resolve_ref_unsafe(), even with RESOLVE_REF_NO_RECURSE
     it may be the name of the ref pointed-to by a symref.
     We already normalize this back to orig_refname before
     taking the lockfile, but we need to do so before the
     null_oid check.

While we're rearranging the REF_NODEREF handling, we can
also bump the initialization of lflags to the top of the
function, where we are setting up other flags. This saves us
from having yet another conditional block on REF_NODEREF
just to set it later.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 09:05:42 -08:00
6294dcb49f lock_ref_sha1_basic: always fill old_oid while holding lock
Our basic strategy for taking a ref lock is:

  1. Create $ref.lock to take the lock

  2. Read the ref again while holding the lock (during which
     time we know that nobody else can be updating it).

  3. Compare the value we read to the expected "old_sha1"

The value we read in step (2) is returned to the caller via
the lock->old_oid field, who may use it for other purposes
(such as writing a reflog).

If we have no "old_sha1" (i.e., we are unconditionally
taking the lock), then we obviously must omit step 3. But we
_also_ omit step 2. This seems like a nice optimization, but
it means that the caller sees only whatever was left in
lock->old_oid from previous calls to resolve_ref_unsafe(),
which happened outside of the lock.

We can demonstrate this race pretty easily. Imagine you have
three commits, $one, $two, and $three. One script just flips
between $one and $two, without providing an old-sha1:

  while true; do
    git update-ref -m one refs/heads/foo $one
    git update-ref -m two refs/heads/foo $two
  done

Meanwhile, another script tries to set the value to $three,
also not using an old-sha1:

  while true; do
    git update-ref -m three refs/heads/foo $three
  done

If these run simultaneously, we'll see a lot of lock
contention, but each of the writes will succeed some of the
time. The reflog may record movements between any of the
three refs, but we would expect it to provide a consistent
log: the "from" field of each log entry should be the same
as the "to" field of the previous one.

But if we check this:

  perl -alne '
    print "mismatch on line $."
            if defined $last && $F[0] ne $last;
    $last = $F[1];
  ' .git/logs/refs/heads/foo

we'll see many mismatches. Why?

Because sometimes, in the time between lock_ref_sha1_basic
filling lock->old_oid via resolve_ref_unsafe() and it taking
the lock, there may be a complete write by another process.
And the "from" field in our reflog entry will be wrong, and
will refer to an older value.

This is probably quite rare in practice. It requires writers
which do not provide an old-sha1 value, and it is a very
quick race. However, it is easy to fix: we simply perform
step (2), the read-under-lock, whether we have an old-sha1
or not. Then the value we hand back to the caller is always
atomic.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-13 09:05:30 -08:00
fc10eb5b87 Sync with maint
* maint:
  l10n: ko.po: Add Korean translation
2016-01-12 15:21:00 -08:00
c9906e47c0 First batch for post 2.7 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-12 15:20:51 -08:00
bdd1cc2092 Merge branch 'vl/grep-configurable-threads'
"git grep" can now be configured (or told from the command line)
how many threads to use when searching in the working tree files.

* vl/grep-configurable-threads:
  grep: add --threads=<num> option and grep.threads configuration
  grep: slight refactoring to the code that disables threading
  grep: allow threading even on a single-core machine
2016-01-12 15:16:55 -08:00
72d25911eb Merge branch 'ea/blame-progress'
"git blame" learned to produce the progress eye-candy when it takes
too much time before emitting the first line of the result.

* ea/blame-progress:
  blame: add support for --[no-]progress option
2016-01-12 15:16:54 -08:00
187c0d3d9e Merge branch 'sb/submodule-parallel-fetch'
Add a framework to spawn a group of processes in parallel, and use
it to run "git fetch --recurse-submodules" in parallel.

Rerolled and this seems to be a lot cleaner.  The merge of the
earlier one to 'next' has been reverted.

* sb/submodule-parallel-fetch:
  submodules: allow parallel fetching, add tests and documentation
  fetch_populated_submodules: use new parallel job processing
  run-command: add an asynchronous parallel child processor
  sigchain: add command to pop all common signals
  strbuf: add strbuf_read_once to read without blocking
  xread: poll on non blocking fds
  submodule.c: write "Fetching submodule <foo>" to stderr
2016-01-12 15:16:54 -08:00
7b9d1b9556 Merge branch 'ps/push-delete-option'
"branch --delete" has "branch -d" but "push --delete" does not.

* ps/push-delete-option:
  push: add '-d' as shorthand for '--delete'
  push: add '--delete' flag to synopsis
2016-01-12 15:16:54 -08:00
ce7da1d281 Merge branch 'ep/make-phoney'
A slight update to the Makefile.

* ep/make-phoney:
  Makefile: add missing phony target
2016-01-12 15:16:53 -08:00
d82d093456 Merge branch 'nd/stop-setenv-work-tree'
An earlier change in 2.5.x-era broke users' hooks and aliases by
exporting GIT_WORK_TREE to point at the root of the working tree,
interfering when they tried to use a different working tree without
setting GIT_WORK_TREE environment themselves.

* nd/stop-setenv-work-tree:
  Revert "setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when work tree is set, like $GIT_DIR"
2016-01-12 15:16:53 -08:00
ee76f92fe8 notes: allow treeish expressions as notes ref
init_notes() is the main point of entry to the notes API. It ensures
that the input can be used as ref, because it needs a ref to update to
store notes tree after modifying it.

There however are many use cases where notes tree is only read, e.g.
"git log --notes=...".  Any notes-shaped treeish could be used for such
purpose, but it is not allowed due to existing restriction.

Allow treeish expressions to be used in the case the notes tree is going
to be used without write "permissions".  Add a flag to distinguish
whether the notes tree is intended to be used read-only, or will be
updated.

With this change, operations that use notes read-only can be fed any
notes-shaped tree-ish can be used, e.g. git log --notes=notes@{1}.

Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-12 15:10:01 -08:00
1b0b6dd072 Merge branch 'maint' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po into maint
* 'maint' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: ko.po: Add Korean translation
2016-01-12 15:05:05 -08:00
a9eb90aab5 gitweb: squelch "uninitialized value" warning
git_object() chomps $type that is read from "cat-file -t", but
it does so before checking if $type is defined, resulting in
a Perl warning in the server error log:

  gitweb.cgi: Use of uninitialized value $type in scalar chomp at
  [...]/gitweb.cgi line 7579., referer: [...]

when trying to access a non-existing commit, for example:

  http://HOST/?p=PROJECT.git;a=commit;h=NON_EXISTING_COMMIT

Check the value in $type before chomping.  This will cause us to
call href with its action parameter set to undef when formulating
the URL to redirect to, but that is harmless, as the function treats
a parameter that set to undef as if it does not exist.

Signed-off-by: Øyvind A. Holm <sunny@sunbase.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-12 13:21:15 -08:00
ec1b763d05 t9901-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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:49:49 -08:00
9c1037751c t9501-gitweb-standalone-http-status.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:49:48 -08:00
c7b793a17d t9350-fast-export.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:49:48 -08:00
80a6b3f0d5 t9300-fast-import.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:49:48 -08:00
9375dcf3b9 t9150-svk-mergetickets.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:49:47 -08:00
e74ef60497 t9145-git-svn-master-branch.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:49:47 -08:00
27fe43e869 t9138-git-svn-authors-prog.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:49:47 -08:00
2525c5170f t9137-git-svn-dcommit-clobber-series.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:49:47 -08:00
becd67fd28 t9132-git-svn-broken-symlink.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:49:47 -08:00
a5c98acec6 t9130-git-svn-authors-file.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:49:46 -08:00
8c311f96a5 t9129-git-svn-i18n-commitencoding.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:49:46 -08:00
57da04965d t9119-git-svn-info.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:49:46 -08:00
1d9e86f80d t9118-git-svn-funky-branch-names.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:47:29 -08:00
78ba28d84b t9114-git-svn-dcommit-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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:47:29 -08:00
efa639fe6b t9110-git-svn-use-svm-props.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:47:28 -08:00
1be2fa02b5 t9109-git-svn-multi-glob.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:47:28 -08:00
38e947660b t9108-git-svn-glob.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:47:28 -08:00
8823d2fa79 t9107-git-svn-migrate.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:47:27 -08:00
32858a0150 t9105-git-svn-commit-diff.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:47:27 -08:00
cd914d8090 t9104-git-svn-follow-parent.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:47:27 -08:00
e10de5a054 t9101-git-svn-props.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:47:26 -08:00
6560857550 t9100-git-svn-basic.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-12 11:47:26 -08:00
4be49d7568 checkout,clone: check return value of create_symref
It's unlikely that we would fail to create or update a
symbolic ref (especially HEAD), but if we do, we should
notice and complain. Note that there's no need to give more
details in our error message; create_symref will already
have done so.

While we're here, let's also fix a minor memory leak in
clone.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-12 11:11:52 -08:00
ecd9ba6177 builtin/grep: add grep.fallbackToNoIndex config
Currently when git grep is used outside of a git repository without the
--no-index option git simply dies.  For convenience, add a
grep.fallbackToNoIndex configuration variable.  If set to true, git grep
behaves like git grep --no-index if it is run outside of a git
repository.  It defaults to false, preserving the current behavior.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-12 10:54:31 -08:00
7d1aaa684d t0060: verify that basename() and dirname() work as expected
Unfortunately, some libgen implementations yield outcomes different
from what Git expects. For example, mingw-w64-crt provides a basename()
function, that shortens `path0/` to `path`!

So let's verify that the basename() and dirname() functions we use
conform to what Git expects.

Derived-from-code-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-12 10:41:34 -08:00
824682ab51 compat/basename.c: provide a dirname() compatibility function
When there is no `libgen.h` to our disposal, we miss the `dirname()`
function.  Earlier we added basename() compatibility function for
the same reason at e1c06886 (compat: add a basename() compatibility
function, 2009-05-31).

So far, we only had one user of that function: credential-cache--daemon
(which was only compiled when Unix sockets are available, anyway). But
now we also have `builtin/am.c` as user, so we need it.

Since `dirname()` is a sibling of `basename()`, we simply put our very
own `gitdirname()` implementation next to `gitbasename()` and use it
if `NO_LIBGEN_H` has been set.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-12 10:40:54 -08:00
61725be349 compat/basename: make basename() conform to POSIX
According to POSIX, basename("/path/") should return "path", not
"path/". Likewise, basename(NULL) and basename("") should both
return "." to conform.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-12 10:40:27 -08:00
2f36eed936 Refactor skipping DOS drive prefixes
Junio noticed that there is an implicit assumption in pretty much
all the code calling has_dos_drive_prefix(): it forces all of its
callsites to hardcode the knowledge that the DOS drive prefix is
always two bytes long.

While this assumption is pretty safe, we can still make the code
more readable and less error-prone by introducing a function that
skips the DOS drive prefix safely.

While at it, we change the has_dos_drive_prefix() return value: it
now returns the number of bytes to be skipped if there is a DOS
drive prefix.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-12 10:39:40 -08:00
ea56518dfe Handle more file writes correctly in shared repos
In shared repositories, we have to be careful when writing files whose
permissions do not allow users other than the owner to write them.

In particular, we force the marks file of fast-export and the FETCH_HEAD
when fetching to be rewritten from scratch.

This commit does not touch other calls to fopen() that want to
write files:

 - commands that write to working tree files (core.sharedRepository
   does not affect permission bits of working tree files),
   e.g. .rej file created by "apply --reject", result of applying a
   previous conflict resolution by "rerere", "git merge-file".

 - git am, when splitting mails (git-am correctly cleans up its directory
   after finishing, so there is no need to share those files between users)

 - git submodule clone, when writing the .git file, because the file
   will not be overwritten

 - git_terminal_prompt() in compat/terminal.c, because it is not writing to
   a file at all

 - git diff --output, because the output file is clearly not intended to be
   shared between the users of the current repository

 - git fast-import, when writing a crash report, because the reports' file
   names are unique due to an embedded process ID

 - mailinfo() in mailinfo.c, because the output is clearly not intended to
   be shared between the users of the current repository

 - check_or_regenerate_marks() in remote-testsvn.c, because this is only
   used for Git's internal testing

 - git fsck, when writing lost&found blobs (this should probably be
   changed, but left as a low-hanging fruit for future contributors).

Note that this patch does not touch callers of write_file() and
write_file_gently(), which would benefit from the same scrutiny as
to usage in shared repositories.  Most notable users are branch,
daemon, submodule & worktree, and a worrisome call in transport.c
when updating one ref (which ignores the shared flag).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-11 14:04:29 -08:00
1f5101aee2 t7810: correct --no-index test
GIT_CEILING_DIRECTORIES doesn't prevent chdir up into another directory
while looking for a repository directory if it is equal to the current
directory.  Because of this, the test which claims to test the git grep
--no-index command outside of a repository actually tests it inside of a
repository.  The test_must_fail assertions still pass because the git
grep only looks at untracked files and therefore no file matches, but
not because it's run outside of a repository as it was originally
intended.

Set the GIT_CEILING_DIRECTORIES environment variable to the parent
directory of the directory in which the git grep command is executed, to
make sure it is actually run outside of a git repository.

In addition, the && chain was broken in a couple of places in the same
test, fix that.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-11 13:37:02 -08:00
bdf20f5edd t/t9001-send-email.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
      perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-11 11:47:05 -08:00
06b6b68ff9 test for '!' handling in rev-parse's named commits
In anticipation of extending this behaviour, add tests verifying the
handling of exclamation marks when looking up a commit "by name".

Specifically, as documented: '<rev>^{/!Message}' should fail, as the '!'
prefix is reserved; while '<rev>^{!!Message}' should search for a commit
whose message contains the string "!Message".

Signed-off-by: Will Palmer <wmpalmer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stephen P. Smith <ischis2@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-11 10:44:13 -08:00
844116d92f t/t8003-blame-corner-cases.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-08 12:54:07 -08:00
aa14a3c105 t/t7700-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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-08 12:54:07 -08:00
cf60c8f346 t/t7602-merge-octopus-many.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-08 12:54:06 -08:00
0c923256a0 t/t7505-prepare-commit-msg-hook.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-08 12:54:06 -08:00
33c85913df t/t7504-commit-msg-hook.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-08 12:54:06 -08:00
db0ff2c032 t/t7408-submodule-reference.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-08 12:54:05 -08:00
848351b236 t/t7406-submodule-update.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-08 12:54:05 -08:00
57109790dc t/t7103-reset-bare.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-08 12:54:04 -08:00
60253a605d docs: clarify that --depth for git-fetch works with newly initialized repos
The original wording sounded as if --depth could only be used to deepen or
shorten the history of existing repos. However, that is not the case. In a
workflow like

    $ git init
    $ git remote add origin https://github.com/git/git.git
    $ git fetch --depth=1

The newly initialized repo is properly created as a shallow repo.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-08 12:40:12 -08:00
fc142811d1 docs: say "commits" in the --depth option wording for git-clone
It is not wrong to talk about "revisions" here, but in this context
revisions are always commits, and that is how we already name it in the
git-fetch docs. So align the docs by always referring to "commits".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-08 12:39:58 -08:00
8c722360d1 Revert "dir.c: don't exclude whole dir prematurely if neg pattern may match"
This reverts commit 57534ee77d. The
feature added in that commit requires that patterns behave the same way
from anywhere. But some patterns can behave differently depending on
current "working" directory. The conditions to catch and avoid these
patterns are too loose. The untracked listing[1] and sparse-checkout
selection[2] can become incorrect as a result.

  [1] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/283520
  [2] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/283532

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-08 11:24:14 -08:00
90ae5d2716 t/t7006-pager.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-07 13:59:04 -08:00
63873a0aa7 t/t7004-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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-07 13:58:57 -08:00
994851943e t/t7003-filter-branch.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-07 13:58:37 -08:00
36b4697fdc t/t7001-mv.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-07 13:58:29 -08:00
7b8c0b53c3 t/t6132-pathspec-exclude.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-07 13:58:17 -08:00
59f9c6c3cd t/t6032-merge-large-rename.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-07 13:58:13 -08:00
ae4c094e37 t/t6015-rev-list-show-all-parents.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-07 13:58:01 -08:00
3a9992b062 t/t6002-rev-list-bisect.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-07 13:57:48 -08:00
11da571a2f t/t6001-rev-list-graft.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-07 13:56:47 -08:00
14a771eee9 t/t5900-repo-selection.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-07 13:56:32 -08:00
79d7582e32 commit: allow editing the commit message even in shared repos
It was pointed out by Yaroslav Halchenko that the file containing the
commit message is writable only by the owner, which means that we have
to rewrite it from scratch in a shared repository.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-07 13:52:55 -08:00
28a1b56932 docs: clarify that passing --depth to git-clone implies --single-branch
It is confusing to document how --depth behaves as part of the
--single-branch docs. Better move that part to the --depth docs, saying
that it implies --single-branch by default.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-07 11:45:19 -08:00
b2c150d3aa Expand documentation describing --signoff
Modify various document (man page) files to explain
in more detail what --signoff means.

This was inspired by https://lwn.net/Articles/669976/ where
paulj noted, "adding [the] '-s' argument to [a] git commit
doesn't really mean you have even heard of the DCO...".
Extending git's documentation will make it easier to argue
that developers understood --signoff when they use it.

Signed-off-by: David A. Wheeler <dwheeler@dwheeler.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-05 13:42:39 -08:00
aecad374ae reflog-walk: don't segfault on non-commit sha1's in the reflog
git reflog (ab)uses the log machinery to display its list of log
entries. To do so it must fake commit parent information for the log
walker.

For refs in refs/heads this is no problem, as they should only ever
point to commits. Tags and other refs however can point to anything,
thus their reflog may contain non-commit objects.

To avoid segfaulting, we check whether reflog entries are commits before
feeding them to the log walker and skip any non-commits. This means that
git reflog output will be incomplete for such refs, but that's one step
up from segfaulting. A more complete solution would be to decouple git
reflog from the log walker machinery.

Signed-off-by: Dennis Kaarsemaker <dennis@kaarsemaker.net>
Helped-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-05 13:41:06 -08:00
d9c2bd560e do_compare_entry: use already-computed path
In traverse_trees, we generate the complete traverse path for a
traverse_info.  Later, in do_compare_entry, we used to go do a bunch
of work to compare the traverse_info to a cache_entry's name without
computing that path.  But since we already have that path, we don't
need to do all that work.  Instead, we can just put the generated
path into the traverse_info, and do the comparison more directly.

We copy the path because prune_traversal might mutate `base`. This
doesn't happen in any codepaths where do_compare_entry is called,
but it's better to be safe.

This makes git checkout much faster -- about 25% on Twitter's
monorepo.  Deeper directory trees are likely to benefit more than
shallower ones.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-05 13:39:46 -08:00
36fc7d8a79 t6050-replace: make failing editor test more robust
'git replace --edit' should error out when the invoked editor fails,
but the test checking this behavior would not notice if this weren't
the case.

The test in question, ever since it was added in 85f98fc037
(replace: add tests for --edit, 2014-05-17), has simulated a failing
editor in an unconventional way:

  test_must_fail env GIT_EDITOR='./fakeeditor;false' git replace --edit

I presume the reason for this unconventional editor was the fact that
'git replace --edit' requires the edited object to be different from
the original, but a mere 'false' as editor would leave the object
unchanged and 'git replace --edit' would error out anyway complaining
about the new and the original object files being the same.  Running
'fakeeditor' before 'false' was supposed to ensure that the object
file is modified and thus 'git replace --edit' errors out because of
the failed editor.

However, this editor doesn't actually modify the edited object,
because start_command() turns this editor into:

  /bin/sh -c './fakeeditor;false "$@"' './fakeeditor;false' \
          '.../.git/REPLACE_EDITOBJ'

This means that the test's fakeeditor script doesn't even get the path
of the object to be edited as argument, triggering error messages from
the commands executed inside the script ('sed' and 'mv'), and
ultimately leaving the object file unchanged.

If a patch were to remove the die() from the error path after
launch_editor(), the test would not catch it, because 'git replace'
would continue execution past launch_editor() and would error out a
bit later due to the unchanged edited object.  Though 'git replace'
would error out for the wrong reason, this would satisfy
'test_must_fail' just as well, and the test would succeed leaving the
undesired change unnoticed.

Create a proper failing fake editor script for this test to ensure
that the edited object is in fact modified and 'git replace --edit'
won't error out because the new and original object files are the
same.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-05 09:50:39 -08:00
e914ef0d03 for-each-ref: document creatordate and creator fields
These were introduced back in 2006 at 3175aa1ec2 but
never documented.

Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-05 09:44:19 -08:00
754884255b Git 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-04 14:08:04 -08:00
3e9226acc8 Sync with 2.6.5 2016-01-04 14:06:59 -08:00
833e48259e Git 2.6.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-04 14:06:00 -08:00
e3073cf895 Merge branch 'jk/pending-keep-tag-name' into maint
History traversal with "git log --source" that starts with an
annotated tag failed to report the tag as "source", due to an
old regression in the command line parser back in v2.2 days.

* jk/pending-keep-tag-name:
  revision.c: propagate tag names from pending array
2016-01-04 14:03:08 -08:00
e002527582 Merge branch 'jk/symbolic-ref-maint' into maint
"git symbolic-ref" forgot to report a failure with its exit status.

* jk/symbolic-ref-maint:
  t1401: test reflog creation for git-symbolic-ref
  symbolic-ref: propagate error code from create_symref()
2016-01-04 14:02:58 -08:00
e54d0f5a02 Merge branch 'jk/ident-loosen-getpwuid' into maint
When getpwuid() on the system returned NULL (e.g. the user is not
in the /etc/passwd file or other uid-to-name mappings), the
codepath to find who the user is to record it in the reflog barfed
and died.  Loosen the check in this codepath, which already accepts
questionable ident string (e.g. host part of the e-mail address is
obviously bogus), and in general when we operate fmt_ident() function
in non-strict mode.

* jk/ident-loosen-getpwuid:
  ident: loosen getpwuid error in non-strict mode
  ident: keep a flag for bogus default_email
  ident: make xgetpwuid_self() a static local helper
2016-01-04 14:02:57 -08:00
06b5c9304d Merge branch 'jk/send-email-ssl-errors' into maint
Improve error reporting when SMTP TLS fails.

* jk/send-email-ssl-errors:
  send-email: enable SSL level 1 debug output
2016-01-04 14:02:55 -08:00
34872f0b3c Merge branch 'sg/completion-no-column' into maint
The completion script (in contrib/) used to list "git column"
(which is not an end-user facing command) as one of the choices

* sg/completion-no-column:
  completion: remove 'git column' from porcelain commands
2016-01-04 14:02:47 -08:00
7438e3f64a t/t5710-info-alternate.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-04 13:45:41 -08:00
46d76d6cdd t/t5700-clone-reference.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-04 13:45:36 -08:00
c723e50d41 t/t5601-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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-04 13:45:16 -08:00
c747cf33ba t/t5570-git-daemon.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-04 13:45:05 -08:00
bacb1c016d t/t5550-http-fetch-dumb.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-04 13:44:54 -08:00
752f505cf3 t/t5538-push-shallow.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-04 13:44:17 -08:00
e3a75be3fe t/t5537-fetch-shallow.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-04 13:43:47 -08:00
b7cbbffb85 t/t5532-fetch-proxy.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-04 13:42:40 -08:00
14dc2d9869 t/t5530-upload-pack-error.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-04 13:41:49 -08:00
91852b50a6 t/t5522-pull-symlink.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2016-01-04 13:41:44 -08:00
2c510f21cd git-send-email: do not double-escape quotes from mutt
mutt saves aliases with escaped quotes in the form of:

	alias dot \"Dot U. Sir\" <somebody@example.org>

When we pass through our sanitize_address routine,
we end up with double-escaping:

	 To: "\\\"Dot U. Sir\\\" <somebody@example.org>

Remove the escaping in mutt only for now, as I am not sure
if other mailers can do this or if this is better fixed in
sanitize_address.

Cc: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Cc: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-04 13:35:40 -08:00
a0df2e5a7e bswap: add NO_UNALIGNED_LOADS define
The byte-swapping code automatically decides, based on the
platform, whether it is sensible to cast and do a potentially
unaligned ntohl(), or to pick individual bytes out of an
array.

It can be handy to override this decision, though, when
turning on compiler flags that will complain about unaligned
loads (such as -fsanitize=undefined). This patch adds a
macro check to make this possible.

There's no nice Makefile knob here; this is for prodding at
Git's internals, and anybody using it can set
"-DNO_UNALIGNED_LOADS" in the same place they are setting up
"-fsanitize".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-04 09:51:33 -08:00
9a93c6686f avoid shifting signed integers 31 bits
We sometimes use 32-bit unsigned integers as bit-fields.
It's fine to access the MSB, because it's unsigned. However,
doing so as "1 << 31" is wrong, because the constant "1" is
a signed int, and we shift into the sign bit, causing
undefined behavior.

We can fix this by using "1U" as the constant.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-01-04 09:51:16 -08:00
c6cd26696c l10n: ko.po: Add Korean translation
Signed-off-by: Changwoo Ryu <cwryu@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Hyunjun Kim <yoloseem@users.noreply.github.com>
2016-01-03 19:07:29 +09:00
5863990799 Merge tag 'l10n-2.7.0-rnd2+de' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
l10n-2.7.0-rnd2+de

* tag 'l10n-2.7.0-rnd2+de' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: translate 68 new messages
  l10n: de.po: improve some translations
2016-01-02 11:31:43 -08:00
99487cf228 user-manual: add addition gitweb information
Rework the section on gitweb to add information about the cgi script
and the instaweb command.

Signed-off-by: Stephen P. Smith <ischis2@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-30 15:27:04 -08:00
9cfde9ee8f user-manual: add section documenting shallow clones
Signed-off-by: Stephen P. Smith <ischis2@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-30 11:44:56 -08:00
9624a22ac6 dir: free untracked cache when removing it
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-29 13:38:41 -08:00
bac58749bb glossary: define the term shallow clone
There are several places in the documentation that
the term shallow clone is used. Defining the term
enables its use elsewhere with a known definition.

Signed-off-by: Stephen P. Smith <ischis2@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-29 11:18:36 -08:00
ac78663b0d run-command: don't warn on SIGPIPE deaths
When git executes a sub-command, we print a warning if the
command dies due to a signal, but make an exception for
"uninteresting" cases like SIGINT and SIGQUIT (since the
user presumably just hit ^C).

We should make a similar exception for SIGPIPE, because it's
an expected and uninteresting return in most cases; it
generally means the user quit the pager before git had
finished generating all output.  This used to be very hard
to trigger in practice, because:

  1. We only complain if we see a real SIGPIPE death, not
     the shell-induced 141 exit code. This means that
     anything we run via the shell does not trigger the
     warning, which includes most non-trivial aliases.

  2. The common case for SIGPIPE is the user quitting the
     pager before git has finished generating all output.
     But if the user triggers a pager with "-p", we redirect
     the git wrapper's stderr to that pager, too.  Since the
     pager is dead, it means that the message goes nowhere.

  3. You can see it if you run your own pager, like
     "git foo | head". But that only happens if "foo" is a
     non-builtin (so it doesn't work with "log", for
     example).

However, it may become more common after 86d26f2, which
teaches alias to re-exec builtins rather than running them
in the same process. This case doesn't trigger (1), as we
don't need a shell to run a git command. It doesn't trigger
(2), because the pager is not started by the original git,
but by the inner re-exec of git. And it doesn't trigger (3),
because builtins are treated more like non-builtins in this
case.

Given how flaky this message already is (e.g., you cannot
even know whether you will see it, as git optimizes out some
shell invocations behind the scenes based on the contents of
the command!), and that it is unlikely to ever provide
useful information, let's suppress it for all cases of
SIGPIPE.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-29 11:05:11 -08:00
02103b3289 l10n: de.po: translate 68 new messages
Translate 68 new messages came from git.pot update in
f4f2c8f (l10n: git.pot: v2.7.0 round 1 (66 new, 29 removed)) and
2c0ca05 (l10n: git.pot: v2.7.0 round 2 (2 new, 2 removed)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthias Rüster <matthias.ruester@gmail.com>
2015-12-29 19:53:17 +01:00
503b1ef7b2 l10n: de.po: improve some translations
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Phillip Sz <phillip.szelat@gmail.com>
2015-12-29 19:53:17 +01:00
396da8f7a0 create_symref: write reflog while holding lock
We generally hold a lock on the matching ref while writing
to its reflog; this prevents two simultaneous writers from
clobbering each other's reflog lines (it does not even have
to be two symref updates; because we don't hold the lock, we
could race with somebody writing to the pointed-to ref via
HEAD, for example).

We can fix this by writing the reflog before we commit the
lockfile. This runs the risk of writing the reflog but
failing the final rename(), but at least we now err on the
same side as the rest of the ref code.

Noticed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
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>
2015-12-29 10:34:25 -08:00
370e5ad65e create_symref: use existing ref-lock code
The create_symref() function predates the existence of
"struct lock_file", let alone the more recent "struct
ref_lock". Instead, it just does its own manual dot-locking.
Besides being more code, this has a few downsides:

 - if git is interrupted while holding the lock, we don't
   clean up the lockfile

 - we don't do the usual directory/filename conflict check.
   So you can sometimes create a symref "refs/heads/foo/bar",
   even if "refs/heads/foo" exists (namely, if the refs are
   packed and we do not hit the d/f conflict in the
   filesystem).

This patch refactors create_symref() to use the "struct
ref_lock" interface, which handles both of these things.
There are a few bonus cleanups that come along with it:

 - we leaked ref_path in some error cases

 - the symref contents were stored in a fixed-size buffer,
   putting an artificial (albeit large) limitation on the
   length of the refname. We now write through fprintf, and
   handle refnames of any size.

 - we called adjust_shared_perm only after the file was
   renamed into place, creating a potential race with
   readers in a shared repository. The lockfile code now
   handles this when creating the lockfile, making it
   atomic.

 - the legacy prefer_symlink_refs path did not do any
   locking at all. Admittedly, it is not atomic from a
   reader's perspective (as it unlinks and re-creates the
   symlink to overwrite), but at least it cannot conflict
   with other writers now.

 - the result of this patch is hopefully more readable. It
   eliminates three goto labels. Two were for error checking
   that is now simplified, and the third was to reach shared
   code that has been pulled into its own function.

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>
2015-12-29 10:33:31 -08:00
b9badadd06 create_symref: modernize variable names
Once upon a time, create_symref() was used only to point
HEAD at a branch name, and the variable names reflect that
(e.g., calling the path git_HEAD). However, it is much more
generic these days (and has been for some time). Let's
update the variable names to make it easier to follow:

  - `ref_target` is now just `refname`. This is closer to
    the `ref` that is already in `cache.h`, but with the
    extra twist that "name" makes it clear this is the name
    and not a ref struct. Dropping "target" hopefully makes
    it clear that we are talking about the symref itself,
    not what it points to.

  - `git_HEAD` is now `ref_path`; the on-disk path
    corresponding to `ref`.

  - `refs_heads_master` is now just `target`; i.e., what the
    symref points at. This term also matches what is in
    the symlink(2) manpage (at least on Linux).

  - the buffer to hold the symref file's contents was simply
    called `ref`. It's now `buf` (admittedly also generic,
    but at least not actively introducing confusion with the
    other variable holding the refname).

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>
2015-12-29 10:33:09 -08:00
28274d02c4 Git 2.7-rc3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-28 14:00:52 -08:00
aecb9979df Merge branch 'sh/p4-multi-depot'
"git p4" when interacting with multiple depots at the same time
used to incorrectly drop changes.

* sh/p4-multi-depot:
  git-p4: reduce number of server queries for fetches
  git-p4: support multiple depot paths in p4 submit
  git-p4: failing test case for skipping changes with multiple depots
2015-12-28 13:58:58 -08:00
71957339da Merge branch 'jk/pending-keep-tag-name'
History traversal with "git log --source" that starts with an
annotated tag failed to report the tag as "source", due to an
old regression in the command line parser back in v2.2 days.

* jk/pending-keep-tag-name:
  revision.c: propagate tag names from pending array
2015-12-28 13:58:04 -08:00
e929264e8d Merge branch 'jk/symbolic-ref-maint'
"git symbolic-ref" forgot to report a failure with its exit status.

* jk/symbolic-ref-maint:
  t1401: test reflog creation for git-symbolic-ref
  symbolic-ref: propagate error code from create_symref()
2015-12-28 13:57:24 -08:00
ce858c06a4 Merge tag 'l10n-2.7.0-rnd2' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
l10n-2.7.0-rnd2

* tag 'l10n-2.7.0-rnd2' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2477t,0f,0u)
  l10n: ca.po: update translation
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.7.0 l10n round 2
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2477t0f0u)
  l10n: sv: Fix bad translation
  l10n: fr.po v2.7.0 round 2 (2477t)
  l10n: git.pot: v2.7.0 round 2 (2 new, 2 removed)
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.7.0 l10n round 1
  l10n: ca.po: update translation
  l10n: fr v2.7.0 round 1 (2477t)
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2477t,0f,0u)
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2477t0f0u)
  l10n: vi.po: Updated translation (2477t)
  l10n: git.pot: v2.7.0 round 1 (66 new, 29 removed)
  l10n: fr.po: Fix typo
  l10n: fr.po: Fix typo
2015-12-28 13:53:47 -08:00
1de2e442af user-manual: remove temporary branch entry from todo list
In the section on "How to check out a different version of a
project" the "new" branch is used as a temporary branch.  A detached
HEAD was not used since it was a new feature introduced just a
couple weeks prior.

The section could be changed to use and explain a detached HEAD,
except that would increase the learning curve early in the manual.
Detached HEADs are discussed a couple sections later under
"Examining an old version without creating a new branch".

Let's declare that it is a bad idea to rewrite the example that
uses a temporary branch to do the sightseeing on a detached HEAD.

Signed-off-by: Stephen P. Smith <ischis2@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-28 13:47:37 -08:00
5ee0d624fb t/t5517-push-mirror.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:37:05 -08:00
bf45242ba7 t/t5516-fetch-push.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:37:04 -08:00
28666e55f3 t/t5515-fetch-merge-logic.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:37:04 -08:00
a9d32be4d2 t/t5510-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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:37:04 -08:00
e15243cc77 t/t5506-remote-groups.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:37:04 -08:00
c00978144a t/t5505-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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:37:03 -08:00
2feed90768 t/t5500-fetch-pack.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:37:03 -08:00
0469cb96e3 t/t5305-include-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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:37:03 -08:00
213ea1161c t/t5304-prune.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:37:02 -08:00
a64d080fff t/t5303-pack-corruption-resilience.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:37:02 -08:00
6ffd3ec88c t/t5100: no need to use 'echo' command substitutions for globbing
Instead of making the shell expand 00* and invoke 'echo' with it,
and then capturing its output as command substitution, just use
the result of expanding 00* directly.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-28 13:36:50 -08:00
20cffb7235 t/t5302-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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:36:47 -08:00
046dec74af t/t5301-sliding-window.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:36:45 -08:00
d6cd9ac905 t/t5300-pack-object.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:36:43 -08:00
fc7b076d33 t/t5100-mailinfo.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:36:41 -08:00
ed6c23142a t/t3700-add.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:36:37 -08:00
e3ab3bc22b t/t3600-rm.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:36:34 -08:00
9b4950899a t/t3511-cherry-pick-x.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:36:32 -08:00
c82ec45e86 t/t3403-rebase-skip.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:36:29 -08:00
13f11b9585 t/t3210-pack-refs.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:36:27 -08:00
8db3294142 t/t3101-ls-tree-dirname.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_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>
2015-12-28 13:36:22 -08:00
2653a8c6fa dir.c: clean the entire struct in clear_exclude_list()
Make sure "el" can be reuseable again. The problem was el->alloc is
not cleared and may cause segfaults next time because add_exclude()
thinks el->excludes (being NULL) has enough space. Just clear the
entire struct to be safe.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-28 12:48:27 -08:00
4d55200532 grep: make it clear i-t-a entries are ignored
The expression "!S_ISREG(ce)" covers i-t-a entries as well because
ce->ce_mode would be zero then. I could make a comment saying that, but
it's probably better just to comment with code, in case i-t-a entry
content changes in future.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-28 12:42:35 -08:00
5fa9ab8080 l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
Signed-off-by: Dimitriy Ryazantcev <dimitriy.ryazantcev@gmail.com>
2015-12-28 23:16:00 +08:00
9011cf9233 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/alshopov/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/alshopov/git-po:
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2477t,0f,0u)
2015-12-28 23:13:15 +08:00
c5e5e68647 l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2477t,0f,0u)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2015-12-28 11:33:41 +02:00
62c9705d75 l10n: ca.po: update translation
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
2015-12-27 21:42:59 -07:00
10c1e85539 t/t3100-ls-tree-restrict.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:44:49 -08:00
85aea1e7e0 t/t3030-merge-recursive.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:44:49 -08:00
fc12fa35fd t/t2102-update-index-symlinks.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:44:49 -08:00
697b90d7e6 t/t2025-worktree-add.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:44:49 -08:00
16149d75bd t/t1700-split-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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:44:49 -08:00
dcfbb2aa89 t/t1512-rev-parse-disambiguation.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:44:49 -08:00
9fe281b342 t/t1511-rev-parse-caret.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:44:49 -08:00
2c25eaa1b5 t/t1410-reflog.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:44:49 -08:00
8a7b73c152 t/t1401-symbolic-ref.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:44:49 -08:00
cbda02fcb7 t/t1100-commit-tree-options.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:44:49 -08:00
92bea9530b unimplemented.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:33:13 -08:00
21c6f9875a test-sha1.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:33:13 -08:00
e429dfd5e4 t/lib-httpd.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:33:13 -08:00
4796af1510 git-gui/po/glossary/txt-to-pot.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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:33:13 -08:00
57eb1bef7d contrib/thunderbird-patch-inline/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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:33:13 -08:00
bc32bacc72 contrib/examples/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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:33:13 -08:00
6ccca67a74 contrib/examples/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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:33:13 -08:00
1a3655264e contrib/examples/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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:33:13 -08:00
cc301d7e51 contrib/examples/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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:33:13 -08:00
a22c9e8d9e contrib/examples/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
	perl -i -pe 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/`(.+?)`/\$(\1)/smg'  "${_f}"
done

and then carefully proof-read.

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>
2015-12-27 15:33:13 -08:00
89f80d72c1 l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.7.0 l10n round 2
Update 2 translations (2477t0f0u) for git v2.7.0-rc1.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-12-26 21:22:53 +08:00
707a423f81 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 (2477t0f0u)
  l10n: sv: Fix bad translation
2015-12-26 21:22:30 +08:00
9ff1198e67 l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2477t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2015-12-26 12:27:15 +01:00
171e58a148 l10n: sv: Fix bad translation
Found-by: Sebastian Rasmussen <sebras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2015-12-26 12:24:44 +01:00
f938915aad l10n: fr.po v2.7.0 round 2 (2477t)
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2015-12-24 07:38:22 +01:00
554f6e4106 Git 2.7-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-22 14:46:01 -08:00
de60b97422 Merge branch 'js/emu-write-epipe-on-windows'
The write(2) emulation for Windows learned to set errno to EPIPE
when necessary.

* js/emu-write-epipe-on-windows:
  mingw: emulate write(2) that fails with a EPIPE
2015-12-22 14:45:16 -08:00
6a4f2eced4 push: don't mark options of recurse-submodules for translation
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-22 14:40:47 -08:00
57ea7123c8 git.c: make sure we do not leak GIT_* to alias scripts
The unfortunate commit d95138e (setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when
work tree is set, like $GIT_DIR - 2015-06-26) exposes another problem,
besides git-clone that's described in the previous commit. If
GIT_WORK_TREE (or even GIT_DIR) is exported to an alias script, it may
mislead git commands in the script where the repo is. Granted, most
scripts work on the repo where the alias is summoned from. But nowhere
do we forbid the script to visit another repository.

The revert of d95138e in the previous commit is sufficient as a
fix. However, to protect us from accidentally leaking GIT_*
environment variables again, we restore certain sensitive env before
calling the external script.

GIT_PREFIX is let through because there's another setup side effect
that we simply accepted so far: current working directory is
moved. Maybe in future we can introduce a new alias format that
guarantees no cwd move, then we can unexport GIT_PREFIX.

Reported-by: Gabriel Ganne <gabriel.ganne@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-22 13:40:32 -08:00
86d26f240f setup.c: re-fix d95138e (setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when ..
Commit d95138e [1] attempted to fix a .git file problem by
setting GIT_WORK_TREE whenever GIT_DIR is set. It sounded harmless
because we handle GIT_DIR and GIT_WORK_TREE side by side for most
commands, with two exceptions: git-init and git-clone.

"git clone" is not happy with d95138e. This command ignores GIT_DIR
but respects GIT_WORK_TREE [2] [3] which means it used to run fine
from a hook, where GIT_DIR was set but GIT_WORK_TREE was not (*).
With d95138e, GIT_WORK_TREE is set all the time and git-clone
interprets that as "I give you order to put the worktree here",
usually against the user's intention.

The solution in d95138e is reverted earlier, and instead we reuse
the solution from c056261 [4].  It fixed another setup-messed-
up-by-alias by saving and restoring env and spawning a new process,
but for git-clone and git-init only.

Now we conclude that setup-messed-up-by-alias is always evil. So the
env restoration is done for _all_ commands, including external ones,
whenever aliases are involved. It fixes what d95138e tried to fix,
without upsetting git-clone-inside-hooks.

The test from d95138e remains to verify it's not broken by this. A new
test is added to make sure git-clone-inside-hooks remains happy.

(*) GIT_WORK_TREE was not set _most of the time_. In some cases
    GIT_WORK_TREE is set and git-clone will behave differently. The
    use of GIT_WORK_TREE to direct git-clone to put work tree
    elsewhere looks like a mistake because it causes surprises this
    way. But that's a separate story.

[1] d95138e (setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when work tree is set, like
             $GIT_DIR - 2015-06-26)
[2] 2beebd2 (clone: create intermediate directories of destination
             repo - 2008-06-25)
[3] 20ccef4 (make git-clone GIT_WORK_TREE aware - 2007-07-06)
[4] c056261 (git potty: restore environments after alias expansion -
             2014-06-08)

Reported-by: Anthony Sottile <asottile@umich.edu>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-22 13:40:32 -08:00
0d5466d244 git.c: make it clear save_env() is for alias handling only
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-22 13:40:32 -08:00
ec3de38da9 Merge branch 'nd/stop-setenv-work-tree' into nd/clear-gitenv-upon-use-of-alias
* nd/stop-setenv-work-tree:
  Revert "setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when work tree is set, like $GIT_DIR"
2015-12-22 13:40:12 -08:00
df1e6ea87a Revert "setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when work tree is set, like $GIT_DIR"
This reverts d95138e6 (setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when work tree
is set, like $GIT_DIR, 2015-06-26).

It has caused three regression reports so far.

  http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/281608
  http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/281979
  http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/282691

All of them are about spawning git subprocesses, where the new
presence of GIT_WORK_TREE either changes command behaviour (git-init
or git-clone), or how repo/worktree is detected (from aliases), with
or without $GIT_DIR.

The original bug will be re-fixed another way.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-22 13:36:47 -08:00
2c0ca0506e l10n: git.pot: v2.7.0 round 2 (2 new, 2 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.7.0-rc1-44-g1d88dab for git v2.7.0 l10n round 2.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-12-22 22:51:43 +08:00
076ab2b193 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.7.0 l10n round 1
  l10n: ca.po: update translation
  l10n: fr v2.7.0 round 1 (2477t)
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2477t,0f,0u)
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2477t0f0u)
  l10n: vi.po: Updated translation (2477t)
  l10n: git.pot: v2.7.0 round 1 (66 new, 29 removed)
  l10n: fr.po: Fix typo
  l10n: fr.po: Fix typo
2015-12-22 22:50:24 +08:00
9d98bbf578 pack-revindex: store entries directly in packed_git
A pack_revindex struct has two elements: the revindex
entries themselves, and a pointer to the packed_git. We need
both to do lookups, because only the latter knows things
like the number of objects in the pack.

Now that packed_git contains the pack_revindex struct it's
just as easy to pass around the packed_git itself, and we do
not need the extra back-pointer.

We can instead just store the entries directly in the pack.
All functions which took a pack_revindex now just take a
packed_git. We still lazy-load in find_pack_revindex, so
most callers are unaffected.

The exception is the bitmap code, which computes the
revindex and caches the pointer when we load the bitmaps. We
can continue to load, drop the extra cache pointer, and just
access bitmap_git.pack.revindex directly.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-21 14:36:28 -08:00
f4015337da pack-revindex: drop hash table
The main entry point to the pack-revindex code is
find_pack_revindex(). This calls revindex_for_pack(), which
lazily computes and caches the revindex for the pack.

We store the cache in a very simple hash table. It's created
by init_pack_revindex(), which inserts an entry for every
packfile we know about, and we never grow or shrink the
hash. If we ever need the revindex for a pack that isn't in
the hash, we die() with an internal error.

This can lead to a race, because we may load more packs
after having called init_pack_revindex(). For example,
imagine we have one process which needs to look at the
revindex for a variety of objects (e.g., cat-file's
"%(objectsize:disk)" format).  Simultaneously, git-gc is
running, which is doing a `git repack -ad`. We might hit a
sequence like:

  1. We need the revidx for some packed object. We call
     find_pack_revindex() and end up in init_pack_revindex()
     to create the hash table for all packs we know about.

  2. We look up another object and can't find it, because
     the repack has removed the pack it's in. We re-scan the
     pack directory and find a new pack containing the
     object. It gets added to our packed_git list.

  3. We call find_pack_revindex() for the new object, which
     hits revindex_for_pack() for our new pack. It can't
     find the packed_git in the revindex hash, and dies.

You could also replace the `repack` above with a push or
fetch to create a new pack, though these are less likely
(you would have to somehow learn about the new objects to
look them up).

Prior to 1a6d8b9 (do not discard revindex when re-preparing
packfiles, 2014-01-15), this was safe, as we threw away the
revindex whenever we re-scanned the pack directory (and thus
re-created the revindex hash on the fly). However, we don't
want to simply revert that commit, as it was solving a
different race.

So we have a few options:

  - We can fix the race in 1a6d8b9 differently, by having
    the bitmap code look in the revindex hash instead of
    caching the pointer. But this would introduce a lot of
    extra hash lookups for common bitmap operations.

  - We could teach the revindex to dynamically add new packs
    to the hash table. This would perform the same, but
    would mean adding extra code to the revindex hash (which
    currently cannot be resized at all).

  - We can get rid of the hash table entirely. There is
    exactly one revindex per pack, so we can just store it
    in the packed_git struct. Since it's initialized lazily,
    it does not add to the startup cost.

    This is the best of both worlds: less code and fewer
    hash table lookups.  The original code likely avoided
    this in the name of encapsulation. But the packed_git
    and reverse_index code are fairly intimate already, so
    it's not much of a loss.

This patch implements the final option. It's a minimal
conversion that retains the pack_revindex struct. No callers
need to change, and we can do further cleanup in a follow-on
patch.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-21 14:36:11 -08:00
f91b2732b3 t1401: test reflog creation for git-symbolic-ref
The current code writes a reflog entry whenever we update a
symbolic ref, but we never test that this is so. Let's add a
test to make sure upcoming refactoring doesn't cause a
regression.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-21 12:06:31 -08:00
3e4068ed90 symbolic-ref: propagate error code from create_symref()
If create_symref() fails, git-symbolic-ref will still exit
with code 0, and our caller has no idea that the command did
nothing.

This appears to have been broken since the beginning of time
(e.g., it is not a regression where create_symref() stopped
calling die() or something similar).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-21 12:03:03 -08:00
1f90a64891 git-p4: reduce number of server queries for fetches
When fetching changes from a depot using a full client spec, there
is no need to perform as many queries as there are top-level paths
in the client spec.  Instead we query all changes in chronological
order, also getting rid of the need to sort the results and remove
duplicates.

Signed-off-by: Sam Hocevar <sam@hocevar.net>
Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-21 11:26:55 -08:00
cbc692425c git-p4: support multiple depot paths in p4 submit
When submitting from a repository that was cloned using a client spec,
use the full list of paths when ruling out files that are outside the
view.  This fixes a bug where only files pertaining to the first path
would be included in the p4 submit.

Signed-off-by: Sam Hocevar <sam@hocevar.net>
Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-21 11:26:36 -08:00
1d88dab47a Update release notes to 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-21 11:08:20 -08:00
fbe959dde7 Merge branch 'bc/format-patch-null-from-line'
"format-patch" has learned a new option to zero-out the commit
object name on the mbox "From " line.

* bc/format-patch-null-from-line:
  format-patch: check that header line has expected format
  format-patch: add an option to suppress commit hash
  sha1_file.c: introduce a null_oid constant
2015-12-21 10:59:08 -08:00
5498c57cdd Merge branch 'jk/ident-loosen-getpwuid'
When getpwuid() on the system returned NULL (e.g. the user is not
in the /etc/passwd file or other uid-to-name mappings), the
codepath to find who the user is to record it in the reflog barfed
and died.  Loosen the check in this codepath, which already accepts
questionable ident string (e.g. host part of the e-mail address is
obviously bogus), and in general when we operate fmt_ident() function
in non-strict mode.

* jk/ident-loosen-getpwuid:
  ident: loosen getpwuid error in non-strict mode
  ident: keep a flag for bogus default_email
  ident: make xgetpwuid_self() a static local helper
2015-12-21 10:59:07 -08:00
7aaff08f39 Merge branch 'jk/send-email-ssl-errors'
Improve error reporting when SMTP TLS fails.

* jk/send-email-ssl-errors:
  send-email: enable SSL level 1 debug output
2015-12-21 10:59:06 -08:00
d78cba4b8f Merge branch 'sg/completion-no-column'
The completion script (in contrib/) used to list "git column"
(which is not an end-user facing command) as one of the choices

* sg/completion-no-column:
  completion: remove 'git column' from porcelain commands
2015-12-21 10:59:06 -08:00
5d35d72fc3 Merge branch 'mc/push-recurse-submodules-config'
Add new config to avoid typing "--recurse-submodules" on each push.

* mc/push-recurse-submodules-config:
  push: follow the "last one wins" convention for --recurse-submodules
  push: test that --recurse-submodules on command line overrides config
  push: add recurseSubmodules config option
2015-12-21 10:59:05 -08:00
2b86292ed1 mingw: emulate write(2) that fails with a EPIPE
On Windows, when writing to a pipe fails, errno is always
EINVAL. However, Git expects it to be EPIPE.

According to the documentation, there are two cases in which write()
triggers EINVAL: the buffer is NULL, or the length is odd but the mode
is 16-bit Unicode (the broken pipe is not mentioned as possible cause).
Git never sets the file mode to anything but binary, therefore we know
that errno should actually be EPIPE if it is EINVAL and the buffer is
not NULL.

See https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/1570wh78.aspx for more
details.

This works around t5571.11 failing with v2.6.4 on Windows.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Acked-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-21 08:59:04 -08:00
c3ee2e2c9d Merge git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk
* git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk:
  gitk: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (311t)
  gitk: Let .bleft.mid widgets 'breathe'
  gitk: Match ttk fonts to gitk fonts
  gitk: Update revision date in Japanese PO file
  gitk: Update "Language:" header
  gitk: Improve translation message
  gitk: Remove unused line
  gitk: Update year
  gitk: Change last translator line
  gitk: Update fuzzy messages
  gitk: Update Japanese translation
  gitk: Fix translation around copyright sign
  gitk: Update Japanese translation
  gitk: Fix wrong translation
  gitk: Translate Japanese catalog
  gitk: Translate more to Japanese catalog
  gitk: Update Japanese message catalog
  gitk: Re-sync line number in Japanese message catalogue
  gitk: Color name update
2015-12-21 08:56:16 -08:00
94550ed38c l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.7.0 l10n round 1
Update 66 translations (2477t0f0u) for git v2.7.0-rc0.

Reviewed-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-12-20 19:33:14 +08:00
5b82d4ee29 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/alexhenrie/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/alexhenrie/git-po:
  l10n: ca.po: update translation
2015-12-20 19:32:26 +08:00
13691905d0 Merge branch 'fr_v2.7.0' of git://github.com/jnavila/git
* 'fr_v2.7.0' of git://github.com/jnavila/git:
  l10n: fr v2.7.0 round 1 (2477t)
2015-12-20 19:31:47 +08:00
e976d7af41 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/alshopov/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/alshopov/git-po:
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2477t,0f,0u)
2015-12-20 19:30:52 +08:00
0d8e36f314 l10n: ca.po: update translation
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
2015-12-18 23:38:23 -07:00
0de75aafb6 Merge branch 'ja.po' of https://github.com/qykth-git/gitk 2015-12-19 13:33:16 +11:00
04d04c071e Merge branch 'color-fix' of https://github.com/qykth-git/gitk 2015-12-19 13:29:35 +11:00
ffd5159bcc l10n: fr v2.7.0 round 1 (2477t)
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2015-12-18 22:00:37 +01:00
aeef7d84f4 l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2477t,0f,0u)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2015-12-18 10:36:21 +02:00
fbc63eb656 l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2477t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2015-12-18 09:09:41 +01:00
728350b76a revision.c: propagate tag names from pending array
When we unwrap a tag to find its commit for a traversal, we
do not propagate the "name" field of the tag in the pending
array (i.e., the ref name the user gave us in the first
place) to the commit (instead, we use an empty string). This
means that "git log --source" will never show the tag-name
for commits we reach through it.

This was broken in 2073949 (traverse_commit_list: support
pending blobs/trees with paths, 2014-10-15). That commit
tried to be careful and avoid propagating the path
information for a tag (which would be nonsensical) to trees
and blobs. But it should not have cut off the "name" field,
which should carry forward to children.

Note that this does mean that the "name" field will carry
forward to blobs and trees, too. Whereas prior to 2073949,
we always gave them an empty string. This is the right thing
to do, but in practice no callers probably use it (since now
we have an explicit separate "path" field, which was the
point of 2073949).

We add tests here not only for the broken case, but also a
basic sanity test of "log --source" in general, which did
not have any coverage in the test suite.

Reported-by: Raymundo <gypark@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-17 10:47:56 -08:00
f3adf457e0 Merge branch 'fr/rebase-i-continue-preserve-options'
"git rebase -i" started with merge strategy options did not
propagate them upon "git rebase --continue".

* fr/rebase-i-continue-preserve-options:
  rebase -i: remember merge options beyond continue actions
2015-12-16 14:42:52 -08:00
787407e5e0 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  credential-store: don't pass strerror to die_errno()
2015-12-16 14:40:30 -08:00
38a2559113 push: add '-d' as shorthand for '--delete'
"git push" takes "--delete" but does not take a short form "-d",
unlike "git branch" which does take both.  Bring consistency
between them.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-16 12:30:10 -08:00
62104ba14a submodules: allow parallel fetching, add tests and documentation
This enables the work of the previous patches.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-16 12:06:08 -08:00
fe85ee6e23 fetch_populated_submodules: use new parallel job processing
In a later patch we enable parallel processing of submodules, this
only adds the possibility for it. So this change should not change
any user facing behavior.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-16 12:06:08 -08:00
c553c72eed run-command: add an asynchronous parallel child processor
This allows to run external commands in parallel with ordered output
on stderr.

If we run external commands in parallel we cannot pipe the output directly
to the our stdout/err as it would mix up. So each process's output will
flow through a pipe, which we buffer. One subprocess can be directly
piped to out stdout/err for a low latency feedback to the user.

Example:
Let's assume we have 5 submodules A,B,C,D,E and each fetch takes a
different amount of time as the different submodules vary in size, then
the output of fetches in sequential order might look like this:

 time -->
 output: |---A---| |-B-| |-------C-------| |-D-| |-E-|

When we schedule these submodules into maximal two parallel processes,
a schedule and sample output over time may look like this:

process 1: |---A---| |-D-| |-E-|

process 2: |-B-| |-------C-------|

output:    |---A---|B|---C-------|DE

So A will be perceived as it would run normally in the single child
version. As B has finished by the time A is done, we can dump its whole
progress buffer on stderr, such that it looks like it finished in no
time. Once that is done, C is determined to be the visible child and
its progress will be reported in real time.

So this way of output is really good for human consumption, as it only
changes the timing, not the actual output.

For machine consumption the output needs to be prepared in the tasks,
by either having a prefix per line or per block to indicate whose tasks
output is displayed, because the output order may not follow the
original sequential ordering:

 |----A----| |--B--| |-C-|

will be scheduled to be all parallel:

process 1: |----A----|
process 2: |--B--|
process 3: |-C-|
output:    |----A----|CB

This happens because C finished before B did, so it will be queued for
output before B.

To detect when a child has finished executing, we check interleaved
with other actions (such as checking the liveliness of children or
starting new processes) whether the stderr pipe still exists. Once a
child closed its stderr stream, we assume it is terminating very soon,
and use `finish_command()` from the single external process execution
interface to collect the exit status.

By maintaining the strong assumption of stderr being open until the
very end of a child process, we can avoid other hassle such as an
implementation using `waitpid(-1)`, which is not implemented in Windows.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-16 12:06:08 -08:00
bfb6b53c05 sigchain: add command to pop all common signals
The new method removes all common signal handlers that were installed
by sigchain_push.

CC: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-16 12:06:08 -08:00
b4e04fb66e strbuf: add strbuf_read_once to read without blocking
The new call will read from a file descriptor into a strbuf once. The
underlying call xread is just run once. xread only reattempts
reading in case of EINTR, which makes it suitable to use for a
nonblocking read.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-16 12:06:08 -08:00
1079c4be0b xread: poll on non blocking fds
The man page of read(2) says:

  EAGAIN The file descriptor fd refers to a file other than a socket
	 and has been marked nonblocking (O_NONBLOCK), and the read
	 would block.

  EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK
	 The file descriptor fd refers to a socket and has been marked
	 nonblocking (O_NONBLOCK), and the read would block.  POSIX.1-2001
	 allows either error to be returned for this case, and does not
	 require these constants to have the same value, so a portable
	 application should check for both possibilities.

If we get an EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK the fd must have set O_NONBLOCK.
As the intent of xread is to read as much as possible either until the
fd is EOF or an actual error occurs, we can ease the feeder of the fd
by not spinning the whole time, but rather wait for it politely by not
busy waiting.

We should not care if the call to poll failed, as we're in an infinite
loop and can only get out with the correct read().

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Acked-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-16 12:06:08 -08:00
fbf71645d1 submodule.c: write "Fetching submodule <foo>" to stderr
The "Pushing submodule <foo>" progress output correctly goes to
stderr, but "Fetching submodule <foo>" is going to stdout by
mistake.  Fix it to write to stderr.

Noticed while trying to implement a parallel submodule fetch.  When
this particular output line went to a different file descriptor, it
was buffered separately, resulting in wrongly interleaved output if
we copied it to the terminal naively.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-16 12:06:08 -08:00
89f09dd34e grep: add --threads=<num> option and grep.threads configuration
"git grep" can now be configured (or told from the command line) how
many threads to use when searching in the working tree files.

Signed-off-by: Victor Leschuk <vleschuk@accesssoftek.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-16 12:03:23 -08:00
e6be2655fc Makefile: add missing phony target
Add some missing phony target to Makefile.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-16 12:01:10 -08:00
1ff88560c8 Merge branch 'sg/lock-file-commit-error' into maint
* sg/lock-file-commit-error:
  credential-store: don't pass strerror to die_errno()
2015-12-16 10:27:22 -08:00
87d01c854b credential-store: don't pass strerror to die_errno()
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-16 10:27:12 -08:00
aba37f495e blame: add support for --[no-]progress option
Teach the command to show progress output when it takes long time to
produce the first line of output; this option cannot be used with
"--incremental" or "--porcelain" options.

git-annotate inherits the option as well.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Edmundo Carmona Antoranz <eantoranz@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-16 10:18:34 -08:00
044b1f3cb4 grep: slight refactoring to the code that disables threading
When show-in-pager option is used, threading is unconditionally
disabled, but this happened much earlier than the code that
determines the use of threading based on the operand (i.e. we do not
thread search in the object database).  Consolidate the code to
disable threading to just one place.

Signed-off-by: Victor Leschuk <vleschuk@accesssoftek.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-15 10:49:57 -08:00
b6b468b2bf grep: allow threading even on a single-core machine
Earlier we disabled threading when online_cpus() said "1", but on a
filesystem with long latency (or in a cold cache situation), using
multiple threads to drive I/O in parallel would improve performance
even on a single-core machines.

Signed-off-by: Victor Leschuk <vleschuk@accesssoftek.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-15 10:43:30 -08:00
06dfc9ebaa format-patch: check that header line has expected format
The format of the "From " header line is very specific to allow
utilities to detect Git-style patches.  Add a test that the patches
created are in the expected format.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-15 10:03:56 -08:00
3a30aa1787 format-patch: add an option to suppress commit hash
Oftentimes, patches created by git format-patch will be stored in
version control or compared with diff.  In these cases, two otherwise
identical patches can have different commit hashes, leading to diff
noise.  Teach git format-patch a --zero-commit option that instead
produces an all-zero hash to avoid this diff noise.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-15 10:03:40 -08:00
f900c8326a Git 2.7-rc1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-15 09:47:11 -08:00
bdb32a88fa Sync with maint 2015-12-15 09:45:16 -08:00
1aaf149757 Update draft release notes to 2.6.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-15 09:44:54 -08:00
a61fd3fc3f Merge branch 'dt/fsck-verify-pack-error' into maint
The exit code of git-fsck didnot reflect some types of errors found
in packed objects, which has been corrected.

* dt/fsck-verify-pack-error:
  verify_pack: do not ignore return value of verification function
2015-12-15 09:42:20 -08:00
de301c5c85 Merge branch 'ep/ident-with-getaddrinfo' into maint
A fix-up for recent topic.

* ep/ident-with-getaddrinfo:
  ident: fix undefined variable when NO_IPV6 is set
  ident.c: add support for IPv6
2015-12-15 09:42:01 -08:00
f97f2e5c64 Merge branch 'ls/p4-keep-empty-commits' into maint
"git p4" used to import Perforce CLs that touch only paths outside
the client spec as empty commits.  It has been corrected to ignore
them instead, with a new configuration git-p4.keepEmptyCommits as a
backward compatibility knob.

* ls/p4-keep-empty-commits:
  git-p4: add option to keep empty commits
2015-12-15 09:34:19 -08:00
9c69f77dcb Merge branch 'jk/send-email-complete-aliases'
A fix-up for recent topic.

* jk/send-email-complete-aliases:
  completion: fix completing unstuck email alias arguments
2015-12-15 09:33:19 -08:00
47be26dfcc Merge branch 'ep/ident-with-getaddrinfo'
A fix-up for recent topic.

* ep/ident-with-getaddrinfo:
  ident: fix undefined variable when NO_IPV6 is set
2015-12-15 09:33:19 -08:00
3b65c248a3 Merge branch 'jk/prune-mtime' into maint
The helper used to iterate over loose object directories to prune
stale objects did not closedir() immediately when it is done with a
directory--a callback such as the one used for "git prune" may want
to do rmdir(), but it would fail on open directory on platforms
such as WinXP.

* jk/prune-mtime:
  prune: close directory earlier during loose-object directory traversal
2015-12-15 09:27:12 -08:00
a899d500c6 Merge branch 'ls/p4-keep-empty-commits'
"git p4" used to import Perforce CLs that touch only paths outside
the client spec as empty commits.  It has been corrected to ignore
them instead, with a new configuration git-p4.keepEmptyCommits as a
backward compatibility knob.

* ls/p4-keep-empty-commits:
  git-p4: add option to keep empty commits
2015-12-15 08:02:19 -08:00
897b18508b Merge branch 'jk/prune-mtime'
The helper used to iterate over loose object directories to prune
stale objects did not closedir() immediately when it is done with a
directory--a callback such as the one used for "git prune" may want
to do rmdir(), but it would fail on open directory on platforms
such as WinXP.

* jk/prune-mtime:
  prune: close directory earlier during loose-object directory traversal
2015-12-15 08:02:16 -08:00
785e70f467 git-p4: failing test case for skipping changes with multiple depots
James Farwell reported that with multiple depots git-p4 would
skip changes.

http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/282297

Add a failing test case demonstrating the problem.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-14 14:03:45 -08:00
ccab28a947 completion: fix completing unstuck email alias arguments
Completing unstuck form of email aliases doesn't quite work:

  $ git send-email --to <TAB>
  alice   bob     cecil
  $ git send-email --to a<TAB>
  alice   bob     cecil

While listing email aliases works as expected, the second case should
just complete to 'alice', but it keeps offering all email aliases
instead.

The cause for this behavior is that in this case we mistakenly tell
__gitcomp() explicitly that the current word to be completed is empty,
while in reality it is not.  As a result __gitcomp() doesn't filter
out non-matching aliases, so all aliases end up being offered over and
over again.

Fix this by not passing the current word to be completed to
__gitcomp() and letting it go the default route and grab it from the
'$cur' variable.  Don't pass empty prefix either, because it's assumed
to be empty when unspecified, so it's not necessary.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-14 14:01:37 -08:00
fff69f7053 push: add '--delete' flag to synopsis
The delete flag is not mentioned in the synopsis of `git-push`.
Add the flag to make it more discoverable.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-14 13:47:03 -08:00
3e56e7245c sha1_file.c: introduce a null_oid constant
null_oid is the struct object_id equivalent to null_sha1.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-14 13:35:54 -08:00
58d29ececf ident: fix undefined variable when NO_IPV6 is set
Commit 00bce77 (ident.c: add support for IPv6, 2015-11-27)
moved the "gethostbyname" call out of "add_domainname" and
into the helper function "canonical_name". But when moving
the code, it forgot that the "buf" variable is passed as
"host" in the helper.

Reported-by: johan defries <johandefries@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-14 13:06:00 -08:00
92bcbb9b33 ident: loosen getpwuid error in non-strict mode
If the user has not specified an identity and we have to
turn to getpwuid() to find the username or gecos field, we
die immediately when getpwuid fails (e.g., because the user
does not exist). This is OK for making a commit, where we
have set IDENT_STRICT and would want to bail on bogus input.

But for something like a reflog, where the ident is "best
effort", it can be pain. For instance, even running "git
clone" with a UID that is not in /etc/passwd will result in
git barfing, just because we can't find an ident to put in
the reflog.

Instead of dying in xgetpwuid_self, we can instead return a
fallback value, and set a "bogus" flag. For the username in
an email, we already have a "default_email_is_bogus" flag.
For the name field, we introduce (and check) a matching
"default_name_is_bogus" flag. As a bonus, this means you now
get the usual "tell me who you are" advice instead of just a
"no such user" error.

No tests, as this is dependent on configuration outside of
git's control. However, I did confirm that it behaves
sensibly when I delete myself from the local /etc/passwd
(reflogs get written, and commits complain).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-14 11:44:38 -08:00
843565a8ed l10n: vi.po: Updated translation (2477t)
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2015-12-12 14:34:08 +07:00
4f7214bf19 gitk: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (311t)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-12-12 13:48:20 +11:00
cae4b60a98 gitk: Let .bleft.mid widgets 'breathe'
The widgets on top of the diff window are very tightly packed. Make
them breathe a little by adding an 'i'-spaced padding between them.

Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Bilotta <giuseppe.bilotta@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-12-12 13:43:53 +11:00
6cb73c84e1 gitk: Match ttk fonts to gitk fonts
The fonts set in setoptions aren't consistently picked up by ttk, which
uses its own predefined fonts. This is noticeable when switching
between using and not using ttk with custom fonts or in HiDPI settings
(where the default TTK fonts do _not_ respect tk sclaing).

Fix by mapping the ttk fontset to the one used by gitk internally.

Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Bilotta <giuseppe.bilotta@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-12-12 13:43:52 +11:00
040fd39e67 rebase -i: remember merge options beyond continue actions
If the user explicitly specified a merge strategy or strategy
options, continue to use that strategy/option after
"rebase --continue".  Add a test of the corrected behavior.

If --merge is specified or implied by -s or -X, then "strategy and
"strategy_opts" are set to values from which "strategy_args" can be
derived; otherwise they are set to empty strings.  Either way,
their values are propagated from one step of an interactive rebase
to the next via state files.

"do_merge", on the other hand, is *not* propagated to later steps of
an interactive rebase.  Therefore, making the initialization of
"strategy_args" conditional on "do_merge" being set prevents later
steps of an interactive rebase from setting it correctly.

Luckily, we don't need the "do_merge" guard at all.  If the rebase
was started without --merge, then "strategy" and "strategy_opts"
are both the empty string, which results in "strategy_args" also
being set to the empty string, which is just what we want in that
situation.  So remove the "do_merge" guard and derive
"strategy_args" from "strategy" and "strategy_opts" every time.

Reported-by: Diogo de Campos <campos@esss.com.br>
Signed-off-by: Fabian Ruch <bafain@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-11 12:44:44 -08:00
160fcdb007 completion: remove 'git column' from porcelain commands
'git column' is an internal helper, so it should not be offered on
'git <TAB>' along with porcelain commands.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-11 12:43:16 -08:00
4b9ab0ee01 Update release notes to 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-11 11:20:23 -08:00
52b2e6be99 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  Prepare for 2.6.5
2015-12-11 11:19:43 -08:00
49e863b02a Prepare for 2.6.5
This back-merges hopefully the last batch of trivially correct fixes
to the 2.6.x maintenance track from the master branch.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-11 11:17:47 -08:00
58e3dd21f6 Merge branch 'sn/null-pointer-arith-in-mark-tree-uninteresting' into maint
mark_tree_uninteresting() has code to handle the case where it gets
passed a NULL pointer in its 'tree' parameter, but the function had
'object = &tree->object' assignment before checking if tree is
NULL.  This gives a compiler an excuse to declare that tree will
never be NULL and apply a wrong optimization.  Avoid it.

* sn/null-pointer-arith-in-mark-tree-uninteresting:
  revision.c: fix possible null pointer arithmetic
2015-12-11 11:14:38 -08:00
abca668a93 Merge branch 'sg/lock-file-commit-error' into maint
Cosmetic improvement to lock-file error messages.

* sg/lock-file-commit-error:
  Make error message after failing commit_lock_file() less confusing
2015-12-11 11:14:18 -08:00
76058817e8 Merge branch 'cb/t3404-shellquote' into maint
* cb/t3404-shellquote:
  t3404: fix quoting of redirect for some versions of bash
2015-12-11 11:14:18 -08:00
17e5bcab71 Merge branch 'sb/doc-submodule-sync-recursive' into maint
* sb/doc-submodule-sync-recursive:
  document submodule sync --recursive
2015-12-11 11:14:17 -08:00
63b3db71d8 Merge branch 'nd/doc-check-ref-format-typo' into maint
* nd/doc-check-ref-format-typo:
  git-check-ref-format.txt: typo, s/avoids/avoid/
2015-12-11 11:14:15 -08:00
288fe0cfb6 Merge branch 'rs/show-branch-argv-array' into maint
Code simplification.

* rs/show-branch-argv-array:
  show-branch: use argv_array for default arguments
2015-12-11 11:14:14 -08:00
0af22d6fff Merge branch 'rs/pop-commit' into maint
Code simplification.

* rs/pop-commit:
  use pop_commit() for consuming the first entry of a struct commit_list
2015-12-11 11:14:13 -08:00
8c0a546670 Merge branch 'as/subtree-with-spaces' into maint
Update "git subtree" (in contrib/) so that it can take whitespaces
in the pathnames, not only in the in-tree pathname but the name of
the directory that the repository is in.

* as/subtree-with-spaces:
  contrib/subtree: respect spaces in a repository path
  t7900-subtree: test the "space in a subdirectory name" case
2015-12-11 11:14:11 -08:00
4cb5488fa6 Merge branch 'jk/test-lint-forbid-when-finished-in-subshell' into maint
Because "test_when_finished" in our test framework queues the
clean-up tasks to be done in a shell variable, it should not be
used inside a subshell.  Add a mechanism to allow 'bash' to catch
such uses, and fix the ones that were found.

* jk/test-lint-forbid-when-finished-in-subshell:
  test-lib-functions: detect test_when_finished in subshell
  t7800: don't use test_config in a subshell
  test-lib-functions: support "test_config -C <dir> ..."
  t5801: don't use test_when_finished in a subshell
  t7610: don't use test_config in a subshell
2015-12-11 11:14:10 -08:00
782ca8c44e Merge branch 'sn/null-pointer-arith-in-mark-tree-uninteresting'
mark_tree_uninteresting() has code to handle the case where it gets
passed a NULL pointer in its 'tree' parameter, but the function had
'object = &tree->object' assignment before checking if tree is
NULL.  This gives a compiler an excuse to declare that tree will
never be NULL and apply a wrong optimization.  Avoid it.

* sn/null-pointer-arith-in-mark-tree-uninteresting:
  revision.c: fix possible null pointer arithmetic
2015-12-11 10:41:01 -08:00
fa41b05253 Merge branch 'sb/doc-submodule-sync-recursive'
* sb/doc-submodule-sync-recursive:
  document submodule sync --recursive
2015-12-11 10:41:00 -08:00
c87eec9784 Merge branch 'cb/t3404-shellquote'
* cb/t3404-shellquote:
  t3404: fix quoting of redirect for some versions of bash
2015-12-11 10:40:58 -08:00
e0048d3e0d Merge branch 'sg/lock-file-commit-error'
Cosmetic improvement to lock-file error messages.

* sg/lock-file-commit-error:
  Make error message after failing commit_lock_file() less confusing
2015-12-11 10:40:55 -08:00
9d605249e5 send-email: enable SSL level 1 debug output
If a server's certificate isn't accepted by send-email, the output is:

	Unable to initialize SMTP properly. Check config and use --smtp-debug.

but adding --smtp-debug=1 just produces the same output since we don't
get as far as talking SMTP.

Turning on SSL debug at level 1 gives:

	DEBUG: .../IO/Socket/SSL.pm:1796: SSL connect attempt failed error:14090086:SSL routines:ssl3_get_server_certificate:certificate verify failed
	DEBUG: .../IO/Socket/SSL.pm:673: fatal SSL error: SSL connect attempt failed error:14090086:SSL routines:ssl3_get_server_certificate:certificate verify failed
	DEBUG: .../IO/Socket/SSL.pm:1780: IO::Socket::IP configuration failed

IO::Socket::SSL defines level 1 debug as "print out errors from
IO::Socket::SSL and ciphers from Net::SSLeay".  In fact, it aliases
Net::SSLeay::trace which is defined to guarantee silence at level 0 and
only emit error messages at level 1, so let's enable it by default.

The modification of warnings is needed to avoid a warning about:

	Name "IO::Socket::SSL::DEBUG" used only once: possible typo

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-11 09:41:10 -08:00
f4f2c8f87e l10n: git.pot: v2.7.0 round 1 (66 new, 29 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.7.0-rc0 for git v2.7.0 l10n round 1.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-12-11 23:37:11 +08:00
c65da26899 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: fr.po: Fix typo
  l10n: fr.po: Fix typo
2015-12-11 23:33:45 +08:00
19ce497cf5 ident: keep a flag for bogus default_email
If we have to deduce the user's email address and can't come
up with something plausible for the hostname, we simply
write "(none)" or ".(none)" in the hostname.

Later, our strict-check is forced to use strstr to look for
this magic string. This is probably not a problem in
practice, but it's rather ugly. Let's keep an extra flag
that tells us the email is bogus, and check that instead.

We could get away with simply setting the global in
add_domainname(); it only gets called to write into
git_default_email. However, let's make the code a little
more obvious to future readers by actually passing a pointer
to our "bogus" flag down the call-chain.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-10 15:39:25 -08:00
e850194c83 ident: make xgetpwuid_self() a static local helper
This function is defined in wrapper.c, but nobody besides
ident.c uses it. And nobody is likely to in the future,
either, as anything that cares about the user's name should
be going through the ident code.

Moving it here is a cleanup of the global namespace, but it
will also enable further cleanups inside ident.c.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-10 15:38:59 -08:00
7d722536dd Git 2.7-rc0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-10 12:59:37 -08:00
39e07f77b6 Sync with maint
* maint:
  Documentation/git-update-index: add missing opts to synopsis
2015-12-10 12:45:17 -08:00
86c95ac5d2 Update release notes to 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-10 12:43:52 -08:00
56d63d0eab Merge branch 'nd/doc-check-ref-format-typo'
* nd/doc-check-ref-format-typo:
  git-check-ref-format.txt: typo, s/avoids/avoid/
2015-12-10 12:36:15 -08:00
844a9ce472 Merge branch 'bc/object-id'
More transition from "unsigned char[40]" to "struct object_id".

This needed a few merge fixups, but is mostly disentangled from other
topics.

* bc/object-id:
  remote: convert functions to struct object_id
  Remove get_object_hash.
  Convert struct object to object_id
  Add several uses of get_object_hash.
  object: introduce get_object_hash macro.
  ref_newer: convert to use struct object_id
  push_refs_with_export: convert to struct object_id
  get_remote_heads: convert to struct object_id
  parse_fetch: convert to use struct object_id
  add_sought_entry_mem: convert to struct object_id
  Convert struct ref to use object_id.
  sha1_file: introduce has_object_file helper.
2015-12-10 12:36:13 -08:00
b12a966eff Merge branch 'dt/fsck-verify-pack-error'
The exit code of git-fsck didnot reflect some types of errors found
in packed objects, which has been corrected.

* dt/fsck-verify-pack-error:
  verify_pack: do not ignore return value of verification function
2015-12-10 12:36:12 -08:00
9eb2449c35 Merge branch 'ls/travis-yaml'
The necessary infrastructure to build topics using the free Travis
CI has been added. Developers forking from this topic (and enabling
Travis) can do their own builds, and we can turn on auto-builds for
git/git (including build-status for pull requests that people
open).

* ls/travis-yaml:
  Add Travis CI support
2015-12-10 12:36:12 -08:00
bc49712789 Documentation/git-update-index: add missing opts to synopsis
Split index related options should appear in the 'SYNOPSIS'
section.

These options are already documented in the 'OPTIONS' section.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-10 12:21:26 -08:00
4ae048e67e git-p4: add option to keep empty commits
A changelist that contains only excluded files due to a client spec was
imported as an empty commit. Fix that issue by ignoring these commits.
Add option "git-p4.keepEmptyCommits" to make the previous behavior
available.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Pete Harlan
Acked-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-10 10:45:02 -08:00
545299f822 Merge branch 'ep/ident-with-getaddrinfo'
A build without NO_IPv6 used to use gethostbyname() when guessing
user's hostname, instead of getaddrinfo() that is used in other
codepaths in such a build.

* ep/ident-with-getaddrinfo:
  ident.c: add support for IPv6
2015-12-08 14:14:50 -08:00
2b597f3307 Merge branch 'ls/test-must-fail-sigpipe'
Fix some racy client/server tests by treating SIGPIPE the same as a
normal non-zero exit.

* ls/test-must-fail-sigpipe:
  add "ok=sigpipe" to test_must_fail and use it to fix flaky tests
  implement test_might_fail using a refactored test_must_fail
2015-12-08 14:14:49 -08:00
b1cda70fff Merge branch 'dt/refs-backend-pre-vtable'
Code preparation for pluggable ref backends.

* dt/refs-backend-pre-vtable:
  refs: break out ref conflict checks
  files_log_ref_write: new function
  initdb: make safe_create_dir public
  refs: split filesystem-based refs code into a new file
  refs/refs-internal.h: new header file
  refname_is_safe(): improve docstring
  pack_if_possible_fn(): use ref_type() instead of is_per_worktree_ref()
  copy_msg(): rename to copy_reflog_msg()
  verify_refname_available(): new function
  verify_refname_available(): rename function
2015-12-08 14:14:49 -08:00
fa5f2398e5 Sync with 2.6.4 2015-12-08 14:13:52 -08:00
bdfc6b364a Git 2.6.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-08 14:12:45 -08:00
4d0069f277 Merge branch 'rs/status-detached-head-memcmp' into maint
Fix some string-matching corner cases when digging in the reflog for
"git status".

* rs/status-detached-head-memcmp:
  wt-status: correct and simplify check for detached HEAD
2015-12-08 14:11:32 -08:00
b5d2d8eef0 Merge branch 'ad/sha1-update-chunked' into maint
Apple's common crypto implementation of SHA1_Update() does not take
more than 4GB at a time, and we now have a compile-time workaround
for it.

* ad/sha1-update-chunked:
  sha1: allow limiting the size of the data passed to SHA1_Update()
  sha1: provide another level of indirection for the SHA-1 functions
2015-12-08 14:05:03 -08:00
e6ed5a438c Merge branch 'sg/bash-prompt-dirty-orphan' into maint
Produce correct "dirty" marker for shell prompts, even when we
are on an orphan or an unborn branch.

* sg/bash-prompt-dirty-orphan:
  bash prompt: indicate dirty index even on orphan branches
  bash prompt: remove a redundant 'git diff' option
  bash prompt: test dirty index and worktree while on an orphan branch
2015-12-08 14:05:02 -08:00
22386ad6ee Merge branch 'jk/interpret-trailers-outside-a-repository' into maint
Allow "git interpret-trailers" to run outside of a Git repository.

* jk/interpret-trailers-outside-a-repository:
  interpret-trailers: allow running outside a repository
2015-12-08 14:05:02 -08:00
697bd2871c Merge branch 'jk/rebase-no-autostash' into maint
There was no way to defeat a configured rebase.autostash variable
from the command line, as "git rebase --no-autostash" was missing.

* jk/rebase-no-autostash:
  Documentation/git-rebase: fix --no-autostash formatting
  rebase: support --no-autostash
2015-12-08 14:05:01 -08:00
a2678df335 revision.c: fix possible null pointer arithmetic
mark_tree_uninteresting() dereferences a tree pointer before
checking if the pointer is valid. Fix that by doing the check first.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Naewe <stefan.naewe@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-07 12:32:02 -08:00
7f0871c954 l10n: fr.po: Fix typo
Signed-off-by: Audric Schiltknecht <storm@chemicalstorm.org>
2015-12-04 18:38:58 -05:00
7966230b7d t3404: fix quoting of redirect for some versions of bash
As CodingGuidelines says, some versions of bash errors out when
$variable substitution is used as the target for redirection without
being quoted (even though POSIX may not require such a quote).

Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-04 14:05:18 -08:00
56a8aea0c6 git-check-ref-format.txt: typo, s/avoids/avoid/
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-04 13:09:48 -08:00
e7220c40b1 document submodule sync --recursive
The git-submodule(1) is inconsistent. In the synopsis, it says:

       git submodule [--quiet] sync [--recursive] [--] [<path>...]

The description of the sync does not mention --recursive, and the
description of --recursive says that it is only available for foreach,
update and status.

The option was introduced (82f49f294c, Teach --recursive to submodule
sync, 2012-10-26) a while ago, so let's document it, too.

Reported-by: Per Cederqvist <cederp@opera.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-04 13:08:05 -08:00
d34141cd08 push: follow the "last one wins" convention for --recurse-submodules
Use the "last one wins" convention for --recurse-submodules rather
than treating conflicting options as an error.

Also, fix the declaration of the file-scope recurse_submodules
global variable to put it on a separate line.

Signed-off-by: Mike Crowe <mac@mcrowe.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-04 13:04:04 -08:00
f5c7cd9ecf push: test that --recurse-submodules on command line overrides config
t5531 only checked that the push.recurseSubmodules config option was
overridden by passing --recurse-submodules=check on the command
line.  Add new tests for overriding with --recurse-submodules=no,
--no-recurse-submodules and --recurse-submodules=push too.

Also correct minor typo in test commit message.

Signed-off-by: Mike Crowe <mac@mcrowe.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-04 13:03:23 -08:00
e5da8655b2 Sync with maint
* maint:
  Prepare for 2.6.4
2015-12-04 11:39:56 -08:00
9a8c740225 Prepare for 2.6.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-04 11:39:19 -08:00
aa0b4c31d9 Merge branch 'da/difftool' into maint
The code to prepare the working tree side of temporary directory
for the "dir-diff" feature forgot that symbolic links need not be
copied (or symlinked) to the temporary area, as the code already
special cases and overwrites them.  Besides, it was wrong to try
computing the object name of the target of symbolic link, which may
not even exist or may be a directory.

* da/difftool:
  difftool: ignore symbolic links in use_wt_file
2015-12-04 11:34:24 -08:00
b50ceab48f Merge branch 'dk/gc-idx-wo-pack' into maint
Having a leftover .idx file without corresponding .pack file in
the repository hurts performance; "git gc" learned to prune them.

We may want to do the same for .bitmap (and notice but not prune
.keep) without corresponding .pack, but that can be a separate
topic.

* dk/gc-idx-wo-pack:
  gc: remove garbage .idx files from pack dir
  t5304: test cleaning pack garbage
  prepare_packed_git(): refactor garbage reporting in pack directory
2015-12-04 11:33:08 -08:00
9ed86a5d4e RelNotes update for 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-12-04 11:31:28 -08:00
80c17cac36 Merge branch 'sg/bash-prompt-dirty-orphan'
Produce correct "dirty" marker for shell prompts, even when we
are on an orphan or an unborn branch.

* sg/bash-prompt-dirty-orphan:
  bash prompt: indicate dirty index even on orphan branches
  bash prompt: remove a redundant 'git diff' option
  bash prompt: test dirty index and worktree while on an orphan branch
2015-12-04 11:19:12 -08:00
3a5b6eeceb Merge branch 'np/credential-cache-sighup'
Workaround for using credential-cache with emacs.

* np/credential-cache-sighup:
  credential-cache: new option to ignore sighup
2015-12-04 11:19:11 -08:00
2d808073db Merge branch 'rs/parseopt-short-help'
Make "-h" command line option work more consistently in all commands.

* rs/parseopt-short-help:
  show-ref: stop using PARSE_OPT_NO_INTERNAL_HELP
  grep: stop using PARSE_OPT_NO_INTERNAL_HELP
  parse-options: allow -h as a short option
  parse-options: inline parse_options_usage() at its only remaining caller
  parse-options: deduplicate parse_options_usage() calls
2015-12-04 11:19:11 -08:00
c69d08df96 Merge branch 'jk/send-email-complete-aliases'
Teach send-email to dump mail aliases, so that we can do tab completion
on the command line.

* jk/send-email-complete-aliases:
  completion: add support for completing email aliases
  sendemail: teach git-send-email to dump alias names
2015-12-04 11:19:11 -08:00
2e5adec97a Merge branch 'jk/filter-branch-no-index'
Speed up filter-branch for cases where we only care about rewriting
commits, not tree data.

* jk/filter-branch-no-index:
  filter-branch: skip index read/write when possible
2015-12-04 11:19:10 -08:00
4672123fe5 Merge branch 'ad/sha1-update-chunked'
Apple's common crypto implementation of SHA1_Update() does not take
more than 4GB at a time, and we now have a compile-time workaround
for it.

* ad/sha1-update-chunked:
  sha1: allow limiting the size of the data passed to SHA1_Update()
  sha1: provide another level of indirection for the SHA-1 functions
2015-12-04 11:19:10 -08:00
fd13a2ecfb Merge branch 'mk/blame-first-parent'
Regression fix for a topic already in master.

* mk/blame-first-parent:
  blame: fix object casting regression
2015-12-01 18:54:58 -05:00
43ed3827ed Merge branch 'jk/send-email-ca-path'
Use a safer behavior when we hit errors verifying remote certificates.

* jk/send-email-ca-path:
  send-email: die if CA path doesn't exist
2015-12-01 18:54:54 -05:00
e2187fe520 Merge branch 'rs/fsck-nul-header'
Fsck did not correctly detect a NUL-truncated header in a tag.

* rs/fsck-nul-header:
  fsck: treat a NUL in a tag header as an error
  t1450: add tests for NUL in headers of commits and tags
2015-12-01 18:54:47 -05:00
fa7095e63d Merge branch 'ls/p4-test-timeouts'
Work around some test flakiness with p4d.

* ls/p4-test-timeouts:
  git-p4: add trap to kill p4d on test exit
  git-p4: add p4d timeout in tests
  git-p4: retry kill/cleanup operations in tests with timeout
2015-12-01 18:54:40 -05:00
e0dd81b08e Merge branch 'js/test-modernize-t9300'
Clean up style in an ancient test.

* js/test-modernize-t9300:
  modernize t9300: move test preparations into test_expect_success
  modernize t9300: mark here-doc words to ignore tab indentation
  modernize t9300: use test_when_finished for clean-up
  modernize t9300: wrap lines after &&
  modernize t9300: use test_must_be_empty
  modernize t9300: use test_must_fail
  modernize t9300: single-quote placement and indentation
2015-12-01 18:54:37 -05:00
d0e8377b90 Merge branch 'jk/send-email-expand-paths'
Expand paths in some send-email config variables.

* jk/send-email-expand-paths:
  send-email: expand path in sendemail.smtpsslcertpath config
2015-12-01 18:54:34 -05:00
30fe9b2f9a Merge branch 'dg/subtree-test-cleanup'
Test cleanups for the subtree project.

* dg/subtree-test-cleanup:
  contrib/subtree: Handle '--prefix' argument with a slash appended
  contrib/subtree: Make each test self-contained
  contrib/subtree: Add split tests
  contrib/subtree: Add merge tests
  contrib/subtree: Add tests for subtree add
  contrib/subtree: Add test for missing subtree
  contrib/subtree: Clean and refactor test code
2015-12-01 18:54:31 -05:00
23bc35f3dc Merge branch 'dt/http-range'
Portability fix for a topic already in 'master'.

* dt/http-range:
  http: fix some printf format warnings
2015-12-01 18:54:28 -05:00
8c24d832cd verify_pack: do not ignore return value of verification function
In verify_pack, a caller-supplied verification function is called.
The function returns an int.  If that return value is non-zero,
verify_pack should fail.

The only caller of verify_pack is in builtin/fsck.c, whose verify_fn
returns a meaningful error code (which was then ignored).  Now, fsck
might return a different error code (with more detail).  This would
happen in the unlikely event that a commit or tree that is a valid git
object but not a valid instance of its type gets into a pack.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-12-01 18:19:35 -05:00
08a3651fe7 Make error message after failing commit_lock_file() less confusing
The error message after a failing commit_lock_file() call sometimes
looks like this, causing confusion:

  $ git remote add remote git@server.com/repo.git
  error: could not commit config file .git/config
  # Huh?!
  # I didn't want to commit anything, especially not my config file!

While in the narrow context of the lockfile module using the verb
'commit' in the error message makes perfect sense, in the broader
context of git the word 'commit' already has a very specific meaning,
hence the confusion.

Reword these error messages to say "could not write" instead of "could
not commit".

While at it, include strerror in the error messages after writing the
config file or the credential store fails to provide some information
about the cause of the failure, and update the style of the error
message after writing the reflog fails to match surrounding error
messages (i.e. no '' around the pathname and no () around the error
description).

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-12-01 18:17:23 -05:00
40fdcc5357 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  http: treat config options sslCAPath and sslCAInfo as paths
  Documentation/diff: give --word-diff-regex=. example
  filter-branch: deal with object name vs. pathname ambiguity in tree-filter
  check-ignore: correct documentation about output
  git-p4: clean up after p4 submit failure
  git-p4: work with a detached head
  git-p4: add option to system() to return subshell status
  git-p4: add failing test for submit from detached head
  remote-http(s): support SOCKS proxies
  t5813: avoid creating urls that break on cygwin
  Escape Git's exec path in contrib/rerere-train.sh script
  allow hooks to ignore their standard input stream
  rebase-i-exec: Allow space in SHELL_PATH
  Documentation: make environment variable formatting more consistent
2015-12-01 17:32:38 -05:00
908a6e4156 Merge branch 'eg/p4-submit-catch-failure' into maint
Just like the working tree is cleaned up when the user cancelled
submission in P4Submit.applyCommit(), clean up the mess if "p4
submit" fails.

* eg/p4-submit-catch-failure:
  git-p4: clean up after p4 submit failure
2015-12-01 17:24:21 -05:00
35f263545c Merge branch 'dk/check-ignore-docs' into maint
Documentation clarification for "check-ignore" without "--verbose".

* dk/check-ignore-docs:
  check-ignore: correct documentation about output
2015-12-01 17:21:32 -05:00
5b228f956a Merge branch 'ld/p4-detached-head' into maint
Make git-p4 work on a detached head.

* ld/p4-detached-head:
  git-p4: work with a detached head
  git-p4: add option to system() to return subshell status
  git-p4: add failing test for submit from detached head
2015-12-01 17:21:29 -05:00
978b5760a1 Merge branch 'sg/filter-branch-dwim-ambiguity' into maint
Fix for a corner case in filter-branch.

* sg/filter-branch-dwim-ambiguity:
  filter-branch: deal with object name vs. pathname ambiguity in tree-filter
2015-12-01 17:21:17 -05:00
2cc36407df Merge branch 'mg/doc-word-diff-example' into maint
* mg/doc-word-diff-example:
  Documentation/diff: give --word-diff-regex=. example
2015-12-01 17:21:11 -05:00
712a12e506 Merge branch 'cb/ssl-config-pathnames' into maint
Allow tilde-expansion in some http config variables.

* cb/ssl-config-pathnames:
  http: treat config options sslCAPath and sslCAInfo as paths
2015-12-01 17:21:01 -05:00
76fdb0640e Merge branch 'dk/t5813-unc-paths' into maint
Test portability fix for a topic in v2.6.1.

* dk/t5813-unc-paths:
  t5813: avoid creating urls that break on cygwin
2015-12-01 17:20:52 -05:00
3840d2d617 Merge branch 'dk/rerere-train-quoting' into maint
Fix shell quoting in contrib script.

* dk/rerere-train-quoting:
  Escape Git's exec path in contrib/rerere-train.sh script
2015-12-01 17:20:46 -05:00
347acea06a Merge branch 'cb/hook-sigpipe' into maint
We now consistently allow all hooks to ignore their standard input,
rather than having git complain of SIGPIPE.

* cb/hook-sigpipe:
  allow hooks to ignore their standard input stream
2015-12-01 17:19:52 -05:00
45e330f512 Merge branch 'fm/shell-path-whitespace' into maint
Portability fix for Windows, which may rewrite $SHELL variable using
non-POSIX paths.

* fm/shell-path-whitespace:
  rebase-i-exec: Allow space in SHELL_PATH
2015-12-01 17:19:37 -05:00
2945adcc2d Merge branch 'ar/doc-env-variable-format' into maint
Minor documentation fixup.

* ar/doc-env-variable-format:
  Documentation: make environment variable formatting more consistent
2015-12-01 17:19:33 -05:00
92b9bf4a15 Merge branch 'pt/http-socks-proxy' into maint
Add support for talking http/https over socks proxy.

* pt/http-socks-proxy:
  remote-http(s): support SOCKS proxies
2015-12-01 17:19:12 -05:00
cd76778049 Merge branch 'rc/configure-use-libs-when-checking-a-lib' into maint
The "configure" script did not test for -lpthread correctly, which
upset some linkers.

* rc/configure-use-libs-when-checking-a-lib:
  configure.ac: use $LIBS not $CFLAGS when testing -lpthread
2015-12-01 17:19:06 -05:00
904de44c1c wt-status: correct and simplify check for detached HEAD
If a branch name is longer than four characters then memcmp() reads over
the end of the static string "HEAD".  This causes the following test
failures with AddressSanitizer:

t3203-branch-output.sh                           (Wstat: 256 Tests: 18 Failed: 4)
  Failed tests:  12, 15-17
  Non-zero exit status: 1
t3412-rebase-root.sh                             (Wstat: 256 Tests: 31 Failed: 3)
  Failed tests:  28-29, 31
  Non-zero exit status: 1
t3507-cherry-pick-conflict.sh                    (Wstat: 256 Tests: 31 Failed: 4)
  Failed tests:  14, 29-31
  Non-zero exit status: 1
t3510-cherry-pick-sequence.sh                    (Wstat: 256 Tests: 39 Failed: 14)
  Failed tests:  17, 22-26, 28-30, 34-35, 37-39
  Non-zero exit status: 1
t3420-rebase-autostash.sh                        (Wstat: 256 Tests: 28 Failed: 4)
  Failed tests:  24-27
  Non-zero exit status: 1
t3404-rebase-interactive.sh                      (Wstat: 256 Tests: 91 Failed: 57)
  Failed tests:  17, 19, 21-42, 44, 46-74, 77, 81-82
  Non-zero exit status: 1
t3900-i18n-commit.sh                             (Wstat: 256 Tests: 34 Failed: 1)
  Failed test:  34
  Non-zero exit status: 1
t5407-post-rewrite-hook.sh                       (Wstat: 256 Tests: 14 Failed: 6)
  Failed tests:  9-14
  Non-zero exit status: 1
t7001-mv.sh                                      (Wstat: 256 Tests: 46 Failed: 5)
  Failed tests:  39-43
  Non-zero exit status: 1
t7509-commit.sh                                  (Wstat: 256 Tests: 12 Failed: 2)
  Failed tests:  11-12
  Non-zero exit status: 1
t7512-status-help.sh                             (Wstat: 256 Tests: 39 Failed: 35)
  Failed tests:  5-39
  Non-zero exit status: 1
t6030-bisect-porcelain.sh                        (Wstat: 256 Tests: 70 Failed: 1)
  Failed test:  13
  Non-zero exit status: 1

And if a branch is named "H", "HE", or "HEA" then the current if clause
erroneously considers it as matching "HEAD" because it only compares
up to the end of the branch name.

Fix that by doing the comparison using strcmp() and only after the
branch name is extracted.  This way neither too less nor too many
characters are checked.  While at it call strchrnul() to find the end
of the branch name instead of open-coding it.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-28 12:30:18 -05:00
00bce77fe5 ident.c: add support for IPv6
Add IPv6 support by implementing name resolution with the
protocol agnostic getaddrinfo(3) API. The old gethostbyname(3)
code is still available when git is compiled with NO_IPV6.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-28 12:20:42 -05:00
522354d70f Add Travis CI support
The tests are currently executed on "Ubuntu 12.04 LTS Server Edition
64 bit" and on "OS X Mavericks" using gcc and clang.

Perforce and Git-LFS are installed and therefore available for the
respective tests.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-28 12:11:12 -05:00
8bf4becf0c add "ok=sigpipe" to test_must_fail and use it to fix flaky tests
t5516 "75 - deny fetch unreachable SHA1, allowtipsha1inwant=true" is
flaky in the following case:
1. remote upload-pack finds out "not our ref"
2. remote sends a response and closes the pipe
3. fetch-pack still tries to write commands to the remote upload-pack
4. write call in wrapper.c dies with SIGPIPE

The test is flaky because the sending fetch-pack may or may
not have finished writing its output by step (3). If it did,
then we see a closed pipe on the next read() call. If it
didn't, then we get the SIGPIPE from step (4) above. Both
are fine, but the latter fools test_must_fail.

t5504 "9 - push with transfer.fsckobjects" is flaky, too, and returns
SIGPIPE once in a while. I had to remove the final "To dst..." output
check because there is no output if the process dies with SIGPIPE.

Accept such a death-with-sigpipe also as OK when we are expecting a
failure.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-28 12:06:14 -05:00
bbfe5302d5 implement test_might_fail using a refactored test_must_fail
Add an (optional) first parameter "ok=<special case>" to test_must_fail
and return success for "<special case>". Add "success" as
"<special case>" and use it to implement "test_might_fail". This removes
redundancies in test-lib-function.sh.

You can pass multiple <special case> arguments divided by comma (e.g.
"test_must_fail ok=success,something")

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-28 12:04:28 -05:00
1bc8feaa7c Merge branch 'fp/subtree-todo-update'
Cross completed task off of subtree project's todo list.

* fp/subtree-todo-update:
  contrib/subtree: remove "push" command from the "todo" file
2015-11-24 19:06:54 -05:00
a3824e7145 Merge branch 'rc/configure-use-libs-when-checking-a-lib'
The "configure" script did not test for -lpthread correctly, which
upset some linkers.

* rc/configure-use-libs-when-checking-a-lib:
  configure.ac: use $LIBS not $CFLAGS when testing -lpthread
2015-11-24 19:06:33 -05:00
718a9e67b6 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  Documentation/git-update-index: add missing opts to synopsys
2015-11-24 19:04:41 -05:00
bf9acba2c1 http: treat config options sslCAPath and sslCAInfo as paths
This enables ~ and ~user expansion for these config options.

Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 18:51:00 -05:00
2c15c00651 Documentation/diff: give --word-diff-regex=. example
It's just so useful.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 18:38:46 -05:00
4d2a3646d1 filter-branch: deal with object name vs. pathname ambiguity in tree-filter
'git filter-branch' fails complaining about an ambiguous argument, if
a tree-filter renames a path and the new pathname happens to match an
existing object name.

After the tree-filter has been applied, 'git filter-branch' looks for
changed paths by running:

  git diff-index -r --name-only --ignore-submodules $commit

which then, because of the lack of disambiguating double-dash, can't
decide whether to treat '$commit' as revision or path and errors out.

Add that disambiguating double-dash after 'git diff-index's revision
argument to make sure that '$commit' is interpreted as a revision.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 18:37:50 -05:00
c55d65f3c5 send-email: die if CA path doesn't exist
If the CA path isn't found it's most likely to indicate a
misconfiguration, in which case accepting any certificate is unlikely to
be the correct thing to do.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 18:35:55 -05:00
219cbf091a check-ignore: correct documentation about output
By default git check-ignore shows only the filenames that will be
ignored, not the pattern that causes their exclusion. Instead of moving
the partial exclude pattern precendence information to the -v option
where it belongs, link to gitignore(5) which describes this more
thoroughly.

Signed-off-by: Dennis Kaarsemaker <dennis@kaarsemaker.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 17:13:36 -05:00
7cb5f7c44d blame: fix object casting regression
Commit 1b0d400 refactored the prepare_final() function so
that it could be reused in multiple places. Originally, the
loop had two outputs: a commit to stuff into sb->final, and
the name of the commit from the rev->pending array.

After the refactor, that loop is put in its own function
with a single return value: the object_array_entry from the
rev->pending array. This contains both the name and the object,
but with one important difference: the object is the
_original_ object found by the revision parser, not the
dereferenced commit. If one feeds a tag to "git blame", we
end up casting the tag object to a "struct commit", which
causes a segfault.

Instead, let's return the commit (properly casted) directly
from the function, and take the "name" as an optional
out-parameter. This does the right thing, and actually
simplifies the callers, who no longer need to cast or
dereference the object_array_entry themselves.

[test case by Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>]

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 17:07:04 -05:00
5d65fe312e contrib/subtree: unwrap tag refs
If a subtree was added using a tag ref, the tag ref is stored in
the subtree commit message instead of the underlying commit's ref.
To split or push subsequent changes to the subtree, the subtree
command needs to unwrap the tag ref.  This patch makes it do so.

The problem was described in a message to the mailing list from
Junio C Hamano dated 29 Apr 2014, with the subject "Re: git subtree
issue in more recent versions". The archived message can be found
at <http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/247503>.

Signed-off-by: Rob Mayoff <mayoff@dqd.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 16:53:35 -05:00
5cb2e162d2 Documentation/git-update-index: add missing opts to synopsys
Untracked cache related options should appear in the synopsis.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 15:44:40 -05:00
b7638fed42 git-p4: clean up after p4 submit failure
When "p4 submit" command fails in P4Submit.applyCommit, the
workspace is left with the changes.  We already have code to revert
the changes to the workspace when the user decides to cancel
submission by aborting the editor that edits the change description,
and we should treat the "p4 submit" failure the same way.

Clean the workspace if p4_write_pipe raised SystemExit, so that the
user don't have to do it themselves.

Signed-off-by: GIRARD Etienne <egirard@murex.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 15:41:59 -05:00
c26f70ceb3 bash prompt: indicate dirty index even on orphan branches
__git_ps1() doesn't indicate dirty index while on an orphan branch.

To check the dirtiness of the index, __git_ps1() runs 'git diff-index
--cached ... HEAD', which doesn't work on an orphan branch,
because HEAD doesn't point to a valid commit.

Run 'git diff ... --cached' instead, as it does the right thing both
on valid and invalid HEAD, i.e. compares the index to the existing
HEAD in the former case and to the empty tree in the latter.  This
fixes the two failing tests added in the first commit of this series.

The dirtiness of the worktree is already checked with 'git diff' and
is displayed correctly even on an orphan branch.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 15:27:01 -05:00
0af9f7ecb8 bash prompt: remove a redundant 'git diff' option
To get the dirty state indicator __git_ps1() runs 'git diff' with
'--quiet --exit-code' options.  '--quiet' already implies
'--exit-code', so the latter is unnecessary and can be removed.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 15:27:01 -05:00
a30d11ebdf bash prompt: test dirty index and worktree while on an orphan branch
There is only a single test exercising the dirty state indicator on an
orphan branch, and in that test neither the index nor the worktree are
dirty.

Add two failing tests to check the dirty state indicator while either
the index is dirty or while both the index and the worktree are dirty
on an orphan branch, and to show that the dirtiness of the index is
not displayed in these cases (the fourth combination, i.e. clean index
and dirty worktree are impossible on an orphan branch).  Update the
existing dirty state indicator on clean orphan branch test to match
the style of the two new tests, most importantly to use 'git checkout
--orphan' instead of cd-ing into a repository that just happens to be
empty and clean.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 15:27:01 -05:00
00ad6e3182 git-p4: work with a detached head
When submitting, git-p4 finds the current branch in
order to know if it is allowed to submit (configuration
"git-p4.allowSubmit").

On a detached head, detecting the branch would fail, and
git-p4 would report a cryptic error.

This change teaches git-p4 to recognise a detached head and
submit successfully.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 15:20:15 -05:00
cbff4b25e4 git-p4: add option to system() to return subshell status
Add an optional parameter ignore_error to the git-p4 system()
function. If used, it will return the subshell exit status
rather than throwing an exception.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 15:20:15 -05:00
74b6fe9202 git-p4: add failing test for submit from detached head
git-p4 can't submit from a detached head. This test case
demonstrates the problem.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-24 15:20:15 -05:00
b33a15b081 push: add recurseSubmodules config option
The --recurse-submodules command line parameter has existed for some
time but it has no config file equivalent.

Following the style of the corresponding parameter for git fetch, let's
invent push.recurseSubmodules to provide a default for this
parameter. This also requires the addition of --recurse-submodules=no to
allow the configuration to be overridden on the command line when
required.

The most straightforward way to implement this appears to be to make
push use code in submodule-config in a similar way to fetch.

Signed-off-by: Mike Crowe <mac@mcrowe.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:07 -05:00
7f4d4746c1 credential-cache: new option to ignore sighup
Introduce new option "credentialCache.ignoreSIGHUP" which stops
git-credential-cache--daemon from quitting on SIGHUP.  This is useful
when "git push" is started from Emacs, because all child
processes (including the daemon) will receive a SIGHUP when "git push"
exits.

Signed-off-by: Noam Postavsky <npostavs@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:07 -05:00
42fdf86e5f show-ref: stop using PARSE_OPT_NO_INTERNAL_HELP
The flag PARSE_OPT_NO_INTERNAL_HELP is set to allow overriding the
option -h, except when it's the only one given.  This is the default
behavior now, so remove the flag and the hand-rolled --help-all
handling.  The internal --help-all handler now actually shows hidden
options, i.e. -h in this case.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:07 -05:00
8a272f291a fsck: treat a NUL in a tag header as an error
We check the return value of verify_header() for commits already, so do
the same for tags as well.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:07 -05:00
4441549995 grep: stop using PARSE_OPT_NO_INTERNAL_HELP
The flag PARSE_OPT_NO_INTERNAL_HELP is set to allow overriding the
option -h, except when it's the only one given.  This is the default
behavior now, so remove the flag and the hand-rolled --help-all
handling.  The internal --help-all handler now actually shows hidden
options, i.e. --debug in this case.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:07 -05:00
80c7f5a011 t1450: add tests for NUL in headers of commits and tags
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:07 -05:00
5ad0d3d526 parse-options: allow -h as a short option
Let callers provide their own handler for the short option -h even
without the flag PARSE_OPT_NO_INTERNAL_HELP, but call the internal
handler (showing usage information) if that is the only parameter.
Implement the first part by checking for -h only if parse_short_opt()
can't find it and returns -2.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:07 -05:00
d3d1f8c46f parse-options: inline parse_options_usage() at its only remaining caller
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:07 -05:00
ac20ff6daa parse-options: deduplicate parse_options_usage() calls
Avoid long lines and repeating parse_options_usage() calls with their
duplicate parameters by providing labels with speaking names to jump to.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:07 -05:00
dfbe5eeb32 completion: add support for completing email aliases
Using the new --dump-aliases option from git-send-email, add completion
for --to, --cc, --bcc, and --from with the available configured aliases.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:06 -05:00
dfe90e8b52 git-p4: add trap to kill p4d on test exit
Sometimes the "prove" test runner hangs on test exit because p4d is
still running. Add a trap to always kill "p4d" on test exit.

You can reproduce the problem by commenting "P4D_TIMEOUT" in
"lib-git-p4.sh" and running "prove ./t9800-git-p4-basic.sh".

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:06 -05:00
68297e0fd8 modernize t9300: move test preparations into test_expect_success
Our usual style these days is to execute everything inside
test_expect_success. Make it so.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:06 -05:00
6e07a3b51b send-email: expand path in sendemail.smtpsslcertpath config
As it says in the name, the SSL certificate path is a path so treat it
as one and support tilde-expansion.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:06 -05:00
17b7a83244 sendemail: teach git-send-email to dump alias names
Add an option "--dump-aliases" which changes the default behavior of
git-send-email. This mode will simply read the alias files configured by
sendemail.aliasesfile and sendemail.aliasfiletype and dump a list of all
configured aliases, one per line. The intended use case for this option
is the bash-completion script which will use it to autocomplete aliases
on the options which take addresses.

Add some tests for the new option using various alias file formats.

A possible future extension to the alias dump format could be done by
extending the --dump-aliases to take an optional argument defining the
format to display. This has not been done in this patch as no user of
this information has been identified.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:06 -05:00
842addef70 git-p4: add p4d timeout in tests
In rare cases p4d seems to hang. This watchdog will kill the p4d
process after 300s in any case. That means each individual git p4 test
needs to finish before 300s or it will fail.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:06 -05:00
0ca2972345 modernize t9300: mark here-doc words to ignore tab indentation
In the next commit, we will indent test case preparations. This will
require that here-documents ignore the tab indentation. Prepare for
this change by marking the here-doc words accordingly. This does not
have an effect now, but will remove some noise from the git diff -b
output of the next commit.

The change here is entirely automated with this perl command:

  perl -i -lpe 's/(cat.*<<) *((EOF|(EXPECT|INPUT)_END).*$)/$1-$2 &&/' t/t9300-fast-import.sh

i.e., inserts a dash between << and the EOF word (and removes blanks
that our style guide abhors) and appends the && that will become
necessary.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:06 -05:00
23aee4199a git-p4: retry kill/cleanup operations in tests with timeout
In rare cases kill/cleanup operations in tests fail. Retry these
operations with a timeout to make the test less flaky.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:06 -05:00
93e911f5ae modernize t9300: use test_when_finished for clean-up
A number of clean-ups of test cases are performed outside of
test_expect_success. Replace these cases by using test_when_finished.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:06 -05:00
ec2c10bef8 modernize t9300: wrap lines after &&
It is customary to have each command in test snippets on its own line.
Fix those instances that do not follow this guideline.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:06 -05:00
acf3af25fb modernize t9300: use test_must_be_empty
Instead of comparing actual output to an empty file, use
test_must_be_empty. In addition to the better error message provided by
the helper, allocation of an empty file during the setup sequence can be
avoided.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:06 -05:00
b08d82f0e8 modernize t9300: use test_must_fail
One test case open-codes a test for an expected failure. Replace it by
test_must_fail.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:06 -05:00
d67824feaa modernize t9300: single-quote placement and indentation
Many test cases do not follow our modern style that places the
single-quotes that surround the shell code snippets before and after
the shell code. Make it so.

Many of the lines changed in this way are indented other than by a
single tab. Change them (and some additional lines) to be indented
with a tab.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:06 -05:00
fcd30b1387 remote: convert functions to struct object_id
Convert several unsigned char arrays to use struct object_id instead,
and change hard-coded 40-based constants to use GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ as well.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:05 -05:00
ed1c9977cb Remove get_object_hash.
Convert all instances of get_object_hash to use an appropriate reference
to the hash member of the oid member of struct object.  This provides no
functional change, as it is essentially a macro substitution.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:05 -05:00
f2fd0760f6 Convert struct object to object_id
struct object is one of the major data structures dealing with object
IDs.  Convert it to use struct object_id instead of an unsigned char
array.  Convert get_object_hash to refer to the new member as well.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:05 -05:00
7999b2cf77 Add several uses of get_object_hash.
Convert most instances where the sha1 member of struct object is
dereferenced to use get_object_hash.  Most instances that are passed to
functions that have versions taking struct object_id, such as
get_sha1_hex/get_oid_hex, or instances that can be trivially converted
to use struct object_id instead, are not converted.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:05 -05:00
3c4270107f object: introduce get_object_hash macro.
This macro is a temporary change to ease the transition of struct object
to use struct object_id.  It takes an argument of struct object and
returns the object's hash.  Provide this hash next to struct object for
easier conversion.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:05 -05:00
6f3d57b6e4 ref_newer: convert to use struct object_id
Convert ref_newer and its caller to use struct object_id instead of
unsigned char *.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:05 -05:00
27912a03fd push_refs_with_export: convert to struct object_id
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:05 -05:00
e96b16cc2a get_remote_heads: convert to struct object_id
Replace an unsigned char array with struct object_id and express several
hard-coded constants in terms of GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:05 -05:00
8338c911d1 parse_fetch: convert to use struct object_id
Convert the parse_fetch function to use struct object_id.  Remove the
strlen check as get_oid_hex will fail safely on receiving a too-short
NUL-terminated string.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:05 -05:00
854ecb9cad add_sought_entry_mem: convert to struct object_id
Convert this function to use struct object_id.  Express several
hardcoded constants in terms of GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:05 -05:00
f4e54d02b8 Convert struct ref to use object_id.
Use struct object_id in three fields in struct ref and convert all the
necessary places that use it.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:05 -05:00
b419aa25d5 sha1_file: introduce has_object_file helper.
Add has_object_file, which is a wrapper around has_sha1_file, but for
struct object_id.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 08:02:05 -05:00
6d7afe07f2 remote-http(s): support SOCKS proxies
With this patch we properly support SOCKS proxies, configured e.g. like
this:

	git config http.proxy socks5://192.168.67.1:32767

Without this patch, Git mistakenly tries to use SOCKS proxies as if they
were HTTP proxies, resulting in a error message like:

	fatal: unable to access 'http://.../': Proxy CONNECT aborted

This patch was required to work behind a faulty AP and scraped from
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15227130/#15228479 and guarded with
an appropriate cURL version check by Johannes Schindelin.

Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-20 07:31:39 -05:00
0c83680e9c Merge branch 'master' of git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn
* 'master' of git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn:
  git-svn: improve rebase/mkdirs performance
2015-11-20 06:56:58 -05:00
dbba85e46b Merge branch 'lf/ref-is-hidden-namespace'
Extend transfer.hideRefs to work better with use of namespaces.

* lf/ref-is-hidden-namespace:
  t5509: add basic tests for hideRefs
  hideRefs: add support for matching full refs
  upload-pack: strip refs before calling ref_is_hidden()
  config.txt: document the semantics of hideRefs with namespaces
2015-11-20 06:56:11 -05:00
45014beac0 Merge branch 'dk/gc-idx-wo-pack'
Having a leftover .idx file without corresponding .pack file in
the repository hurts performance; "git gc" learned to prune them.

* dk/gc-idx-wo-pack:
  gc: remove garbage .idx files from pack dir
  t5304: test cleaning pack garbage
  prepare_packed_git(): refactor garbage reporting in pack directory
2015-11-20 06:55:34 -05:00
681390b3f6 t5813: avoid creating urls that break on cygwin
When passed an ssh:// url, git strips ssh://host from the url but does
not remove leading slashes from the path. So when this test used
ssh://remote//path/to/pwd, the path accessed by our fake SSH is
//path/to/pwd, which cygwin interprets as a UNC path, causing the test
to fail.

We may want to actually fix this in git itself, making it remove extra
slashes from urls before feeding them to transports or helpers, but
that's for another topic as it could cause regressions.

Signed-off-by: Dennis Kaarsemaker <dennis@kaarsemaker.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 06:46:48 -05:00
4573a68e9b Escape Git's exec path in contrib/rerere-train.sh script
Whitespace can cause the source command to fail. This is usually not a
problem on Unix systems, but on Windows Git is likely to be installed
under "C:/Program Files/", thus rendering the script broken.

Signed-off-by: Daniel Knittl-Frank <knittl89+git@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 06:43:00 -05:00
0845122c39 refs: break out ref conflict checks
Create new function find_descendant_ref, to hold one of the ref
conflict checks used in verify_refname_available. Multiple backends
will need this function, so move it to the common code.

Also move rename_ref_available to the common code, because alternate
backends might need it and it has no files-backend-specific code.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 04:52:01 -05:00
5f3c3a4e6f files_log_ref_write: new function
Because HEAD and stash are per-worktree, every refs backend needs to
go through the files backend to write these refs.

So create a new function, files_log_ref_write, and add it to
refs/refs-internal.h. Later, we will use this to handle reflog updates
for per-worktree symbolic refs (HEAD).

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 04:52:01 -05:00
eb33876c26 initdb: make safe_create_dir public
Soon we will want to create initdb functions for ref backends, and
code from initdb that calls this function needs to move into the files
backend. So this function needs to be public.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 04:52:01 -05:00
7bd9bcf372 refs: split filesystem-based refs code into a new file
As another step in the move to pluggable reference backends, move the
code that is specific to the filesystem-based reference backend (i.e.,
the current system of storing references as loose and packed files) into
a separate file, refs/files-backend.c.

Aside from a tiny bit of file header boilerplate, this commit only moves
a subset of the code verbatim from refs.c to the new file, as can easily
be verified using patience diff:

    git diff --patience $commit^:refs.c $commit:refs.c
    git diff --patience $commit^:refs.c $commit:refs/files-backend.c

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 04:52:01 -05:00
4cb77009e1 refs/refs-internal.h: new header file
There are a number of constants, structs, and static functions defined
in refs.c and treated as private to the references module. But we want
to support multiple reference backends within the reference module,
and those backends will need access to some heretofore private
declarations.

We don't want those declarations to be visible to non-refs code, so we
don't want to move them to refs.h. Instead, add a new header file,
refs/refs-internal.h, that is intended to be included only from within
the refs module. Make some functions non-static and move some
declarations (and their corresponding docstrings) from refs.c to this
file.

In a moment we will add more content to the "refs" subdirectory.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 04:52:01 -05:00
03b32623d8 refname_is_safe(): improve docstring
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 04:52:01 -05:00
a935ebd4a7 pack_if_possible_fn(): use ref_type() instead of is_per_worktree_ref()
is_per_worktree_ref() will soon be made private, so use the public
interface, ref_type(), in its place. And now that we're using
ref_type(), we can make it clear that we won't pack pseudorefs. This was
the case before, but due to the not-so-obvious reason that this function
is applied to references via the loose reference cache, which only
includes references that live inside "refs/".

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 04:52:01 -05:00
f4a5721ccb copy_msg(): rename to copy_reflog_msg()
We will soon increase the visibility of this function, so make its name
more distinctive.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 04:52:01 -05:00
d336123160 verify_refname_available(): new function
Add a new verify_refname_available() function, which checks whether the
refname is available for use, taking all references (both packed and
loose) into account. This function, unlike the old
verify_refname_available(), has semantics independent of the choice of
reference storage, and can therefore be implemented by alternative
reference backends.

Use the new function in a couple of places.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 04:52:01 -05:00
7003b3ce21 verify_refname_available(): rename function
Rename verify_refname_available() to verify_refname_available_dir() to
make the old name available for a more general purpose.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-20 04:52:01 -05:00
af65f68cdf allow hooks to ignore their standard input stream
Since ec7dbd145 (receive-pack: allow hooks to ignore its
standard input stream) the pre-receive and post-receive
hooks ignore SIGPIPE. Do the same for the remaining hooks
pre-push and post-rewrite, which read from standard input.
The same arguments for ignoring SIGPIPE apply.

Include test by Jeff King which checks that SIGPIPE does not
cause pre-push hook failure. With the use of git update-ref
--stdin it is fast enough to be enabled by default.

Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <clemens.buchacher@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-16 08:59:19 -05:00
fe9394ad3e rebase-i-exec: Allow space in SHELL_PATH
On Windows, when Git is installed under "C:\Program Files\Git",
SHELL_PATH will include a space. Fix "git rebase --interactive --exec"
so that it works with spaces in SHELL_PATH.

Signed-off-by: Fredrik Medley <fredrik.medley@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-13 17:51:39 -05:00
d16031caf1 contrib/subtree: Handle '--prefix' argument with a slash appended
'git subtree merge' will fail if the argument of '--prefix' has a slash
appended.

Signed-off-by: Techlive Zheng <techlivezheng@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David A. Greene <greened@obbligato.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-13 00:02:56 -05:00
43711746bd contrib/subtree: Make each test self-contained
Each test runs a full repository creation and any subtree actions
needed to perform the test.  Each test starts with a clean slate,
making debugging and post-mortem analysis much easier.

Signed-off-by: Techlive Zheng <techlivezheng@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David A. Greene <greened@obbligato.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-13 00:02:56 -05:00
4fe2e33cc9 contrib/subtree: Add split tests
Add tests to check various options to split.  Check combinations of
--prefix, --message, --annotate, --branch and --rejoin.

Signed-off-by: Techlive Zheng <techlivezheng@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David A. Greene <greened@obbligato.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-13 00:02:56 -05:00
4f96fcc9a2 contrib/subtree: Add merge tests
Add some tests for various merge operations.  Test combinations of merge
with --message, --prefix and --squash.

Signed-off-by: Techlive Zheng <techlivezheng@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David A. Greene <greened@obbligato.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-13 00:02:56 -05:00
c9924996c9 contrib/subtree: Add tests for subtree add
Add some tests to check various options to subtree add.  These test
various combinations of --message, --prefix and --squash.

Signed-off-by: Techlive Zheng <techlivezheng@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David A. Greene <greened@obbligato.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-13 00:02:56 -05:00
a686701184 contrib/subtree: Add test for missing subtree
Test that a merge from a non-existant subtree fails.

Signed-off-by: Techlive Zheng <techlivezheng@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David A. Greene <greened@obbligato.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-13 00:02:56 -05:00
b0638aa2f8 contrib/subtree: Clean and refactor test code
Mostly prepare for the later tests refactoring.  This moves some
common code to helper functions and generally cleans things up to be
more presentable.

Signed-off-by: Techlive Zheng <techlivezheng@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David A. Greene <greened@obbligato.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-13 00:02:56 -05:00
a1420cd320 gitk: Update revision date in Japanese PO file
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 15:17:20 +09:00
e25f12247e gitk: Update "Language:" header
msgfmt(1) wants this header.

Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 15:17:20 +09:00
e82470ac8c gitk: Improve translation message
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 15:17:20 +09:00
0f8b604f91 gitk: Remove unused line
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 15:17:19 +09:00
0ded623a5f gitk: Update year
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 15:17:19 +09:00
6c54103e77 gitk: Change last translator line
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 15:17:19 +09:00
c670cf3518 gitk: Update fuzzy messages
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 15:17:12 +09:00
b9d3c9652e gitk: Update Japanese translation
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 14:52:27 +09:00
8032ab360a gitk: Fix translation around copyright sign
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 14:52:27 +09:00
a23630dec5 gitk: Update Japanese translation
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 14:52:27 +09:00
3cc4c11007 gitk: Fix wrong translation
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 14:52:27 +09:00
ecfeeed5a7 gitk: Translate Japanese catalog
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 14:52:27 +09:00
cf2d5a0904 gitk: Translate more to Japanese catalog
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 14:52:21 +09:00
640495bd89 gitk: Update Japanese message catalog
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 13:12:11 +09:00
b34df2f9bc gitk: Re-sync line number in Japanese message catalogue
Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 13:12:11 +09:00
66db14c94c gitk: Color name update
Color name "green" was darken since Tcl/Tk 7.6.
 Because color name scheme was changed from "X11 colors" to "Web colors".

 Use "lime" to keep colors.

See also:
http://www.tcl.tk/cgi-bin/tct/tip/403.html

Signed-off-by: YOKOTA Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp>
2015-11-12 12:54:49 +09:00
838ecf0b0f http: fix some printf format warnings
Commit f8117f55 ("http: use off_t to store partial file size",
02-11-2015) changed the type of some variables from long to off_t.
Unfortunately, the off_t type is not portable and can be represented
by several different actual types (even multiple types on the same
platform). This makes it difficult to print an off_t variable in
a platform independent way. As a result, this commit causes gcc to
issue some printf format warnings on a couple of different platforms.

In order to suppress the warnings, change the format specifier to use
the PRIuMAX macro and cast the off_t argument to uintmax_t. (See also
the http_opt_request_remainder() function, which uses the same
solution).

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-11 19:10:41 -05:00
6dedd8001b Documentation: make environment variable formatting more consistent
Documentation/git.txt is not consistent in the way it
stylizes mentions of Environment Variables. Most of them are
enclosed in single quotes, some are enclosed in backticks,
some are not enclosed.

Signed-off-by: Andrey Rybak <rybak.a.v@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-11-11 16:46:34 -05:00
8262574822 git-svn: improve rebase/mkdirs performance
Processing empty_dir directives becomes extremely slow for svn
repositories with a large enough history.

This is due to using a single hash to store the list of empty
directories, with the expensive step being purging items from
that hash using grep+delete.

Storing directories in a hash of hashes improves the performance
of this purge step and removes a potentially lengthy delay after
every rebase/mkdirs command.

The svn repository with this behaviour has 110K commits with
unhandled.log containing 170K empty_dir directives.

This takes 10 minutes to process when using a single hash, vs
3 seconds with a hash of hashes.

Signed-off-by: Dair Grant <dair@feralinteractive.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2015-11-10 01:35:01 +00:00
bac2c5bf1a configure.ac: use $LIBS not $CFLAGS when testing -lpthread
Some linkers, namely the one on IRIX are rather strict concerning
the order or arguments for symbol resolution, i.e. no libraries
listed before objects or other libraries on the command line are
considered for symbol resolution.  Therefore, -lpthread can't work
if it's put in CFLAGS, because it will not be considered for
resolving pthread_key_create in conftest.o. Use $LIBS instead.

Signed-off-by: Rainer Canavan <git@canavan.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-06 09:41:08 -08:00
348d4f2fc5 filter-branch: skip index read/write when possible
If the user specifies an index filter but not a tree filter,
filter-branch cleverly avoids checking out the tree
entirely. But we don't do the next level of optimization: if
you have no index or tree filter, we do not need to read the
index at all.

This can greatly speed up cases where we are only changing
the commit objects (e.g., cementing a graft into place).
Here are numbers from the newly-added perf test:

  Test                  HEAD^              HEAD
  ---------------------------------------------------------------
  7000.2: noop filter   13.81(4.95+0.83)   5.43(0.42+0.43) -60.7%

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-06 09:35:49 -08:00
4547039649 contrib/subtree: remove "push" command from the "todo" file
Because the "push" command is already available, remove it from the
"todo" file.

Signed-off-by: Fabio Porcedda <fabio.porcedda@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-06 09:32:33 -08:00
f34be46e47 Eleventh batch for 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-05 15:26:08 -08:00
6a38bd6268 Merge branch 'ea/checkout-progress'
"git checkout" did not follow the usual "--[no-]progress"
convention and implemented only "--quiet" that is essentially
a superset of "--no-progress".  Extend the command to support the
usual "--[no-]progress".

* ea/checkout-progress:
  checkout: add --progress option
2015-11-05 15:24:28 -08:00
848cdba579 Merge branch 'dt/http-range'
A Range: request can be responded with a full response and when
asked properly libcurl knows how to strip the result down to the
requested range.  However, we were hand-crafting a range request
and it did not kick in.

* dt/http-range:
  http: use off_t to store partial file size
  http.c: use CURLOPT_RANGE for range requests
2015-11-05 15:24:27 -08:00
2c78628255 Sync with 2.6.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-05 12:22:34 -08:00
af40944bda Git 2.6.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-05 12:20:34 -08:00
b8f5242592 Merge branch 'rs/daemon-plug-child-leak' into maint
"git daemon" uses "run_command()" without "finish_command()", so it
needs to release resources itself, which it forgot to do.

* rs/daemon-plug-child-leak:
  daemon: plug memory leak
  run-command: factor out child_process_clear()
2015-11-05 12:18:17 -08:00
db43891ce6 Merge branch 'rs/wt-status-detached-branch-fix' into maint
"git status --branch --short" accessed beyond the constant string
"HEAD", which has been corrected.

* rs/wt-status-detached-branch-fix:
  wt-status: use skip_prefix() to get rid of magic string length constants
  wt-status: don't skip a magical number of characters blindly
  wt-status: avoid building bogus branch name with detached HEAD
  wt-status: exit early using goto in wt_shortstatus_print_tracking()
  t7060: add test for status --branch on a detached HEAD
2015-11-05 12:18:15 -08:00
f97aee1f94 Merge branch 'jk/initialization-fix-to-add-submodule-odb' into maint
We peek objects from submodule's object store by linking it to the
list of alternate object databases, but the code to do so forgot to
correctly initialize the list.

* jk/initialization-fix-to-add-submodule-odb:
  add_submodule_odb: initialize alt_odb list earlier
2015-11-05 12:18:14 -08:00
ace5348dcb Merge branch 'js/misc-fixes' into maint
Various compilation fixes and squelching of warnings.

* js/misc-fixes:
  Correct fscanf formatting string for I64u values
  Silence GCC's "cast of pointer to integer of a different size" warning
  Squelch warning about an integer overflow
2015-11-05 12:18:13 -08:00
a878e7e62b Merge branch 'jc/add-u-A-default-to-top' into maint
"git --literal-pathspecs add -u/-A" without any command line
argument misbehaved ever since Git 2.0.

* jc/add-u-A-default-to-top:
  add: simplify -u/-A without pathspec
2015-11-05 12:18:12 -08:00
5e6154fb14 Merge branch 'jk/delete-modechange-conflict' into maint
Merging a branch that removes a path and another that changes the
mode bits on the same path should have conflicted at the path, but
it didn't and silently favoured the removal.

* jk/delete-modechange-conflict:
  merge: detect delete/modechange conflict
  t6031: generalize for recursive and resolve strategies
  t6031: move triple-rename test to t3030
2015-11-05 12:18:11 -08:00
c378862b1e Merge branch 'js/imap-send-curl-compilation-fix' into maint
"git imap-send" did not compile well with older version of cURL library.

* js/imap-send-curl-compilation-fix:
  imap-send: only use CURLOPT_LOGIN_OPTIONS if it is actually available
2015-11-05 12:18:10 -08:00
3897d2d906 Merge branch 'rp/link-curl-before-ssl' into maint
The linkage order of libraries was wrong in places around libcurl.

* rp/link-curl-before-ssl:
  configure.ac: detect ssl need with libcurl
  Makefile: make curl-config path configurable
  Makefile: link libcurl before zlib
2015-11-05 12:18:09 -08:00
4349f597f0 Merge branch 'nd/clone-linked-checkout' into maint
It was not possible to use a repository-lookalike created by "git
worktree add" as a local source of "git clone".

* nd/clone-linked-checkout:
  clone: better error when --reference is a linked checkout
  clone: allow --local from a linked checkout
  enter_repo: allow .git files in strict mode
  enter_repo: avoid duplicating logic, use is_git_directory() instead
  t0002: add test for enter_repo(), non-strict mode
  path.c: delete an extra space
2015-11-05 12:18:08 -08:00
53be145209 Merge branch 'sa/send-email-smtp-batch-data-limit' into maint
When "git send-email" wanted to talk over Net::SMTP::SSL,
Net::Cmd::datasend() did not like to be fed too many bytes at the
same time and failed to send messages.  Send the payload one line
at a time to work around the problem.

* sa/send-email-smtp-batch-data-limit:
  git-send-email.perl: Fixed sending of many/huge changes/patches
2015-11-05 12:18:06 -08:00
948bfa2c0f t5509: add basic tests for hideRefs
Test whether regular and full hideRefs patterns work as expected when
namespaces are used.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@lfos.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-05 11:25:02 -08:00
78a766ab6e hideRefs: add support for matching full refs
In addition to matching stripped refs, one can now add hideRefs
patterns that the full (unstripped) ref is matched against. To
distinguish between stripped and full matches, those new patterns
must be prefixed with a circumflex (^).

This commit also removes support for the undocumented and unintended
hideRefs settings ".have" (suppressing all "have" lines) and
"capabilities^{}" (suppressing the capabilities line).

Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@lfos.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-05 11:25:02 -08:00
00b293e519 upload-pack: strip refs before calling ref_is_hidden()
Make hideRefs handling in upload-pack consistent with the behavior
described in the documentation by stripping refs before comparing them
with prefixes in hideRefs.

Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@lfos.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-05 11:25:02 -08:00
92cab492ba config.txt: document the semantics of hideRefs with namespaces
Right now, there is no clear definition of how transfer.hideRefs should
behave when a namespace is set. Explain that hideRefs prefixes match
stripped names in that case. This is how hideRefs patterns are currently
handled in receive-pack.

Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@lfos.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-05 11:25:00 -08:00
001fd7a90b sha1: allow limiting the size of the data passed to SHA1_Update()
Using the previous commit's inredirection mechanism for SHA1,
support a chunked implementation of SHA1_Update() that limits the
amount of data in the chunk passed to SHA1_Update().

This is enabled by using the Makefile variable SHA1_MAX_BLOCK_SIZE
to specify chunk size.  When using Apple's CommonCrypto library this
is set to 1GiB (the implementation cannot handle more 4GiB).

Signed-off-by: Atousa Pahlevan Duprat <apahlevan@ieee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-05 10:35:11 -08:00
3bc72fde3f sha1: provide another level of indirection for the SHA-1 functions
The git source uses git_SHA1_Update() and friends to call into the
code that computes the hashes.  Traditionally, we used to map these
directly to underlying implementation of the SHA-1 hash (e.g.
SHA1_Update() from OpenSSL or blk_SHA1_Update() from block-sha1/).

This arrangement however makes it hard to tweak behaviour of the
underlying implementation without fully replacing.  If we want to
introduce a tweaked_SHA1_Update() wrapper to implement the "Update"
in a slightly different way, for example, the implementation of the
wrapper still would want to call into the underlying implementation,
but tweaked_SHA1_Update() cannot call git_SHA1_Update() to get to
the underlying implementation (often but not always SHA1_Update()).

Add another level of indirection that maps platform_SHA1_Update()
and friends to their underlying implementations, and by default make
git_SHA1_Update() and friends map to platform_SHA1_* functions.

Doing it this way will later allow us to map git_SHA1_Update() to
tweaked_SHA1_Update(), and the latter can use platform_SHA1_Update()
in its implementation.

Signed-off-by: Atousa Pahlevan Duprat <apahlevan@ieee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-05 10:35:11 -08:00
259b5e6d33 Sync with maint
* maint:
2015-11-04 14:21:41 -08:00
684fea3794 Merge branch 'xf/user-manual-ff' into maint
* xf/user-manual-ff:
  user-manual: fix the description of fast-forward
2015-11-04 14:20:49 -08:00
6c66686e0b Merge branch 'xf/user-manual-markup' into maint
AsciiDoc markup fixes.

* xf/user-manual-markup:
  Documentation: match undefline with the text in old release notes
  Documentation: match underline with the text
  Documentation: fix header markup
2015-11-04 14:20:47 -08:00
7974b3fd75 Merge branch 'jc/everyday-markup' into maint
AsciiDoc markup fixes.

* jc/everyday-markup:
  Documentation/everyday: match undefline with the text
2015-11-04 14:20:46 -08:00
bc1e0481bf Merge branch 'jc/em-dash-in-doc' into maint
AsciiDoc markup fixes.

* jc/em-dash-in-doc:
  Documentation: AsciiDoc spells em-dash as double-dashes, not triple
2015-11-04 14:20:45 -08:00
d091031ce2 Merge branch 'es/worktree-add' into maint
* es/worktree-add:
  worktree: usage: denote <branch> as optional with 'add'
2015-11-04 14:20:44 -08:00
478f34d2b6 gc: remove garbage .idx files from pack dir
Add a custom report_garbage handler to collect and remove
garbage .idx files from the pack directory.

Signed-off-by: Doug Kelly <dougk.ff7@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-04 11:30:22 -08:00
e6d65c9a47 t5304: test cleaning pack garbage
Pack garbage, noticeably stale .idx files, can be cleaned up during
a garbage collection.  This tests to ensure such garbage is properly
cleaned up.

Note that the prior test for checking pack garbage with count-objects
left some stale garbage after the test exited.  This has also been
corrected.

Signed-off-by: Doug Kelly <dougk.ff7@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-04 11:30:10 -08:00
3b93d3f34b l10n: fr.po: Fix typo
Signed-off-by: Élie Bouttier <elie@bouttier.eu>
2015-11-04 16:57:00 +01:00
aa826b651a Sync with maint 2015-11-03 15:41:50 -08:00
fdca2bed90 Merge branch 'mk/blame-error-message' into maint
The error message from "git blame --contents --reverse" incorrectly
talked about "--contents --children".

* mk/blame-error-message:
  blame: fix option name in error message
2015-11-03 15:32:43 -08:00
5c15ca0b3c Merge branch 'jk/merge-file-exit-code' into maint
"git merge-file" tried to signal how many conflicts it found, which
obviously would not work well when there are too many of them.

* jk/merge-file-exit-code:
  merge-file: clamp exit code to maximum 127
2015-11-03 15:32:41 -08:00
3a27eec48e Merge branch 'dt/name-hash-dir-entry-fix' into maint
The name-hash subsystem that is used to cope with case insensitive
filesystems keeps track of directories and their on-filesystem
cases for all the paths in the index by holding a pointer to a
randomly chosen cache entry that is inside the directory (for its
ce->ce_name component).  This pointer was not updated even when the
cache entry was removed from the index, leading to use after free.
This was fixed by recording the path for each directory instead of
borrowing cache entries and restructuring the API somewhat.

* dt/name-hash-dir-entry-fix:
  name-hash: don't reuse cache_entry in dir_entry
2015-11-03 15:32:40 -08:00
ced2321a8d Merge branch 'jc/am-3-fallback-regression-fix' into maint
"git am -3" had a small regression where it is aborted in its error
handling codepath when underlying merge-recursive failed in certain
ways, as it assumed that the internal call to merge-recursive will
never die, which is not the case (yet).

* jc/am-3-fallback-regression-fix:
  am -3: do not let failed merge from completing the error codepath
2015-11-03 15:32:39 -08:00
f5f7684596 Merge branch 'jc/usage-stdin' into maint
The synopsis text and the usage string of subcommands that read
list of things from the standard input are often shown as if they
only take input from a file on a filesystem, which was misleading.

* jc/usage-stdin:
  usage: do not insist that standard input must come from a file
2015-11-03 15:32:38 -08:00
14f905caf2 Merge branch 'rt/placeholder-in-usage' into maint
A couple of commands still showed "[options]" in their usage string
to note where options should come on their command line, but we
spell that "[<options>]" in most places these days.

* rt/placeholder-in-usage:
  am, credential-cache: add angle brackets to usage string
2015-11-03 15:32:37 -08:00
ccb47391c1 Merge branch 'dt/t7063-fix-flaky-test' into maint
* dt/t7063-fix-flaky-test:
  t7063: fix flaky untracked-cache test
2015-11-03 15:32:36 -08:00
1bf986bc9c Merge branch 'mk/submodule-gitdir-path' into maint
The submodule code has been taught to work better with separate
work trees created via "git worktree add".

* mk/submodule-gitdir-path:
  path: implement common_dir handling in git_pathdup_submodule()
  submodule refactor: use strbuf_git_path_submodule() in add_submodule_odb()
2015-11-03 15:32:35 -08:00
c1324e66d4 Merge branch 'nd/gc-auto-background-fix' into maint
When "git gc --auto" is backgrounded, its diagnosis message is
lost.  Save it to a file in $GIT_DIR and show it next time the "gc
--auto" is run.

* nd/gc-auto-background-fix:
  gc: save log from daemonized gc --auto and print it next time
2015-11-03 15:32:33 -08:00
c7bdbd6f92 Merge branch 'ls/p4-translation-failure' into maint
Work around "git p4" failing when the P4 depot records the contents
in UTF-16 without UTF-16 BOM.

* ls/p4-translation-failure:
  git-p4: handle "Translation of file content failed"
  git-p4: add test case for "Translation of file content failed" error
2015-11-03 15:32:32 -08:00
c04b3a2dbf Merge branch 'gr/rebase-i-drop-warn' into maint
Recent update to "rebase -i" that tries to sanity check the edited
insn sheet before it uses it has become too picky on Windows where
CRLF left by the editor is turned into a trailing CR on the line
read via the "read" built-in command.

* gr/rebase-i-drop-warn:
  rebase-i: work around Windows CRLF line endings
  t3404: "rebase -i" gets broken when insn sheet uses CR/LF line endings
2015-11-03 15:32:30 -08:00
f836a32ba7 Merge branch 'js/clone-dissociate' into maint
"git clone --dissociate" runs a big "git repack" process at the
end, and it helps to close file descriptors that are open on the
packs and their idx files before doing so on filesystems that
cannot remove a file that is still open.

* js/clone-dissociate:
  clone --dissociate: avoid locking pack files
  sha1_file.c: add a function to release all packs
  sha1_file: consolidate code to close a pack's file descriptor
  t5700: demonstrate a Windows file locking issue with `git clone --dissociate`
2015-11-03 15:32:29 -08:00
04bba3a12b Merge branch 'ld/p4-import-labels' into maint
Correct "git p4 --detect-labels" so that it does not fail to create
a tag that points at a commit that is also being imported.

* ld/p4-import-labels:
  git-p4: fix P4 label import for unprocessed commits
  git-p4: do not terminate creating tag for unknown commit
  git-p4: failing test for ignoring invalid p4 labels
2015-11-03 15:32:28 -08:00
e23469f91a Merge branch 'tk/stripspace' into maint
The internal stripspace() function has been moved to where it
logically belongs to, i.e. strbuf API, and the command line parser
of "git stripspace" has been updated to use the parse_options API.

* tk/stripspace:
  stripspace: use parse-options for command-line parsing
  strbuf: make stripspace() part of strbuf
2015-11-03 15:32:26 -08:00
f89baca1b9 Merge branch 'jk/repository-extension' into maint
Prepare for Git on-disk repository representation to undergo
backward incompatible changes by introducing a new repository
format version "1", with an extension mechanism.

* jk/repository-extension:
  introduce "preciousObjects" repository extension
  introduce "extensions" form of core.repositoryformatversion
2015-11-03 15:32:25 -08:00
c29024e5d1 Tenth batch for 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-03 15:18:22 -08:00
c3c592ef95 Merge branch 'rs/daemon-plug-child-leak'
"git daemon" uses "run_command()" without "finish_command()", so it
needs to release resources itself, which it forgot to do.

* rs/daemon-plug-child-leak:
  daemon: plug memory leak
  run-command: factor out child_process_clear()
2015-11-03 15:13:12 -08:00
6784eb5ad9 Merge branch 'mk/blame-first-parent'
"git blame" learnt to take "--first-parent" and "--reverse" at the
same time when it makes sense.

* mk/blame-first-parent:
  blame: allow blame --reverse --first-parent when it makes sense
  blame: extract find_single_final
  blame: test to describe use of blame --reverse --first-parent
2015-11-03 15:13:10 -08:00
a59d1d8035 Merge branch 'rs/wt-status-detached-branch-fix'
"git status --branch --short" accessed beyond the constant string
"HEAD", which has been corrected.

* rs/wt-status-detached-branch-fix:
  wt-status: use skip_prefix() to get rid of magic string length constants
  wt-status: don't skip a magical number of characters blindly
  wt-status: avoid building bogus branch name with detached HEAD
  wt-status: exit early using goto in wt_shortstatus_print_tracking()
  t7060: add test for status --branch on a detached HEAD
2015-11-03 15:13:08 -08:00
654b986dec Merge branch 'rs/show-branch-argv-array'
Code simplification.

* rs/show-branch-argv-array:
  show-branch: use argv_array for default arguments
2015-11-03 15:13:07 -08:00
4b571eb0c2 Merge branch 'js/git-gdb'
Allow easier debugging of a single "git" invocation in our test
scripts.

* js/git-gdb:
  test: facilitate debugging Git executables in tests with gdb
2015-11-03 15:13:05 -08:00
acfeaf8c96 Merge branch 'jk/initialization-fix-to-add-submodule-odb'
We peek objects from submodule's object store by linking it to the
list of alternate object databases, but the code to do so forgot to
correctly initialize the list.

* jk/initialization-fix-to-add-submodule-odb:
  add_submodule_odb: initialize alt_odb list earlier
2015-11-03 15:13:04 -08:00
c253b82e42 Merge branch 'da/difftool'
The code to prepare the working tree side of temporary directory
for the "dir-diff" feature forgot that symbolic links need not be
copied (or symlinked) to the temporary area, as the code already
special cases and overwrites them.  Besides, it was wrong to try
computing the object name of the target of symbolic link, which may
not even exist or may be a directory.

* da/difftool:
  difftool: ignore symbolic links in use_wt_file
2015-11-03 15:13:02 -08:00
c5d9418ecd Merge branch 'jc/mailinfo-lib'
Hotfix for a topic already in 'master'.

* jc/mailinfo-lib:
  mailinfo: fix passing wrong address to git_mailinfo_config
2015-11-03 15:12:59 -08:00
415095f055 Merge branch 'kn/for-each-branch'
Using the timestamp based criteria in "git branch --sort" did not
tiebreak branches that point at commits with the same timestamp (or
the same commit), making the resulting output unstable.

* kn/for-each-branch:
  ref-filter: fallback on alphabetical comparison
2015-11-03 15:12:57 -08:00
b1b49ff8d4 daemon: plug memory leak
Call child_process_clear() when a child ends to release the memory
allocated for its environment.  This is necessary because unlike all
other users of start_command() we don't call finish_command(), which
would have taken care of that for us.

This leak was introduced by f063d38b (daemon: use cld->env_array
when re-spawning).

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-02 15:01:23 -08:00
2d71608ec0 run-command: factor out child_process_clear()
Avoid duplication by moving the code to release allocated memory for
arguments and environment to its own function, child_process_clear().
Export it to provide a counterpart to child_process_init().

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-02 15:01:00 -08:00
f8117f550b http: use off_t to store partial file size
When we try to resume transfer of a partially-downloaded
object or pack, we fopen() the existing file for append,
then use ftell() to get the current position. We use a
"long", which can hold only 2GB on a 32-bit system, even
though packfiles may be larger than that.

Let's switch to using off_t, which should hold any file size
our system is capable of storing. We need to use ftello() to
get the off_t. This is in POSIX and hopefully available
everywhere; if not, we should be able to wrap it by falling
back to ftell(), which would presumably return "-1" on such
a large file (and we would simply skip resuming in that case).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-02 14:19:54 -08:00
835c4d3689 http.c: use CURLOPT_RANGE for range requests
A HTTP server is permitted to return a non-range response to a HTTP
range request (and Apache httpd in fact does this in some cases).
While libcurl knows how to correctly handle this (by skipping bytes
before and after the requested range), it only turns on this handling
if it is aware that a range request is being made.  By manually
setting the range header instead of using CURLOPT_RANGE, we were
hiding the fact that this was a range request from libcurl.  This
could cause corruption.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-02 14:18:06 -08:00
870ebdb9c4 checkout: add --progress option
Under normal circumstances, and like other git commands,
git checkout will write progress info to stderr if
attached to a terminal. This option allows progress
to be forced even if not using a terminal. Also,
progress can be skipped if using option --no-progress.

Signed-off-by: Edmundo Carmona Antoranz <eantoranz@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-01 14:08:17 -08:00
85d9d9ddf3 mailinfo: fix passing wrong address to git_mailinfo_config
git_mailinfo_config() expects "struct mailinfo *". But in
setup_mailinfo(), "mi" is already "struct mailinfo *". &mi would make
it "struct mailinfo **" and git_mailinfo_config() would damage some
other memory when it assigns some value to mi->use_scissors.

This is caught by t4150.20. git_mailinfo_config() breaks
mi->name.alloc and makes strbuf_release() in clear_mailinfo() attempt
to free strbuf_slopbuf.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-01 10:29:40 -08:00
c949b00fb8 show-branch: use argv_array for default arguments
Use argv_array instead of open-coding it.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-01 10:24:29 -08:00
c72b49dfab wt-status: use skip_prefix() to get 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>
2015-11-01 09:58:20 -08:00
8d8325f8ee wt-status: don't skip a magical number of characters blindly
Use the variable branch_name, which already has "refs/heads/" removed,
instead of blindly advancing in the ->branch string by 11 bytes.  This
is safer and less magical.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-01 09:58:20 -08:00
baf0a3e47d wt-status: avoid building bogus branch name with detached HEAD
If we're on a detached HEAD then wt_shortstatus_print_tracking() takes
the string "HEAD (no branch)", translates it, skips the first eleven
characters and passes the result to branch_get(), which returns a bogus
result and accesses memory out of bounds in order to produce it.
Somehow stat_tracking_info(), which is passed that result, does the
right thing anyway, i.e. it finds that there is no base.

Avoid the bogus results and memory accesses by checking for HEAD first
and exiting early in that case.  This fixes t7060 with --valgrind.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-01 09:58:20 -08:00
bcf8cc25ac wt-status: exit early using goto in wt_shortstatus_print_tracking()
Deduplicate printing the line terminator by jumping to the end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-01 09:58:20 -08:00
7ca8c18950 t7060: add test for status --branch on a detached HEAD
This test fails when run under Valgrind because branch_get() gets passed
a bogus branch name pointer:

==62831== Invalid read of size 1
==62831==    at 0x4F76AE: branch_get (remote.c:1650)
==62831==    by 0x53499E: wt_shortstatus_print_tracking (wt-status.c:1654)
==62831==    by 0x53499E: wt_shortstatus_print (wt-status.c:1706)
==62831==    by 0x428D29: cmd_status (commit.c:1384)
==62831==    by 0x405D6D: run_builtin (git.c:350)
==62831==    by 0x405D6D: handle_builtin (git.c:536)
==62831==    by 0x404F10: run_argv (git.c:582)
==62831==    by 0x404F10: main (git.c:690)
==62831==  Address 0x5e89b0b is 6 bytes after a block of size 5 alloc'd
==62831==    at 0x4C28C4F: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:299)
==62831==    by 0x59579E9: strdup (strdup.c:42)
==62831==    by 0x52E108: xstrdup (wrapper.c:43)
==62831==    by 0x5322A6: wt_status_prepare (wt-status.c:130)
==62831==    by 0x4276E0: status_init_config (commit.c:184)
==62831==    by 0x428BB8: cmd_status (commit.c:1350)
==62831==    by 0x405D6D: run_builtin (git.c:350)
==62831==    by 0x405D6D: handle_builtin (git.c:536)
==62831==    by 0x404F10: run_argv (git.c:582)
==62831==    by 0x404F10: main (git.c:690)

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-01 09:58:20 -08:00
700fd28e4f blame: allow blame --reverse --first-parent when it makes sense
Allow combining --reverse and --first-parent if initial commit of
specified range is at the first-parent chain starting from the final
commit. Disable the prepare_revision_walk()'s builtin children
collection, instead picking only the ones which are along the first
parent chain.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-30 15:33:13 -07:00
1b0d40000a blame: extract find_single_final
Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-30 15:30:41 -07:00
ec352401fb blame: test to describe use of blame --reverse --first-parent
Reverse blame can be used to locate removal of lines which does not
change adjacent lines. Such edits do not appear in non-reverse blame,
because the adjacent lines last changed commit is older history, before
the edit.

For a big and active project which uses topic branches, or analogous
feature, for example pull-requests, the history can contain many
concurrent branches, and even after an edit merged into the target
branch, there are still many (sometimes several tens or even hundreds)
topic branch which do not contain it:

 a0--a1-----*a2-*a3-a4...-*a100
 |\         /   /         /
 | b0-B1..bN   /         /
 |\           /         /
 | c0..   ..cN         /
 \                    /
  z0..            ..zN

Here, the '*'s mark the first parent in merge, and uppercase B1 - the
commit where the line being blamed for was removed. Since commits cN-zN
do not contain B1, they still have the line removed in B1, and
reverse blame can report that the last commit for the line was zN
(meaning that it was removed in a100). In fact it really does return
some very late commit, and this makes it unusable for finding the B1
commit.

The search could be done by blame --reverse --first-parent. For range
a0..a100 it would return a1, and then only one additional blame along
the a0..bN will return the desired commit b0. But combining --reverse
and --first-parent was forbidden in 95a4fb0eac, because incorrectly
specified range could produce unexpected and meaningless result.

Add test which describes the expected behavior of
`blame --reverse --first-parent` in the case described above.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-30 15:28:45 -07:00
6a94088cc3 test: facilitate debugging Git executables in tests with gdb
When prefixing a Git call in the test suite with 'debug ', it will
now be run with GDB, allowing the developer to debug test failures
more conveniently.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-30 14:02:38 -07:00
9e468334b4 ref-filter: fallback on alphabetical comparison
In ref-filter.c the comparison of refs while sorting is handled by
cmp_ref_sorting() function. When sorting as per numerical values
(e.g. --sort=objectsize) there is no fallback comparison when both
refs hold the same value. This can cause unexpected results (i.e. the
order of listing refs with equal values cannot be pre-determined) as
pointed out by Johannes Sixt ($gmane/280117).

Hence, fallback to alphabetical comparison based on the refname
whenever the other criterion is equal.

A test in t3203 was expecting that branch-two sorts before HEAD, which
happened to be how qsort(3) on Linux sorted the array, but (1) that
outcome was not even guaranteed, and (2) once we start breaking ties
with the refname, "HEAD" should sort before "branch-two" so the
original expectation was inconsistent with the criterion we now use.

Update it to match the new world order, which we can now depend on
being stable.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Reported-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <Karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-30 13:50:52 -07:00
2635c2b8bf Ninth batch for 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-30 13:17:31 -07:00
54bc41416c Merge branch 'jk/merge-file-exit-code'
"git merge-file" tried to signal how many conflicts it found, which
obviously would not work well when there are too many of them.

* jk/merge-file-exit-code:
  merge-file: clamp exit code to maximum 127
2015-10-30 13:07:08 -07:00
f60b5dc68c Merge branch 'gr/rebase-i-drop-warn'
Recent update to "rebase -i" that tries to sanity check the edited
insn sheet before it uses it has become too picky on Windows where
CRLF left by the editor is turned into a trailing CR on the line
read via the "read" built-in command.

* gr/rebase-i-drop-warn:
  rebase-i: work around Windows CRLF line endings
  t3404: "rebase -i" gets broken when insn sheet uses CR/LF line endings
2015-10-30 13:07:06 -07:00
7fd4181c66 Merge branch 'xf/user-manual-ff'
* xf/user-manual-ff:
  user-manual: fix the description of fast-forward
2015-10-30 13:07:05 -07:00
0692a6c22c Merge branch 'rs/pop-commit'
Code simplification.

* rs/pop-commit:
  use pop_commit() for consuming the first entry of a struct commit_list
2015-10-30 13:07:03 -07:00
23d58a00e5 Merge branch 'mk/blame-error-message'
The error message from "git blame --contents --reverse" incorrectly
talked about "--contents --children".

* mk/blame-error-message:
  blame: fix option name in error message
2015-10-30 13:07:02 -07:00
808d119263 Merge branch 'js/misc-fixes'
Various compilation fixes and squelching of warnings.

* js/misc-fixes:
  Correct fscanf formatting string for I64u values
  Silence GCC's "cast of pointer to integer of a different size" warning
  Squelch warning about an integer overflow
2015-10-30 13:07:00 -07:00
e88e424f4c Merge branch 'js/imap-send-curl-compilation-fix'
"git imap-send" did not compile well with older version of cURL library.

* js/imap-send-curl-compilation-fix:
  imap-send: only use CURLOPT_LOGIN_OPTIONS if it is actually available
2015-10-30 13:06:58 -07:00
203501b39f Merge branch 'jk/delete-modechange-conflict'
Merging a branch that removes a path and another that changes the
mode bits on the same path should have conflicted at the path, but
it didn't and silently favoured the removal.

* jk/delete-modechange-conflict:
  merge: detect delete/modechange conflict
  t6031: generalize for recursive and resolve strategies
  t6031: move triple-rename test to t3030
2015-10-30 13:06:57 -07:00
f7722a447a Merge branch 'jc/add-u-A-default-to-top'
"git --literal-pathspecs add -u/-A" without any command line
argument misbehaved ever since Git 2.0.

* jc/add-u-A-default-to-top:
  add: simplify -u/-A without pathspec
2015-10-30 13:06:55 -07:00
908700c008 Merge branch 'ar/clone-dissociate'
"git clone --dissociate" used to require that "--reference" was
used at the same time, but you can create a new repository that
borrows objects from another without using "--reference", namely
with "clone --local" from a repository that borrows objects from
other repositories.

* ar/clone-dissociate:
  clone: allow "--dissociate" without reference
2015-10-30 13:06:53 -07:00
482456a414 Merge git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk
* git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk:
  gitk: Update Russian translation
  gitk: Add accelerator to German locale
  gitk: Add accelerators to Japanese locale
  gitk: Update msgid's for menu items with accelerator
  gitk: l10n: Update Catalan translation
  gitk: Add missing accelerators
  Updated Vietnamese translation
2015-10-30 09:02:27 -07:00
d70c034a75 Merge https://github.com/vnwildman/gitk
This brings in an update to the Vietnamese translation.

Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-10-30 21:01:55 +11:00
222e878802 gitk: Update Russian translation
Signed-off-by: Dimitriy Ryazantcev <dimitriy.ryazantcev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-10-30 20:56:11 +11:00
61aae60af1 gitk: Add accelerator to German locale
Assigned either to the first letter or some unique letter.  At least
there are no conflicts, as far as I see...

Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-10-30 20:45:56 +11:00
c3f695d5f7 gitk: Add accelerators to Japanese locale
Just follow the English accelerator keys.

Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-10-30 20:45:55 +11:00
4ed950841e gitk: Update msgid's for menu items with accelerator
The commit d99b4b0de2 ("gitk: Accelerators for the main menu")
modified the menu item strings with the accelerator, but the
translations didn't follow, thus the menus are shown without
translations.

This patch systematically update the msgid keys just to follow this
change.  The contents aren't changed, so the accelerator won't work in
these locales for now.  Each locale translator needs to add proper
acceleration keys appropriately.

Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-10-30 20:45:55 +11:00
a822fdbe8e gitk: l10n: Update Catalan translation
The gitk included in git 2.6.0 crashes if run from a Catalan locale.
I'm hoping that a translation update will fix this.

Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-10-30 20:39:31 +11:00
28de56856a gitk: Add missing accelerators
In d99b4b0de2 ("gitk: Accelerators for the main menu", 2015-09-09),
accelerators were added to allow efficient keyboard navigation. One
instance of the strings "Edit view..." and "Delete view" were left
without the ampersand.

Add the missing ampersand characters to unbreak our international
users.

Signed-off-by: Beat Bolli <dev+git@drbeat.li>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-10-30 20:38:11 +11:00
80980a1d5c Eighth batch for 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-29 14:02:40 -07:00
95b86a60cf Merge branch 'jc/am-mailinfo-direct'
"git am" used to spawn "git mailinfo" via run_command() API once
per each patch, but learned to make a direct call to mailinfo()
instead.

* jc/am-mailinfo-direct:
  am: make direct call to mailinfo
2015-10-29 13:59:23 -07:00
ba5312da19 Merge branch 'jc/mailinfo-lib'
The implementation of "git mailinfo" was refactored so that a
mailinfo() function can be directly called from inside a process.

* jc/mailinfo-lib: (34 commits)
  mailinfo: remove calls to exit() and die() deep in the callchain
  mailinfo: handle charset conversion errors in the caller
  mailinfo: libify
  mailinfo: keep the parsed log message in a strbuf
  mailinfo: handle_commit_msg() shouldn't be called after finding patchbreak
  mailinfo: move content/content_top to struct mailinfo
  mailinfo: move [ps]_hdr_data to struct mailinfo
  mailinfo: move cmitmsg and patchfile to struct mailinfo
  mailinfo: move charset to struct mailinfo
  mailinfo: move transfer_encoding to struct mailinfo
  mailinfo: move check for metainfo_charset to convert_to_utf8()
  mailinfo: move metainfo_charset to struct mailinfo
  mailinfo: move use_scissors and use_inbody_headers to struct mailinfo
  mailinfo: move add_message_id and message_id to struct mailinfo
  mailinfo: move patch_lines to struct mailinfo
  mailinfo: move filter/header stage to struct mailinfo
  mailinfo: move global "FILE *fin, *fout" to struct mailinfo
  mailinfo: move keep_subject & keep_non_patch_bracket to struct mailinfo
  mailinfo: introduce "struct mailinfo" to hold globals
  mailinfo: move global "line" into mailinfo() function
  ...
2015-10-29 13:59:22 -07:00
9627b0a49f Merge branch 'rp/link-curl-before-ssl'
The linkage order of libraries was wrong in places around libcurl.

* rp/link-curl-before-ssl:
  configure.ac: detect ssl need with libcurl
  Makefile: make curl-config path configurable
  Makefile: link libcurl before zlib
2015-10-29 13:59:20 -07:00
69fe31887b Merge branch 'dt/name-hash-dir-entry-fix'
The name-hash subsystem that is used to cope with case insensitive
filesystems keeps track of directories and their on-filesystem
cases for all the paths in the index by holding a pointer to a
randomly chosen cache entry that is inside the directory (for its
ce->ce_name component).  This pointer was not updated even when the
cache entry was removed from the index, leading to use after free.
This was fixed by recording the path for each directory instead of
borrowing cache entries and restructuring the API somewhat.

* dt/name-hash-dir-entry-fix:
  name-hash: don't reuse cache_entry in dir_entry
2015-10-29 13:59:19 -07:00
433cc7e3fb Merge branch 'tk/sigchain-unnecessary-post-tempfile'
Remove no-longer used #include.

* tk/sigchain-unnecessary-post-tempfile:
  shallow: remove unused #include "sigchain.h"
  read-cache: remove unused #include "sigchain.h"
  diff: remove unused #include "sigchain.h"
  credential-cache--daemon: remove unused #include "sigchain.h"
2015-10-29 13:59:18 -07:00
228905fbce Merge branch 'jk/war-on-sprintf'
* jk/war-on-sprintf:
  compat/mingw.c: remove printf format warning
  read_branches_file: plug a FILE* leak
2015-10-29 13:59:17 -07:00
73167677c0 Merge branch 'jc/em-dash-in-doc'
AsciiDoc markup fixes.

* jc/em-dash-in-doc:
  Documentation: AsciiDoc spells em-dash as double-dashes, not triple
2015-10-29 13:59:16 -07:00
f7a88b6c58 Merge branch 'jc/everyday-markup'
AsciiDoc markup fixes.

* jc/everyday-markup:
  Documentation/everyday: match undefline with the text
2015-10-29 13:59:15 -07:00
6abe8f4439 Merge branch 'xf/user-manual-markup'
AsciiDoc markup fixes.

* xf/user-manual-markup:
  Documentation: match undefline with the text in old release notes
  Documentation: match underline with the text
  Documentation: fix header markup
2015-10-29 13:59:14 -07:00
cfe2d4be91 difftool: ignore symbolic links in use_wt_file
The caller is preparing a narrowed-down copy of the working tree and
this function is asked if the path should be included in that copy.
If we say yes, the path from the working tree will be either symlinked
or copied into the narrowed-down copy.

For any path that is a symbolic link, the caller later fixes up the
narrowed-down copy by unlinking the path and replacing it with a
regular file it writes out that mimics the way how "git diff"
compares symbolic links.

Let's answer "no, you do not want to copy/symlink the working tree
file" for all symbolic links from this function, as we know the
result will not be used because it will be overwritten anyway.

Incidentally, this also stops the function from feeding a symbolic
link in the working tree to hash-object, which is a wrong thing to
do to begin with. The link may be pointing at a directory, or worse
may be dangling (both would be noticed as an error).  Even if the
link points at a regular file, hashing the contents of a file that
is pointed at by the link is not correct (Git hashes the contents of
the link itself, not the pointee).

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-29 13:43:10 -07:00
e34f80278e merge-file: clamp exit code to maximum 127
Git-merge-file is documented to return one of three exit
codes:

  - zero means the merge was successful

  - a negative number means an error occurred

  - a positive number indicates the number of conflicts

Unfortunately, this all gets stuffed into an 8-bit return
code. Which means that if you have 256 conflicts, this wraps
to zero, and the merge appears to succeed (and commits a
blob full of conflict-marker cruft!).

This patch clamps the return value to a maximum of 127,
which we should be able to safely represent everywhere. This
also leaves 128-255 for other values. Shells (and some parts
of git) will typically represent signal death as 128 plus
the signal number. And negative values are typically coerced
to an 8-bit unsigned value (so "return -1" ends up as 255).

Technically negative returns have the same problem (e.g.,
"-256" wraps back to 0), but this is not a problem in
practice, as the only negative value we use is "-1".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-29 12:10:23 -07:00
39743cf554 rebase-i: work around Windows CRLF line endings
Editors on Windows can and do save text files with CRLF line
endings, which is the convention on the platform.  We are seeing
reports that the "read" command in a port of bash to the environment
however does not strip the CRLF at the end, not adjusting for the
same convention on the platform.

This breaks the recently added sanity checks for the insn sheet fed
to "rebase -i"; instead of an empty line (hence nothing in $command),
the script was getting a lone CR in there.

Special case a lone CR and treat it the same way as an empty line to
work this around.

This patch (also) passes the test with Git for Windows, where the
issue was seen first.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-28 10:06:46 -07:00
1db25aae5e t3404: "rebase -i" gets broken when insn sheet uses CR/LF line endings
Based on a bug report by Chad Boles.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-28 10:01:59 -07:00
9a6e4f032e add_submodule_odb: initialize alt_odb list earlier
The add_submodule_odb function tries to add a submodule's
object store as an "alternate". It needs the existing list
to be initialized (from the objects/info/alternates file)
for two reasons:

  1. We look for duplicates with the existing alternate
     stores, but obviously this doesn't work if we haven't
     loaded any yet.

  2. We link our new entry into the list by prepending it to
     alt_odb_list. But we do _not_ modify alt_odb_tail.
     This variable starts as NULL, and is a signal to the
     alt_odb code that the list has not yet been
     initialized.

     We then call read_info_alternates on the submodule (to
     recursively load its alternates), which will try to
     append to that tail, assuming it has been initialized.
     This causes us to segfault if it is NULL.

This rarely comes up in practice, because we will have
initialized the alt_odb any time we do an object lookup. So
you can trigger this only when:

  - you try to access a submodule (e.g., a diff with
    diff.submodule=log)

  - the access happens before any other object has been
    accessed (e.g., because the diff is between the working
    tree and the index)

  - the submodule contains an alternates file (so we try to
    add an entry to the NULL alt_odb_tail)

To fix this, we just need to call prepare_alt_odb at the
start of the function (and if we have already initialized,
it is a noop).

Note that we can remove the prepare_alt_odb call from the
end. It is guaranteed to be a noop, since we will have
called it earlier.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-28 08:26:15 -07:00
37023ba381 Seventh batch for 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-26 16:02:08 -07:00
922239e7da Merge branch 'dk/p4-import-ctypes'
"git-p4" tried to use from ctypes module without first importing
it.

* dk/p4-import-ctypes:
  git-p4: import the ctypes module
2015-10-26 15:55:26 -07:00
fa46579555 Merge branch 'jk/repository-extension'
Prepare for Git on-disk repository representation to undergo
backward incompatible changes by introducing a new repository
format version "1", with an extension mechanism.

* jk/repository-extension:
  introduce "preciousObjects" repository extension
  introduce "extensions" form of core.repositoryformatversion
2015-10-26 15:55:25 -07:00
9d4a0692dc Merge branch 'dt/t7063-fix-flaky-test'
* dt/t7063-fix-flaky-test:
  t7063: fix flaky untracked-cache test
2015-10-26 15:55:23 -07:00
2be421dbb6 Merge branch 'kn/for-each-tag'
Recent update to "git tag --contains" caused a performance
regression.

* kn/for-each-tag:
  tag.c: use the correct algorithm for the '--contains' option
2015-10-26 15:55:22 -07:00
522e2f4515 Merge branch 'es/worktree-add'
* es/worktree-add:
  worktree: usage: denote <branch> as optional with 'add'
2015-10-26 15:55:21 -07:00
1ad7c0f689 Merge branch 'tk/stripspace'
The internal stripspace() function has been moved to where it
logically belongs to, i.e. strbuf API, and the command line parser
of "git stripspace" has been updated to use the parse_options API.

* tk/stripspace:
  stripspace: use parse-options for command-line parsing
  strbuf: make stripspace() part of strbuf
2015-10-26 15:55:20 -07:00
0884726b43 Merge branch 'rt/placeholder-in-usage'
A couple of commands still showed "[options]" in their usage string
to note where options should come on their command line, but we
spell that "[<options>]" in most places these days.

* rt/placeholder-in-usage:
  am, credential-cache: add angle brackets to usage string
2015-10-26 15:55:18 -07:00
97a9e546a2 Merge branch 'jc/usage-stdin'
The synopsis text and the usage string of subcommands that read
list of things from the standard input are often shown as if they
only take input from a file on a filesystem, which was misleading.

* jc/usage-stdin:
  usage: do not insist that standard input must come from a file
2015-10-26 15:55:17 -07:00
a46dcfb840 Merge branch 'mr/worktree-list'
Add the "list" subcommand to "git worktree".

* mr/worktree-list:
  worktree: add 'list' command
  worktree: add details to the worktree struct
  worktree: add a function to get worktree details
  worktree: refactor find_linked_symref function
  worktree: add top-level worktree.c
2015-10-26 15:55:16 -07:00
9c53de7de1 Merge branch 'jc/am-3-fallback-regression-fix'
"git am -3" had a small regression where it is aborted in its error
handling codepath when underlying merge-recursive failed in certain
ways, as it assumed that the internal call to merge-recursive will
never die, which is not the case (yet).

* jc/am-3-fallback-regression-fix:
  am -3: do not let failed merge from completing the error codepath
2015-10-26 15:55:15 -07:00
72fac66bca merge: detect delete/modechange conflict
If one side deletes a file and the other changes its
content, we notice and report a conflict. However, if
instead of changing the content, we change only the mode,
the merge does not notice (and the mode change is silently
dropped).

The trivial index merge notices the problem and correctly
leaves the conflict in the index, but both merge-recursive
and merge-one-file will silently resolve this in favor of
the deletion.  In many cases that is a sane resolution, but
we should be punting to the user whenever there is any
question. So let's detect and treat this as a conflict (in
both strategies).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-26 14:49:31 -07:00
f78d1fe208 t6031: generalize for recursive and resolve strategies
This script tests the filemode handling of merge-recursive,
but we do not test the same thing for merge-resolve. Let's
generalize the script a little:

  1. Break out the setup steps for each test into a separate
     snippet.

  2. For each test, run it twice; once with "-s recursive"
     and once with "-s resolve". We can avoid repeating
     ourselves by adding a function.

  3. Since we have a nice abstracted function, we can make
     our tests more thorough by testing both directions
     (change on "ours" versus "theirs").

This improves our test coverage, and will make this the
place to add more tests related to merging mode changes.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-26 14:48:56 -07:00
6f50833e98 t6031: move triple-rename test to t3030
The t6031 test was introduced to check filemode handling of
merge-recursive. Much later, an unrelated test was tacked on
to look at renames and d/f conflicts. This test does not
depend on anything that happened before (it actually blows
away any existing content in the test repo). Let's move it
to t3030, where there are more related tests.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-26 14:48:54 -07:00
e510ab8988 use pop_commit() for consuming the first entry of a struct commit_list
Instead of open-coding the function pop_commit() just call it.  This
makes the intent clearer and reduces code size.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-26 14:06:46 -07:00
fdcdb77855 Correct fscanf formatting string for I64u values
This fix is probably purely cosmetic because PRIuMAX is likely identical
to SCNuMAX. Nevertheless, when using a function of the scanf() family,
the correct interpolation to use is the latter, not the former.

Signed-off-by: Waldek Maleska <w.maleska@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-26 13:24:03 -07:00
56a1a3ab44 Silence GCC's "cast of pointer to integer of a different size" warning
When calculating hashes from pointers, it actually makes sense to cut
off the most significant bits. In that case, said warning does not make
a whole lot of sense.

So let's just work around it by casting the pointer first to intptr_t
and then casting up/down to the final integral type.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-26 13:24:03 -07:00
8f77442358 Squelch warning about an integer overflow
We cannot rely on long integers to have more than 32 bits.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-26 13:23:59 -07:00
71d9257525 imap-send: only use CURLOPT_LOGIN_OPTIONS if it is actually available
This fixes the compilation on an older Linux that was used to debug
test failures when upgrading Git for Windows to Git v2.3.0.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-26 13:10:30 -07:00
95261974bb blame: fix option name in error message
The option name used in blame's UI is `--reverse`.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-26 13:08:21 -07:00
b2af4829cc user-manual: fix the description of fast-forward
The "Fast-forward merges" section of user-manual.txt incorrectly
says if the current branch is a descendant of the other, Git will
perform a fast-forward merge, but it should the other way around.

Signed-off-by: Xue Fuqiao <xfq.free@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-26 13:03:44 -07:00
29abb33978 add: simplify -u/-A without pathspec
Since Git 2.0, "add -u" and "add -A" run from a subdirectory without
any pathspec mean "everything in the working tree" (before 2.0, they
were limited to the current directory).  The limiting to the current
directory was implemented by inserting "." to the command line when
the end user did not give us any pathspec.  At 2.0, we updated the
code to insert ":/" (instead of '.') to consider everything from the
top-level, by using a pathspec magic "top".

The call to parse_pathspec() using the command line arguments is,
however, made with PATHSPEC_PREFER_FULL option since 5a76aff1 (add:
convert to use parse_pathspec, 2013-07-14), which predates Git 2.0.
In retrospect, there was no need to turn "adding . to limit to the
directory" into "adding :/ to unlimit to everywhere" in Git 2.0;
instead we could just have done "if there is no pathspec on the
command line, just let it be".  The parse_pathspec() then would give
us a pathspec that matches everything and all is well.

Incidentally such a simplification also fixes a corner case bug that
stems from the fact that ":/" does not necessarily mean any magic.
A user would say "git --literal-pathspecs add -u :/" from the
command line when she has a directory ':' and wants to add
everything in it (and she knows that her :/ will be taken as
'everything under the sun' magic pathspec unless she disables the
magic with --literal-pathspecs).  The internal use of ':/' would
behave the same way as such an explicitly given ":/" when run with
"--literal-pathspecs", and will not add everything under the sun as
the code originally intended.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-24 19:32:47 -07:00
d62c89afb2 compat/mingw.c: remove printf format warning
5096d490 (convert trivial sprintf / strcpy calls to xsnprintf) converted
two sprintf calls. Now GCC warns that "format '%u' expects argument of
type 'unsigned int', but argument 4 has type 'long unsigned int'".
Instead of changing the format string, use a variable of type unsigned
in place of the typedef-ed type DWORD, which hides that it is actually an
unsigned long.

There is no correctness issue with the old code because unsigned long and
unsigned are always of the same size on Windows, even in 64-bit builds.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-23 10:17:53 -07:00
0fb19906b5 read_branches_file: plug a FILE* leak
The earlier rewrite f28e3ab2 (read_branches_file: simplify string handling)
of read_branches_file() lost an fclose() call. Put it back.

As on Windows files that are open cannot be removed, the leak manifests in
a failure of 'git remote rename origin origin' when the remote's URL is
specified in .git/branches/origin, because by the time that the command
attempts to remove this file, it is still open.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-23 10:17:48 -07:00
3b19dba703 Documentation: AsciiDoc spells em-dash as double-dashes, not triple
Again, we do not usually process release notes with AsciiDoc, but it
is better to be consistent.

This incidentally reveals breakages left by an ancient 5e00439f
(Documentation: build html for all files in technical and howto,
2012-10-23).  The index-format documentation was originally written
to be read as straight text without formatting and when the commit
forced everything in Documentation/ to go through AsciiDoc, it did
not do any adjustment--hence the double-dashes will be seen in the
resulting text that is rendered as preformatted fixed-width without
converted into em-dashes.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-22 13:02:33 -07:00
0181681e92 clone: allow "--dissociate" without reference
The "--reference" option is not the only way to provide a repository
to borrow objects from.  A repository that borrows from another
repository can be cloned with "clone --local" and the resulting
repository will borrow from the same repository, which the user
may want to "--dissociate" from.

Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-22 12:13:29 -07:00
4b7c50a184 shallow: remove unused #include "sigchain.h"
After switching to use the tempfile module in commit 6e122b44
(setup_temporary_shallow(): use tempfile module), no declarations from
sigchain.h are used in read-cache.c anymore. Thus, remove the #include.

Signed-off-by: Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-22 11:12:38 -07:00
a559263cae read-cache: remove unused #include "sigchain.h"
After switching to use the tempfile module in commit f6ecc62d
(write_shared_index(): use tempfile module), no declarations from
sigchain.h are used in read-cache.c anymore. Thus, remove the #include.

Signed-off-by: Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-22 11:12:37 -07:00
086ecab1a7 diff: remove unused #include "sigchain.h"
After switching to use the tempfile module in commit 284098f1
(diff: use tempfile module), no declarations from sigchain.h are used in
diff.c anymore. Thus, remove the #include.

Signed-off-by: Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-22 11:12:37 -07:00
e17fd18ae2 credential-cache--daemon: remove unused #include "sigchain.h"
After switching to use the tempfile module in commit 9e903316
(credential-cache--daemon: use tempfile module), no declarations from
sigchain.h are used in credential-cache--daemon.c anymore. Thus, remove
the #include.

Signed-off-by: Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-22 11:12:37 -07:00
77d5f715c2 Documentation: match undefline with the text in old release notes
These are not processed with AsciiDoc, but it is better to be
consistent.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-22 10:16:17 -07:00
142d035a02 Documentation: match underline with the text
Even though AsciiDoc is more lenient when deciding if an underline
is for the contents on the previous line to find section headers, we
should match the length of them for other formatters to help them.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-22 10:16:12 -07:00
f3f38c7d9b Documentation/everyday: match undefline with the text
Even though AsciiDoc is more lenient when deciding if an underline
is for the contents on the previous line to find section headers, we
should match the length of them for other formatters to help them.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-22 10:14:44 -07:00
a3e1fa97bc Documentation: fix header markup
Asciidoctor is stricter than AsciiDoc when deciding if underlining
is a section title or the start of preformatted text.  Make the
length of the underlining match the text to ensure that it renders
correctly in all implementations.

Signed-off-by: Xue Fuqiao <xfq.free@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-22 09:35:36 -07:00
6ac617a321 mailinfo: remove calls to exit() and die() deep in the callchain
The top-level mailinfo() would instead punt when the code in the
deeper part of the callchain detects an unrecoverable error in the
input.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:59:34 -07:00
4b98bae2cb am: make direct call to mailinfo
And finally the endgame.  Instead of spawning "git mailinfo" via the
run_command() API the same number of times as there are incoming
patches, make direct internal call to the libified mailinfo() from
"git am" to reduce the spawning overhead, which would matter on some
platforms.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:59:34 -07:00
669b963af2 mailinfo: handle charset conversion errors in the caller
Instead of dying in convert_to_utf8(), just report an error and let
the callers handle it.  Between the two callers:

 - decode_header() silently punts when it cannot parse a broken
   RFC2047 encoded text (e.g. when it sees anything other than B or
   Q after it sees "=?<charset>") by jumping to release_return,
   returning the string it successfully parsed out so far, to the
   caller.  A piece of string that convert_to_utf8() cannot handle
   can be treated the same way.

 - handle_commit_msg() doesn't cope with a malformed line well, so
   die there for now.  We'll lift this even higher in later changes
   in this series.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:59:34 -07:00
c6905e45f0 mailinfo: libify
Move the bulk of the code from builtin/mailinfo.c to mailinfo.c
so that new callers can start calling mailinfo() directly.

Note that a few calls to exit() and die() need to be cleaned up
for the API to be truly useful, which will come in later steps.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:59:34 -07:00
05e625e5bf mailinfo: keep the parsed log message in a strbuf
When mailinfo() is eventually libified, the calling "git am" still
will have to write out the log message in the "msg" file for hooks
and other users of the information, but it does not have to reopen
and reread what it wrote earlier if the function kept it in a strbuf.

This also removes the need for seeking and truncating the output
file when we see a scissors mark in the input, which in turn allows
us to lose two callsites of die_errno().

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:57:17 -07:00
4933910ab7 mailinfo: handle_commit_msg() shouldn't be called after finding patchbreak
There is a strange "if (!mi->cmitmsg) return 0" at the very beginning
of handle_commit_msg(), but the condition should never trigger, because:

 * The only place cmitmsg is set to NULL is after this function sees
   a patch break, closes the FILE * to write the commit log message
   and returns 1.  This function returns non-zero only from that
   codepath.

 * The caller of this function, upon seeing a non-zero return,
   increments filter_stage, starts treating the input as patch text
   and will never call handle_commit_msg() again.

Replace it with an assert(!mi->filter_stage) to ensure the above
observation will stay to be true.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:57:17 -07:00
8e919277e0 mailinfo: move content/content_top to struct mailinfo
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:57:17 -07:00
d895bf0f57 mailinfo: move [ps]_hdr_data to struct mailinfo
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:56:17 -07:00
8f63588a6e mailinfo: move cmitmsg and patchfile to struct mailinfo
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:55:01 -07:00
f1e037b9af mailinfo: move charset to struct mailinfo
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:55:01 -07:00
ab50e38b5d mailinfo: move transfer_encoding to struct mailinfo
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:53:25 -07:00
28c6bfe94c mailinfo: move check for metainfo_charset to convert_to_utf8()
All callers of this function refrain from calling it when
mi->metainfo_charset is NULL; move the check to the callee,
as it already has a few conditions at its beginning to turn
it into a no-op.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:50:17 -07:00
28be2d083c mailinfo: move metainfo_charset to struct mailinfo
This requires us to pass the struct down to decode_header() and
convert_to_utf8() callchain.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:50:17 -07:00
ad57ef9da9 mailinfo: move use_scissors and use_inbody_headers to struct mailinfo
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:42:57 -07:00
6200b751bb mailinfo: move add_message_id and message_id to struct mailinfo
This requires us to pass the structure into check_header() codepath.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:42:57 -07:00
43550efa71 mailinfo: move patch_lines to struct mailinfo
This one is trivial thanks to previous steps that started passing
the structure throughout the input codepaths.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:39:01 -07:00
13c6df2642 mailinfo: move filter/header stage to struct mailinfo
Earlier we got rid of two function-scope static variables that kept
track of the states of helper functions by making them extra arguments
that are passed throughout the callchain.  Now we have a convenient
place to store and pass them around in the form of "struct mailinfo",
change them into two fields in the struct.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:39:01 -07:00
173aef7c2e mailinfo: move global "FILE *fin, *fout" to struct mailinfo
This requires us to pass "struct mailinfo" to more functions
throughout the codepath that read input lines.  Incidentally,
later steps are helped by this patch passing the struct to
more callchains.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:39:01 -07:00
849106d511 mailinfo: move keep_subject & keep_non_patch_bracket to struct mailinfo
These two are the only easy ones that do not require passing the
structure around to deep corners of the callchain.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:37:53 -07:00
c69f2395ba mailinfo: introduce "struct mailinfo" to hold globals
In this first step, move only 'email' and 'name' fields in there and
remove the corresponding globals.  In subsequent patches, more
globals will be moved to this and the structure will be passed
around as a new parameter to more functions.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:37:52 -07:00
6e21b5089f mailinfo: move global "line" into mailinfo() function
With the previous steps, it becomes clear that the mailinfo()
function is the only one that wants the "line" to be directly
touchable.  Move it to the function scope of this function.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:37:52 -07:00
fbbcafd060 mailinfo: do not let find_boundary() touch global "line" directly
With the previous two commits, we established that the local
variable "line" in handle_body() and handle_boundary() functions
always refer to the global "line" that is used as the common and
shared "current line from the input".  They are the only callers of
the last function that refers to the global line directly, i.e.
find_boundary().  Pass "line" as a parameter to this leaf function
to complete the clean-up.  Now the only function that directly refers
to the global "line" is the caller of handle_body() at the very
beginning of this whole callchain.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:37:50 -07:00
69e24defd6 mailinfo: do not let handle_boundary() touch global "line" directly
This function has a single caller, and called with the global "line"
holding the multi-part boundary line the caller saw while processing
the e-mail body.  The function then goes into a loop to process each
line of the input, and fills the same global "line" variable from
the input as it needs to read more lines to process the multi-part
headers.

Let the caller explicitly pass a pointer to this global "line"
variable as an argument, and have the function itself use that
strbuf throughout, instead of referring to the global "line" itself.

There still is a helper function that this function calls that still
touches the global directly; it will be updated as the series progresses.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:36:37 -07:00
fde00d50f6 mailinfo: do not let handle_body() touch global "line" directly
This function has a single caller, and called with the global "line"
holding the first line of the e-mail body after the caller finished
processing the e-mail headers.  The function then goes into a loop
to process each line of the input, starting from what was given by
its caller, and fills the same global "line" variable from the input
as it needs to process more lines.

Let the caller explicitly pass a pointer to this global "line"
variable as an argument, and have the function itself use that
strbuf throughout, instead of referring to the global "line" itself.

There are helper functions that this function calls that still touch
the global directly; they will be updated as the series progresses.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:36:37 -07:00
269e239c48 mailinfo: get rid of function-local static states
Two helper functions use "static int" in their scope to keep track
of the state while repeatedly getting called once for each input
line.  Move these state variables to their ultimate caller and pass
down pointers to them along the callchain, as a small step in
preparation for making this entire callchain more reentrant.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:36:37 -07:00
c1b40bd7b6 mailinfo: move definition of MAX_HDR_PARSED closer to its use
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:34:49 -07:00
30f50c3426 mailinfo: move cleanup_space() before its users
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:33:39 -07:00
4f0f9d46c7 mailinfo: move check_header() after the helpers it uses
This way, we can lose a forward decl for decode_header().

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:32:43 -07:00
9cc243f7a9 mailinfo: move read_one_header_line() closer to its callers
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:30:15 -07:00
39afcd3819 mailinfo: move handle_boundary() lower
This function wants to call find_boundary() and is called only from
one place without any recursing, so it becomes easier to read if it
appears after the called function.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:20:49 -07:00
12d19e80b0 mailinfo: plug strbuf leak during continuation line handling
Whether this loop is left via EOF/break or upon finding a
non-continuation line, the storage used for the contination line
handling is left behind.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 15:18:50 -07:00
41284eb0f9 name-hash: don't reuse cache_entry in dir_entry
Stop reusing cache_entry in dir_entry; doing so causes a
use-after-free bug.

During merges, we free entries that we no longer need in the
destination index.  But those entries might have also been stored in
the dir_entry cache, and when a later call to add_to_index found them,
they would be used after being freed.

To prevent this, change dir_entry to store a copy of the name instead
of a pointer to a cache_entry.  This entails some refactoring of code
that expects the cache_entry.

Keith McGuigan <kmcguigan@twitter.com> diagnosed this bug and wrote
the initial patch, but this version does not use any of Keith's code.

Helped-by: Keith McGuigan <kmcguigan@twitter.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 12:47:38 -07:00
7e91e8d73a configure.ac: detect ssl need with libcurl
When libcurl has been statically compiled with openssl support they both
need to be linked in everytime libcurl is used.

During configuration this can be detected by looking for Curl_ssl_init
function symbol in libcurl, which will only be present if libcurl has been
compiled statically built with openssl.

configure.ac checks for Curl_ssl_init function in libcurl and if such function
exists; it sets NEEDS_SSL_WITH_CURL that is used by the Makefile to include
-lssl alongside with -lcurl.

Signed-off-by: Remi Pommarel <repk@triplefau.lt>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 12:44:44 -07:00
f89158760d Makefile: make curl-config path configurable
There are situations, e.g. during cross compilation, where curl-config
program is not present in the PATH.

Make the makefile use a configurable curl-config program passed through
CURL_CONFIG variable which can be set through config.mak.

Also make this variable tunable through use of autoconf/configure. Configure
will set CURL_CONFIG variable in config.mak.autogen to whatever value has been
passed to ac_cv_prog_CURL_CONFIG.

Signed-off-by: Remi Pommarel <repk@triplefau.lt>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 12:43:31 -07:00
9eaa78b0b0 Makefile: link libcurl before zlib
For static linking especially library order while linking is important. For
example, libcurl wants symbols from zlib when building http-push, http-fetch
and remote-curl. So for these programs libcurl has to be linked before zlib.

Signed-off-by: Remi Pommarel <repk@triplefau.lt>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-21 12:43:03 -07:00
74301d6ede Sync with maint
* maint:
2015-10-20 15:29:57 -07:00
bca92e88e7 Sixth batch for 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-20 15:29:50 -07:00
f0d2f73866 Merge branch 'tb/t0027-crlf'
The test for various line-ending conversions has been enhanced.

* tb/t0027-crlf:
  t0027: improve test for not-normalized files
2015-10-20 15:26:18 -07:00
d94447d3b6 Merge branch 'ls/p4-test-updates'
A few test scripts around "git p4" have been improved for
portability.

* ls/p4-test-updates:
  git-p4: skip t9819 test case on case insensitive file systems
  git-p4: avoid "stat" command in t9815 git-p4-submit-fail
2015-10-20 15:26:09 -07:00
78891795df Merge branch 'jk/war-on-sprintf'
Many allocations that is manually counted (correctly) that are
followed by strcpy/sprintf have been replaced with a less error
prone constructs such as xstrfmt.

Macintosh-specific breakage was noticed and corrected in this
reroll.

* jk/war-on-sprintf: (70 commits)
  name-rev: use strip_suffix to avoid magic numbers
  use strbuf_complete to conditionally append slash
  fsck: use for_each_loose_file_in_objdir
  Makefile: drop D_INO_IN_DIRENT build knob
  fsck: drop inode-sorting code
  convert strncpy to memcpy
  notes: document length of fanout path with a constant
  color: add color_set helper for copying raw colors
  prefer memcpy to strcpy
  help: clean up kfmclient munging
  receive-pack: simplify keep_arg computation
  avoid sprintf and strcpy with flex arrays
  use alloc_ref rather than hand-allocating "struct ref"
  color: add overflow checks for parsing colors
  drop strcpy in favor of raw sha1_to_hex
  use sha1_to_hex_r() instead of strcpy
  daemon: use cld->env_array when re-spawning
  stat_tracking_info: convert to argv_array
  http-push: use an argv_array for setup_revisions
  fetch-pack: use argv_array for index-pack / unpack-objects
  ...
2015-10-20 15:24:01 -07:00
b05c2f9ed4 Merge branch 'js/gc-with-stale-symref' into maint
"git gc" used to barf when a symbolic ref has gone dangling
(e.g. the branch that used to be your upstream's default when you
cloned from it is now gone, and you did "fetch --prune").

* js/gc-with-stale-symref:
  pack-objects: do not get distracted by broken symrefs
  gc: demonstrate failure with stale remote HEAD
2015-10-20 15:22:42 -07:00
3b7c49e9a3 Merge branch 'rd/test-path-utils' into maint
The normalize_ceiling_entry() function does not muck with the end
of the path it accepts, and the real world callers do rely on that,
but a test insisted that the function drops a trailing slash.

* rd/test-path-utils:
  test-path-utils.c: remove incorrect assumption
2015-10-20 15:22:41 -07:00
ce555f3842 Merge branch 'jc/doc-gc-prune-now' into maint
"git gc" is safe to run anytime only because it has the built-in
grace period to protect young objects.  In order to run with no
grace period, the user must make sure that the repository is
quiescent.

* jc/doc-gc-prune-now:
  Documentation/gc: warn against --prune=<now>
2015-10-20 15:22:40 -07:00
44a9b53c59 Merge branch 'jk/filter-branch-use-of-sed-on-incomplete-line' into maint
A recent "filter-branch --msg-filter" broke skipping of the commit
object header, which is fixed.

* jk/filter-branch-use-of-sed-on-incomplete-line:
  filter-branch: remove multi-line headers in msg filter
2015-10-20 15:22:39 -07:00
4b07cd230a git-p4: import the ctypes module
The ctypes module is used on windows to calculate free disk space,
so it must be imported.  We won't need it on other platforms, but
the module is available in Python 2.5 and newer, so importing it
unconditionally is harmless.

Signed-off-by: Dennis Kaarsemaker <dennis@kaarsemaker.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-20 12:55:22 -07:00
9b680fbd3b t7063: fix flaky untracked-cache test
Dirty the test worktree's root directory, as the test expects.

When testing the untracked-cache, we previously assumed that checking
out master would be sufficient to mark the mtime of the worktree's
root directory as racily-dirty.  But sometimes, the checkout would
happen at 12345.999 seconds and the status at 12346.001 seconds,
meaning that the worktree's root directory would not be racily-dirty.
And since it was not truly dirty, occasionally the test would fail.
By making the root truly dirty, the test will always succeed.

Tested by running a few hundred times.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-19 18:32:28 -07:00
614a2aced1 Sync with maint for Russian translation
* maint:
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
2015-10-18 23:39:20 -07:00
1b5ffa36cb Merge branch 'maint' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po into maint
* 'maint' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
2015-10-18 23:37:35 -07:00
ae9f2745be worktree: usage: denote <branch> as optional with 'add'
Although 1eb07d8 (worktree: add: auto-vivify new branch when
<branch> is omitted, 2015-07-06) updated the documentation when
<branch> became optional, it neglected to update the in-code
usage message. Fix this oversight.

Reported-by: ch3cooli@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Sidhant Sharma <tigerkid001@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-18 23:35:58 -07:00
e38ee06e99 mailinfo: explicitly close file handle to the patch output
This does not make a difference within the context of "git mailinfo"
that runs once and exits, as flushing and closing would happen upon
process termination.  It however will matter when we eventually make
it callable as an API function.

Besides, cleaning after yourself once you are done is a good hygiene.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-18 22:13:27 -07:00
b6af8ed13a mailinfo: fix an off-by-one error in the boundary stack
We pre-increment the pointer that we will use to store something at,
so the pointer is already beyond the end of the array if it points
at content[MAX_BOUNDARIES].

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-18 22:13:27 -07:00
3a8fcdaf84 mailinfo: fold decode_header_bq() into decode_header()
In olden days we might have wanted to behave differently in
decode_header() if the header line was encoded with RFC2047, but we
apparently do not do so, hence this helper function can go, together
with its return value.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-18 22:13:27 -07:00
2a5ce7cf0d mailinfo: remove a no-op call convert_to_utf8(it, "")
The called function checks if the second parameter is either a NULL
or an empty string at the very beginning and returns without doing
anything.  Remove the useless call.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-18 22:13:27 -07:00
008ed7df93 tag.c: use the correct algorithm for the '--contains' option
In b7cc53e9 (tag.c: use 'ref-filter' APIs, 2015-09-11) we port tag.c
to use the ref-filter APIs for filtering and printing refs.  In
ref-filter we have two implementations for filtering refs when the
'--contains' option is used.

Although they do the same thing, one is optimized for filtering
branches and the other for tags (borrowed from branch.c and tag.c
respectively) and the 'filter->with_commit_tag_algo' bit decides
which algorithm must be used.  We should unify these.

When we ported tag.c to use ref-filter APIs we missed out on setting
the 'filter->with_commit_tag_algo' bit.  As reported by Jerry
Snitselaar, this causes "git tag --contains" to work way slower than
expected, fix this by setting 'filter->with_commit_tag_algo' in
tag.c before calling 'filter_refs()'.

Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Tested-by: Jerry Snitselaar <jsnitsel@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-18 16:07:36 -07:00
33e8fc8740 usage: do not insist that standard input must come from a file
The synopsys text and the usage string of subcommands that read list
of things from the standard input are often shown like this:

	git gostak [--distim] < <list-of-doshes>

This is problematic in a number of ways:

 * The way to use these commands is more often to feed them the
   output from another command, not feed them from a file.

 * Manual pages outside Git, commands that operate on the data read
   from the standard input, e.g "sort", "grep", "sed", etc., are not
   described with such a "< redirection-from-file" in their synopsys
   text.  Our doing so introduces inconsistency.

 * We do not insist on where the output should go, by saying

	git gostak [--distim] < <list-of-doshes> > <output>

 * As it is our convention to enclose placeholders inside <braket>,
   the redirection operator followed by a placeholder filename
   becomes very hard to read, both in the documentation and in the
   help text.

Let's clean them all up, after making sure that the documentation
clearly describes the modes that take information from the standard
input and what kind of things are expected on the input.

[jc: stole example for fmt-merge-msg from Jonathan]

Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-16 15:27:52 -07:00
0c4dd78434 Sync with 2.6.2 2015-10-16 14:45:49 -07:00
906c32b9c3 Fifth batch for 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-16 14:44:00 -07:00
d5d1e35ace Merge branch 'jc/doc-gc-prune-now'
"git gc" is safe to run anytime only because it has the built-in
grace period to protect young objects.  In order to run with no
grace period, the user must make sure that the repository is
quiescent.

* jc/doc-gc-prune-now:
  Documentation/gc: warn against --prune=<now>
2015-10-16 14:42:50 -07:00
8b70042569 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-config-parse'
Code simplification.

* sb/submodule-config-parse:
  submodule-config: "goto" removal in parse_config()
2015-10-16 14:42:49 -07:00
1551511bdb Merge branch 'jk/filter-branch-use-of-sed-on-incomplete-line'
A recent "filter-branch --msg-filter" broke skipping of the commit
object header, which is fixed.

* jk/filter-branch-use-of-sed-on-incomplete-line:
  filter-branch: remove multi-line headers in msg filter
2015-10-16 14:42:47 -07:00
c6185c0b17 Merge branch 'rd/test-path-utils'
The normalize_ceiling_entry() function does not muck with the end
of the path it accepts, and the real world callers do rely on that,
but a test insisted that the function drops a trailing slash.

* rd/test-path-utils:
  test-path-utils.c: remove incorrect assumption
2015-10-16 14:42:46 -07:00
3c3d3f629a Git 2.6.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-16 14:40:05 -07:00
119ffa3351 Merge branch 'cc/quote-comments' into maint
A no-op code-health maintenance.

* cc/quote-comments:
  quote: move comment before sq_quote_buf()
  quote: fix broken sq_quote_buf() related comment
2015-10-16 14:32:58 -07:00
71ae53526d Merge branch 'es/worktree-add-cleanup' into maint
A no-op code-health maintenance.

* es/worktree-add-cleanup:
  t2026: rename worktree prune test
2015-10-16 14:32:57 -07:00
0dd9e571e8 Merge branch 'tk/doc-interpret-trailers-grammo' into maint
* tk/doc-interpret-trailers-grammo:
  Documentation/interpret-trailers: Grammar fix
2015-10-16 14:32:56 -07:00
9ab74762cd Merge branch 'tk/typofix-connect-unknown-proto-error' into maint
* tk/typofix-connect-unknown-proto-error:
  connect: fix typo in result string of prot_name()
2015-10-16 14:32:55 -07:00
aa8f64dead Merge branch 'jk/asciidoctor-section-heading-markup-fix' into maint
* jk/asciidoctor-section-heading-markup-fix:
  Documentation: fix section header mark-up
2015-10-16 14:32:53 -07:00
22f4b15e88 Merge branch 'nd/ls-remote-does-not-have-u-option' into maint
* nd/ls-remote-does-not-have-u-option:
  ls-remote.txt: delete unsupported option
2015-10-16 14:32:52 -07:00
1c7dc12c43 Merge branch 'jc/fsck-dropped-errors' into maint
There were some classes of errors that "git fsck" diagnosed to its
standard error that did not cause it to exit with non-zero status.

* jc/fsck-dropped-errors:
  fsck: exit with non-zero when problems are found
2015-10-16 14:32:50 -07:00
8f6f1771da Merge branch 'sb/http-flaky-test-fix' into maint
A test script for the HTTP service had a timing dependent bug,
which was fixed.

* sb/http-flaky-test-fix:
  t5561: get rid of racy appending to logfile
2015-10-16 14:32:49 -07:00
2c3cb52c6c Merge branch 'sb/perf-without-installed-git' into maint
Performance-measurement tests did not work without an installed Git.

* sb/perf-without-installed-git:
  t/perf: make runner work even if Git is not installed
2015-10-16 14:32:47 -07:00
15cef7ccd9 Merge branch 'js/icase-wt-detection' into maint
On a case insensitive filesystems, setting GIT_WORK_TREE variable
using a random cases that does not agree with what the filesystem
thinks confused Git that it wasn't inside the working tree.

* js/icase-wt-detection:
  setup: fix "inside work tree" detection on case-insensitive filesystems
2015-10-16 14:32:46 -07:00
14f1467493 Merge branch 'pt/am-builtin' into maint
When "git am" was rewritten as a built-in, it stopped paying
attention to user.signingkey, which was fixed.

* pt/am-builtin:
  am: configure gpg at startup
2015-10-16 14:32:45 -07:00
df64186f63 Merge branch 'mm/detach-at-HEAD-reflog' into maint
After "git checkout --detach", "git status" reported a fairly
useless "HEAD detached at HEAD", instead of saying at which exact
commit.

* mm/detach-at-HEAD-reflog:
  status: don't say 'HEAD detached at HEAD'
  t3203: test 'detached at' after checkout --detach
2015-10-16 14:32:44 -07:00
19d11d43fd Merge branch 'gr/rebase-i-drop-warn' into maint
"git rebase -i" had a minor regression recently, which stopped
considering a line that begins with an indented '#' in its insn
sheet not a comment, which is now fixed.

* gr/rebase-i-drop-warn:
  rebase-i: loosen over-eager check_bad_cmd check
  rebase-i: explicitly accept tab as separator in commands
2015-10-16 14:32:43 -07:00
d5fea2418e Merge branch 'dt/log-follow-config' into maint
Description of the "log.follow" configuration variable in "git log"
documentation is now also copied to "git config" documentation.

* dt/log-follow-config:
  log: Update log.follow doc and add to config.txt
2015-10-16 14:32:42 -07:00
267ebf6c84 Merge branch 'ti/glibc-stdio-mutex-from-signal-handler' into maint
Allocation related functions and stdio are unsafe things to call
inside a signal handler, and indeed killing the pager can cause
glibc to deadlock waiting on allocation mutex as our signal handler
tries to free() some data structures in wait_for_pager().  Reduce
these unsafe calls.

* ti/glibc-stdio-mutex-from-signal-handler:
  pager: don't use unsafe functions in signal handlers
2015-10-16 14:32:41 -07:00
f4892a3c28 Merge branch 'jk/notes-dwim-doc' into maint
The way how --ref/--notes to specify the notes tree reference are
DWIMmed was not clearly documented.

* jk/notes-dwim-doc:
  notes: correct documentation of DWIMery for notes references
2015-10-16 14:32:40 -07:00
47c566a4d6 Merge branch 'jk/make-findstring-makeflags-fix' into maint
Customization to change the behaviour with "make -w" and "make -s"
in our Makefile was broken when they were used together.

* jk/make-findstring-makeflags-fix:
  Makefile: fix MAKEFLAGS tests with multiple flags
2015-10-16 14:32:38 -07:00
4d2a3011ee Merge branch 'jw/make-arflags-customizable' into maint
The Makefile always runs the library archiver with hardcoded "crs"
options, which was inconvenient for exotic platforms on which
people want to use programs with totally different set of command
line options.

* jw/make-arflags-customizable:
  Makefile: allow $(ARFLAGS) specified from the command line
2015-10-16 14:32:36 -07:00
a3bbfe5d00 Merge branch 'jk/connect-clear-env' into maint
The ssh transport, just like any other transport over the network,
did not clear GIT_* environment variables, but it is possible to
use SendEnv and AcceptEnv to leak them to the remote invocation of
Git, which is not a good idea at all.  Explicitly clear them just
like we do for the local transport.

* jk/connect-clear-env:
  git_connect: clarify conn->use_shell flag
  git_connect: clear GIT_* environment for ssh
2015-10-16 14:32:35 -07:00
14d5a3e47e Merge branch 'jk/blame-first-parent' into maint
"git blame --first-parent v1.0..v2.0" was not rejected but did not
limit the blame to commits on the first parent chain.

* jk/blame-first-parent:
  blame: handle --first-parent
2015-10-16 14:32:34 -07:00
be4d6f4c7f Merge branch 'mm/keyid-docs' into maint
Very small number of options take a parameter that is optional
(which is not a great UI element as they can only appear at the end
of the command line).  Add notice to documentation of each and
every one of them.

* mm/keyid-docs:
  Documentation: explain optional arguments better
  Documentation/grep: fix documentation of -O
  Documentation: use 'keyid' consistently, not 'key-id'
2015-10-16 14:32:33 -07:00
c7997e54a5 Merge branch 'pt/pull-builtin' into maint
* pt/pull-builtin:
  pull: enclose <options> in brackets in the usage string
  merge: grammofix in please-commit-before-merge message
2015-10-16 14:32:32 -07:00
d96a0313ef am, credential-cache: add angle brackets to usage string
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-16 10:43:41 -07:00
bed4452468 stripspace: use parse-options for command-line parsing
Use parse-options to parse command-line options instead of a
hand-crafted implementation.  The users can now use a unique
prefix of the long option to say e.g. "git stripspace --strip".

Signed-off-by: Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-16 10:28:49 -07:00
63af4a8446 strbuf: make stripspace() part of strbuf
This function is also used in other builtins than stripspace, so it
makes sense to have it in a more generic place.  Since it operates
on an strbuf and the function is declared in strbuf.h, move it to
strbuf.c and add the corresponding prefix to its name, just like
other API functions in the strbuf_* family.

Also switch all current users of stripspace() to the new function
name and keep a temporary wrapper inline function for any topic
branches still using stripspace().

Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-16 09:45:15 -07:00
e7a7401f8b pull: enclose <options> in brackets in the usage string
All the other placeholders are already shown that way.

Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-16 09:38:32 -07:00
a838ae9d49 Fourth batch for 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-15 15:48:56 -07:00
6ff518f593 Merge branch 'ls/p4-lfs'
Teach "git p4" to send large blobs outside the repository by
talking to Git LFS.

* ls/p4-lfs:
  git-p4: add Git LFS backend for large file system
  git-p4: add support for large file systems
  git-p4: check free space during streaming
  git-p4: add file streaming progress in verbose mode
  git-p4: return an empty list if a list config has no values
  git-p4: add gitConfigInt reader
  git-p4: add optional type specifier to gitConfig reader
2015-10-15 15:43:53 -07:00
1018f3eea4 Merge branch 'js/gc-with-stale-symref'
"git gc" used to barf when a symbolic ref has gone dangling
(e.g. the branch that used to be your upstream's default when you
cloned from it is now gone, and you did "fetch --prune").

* js/gc-with-stale-symref:
  pack-objects: do not get distracted by broken symrefs
  gc: demonstrate failure with stale remote HEAD
2015-10-15 15:43:51 -07:00
db5adf24bf Merge branch 'js/clone-dissociate'
"git clone --dissociate" runs a big "git repack" process at the
end, and it helps to close file descriptors that are open on the
packs and their idx files before doing so on filesystems that
cannot remove a file that is still open.

* js/clone-dissociate:
  clone --dissociate: avoid locking pack files
  sha1_file.c: add a function to release all packs
  sha1_file: consolidate code to close a pack's file descriptor
  t5700: demonstrate a Windows file locking issue with `git clone --dissociate`
2015-10-15 15:43:49 -07:00
b80dd559c9 Merge branch 'tk/doc-interpret-trailers-grammo'
* tk/doc-interpret-trailers-grammo:
  Documentation/interpret-trailers: Grammar fix
2015-10-15 15:43:48 -07:00
91ece0fc1d Merge branch 'es/worktree-add-cleanup'
A no-op code-health maintenance.

* es/worktree-add-cleanup:
  t2026: rename worktree prune test
2015-10-15 15:43:47 -07:00
50337d0f71 Merge branch 'dt/log-follow-config'
Description of the "log.follow" configuration variable in "git log"
documentation is now also copied to "git config" documentation.

* dt/log-follow-config:
  log: Update log.follow doc and add to config.txt
2015-10-15 15:43:46 -07:00
1811f93522 Merge branch 'cc/quote-comments'
A no-op code-health maintenance.

* cc/quote-comments:
  quote: move comment before sq_quote_buf()
  quote: fix broken sq_quote_buf() related comment
2015-10-15 15:43:45 -07:00
633a8bdddf Merge branch 'gr/rebase-i-drop-warn'
"git rebase -i" had a minor regression recently, which stopped
considering a line that begins with an indented '#' in its insn
sheet not a comment, which is now fixed.

* gr/rebase-i-drop-warn:
  rebase-i: loosen over-eager check_bad_cmd check
  rebase-i: explicitly accept tab as separator in commands
2015-10-15 15:43:44 -07:00
a394b39726 Merge branch 'mm/detach-at-HEAD-reflog'
After "git checkout --detach", "git status" reported a fairly
useless "HEAD detached at HEAD", instead of saying at which exact
commit.

* mm/detach-at-HEAD-reflog:
  status: don't say 'HEAD detached at HEAD'
  t3203: test 'detached at' after checkout --detach
2015-10-15 15:43:42 -07:00
50a5e697b4 Merge branch 'sa/send-email-smtp-batch-data-limit'
When "git send-email" wanted to talk over Net::SMTP::SSL,
Net::Cmd::datasend() did not like to be fed too many bytes at the
same time and failed to send messages.  Send the payload one line
at a time to work around the problem.

* sa/send-email-smtp-batch-data-limit:
  git-send-email.perl: Fixed sending of many/huge changes/patches
2015-10-15 15:43:41 -07:00
51a0908a6f Merge branch 'pt/am-builtin'
When "git am" was rewritten as a built-in, it stopped paying
attention to user.signingkey, which was fixed.

* pt/am-builtin:
  am: configure gpg at startup
2015-10-15 15:43:40 -07:00
b9d23c2110 Merge branch 'nd/clone-linked-checkout'
It was not possible to use a repository-lookalike created by "git
worktree add" as a local source of "git clone".

* nd/clone-linked-checkout:
  clone: better error when --reference is a linked checkout
  clone: allow --local from a linked checkout
  enter_repo: allow .git files in strict mode
  enter_repo: avoid duplicating logic, use is_git_directory() instead
  t0002: add test for enter_repo(), non-strict mode
  path.c: delete an extra space
2015-10-15 15:43:40 -07:00
6652939ce8 Merge branch 'js/icase-wt-detection'
On a case insensitive filesystems, setting GIT_WORK_TREE variable
using a random cases that does not agree with what the filesystem
thinks confused Git that it wasn't inside the working tree.

* js/icase-wt-detection:
  setup: fix "inside work tree" detection on case-insensitive filesystems
2015-10-15 15:43:39 -07:00
7f11b48521 Merge branch 'kn/for-each-branch'
Update "git branch" that list existing branches, using the
ref-filter API that is shared with "git tag" and "git
for-each-ref".

* kn/for-each-branch:
  branch: add '--points-at' option
  branch.c: use 'ref-filter' APIs
  branch.c: use 'ref-filter' data structures
  branch: drop non-commit error reporting
  branch: move 'current' check down to the presentation layer
  branch: roll show_detached HEAD into regular ref_list
  branch: bump get_head_description() to the top
  branch: refactor width computation
2015-10-15 15:43:38 -07:00
d5ef5f522a Merge branch 'sb/perf-without-installed-git'
Performance-measurement tests did not work without an installed Git.

* sb/perf-without-installed-git:
  t/perf: make runner work even if Git is not installed
2015-10-15 15:43:37 -07:00
c92df72bf4 Merge branch 'sb/http-flaky-test-fix'
A test script for the HTTP service had a timing dependent bug,
which was fixed.

* sb/http-flaky-test-fix:
  t5561: get rid of racy appending to logfile
2015-10-15 15:43:36 -07:00
30ce3b3bbc Merge branch 'jc/fsck-dropped-errors'
There were some classes of errors that "git fsck" diagnosed to its
standard error that did not cause it to exit with non-zero status.

* jc/fsck-dropped-errors:
  fsck: exit with non-zero when problems are found
2015-10-15 15:43:35 -07:00
00272a6339 Merge branch 'ls/p4-translation-failure'
Work around "git p4" failing when the P4 depot records the contents
in UTF-16 without UTF-16 BOM.

* ls/p4-translation-failure:
  git-p4: handle "Translation of file content failed"
  git-p4: add test case for "Translation of file content failed" error
2015-10-15 15:43:34 -07:00
076c827858 Merge branch 'nd/gc-auto-background-fix'
When "git gc --auto" is backgrounded, its diagnosis message is
lost.  Save it to a file in $GIT_DIR and show it next time the "gc
--auto" is run.

* nd/gc-auto-background-fix:
  gc: save log from daemonized gc --auto and print it next time
2015-10-15 15:43:33 -07:00
1c630badac Merge branch 'mk/submodule-gitdir-path'
The submodule code has been taught to work better with separate
work trees created via "git worktree add".

* mk/submodule-gitdir-path:
  path: implement common_dir handling in git_pathdup_submodule()
  submodule refactor: use strbuf_git_path_submodule() in add_submodule_odb()
2015-10-15 15:43:32 -07:00
b27dacc1a8 Third batch for 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-14 14:31:23 -07:00
1311587d96 Merge branch 'pt/pull-builtin'
* pt/pull-builtin:
  merge: grammofix in please-commit-before-merge message
2015-10-14 14:30:21 -07:00
c35acb632c Merge branch 'nd/ls-remote-does-not-have-u-option'
* nd/ls-remote-does-not-have-u-option:
  ls-remote.txt: delete unsupported option
2015-10-14 14:30:19 -07:00
8e2b4b2942 Merge branch 'jk/asciidoctor-section-heading-markup-fix'
* jk/asciidoctor-section-heading-markup-fix:
  Documentation: fix section header mark-up
2015-10-14 14:30:18 -07:00
d10a7f7535 Merge branch 'tk/typofix-connect-unknown-proto-error'
* tk/typofix-connect-unknown-proto-error:
  connect: fix typo in result string of prot_name()
2015-10-14 14:30:17 -07:00
262cffe6c9 Merge branch 'jk/notes-dwim-doc'
The way how --ref/--notes to specify the notes tree reference are
DWIMmed was not clearly documented.

* jk/notes-dwim-doc:
  notes: correct documentation of DWIMery for notes references
2015-10-14 14:30:15 -07:00
fae1a901ec Documentation/gc: warn against --prune=<now>
"git gc" is safe to run anytime only because it has the built-in
grace period to protect objects that are created by other processes
that are waiting for ref updates to anchor them to the history.  In
order to run with no grace period, the user must make sure that the
repository is quiescent.

Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-14 13:48:39 -07:00
710b4e8a16 t0027: improve test for not-normalized files
When a text file with mixed line endings is commited into the repo,
it is called "not normalized" (or NNO) in t0027.  The existing test
case using repoMIX did not fully test all combinations: (Especially
when core.autocrlf = true) Files with NL are not converted at
commit, but at checkout, so a warning NL->CRLF is given.  Files with
CRLF are not converted at all (so no warning will be given), unless
they are marked as "text" or "auto".

Remove repoMIX introduced in commit 8eeab92f02, and replace it with
a combination of NNO tests.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
2015-10-12 15:07:45 -07:00
147875fd25 submodule-config: "goto" removal in parse_config()
Many components in if/else if/... cascade jumped to a shared
clean-up with "goto release_return", but we can restructure the
function a bit and make them disappear, which reduces the line count
as well.  Also reformat overlong lines and poorly indented ones
while at it.

The order of rules to verify the value for "ignore" used to be to
complain on multiple values first and then complain to boolean, but
swap the order to match how the values for "path" and "url" are
verified.

CC: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
CC: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-12 12:28:33 -07:00
a5a4b3ff4d filter-branch: remove multi-line headers in msg filter
df062010 (filter-branch: avoid passing commit message through sed)
introduced a regression when filtering commits with multi-line headers,
if the header contains a blank line.  An example of this is a gpg-signed
commit:

  $ git cat-file commit signed-commit
  tree 3d4038e029712da9fc59a72afbfcc90418451630
  parent 110eac945dc1713b27bdf49e74e5805db66971f0
  author A U Thor <author@example.com> 1112912413 -0700
  committer C O Mitter <committer@example.com> 1112912413 -0700
  gpgsig -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
   Version: GnuPG v1

   iEYEABECAAYFAlYXADwACgkQE7b1Hs3eQw23CACgldB/InRyDgQwyiFyMMm3zFpj
   pUsAnA+f3aMUsd9mNroloSmlOgL6jIMO
   =0Hgm
   -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----

  Adding gpg

As a consequence, "filter-branch --msg-filter cat" (which should leave the
commit message unchanged) spills the signature (after the internal blank
line) into the original commit message.

The reason is that although the signature is indented, making the line a
whitespace only line, the "read" call is splitting the line based on
the shell's IFS, which defaults to <space><tab><newline>.  The leading
space is consumed and $header_line is empty, causing the "skip header
lines" loop to exit.

The rest of the commit object is then re-used as the rewritten commit
message, causing the new message to include the signature of the
original commit.

Set IFS to an empty string for the "read" call, thus disabling the word
splitting, which causes $header_line to be set to the non-empty value ' '.
This allows the loop to fully consume the header lines before
emitting the original, intact commit message.

[jc: this is literally based on MJG's suggestion]

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: James McCoy <vega.james@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-12 11:23:19 -07:00
4b1fd356b8 git-multimail: update to release 1.2.0
The changes are described in CHANGES.

Contributions-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Contributions-by: Elijah Newren <newren@palantir.com>
Contributions-by: Edward d'Auvergne <edward@nmr-relax.com>
Contributions-by: Vadim Zeitlin <vadim@zeitlins.org>
Contributions-by: Paul Sokolovsky <paul.sokolovsky@linaro.org>
Contributions-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Contributions-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Contributions-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@rhansen.org>
Contributions-by: Job Snijders <job@instituut.net>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-12 10:38:33 -07:00
eb8e364969 git-p4: skip t9819 test case on case insensitive file systems
Windows and OS X file systems are case insensitive by default.
Consequently the "git-p4-case-folding" test case does not apply to
them.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-12 10:36:54 -07:00
3a692b3c87 git-p4: avoid "stat" command in t9815 git-p4-submit-fail
Replace the stat command with the ls command to check file mode
bits.  The stats command is not available on Windows and has
different command line options on OS X.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-12 10:36:16 -07:00
c63d4b2fe8 am -3: do not let failed merge from completing the error codepath
When "am" was rewritten in C, the codepath for falling back to
three-way merge was mistakenly made to make an internal call to
merge-recursive, disabling the error reporting code for certain
types of errors merge-recursive detects and reports by calling
die().

This is a quick-fix for correctness.  The ideal endgame would be to
replace run_command() in run_fallback_merge_recursive() with a
direct call after making sure that internal call to merge-recursive
does not die().

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-09 13:38:30 -07:00
b2a7123b99 test-path-utils.c: remove incorrect assumption
In normalize_ceiling_entry(), we test that normalized paths end with
slash, *unless* the path to be normalized was already the root
directory.

However, normalize_path_copy() does not even enforce this condition.

Even worse: on Windows, the root directory gets translated into a
Windows directory by the Bash before being passed to `git.exe` (or
`test-path-utils.exe`), which means that we cannot even know whether
the path that was passed to us was the root directory to begin with.

This issue has already caused endless hours of trying to "fix" the
MSYS2 runtime, only to break other things due to MSYS2 ensuring that
the converted path maintains the same state as the input path with
respect to any final '/'.

So let's just forget about this test. It is non-essential to Git's
operation, anyway.

Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Ray Donnelly <mingw.android@gmail.com>
2015-10-08 18:03:50 -07:00
14886b40c5 pack-objects: do not get distracted by broken symrefs
It is quite possible for, say, a remote HEAD to become broken, e.g.
when the default branch was renamed.

We should still be able to pack our objects when such a thing happens;
simply ignore broken symrefs (because they cannot matter for the packing
process anyway).

This fixes https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/423

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-08 12:42:06 -07:00
bb9c03b82a worktree: add 'list' command
'git worktree list' iterates through the worktree list, and outputs
details of the worktree including the path to the worktree, the currently
checked out revision and branch, and if the work tree is bare.  There is
also porcelain format option available.

Signed-off-by: Michael Rappazzo <rappazzo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-08 11:57:14 -07:00
92718b7438 worktree: add details to the worktree struct
In addition to the absolute path in the worktree struct, add the location
of the git dir, the head ref (if not detached), the head revision sha1,
whether or not head is detached, and whether or not the worktree is a
bare repo.

Signed-off-by: Michael Rappazzo <rappazzo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-08 11:57:07 -07:00
5193490442 worktree: add a function to get worktree details
The worktree structure provided for an individual worktree includes the
absolute path of the worktree.  The fuction to get the worktree details
is a refactor of the find main/linked symref functions.

Signed-off-by: Michael Rappazzo <rappazzo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-08 11:56:25 -07:00
1ceb7f9067 worktree: refactor find_linked_symref function
Refactoring will help transition this code to provide additional useful
worktree functions.

Signed-off-by: Michael Rappazzo <rappazzo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-08 11:56:05 -07:00
44cd91eab2 quote: move comment before sq_quote_buf()
A big comment at the beginning of quote.c is really
related to sq_quote_buf(), so let's move it in front
of this function.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-07 15:12:01 -07:00
ca9da0d810 quote: fix broken sq_quote_buf() related comment
Since 77d604c (Enhanced sq_quote(), 10 Oct 2005), the
comment at the beginning of quote.c is broken.
Let's fix it.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-07 15:11:54 -07:00
f5b6079871 Second batch for 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-07 13:38:43 -07:00
98f9556a44 Merge branch 'ls/p4-path-encoding'
"git p4" learned to reencode the pathname it uses to communicate
with the p4 depot with a new option.

* ls/p4-path-encoding:
  git-p4: use replacement character for non UTF-8 characters in paths
  git-p4: improve path encoding verbose output
  git-p4: add config git-p4.pathEncoding
2015-10-07 13:38:19 -07:00
a23d263b69 Merge branch 'gb/filter-branch-progress'
Give progress meter to "git filter-branch".

* gb/filter-branch-progress:
  filter-branch: make report-progress more readable
  filter-branch: add passed/remaining seconds on progress
2015-10-07 13:38:18 -07:00
506d8f1b39 Merge branch 'nd/ignore-then-not-ignore'
Allow a later "!/abc/def" to override an earlier "/abc" that
appears in the same .gitignore file to make it easier to express
"everything in /abc directory is ignored, except for ...".

* nd/ignore-then-not-ignore:
  dir.c: don't exclude whole dir prematurely if neg pattern may match
  dir.c: make last_exclude_matching_from_list() run til the end
2015-10-07 13:38:17 -07:00
2b72dbbcf3 Merge branch 'ti/glibc-stdio-mutex-from-signal-handler'
Allocation related functions and stdio are unsafe things to call
inside a signal handler, and indeed killing the pager can cause
glibc to deadlock waiting on allocation mutex as our signal handler
tries to free() some data structures in wait_for_pager().  Reduce
these unsafe calls.

* ti/glibc-stdio-mutex-from-signal-handler:
  pager: don't use unsafe functions in signal handlers
2015-10-07 13:38:16 -07:00
a43eb67e65 Documentation/interpret-trailers: Grammar fix
Signed-off-by: Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-07 10:53:34 -07:00
786b150c8d clone --dissociate: avoid locking pack files
When `git clone` is asked to dissociate the repository from the
reference repository whose objects were used, it is quite possible that
the pack files need to be repacked. In that case, the pack files need to
be deleted that were originally hard-links to the reference repository's
pack files.

On platforms where a file cannot be deleted if another process still
holds a handle on it, we therefore need to take pains to release all
pack files and indexes before dissociating.

This fixes https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/446

The test case to demonstrate the breakage technically does not need to
be run on Linux or MacOSX. It won't hurt, either, though.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-07 10:47:50 -07:00
38849a8116 sha1_file.c: add a function to release all packs
On Windows, files that are in use cannot be removed or renamed. That
means that we have to release pack files when we are about to, say,
repack them. Let's introduce a convenient function to close all the
pack files and their idx files.

While at it, we consolidate the close windows/close fd/close index
stanza in `free_pack_by_name()` into the `close_pack()` function that
is used by the new `close_all_packs()` function to avoid repeated code.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-07 10:47:10 -07:00
ba128e2375 t2026: rename worktree prune test
Linked checkouts are known under the name worktree, now. Rename the test
accordingly.

Specifically, this avoids the confusion that t2026 is actually not about
pruning in or with linked checkouts aka worktress but about pruning
worktrees, i.e. about "git worktree prune" rather than "git prune".

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-07 10:39:32 -07:00
fd8d07efda log: Update log.follow doc and add to config.txt
Documentation/config.txt does not include the documentation for
log.follow that is in Documentation/git-log.txt.  This commit adds the
log.follow documentation to config.txt and also updates the wording to
be consistent with the format that is followed by other boolean
configuration variables.

Signed-off-by: Eric N. Vander Weele <ericvw@gmail.com>
Acked-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-07 10:37:48 -07:00
1db168ee97 rebase-i: loosen over-eager check_bad_cmd check
804098bb (git rebase -i: add static check for commands and SHA-1,
2015-06-29) tried to check all insns before running any in the todo
list, but it did so by implementing its own parser that is a lot
stricter than necessary.  We used to allow lines that are indented
(including comment lines), and we used to allow a whitespace between
the insn and the commit object name to be HT, among other things,
that are flagged as an invalid line by mistake.

Fix this by using the same tokenizer that is used to parse the todo
list file in the new check.

Whether it's a good thing to accept indented comments is
debatable (other commands like "git commit" do not accept them), but we
already accepted them in the past, and some people and scripts rely on
this behavior. Also, a line starting with space followed by a '#' cannot
have any meaning other than being a comment, hence it doesn't harm to
accept them as comments.

Largely based on patch by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>

[jc: updated test with quickfix from Torsten Bögershausen]

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 22:39:56 -07:00
8c845cde99 gc: demonstrate failure with stale remote HEAD
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 14:56:57 -07:00
71fe5d7fb0 sha1_file: consolidate code to close a pack's file descriptor
There was a lot of repeated code to close the file descriptor of
a given pack. Let's just refactor this code into a single function.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 14:43:58 -07:00
11911bf7c4 t5700: demonstrate a Windows file locking issue with git clone --dissociate
On Windows, dissociating from a reference can fail very easily due to
pack files that are still in use when they want to be removed.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 14:43:44 -07:00
24a00ef646 Start cycle toward 2.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 13:20:21 -07:00
590f6e4235 Sync with 2.6.1 2015-10-05 13:20:08 -07:00
e13d854322 Merge branch 'mm/keyid-docs'
Very small number of options take a parameter that is optional
(which is not a great UI element as they can only appear at the end
of the command line).  Add notice to documentation of each and
every one of them.

* mm/keyid-docs:
  Documentation: explain optional arguments better
  Documentation/grep: fix documentation of -O
  Documentation: use 'keyid' consistently, not 'key-id'
2015-10-05 12:30:26 -07:00
e437cbd015 Merge branch 'bb/remote-get-url'
"git remote" learned "get-url" subcommand to show the URL for a
given remote name used for fetching and pushing.

* bb/remote-get-url:
  remote: add get-url subcommand
2015-10-05 12:30:25 -07:00
ff2be2610a Merge branch 'jk/blame-first-parent'
"git blame --first-parent v1.0..v2.0" was not rejected but did not
limit the blame to commits on the first parent chain.

* jk/blame-first-parent:
  blame: handle --first-parent
2015-10-05 12:30:24 -07:00
1e7ea4e7ab Merge branch 'jw/make-arflags-customizable'
The Makefile always runs the library archiver with hardcoded "crs"
options, which was inconvenient for exotic platforms on which
people want to use programs with totally different set of command
line options.

* jw/make-arflags-customizable:
  Makefile: allow $(ARFLAGS) specified from the command line
2015-10-05 12:30:23 -07:00
6560584494 Merge branch 'jk/rebase-no-autostash'
There was no way to defeat a configured rebase.autostash variable
from the command line, as "git rebase --no-autostash" was missing.

* jk/rebase-no-autostash:
  Documentation/git-rebase: fix --no-autostash formatting
  rebase: support --no-autostash
2015-10-05 12:30:22 -07:00
96090283e0 Merge branch 'jk/make-findstring-makeflags-fix'
Customization to change the behaviour with "make -w" and "make -s"
in our Makefile was broken when they were used together.

* jk/make-findstring-makeflags-fix:
  Makefile: fix MAKEFLAGS tests with multiple flags
2015-10-05 12:30:20 -07:00
65e1449614 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-helper'
The infrastructure to rewrite "git submodule" in C is being built
incrementally.  Let's polish these early parts well enough and make
them graduate to 'next' and 'master', so that the more involved
follow-up can start cooking on a solid ground.

* sb/submodule-helper:
  submodule: rewrite `module_clone` shell function in C
  submodule: rewrite `module_name` shell function in C
  submodule: rewrite `module_list` shell function in C
2015-10-05 12:30:19 -07:00
8a54523f0f Merge branch 'kn/for-each-tag'
The "ref-filter" code was taught about many parts of what "tag -l"
does and then "tag -l" is being reimplemented in terms of "ref-filter".

* kn/for-each-tag:
  tag.c: implement '--merged' and '--no-merged' options
  tag.c: implement '--format' option
  tag.c: use 'ref-filter' APIs
  tag.c: use 'ref-filter' data structures
  ref-filter: add option to match literal pattern
  ref-filter: add support to sort by version
  ref-filter: add support for %(contents:lines=X)
  ref-filter: add option to filter out tags, branches and remotes
  ref-filter: implement an `align` atom
  ref-filter: introduce match_atom_name()
  ref-filter: introduce handler function for each atom
  utf8: add function to align a string into given strbuf
  ref-filter: introduce ref_formatting_state and ref_formatting_stack
  ref-filter: move `struct atom_value` to ref-filter.c
  strtoul_ui: reject negative values
2015-10-05 12:30:18 -07:00
416e2b3d4b Merge branch 'jk/test-lint-forbid-when-finished-in-subshell'
Because "test_when_finished" in our test framework queues the
clean-up tasks to be done in a shell variable, it should not be
used inside a subshell.  Add a mechanism to allow 'bash' to catch
such uses, and fix the ones that were found.

* jk/test-lint-forbid-when-finished-in-subshell:
  test-lib-functions: detect test_when_finished in subshell
  t7800: don't use test_config in a subshell
  test-lib-functions: support "test_config -C <dir> ..."
  t5801: don't use test_when_finished in a subshell
  t7610: don't use test_config in a subshell
2015-10-05 12:30:17 -07:00
ebb58652b2 Merge branch 'jk/interpret-trailers-outside-a-repository'
Allow "git interpret-trailers" to run outside of a Git repository.

* jk/interpret-trailers-outside-a-repository:
  interpret-trailers: allow running outside a repository
2015-10-05 12:30:16 -07:00
a66aa25afb Merge branch 'as/subtree-with-spaces'
Update "git subtree" (in contrib/) so that it can take whitespaces
in the pathnames, not only in the in-tree pathname but the name of
the directory that the repository is in.

* as/subtree-with-spaces:
  contrib/subtree: respect spaces in a repository path
  t7900-subtree: test the "space in a subdirectory name" case
2015-10-05 12:30:15 -07:00
e6f11c19ab Merge branch 'jk/connect-clear-env'
The ssh transport, just like any other transport over the network,
did not clear GIT_* environment variables, but it is possible to
use SendEnv and AcceptEnv to leak them to the remote invocation of
Git, which is not a good idea at all.  Explicitly clear them just
like we do for the local transport.

* jk/connect-clear-env:
  git_connect: clarify conn->use_shell flag
  git_connect: clear GIT_* environment for ssh
2015-10-05 12:30:14 -07:00
7b09c459d3 Merge branch 'jk/date-local'
"git log --date=local" used to only show the normal (default)
format in the local timezone.  The command learned to take 'local'
as an instruction to use the local timezone with other formats,
e.g. "git show --date=rfc-local".

* jk/date-local:
  t6300: add tests for "-local" date formats
  t6300: make UTC and local dates different
  date: make "local" orthogonal to date format
  date: check for "local" before anything else
  t6300: add test for "raw" date format
  t6300: introduce test_date() helper
  fast-import: switch crash-report date to iso8601
  Documentation/rev-list: don't list date formats
  Documentation/git-for-each-ref: don't list date formats
  Documentation/config: don't list date formats
  Documentation/blame-options: don't list date formats
2015-10-05 12:30:13 -07:00
297ae7151f Merge branch 'dt/refs-bisection'
Move the refs used during a "git bisect" session to per-worktree
hierarchy refs/worktree/* so that independent bisect sessions can
be done in different worktrees.

* dt/refs-bisection:
  refs: make refs/bisect/* per-worktree
  path: optimize common dir checking
  refs: clean up common_list
2015-10-05 12:30:11 -07:00
5e9a74b480 Merge branch 'nk/stash-show-config'
Users who are too busy to type three extra keystrokes to ask for
"git stash show -p" can now set stash.showPatch configuration
varible to true to always see the actual patch, not just the list
of paths affected with feel for the extent of damage via diffstat.

* nk/stash-show-config:
  stash: allow "stash show" diff output configurable
2015-10-05 12:30:10 -07:00
88bad58d38 Merge branch 'jk/async-pkt-line'
The debugging infrastructure for pkt-line based communication has
been improved to mark the side-band communication specifically.

* jk/async-pkt-line:
  pkt-line: show packets in async processes as "sideband"
  run-command: provide in_async query function
2015-10-05 12:30:09 -07:00
db9789ab4e Merge branch 'jh/quiltimport-explicit-series-file'
"quiltimport" allows to specify the series file by honoring the
$QUILT_SERIES environment and also --series command line option.

* jh/quiltimport-explicit-series-file:
  git-quiltimport: add commandline option --series <file>
2015-10-05 12:30:08 -07:00
5e1288ac9e Merge branch 'ld/p4-import-labels'
Correct "git p4 --detect-labels" so that it does not fail to create
a tag that points at a commit that is also being imported.

* ld/p4-import-labels:
  git-p4: fix P4 label import for unprocessed commits
  git-p4: do not terminate creating tag for unknown commit
  git-p4: failing test for ignoring invalid p4 labels
2015-10-05 12:30:07 -07:00
22dd6eb31f Merge branch 'ad/bisect-terms'
The use of 'good/bad' in "git bisect" made it confusing to use when
hunting for a state change that is not a regression (e.g. bugfix).
The command learned 'old/new' and then allows the end user to
say e.g. "bisect start --term-old=fast --term=new=slow" to find a
performance regression.

Michael's idea to make 'good/bad' more intelligent does have
certain attractiveness ($gname/272867), and makes some of the work
on this topic a moot point.

* ad/bisect-terms:
  bisect: allow setting any user-specified in 'git bisect start'
  bisect: add 'git bisect terms' to view the current terms
  bisect: add the terms old/new
  bisect: sanity check on terms
2015-10-05 12:30:06 -07:00
dc5400e11d Merge branch 'jc/rerere'
Code clean-up and minor fixes.

* jc/rerere: (21 commits)
  rerere: un-nest merge() further
  rerere: use "struct rerere_id" instead of "char *" for conflict ID
  rerere: call conflict-ids IDs
  rerere: further clarify do_rerere_one_path()
  rerere: further de-dent do_plain_rerere()
  rerere: refactor "replay" part of do_plain_rerere()
  rerere: explain the remainder
  rerere: explain "rerere forget" codepath
  rerere: explain the primary codepath
  rerere: explain MERGE_RR management helpers
  rerere: fix benign off-by-one non-bug and clarify code
  rerere: explain the rerere I/O abstraction
  rerere: do not leak mmfile[] for a path with multiple stage #1 entries
  rerere: stop looping unnecessarily
  rerere: drop want_sp parameter from is_cmarker()
  rerere: report autoupdated paths only after actually updating them
  rerere: write out each record of MERGE_RR in one go
  rerere: lift PATH_MAX limitation
  rerere: plug conflict ID leaks
  rerere: handle conflicts with multiple stage #1 entries
  ...
2015-10-05 12:30:05 -07:00
9958dd8685 Merge branch 'kn/for-each-tag-branch'
Some features from "git tag -l" and "git branch -l" have been made
available to "git for-each-ref" so that eventually the unified
implementation can be shared across all three, in a follow-up
series or two.

* kn/for-each-tag-branch:
  for-each-ref: add '--contains' option
  ref-filter: implement '--contains' option
  parse-options.h: add macros for '--contains' option
  parse-option: rename parse_opt_with_commit()
  for-each-ref: add '--merged' and '--no-merged' options
  ref-filter: implement '--merged' and '--no-merged' options
  ref-filter: add parse_opt_merge_filter()
  for-each-ref: add '--points-at' option
  ref-filter: implement '--points-at' option
  tag: libify parse_opt_points_at()
  t6302: for-each-ref tests for ref-filter APIs
2015-10-05 12:30:03 -07:00
34e02deb60 name-rev: use strip_suffix to avoid magic numbers
The manual size computations here are correct, but using
strip_suffix makes that obvious, and hopefully communicates
the intent of the code more clearly.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:06 -07:00
00b6c178c3 use strbuf_complete to conditionally append slash
When working with paths in strbufs, we frequently want to
ensure that a directory contains a trailing slash before
appending to it. We can shorten this code (and make the
intent more obvious) by calling strbuf_complete.

Most of these cases are trivially identical conversions, but
there are two things to note:

  - in a few cases we did not check that the strbuf is
    non-empty (which would lead to an out-of-bounds memory
    access). These were generally not triggerable in
    practice, either from earlier assertions, or typically
    because we would have just fed the strbuf to opendir(),
    which would choke on an empty path.

  - in a few cases we indexed the buffer with "original_len"
    or similar, rather than the current sb->len, and it is
    not immediately obvious from the diff that they are the
    same. In all of these cases, I manually verified that
    the strbuf does not change between the assignment and
    the strbuf_complete call.

This does not convert cases which look like:

  if (sb->len && !is_dir_sep(sb->buf[sb->len - 1]))
	  strbuf_addch(sb, '/');

as those are obviously semantically different. Some of these
cases arguably should be doing that, but that is out of
scope for this change, which aims purely for cleanup with no
behavior change (and at least it will make such sites easier
to find and examine in the future, as we can grep for
strbuf_complete).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:06 -07:00
f0766bf94e fsck: use for_each_loose_file_in_objdir
Since 27e1e22 (prune: factor out loose-object directory
traversal, 2014-10-15), we now have a generic callback
system for iterating over the loose object directories. This
is used by prune, count-objects, etc.

We did not convert git-fsck at the time because it
implemented an inode-sorting scheme that was not part of the
generic code. Now that the inode-sorting code is gone, we
can reuse the generic code.  The result is shorter,
hopefully more readable, and drops some unchecked sprintf
calls.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:06 -07:00
e23a91b047 Makefile: drop D_INO_IN_DIRENT build knob
Now that fsck has dropped its inode-sorting, there are no
longer any users of this knob, and it can go away.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:06 -07:00
144e4cf709 fsck: drop inode-sorting code
Fsck tries to access loose objects in order of inode number,
with the hope that this would make cold cache access faster
on a spinning disk. This dates back to 7e8c174 (fsck-cache:
sort entries by inode number, 2005-05-02), which predates
the invention of packfiles.

These days, there's not much point in trying to optimize
cold cache for a large number of loose objects. You are much
better off to simply pack the objects, which will reduce the
disk footprint _and_ provide better locality of data access.

So while you can certainly construct pathological cases
where this code might help, it is not worth the trouble
anymore.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:06 -07:00
eddda37144 convert strncpy to memcpy
strncpy is known to be a confusing function because of its
termination semantics.  These calls are all correct, but it
takes some examination to see why. In particular, every one
of them expects to copy up to the length limit, and then
makes some arrangement for terminating the result.

We can just use memcpy, along with noting explicitly how the
result is terminated (if it is not already obvious). That
should make it more clear to a reader that we are doing the
right thing.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:06 -07:00
02e32b7deb notes: document length of fanout path with a constant
We know that a fanned-out sha1 in a notes tree cannot be
more than "aa/bb/cc/...", and we have an assert() to confirm
that. But let's factor out that length into a constant so we
can be sure it is used consistently. And even though we
assert() earlier, let's replace a strcpy with xsnprintf, so
it is clear to a reader that all cases are covered.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
7ce4fb948c color: add color_set helper for copying raw colors
To set up default colors, we sometimes strcpy() from the
default string literals into our color buffers. This isn't a
bug (assuming the destination is COLOR_MAXLEN bytes), but
makes it harder to audit the code for problematic strcpy
calls.

Let's introduce a color_set which copies under the
assumption that there are COLOR_MAXLEN bytes in the
destination (of course you can call it on a smaller buffer,
so this isn't providing a huge amount of safety, but it's
more convenient than calling xsnprintf yourself).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
34fa79a6cd prefer memcpy to strcpy
When we already know the length of a string (e.g., because
we just malloc'd to fit it), it's nicer to use memcpy than
strcpy, as it makes it more obvious that we are not going to
overflow the buffer (because the size we pass matches the
size in the allocation).

This also eliminates calls to strcpy, which make auditing
the code base harder.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
4c9ac3bfaa help: clean up kfmclient munging
When we are going to launch "/path/to/konqueror", we instead
rewrite this into "/path/to/kfmclient" by duplicating the
original string and writing over the ending bits. This can
be done more obviously with strip_suffix and xstrfmt.

Note that we also fix a subtle bug with the "filename"
parameter, which is passed as argv[0] to the child. If the
user has configured a program name with no directory
component, we always pass the string "kfmclient", even if
your program is called something else. But if you give a
full path, we give the basename of that path. But more
bizarrely, if we rewrite "konqueror" to "kfmclient", we
still pass "konqueror".

The history of this function doesn't reveal anything
interesting, so it looks like just an oversight from
combining the suffix-munging with the basename-finding.
Let's just call basename on the munged path, which produces
consistent results (if you gave a program, whether a full
path or not, we pass its basename).

Probably this doesn't matter at all in practice, but it
makes the code slightly less confusing to read.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
b26cb7c777 receive-pack: simplify keep_arg computation
To generate "--keep=receive-pack $pid on $host", we write
progressively into a single buffer, which requires keeping
track of how much we've written so far. But since the result
is destined to go into our argv array, we can simply use
argv_array_pushf.

Unfortunately we still have to have a fixed-size buffer for
the gethostname() call, but at least it now doesn't involve
any extra size computation. And as a bonus, we drop an
sprintf and a strcpy call.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
c7ab0ba340 avoid sprintf and strcpy with flex arrays
When we are allocating a struct with a FLEX_ARRAY member, we
generally compute the size of the array and then sprintf or
strcpy into it. Normally we could improve a dynamic allocation
like this by using xstrfmt, but it doesn't work here; we
have to account for the size of the rest of the struct.

But we can improve things a bit by storing the length that
we use for the allocation, and then feeding it to xsnprintf
or memcpy, which makes it more obvious that we are not
writing more than the allocated number of bytes.

It would be nice if we had some kind of helper for
allocating generic flex arrays, but it doesn't work that
well:

 - the call signature is a little bit unwieldy:

      d = flex_struct(sizeof(*d), offsetof(d, path), fmt, ...);

   You need offsetof here instead of just writing to the
   end of the base size, because we don't know how the
   struct is packed (partially this is because FLEX_ARRAY
   might not be zero, though we can account for that; but
   the size of the struct may actually be rounded up for
   alignment, and we can't know that).

 - some sites do clever things, like over-allocating because
   they know they will write larger things into the buffer
   later (e.g., struct packed_git here).

So we're better off to just write out each allocation (or
add type-specific helpers, though many of these are one-off
allocations anyway).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
6f687c21c0 use alloc_ref rather than hand-allocating "struct ref"
This saves us some manual computation, and eliminates a call
to strcpy.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
cbc8feeaf9 color: add overflow checks for parsing colors
Our color parsing is designed to never exceed COLOR_MAXLEN
bytes. But the relationship between that hand-computed
number and the parsing code is not at all obvious, and we
merely hope that it has been computed correctly for all
cases.

Let's mark the expected "end" pointer for the destination
buffer and make sure that we do not exceed it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
2b87d3a896 drop strcpy in favor of raw sha1_to_hex
In some cases where we strcpy() the result of sha1_to_hex(),
there's no need; the result goes directly into a printf
statement, and we can simply pass the return value from
sha1_to_hex() directly.

When this code was originally written, sha1_to_hex used a
single buffer, and it was not safe to use it twice within a
single expression. That changed as of dcb3450 (sha1_to_hex()
usage cleanup, 2006-05-03), but this code was never updated.

History-dug-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
d59f765ac9 use sha1_to_hex_r() instead of strcpy
Before sha1_to_hex_r() existed, a simple way to get hex
sha1 into a buffer was with:

  strcpy(buf, sha1_to_hex(sha1));

This isn't wrong (assuming the buf is 41 characters), but it
makes auditing the code base for bad strcpy() calls harder,
as these become false positives.

Let's convert them to sha1_to_hex_r(), and likewise for
some calls to find_unique_abbrev(). While we're here, we'll
double-check that all of the buffers are correctly sized,
and use the more obvious GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ constant.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
f063d38b80 daemon: use cld->env_array when re-spawning
This avoids an ugly strcat into a fixed-size buffer. It's
not wrong (the buffer is plenty large enough for an IPv6
address plus some minor formatting), but it takes some
effort to verify that.

Unfortunately we are still stuck with some fixed-size
buffers to hold the output of inet_ntop. But at least we now
pass very easy-to-verify parameters, rather than doing a
manual computation to account for other data in the buffer.

As a side effect, this also fixes the case where we might
pass an uninitialized portbuf buffer through the
environment. This probably couldn't happen in practice, as
it would mean that addr->sa_family was neither AF_INET nor
AF_INET6 (and that is all we are listening on).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
0b282cc4b2 stat_tracking_info: convert to argv_array
In addition to dropping the magic number for the fixed-size
argv, we can also drop a fixed-length buffer and some
strcpy's into it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
a0355f6bcd http-push: use an argv_array for setup_revisions
This drops the magic number for the fixed-size argv arrays,
so we do not have to wonder if we are overflowing it. We can
also drop some confusing sha1_to_hex memory allocation
(which seems to predate the ring of buffers allowing
multiple calls), and get rid of an unchecked sprintf call.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
984a43b902 fetch-pack: use argv_array for index-pack / unpack-objects
This cleans up a magic number that must be kept in sync with
the rest of the code (the number of argv slots). It also
lets us drop some fixed buffers and an sprintf (since we
can now use argv_array_pushf).

We do still have to keep one fixed buffer for calling
gethostname, but at least now the size computations for it
are much simpler.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
43bb66ae0b diagnose_invalid_index_path: use strbuf to avoid strcpy/strcat
We dynamically allocate a buffer and then strcpy and strcat
into it. This isn't buggy, but we'd prefer to avoid these
suspicious functions.

This would be a good candidate for converstion to xstrfmt,
but we need to record the length for dealing with index
entries. A strbuf handles that for us.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
d4b3d11a03 write_loose_object: convert to strbuf
When creating a loose object tempfile, we use a fixed
PATH_MAX-sized buffer, and strcpy directly into it. This
isn't buggy, because we do a rough check of the size, but
there's no verification that our guesstimate of the required
space is enough (in fact, it's several bytes too big for the
current naming scheme).

Let's switch to a strbuf, which makes this much easier to
verify. The allocation overhead should be negligible, since
we are replacing a static buffer with a static strbuf, and
we'll only need to allocate on the first call.

While we're here, we can also document a subtle interaction
with mkstemp that would be easy to overlook.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
4635768809 remove_leading_path: use a strbuf for internal storage
This function strcpy's directly into a PATH_MAX-sized
buffer. There's only one caller, which feeds the git_dir into
it, so it's not easy to trigger in practice (even if you fed
a large $GIT_DIR through the environment or .git file, it
would have to actually exist and be accessible on the
filesystem to get to this point). We can fix it by moving to
a strbuf.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:05 -07:00
e9ba678175 enter_repo: convert fixed-size buffers to strbufs
We use two PATH_MAX-sized buffers to represent the repo
path, and must make sure not to overflow them. We do take
care to check the lengths, but the logic is rather hard to
follow, as we use several magic numbers (e.g., "PATH_MAX -
10"). And in fact you _can_ overflow the buffer if you have
a ".git" file with an extremely long path in it.

By switching to strbufs, these problems all go away. We do,
however, retain the check that the initial input we get is
no larger than PATH_MAX. This function is an entry point for
untrusted repo names from the network, and it's a good idea
to keep a sanity check (both to avoid allocating arbitrary
amounts of memory, and also as a layer of defense against
any downstream users of the names).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:04 -07:00
b4600fbe07 merge-recursive: convert malloc / strcpy to strbuf
This would be a fairly routine use of xstrfmt, except that
we need to remember the length of the result to pass to
cache_name_pos. So just use a strbuf, which makes this
simple.

As a bonus, this gets rid of confusing references to
"pathlen+1". The "1" is for the trailing slash we added, but
that is automatically accounted for in the strbuf's len
parameter.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:04 -07:00
bd22d4ffbc transport: use strbufs for status table "quickref" strings
We generate range strings like "1234abcd...5678efab" for use
in the the fetch and push status tables. We use fixed-size
buffers along with strcat to do so. These aren't buggy, as
our manual size computation is correct, but there's nothing
checking that this is so.  Let's switch them to strbufs
instead, which are obviously correct, and make it easier to
audit the code base for problematic calls to strcat().

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:04 -07:00
6c31c22ceb apply: convert root string to strbuf
We use manual computation and strcpy to allocate the "root"
variable. This would be much simpler using xstrfmt.  But
since we store the length, too, we can just use a strbuf,
which handles that for us.

Note that we stop distinguishing between "no root" and
"empty root" in some cases, but that's OK; the results are
the same (e.g., inserting an empty string is a noop).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:08:04 -07:00
9c28390bda init: use strbufs to store paths
The init code predates strbufs, and uses PATH_MAX-sized
buffers along with many manual checks on intermediate sizes
(some of which make magic assumptions, such as that init
will not create a path inside .git longer than 50
characters).

We can simplify this greatly by using strbufs, which drops
some hard-to-verify strcpy calls in favor of git_path_buf.
While we're in the area, let's also convert existing calls
to git_path to the safer git_path_buf (our existing calls
were passed to pretty tame functions, and so were not a
problem, but it's easy to be consistent and safe here).

Note that we had an explicit test that "git init" rejects
long template directories. This comes from 32d1776 (init: Do
not segfault on big GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR environment variable,
2009-04-18). We can drop the test_must_fail here, as we now
accept this and need only confirm that we don't segfault,
which was the original point of the test.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:07:04 -07:00
fdf729661a probe_utf8_pathname_composition: use internal strbuf
When we are initializing a .git directory, we may call
probe_utf8_pathname_composition to detect utf8 mangling. We
pass in a path buffer for it to use, and it blindly
strcpy()s into it, not knowing whether the buffer is large
enough to hold the result or not.

In practice this isn't a big deal, because the buffer we
pass in already contains "$GIT_DIR/config", and we append
only a few extra bytes to it. But we can easily do the right
thing just by calling git_path_buf ourselves. Technically
this results in a different pathname (before we appended our
utf8 characters to the "config" path, and now they get their
own files in $GIT_DIR), but that should not matter for our
purposes.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:06:49 -07:00
e2b021eb5b precompose_utf8: drop unused variable
The result of iconv is assigned to a variable, but we never
use it (instead, we check errno and whether the function
consumed all bytes). Let's drop the assignment, as it
triggers gcc's -Wunused-but-set-variable.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-05 11:05:51 -07:00
b47d807d20 git-p4: add Git LFS backend for large file system
Add example implementation including test cases for the large file
system using Git LFS.

Pushing files to the Git LFS server is not tested.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-03 10:21:14 -07:00
a5db4b127b git-p4: add support for large file systems
Perforce repositories can contain large (binary) files. Migrating these
repositories to Git generates very large local clones. External storage
systems such as Git LFS [1], Git Fat [2], Git Media [3], git-annex [4]
try to address this problem.

Add a generic mechanism to detect large files based on extension,
uncompressed size, and/or compressed size.

[1] https://git-lfs.github.com/
[2] https://github.com/jedbrown/git-fat
[3] https://github.com/alebedev/git-media
[4] https://git-annex.branchable.com/

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>

Conflicts:
	Documentation/git-p4.txt
	git-p4.py
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-03 10:21:14 -07:00
4d25dc4475 git-p4: check free space during streaming
git-p4 will just halt if there is not enough disk space while
streaming content from P4 to Git. Add a check to ensure at least
4 times (arbitrarily chosen) the size of a streamed file is available.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-03 10:21:13 -07:00
d2176a5060 git-p4: add file streaming progress in verbose mode
If a file is streamed from P4 to Git then the verbose mode prints
continuously the progress as percentage like this:
//depot/file.bin 20% (10 MB)

Upon completion the progress is overwritten with depot source, local
file and size like this:
//depot/file.bin --> local/file.bin (10 MB)

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-03 10:21:13 -07:00
7960e70710 git-p4: return an empty list if a list config has no values
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-03 10:21:13 -07:00
cb1dafdfda git-p4: add gitConfigInt reader
Add a git config reader for integer variables. Please note that the
git config implementation automatically supports k, m, and g suffixes.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-03 10:21:13 -07:00
692e17964d git-p4: add optional type specifier to gitConfig reader
The functions "gitConfig" and "gitConfigBool" are almost identical.
Make "gitConfig" more generic by adding an optional type specifier.
Use the type specifier "--bool" with "gitConfig" to implement
"gitConfigBool. This prepares the implementation of other type
specifiers such as "--int".

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-03 10:20:00 -07:00
b7447679e8 merge: grammofix in please-commit-before-merge message
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-02 14:29:56 -07:00
ac6c561b59 worktree: add top-level worktree.c
worktree.c contains functions to work with and get information from
worktrees.  This introduction moves functions related to worktrees
from branch.c into worktree.c

Signed-off-by: Michael Rappazzo <rappazzo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-02 13:07:38 -07:00
31bff64100 rebase-i: explicitly accept tab as separator in commands
The git-rebase-todo is parsed several times with different parsers. In
principle, the user input is normalized by transform_todo_ids and
further parsing can be stricter.

In case the user wrote

pick deadbeef<TAB>commit message

the parser of transform_todo_ids was considering the sha1 to be
"deadbeef<TAB>commit", and was leaving the tab in the transformed sheet.
In practice, this went unnoticed since the actual command interpretation
was done later in do_next which did accept the tab as a separator.

Make it explicit in the code of transform_todo_ids that tabs are
accepted. This way, code that mimicks it will also accept tabs as
separator.

A similar construct appears in skip_unnecessary_picks, but this one
comes after transform_todo_ids, hence reads the normalized format, so it
needs not be changed.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-02 11:36:44 -07:00
0eb8548f45 status: don't say 'HEAD detached at HEAD'
After using "git checkout --detach", the reflog is left with an entry
like

  checkout: moving from ... to HEAD

This message is parsed to generate the 'HEAD detached at' message in
'git branch' and 'git status', which leads to the not-so-useful message
'HEAD detached at HEAD'.

Instead, when parsing such reflog entry, resolve HEAD to the
corresponding commit in the reflog, so that the message becomes 'HEAD
detached at $sha1'.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-02 11:29:46 -07:00
9cb07d81b3 t3203: test 'detached at' after checkout --detach
This currently fails: the output is 'HEAD detached at HEAD'.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-02 11:29:16 -07:00
434c64df66 am: configure gpg at startup
The new builtin am ignores the user.signingkey variable: gpg is being
called with the committer details as the key ID, which may not be
correct. git_gpg_config is responsible for handling that variable and is
expected to be called on initialization by any modules that use gpg.

Signed-off-by: Renee Margaret McConahy <nepella@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-30 13:02:30 -07:00
f60c483d1d git-send-email.perl: Fixed sending of many/huge changes/patches
Sometimes sending huge patches/commits fail with

[Net::SMTP::SSL] Connection closed at /usr/lib/git-core/git-send-email
line 1320.

Running the command with --smtp-debug=1 yields to

Net::SMTP::SSL: Net::Cmd::datasend(): unexpected EOF on command channel:
at /usr/lib/git-core/git-send-email line 1320.
[Net::SMTP::SSL] Connection closed at /usr/lib/git-core/git-send-email
line 1320.

Stefan described it in his mail like this:

It seems to me that there is a size limit, after cutting down the patch
to ~16K, sending started to work. I cut it twice, once by removing lines
from the head and once from the bottom, in both cases at the size of
around 16K I could send the patch.

See also original report:
http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/274569

Reported-by: Juston Li <juston.h.li@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Markos Chandras <hwoarang@gentoo.org>
Signed-off-by: Lars Wendler <polynomial-c@gentoo.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-30 12:44:41 -07:00
82aa9b751f l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
Signed-off-by: Dimitriy Ryazantcev <dimitriy.ryazantcev@gmail.com>
2015-09-30 18:01:23 +03:00
22f698cb18 Git 2.6.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 19:19:34 -07:00
3adc4ec7b9 Sync with v2.5.4 2015-09-28 19:16:54 -07:00
24358560c3 Git 2.5.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 15:34:28 -07:00
11a458befc Sync with 2.4.10 2015-09-28 15:33:56 -07:00
a2558fb8e1 Git 2.4.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 15:30:30 -07:00
6343e2f6f2 Sync with 2.3.10 2015-09-28 15:28:31 -07:00
18b58f707f Git 2.3.10
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 15:26:52 -07:00
92cdfd2131 Merge branch 'jk/xdiff-memory-limits' into maint-2.3 2015-09-28 14:59:28 -07:00
83c4d38017 merge-file: enforce MAX_XDIFF_SIZE on incoming files
The previous commit enforces MAX_XDIFF_SIZE at the
interfaces to xdiff: xdi_diff (which calls xdl_diff) and
ll_xdl_merge (which calls xdl_merge).

But we have another direct call to xdl_merge in
merge-file.c. If it were written today, this probably would
just use the ll_merge machinery. But it predates that code,
and uses slightly different options to xdl_merge (e.g.,
ZEALOUS_ALNUM).

We could try to abstract out an xdi_merge to match the
existing xdi_diff, but even that is difficult. Rather than
simply report error, we try to treat large files as binary,
and that distinction would happen outside of xdi_merge.

The simplest fix is to just replicate the MAX_XDIFF_SIZE
check in merge-file.c.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 14:58:13 -07:00
dcd1742e56 xdiff: reject files larger than ~1GB
The xdiff code is not prepared to handle extremely large
files. It uses "int" in many places, which can overflow if
we have a very large number of lines or even bytes in our
input files. This can cause us to produce incorrect diffs,
with no indication that the output is wrong. Or worse, we
may even underallocate a buffer whose size is the result of
an overflowing addition.

We're much better off to tell the user that we cannot diff
or merge such a large file. This patch covers both cases,
but in slightly different ways:

  1. For merging, we notice the large file and cleanly fall
     back to a binary merge (which is effectively "we cannot
     merge this").

  2. For diffing, we make the binary/text distinction much
     earlier, and in many different places. For this case,
     we'll use the xdi_diff as our choke point, and reject
     any diff there before it hits the xdiff code.

     This means in most cases we'll die() immediately after.
     That's not ideal, but in practice we shouldn't
     generally hit this code path unless the user is trying
     to do something tricky. We already consider files
     larger than core.bigfilethreshold to be binary, so this
     code would only kick in when that is circumvented
     (either by bumping that value, or by using a
     .gitattribute to mark a file as diffable).

     In other words, we can avoid being "nice" here, because
     there is already nice code that tries to do the right
     thing. We are adding the suspenders to the nice code's
     belt, so notice when it has been worked around (both to
     protect the user from malicious inputs, and because it
     is better to die() than generate bogus output).

The maximum size was chosen after experimenting with feeding
large files to the xdiff code. It's just under a gigabyte,
which leaves room for two obvious cases:

  - a diff3 merge conflict result on files of maximum size X
    could be 3*X plus the size of the markers, which would
    still be only about 3G, which fits in a 32-bit int.

  - some of the diff code allocates arrays of one int per
    record. Even if each file consists only of blank lines,
    then a file smaller than 1G will have fewer than 1G
    records, and therefore the int array will fit in 4G.

Since the limit is arbitrary anyway, I chose to go under a
gigabyte, to leave a safety margin (e.g., we would not want
to overflow by allocating "(records + 1) * sizeof(int)" or
similar.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 14:57:23 -07:00
3efb988098 react to errors in xdi_diff
When we call into xdiff to perform a diff, we generally lose
the return code completely. Typically by ignoring the return
of our xdi_diff wrapper, but sometimes we even propagate
that return value up and then ignore it later.  This can
lead to us silently producing incorrect diffs (e.g., "git
log" might produce no output at all, not even a diff header,
for a content-level diff).

In practice this does not happen very often, because the
typical reason for xdiff to report failure is that it
malloc() failed (it uses straight malloc, and not our
xmalloc wrapper).  But it could also happen when xdiff
triggers one our callbacks, which returns an error (e.g.,
outf() in builtin/rerere.c tries to report a write failure
in this way). And the next patch also plans to add more
failure modes.

Let's notice an error return from xdiff and react
appropriately. In most of the diff.c code, we can simply
die(), which matches the surrounding code (e.g., that is
what we do if we fail to load a file for diffing in the
first place). This is not that elegant, but we are probably
better off dying to let the user know there was a problem,
rather than simply generating bogus output.

We could also just die() directly in xdi_diff, but the
callers typically have a bit more context, and can provide a
better message (and if we do later decide to pass errors up,
we're one step closer to doing so).

There is one interesting case, which is in diff_grep(). Here
if we cannot generate the diff, there is nothing to match,
and we silently return "no hits". This is actually what the
existing code does already, but we make it a little more
explicit.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 14:57:10 -07:00
f2df3104ce Merge branch 'jk/transfer-limit-redirection' into maint-2.3 2015-09-28 14:46:05 -07:00
df37727a65 Merge branch 'jk/transfer-limit-protocol' into maint-2.3 2015-09-28 14:33:27 -07:00
be08dee973 Git 2.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 13:18:19 -07:00
29bc480aa1 ls-remote.txt: delete unsupported option
-u <exec> has never been supported, but it was mentioned since
0a2bb55 (git ls-remote: make usage string match manpage -
2008-11-11). Nobody has complained about it for seven years, it's
probably safe to say nobody cares. So let's remove "-u" in documents
instead of adding code to support it.

While at there, fix --upload-pack syntax too.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 11:07:04 -07:00
63ec5e1fec setup: fix "inside work tree" detection on case-insensitive filesystems
Git has a config variable to indicate that it is operating on a file
system that is case-insensitive: core.ignoreCase. But the
`dir_inside_of()` function did not respect that. As a result, if Git's
idea of the current working directory disagreed in its upper/lower case
with the `GIT_WORK_TREE` variable (e.g. `C:\test` vs `c:\test`) the
user would be greeted by the error message

	fatal: git-am cannot be used without a working tree.

when trying to run a rebase.

This fixes https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/402 (reported by
Daniel Harding).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 10:49:06 -07:00
d78db8424e clone: better error when --reference is a linked checkout
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 10:46:36 -07:00
744e469755 clone: allow --local from a linked checkout
Noticed-by: Bjørnar Snoksrud <snoksrud@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 10:46:35 -07:00
1f5fbe1fe2 enter_repo: allow .git files in strict mode
Strict mode is about not guessing where .git is. If the user points to a
.git file, we know exactly where the target .git dir will be. This makes
it possible to serve .git files as repository on the server side.

This may be needed even in local clone case because transport.c code
uses upload-pack for fetching remote refs. But right now the
clone/transport code goes with non-strict.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 10:46:33 -07:00
0f64cc407f enter_repo: avoid duplicating logic, use is_git_directory() instead
It matters for linked checkouts where 'refs' directory won't be
available in $GIT_DIR. is_git_directory() knows about $GIT_COMMON_DIR
and can handle this case.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 10:46:22 -07:00
31041209fe t0002: add test for enter_repo(), non-strict mode
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-28 10:46:18 -07:00
b258116462 http: limit redirection depth
By default, libcurl will follow circular http redirects
forever. Let's put a cap on this so that somebody who can
trigger an automated fetch of an arbitrary repository (e.g.,
for CI) cannot convince git to loop infinitely.

The value chosen is 20, which is the same default that
Firefox uses.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 15:32:28 -07:00
f4113cac0c http: limit redirection to protocol-whitelist
Previously, libcurl would follow redirection to any protocol
it was compiled for support with. This is desirable to allow
redirection from HTTP to HTTPS. However, it would even
successfully allow redirection from HTTP to SFTP, a protocol
that git does not otherwise support at all. Furthermore
git's new protocol-whitelisting could be bypassed by
following a redirect within the remote helper, as it was
only enforced at transport selection time.

This patch limits redirects within libcurl to HTTP, HTTPS,
FTP and FTPS. If there is a protocol-whitelist present, this
list is limited to those also allowed by the whitelist. As
redirection happens from within libcurl, it is impossible
for an HTTP redirect to a protocol implemented within
another remote helper.

When the curl version git was compiled with is too old to
support restrictions on protocol redirection, we warn the
user if GIT_ALLOW_PROTOCOL restrictions were requested. This
is a little inaccurate, as even without that variable in the
environment, we would still restrict SFTP, etc, and we do
not warn in that case. But anything else means we would
literally warn every time git accesses an http remote.

This commit includes a test, but it is not as robust as we
would hope. It redirects an http request to ftp, and checks
that curl complained about the protocol, which means that we
are relying on curl's specific error message to know what
happened. Ideally we would redirect to a working ftp server
and confirm that we can clone without protocol restrictions,
and not with them. But we do not have a portable way of
providing an ftp server, nor any other protocol that curl
supports (https is the closest, but we would have to deal
with certificates).

[jk: added test and version warning]

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 15:30:39 -07:00
5088d3b387 transport: refactor protocol whitelist code
The current callers only want to die when their transport is
prohibited. But future callers want to query the mechanism
without dying.

Let's break out a few query functions, and also save the
results in a static list so we don't have to re-parse for
each query.

Based-on-a-patch-by: Blake Burkhart <bburky@bburky.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 15:28:36 -07:00
be510e0105 Documentation: fix section header mark-up
Asciidoctor is stricter than AsciiDoc when deciding if underlining
is a section title or the start of preformatted text.  Make the
length of the underlining match the text to ensure that it renders
correctly in all implementations.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
[jc: squashed in git-bisect one noticed by Michael J Gruber]
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:47:06 -07:00
31cd128372 t/perf: make runner work even if Git is not installed
aggregate.perl did not work when Git.pm is not installed to a directory
contained in the default Perl library path list or PERLLIB.
This commit prepends the Perl library path of the current Git source
tree to enable this.

Note that this commit adds a hard-coded relative path

  use lib '../../perl/blib/lib';

instead of the flexible environment-based variant

  use lib (split(/:/, $ENV{GITPERLLIB}));

which is used in tests written in Perl.
The hard-coded variant is used because the whole performance test
framework does it that way (and GITPERLLIB is not set there).

Signed-off-by: Stephan Beyer <s-beyer@gmx.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:44:59 -07:00
75faa45ae0 replace trivial malloc + sprintf / strcpy calls with xstrfmt
It's a common pattern to do:

  foo = xmalloc(strlen(one) + strlen(two) + 1 + 1);
  sprintf(foo, "%s %s", one, two);

(or possibly some variant with strcpy()s or a more
complicated length computation).  We can switch these to use
xstrfmt, which is shorter, involves less error-prone manual
computation, and removes many sprintf and strcpy calls which
make it harder to audit the code for real buffer overflows.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
ac5190cc48 sha1_get_pack_name: use a strbuf
We do some manual memory computation here, and there's no
check that our 60 is not overflowed by the raw sprintf (it
isn't, because the "which" parameter is never longer than
"pack"). We can simplify this greatly with a strbuf.

Technically the end result is not identical, as the original
took care not to rewrite the object directory on each call
for performance reasons.  We could do that here, too (by
saving the baselen and resetting to it), but it's not worth
the complexity; this function is not called a lot (generally
once per packfile that we open).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
b7115a350b receive-pack: convert strncpy to xsnprintf
This strncpy is pointless; we pass the strlen() of the src
string, meaning that it works just like a memcpy. Worse,
though, is that the size has no relation to the destination
buffer, meaning it is a potential overflow.  In practice,
it's not. We pass only short constant strings like
"warning: " and "error: ", which are much smaller than the
destination buffer.

We can make this much simpler by just using xsnprintf, which
will check for overflow and return the size for our next
vsnprintf, without us having to run a separate strlen().

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
54ba4c5fa2 http-walker: store url in a strbuf
We do an unchecked sprintf directly into our url buffer.
This doesn't overflow because we know that it was sized for
"$base/objects/info/http-alternates", and we are writing
"$base/objects/info/alternates", which must be smaller. But
that is not immediately obvious to a reader who is looking
for buffer overflows. Let's switch to a strbuf, so that we
do not have to think about this issue at all.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
0cc4142859 http-push: replace strcat with xsnprintf
We account for these strcats in our initial allocation, but
the code is confusing to follow and verify. Let's remember
our original allocation length, and then xsnprintf can
verify that we don't exceed it.

Note that we can't just use xstrfmt here (which would be
even cleaner) because the code tries to grow the buffer only
when necessary.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
7d0581a9ab http-push: use strbuf instead of fwrite_buffer
The http-push code defines an fwrite_buffer function for use
as a curl callback; it just writes to a strbuf. There's no
reason we need to use it ourselves, as we know we have a
strbuf. This lets us format directly into it, rather than
dealing with an extra temporary buffer (which required
manual length computation).

While we're here, let's also remove the literal tabs from
the source in favor of "\t", which is more visually obvious.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
48bcc1c3cc add_packed_git: convert strcpy into xsnprintf
We have the path "foo.idx", and we create a buffer big
enough to hold "foo.pack" and "foo.keep", and then strcpy
straight into it. This isn't a bug (we have enough space),
but it's very hard to tell from the strcpy that this is so.

Let's instead use strip_suffix to take off the ".idx",
record the size of our allocation, and use xsnprintf to make
sure we don't violate our assumptions.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
df1ed03a6f remote-ext: simplify git pkt-line generation
We format a pkt-line into a heap buffer, which requires
manual computation of the required size, and uses some bare
sprintf calls. We could use a strbuf instead, which would
take care of the computation for us. But it's even easier
still to use packet_write(). Besides handling the formatting
and writing for us, it fixes two things:

  1. Our manual max-size check used 0xFFFF, while technically
     LARGE_PACKET_MAX is slightly smaller than this.

  2. Our packet will now be output as part of
     GIT_TRACE_PACKET debugging.

Unfortunately packet_write() does not let us build up the
buffer progressively, so we do have to repeat ourselves a
little depending on the "vhost" setting, but the end result
is still far more readable than the original.

Since there were no tests covering this feature at all,
we'll add a few into t5802.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
330c8e2670 entry.c: convert strcpy to xsnprintf
This particular conversion is non-obvious, because nobody
has passed our function the length of the destination
buffer. However, the interface to checkout_entry specifies
that the buffer must be at least TEMPORARY_FILENAME_LENGTH
bytes long, so we can check that (meaning the existing code
was not buggy, but merely worrisome to somebody reading it).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
0cb9d6d6b6 upload-archive: convert sprintf to strbuf
When we report an error to the client, we format it into a
fixed-size buffer using vsprintf(). This can't actually
overflow in practice, since we only format a very tame
subset of strings (mostly strerror() output). However, it's
hard to tell immediately, so let's just use a strbuf so
readers do not have to wonder.

We do add an allocation here, but the performance is not
important; the next step is to call die() anyway.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
19bdd3e7e1 grep: use xsnprintf to format failure message
This looks at first glance like the sprintf can overflow our
buffer, but it's actually fine; the p->origin string is
something constant and small, like "command line" or "-e
option".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
495127dbcb resolve_ref: use strbufs for internal buffers
resolve_ref already uses a strbuf internally when generating
pathnames, but it uses fixed-size buffers for storing the
refname and symbolic refs. This means that you cannot
actually point HEAD to a ref that is larger than 256 bytes.

We can lift this limit by using strbufs here, too. Like
sb_path, we pass the the buffers into our helper function,
so that we can easily clean up all output paths. We can also
drop the "unsafe" name from our helper function, as it no
longer uses a single static buffer (but of course
resolve_ref_unsafe is still unsafe, because the static
buffers moved there).

As a bonus, we also get to drop some strcpy calls between
the two fixed buffers (that cannot currently overflow
because the two buffers are sized identically).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
48bdf86995 compat/hstrerror: convert sprintf to snprintf
This is a trivially correct use of sprintf, as our error
number should not be excessively long. But it's still nice
to drop an sprintf call.

Note that we cannot use xsnprintf here, because this is
compat code which does not load git-compat-util.h.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
0e265a92a1 read_remotes_file: simplify string handling
The main motivation for this cleanup is to switch our
line-reading to a strbuf, which removes the use of a
fixed-size buffer (which limited the size of remote URLs).
Since we have the strbuf, we can make use of strbuf_rtrim().

While we're here, we can also simplify the parsing of each
line.  First, we can use skip_prefix() to avoid some magic
numbers.

But second, we can avoid splitting the parsing and actions
for each line into two stages. Right now we figure out which
type of line we have, set an int to a magic number,
skip any intermediate whitespace, and then act on
the resulting value based on the magic number.

Instead, let's factor the whitespace skipping into a
function. That lets us avoid the magic numbers and keep the
actions close to the parsing.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
f5691aa640 stop_progress_msg: convert sprintf to xsnprintf
The usual arguments for using xsnprintf over sprintf apply,
but this case is a little tricky. We print to a fixed-size
buffer if we have room, and otherwise to an allocated
buffer. So there should be no overflow here, but it is still
good to communicate our intention, as well as to check our
earlier math for how much space the string will need.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
f28e3ab231 read_branches_file: simplify string handling
This function does a lot of manual string handling, and has
some unnecessary limits. This patch cleans up a number of
things:

  1. Drop the arbitrary 1000-byte limit on the size of the
     remote name (we do not have such a limit in any of the
     other remote-reading mechanisms).

  2. Replace fgets into a fixed-size buffer with a strbuf,
     eliminating any limits on the length of the URL.

  3. Replace manual whitespace handling with strbuf_trim
     (since we now have a strbuf). This also gets rid
     of a call to strcpy, and the confusing reuse of the "p"
     pointer for multiple purposes.

  4. We currently build up the refspecs over multiple strbuf
     calls. We do this to handle the fact that the URL "frag"
     may not be present. But rather than have multiple
     conditionals, let's just default "frag" to "master".
     This lets us format the refspecs with a single xstrfmt.
     It's shorter, and easier to see what the final string
     looks like.

     We also update the misleading comment in this area (the
     local branch is named after the remote name, not after
     the branch name on the remote side).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
c3bb0ac796 find_short_object_filename: convert sprintf to xsnprintf
We use sprintf() to format some hex data into a buffer. The
buffer is clearly long enough, and using snprintf here is
not necessary. And in fact, it does not really make anything
easier to audit, as the size we feed to snprintf accounts
for the magic extra 42 bytes found in each alt->name field
of struct alternate_object_database (which is there exactly
to do this formatting).

Still, it is nice to remove an sprintf call and replace it
with an xsnprintf and explanatory comment, which makes it
easier to audit the code base for overflows.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
c978610dc8 mailmap: replace strcpy with xstrdup
We want to make a copy of a string without any leading
whitespace. To do so, we allocate a buffer large enough to
hold the original, skip past the whitespace, then copy that.
It's much simpler to just allocate after we've skipped, in
which case we can just copy the remainder of the string,
leaving no question of whether "len" is large enough.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
ef1286d3c0 use xsnprintf for generating git object headers
We generally use 32-byte buffers to format git's "type size"
header fields. These should not generally overflow unless
you can produce some truly gigantic objects (and our types
come from our internal array of constant strings). But it is
a good idea to use xsnprintf to make sure this is the case.

Note that we slightly modify the interface to
write_sha1_file_prepare, which nows uses "hdrlen" as an "in"
parameter as well as an "out" (on the way in it stores the
allocated size of the header, and on the way out it returns
the ultimate size of the header).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
acd47eec99 help: drop prepend function in favor of xstrfmt
This function predates xstrfmt, and its functionality is a
subset. Let's just use xstrfmt.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
f2f0267529 archive-tar: use xsnprintf for trivial formatting
When we generate tar headers, we sprintf() values directly
into a struct with the fixed-size header values. For the
most part this is fine, as we are formatting small values
(e.g., the octal format of "mode & 0x7777" is of fixed
length). But it's still a good idea to use xsnprintf here.
It communicates to readers what our expectation is, and it
provides a run-time check that we are not overflowing the
buffers.

The one exception here is the mtime, which comes from the
epoch time of the commit we are archiving. For sane values,
this fits into the 12-byte value allocated in the header.
But since git can handle 64-bit times, if I claim to be a
visitor from the year 10,000 AD, I can overflow the buffer.
This turns out to be harmless, as we simply overflow into
the chksum field, which is then overwritten.

This case is also best as an xsnprintf. It should never come
up, short of extremely malformed dates, and in that case we
are probably better off dying than silently truncating the
date value (and we cannot expand the size of the buffer,
since it is dictated by the ustar format). Our friends in
the year 5138 (when we legitimately flip to a 12-digit
epoch) can deal with that problem then.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
a5e03bf5c6 ref-filter: drop sprintf and strcpy calls
The ref-filter code comes from for-each-ref, and inherited a
number of raw sprintf and strcpy calls. These are generally
all safe, as we custom-size the buffers, or are formatting
numbers into sufficiently large buffers. But we can make the
resulting code even simpler and more obviously correct by
using some of our helper functions.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
5096d4909f convert trivial sprintf / strcpy calls to xsnprintf
We sometimes sprintf into fixed-size buffers when we know
that the buffer is large enough to fit the input (either
because it's a constant, or because it's numeric input that
is bounded in size). Likewise with strcpy of constant
strings.

However, these sites make it hard to audit sprintf and
strcpy calls for buffer overflows, as a reader has to
cross-reference the size of the array with the input. Let's
use xsnprintf instead, which communicates to a reader that
we don't expect this to overflow (and catches the mistake in
case we do).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
9ae97018fb use strip_suffix and xstrfmt to replace suffix
When we want to convert "foo.pack" to "foo.idx", we do it by
duplicating the original string and then munging the bytes
in place. Let's use strip_suffix and xstrfmt instead, which
has several advantages:

  1. It's more clear what the intent is.

  2. It does not implicitly rely on the fact that
     strlen(".idx") <= strlen(".pack") to avoid an overflow.

  3. We communicate the assumption that the input file ends
     with ".pack" (and get a run-time check that this is so).

  4. We drop calls to strcpy, which makes auditing the code
     base easier.

Likewise, we can do this to convert ".pack" to ".bitmap",
avoiding some manual memory computation.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
db85a8a9c2 compat/inet_ntop: fix off-by-one in inet_ntop4
Our compat inet_ntop4 function writes to a temporary buffer
with snprintf, and then uses strcpy to put the result into
the final "dst" buffer. We check the return value of
snprintf against the size of "dst", but fail to account for
the NUL terminator. As a result, we may overflow "dst" with
a single NUL. In practice, this doesn't happen because the
output of inet_ntop is limited, and we provide buffers that
are way oversized.

We can fix the off-by-one check easily, but while we are
here let's also use strlcpy for increased safety, just in
case there are other bugs lurking.

As a side note, this compat code seems to be BSD-derived.
Searching for "vixie inet_ntop" turns up NetBSD's latest
version of the same code, which has an identical fix (and
switches to strlcpy, too!).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
2805bb5970 fetch: replace static buffer with xstrfmt
We parse the INFINITE_DEPTH constant into a static,
fixed-size buffer using sprintf. This buffer is sufficiently
large for the current constant, but it's a suspicious
pattern, as the constant is defined far away, and it's not
immediately obvious that 12 bytes are large enough to hold
it.

We can just use xstrfmt here, which gets rid of any question
of the buffer size. It also removes any concerns with object
lifetime, which means we do not have to wonder why this
buffer deep within a conditional is marked "static" (we
never free our newly allocated result, of course, but that's
OK; it's global that lasts the lifetime of the whole program
anyway).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
04724222d5 test-dump-cache-tree: avoid overflow of cache-tree name
When dumping a cache-tree, we sprintf sub-tree names directly
into a fixed-size buffer, which can overflow. We can
trivially fix this by converting to xsnprintf to at least
notice and die.

This probably should handle arbitrary-sized names, but
there's not much point. It's used only by the test scripts,
so the trivial fix is enough.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
3ec832c4b5 config: use xstrfmt in normalize_value
We xmalloc a fixed-size buffer and sprintf into it; this is
OK because the size of our formatting types is finite, but
that's not immediately clear to a reader auditing sprintf
calls. Let's switch to xstrfmt, which is shorter and
obviously correct.

Note that just dropping the common xmalloc here causes gcc
to complain with -Wmaybe-uninitialized. That's because if
"types" does not match any of our known types, we never
write anything into the "normalized" pointer. With the
current code, gcc doesn't notice because we always return a
valid pointer (just one which might point to uninitialized
data, but the compiler doesn't know that). In other words,
the current code is potentially buggy if new types are added
without updating this spot.

So let's take this opportunity to clean up the function a
bit more. We can drop the "normalized" pointer entirely, and
just return directly from each code path. And then add an
assertion at the end in case we haven't covered any cases.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
3131977de1 progress: store throughput display in a strbuf
Coverity noticed that we strncpy() into a fixed-size buffer
without making sure that it actually ended up
NUL-terminated. This is unlikely to be a bug in practice,
since throughput strings rarely hit 32 characters, but it
would be nice to clean it up.

The most obvious way to do so is to add a NUL-terminator.
But instead, this patch switches the fixed-size buffer out
for a strbuf. At first glance this seems much less
efficient, until we realize that filling in the fixed-size
buffer is done by writing into a strbuf and copying the
result!

By writing straight to the buffer, we actually end up more
efficient:

  1. We avoid an extra copy of the bytes.

  2. Rather than malloc/free each time progress is shown, we
     can strbuf_reset and use the same buffer each time.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
0bb443fdd2 trace: use strbuf for quote_crnl output
When we output GIT_TRACE_SETUP paths, we quote any
meta-characters. But our buffer to hold the result is only
PATH_MAX bytes, and we could double the size of the input
path (if every character needs quoting). We could use a
2*PATH_MAX buffer, if we assume the input will never be more
than PATH_MAX. But it's easier still to just switch to a
strbuf and not worry about whether the input can exceed
PATH_MAX or not.

The original copied the "p2" pointer to "p1", advancing
both. Since this gets rid of "p1", let's also drop "p2",
whose name is now confusing. We can just advance the
original "path" pointer.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
1d895f194f mailsplit: make PATH_MAX buffers dynamic
There are several PATH_MAX-sized buffers in mailsplit, along
with some questionable uses of sprintf.  These are not
really of security interest, as local mailsplit pathnames
are not typically under control of an attacker, and you
could generally only overflow a few numbers at the end of a
path that approaches PATH_MAX (a longer path would choke
mailsplit long before). But it does not hurt to be careful,
and as a bonus we lift some limits for systems with
too-small PATH_MAX varibles.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
c1fd080917 fsck: use strbuf to generate alternate directories
When fsck-ing alternates, we make a copy of the alternate
directory in a fixed PATH_MAX buffer. We memcpy directly,
without any check whether we are overflowing the buffer.
This is OK if PATH_MAX is a true representation of the
maximum path on the system, because any path here will have
already been vetted by the alternates subsystem. But that is
not true on every system, so we should be more careful.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
af49c6d091 add reentrant variants of sha1_to_hex and find_unique_abbrev
The sha1_to_hex and find_unique_abbrev functions always
write into reusable static buffers. There are a few problems
with this:

  - future calls overwrite our result. This is especially
    annoying with find_unique_abbrev, which does not have a
    ring of buffers, so you cannot even printf() a result
    that has two abbreviated sha1s.

  - if you want to put the result into another buffer, we
    often strcpy, which looks suspicious when auditing for
    overflows.

This patch introduces sha1_to_hex_r and find_unique_abbrev_r,
which write into a user-provided buffer. Of course this is
just punting on the overflow-auditing, as the buffer
obviously needs to be GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ + 1 bytes. But it is
much easier to audit, since that is a well-known size.

We retain the non-reentrant forms, which just become thin
wrappers around the reentrant ones. This patch also adds a
strbuf variant of find_unique_abbrev, which will be handy in
later patches.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
399ad553ce strbuf: make strbuf_complete_line more generic
The strbuf_complete_line function makes sure that a buffer
ends in a newline. But we may want to do this for any
character (e.g., "/" on the end of a path). Let's factor out
a generic version, and keep strbuf_complete_line as a thin
wrapper.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
bb3788cebb add git_path_buf helper function
If you have a function that uses git_path a lot, but would
prefer to avoid the static buffers, it's useful to keep a
single scratch buffer locally and reuse it for each call.
You used to be able to do this with git_snpath:

  char buf[PATH_MAX];

  foo(git_snpath(buf, sizeof(buf), "foo"));
  bar(git_snpath(buf, sizeof(buf), "bar"));

but since 1a83c24, git_snpath has been replaced with
strbuf_git_path. This is good, because it removes the
arbitrary PATH_MAX limit. But using strbuf_git_path is more
awkward for two reasons:

  1. It adds to the buffer, rather than replacing it. This
     is consistent with other strbuf functions, but makes
     reuse of a single buffer more tedious.

  2. It doesn't return the buffer, so you can't format
     as part of a function's arguments.

The new git_path_buf solves both of these, so you can use it
like:

  struct strbuf buf = STRBUF_INIT;

  foo(git_path_buf(&buf, "foo"));
  bar(git_path_buf(&buf, "bar"));

  strbuf_release(&buf);

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
7b03c89ebd add xsnprintf helper function
There are a number of places in the code where we call
sprintf(), with the assumption that the output will fit into
the buffer. In many cases this is true (e.g., formatting a
number into a large buffer), but it is hard to tell
immediately from looking at the code. It would be nice if we
had some run-time check to make sure that our assumption is
correct (and to communicate to readers of the code that we
are not blindly calling sprintf, but have actually thought
about this case).

This patch introduces xsnprintf, which behaves just like
snprintf, except that it dies whenever the output is
truncated. This acts as a sort of assert() for these cases,
which can help find places where the assumption is violated
(as opposed to truncating and proceeding, which may just
silently give a wrong answer).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
fbe85e73ce fsck: don't fsck alternates for connectivity-only check
Commit 02976bf (fsck: introduce `git fsck --connectivity-only`,
2015-06-22) recently gave fsck an option to perform only a
subset of the checks, by skipping the fsck_object_dir()
call. However, it does so only for the local object
directory, and we still do expensive checks on any alternate
repos. We should skip them in this case, too.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
108332c7a0 archive-tar: fix minor indentation violation
This looks like a simple omission from 8539070 (archive-tar:
unindent write_tar_entry by one level, 2012-05-03).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
d270d7b7a2 mailsplit: fix FILE* leak in split_maildir
If we encounter an error while splitting a maildir, we exit
the function early, leaking the open filehandle. This isn't
a big deal, since we exit the program soon after, but it's
easy enough to be careful.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
7cd17e8057 show-branch: avoid segfault with --reflog of unborn branch
When no branch is given to the "--reflog" option, we resolve
HEAD to get the default branch. However, if HEAD points to
an unborn branch, resolve_ref returns NULL, and we later
segfault trying to access it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:18:18 -07:00
83e6bda3fa connect: fix typo in result string of prot_name()
Replace 'unkown' with 'unknown'.

Signed-off-by: Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 10:01:07 -07:00
aa3bc55e40 branch: add '--points-at' option
Add the '--points-at' option provided by 'ref-filter'. The option lets
the user to list only branches which points at the given object.

Add documentation and tests for the same.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 08:54:54 -07:00
aedcb7dc75 branch.c: use 'ref-filter' APIs
Make 'branch.c' use 'ref-filter' APIs for iterating through refs
sorting. This removes most of the code used in 'branch.c' replacing it
with calls to the 'ref-filter' library.

Make 'branch.c' use the 'filter_refs()' function provided by 'ref-filter'
to filter out tags based on the options set.

We provide a sorting option provided for 'branch.c' by using the
sorting options provided by 'ref-filter'. Also by default, we sort by
'refname'.  Since 'HEAD' is alphabatically before 'refs/...' we end up
with an array consisting of the 'HEAD' ref then the local branches and
finally the remote-tracking branches.

Also remove the 'ignore' variable from ref_array_item as it was
previously used for the '--merged' option and now that is handled by
ref-filter.

Modify some of the tests in t1430 to check the stderr for a warning
regarding the broken ref. This is done as ref-filter throws a warning
for broken refs rather than directly printing them.

Add tests and documentation for the same.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 08:54:54 -07:00
1511b22d40 branch.c: use 'ref-filter' data structures
Make 'branch.c' use 'ref-filter' data structures and make changes to
support the new data structures. This is a part of the process of
porting 'branch.c' to use 'ref-filter' APIs.

This is a temporary step before porting 'branch.c' to use 'ref-filter'
completely. As this is a temporary step, most of the code introduced
here will be removed when 'branch.c' is ported over to use
'ref-filter' APIs.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 08:54:54 -07:00
ca41799068 branch: drop non-commit error reporting
Remove the error "branch '%s' does not point at a commit" in
append_ref(), which reports branch refs which do not point to
commits.  Also remove the error "some refs could not be read" in
print_ref_list() which is triggered as a consequence of the first
error.

The purpose of these codepaths is not to diagnose and report a
repository corruption.  If we care about such a corruption, we
should report it from fsck instead, which we already do.

This also helps in a smooth port of branch.c to use ref-filter APIs
over the following patches. On the other hand, ref-filter ignores refs
which do not point at commits silently.

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 08:52:16 -07:00
362d8b6e0d t5561: get rid of racy appending to logfile
The definition of log_div() appended information to the web server's
logfile to make the test more readable. However, log_div() was called
right after a request is served (which is done by git-http-backend);
the web server waits for the git-http-backend process to exit before
it writes to the log file. When the duration between serving a request
and exiting was long, the log_div() output was written before the last
request's log, and the test failed. (This duration could become
especially long for PROFILE=GEN builds.)

To get rid of this behavior, we should not change the logfile at all.
This commit removes log_div() and its calls. The additional information
is kept in the test (for readability reasons) but filtered out before
comparing it to the actual logfile.

Signed-off-by: Stephan Beyer <s-beyer@gmx.net>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-25 08:45:25 -07:00
122f76f574 fsck: exit with non-zero when problems are found
After finding some problems (e.g. a ref refs/heads/X points at an
object that is not a commit) and issuing an error message, the
program failed to signal the fact that it found an error by a
non-zero exit status.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-23 14:29:28 -07:00
f65f13911a branch: move 'current' check down to the presentation layer
We check if given ref is the current branch in print_ref_list(). Move
this check to print_ref_item() where it is checked right before
printing. This enables a smooth transition to using ref-filter APIs,
as we can later replace the current check while printing to just check
for FILTER_REFS_DETACHED instead.

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-23 11:43:08 -07:00
23e714df91 branch: roll show_detached HEAD into regular ref_list
Remove show_detached() and make detached HEAD to be rolled into
regular ref_list by adding REF_DETACHED_HEAD as a kind of branch and
supporting the same in append_ref(). This eliminates the need for an
extra function and helps in easier porting of branch.c to use
ref-filter APIs.

Before show_detached() used to check if the HEAD branch satisfies the
'--contains' option, now that is taken care by append_ref().

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-23 11:41:25 -07:00
2dad24a5c3 branch: bump get_head_description() to the top
This is a preperatory patch for 'roll show_detached HEAD into regular
ref_list'. This patch moves get_head_description() to the top so that
it can be used in print_ref_item().

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-23 11:41:19 -07:00
1051e40dba branch: refactor width computation
Remove unnecessary variables from ref_list and ref_item which were
used for width computation. This is to make ref_item similar to
ref-filter's ref_array_item. This will ensure a smooth port of
branch.c to use ref-filter APIs in further patches.

Previously the maxwidth was computed when inserting the refs into the
ref_list. Now, we obtain the entire ref_list and then compute
maxwidth.

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-23 11:41:01 -07:00
33cfccbbf3 submodule: allow only certain protocols for submodule fetches
Some protocols (like git-remote-ext) can execute arbitrary
code found in the URL. The URLs that submodules use may come
from arbitrary sources (e.g., .gitmodules files in a remote
repository). Let's restrict submodules to fetching from a
known-good subset of protocols.

Note that we apply this restriction to all submodule
commands, whether the URL comes from .gitmodules or not.
This is more restrictive than we need to be; for example, in
the tests we run:

  git submodule add ext::...

which should be trusted, as the URL comes directly from the
command line provided by the user. But doing it this way is
simpler, and makes it much less likely that we would miss a
case. And since such protocols should be an exception
(especially because nobody who clones from them will be able
to update the submodules!), it's not likely to inconvenience
anyone in practice.

Reported-by: Blake Burkhart <bburky@bburky.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-23 11:35:48 -07:00
a5adaced2e transport: add a protocol-whitelist environment variable
If we are cloning an untrusted remote repository into a
sandbox, we may also want to fetch remote submodules in
order to get the complete view as intended by the other
side. However, that opens us up to attacks where a malicious
user gets us to clone something they would not otherwise
have access to (this is not necessarily a problem by itself,
but we may then act on the cloned contents in a way that
exposes them to the attacker).

Ideally such a setup would sandbox git entirely away from
high-value items, but this is not always practical or easy
to set up (e.g., OS network controls may block multiple
protocols, and we would want to enable some but not others).

We can help this case by providing a way to restrict
particular protocols. We use a whitelist in the environment.
This is more annoying to set up than a blacklist, but
defaults to safety if the set of protocols git supports
grows). If no whitelist is specified, we continue to default
to allowing all protocols (this is an "unsafe" default, but
since the minority of users will want this sandboxing
effect, it is the only sensible one).

A note on the tests: ideally these would all be in a single
test file, but the git-daemon and httpd test infrastructure
is an all-or-nothing proposition rather than a test-by-test
prerequisite. By putting them all together, we would be
unable to test the file-local code on machines without
apache.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-23 11:35:48 -07:00
e14c92e841 notes: correct documentation of DWIMery for notes references
expand_notes_ref is used by --ref from git-notes(1) and --notes from the
git log to find the full refname of a notes reference. Previously the
documentation of these options was not clear about what sorts of
expansions would be performed. Fix the documentation to clearly and
accurately describe the behavior of the expansions.

Add a test for this expansion when using git notes get-ref in order to
prevent future patches from changing this behavior.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-22 15:24:01 -07:00
1f5f390711 git-p4: handle "Translation of file content failed"
A P4 repository can get into a state where it contains a file with
type UTF-16 that does not contain a valid UTF-16 BOM. If git-p4
attempts to retrieve the file then the process crashes with a
"Translation of file content failed" error.

More info here: http://answers.perforce.com/articles/KB/3117

Fix this by detecting this error and retrieving the file as binary
instead. The result in Git is the same.

Known issue: This works only if git-p4 is executed in verbose mode.
In normal mode no exceptions are thrown and git-p4 just exits.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-22 12:15:17 -07:00
fe18a0f279 git-p4: add test case for "Translation of file content failed" error
A P4 repository can get into a state where it contains a file with
type UTF-16 that does not contain a valid UTF-16 BOM. If git-p4
attempts to retrieve the file then the process crashes with a
"Translation of file content failed" error.

More info here: http://answers.perforce.com/articles/KB/3117

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-22 12:15:12 -07:00
71400d97b1 filter-branch: make report-progress more readable
The name of some variables that are used very locally in this
function were overly long; they were making the lines harder to read
and the longer names didn't add much more information.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-21 15:19:06 -07:00
6a9d16a0a8 filter-branch: add passed/remaining seconds on progress
adds seconds progress and estimated seconds time if getting the current
timestamp is supported by the date +%s command

Signed-off-by: Gabor Bernat <gabor.bernat@gravityrd.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-21 15:19:06 -07:00
8d530c4d64 Git 2.6-rc3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-21 13:26:13 -07:00
4cb870d804 git-p4: use replacement character for non UTF-8 characters in paths
If non UTF-8 characters are detected in paths then replace them with
a placeholder instead of throwing a UnicodeDecodeError
exception. This restores the original (implicit) implementation that
was broken in 00a9403.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-21 13:24:11 -07:00
74a844a555 Merge branch 'rj/mailmap-ramsay'
* rj/mailmap-ramsay:
  mailmap: update my entry with new email address
2015-09-21 12:58:35 -07:00
b6bd2d0964 Merge branch 'bn/send-email-smtp-auth-error-message-fix'
Fix a minor regression brought in to "git send-email" by a recent
addition of the "--smtp-auth" option.

* bn/send-email-smtp-auth-error-message-fix:
  send-email: fix uninitialized var warning for $smtp_auth
2015-09-21 12:27:15 -07:00
57534ee77d dir.c: don't exclude whole dir prematurely if neg pattern may match
If there is a pattern "!foo/bar", this patch makes it not exclude "foo"
right away. This gives us a chance to examine "foo" and re-include
"foo/bar".

In order for it to detect that the directory under examination should
not be excluded right away, in other words it is a parent directory of a
negative pattern, the "directory path" of the negative pattern must be
literal. Patterns like "!f?o/bar" can't stop "foo" from being excluded.

Basename matching (i.e. "no slashes in the pattern") or must-be-dir
matching (i.e. "trailing slash in the pattern") does not work well with
this. For example, if we descend in "foo" and are examining "foo/abc",
current code for "foo/" pattern will check if path "foo/abc", not "foo",
is a directory. The same problem with basename matching. These may need
big code reorg to make it work.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-21 11:06:47 -07:00
e6efecc46a dir.c: make last_exclude_matching_from_list() run til the end
The next patch adds some post processing to the result value before it's
returned to the caller. Keep all branches reach the end of the function,
so we can do it all in one place.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-21 11:06:03 -07:00
e646ab9cf8 Merge tag 'l10n-2.6.0-rnd2+de' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
l10n-2.6.0-rnd2 plus de

* tag 'l10n-2.6.0-rnd2+de' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po: (25 commits)
  l10n: de.po: better language for one string
  l10n: de.po: translate 2 messages
  l10n: Update and review Vietnamese translation (2440t)
  l10n: fr.po v2.6.0 round 2 (2440t)
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.6.0 l10n round 2
  l10n: ca.po: update translation
  l10n: git.pot: v2.6.0 round 2 (3 improvements)
  l10n: de.po: translate 123 new messages
  l10n: fr.po v2.6.0 round 1 (2441t)
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2441t0f0u)
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.6.0 l10n round 1
  l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation (2441t)
  l10n: git.pot: v2.6.0 round 1 (123 new, 41 removed)
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: "commit message"
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: pickaxe
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: fork
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: tag
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: "dumb", "smart"
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: SHA-1
  l10n: zh_CN: Add Surrounding Spaces
  ...
2015-09-21 10:54:07 -07:00
904f6e7c15 send-email: fix uninitialized var warning for $smtp_auth
On the latest version of git-send-email, I see this error just before
running SMTP auth (I didn't provide any --smtp-auth= parameter):

  Use of uninitialized value $smtp_auth in pattern match (m//) at \
  /home/briannorris/git/git/git-send-email.perl line 1139.

Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <computersforpeace@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-21 10:51:19 -07:00
2b594bf90d Documentation: explain optional arguments better
Improve the documentation of commands taking optional arguments in two
ways:

* Documents the behavior of '-O' (for grep) and '-S' (for commands
  creating commits) when used without the optional argument.

* Document the syntax of these options.

For the second point, the behavior is documented in gitcli(7), but it is
easy for users to miss, and hard for the same user to understand why e.g.
"git status -u no" does not work.

Document this explicitly in the documentation of each short option having
an optional argument: they are the most error prone since there is no '='
sign between the option and its argument.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-21 10:48:23 -07:00
318ca61531 Documentation/grep: fix documentation of -O
Since the argument of -O, --open-file-in-pager is optional, it must be
stuck to the command. Reflect this in the documentation.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-21 10:48:21 -07:00
340f2c5e63 Documentation: use 'keyid' consistently, not 'key-id'
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-21 10:48:17 -07:00
329e6e8794 gc: save log from daemonized gc --auto and print it next time
While commit 9f673f9 (gc: config option for running --auto in
background - 2014-02-08) helps reduce some complaints about 'gc
--auto' hogging the terminal, it creates another set of problems.

The latest in this set is, as the result of daemonizing, stderr is
closed and all warnings are lost. This warning at the end of cmd_gc()
is particularly important because it tells the user how to avoid "gc
--auto" running repeatedly. Because stderr is closed, the user does
not know, naturally they complain about 'gc --auto' wasting CPU.

Daemonized gc now saves stderr to $GIT_DIR/gc.log. Following gc --auto
will not run and gc.log printed out until the user removes gc.log.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-21 09:43:30 -07:00
18a21c1956 l10n: de.po: better language for one string
Just one string I think we could translate better.

Signed-off-by: Phillip Sz <phillip.szelat@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-09-20 18:49:09 +02:00
2e0f3663f5 l10n: de.po: translate 2 messages
Translate 2 messages came from git.pot update in e447091
(l10n: git.pot: v2.6.0 round 2 (3 improvements)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Phillip Sz <phillip.szelat@gmail.com>
2015-09-20 18:49:09 +02:00
5fc31c1f81 l10n: Update and review Vietnamese translation (2440t)
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2015-09-21 00:44:47 +08:00
84486b1ebe l10n: fr.po v2.6.0 round 2 (2440t)
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2015-09-21 00:44:47 +08:00
03ea3327da l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.6.0 l10n round 2
Update 2 translations (2440t0f0u) for git v2.6.0-rc2.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-09-21 00:44:47 +08:00
3ffa1ab2c8 l10n: ca.po: update translation
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
2015-09-21 00:44:47 +08:00
80d1b4817a l10n: git.pot: v2.6.0 round 2 (3 improvements)
Introduce three i18n improvements from the following commits:

* tag, update-ref: improve description of option "create-reflog"
* pull: don't mark values for option "rebase" for translation
* show-ref: place angle brackets around variables in usage string

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-09-21 00:44:46 +08:00
070d1084ba Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: translate 123 new messages
  l10n: fr.po v2.6.0 round 1 (2441t)
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2441t0f0u)
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.6.0 l10n round 1
  l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation (2441t)
  l10n: git.pot: v2.6.0 round 1 (123 new, 41 removed)
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: "commit message"
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: pickaxe
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: fork
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: tag
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: "dumb", "smart"
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: SHA-1
  l10n: zh_CN: Add Surrounding Spaces
  l10n: zh_CN: Add translations for Git glossary
  l10n: TEAMS: stash inactive zh_CN team members
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Translation of "tag"
  l10n: zh_CN: Unify Translation of "packfile"
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Translation: "tag object"

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-09-21 00:44:07 +08:00
e6e86ed4c4 l10n: de.po: translate 123 new messages
Translate 123 new messages came from git.pot update in df0617b
(l10n: git.pot: v2.6.0 round 1 (123 new, 41 removed)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Phillip Sz <phillip.szelat@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthias Rüster <matthias.ruester@gmail.com>
2015-09-21 00:35:49 +08:00
7a43c952de l10n: fr.po v2.6.0 round 1 (2441t)
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2015-09-21 00:35:42 +08:00
0e5767991b Update RelNotes to 2.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 12:33:24 -07:00
4d8002429f Sync with 2.5.3
* maint:
  Git 2.5.3
2015-09-17 12:29:49 -07:00
a2654356d4 Merge branch 'po/doc-branch-desc'
The branch descriptions that are set with "git branch --edit-description"
option were used in many places but they weren't clearly documented.

* po/doc-branch-desc:
  doc: show usage of branch description
2015-09-17 12:29:03 -07:00
8d45eefe3e Merge branch 'et/win32-poll-timeout'
* et/win32-poll-timeout:
  poll: honor the timeout on Win32
2015-09-17 12:29:02 -07:00
1c1fee746e Merge branch 'as/config-doc-markup-fix'
* as/config-doc-markup-fix:
  Documentation/config: fix formatting for branch.*.rebase and pull.rebase
2015-09-17 12:29:01 -07:00
96f78d3998 remote: add get-url subcommand
Expanding `insteadOf` is a part of ls-remote --url and there is no way
to expand `pushInsteadOf` as well. Add a get-url subcommand to be able
to query both as well as a way to get all configured urls.

Signed-off-by: Ben Boeckel <mathstuf@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 12:19:57 -07:00
ee6ad5f4d5 Git 2.5.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 12:16:17 -07:00
8833ccd7d0 Merge branch 'dt/untracked-subdir' into maint
The experimental untracked-cache feature were buggy when paths with
a few levels of subdirectories are involved.

* dt/untracked-subdir:
  untracked cache: fix entry invalidation
  untracked-cache: fix subdirectory handling
  t7063: use --force-untracked-cache to speed up a bit
  untracked-cache: support sparse checkout
2015-09-17 12:12:29 -07:00
d6579d9436 Merge branch 'br/svn-doc-include-paths-config' into maint
* br/svn-doc-include-paths-config:
  git-svn doc: mention "svn-remote.<name>.include-paths"
2015-09-17 12:11:46 -07:00
cfc3e0ee4a Merge branch 'ah/submodule-typofix-in-error' into maint
Error string fix.

* ah/submodule-typofix-in-error:
  git-submodule: remove extraneous space from error message
2015-09-17 12:11:08 -07:00
02dad2673b Merge branch 'js/maint-am-skip-performance-regression' into maint
* js/maint-am-skip-performance-regression:
  am --skip/--abort: merge HEAD/ORIG_HEAD tree into index
2015-09-17 12:03:02 -07:00
5242860f54 tag.c: implement '--merged' and '--no-merged' options
Use 'ref-filter' APIs to implement the '--merged' and '--no-merged'
options into 'tag.c'. The '--merged' option lets the user to only list
tags merged into the named commit. The '--no-merged' option lets the
user to only list tags not merged into the named commit.  If no object
is provided it assumes HEAD as the object.

Add documentation and tests for the same.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:50 -07:00
df0947417a tag.c: implement '--format' option
Implement the '--format' option provided by 'ref-filter'.
This lets the user list tags as per desired format similar
to the implementation in 'git for-each-ref'.

Add tests and documentation for the same.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:49 -07:00
b7cc53e92c tag.c: use 'ref-filter' APIs
Make 'tag.c' use 'ref-filter' APIs for iterating through refs, sorting
and printing of refs. This removes most of the code used in 'tag.c'
replacing it with calls to the 'ref-filter' library.

Make 'tag.c' use the 'filter_refs()' function provided by 'ref-filter'
to filter out tags based on the options set.

For printing tags we use 'show_ref_array_item()' function provided by
'ref-filter'.

We improve the sorting option provided by 'tag.c' by using the sorting
options provided by 'ref-filter'. This causes the test 'invalid sort
parameter on command line' in t7004 to fail, as 'ref-filter' throws an
error for all sorting fields which are incorrect. The test is changed
to reflect the same.

Modify documentation for the same.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:49 -07:00
ac4cc866c8 tag.c: use 'ref-filter' data structures
Make 'tag.c' use 'ref-filter' data structures and make changes to
support the new data structures. This is a part of the process
of porting 'tag.c' to use 'ref-filter' APIs.

This is a temporary step before porting 'tag.c' to use 'ref-filter'
completely. As this is a temporary step, most of the code
introduced here will be removed when 'tag.c' is ported over to use
'ref-filter' APIs.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:49 -07:00
bef0e12bec ref-filter: add option to match literal pattern
Since 'ref-filter' only has an option to match path names add an
option for plain fnmatch pattern-matching.

This is to support the pattern matching options which are used in `git
tag -l` and `git branch -l` where we can match patterns like `git tag
-l foo*` which would match all tags which has a "foo*" pattern.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:49 -07:00
90c004085c ref-filter: add support to sort by version
Add support to sort by version using the "v:refname" and
"version:refname" option. This is achieved by using the 'versioncmp()'
function as the comparing function for qsort.

This option is included to support sorting by versions in `git tag -l`
which will eventually be ported to use ref-filter APIs.

Add documentation and tests for the same.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:49 -07:00
1bb38e5a6a ref-filter: add support for %(contents:lines=X)
In 'tag.c' we can print N lines from the annotation of the tag using
the '-n<num>' option. Copy code from 'tag.c' to 'ref-filter' and
modify it to support appending of N lines from the annotation of tags
to the given strbuf.

Implement %(contents:lines=X) where X lines of the given object are
obtained.

While we're at it, remove unused "contents:<suboption>" atoms from
the `valid_atom` array.

Add documentation and test for the same.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:48 -07:00
5b4f28510f ref-filter: add option to filter out tags, branches and remotes
Add a function called 'for_each_fullref_in()' to refs.{c,h} which
iterates through each ref for the given path without trimming the path
and also accounting for broken refs, if mentioned.

Add 'filter_ref_kind()' in ref-filter.c to check the kind of ref being
handled and return the kind to 'ref_filter_handler()', where we
discard refs which we do not need and assign the kind to needed refs.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:48 -07:00
ce59208293 ref-filter: implement an align atom
Implement an `align` atom which left-, middle-, or right-aligns the
content between %(align:...) and %(end).

The "align:" is followed by `<width>` and `<position>` in any order
separated by a comma, where the `<position>` is either left, right or
middle, default being left and `<width>` is the total length of the
content with alignment. If the contents length is more than the width
then no alignment is performed.  e.g. to align a refname atom to the
middle with a total width of 40 we can do:
--format="%(align:middle,40)%(refname)%(end)".

We introduce an `at_end` function for each element of the stack which
is to be called when the `end` atom is encountered. Using this we
implement end_align_handler() for the `align` atom, this aligns the
final strbuf by calling `strbuf_utf8_align()` from utf8.c.

Ensure that quote formatting is performed on the whole of
%(align:...)...%(end) rather than individual atoms inside. We skip
quote formatting for individual atoms when the current stack element
is handling an %(align:...) atom and perform quote formatting at the
end when we encounter the %(end) atom of the second element of then
stack.

Add documentation and tests for the same.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:48 -07:00
40a7551d25 ref-filter: introduce match_atom_name()
Introduce match_atom_name() which helps in checking if a particular
atom is the atom we're looking for and if it has a value attached to
it or not.

Use it instead of starts_with() for checking the value of %(color:...)
atom. Write a test for the same.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Thanks-to: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:48 -07:00
63d89fbce1 ref-filter: introduce handler function for each atom
Introduce a handler function for each atom, which is called when the
atom is processed in show_ref_array_item().

In this context make append_atom() as the default handler function and
extract quote_formatting() out of append_atom(). Bump this to the top.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:48 -07:00
110dcda50d utf8: add function to align a string into given strbuf
Add strbuf_utf8_align() which will align a given string into a strbuf
as per given align_type and width. If the width is greater than the
string length then no alignment is performed.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:48 -07:00
574e96a241 ref-filter: introduce ref_formatting_state and ref_formatting_stack
Introduce ref_formatting_state which will hold the formatted output
strbuf instead of directly printing to stdout. This will help us in
creating modifier atoms which modify the format specified before
printing to stdout.

Implement a stack machinery for ref_formatting_state, this allows us
to push and pop elements onto the stack. Whenever we pop an element
from the stack, the strbuf from that element is appended to the strbuf
of the next element on the stack, this will allow us to support
nesting of modifier atoms.

Rename some functions to reflect the changes made:
print_value() -> append_atom()
emit()        -> append_literal()

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:48 -07:00
3a25761a5e ref-filter: move struct atom_value to ref-filter.c
Since atom_value is only required for the internal working of
ref-filter it doesn't belong in the public header.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:48 -07:00
e6f2599cba strtoul_ui: reject negative values
strtoul_ui uses strtoul to get a long unsigned, then checks that casting
to unsigned does not lose information and return the casted value.

On 64 bits architecture, checking that the cast does not change the value
catches most errors, but when sizeof(int) == sizeof(long) (e.g. i386),
the check does nothing. Unfortunately, strtoul silently accepts negative
values, and as a result strtoul_ui("-1", ...) raised no error.

This patch catches negative values before it's too late, i.e. before
calling strtoul.

Reported-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-17 10:02:27 -07:00
00a9403a10 git-p4: improve path encoding verbose output
If a path with non-ASCII characters is detected then print the
encoding and the encoded string in verbose mode.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-16 15:53:08 -07:00
95a4fb0eac blame: handle --first-parent
The revision.c options-parser will parse "--first-parent"
for us, but the blame code does not actually respect it, as
we simply iterate over the whole list returned by
first_scapegoat(). We can fix this by returning a
truncated parent list.

Note that we could technically also do so by limiting the
return value of num_scapegoats(), but that is less robust.
We would rely on nobody ever looking at the "next" pointer
from the returned list.

Combining "--reverse" with "--first-parent" is more
complicated, and will probably involve cooperation from
revision.c. Since the desired semantics are not even clear,
let's punt on this for now, but explicitly disallow it to
avoid confusing users (this is not really a regression,
since it did something nonsensical before).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-16 09:59:05 -07:00
dafc047369 mailmap: update my entry with new email address
My 'demon' email address is no longer functional since, after 16+
years with demon, I have had to change my ISP. :(

Also, take the opportunity to remove my middle name, which I only
use on official documents (or in the GECOS field when creating a
user account on unix).

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-16 09:08:48 -07:00
c39badbb9a Updated Vietnamese translation
Signed-off-by: Trần Ngọc Quân <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2015-09-15 07:36:44 +07:00
f4d9753a89 Update RelNotes to 2.6 to describe leftover bits since -rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-14 15:00:41 -07:00
cf2094ca63 Merge branch 'js/maint-am-skip-performance-regression'
Recent versions of scripted "git am" has a performance regression in
"git am --skip" codepath, which no longer exists in the built-in
version on the 'master' front.  Fix the regression in the last
scripted version that appear in 2.5.x maintenance track and older.

* js/maint-am-skip-performance-regression:
  am --skip/--abort: merge HEAD/ORIG_HEAD tree into index
2015-09-14 14:59:13 -07:00
b8367d1f01 Merge branch 'ah/show-ref-usage-string'
Both "git show-ref -h" and "git show-ref --help" illustrated that the
"--exclude-existing" option makes the command read list of refs
from its standard input.  Change only the "show-ref -h" output to
have a pair of "<>" around the placeholder that designate an input
file, i.e. "git show-ref --exclude-existing < <ref-list>".

* ah/show-ref-usage-string:
  show-ref: place angle brackets around variables in usage string
2015-09-14 14:59:06 -07:00
a9400b01df Merge branch 'sg/help-group'
* sg/help-group:
  Makefile: use SHELL_PATH when running generate-cmdlist.sh
2015-09-14 14:59:05 -07:00
153ec926b6 Merge branch 'rt/help-strings-fix'
* rt/help-strings-fix:
  tag, update-ref: improve description of option "create-reflog"
  pull: don't mark values for option "rebase" for translation
2015-09-14 14:59:04 -07:00
45733fa93f Git 2.6-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-14 13:17:56 -07:00
ef8b53e78c poll: honor the timeout on Win32
Ensure that when passing a pipe, the gnulib poll replacement will not
return 0 before the timeout has passed.

Not obeying the timeout (and merely returning 0) causes pathological
behavior when preparing a packfile for a repository and taking a
long time to do so.  If poll were to return 0 immediately, this would
cause keep-alives to get sent as quickly as possible until the packfile
was created.  Such deviance from the standard would cause megabytes (or
more) of keep-alive packets to be sent.

GetTickCount is used as it is efficient, stable and monotonically
increasing.  (Neither GetSystemTime nor QueryPerformanceCounter have
all three of these properties.)

Signed-off-by: Edward Thomson <ethomson@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-14 12:53:48 -07:00
561d2b7934 doc: show usage of branch description
The branch description will be included in 'git format-patch
--cover-letter' and in 'git pull-request' emails. It can also
be used in the automatic merge message. Tell the reader.

While here, clarify that the description may be a multi-line
explanation of the purpose of the branch's patch series.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-14 12:50:33 -07:00
3f26fe7644 Merge git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk
* git://ozlabs.org/~paulus/gitk:
  gitk: Accelerators for the main menu
  gitk: Adjust the menu line numbers to compensate for the new entry
  gitk: Add a "Copy commit summary" command
  gitk: Update Bulgarian translation (307t)
  gitk: Update .po files
  gitk: Update Bulgarian translation (304t)
  gitk: Use translated version of "Command line" in getcommitlines
  gitk: Make it easier to go quickly to a specific commit
  gitk: Show the current view's name in the window title
  gitk: Add mouse right-click options to copy path and branch name
  gitk: Remove mc parameter from proc show_error
  gitk: Fix error when changing colors after closing "List references" window
  gitk: Replace catch {unset foo} with unset -nocomplain foo
  gitk: Rearrange window title to be more conventional
  gitk: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (305t0f0u)
  gitk: Fix bad English grammar "Matches none Commit Info"
2015-09-14 11:50:21 -07:00
4be6af6459 Merge branch 'jk/pack-protocol-doc'
Streamline documentation of the pkt-line protocol.

* jk/pack-protocol-doc:
  pack-protocol: clarify LF-handling in PKT-LINE()
2015-09-14 11:46:59 -07:00
971f9ea543 Merge branch 'mp/t7060-diff-index-test'
Fix an old test that was doing the same thing as another one.

* mp/t7060-diff-index-test:
  t7060: actually test "git diff-index --cached -M"
2015-09-14 11:46:31 -07:00
e0eeba263c Merge branch 'gb/apply-comment-typofix'
* gb/apply-comment-typofix:
  apply: comment grammar fix
2015-09-14 11:44:44 -07:00
11f9dd7191 path: implement common_dir handling in git_pathdup_submodule()
When submodule is a linked worktree, "git diff --submodule" and other
calls which directly access the submodule's object database do not correctly
calculate its path. Fix it by changing the git_pathdup_submodule() behavior,
to use either common or per-worktree directory.

Do it similarly as for parent repository, but ignore the GIT_COMMON_DIR
environment variable, because it would mean common directory for the parent
repository and does not make sense for submodule.

Also add test for functionality which uses this call.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-14 11:03:46 -07:00
35fb4d2e3d submodule refactor: use strbuf_git_path_submodule() in add_submodule_odb()
Functions which directly operate submodule's object database do not
handle the case when the submodule is linked worktree (which are
introduced in c7b3a3d2fe). Instead of fixing the path calculation use
already existing strbuf_git_path_submodule() function without changing
overall behaviour. Then it will be possible to modify only that function
whenever we need to change real location of submodule's repository
content.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-14 11:03:46 -07:00
d99b4b0de2 gitk: Accelerators for the main menu
This allows fast, keyboard-only usage of the menu (e.g. Alt+V, N to open a
new view).

Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Bilotta <giuseppe.bilotta@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-09-13 15:05:24 +10:00
b6f92a8563 gitk: Adjust the menu line numbers to compensate for the new entry
Commit d835dbb9 ("gitk: Add a "Copy commit summary" command",
2015-08-13) in the upstream gitk repo added a new context menu entry.
Therefore, the line numbers of the entries below the new one need to be
adjusted when their text or state is changed.

Signed-off-by: Beat Bolli <dev+git@drbeat.li>
Cc: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-09-13 15:00:30 +10:00
d23871079f Documentation/config: fix formatting for branch.*.rebase and pull.rebase
Don't format the second paragraph as a literal block.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-12 18:09:24 -07:00
98c32bd889 tag, update-ref: improve description of option "create-reflog"
The description of option "create-reflog" is "create_reflog", which
is neither a good description, nor a sensible string to translate.
Change it to a more meaningful message.

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-11 09:50:02 -07:00
7306b39f5a pull: don't mark values for option "rebase" for translation
"false|true|preserve" are actual values for option "rebase"
of the "git-pull" command and should therefore not be marked
for translation.

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-11 09:50:00 -07:00
57cee8ac5f Makefile: use SHELL_PATH when running generate-cmdlist.sh
Non-POSIX shells, such as /bin/sh on SunOS, do not support $((...))
arithmetic expansion or $(...) command substitution needed by
generate-cmdlist.sh.  Make sure that we use a POSIX compliant shell
$(SHELL_PATH) when running generate-cmdlist.sh.

Signed-off-by: Alejandro R. Sedeño <asedeno@mit.edu>
Acked-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-10 17:49:00 -07:00
82e0668cde Documentation/git-rebase: fix --no-autostash formatting
All of the other "--option" and "--no-option" pairs in this file are
formatted as separate options.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-10 17:42:04 -07:00
619e360428 rebase: support --no-autostash
This is documented as an option but we don't actually accept it.
Support it so that it is possible to override the "rebase.autostash"
config variable.

Reported-by: Daniel Hahler <genml+git-2014@thequod.de>
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-10 17:42:01 -07:00
ac179b4d9c Makefile: allow $(ARFLAGS) specified from the command line
We can do this because we have a very simple needs and run "ar"
exactly the same way everywhere ;-).

Requested-by: Jeffrey Walton
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-10 14:27:21 -07:00
1962994f08 Merge git://bogomips.org/git-svn
* git://bogomips.org/git-svn:
  git-svn: parse authors file more leniently
2015-09-10 14:06:58 -07:00
f7c6de0ea1 git-svn: parse authors file more leniently
Currently, git-svn parses an authors file using the perl regex

/^(.+?|\(no author\))\s*=\s*(.+?)\s*<(.+)>\s*$/

in order to extract svn user name, real name and e-mail.
This does not match an empty e-mail field like "<>". On the other hand,
the output of an authors-prog is parsed with the perl regex

/^\s*(.+?)\s*<(.*)>\s*$/

in order to extract real name and e-mail.

So, specifying a trivial file grep such as

grep "$1" /tmp/authors | head -n 1 | cut -d'=' -f2 | cut -c'2-'

as the authors prog gives different results compared to specifying
/tmp/authors as the authors file directly.

Instead, make git svn uses the perl regex

/^(.+?|\(no author\))\s*=\s*(.+?)\s*<(.*)>\s*$/

for parsing the authors file so that the same (slightly more lenient)
regex is used in both cases.

Reported-by: Till Schäfer <till2.schaefer@tu-dortmund.de>
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
2015-09-10 17:59:38 +00:00
ef49e05a64 Makefile: fix MAKEFLAGS tests with multiple flags
findstring is defined as $(findstring FIND,IN) so if multiple flags are
set these tests do the wrong thing unless $(MAKEFLAGS) is the second
argument.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-10 09:26:23 -07:00
61d93a2aab Merge branch 'master' of github.com:jiangxin/git
* 'master' of github.com:jiangxin/git:
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.6.0 l10n round 1
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: "commit message"
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: pickaxe
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: fork
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: tag
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: "dumb", "smart"
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: SHA-1
  l10n: zh_CN: Add Surrounding Spaces
  l10n: zh_CN: Add translations for Git glossary
  l10n: TEAMS: stash inactive zh_CN team members
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Translation of "tag"
  l10n: zh_CN: Unify Translation of "packfile"
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Translation: "tag object"
2015-09-10 23:14:16 +08:00
f0bc854623 Sync with 2.5.2 2015-09-09 14:30:35 -07:00
b9d66899a9 am --skip/--abort: merge HEAD/ORIG_HEAD tree into index
f8da6801 (am --skip: support skipping while on unborn branch,
2015-06-06) introduced a performance regression to "git am --skip",
where it used "read-tree" to reconstruct the index from scratch
without reusing the cached stat information.

This is a backport of the corresponding patch to the builtin am in 2.6:
3ecc704 (am --skip/--abort: merge HEAD/ORIG_HEAD tree into index,
2015-08-19).

Reportedly, it can make a huge difference on Windows, in one case a `git
rebase --skip` took 1m40s without, and 5s with, this patch.

cf. https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/365

Reported-and-suggested-by: Kim Gybels <kgybels@infogroep.be>
Acked-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-09 14:22:56 -07:00
d8455d17af l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2441t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2015-09-09 21:47:09 +01:00
7a2c4af7a8 Release Notes: typofix
Thanks to Andreas Schwab for careful reading.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-09 10:34:35 -07:00
5fcadc3b6c apply: comment grammar fix
Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Bilotta <giuseppe.bilotta@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-09 10:21:43 -07:00
ee8838d157 submodule: rewrite module_clone shell function in C
This reimplements the helper function `module_clone` in shell
in C as `clone`. This functionality is needed for converting
`git submodule update` later on, which we want to add threading
to.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-08 15:48:21 -07:00
689efb737a Git 2.6-rc1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-08 15:38:43 -07:00
d6a2b05cbb Merge branch 'jc/builtin-am-signoff-regression-fix'
Recent "git am" had regression when adding a Signed-off-by line
with its "-s" option by an unintended tightening of how an existing
trailer block is detected.

* jc/builtin-am-signoff-regression-fix:
  am: match --signoff to the original scripted version
2015-09-08 15:35:05 -07:00
a48b409f9c git_connect: clarify conn->use_shell flag
When executing user-specified programs, we generally always
want to use a shell, for flexibility and consistency. One
big exception is executing $GIT_SSH, which for historical
reasons must not use a shell.

Once upon a time the logic in git_connect looked like:

  if (protocol == PROTO_SSH) {
	  ... setup ssh ...
  } else {
	  ... setup local connection ...
	  conn->use_shell = 1;
  }

But over time the PROTO_SSH block has grown, and the "local"
block has shrunk so that it contains only conn->use_shell;
it's easy to miss at the end of the large block.  Moreover,
PROTO_SSH now also sometimes sets use_shell, when the new
GIT_SSH_COMMAND is used.

Let's just set conn->use_shell when we're setting up the "conn"
struct, and unset it (with a comment) in the historical GIT_SSH
case.  This will make the flow easier to follow.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-08 15:33:21 -07:00
cbd9fc2366 interpret-trailers: allow running outside a repository
It may be useful to run git-interpret-trailers without needing to be in
a repository.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Acked-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-08 11:16:47 -07:00
5b6ab38bd3 contrib/subtree: respect spaces in a repository path
Remote repository may have spaces in its path, so take it into account.

Also, as far as there are no tests for the `push` command, add them.

Signed-off-by: Alexey Shumkin <Alex.Crezoff@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-08 11:09:13 -07:00
c61eb4106d t7900-subtree: test the "space in a subdirectory name" case
In common case there can be spaces in a subdirectory name. Change tests
accorgingly to this statement.

Also, as far as a call to the `rejoin_msg` function (in `cmd_split`)
does not take into account such a case this patch fixes commit message
when `--rejoin` option is set .

Besides, as `fixnl` and `multiline` functions did not take into account
the "new" tested "space in a subdirectory name" case they become unused
and redundant, so they are removed.

Signed-off-by: Alexey Shumkin <Alex.Crezoff@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-08 11:09:10 -07:00
0968f12a99 test-lib-functions: detect test_when_finished in subshell
test_when_finished does nothing in a subshell because the change to
test_cleanup does not affect the parent.

There is no POSIX way to detect that we are in a subshell ($$ and $PPID
are specified to remain unchanged), but we can detect it on Bash and
fall back to ignoring the bug on other shells.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-08 10:35:05 -07:00
da568b66f1 t7800: don't use test_config in a subshell
Use the new "-C" option to test_config to change the configuration in
the submodule from the top level of the test so that it can be unset
correctly when the test finishes.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-08 10:35:03 -07:00
5fafc07fca test-lib-functions: support "test_config -C <dir> ..."
If used in a subshell, test_config cannot unset variables at the end of
a test.  This is a problem when testing submodules because we do not
want to "cd" at to top level of a test script in order to run the
command inside the submodule.

Add a "-C" option to test_config (and test_unconfig) so that test_config
can be kept outside subshells and still affect subrepositories.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-08 10:35:01 -07:00
c545bc6266 t5801: don't use test_when_finished in a subshell
test_when_finished has no effect in a subshell.  Since the cmp_marks
function is only used once, inline it at its call site and move the
test_when_finished invocation to the start of the test.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-08 10:34:59 -07:00
1a9a23e35c t7610: don't use test_config in a subshell
test_config uses test_when_finished to reset the configuration after the
test, but this does not work inside a subshell.  This does not cause a
problem here because the first thing the next test does is to set this
config variable itself, but we are about to add a check that will
complain when test_when_finished is used in a subshell.

In this case, "subdir" not a submodule so test_config has the same
effect when run at the top level and can simply be moved out of the
subshell.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-08 10:34:58 -07:00
1b7f4a3454 l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.6.0 l10n round 1
Update 123 translations (2441t0f0u) for git v2.6.0-rc0.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
2015-09-08 23:07:20 +08:00
1fb5925905 path.c: delete an extra space
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-07 09:19:36 -07:00
895ff3b2c7 add and use a convenience macro ce_intent_to_add()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-06 20:01:13 -07:00
aab845424e am: match --signoff to the original scripted version
Linus noticed that the recently reimplemented "git am -s" defines
the trailer block too rigidly, resulting in an unnecessary blank
line between the existing sign-offs and his new sign-off.  An e-mail
submission sent to Linus in real life ends with mixture of sign-offs
and commentaries, e.g.

	title here

	message here

	Signed-off-by: Original Author <original@auth.or>
	[rv: tweaked frotz and nitfol]
	Signed-off-by: Re Viewer <rv@ew.er>
	Signed-off-by: Other Reviewer <other@rev.ewer>
	---
	patch here

Because the reimplementation reused append_signoff() helper that is
used by other codepaths, which is unaware that people intermix such
comments with their sign-offs in the trailer block, such a message
was judged to end with a non-trailer, resulting in an extra blank
line before adding a new sign-off.

The original scripted version of "git am" used a lot looser
definition, i.e. "if and only if there is no line that begins with
Signed-off-by:, add a blank line before adding a new sign-off".  For
the upcoming release, stop using the append_signoff() in "git am"
and reimplement the looser definition used by the scripted version
to use only in "git am" to fix this regression in "am" while
avoiding new regressions to other users of append_signoff().

In the longer term, we should look into loosening append_signoff()
so that other codepaths that add a new sign-off behave the same way
as "git am -s", but that is a task for post-release.

Reported-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-06 19:59:40 -07:00
f29938849a l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation (2441t)
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2015-09-07 08:54:05 +07:00
9049ba7c0f Merge branch 'master' of github.com:jiangxin/git into master
* 'master' of github.com:jiangxin/git:
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: "commit message"
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: pickaxe
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: fork
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: tag
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: "dumb", "smart"
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: SHA-1
  l10n: zh_CN: Add Surrounding Spaces
  l10n: zh_CN: Add translations for Git glossary
  l10n: TEAMS: stash inactive zh_CN team members
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Translation of "tag"
  l10n: zh_CN: Unify Translation of "packfile"
  l10n: zh_CN: Update Translation: "tag object"

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-09-05 09:26:26 +08:00
df0617bfa7 l10n: git.pot: v2.6.0 round 1 (123 new, 41 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.6.0-rc0-24-gec371ff for git v2.6.0 l10n
round 1.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-09-05 09:21:10 +08:00
aab4043851 git_connect: clear GIT_* environment for ssh
When we "switch" to another local repository to run the server
side of a fetch or push, we must clear the variables in
local_repo_env so that our local $GIT_DIR, etc, do not
pollute the upload-pack or receive-pack that is executing in
the "remote" repository.

We have never done so for ssh connections. For the most
part, nobody has noticed because ssh will not pass unknown
environment variables by default. However, it is not out of
the question for a user to configure ssh to pass along GIT_*
variables using SendEnv/AcceptEnv.

We can demonstrate the problem by using "git -c" on a local
command and seeing its impact on a remote repository.  This
config ends up in $GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS. In the local case,
the config has no impact, but in the ssh transport, it does
(our test script has a fake ssh that passes through all
environment variables; this isn't normal, but does simulate
one possible setup).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-04 15:50:33 -07:00
507d7804c0 pager: don't use unsafe functions in signal handlers
Since the commit a3da882120 (pager: do wait_for_pager on signal
death), we call wait_for_pager() in the pager's signal handler.  The
recent bug report revealed that this causes a deadlock in glibc at
aborting "git log" [*1*].  When this happens, git process is left
unterminated, and it can't be killed by SIGTERM but only by SIGKILL.

The problem is that wait_for_pager() function does more than waiting
for pager process's termination, but it does cleanups and printing
errors.  Unfortunately, the functions that may be used in a signal
handler are very limited [*2*].  Particularly, malloc(), free() and the
variants can't be used in a signal handler because they take a mutex
internally in glibc.  This was the cause of the deadlock above.  Other
than the direct calls of malloc/free, many functions calling
malloc/free can't be used.  strerror() is such one, either.

Also the usage of fflush() and printf() in a signal handler is bad,
although it seems working so far.  In a safer side, we should avoid
them, too.

This patch tries to reduce the calls of such functions in signal
handlers.  wait_for_signal() takes a flag and avoids the unsafe
calls.   Also, finish_command_in_signal() is introduced for the
same reason.  There the free() calls are removed, and only waits for
the children without whining at errors.

[*1*] https://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=942297
[*2*] http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/V2_chap02.html#tag_15_04_03

Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-04 14:57:51 -07:00
ec371ff6e3 Sync with maint
* maint:
2015-09-04 14:34:57 -07:00
27ea6f85be Git 2.5.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-04 10:46:07 -07:00
3d3caf0b78 Sync with 2.4.9 2015-09-04 10:43:23 -07:00
74b6763816 Git 2.4.9
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-04 10:36:14 -07:00
ef0e938a1a Sync with 2.3.9 2015-09-04 10:34:19 -07:00
ecad27cf98 Git 2.3.9
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-04 10:32:15 -07:00
8267cd11d6 Sync with 2.2.3 2015-09-04 10:29:28 -07:00
441c4a4017 Git 2.2.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-04 10:26:23 -07:00
f54cb059b1 Merge branch 'jk/long-paths' into maint-2.2 2015-09-04 10:25:23 -07:00
78f23bdf68 show-branch: use a strbuf for reflog descriptions
When we show "branch@{0}", we format into a fixed-size
buffer using sprintf. This can overflow if you have long
branch names. We can fix it by using a temporary strbuf.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-04 09:48:26 -07:00
5015f01c12 read_info_alternates: handle paths larger than PATH_MAX
This function assumes that the relative_base path passed
into it is no larger than PATH_MAX, and writes into a
fixed-size buffer. However, this path may not have actually
come from the filesystem; for example, add_submodule_odb
generates a path using a strbuf and passes it in. This is
hard to trigger in practice, though, because the long
submodule directory would have to exist on disk before we
would try to open its info/alternates file.

We can easily avoid the bug, though, by simply creating the
filename on the heap.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-04 09:36:51 -07:00
c29edfefb6 notes: use a strbuf in add_non_note
When we are loading a notes tree into our internal hash
table, we also collect any files that are clearly non-notes.
We format the name of the file into a PATH_MAX buffer, but
unlike true notes (which cannot be larger than a fanned-out
sha1 hash), these tree entries can be arbitrarily long,
overflowing our buffer.

We can fix this by switching to a strbuf. It doesn't even
cost us an extra allocation, as we can simply hand ownership
of the buffer over to the non-note struct.

This is of moderate security interest, as you might fetch
notes trees from an untrusted remote. However, we do not do
so by default, so you would have to manually fetch into the
notes namespace.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-04 09:36:28 -07:00
f514ef9787 verify_absent: allow filenames longer than PATH_MAX
When unpack-trees wants to know whether a path will
overwrite anything in the working tree, we use lstat() to
see if there is anything there. But if we are going to write
"foo/bar", we can't just lstat("foo/bar"); we need to look
for leading prefixes (e.g., "foo"). So we use the lstat cache
to find the length of the leading prefix, and copy the
filename up to that length into a temporary buffer (since
the original name is const, we cannot just stick a NUL in
it).

The copy we make goes into a PATH_MAX-sized buffer, which
will overflow if the prefix is longer than PATH_MAX. How
this happens is a little tricky, since in theory PATH_MAX is
the biggest path we will have read from the filesystem. But
this can happen if:

  - the compiled-in PATH_MAX does not accurately reflect
    what the filesystem is capable of

  - the leading prefix is not _quite_ what is on disk; it
    contains the next element from the name we are checking.
    So if we want to write "aaa/bbb/ccc/ddd" and "aaa/bbb"
    exists, the prefix of interest is "aaa/bbb/ccc". If
    "aaa/bbb" approaches PATH_MAX, then "ccc" can overflow
    it.

So this can be triggered, but it's hard to do. In
particular, you cannot just "git clone" a bogus repo. The
verify_absent checks happen before unpack-trees writes
anything to the filesystem, so there are never any leading
prefixes during the initial checkout, and the bug doesn't
trigger. And by definition, these files are larger than
PATH_MAX, so writing them will fail, and clone will
complain (though it may write a partial path, which will
cause a subsequent "git checkout" to hit the bug).

We can fix it by creating the temporary path on the heap.
The extra malloc overhead is not important, as we are
already making at least one stat() call (and probably more
for the prefix discovery).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-04 08:50:50 -07:00
fb8880dea3 Merge branch 'ee/clean-test-fixes' into maint
* ee/clean-test-fixes:
  t7300: fix broken && chains
2015-09-03 19:18:05 -07:00
5af77d1352 Merge branch 'jk/log-missing-default-HEAD' into maint
"git init empty && git -C empty log" said "bad default revision 'HEAD'",
which was found to be a bit confusing to new users.

* jk/log-missing-default-HEAD:
  log: diagnose empty HEAD more clearly
2015-09-03 19:18:04 -07:00
9d939886db Merge branch 'cc/trailers-corner-case-fix' into maint
The "interpret-trailers" helper mistook a multi-paragraph title of
a commit log message with a colon in it as the end of the trailer
block.

* cc/trailers-corner-case-fix:
  trailer: support multiline title
  trailer: retitle a test and correct an in-comment message
  trailer: ignore first line of message
2015-09-03 19:18:03 -07:00
311e5ce2cc Merge branch 'dt/commit-preserve-base-index-upon-opportunistic-cache-tree-update' into maint
When re-priming the cache-tree opportunistically while committing
the in-core index as-is, we mistakenly invalidated the in-core
index too aggressively, causing the experimental split-index code
to unnecessarily rewrite the on-disk index file(s).

* dt/commit-preserve-base-index-upon-opportunistic-cache-tree-update:
  commit: don't rewrite shared index unnecessarily
2015-09-03 19:18:02 -07:00
1c82039228 Merge branch 'rs/archive-zip-many' into maint
"git archive" did not use zip64 extension when creating an archive
with more than 64k entries, which nobody should need, right ;-)?

* rs/archive-zip-many:
  archive-zip: support more than 65535 entries
  archive-zip: use a local variable to store the creator version
  t5004: test ZIP archives with many entries
2015-09-03 19:18:01 -07:00
ae6ac8483b Merge branch 'jc/calloc-pathspec' into maint
Minor code cleanup.

* jc/calloc-pathspec:
  ps_matched: xcalloc() takes nmemb and then element size
2015-09-03 19:18:00 -07:00
8136099a31 Merge branch 'ss/fix-config-fd-leak' into maint
* ss/fix-config-fd-leak:
  config: close config file handle in case of error
2015-09-03 19:17:59 -07:00
dc4e7b0244 Merge branch 'sg/wt-status-header-inclusion' into maint
* sg/wt-status-header-inclusion:
  wt-status: move #include "pathspec.h" to the header
2015-09-03 19:17:57 -07:00
659227be2e Merge branch 'po/po-readme' into maint
Doc updates for i18n.

* po/po-readme:
  po/README: Update directions for l10n contributors
2015-09-03 19:17:56 -07:00
57a2bb1f92 Merge branch 'sg/t3020-typofix' into maint
* sg/t3020-typofix:
  t3020: fix typo in test description
2015-09-03 19:17:55 -07:00
c1fa16b193 Merge branch 'as/docfix-reflog-expire-unreachable' into maint
Docfix.

* as/docfix-reflog-expire-unreachable:
  Documentation/config: fix inconsistent label on gc.*.reflogExpireUnreachable
2015-09-03 19:17:53 -07:00
d6c196abfd Merge branch 'nd/fixup-linked-gitdir' into maint
The code in "multiple-worktree" support that attempted to recover
from an inconsistent state updated an incorrect file.

* nd/fixup-linked-gitdir:
  setup: update the right file in multiple checkouts
2015-09-03 19:17:53 -07:00
e654e3b574 Merge branch 'jk/rev-list-has-no-notes' into maint
"git rev-list" does not take "--notes" option, but did not complain
when one is given.

* jk/rev-list-has-no-notes:
  rev-list: make it obvious that we do not support notes
2015-09-03 19:17:53 -07:00
fa6d3749ed Merge branch 'jk/fix-alias-pager-config-key-warnings' into maint
Because the configuration system does not allow "alias.0foo" and
"pager.0foo" as the configuration key, the user cannot use '0foo'
as a custom command name anyway, but "git 0foo" tried to look these
keys up and emitted useless warnings before saying '0foo is not a
git command'.  These warning messages have been squelched.

* jk/fix-alias-pager-config-key-warnings:
  config: silence warnings for command names with invalid keys
2015-09-03 19:17:52 -07:00
0b2cef2805 Merge branch 'nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs' into maint
Test updates for Windows.

* nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs:
  t2019: skip test requiring '*' in a file name non Windows
2015-09-03 19:17:51 -07:00
969560bddc Merge branch 'sg/help-group' into maint
We rewrote one of the build scripts in Perl but this reimplements
in Bourne shell.

* sg/help-group:
  generate-cmdlist: re-implement as shell script
2015-09-03 19:17:51 -07:00
d11448f685 Merge branch 'ps/t1509-chroot-test-fixup' into maint
t1509 test that requires a dedicated VM environment had some
bitrot, which has been corrected.

* ps/t1509-chroot-test-fixup:
  tests: fix cleanup after tests in t1509-root-worktree
  tests: fix broken && chains in t1509-root-worktree
2015-09-03 19:17:50 -07:00
8b2707101a Merge branch 'jh/strbuf-read-use-read-in-full' into maint
strbuf_read() used to have one extra iteration (and an unnecessary
strbuf_grow() of 8kB), which was eliminated.

* jh/strbuf-read-use-read-in-full:
  strbuf_read(): skip unnecessary strbuf_grow() at eof
2015-09-03 19:17:50 -07:00
6c0850f2dd Merge branch 'jk/long-error-messages' into maint
The codepath to produce error messages had a hard-coded limit to
the size of the message, primarily to avoid memory allocation while
calling die().

* jk/long-error-messages:
  vreportf: avoid intermediate buffer
  vreportf: report to arbitrary filehandles
2015-09-03 19:17:49 -07:00
cbcd3dcaa8 Merge branch 'cb/open-noatime-clear-errno' into maint
When trying to see that an object does not exist, a state errno
leaked from our "first try to open a packfile with O_NOATIME and
then if it fails retry without it" logic on a system that refuses
O_NOATIME.  This confused us and caused us to die, saying that the
packfile is unreadable, when we should have just reported that the
object does not exist in that packfile to the caller.

* cb/open-noatime-clear-errno:
  git_open_noatime: return with errno=0 on success
2015-09-03 19:17:49 -07:00
03ea02771a Merge branch 'mh/get-remote-group-fix' into maint
An off-by-one error made "git remote" to mishandle a remote with a
single letter nickname.

* mh/get-remote-group-fix:
  get_remote_group(): use skip_prefix()
  get_remote_group(): eliminate superfluous call to strcspn()
  get_remote_group(): rename local variable "space" to "wordlen"
  get_remote_group(): handle remotes with single-character names
2015-09-03 19:17:48 -07:00
99264e93fc t6300: add tests for "-local" date formats
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 15:46:55 -07:00
db7bae25ed t6300: make UTC and local dates different
By setting the UTC time to 23:18:43 the date in +0200 is the following
day, 2006-07-04.  This will ensure that the test for "short-local" to be
added in the following patch tests for different output from the "short"
format.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 15:45:35 -07:00
add00ba2de date: make "local" orthogonal to date format
Most of our "--date" modes are about the format of the date:
which items we show and in what order. But "--date=local" is
a bit of an oddball. It means "show the date in the normal
format, but using the local timezone". The timezone we use
is orthogonal to the actual format, and there is no reason
we could not have "localized iso8601", etc.

This patch adds a "local" boolean field to "struct
date_mode", and drops the DATE_LOCAL element from the
date_mode_type enum (it's now just DATE_NORMAL plus
local=1). The new feature is accessible to users by adding
"-local" to any date mode (e.g., "iso-local"), and we retain
"local" as an alias for "default-local" for backwards
compatibility.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 15:45:26 -07:00
dc6d782c5d date: check for "local" before anything else
In a following commit we will make "local" orthogonal to the format.
Although this will not apply to "relative", which does not use the
timezone, it applies to all other formats so move the timezone
conversion to the start of the function.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 15:42:18 -07:00
f3c1ba5026 t6300: add test for "raw" date format
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 15:36:57 -07:00
f95cecf433 t6300: introduce test_date() helper
This moves the setup of the "expected" file inside the test case.  The
helper function has the advantage that we can use SQ in the file content
without needing to escape the quotes.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 15:36:38 -07:00
547ed71636 fast-import: switch crash-report date to iso8601
When fast-import emits a crash report, it does so in the
user's local timezone. But because we omit the timezone
completely for DATE_LOCAL, a reader of the report does not
immediately know which time zone was used. Let's switch this
to ISO8601 instead, which includes the time zone.

This does mean we will show the time in UTC, but that's not
a big deal. A crash report like this will either be looked
at immediately (in which case nobody even looks at the
timestamp), or it will be passed along to a developer to
debug, in which case the original timezone is less likely to
be of interest.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 15:36:34 -07:00
4b1c5e1d26 Documentation/rev-list: don't list date formats
We are about to add several new date formats which will make this list
too long to display in a single line.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 15:36:30 -07:00
8f50d263d7 Documentation/git-for-each-ref: don't list date formats
We are about to add a new set of supported date formats and do not want
to have to maintain the same list in several different bits of
documentation.  Refer to git-rev-list(1) which contains the full list of
supported formats.

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 15:34:59 -07:00
78a844160b Documentation/config: don't list date formats
This list is already incomplete (missing "raw") and we're about to add
new formats.  Since this option sets a default for git-log's --date
option, just refer to git-log(1).

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 15:34:45 -07:00
2df4e29c85 Documentation/blame-options: don't list date formats
This list is already incomplete (missing "raw") and we're about to add
new formats.  Remove it and refer to the canonical documentation in
git-log(1).

Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 15:34:39 -07:00
1c9b659d98 pack-protocol: clarify LF-handling in PKT-LINE()
The spec is very inconsistent about which PKT-LINE() parts
of the grammar include a LF. On top of that, the code is not
consistent, either (e.g., send-pack does not put newlines
into the ref-update commands it sends).

Let's make explicit the long-standing expectation that we
generally expect pkt-lines to end in a newline, but that
receivers should be lenient. This makes the spec consistent,
and matches what git already does (though it does not always
fulfill the SHOULD).

We do make an exception for the push-cert, where the
receiving code is currently a bit pickier. This is a
reasonable way to be, as the data needs to be byte-for-byte
compatible with what was signed. We _could_ make up some
rules about signing a canonicalized version including
newlines, but that would require a code change, and is out
of scope for this patch.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 15:18:12 -07:00
7662973ea3 Merge branch 'jk/am-rerere-lock-fix'
Recent "git am" introduced a double-locking failure when used with
the "--3way" option that invokes rerere machinery.

* jk/am-rerere-lock-fix:
  rerere: release lockfile in non-writing functions
2015-09-03 14:14:01 -07:00
0ea306ef17 submodule: rewrite module_name shell function in C
This implements the helper `name` in C instead of shell,
yielding a nice performance boost.

Before this patch, I measured a time (best out of three):

  $ time ./t7400-submodule-basic.sh  >/dev/null
    real	0m11.066s
    user	0m3.348s
    sys	0m8.534s

With this patch applied I measured (also best out of three)

  $ time ./t7400-submodule-basic.sh  >/dev/null
    real	0m10.063s
    user	0m3.044s
    sys	0m7.487s

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 14:12:40 -07:00
74703a1e4d submodule: rewrite module_list shell function in C
Most of the submodule operations work on a set of submodules.
Calculating and using this set is usually done via:

       module_list "$@" | {
           while read mode sha1 stage sm_path
           do
                # the actual operation
           done
       }

Currently the function `module_list` is implemented in the
git-submodule.sh as a shell script wrapping a perl script.
The rewrite is in C, such that it is faster and can later be
easily adapted when other functions are rewritten in C.

git-submodule.sh, similar to the builtin commands, will navigate
to the top-most directory of the repository and keep the
subdirectory as a variable. As the helper is called from
within the git-submodule.sh script, we are already navigated
to the root level, but the path arguments are still relative
to the subdirectory we were in when calling git-submodule.sh.
That's why there is a `--prefix` option pointing to an alternative
path which to anchor relative path arguments.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 14:12:40 -07:00
a9e38359e3 git-p4: add config git-p4.pathEncoding
Perforce keeps the encoding of a path as given by the originating OS.
Git expects paths encoded as UTF-8. Add a config to tell git-p4 what
encoding Perforce had used for the paths. This encoding is used to
transcode the paths to UTF-8. As an example, Perforce on Windows often
uses “cp1252” to encode path names.

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-03 14:11:49 -07:00
16ffa6443e Git 2.6-rc0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-02 12:55:28 -07:00
cdd00dfe94 Merge branch 'cc/trailers-corner-case-fix'
The "interpret-trailers" helper mistook a multi-paragraph title of
a commit log message with a colon in it as the end of the trailer
block.

* cc/trailers-corner-case-fix:
  trailer: support multiline title
2015-09-02 12:50:21 -07:00
8f8386eeb4 Merge branch 'sb/read-cache-one-indent-style-fix'
* sb/read-cache-one-indent-style-fix:
  read-cache: fix indentation in read_index_from
2015-09-02 12:50:18 -07:00
83d9092f95 Merge branch 'ee/clean-test-fixes'
* ee/clean-test-fixes:
  t7300: fix broken && chains
2015-09-02 12:50:16 -07:00
699a0f3748 Merge branch 'jk/log-missing-default-HEAD'
"git init empty && git -C empty log" said "bad default revision 'HEAD'",
which was found to be a bit confusing to new users.

* jk/log-missing-default-HEAD:
  log: diagnose empty HEAD more clearly
2015-09-02 12:50:10 -07:00
b894d3e788 t7060: actually test "git diff-index --cached -M"
A test was designed for "git diff-index --cached -M" but the command is
run without the "-M" option (which makes the test essentially identical
to its preceding counterpart).

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Prat <matthieuprat@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-02 12:23:30 -07:00
7aa67f62c7 Ninth batch for 2.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-01 16:31:58 -07:00
81d0e33a22 Merge branch 'dt/commit-preserve-base-index-upon-opportunistic-cache-tree-update'
When re-priming the cache-tree opportunistically while committing
the in-core index as-is, we mistakenly invalidated the in-core
index too aggressively, causing the experimental split-index code
to unnecessarily rewrite the on-disk index file(s).

* dt/commit-preserve-base-index-upon-opportunistic-cache-tree-update:
  commit: don't rewrite shared index unnecessarily
2015-09-01 16:31:29 -07:00
0fb8e24234 Merge branch 'rt/remove-hold-lockfile-for-append'
* rt/remove-hold-lockfile-for-append:
  lockfile: remove function "hold_lock_file_for_append"
2015-09-01 16:31:27 -07:00
565f575791 Merge branch 'rs/archive-zip-many'
"git archive" did not use zip64 extension when creating an archive
with more than 64k entries, which nobody should need, right ;-)?

* rs/archive-zip-many:
  archive-zip: support more than 65535 entries
  archive-zip: use a local variable to store the creator version
  t5004: test ZIP archives with many entries
2015-09-01 16:31:24 -07:00
bb84dceb04 Merge branch 'ls/p4-fold-case-client-specs'
On case insensitive systems, "git p4" did not work well with client
specs.

* ls/p4-fold-case-client-specs:
  git-p4: honor core.ignorecase when using P4 client specs
2015-09-01 16:31:22 -07:00
2953140a65 Merge branch 'ah/submodule-typofix-in-error'
Error string fix.

* ah/submodule-typofix-in-error:
  git-submodule: remove extraneous space from error message
2015-09-01 16:31:21 -07:00
bc1c6009c6 Merge branch 'ah/reflog-typofix-in-error'
Error string fix.

* ah/reflog-typofix-in-error:
  reflog: add missing single quote to error message
2015-09-01 16:31:18 -07:00
0b20a4680b Merge branch 'ah/read-tree-usage-string'
Usage string fix.

* ah/read-tree-usage-string:
  read-tree: replace bracket set with parentheses to clarify usage
2015-09-01 16:31:16 -07:00
8746e30541 Merge branch 'ah/pack-objects-usage-strings'
Usage string fix.

* ah/pack-objects-usage-strings:
  pack-objects: place angle brackets around placeholders in usage strings
2015-09-01 16:31:12 -07:00
49c15c0e4a Merge branch 'br/svn-doc-include-paths-config'
* br/svn-doc-include-paths-config:
  git-svn doc: mention "svn-remote.<name>.include-paths"
2015-09-01 16:31:10 -07:00
91d54694a4 Merge branch 'nd/fixup-linked-gitdir'
The code in "multiple-worktree" support that attempted to recover
from an inconsistent state updated an incorrect file.

* nd/fixup-linked-gitdir:
  setup: update the right file in multiple checkouts
2015-09-01 16:31:07 -07:00
9dd330e6ca rerere: release lockfile in non-writing functions
There's a bug in builtin/am.c in which we take a lock on
MERGE_RR recursively. But rather than fix am.c, this patch
fixes the confusing interface from rerere.c that caused the
bug. Read on for the gory details.

The setup_rerere() function both reads the existing MERGE_RR
file, and takes MERGE_RR.lock. In the rerere() and
rerere_forget() functions, we end up in write_rr(), which
will then commit the lock file.

But for functions like rerere_clear() that do not write to
MERGE_RR, we expect the caller to have handled
setup_rerere(). That caller would then need to release the
lockfile, but it can't; the lock struct is local to
rerere.c.

For builtin/rerere.c, this is OK. We run a single rerere
operation and then exit immediately, which has the side
effect of rolling back the lockfile.

But in builtin/am.c, this is actively wrong. If we run "git
am -3 --skip", we call setup-rerere twice without releasing
the lock:

  1. The "--skip" causes us to call am_rerere_clear(), which
     calls setup_rerere(), but never drops the lock.

  2. We then proceed to the next patch.

  3. The "--3way" may cause us to call rerere() to handle
     conflicts in that patch, but we are already holding the
     lock. The lockfile code dies with:

     BUG: prepare_tempfile_object called for active object

We could fix this by having rerere_clear() call
rollback_lock_file(). But it feels a bit odd for it to roll
back a lockfile that it did not itself take. So let's
simplify the interface further, and handle setup_rerere in
the function itself, taking away the question from the
caller over whether they need to do so.

We can give rerere_gc() the same treatment, as well (even
though it doesn't have any callers besides builtin/rerere.c
at this point). Note that these functions don't take flags
from their callers to pass along to setup_rerere; that's OK,
because the flags would not be meaningful for what they are
doing.

Both of those functions need to hold the lock because even
though they do not write to MERGE_RR, they are still writing
and should be protected from a simultaneous "rerere" run.
But rerere_remaining(), "rerere diff", and "rerere status"
are all read-only operations. They want to setup_rerere(),
but do not care about taking the lock in the first place.
Since our update of MERGE_RR is the usual atomic rename done
by commit_lock_file, they can just do a lockless read. For
that, we teach setup_rerere a READONLY flag to avoid the
lock.

As a bonus, this pushes builtin/rerere.c's setup_rerere call
closer to the functions that use it. Which means that "git
rerere totally-bogus-command" will no longer silently
exit(0) in a repository without rerere enabled.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-01 15:52:54 -07:00
fd89433dd0 pkt-line: show packets in async processes as "sideband"
If you run "GIT_TRACE_PACKET=1 git push", you may get
confusing output like (line prefixes omitted for clarity):

   packet:      push< \1000eunpack ok0019ok refs/heads/master0000
   packet:      push< unpack ok
   packet:      push< ok refs/heads/master
   packet:      push< 0000
   packet:      push< 0000

Why do we see the data twice, once apparently wrapped inside
another pkt-line, and once unwrapped? Why do we get two
flush packets?

The answer is that we start an async process to demux the
sideband data. The first entry comes from the sideband
process reading the data, and the second from push itself.
Likewise, the first flush is inside the demuxed packet, and
the second is an actual sideband flush.

We can make this a bit more clear by marking the sideband
demuxer explicitly as "sideband" rather than "push". The
most elegant way to do this would be to simply call
packet_trace_identity() inside the sideband demuxer. But we
can't do that reliably, because it relies on a global
variable, which might be shared if pthreads are in use.

What we really need is thread-local storage for
packet_trace_identity. But the async code does not provide
an interface for that, and it would be messy to add it here
(we'd have to care about pthreads, initializing our
pthread_key_t ahead of time, etc).

So instead, let us just assume that any async process is
handling sideband data. That's always true now, and is
likely to remain so in the future.

The output looks like:

   packet:  sideband< \1000eunpack ok0019ok refs/heads/master0000
   packet:      push< unpack ok
   packet:      push< ok refs/heads/master
   packet:      push< 0000
   packet:  sideband< 0000

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-01 15:11:57 -07:00
661a8cf408 run-command: provide in_async query function
It's not easy for arbitrary code to find out whether it is
running in an async process or not. A top-level function
which is fed to start_async() can know (you just pass down
an argument saying "you are async"). But that function may
call other global functions, and we would not want to have
to pass the information all the way through the call stack.

Nor can we simply set a global variable, as those may be
shared between async threads and the main thread (if the
platform supports pthreads). We need pthread tricks _or_ a
global variable, depending on how start_async is
implemented.

The callers don't have enough information to do this right,
so let's provide a simple query function that does.
Fortunately we can reuse the existing infrastructure to make
the pthread case simple (and even simplify die_async() by
using our new function).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-01 15:11:53 -07:00
ff60ffdc05 git-quiltimport: add commandline option --series <file>
The quilt series file doesn't have to be located in the same directory
with the patches and can be named differently than 'series' as well. This
patch adds a commandline option to allow for a non-standard series
filename and location.

Signed-off-by: Juerg Haefliger <juerg.haefliger@hp.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-01 11:10:07 -07:00
ce414b33ec refs: make refs/bisect/* per-worktree
We need the place we stick refs for bisects in progress to not be
shared between worktrees.  So we make the refs/bisect/ hierarchy
per-worktree.

The is_per_worktree_ref function and associated docs learn that
refs/bisect/ is per-worktree, as does the git_path code in path.c

The ref-packing functions learn that per-worktree refs should not be
packed (since packed-refs is common rather than per-worktree).

Since refs/bisect is per-worktree, logs/refs/bisect should be too.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-01 10:37:39 -07:00
4e09cf2acf path: optimize common dir checking
Instead of a linear search over common_list to check whether
a path is common, use a trie.  The trie search operates on
path prefixes, and handles excludes.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-01 10:37:38 -07:00
0701530c26 refs: clean up common_list
Instead of common_list having formatting like ! and /, use a struct to
hold common_list data in a structured form.

We don't use 'exclude' yet; instead, we keep the old codepath that
handles info/sparse-checkout and logs/HEAD.  Later, we will use exclude.

[jc: with "make common_list[] static" clean-up from Ramsay squashed in]

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-09-01 10:37:12 -07:00
16163602ba Eighth batch for 2.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-31 15:40:24 -07:00
e95c3fb54f Merge branch 'sg/describe-contains'
"git describe" without argument defaulted to describe the HEAD
commit, but "git describe --contains" didn't.  Arguably, in a
repository used for active development, such defaulting would not
be very useful as the tip of branch is typically not tagged, but it
is better to be consistent.

* sg/describe-contains:
  describe --contains: default to HEAD when no commit-ish is given
2015-08-31 15:39:10 -07:00
b21089db6a Merge branch 'db/push-sign-if-asked'
The client side codepaths in "git push" have been cleaned up
and the user can request to perform an optional "signed push",
i.e. sign only when the other end accepts signed push.

* db/push-sign-if-asked:
  push: add a config option push.gpgSign for default signed pushes
  push: support signing pushes iff the server supports it
  builtin/send-pack.c: use parse_options API
  config.c: rename git_config_maybe_bool_text and export it as git_parse_maybe_bool
  transport: remove git_transport_options.push_cert
  gitremote-helpers.txt: document pushcert option
  Documentation/git-send-pack.txt: document --signed
  Documentation/git-send-pack.txt: wrap long synopsis line
  Documentation/git-push.txt: document when --signed may fail
2015-08-31 15:39:08 -07:00
5b6211aee1 Merge branch 'jk/notes-merge-config'
"git notes merge" can be told with "--strategy=<how>" option how to
automatically handle conflicts; this can now be configured by
setting notes.mergeStrategy configuration variable.

* jk/notes-merge-config:
  notes: teach git-notes about notes.<name>.mergeStrategy option
  notes: add notes.mergeStrategy option to select default strategy
  notes: add tests for --commit/--abort/--strategy exclusivity
  notes: extract parse_notes_merge_strategy to notes-utils
  notes: extract enum notes_merge_strategy to notes-utils.h
  notes: document cat_sort_uniq rewriteMode
2015-08-31 15:39:05 -07:00
d75bb73bcf Merge branch 'jc/am-state-fix'
Recent reimplementation of "git am" changed the format of state
files kept in $GIT_DIR/rebase-apply/ without meaning to do so,
primarily because write_file() API was cumbersome to use and it was
easy to mistakenly make text files with incomplete lines.  Update
write_file() interface to make it harder to misuse.

* jc/am-state-fix:
  write_file(): drop caller-supplied LF from calls to create a one-liner file
  write_file_v(): do not leave incomplete line at the end
  write_file(): drop "fatal" parameter
  builtin/am: make sure state files are text
  builtin/am: introduce write_state_*() helper functions
2015-08-31 15:39:03 -07:00
2ba6183b0b Merge branch 'jc/log-p-cc'
"git log --cc" did not show any patch, even though most of the time
the user meant "git log --cc -p -m" to see patch output for commits
with a single parent, and combined diff for merge commits.  The
command is taught to DWIM "--cc" (without "--raw" and other forms
of output specification) to "--cc -p -m".

* jc/log-p-cc:
  builtin/log.c: minor reformat
  log: show merge commit when --cc is given
  log: when --cc is given, default to -p unless told otherwise
  log: rename "tweak" helpers
2015-08-31 15:38:59 -07:00
7b7c10bf5e Merge branch 'jk/fix-alias-pager-config-key-warnings'
Because the configuration system does not allow "alias.0foo" and
"pager.0foo" as the configuration key, the user cannot use '0foo'
as a custom command name anyway, but "git 0foo" tried to look these
keys up and emitted useless warnings before saying '0foo is not a
git command'.  These warning messages have been squelched.

* jk/fix-alias-pager-config-key-warnings:
  config: silence warnings for command names with invalid keys
2015-08-31 15:38:57 -07:00
0bb71fb36d Merge branch 'jk/rev-list-has-no-notes'
"git rev-list" does not take "--notes" option, but did not complain
when one is given.

* jk/rev-list-has-no-notes:
  rev-list: make it obvious that we do not support notes
2015-08-31 15:38:55 -07:00
5a4f07b322 Merge branch 'hv/submodule-config'
The gitmodules API accessed from the C code learned to cache stuff
lazily.

* hv/submodule-config:
  submodule: allow erroneous values for the fetchRecurseSubmodules option
  submodule: use new config API for worktree configurations
  submodule: extract functions for config set and lookup
  submodule: implement a config API for lookup of .gitmodules values
2015-08-31 15:38:52 -07:00
fc9dfda1be Merge branch 'sg/config-name-only'
"git config --list" output was hard to parse when values consist of
multiple lines.  "--name-only" option is added to help this.

* sg/config-name-only:
  get_urlmatch: avoid useless strbuf write
  format_config: simplify buffer handling
  format_config: don't init strbuf
  config: restructure format_config() for better control flow
  completion: list variable names reliably with 'git config --name-only'
  config: add '--name-only' option to list only variable names
2015-08-31 15:38:50 -07:00
6bea53c130 read-cache: fix indentation in read_index_from
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-31 12:31:00 -07:00
3086c064fb stash: allow "stash show" diff output configurable
Some users might want to see diff (patch) output always rather than
diffstat when [s]he runs 'git stash show'.  Although this can be
done with adding -p option, users are too lazy to type extra three
keys.

Add two variables that control to show diffstat and patch output
respectively.  The stash.showStat is for diffstat and default is
true.  The stat.showPatch is for the patch output and default is
false.

Signed-off-by: Namhyung Kim <namhyung@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-31 11:29:04 -07:00
5c99995df8 trailer: support multiline title
We currently ignore the first line passed to `git interpret-trailers`,
when looking for the beginning of the trailers.

Unfortunately this does not work well when a commit is created with a
line break in the title, using for example the following command:

git commit -m 'place of
code: change we made'

That's why instead of ignoring only the first line, it is better to
ignore the first paragraph.

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-31 11:14:08 -07:00
1733ed3d70 t7300: fix broken && chains
While we are here, remove some boilerplate by using test_commit.

Signed-off-by: Erik Elfström <erik.elfstrom@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-31 09:46:36 -07:00
ce11360467 log: diagnose empty HEAD more clearly
If you init or clone an empty repository, the initial
message from running "git log" is not very friendly:

  $ git init
  Initialized empty Git repository in /home/peff/foo/.git/
  $ git log
  fatal: bad default revision 'HEAD'

Let's detect this situation and write a more friendly
message:

  $ git log
  fatal: your current branch 'master' does not have any commits yet

We also detect the case that 'HEAD' points to a broken ref;
this should be even less common, but is easy to see. Note
that we do not diagnose all possible cases. We rely on
resolve_ref, which means we do not get information about
complex cases. E.g., "--default master" would use dwim_ref
to find "refs/heads/master", but we notice only that
"master" does not exist. Similarly, a complex sha1
expression like "--default HEAD^2" will not resolve as a
ref.

But that's OK. We fall back to a generic error message in
those cases, and they are unlikely to be used anyway.
Catching an empty or broken "HEAD" improves the common case,
and the other cases are not regressed.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-31 09:34:20 -07:00
cc75addd23 show-ref: place angle brackets around variables in usage string
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-31 09:33:53 -07:00
475a34451f commit: don't rewrite shared index unnecessarily
Remove a cache invalidation which would cause the shared index to be
rewritten on as-is commits.

When the cache-tree has changed, we need to update it.  But we don't
necessarily need to update the shared index.  So setting
active_cache_changed to SOMETHING_CHANGED is unnecessary.  Instead, we
let update_main_cache_tree just update the CACHE_TREE_CHANGED bit.

In order to test this, make test-dump-split-index not segfault on
missing replace_bitmap/delete_bitmap.  This new codepath is not called
now that the test passes, but is necessary to avoid a segfault when the
new test is run with the old builtin/commit.c code.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Acked-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-31 08:41:07 -07:00
aecce6d0ef Sync with 2.5.1 2015-08-28 12:32:45 -07:00
e6837c8b43 Seventh batch for 2.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 12:32:25 -07:00
483c9b8602 Merge branch 'cc/trailers-corner-case-fix'
"interpret-trailers" helper mistook a single-liner log message that
has a colon as the end of existing trailer.

* cc/trailers-corner-case-fix:
  trailer: retitle a test and correct an in-comment message
  trailer: ignore first line of message
2015-08-28 12:32:17 -07:00
038226ebc6 Merge branch 'dt/untracked-subdir'
The experimental untracked-cache feature were buggy when paths with
a few levels of subdirectories are involved.

* dt/untracked-subdir:
  untracked cache: fix entry invalidation
  untracked-cache: fix subdirectory handling
2015-08-28 12:32:15 -07:00
b43702ac56 git-p4: fix P4 label import for unprocessed commits
With --detect-labels enabled, git-p4 will try to create tags
using git fast-import by writing a "tag" clause to the
fast-import stream.

If the commit that the tag references has not yet actually
been processed by fast-import, then the tag can't be created
and git-p4 fails to import the P4 label.

Teach git-p4 to use fast-import "marks" when creating tags
which reference commits created during the current run of the
program.

Commits created before the current run are still referenced
in the old way using a normal git commit.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 12:02:58 -07:00
9ab1cfe505 git-p4: do not terminate creating tag for unknown commit
If p4 reports a tag for a commit that git-p4 does not know
about (e.g. because it references a P4 changelist that was
imported prior to the point at which the repo was cloned into
git), make sure that the error is correctly caught and handled.
rather than just crashing.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 12:02:56 -07:00
62a3c4848e git-p4: failing test for ignoring invalid p4 labels
When importing a label which references a commit that git-p4 does
not know about, git-p4 should skip it and go on to process other
labels that can be imported.

Instead it crashes when attempting to find the missing commit in
the git history. This test demonstrates the problem.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 12:02:50 -07:00
9476c2c39e read-tree: replace bracket set with parentheses to clarify usage
-u and -i can only be given if -m, --reset, or --prefix is given.
Without parentheses, it looks like -u and -i can be used no matter
what, and the second pair of brackets is confusing.

Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 12:01:37 -07:00
b8c1d27577 pack-objects: place angle brackets around placeholders in usage strings
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 11:59:10 -07:00
b80fa842ed git-submodule: remove extraneous space from error message
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Chris Packham <judge.packham@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 11:57:24 -07:00
aae42e43c4 lockfile: remove function "hold_lock_file_for_append"
With 77b9b1d (add_to_alternates_file: don't add duplicate entries,
2015-08-10) the last caller of function "hold_lock_file_for_append"
has been removed, so we can remove the function as well.

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 11:32:01 -07:00
c415fb791b Git 2.5.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 11:19:57 -07:00
c3cb7b6fec Mingw: verify both ends of the pipe () call
The code to open and test the second end of the pipe clearly imitates
the code for the first end. A little too closely, though... Let's fix
the obvious copy-edit bug.

Signed-off-by: Jose F. Morales <jfmcjf@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 11:11:50 -07:00
a0a50d873c git-p4: honor core.ignorecase when using P4 client specs
Perforce depot may record paths in mixed cases, e.g. "p4 files" may
show that there are these two paths:

   //depot/Path/to/file1
   //depot/pATH/to/file2

and with "p4" or "p4v", these end up in the same directory, e.g.

   //depot/Path/to/file1
   //depot/Path/to/file2

which is the desired outcome on case insensitive systems.

If git-p4 is used with client spec "//depot/Path/...", however, then
all files not matching the case in the client spec are ignored (in
the example above "//depot/pATH/to/file2").

Fix this by using the path case that appears first in lexicographical
order when core.ignorecase is set to true. This behavior is consistent
with "p4" and "p4v".

Signed-off-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 10:33:16 -07:00
99885bc0ef reflog: add missing single quote to error message
The error message can be seen by running
`git config gc.reflogexpire foo` and then `git reflog expire`.

Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 09:42:13 -07:00
88329ca809 archive-zip: support more than 65535 entries
Support more than 65535 entries cleanly by writing a "zip64 end of
central directory record" (with a 64-bit field for the number of
entries) before the usual "end of central directory record" (which
contains only a 16-bit field).  InfoZIP's zip does the same.
Archives with 65535 or less entries are not affected.

Programs that extract all files like InfoZIP's zip and 7-Zip
ignored the field and could extract all files already.  Software
that relies on the ZIP file directory to show a list of contained
files quickly to simulate to normal directory like Windows'
built-in ZIP functionality only saw a subset of the included files.

Windows supports ZIP64 since Vista according to
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zip_%28file_format%29#ZIP64.

Suggested-by: Johannes Schauer <josch@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 08:54:57 -07:00
0f747f9d37 archive-zip: use a local variable to store the creator version
Use a simpler conditional right next to the code which makes a higher
creator version necessary -- namely symlink handling and support for
executable files -- instead of a long line with a ternary operator.
The resulting code has more lines but is simpler and allows reuse of
the value easily.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 08:52:22 -07:00
19ee29401d t5004: test ZIP archives with many entries
A ZIP file directory has a 16-bit field for the number of entries it
contains.  There are 64-bit extensions to deal with that.  Demonstrate
that git archive --format=zip currently doesn't use them and instead
overflows the field.

InfoZIP's unzip doesn't care about this field and extracts all files
anyway.  Software that uses the directory for presenting a filesystem
like view quickly -- notably Windows -- depends on it, but doesn't
lend itself to an automatic test case easily.  Use InfoZIP's zipinfo,
which probably isn't available everywhere but at least can provides
*some* way to check this field.

To speed things up a bit create and commit only a subset of the files
and build a fake tree out of duplicates and pass that to git archive.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-28 08:52:10 -07:00
3a9835bf65 Sixth batch for 2.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-26 15:47:48 -07:00
678c5a49ee Merge branch 'sg/help-group'
We rewrote one of the build scripts in Perl but this reimplements
in Bourne shell.

* sg/help-group:
  generate-cmdlist: re-implement as shell script
2015-08-26 15:45:40 -07:00
6525496172 Merge branch 'sg/wt-status-header-inclusion'
* sg/wt-status-header-inclusion:
  wt-status: move #include "pathspec.h" to the header
2015-08-26 15:45:38 -07:00
cfcd38f552 Merge branch 'as/docfix-reflog-expire-unreachable'
* as/docfix-reflog-expire-unreachable:
  Documentation/config: fix inconsistent label on gc.*.reflogExpireUnreachable
2015-08-26 15:45:37 -07:00
7205e220e8 Merge branch 'sg/t3020-typofix'
* sg/t3020-typofix:
  t3020: fix typo in test description
2015-08-26 15:45:36 -07:00
88bd19be2f Merge branch 'jc/calloc-pathspec'
* jc/calloc-pathspec:
  ps_matched: xcalloc() takes nmemb and then element size
2015-08-26 15:45:34 -07:00
a5315dd17d Merge branch 'dt/untracked-sparse'
Test update.

* dt/untracked-sparse:
  t7063: use --force-untracked-cache to speed up a bit
2015-08-26 15:45:33 -07:00
74702c3825 Merge branch 'pt/am-builtin'
Rewrite "am" in "C".

* pt/am-builtin:
  i18n: am: fix typo in description of -b option
2015-08-26 15:45:33 -07:00
b7d2a15b9f Merge branch 'pt/am-builtin-abort-fix'
"git am" that was recently reimplemented in C had a performance
regression in "git am --abort" that goes back to the version before
an attempted (and failed) patch application.

* pt/am-builtin-abort-fix:
  am --skip/--abort: merge HEAD/ORIG_HEAD tree into index
2015-08-26 15:45:32 -07:00
788f211966 Merge branch 'po/po-readme'
* po/po-readme:
  po/README: Update directions for l10n contributors
2015-08-26 15:45:32 -07:00
629ac65f68 Merge branch 'jv/send-email-selective-smtp-auth'
"git send-email" learned a new option --smtp-auth to limit the SMTP
AUTH mechanisms to be used to a subset of what the system library
supports.

* jv/send-email-selective-smtp-auth:
  send-email: provide whitelist of SMTP AUTH mechanisms
2015-08-26 15:45:31 -07:00
ed070a4007 Merge branch 'ep/http-configure-ssl-version'
A new configuration variable http.sslVersion can be used to specify
what specific version of SSL/TLS to use to make a connection.

* ep/http-configure-ssl-version:
  http: add support for specifying the SSL version
2015-08-26 15:45:31 -07:00
51e83a4898 Merge branch 'ss/fix-config-fd-leak'
* ss/fix-config-fd-leak:
  config: close config file handle in case of error
2015-08-26 15:45:30 -07:00
1fb5a0ea96 i18n: am: fix typo in description of -b option
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-26 12:51:43 -07:00
6262fe9ca3 trailer: retitle a test and correct an in-comment message
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-26 12:16:56 -07:00
486e1e1223 git-svn doc: mention "svn-remote.<name>.include-paths"
Mention the configuration variable in a way similar to how
"svn-remote.<name>.ignore-paths" is mentioned.

Signed-off-by: Brett Randall <javabrett@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-26 10:27:26 -07:00
33f2c4ff7b Sync with maint
* maint:
  pull: pass upload_pack only when it was given
2015-08-25 16:09:30 -07:00
52f6893d35 Merge branch 'jk/guess-repo-name-regression-fix' into maint
"git clone $URL" in recent releases of Git contains a regression in
the code that invents a new repository name incorrectly based on
the $URL.  This has been corrected.

* jk/guess-repo-name-regression-fix:
  clone: use computed length in guess_dir_name
  clone: add tests for output directory
2015-08-25 16:09:17 -07:00
84deb3eac5 Merge branch 'jk/test-with-x' into maint
Running tests with the "-x" option to make them verbose had some
unpleasant interactions with other features of the test suite.

* jk/test-with-x:
  test-lib: disable trace when test is not verbose
  test-lib: turn off "-x" tracing during chain-lint check
2015-08-25 16:09:16 -07:00
7a23807407 Merge branch 'sb/check-return-from-read-ref' into maint
* sb/check-return-from-read-ref:
  transport-helper: die on errors reading refs.
2015-08-25 16:09:16 -07:00
425a4c7734 Merge branch 'mm/pull-upload-pack' into maint
"git pull" in recent releases of Git has a regression in the code
that allows custom path to the --upload-pack=<program>.  This has
been corrected.

Note that this is irrelevant for 'master' with "git pull" rewritten
in C.

* mm/pull-upload-pack:
  pull: pass upload_pack only when it was given
  pull.sh: quote $upload_pack when passing it to git-fetch
2015-08-25 16:09:15 -07:00
13e0e28f53 pull: pass upload_pack only when it was given
The upload_pack shell variable is initialized to an empty string, so
conditional expansion with ${upload_pack+"$upload_pack"} would not
work very well.  You need a colon there.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-25 16:08:58 -07:00
8da8889a4b Fifth batch for 2.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-25 15:00:25 -07:00
9b8d731995 Merge branch 'cb/open-noatime-clear-errno'
When trying to see that an object does not exist, a state errno
leaked from our "first try to open a packfile with O_NOATIME and
then if it fails retry without it" logic on a system that refuses
O_NOATIME.  This confused us and caused us to die, saying that the
packfile is unreadable, when we should have just reported that the
object does not exist in that packfile to the caller.

* cb/open-noatime-clear-errno:
  git_open_noatime: return with errno=0 on success
2015-08-25 14:57:10 -07:00
db86e61cbb Merge branch 'mh/tempfile'
The "lockfile" API has been rebuilt on top of a new "tempfile" API.

* mh/tempfile:
  credential-cache--daemon: use tempfile module
  credential-cache--daemon: delete socket from main()
  gc: use tempfile module to handle gc.pid file
  lock_repo_for_gc(): compute the path to "gc.pid" only once
  diff: use tempfile module
  setup_temporary_shallow(): use tempfile module
  write_shared_index(): use tempfile module
  register_tempfile(): new function to handle an existing temporary file
  tempfile: add several functions for creating temporary files
  prepare_tempfile_object(): new function, extracted from create_tempfile()
  tempfile: a new module for handling temporary files
  commit_lock_file(): use get_locked_file_path()
  lockfile: add accessor get_lock_file_path()
  lockfile: add accessors get_lock_file_fd() and get_lock_file_fp()
  create_bundle(): duplicate file descriptor to avoid closing it twice
  lockfile: move documentation to lockfile.h and lockfile.c
2015-08-25 14:57:09 -07:00
424f89f098 Merge branch 'pt/am-builtin-options'
After "git am --opt1" stops, running "git am --opt2" pays attention
to "--opt2" only for the patch that caused the original invocation
to stop.

* pt/am-builtin-options:
  am: let --signoff override --no-signoff
  am: let command-line options override saved options
  test_terminal: redirect child process' stdin to a pty
2015-08-25 14:57:08 -07:00
080cc64663 Merge branch 'dt/refs-pseudo'
To prepare for allowing a different "ref" backend to be plugged in
to the system, update_ref()/delete_ref() have been taught about
ref-like things like MERGE_HEAD that are per-worktree (they will
always be written to the filesystem inside $GIT_DIR).

* dt/refs-pseudo:
  pseudoref: check return values from read_ref()
  sequencer: replace write_cherry_pick_head with update_ref
  bisect: use update_ref
  pseudorefs: create and use pseudoref update and delete functions
  refs: add ref_type function
  refs: introduce pseudoref and per-worktree ref concepts
2015-08-25 14:57:08 -07:00
32561f5dd3 Merge branch 'dt/notes-multiple'
When linked worktree is used, simultaneous "notes merge" instances
for the same ref in refs/notes/* are prevented from stomping on
each other.

* dt/notes-multiple:
  notes: handle multiple worktrees
  worktrees: add find_shared_symref
2015-08-25 14:57:08 -07:00
5d5be8167d Merge branch 'nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs'
Test updates for Windows.

* nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs:
  t2019: skip test requiring '*' in a file name non Windows
2015-08-25 14:57:07 -07:00
1302c9f514 Merge branch 'jk/long-error-messages'
The codepath to produce error messages had a hard-coded limit to
the size of the message, primarily to avoid memory allocation while
calling die().

* jk/long-error-messages:
  vreportf: avoid intermediate buffer
  vreportf: report to arbitrary filehandles
2015-08-25 14:57:06 -07:00
b590720f2c Merge branch 'ee/clean-remove-dirs'
Test updates for Windows.

* ee/clean-remove-dirs:
  t7300-clean: require POSIXPERM for chmod 0 test
2015-08-25 14:57:06 -07:00
3b281d1281 Merge branch 'jh/strbuf-read-use-read-in-full'
strbuf_read() used to have one extra iteration (and an unnecessary
strbuf_grow() of 8kB), which was eliminated.

* jh/strbuf-read-use-read-in-full:
  strbuf_read(): skip unnecessary strbuf_grow() at eof
2015-08-25 14:57:06 -07:00
3acf8dd887 builtin/log.c: minor reformat
Two logical lines that were not overly long was split in the middle,
which made them read worse.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-25 13:11:21 -07:00
1f76a10b2d write_file(): drop caller-supplied LF from calls to create a one-liner file
All of the callsites covered by this change call write_file() or
write_file_gently() to create a one-liner file.  Drop the caller
supplied LF and let these callees to append it as necessary.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-25 12:49:19 -07:00
e7ffa38c6e write_file_v(): do not leave incomplete line at the end
All existing callers to this function use it to produce a text file
or an empty file, and a new callsite that mimick them must end their
payload with a LF.  If they forget to do so, the resulting file will
end with an incomplete line.

Teach write_file_v() to complete the incomplete line, if exists, so
that the callers do not have to.

With this, the caller-side fix in builtin/am.c becomes unnecessary.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-25 12:48:39 -07:00
82aec45b7d generate-cmdlist: re-implement as shell script
527ec39 (generate-cmdlist: parse common group commands, 2015-05-21)
replaced generate-cmdlist.sh with a more functional Perl version,
generate-cmdlist.perl. The Perl version gleans named tags from a new
"common groups" section in command-list.txt and recognizes those
tags in "command list" section entries in place of the old 'common'
tag. This allows git-help to, not only recognize, but also group
common commands.

Although the tests require Perl, 527ec39 creates an unconditional
dependence upon Perl in the build system itself, which can not be
overridden with NO_PERL. Such a dependency may be undesirable; for
instance, the 'git-lite' package in the FreeBSD ports tree is
intended as a minimal Git installation (which may, for example, be
useful on servers needing only local clone and update capability),
which, historically, has not depended upon Perl[1].

Therefore, revive generate-cmdlist.sh and extend it to recognize
"common groups" and its named tags. Retire generate-cmdlist.perl.

[1]: http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/275905/focus=276132

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-25 11:24:31 -07:00
a62bc310bf blame: remove obsolete comment
That "someday" in the comment happened two years later in
b65982b (Optimize "diff-index --cached" using cache-tree - 2009-05-20)

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-25 09:41:44 -07:00
82fde87ff3 setup: update the right file in multiple checkouts
This code is introduced in 23af91d (prune: strategies for linked
checkouts - 2014-11-30), and it's supposed to implement this rule from
that commit's message:

 - linked checkouts are supposed to keep its location in $R/gitdir up
   to date. The use case is auto fixup after a manual checkout move.

Note the name, "$R/gitdir", not "$R/gitfile". Correct the path to be
updated accordingly.

While at there, make sure I/O errors are not silently dropped.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-25 09:39:08 -07:00
2bd07065c3 describe --contains: default to HEAD when no commit-ish is given
'git describe --contains' doesn't default to HEAD when no commit is
given, and it doesn't produce any output, not even an error:

  ~/src/git ((v2.5.0))$ ./git describe --contains
  ~/src/git ((v2.5.0))$ ./git describe --contains HEAD
  v2.5.0^0

Unlike other 'git describe' options, the '--contains' code path is
implemented by calling 'name-rev' with a bunch of options plus all the
commit-ishes that were passed to 'git describe'.  If no commit-ish was
present, then 'name-rev' got invoked with none, which then leads to the
behavior illustrated above.

Porcelain commands usually default to HEAD when no commit-ish is given,
and 'git describe' already does so in all other cases, so it should do
so with '--contains' as well.

Pass HEAD to 'name-rev' when no commit-ish is given on the command line
to make '--contains' behave consistently with other 'git describe'
options.  While at it, use argv_array_pushv() instead of the loop to
pass commit-ishes to 'git name-rev'.

'git describe's short help already indicates that the commit-ish is
optional, but the synopsis in the man page doesn't, so update it
accordingly as well.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-25 09:35:13 -07:00
667599e825 l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: "commit message"
Add "commit message" to glossary.  Translate it as "提交信息".

Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
2015-08-25 09:47:50 +08:00
7b8419f094 Merge 'jk/git-path' into kn/for-each-tag
* jk/git-path:
  memoize common git-path "constant" files
  get_repo_path: refactor path-allocation
  find_hook: keep our own static buffer
  refs.c: remove_empty_directories can take a strbuf
  refs.c: avoid git_path assignment in lock_ref_sha1_basic
  refs.c: avoid repeated git_path calls in rename_tmp_log
  refs.c: simplify strbufs in reflog setup and writing
  path.c: drop git_path_submodule
  refs.c: remove extra git_path calls from read_loose_refs
  remote.c: drop extraneous local variable from migrate_file
  prefer mkpathdup to mkpath in assignments
  prefer git_pathdup to git_path in some possibly-dangerous cases
  add_to_alternates_file: don't add duplicate entries
  t5700: modernize style
  cache.h: complete set of git_path_submodule helpers
  cache.h: clarify documentation for git_path, et al
2015-08-24 15:30:43 -07:00
a123b19eec Merge 'kn/for-each-tag-branch' into kn/for-each-tag
* kn/for-each-tag-branch:
  for-each-ref: add '--contains' option
  ref-filter: implement '--contains' option
  parse-options.h: add macros for '--contains' option
  parse-option: rename parse_opt_with_commit()
  for-each-ref: add '--merged' and '--no-merged' options
  ref-filter: implement '--merged' and '--no-merged' options
  ref-filter: add parse_opt_merge_filter()
  for-each-ref: add '--points-at' option
  ref-filter: implement '--points-at' option
  tag: libify parse_opt_points_at()
  t6302: for-each-ref tests for ref-filter APIs
2015-08-24 15:30:29 -07:00
12d6ce1dba write_file(): drop "fatal" parameter
All callers except three passed 1 for the "fatal" parameter to ask
this function to die upon error, but to a casual reader of the code,
it was not all obvious what that 1 meant.  Instead, split the
function into two based on a common write_file_v() that takes the
flag, introduce write_file_gently() as a new way to attempt creating
a file without dying on error, and make three callers to call it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-24 13:09:02 -07:00
57c867efe4 builtin/am: make sure state files are text
We forgot to terminate the payload given to write_file() with LF,
resulting in files that end with an incomplete line.  Teach the
wrappers builtin/am uses to make sure it adds LF at the end as
necessary.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-24 13:01:59 -07:00
25b763ba7a builtin/am: introduce write_state_*() helper functions
There are many calls to write_file() that repeat the same pattern in
the implementation of the builtin version of "am".  They all share
the same traits, i.e they

 - produce a text file with a single string in it;

 - have enough information to produce the entire contents of that
   file;

 - generate the pathname of the file by making a call to am_path(); and

 - they ask write_file() to die() upon failure.

The slight differences among the call sites throw them into roughly
three categories:

 - many write either "t" or "f" based on a boolean value to a file;

 - some write the integer value in decimal text;

 - some others write more general string, e.g. an object name in
   hex, an empty string (i.e. the presense of the file itself serves
   as a flag), etc.

Introduce three helpers, write_state_bool(), write_state_count() and
write_state_text(), to reduce direct calls to write_file().

This is a preparatory step for the next step to ensure that no
"state" file this command leaves in $GIT_DIR is with an incomplete
line at the end.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-24 11:18:59 -07:00
2aea7a51a1 rev-list: make it obvious that we do not support notes
The rev-list command does not have the internal
infrastructure to display notes. Running:

  git rev-list --notes HEAD

will silently ignore the "--notes" option. Running:

  git rev-list --notes --grep=. HEAD

will crash on an assert. Running:

  git rev-list --format=%N HEAD

will place a literal "%N" in the output (it does not even
expand to an empty string).

Let's have rev-list tell the user that it cannot fill the
user's request, rather than silently producing wrong data.
Likewise, let's remove mention of the notes options from the
rev-list documentation.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-24 10:33:15 -07:00
9e9de18f1a config: silence warnings for command names with invalid keys
When we are running the git command "foo", we may have to
look up the config keys "pager.foo" and "alias.foo". These
config schemes are mis-designed, as the command names can be
anything, but the config syntax has some restrictions. For
example:

  $ git foo_bar
  error: invalid key: pager.foo_bar
  error: invalid key: alias.foo_bar
  git: 'foo_bar' is not a git command. See 'git --help'.

You cannot name an alias with an underscore. And if you have
an external command with one, you cannot configure its
pager.

In the long run, we may develop a different config scheme
for these features. But in the near term (and because we'll
need to support the existing scheme indefinitely), we should
at least squelch the error messages shown above.

These errors come from git_config_parse_key. Ideally we
would pass a "quiet" flag to the config machinery, but there
are many layers between the pager code and the key parsing.
Passing a flag through all of those would be an invasive
change.

Instead, let's provide a config function to report on
whether a key is syntactically valid, and have the pager and
alias code skip lookup for bogus keys. We can build this
easily around the existing git_config_parse_key, with two
minor modifications:

  1. We now handle a NULL store_key, to validate but not
     write out the normalized key.

  2. We accept a "quiet" flag to avoid writing to stderr.
     This doesn't need to be a full-blown public "flags"
     field, because we can make the existing implementation
     a static helper function, keeping the mess contained
     inside config.c.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-24 08:52:23 -07:00
12e59059ee l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: pickaxe
Translate the term "pickaxe" as "挖掘".

Initially proposed by @louy2 .

Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
2015-08-23 15:12:22 +08:00
e397e7e353 l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: fork
Remove "复刻" from translation option list of "fork", keeping "派生"
as the only one.

In Git context, by talking about the term "fork", one usually mean the
procedure that divides a branch into two or more history lines.  That
is quite like the "fork" concept in programming, which split a process
into two or more independent processes.

On the other hand, "复刻" by itself means "copy" or "mirror".  It is
considered more suitable for describing the procedure like
"fork a repository", which is common on public repository hosting
services, such as GitHub.  However, this is beyond the scope of
core-Git.  As a l10n work for core-Git, "复刻" should be removed here.

There used to be another option - "分岔".  Its a good idea to
translate "fork point" as "分岔点".  However, "派生点" is as good,
too.  So this option is finally discarded.

Also fix a relevant translation issue which was introduced in
`160fb2b`.

Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
2015-08-23 15:12:22 +08:00
933c015e37 l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: tag
Add verb form translation of tag.

Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
2015-08-23 15:12:22 +08:00
755c831b9f l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: "dumb", "smart"
"dumb/smart HTTP protocol" are normally considered as phrases.
Add "protocol" as a suffix after them makes more sense.

Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
2015-08-23 15:12:22 +08:00
ee7589bb22 l10n: zh_CN: Update Git Glossary: SHA-1
It's quite common to see the term "SHA-1" remain untranslated in many
l10n works. So update the "SHA-1" entry in Git glossary to match this
behavior.

Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
2015-08-23 15:11:57 +08:00
7aa9b9ba02 wt-status: move #include "pathspec.h" to the header
The declaration of 'struct wt_status' requires the declararion of 'struct
pathspec'.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-21 14:49:27 -07:00
dc5d553b55 trailer: ignore first line of message
When looking for the start of the trailers in the message
we are passed, we should ignore the first line of the message.

The reason is that if we are passed a patch or commit message
then the first line should be the patch title.
If we are passed only trailers we can expect that they start
with an empty line that can be ignored too.

This way we can properly process commit messages that have
only one line with something that looks like a trailer, for
example like "area of code: change we made".

Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-21 10:17:47 -07:00
f04c6904dc Documentation/config: fix inconsistent label on gc.*.reflogExpireUnreachable
Change <ref> to <pattern> in the description of
gc.*.reflogExpireUnreachable, since that is what the text refers to.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-21 10:15:13 -07:00
82dee4160c log: show merge commit when --cc is given
We defaulted to ignoring merge diffs because long long ago, in a
galaxy far away, we didn't have a great way to show the diffs.  The
whole "--cc" option goes back to January '06 and commit d8f4790e6f
("diff-tree --cc: denser combined diff output for a merge commit").
And before that option - so for about 8 months - we had no good way
to show the diffs of merges in a good dense way.  So the whole
"don't show diffs for merges by default" actually made a lot of
sense originally, because our merge diffs were not very useful.

And this was carried forward to this day.  "git log --cc" still
ignores merge commits, and you need to say "git log -m --cc" to view
a sensible rendition of merge and non-merge commits, even with the
previous change to make "--cc" imply "-p".

Teach "git log" that "--cc" means the user wants to see interesting
changes in merge commits by turning "-m" on.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-20 15:06:04 -07:00
c7eaf8b4c3 log: when --cc is given, default to -p unless told otherwise
The "--cc" option to "git log" is clearly a request to show some
sort of combined diff (be it --patch or --raw), but traditionally
we required the command line to explicitly ask for "git log -p --cc".

Teach the command line parser to treat a lone "--cc" as if the user
specified "-p --cc".  Formats that do ask for other forms of diff
output, e.g. "log --raw --cc", are not overriden.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-20 15:03:57 -07:00
b130c706ec log: rename "tweak" helpers
The revision walking API allows the callers to tweak its
configuration at the last minute, immediately after all the revision
and pathspec parameters are parsed from the command line but before
the default actions are decided based on them, by defining a "tweak"
callback function when calling setup_revisions().  Traditionally,
this facility was used by "git show" to turn on the patch output
"-p" by default when no diff output option (e.g.  "--raw" or "-s" to
squelch the output altogether) is given on the command line, and
further give dense combined diffs "--cc" for merge commits when no
option to countermand it (e.g. "-m" to show pairwise patches).

Recently, "git log" started using the same facility, but we named
the callback function "default_follow_tweak()", as if the only kind
of tweaking we would want for "git log" will forever be limited to
turning "--follow" on by default when told by a configuration
variable.  That was myopic.

Rename it to more generic name "log_setup_revisions_tweak()", and
match the one used by show "show_setup_revisions_tweak()".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-20 14:23:05 -07:00
a92330d21c get_urlmatch: avoid useless strbuf write
We create a strbuf only to insert a single string, pass the
resulting buffer to a function (which does not modify the
string), and then free it. We can just pass the original
string instead.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-20 13:16:50 -07:00
f225987753 format_config: simplify buffer handling
When formatting a config value into a strbuf, we may end
up stringifying it into a fixed-size buffer using sprintf,
and then copying that buffer into the strbuf. We can
eliminate the middle-man (and drop some calls to sprintf!)
by writing directly to the strbuf.

The reason it was written this way in the first place is
that we need to know before writing the value whether to
insert a delimiter. Instead of delaying the write of the
value, we speculatively write the delimiter, and roll it
back in the single case that cares.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-20 13:16:50 -07:00
9f1429df17 format_config: don't init strbuf
It's unusual for a function which writes to a passed-in
strbuf to call strbuf_init; that will throw away anything
already there, leaking memory. In this case, there are
exactly two callers; one relies on this initialization and
the other passes in an already-initialized buffer.

There's no leak, as the initialized buffer doesn't have
anything in it. But let's bump the strbuf_init out to the
one caller who needs it, making format_config more
idiomatic.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-20 13:16:50 -07:00
ebca2d4957 config: restructure format_config() for better control flow
Commit 578625fa91 (config: add '--name-only' option to list only
variable names, 2015-08-10) modified format_config() such that it
returned from the middle of the function when showing only keys,
resulting in ugly code structure.

Reorganize the if statements and dealing with the key-value delimiter to
make the function easier to read.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-20 13:15:17 -07:00
1269847854 t3020: fix typo in test description
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-20 13:14:21 -07:00
8b54c23437 ps_matched: xcalloc() takes nmemb and then element size
Even though multiplication is commutative, the order of arguments
should be xcalloc(nmemb, size).  ps_matched is an array of 1-byte
element whose size is the same as the number of pathspec elements.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-20 09:57:38 -07:00
ff86faf2fa Sync with maint
* maint:
  Start preparing for 2.5.1
2015-08-19 14:49:37 -07:00
8f8d0ecfde Fourth batch for 2.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 14:48:57 -07:00
011710a315 Merge branch 'tb/complete-rebase-i-edit-todo'
The command-line completion script (in contrib/) has been updated.

* tb/complete-rebase-i-edit-todo:
  completion: offer '--edit-todo' during interactive rebase
2015-08-19 14:48:56 -07:00
8c9155e031 Merge branch 'jk/git-path'
git_path() and mkpath() are handy helper functions but it is easy
to misuse, as the callers need to be careful to keep the number of
active results below 4.  Their uses have been reduced.

* jk/git-path:
  memoize common git-path "constant" files
  get_repo_path: refactor path-allocation
  find_hook: keep our own static buffer
  refs.c: remove_empty_directories can take a strbuf
  refs.c: avoid git_path assignment in lock_ref_sha1_basic
  refs.c: avoid repeated git_path calls in rename_tmp_log
  refs.c: simplify strbufs in reflog setup and writing
  path.c: drop git_path_submodule
  refs.c: remove extra git_path calls from read_loose_refs
  remote.c: drop extraneous local variable from migrate_file
  prefer mkpathdup to mkpath in assignments
  prefer git_pathdup to git_path in some possibly-dangerous cases
  add_to_alternates_file: don't add duplicate entries
  t5700: modernize style
  cache.h: complete set of git_path_submodule helpers
  cache.h: clarify documentation for git_path, et al
2015-08-19 14:48:56 -07:00
51a22ce147 Merge branch 'jc/finalize-temp-file'
Long overdue micro clean-up.

* jc/finalize-temp-file:
  sha1_file.c: rename move_temp_to_file() to finalize_object_file()
2015-08-19 14:48:55 -07:00
4bfab58ce2 Merge branch 'ps/guess-repo-name-at-root'
"git clone $URL", when cloning from a site whose sole purpose is to
host a single repository (hence, no path after <scheme>://<site>/),
tried to use the site name as the new repository name, but did not
remove username or password when <site> part was of the form
<user>@<pass>:<host>.  The code is taught to redact these.

* ps/guess-repo-name-at-root:
  clone: abort if no dir name could be guessed
  clone: do not use port number as dir name
  clone: do not include authentication data in guessed dir
2015-08-19 14:48:54 -07:00
8259da5ea3 Merge branch 'jk/guess-repo-name-regression-fix'
"git clone $URL" in recent releases of Git contains a regression in
the code that invents a new repository name incorrectly based on
the $URL.  This has been corrected.

* jk/guess-repo-name-regression-fix:
  clone: use computed length in guess_dir_name
  clone: add tests for output directory
2015-08-19 14:48:54 -07:00
824a0be6be Merge branch 'jk/negative-hiderefs'
A negative !ref entry in multi-value transfer.hideRefs
configuration can be used to say "don't hide this one".

* jk/negative-hiderefs:
  refs: support negative transfer.hideRefs
  docs/config.txt: reorder hideRefs config
2015-08-19 14:48:54 -07:00
138014c3cf Merge branch 'jk/test-with-x'
Running tests with the "-x" option to make them verbose had some
unpleasant interactions with other features of the test suite.

* jk/test-with-x:
  test-lib: disable trace when test is not verbose
  test-lib: turn off "-x" tracing during chain-lint check
2015-08-19 14:48:53 -07:00
034603f0a3 Merge branch 'ps/t1509-chroot-test-fixup'
t1509 test that requires a dedicated VM environment had some
bitrot, which has been corrected.

* ps/t1509-chroot-test-fixup:
  tests: fix cleanup after tests in t1509-root-worktree
  tests: fix broken && chains in t1509-root-worktree
2015-08-19 14:48:52 -07:00
1d82ef5b16 Merge branch 'sb/check-return-from-read-ref'
* sb/check-return-from-read-ref:
  transport-helper: die on errors reading refs.
2015-08-19 14:48:52 -07:00
d772def9c8 Merge branch 'mm/pull-upload-pack'
"git pull" in recent releases of Git has a regression in the code
that allows custom path to the --upload-pack=<program>.  This has
been corrected.

Note that this is irrelevant for 'master' with "git pull" rewritten
in C.

* mm/pull-upload-pack:
  pull.sh: quote $upload_pack when passing it to git-fetch
2015-08-19 14:48:51 -07:00
552a736de7 Start preparing for 2.5.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 14:48:13 -07:00
91db0091c0 Merge branch 'ta/docfix-index-format-tech' into maint
* ta/docfix-index-format-tech:
  typofix for index-format.txt
2015-08-19 14:41:34 -07:00
b994b9bc0b Merge branch 'sb/parse-options-codeformat' into maint
* sb/parse-options-codeformat:
  parse-options: align curly braces for all options
2015-08-19 14:41:34 -07:00
223b55a577 Merge branch 'sb/remove-unused-var-from-builtin-add' into maint
* sb/remove-unused-var-from-builtin-add:
  add: remove dead code
2015-08-19 14:41:33 -07:00
24493ff5d8 Merge branch 'kn/tag-doc-fix' into maint
* kn/tag-doc-fix:
  Documentation/tag: remove double occurance of "<pattern>"
2015-08-19 14:41:32 -07:00
cacee08cd2 Merge branch 'es/doc-clean-outdated-tools' into maint
* es/doc-clean-outdated-tools:
  Documentation/git-tools: retire manually-maintained list
  Documentation/git-tools: drop references to defunct tools
  Documentation/git-tools: fix item text formatting
  Documentation/git-tools: improve discoverability of Git wiki
  Documentation/git: drop outdated Cogito reference
2015-08-19 14:41:31 -07:00
25a294e44d Merge branch 'nd/export-worktree' into maint
Running an aliased command from a subdirectory when the .git thing
in the working tree is a gitfile pointing elsewhere did not work.

* nd/export-worktree:
  setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when work tree is set, like $GIT_DIR
2015-08-19 14:41:30 -07:00
f9610bcae9 Merge branch 'mh/fast-import-optimize-current-from' into maint
Often a fast-import stream builds a new commit on top of the
previous commit it built, and it often unconditionally emits a
"from" command to specify the first parent, which can be omitted in
such a case.  This caused fast-import to forget the tree of the
previous commit and then re-read it from scratch, which was
inefficient.  Optimize for this common case.

* mh/fast-import-optimize-current-from:
  fast-import: do less work when given "from" matches current branch head
2015-08-19 14:41:29 -07:00
d3ac359841 Merge branch 'ib/scripted-parse-opt-better-hint-string' into maint
The "rev-parse --parseopt" mode parsed the option specification
and the argument hint in a strange way to allow '=' and other
special characters in the option name while forbidding them from
the argument hint.  This made it impossible to define an option
like "--pair <key>=<value>" with "pair=key=value" specification,
which instead would have defined a "--pair=key <value>" option.

* ib/scripted-parse-opt-better-hint-string:
  rev-parse --parseopt: allow [*=?!] in argument hints
2015-08-19 14:41:29 -07:00
204ea3cad4 Merge branch 'se/doc-checkout-ours-theirs' into maint
A "rebase" replays changes of the local branch on top of something
else, as such they are placed in stage #3 and referred to as
"theirs", while the changes in the new base, typically a foreign
work, are placed in stage #2 and referred to as "ours".  Clarify
the "checkout --ours/--theirs".

* se/doc-checkout-ours-theirs:
  checkout: document subtlety around --ours/--theirs
2015-08-19 14:41:28 -07:00
b083703ce3 Merge branch 'cb/uname-in-untracked' into maint
An experimental "untracked cache" feature used uname(2) in a
slightly unportable way.

* cb/uname-in-untracked:
  untracked: fix detection of uname(2) failure
2015-08-19 14:41:28 -07:00
4f66e44300 Merge branch 'as/sparse-checkout-removal' into maint
"sparse checkout" misbehaved for a path that is excluded from the
checkout when switching between branches that differ at the path.

* as/sparse-checkout-removal:
  unpack-trees: don't update files with CE_WT_REMOVE set
2015-08-19 14:41:27 -07:00
7e7ce32f7a Merge branch 'db/send-pack-user-signingkey' into maint
The low-level "git send-pack" did not honor 'user.signingkey'
configuration variable when sending a signed-push.

* db/send-pack-user-signingkey:
  builtin/send-pack.c: respect user.signingkey
2015-08-19 14:41:26 -07:00
17850efa5f Merge branch 'jx/do-not-crash-receive-pack-wo-head' into maint
An attempt to delete a ref by pushing into a repositorywhose HEAD
symbolic reference points at an unborn branch that cannot be
created due to ref D/F conflict (e.g. refs/heads/a/b exists, HEAD
points at refs/heads/a) failed.

* jx/do-not-crash-receive-pack-wo-head:
  receive-pack: crash when checking with non-exist HEAD
2015-08-19 14:41:26 -07:00
5a30374a29 Merge branch 'da/subtree-date-confusion' into maint
"git subtree" (in contrib/) depended on "git log" output to be
stable, which was a no-no.  Apply a workaround to force a
particular date format.

* da/subtree-date-confusion:
  contrib/subtree: ignore log.date configuration
2015-08-19 14:41:25 -07:00
68c757f219 push: add a config option push.gpgSign for default signed pushes
Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 12:58:58 -07:00
30261094b1 push: support signing pushes iff the server supports it
Add a new flag --sign=true (or --sign=false), which means the same
thing as the original --signed (or --no-signed).  Give it a third
value --sign=if-asked to tell push and send-pack to send a push
certificate if and only if the server advertised a push cert nonce.

If not, warn the user that their push may not be as secure as they
thought.

Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 12:58:45 -07:00
068c77a518 builtin/send-pack.c: use parse_options API
The old option parsing code in this plumbing command predates this
API, so option parsing was done more manually. Using the new API
brings send-pack more in line with push, and accepts new variants
like --no-* for negating options.

Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 12:45:28 -07:00
9a549d4397 config.c: rename git_config_maybe_bool_text and export it as git_parse_maybe_bool
This helper function does not complain about the config variable
but just silently reports failure to the caller.  It is useful for
callers that need to parse any string that could be boolean or other
string (e.g. tristate yes/no/auto).

Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 12:43:22 -07:00
87c0d08b3d transport: remove git_transport_options.push_cert
This field was set in transport_set_option, but never read in the push
code. The push code basically ignores the smart_options field
entirely, and derives its options from the flags arguments to the
push* callbacks. Note that in git_transport_push there are already
several args set from flags that have no corresponding field in
git_transport_options; after this change, push_cert is just like
those.

Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 12:41:54 -07:00
b9299a2bb1 gitremote-helpers.txt: document pushcert option
Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 12:41:38 -07:00
66697fe4ba Documentation/git-send-pack.txt: document --signed
Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 12:40:57 -07:00
a3fb31a892 Documentation/git-send-pack.txt: wrap long synopsis line
Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 12:39:31 -07:00
f9e0952d1f Documentation/git-push.txt: document when --signed may fail
Like --atomic, --signed will fail if the server does not advertise the
necessary capability. In addition, it requires gpg on the client side.

Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 12:38:35 -07:00
5a1ba6b48a Merge 'hv/submodule-config' to 'sb/submodule-helper'
* hv/submodule-config:
  submodule: allow erroneous values for the fetchRecurseSubmodules option
  submodule: use new config API for worktree configurations
  submodule: extract functions for config set and lookup
  submodule: implement a config API for lookup of .gitmodules values
2015-08-19 11:45:08 -07:00
027771fcb1 submodule: allow erroneous values for the fetchRecurseSubmodules option
We should not die when reading the submodule config cache since the
user might not be able to get out of that situation when the
configuration is part of the history.

We should handle this condition later when the value is about to be
used.

Signed-off-by: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 11:43:10 -07:00
851e18c385 submodule: use new config API for worktree configurations
We remove the extracted functions and directly parse into and read out
of the cache. This allows us to have one unified way of accessing
submodule configuration values specific to single submodules. Regardless
whether we need to access a configuration from history or from the
worktree.

Signed-off-by: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 11:43:10 -07:00
0d9f282c94 submodule: extract functions for config set and lookup
This is one step towards using the new configuration API. We just
extract these functions to make replacing the actual code easier.

Signed-off-by: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 11:43:09 -07:00
959b5455d0 submodule: implement a config API for lookup of .gitmodules values
In a superproject some commands need to interact with submodules. They
need to query values from the .gitmodules file either from the worktree
of from certain revisions. At the moment this is quite hard since a
caller would need to read the .gitmodules file from the history and then
parse the values. We want to provide an API for this so we have one
place to get values from .gitmodules from any revision (including the
worktree).

The API is realized as a cache which allows us to lazily read
.gitmodules configurations by commit into a runtime cache which can then
be used to easily lookup values from it. Currently only the values for
path or name are stored but it can be extended for any value needed.

It is expected that .gitmodules files do not change often between
commits. Thats why we lookup the .gitmodules sha1 from a commit and then
either lookup an already parsed configuration or parse and cache an
unknown one for each sha1. The cache is lazily build on demand for each
requested commit.

This cache can be used for all purposes which need knowledge about
submodule configurations. Example use cases are:

 * Recursive submodule checkout needs to lookup a submodule name from
   its path when a submodule first appears. This needs be done before
   this configuration exists in the worktree.

 * The implementation of submodule support for 'git archive' needs to
   lookup the submodule name to generate the archive when given a
   revision that is not checked out.

 * 'git fetch' when given the --recurse-submodules=on-demand option (or
   configuration) needs to lookup submodule names by path from the
   database rather than reading from the worktree. For new submodule it
   needs to lookup the name from its path to allow cloning new
   submodules into the .git folder so they can be checked out without
   any network interaction when the user does a checkout of that
   revision.

Signed-off-by: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 11:43:09 -07:00
3ecc7040ef am --skip/--abort: merge HEAD/ORIG_HEAD tree into index
After running "git am --abort", and then running "git reset --hard",
files that were not modified would still be re-checked out.

This is because clean_index() in builtin/am.c mistakenly called the
read_tree() function, which overwrites all entries in the index,
including the stat info.

"git am --skip" did not seem to have this issue because am_skip() called
am_run(), which called refresh_cache() to update the stat info. However,
there's still a performance penalty as the lack of stat info meant that
refresh_cache() would have to scan all files for changes.

Fix this by using unpack_trees() instead to merge the tree into the
index, so that the stat info from the index is kept.

Reported-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 10:51:39 -07:00
73f9145fbf untracked cache: fix entry invalidation
First, the current code in untracked_cache_invalidate_path() is wrong
because it can only handle paths "a" or "a/b", not "a/b/c" because
lookup_untracked() only looks for entries directly under the given
directory. In the last case, it will look for the entry "b/c" in
directory "a" instead. This means if you delete or add an entry in a
subdirectory, untracked cache may become out of date because it does not
invalidate properly. This is noticed by David Turner.

The second problem is about invalidation inside a fully untracked/excluded
directory. In this case we may have to invalidate back to root. See the
comment block for detail.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 10:40:55 -07:00
2e5910f276 untracked-cache: fix subdirectory handling
Previously, some calls lookup_untracked would pass a full path.  But
lookup_untracked assumes that the portion of the path up to and
including to the untracked_cache_dir has been removed.  So
lookup_untracked would be looking in the untracked_cache for 'foo' for
'foo/bar' (instead of just looking for 'bar').  This would cause
untracked cache corruption.

Instead, treat_directory learns to track the base length of the parent
directory, so that only the last path component is passed to
lookup_untracked.

Helped-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-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>
2015-08-19 10:40:24 -07:00
f178136e68 t7063: use --force-untracked-cache to speed up a bit
When in the middle of t7063, we are sure untracked cache is supported,
so we can use --force-untracked-cache to skip the support detection
phase and save a few seconds. It's also good that --force-untracked-cache
is exercised in the test suite.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-19 10:37:13 -07:00
4f655e22b7 notes: teach git-notes about notes.<name>.mergeStrategy option
Teach notes about a new "notes.<name>.mergeStrategy" option for
configuring the notes merge strategy when merging into
refs/notes/<name>. This option allows for the selection of merge
strategy for particular notes refs, rather than all notes ref merges, as
user may not want cat_sort_uniq for all refs, but only some. Note that
the <name> is the local reference we are merging into, not the remote
ref we merged from. The assumption is that users will mostly want to
configure separate local ref merge strategies rather than strategies
depending on which remote ref they merge from.

notes.<name>.mergeStrategy overrides the general behavior as it is more
specific.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-17 15:39:13 -07:00
d2d68d9975 notes: add notes.mergeStrategy option to select default strategy
Teach git-notes about "notes.mergeStrategy" to select a general strategy
for all notes merges. This enables a user to always get expected merge
strategy such as "cat_sort_uniq" without having to pass the "-s" option
manually.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-17 15:38:54 -07:00
11dd2b2e9a notes: add tests for --commit/--abort/--strategy exclusivity
Add new tests to ensure that --commit, --abort, and --strategy are
mutually exclusive.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-17 15:38:37 -07:00
93efcad317 notes: extract parse_notes_merge_strategy to notes-utils
Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-17 15:38:32 -07:00
4d03dd18f0 notes: extract enum notes_merge_strategy to notes-utils.h
A future patch will extract parsing of the --strategy string into a
helper function in notes.c and will require the enumeration definition.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-17 15:36:23 -07:00
e48ad1b9b1 notes: document cat_sort_uniq rewriteMode
Teach documentation about the cat_sort_uniq rewriteMode that got added
at the same time as the equivalent merge strategy.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-17 15:35:49 -07:00
44e02239f4 Third batch for 2.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-17 15:09:25 -07:00
1c09276e34 Merge branch 'dt/untracked-sparse'
Allow untracked cache (experimental) to be used when sparse
checkout (experimental) is also in use.

* dt/untracked-sparse:
  untracked-cache: support sparse checkout
2015-08-17 15:07:52 -07:00
2e8ef44ee5 Merge branch 'ta/docfix-index-format-tech'
* ta/docfix-index-format-tech:
  typofix for index-format.txt
2015-08-17 15:07:52 -07:00
66873d4065 Merge branch 'mh/get-remote-group-fix'
An off-by-one error made "git remote" to mishandle a remote with a
single letter nickname.

* mh/get-remote-group-fix:
  get_remote_group(): use skip_prefix()
  get_remote_group(): eliminate superfluous call to strcspn()
  get_remote_group(): rename local variable "space" to "wordlen"
  get_remote_group(): handle remotes with single-character names
2015-08-17 15:07:51 -07:00
e69b408280 Merge branch 'kd/pull-rebase-autostash'
"git pull --rebase" has been taught to pay attention to
rebase.autostash configuration.

* kd/pull-rebase-autostash:
  pull: allow dirty tree when rebase.autostash enabled
2015-08-17 15:07:50 -07:00
0f2e68b54c send-email: provide whitelist of SMTP AUTH mechanisms
When sending an e-mail, the client and server must agree on an
authentication mechanism. Some servers (due to misconfiguration
or a bug) deny valid credentials for certain mechanisms. In this
patch, a new option --smtp-auth and configuration entry smtpAuth
are introduced. If smtp_auth is defined, it works as a whitelist
of allowed mechanisms for authentication selected from the ones
supported by the installed SASL perl library.

Signed-off-by: Jan Viktorin <viktorin@rehivetech.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-17 13:53:16 -07:00
a6926b837e po/README: Update directions for l10n contributors
Some Linux distributions (such as Ubuntu) have their own l10n workflows,
and their translations may be different.  Add notes for this case for
l10n translators.

Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-17 12:12:26 -07:00
01861cb7a2 http: add support for specifying the SSL version
Teach git about a new option, "http.sslVersion", which permits one
to specify the SSL version to use when negotiating SSL connections.
The setting can be overridden by the GIT_SSL_VERSION environment
variable.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-17 10:16:34 -07:00
0a489b0680 prepare_packed_git(): refactor garbage reporting in pack directory
The hook to report "garbage" files in $GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY/pack/
could be generic but is too specific to count-object's needs.

Move the part to produce human-readable messages to count-objects,
and refine the interface to callback with the "bits" with values
defined in the cache.h header file, so that other callers (e.g.
prune) can later use the same mechanism to enumerate different
kinds of garbage files and do something intelligent about them,
other than reporting in textual messages.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-17 09:14:59 -07:00
54d160ec0d config: close config file handle in case of error
When updating an existing configuration file, we did not always
close the filehandle that is reading from the current configuration
file when we encountered an error (e.g. when unsetting a variable
that does not exist).

Signed-off-by: Sven Strickroth <email@cs-ware.de>
Signed-off-by: Sup Yut Sum <ch3cooli@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-14 13:49:41 -07:00
d835dbb91f gitk: Add a "Copy commit summary" command
When referring to earlier commits in commit messages or other text, one
of the established formats is

    <abbrev-sha> ("<summary>", <author-date>)

Add a "Copy commit summary" command to the context menu that puts this
text for the currently selected commit on the clipboard. This makes it
easy for our users to create well-formatted commit references.

The <abbrev-sha> is produced with the %h format specifier to make it
unique. Its length can be controlled with the gitk preference
"Auto-select SHA1 (length)", or, if this preference is set to its
default value (40), with the Git config setting core.abbrev.

Signed-off-by: Beat Bolli <dev+git@drbeat.li>
Cc: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-08-13 13:47:43 +10:00
dfed7f917e gitk: Update Bulgarian translation (307t)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-08-13 13:47:09 +10:00
9e9033166b credential-cache--daemon: use tempfile module
Use the tempfile module to ensure that the socket file gets deleted on
program exit.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-12 14:50:11 -07:00
18a3de4214 credential-cache--daemon: delete socket from main()
main() is responsible for cleaning up the socket in the case of
errors, so it is reasonable to also make it responsible for cleaning
it up when there are no errors. This change also makes the next step
easier.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-12 14:50:11 -07:00
ebebeaea0a gc: use tempfile module to handle gc.pid file
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-12 14:50:11 -07:00
00539cef39 lock_repo_for_gc(): compute the path to "gc.pid" only once
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-12 14:50:11 -07:00
284098f13f diff: use tempfile module
Also add some code comments explaining how the fields in "struct
diff_tempfile" are used.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-12 14:49:43 -07:00
130be8eeb8 Second batch for 2.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-12 14:16:31 -07:00
fde61a0f72 Merge branch 'sb/remove-unused-var-from-builtin-add'
* sb/remove-unused-var-from-builtin-add:
  add: remove dead code
2015-08-12 14:09:58 -07:00
535efaf6be Merge branch 'sb/parse-options-codeformat'
* sb/parse-options-codeformat:
  parse-options: align curly braces for all options
2015-08-12 14:09:57 -07:00
9ad8474b98 Merge branch 'dt/unpack-trees-cache-tree-revalidate'
The code to perform multi-tree merges has been taught to repopulate
the cache-tree upon a successful merge into the index, so that
subsequent "diff-index --cached" (hence "status") and "write-tree"
(hence "commit") will go faster.

The same logic in "git checkout" may now be removed, but that is a
separate issue.

* dt/unpack-trees-cache-tree-revalidate:
  unpack-trees: populate cache-tree on successful merge
2015-08-12 14:09:57 -07:00
0188f32304 Merge branch 'dt/reflog-tests'
Tests that assume how reflogs are represented on the filesystem too
much have been corrected.

* dt/reflog-tests:
  tests: remove some direct access to .git/logs
  t/t7509: remove unnecessary manipulation of reflog
2015-08-12 14:09:56 -07:00
53860f0392 Merge branch 'es/worktree-add-cleanup'
The "new-worktree-mode" hack in "checkout" that was added in
nd/multiple-work-trees topic has been removed by updating the
implementation of new "worktree add".

* es/worktree-add-cleanup: (25 commits)
  Documentation/git-worktree: fix duplicated 'from'
  Documentation/config: mention "now" and "never" for 'expire' settings
  Documentation/git-worktree: fix broken 'linkgit' invocation
  checkout: drop intimate knowledge of newly created worktree
  worktree: populate via "git reset --hard" rather than "git checkout"
  worktree: avoid resolving HEAD unnecessarily
  worktree: make setup of new HEAD distinct from worktree population
  worktree: detect branch-name/detached and error conditions locally
  worktree: add_worktree: construct worktree-population command locally
  worktree: elucidate environment variables intended for child processes
  worktree: make branch creation distinct from worktree population
  worktree: add: suppress auto-vivication with --detach and no <branch>
  worktree: make --detach mutually exclusive with -b/-B
  worktree: introduce options container
  worktree: simplify new branch (-b/-B) option checking
  worktree: improve worktree setup message
  branch: publish die_if_checked_out()
  checkout: teach check_linked_checkout() about symbolic link HEAD
  checkout: check_linked_checkout: simplify symref parsing
  checkout: check_linked_checkout: improve "already checked out" aesthetic
  ...
2015-08-12 14:09:56 -07:00
7aa2da6162 Merge branch 'pt/am-builtin'
Rewrite "am" in "C".

* pt/am-builtin: (46 commits)
  git-am: add am.threeWay config variable
  builtin-am: remove redirection to git-am.sh
  builtin-am: check for valid committer ident
  builtin-am: implement legacy -b/--binary option
  builtin-am: implement -i/--interactive
  builtin-am: support and auto-detect mercurial patches
  builtin-am: support and auto-detect StGit series files
  builtin-am: support and auto-detect StGit patches
  builtin-am: rerere support
  builtin-am: invoke post-applypatch hook
  builtin-am: invoke pre-applypatch hook
  builtin-am: invoke applypatch-msg hook
  builtin-am: support automatic notes copying
  builtin-am: invoke post-rewrite hook
  builtin-am: implement -S/--gpg-sign, commit.gpgsign
  builtin-am: implement --committer-date-is-author-date
  builtin-am: implement --ignore-date
  builtin-am: pass git-apply's options to git-apply
  builtin-am: implement --[no-]scissors
  builtin-am: support --keep-cr, am.keepcr
  ...
2015-08-12 14:09:55 -07:00
c1e5ca90db Merge branch 'es/worktree-add'
Remove remaining cruft from  "git checkout --to", which
transitioned to "git worktree add".

* es/worktree-add:
  config: rename "gc.pruneWorktreesExpire" to "gc.worktreePruneExpire"
  Documentation/git-worktree: wordsmith worktree-related manpages
  Documentation/config: fix stale "git prune --worktree" reference
  Documentation/git-worktree: fix incorrect reference to file "locked"
  Documentation/git-worktree: consistently use term "linked working tree"
2015-08-12 14:09:55 -07:00
71cc60070f Merge branch 'ad/bisect-cleanup'
Code and documentation clean-up to "git bisect".

* ad/bisect-cleanup:
  bisect: don't mix option parsing and non-trivial code
  bisect: simplify the addition of new bisect terms
  bisect: replace hardcoded "bad|good" by variables
  Documentation/bisect: revise overall content
  Documentation/bisect: move getting help section to the end
  bisect: correction of typo
2015-08-12 14:09:53 -07:00
dff6f280df git_open_noatime: return with errno=0 on success
In read_sha1_file_extended we die if read_object fails with a fatal
error. We detect a fatal error if errno is non-zero and is not
ENOENT. If the object could not be read because it does not exist,
this is not considered a fatal error and we want to return NULL.

Somewhere down the line, read_object calls git_open_noatime to open
a pack index file, for example. We first try open with O_NOATIME.
If O_NOATIME fails with EPERM, we retry without O_NOATIME. When the
second open succeeds, errno is however still set to EPERM from the
first attempt. When we finally determine that the object does not
exist, read_object returns NULL and read_sha1_file_extended dies
with a fatal error:

    fatal: failed to read object <sha1>: Operation not permitted

Fix this by resetting errno to zero before we call open again.

Cc: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <clemens.buchacher@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-12 13:56:19 -07:00
094c7e6352 prune: close directory earlier during loose-object directory traversal
27e1e22d (prune: factor out loose-object directory traversal, 2014-10-16)
introduced a new function for_each_loose_file_in_objdir() with a helper
for_each_file_in_obj_subdir(). The latter calls callbacks for each file
found during a directory traversal and finally also a callback for the
directory itself.

git-prune uses the function to clean up the object directory. In
particular, in the directory callback it calls rmdir(). On Windows XP,
this rmdir call fails, because the directory is still open while the
callback is called. Close the directory before calling the callback.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-12 12:06:00 -07:00
b5e823594c am: let --signoff override --no-signoff
After resolving a conflicting patch, a user may wish to sign off the
patch to declare that the patch has been modified. As such, the user
will expect that running "git am --signoff --continue" will append the
signoff to the commit message.

However, the --signoff option is only taken into account during the
mail-parsing stage. If the --signoff option is set, then the signoff
will be appended to the commit message. Since the mail-parsing stage
comes before the patch application stage, the --signoff option, if
provided on the command-line when resuming, will have no effect at all.

We cannot move the append_signoff() call to the patch application stage
as the applypatch-msg hook and interactive mode, which run before patch
application, may expect the signoff to be there.

Fix this by taking note if the user explictly set the --signoff option
on the command-line, and append the signoff to the commit message when
resuming if so.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-12 10:33:47 -07:00
852a171018 am: let command-line options override saved options
When resuming, git-am mistakenly ignores command-line options.

For instance, when a patch fails to apply with "git am patch",
subsequently running "git am --3way" would not cause git-am to fall
back on attempting a threeway merge.  This occurs because by default
the --3way option is saved as "false", and the saved am options are
loaded after the command-line options are parsed, thus overwriting
the command-line options when resuming.

Fix this by moving the am_load() function call before parse_options(),
so that command-line options will override the saved am options.

The purpose of supporting this use case is to enable users to "wiggle"
that one conflicting patch. As such, it is expected that the
command-line options do not affect subsequent applied patches. Implement
this by calling am_load() once we apply the conflicting patch
successfully.

Noticed-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-12 10:33:47 -07:00
18d8c26930 test_terminal: redirect child process' stdin to a pty
When resuming, git-am detects if we are trying to feed it patches or not
by checking if stdin is a TTY.

However, the test library redirects stdin to /dev/null. This makes it
difficult, for instance, to test the behavior of "git am -3" when
resuming, as git-am will think we are trying to feed it patches and
error out.

Support this use case by extending test-terminal.perl to create a
pseudo-tty for the child process' standard input as well.

Note that due to the way the code is structured, the child's stdin
pseudo-tty will be closed when we finish reading from our stdin. This
means that in the common case, where our stdin is attached to /dev/null,
the child's stdin pseudo-tty will be closed immediately. Some operations
like isatty(), which git-am uses, require the file descriptor to be
open, and hence if the success of the command depends on such functions,
test_terminal's stdin should be redirected to a source with large amount
of data to ensure that the child's stdin is not closed, e.g.

	test_terminal git am --3way </dev/zero

Cc: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Cc: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-12 10:33:46 -07:00
2c3aed1381 pseudoref: check return values from read_ref()
These codepaths attempt to compare the "expected" current value with
the actual current value, but did not check if we successfully read
the current value before comparison.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-11 15:52:20 -07:00
b3325dfc64 t2019: skip test requiring '*' in a file name non Windows
A test case introduced by ae454f61 (Add tests for wildcard "path vs ref"
disambiguation) allocates a file named '*.c'. This does not work on
Windows, because the OS forbids file names containing wildcard
characters. The test case fails where the shell attempts to allocate the
file. Skip the test on Windows.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-11 15:17:30 -07:00
fbf2fecf50 t7300-clean: require POSIXPERM for chmod 0 test
A test case introduced by 91479b9c (t7300: add tests to document
behavior of clean and nested git) uses 'chmod 0' to verify that a
subdirectory that has an unreadable .git file is not removed. This can
work only when the system pays attention to the permissions set with
'chmod'. Therefore, set the POSIXPERM prerequisite on the test case.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-11 15:17:07 -07:00
f4c3edc0b1 vreportf: avoid intermediate buffer
When we call "die(fmt, args...)", we end up in vreportf with
two pieces of information:

  1. The prefix "fatal: "

  2. The original fmt and va_list of args.

We format item (2) into a temporary buffer, and then fprintf
the prefix and the temporary buffer, along with a newline.
This has the unfortunate side effect of truncating any error
messages that are longer than 4096 bytes.

Instead, let's use separate calls for the prefix and
newline, letting us hand the item (2) directly to vfprintf.
This is essentially undoing d048a96 (print
warning/error/fatal messages in one shot, 2007-11-09), which
tried to have the whole output end up in a single `write`
call.

But we can address this instead by explicitly requesting
line-buffering for the output handle, and by making sure
that the buffer is empty before we start (so that outputting
the prefix does not cause a flush due to hitting the buffer
limit).

We may still break the output into two writes if the content
is larger than our buffer, but there's not much we can do
there; depending on the stdio implementation, that might
have happened even with a single fprintf call.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-11 14:29:36 -07:00
3b331e9267 vreportf: report to arbitrary filehandles
The vreportf function always goes to stderr, but run-command
wants child errors to go to the parent's original stderr. To
solve this, commit a5487dd duplicates the stderr fd and
installs die and error handlers to direct the output
appropriately (which later turned into the vwritef
function). This has two downsides, though:

  - we make multiple calls to write(), which contradicts the
    "write at once" logic from d048a96 (print
    warning/error/fatal messages in one shot, 2007-11-09).

  - the custom handlers basically duplicate the normal
    handlers.  They're only a few lines of code, but we
    should not have to repeat the magic "exit(128)", for
    example.

We can solve the first by using fdopen() on the duplicated
descriptor. We can't pass this to vreportf, but we could
introduce a new vreportf_to to handle it.

However, to fix the second problem, we instead introduce a
new "set_error_handle" function, which lets the normal
vreportf calls output to a handle besides stderr. Thus we
can get rid of our custom handlers entirely, and just ask
the regular handlers to output to our new descriptor.

And as vwritef has no more callers, it can just go away.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-11 14:24:50 -07:00
b02e8595e2 notes: handle multiple worktrees
Before creating NOTES_MERGE_REF, check NOTES_MERGE_REF using
find_shared_symref and die if we find one.  This prevents simultaneous
merges to the same notes branch from different worktrees.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Reviewed-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-11 13:52:27 -07:00
41af65651d worktrees: add find_shared_symref
Add a new function, find_shared_symref, which contains the heart of
die_if_checked_out, but works for any symref, not just HEAD.  Refactor
die_if_checked_out to use the same infrastructure as
find_shared_symref.

Soon, we will use find_shared_symref to protect notes merges in
worktrees.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Reviewed-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-11 13:48:15 -07:00
f932729cc7 memoize common git-path "constant" files
One of the most common uses of git_path() is to pass a
constant, like git_path("MERGE_MSG"). This has two
drawbacks:

  1. The return value is a static buffer, and the lifetime
     is dependent on other calls to git_path, etc.

  2. There's no compile-time checking of the pathname. This
     is OK for a one-off (after all, we have to spell it
     correctly at least once), but many of these constant
     strings appear throughout the code.

This patch introduces a series of functions to "memoize"
these strings, which are essentially globals for the
lifetime of the program. We compute the value once, take
ownership of the buffer, and return the cached value for
subsequent calls.  cache.h provides a helper macro for
defining these functions as one-liners, and defines a few
common ones for global use.

Using a macro is a little bit gross, but it does nicely
document the purpose of the functions. If we need to touch
them all later (e.g., because we learned how to change the
git_dir variable at runtime, and need to invalidate all of
the stored values), it will be much easier to have the
complete list.

Note that the shared-global functions have separate, manual
declarations. We could do something clever with the macros
(e.g., expand it to a declaration in some places, and a
declaration _and_ a definition in path.c). But there aren't
that many, and it's probably better to stay away from
too-magical macros.

Likewise, if we abandon the C preprocessor in favor of
generating these with a script, we could get much fancier.
E.g., normalizing "FOO/BAR-BAZ" into "git_path_foo_bar_baz".
But the small amount of saved typing is probably not worth
the resulting confusion to readers who want to grep for the
function's definition.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:37:14 -07:00
0ea68e4296 get_repo_path: refactor path-allocation
The get_repo_path function calls mkpath() and then does some
non-trivial operations on it, like calling
is_git_directory() and read_gitfile(). These are actually
OK (they do not use more pathname static buffers
themselves), but it takes a fair bit of work to verify.

Let's use our own strbuf to store the path, and we can
simply reuse it for each iteration of the loop (we can even
avoid rewriting the beginning part, since we are trying a
series of suffixes).

To make the strbuf cleanup easier, we split out a thin
wrapper. As a bonus, this wrapper can factor out the
canonicalization that happens in all of the early-return
code paths.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:37:14 -07:00
03f2c7731b find_hook: keep our own static buffer
The find_hook function returns the results of git_path,
which is a static buffer shared by other path-related calls.
Returning such a buffer is slightly dangerous, because it
can be overwritten by seemingly unrelated functions.

Let's at least keep our _own_ static buffer, so you can
only get in trouble by calling find_hook in quick
succession, which is less likely to happen and more obvious
to notice.

While we're at it, let's add some documentation of the
function's limitations.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:37:13 -07:00
470e28d4e1 refs.c: remove_empty_directories can take a strbuf
The first thing we do in this function is copy the input
into a strbuf. Of the 4 callers, 3 of them already have a
strbuf we could use. Let's just take the strbuf, and convert
the remaining caller to use a strbuf, rather than a raw
git_path. This is safer, anyway, as remove_dir_recursively
is a non-trivial function that might use the pathname
buffers itself (this is _probably_ OK, as the likely culprit
would be calling resolve_gitlink_ref, but we do not pass the
proper flags to ask it to avoid blowing away gitlinks).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:37:13 -07:00
5f8ef5b848 refs.c: avoid git_path assignment in lock_ref_sha1_basic
Assigning the result of git_path is a bad pattern, because
it's not immediately obvious how long you expect the content
to stay valid (and it may be overwritten by subsequent
calls). Let's use a function-local strbuf here instead,
which we know is safe (we just have to remember to free it
in all code paths).

As a bonus, we get rid of a confusing variable-reuse
("ref_file" is used for two distinct purposes).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:37:13 -07:00
d6549f3655 refs.c: avoid repeated git_path calls in rename_tmp_log
Because it's not safe to store the static-buffer results of
git_path for a long time, we end up formatting the same
filename over and over. We can fix this by using a
function-local strbuf to store the formatted pathname and
avoid repeating ourselves.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:37:13 -07:00
54b418f698 refs.c: simplify strbufs in reflog setup and writing
Commit 1a83c24 (git_snpath(): retire and replace with
strbuf_git_path(), 2014-11-30) taught log_ref_setup and
log_ref_write_1 to take a strbuf parameter, rather than a
bare string. It then makes an alias to the strbuf's "buf"
field under the original name.

This made the original diff much shorter, but the resulting
code is more complicated that it needs to be. Since we've
aliased the pointer, we drop our reference to the strbuf to
ensure we don't accidentally change it. But if we simply
drop our alias and use "logfile.buf" directly, we do not
have to worry about this aliasing. It's a larger diff, but
the resulting code is simpler.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:37:13 -07:00
07e3070d2a path.c: drop git_path_submodule
There are no callers of the slightly-dangerous static-buffer
git_path_submodule left. Let's drop it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:37:13 -07:00
f5b2dec165 refs.c: remove extra git_path calls from read_loose_refs
In iterating over the loose refs in "refs/foo/", we keep a
running strbuf with "refs/foo/one", "refs/foo/two", etc. But
we also need to access these files in the filesystem, as
".git/refs/foo/one", etc. For this latter purpose, we make a
series of independent calls to git_path(). These are safe
(we only use the result to call stat()), but assigning the
result of git_path is a suspicious pattern that we'd rather
avoid.

This patch keeps a running buffer with ".git/refs/foo/", and
we can just append/reset each directory element as we loop.
This matches how we handle the refnames. It should also be
more efficient, as we do not keep formatting the same
".git/refs/foo" prefix (which can be arbitrarily deep).

Technically we are dropping a call to strbuf_cleanup() on
each generated filename, but that's OK; it wasn't doing
anything, as we are putting in single-level names we read
from the filesystem (so it could not possibly be cleaning up
cruft like "./" in this instance).

A clever reader may also note that the running refname
buffer ("refs/foo/") is actually a subset of the filesystem
path buffer (".git/refs/foo/"). We could get by with one
buffer, indexing the length of $GIT_DIR when we want the
refname. However, having tried this, the resulting code
actually ends up a little more confusing, and the efficiency
improvement is tiny (and almost certainly dwarfed by the
system calls we are making).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:37:13 -07:00
b21a5d6605 remote.c: drop extraneous local variable from migrate_file
It's an anti-pattern to assign the result of git_path to a
variable, since other calls may reuse our buffer. In this
case, we feed the result to unlink_or_warn immediately
afterwards, so it's OK. However, it's nice to avoid
assignment entirely, which makes it more obvious that
there's no bug.

We can just pass the result directly to unlink_or_warn,
which is a known-simple function. As a bonus, the code flow
is a little more obvious, as we eliminate an extra
conditional (a reader does not have to wonder any more
"under which circumstances is 'path' set?").

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:37:12 -07:00
e3cf230324 prefer mkpathdup to mkpath in assignments
As with the previous commit to git_path, assigning the
result of mkpath is suspicious, since it is not clear
whether we will still depend on the value after it may have
been overwritten by subsequent calls. This patch converts
low-hanging fruit to use mkpathdup instead of mkpath (with
the downside that we must remember to free the result).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:37:12 -07:00
fcd12db6af prefer git_pathdup to git_path in some possibly-dangerous cases
Because git_path uses a static buffer that is shared with
calls to git_path, mkpath, etc, it can be dangerous to
assign the result to a variable or pass it to a non-trivial
function. The value may change unexpectedly due to other
calls.

None of the cases changed here has a known bug, but they're
worth converting away from git_path because:

  1. It's easy to use git_pathdup in these cases.

  2. They use constructs (like assignment) that make it
     hard to tell whether they're safe or not.

The extra malloc overhead should be trivial, as an
allocation should be an order of magnitude cheaper than a
system call (which we are clearly about to make, since we
are constructing a filename). The real cost is that we must
remember to free the result.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:37:12 -07:00
77b9b1d13a add_to_alternates_file: don't add duplicate entries
The add_to_alternates_file function blindly uses
hold_lock_file_for_append to copy the existing contents, and
then adds the new line to it. This has two minor problems:

  1. We might add duplicate entries, which are ugly and
     inefficient.

  2. We do not check that the file ends with a newline, in
     which case we would bogusly append to the final line.
     This is quite unlikely in practice, though, as we call
     this function only from git-clone, so presumably we are
     the only writers of the file (and we always add a
     newline).

Instead of using hold_lock_file_for_append, let's copy the
file line by line, which ensures all records are properly
terminated. If we see an extra line, we can simply abort the
update (there is no point in even copying the rest, as we
know that it would be identical to the original).

As a bonus, we also get rid of some calls to the
static-buffer mkpath and git_path functions.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:15:42 -07:00
bc192300c4 t5700: modernize style
The early part of this test is rather old, and does not
follow our usual style guidelines. In particular:

  - the tests liberally chdir, and expect out-of-test "cd"
    commands to return them to a sane state

  - test commands aren't indented at all

  - there are a lot of minor formatting nits, like the
    opening quote of the test block on the wrong line,
    spaces after ">", etc

This patch fixes the style issues, and uses a few helper
functions, along with subshells and "git -C", to avoid
changing the cwd of the main script.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:15:42 -07:00
f5895fd399 cache.h: complete set of git_path_submodule helpers
The git_path function has "git_pathdup" and
"strbuf_git_path" variants, but git_submodule_path only
comes in the dangerous, static-buffer variant. That makes
refactoring callers to use the safer functions hard (since
they don't exist).

Since we're already using a strbuf behind the scenes, it's
easy to expose all three of these interfaces with thin
wrappers.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:15:41 -07:00
69ddd231fe cache.h: clarify documentation for git_path, et al
The comment above these functions actually describes
sha1_file_name, and comes from the very first revision of
git. Commit 723c31f (Add "git_path()" and "head_ref()"
helper functions., 2005-07-05) added git_path, pushing the
comment away from the function it describes; later commits
added more functions in this block.

Let's fix the comment to describe these related functions in
more detail. Let's also make sure to point out their safer
alternatives (and move those alternatives below, which makes
more sense when reading the file).

Note that we do not need to move the existing comment to
sha1_file_name.  Commit d40d535 (sha1_file.c: document a
bunch of functions defined in the file, 2014-02-21) already
added a much more descriptive comment to it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 15:15:41 -07:00
6e122b449b setup_temporary_shallow(): use tempfile module
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 12:57:14 -07:00
f6ecc62dbf write_shared_index(): use tempfile module
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 12:57:14 -07:00
99397152a3 register_tempfile(): new function to handle an existing temporary file
Allow an existing file to be registered with the tempfile-handling
infrastructure; in particular, arrange for it to be deleted on program
exit. This can be used if the temporary file has to be created in a
more complicated way than just open(). For example:

* If the file itself needs to be created via the lockfile API
* If it is not a regular file (e.g., a socket)

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 12:57:14 -07:00
354ab11206 tempfile: add several functions for creating temporary files
Add several functions for creating temporary files with
automatically-generated names, analogous to mkstemps(), but also
arranging for the files to be deleted on program exit.

The functions are named according to a pattern depending how they
operate. They will be used to replace many places in the code where
temporary files are created and cleaned up ad-hoc.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 12:57:14 -07:00
7eba6ce5c7 prepare_tempfile_object(): new function, extracted from create_tempfile()
This makes the next step easier.

The old code used to use "path" to set the initial length of
tempfile->filename. This was not helpful because path was usually
relative whereas the value stored to filename will be absolute. So
just initialize the length to 0.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 12:57:14 -07:00
1a9d15db25 tempfile: a new module for handling temporary files
A lot of work went into defining the state diagram for lockfiles and
ensuring correct, race-resistant cleanup in all circumstances.

Most of that infrastructure can be applied directly to *any* temporary
file. So extract a new "tempfile" module from the "lockfile" module.
Reimplement lockfile on top of tempfile.

Subsequent commits will add more users of the new module.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 12:57:14 -07:00
9c77381d6a commit_lock_file(): use get_locked_file_path()
First beef up the sanity checking in get_locked_file_path() to match
that in commit_lock_file(). Then rewrite commit_lock_file() to use
get_locked_file_path() for its pathname computation.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 12:57:14 -07:00
b4fb09e4da lockfile: add accessor get_lock_file_path()
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 12:57:14 -07:00
c99a4c2db3 lockfile: add accessors get_lock_file_fd() and get_lock_file_fp()
We are about to move those members, so change client code to read them
through accessor functions.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 12:57:14 -07:00
e54c347c1c create_bundle(): duplicate file descriptor to avoid closing it twice
write_pack_data() passes bundle_fd to start_command() to be used as
the stdout of pack-objects. But start_command() closes its stdout if
it is > 1. This is a problem if bundle_fd is the fd of a lock_file,
because commit_lock_file() will also try to close the fd.

So the old code suppressed commit_lock_file()'s usual behavior of
closing the file descriptor by setting the lock_file object's fd field
to -1.

But this is not really kosher. Code here shouldn't be mutating fields
within the lock_file object.

Instead, duplicate the file descriptor before passing it to
write_pack_data(). Then that function can close its copy without
closing the copy held in the lock_file object.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 12:57:14 -07:00
2db69de81d lockfile: move documentation to lockfile.h and lockfile.c
Rearrange/rewrite it somewhat to fit its new environment.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 12:57:14 -07:00
3ebbd00cf3 strbuf_read(): skip unnecessary strbuf_grow() at eof
The loop in strbuf_read() uses xread() repeatedly while extending
the strbuf until the call returns zero.  If the buffer is
sufficiently large to begin with, this results in xread()
returning the remainder of the file to the end (returning
non-zero), the loop extending the strbuf, and then making another
call to xread() to have it return zero.

By using read_in_full(), we can tell when the read reached the end
of file: when it returns less than was requested, it's eof.  This
way we can avoid an extra iteration that allocates an extra 8kB
that is never used.

Signed-off-by: Jim Hill <gjthill@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 12:51:13 -07:00
cb5add5868 sha1_file.c: rename move_temp_to_file() to finalize_object_file()
Since 5a688fe4 ("core.sharedrepository = 0mode" should set, not
loosen, 2009-03-25), we kept reminding ourselves:

    NEEDSWORK: this should be renamed to finalize_temp_file() as
    "moving" is only a part of what it does, when no patch between
    master to pu changes the call sites of this function.

without doing anything about it.  Let's do so.

The purpose of this function was not to move but to finalize.  The
detail of the primarily implementation of finalizing was to link the
temporary file to its final name and then to unlink, which wasn't
even "moving".  The alternative implementation did "move" by calling
rename(2), which is a fun tangent.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 11:10:37 -07:00
adef9561f0 clone: abort if no dir name could be guessed
Due to various components of the URI being stripped off it may
happen that we fail to guess a directory name. We currently error
out with a message that it is impossible to create the working
tree '' in such cases. Instead, error out early with a sensible
error message hinting that a directory name should be specified
manually on the command line.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 11:02:11 -07:00
92722efec0 clone: do not use port number as dir name
If the URI contains a port number and the URI's path component is
empty we fail to guess a sensible directory name. E.g. cloning a
repository 'ssh://example.com:2222/' we guess a directory name
'2222' where we would want the hostname only, e.g. 'example.com'.

We need to take care to not drop trailing port-like numbers in
certain cases. E.g. when cloning a repository 'foo/bar:2222.git'
we want to guess the directory name '2222' instead of 'bar'.
Thus, we have to first check the stripped URI for path separators
and only strip port numbers if there are path separators present.
This heuristic breaks when cloning a repository 'bar:2222.git',
though.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 11:02:07 -07:00
e895986727 clone: do not include authentication data in guessed dir
If the URI contains authentication data and the URI's path
component is empty, we fail to guess a sensible directory name.
E.g. cloning a repository 'ssh://user:password@example.com/' we
guess a directory name 'password@example.com' where we would want
the hostname only, e.g. 'example.com'.

The naive way of just adding '@' as a path separator would break
cloning repositories like 'foo/bar@baz.git' (which would
currently become 'bar@baz' but would then become 'baz' only).
Instead fix this by first dropping the scheme and then greedily
scanning for an '@' sign until we find the first path separator.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 11:01:08 -07:00
db2e220447 clone: use computed length in guess_dir_name
Commit 7e837c6 (clone: simplify string handling in
guess_dir_name(), 2015-07-09) changed clone to use
strip_suffix instead of hand-rolled pointer manipulation.
However, strip_suffix will strip from the end of a
NUL-terminated string, and we may have already stripped some
characters (like directory separators, or "/.git"). This
leads to commands like:

  git clone host:foo.git/

failing to strip the ".git".

We must instead convert our pointer arithmetic into a
computed length and feed that to strip_suffix_mem, which will
then reduce the length further for us.

It would be nicer if we could drop the pointer manipulation
entirely, and just continually strip using strip_suffix. But
that doesn't quite work for two reasons:

  1. The early suffixes we're stripping are not constant; we
     need to look for is_dir_sep, which could be one of
     several characters.

  2. Mid-way through the stripping we compute the pointer
     "start", which shows us the beginning of the pathname.
     Which really give us two lengths to work with: the
     offset from the start of the string, and from the start
     of the path. By using pointers for the early part, we
     can just compute the length from "start" when we need
     it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 11:01:05 -07:00
d6a31e08cd clone: add tests for output directory
When we run "git clone $url", clone guesses from the $url
what to name the local output directory. We don't have any
test coverage of this, so let's add some basic tests.

This reveals a few problems:

  - cloning "foo.git/" does not properly remove the ".git";
    this is a recent regression from 7e837c6 (clone:
    simplify string handling in guess_dir_name(), 2015-07-09)

  - likewise, cloning foo/.git does not seem to handle the
    bare case (we should end up in foo.git, but we try to
    use foo/.git on the local end), which also comes from
    7e837c6.

  - cloning the root is not very smart about URL parsing,
    and usernames and port numbers may end up in the
    directory name

All of these tests are marked as failures.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 10:59:30 -07:00
905f2036d0 completion: list variable names reliably with 'git config --name-only'
Recenty I created a multi-line branch description with '.' and '='
characters on one of the lines, and noticed that fragments of that line
show up when completing set variable names for 'git config', e.g.:

  $ git config --get branch.b.description
  Branch description to fool the completion script with a
  second line containing dot . and equals = characters.
  $ git config --unset <TAB>
  ...
  second line containing dot . and equals
  ...

The completion script runs 'git config --list' and processes its output
to strip the values and keep only the variable names.  It does so by
looking for lines containing '.' and '=' and outputting everything
before the '=', which was fooled by my multi-line branch description.

A similar issue exists with aliases and pretty format aliases with
multi-line values, but in that case 'git config --get-regexp' is run and
lines in its output are simply stripped after the first space, so
subsequent lines don't even have to contain '.' and '=' to fool the
completion script.

Use the new '--name-only' option added in the previous commit to list
config variable names reliably in both cases, without error-prone post
processing.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 10:34:40 -07:00
578625fa91 config: add '--name-only' option to list only variable names
'git config' can only show values or name-value pairs, so if a shell
script needs the names of set config variables it has to run 'git config
--list' or '--get-regexp' and parse the output to separate config
variable names from their values.  However, such a parsing can't cope
with multi-line values.  Though 'git config' can produce null-terminated
output for newline-safe parsing, that's of no use in such a case, becase
shells can't cope with null characters.

Even our own bash completion script suffers from these issues.

Help the completion script, and shell scripts in general, by introducing
the '--name-only' option to modify the output of '--list' and
'--get-regexp' to list only the names of config variables, so they don't
have to perform error-prone post processing to separate variable names
from their values anymore.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-10 10:33:58 -07:00
4375c10e28 l10n: zh_CN: Add Surrounding Spaces
Some English words inside the Chinese sentences appear without
surrounding spaces, which are considered irregular.

This commit try to fix this issue, with the help of some regular
express patterns.

Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
2015-08-10 18:15:46 +08:00
e53a64b982 config.mak.uname: Cygwin needs OBJECT_CREATION_USES_RENAMES
This is necessary to use Git on Windows shared directories, and is
already enabled for the MinGW and plain Windows builds.

This problem was reported on the Cygwin mailing list at
https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2015-08/msg00102.html (amongst others)
and is being applied as a manual patch to the Cygwin builds until
the patch is taken here.

Reported-by: Peter Rosin <peda@lysator.liu.se>
Signed-off-by: Adam Dinwoodie <adam@dinwoodie.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-07 14:36:45 -07:00
9b5fe78b34 test-lib: disable trace when test is not verbose
The "-x" test-script option turns on the shell's "-x"
tracing, which can help show why a particular test is
failing. Unfortunately, this can create false negatives in
some tests if they invoke a shell function with its stderr
redirected. t5512.10 is such a test, as it does:

    test_must_fail git ls-remote refs*master >actual 2>&1 &&
    test_cmp exp actual

The "actual" file gets the "-x" trace for the test_must_fail
function, which prevents it from matching the expected
output.

There's no way to avoid this without managing the
trace flag inside each sub-function, which isn't really a
workable solution. But unless you specifically care about
t5512.10, we can work around it by enabling tracing only for
the specific tests we want.

You can already do:

    ./t5512-ls-remote.sh -x --verbose-only=16

to see the trace only for a specific test. But that doesn't
_disable_ the tracing in the other tests; it just sends it
to /dev/null. However, there's no point in generating a
trace that the user won't see, so we can simply disable
tracing whenever it doesn't have a matching verbose flag.

The normal case of just "./t5512-ls-remote.sh -x" stays the
same, as "-x" already implies "--verbose" (and
"--verbose-only" overrides "--verbose", which is why this
works at all). And for our test, we need only check
$verbose, as maybe_setup_verbose will have already
set that flag based on the $verbose_only list).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-07 11:52:46 -07:00
2a01ef8ca3 test-lib: turn off "-x" tracing during chain-lint check
Now that GIT_TEST_CHAIN_LINT is on by default, running:

    ./t0000-basic.sh -x --verbose-only=1

starts with:

    expecting success:
            find .git/objects -type f -print >should-be-empty &&
            test_line_count = 0 should-be-empty

    + exit 117
    error: last command exited with $?=117
    + find .git/objects -type f -print
    + test_line_count = 0 should-be-empty
    + test 3 != 3
    + wc -l
    + test 0 = 0
    ok 1 - .git/objects should be empty after git init in an empty repo

This is confusing, as the "exit 117" line and the error line
(which is printed in red, no less!) are not part of the test
at all, but are rather in the separate chain-lint test_eval.
Let's unset the "trace" variable when eval-ing the chain
lint check, which avoids this.

Note that we cannot just do a one-shot variable like:

    trace= test_eval ...

as the behavior of one-shot variables for function calls
is not portable.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-07 11:50:28 -07:00
2bc31d1631 refs: support negative transfer.hideRefs
If you hide a hierarchy of refs using the transfer.hideRefs
config, there is no way to later override that config to
"unhide" it. This patch implements a "negative" hide which
causes matches to immediately be marked as unhidden, even if
another match would hide it. We take care to apply the
matches in reverse-order from how they are fed to us by the
config machinery, as that lets our usual "last one wins"
config precedence work (and entries in .git/config, for
example, will override /etc/gitconfig).

So you can now do:

  $ git config --system transfer.hideRefs refs/secret
  $ git config transfer.hideRefs '!refs/secret/not-so-secret'

to hide refs/secret in all repos, except for one public bit
in one specific repo. Or you can even do:

  $ git clone \
      -u "git -c transfer.hiderefs="!refs/foo" upload-pack" \
      remote:repo.git

to clone remote:repo.git, overriding any hiding it has
configured.

There are two alternatives that were considered and
rejected:

  1. A generic config mechanism for removing an item from a
     list. E.g.: (e.g., "[transfer] hideRefs -= refs/foo").

     This is nice because it could apply to other
     multi-valued config, as well. But it is not nearly as
     flexible. There is no way to say:

       [transfer]
       hideRefs = refs/secret
       hideRefs = refs/secret/not-so-secret

     Having explicit negative specifications means we can
     override previous entries, even if they are not the
     same literal string.

  2. Adding another variable to override some parts of
     hideRefs (e.g., "exposeRefs").

     This solves the problem from alternative (1), but it
     cannot easily obey the normal config precedence,
     because it would use two separate lists. For example:

       [transfer]
       hideRefs = refs/secret
       exposeRefs = refs/secret/not-so-secret
       hideRefs = refs/secret/not-so-secret/no-really-its-secret

     With two lists, we have to apply the "expose" rules
     first, and only then apply the "hide" rules. But that
     does not match what the above config intends.

     Of course we could internally parse that to a single
     list, respecting the ordering, which saves us having to
     invent the new "!" syntax. But using a single name
     communicates to the user that the ordering _is_
     important. And "!" is well-known for negation, and
     should not appear at the beginning of a ref (it is
     actually valid in a ref-name, but all entries here
     should be fully-qualified, starting with "refs/").

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-07 11:47:36 -07:00
160fb2b28b l10n: zh_CN: Add translations for Git glossary
Add translations of Git glossary (most of them are from the command `git
help glossary`) in the header of `zh_CN.po`.  Also fixes some translations
according to this glossary, such as "pathspec", "repository", "refspec".

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
2015-08-07 17:59:31 +08:00
09bb6520d4 completion: offer '--edit-todo' during interactive rebase
Helped-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Helped-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@virtuell-zuhause.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-05 13:35:36 -07:00
faacc5aa7c tests: fix cleanup after tests in t1509-root-worktree
During cleanup we do a simple 'rm /*' to remove leftover files
from previous tests. As 'rm' errors out when there is anything it
cannot delete and there are directories present at '/' it will
throw an error, causing the '&&' chain to fail.

Fix this by explicitly removing the files.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-05 13:00:04 -07:00
24ca45f64c tests: fix broken && chains in t1509-root-worktree
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-05 12:59:56 -07:00
65f9b75dfe Documentation/git-worktree: fix duplicated 'from'
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Acked-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-05 12:57:14 -07:00
e97a5e765d git-am: add am.threeWay config variable
Add the am.threeWay configuration variable to use the -3 or --3way
option of git am by default. When am.threeway is set and not desired
for a specific git am command, the --no-3way option can be used to
override it.

Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
783d7e865e builtin-am: remove redirection to git-am.sh
At the beginning of the rewrite of git-am.sh to C, in order to not break
existing test scripts that depended on a functional git-am, a
redirection to git-am.sh was introduced that would activate if the
environment variable _GIT_USE_BUILTIN_AM was not defined.

Now that all of git-am.sh's functionality has been re-implemented in
builtin/am.c, remove this redirection, and retire git-am.sh into
contrib/examples/.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
5e4f9cff3c builtin-am: check for valid committer ident
When commit_tree() is called, if the user does not have an explicit
committer ident configured, it will attempt to construct a default
committer ident based on the user's and system's info (e.g. gecos field,
hostname etc.) However, if a default committer ident is unable to be
constructed, commit_tree() will die(), but at this point of git-am's
execution, there will already be changes made to the index and work
tree.

This can be confusing to new users, and as such since d64e6b0 (Keep
Porcelainish from failing by broken ident after making changes.,
2006-02-18) git-am.sh will check to see if the committer ident has been
configured, or a default one can be constructed, before even starting to
apply patches.

Re-implement this in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
c2676cde9f builtin-am: implement legacy -b/--binary option
The -b/--binary option was initially implemented in 087b674 (git-am:
--binary; document --resume and --binary., 2005-11-16). The option will
pass the --binary flag to git-apply to allow it to apply binary patches.

However, in 2b6eef9 (Make apply --binary a no-op., 2006-09-06), --binary
was been made a no-op in git-apply. Following that, since cb3a160
(git-am: ignore --binary option, 2008-08-09), the --binary option in
git-am is ignored as well.

In 6c15a1c (am: officially deprecate -b/--binary option, 2012-03-13),
the --binary option was tweaked to its present behavior: when set, the
message:

	The -b/--binary option has been a no-op for long time, and it
	will be removed. Please do not use it anymore.

will be printed.

Re-implement this in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
7ff2683253 builtin-am: implement -i/--interactive
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07),
git-am.sh supported the --interactive mode. After parsing the patch mail
and extracting the patch, commit message and authorship info, an
interactive session will begin that allows the user to choose between:

* applying the patch

* applying the patch and all subsequent patches (by disabling
  interactive mode in subsequent patches)

* skipping the patch

* editing the commit message

Since f89ad67 (Add [v]iew patch in git-am interactive., 2005-10-25),
git-am.sh --interactive also supported viewing the patch to be applied.

When --resolved-ing in --interactive mode, we need to take care to
update the patch with the contents of the index, such that the correct
patch will be displayed when the patch is viewed in interactive mode.

Re-implement the above in builtin/am.c

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
94cd175cff builtin-am: support and auto-detect mercurial patches
Since 0cfd112 (am: preliminary support for hg patches, 2011-08-29),
git-am.sh could convert mercurial patches to an RFC2822 mail patch
suitable for parsing with git-mailinfo, and queue them in the state
directory for application.

Since 15ced75 (git-am foreign patch support: autodetect some patch
formats, 2009-05-27), git-am.sh was able to auto-detect mercurial
patches by checking if the file begins with the line:

	# HG changeset patch

Re-implement the above in builtin/am.c.

Helped-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
336108c156 builtin-am: support and auto-detect StGit series files
Since c574e68 (git-am foreign patch support: StGIT support, 2009-05-27),
git-am.sh is able to read a single StGit series file and, for each StGit
patch listed in the file, convert the StGit patch into a RFC2822 mail
patch suitable for parsing with git-mailinfo, and queue them in the
state directory for applying.

Since 15ced75 (git-am foreign patch support: autodetect some patch
formats, 2009-05-27), git-am.sh is able to auto-detect StGit series
files by checking to see if the file starts with the string:

	# This series applies on GIT commit

Re-implement the above in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
5ae41c79b8 builtin-am: support and auto-detect StGit patches
Since c574e68 (git-am foreign patch support: StGIT support, 2009-05-27),
git-am.sh supported converting StGit patches into RFC2822 mail patches
that can be parsed with git-mailinfo.

Implement this by introducing two functions in builtin/am.c:
stgit_patch_to_mail() and split_mail_conv().

stgit_patch_to_mail() is a callback function for split_mail_conv(), and
contains the logic for converting an StGit patch into an RFC2822 mail
patch.

split_mail_conv() implements the logic to go through each file in the
`paths` list, reading from stdin where specified, and calls the callback
function to write the converted patch to the corresponding output file
in the state directory. This interface should be generic enough to
support other foreign patch formats in the future.

Since 15ced75 (git-am foreign patch support: autodetect some patch
formats, 2009-05-27), git-am.sh is able to auto-detect StGit patches.
Re-implement this in builtin/am.c.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
f1cb96d687 builtin-am: rerere support
git-am.sh will call git-rerere at the following events:

* "git rerere" when a three-way merge fails to record the conflicted
  automerge results. Since 8389b52 (git-rerere: reuse recorded resolve.,
  2006-01-28)

  * Since cb6020b (Teach --[no-]rerere-autoupdate option to merge,
    revert and friends, 2009-12-04), git-am.sh supports the
    --[no-]rerere-autoupdate option as well, and would pass it to
    git-rerere.

* "git rerere" when --resolved, to record the hand resolution. Since
  f131dd4 (rerere: record (or avoid misrecording) resolved, skipped or
  aborted rebase/am, 2006-12-08)

* "git rerere clear" when --skip-ing. Since f131dd4 (rerere: record (or
  avoid misrecording) resolved, skipped or aborted rebase/am,
  2006-12-08)

* "git rerere clear" when --abort-ing. Since 3e5057a (git am --abort,
  2008-07-16)

Re-implement the above in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
7088f8078a builtin-am: invoke post-applypatch hook
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07),
git-am.sh will invoke the post-applypatch hook after the patch is
applied and a commit is made. The exit code of the hook is ignored.

Re-implement this in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
6c24c5c0a5 builtin-am: invoke pre-applypatch hook
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07),
git-am.sg will invoke the pre-applypatch hook after applying the patch
to the index, but before a commit is made. Should the hook exit with a
non-zero status, git am will exit.

Re-implement this in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
b8803d8f8c builtin-am: invoke applypatch-msg hook
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07),
git-am.sh will invoke the applypatch-msg hooks just after extracting the
patch message. If the applypatch-msg hook exits with a non-zero status,
git-am.sh abort before even applying the patch to the index.

Re-implement this in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
88b291fe9d builtin-am: support automatic notes copying
Since eb2151b (rebase: support automatic notes copying, 2010-03-12),
git-am.sh supported automatic notes copying in --rebasing mode by
invoking "git notes copy" once it has finished applying all the patches.

Re-implement this feature in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
13b97ea5f0 builtin-am: invoke post-rewrite hook
Since 96e1948 (rebase: invoke post-rewrite hook, 2010-03-12), git-am.sh
will invoke the post-rewrite hook after it successfully finishes
applying all the queued patches.

To do this, when parsing a mail to extract its patch and metadata, in
--rebasing mode git-am.sh will also store the original commit ID in the
$state_dir/original-commit file. Once it applies and commits the patch,
the original commit ID, and the new commit ID, will be appended to the
$state_dir/rewritten file.

Once all of the queued mail have been processed, git-am.sh will then
invoke the post-rewrite hook with the contents of the
$state_dir/rewritten file.

Re-implement this in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
7e35dacbe3 builtin-am: implement -S/--gpg-sign, commit.gpgsign
Since 3b4e395 (am: add the --gpg-sign option, 2014-02-01), git-am.sh
supported the --gpg-sign option, and would pass it to git-commit-tree,
thus GPG-signing the commit object.

Re-implement this option in builtin/am.c.

git-commit-tree would also sign the commit by default if the
commit.gpgsign setting is true. Since we do not run commit-tree, we
re-implement this behavior by handling the commit.gpgsign setting
ourselves.

Helped-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
0cd4bcba67 builtin-am: implement --committer-date-is-author-date
Since 3f01ad6 (am: Add --committer-date-is-author-date option,
2009-01-22), git-am.sh implemented the --committer-date-is-author-date
option, which tells git-am to use the timestamp recorded in the email
message as both author and committer date.

Re-implement this option in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
f07adb62f2 builtin-am: implement --ignore-date
Since a79ec62 (git-am: Add --ignore-date option, 2009-01-24), git-am.sh
supported the --ignore-date option, and would use the current timestamp
instead of the one provided in the patch if the option was set.

Re-implement this option in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
257e8cecc1 builtin-am: pass git-apply's options to git-apply
git-am.sh recognizes some of git-apply's options, and would pass them to
git-apply:

* --whitespace, since 8c31cb8 (git-am: --whitespace=x option.,
  2006-02-28)

* -C, since 67dad68 (add -C[NUM] to git-am, 2007-02-08)

* -p, since 2092a1f (Teach git-am to pass -p option down to git-apply,
  2007-02-11)

* --directory, since b47dfe9 (git-am: add --directory=<dir> option,
  2009-01-11)

* --reject, since b80da42 (git-am: implement --reject option passed to
  git-apply, 2009-01-23)

* --ignore-space-change, --ignore-whitespace, since 86c91f9 (git apply:
  option to ignore whitespace differences, 2009-08-04)

* --exclude, since 77e9e49 (am: pass exclude down to apply, 2011-08-03)

* --include, since 58725ef (am: support --include option, 2012-03-28)

* --reject, since b80da42 (git-am: implement --reject option passed to
  git-apply, 2009-01-23)

Re-implement support for these options in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
9b646617b8 builtin-am: implement --[no-]scissors
Since 017678b (am/mailinfo: Disable scissors processing by default,
2009-08-26), git-am supported the --[no-]scissors option, passing it to
git-mailinfo.

Re-implement support for this option in builtin/am.c.

Since the default setting of --scissors in git-mailinfo can be
configured with mailinfo.scissors (and perhaps through other settings in
the future), to be safe we make an explicit distinction between
SCISSORS_UNSET, SCISSORS_TRUE and SCISSORS_FALSE.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
5d123a4017 builtin-am: support --keep-cr, am.keepcr
Since ad2c928 (git-am: Add command line parameter `--keep-cr` passing it
to git-mailsplit, 2010-02-27), git-am.sh supported the --keep-cr option
and would pass it to git-mailsplit.

Since e80d4cb (git-am: Add am.keepcr and --no-keep-cr to override it,
2010-02-27), git-am.sh supported the am.keepcr config setting, which
controls whether --keep-cr is on by default.

Re-implement the above in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
702cbaad61 builtin-am: implement --[no-]message-id, am.messageid
Since a078f73 (git-am: add --message-id/--no-message-id, 2014-11-25),
git-am.sh supported the --[no-]message-id options, and the
"am.messageid" setting which specifies the default option.

--[no-]message-id tells git-am whether or not the -m option should be
passed to git-mailinfo.

Re-implement this option in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
4f1b696175 builtin-am: implement -k/--keep, --keep-non-patch
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07),
git-am.sh supported the -k/--keep option to pass the -k option to
git-mailsplit.

Since f7e5ea1 (am: learn passing -b to mailinfo, 2012-01-16), git-am.sh
supported the --keep-non-patch option to pass the -b option to
git-mailsplit.

Re-implement these two options in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
ef7ee16d75 builtin-am: implement -u/--utf8
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07),
git-am.sh supported the -u,--utf8 option. If set, the -u option will be
passed to git-mailinfo to re-code the commit log message and authorship
in the charset specified by i18n.commitencoding. If unset, the -n option
will be passed to git-mailinfo, which disables the re-encoding.

Since d84029b (--utf8 is now default for 'git-am', 2007-01-08), --utf8
is specified by default in git-am.sh.

Re-implement the above in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
6d42ac2941 builtin-am: handle stray state directory
Should git-am terminate unexpectedly between the point where the state
directory is created, but the "next" and "last" files are not written
yet, a stray state directory will be left behind.

As such, since b141f3c (am: handle stray $dotest directory, 2013-06-15),
git-am.sh explicitly recognizes such a stray directory, and allows the
user to remove it with am --abort.

Re-implement this feature in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
df2760a576 builtin-am: bypass git-mailinfo when --rebasing
Since 5e835ca (rebase: do not munge commit log message, 2008-04-16),
git am --rebasing no longer gets the commit log message from the patch,
but reads it directly from the commit identified by the "From " header
line.

Since 43c2325 (am: use get_author_ident_from_commit instead of mailinfo
when rebasing, 2010-06-16), git am --rebasing also gets the author name,
email and date directly from the commit.

Since 0fbb95d (am: don't call mailinfo if $rebasing, 2012-06-26), git am
--rebasing does not use git-mailinfo to get the patch body, but rather
generates it directly from the commit itself.

The above 3 commits introduced a separate parse_mail() code path in
git-am.sh's --rebasing mode that bypasses git-mailinfo. Re-implement
this code path in builtin/am.c as parse_mail_rebase().

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
35bdcc59f6 builtin-am: implement --rebasing mode
Since 3041c32 (am: --rebasing, 2008-03-04), git-am.sh supported the
--rebasing option, which is used internally by git-rebase to tell git-am
that it is being used for its purpose. It would create the empty file
$state_dir/rebasing to help "completion" scripts tell if the ongoing
operation is am or rebase.

As of 0fbb95d (am: don't call mailinfo if $rebasing, 2012-06-26),
--rebasing also implies --3way as well.

Since a1549e1 (am: return control to caller, for housekeeping,
2013-05-12), git-am.sh would only clean up the state directory when it
is not --rebasing, instead deferring cleanup to git-rebase.sh.

Re-implement the above in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
84f3de28ba builtin-am: implement --3way
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07),
git-am.sh supported the --3way option, and if set, would attempt to do a
3-way merge if the initial patch application fails.

Since 5d86861 (am -3: list the paths that needed 3-way fallback,
2012-03-28), in a 3-way merge git-am.sh would list the paths that needed
3-way fallback, so that the user can review them more carefully to spot
mismerges.

Re-implement the above in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
d23a5117f8 cache-tree: introduce write_index_as_tree()
A caller may wish to write a temporary index as a tree. However,
write_cache_as_tree() assumes that the index was read from, and will
write to, the default index file path. Introduce write_index_as_tree()
which removes this limitation by allowing the caller to specify its own
index_state and index file path.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
eb898b83f2 builtin-am: implement -s/--signoff
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07), git-am
supported the --signoff option which will append a signoff at the end of
the commit messsage. Re-implement this feature in parse_mail() by
calling append_signoff() if the option is set.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
2d83109aab builtin-am: exit with user friendly message on failure
Since ced9456 (Give the user a hint for how to continue in the case that
git-am fails because it requires user intervention, 2006-05-02), git-am
prints additional information on how the user can re-invoke git-am to
resume patch application after resolving the failure. Re-implement this
through the die_user_resolve() function.

Since cc12005 (Make git rebase interactive help match documentation.,
2006-05-13), git-am supports the --resolvemsg option which is used by
git-rebase to override the message printed out when git-am fails.
Re-implement this option.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
5d28cf7819 builtin-am: implement -q/--quiet
Since 0e987a1 (am, rebase: teach quiet option, 2009-06-16), git-am
supported the --quiet option, and when told to be quiet, would only
speak on failure. Re-implement this by introducing the say() function,
which works like fprintf_ln(), but would only write to the stream when
state->quiet is false.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
8d18550318 builtin-am: reject patches when there's a session in progress
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07), git-am
would error out if the user gave it mbox(s) on the command-line, but
there was a session in progress.

Since c95b138 (Fix git-am safety checks, 2006-09-15), git-am would
detect if the user attempted to feed it a mbox via stdin, by checking if
stdin is not a tty and there is no resume command given.

Re-implement the above two safety checks.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
33388a71d2 builtin-am: implement --abort
Since 3e5057a (git am --abort, 2008-07-16), git-am supported the --abort
option that will rewind HEAD back to the original commit. Re-implement
this through am_abort().

Since 7b3b7e3 (am --abort: keep unrelated commits since the last failure
and warn, 2010-12-21), to prevent commits made since the last failure
from being lost, git-am will not rewind HEAD back to the original
commit if HEAD moved since the last failure. Re-implement this through
safe_to_abort().

Helped-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
9990080c9d builtin-am: implement --skip
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07), git-am
supported resuming from a failed patch application by skipping the
current patch. Re-implement this feature by introducing am_skip().

Helped-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
8c7b1563ee builtin-am: don't parse mail when resuming
Since 271440e (git-am: make it easier after fixing up an unapplicable
patch., 2005-10-25), when "git am" is run again after being paused, the
current mail message will not be re-parsed, but instead the contents of
the state directory's patch, msg and author-script files will be used
as-is instead.

Re-implement this in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
240bfd2de9 builtin-am: implement --resolved/--continue
Since 0c15cc9 (git-am: --resolved., 2005-11-16), git-am supported
resuming from a failed patch application. The user will manually apply
the patch, and the run git am --resolved which will then commit the
resulting index. Re-implement this feature by introducing am_resolve().

Since it makes no sense for the user to run am --resolved when there is
no session in progress, we error out in this case.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
32a5fcbfe9 builtin-am: refuse to apply patches if index is dirty
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07), git-am
will refuse to apply patches if the index is dirty. Re-implement this
behavior in builtin/am.c.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
c9e8d960b6 builtin-am: implement committing applied patch
Implement do_commit(), which commits the index which contains the
results of applying the patch, along with the extracted commit message
and authorship information.

Since 29b6754 (am: remove rebase-apply directory before gc, 2010-02-22),
git gc --auto is also invoked to pack the loose objects that are created
from making the commits.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
38a824fe05 builtin-am: apply patch with git-apply
Implement applying the patch to the index using git-apply.

If a file is unchanged but stat-dirty, git-apply may erroneously fail to
apply patches, thinking that they conflict with a dirty working tree.

As such, since 2a6f08a (am: refresh the index at start and --resolved,
2011-08-15), git-am will refresh the index before applying patches.
Re-implement this behavior.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
3e20dcf367 builtin-am: extract patch and commit info with git-mailinfo
For the purpose of applying the patch and committing the results,
implement extracting the patch data, commit message and authorship from
an e-mail message using git-mailinfo.

git-mailinfo is run as a separate process, but ideally in the future,
we should be be able to access its functionality directly without
spawning a new process.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
c29807b27d builtin-am: auto-detect mbox patches
Since 15ced75 (git-am foreign patch support: autodetect some patch
formats, 2009-05-27), git-am.sh is able to autodetect mbox, stgit and
mercurial patches through heuristics.

Re-implement support for autodetecting mbox/maildir files in
builtin/am.c.

RFC 2822 requires that lines are terminated by "\r\n". To support this,
implement strbuf_getline_crlf(), which will remove both '\n' and "\r\n"
from the end of the line.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
11c2177f2c builtin-am: split out mbox/maildir patches with git-mailsplit
git-am.sh supports mbox, stgit and mercurial patches. Re-implement
support for splitting out mbox/maildirs using git-mailsplit, while also
implementing the framework required to support other patch formats in
the future.

Re-implement support for the --patch-format option (since a5a6755
(git-am foreign patch support: introduce patch_format, 2009-05-27)) to
allow the user to choose between the different patch formats.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
8c3bd9e288 builtin-am: implement patch queue mechanism
git-am applies a series of patches. If the process terminates
abnormally, we want to be able to resume applying the series of patches.
This requires the session state to be saved in a persistent location.

Implement the mechanism of a "patch queue", represented by 2 integers --
the index of the current patch we are applying and the index of the last
patch, as well as its lifecycle through the following functions:

* am_setup(), which will set up the state directory
  $GIT_DIR/rebase-apply. As such, even if the process exits abnormally,
  the last-known state will still persist.

* am_load(), which is called if there is an am session in
  progress, to load the last known state from the state directory so we
  can resume applying patches.

* am_run(), which will do the actual patch application. After applying a
  patch, it calls am_next() to increment the current patch index. The
  logic for applying and committing a patch is not implemented yet.

* am_destroy(), which is finally called when we successfully applied all
  the patches in the queue, to clean up by removing the state directory
  and its contents.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
73c2779f42 builtin-am: implement skeletal builtin am
For the purpose of rewriting git-am.sh into a C builtin, implement a
skeletal builtin/am.c that redirects to $GIT_EXEC_PATH/git-am if the
environment variable _GIT_USE_BUILTIN_AM is not defined. Since in the
Makefile git-am.sh takes precedence over builtin/am.c,
$GIT_EXEC_PATH/git-am will contain the shell script git-am.sh, and thus
this allows us to fall back on the functional git-am.sh when running the
test suite for tests that depend on a working git-am implementation.

Since git-am.sh cannot handle any environment modifications by
setup_git_directory(), "am" is declared with no setup flags in git.c. On
the other hand, to re-implement git-am.sh in builtin/am.c, we need to
run all the git dir and work tree setup logic that git.c typically does
for us. As such, we work around this temporarily by copying the logic in
git.c's run_builtin(), which is roughly:

	prefix = setup_git_directory();
	trace_repo_setup(prefix);
	setup_work_tree();

This redirection should be removed when all the features of git-am.sh
have been re-implemented in builtin/am.c.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
260eec2927 wrapper: implement xfopen()
A common usage pattern of fopen() is to check if it succeeded, and die()
if it failed:

	FILE *fp = fopen(path, "w");
	if (!fp)
		die_errno(_("could not open '%s' for writing"), path);

Implement a wrapper function xfopen() for the above, so that we can save
a few lines of code and make the die() messages consistent.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
3ff53df7b4 wrapper: implement xopen()
A common usage pattern of open() is to check if it was successful, and
die() if it was not:

	int fd = open(path, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT, 0777);
	if (fd < 0)
		die_errno(_("Could not open '%s' for writing."), path);

Implement a wrapper function xopen() that does the above so that we can
save a few lines of code, and make the die() messages consistent.

Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-04 22:02:11 -07:00
ae25fd39bc transport-helper: die on errors reading refs.
We check the return value of read_ref in 19 out of 21 cases.
This adds checks to the missing cases.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 13:03:58 -07:00
06e6a74506 bisect: allow setting any user-specified in 'git bisect start'
This allows a natural user-interface when looking for any change in the
code, not just regression. For example:

git bisect start --term-old fast --term-new slow
git bisect fast
git bisect slow
...

There were several proposed user-interfaces for this feature. This patch
implements it as options to 'git bisect start' for the following reasons:

* By construction, the terms will be valid for one and only one
  bisection.

* Unlike positional arguments, using named options avoid having to
  remember an order.

* We can combine user-defined terms and passing old/new commits as
  argument to "git bisect start".

* The implementation is relatively simple.

See previous discussions:

  http://mid.gmane.org/1435337896-20709-3-git-send-email-Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 11:42:43 -07:00
4a6ada32cb bisect: don't mix option parsing and non-trivial code
As-is, the revisions that appear on the command-line are processed in
order. This would mix badly with code that changes the configuration
(e.g. change $TERM_GOOD and $TERM_BAD) while processing the options.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 11:42:42 -07:00
21b55e3369 bisect: add 'git bisect terms' to view the current terms
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 11:42:42 -07:00
21e5cfd8b3 bisect: add the terms old/new
When not looking for a regression during a bisect but for a fix or a
change in another given property, it can be confusing to use 'good'
and 'bad'.

This patch introduce `git bisect new` and `git bisect old` as an
alternative to 'bad' and good': the commits which have a certain
property must be marked as `new` and the ones which do not as `old`.

The output will be the first commit after the change in the property.
During a new/old bisect session you cannot use bad/good commands and
vice-versa.

Some commands are still not available for old/new:
     * git rev-list --bisect does not treat the revs/bisect/new and
       revs/bisect/old-SHA1 files.

Old discussions:
	- http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/86063
		introduced bisect fix unfixed to find fix.
	- http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/182398
		discussion around bisect yes/no or old/new.
	- http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/199758
		last discussion and reviews
New discussions:
	- http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/271320
		( v2 1/7-4/7 )
	- http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/271343
		( v2 5/7-7/7 )

Signed-off-by: Antoine Delaite <antoine.delaite@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Louis Stuber <stuberl@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Valentin Duperray <Valentin.Duperray@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Franck Jonas <Franck.Jonas@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Lucien Kong <Lucien.Kong@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Nguy <Thomas.Nguy@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Huynh Khoi Nguyen Nguyen <Huynh-Khoi-Nguyen.Nguyen@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 11:42:42 -07:00
fe67687bb1 bisect: sanity check on terms
This is currently only a defensive check since the only terms are
bad/good and new/old, which pass it, but this is a preparation step for
accepting user-supplied terms.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 11:42:42 -07:00
cb46d630ba bisect: simplify the addition of new bisect terms
We create a file BISECT_TERMS in the repository .git to be read during a
bisection. There's no user-interface yet, but "git bisect" works if terms
other than old/new or bad/good are set in .git/BISECT_TERMS. The
fonctions to be changed if we add new terms are quite few.

In git-bisect.sh:
	check_and_set_terms
	bisect_voc

Co-authored-by: Louis Stuber <stuberl@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Tweaked-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Antoine Delaite <antoine.delaite@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Louis Stuber <stuberl@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Valentin Duperray <Valentin.Duperray@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Franck Jonas <Franck.Jonas@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Lucien Kong <Lucien.Kong@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Nguy <Thomas.Nguy@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Huynh Khoi Nguyen Nguyen <Huynh-Khoi-Nguyen.Nguyen@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 11:42:41 -07:00
efc8a625e9 Sync with maint
* maint:
  Git 2.4.8
2015-08-03 11:20:07 -07:00
eb67052b13 First batch for 2.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 11:19:36 -07:00
12b7eda44e Merge branch 'es/doc-clean-outdated-tools'
* es/doc-clean-outdated-tools:
  Documentation/git-tools: retire manually-maintained list
  Documentation/git-tools: drop references to defunct tools
  Documentation/git-tools: fix item text formatting
  Documentation/git-tools: improve discoverability of Git wiki
  Documentation/git: drop outdated Cogito reference
2015-08-03 11:01:32 -07:00
8d3981ccbe Merge branch 'jk/refspec-parse-wildcard'
Allow an asterisk as a substring (as opposed to the entirety) of
a path component for both side of a refspec, e.g.
"refs/heads/o*:refs/remotes/heads/i*".

* jk/refspec-parse-wildcard:
  refs: loosen restriction on wildcard "*" refspecs
  refs: cleanup comments regarding check_refname_component()
2015-08-03 11:01:31 -07:00
7a06e63f82 Merge branch 'da/subtree-date-confusion'
"git subtree" (in contrib/) depended on "git log" output to be
stable, which was a no-no.  Apply a workaround to force a
particular date format.

* da/subtree-date-confusion:
  contrib/subtree: ignore log.date configuration
2015-08-03 11:01:31 -07:00
0baebca51e Merge branch 'jx/do-not-crash-receive-pack-wo-head'
An attempt to delete a ref by pushing into a repositorywhose HEAD
symbolic reference points at an unborn branch that cannot be
created due to ref D/F conflict (e.g. refs/heads/a/b exists, HEAD
points at refs/heads/a) failed.

* jx/do-not-crash-receive-pack-wo-head:
  receive-pack: crash when checking with non-exist HEAD
2015-08-03 11:01:31 -07:00
0c54706528 Merge branch 'db/send-pack-user-signingkey'
The low-level "git send-pack" did not honor 'user.signingkey'
configuration variable when sending a signed-push.

* db/send-pack-user-signingkey:
  builtin/send-pack.c: respect user.signingkey
2015-08-03 11:01:30 -07:00
c12401705c Merge branch 'zb/userdiff-fountain'
New userdiff pattern definition for fountain screenwriting markup
format.

* zb/userdiff-fountain:
  userdiff: add support for Fountain documents
2015-08-03 11:01:29 -07:00
b6d323f164 Merge branch 'dt/refs-backend-preamble'
In preparation for allowing different "backends" to store the refs
in a way different from the traditional "one ref per file in $GIT_DIR
or in a $GIT_DIR/packed-refs file" filesystem storage, reduce
direct filesystem access to ref-like things like CHERRY_PICK_HEAD
from scripts and programs.

* dt/refs-backend-preamble:
  git-stash: use update-ref --create-reflog instead of creating files
  update-ref and tag: add --create-reflog arg
  refs: add REF_FORCE_CREATE_REFLOG flag
  git-reflog: add exists command
  refs: new public ref function: safe_create_reflog
  refs: break out check for reflog autocreation
  refs.c: add err arguments to reflog functions
2015-08-03 11:01:29 -07:00
8348bf1b69 Merge branch 'as/sparse-checkout-removal'
"sparse checkout" misbehaved for a path that is excluded from the
checkout when switching between branches that differ at the path.

* as/sparse-checkout-removal:
  unpack-trees: don't update files with CE_WT_REMOVE set
2015-08-03 11:01:28 -07:00
d939af12bd Merge branch 'jk/date-mode-format'
Teach "git log" and friends a new "--date=format:..." option to
format timestamps using system's strftime(3).

* jk/date-mode-format:
  strbuf: make strbuf_addftime more robust
  introduce "format" date-mode
  convert "enum date_mode" into a struct
  show-branch: use DATE_RELATIVE instead of magic number
2015-08-03 11:01:27 -07:00
980a3d3dd7 Merge branch 'pt/am-tests'
* pt/am-tests:
  t3901: test git-am encoding conversion
  t3418: non-interactive rebase --continue with rerere enabled
  t4150: tests for am --[no-]scissors
  t4150: am with post-applypatch hook
  t4150: am with pre-applypatch hook
  t4150: am with applypatch-msg hook
  t4150: am --resolved fails if index has unmerged entries
  t4150: am --resolved fails if index has no changes
  t4150: am refuses patches when paused
  t4151: am --abort will keep dirty index intact
  t4150: am fails if index is dirty
  t4150: am.messageid really adds the message id
2015-08-03 11:01:27 -07:00
461c119739 Merge branch 'sg/bash-prompt-untracked-optim'
Optimize computation of untracked status indicator by bash prompt
script (in contrib/).

* sg/bash-prompt-untracked-optim:
  bash prompt: faster untracked status indicator with untracked directories
  bash prompt: test untracked files status indicator with untracked dirs
2015-08-03 11:01:26 -07:00
8e699cdb9f Merge branch 'cb/uname-in-untracked'
An experimental "untracked cache" feature used uname(2) in a
slightly unportable way.

* cb/uname-in-untracked:
  untracked: fix detection of uname(2) failure
2015-08-03 11:01:26 -07:00
c0b901eaf7 Merge branch 'se/doc-checkout-ours-theirs'
A "rebase" replays changes of the local branch on top of something
else, as such they are placed in stage #3 and referred to as
"theirs", while the changes in the new base, typically a foreign
work, are placed in stage #2 and referred to as "ours".  Clarify
the "checkout --ours/--theirs".

* se/doc-checkout-ours-theirs:
  checkout: document subtlety around --ours/--theirs
2015-08-03 11:01:25 -07:00
2bf2d819e1 Merge branch 'ib/scripted-parse-opt-better-hint-string'
The "rev-parse --parseopt" mode parsed the option specification
and the argument hint in a strange way to allow '=' and other
special characters in the option name while forbidding them from
the argument hint.  This made it impossible to define an option
like "--pair <key>=<value>" with "pair=key=value" specification,
which instead would have defined a "--pair=key <value>" option.

* ib/scripted-parse-opt-better-hint-string:
  rev-parse --parseopt: allow [*=?!] in argument hints
2015-08-03 11:01:24 -07:00
3ecca8879a Merge branch 'mh/fast-import-optimize-current-from'
Often a fast-import stream builds a new commit on top of the
previous commit it built, and it often unconditionally emits a
"from" command to specify the first parent, which can be omitted in
such a case.  This caused fast-import to forget the tree of the
previous commit and then re-read it from scratch, which was
inefficient.  Optimize for this common case.

* mh/fast-import-optimize-current-from:
  fast-import: do less work when given "from" matches current branch head
2015-08-03 11:01:24 -07:00
85df7cd487 Merge branch 'kn/tag-doc-fix'
* kn/tag-doc-fix:
  Documentation/tag: remove double occurance of "<pattern>"
2015-08-03 11:01:24 -07:00
c0d503433f Merge branch 'mh/fast-import-get-mark'
"git fast-import" learned to respond to the get-mark command via
its cat-blob-fd interface.

* mh/fast-import-get-mark:
  fast-import: add a get-mark command
2015-08-03 11:01:23 -07:00
3a760cad79 Merge branch 'gr/rebase-i-drop-warn'
Add "drop commit-object-name subject" command as another way to
skip replaying of a commit in "rebase -i", and then punish those
who do not use it (and instead just remove the lines) by throwing
a warning.

* gr/rebase-i-drop-warn:
  git rebase -i: add static check for commands and SHA-1
  git rebase -i: warn about removed commits
  git-rebase -i: add command "drop" to remove a commit
2015-08-03 11:01:22 -07:00
720e20eb68 Merge branch 'jc/commit-slab'
Memory use reduction when commit-slab facility is used to annotate
sparsely (which is not recommended in the first place).

* jc/commit-slab:
  commit-slab: introduce slabname##_peek() function
2015-08-03 11:01:21 -07:00
2dded96052 Merge branch 'dt/log-follow-config'
Add a new configuration variable to enable "--follow" automatically
when "git log" is run with one pathspec argument.

* dt/log-follow-config:
  log: add "log.follow" configuration variable
2015-08-03 11:01:20 -07:00
178d2c7a7f Merge branch 'gp/status-rebase-i-info'
Teach "git status" to show a more detailed information regarding
the "rebase -i" session in progress.

* gp/status-rebase-i-info:
  status: add new tests for status during rebase -i
  status: give more information during rebase -i
  status: differentiate interactive from non-interactive rebases
  status: factor two rebase-related messages together
2015-08-03 11:01:20 -07:00
d2c3464fef Merge branch 'jk/cat-file-batch-all'
"cat-file" learned "--batch-all-objects" option to enumerate all
available objects in the repository more quickly than "rev-list
--all --objects" (the output includes unreachable objects, though).

* jk/cat-file-batch-all:
  cat-file: sort and de-dup output of --batch-all-objects
  cat-file: add --batch-all-objects option
  cat-file: split batch_one_object into two stages
  cat-file: stop returning value from batch_one_object
  cat-file: add --buffer option
  cat-file: move batch_options definition to top of file
  cat-file: minor style fix in options list
2015-08-03 11:01:19 -07:00
b2f44feba5 Merge branch 'js/fsck-opt'
Allow ignoring fsck errors on specific set of known-to-be-bad
objects, and also tweaking warning level of various kinds of non
critical breakages reported.

* js/fsck-opt:
  fsck: support ignoring objects in `git fsck` via fsck.skiplist
  fsck: git receive-pack: support excluding objects from fsck'ing
  fsck: introduce `git fsck --connectivity-only`
  fsck: support demoting errors to warnings
  fsck: document the new receive.fsck.<msg-id> options
  fsck: allow upgrading fsck warnings to errors
  fsck: optionally ignore specific fsck issues completely
  fsck: disallow demoting grave fsck errors to warnings
  fsck: add a simple test for receive.fsck.<msg-id>
  fsck: make fsck_tag() warn-friendly
  fsck: handle multiple authors in commits specially
  fsck: make fsck_commit() warn-friendly
  fsck: make fsck_ident() warn-friendly
  fsck: report the ID of the error/warning
  fsck (receive-pack): allow demoting errors to warnings
  fsck: offer a function to demote fsck errors to warnings
  fsck: provide a function to parse fsck message IDs
  fsck: introduce identifiers for fsck messages
  fsck: introduce fsck options
2015-08-03 11:01:18 -07:00
be9cb560e3 Merge branch 'mh/init-delete-refs-api'
Clean up refs API and make "git clone" less intimate with the
implementation detail.

* mh/init-delete-refs-api:
  delete_ref(): use the usual convention for old_sha1
  cmd_update_ref(): make logic more straightforward
  update_ref(): don't read old reference value before delete
  check_branch_commit(): make first parameter const
  refs.h: add some parameter names to function declarations
  refs: move the remaining ref module declarations to refs.h
  initial_ref_transaction_commit(): check for ref D/F conflicts
  initial_ref_transaction_commit(): check for duplicate refs
  refs: remove some functions from the module's public interface
  initial_ref_transaction_commit(): function for initial ref creation
  repack_without_refs(): make function private
  prune_refs(): use delete_refs()
  prune_remote(): use delete_refs()
  delete_refs(): bail early if the packed-refs file cannot be rewritten
  delete_refs(): make error message more generic
  delete_refs(): new function for the refs API
  delete_ref(): handle special case more explicitly
  remove_branches(): remove temporary
  delete_ref(): move declaration to refs.h
2015-08-03 11:01:17 -07:00
5f02274e4c Merge branch 'pt/pull-builtin'
Reimplement 'git pull' in C.

* pt/pull-builtin:
  pull: remove redirection to git-pull.sh
  pull --rebase: error on no merge candidate cases
  pull --rebase: exit early when the working directory is dirty
  pull: configure --rebase via branch.<name>.rebase or pull.rebase
  pull: teach git pull about --rebase
  pull: set reflog message
  pull: implement pulling into an unborn branch
  pull: fast-forward working tree if head is updated
  pull: check if in unresolved merge state
  pull: support pull.ff config
  pull: error on no merge candidates
  pull: pass git-fetch's options to git-fetch
  pull: pass git-merge's options to git-merge
  pull: pass verbosity, --progress flags to fetch and merge
  pull: implement fetch + merge
  pull: implement skeletal builtin pull
  argv-array: implement argv_array_pushv()
  parse-options-cb: implement parse_opt_passthru_argv()
  parse-options-cb: implement parse_opt_passthru()
2015-08-03 11:01:17 -07:00
0b9ce18ede Merge branch 'jk/pkt-log-pack'
Enhance packet tracing machinery to allow capturing an incoming
pack data to a file for debugging.

* jk/pkt-log-pack:
  pkt-line: support tracing verbatim pack contents
  pkt-line: tighten sideband PACK check when tracing
  pkt-line: simplify starts_with checks in packet tracing
2015-08-03 11:01:16 -07:00
9f56db7caf Merge branch 'mr/rebase-i-customize-insn-sheet'
"git rebase -i"'s list of todo is made configurable.

* mr/rebase-i-customize-insn-sheet:
  git-rebase--interactive.sh: add config option for custom instruction format
2015-08-03 11:01:16 -07:00
8f50e2eef7 Merge branch 'rl/send-email-aliases'
"git send-email" now performs alias-expansion on names that are
given via --cccmd, etc.

This round comes with a lot more enhanced e-mail address parser,
which makes it a bit scary, but as long as it works as designed, it
makes it wonderful ;-).

* rl/send-email-aliases:
  send-email: suppress meaningless whitespaces in from field
  send-email: allow multiple emails using --cc, --to and --bcc
  send-email: consider quote as delimiter instead of character
  send-email: reduce dependencies impact on parse_address_line
  send-email: minor code refactoring
  send-email: allow use of aliases in the From field of --compose mode
  send-email: refactor address list process
  t9001-send-email: refactor header variable fields replacement
  send-email: allow aliases in patch header and command script outputs
  t9001-send-email: move script creation in a setup test
2015-08-03 11:01:15 -07:00
81bc521af2 Merge branch 'kb/i18n-doc'
* kb/i18n-doc:
  Documentation/i18n.txt: clarify character encoding support
2015-08-03 11:01:15 -07:00
a3f4eb1b40 Merge branch 'nd/export-worktree'
Running an aliased command from a subdirectory when the .git thing
in the working tree is a gitfile pointing elsewhere did not work.

* nd/export-worktree:
  setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when work tree is set, like $GIT_DIR
2015-08-03 11:01:14 -07:00
54d673f25d Merge branch 'ee/clean-remove-dirs'
Replace "is this subdirectory a separate repository that should not
be touched?" check "git clean" does by checking if it has .git/HEAD
using the submodule-related code with a more optimized check.

* ee/clean-remove-dirs:
  read_gitfile_gently: fix use-after-free
  clean: improve performance when removing lots of directories
  p7300: add performance tests for clean
  t7300: add tests to document behavior of clean and nested git
  setup: sanity check file size in read_gitfile_gently
  setup: add gentle version of read_gitfile
2015-08-03 11:01:13 -07:00
e12b51e4d6 Merge branch 'cb/parse-magnitude'
Move machinery to parse human-readable scaled numbers like 1k, 4M,
and 2G as an option parameter's value from pack-objects to
parse-options API, to make it available to other codepaths.

* cb/parse-magnitude:
  parse-options: move unsigned long option parsing out of pack-objects.c
  test-parse-options: update to handle negative ints
2015-08-03 11:01:13 -07:00
ba12cb299f Merge branch 'bc/gpg-verify-raw'
"git verify-tag" and "git verify-commit" have been taught to share
more code, and then learned to optionally show the verification
message from the underlying GPG implementation.

* bc/gpg-verify-raw:
  verify-tag: add option to print raw gpg status information
  verify-commit: add option to print raw gpg status information
  gpg: centralize printing signature buffers
  gpg: centralize signature check
  verify-commit: add test for exit status on untrusted signature
  verify-tag: share code with verify-commit
  verify-tag: add tests
2015-08-03 11:01:12 -07:00
e7cf4b2571 Merge branch 'pt/am-foreign'
Various enhancements around "git am" reading patches generated by
foreign SCM.

* pt/am-foreign:
  am: teach mercurial patch parser how to read from stdin
  am: use gmtime() to parse mercurial patch date
  t4150: test applying StGit series
  am: teach StGit patch parser how to read from stdin
  t4150: test applying StGit patch
2015-08-03 11:01:12 -07:00
7ebc8cbedd Merge branch 'kn/for-each-ref'
GSoC project to rebuild ref listing by branch and tag based on the
for-each-ref machinery.  This is its first part.

* kn/for-each-ref:
  ref-filter: make 'ref_array_item' use a FLEX_ARRAY for refname
  for-each-ref: introduce filter_refs()
  ref-filter: move code from 'for-each-ref'
  ref-filter: add 'ref-filter.h'
  for-each-ref: rename variables called sort to sorting
  for-each-ref: rename some functions and make them public
  for-each-ref: introduce 'ref_array_clear()'
  for-each-ref: introduce new structures for better organisation
  for-each-ref: rename 'refinfo' to 'ref_array_item'
  for-each-ref: clean up code
  for-each-ref: extract helper functions out of grab_single_ref()
2015-08-03 11:01:11 -07:00
31a0ad5456 Merge branch 'mh/replace-refs'
Add an environment variable to tell Git to look into refs hierarchy
other than refs/replace/ for the object replacement data.

* mh/replace-refs:
  Allow to control where the replace refs are looked for
2015-08-03 11:01:10 -07:00
e88b8586bf Sync with 2.4.8
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:45:34 -07:00
8545932d45 Git 2.4.8
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:43:01 -07:00
29dce32f79 Merge branch 'js/rebase-i-clean-up-upon-continue-to-skip' into maint
Abandoning an already applied change in "git rebase -i" with
"--continue" left CHERRY_PICK_HEAD and confused later steps.

* js/rebase-i-clean-up-upon-continue-to-skip:
  rebase -i: do not leave a CHERRY_PICK_HEAD file behind
  t3404: demonstrate CHERRY_PICK_HEAD bug
2015-08-03 10:41:34 -07:00
de67af4a8f Merge branch 'ss/clone-guess-dir-name-simplify' into maint
Code simplification.

* ss/clone-guess-dir-name-simplify:
  clone: simplify string handling in guess_dir_name()
2015-08-03 10:41:33 -07:00
44737c4228 Merge branch 'sg/completion-commit-cleanup' into maint
* sg/completion-commit-cleanup:
  completion: teach 'scissors' mode to 'git commit --cleanup='
2015-08-03 10:41:33 -07:00
c36e465aca Merge branch 'pt/am-abort-fix' into maint
Various fixes around "git am" that applies a patch to a history
that is not there yet.

* pt/am-abort-fix:
  am --abort: keep unrelated commits on unborn branch
  am --abort: support aborting to unborn branch
  am --abort: revert changes introduced by failed 3way merge
  am --skip: support skipping while on unborn branch
  am -3: support 3way merge on unborn branch
  am --skip: revert changes introduced by failed 3way merge
2015-08-03 10:41:32 -07:00
0533a9b70c Merge branch 'mh/reporting-broken-refs-from-for-each-ref' into maint
"git for-each-ref" reported "missing object" for 0{40} when it
encounters a broken ref.  The lack of object whose name is 0{40} is
not the problem; the ref being broken is.

* mh/reporting-broken-refs-from-for-each-ref:
  read_loose_refs(): treat NULL_SHA1 loose references as broken
  read_loose_refs(): simplify function logic
  for-each-ref: report broken references correctly
  t6301: new tests of for-each-ref error handling
2015-08-03 10:41:31 -07:00
a94594dcf7 Merge branch 'sg/commit-cleanup-scissors' into maint
"git commit --cleanup=scissors" was not careful enough to protect
against getting fooled by a line that looked like scissors.

* sg/commit-cleanup-scissors:
  commit: cope with scissors lines in commit message
2015-08-03 10:41:30 -07:00
4a71109aa4 for-each-ref: add '--contains' option
Add the '--contains' option provided by 'ref-filter'. The '--contains'
option lists only refs which contain the mentioned commit (HEAD if no
commit is explicitly given).

Add documentation and tests for the same.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:25:28 -07:00
ee2bd06b0f ref-filter: implement '--contains' option
'tag -l' and 'branch -l' have two different ways of finding
out if a certain ref contains a commit. Implement both these
methods in ref-filter and give the caller of ref-filter API
the option to pick which implementation to be used.

'branch -l' uses 'is_descendant_of()' from commit.c which is
left as the default implementation to be used.

'tag -l' uses a more specific algorithm since ffc4b80. This
implementation is used whenever the 'with_commit_tag_algo' bit
is set in 'struct ref_filter'.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:25:28 -07:00
f266c9163b parse-options.h: add macros for '--contains' option
Add a macro for using the '--contains' option in parse-options.h
also include an optional '--with' option macro which performs the
same action as '--contains'.

Make tag.c and branch.c use this new macro.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:25:28 -07:00
9d306b5a60 parse-option: rename parse_opt_with_commit()
Rename parse_opt_with_commit() to parse_opt_commits() to show
that it can be used to obtain a list of commits and is not
constricted to usage of '--contains' option.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:25:28 -07:00
7c32834813 for-each-ref: add '--merged' and '--no-merged' options
Add the '--merged' and '--no-merged' options provided by 'ref-filter'.
The '--merged' option lets the user to only list refs merged into the
named commit. The '--no-merged' option lets the user to only list refs
not merged into the named commit.

Add documentation and tests for the same.

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:25:28 -07:00
35257aa012 ref-filter: implement '--merged' and '--no-merged' options
In 'branch -l' we have '--merged' option which only lists refs (branches)
merged into the named commit and '--no-merged' option which only lists
refs (branches) not merged into the named commit. Implement these two
options in ref-filter.{c,h} so that other commands can benefit from this.

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:25:28 -07:00
5afcb90560 ref-filter: add parse_opt_merge_filter()
Add 'parse_opt_merge_filter()' to parse '--merged' and '--no-merged'
options and write macros for the same.

This is copied from 'builtin/branch.c' which will eventually be removed
when we port 'branch.c' to use ref-filter APIs.

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:25:28 -07:00
d325406ef2 for-each-ref: add '--points-at' option
Add the '--points-at' option provided by 'ref-filter'. The
option lets the user to list only refs which points at the
given object.

Add documentation and tests for the same.

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:25:28 -07:00
68411046b5 ref-filter: implement '--points-at' option
In 'tag -l' we have '--points-at' option which lets users
list only tags of a given object. Implement this option in
'ref-filter.{c,h}' so that other commands can benefit from this.

This is duplicated from tag.c, we will eventually remove that
when we port tag.c to use ref-filter APIs.

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:25:27 -07:00
b2172fdf70 tag: libify parse_opt_points_at()
Rename 'parse_opt_points_at()' to 'parse_opt_object_name()' and
move it from 'tag.c' to 'parse-options'. This now acts as a common
parse_opt function which accepts an objectname and stores it into
a sha1_array.

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:25:27 -07:00
af83bafa48 t6302: for-each-ref tests for ref-filter APIs
Add a test suite for testing the ref-filter APIs used
by for-each-ref. We just intialize the test suite for now.
More tests will be added in the following patches as more
options are added to for-each-ref.

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:25:27 -07:00
1958a6eb54 ref-filter: make 'ref_array_item' use a FLEX_ARRAY for refname
This would remove the need of using a pointer to store refname.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:24:07 -07:00
14de7fba34 for-each-ref: introduce filter_refs()
Introduce filter_refs() which will act as an API for filtering
a set of refs. Based on the type of refs the user has requested,
we iterate through those refs and apply filters as per the
given ref_filter structure and finally store the filtered refs
in the ref_array structure.

Currently this will wrap around ref_filter_handler(). Hence,
ref_filter_handler is made file scope static.

As users of this API will no longer send a ref_filter_cbdata
structure directly, we make the elements of ref_filter_cbdata
pointers. We can now use the information given by the users
to obtain our own ref_filter_cbdata structure. Changes are made to
support the change in ref_filter_cbdata structure.

Make 'for-each-ref' use this API.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:24:07 -07:00
c95b758587 ref-filter: move code from 'for-each-ref'
Move most of the code from 'for-each-ref' to 'ref-filter' to make
it publicly available to other commands, this is to unify the code
of 'tag -l', 'branch -l' and 'for-each-ref' so that they can share
their implementations with each other.

Add 'ref-filter' to the Makefile, this completes the movement of code
from 'for-each-ref' to 'ref-filter'.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-08-03 10:24:07 -07:00
bbdf0acc7d l10n: TEAMS: stash inactive zh_CN team members
Add Ray Chen as member of zh_CN l10n team member, and move other
inactive zh_CN l10n team members to the header of zh_CN.po.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-08-04 00:43:08 +08:00
7687252f3f untracked-cache: support sparse checkout
Remove a check that would disable the untracked cache for sparse
checkouts.  Add tests that ensure that the untracked cache works with
sparse checkouts -- specifically considering the case that a file
foo/bar is checked out, but foo/.gitignore is not.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-31 10:56:18 -07:00
d96a53996b sequencer: replace write_cherry_pick_head with update_ref
Now update_ref (via write_pseudoref) does almost exactly what
write_cherry_pick_head did, so we can remove write_cherry_pick_head
and just use update_ref.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-31 10:40:18 -07:00
f3a977187e bisect: use update_ref
Instead of manually writing a pseudoref (in one case) and shelling out
to git update-ref (in another), use the update_ref function.  This
is much simpler.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-31 10:40:08 -07:00
74ec19d4be pseudorefs: create and use pseudoref update and delete functions
Pseudorefs should not be updated through the ref transaction
API, because alternate ref backends still need to store pseudorefs
in GIT_DIR (instead of wherever they store refs).  Instead,
change update_ref and delete_ref to call pseudoref-specific
functions.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-31 10:39:38 -07:00
266b18273a refs: add ref_type function
Add a function ref_type, which categorizes refs as per-worktree,
pseudoref, or normal ref.

Later, we will use this in refs.c to treat pseudorefs specially.
Alternate ref backends may use it to treat both pseudorefs and
per-worktree refs differently.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-31 10:39:04 -07:00
2036cb98d0 refs: introduce pseudoref and per-worktree ref concepts
Add glossary entries for both concepts.

Pseudorefs and per-worktree refs do not yet have special handling,
because the files refs backend already handles them correctly.  Later,
we will make the LMDB backend call out to the files backend to handle
per-worktree refs.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-31 10:37:47 -07:00
45abdee662 add: remove dead code
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-31 08:49:33 -07:00
22d6857d46 pull.sh: quote $upload_pack when passing it to git-fetch
The previous code broke for example

  git pull --upload-pack 'echo --foo'

Reported-by: Joey Hess <id@joeyh.name>
Fix-suggested-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>
2015-07-30 14:14:32 -07:00
55a16ee487 l10n: zh_CN: Update Translation of "tag"
- "tag" translated as "标签".
- "annotated tag" translated as "附注标签".
- "mergetag" translated as "合并标签".
- "tag name" translated as "标签名称".
- Relevant adjustments.

Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-07-30 23:42:27 +08:00
14691e3827 parse-options: align curly braces for all options
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-29 13:31:51 -07:00
bc598c32ae get_remote_group(): use skip_prefix()
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 14:39:26 -07:00
5f65499fa2 get_remote_group(): eliminate superfluous call to strcspn()
There is no need to call it if value is the empty string. This also
eliminates code duplication.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 14:39:24 -07:00
e286542de0 get_remote_group(): rename local variable "space" to "wordlen"
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 14:39:21 -07:00
c26f7d7b26 get_remote_group(): handle remotes with single-character names
The code for splitting a whitespace-separated list of values in
"remotes.<name>" had an off-by-one error that caused it to skip over
remotes whose names consist of a single character.

Also remove unnecessary braces.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 14:39:10 -07:00
52fca2184d unpack-trees: populate cache-tree on successful merge
When we unpack trees into an existing index, we discard the old
index and replace it with the new, merged index.  Ensure that this
index has its cache-tree populated.  This will make subsequent git
status and commit commands faster.

Signed-off-by: Brian Degenhardt <bmd@bmdhacks.com>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 13:43:13 -07:00
8cc88166c0 Documentation/config: mention "now" and "never" for 'expire' settings
In addition to approxidate-style values ("2.months.ago", "yesterday"),
consumers of 'gc.*expire*' configuration variables also accept and
respect 'now' ("do it immediately") and 'never' ("suppress entirely").

Suggested-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 13:23:03 -07:00
1c601af25a Documentation/git-tools: retire manually-maintained list
When Git was young, people looking for third-party Git-related tools
came to the Git project itself to find them, so it made sense to
maintain a list of tools here. These days, however, search engines fill
that role much more efficiently, so retire the manually-maintained
list.

The list of front-ends and tools on the Git wiki rates perhaps a distant
second to search engines, and may still have value, so retain a
reference to it.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 13:21:59 -07:00
dd7961c0fb Documentation/git-tools: drop references to defunct tools
Cogito -- unmaintained since late 2006[1]
pg -- URL dead; web searches reveal no information
quilt2git -- URL dead; web searches reveal no information
(h)gct -- URL dead; no repository activity since 2007[2]

[1]: http://git.or.cz/cogito/
[2]: http://repo.or.cz/w/hgct.git

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 13:21:42 -07:00
e810f93977 Documentation/git-tools: fix item text formatting
Descriptive text for each tool item is incorrectly formatted using a
fixed width font. Fix formatting to use a variable width font by
unindenting the item text.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 13:21:13 -07:00
fd8c620cd9 Documentation/git-tools: improve discoverability of Git wiki
These days, the best way to find Git-related tools is via a search
engine. The Git wiki may be a distant second, and git-tools.txt falls in
last place. Therefore, promote the Git wiki reference to the top of
git-tools.txt so the reader will encounter it first, rather than hiding
it away at the very bottom.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 13:20:51 -07:00
cc118a65b4 docs/config.txt: reorder hideRefs config
The descriptions for receive.hideRefs and
uploadpack.hideRefs are largely the same, and then
transfer.hideRefs refers to both of them. Instead, let's
make transfer.hideRefs the "master" source, and refer to it
from the other sites (with appropriate program-specific
annotations).

This avoids duplication, and will make it easier to document
changes to the config option without having to copy and
paste the description in two places.

While we're at it, this fixes some bogus subject/verb
agreement in the original description.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 13:15:40 -07:00
d0ab058498 tests: remove some direct access to .git/logs
Alternate refs backends might store reflogs somewhere other than
.git/logs.  Change most test code that directly accesses .git/logs to
instead use git reflog commands.

There are still a few tests which need direct access to reflogs: to
check reflog permissions, to manually create reflogs from scratch, to
save/restore reflogs, to check the format of raw reflog data, and to
remove not just reflog contents, but the reflogs themselves. All cases
which don't need direct access have been modified.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 11:46:46 -07:00
86b601c5d8 t/t7509: remove unnecessary manipulation of reflog
Remove unnecessary reflog manipulation.  The test does not rely in any
way on this reflog manipulation, and the case that the test
exercises is unrelated to reflogs.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 11:45:19 -07:00
da4c5adae9 typofix for index-format.txt
Signed-off-by: Thomas Ackermann <th.acker@arcor.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-28 11:05:41 -07:00
dbd6cced19 l10n: zh_CN: Unify Translation of "packfile"
Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
2015-07-28 13:26:41 +08:00
a17c56c056 Git 2.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-27 12:29:47 -07:00
7a2c87b152 Sync with 2.4.7 2015-07-27 12:26:40 -07:00
ca00f80b58 Git 2.4.7
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-27 12:25:42 -07:00
caac7a3abe Merge branch 'jk/pretty-encoding-doc' into maint
Doc update.

* jk/pretty-encoding-doc:
  docs: clarify that --encoding can produce invalid sequences
2015-07-27 12:21:48 -07:00
ff132a190e Merge branch 'tb/checkout-doc' into maint
Doc update.

* tb/checkout-doc:
  git-checkout.txt: document "git checkout <pathspec>" better
2015-07-27 12:21:47 -07:00
3afcec9057 Merge branch 'ls/hint-rev-list-count' into maint
* ls/hint-rev-list-count:
  rev-list: add --count to usage guide
2015-07-27 12:21:47 -07:00
315b3ba3e4 Merge branch 'mm/branch-doc-updates' into maint
* mm/branch-doc-updates:
  Documentation/branch: document -M and -D in terms of --force
  Documentation/branch: document -d --force and -m --force
2015-07-27 12:21:46 -07:00
bde6a72af5 Merge branch 'jc/fsck-retire-require-eoh' into maint
A fix to a minor regression to "git fsck" in v2.2 era that started
complaining about a body-less tag object when it lacks a separator
empty line after its header to separate it with a non-existent body.

* jc/fsck-retire-require-eoh:
  fsck: it is OK for a tag and a commit to lack the body
2015-07-27 12:21:46 -07:00
c18593658e Merge branch 'et/http-proxyauth' into maint
We used to ask libCURL to use the most secure authentication method
available when talking to an HTTP proxy only when we were told to
talk to one via configuration variables.  We now ask libCURL to
always use the most secure authentication method, because the user
can tell libCURL to use an HTTP proxy via an environment variable
without using configuration variables.

* et/http-proxyauth:
  http: always use any proxy auth method available
2015-07-27 12:21:44 -07:00
342c14db8c Merge branch 'jc/unexport-git-pager-in-use-in-pager' into maint
When you say "!<ENTER>" while running say "git log", you'd confuse
yourself in the resulting shell, that may look as if you took
control back to the original shell you spawned "git log" from but
that isn't what is happening.  To that new shell, we leaked
GIT_PAGER_IN_USE environment variable that was meant as a local
communication between the original "Git" and subprocesses that was
spawned by it after we launched the pager, which caused many
"interesting" things to happen, e.g. "git diff | cat" still paints
its output in color by default.

Stop leaking that environment variable to the pager's half of the
fork; we only need it on "Git" side when we spawn the pager.

* jc/unexport-git-pager-in-use-in-pager:
  pager: do not leak "GIT_PAGER_IN_USE" to the pager
2015-07-27 12:21:44 -07:00
3b175fb940 Merge branch 'mh/strbuf-read-file-returns-ssize-t' into maint
Avoid possible ssize_t to int truncation.

* mh/strbuf-read-file-returns-ssize-t:
  strbuf: strbuf_read_file() should return ssize_t
2015-07-27 12:21:43 -07:00
6f402a93ce Merge branch 'kb/config-unmap-before-renaming' into maint
"git config" failed to update the configuration file when the
underlying filesystem is incapable of renaming a file that is still
open.

* kb/config-unmap-before-renaming:
  config.c: fix writing config files on Windows network shares
2015-07-27 12:21:42 -07:00
726359be47 Merge branch 'jk/rev-list-no-bitmap-while-pruning' into maint
A minor bugfix when pack bitmap is used with "rev-list --count".

* jk/rev-list-no-bitmap-while-pruning:
  rev-list: disable --use-bitmap-index when pruning commits
2015-07-27 12:21:42 -07:00
aa0b816c5d Merge branch 'rh/test-color-avoid-terminfo-in-original-home' into maint
An ancient test framework enhancement to allow color was not
entirely correct; this makes it work even when tput needs to read
from the ~/.terminfo under the user's real HOME directory.

* rh/test-color-avoid-terminfo-in-original-home:
  test-lib.sh: fix color support when tput needs ~/.terminfo
  Revert "test-lib.sh: do tests for color support after changing HOME"
2015-07-27 12:21:41 -07:00
7c696007ca Merge branch 'jk/fix-refresh-utime' into maint
Fix a small bug in our use of umask() return value.

* jk/fix-refresh-utime:
  check_and_freshen_file: fix reversed success-check
2015-07-27 12:21:40 -07:00
3f8b439a0e Merge branch 'cb/rebase-am-exit-code' into maint
"git rebase" did not exit with failure when format-patch it invoked
failed for whatever reason.

* cb/rebase-am-exit-code:
  rebase: return non-zero error code if format-patch fails
2015-07-27 12:21:39 -07:00
de62fe8c42 Merge branch 'jk/index-pack-reduce-recheck' into maint
Disable "have we lost a race with competing repack?" check while
receiving a huge object transfer that runs index-pack.

* jk/index-pack-reduce-recheck:
  index-pack: avoid excessive re-reading of pack directory
2015-07-27 12:21:38 -07:00
cd377f45c9 refs: loosen restriction on wildcard "*" refspecs
Loosen restrictions on refspecs by allowing patterns that have a "*"
within a component instead of only as the whole component.

Remove the logic to accept a single "*" as a whole component from
check_refname_format(), and implement an extended form of that logic
in check_refname_component().  Pass the pointer to the flags argument
to the latter, as it has to clear REFNAME_REFSPEC_PATTERN bit when
it sees "*".

Teach check_refname_component() function to allow an asterisk "*"
only when REFNAME_REFSPEC_PATTERN is set in the flags, and drop the
bit after seeing a "*", to ensure that one side of a refspec
contains at most one asterisk.

This will allow us to accept refspecs such as `for/bar*:foo/baz*`.
Any refspec which functioned before shall continue functioning with
the new logic.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-27 09:21:31 -07:00
53a8555ee4 refs: cleanup comments regarding check_refname_component()
Correctly specify all characters which are rejected under the '4: a
bad character' disposition, which did not list all characters that
are treated as such.

Cleanup comment style for rejected refs by inserting a ", or" at the
end of each statement.

Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-27 09:21:15 -07:00
53438e8fe2 l10n: zh_CN: Update Translation: "tag object"
* "tag object" translated as "标签对象".
* "objects to be packed" translated as "待打包对象".
* Add "那些", for better reading experience.

Signed-off-by: Ray Chen <oldsharp@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-07-27 23:39:37 +08:00
f25b98e6f8 Documentation/git: drop outdated Cogito reference
Cogito hasn't been maintained since late 2006, so drop the reference
to it. The warning that SCMS front-ends might override listed
environment variables, however, may still be valuable, so keep it but
generalize the wording.

Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-25 10:47:11 -07:00
15ed07d532 rerere: un-nest merge() further
By consistently using "upon failure, set 'ret' and jump to out"
pattern, flatten the function further.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 16:05:40 -07:00
1d51eced10 rerere: use "struct rerere_id" instead of "char *" for conflict ID
This gives a thin abstraction between the conflict ID that is a hash
value obtained by inspecting the conflicts and the name of the
directory under $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/, in which the previous resolution
is recorded to be replayed.  The plan is to make sure that the
presence of the directory does not imply the presense of a previous
resolution and vice-versa, and later allow us to have more than one
pair of <preimage, postimage> for a given conflict ID.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 16:05:26 -07:00
18bb99342f rerere: call conflict-ids IDs
Most places we call conflict IDs "name" and some others we call them
"hex"; update all of them to "id".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 16:04:41 -07:00
925d73c421 rerere: further clarify do_rerere_one_path()
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 16:03:56 -07:00
c7a25d3790 rerere: further de-dent do_plain_rerere()
It's just easier to follow this way.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 16:02:47 -07:00
8e7768b2de rerere: refactor "replay" part of do_plain_rerere()
Extract the body of a loop that attempts to replay recorded
resolution for each conflicted path into a helper function, not
because I want to call it from multiple places later, but because
the logic has become too deeply nested and hard to read.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 16:02:37 -07:00
e828de826b rerere: explain the remainder
Explain the internals of rerere as in-code comments, while
sprinkling "NEEDSWORK" comment to highlight iffy bits and
questionable assumptions.

This covers the codepath that implements "rerere gc" and "rerere
clear".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 16:02:31 -07:00
963ec00356 rerere: explain "rerere forget" codepath
Explain the internals of rerere as in-code comments, while
sprinkling "NEEDSWORK" comment to highlight iffy bits and
questionable assumptions.

This covers the codepath that implements "rerere forget".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 16:02:18 -07:00
cc899eca55 rerere: explain the primary codepath
Explain the internals of rerere as in-code comments, while
sprinkling "NEEDSWORK" comment to highlight iffy bits and
questionable assumptions.

This one covers the codepath reached from rerere(), the primary
interface to the subsystem.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 16:02:17 -07:00
4b68c2a087 rerere: explain MERGE_RR management helpers
Explain the internals of rerere as in-code comments, while
sprinkling "NEEDSWORK" comment to highlight iffy bits and
questionable assumptions.

This one covers the "$GIT_DIR/MERGE_RR" file and in-core merge_rr
that are used to keep track of the status of "rerere" session in
progress.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 16:02:06 -07:00
d3c2749def rerere: fix benign off-by-one non-bug and clarify code
rerere_io_putconflict() wants to use a limited fixed-sized buf[] on
stack repeatedly to formulate a longer string, but its implementation
is doubly confusing:

 * When it knows that the whole thing fits in buf[], it wants to
   fill early part of buf[] with conflict marker characters,
   followed by a LF and a NUL.  It miscounts the size of the buffer
   by 1 and does not use the last byte of buf[].

 * When it needs to show only the early part of a long conflict
   marker string (because the whole thing does not fit in buf[]), it
   adjusts the number of bytes shown in the current round in a
   strange-looking way.  It makes sure that this round does not emit
   all bytes and leaves at least one byte to the next round, so that
   "it all fits" case will pick up the rest and show the terminating
   LF.  While this is correct, one needs to stop and think for a
   while to realize why it is correct without an explanation.

Fix the benign off-by-one, and add comments to explain the
strange-looking size adjustment.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 16:02:02 -07:00
a96847cc16 rerere: explain the rerere I/O abstraction
Explain the internals of rerere as in-code comments.

This one covers our thin I/O abstraction to read from either
a file or a memory while optionally writing out to a file.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 15:11:05 -07:00
7d4053b69b rerere: do not leak mmfile[] for a path with multiple stage #1 entries
A conflicted index can have multiple stage #1 entries when dealing
with a criss-cross merge and using the "resolve" merge strategy.

Plug the leak by reading only the first one of the same stage
entries.

Strictly speaking, this fix does change the semantics, in that we
used to use the last stage #1 entry as the common ancestor when
doing the plain-vanilla three-way merge, but with the leak fix, we
will use the first stage #1 entry.  But it is not a grave backward
compatibility breakage.  Either way, we are arbitrarily picking one
of multiple stage #1 entries and using it, ignoring others, and
there is no meaning in the ordering of these stage #1 entries.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 15:11:02 -07:00
74444d4ec4 rerere: stop looping unnecessarily
handle_cache() loops 3 times starting from an index entry that is
unmerged, while ignoring an entry for a path that is different from
what we are looking for.

As the index is sorted, once we see a different path, we know we saw
all stages for the path we are interested in.  Just loop while we
see the same path and then break, instead of continuing for 3 times.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 15:09:32 -07:00
67711cdc39 rerere: drop want_sp parameter from is_cmarker()
As the nature of the conflict marker line determines if there should
be a SP and label after it, the caller shouldn't have to pass the
parameter redundantly.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 15:09:07 -07:00
a14c7ab8f5 rerere: report autoupdated paths only after actually updating them
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 15:08:44 -07:00
e2cb6a950b rerere: write out each record of MERGE_RR in one go
Instead of writing the hash for a conflict, a HT, and the path
with three separate write_in_full() calls, format them into a
single record into a strbuf and write it out in one go.

As a more recent "rerere remaining" codepath abuses the .util field
of the merge_rr data to store a sentinel token, make sure that
codepath does not call into this function (of course, "remaining" is
a read-only operation and currently does not call it).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 15:08:27 -07:00
f5800f6ad8 rerere: lift PATH_MAX limitation
The MERGE_RR file records a collection of NUL-terminated entries,
each of which consists of

 - a hash that identifies the conflict
 - a HT
 - the pathname

We used to read this piece-by-piece, and worse yet, read the
pathname part a byte at a time into a fixed buffer of size PATH_MAX.

Instead, read a whole entry using strbuf_getwholeline() and parse
out the fields.  This way, we issue fewer read(2) calls and more
importantly we do not have to limit the pathname to PATH_MAX.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 15:08:23 -07:00
8d9b5a4ada rerere: plug conflict ID leaks
The merge_rr string list stores the conflict ID (a hexadecimal
string that is used to index into $GIT_DIR/rr-cache) in the .util
field of its elements, and when do_plain_rerere() resolves a
conflict, the field is cleared.  Also, when rerere_forget()
recomputes the conflict ID to updates the preimage file, the
conflict ID for the path is updated.

We forgot to free the existing conflict ID when we did these two
operations.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 15:08:22 -07:00
5eda906b28 rerere: handle conflicts with multiple stage #1 entries
A conflicted index can have multiple stage #1 entries when dealing
with a criss-cross merge and using the "resolve" merge strategy.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 15:08:05 -07:00
6f9504c48e RelNotes: am.threeWay does not exist (yet)
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 14:31:23 -07:00
15dc5b5fb0 Revert "git-am: add am.threeWay config variable"
This reverts commit d96a275b91.

It used to be possible to apply a patch series with "git am mbox"
and then only after seeing a failure, switch to three-way mode via
"git am -3" (no other options or arguments).  The commit being
reverted broke this workflow.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 10:55:24 -07:00
5f5f553fd5 Documentation/git-worktree: fix broken 'linkgit' invocation
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-24 10:11:35 -07:00
e7aac44ed2 contrib/subtree: ignore log.date configuration
git-subtree's log format string uses "%ad" and "%cd", which
respect the user's configured log.date value.

This is problematic for git-subtree because it needs to use real
dates so that copied commits come through unchanged.

Add a test and tweak the format strings to use %aD and %cD
so that the default date format is used instead.

Reported-by: Bryan Jacobs <b@q3q.us>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-23 15:08:41 -07:00
69f9c87d46 userdiff: add support for Fountain documents
Add support for Fountain, a plain text screenplay format.  Git
facilitates not just programming specifically, but creative writing
in general, so it makes sense to also support other plain text
documents besides source code.

In the structure of a screenplay specifically, scenes are roughly
analogous to functions, in the sense that it makes your job easier
if you can see which ones were changed in a given range of patches.

More information about the Fountain format can be found on its
official website, at http://fountain.io .

Signed-off-by: Zoë Blade <zoe@bytenoise.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-23 14:44:51 -07:00
b112b14d78 receive-pack: crash when checking with non-exist HEAD
If HEAD of a repository points to a conflict reference, such as:

* There exist a reference named 'refs/heads/jx/feature1', but HEAD
  points to 'refs/heads/jx', or

* There exist a reference named 'refs/heads/feature', but HEAD points
  to 'refs/heads/feature/bad'.

When we push to delete a reference for this repo, such as:

        git push /path/to/bad-head-repo.git :some/good/reference

The git-receive-pack process will crash.

This is because if HEAD points to a conflict reference, the function
`resolve_refdup("HEAD", ...)` does not return a valid reference name,
but a null buffer.  Later matching the delete reference against the null
buffer will cause git-receive-pack crash.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-22 14:18:22 -07:00
53c76dc05e pull: allow dirty tree when rebase.autostash enabled
rebase learned to stash changes when it encounters a dirty work tree,
but git pull --rebase does not.

Only verify if the working tree is dirty when rebase.autostash is not
enabled.

Signed-off-by: Kevin Daudt <me@ikke.info>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-22 12:56:30 -07:00
d830d395a1 builtin/send-pack.c: respect user.signingkey
When git-send-pack is exec'ed, as is done by git-remote-http, it
does not read the config, and configured value of user.signingkey is
ignored. Thus it was impossible to specify a signing key over HTTP,
other than the default key in the keyring having a User ID matching
the "Name <email>" format.

This patch at least partially fixes the problem by reading in the GPG
config from within send-pack. It does not address the related problem
of plumbing a value for this configuration option using
`git -c user.signingkey push ...`.

Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-21 15:24:27 -07:00
f99a38c012 Git 2.5.0-rc3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-21 14:11:54 -07:00
89dea97334 git-stash: use update-ref --create-reflog instead of creating files
This is in support of alternate ref backends which don't necessarily
store reflogs as files.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-21 14:08:49 -07:00
144c76fa39 update-ref and tag: add --create-reflog arg
Allow the creation of a ref (e.g. stash) with a reflog already in
place. For most refs (e.g. those under refs/heads), this happens
automatically, but for others, we need this option.

Currently, git does this by pre-creating the reflog, but alternate ref
backends might store reflogs somewhere other than .git/logs.  Code
that now directly manipulates .git/logs should instead use git
plumbing commands.

I also added --create-reflog to git tag, just for completeness.

In a moment, we will use this argument to make git stash work with
alternate ref backends.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-21 14:08:35 -07:00
0f2a71d992 refs: add REF_FORCE_CREATE_REFLOG flag
Add a flag to allow forcing the creation of a reflog even if the ref
name and core.logAllRefUpdates setting would not ordinarily cause ref
creation.

In a moment, we will use this to add options to git tag and git
update-ref to force reflog creation.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-21 14:08:26 -07:00
afcb2e7a3b git-reflog: add exists command
This is necessary because alternate ref backends might store reflogs
somewhere other than .git/logs.  Code that now directly manipulates
.git/logs should instead go through git-reflog.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-21 14:08:14 -07:00
abd0cd3a30 refs: new public ref function: safe_create_reflog
The safe_create_reflog function creates a reflog, if it does not
already exist.

The log_ref_setup function becomes private and gains a force_create
parameter to force the creation of a reflog even if log_all_ref_updates
is false or the refname is not one of the special refnames.

The new parameter also reduces the need to store, modify, and restore
the log_all_ref_updates global before reflog creation.

In a moment, we will use this to add reflog creation commands to
git-reflog.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-21 14:07:59 -07:00
4e2bef57c9 refs: break out check for reflog autocreation
This is just for clarity.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-21 14:07:54 -07:00
a4c653dfcd refs.c: add err arguments to reflog functions
Add an err argument to log_ref_setup that can explain the reason
for a failure. This then eliminates the need to manage errno through
this function since we can just add strerror(errno) to the err string
when meaningful. No callers relied on errno from this function for
anything else than the error message.

Also add err arguments to private functions write_ref_to_lockfile,
log_ref_write_1, commit_ref_update. This again eliminates the need to
manage errno in these functions.

Some error messages are slightly reordered.

Update of a patch by Ronnie Sahlberg.

Signed-off-by: Ronnie Sahlberg <sahlberg@google.com>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-21 14:07:28 -07:00
7d782416cb unpack-trees: don't update files with CE_WT_REMOVE set
Don't update files in the worktree from cache entries which are
flagged with CE_WT_REMOVE.

When a user does a sparse checkout, git removes files that are
marked with CE_WT_REMOVE (because they are out-of-scope for the
sparse checkout). If those files are also marked CE_UPDATE (for
instance, because they differ in the branch that is being checked
out and the outgoing branch), git would previously recreate them.
This patch prevents them from being recreated.

These erroneously-created files would also interfere with merges,
causing pre-merge revisions of out-of-scope files to appear in the
worktree.

apply_sparse_checkout() is the function where all "action"
manipulation (add, delete, update files..) for sparse checkout
occurs; it should not ask to delete and update both at the same
time.

Signed-off-by: Anatole Shaw <git-devel@omni.poc.net>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Helped-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-21 13:19:20 -07:00
c5918ab450 Merge branch 'tf/gitweb-typofix'
* tf/gitweb-typofix:
  gitweb: fix typo in man page
2015-07-21 12:45:27 -07:00
83d3330dec Merge tag 'l10n-2.5.0-rnd2' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
l10n-2.5.0-rnd2

* tag 'l10n-2.5.0-rnd2' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: ca.po: update translation
  l10n: de.po: translate 9 new messages
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2359t,0f,0u)
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.5.0 l10n round 2
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2359t0f0u)
  l10n: fr v2.5.0 round 2 (2359t)
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
  l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation (2359t)
  l10n: git.pot: v2.5.0 round 2 (9 new, 5 removed)
2015-07-21 10:27:33 -07:00
e4f031e34b strbuf: make strbuf_addftime more robust
The return value of strftime is poorly designed; when it
returns 0, the caller cannot tell if the buffer was not
large enough, or if the output was actually 0 bytes. In the
original implementation of strbuf_addftime, we simply punted
and guessed that our 128-byte hint would be large enough.

We can do better, though, if we're willing to treat strftime
like less of a black box. We can munge the incoming format
to make sure that it never produces 0-length output, and
then "fix" the resulting output.  That lets us reliably grow
the buffer based on strftime's return value.

Clever-idea-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 22:17:06 -07:00
dd160d794f bash prompt: faster untracked status indicator with untracked directories
If the untracked status indicator is enabled, __git_ps1() looks for
untracked files by running 'git ls-files'.  This can be perceptibly slow
in case of an untracked directory containing lot of files, because it
lists all files found in the untracked directory only to be redirected
into /dev/null right away (this is the actual command run by __git_ps1()):

  $ ls untracked-dir/ |wc -l
  100000
  $ time git ls-files --others --exclude-standard --error-unmatch \
    -- ':/*' >/dev/null 2>/dev/null

  real	0m0.955s
  user	0m0.936s
  sys	0m0.016s

Eliminate this delay by additionally passing the '--directory
--no-empty-directory' options to 'git ls-files' to show only the name of
non-empty untracked directories instead of all their content:

  $ time git ls-files --others --exclude-standard --directory \
    --no-empty-directory --error-unmatch -- ':/*' >/dev/null 2>/dev/null

  real	0m0.010s
  user	0m0.008s
  sys	0m0.000s

This follows suit of ea95c7b8f5 (completion: improve untracked directory
filtering for filename completion, 2013-09-18).

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 13:08:56 -07:00
6bfab998b5 bash prompt: test untracked files status indicator with untracked dirs
The next commit will tweak the way __git_ps1() decides whether to display
the untracked files status indicator in the presence of untracked
directories.  Add tests to make sure it doesn't change current behavior,
in particular that an empty untracked directory doesn't trigger the
untracked files status indicator.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 13:08:53 -07:00
272be14a85 checkout: drop intimate knowledge of newly created worktree
Now that git-worktree no longer relies upon git-checkout for new branch
creation, new worktree HEAD set up, or initial worktree population,
git-checkout no longer needs intimate knowledge that it may be operating
in a newly created worktree. Therefore, drop 'new_worktree_mode' and the
private GIT_CHECKOUT_NEW_WORKTREE environment variable by which
git-worktree communicated to git-checkout that it was being invoked to
manipulate a new worktree.

This reverts the remaining changes to checkout.c by 529fef2 (checkout:
support checking out into a new working directory, 2014-11-30).

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:52 -07:00
1c56190aec worktree: populate via "git reset --hard" rather than "git checkout"
Now that git-worktree handles all functionality (--force, --detach,
-b/-B) previously delegated to git-checkout, actual population of the
new worktree can be accomplished more directly and lightweight with
"git reset --hard" in place of "git checkout".

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:52 -07:00
ed197a6ab9 worktree: avoid resolving HEAD unnecessarily
Now that git-worktree sets HEAD explicitly to its final value via either
git-symbolic-ref or git-update-ref, rather than relying upon
git-checkout to do so, the "hack" for pacifying is_git_directory() with
a temporary HEAD, though still necessary, can be simplified.

Since the real HEAD is now populated with its proper final value, the
value of the temporary HEAD truly no longer matters, and any value which
looks like an object ID is good enough to satisfy is_git_directory().
Therefore, just set the temporary HEAD to a literal value rather than
going through the effort of resolving the current branch's HEAD.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:52 -07:00
7f44e3d1de worktree: make setup of new HEAD distinct from worktree population
git-worktree currently conflates setting of HEAD in the new worktree and
initial worktree population into a single git-checkout invocation which
requires git-checkout to have special knowledge that it is operating on
a newly created worktree. The eventual goal is to rid git-checkout of
that overly-intimate knowledge.

Once these operations are separate, git-worktree will no longer be able
to delegate to git-branch the setting of the new worktree's HEAD to the
desired branch (or commit, if detached). Therefore, make git-worktree
itself responsible for setting up HEAD as either a symbolic reference,
if associated with a branch, or detached, if not.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:52 -07:00
f7c9dac1b0 worktree: detect branch-name/detached and error conditions locally
git-worktree currently conflates setting of HEAD in the new worktree
with initial worktree population via a single git-checkout invocation,
which requires git-checkout to have special knowledge that it is
operating in a newly created worktree. The eventual goal is to separate
these operations and rid git-checkout of that overly-intimate knowledge.

Once these operations are separate, git-worktree will no longer be able
to rely upon git-branch to determine the state of the worktree (branch
name or detached), or to check for error conditions, such as the
requested branch already checked out elsewhere, or an invalid reference.
Therefore, imbue git-worktree with the intelligence to determine a
branch name or detached state locally, and to perform error checking on
its own.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:52 -07:00
80a0548f6c worktree: add_worktree: construct worktree-population command locally
The caller of add_worktree() provides it with a command to invoke to
populate the new worktree. This was a useful abstraction during the
conversion of "git checkout --to" functionality to "git worktree add"
since git-checkout and git-worktree constructed the population command
differently. However, now that "git checkout --to" has been retired, and
add_worktree() has access to the options given to "worktree add", this
extra indirection is no longer useful and makes the code a bit
convoluted.

Moreover, the eventual goal is for git-worktree to make setting of HEAD
and worktree population distinct operations, whereas they are currently
conflated into a single git-checkout invocation. As such, add_worktree()
will eventually invoke other commands in addition to the worktree
population command, so it will be doing command construction itself
anyhow.

Therefore, relocate construction of the worktree population command from
add() to add_worktree().

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:52 -07:00
ae2a38271f worktree: elucidate environment variables intended for child processes
Take advantage of 'struct child_process.env' to make it obvious that
environment variables set by add_worktree() are intended specifically
for sub-commands it invokes to operate in the new worktree.

We assign a local 'struct argv_array' to child_process.env, rather than
utilizing the child_process.env_array 'struct argv_array', because
future patches will make add_worktree() invoke additional sub-commands,
and it's simpler to populate the environment array just once, whereas
child_process.env_array gets cleared after each invocation, thus would
require re-population for each sub-command.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:51 -07:00
c2842439a3 worktree: make branch creation distinct from worktree population
git-worktree currently conflates branch creation, setting of HEAD in the
new worktree, and worktree population into a single sub-invocation of
git-checkout, which requires git-checkout to be specially aware that it
is operating in a newly-created worktree. The goal is to free
git-checkout of that special knowledge, and to do so, git-worktree will
eventually perform those operations separately. Thus, as a first step,
rather than piggybacking on git-checkout's -b/-B ability to create a new
branch at checkout time, make git-worktree responsible for branch
creation itself.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:51 -07:00
5c942570fe worktree: add: suppress auto-vivication with --detach and no <branch>
Fix oversight where branch auto-vivication incorrectly kicks in when
--detach is specified and <branch> omitted. Instead, treat:

    git worktree add --detach <path>

as shorthand for:

    git worktree add --detach <path> HEAD

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:51 -07:00
ab0b2c53ed worktree: make --detach mutually exclusive with -b/-B
Be consistent with git-checkout which disallows this (not particularly
meaningful) combination.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:24 -07:00
5dd6e234a7 worktree: introduce options container
add_worktree() will eventually need to deal with some options itself, so
introduce a structure into which options can be conveniently bundled,
and pass it along to add_worktree().

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:24 -07:00
eef005dcb3 worktree: simplify new branch (-b/-B) option checking
Make 'new_branch' be the name of the new branch for both forced and
non-forced cases; and add boolean 'force_new_branch' to indicate forced
branch creation. This will simplify logic later on when git-worktree
handles branch creation locally rather than delegating it to
git-checkout as part of the worktree population phase.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:24 -07:00
cd2f471311 worktree: improve worktree setup message
When git-worktree creates a new worktree, it reports:

    Enter "<path>" (identifier <tag>)

which misleadingly implies that it is setting <path> as the working
directory (as if "cd <path>" had been invoked), whereas it's actually
preparing the new worktree by creating its administrative files, setting
HEAD, and populating it. Make this more clear by instead saying:

    Preparing "<path>" (identifier <tag>)

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:24 -07:00
ed89f84b3c branch: publish die_if_checked_out()
git-worktree currently conflates new branch creation, setting of HEAD in
the new wortkree, and worktree population into a single sub-invocation
of git-checkout. However, these operations will eventually be separated,
and git-worktree itself will need to be able to detect if the branch is
already checked out elsewhere, rather than relying upon git-branch to
make this determination, so publish die_if_checked_out().

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:24 -07:00
746bbdc64f checkout: teach check_linked_checkout() about symbolic link HEAD
check_linked_checkout() only understands symref-style HEAD (i.e. "ref:
refs/heads/master"), however, HEAD may also be a an actual symbolic link
(on platforms which support it). To accurately detect if a branch is
checked out elsewhere, it needs to handle symbolic link HEAD, as well.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:24 -07:00
33aef83666 checkout: check_linked_checkout: simplify symref parsing
check_linked_checkout() only understands symref-style HEAD (i.e. "ref:
refs/heads/master"), however, HEAD may also be a an actual symbolic link
(on platforms which support it), thus it will need to check that style
HEAD, as well (via readlink()). As a preparatory step, simplify parsing
of symref-style HEAD so the actual branch check can be re-used easily
for symbolic links (in an upcoming patch).

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:24 -07:00
39e69e1519 checkout: check_linked_checkout: improve "already checked out" aesthetic
When check_linked_checkout() discovers that the branch is already
checked out elsewhere, it emits the diagnostic:

    'blorp' is already checked out at '/some/path/.git'

which is misleading since "checked out at" implies the working tree, but
".git" is the location of the repository administrative files. Fix by
dropping ".git" from the message.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:24 -07:00
4341460d92 checkout: generalize die_if_checked_out() branch name argument
The plan is to publish die_if_checked_out() so that callers other than
git-checkout can take advantage of it, however, those callers won't have
access to git-checkout's "struct branch_info". Therefore, change it to
accept the full name of the branch as a simple string instead.

While here, also give the argument a more meaningful name ("branch"
instead of "new").

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:24 -07:00
4e07815dba checkout: die_if_checked_out: simplify strbuf management
There is no reason to keep the strbuf active long after its last use.
By releasing it as early as possible, resource management is simplified
and there is less worry about future changes resulting in a leak.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:24 -07:00
aaad2c948f checkout: improve die_if_checked_out() robustness
die_if_checked_out() is intended to check if the branch about to be
checked out is already checked out either in the main worktree or in a
linked worktree. However, if .git/worktrees directory does not exist,
then it never bothers checking the main worktree, even though the
specified branch might indeed be checked out there, which is fragile
behavior.

This hasn't been a problem in practice since the current implementation
of "git worktree add" (and, earlier, "git checkout --to") always creates
.git/worktrees before die_if_checked_out() is called by the child "git
checkout" invocation which populates the new worktree.

However, git-worktree will eventually want to call die_if_checked_out()
itself rather than only doing so indirectly as a side-effect of invoking
git-checkout, and reliance upon order of operations (creating
.git/worktrees before checking if a branch is already checked out) is
fragile. As a general function, callers should not be expected to abide
by this undocumented and unwarranted restriction. Therefore, make
die_if_checked_out() more robust by checking the main worktree whether
.git/worktrees exists or not.

While here, also move a comment explaining why die_if_checked_out()'s
helper parses HEAD manually. Such information resides more naturally
with the helper itself rather than at its first point of call.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:24 -07:00
e13d37094e checkout: name check_linked_checkouts() more meaningfully
check_linked_checkouts() doesn't just "check" linked checkouts for
"something"; specifically, it aborts the operation if the branch about
to be checked out is already checked out elsewhere. Therefore, rename it
to die_if_checked_out() to give a better indication of its function.
The more meaningful name will be particularly important when this
function is later published for use by other callers.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:24 -07:00
c265c533cf checkout: avoid resolving HEAD unnecessarily
When --ignore-other-worktree is specified, we unconditionally skip the
check to see if the requested branch is already checked out in a linked
worktree. Since we know that we will be skipping that check, there is no
need to resolve HEAD in order to detect other conditions under which we
may skip the check.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:29:24 -07:00
114ff8881a config: rename "gc.pruneWorktreesExpire" to "gc.worktreePruneExpire"
As of df0b6cf (worktree: new place for "git prune --worktrees",
2015-06-29), linked worktree pruning functionality moved from
"git prune --worktrees" to "git worktree prune". Rename the
associated configuration variable accordingly.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:09:06 -07:00
b07244f4c3 Documentation/git-worktree: wordsmith worktree-related manpages
[es: reword .git/worktrees and .git/worktrees/<id>/locked descriptions]

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:07:18 -07:00
fe819b4b73 Documentation/config: fix stale "git prune --worktree" reference
This should have been changed to "git worktree prune" by df0b6cf
(worktree: new place for "git prune --worktrees", 2015-06-29)

[es: reword commit message]

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:03:58 -07:00
2e73ab6e69 Documentation/git-worktree: fix incorrect reference to file "locked"
The administrative file to suppress pruning is named "locked", not "lock".

[es: don't touch unrelated "git worktree lock" command; reword commit
message]

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:03:57 -07:00
bc483285b7 Documentation/git-worktree: consistently use term "linked working tree"
Sometimes linked working trees were called "linked working
directories" or "linked worktrees". Always refer to them as "linked
working trees" for consistency.

[es: fix additional occurrences]

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 11:03:57 -07:00
cdab3cacf6 l10n: ca.po: update translation
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
2015-07-20 11:54:40 -06:00
5b05b92d03 t3901: test git-am encoding conversion
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07), git-am
supported the --utf8 and --no-utf8 options, and if set, would pass the
-u flag and the -k flag respectively.

git mailinfo -u will re-code the commit log message and authorship info
in the charset specified by i18n.commitencoding setting, while
git mailinfo -n will disable the re-coding.

Since d84029b (--utf8 is now default for 'git-am', 2007-01-08), --utf8
is set by default in git-am.

Add various encoding conversion tests to t3901 to test git-mailinfo's
encoding conversion. In addition, add a test for --no-utf8 to check that
no encoding conversion will occur if that option is set.

Helped-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 10:53:05 -07:00
0f62fbae65 t3418: non-interactive rebase --continue with rerere enabled
Since 8389b52 (git-rerere: reuse recorded resolve., 2006-01-28), git-am
will call git-rerere to re-use recorded merge conflict resolutions if
any occur in a threeway merge.

Add a test to ensure that git-rerere is called by git-am (which handles
the non-interactive rebase).

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 10:53:01 -07:00
bf72ac17d7 t4150: tests for am --[no-]scissors
Since 017678b (am/mailinfo: Disable scissors processing by default,
2009-08-26), git-am supported the --[no-]scissors option, passing it to
git-mailinfo.

Add tests to ensure that git-am will pass the --scissors option to
git-mailinfo, and that --no-scissors will override the configuration
setting of mailinfo.scissors.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 10:52:43 -07:00
3ef4446bf2 t4150: am with post-applypatch hook
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07),
git-am.sh will invoke the post-applypatch hook after the patch is
applied and a commit is made. The exit code of the hook is ignored.

Add tests for this hook.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 10:52:28 -07:00
3bc6686b86 t4150: am with pre-applypatch hook
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07),
git-am.sg will invoke the pre-applypatch hook after applying the patch
to the index, but before a commit is made. Should the hook exit with a
non-zero status, git am will exit.

Add tests for this hook.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 10:52:21 -07:00
f26bdf2d98 t4150: am with applypatch-msg hook
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07), git-am
will invoke the applypatch-msg hooks just after extracting the patch
message. If the applypatch-msg hook exits with a non-zero status, git-am
abort before even applying the patch to the index.

Add tests for this hook.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 10:52:13 -07:00
9e2a113db9 t4150: am --resolved fails if index has unmerged entries
Since c1d1128 (git-am --resolved: more usable error message.,
2006-04-28), git-am --resolved will check to see if there are any
unmerged entries, and will error out with a user-friendly error message
if there are.

Add a test for this.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 10:52:04 -07:00
60ff7f9f5c t4150: am --resolved fails if index has no changes
Since 6d28644 (git-am: do not allow empty commits by mistake.,
2006-02-23), git-am --resolved will check to see if the index has any
changes to prevent the user from creating an empty commit by mistake.

Add a test for this.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 10:51:47 -07:00
b4967ab490 t4150: am refuses patches when paused
Since c95b138 (Fix git-am safety checks, 2006-09-15), when there is a
session in progress, git-am will check the command-line arguments and
standard input to ensure that the user does not pass it any patches.

Add a test for this.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 10:51:37 -07:00
528484c645 t4151: am --abort will keep dirty index intact
Since 7b3b7e3 (am --abort: keep unrelated commits since the last failure
and warn, 2010-12-21), git-am --abort will not touch the index if on the
previous invocation, git-am failed because the index is dirty. This is
to ensure that the user's modifications to the index are not discarded.

Add a test for this.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 10:51:18 -07:00
ab156128fa t4150: am fails if index is dirty
Since d1c5f2a (Add git-am, applymbox replacement., 2005-10-07), git-am
will ensure that the index is clean before applying the patch. This is
to prevent changes unrelated to the patch from being committed.

Add a test for this check.

Reviewed-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-20 10:51:02 -07:00
100e433741 untracked: fix detection of uname(2) failure
According to POSIX specification uname(2) must return -1 on failure
and a non-negative value on success.  Although many implementations
do return 0 on success it is valid to return any positive value for
success.  In particular, Solaris returns 1.

Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-17 14:39:59 -07:00
fbdeabf1f0 Merge branch 'jk/still-interesting'
Code clean-up.

* jk/still-interesting:
  revision.c: remove unneeded check for NULL
2015-07-17 10:44:56 -07:00
4d9f744e34 Merge branch 'es/worktree-add'
Update to the "linked checkout" in 2.5.0-rc1.

Instead of "checkout --to" that does not do what "checkout"
normally does, move the functionality to "git worktree add".

As this makes the end-user experience of the "worktree add" more or
less complete, I am tempted to say we should cook the other topic
that removes the internal "new-worktree-mode" hack from "checkout"
a bit longer in 'next', and release 2.5 final without that one.

* es/worktree-add:
  Documentation/git: fix stale "MULTIPLE CHECKOUT MODE" reference
  worktree: caution that this is still experimental
  Documentation/git-worktree: fix stale "git checkout --to" references
2015-07-17 10:44:55 -07:00
1eaca7a5bb Documentation/git: fix stale "MULTIPLE CHECKOUT MODE" reference
This should have been changed by 93a3649 (Documentation: move linked
worktree description from checkout to worktree, 2015-07-06).

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-17 10:05:36 -07:00
18b22dbed8 worktree: caution that this is still experimental
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-16 15:59:48 -07:00
4d5a3c5884 Documentation/git-worktree: fix stale "git checkout --to" references
These should have been changed to "git worktree add" by fc56361
(worktree: introduce "add" command, 2015-07-06.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-16 15:59:17 -07:00
01d597feec Merge branch 'master' of https://github.com/ralfth/git-po-de
* 'master' of https://github.com/ralfth/git-po-de:
  l10n: de.po: translate 9 new messages
2015-07-16 07:44:43 +08:00
6003e7f93a Sync with 2.4.6 2015-07-15 12:32:37 -07:00
bb3e7b1a55 Git 2.4.6
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-15 12:31:07 -07:00
abecddea25 Merge branch 'jc/diff-ws-error-highlight'
A hotfix to a new feature in 2.5.0-rc.

* jc/diff-ws-error-highlight:
  diff: parse ws-error-highlight option more strictly
2015-07-15 12:30:14 -07:00
b7abfacf5e Merge branch 'mm/describe-doc' into maint
Docfix.

* mm/describe-doc:
  Documentation/describe: improve one-line summary
2015-07-15 11:41:26 -07:00
51d5980ea0 Merge branch 'jc/prompt-document-ps1-state-separator' into maint
Docfix.

* jc/prompt-document-ps1-state-separator:
  git-prompt.sh: document GIT_PS1_STATESEPARATOR
2015-07-15 11:41:26 -07:00
3f20927717 Merge branch 'es/osx-header-pollutes-mask-macro' into maint
* es/osx-header-pollutes-mask-macro:
  ewah: use less generic macro name
  ewah/bitmap: silence warning about MASK macro redefinition
2015-07-15 11:41:24 -07:00
71a8af60ae Merge branch 'es/utf8-stupid-compiler-workaround' into maint
A compilation workaround.

* es/utf8-stupid-compiler-workaround:
  utf8: NO_ICONV: silence uninitialized variable warning
2015-07-15 11:41:23 -07:00
a15ebbc2c7 Merge branch 'fk/doc-format-patch-vn' into maint
Docfix.

* fk/doc-format-patch-vn:
  doc: format-patch: fix typo
2015-07-15 11:41:22 -07:00
e9da4e6ff2 Merge branch 'pt/t0302-needs-sanity' into maint
* pt/t0302-needs-sanity:
  t0302: "unreadable" test needs SANITY prereq
2015-07-15 11:41:21 -07:00
eca143b721 Merge branch 'me/fetch-into-shallow-safety' into maint
"git fetch --depth=<depth>" and "git clone --depth=<depth>" issued
a shallow transfer request even to an upload-pack that does not
support the capability.

* me/fetch-into-shallow-safety:
  fetch-pack: check for shallow if depth given
2015-07-15 11:41:20 -07:00
697f67ac9f Merge branch 'mh/fsck-reflog-entries' into maint
"git fsck" used to ignore missing or invalid objects recorded in reflog.

* mh/fsck-reflog-entries:
  fsck: report errors if reflog entries point at invalid objects
  fsck_handle_reflog_sha1(): new function
2015-07-15 11:41:19 -07:00
ada9ecd989 Merge branch 'af/tcsh-completion-noclobber' into maint
The tcsh completion writes a bash scriptlet but that would have
failed for users with noclobber set.

* af/tcsh-completion-noclobber:
  git-completion.tcsh: fix redirect with noclobber
2015-07-15 11:41:18 -07:00
7c621186ba Merge branch 'pa/auto-gc-mac-osx' into maint
Recent Mac OS X updates breaks the logic to detect that the machine
is on the AC power in the sample pre-auto-gc script.

* pa/auto-gc-mac-osx:
  hooks/pre-auto-gc: adjust power checking for newer OS X
2015-07-15 11:41:17 -07:00
93eba05b4f Merge branch 'jc/do-not-feed-tags-to-clear-commit-marks' into maint
"git format-patch --ignore-if-upstream A..B" did not like to be fed
tags as boundary commits.

* jc/do-not-feed-tags-to-clear-commit-marks:
  format-patch: do not feed tags to clear_commit_marks()
2015-07-15 11:41:16 -07:00
f1e80c0829 l10n: de.po: translate 9 new messages
Translate 9 new messages came from git.pot update in a4156d2
(l10n: git.pot: v2.5.0 round 2 (9 new, 5 removed)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Phillip Sz <phillip.szelat@gmail.com>
2015-07-15 20:30:52 +02:00
619b8f8636 l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2359t,0f,0u)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2015-07-15 20:34:23 +03:00
2d893dff4c rev-parse --parseopt: allow [*=?!] in argument hints
A line in the input to "rev-parse --parseopt" describes an option by
listing a short and/or long name, optional flags [*=?!], argument hint,
and then whitespace and help string.

We did not allow any of the [*=?!] characters in the argument hints.
The following input

    pair=key=value  equals sign in the hint

used to generate a help line like this:

    --pair=key <value>   equals sign in the hint

and used to expect "pair=key" as the argument name.

That is not very helpful as we generally do not want any of the [*=?!]
characters in the argument names.  But we do want to use at least the
equals sign in the argument hints.

Update the parser to make long argument names stop at the first [*=?!]
character.

Add test case with equals sign in the argument hint and update the test
to perform all the operations in test_expect_success matching the
t/README requirements and allowing commands like

    ./t1502-rev-parse-parseopt.sh --run=1-2

to stop at the test case 2 without any further modification of the test
state area.

Signed-off-by: Ilya Bobyr <ilya.bobyr@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-15 10:30:54 -07:00
5bb01d4f02 l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.5.0 l10n round 2
Update 9 translations (2359t0f0u) for git v2.5.0-rc2.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-07-15 23:21:08 +08:00
e557179a63 l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2359t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2015-07-15 12:54:11 +01:00
297230d490 Merge branch 'fr_v2.5.0-round2' of git://github.com/jnavila/git
* 'fr_v2.5.0-round2' of git://github.com/jnavila/git:
  l10n: fr v2.5.0 round 2 (2359t)
2015-07-15 07:06:49 +08:00
be67fb4fc9 l10n: fr v2.5.0 round 2 (2359t)
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
2015-07-14 23:03:24 +02:00
9ce8613349 Merge branch 'russian-l10n' of https://github.com/DJm00n/git-po-ru
* 'russian-l10n' of https://github.com/DJm00n/git-po-ru:
  l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
2015-07-14 22:30:12 +08:00
a3e55f72ba l10n: ru.po: update Russian translation
Signed-off-by: Dimitriy Ryazantcev <dimitriy.ryazantcev@gmail.com>
2015-07-14 16:34:00 +03:00
21f637378d l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation (2359t)
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2015-07-14 07:30:51 +07:00
a4156d2034 l10n: git.pot: v2.5.0 round 2 (9 new, 5 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.5.0-rc2 for git v2.5.0 l10n round 2.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-07-14 07:20:08 +08:00
961abca02c Merge tag 'l10n-2.5.0-rnd1' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po
l10n-2.5.0-rnd1

* tag 'l10n-2.5.0-rnd1' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: translate 65 new messages
  l10n: de.po: translate "index" as "Index"
  l10n: de.po: fix translation of "head nodes"
  l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.5.0 l10n round 1
  l10n: ca.po: update translation
  l10n: fr.po v2.5.0-rc0 (2355t)
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2355t,0f,0u)
  l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2355t0f0u)
  l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation (2355t)
  l10n: git.pot: v2.5.0 round 1 (65 new, 15 removed)
2015-07-13 15:37:24 -07:00
01977f46cb Git 2.5.0-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-13 14:04:30 -07:00
799767cc98 Merge branch 'es/worktree-add'
Update to the "linked checkout" in 2.5.0-rc1.

Instead of "checkout --to" that does not do what "checkout"
normally does, move the functionality to "git worktree add".

* es/worktree-add: (24 commits)
  Revert "checkout: retire --ignore-other-worktrees in favor of --force"
  checkout: retire --ignore-other-worktrees in favor of --force
  worktree: add: auto-vivify new branch when <branch> is omitted
  worktree: add: make -b/-B default to HEAD when <branch> is omitted
  worktree: extract basename computation to new function
  checkout: require worktree unconditionally
  checkout: retire --to option
  tests: worktree: retrofit "checkout --to" tests for "worktree add"
  worktree: add -b/-B options
  worktree: add --detach option
  worktree: add --force option
  worktree: introduce "add" command
  checkout: drop 'checkout_opts' dependency from prepare_linked_checkout
  checkout: make --to unconditionally verbose
  checkout: prepare_linked_checkout: drop now-unused 'new' argument
  checkout: relocate --to's "no branch specified" check
  checkout: fix bug with --to and relative HEAD
  Documentation/git-worktree: add EXAMPLES section
  Documentation/git-worktree: add high-level 'lock' overview
  Documentation/git-worktree: split technical info from general description
  ...
2015-07-13 14:02:19 -07:00
7783eb2e59 Merge branch 'nd/multiple-work-trees'
"git checkout [<tree-ish>] <paths>" spent unnecessary cycles
checking if the current branch was checked out elsewhere, when we
know we are not switching the branches ourselves.

* nd/multiple-work-trees:
  worktree: new place for "git prune --worktrees"
  checkout: don't check worktrees when not necessary
2015-07-13 14:02:02 -07:00
721f5bb896 Merge branch 'ss/clone-guess-dir-name-simplify'
Code simplification.

* ss/clone-guess-dir-name-simplify:
  clone: simplify string handling in guess_dir_name()
2015-07-13 14:00:28 -07:00
313f52334b Merge branch 'kb/config-unmap-before-renaming'
"git config" failed to update the configuration file when the
underlying filesystem is incapable of renaming a file that is still
open.

* kb/config-unmap-before-renaming:
  config.c: fix writing config files on Windows network shares
2015-07-13 14:00:27 -07:00
d790ba92cc Merge branch 'mh/strbuf-read-file-returns-ssize-t'
Avoid possible ssize_t to int truncation.

* mh/strbuf-read-file-returns-ssize-t:
  strbuf: strbuf_read_file() should return ssize_t
2015-07-13 14:00:27 -07:00
6cf7eef384 Merge branch 'jc/unexport-git-pager-in-use-in-pager'
When you say "!<ENTER>" while running say "git log", you'd confuse
yourself in the resulting shell, that may look as if you took
control back to the original shell you spawned "git log" from but
that isn't what is happening.  To that new shell, we leaked
GIT_PAGER_IN_USE environment variable that was meant as a local
communication between the original "Git" and subprocesses that was
spawned by it after we launched the pager, which caused many
"interesting" things to happen, e.g. "git diff | cat" still paints
its output in color by default.

Stop leaking that environment variable to the pager's half of the
fork; we only need it on "Git" side when we spawn the pager.

* jc/unexport-git-pager-in-use-in-pager:
  pager: do not leak "GIT_PAGER_IN_USE" to the pager
2015-07-13 14:00:27 -07:00
43f23b09bf Merge branch 'kb/use-nsec-doc'
Clarify in the Makefile a guideline to decide use of USE_NSEC.

* kb/use-nsec-doc:
  Makefile / racy-git.txt: clarify USE_NSEC prerequisites
2015-07-13 14:00:26 -07:00
e01787f1a1 Merge branch 'js/rebase-i-clean-up-upon-continue-to-skip'
Abandoning an already applied change in "git rebase -i" with
"--continue" left CHERRY_PICK_HEAD and confused later steps.

* js/rebase-i-clean-up-upon-continue-to-skip:
  rebase -i: do not leave a CHERRY_PICK_HEAD file behind
  t3404: demonstrate CHERRY_PICK_HEAD bug
2015-07-13 14:00:25 -07:00
0e521a41b5 Merge branch 'et/http-proxyauth'
We used to ask libCURL to use the most secure authentication method
available when talking to an HTTP proxy only when we were told to
talk to one via configuration variables.  We now ask libCURL to
always use the most secure authentication method, because the user
can tell libCURL to use an HTTP proxy via an environment variable
without using configuration variables.

* et/http-proxyauth:
  http: always use any proxy auth method available
2015-07-13 14:00:24 -07:00
acf7189512 Merge branch 'jc/fsck-retire-require-eoh'
A fix to a minor regression to "git fsck" in v2.2 era that started
complaining about a body-less tag object when it lacks a separator
empty line after its header to separate it with a non-existent body.

* jc/fsck-retire-require-eoh:
  fsck: it is OK for a tag and a commit to lack the body
2015-07-13 14:00:24 -07:00
0df3245721 fast-import: do less work when given "from" matches current branch head
When building a fast-import stream, it's easy to forget the fact
that for non-merge commits happening on top of the current branch
head, there is no need for a "from" command. That is corroborated by
the fact that at least git-p4, hg-fast-export and felipec's
git-remote-hg all unconditionally use a "from" command.

Unfortunately, giving a "from" command always resets the branch
tree, forcing it to be re-read, and in many cases, the pack is also
closed and reopened through gfi_unpack_entry.  Both are unnecessary
overhead, and the latter is particularly slow at least on OSX.

Avoid resetting the tree when it's unmodified, and avoid calling
gfi_unpack_entry when the given mark points to the same commit as
the current branch head.

Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-13 09:36:05 -07:00
3f4f17b51b diff: parse ws-error-highlight option more strictly
Check if a matched token is followed by a delimiter before advancing the
pointer arg.  This avoids accepting composite words like "allnew" or
"defaultcontext" and misparsing them as "new" or "context".

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-12 09:55:23 -07:00
c925fe2368 Revert "checkout: retire --ignore-other-worktrees in favor of --force"
This reverts commit 0d1a151783.

When trying to switch to a different branch, that happens to be
checked out in another working tree, the user shouldn't have to
give up the other safety measures (like protecting the local changes
that overlap the difference between the branches) while defeating
the "no two checkouts of the same branch" safety.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-12 09:38:21 -07:00
f30301657b checkout: document subtlety around --ours/--theirs
During a 'rebase' (hence 'pull --rebase'), --ours/--theirs may
appear to be swapped to those who are not aware of the fact that
they are temporarily playing the role of the keeper of the more
authoritative history.

Add a note to clarify.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon A. Eugster <simon.eugster@eps.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-12 09:28:24 -07:00
e59f6c2d34 The last minute bits of fixes
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-10 14:29:00 -07:00
8413a79e67 Merge branch 'cb/rebase-am-exit-code'
"git rebase" did not exit with failure when format-patch it invoked
failed for whatever reason.

* cb/rebase-am-exit-code:
  rebase: return non-zero error code if format-patch fails
2015-07-10 14:26:16 -07:00
1f9e0a5348 Merge branch 'jk/fix-refresh-utime'
Fix a small bug in our use of umask() return value.

* jk/fix-refresh-utime:
  check_and_freshen_file: fix reversed success-check
2015-07-10 14:26:15 -07:00
a745a58ade Merge branch 'mm/branch-doc-updates'
* mm/branch-doc-updates:
  Documentation/branch: document -M and -D in terms of --force
  Documentation/branch: document -d --force and -m --force
2015-07-10 14:26:13 -07:00
b3a30f6e0c Merge branch 'ls/hint-rev-list-count'
* ls/hint-rev-list-count:
  rev-list: add --count to usage guide
2015-07-10 14:26:13 -07:00
ace6325ddf Merge branch 'jk/rev-list-no-bitmap-while-pruning'
A minor bugfix when pack bitmap is used with "rev-list --count".

* jk/rev-list-no-bitmap-while-pruning:
  rev-list: disable --use-bitmap-index when pruning commits
2015-07-10 14:26:12 -07:00
3cbb92054b Merge branch 'cb/subtree-tests-update'
Tests update in contrib/subtree.

* cb/subtree-tests-update:
  contrib/subtree: small tidy-up to test
  contrib/subtree: fix broken &&-chains and revealed test error
  contrib/subtree: use tabs consitently for indentation in tests
2015-07-10 14:17:56 -07:00
615eb98a83 Merge branch 'rh/test-color-avoid-terminfo-in-original-home'
An ancient test framework enhancement to allow color was not
entirely correct; this makes it work even when tput needs to read
from the ~/.terminfo under the user's real HOME directory.

* rh/test-color-avoid-terminfo-in-original-home:
  test-lib.sh: fix color support when tput needs ~/.terminfo
  Revert "test-lib.sh: do tests for color support after changing HOME"
2015-07-10 14:17:55 -07:00
64fe6fcd9e Merge branch 'sb/p5310-and-chain'
Code clean-up.

* sb/p5310-and-chain:
  p5310: Fix broken && chain in performance test
2015-07-10 14:17:54 -07:00
e12fc40a15 Merge branch 'tb/checkout-doc'
Doc update.

* tb/checkout-doc:
  git-checkout.txt: document "git checkout <pathspec>" better
2015-07-10 14:17:54 -07:00
bbddc51664 Merge branch 'jk/pretty-encoding-doc'
Doc update.

* jk/pretty-encoding-doc:
  docs: clarify that --encoding can produce invalid sequences
2015-07-10 14:17:54 -07:00
89bf01361e Merge branch 'nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs'
Test updates to a topic already in 2.5-rc.

* nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs:
  Add tests for wildcard "path vs ref" disambiguation
2015-07-10 14:17:52 -07:00
35813042ef Documentation/tag: remove double occurance of "<pattern>"
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-10 09:44:13 -07:00
c07173f215 Merge branch 'jk/maint-for-each-packed-object'
The for_each_packed_object() API function did not iterate over
objects in a packfile that hasn't been used yet.

* jk/maint-for-each-packed-object:
  for_each_packed_object: automatically open pack index
2015-07-09 14:31:43 -07:00
0bf46af089 Merge branch 'jc/fix-alloc-sortbuf-in-index-pack'
A hotfix for what is in 2.5-rc but not in 2.4.

* jc/fix-alloc-sortbuf-in-index-pack:
  index-pack: fix allocation of sorted_by_pos array
2015-07-09 14:31:42 -07:00
7e837c6477 clone: simplify string handling in guess_dir_name()
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-09 14:21:29 -07:00
076c98372e log: add "log.follow" configuration variable
People who work on projects with mostly linear history with frequent
whole file renames may want to always use "git log --follow" when
inspecting the life of the content that live in a single path.

Teach the command to behave as if "--follow" was given from the
command line when log.follow configuration variable is set *and*
there is one (and only one) path on the command line.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-09 10:24:23 -07:00
3096b2ecdb check_and_freshen_file: fix reversed success-check
When we want to write out a loose object file, we have
always first made sure we don't already have the object
somewhere. Since 33d4221 (write_sha1_file: freshen existing
objects, 2014-10-15), we also update the timestamp on the
file, so that a simultaneous prune knows somebody is
likely to reference it soon.

If our utime() call fails, we treat this the same as not
having the object in the first place; the safe thing to do
is write out another copy. However, the loose-object check
accidentally inverts the utime() check; it returns failure
_only_ when the utime() call actually succeeded. Thus it was
failing to protect us there, and in the normal case where
utime() succeeds, it caused us to pointlessly write out and
link the object.

This passed our freshening tests, because writing out the
new object is certainly _one_ way of updating its utime. So
the normal case was inefficient, but not wrong.

While we're here, let's also drop a comment in front of the
check_and_freshen functions, making a note of their return
type (since it is not our usual "0 for success, -1 for
error").

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-08 15:58:28 -07:00
60d708b220 rebase: return non-zero error code if format-patch fails
Since e481af06 (rebase: Handle cases where format-patch fails) we
notice if format-patch fails and return immediately from
git-rebase--am. We save the return value with ret=$?, but then we
return $?, which is usually zero in this case.

Fix this by returning $ret instead.

Cc: Andrew Wong <andrew.kw.w@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <clemens.buchacher@intel.com>
Helped-by: Jorge Nunes <jorge.nunes@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-08 15:36:42 -07:00
262ea4a6c0 l10n: de.po: translate 65 new messages
Translate 65 new messages came from git.pot update in
64f23b0 (l10n: git.pot: v2.5.0 round 1 (65 new, 15 removed)).

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-07-08 19:50:38 +02:00
43d2401456 l10n: de.po: translate "index" as "Index"
The term "index" is translated as "Staging-Area" to
match a majority of German books and to not confuse
Git beginners who don't know about Git's index.

"Staging Area" is used in German books as a thing where
content can be staged for commit.  While the translation
is good for those kind of messages, it's bad for messages
that mean the Git index as the tree state or the index
file, in which case we should translate as "Index".

Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-07-08 19:38:42 +02:00
121f7b0509 l10n: de.po: fix translation of "head nodes"
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Phillip Sz <phillip.szelat@gmail.com>
2015-07-08 19:38:42 +02:00
fa5b1aa9a1 send-email: suppress meaningless whitespaces in from field
Remove leading and trailing whitespaces in from field before
interepreting it to improve consistency with other options.  The
split_addrs function already take care of trailing and leading
whitespaces for to, cc and bcc fields.
The from option now:

 - has the same behavior when passing arguments like
   "  jdoe@example.com ", "\t jdoe@example.com " or
   "jdoe@example.com".

 - interprets aliases in string containing leading and trailing
   whitespaces such as " alias" or "alias\t" like other options.

Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-07 14:39:07 -07:00
b1c8a11c80 send-email: allow multiple emails using --cc, --to and --bcc
Accept a list of emails separated by commas in flags --cc, --to and
--bcc.  Multiple addresses can already be given by using these options
multiple times, but it is more convenient to allow cutting-and-pasting
a list of addresses from the header of an existing e-mail message,
which already lists them as comma-separated list, as a value to a
single parameter.

The following format can now be used:

    $ git send-email --to='Jane <jdoe@example.com>, mike@example.com'

Remove the limitation imposed by 79ee555b (Check and document the
options to prevent mistakes, 2006-06-21) which rejected every argument
with comma in --cc, --to and --bcc.

Signed-off-by: Mathieu Lienard--Mayor <Mathieu.Lienard--Mayor@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Jorge Juan Garcia Garcia <Jorge-Juan.Garcia-Garcia@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-07 14:39:07 -07:00
1fe9703f08 send-email: consider quote as delimiter instead of character
Do not consider quote inside a recipient name as character when
they are not escaped. This interprets:

  "Jane" "Doe" <jdoe@example.com>

as:

  "Jane Doe" <jdoe@example.com>

instead of:

  "Jane\" \"Doe" <jdoe@example.com>

Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-07 14:39:07 -07:00
8d314d7afe send-email: reduce dependencies impact on parse_address_line
parse_address_line had not the same behavior whether the user had
Mail::Address or not. Teach parse_address_line to behave like
Mail::Address.

When the user input is correct, this implementation behaves
exactly like Mail::Address except when there are quotes
inside the name:

  "Jane Do"e <jdoe@example.com>

In this case the result of parse_address_line is:

  With M::A : "Jane Do" e <jdoe@example.com>
  Without   : "Jane Do e" <jdoe@example.com>

When the user input is not correct, the behavior is also mostly
the same.

Unlike Mail::Address, this doesn't parse groups and recursive
commentaries.

Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-07 14:38:20 -07:00
0d1a151783 checkout: retire --ignore-other-worktrees in favor of --force
As a safeguard, checking out a branch already checked out by a different
worktree is disallowed. This behavior can be overridden with
--ignore-other-worktrees, however, this option is neither obvious nor
particularly discoverable. As a common safeguard override, --force is
more likely to come to mind. Therefore, overload it to also suppress the
check for a branch already checked out elsewhere.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-07 14:34:46 -07:00
1eb07d829f worktree: add: auto-vivify new branch when <branch> is omitted
As a convenience, when <branch> is omitted from "git worktree <path>
<branch>" and neither -b nor -B is used, automatically create a new
branch named after <path>, as if "-b $(basename <path>)" was specified.
Thus, "git worktree add ../hotfix" creates a new branch named "hotfix"
and associates it with new worktree "../hotfix".

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-07 14:34:32 -07:00
8528bf4b89 t4150: am.messageid really adds the message id
Since a078f73 (git-am: add --message-id/--no-message-id, 2014-11-25),
the am.messageid setting determines whether the --message-id option is
set by default.

Add a test for this.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-07 11:04:20 -07:00
592e412d0f status: add new tests for status during rebase -i
Expand test coverage with one or more than two commands done
and with zero, one or more than two commands remaining.

Signed-off-by: Guillaume Pagès <guillaume.pages@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-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>
2015-07-06 16:03:35 -07:00
84e6fb9da9 status: give more information during rebase -i
git status gives more information during rebase -i, about the list of
command that are done during the rebase. It displays the two last
commands executed and the two next lines to be executed. It also gives
hints to find the whole files in .git directory.

Signed-off-by: Guillaume Pagès <guillaume.pages@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-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>
2015-07-06 16:02:50 -07:00
0f4af3b9ea worktree: add: make -b/-B default to HEAD when <branch> is omitted
As a convenience, like "git branch" and "git checkout -b", make
"git worktree add -b <newbranch> <path> <branch>" default to HEAD when
<branch> is omitted.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:48 -07:00
f5682b2a86 worktree: extract basename computation to new function
A subsequent patch will also need to compute the basename of the new
worktree, so factor out this logic into a new function.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:48 -07:00
0ca560cb97 checkout: require worktree unconditionally
In order to allow linked worktree creation via "git checkout --to" from
a bare repository, 3473ad0 (checkout: don't require a work tree when
checking out into a new one, 2014-11-30) dropped git-checkout's
unconditional NEED_WORK_TREE requirement and instead performed worktree
setup conditionally based upon presence or absence of the --to option.
Now that --to has been retired and git-checkout is no longer responsible
for linked worktree creation, the NEED_WORK_TREE requirement can be
re-instated.

This effectively reverts 3473ad0, except for the tests it added which
now check bare repository behavior of "git worktree add" instead.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:48 -07:00
b979d95027 checkout: retire --to option
Now that "git worktree add" has achieved user-facing feature-parity with
"git checkout --to", retire the latter.

Move the actual linked worktree creation functionality,
prepare_linked_checkout() and its helpers, verbatim from checkout.c to
worktree.c.

This effectively reverts changes to checkout.c by 529fef2 (checkout:
support checking out into a new working directory, 2014-11-30) with the
exception of merge_working_tree() and switch_branches() which still
require specialized knowledge that a the checkout is occurring in a
newly-created linked worktree (signaled to them by the private
GIT_CHECKOUT_NEW_WORKTREE environment variable).

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:47 -07:00
f194b1ef6e tests: worktree: retrofit "checkout --to" tests for "worktree add"
With the introduction of "git worktree add", "git checkout --to" is
slated for removal. Therefore, retrofit linked worktree creation tests
to use "git worktree add" instead.

(The test to check exclusivity of "checkout --to" and "checkout <paths>"
is dropped altogether since it becomes meaningless with retirement of
"checkout --to".)

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:47 -07:00
cbdf60fa18 worktree: add -b/-B options
One of git-worktree's roles is to populate the new worktree, much like
git-checkout, and thus, for convenience, ought to support several of the
same shortcuts. Toward this goal, add -b/-B options to create a new
branch and check it out in the new worktree.

(For brevity, only -b is mentioned in the synopsis; -B is omitted.)

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:47 -07:00
39ecb27436 worktree: add --detach option
One of git-worktree's roles is to populate the new worktree, much like
git-checkout, and thus, for convenience, ought to support several of the
same shortcuts. Toward this goal, add a --detach option to detach HEAD
in the new worktree.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:46 -07:00
f43254440d worktree: add --force option
By default, "git worktree add" refuses to create a new worktree when
the requested branch is already checked out elsewhere. Add a --force
option to override this safeguard.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:46 -07:00
fc56361f58 worktree: introduce "add" command
The plan is to relocate "git checkout --to" functionality to "git
worktree add". As a first step, introduce a bare-bones git-worktree
"add" command along with documentation. At this stage, "git worktree
add" merely invokes "git checkout --to" behind the scenes, but an
upcoming patch will move the actual functionality
(checkout.c:prepare_linked_checkout() and its helpers) to worktree.c.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:45 -07:00
bdf0f375b9 checkout: drop 'checkout_opts' dependency from prepare_linked_checkout
The plan is to relocate "git checkout --to" functionality to "git
worktree add", however, worktree.c won't have access to the 'struct
checkout_opts' passed to prepare_linked_worktree(), which it consults
for the pathname of the new worktree and the argv[] of the command it
should run to populate the new worktree. Facilitate relocation of
prepare_linked_worktree() by instead having it accept the pathname and
argv[] directly, thus eliminating the final references to 'struct
checkout_opts'.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:45 -07:00
338dfd0da4 checkout: make --to unconditionally verbose
prepare_linked_checkout() respects git-checkout's --quiet flag, however,
the plan is to relocate "git checkout --to" functionality to "git
worktree add", and git-worktree does not (yet) have a --quiet flag.
Consequently, make prepare_linked_checkout() unconditionally verbose to
ease eventual code movement to worktree.c.

(A --quiet flag can be added to git-worktree later if there is demand
for it.)

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:45 -07:00
3c3e7f5b57 checkout: prepare_linked_checkout: drop now-unused 'new' argument
The only references to 'new' were folded out by the last two patches.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:44 -07:00
9559ce8368 checkout: relocate --to's "no branch specified" check
The plan is to relocate "git checkout --to" functionality to "git
worktree add", however, this check expects a 'struct branch_info' which
git-worktree won't have at hand. It will, however, have access to its
own command-line from which it can pick up the branch name. Therefore,
as a preparatory step, rather than having prepare_linked_checkout()
perform this check, make it the caller's responsibility.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:44 -07:00
c990a4c11d checkout: fix bug with --to and relative HEAD
Given "git checkout --to <path> HEAD~1", the new worktree's HEAD should
begin life at the current branch's HEAD~1, however, it actually ends up
at HEAD~2. This happens because:

    1. git-checkout resolves HEAD~1

    2. to satisfy is_git_directory(), prepare_linked_worktree() creates
       a HEAD for the new worktree with the value of the resolved HEAD~1

    3. git-checkout re-invokes itself with the same arguments within the
       new worktree to populate the worktree

    4. the sub git-checkout resolves HEAD~1 relative to its own HEAD,
       which is the resolved HEAD~1 from the original invocation,
       resulting unexpectedly and incorrectly in HEAD~2 (relative to the
       original)

Fix this by unconditionally assigning the current worktree's HEAD as the
value of the new worktree's HEAD.

As a side-effect, this change also eliminates a dependence within
prepare_linked_checkout() upon 'struct branch_info'. The plan is to
eventually relocate "git checkout --to" functionality to "git worktree
add", and worktree.c won't have knowledge of 'struct branch_info', so
removal of this dependency is a step toward that goal.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:44 -07:00
9645459756 Documentation/git-worktree: add EXAMPLES section
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:44 -07:00
a8ba5dd7b1 Documentation/git-worktree: add high-level 'lock' overview
Due to the (current) absence of a "git worktree lock" command, locking
a worktree's administrative files to prevent automatic pruning is a
manual task, necessarily requiring low-level understanding of linked
worktree functionality. However, this level of detail does not belong
in the high-level DESCRIPTION section, so add a generalized discussion
of locking to DESCRIPTION and move the technical information to DETAILS.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:43 -07:00
af189b4cbe Documentation/git-worktree: split technical info from general description
The DESCRIPTION section should provide a high-level overview of linked
worktree functionality to bring users up to speed quickly, without
overloading them with low-level details, so relocate the technical
information to a new DETAILS section.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:43 -07:00
6d3824cf92 Documentation/git-worktree: add BUGS section
Relocate submodule warning to BUGS and enumerate missing commands.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:43 -07:00
93a36493e2 Documentation: move linked worktree description from checkout to worktree
Now that the git-worktree command exists, its documentation page is the
natural place for the linked worktree description to reside. Relocate
the "MULTIPLE WORKING TREES" description verbatim from git-checkout.txt
to git-worktree.txt.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:43 -07:00
4f09825e58 Documentation/git-worktree: associate options with commands
git-worktree options affect some worktree commands but not others, but
this is not necessarily obvious from the option descriptions. Make this
clear by indicating explicitly which commands are affected by which
options.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:43 -07:00
5c31464874 Documentation/git-checkout: fix incorrect worktree prune command
This was missed when "git prune --worktrees" became "git worktree prune".

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 11:07:42 -07:00
83fe16703e Documentation/branch: document -M and -D in terms of --force
Now that we have proper documentation for --force's interaction with -d
and -m, we can avoid duplication and consider -M and -D as convenience
aliases for -m --force and -d --force.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 10:36:54 -07:00
8482d042a0 Documentation/branch: document -d --force and -m --force
The --force option was modified in 356e91f (branch: allow -f with -m and
-d, 2014-12-08), but the documentation was not updated.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 10:36:51 -07:00
5bdb7a78ad git-multimail: update to release 1.1.1
The only change is a bugfix: the SMTP mailer was not working with
Python 2.4.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-06 09:43:17 -07:00
7aea43ff4e l10n: zh_CN: for git v2.5.0 l10n round 1
Update 65 translations (2355t0f0u) for git v2.5.0-rc0.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-07-05 23:13:37 +08:00
781d93067d index-pack: fix allocation of sorted_by_pos array
When c6458e60 (index-pack: kill union delta_base to save memory,
2015-04-18) attempted to reduce the memory footprint of index-pack,
one of the key thing it did was to keep track of ref-deltas and
ofs-deltas separately.

In fix_unresolved_deltas(), however it forgot that it now wants to
look only at ref deltas in one place.  The code allocated an array
for nr_unresolved, which is sum of number of ref- and ofs-deltas
minus nr_resolved, which may be larger or smaller than the number
ref-deltas.  Depending on nr_resolved, this was either under or over
allocating.

Also, the old code before this change had to use 'i' and 'n' because
some of the things we see in the (old) deltas[] array we scanned
with 'i' would not make it into the sorted_by_pos[] array in the old
world order, but now because you have only ref delta in a separate
ref_deltas[] array, they increment lock&step.  We no longer need
separate variables.  And most importantly, we shouldn't pass the
nr_unresolved parameter, as this number does not play a role in the
working of this helper function.

Helped-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-04 15:26:03 -07:00
6c8afe495b strbuf: strbuf_read_file() should return ssize_t
It is currently declared to return int, which could overflow for
large files.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-03 18:25:02 -07:00
124b51909d pager: do not leak "GIT_PAGER_IN_USE" to the pager
Since 2e6c012e (setup_pager: set GIT_PAGER_IN_USE, 2011-08-17), we
export GIT_PAGER_IN_USE so that a process that becomes the upstream
of the spawned pager can still tell that we have spawned the pager
and decide to do colored output even when its output no longer goes
to a terminal (i.e. isatty(1)).

But we forgot to clear it from the enviornment of the spawned pager.

This is not a problem in a sane world, but if you have a handful of
thousands Git users in your organization, somebody is bound to do
strange things, e.g. typing "!<ENTER>" instead of 'q' to get control
back from $LESS.  GIT_PAGER_IN_USE is still set in that subshell
spawned by "less", and all sorts of interesting things starts
happening, e.g. "git diff | cat" starts coloring its output.

We can clear the environment variable in the half of the fork that
runs the pager to avoid the confusion.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-03 18:07:21 -07:00
7363e66904 l10n: ca.po: update translation
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
2015-07-01 22:22:02 -06:00
1976f9b527 Merge branch 'fr_2.5.0_round1' of git://github.com/jnavila/git
* 'fr_2.5.0_round1' of git://github.com/jnavila/git:
  l10n: fr.po v2.5.0-rc0 (2355t)
2015-07-02 07:01:51 +08:00
3a59e5954e Documentation/i18n.txt: clarify character encoding support
As a "distributed" VCS, git should better define the encodings of its core
textual data structures, in particular those that are part of the network
protocol.

That git is encoding agnostic is only really true for blob objects. E.g.
the 'non-NUL bytes' requirement of tree and commit objects excludes
UTF-16/32, and the special meaning of '/' in the index file as well as
space and linefeed in commit objects eliminates EBCDIC and other non-ASCII
encodings.

Git expects bytes < 0x80 to be pure ASCII, thus CJK encodings that partly
overlap with the ASCII range are problematic as well. E.g. fmt_ident()
removes trailing 0x5C from user names on the assumption that it is ASCII
'\'. However, there are over 200 GBK double byte codes that end in 0x5C.

UTF-8 as default encoding on Linux and respective path translations in the
Mac and Windows versions have established UTF-8 NFC as de-facto standard
for path names.

Update the documentation in i18n.txt to reflect the current status-quo.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-01 14:55:53 -07:00
b1ffafa978 Makefile / racy-git.txt: clarify USE_NSEC prerequisites
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-01 14:54:42 -07:00
cbed29f37b Git 2.5.0-rc1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-01 14:05:33 -07:00
58eb0122f3 Merge branch 'me/fetch-into-shallow-safety'
"git fetch --depth=<depth>" and "git clone --depth=<depth>" issued
a shallow transfer request even to an upload-pack that does not
support the capability.

* me/fetch-into-shallow-safety:
  fetch-pack: check for shallow if depth given
2015-07-01 14:02:33 -07:00
d70bc3b97a Merge branch 'jc/prompt-document-ps1-state-separator'
Docfix.

* jc/prompt-document-ps1-state-separator:
  git-prompt.sh: document GIT_PS1_STATESEPARATOR
2015-07-01 14:02:32 -07:00
15b3f71148 Merge branch 'mm/describe-doc'
Docfix.

* mm/describe-doc:
  Documentation/describe: improve one-line summary
2015-07-01 14:02:31 -07:00
a225a26010 Merge branch 'da/mergetool-winmerge'
Hotfix for an earlier change already in 'master' that broke the
default tool selection for mergetool.

* da/mergetool-winmerge:
  mergetool-lib: fix default tool selection
2015-07-01 14:02:30 -07:00
c8a70d3509 rev-list: disable --use-bitmap-index when pruning commits
The reachability bitmaps do not have enough information to
tell us which commits might have changed path "foo", so the
current code produces wrong answers for:

  git rev-list --use-bitmap-index --count HEAD -- foo

(it silently ignores the "foo" limiter). Instead, we should
fall back to doing a normal traversal (it is OK to fall
back rather than complain, because --use-bitmap-index is a
pure optimization, and might not kick in for other reasons,
such as there being no bitmaps in the repository).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-01 12:00:50 -07:00
ae454f6125 Add tests for wildcard "path vs ref" disambiguation
Commit 28fcc0b (pathspec: avoid the need of "--" when wildcard is used -
2015-05-02) changes how the disambiguation rules work. This patch adds
some tests to demonstrate, basically, if wildcard characters are in an
argument:

 - if the argument is valid extended sha-1 syntax, "--" must be used
 - otherwise the argument is considered a path, even without "--"

And wildcard can appear in extended sha-1 syntax, either as part of
regex in ":/<regex>" or as the literal path in ":<path>". The latter
case is less likely to happen in real world. But if you do ":/" a lot,
you may need to type "--" more.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-01 09:30:53 -07:00
28c7b1f7b7 fast-import: add a get-mark command
It is sometimes useful for importers to be able to read the SHA-1
corresponding to a mark that they have created via fast-import. For
example, they might want to embed the SHA-1 into the commit message of
a later commit. Or it might be useful for internal bookkeeping uses,
or for logging.

Add a "get-mark" command to "git fast-import" that allows the importer
to ask for the value of a mark that has been created earlier.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-01 09:29:59 -07:00
75d2e5a7b0 rev-list: add --count to usage guide
--count should be mentioned in the usage guide, this updates code and
documentation.

Signed-off-by: Lawrence Siebert <lawrencesiebert@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-07-01 09:29:11 -07:00
7b0580583a l10n: fr.po v2.5.0-rc0 (2355t)
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Claude Dioudonnat <cdioudonnat@itnetwork.fr>
2015-06-30 21:35:11 +02:00
804098bb30 git rebase -i: add static check for commands and SHA-1
Check before the start of the rebasing if the commands exists, and for
the commands expecting a SHA-1, check if the SHA-1 is present and
corresponds to a commit. In case of error, print the error, stop git
rebase and prompt the user to fix with 'git rebase --edit-todo' or to
abort.

This allows to avoid doing half of a rebase before finding an error
and giving back what's left of the todo list to the user and prompt
him to fix when it might be too late for him to do so (he might have
to abort and restart the rebase).

Signed-off-by: Galan Rémi <remi.galan-alfonso@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-30 12:14:25 -07:00
3707995960 git rebase -i: warn about removed commits
Check if commits were removed (i.e. a line was deleted) and print
warnings or stop git rebase depending on the value of the
configuration variable rebase.missingCommitsCheck.

This patch gives the user the possibility to avoid silent loss of
information (losing a commit through deleting the line in this case)
if he wants.

Add the configuration variable rebase.missingCommitsCheck.
    - When unset or set to "ignore", no checking is done.
    - When set to "warn", the commits are checked, warnings are
      displayed but git rebase still proceeds.
    - When set to "error", the commits are checked, warnings are
      displayed and the rebase is stopped.
      (The user can then use 'git rebase --edit-todo' and
      'git rebase --continue', or 'git rebase --abort')

rebase.missingCommitsCheck defaults to "ignore".

Signed-off-by: Galan Rémi <remi.galan-alfonso@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-30 12:14:25 -07:00
c9266d5894 git-rebase -i: add command "drop" to remove a commit
Instead of removing a line to remove the commit, you can use the
command "drop" (just like "pick" or "edit"). It has the same effect as
deleting the line (removing the commit) except that you keep a visual
trace of your actions, allowing a better control and reducing the
possibility of removing a commit by mistake.

Signed-off-by: Galan Rémi <remi.galan-alfonso@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-30 12:14:25 -07:00
c46e27aa77 send-email: minor code refactoring
Group expressions in a single if statement. This avoid checking
multiple time if the variable $sender is defined.

Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-30 11:34:35 -07:00
193d716011 send-email: allow use of aliases in the From field of --compose mode
Aliases were expanded before considering the From field of the
--compose option. This is inconsistent with other fields
(To, Cc, ...) which already support aliases.

Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-30 11:34:35 -07:00
b5e112d8d2 send-email: refactor address list process
Simplify code by creating a function which transform a list of strings
containing email addresses (separated by commas, comporting aliases)
into a clean list of valid email addresses.

Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-30 11:34:35 -07:00
d4cf11c2e9 t9001-send-email: refactor header variable fields replacement
Create a function which replaces Date, Message-Id and
X-Mailer lines generated by git-send-email by a specific string:

Date:.*$       -> Date: DATE-STRING
Message-Id:.*$ -> Message-Id: MESSAGE-ID-STRING
X-Mailer:.*$   -> X-Mailer: X-MAILER-STRING
Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-30 11:34:34 -07:00
f6f79e5ee3 send-email: allow aliases in patch header and command script outputs
Interpret aliases in:

  -  Header fields of patches generated by git format-patch
     (using --to, --cc, --add-header for example) or
     manually modified. Example of fields in header:

      To: alias1
      Cc: alias2
      Cc: alias3

  -  Outputs of command scripts specified by --cc-cmd and
     --to-cmd. Example of script:

      #!/bin/sh
      echo alias1
      echo alias2

Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-30 11:34:34 -07:00
62089fb8e9 t9001-send-email: move script creation in a setup test
Move the creation of the scripts used in to-cmd and cc-cmd tests
in a setup test to make them available for later tests.

Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-30 11:29:18 -07:00
df25e9475b status: differentiate interactive from non-interactive rebases
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Pagès <guillaume.pages@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-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>
2015-06-30 11:13:06 -07:00
05eb563553 status: factor two rebase-related messages together
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Pagès <guillaume.pages@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-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>
2015-06-30 11:12:30 -07:00
7a64592cf8 config.c: fix writing config files on Windows network shares
Renaming to an existing file doesn't work on Windows network shares if the
target file is open.

munmap() the old config file before commit_lock_file.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-30 11:01:59 -07:00
43f9d9f3a6 bisect: replace hardcoded "bad|good" by variables
To add new tags like old/new and have keywords less confusing, the
first step is to avoid hardcoding the keywords.

The default mode is still bad/good.

Signed-off-by: Antoine Delaite <antoine.delaite@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Louis Stuber <stuberl@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Valentin Duperray <Valentin.Duperray@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Franck Jonas <Franck.Jonas@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Lucien Kong <Lucien.Kong@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Nguy <Thomas.Nguy@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Huynh Khoi Nguyen Nguyen <Huynh-Khoi-Nguyen.Nguyen@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-29 13:19:12 -07:00
0e0aff4b4c rebase -i: do not leave a CHERRY_PICK_HEAD file behind
When skipping commits whose changes were already applied via `git rebase
--continue`, we need to clean up said file explicitly.

The same is not true for `git rebase --skip` because that will execute
`git reset --hard` as part of the "skip" handling in git-rebase.sh, even
before git-rebase--interactive.sh is called.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-29 13:12:43 -07:00
d17ec3a9da t3404: demonstrate CHERRY_PICK_HEAD bug
When rev-list's --cherry option does not detect that a patch has already
been applied upstream, an interactive rebase would offer to reapply it and
consequently stop at that patch with a failure, mentioning that the diff
is empty.

Traditionally, a `git rebase --continue` simply skips the commit in such a
situation.

However, as pointed out by Gábor Szeder, this leaves a CHERRY_PICK_HEAD
behind, making the Git prompt believe that a cherry pick is still going
on. This commit adds a test case demonstrating this bug.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-29 13:11:37 -07:00
aa1462cc3d introduce "format" date-mode
This feeds the format directly to strftime. Besides being a
little more flexible, the main advantage is that your system
strftime may know more about your locale's preferred format
(e.g., how to spell the days of the week).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-29 11:39:10 -07:00
a5481a6c94 convert "enum date_mode" into a struct
In preparation for adding date modes that may carry extra
information beyond the mode itself, this patch converts the
date_mode enum into a struct.

Most of the conversion is fairly straightforward; we pass
the struct as a pointer and dereference the type field where
necessary. Locations that declare a date_mode can use a "{}"
constructor.  However, the tricky case is where we use the
enum labels as constants, like:

  show_date(t, tz, DATE_NORMAL);

Ideally we could say:

  show_date(t, tz, &{ DATE_NORMAL });

but of course C does not allow that. Likewise, we cannot
cast the constant to a struct, because we need to pass an
actual address. Our options are basically:

  1. Manually add a "struct date_mode d = { DATE_NORMAL }"
     definition to each caller, and pass "&d". This makes
     the callers uglier, because they sometimes do not even
     have their own scope (e.g., they are inside a switch
     statement).

  2. Provide a pre-made global "date_normal" struct that can
     be passed by address. We'd also need "date_rfc2822",
     "date_iso8601", and so forth. But at least the ugliness
     is defined in one place.

  3. Provide a wrapper that generates the correct struct on
     the fly. The big downside is that we end up pointing to
     a single global, which makes our wrapper non-reentrant.
     But show_date is already not reentrant, so it does not
     matter.

This patch implements 3, along with a minor macro to keep
the size of the callers sane.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-29 11:39:07 -07:00
b7c1e11dc4 show-branch: use DATE_RELATIVE instead of magic number
This is more readable, and won't break if we ever change the
order of the date_mode enum.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-29 11:39:04 -07:00
5841520b03 http: always use any proxy auth method available
We set CURLOPT_PROXYAUTH to use the most secure authentication
method available only when the user has set configuration variables
to specify a proxy.  However, libcurl also supports specifying a
proxy through environment variables.  In that case libcurl defaults
to only using the Basic proxy authentication method, because we do
not use CURLOPT_PROXYAUTH.

Set CURLOPT_PROXYAUTH to always use the most secure authentication
method available, even when there is no git configuration telling us
to use a proxy. This allows the user to use environment variables to
configure a proxy that requires an authentication method different
from Basic.

Signed-off-by: Enrique A. Tobis <etobis@twosigma.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-29 09:57:43 -07:00
ae40ebda9b revision.c: remove unneeded check for NULL
The function is called only from one place, which makes sure to have
`interesting_cache` not NULL.  Additionally the variable is a
dereferenced a few lines before unconditionally, which would have
resulted in a segmentation fault before hitting this check.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-29 09:54:18 -07:00
df0b6cfbda worktree: new place for "git prune --worktrees"
Commit 23af91d (prune: strategies for linked checkouts - 2014-11-30)
adds "--worktrees" to "git prune" without realizing that "git prune" is
for object database only. This patch moves the same functionality to a
new command "git worktree".

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
2015-06-29 08:48:44 -07:00
cda2ef6470 Merge branch 'master' of git://github.com/alshopov/git-po
* 'master' of git://github.com/alshopov/git-po:
  l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2355t,0f,0u)
2015-06-29 06:41:44 +08:00
912bd497e9 Sync with maint
* maint:
2015-06-28 14:51:12 -07:00
84d18c0bcf fsck: it is OK for a tag and a commit to lack the body
When fsck validates a commit or a tag, it scans each line in the
header of the object using helper functions such as "start_with()",
etc. that work on a NUL terminated buffer, but before a1e920a0
(index-pack: terminate object buffers with NUL, 2014-12-08), the
validation functions were fed the object data in a piece of memory
that is not necessarily terminated with a NUL.

We added a helper function require_end_of_header() to be called at
the beginning of these validation functions to insist that the
object data contains an empty line before its end.  The theory is
that the validating functions will notice and stop when it hits an
empty line as a normal end of header (or a required header line that
is missing) without scanning past the end of potentially not
NUL-terminated buffer.

But the theory forgot that in the older days, Git itself happily
created objects with only the header lines without a body. This
caused Git 2.2 and later to issue an unnecessary warning in some
existing repositories.

With a1e920a0, we do not need to require an empty line (or the body)
in these objects to safely parse and validate them.  Drop the
offending "must have an empty line" check from this helper function,
while keeping the other check to make sure that there is no NUL in
the header part of the object, and adjust the name of the helper to
what it does accordingly.

Noticed-by: Wolfgang Denk <wd@denx.de>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-28 14:47:28 -07:00
fb70a06da2 rerere: fix an off-by-one non-bug
When ac49f5ca (rerere "remaining", 2011-02-16) split out a new
helper function check_one_conflict() out of find_conflict()
function, so that the latter will use the returned value from the
new helper to update the loop control variable that is an index into
active_cache[], the new variable incremented the index by one too
many when it found a path with only stage #1 entry at the very end
of active_cache[].

This "strange" return value does not have any effect on the loop
control of two callers of this function, as they all notice that
active_nr+2 is larger than active_nr just like active_nr+1 is, but
nevertheless it puzzles the readers when they are trying to figure
out what the function is trying to do.

In fact, there is no need to do an early return.  The code that
follows after skipping the stage #1 entry is fully prepared to
handle a case where the entry is at the very end of active_cache[].

Help future readers from unnecessary confusion by dropping an early
return.  We skip the stage #1 entry, and if there are stage #2 and
stage #3 entries for the same path, we diagnose the path as
THREE_STAGED (otherwise we say PUNTED), and then we skip all entries
for the same path.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-28 14:35:37 -07:00
e1f7037167 l10n: Updated Bulgarian translation of git (2355t,0f,0u)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2015-06-28 22:50:10 +03:00
a7ec9810be l10n: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (2355t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
2015-06-28 18:50:20 +01:00
bd8202f3ac l10n: Updated Vietnamese translation (2355t)
Signed-off-by: Tran Ngoc Quan <vnwildman@gmail.com>
2015-06-28 14:46:18 +07:00
64f23b0c20 l10n: git.pot: v2.5.0 round 1 (65 new, 15 removed)
Generate po/git.pot from v2.5.0-rc0 for git v2.5.0 l10n round 1.

Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <worldhello.net@gmail.com>
2015-06-27 19:18:04 +08:00
5330e6e270 p5310: Fix broken && chain in performance test
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-26 15:41:50 -07:00
2df5a846d0 Documentation/bisect: revise overall content
Thoroughly revise the "git bisect" manpage, including:

* Beef up the "Description" section.

* Make the first long example less specific to kernel development.

* De-emphasize implementation details in a couple of places.

* Add "(roughly N steps)" in the places where example output is shown.

* Properly markup code within the prose.

* Lots of wordsmithing.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-26 14:15:05 -07:00
d95138e695 setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when work tree is set, like $GIT_DIR
In the test case, we run setup_git_dir_gently() the first time to read
$GIT_DIR/config so that we can resolve aliases. We'll enter
setup_discovered_git_dir() and may or may not call set_git_dir() near
the end of the function, depending on whether the detected git dir is
".git" or not. This set_git_dir() will set env var $GIT_DIR.

For normal repo, git dir detected via setup_discovered_git_dir() will be
".git", and set_git_dir() is not called. If .git file is used however,
the git dir can't be ".git" and set_git_dir() is called and $GIT_DIR
set. This is the key of this problem.

If we expand an alias (or autocorrect command names), then
setup_git_dir_gently() is run the second time. If $GIT_DIR is not set in
the first run, we run the same setup_discovered_git_dir() as before.
Nothing to see. If it is, however, we'll enter setup_explicit_git_dir()
this time.

This is where the "fun" is.  If $GIT_WORK_TREE is not set but
$GIT_DIR is, you are supposed to be at the root level of the
worktree.  But if you are in a subdir "foo/bar" (real worktree's top
is "foo"), this rule bites you: your detected worktree is now
"foo/bar", even though the first run correctly detected worktree as
"foo". You get "internal error: work tree has already been set" as a
result.

Bottom line is, when $GIT_DIR is set, $GIT_WORK_TREE should be set too
unless there's no work tree. But setting $GIT_WORK_TREE inside
set_git_dir() may backfire. We don't know at that point if work tree is
already configured by the caller. So set it when work tree is
detected. It does not harm if $GIT_WORK_TREE is set while $GIT_DIR is
not.

Reported-by: Bjørnar Snoksrud <snoksrud@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-26 11:52:26 -07:00
c9493973a5 Documentation/bisect: move getting help section to the end
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-26 11:10:54 -07:00
3115ee45c8 cat-file: sort and de-dup output of --batch-all-objects
The sorting we could probably live without, but printing
duplicates is just a hassle for the user, who must then
de-dup themselves (or risk a wrong answer if they are doing
something like counting objects with a particular property).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-26 09:24:42 -07:00
38ae878407 read_gitfile_gently: fix use-after-free
The "dir" variable is a pointer into the "buf" array. When
we hit the cleanup_return path, the first thing we do is
free(buf); but one of the error messages prints "dir", which
will access the memory after the free.

We can fix this by reorganizing the error path a little. We
act on the fatal, error-printing conditions first, as they
want to access memory and do not care about freeing. Then we
free any memory, and finally return.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-26 09:23:08 -07:00
351d06df51 Merge branch 'jk/stash-require-clean-index' into maint
A hotfix for the topic already in 'master'.

* jk/stash-require-clean-index:
  Revert "stash: require a clean index to apply"
2015-06-25 23:03:27 -07:00
b1f0802e91 Merge branch 'cb/array-size' into maint
* cb/array-size:
  Fix definition of ARRAY_SIZE for non-gcc builds
2015-06-25 23:03:25 -07:00
7ecec52d42 Git 2.5.0-rc0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-25 11:08:39 -07:00
c82b6d3f4b Merge branch 'cn/cvsimport-perl-update'
* cn/cvsimport-perl-update:
  cvsimport: silence regex warning appearing in Perl 5.22.
2015-06-25 11:08:08 -07:00
5416f8af0f Merge branch 'cb/array-size'
* cb/array-size:
  Fix definition of ARRAY_SIZE for non-gcc builds
2015-06-25 11:07:42 -07:00
a6a1ad9b25 Sync with 2.4.5 2015-06-25 11:04:30 -07:00
0df0541bf1 Git 2.4.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-25 11:03:05 -07:00
ebf4fc90da Merge branch 'sg/merge-summary-config' into maint
Doc updates.

* sg/merge-summary-config:
  Documentation: include 'merge.branchdesc' for merge and config as well
2015-06-25 11:02:17 -07:00
5fd72277d4 Merge branch 'jk/make-fix-dependencies' into maint
Build clean-up.

* jk/make-fix-dependencies:
  Makefile: silence perl/PM.stamp recipe
  Makefile: avoid timestamp updates to GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS
  Makefile: drop dependency between git-instaweb and gitweb
2015-06-25 11:02:16 -07:00
68538cf954 Merge branch 'sb/pack-protocol-mention-smart-http' into maint
Doc updates.

* sb/pack-protocol-mention-smart-http:
  Documentation/technical/pack-protocol: mention http as possible protocol
2015-06-25 11:02:14 -07:00
f2bd231414 Merge branch 'jk/die-on-bogus-worktree-late' into maint
The setup code used to die when core.bare and core.worktree are set
inconsistently, even for commands that do not need working tree.

* jk/die-on-bogus-worktree-late:
  setup_git_directory: delay core.bare/core.worktree errors
2015-06-25 11:02:13 -07:00
6356003c80 Merge branch 'pt/pull-tags-error-diag' into maint
There was a dead code that used to handle "git pull --tags" and
show special-cased error message, which was made irrelevant when
the semantics of the option changed back in Git 1.9 days.

* pt/pull-tags-error-diag:
  pull: remove --tags error in no merge candidates case
2015-06-25 11:02:12 -07:00
6998d890c7 Merge branch 'jk/color-diff-plain-is-context' into maint
"color.diff.plain" was a misnomer; give it 'color.diff.context' as
a more logical synonym.

* jk/color-diff-plain-is-context:
  diff.h: rename DIFF_PLAIN color slot to DIFF_CONTEXT
  diff: accept color.diff.context as a synonym for "plain"
2015-06-25 11:02:11 -07:00
c5baf18a40 Merge branch 'jk/diagnose-config-mmap-failure' into maint
The configuration reader/writer uses mmap(2) interface to access
the files; when we find a directory, it barfed with "Out of memory?".

* jk/diagnose-config-mmap-failure:
  xmmap(): drop "Out of memory?"
  config.c: rewrite ENODEV into EISDIR when mmap fails
  config.c: avoid xmmap error messages
  config.c: fix mmap leak when writing config
  read-cache.c: drop PROT_WRITE from mmap of index
2015-06-25 11:02:11 -07:00
c53312583b Merge branch 'jk/squelch-missing-link-warning-for-unreachable' into maint
Recent "git prune" traverses young unreachable objects to safekeep
old objects in the reachability chain from them, which sometimes
caused error messages that are unnecessarily alarming.

* jk/squelch-missing-link-warning-for-unreachable:
  suppress errors on missing UNINTERESTING links
  silence broken link warnings with revs->ignore_missing_links
  add quieter versions of parse_{tree,commit}
2015-06-25 11:02:10 -07:00
f249409b6b Merge branch 'mm/rebase-i-post-rewrite-exec' into maint
"git rebase -i" fired post-rewrite hook when it shouldn't (namely,
when it was told to stop sequencing with 'exec' insn).

* mm/rebase-i-post-rewrite-exec:
  t5407: use <<- to align the expected output
  rebase -i: fix post-rewrite hook with failed exec command
  rebase -i: demonstrate incorrect behavior of post-rewrite
2015-06-25 11:02:09 -07:00
b5496cbd22 Merge branch 'nd/diff-i-t-a'
* nd/diff-i-t-a:
  Revert "diff-lib.c: adjust position of i-t-a entries in diff"
2015-06-25 10:47:46 -07:00
16272c7db4 cvsimport: silence regex warning appearing in Perl 5.22.
Since Perl 5.22, "A literal '{' should now be escaped in a pattern".
Silence the recently added warning by using \{ instead.

Signed-off-by: Christian Neukirchen <chneukirchen@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-24 17:14:27 -07:00
e2c6f7cd5a Fix definition of ARRAY_SIZE for non-gcc builds
The improved ARRAY_SIZE macro uses BARF_UNLESS_AN_ARRAY which expands
to a valid check for recent gcc versions and to 0 for older gcc
versions but is not defined on non-gcc builds.

Non-gcc builds need this macro to expand to 0 as well. The current outer
test (defined(__GNUC__) && (__GNUC__ >= 3)) is a strictly weaker
condition than the inner test (GIT_GNUC_PREREQ(3, 1)) so we can omit the
outer test and cause the BARF_UNLESS_AN_ARRAY macro to be defined
correctly on non-gcc builds as well as gcc builds with older versions.

Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-24 17:14:00 -07:00
067fbd4105 introduce "preciousObjects" repository extension
If this extension is used in a repository, then no
operations should run which may drop objects from the object
storage. This can be useful if you are sharing that storage
with other repositories whose refs you cannot see.

For instance, if you do:

  $ git clone -s parent child
  $ git -C parent config extensions.preciousObjects true
  $ git -C parent config core.repositoryformatversion 1

you now have additional safety when running git in the
parent repository. Prunes and repacks will bail with an
error, and `git gc` will skip those operations (it will
continue to pack refs and do other non-object operations).
Older versions of git, when run in the repository, will
fail on every operation.

Note that we do not set the preciousObjects extension by
default when doing a "clone -s", as doing so breaks
backwards compatibility. It is a decision the user should
make explicitly.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-24 17:09:35 -07:00
00a09d57eb introduce "extensions" form of core.repositoryformatversion
Normally we try to avoid bumps of the whole-repository
core.repositoryformatversion field. However, it is
unavoidable if we want to safely change certain aspects of
git in a backwards-incompatible way (e.g., modifying the set
of ref tips that we must traverse to generate a list of
unreachable, safe-to-prune objects).

If we were to bump the repository version for every such
change, then any implementation understanding version `X`
would also have to understand `X-1`, `X-2`, and so forth,
even though the incompatibilities may be in orthogonal parts
of the system, and there is otherwise no reason we cannot
implement one without the other (or more importantly, that
the user cannot choose to use one feature without the other,
weighing the tradeoff in compatibility only for that
particular feature).

This patch documents the existing repositoryformatversion
strategy and introduces a new format, "1", which lets a
repository specify that it must run with an arbitrary set of
extensions. This can be used, for example:

 - to inform git that the objects should not be pruned based
   only on the reachability of the ref tips (e.g, because it
   has "clone --shared" children)

 - that the refs are stored in a format besides the usual
   "refs" and "packed-refs" directories

Because we bump to format "1", and because format "1"
requires that a running git knows about any extensions
mentioned, we know that older versions of the code will not
do something dangerous when confronted with these new
formats.

For example, if the user chooses to use database storage for
refs, they may set the "extensions.refbackend" config to
"db". Older versions of git will not understand format "1"
and bail. Versions of git which understand "1" but do not
know about "refbackend", or which know about "refbackend"
but not about the "db" backend, will refuse to run. This is
annoying, of course, but much better than the alternative of
claiming that there are no refs in the repository, or
writing to a location that other implementations will not
read.

Note that we are only defining the rules for format 1 here.
We do not ever write format 1 ourselves; it is a tool that
is meant to be used by users and future extensions to
provide safety with older implementations.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-24 17:09:08 -07:00
df97e5dfea Ninth batch for 2.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-24 12:27:20 -07:00
bfb539bb73 Merge branch 'jk/stash-require-clean-index'
A hotfix for the topic already in 'master'.

* jk/stash-require-clean-index:
  Revert "stash: require a clean index to apply"
2015-06-24 12:21:59 -07:00
3072ec397c Merge branch 'pa/auto-gc-mac-osx'
Recent Mac OS X updates breaks the logic to detect that the machine
is on the AC power in the sample pre-auto-gc script.

* pa/auto-gc-mac-osx:
  hooks/pre-auto-gc: adjust power checking for newer OS X
2015-06-24 12:21:58 -07:00
b3689ce31c Merge branch 'pt/t0302-needs-sanity'
* pt/t0302-needs-sanity:
  t0302: "unreadable" test needs SANITY prereq
2015-06-24 12:21:57 -07:00
b79bbed185 Merge branch 'ld/p4-changes-block-size'
More Perforce row number limit workaround for "git p4".

* ld/p4-changes-block-size:
  git-p4: fixing --changes-block-size handling
  git-p4: add tests for non-numeric revision range
  git-p4: test with limited p4 server results
  git-p4: additional testing of --changes-block-size
2015-06-24 12:21:57 -07:00
61461791be Merge branch 'fk/doc-format-patch-vn'
Docfix.

* fk/doc-format-patch-vn:
  doc: format-patch: fix typo
2015-06-24 12:21:56 -07:00
07528be101 Merge branch 'sg/commit-cleanup-scissors'
"git commit --cleanup=scissors" was not careful enough to protect
against getting fooled by a line that looked like scissors.

* sg/commit-cleanup-scissors:
  commit: cope with scissors lines in commit message
2015-06-24 12:21:55 -07:00
712b351bd3 Merge branch 'jk/index-pack-reduce-recheck'
Disable "have we lost a race with competing repack?" check while
receiving a huge object transfer that runs index-pack.

* jk/index-pack-reduce-recheck:
  index-pack: avoid excessive re-reading of pack directory
2015-06-24 12:21:54 -07:00
c595cb9c4f Merge branch 'af/tcsh-completion-noclobber'
The tcsh completion writes a bash scriptlet but that would have
failed for users with noclobber set.

* af/tcsh-completion-noclobber:
  git-completion.tcsh: fix redirect with noclobber
2015-06-24 12:21:53 -07:00
9d71c5f408 Merge branch 'mh/reporting-broken-refs-from-for-each-ref'
"git for-each-ref" reported "missing object" for 0{40} when it
encounters a broken ref.  The lack of object whose name is 0{40} is
not the problem; the ref being broken is.

* mh/reporting-broken-refs-from-for-each-ref:
  read_loose_refs(): treat NULL_SHA1 loose references as broken
  read_loose_refs(): simplify function logic
  for-each-ref: report broken references correctly
  t6301: new tests of for-each-ref error handling
2015-06-24 12:21:52 -07:00
54a17cdb9c Merge branch 'sg/completion-commit-cleanup'
* sg/completion-commit-cleanup:
  completion: teach 'scissors' mode to 'git commit --cleanup='
2015-06-24 12:21:51 -07:00
ce5e33832a Merge branch 'pt/am-abort-fix'
Various fixes around "git am" that applies a patch to a history
that is not there yet.

* pt/am-abort-fix:
  am --abort: keep unrelated commits on unborn branch
  am --abort: support aborting to unborn branch
  am --abort: revert changes introduced by failed 3way merge
  am --skip: support skipping while on unborn branch
  am -3: support 3way merge on unborn branch
  am --skip: revert changes introduced by failed 3way merge
2015-06-24 12:21:50 -07:00
6f59058e49 Merge branch 'nd/untracked-cache'
Hotfix for the 'untracked-cache' topic that is already in 'master'.

* nd/untracked-cache:
  read-cache: fix untracked cache invalidation when split-index is used
2015-06-24 12:21:49 -07:00
8f61ccf15d Merge branch 'mh/fsck-reflog-entries'
"git fsck" used to ignore missing or invalid objects recorded in reflog.

* mh/fsck-reflog-entries:
  fsck: report errors if reflog entries point at invalid objects
  fsck_handle_reflog_sha1(): new function
2015-06-24 12:21:48 -07:00
510ab3f3c1 Merge branch 'js/sleep-without-select'
Portability fix.

* js/sleep-without-select:
  lockfile: wait using sleep_millisec() instead of select()
  lockfile: convert retry timeout computations to millisecond
  help.c: wrap wait-only poll() invocation in sleep_millisec()
  lockfile: replace random() by rand()
2015-06-24 12:21:47 -07:00
5d24b109a6 Merge branch 'es/utf8-stupid-compiler-workaround'
A compilation workaround.

* es/utf8-stupid-compiler-workaround:
  utf8: NO_ICONV: silence uninitialized variable warning
2015-06-24 12:21:46 -07:00
4b64c8a1ee Merge branch 'rl/am-3way-config'
"git am" learned am.threeWay configuration variable.

* rl/am-3way-config:
  git-am: add am.threeWay config variable
  t4150-am: refactor am -3 tests
  git-am.sh: fix initialization of the threeway variable
2015-06-24 12:21:45 -07:00
49ac7358da Merge branch 'jc/ll-merge-expose-path'
Traditionally, external low-level 3-way merge drivers are expected
to produce their results based solely on the contents of the three
variants given in temporary files named by %O, %A and %B on their
command line.  Additionally allow them to look at the final path
(given by %P).

* jc/ll-merge-expose-path:
  ll-merge: pass the original path to external drivers
2015-06-24 12:21:45 -07:00
6da9f888da Merge branch 'es/osx-header-pollutes-mask-macro'
* es/osx-header-pollutes-mask-macro:
  ewah: use less generic macro name
  ewah/bitmap: silence warning about MASK macro redefinition
2015-06-24 12:21:44 -07:00
3c84c38dac Merge branch 'es/configure-getdelim'
Auto-detect availability of getdelim() that helps optimized version
of strbuf_getwholeline().

* es/configure-getdelim:
  configure: add getdelim() check
  config.mak.uname: Darwin: define HAVE_GETDELIM for modern OS X releases
2015-06-24 12:21:43 -07:00
a1eaf8655d Merge branch 'pt/pull-optparse'
"git pull" has become more aware of the options meant for
underlying "git fetch" and then learned to use parse-options
parser.

* pt/pull-optparse:
  pull: use git-rev-parse --parseopt for option parsing
  pull: handle git-fetch's options as well
2015-06-24 12:21:42 -07:00
20d16da5ca Merge branch 'qn/blame-show-email'
"git blame" learned blame.showEmail configuration variable.

* qn/blame-show-email:
  blame: add blame.showEmail configuration
2015-06-24 12:21:41 -07:00
de04706e31 Merge branch 'jc/do-not-feed-tags-to-clear-commit-marks'
"git format-patch --ignore-if-upstream A..B" did not like to be fed
tags as boundary commits.

* jc/do-not-feed-tags-to-clear-commit-marks:
  format-patch: do not feed tags to clear_commit_marks()
2015-06-24 12:21:40 -07:00
8c17d5a3c0 Merge branch 'es/send-email-sendmail-alias'
"git send-email" learned to handle more forms of sendmail style
aliases file.

* es/send-email-sendmail-alias:
  send-email: further warn about unsupported sendmail aliases features
  t9001: add sendmail aliases line continuation tests
  t9001: refactor sendmail aliases test infrastructure
  send-email: implement sendmail aliases line continuation support
  send-email: simplify sendmail aliases comment and blank line recognizer
  send-email: refactor sendmail aliases parser
  send-email: fix style: cuddle 'elsif' and 'else' with closing brace
  send-email: drop noise comments which merely repeat what code says
  send-email: visually distinguish sendmail aliases parser warnings
  send-email: further document missing sendmail aliases functionality
2015-06-24 12:21:39 -07:00
59c465d5c0 Merge branch 'jc/apply-reject-noop-hunk'
"git apply" cannot diagnose a patch corruption when the breakage is
to mark the length of the hunk shorter than it really is on the
hunk header line "@@ -l,k +m,n @@"; one special case it could is
when the hunk becomes no-op (e.g. k == n == 2 for two-line context
patch output), and it learned how to do so.

* jc/apply-reject-noop-hunk:
  apply: reject a hunk that does not do anything
2015-06-24 12:21:39 -07:00
1335f73289 fsck: support ignoring objects in git fsck via fsck.skiplist
Identical to support in `git receive-pack for the config option
`receive.fsck.skiplist`, we now support ignoring given objects in
`git fsck` via `fsck.skiplist` altogether.

This is extremely handy in case of legacy repositories where it would
cause more pain to change incorrect objects than to live with them
(e.g. a duplicate 'author' line in an early commit object).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:37 -07:00
cd94c6f91e fsck: git receive-pack: support excluding objects from fsck'ing
The optional new config option `receive.fsck.skipList` specifies the path
to a file listing the names, i.e. SHA-1s, one per line, of objects that
are to be ignored by `git receive-pack` when `receive.fsckObjects = true`.

This is extremely handy in case of legacy repositories where it would
cause more pain to change incorrect objects than to live with them
(e.g. a duplicate 'author' line in an early commit object).

The intended use case is for server administrators to inspect objects
that are reported by `git push` as being too problematic to enter the
repository, and to add the objects' SHA-1 to a (preferably sorted) file
when the objects are legitimate, i.e. when it is determined that those
problematic objects should be allowed to enter the server.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:37 -07:00
02976bf856 fsck: introduce git fsck --connectivity-only
This option avoids unpacking each and all blob objects, and just
verifies the connectivity. In particular with large repositories, this
speeds up the operation, at the expense of missing corrupt blobs,
ignoring unreachable objects and other fsck issues, if any.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:37 -07:00
2becf00ff7 fsck: support demoting errors to warnings
We already have support in `git receive-pack` to deal with some legacy
repositories which have non-fatal issues.

Let's make `git fsck` itself useful with such repositories, too, by
allowing users to ignore known issues, or at least demote those issues
to mere warnings.

Example: `git -c fsck.missingEmail=ignore fsck` would hide
problems with missing emails in author, committer and tagger lines.

In the same spirit that `git receive-pack`'s usage of the fsck machinery
differs from `git fsck`'s – some of the non-fatal warnings in `git fsck`
are fatal with `git receive-pack` when receive.fsckObjects = true, for
example – we strictly separate the fsck.<msg-id> from the
receive.fsck.<msg-id> settings.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:36 -07:00
4b55b9b479 fsck: document the new receive.fsck.<msg-id> options
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:36 -07:00
f27d05b170 fsck: allow upgrading fsck warnings to errors
The 'invalid tag name' and 'missing tagger entry' warnings can now be
upgraded to errors by specifying `invalidTagName` and
`missingTaggerEntry` in the receive.fsck.<msg-id> config setting.

Incidentally, the missing tagger warning is now really shown as a warning
(as opposed to being reported with the "error:" prefix, as it used to be
the case before this commit).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:36 -07:00
efaba7cc77 fsck: optionally ignore specific fsck issues completely
An fsck issue in a legacy repository might be so common that one would
like not to bother the user with mentioning it at all. With this change,
that is possible by setting the respective message type to "ignore".

This change "abuses" the missingEmail=warn test to verify that "ignore"
is also accepted and works correctly. And while at it, it makes sure
that multiple options work, too (they are passed to unpack-objects or
index-pack as a comma-separated list via the --strict=... command-line
option).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:36 -07:00
f50c440730 fsck: disallow demoting grave fsck errors to warnings
Some kinds of errors are intrinsically unrecoverable (e.g. errors while
uncompressing objects). It does not make sense to allow demoting them to
mere warnings.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:36 -07:00
70a4ae73d8 fsck: add a simple test for receive.fsck.<msg-id>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:36 -07:00
7d7d5b0568 fsck: make fsck_tag() warn-friendly
When fsck_tag() identifies a problem with the commit, it should try
to make it possible to continue checking the commit object, in case the
user wants to demote the detected errors to mere warnings.

Just like fsck_commit(), there are certain problems that could hide other
issues with the same tag object. For example, if the 'type' line is not
encountered in the correct position, the 'tag' line – if there is any –
would not be handled at all.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:35 -07:00
c9ad147f83 fsck: handle multiple authors in commits specially
This problem has been detected in the wild, and is the primary reason
to introduce an option to demote certain fsck errors to warnings. Let's
offer to ignore this particular problem specifically.

Technically, we could handle such repositories by setting
receive.fsck.<msg-id> to missingCommitter=warn, but that could hide
missing tree objects in the same commit because we cannot continue
verifying any commit object after encountering a missing committer line,
while we can continue in the case of multiple author lines.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:35 -07:00
b3584761eb fsck: make fsck_commit() warn-friendly
When fsck_commit() identifies a problem with the commit, it should try
to make it possible to continue checking the commit object, in case the
user wants to demote the detected errors to mere warnings.

Note that some problems are too problematic to simply ignore. For
example, when the header lines are mixed up, we punt after encountering
an incorrect line. Therefore, demoting certain warnings to errors can
hide other problems. Example: demoting the missingauthor error to
a warning would hide a problematic committer line.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:35 -07:00
e6826e335a fsck: make fsck_ident() warn-friendly
When fsck_ident() identifies a problem with the ident, it should still
advance the pointer to the next line so that fsck can continue in the
case of a mere warning.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:35 -07:00
71ab8fa840 fsck: report the ID of the error/warning
Some repositories written by legacy code have objects with non-fatal
fsck issues. To allow the user to ignore those issues, let's print
out the ID (e.g. when encountering "missingEmail", the user might
want to call `git config --add receive.fsck.missingEmail=warn`).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:35 -07:00
5d477a334a fsck (receive-pack): allow demoting errors to warnings
For example, missing emails in commit and tag objects can be demoted to
mere warnings with

	git config receive.fsck.missingemail=warn

The value is actually a comma-separated list.

In case that the same key is listed in multiple receive.fsck.<msg-id>
lines in the config, the latter configuration wins (this can happen for
example when both $HOME/.gitconfig and .git/config contain message type
settings).

As git receive-pack does not actually perform the checks, it hands off
the setting to index-pack or unpack-objects in the form of an optional
argument to the --strict option.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:27:34 -07:00
0282f4dced fsck: offer a function to demote fsck errors to warnings
There are legacy repositories out there whose older commits and tags
have issues that prevent pushing them when 'receive.fsckObjects' is set.
One real-life example is a commit object that has been hand-crafted to
list two authors.

Often, it is not possible to fix those issues without disrupting the
work with said repositories, yet it is still desirable to perform checks
by setting `receive.fsckObjects = true`. This commit is the first step
to allow demoting specific fsck issues to mere warnings.

The `fsck_set_msg_types()` function added by this commit parses a list
of settings in the form:

	missingemail=warn,badname=warn,...

Unfortunately, the FSCK_WARN/FSCK_ERROR flag is only really heeded by
git fsck so far, but other call paths (e.g. git index-pack --strict)
error out *always* no matter what type was specified. Therefore, we need
to take extra care to set all message types to FSCK_ERROR by default in
those cases.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 14:26:46 -07:00
f6216c2c5c bisect: correction of typo
Signed-off-by: Antoine Delaite <antoine.delaite@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 11:41:56 -07:00
78cc1a540b Revert "diff-lib.c: adjust position of i-t-a entries in diff"
This reverts commit d95d728aba.

It turns out that many other commands that need to interact with the
result of running diff-files and diff-index, e.g.  "git apply", "git
rm", etc., need to be adjusted to the new world order it brings in.
For example, it would break this sequence to correct a whitespace
breakage in the parts you changed:

	git add -N file
	git diff --cached file | git apply --cached --whitespace=fix
	git checkout file

In the old world order, "diff" showed a patch to modify an existing
empty file by adding its full contents, and "apply" updated the
index by modifying the existing empty blob (which is what an
Intent-to-Add entry records in the index) with that patch.

In the new world order, "diff" shows a patch to create a new file
with its full contents, but because "apply" thinks that the i-t-a
entry already exists in the index, it refused to accept a creation.

Adjusting "apply" to this new world order is easy, but we need to
assess the extent of the damage to the rest of the system the new
world order brought in before going forward and adjust them all,
after which we can resurrect the commit being reverted here.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-23 10:37:21 -07:00
edc8f710c7 contrib/subtree: small tidy-up to test
There's no need to switch branches to parse another branch's ancestry.

Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 15:30:00 -07:00
d417c244ec contrib/subtree: fix broken &&-chains and revealed test error
This fixes two instances where a &&-chain was broken in the subtree
tests and fixes a test error that was revealed because of this.

Many tests in t7900-subtree.sh make a commit and then use 'undo' to
reset the state for the next test. In the 'check hash of split' test,
an 'undo' was being invoked after a 'subtree split' even though the
particular invocation of 'subtree split' did not actually make a commit.
The subsequent check_equal was failing, but this failure was masked by
that broken &&-chain.

Removing this undo causes the failing check_equal to succeed but breaks
the a check_equal later on in the same test.

It turns out that an earlier test ('check if --message for merge works
with squash too') makes a commit but doesn't 'undo' to the state
expected by the remaining tests. None of the intervening tests cared
enough about the state of the test repo to fail and the spurious 'undo'
in 'check hash of split' restored the expected state for any remaining
test that might care.

Adding the missing 'undo' to 'check if --message for merge works
with squash too' and removing the spurious one from 'check hash of
split' fixes all tests once the &&-chains are completed.

Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 15:29:51 -07:00
41208825a8 contrib/subtree: use tabs consitently for indentation in tests
Although subtrees tests uses more spaces for indentation than tabs,
there are still quite a lot of lines indented with tabs. As tabs conform
with Git coding guidelines resolve the inconsistency in favour of tabs.

Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 15:29:36 -07:00
2a514ed805 parse-options: move unsigned long option parsing out of pack-objects.c
The unsigned long option parsing (including 'k'/'m'/'g' suffix
parsing) is more widely applicable.  Add support for OPT_MAGNITUDE
to parse-options.h and change pack-objects.c use this support.

The error behavior on parse errors follows that of OPT_INTEGER.  The
name of the option that failed to parse is reported with a brief
message describing the expect format for the option argument and
then the full usage message for the command invoked.

This differs from the previous behavior for OPT_ULONG used in
pack-objects for --max-pack-size and --window-memory which used to
display the value supplied in the error message and did not display
the full usage message.

Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 15:07:21 -07:00
81a48cc080 test-parse-options: update to handle negative ints
Fix the printf specification to treat 'integer' as the signed type
that it is and add a test that checks that we parse negative option
arguments.

Signed-off-by: Charles Bailey <cbailey32@bloomberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 15:04:23 -07:00
6a951937ae cat-file: add --batch-all-objects option
It can sometimes be useful to examine all objects in the
repository. Normally this is done with "git rev-list --all
--objects", but:

  1. That shows only reachable objects. You may want to look
     at all available objects.

  2. It's slow. We actually open each object to walk the
     graph. If your operation is OK with seeing unreachable
     objects, it's an order of magnitude faster to just
     enumerate the loose directories and pack indices.

You can do this yourself using "ls" and "git show-index",
but it's non-obvious.  This patch adds an option to
"cat-file --batch-check" to operate on all available
objects (rather than reading names from stdin).

This is based on a proposal by Charles Bailey to provide a
separate "git list-all-objects" command. That is more
orthogonal, as it splits enumerating the objects from
getting information about them. However, in practice you
will either:

  a. Feed the list of objects directly into cat-file anyway,
     so you can find out information about them. Keeping it
     in a single process is more efficient.

  b. Ask the listing process to start telling you more
     information about the objects, in which case you will
     reinvent cat-file's batch-check formatter.

Adding a cat-file option is simple and efficient. And if you
really do want just the object names, you can always do:

  git cat-file --batch-check='%(objectname)' --batch-all-objects

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:55:52 -07:00
44b877e9bc cat-file: split batch_one_object into two stages
There are really two things going on in this function:

  1. We convert the name we got on stdin to a sha1.

  2. We look up and print information on the sha1.

Let's split out the second half so that we can call it
separately.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:55:52 -07:00
82330950d9 cat-file: stop returning value from batch_one_object
If batch_one_object returns an error code, we stop reading
input.  However, it will only do so if we feed it NULL,
which cannot happen; we give it the "buf" member of a
strbuf, which is always non-NULL.

We did originally stop on other errors (like a missing
object), but this was changed in 3c076db (cat-file --batch /
--batch-check: do not exit if hashes are missing,
2008-06-09). These days we keep going for any per-object
error (and print "missing" when necessary).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:55:52 -07:00
fc4937c372 cat-file: add --buffer option
We use a direct write() to output the results of --batch and
--batch-check. This is good for processes feeding the input
and reading the output interactively, but it introduces
measurable overhead if you do not want this feature. For
example, on linux.git:

  $ git rev-list --objects --all | cut -d' ' -f1 >objects
  $ time git cat-file --batch-check='%(objectsize)' \
          <objects >/dev/null
  real    0m5.440s
  user    0m5.060s
  sys     0m0.384s

This patch adds an option to use regular stdio buffering:

  $ time git cat-file --batch-check='%(objectsize)' \
          --buffer <objects >/dev/null
  real    0m4.975s
  user    0m4.888s
  sys     0m0.092s

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:55:52 -07:00
bfd155943e cat-file: move batch_options definition to top of file
That way all of the functions can make use of it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:55:52 -07:00
ad42f28d0c cat-file: minor style fix in options list
We do not put extra whitespace before the first macro
argument.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:55:52 -07:00
b4d6280e2f Merge branch 'jk/maint-for-each-packed-object' into jk/cat-file-batch-all
* jk/maint-for-each-packed-object:
  for_each_packed_object: automatically open pack index
2015-06-22 14:54:15 -07:00
f813e9ea5f for_each_packed_object: automatically open pack index
When for_each_packed_object is called, we call
prepare_packed_git() to make sure we have the actual list of
packs. But the latter does not actually open the pack
indices, meaning that pack->nr_objects may simply be 0 if
the pack has not otherwise been used since the program
started.

In practice, this didn't come up for the current callers,
because they iterate the packed objects only after iterating
all reachable objects (so for it to matter you would have to
have a pack consisting only of unreachable objects). But it
is a dangerous and confusing interface that should be fixed
for future callers.

Note that we do not end the iteration when a pack cannot be
opened, but we do return an error. That lets you complete
the iteration even in actively-repacked repository where an
.idx file may racily go away, but it also lets callers know
that they may not have gotten the complete list (which the
current reachability-check caller does care about).

We have to tweak one of the prune tests due to the changed
return value; an earlier test creates bogus .idx files and
does not clean them up. Having to make this tweak is a good
thing; it means we will not prune in a broken repository,
and the test confirms that we do not negatively impact a
more lenient caller, count-objects.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:53:58 -07:00
e18443ece7 verify-tag: add option to print raw gpg status information
verify-tag by default displays human-readable output on standard error.
However, it can also be useful to get access to the raw gpg status
information, which is machine-readable, allowing automated
implementation of signing policy.  Add a --raw option to make verify-tag
produce the gpg status information on standard error instead of the
human-readable format.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:20:47 -07:00
aeff29dd4d verify-commit: add option to print raw gpg status information
verify-commit by default displays human-readable output on standard
error.  However, it can also be useful to get access to the raw gpg
status information, which is machine-readable, allowing automated
implementation of signing policy.  Add a --raw option to make
verify-commit produce the gpg status information on standard error
instead of the human-readable format.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:20:47 -07:00
ca194d50b8 gpg: centralize printing signature buffers
The code to handle printing of signature data from a struct
signature_check is very similar between verify-commit and verify-tag.
Place this in a single function.  verify-tag retains its special case
behavior of printing the tag even when no valid signature is found.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:20:47 -07:00
434060ec6d gpg: centralize signature check
verify-commit and verify-tag both share a central codepath for verifying
commits: check_signature.  However, verify-tag exited successfully for
untrusted signature, while verify-commit exited unsuccessfully.
Centralize this signature check and make verify-commit adopt the older
verify-tag behavior.  This behavior is more logical anyway, as the
signature is in fact valid, whether or not there's a path of trust to
the author.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:20:46 -07:00
8e98e5f27a verify-commit: add test for exit status on untrusted signature
verify-tag exits successfully if the signature is good but the key is
untrusted.  verify-commit exits unsuccessfully.  This divergence in
behavior is unexpected and unwanted.  Since verify-tag existed earlier,
add a failing test to have verify-commit share verify-tag's behavior.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:20:46 -07:00
a4cc18f293 verify-tag: share code with verify-commit
verify-tag was executing an entirely different codepath than
verify-commit, except for the underlying verify_signed_buffer.  Move
much of the code from check_commit_signature to a generic
check_signature function and adjust both codepaths to call it.

Update verify-tag to explicitly output the signature text, as we now
call verify_signed_buffer with strbufs to catch the output, which
prevents it from being printed automatically.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:20:45 -07:00
d66aeff21e verify-tag: add tests
verify-tag was lacking tests.  Add some, mirroring those used for
verify-commit.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 14:20:44 -07:00
1c03c4d347 delete_ref(): use the usual convention for old_sha1
The ref_transaction_update() family of functions use the following
convention for their old_sha1 parameters:

* old_sha1 == NULL: Don't check the old value at all.
* is_null_sha1(old_sha1): Ensure that the reference didn't exist
  before the transaction.
* otherwise: Ensure that the reference had the specified value before
  the transaction.

delete_ref() had a different convention, namely treating
is_null_sha1(old_sha1) as "don't care". Change it to adhere to the
standard convention to reduce the scope for confusion.

Please note that it is now a bug to pass old_sha1=NULL_SHA1 to
delete_ref() (because it doesn't make sense to delete a reference that
you already know doesn't exist). This is consistent with the behavior
of ref_transaction_delete().

Most of the callers of delete_ref() never pass old_sha1=NULL_SHA1 to
delete_ref(), and are therefore unaffected by this change. The
two exceptions are:

* The call in cmd_update_ref(), which passed NULL_SHA1 if the old
  value passed in on the command line was 0{40} or the empty string.
  Change that caller to pass NULL in those cases.

  Arguably, it should be an error to call "update-ref -d" with the old
  value set to "does not exist", just as it is for the `--stdin`
  command "delete". But since this usage was accepted until now,
  continue to accept it.

* The call in delete_branches(), which could pass NULL_SHA1 if
  deleting a broken or symbolic ref. Change it to pass NULL in these
  cases.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:14 -07:00
e2991c8048 cmd_update_ref(): make logic more straightforward
Restructure the code to avoid clearing oldsha1 when oldval is unset.
It's value is not needed in that case, so this change makes it more
obvious that its initialization is consistent with its later use.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:14 -07:00
a1c9eb918b update_ref(): don't read old reference value before delete
If we are deleting the reference, then we don't need to read the
reference's old value. It doesn't provide any race safety, because the
value read just before the delete is no "better" than the value that
would be read under lock during the delete. And even if the reference
previously didn't exist, we can call delete_ref() on it if we don't
provide an old_sha1 value.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:13 -07:00
4eaa4bd800 check_branch_commit(): make first parameter const
Make it clear that this function does not overwrite its first
argument.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:13 -07:00
243371023e refs.h: add some parameter names to function declarations
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:13 -07:00
fb58c8d507 refs: move the remaining ref module declarations to refs.h
Some functions from the refs module were still declared in cache.h.
Move them to refs.h.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:12 -07:00
e426ff4222 initial_ref_transaction_commit(): check for ref D/F conflicts
In initial_ref_transaction_commit(), check for D/F conflicts (i.e.,
the type of conflict that exists between "refs/foo" and
"refs/foo/bar") among the references being created and between the
references being created and any hypothetical existing references.

Ideally, there shouldn't *be* any existing references when this
function is called. But, at least in the case of the "testgit" remote
helper, "clone" can be called after the remote-tracking "HEAD" and
"master" branches have already been created. So let's just do the
full-blown check.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:12 -07:00
fb802b3129 initial_ref_transaction_commit(): check for duplicate refs
Error out if the ref_transaction includes more than one update for any
refname.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:11 -07:00
0a4b24ff14 refs: remove some functions from the module's public interface
The following functions are no longer used from outside the refs
module:

* lock_packed_refs()
* add_packed_ref()
* commit_packed_refs()
* rollback_packed_refs()

So make these functions private.

This is an important step, because it means that nobody outside of the
refs module needs to know the difference between loose and packed
references.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:11 -07:00
58f233ce1e initial_ref_transaction_commit(): function for initial ref creation
"git clone" uses shortcuts when creating the initial set of
references:

* It writes them directly to packed-refs.

* It doesn't lock the individual references (though it does lock the
  packed-refs file).

* It doesn't check for refname conflicts between two new references or
  between one new reference and any hypothetical old ones.

* It doesn't create reflog entries for the reference creations.

This functionality was implemented in builtin/clone.c. But really that
file shouldn't have such intimate knowledge of how references are
stored. So provide a new function in the refs API,
initial_ref_transaction_commit(), which can be used for initial
reference creation. The new function is based on the ref_transaction
interface.

This means that we can make some other functions private to the refs
module. That will be done in a followup commit.

It would seem to make sense to add a test here that there are no
existing references, because that is how the function *should* be
used. But in fact, the "testgit" remote helper appears to call it
*after* having set up refs/remotes/<name>/HEAD and
refs/remotes/<name>/master, so we can't be so strict. For now, the
function trusts its caller to only call it when it makes sense. Future
commits will add some more limited sanity checks.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:11 -07:00
79e4d8a9b8 repack_without_refs(): make function private
It is no longer called from outside of the refs module. Also move its
docstring and change it to imperative voice.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:11 -07:00
a087b432a7 prune_refs(): use delete_refs()
The old version just looped over the references to delete, calling
delete_ref() on each one. But that has quadratic behavior, because
each call to delete_ref() might have to rewrite the packed-refs file.
This can be very expensive in a repository with a large number of
references. In some (admittedly extreme) repositories, we've seen
cases where the ref-pruning part of fetch takes multiple tens of
minutes.

Instead call delete_refs(), which (aside from being less code) has the
optimization that it only rewrites the packed-refs file a single time.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:10 -07:00
a122366d69 prune_remote(): use delete_refs()
This slightly changes how errors are reported. The old and new code
both report errors that come from repack_without_refs() the same way.
But if an error occurs within delete_ref(), the old version only
emitted an error within delete_ref() without further comment. The new
version (in delete_refs()) still emits that error, but then follows it
up with

    error(_("could not remove reference %s"), refname)

The "could not remove reference" error originally came from a similar
message in remove_branches() (from builtin/remote.c).

This is an improvement, because the error from delete_ref() (which
usually comes from ref_transaction_commit()) can be pretty low-level,
like

    Cannot lock ref '%s': unable to resolve reference %s: %s

where the last "%s" is the original strerror.

In any case, I don't think we need to sweat the details too much,
because these errors should only ever be seen in the case of a broken
repository or a race between two processes; i.e., only in pretty rare
and anomalous situations.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:10 -07:00
7fa7dc8904 delete_refs(): bail early if the packed-refs file cannot be rewritten
If we fail to delete the doomed references from the packed-refs file,
then it is unsafe to delete their loose references, because doing so
might expose a value from the packed-refs file that is obsolete and
perhaps even points at an object that has been garbage collected.

So if repack_without_refs() fails, emit a more explicit error message
and bail.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:10 -07:00
5d97861b9b delete_refs(): make error message more generic
Change the error message from

    Could not remove branch %s

to

    could not remove reference %s

First of all, the old error message referred to "branch
refs/remotes/origin/foo", which was awkward even for the existing
caller. Normally we would refer to a reference like that as either
"remote-tracking branch origin/foo" or "reference
refs/remotes/origin/foo". Here I take the lazier alternative.

Moreover, now that this function is part of the refs API, it might be
called for refs that are neither branches nor remote-tracking
branches.

While we're at it, convert the error message to lower case, as per our
usual convention.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:09 -07:00
98ffd5ff67 delete_refs(): new function for the refs API
Move the function remove_branches() from builtin/remote.c to refs.c,
rename it to delete_refs(), and make it public.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:09 -07:00
fc67a0825c delete_ref(): handle special case more explicitly
delete_ref() uses a different convention for its old_sha1 parameter
than, say, ref_transaction_delete(): NULL_SHA1 means not to check the
old value. Make this fact a little bit clearer in the code by handling
it in explicit, commented code rather than burying it in a conditional
expression.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:09 -07:00
b4c4af832b remove_branches(): remove temporary
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:08 -07:00
fc1c21689d delete_ref(): move declaration to refs.h
Also

* Add a docstring

* Rename the second parameter to "old_sha1", to be consistent with the
  convention used elsewhere in the refs module

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 13:17:08 -07:00
f417eed8cd fsck: provide a function to parse fsck message IDs
These functions will be used in the next commits to allow the user to
ask fsck to handle specific problems differently, e.g. demoting certain
errors to warnings. The upcoming `fsck_set_msg_types()` function has to
handle partial strings because we would like to be able to parse, say,
'missingemail=warn,missingtaggerentry=warn' command line parameters
(which will be passed by receive-pack to index-pack and unpack-objects).

To make the parsing robust, we generate strings from the enum keys, and
using these keys, we match up strings without dashes case-insensitively
to the corresponding enum values.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 12:53:25 -07:00
c99ba492f1 fsck: introduce identifiers for fsck messages
Instead of specifying whether a message by the fsck machinery constitutes
an error or a warning, let's specify an identifier relating to the
concrete problem that was encountered. This is necessary for upcoming
support to be able to demote certain errors to warnings.

In the process, simplify the requirements on the calling code: instead of
having to handle full-blown varargs in every callback, we now send a
string buffer ready to be used by the callback.

We could use a simple enum for the message IDs here, but we want to
guarantee that the enum values are associated with the appropriate
message types (i.e. error or warning?). Besides, we want to introduce a
parser in the next commit that maps the string representation to the
enum value, hence we use the slightly ugly preprocessor construct that
is extensible for use with said parser.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 10:24:27 -07:00
22410549fc fsck: introduce fsck options
Just like the diff machinery, we are about to introduce more settings,
therefore it makes sense to carry them around as a (pointer to a) struct
containing all of them.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-22 10:23:32 -07:00
f67986b909 mergetool-lib: fix default tool selection
When no diff nor merge tool is specified (config, option), mergetool-lib
is supposed to choose a default tool from a set of tools. That set is
constructed dynamically depending on the environment (graphical, editor
setting) as a space separated string of tool names.

719518f (mergetool--lib: set IFS for difftool and mergetool, 2015-05-20)
introduced a newline as IFS which breaks the parsing of the space
separated list into items, resulting in a failed search for an available
tool.

Set IFS to a space locally for the tool search.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-19 11:20:52 -07:00
b1456605c2 pull: remove redirection to git-pull.sh
At the beginning of the rewrite of git-pull.sh to C, we introduced a
redirection to git-pull.sh if the environment variable
_GIT_USE_BUILTIN_PULL was not defined in order to not break test scripts
that relied on a functional git-pull.

Now that all of git-pull's functionality has been re-implemented in
builtin/pull.c, remove this redirection, and retire the old git-pull.sh
into contrib/examples/.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-18 13:18:59 -07:00
b7b314711a pull --rebase: error on no merge candidate cases
Tweak the error messages printed by die_no_merge_candidates() to take
into account that we may be "rebasing against" rather than "merging
with".

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-18 13:18:52 -07:00
8944969c20 pull --rebase: exit early when the working directory is dirty
Re-implement the behavior introduced by f9189cf (pull --rebase: exit
early when the working directory is dirty, 2008-05-21).

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-18 13:18:43 -07:00
81dbd768db pull: configure --rebase via branch.<name>.rebase or pull.rebase
Since cd67e4d (Teach 'git pull' about --rebase, 2007-11-28),
fetch+rebase could be set by default by defining the config variable
branch.<name>.rebase. This setting can be overriden on the command line
by --rebase and --no-rebase.

Since 6b37dff (pull: introduce a pull.rebase option to enable --rebase,
2011-11-06), git-pull --rebase can also be configured via the
pull.rebase configuration option.

Re-implement support for these two configuration settings by introducing
config_get_rebase() which is called before parse_options() to set the
default value of opt_rebase.

Helped-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Helped-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-18 13:17:53 -07:00
1678b81ecc pull: teach git pull about --rebase
Since cd67e4d (Teach 'git pull' about --rebase, 2007-11-28), if the
--rebase option is set, git-rebase is run instead of git-merge.

Re-implement this by introducing run_rebase(), which is called instead
of run_merge() if opt_rebase is a true value.

Since c85c792 (pull --rebase: be cleverer with rebased upstream
branches, 2008-01-26), git-pull handles the case where the upstream
branch was rebased since it was last fetched. The fork point (old remote
ref) of the branch from the upstream branch is calculated before fetch,
and then rebased from onto the new remote head (merge_head) after fetch.

Re-implement this by introducing get_merge_branch_2() and
get_merge_branch_1() to find the upstream branch for the
specified/current branch, and get_rebase_fork_point() which will find
the fork point between the upstream branch and current branch.

However, the above change created a problem where git-rebase cannot
detect commits that are already upstream, and thus may result in
unnecessary conflicts. cf65426 (pull --rebase: Avoid spurious conflicts
and reapplying unnecessary patches, 2010-08-12) fixes this by ignoring
the above old remote ref if it is contained within the merge base of the
merge head and the current branch.

This is re-implemented in run_rebase() where fork_point is not used if
it is the merge base returned by get_octopus_merge_base().

Helped-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-18 13:17:46 -07:00
41fca0989e pull: set reflog message
f947413 (Use GIT_REFLOG_ACTION environment variable instead.,
2006-12-28) established git-pull's method for setting the reflog
message, which is to set the environment variable GIT_REFLOG_ACTION to
the evaluation of "pull${1+ $*}" if it has not already been set.

Re-implement this behavior.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-18 13:17:39 -07:00
49ec402d52 pull: implement pulling into an unborn branch
b4dc085 (pull: merge into unborn by fast-forwarding from empty
tree, 2013-06-20) established git-pull's current behavior of pulling
into an unborn branch by fast-forwarding the work tree from an empty
tree to the merge head, then setting HEAD to the merge head.

Re-implement this behavior by introducing pull_into_void() which will be
called instead of run_merge() if HEAD is invalid.

Helped-by: Stephen Robin <stephen.robin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-18 13:17:32 -07:00
fe911b8ca0 pull: fast-forward working tree if head is updated
Since b10ac50 (Fix pulling into the same branch., 2005-08-25), git-pull,
upon detecting that git-fetch updated the current head, will
fast-forward the working tree to the updated head commit.

Re-implement this behavior.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-18 13:17:24 -07:00
4a4cf9e821 pull: check if in unresolved merge state
Since d38a30d (Be more user-friendly when refusing to do something
because of conflict., 2010-01-12), git-pull will error out with
user-friendly advices if the user is in the middle of a merge or has
unmerged files.

Re-implement this behavior. While the "has unmerged files" case can be
handled by die_resolve_conflict(), we introduce a new function
die_conclude_merge() for printing a different error message for when
there are no unmerged files but the merge has not been finished.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-18 13:17:16 -07:00
a9de989754 pull: support pull.ff config
Since b814da8 (pull: add pull.ff configuration, 2014-01-15), git-pull.sh
would lookup the configuration value of "pull.ff", and set the flag
"--ff" if its value is "true", "--no-ff" if its value is "false" and
"--ff-only" if its value is "only".

Re-implement this behavior.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-18 13:17:09 -07:00
44c175c7a4 pull: error on no merge candidates
Commit a8c9bef (pull: improve advice for unconfigured error case,
2009-10-05) fully established the current advices given by git-pull for
the different cases where git-fetch will not have anything marked for
merge:

1. We fetched from a specific remote, and a refspec was given, but it
   ended up not fetching anything. This is usually because the user
   provided a wildcard refspec which had no matches on the remote end.

2. We fetched from a non-default remote, but didn't specify a branch to
   merge. We can't use the configured one because it applies to the
   default remote, and thus the user must specify the branches to merge.

3. We fetched from the branch's or repo's default remote, but:

   a. We are not on a branch, so there will never be a configured branch
      to merge with.

   b. We are on a branch, but there is no configured branch to merge
      with.

4. We fetched from the branch's or repo's default remote, but the
   configured branch to merge didn't get fetched (either it doesn't
   exist, or wasn't part of the configured fetch refspec)

Re-implement the above behavior by implementing get_merge_heads() to
parse the heads in FETCH_HEAD for merging, and implementing
die_no_merge_candidates(), which will be called when FETCH_HEAD has no
heads for merging.

Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-18 13:16:31 -07:00
a32975f516 pull: pass git-fetch's options to git-fetch
Since eb2a8d9 (pull: handle git-fetch's options as well, 2015-06-02),
git-pull knows about and handles git-fetch's options, passing them to
git-fetch. Re-implement this behavior.

Since 29609e6 (pull: do nothing on --dry-run, 2010-05-25) git-pull
supported the --dry-run option, exiting after git-fetch if --dry-run is
set. Re-implement this behavior.

Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-18 13:16:08 -07:00
5b1d901c01 git-multimail: update to release 1.1.0
The changes are described in CHANGES.

Contributions-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Contributions-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@rhansen.org>
Contributions-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Contributions-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Contributions-by: Luke Mewburn <luke@mewburn.net>
Contributions-by: Dave Boutcher <daveboutcher@gmail.com>
Contributions-by: Azat Khuzhin <a3at.mail@gmail.com>
Contributions-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Contributions-by: Mikko Johannes Koivunalho <mikko.koivunalho@iki.fi>
Contributions-by: Elijah Newren <newren@palantir.com>
Contributions-by: Benoît Ryder <benoit@ryder.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-18 10:03:52 -07:00
d5c1b7c286 test-lib.sh: fix color support when tput needs ~/.terminfo
If tput needs ~/.terminfo for the current $TERM, then tput will
succeed before HOME is changed to $TRASH_DIRECTORY (causing color to
be set to 't') but fail afterward.

One possible way to fix this is to treat HOME like TERM: back up the
original value and temporarily restore it before say_color() runs
tput.

Instead, pre-compute and save the color control sequences before
changing either TERM or HOME.  Use the saved control sequences in
say_color() rather than call tput each time.  This avoids the need to
back up and restore the TERM and HOME variables, and it avoids the
overhead of a subshell and two invocations of tput per call to
say_color().

Signed-off-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@bbn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-17 15:16:52 -07:00
e479c5f8f3 docs: clarify that --encoding can produce invalid sequences
In the common case that the commit encoding matches the
output encoding, we do not touch the buffer at all, which
makes things much more efficient. But it might be unclear to
a consumer that we will pass through bogus sequences.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-17 13:46:36 -07:00
c4ac525c84 git-checkout.txt: document "git checkout <pathspec>" better
git checkout <pathspec> can be used to reset changes in the working tree.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-17 13:33:06 -07:00
ca92a660bf Revert "test-lib.sh: do tests for color support after changing HOME"
This reverts commit 102fc80d32.

There are two issues with that commit:

  * It is buggy.  In pseudocode, it is doing:

       color is set || TERM != dumb && color works && color=t

    when it should be doing:

       color is set || { TERM != dumb && color works && color=t }

  * It unnecessarily disables color when tput needs to read
    ~/.terminfo to get the control sequences.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-17 13:05:00 -07:00
eb86a507a1 fetch-pack: check for shallow if depth given
When a repository is first fetched as a shallow clone, either by
git-clone or by fetching into an empty repo, the server's capabilities
are not currently consulted. The client will send shallow requests even
if the server does not understand them, and the resulting error may be
unhelpful to the user. This change pre-emptively checks so we can exit
with a helpful error if necessary.

Signed-off-by: Mike Edgar <adgar@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-17 12:03:58 -07:00
16da57c7c6 Eighth batch for 2.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-16 14:39:31 -07:00
5c040f5af5 Sync with 2.4.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-16 14:39:01 -07:00
f09bd215cd Git 2.4.4
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-16 14:38:01 -07:00
37d6f933df Merge branch 'jk/clone-dissociate' into maint
Code clean-up.

* jk/clone-dissociate:
  clone: reorder --dissociate and --reference options
  clone: use OPT_STRING_LIST for --reference
2015-06-16 14:33:52 -07:00
0d9388dc30 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-doc-intro' into maint
* sb/submodule-doc-intro:
  submodule doc: reorder introductory paragraphs
2015-06-16 14:33:52 -07:00
6de4c80839 Merge branch 'sb/glossary-submodule' into maint
* sb/glossary-submodule:
  glossary: add "remote", "submodule", "superproject"
2015-06-16 14:33:51 -07:00
6588f82ff6 Merge branch 'ah/usage-strings' into maint
A few usage string updates.

* ah/usage-strings:
  blame, log: format usage strings similarly to those in documentation
2015-06-16 14:33:50 -07:00
afd647c55f Merge branch 'mc/commit-doc-grammofix' into maint
Doc grammar fix.

* mc/commit-doc-grammofix:
  Documentation/git-commit: grammofix
2015-06-16 14:33:49 -07:00
dfb67594e9 Merge branch 'rs/janitorial' into maint
Code clean-up.

* rs/janitorial:
  dir: remove unused variable sb
  clean: remove unused variable buf
  use file_exists() to check if a file exists in the worktree
2015-06-16 14:33:47 -07:00
2cd8ebdd3d Merge branch 'sb/test-bitmap-free-at-end' into maint
An earlier leakfix to bitmap testing code was incomplete.

* sb/test-bitmap-free-at-end:
  test_bitmap_walk: free bitmap with bitmap_free
2015-06-16 14:33:47 -07:00
6b2c0ead06 Merge branch 'dt/clean-pathspec-filter-then-lstat' into maint
"git clean pathspec..." tried to lstat(2) and complain even for
paths outside the given pathspec.

* dt/clean-pathspec-filter-then-lstat:
  clean: only lstat files in pathspec
2015-06-16 14:33:46 -07:00
b76b4cd4f1 Merge branch 'jk/http-backend-deadlock' into maint
Communication between the HTTP server and http_backend process can
lead to a dead-lock when relaying a large ref negotiation request.
Diagnose the situation better, and mitigate it by reading such a
request first into core (to a reasonable limit).

* jk/http-backend-deadlock:
  http-backend: spool ref negotiation requests to buffer
  t5551: factor out tag creation
  http-backend: fix die recursion with custom handler
2015-06-16 14:33:45 -07:00
070d276cc1 Merge branch 'jh/filter-empty-contents' into maint
The clean/smudge interface did not work well when filtering an
empty contents (failed and then passed the empty input through).
It can be argued that a filter that produces anything but empty for
an empty input is nonsense, but if the user wants to do strange
things, then why not?

* jh/filter-empty-contents:
  sha1_file: pass empty buffer to index empty file
2015-06-16 14:33:44 -07:00
659d4c8fb2 Merge branch 'jk/stash-options' into maint
Make "git stash something --help" error out, so that users can
safely say "git stash drop --help".

* jk/stash-options:
  stash: recognize "--help" for subcommands
  stash: complain about unknown flags
2015-06-16 14:33:43 -07:00
4be33f7222 Merge branch 'mm/log-format-raw-doc' into maint
Clarify that "log --raw" and "log --format=raw" are unrelated
concepts.

* mm/log-format-raw-doc:
  Documentation/log: clarify sha1 non-abbreviation in log --raw
  Documentation/log: clarify what --raw means
2015-06-16 14:33:43 -07:00
335f1a7eb2 Merge branch 'ep/do-not-feed-a-pointer-to-array-size' into maint
Catch a programmer mistake to feed a pointer not an array to
ARRAY_SIZE() macro, by using a couple of GCC extensions.

* ep/do-not-feed-a-pointer-to-array-size:
  git-compat-util.h: implement a different ARRAY_SIZE macro for for safely deriving the size of array
2015-06-16 14:33:41 -07:00
c3b1c1e9b2 Merge branch 'nd/slim-index-pack-memory-usage'
An earlier optimization broke index-pack for a large object
transfer; this fixes it before the breakage hits any released
version.

* nd/slim-index-pack-memory-usage:
  index-pack: fix truncation of off_t in comparison
2015-06-16 14:27:08 -07:00
486b51bc81 Merge branch 'sb/pack-protocol-mention-smart-http'
Doc updates.

* sb/pack-protocol-mention-smart-http:
  Documentation/technical/pack-protocol: mention http as possible protocol
2015-06-16 14:27:08 -07:00
0d5d7db435 Merge branch 'jk/make-fix-dependencies'
Build clean-up.

* jk/make-fix-dependencies:
  Makefile: silence perl/PM.stamp recipe
  Makefile: avoid timestamp updates to GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS
  Makefile: drop dependency between git-instaweb and gitweb
2015-06-16 14:27:07 -07:00
103b6f9c2b Merge branch 'jk/die-on-bogus-worktree-late'
The setup code used to die when core.bare and core.worktree are set
inconsistently, even for commands that do not need working tree.

* jk/die-on-bogus-worktree-late:
  setup_git_directory: delay core.bare/core.worktree errors
2015-06-16 14:27:06 -07:00
c7ca4424ea Merge branch 'sg/merge-summary-config'
Doc updates.

* sg/merge-summary-config:
  Documentation: include 'merge.branchdesc' for merge and config as well
2015-06-16 14:27:05 -07:00
412e63f0fd Merge branch 'ah/send-email-sendmail-alias'
"git send-email" learned the alias file format used by the sendmail
program (in an abbreviated form).

* ah/send-email-sendmail-alias:
  t9001: write $HOME/, not ~/, to help shells without tilde expansion
  send-email: add sendmail email aliases format
2015-06-16 14:27:04 -07:00
323598387d pkt-line: support tracing verbatim pack contents
When debugging the pack protocol, it is sometimes useful to
store the verbatim pack that we sent or received on the
wire. Looking at the on-disk result is often not helpful for
a few reasons:

  1. If the operation is a clone, we destroy the repo on
     failure, leaving nothing on disk.

  2. If the pack is small, we unpack it immediately, and the
     full pack never hits the disk.

  3. If we feed the pack to "index-pack --fix-thin", the
     resulting pack has the extra delta bases added to it.

We already have a GIT_TRACE_PACKET mechanism for tracing
packets. Let's extend it with GIT_TRACE_PACKFILE to dump the
verbatim packfile.

There are a few other positive fallouts that come from
rearranging this code:

 - We currently disable the packet trace after seeing the
   PACK header, even though we may get human-readable lines
   on other sidebands; now we include them in the trace.

 - We currently try to print "PACK ..." in the trace to
   indicate that the packfile has started. But because we
   disable packet tracing, we never printed this line. We
   will now do so.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-16 13:24:22 -07:00
25f600e142 Documentation/describe: improve one-line summary
git describe does not show 'the most recent tag that is reachable from a
commit', but a descriptive name based on this tag. Fix the description to
reflect that.

Suggested-by: Albert Netymk <albertnetymk@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-16 13:19:34 -07:00
d6d1a75e51 pkt-line: tighten sideband PACK check when tracing
To find the start of the pack data, we accept the word PACK
at the beginning of any sideband channel, even though what
we really want is to find the pack data on channel 1. In
practice this doesn't matter, as sideband-2 messages tend to
start with "error:" or similar, but it is a good idea to be
explicit (especially as we add more code in this area, we
will rely on this assumption).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 13:25:52 -07:00
f3612acb93 pkt-line: simplify starts_with checks in packet tracing
We carefully check that our pkt buffer has enough characters
before seeing if it starts with "PACK". The intent is to
avoid reading random memory if we get a short buffer like
"PAC".

However, we know that the traced packets are always
NUL-terminated. They come from one of these sources:

  1. A string literal.

  2. `format_packet`, which uses a strbuf.

  3. `packet_read`, which defensively NUL-terminates what we
     read.

We can therefore drop the length checks, as we know we will
hit the trailing NUL if we have a short input.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 13:25:50 -07:00
0179ca7a62 clean: improve performance when removing lots of directories
"git clean" uses resolve_gitlink_ref() to check for the presence of
nested git repositories, but it has the drawback of creating a
ref_cache entry for every directory that should potentially be
cleaned. The linear search through the ref_cache list causes a massive
performance hit for large number of directories.

Modify clean.c:remove_dirs to use setup.c:is_git_directory and
setup.c:read_gitfile_gently instead.

Both these functions will open files and parse contents when they find
something that looks like a git repository. This is ok from a
performance standpoint since finding repository candidates should be
comparatively rare.

Using is_git_directory and read_gitfile_gently should give a more
standardized check for what is and what isn't a git repository but
also gives three behavioral changes.

The first change is that we will now detect and avoid cleaning empty
nested git repositories (only init run). This is desirable.

Second, we will no longer die when cleaning a file named ".git" with
garbage content (it will be cleaned instead). This is also desirable.

The last change is that we will detect and avoid cleaning empty bare
repositories that have been placed in a directory named ".git". This
is not desirable but should have no real user impact since we already
fail to clean non-empty bare repositories in the same scenario. This
is thus deemed acceptable.

On top of this we add some extra precautions. If read_gitfile_gently
fails to open the git file, read the git file or verify the path in
the git file we assume that the path with the git file is a valid
repository and avoid cleaning.

Update t7300 to reflect these changes in behavior.

The time to clean an untracked directory containing 100000 sub
directories went from 61s to 1.7s after this change.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Erik Elfström <erik.elfstrom@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 13:14:24 -07:00
f49a5650ab p7300: add performance tests for clean
The tests are run in dry-run mode to avoid having to restore the test
directories for each timed iteration. Using dry-run is an acceptable
compromise since we are mostly interested in the initial computation
of what to clean and not so much in the cleaning it self.

Signed-off-by: Erik Elfström <erik.elfstrom@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 13:14:18 -07:00
91479b9c72 t7300: add tests to document behavior of clean and nested git
Signed-off-by: Erik Elfström <erik.elfstrom@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 13:14:11 -07:00
921bdd96af setup: sanity check file size in read_gitfile_gently
read_gitfile_gently will allocate a buffer to fit the entire file that
should be read. Add a sanity check of the file size before opening to
avoid allocating a potentially huge amount of memory if we come across
a large file that someone happened to name ".git". The limit is set to
a sufficiently unreasonable size that should never be exceeded by a
genuine .git file.

Signed-off-by: Erik Elfström <erik.elfstrom@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 13:14:01 -07:00
19376104a8 Revert "stash: require a clean index to apply"
This reverts commit ed178ef13a.

That commit was an attempt to improve the safety of applying
a stash, because the application process may create
conflicted index entries, after which it is hard to restore
the original index state.

Unfortunately, this hurts some common workflows around "git
stash -k", like:

    git add -p       ;# (1) stage set of proposed changes
    git stash -k     ;# (2) get rid of everything else
    make test        ;# (3) make sure proposal is reasonable
    git stash apply  ;# (4) restore original working tree

If you "git commit" between steps (3) and (4), then this
just works. However, if these steps are part of a pre-commit
hook, you don't have that opportunity (you have to restore
the original state regardless of whether the tests passed or
failed).

It's possible that we could provide better tools for this
sort of workflow. In particular, even before ed178ef, it
could fail with a conflict if there were conflicting hunks
in the working tree and index (since the "stash -k" puts the
index version into the working tree, and we then attempt to
apply the differences between HEAD and the old working tree
on top of that). But the fact remains that people have been
using it happily for a while, and the safety provided by
ed178ef is simply not that great. Let's revert it for now.
In the long run, people can work on improving stash for this
sort of workflow, but the safety tradeoff is not worth it in
the meantime.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 13:11:17 -07:00
11b6d17801 pull: pass git-merge's options to git-merge
Specify git-merge's options in the option list, and pass any specified
options to git-merge.

These options are:

* -n, --stat, --summary: since d8abe14 (merge, pull: introduce
  '--(no-)stat' option, 2008-04-06)

* --log: since efb779f (merge, pull: add '--(no-)log' command line
  option, 2008-04-06)

* --squash: since 7d0c688 (git-merge --squash, 2006-06-23)

* --commit: since 5072a32 (Teach git-pull about --[no-]ff, --no-squash
  and --commit, 2007-10-29)

* --edit: since 8580830 ("git pull" doesn't know "--edit", 2012-02-11)

* --ff, --ff-only: since 5072a32 (Teach git-pull about --[no-]ff,
  --no-squash and --commit, 2007-10-29)

* --verify-signatures: since efed002 (merge/pull: verify GPG signatures
  of commits being merged, 2013-03-31)

* -s, --strategy: since 60fb5b2 (Use git-merge in git-pull (second
  try)., 2005-09-25)

* -X, --strategy-option: since ee2c795 (Teach git-pull to pass
  -X<option> to git-merge, 2009-11-25)

* -S, --gpg-sign: since ea230d8 (pull: add the --gpg-sign option.,
  2014-02-10)

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 12:40:50 -07:00
2a747902c3 pull: pass verbosity, --progress flags to fetch and merge
7f87aff (Teach/Fix pull/fetch -q/-v options, 2008-11-15) taught git-pull
to accept the verbosity -v and -q options and pass them to git-fetch and
git-merge.

Re-implement support for the verbosity flags by adding it to the options
list and introducing argv_push_verbosity() to push the flags into the
argv array used to execute git-fetch and git-merge.

9839018 (fetch and pull: learn --progress, 2010-02-24) and bebd2fd
(pull: propagate --progress to merge, 2011-02-20) taught git-pull to
accept the --progress option and pass it to git-fetch and git-merge.

Use OPT_PASSTHRU() implemented earlier to pass the "--[no-]progress"
command line options to git-fetch and git-merge.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 12:40:50 -07:00
f2c5baa14e pull: implement fetch + merge
Implement the fetch + merge functionality of git-pull, by first running
git-fetch with the repo and refspecs provided on the command line, then
running git-merge on FETCH_HEAD to merge the fetched refs into the
current branch.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 12:40:50 -07:00
1e1ea69fa4 pull: implement skeletal builtin pull
For the purpose of rewriting git-pull.sh into a C builtin, implement a
skeletal builtin/pull.c that redirects to $GIT_EXEC_PATH/git-pull.sh if
the environment variable _GIT_USE_BUILTIN_PULL is not defined. This
allows us to fall back on the functional git-pull.sh when running the
test suite for tests that depend on a working git-pull implementation.

This redirection should be removed when all the features of git-pull.sh
have been re-implemented in builtin/pull.c.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 12:40:50 -07:00
85b343245b argv-array: implement argv_array_pushv()
When we have a null-terminated array, it would be useful to convert it
or append it to an argv_array for further manipulation.

Implement argv_array_pushv() which will push a null-terminated array of
strings on to an argv_array.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 12:40:49 -07:00
ffad85c599 parse-options-cb: implement parse_opt_passthru_argv()
Certain git commands, such as git-pull, are simply wrappers around other
git commands like git-fetch, git-merge and git-rebase. As such, these
wrapper commands will typically need to "pass through" command-line
options of the commands they wrap.

Implement the parse_opt_passthru_argv() parse-options callback, which
will reconstruct all the provided command-line options into an
argv_array, such that it can be passed to another git command. This is
useful for passing command-line options that can be specified multiple
times.

Helped-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 12:40:49 -07:00
6b3ee18dc5 parse-options-cb: implement parse_opt_passthru()
Certain git commands, such as git-pull, are simply wrappers around other
git commands like git-fetch, git-merge and git-rebase. As such, these
wrapper commands will typically need to "pass through" command-line
options of the commands they wrap.

Implement the parse_opt_passthru() parse-options callback, which will
reconstruct the command-line option into an char* string, such that it
can be passed to another git command.

Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 12:40:49 -07:00
9f0aa6e654 am: teach mercurial patch parser how to read from stdin
git-mailsplit, which splits mbox patches, will read the patch from stdin
when the filename is "-" or there are no files listed on the
command-line.

To be consistent with this behavior, teach the mercurial patch parser to
read from stdin if the filename is "-" or no files are listed on the
command-line.

Based-on-patch-by: Chris Packham <judge.packham@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 12:34:31 -07:00
e9dfe253fd am: use gmtime() to parse mercurial patch date
An example of the line in a mercurial patch that specifies the date of
the commit would be:

	# Date 1433753301 25200

where the first number is the number of seconds since the unix epoch (in
UTC), and the second number is the offset of the timezone, in second s
west of UTC (negative if the timezone is east of UTC).

git-am uses localtime() to break down the first number into its
components (year, month, day, hours, minutes, seconds etc.). However,
the returned components are relative to the user's time zone. As a
result, if the user's time zone does not match the time zone specified
in the patch, the resulting commit will have the wrong author date.

Fix this by using gmtime() instead, which uses UTC instead of the user's
time zone.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 12:34:11 -07:00
fcceef4e06 t4150: test applying StGit series
A StGit series is a directory containing a "series" file which begins
with the line:

	# This series applies on GIT commit XXXXX

where XXXXX is the commit ID that the patch series applies on. Every
following line names a patch in the directory to be applied.

Test that git-am, when given this "series" file, is able to detect it as
an StGit series and apply all the patches in the series.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 12:33:59 -07:00
ab680dce2b am: teach StGit patch parser how to read from stdin
git-mailsplit, which splits mbox patches, will read the patch from stdin
when the filename is "-" or there are no files listed on the
command-line.

To be consistent with this behavior, teach the StGit patch parser to
read from stdin if the filename is "-" or no files are listed on the
command-line.

Based-on-patch-by: Chris Packham <judge.packham@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 12:33:24 -07:00
69b1cf91e5 ref-filter: add 'ref-filter.h'
This is step one of creating a common library for 'for-each-ref',
'branch -l' and 'tag -l'. This creates a header file with the
functions and data structures that ref-filter will provide.
We move the data structures created in for-each-ref to this header
file.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 11:48:09 -07:00
73079d21ec for-each-ref: rename variables called sort to sorting
Rename all the variables called sort to sorting to match the
function/structure name changes made in the previous patch.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 11:48:09 -07:00
277b915715 for-each-ref: rename some functions and make them public
Rename some of the functions and make them publicly available.
This is a preparatory step for moving code from 'for-each-ref'
to 'ref-filter' to make meaningful, targeted services available to
other commands via public APIs.

Functions renamed are:
parse_atom()		-> 	parse_ref_filter_atom()
verify_format()		-> 	verify_ref_format()
get_value()		-> 	get_ref_atom_value()
grab_single_ref()	-> 	ref_filter_handler()
sort_refs()		->	ref_array_sort()
show_ref()		->	show_ref_array_item()
default_sort()		->	ref_default_sorting()
opt_parse_sort()	->	parse_opt_ref_sorting()
cmp_ref_sort()		->	cmp_ref_sorting()

Rename 'struct ref_sort' to 'struct ref_sorting' in this context.

Based-on-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 11:48:09 -07:00
8e33678a26 for-each-ref: introduce 'ref_array_clear()'
Introduce and implement 'ref_array_clear()' which will free
all allocated memory for 'ref_array'.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 11:48:08 -07:00
215b565126 for-each-ref: introduce new structures for better organisation
Introduce 'ref_filter_cbdata' which will hold 'ref_filter'
(conditions to filter the refs on) and 'ref_array' (the array
of ref_array_items). Modify the code to use these new structures.

This is a preparatory patch to eventually move code from 'for-each-ref'
to 'ref-filter' and make it publicly available.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 11:48:08 -07:00
5879232090 for-each-ref: rename 'refinfo' to 'ref_array_item'
Rename 'refinfo' to 'ref_array_item' as a preparatory step for
introduction of new structures in the forthcoming patch.

Re-order the fields in 'ref_array_item' so that refname can be
eventually converted to a FLEX_ARRAY.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 11:48:08 -07:00
fc80edcae1 for-each-ref: clean up code
In 'grab_single_ref()' remove the extra count variable 'cnt' and
use the variable 'grab_cnt' of structure 'grab_ref_cbdata' directly
instead.

Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 11:48:08 -07:00
ed01e206ba for-each-ref: extract helper functions out of grab_single_ref()
Extract two helper functions out of grab_single_ref(). Firstly,
new_refinfo() which is used to allocate memory for a new refinfo
structure and copy the objectname, refname and flag to it.
Secondly, match_name_as_path() which when given an array of patterns
and the refname checks if the refname matches any of the patterns
given while the pattern is a pathname, also supports wildcard
characters.

This is a preperatory patch for restructuring 'for-each-ref' and
eventually moving most of it to 'ref-filter' to provide the
functionality to similar commands via public API's.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Matthieu Moy <matthieu.moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 11:48:07 -07:00
16cf51c7a2 git-rebase--interactive.sh: add config option for custom instruction format
A config option 'rebase.instructionFormat' can override the
default 'oneline' format of the rebase instruction list.

Since the list is parsed using the left, right or boundary mark plus
the sha1, they are prepended to the instruction format.

Signed-off-by: Michael Rappazzo <rappazzo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-15 11:42:58 -07:00
2c185f0476 Merge tag 'l10n-2.4-maint-de-updates' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po into maint
l10n-2.4-maint-de-updates

* tag 'l10n-2.4-maint-de-updates' of git://github.com/git-l10n/git-po:
  l10n: de.po: translation fix for fall-back to 3way merge
  l10n: de.po: punctuation fixes
  l10n: de.po: grammar fix
  l10n: de.po: change error message from "sagen" to "Meinten Sie"
2015-06-14 14:24:49 -07:00
c54c7b376d hooks/pre-auto-gc: adjust power checking for newer OS X
The output of "pmset -g batt" changed at some point from "Currently
drawing from 'AC Power'" to the slightly different "Now drawing from
'AC Power'". Starting the match from "drawing" makes the check work
in both old and new versions of OS X.

Signed-off-by: Panagiotis Astithas <pastith@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-12 15:33:39 -07:00
58d121b22b Allow to control where the replace refs are looked for
It can be useful to have grafts or replace refs for specific use-cases while
keeping the default "view" of the repository pristine (or with a different
set of grafts/replace refs).

It is possible to use a different graft file with GIT_GRAFT_FILE, but while
replace refs are more powerful, they don't have an equivalent override.

Add a GIT_REPLACE_REF_BASE environment variable to control where git is
going to look for replace refs.

Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-12 15:28:17 -07:00
e1c1ab9d25 checkout: don't check worktrees when not necessary
When --patch or pathspecs are passed to git checkout, the working tree
will not be switching branch, so there's no need to check if the branch
that we are running checkout on is already checked out.

Original-patch-by: Spencer Baugh <sbaugh@catern.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-12 15:21:44 -07:00
329af6ca7d t0302: "unreadable" test needs SANITY prereq
The test expects that "chmod -r ~/.git-credentials" would make it
unreadable to the user, and thus needs the SANITY prerequisite.

Reported-by: Jean-Yves LENHOF <jean-yves@lenhof.eu.org>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-12 13:57:51 -07:00
a9845c5f50 l10n: de.po: translation fix for fall-back to 3way merge
The English version is correct, but misleading: It is not the 3way merge
that is being patched also, but that is being fallen back to also.

The German version translates the former meaning. Make it translate the
latter.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-06-12 20:40:04 +02:00
47a1657ab9 l10n: de.po: punctuation fixes
This respects the ellipsis style used in de.po.

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-06-12 20:40:04 +02:00
872b1f26b8 l10n: de.po: grammar fix
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-06-12 20:40:04 +02:00
39f9819931 l10n: de.po: change error message from "sagen" to "Meinten Sie"
We should not use "sagen" if someone has written something wrong.
Although it's "say" in English, we should not use it in German
and instead use our normal error message.

Signed-off-by: Phillip Sz <phillip.szelat@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
2015-06-12 20:39:42 +02:00
a5fe66802f Second half of seventh batch
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-11 09:35:25 -07:00
e356158b4a Merge branch 'tb/complete-sequencing'
The bash completion script (in contrib/) learned a few options that
"git revert" takes.

* tb/complete-sequencing:
  completion: suggest sequencer commands for revert
2015-06-11 09:29:59 -07:00
43262d8d65 Merge branch 'jk/squelch-missing-link-warning-for-unreachable'
Recent "git prune" traverses young unreachable objects to safekeep
old objects in the reachability chain from them, which sometimes
caused error messages that are unnecessarily alarming.

* jk/squelch-missing-link-warning-for-unreachable:
  suppress errors on missing UNINTERESTING links
  silence broken link warnings with revs->ignore_missing_links
  add quieter versions of parse_{tree,commit}
2015-06-11 09:29:59 -07:00
0e04b248b5 Merge branch 'pt/pull-tests'
Add more test coverage to "git pull".

* pt/pull-tests:
  t5520: check reflog action in fast-forward merge
  t5521: test --dry-run does not make any changes
  t5520: test --rebase failure on unborn branch with index
  t5520: test --rebase with multiple branches
  t5520: test work tree fast-forward when fetch updates head
  t5520: test for failure if index has unresolved entries
  t5520: test no merge candidates cases
  t5520: prevent field splitting in content comparisons
2015-06-11 09:29:58 -07:00
c491e9e456 Merge branch 'sb/glossary-submodule'
* sb/glossary-submodule:
  glossary: add "remote", "submodule", "superproject"
2015-06-11 09:29:57 -07:00
7df5c978d5 Merge branch 'sb/submodule-doc-intro'
* sb/submodule-doc-intro:
  submodule doc: reorder introductory paragraphs
2015-06-11 09:29:56 -07:00
dee47925c1 Merge branch 'jk/diagnose-config-mmap-failure'
The configuration reader/writer uses mmap(2) interface to access
the files; when we find a directory, it barfed with "Out of memory?".

* jk/diagnose-config-mmap-failure:
  xmmap(): drop "Out of memory?"
  config.c: rewrite ENODEV into EISDIR when mmap fails
  config.c: avoid xmmap error messages
  config.c: fix mmap leak when writing config
  read-cache.c: drop PROT_WRITE from mmap of index
2015-06-11 09:29:55 -07:00
8f436d1374 Merge branch 'mt/p4-depotFile-at-version'
* mt/p4-depotFile-at-version:
  p4: retrieve the right revision of the file in UTF-16 codepath
2015-06-11 09:29:55 -07:00
829f03e98c Merge branch 'mh/verify-lock-error-report'
Bring consistency to error reporting mechanism used in "refs" API.

* mh/verify-lock-error-report:
  ref_transaction_commit(): do not capitalize error messages
  verify_lock(): do not capitalize error messages
  verify_lock(): report errors via a strbuf
  verify_lock(): on errors, let the caller unlock the lock
  verify_lock(): return 0/-1 rather than struct ref_lock *
2015-06-11 09:29:54 -07:00
db65170ee5 Merge branch 'jk/color-diff-plain-is-context'
"color.diff.plain" was a misnomer; give it 'color.diff.context' as
a more logical synonym.

* jk/color-diff-plain-is-context:
  diff.h: rename DIFF_PLAIN color slot to DIFF_CONTEXT
  diff: accept color.diff.context as a synonym for "plain"
2015-06-11 09:29:53 -07:00
82b416e063 Merge branch 'jk/clone-dissociate'
Code clean-up.

* jk/clone-dissociate:
  clone: reorder --dissociate and --reference options
  clone: use OPT_STRING_LIST for --reference
2015-06-11 09:29:52 -07:00
709cd912d4 Merge branch 'jc/diff-ws-error-highlight'
Allow whitespace breakages in deleted and context lines to be also
painted in the output.

* jc/diff-ws-error-highlight:
  diff.c: --ws-error-highlight=<kind> option
  diff.c: add emit_del_line() and emit_context_line()
  t4015: separate common setup and per-test expectation
  t4015: modernise style
2015-06-11 09:29:51 -07:00
ab7fade919 git-prompt.sh: document GIT_PS1_STATESEPARATOR
The environment variable GIT_PS1_STATESEPARATOR can be used to set the
separator between the branch name and the state symbols in the prompt.

At present the variable is not mentioned in the inline documentation which
makes it difficult for the casual user to identify.

Signed-off-by: Joe Cridge <joe.cridge@me.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-10 14:53:14 -07:00
d614f07549 doc: format-patch: fix typo
reroll count documentation states that v<n> will be pretended to the
filename. Judging by the examples that should have been 'prepended'.

Signed-off-by: Frans Klaver <fransklaver@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-10 14:37:04 -07:00
1051ef0063 git-p4: fixing --changes-block-size handling
The --changes-block-size handling was intended to help when
a user has a limited "maxscanrows" (see "p4 group"). It used
"p4 changes -m $maxchanges" to limit the number of results.

Unfortunately, it turns out that the "maxscanrows" and "maxresults"
limits are actually applied *before* the "-m maxchanges" parameter
is considered (experimentally).

Fix the block-size handling so that it gets blocks of changes
limited by revision number ($Start..$Start+$N, etc). This limits
the number of results early enough that both sets of tests pass.

Note that many other Perforce operations can fail for the same
reason (p4 print, p4 files, etc) and it's probably not possible
to workaround this. In the real world, this is probably not
usually a problem.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-10 08:29:17 -07:00
eceafffbec git-p4: add tests for non-numeric revision range
Test that git-p4 can handle a sync with a non-numeric revision
range (e.g. a date).

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-10 08:29:10 -07:00
a93bedada8 setup: add gentle version of read_gitfile
read_gitfile will die on most error cases. This makes it unsuitable
for speculative calls. Extract the core logic and provide a gentle
version that returns NULL on failure.

The first usecase of the new gentle version will be to probe for
submodules during git clean.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Erik Elfström <erik.elfstrom@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-09 12:29:22 -07:00
0eeb077be7 index-pack: avoid excessive re-reading of pack directory
Since 45e8a74 (has_sha1_file: re-check pack directory before
giving up, 2013-08-30), we spend extra effort for
has_sha1_file to give the right answer when somebody else is
repacking. Usually this effort does not matter, because
after finding that the object does not exist, the next step
is usually to die().

However, some code paths make a large number of
has_sha1_file checks which are _not_ expected to return 1.
The collision test in index-pack.c is such a case. On a
local system, this can cause a performance slowdown of
around 5%. But on a system with high-latency system calls
(like NFS), it can be much worse.

This patch introduces a "quick" flag to has_sha1_file which
callers can use when they would prefer high performance at
the cost of false negatives during repacks. There may be
other code paths that can use this, but the index-pack one
is the most obviously critical, so we'll start with
switching that one.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-09 12:26:35 -07:00
fbfa0973fa commit: cope with scissors lines in commit message
The diff and submodule shortlog appended to the commit message template
by 'git commit --verbose' are not stripped when the commit message
contains an indented scissors line.

When cleaning up a commit message with 'git commit --verbose' or
'--cleanup=scissors' the code is careful and triggers only on a pure
scissors line, i.e. a line containing nothing but a comment character, a
space, and the scissors cut.  This is good, because people can embed
scissors lines in the commit message while using 'git commit --verbose',
and the text they write after their indented scissors line doesn't get
deleted.

While doing so, however, the cleanup function only looks at the first
line matching the scissors pattern and if it doesn't start at the
beginning of the line, then the function just returns without performing
any cleanup.  This is wrong, because a "real" scissors line added by
'git commit --verbose' might follow, and in that case the diff and
submodule shortlog get included in the commit message.

Fix this by changing the scissors pattern to match only at the beginning
of the line, yet be careful to catch scissors on the first line as well.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-09 12:09:44 -07:00
0b1f688bf4 git-completion.tcsh: fix redirect with noclobber
tcsh users who happen to have 'set noclobber' elsewhere in their
~/.tcshrc or ~/.cshrc startup files get a 'File exist' error, and
the tcsh completion file doesn't get generated/updated.

Adding a `!` in the redirect works correctly for both clobber (default)
and 'set noclobber' users.

Reviewed-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ariel Faigon <github.2009@yendor.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-09 11:21:15 -07:00
6ea3b67b4e am --abort: keep unrelated commits on unborn branch
Since 7b3b7e3 (am --abort: keep unrelated commits since the last failure
and warn, 2010-12-21), git-am would refuse to rewind HEAD if commits
were made since the last git-am failure. This check was implemented in
safe_to_abort(), which checked to see if HEAD's hash matched the
abort-safety file.

However, this check was skipped if the abort-safety file was empty,
which can happen if git-am failed while on an unborn branch. As such, if
any commits were made since then, they would be discarded. Fix this by
carrying on the abort safety check even if the abort-safety file is
empty.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 13:14:04 -07:00
e06764c8eb am --abort: support aborting to unborn branch
When git-am is first run on an unborn branch, no ORIG_HEAD is created.
As such, any applied commits will remain even after a git am --abort.

To be consistent with the behavior of git am --abort when it is not run
from an unborn branch, we empty the index, and then destroy the branch
pointed to by HEAD if there is no ORIG_HEAD.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 13:10:45 -07:00
20c3fe7621 am --abort: revert changes introduced by failed 3way merge
Even when a merge conflict occurs with am --3way, the index will be
modified with the results of any successfully merged files. These
changes to the index will not be reverted with a
"git read-tree --reset -u HEAD ORIG_HEAD", as git read-tree will not be
aware of how the current index differs from HEAD or ORIG_HEAD.

To fix this, we first reset any conflicting entries in the index. The
resulting index will contain the results of successfully merged files
introduced by the failed merge. We write this index to a tree, and then
use git read-tree to fast-forward this "index tree" back to ORIG_HEAD,
thus undoing all the changes from the failed merge.

When we are on an unborn branch, HEAD and ORIG_HEAD will not point to
valid trees. In this case, use an empty tree.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 13:09:20 -07:00
f8da6801e2 am --skip: support skipping while on unborn branch
When git am --skip is run, git am will copy HEAD's tree entries to the
index with "git reset HEAD". However, on an unborn branch, HEAD does not
point to a tree, so "git reset HEAD" will fail.

Fix this by treating HEAD as en empty tree when we are on an unborn
branch.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 13:06:44 -07:00
2c970c9ec3 am -3: support 3way merge on unborn branch
While on an unborn branch, git am -3 will fail to do a threeway merge as
it references HEAD as "our tree", but HEAD does not point to a valid
tree.

Fix this by using an empty tree as "our tree" when we are on an unborn
branch.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 13:06:09 -07:00
88d5072466 am --skip: revert changes introduced by failed 3way merge
Even when a merge conflict occurs with am --3way, the index will be
modified with the results of any succesfully merged files (such as a new
file). These changes to the index will not be reverted with a
"git read-tree --reset -u HEAD HEAD", as git read-tree will not be aware
of how the current index differs from HEAD.

To fix this, we first reset any conflicting entries from the index. The
resulting index will contain the results of successfully merged files.
We write the index to a tree, then use git read-tree -m to fast-forward
the "index tree" back to HEAD, thus undoing all the changes from the
failed merge.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 13:05:43 -07:00
1daaddd1d3 t4150: test applying StGit patch
By default, an StGit patch separates the subject from the commit message
and headers as follows:

	$subject

	From: $author_name <$author_email>

	$message
	---
	$diffstats

We test git-am's ability to detect such a patch as an StGit patch, and
its ability to be able to extract the commit author, date and message
from such a patch.

Based-on-patch-by: Chris Packham <judge.packham@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 12:42:02 -07:00
19bf6c9b34 fsck: report errors if reflog entries point at invalid objects
Previously, if a reflog entry's old or new SHA-1 was not resolvable to
an object, that SHA-1 was silently ignored. Instead, report such cases
as errors.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 12:40:36 -07:00
d66ae59b8a fsck_handle_reflog_sha1(): new function
New function, extracted from fsck_handle_reflog_ent(). The extra
is_null_sha1() test for the new reference is currently unnecessary, as
reflogs are deleted when the reference itself is deleted. But it
doesn't hurt, either.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 12:37:32 -07:00
501cf47cdd read_loose_refs(): treat NULL_SHA1 loose references as broken
NULL_SHA1 is used to indicate an "invalid object name" throughout our
code (and the code of other git implementations), so it is vastly more
likely that an on-disk reference was set to this value due to a
software bug than that NULL_SHA1 is the legitimate SHA-1 of an actual
object.  Therefore, if a loose reference has the value NULL_SHA1,
consider it to be broken.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 10:35:41 -07:00
ffcc9ba763 read-cache: fix untracked cache invalidation when split-index is used
Before this change, t7063.17 fails. The actual action though happens at
t7063.16 where the entry "two" is added back to index after being
removed in the .13. Here we expect a directory invalidate at .16 and
none at .17 where untracked cache is refreshed. But things do not go as
expected when GIT_TEST_SPLIT_INDEX is set.

The different behavior that happens at .16 when split index is used: the
entry "two", when deleted at .13, is simply marked "deleted". When .16
executes, the entry resurfaces from the version in base index. This
happens in merge_base_index() where add_index_entry() is called to add
"two" back from the base index.

This is where the bug comes from. The add_index_entry() is called with
ADD_CACHE_KEEP_CACHE_TREE flag because this version of "two" is not new,
it does not break either cache-tree or untracked cache. The code should
check this flag and not invalidate untracked cache. This causes a second
invalidation violates test expectation. The fix is obvious.

Noticed-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 09:45:19 -07:00
6ba9e2c1ba git-p4: test with limited p4 server results
Change the --changes-block-size git-p4 test to use an account with
limited "maxresults" and "maxscanrows" values.

These conditions are applied in the server *before* the "-m maxchanges"
parameter to "p4 changes" is applied, and so the strategy that git-p4
uses for limiting the number of changes does not work. As a result,
the tests all fail.

Note that "maxscanrows" is set quite high, as it appears to not only
limit results from "p4 changes", but *also* limits results from
"p4 print". Files that have more than "maxscanrows" changes seem
(experimentally) to be impossible to print. There's no good way to
work around this.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Acked-by: Lex Spoon <lex@lexspoon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 08:51:51 -07:00
755113b903 git-p4: additional testing of --changes-block-size
Add additional tests of some corner-cases of the
--changes-block-size git-p4 parameter.

Also reduce the number of p4 changes created during the
tests, so that they complete faster.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Acked-by: Lex Spoon <lex@lexspoon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 08:51:48 -07:00
72dbb36554 completion: teach 'scissors' mode to 'git commit --cleanup='
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-08 08:46:47 -07:00
e654eb29ab utf8: NO_ICONV: silence uninitialized variable warning
The last argument of reencode_string_len() is an 'int *' which is
assigned the length of the converted string. When NO_ICONV is defined,
however, reencode_string_len() is stubbed out by the macro:

    #define reencode_string_len(a,b,c,d,e) NULL

which never assigns a value to the final argument. When called like
this:

    int n;
    char *s = reencode_string_len(..., &n);
    if (s)
        do_something(s, n);

some compilers complain that 'n' is used uninitialized within the
conditional.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-05 15:36:35 -07:00
30f8160d26 lockfile: wait using sleep_millisec() instead of select()
Use the new function sleep_millisec() to delay execution for a short
time. This avoids the invocation of select() with just a timeout, but
no file descriptors. Such a use of select() is quit with EINVAL on
Windows, leading to no delay at all.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-05 15:00:32 -07:00
a8a17756bb lockfile: convert retry timeout computations to millisecond
When the goal is to wait for some random amount of time up to one
second, it is not necessary to compute with microsecond precision.
This is a preparation to re-use sleep_millisec().

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-05 15:00:32 -07:00
2024d31765 help.c: wrap wait-only poll() invocation in sleep_millisec()
We want to use the new function elsewhere in a moment.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-05 15:00:32 -07:00
1e9676ec0a lockfile: replace random() by rand()
On Windows, we do not have functions srandom() and random(). Use srand()
and rand(). These functions produce random numbers of lesser quality,
but for the purpose (a retry time-out) they are still good enough.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-05 15:00:31 -07:00
7974889a05 Sync with 2.4.3 2015-06-05 12:23:18 -07:00
69f9a6e54a Git 2.4.3
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-05 12:22:33 -07:00
f1673dc474 The first half of the seventh batch for 2.5
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-05 12:20:57 -07:00
9fb0a798a7 Merge branch 'ld/p4-editor-multi-words'
Unlike "$EDITOR" and "$GIT_EDITOR" that can hold the path to the
command and initial options (e.g. "/path/to/emacs -nw"), 'git p4'
did not let the shell interpolate the contents of the environment
variable that name the editor "$P4EDITOR" (and "$EDITOR", too).
Make it in line with the rest of Git, as well as with Perforce.

* ld/p4-editor-multi-words:
  git-p4: tests: use test-chmtime in place of touch
  git-p4: fix handling of multi-word P4EDITOR
  git-p4: add failing test for P4EDITOR handling
2015-06-05 12:17:38 -07:00
5455ee0573 Merge branch 'bc/object-id'
for_each_ref() callback functions were taught to name the objects
not with "unsigned char sha1[20]" but with "struct object_id".

* bc/object-id: (56 commits)
  struct ref_lock: convert old_sha1 member to object_id
  warn_if_dangling_symref(): convert local variable "junk" to object_id
  each_ref_fn_adapter(): remove adapter
  rev_list_insert_ref(): remove unneeded arguments
  rev_list_insert_ref_oid(): new function, taking an object_oid
  mark_complete(): remove unneeded arguments
  mark_complete_oid(): new function, taking an object_oid
  clear_marks(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
  mark_complete(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
  send_ref(): convert local variable "peeled" to object_id
  upload-pack: rewrite functions to take object_id arguments
  find_symref(): convert local variable "unused" to object_id
  find_symref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
  write_one_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
  write_refs_to_temp_dir(): convert local variable sha1 to object_id
  submodule: rewrite to take an object_id argument
  shallow: rewrite functions to take object_id arguments
  handle_one_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
  add_info_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
  handle_one_reflog(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
  ...
2015-06-05 12:17:37 -07:00
c4a8354bc1 Merge branch 'jk/at-push-sha1'
Introduce <branch>@{push} short-hand to denote the remote-tracking
branch that tracks the branch at the remote the <branch> would be
pushed to.

* jk/at-push-sha1:
  for-each-ref: accept "%(push)" format
  for-each-ref: use skip_prefix instead of starts_with
  sha1_name: implement @{push} shorthand
  sha1_name: refactor interpret_upstream_mark
  sha1_name: refactor upstream_mark
  remote.c: add branch_get_push
  remote.c: return upstream name from stat_tracking_info
  remote.c: untangle error logic in branch_get_upstream
  remote.c: report specific errors from branch_get_upstream
  remote.c: introduce branch_get_upstream helper
  remote.c: hoist read_config into remote_get_1
  remote.c: provide per-branch pushremote name
  remote.c: hoist branch.*.remote lookup out of remote_get_1
  remote.c: drop "remote" pointer from "struct branch"
  remote.c: refactor setup of branch->merge list
  remote.c: drop default_remote_name variable
2015-06-05 12:17:36 -07:00
cbac7067a4 Merge branch 'dl/branch-error-message' into maint
Error messages from "git branch" called remote-tracking branches as
"remote branches".

* dl/branch-error-message:
  branch: do not call a "remote-tracking branch" a "remote branch"
2015-06-05 12:00:29 -07:00
c538004ccb Merge branch 'jk/skip-http-tests-under-no-curl' into maint
Test clean-up.

* jk/skip-http-tests-under-no-curl:
  tests: skip dav http-push tests under NO_EXPAT=NoThanks
  t/lib-httpd.sh: skip tests if NO_CURL is defined
2015-06-05 12:00:28 -07:00
e41f8d98e3 Merge branch 'ps/doc-packfile-vs-pack-file' into maint
Doc consistency updates.

* ps/doc-packfile-vs-pack-file:
  doc: fix inconsistent spelling of "packfile"
  pack-protocol.txt: fix insconsistent spelling of "packfile"
  git-unpack-objects.txt: fix inconsistent spelling of "packfile"
  git-verify-pack.txt: fix inconsistent spelling of "packfile"
2015-06-05 12:00:27 -07:00
48feda5873 Merge branch 'fg/document-commit-message-stripping' into maint
* fg/document-commit-message-stripping:
  Documentation: clarify how "git commit" cleans up the edited log message
2015-06-05 12:00:26 -07:00
5c2e65497b Merge branch 'jk/rerere-forget-check-enabled' into maint
"git rerere forget" in a repository without rerere enabled gave a
cryptic error message; it should be a silent no-op instead.

* jk/rerere-forget-check-enabled:
  rerere: exit silently on "forget" when rerere is disabled
2015-06-05 12:00:25 -07:00
4cb9fe35c0 Merge branch 'pt/pull-log-n' into maint
"git pull --log" and "git pull --no-log" worked as expected, but
"git pull --log=20" did not.

* pt/pull-log-n:
  pull: handle --log=<n>
2015-06-05 12:00:24 -07:00
7e46f27fa6 Merge branch 'pt/pull-ff-vs-merge-ff' into maint
The pull.ff configuration was supposed to override the merge.ff
configuration, but it didn't.

* pt/pull-ff-vs-merge-ff:
  pull: parse pull.ff as a bool or string
  pull: make pull.ff=true override merge.ff
2015-06-05 12:00:23 -07:00
0662990144 Merge branch 'rs/plug-leak-in-pack-bitmaps' into maint
The code to read pack-bitmap wanted to allocate a few hundred
pointers to a structure, but by mistake allocated and leaked memory
enough to hold that many actual structures.  Correct the allocation
size and also have it on stack, as it is small enough.

* rs/plug-leak-in-pack-bitmaps:
  pack-bitmaps: plug memory leak, fix allocation size for recent_bitmaps
2015-06-05 12:00:22 -07:00
7c1ff53d5f Merge branch 'ja/tutorial-asciidoctor-fix' into maint
A literal block in the tutorial had lines with unequal lengths to
delimit it from the rest of the document, which choke GitHub's
AsciiDoc renderer.

* ja/tutorial-asciidoctor-fix:
  doc: fix unmatched code fences
2015-06-05 12:00:22 -07:00
413a715f18 Merge branch 'jk/stripspace-asciidoctor-fix' into maint
A literal block in the tutorial had lines with unequal lengths to
delimit it from the rest of the document, which choke GitHub's
AsciiDoc renderer.

* jk/stripspace-asciidoctor-fix:
  doc: fix unmatched code fences in git-stripspace
2015-06-05 12:00:21 -07:00
96b7f93ac8 Merge branch 'jk/asciidoc-markup-fix' into maint
Various documentation mark-up fixes to make the output more
consistent in general and also make AsciiDoctor (an alternative
formatter) happier.

* jk/asciidoc-markup-fix:
  doc: convert AsciiDoc {?foo} to ifdef::foo[]
  doc: put example URLs and emails inside literal backticks
  doc: drop backslash quoting of some curly braces
  doc: convert \--option to --option
  doc/add: reformat `--edit` option
  doc: fix length of underlined section-title
  doc: fix hanging "+"-continuation
  doc: fix unquoted use of "{type}"
  doc: fix misrendering due to `single quote'
2015-06-05 12:00:19 -07:00
51f319c08f Merge branch 'ps/bundle-verify-arg' into maint
"git bundle verify" did not diagnose extra parameters on the
command line.

* ps/bundle-verify-arg:
  bundle: verify arguments more strictly
2015-06-05 12:00:18 -07:00
7c997bcbf6 Merge branch 'mh/write-refs-sooner-2.4' into maint
Multi-ref transaction support we merged a few releases ago
unnecessarily kept many file descriptors open, risking to fail with
resource exhaustion.  This is for 2.4.x track.

* mh/write-refs-sooner-2.4:
  ref_transaction_commit(): fix atomicity and avoid fd exhaustion
  ref_transaction_commit(): remove the local flags variable
  ref_transaction_commit(): inline call to write_ref_sha1()
  rename_ref(): inline calls to write_ref_sha1() from this function
  commit_ref_update(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
  write_ref_to_lockfile(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
  t7004: rename ULIMIT test prerequisite to ULIMIT_STACK_SIZE
  update-ref: test handling large transactions properly
  ref_transaction_commit(): fix atomicity and avoid fd exhaustion
  ref_transaction_commit(): remove the local flags variable
  ref_transaction_commit(): inline call to write_ref_sha1()
  rename_ref(): inline calls to write_ref_sha1() from this function
  commit_ref_update(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
  write_ref_to_lockfile(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
  t7004: rename ULIMIT test prerequisite to ULIMIT_STACK_SIZE
  update-ref: test handling large transactions properly
2015-06-05 12:00:17 -07:00
4ba8846208 Merge branch 'mh/ref-directory-file' into maint
The ref API did not handle cases where 'refs/heads/xyzzy/frotz' is
removed at the same time as 'refs/heads/xyzzy' is added (or vice
versa) very well.

* mh/ref-directory-file:
  reflog_expire(): integrate lock_ref_sha1_basic() errors into ours
  ref_transaction_commit(): delete extra "the" from error message
  ref_transaction_commit(): provide better error messages
  rename_ref(): integrate lock_ref_sha1_basic() errors into ours
  lock_ref_sha1_basic(): improve diagnostics for ref D/F conflicts
  lock_ref_sha1_basic(): report errors via a "struct strbuf *err"
  verify_refname_available(): report errors via a "struct strbuf *err"
  verify_refname_available(): rename function
  refs: check for D/F conflicts among refs created in a transaction
  ref_transaction_commit(): use a string_list for detecting duplicates
  is_refname_available(): use dirname in first loop
  struct nonmatching_ref_data: store a refname instead of a ref_entry
  report_refname_conflict(): inline function
  entry_matches(): inline function
  is_refname_available(): convert local variable "dirname" to strbuf
  is_refname_available(): avoid shadowing "dir" variable
  is_refname_available(): revamp the comments
  t1404: new tests of ref D/F conflicts within transactions
2015-06-05 12:00:16 -07:00
5efef305d8 Merge branch 'mg/log-decorate-HEAD' into maint
The "log --decorate" enhancement in Git 2.4 that shows the commit
at the tip of the current branch e.g. "HEAD -> master", did not
work with --decorate=full.

* mg/log-decorate-HEAD:
  log: do not shorten decoration names too early
  log: decorate HEAD with branch name under --decorate=full, too
2015-06-05 12:00:15 -07:00
5e896a37c7 Merge branch 'sb/t1020-cleanup' into maint
There was a commented-out (instead of being marked to expect
failure) test that documented a breakage that was fixed since the
test was written; turn it into a proper test.

* sb/t1020-cleanup:
  subdirectory tests: code cleanup, uncomment test
2015-06-05 12:00:14 -07:00
e9f767ecee Merge branch 'jc/gitignore-precedence' into maint
core.excludesfile (defaulting to $XDG_HOME/git/ignore) is supposed
to be overridden by repository-specific .git/info/exclude file, but
the order was swapped from the beginning. This belatedly fixes it.

* jc/gitignore-precedence:
  ignore: info/exclude should trump core.excludesfile
2015-06-05 12:00:13 -07:00
2d8bb4685c Merge branch 'bc/connect-plink' into maint
The connection initiation code for "ssh" transport tried to absorb
differences between the stock "ssh" and Putty-supplied "plink" and
its derivatives, but the logic to tell that we are using "plink"
variants were too loose and falsely triggered when "plink" appeared
anywhere in the path (e.g. "/home/me/bin/uplink/ssh").

* bc/connect-plink:
  connect: improve check for plink to reduce false positives
  t5601: fix quotation error leading to skipped tests
  connect: simplify SSH connection code path
2015-06-05 12:00:11 -07:00
c7b4de2cc5 Merge branch 'ph/rebase-i-redo' into maint
"git rebase -i" moved the "current" command from "todo" to "done" a
bit too prematurely, losing a step when a "pick" did not even start.

* ph/rebase-i-redo:
  rebase -i: redo tasks that die during cherry-pick
2015-06-05 12:00:10 -07:00
8d5ef5a0d1 Merge branch 'jk/add-e-kill-editor' into maint
"git add -e" did not allow the user to abort the operation by
killing the editor.

* jk/add-e-kill-editor:
  add: check return value of launch_editor
2015-06-05 12:00:09 -07:00
a3821a1ae5 Merge branch 'mh/clone-verbosity-fix' into maint
Git 2.4 broke setting verbosity and progress levels on "git clone"
with native transports.

* mh/clone-verbosity-fix:
  clone: call transport_set_verbosity before anything else on the newly created transport
2015-06-05 12:00:08 -07:00
3c91e9966a Merge branch 'jk/sha1-file-reduce-useless-warnings' into maint
* jk/sha1-file-reduce-useless-warnings:
  sha1_file: squelch "packfile cannot be accessed" warnings
2015-06-05 12:00:07 -07:00
1d93ec9397 Merge branch 'tb/blame-resurrect-convert-to-git' into maint
Some time ago, "git blame" (incorrectly) lost the convert_to_git()
call when synthesizing a fake "tip" commit that represents the
state in the working tree, which broke folks who record the history
with LF line ending to make their project portabile across
platforms while terminating lines in their working tree files with
CRLF for their platform.

* tb/blame-resurrect-convert-to-git:
  blame: CRLF in the working tree and LF in the repo
2015-06-05 12:00:06 -07:00
bdf204f28d Merge branch 'jc/plug-fmt-merge-msg-leak' into maint
* jc/plug-fmt-merge-msg-leak:
  fmt-merge-msg: plug small leak of commit buffer
2015-06-05 12:00:05 -07:00
d9c82fa7a7 Merge branch 'pt/xdg-config-path' into maint
Code clean-up for xdg configuration path support.

* pt/xdg-config-path:
  path.c: remove home_config_paths()
  git-config: replace use of home_config_paths()
  git-commit: replace use of home_config_paths()
  credential-store.c: replace home_config_paths() with xdg_config_home()
  dir.c: replace home_config_paths() with xdg_config_home()
  attr.c: replace home_config_paths() with xdg_config_home()
  path.c: implement xdg_config_home()
  t0302: "unreadable" test needs POSIXPERM
  t0302: test credential-store support for XDG_CONFIG_HOME
  git-credential-store: support XDG_CONFIG_HOME
  git-credential-store: support multiple credential files
2015-06-05 12:00:04 -07:00
ef45bb1f81 ll-merge: pass the original path to external drivers
The interface to custom low-level merge driver was modeled to be
capable of driving programs like "merge" (from the RCS suite) that
can produce result solely by looking at three files that hold
contents of common ancestor, ours and theirs.  The information we
feed to the external drivers via the command line placeholders %O,
%A, and %B were designed to be purely about contents by giving
names of the temporary files that hold these variants without
exposing the original pathname.  No matter where the result goes,
merging the same three variants should produce the same result,
contents is the king, that is the Git way.

The external driver interface, however, is meant to help people to
step outside the Git worldview, and sometimes people want to know
the final path that the resulting merged contents would be stored
in.  Expose this to the external drivers via a new placeholder %P.

Requested-by: Andreas Gondek
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-04 15:36:32 -07:00
d96a275b91 git-am: add am.threeWay config variable
Add the am.threeWay configuration variable to use the -3 or --3way
option of git am by default. When am.threeway is set and not desired
for a specific git am command, the --no-3way option can be used to
override it.

Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-04 10:42:41 -07:00
8c8884ce97 t4150-am: refactor am -3 tests
Create a setup for git am -3 in a separate test instead of creating
this setup each time.

This prepares for the next commit which will use this setup as well.

Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-04 10:39:47 -07:00
1164db977e git-am.sh: fix initialization of the threeway variable
Initialization for the threeway variable was missing. This caused
a behavior change for command lines like:

	threeway=t git am ...

This commit adds initialization for this variable.

Signed-off-by: Remi Lespinet <remi.lespinet@ensimag.grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-04 10:39:23 -07:00
f0e7f11d05 index-pack: fix truncation of off_t in comparison
Commit c6458e6 (index-pack: kill union delta_base to save
memory, 2015-04-18) refactored the comparison functions used
in sorting and binary searching our delta list. The
resulting code does something like:

  int cmp_offsets(off_t a, off_t b)
  {
	  return a - b;
  }

This works most of the time, but produces nonsensical
results when the difference between the two offsets is
larger than what can be stored in an "int". This can lead to
unresolved deltas if the packsize is larger than 2G (even on
64-bit systems, an int is still typically 32 bits):

  $ git clone git://github.com/mozilla/gecko-dev
  Cloning into 'gecko-dev'...
  remote: Counting objects: 4800161, done.
  remote: Compressing objects: 100% (178/178), done.
  remote: Total 4800161 (delta 88), reused 0 (delta 0), pack-reused 4799978
  Receiving objects: 100% (4800161/4800161), 2.21 GiB | 3.26 MiB/s, done.
  Resolving deltas:  99% (3808820/3811944), completed with 0 local objects.
  fatal: pack has 3124 unresolved deltas
  fatal: index-pack failed

We can fix it by doing direct comparisons between the
offsets and returning constants; the callers only care about
the sign of the comparison, not the magnitude.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-04 10:28:57 -07:00
f5517074f8 read_loose_refs(): simplify function logic
Make it clearer that there are two possible ways to read the
reference, but that we handle read errors uniformly regardless of
which way it was read.

This refactoring also makes the following change easier to implement.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-03 11:44:25 -07:00
96658060d7 configure: add getdelim() check
As an optimization, strbuf will take advantage of getdelim() if
available, so add a configure check which defines HAVE_GETDELIM if
found.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-03 09:38:19 -07:00
4e3687858e config.mak.uname: Darwin: define HAVE_GETDELIM for modern OS X releases
On Mac OS X, getdelim() first became available with Xcode 4.1[1], which
was released the same day as OS X 10.7 "Lion", so assume getdelim()
availability from 10.7 onward. (As of this writing, OS X is at 10.10
"Yosemite".)

According to Wikipedia[2], 4.1 was also available for download by paying
developers on OS X 10.6 "Snow Leopard", so it's possible that some 10.6
machines may have getdelim(). However, as strbuf's use of getdelim() is
purely an optimization, let's be conservative and assume 10.6 and
earlier lack getdelim().

[1]: Or, possibly with Xcode 4.0, but that version is no longer
     available for download, or not available to non-paying developers,
     so testing is not possible.

[2]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xcode

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-03 09:38:04 -07:00
34b935c01f ewah: use less generic macro name
The ewah/ewok.h header pollutes the global namespace with
"BITS_IN_WORD", without any specific notion that we are
talking about the bits in an eword_t. We can give this the
more specific name "BITS_IN_EWORD".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-03 00:04:01 -07:00
414382fb00 ewah/bitmap: silence warning about MASK macro redefinition
On PowerPC Mac OS X (10.5.8 "Leopard" with Xcode 3.1),
system header /usr/include/ppc/param.h[1] pollutes the
preprocessor namespace with a macro generically named MASK.
This conflicts with the same-named macro in ewah/bitmap.c.
We can avoid this conflict by using a more specific name.

[1]: Included indirectly via:
     git-compat-util.h ->
     sys/sysctl.h ->
     sys/ucred.h ->
     sys/param.h ->
     machine/param.h ->
     ppc/param.h

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-03 00:03:03 -07:00
055c7e9fc6 Documentation/technical/pack-protocol: mention http as possible protocol
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-02 14:59:59 -07:00
e3b601da2a pull: use git-rev-parse --parseopt for option parsing
To enable unambiguous parsing of abbreviated options, bundled short
options, separate form options and to provide consistent usage help, use
git-rev-parse --parseopt for option parsing. With this, simplify the
option parsing code.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-02 13:36:23 -07:00
eb2a8d9ed3 pull: handle git-fetch's options as well
While parsing the command-line arguments, git-pull stops parsing at the
first unrecognized option, assuming that any subsequent options are for
git-fetch, and can thus be kept in the shell's positional parameters
list, so that it can be passed to git-fetch via the expansion of "$@".

However, certain functions in git-pull assume that the positional
parameters do not contain any options:

* error_on_no_merge_candidates() uses the number of positional
  parameters to determine which error message to print out, and will
  thus print the wrong message if git-fetch's options are passed in as
  well.

* the call to get_remote_merge_branch() assumes that the positional
  parameters only contains the optional repo and refspecs, and will
  thus silently fail if git-fetch's options are passed in as well.

* --dry-run is a valid git-fetch option, but if provided after any
  git-fetch options, it is not recognized by git-pull and thus git-pull
  will continue to run the merge or rebase.

Fix these bugs by teaching git-pull to parse git-fetch's options as
well. Add tests to prevent regressions.

This removes the limitation where git-fetch's options have to come after
git-merge's and git-rebase's options on the command line. Update the
documentation to reflect this.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-02 13:36:22 -07:00
2c9c1c5178 Merge branch 'pt/pull-tests' into pt/pull-optparse
* pt/pull-tests:
  t5520: check reflog action in fast-forward merge
  t5521: test --dry-run does not make any changes
  t5520: test --rebase failure on unborn branch with index
  t5520: test --rebase with multiple branches
  t5520: test work tree fast-forward when fetch updates head
  t5520: test for failure if index has unresolved entries
  t5520: test no merge candidates cases
  t5520: prevent field splitting in content comparisons
2015-06-02 13:35:52 -07:00
8afc493d11 for-each-ref: report broken references correctly
If there is a loose reference file with invalid contents, "git
for-each-ref" incorrectly reports the problem as being a missing
object with name NULL_SHA1:

    $ echo '12345678' >.git/refs/heads/nonsense
    $ git for-each-ref
    fatal: missing object 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 for refs/heads/nonsense

With an explicit "--format" string, it can even report that the
reference validly points at NULL_SHA1:

    $ git for-each-ref --format='%(objectname) %(refname)'
    0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 refs/heads/nonsense
    $ echo $?
    0

This has been broken since

    b7dd2d2 for-each-ref: Do not lookup objects when they will not be used (2009-05-27)

, which changed for-each-ref from using for_each_ref() to using
git_for_each_rawref() in order to avoid looking up the referred-to
objects unnecessarily. (When "git for-each-ref" is given a "--format"
string that doesn't include information about the pointed-to object,
it does not look up the object at all, which makes it considerably
faster. Iterating with DO_FOR_EACH_INCLUDE_BROKEN is essential to this
optimization because otherwise for_each_ref() would itself need to
check whether the object exists as part of its brokenness test.)

But for_each_rawref() includes broken references in the iteration, and
"git for-each-ref" doesn't itself reject references with REF_ISBROKEN.
The result is that broken references are processed *as if* they had
the value NULL_SHA1, which is the value stored in entries for broken
references.

Change "git for-each-ref" to emit warnings for references that are
REF_ISBROKEN but to otherwise skip them.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-02 13:09:16 -07:00
c3e23dc117 t6301: new tests of for-each-ref error handling
Add tests that for-each-ref correctly reports broken loose reference
files and references that point at missing objects. In fact, two of
these tests fail, because (1) NULL_SHA1 is not recognized as an
invalid reference value, and (2) for-each-ref doesn't respect
REF_ISBROKEN. Fixes to come.

Note that when for-each-ref is run with a --format option that doesn't
require the object to be looked up, then we should still notice if a
loose reference file is corrupt or contains NULL_SHA1, but we don't
notice if it points at a missing object because we don't do an object
lookup. This is OK.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-02 13:09:04 -07:00
9b7a61d7da format-patch: do not feed tags to clear_commit_marks()
"git format-patch --ignore-if-in-upstream A..B", when either A or B
is a tag, failed miserably.

This is because the code passes the tips it used for traversal to
clear_commit_marks(), after running a temporary revision traversal
to enumerate the commits on both branches to find if they have
commits that make equivalent changes.  The revision traversal
machinery knows how to enumerate commits reachable starting from a
tag, but clear_commit_marks() wants to take nothing but a commit.

In the longer term, it might be a more correct fix to teach
clear_commit_marks() to do the same "committish to commit"
dereferencing that is done in the revision traversal machinery,
but for now this fix should suffice.

Reported-by: Bruce Korb <bruce.korb@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Helped-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 16:02:52 -07:00
86b898487a send-email: further warn about unsupported sendmail aliases features
The sendmail aliases parser diagnoses unsupported features and
unrecognized lines. For completeness, also warn about unsupported
redirection to "/path/name" and "|command", as well as ":include:".

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 15:53:19 -07:00
6be0264030 t9001: add sendmail aliases line continuation tests
A line beginning with whitespace is folded into the preceding line.
A line ending with '\' consumes the following line.

While here, also test an empty sendmail aliases file.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 15:53:15 -07:00
514554cf53 t9001: refactor sendmail aliases test infrastructure
Several new tests of sendmail aliases parsing will be added in a
subsequent patch, so factor out functionality common to all of them
into a new helper function.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 15:53:13 -07:00
2532dd0605 send-email: implement sendmail aliases line continuation support
Logical lines in sendmail aliases files can be spread over multiple
physical lines[1]. A line beginning with whitespace is folded into the
preceding line. A line ending with '\' consumes the following line.

[1]: https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=aliases&sektion=5

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 15:53:11 -07:00
020be85f51 send-email: simplify sendmail aliases comment and blank line recognizer
Replace unnecessarily complex regular expression for recognizing comment
and blank lines in sendmail aliases with idiomatic expressions which
can be easily understood at a glance.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 15:53:03 -07:00
09f1157bbf send-email: refactor sendmail aliases parser
The sendmail aliases parser inlined into %parse_alias is already
uncomfortably large and is expected to grow as additional functionality
is implemented, so extract it to improve manageability.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 15:52:49 -07:00
22e3b46ff9 send-email: fix style: cuddle 'elsif' and 'else' with closing brace
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 15:52:46 -07:00
2cdaabb6f9 send-email: drop noise comments which merely repeat what code says
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 15:52:42 -07:00
818a2d7722 send-email: visually distinguish sendmail aliases parser warnings
Although emitted to stderr, warnings from the sendmail aliases parser
are not visually distinguished as such, and thus can easily be
overlooked in the normal noisy send-email output.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 15:52:37 -07:00
5c3494ed88 send-email: further document missing sendmail aliases functionality
Sendmail aliases[1] supports expansion to a file ("/path/name") or
pipe ("|command"), as well as file inclusion (":include: /path/name"),
however, our implementation does not support such functionality.

[1]: https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=aliases&sektion=5

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 15:52:33 -07:00
8b504db309 blame: add blame.showEmail configuration
Complement existing --show-email option with fallback
configuration variable, with tests.

Signed-off-by: Quentin Neill <quentin.neill@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 15:50:43 -07:00
f86f31ab33 Sixth batch for 2.5 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 12:47:56 -07:00
3dc5ce0a56 Merge branch 'sb/test-bitmap-free-at-end'
An earlier leakfix to bitmap testing code was incomplete.

* sb/test-bitmap-free-at-end:
  test_bitmap_walk: free bitmap with bitmap_free
2015-06-01 12:45:21 -07:00
a6be52e239 Merge branch 'mm/rebase-i-post-rewrite-exec'
"git rebase -i" fired post-rewrite hook when it shouldn't (namely,
when it was told to stop sequencing with 'exec' insn).

* mm/rebase-i-post-rewrite-exec:
  t5407: use <<- to align the expected output
  rebase -i: fix post-rewrite hook with failed exec command
  rebase -i: demonstrate incorrect behavior of post-rewrite
2015-06-01 12:45:20 -07:00
a9d3493380 Merge branch 'fm/fetch-raw-sha1'
"git upload-pack" that serves "git fetch" can be told to serve
commits that are not at the tip of any ref, as long as they are
reachable from a ref, with uploadpack.allowReachableSHA1InWant
configuration variable.

* fm/fetch-raw-sha1:
  upload-pack: optionally allow fetching reachable sha1
  upload-pack: prepare to extend allow-tip-sha1-in-want
  config.txt: clarify allowTipSHA1InWant with camelCase
2015-06-01 12:45:19 -07:00
6dec263333 Merge branch 'sg/help-group'
Group list of commands shown by "git help" along the workflow
elements to help early learners.

* sg/help-group:
  help: respect new common command grouping
  command-list.txt: drop the "common" tag
  generate-cmdlist: parse common group commands
  command-list.txt: add the common groups block
  command-list: prepare machinery for upcoming "common groups" section
2015-06-01 12:45:19 -07:00
abcbafedbf Merge branch 'mm/log-format-raw-doc'
Clarify that "log --raw" and "log --format=raw" are unrelated
concepts.

* mm/log-format-raw-doc:
  Documentation/log: clarify sha1 non-abbreviation in log --raw
  Documentation/log: clarify what --raw means
2015-06-01 12:45:18 -07:00
67f0b6f3b2 Merge branch 'dt/cat-file-follow-symlinks'
"git cat-file --batch(-check)" learned the "--follow-symlinks"
option that follows an in-tree symbolic link when asked about an
object via extended SHA-1 syntax, e.g. HEAD:RelNotes that points at
Documentation/RelNotes/2.5.0.txt.  With the new option, the command
behaves as if HEAD:Documentation/RelNotes/2.5.0.txt was given as
input instead.

* dt/cat-file-follow-symlinks:
  cat-file: add --follow-symlinks to --batch
  sha1_name: get_sha1_with_context learns to follow symlinks
  tree-walk: learn get_tree_entry_follow_symlinks
2015-06-01 12:45:16 -07:00
4ba5bb5531 Merge branch 'rs/janitorial'
Code clean-up.

* rs/janitorial:
  dir: remove unused variable sb
  clean: remove unused variable buf
  use file_exists() to check if a file exists in the worktree
2015-06-01 12:45:15 -07:00
f693bb0bb0 Merge branch 'jk/stash-options'
Make "git stash something --help" error out, so that users can
safely say "git stash drop --help".

* jk/stash-options:
  stash: recognize "--help" for subcommands
  stash: complain about unknown flags
2015-06-01 12:45:14 -07:00
324a9f41cb Merge branch 'da/mergetool-winmerge'
"git mergetool" learned to drive WinMerge as a backend.

* da/mergetool-winmerge:
  mergetools: add winmerge as a builtin tool
  mergetool--lib: set IFS for difftool and mergetool
2015-06-01 12:45:14 -07:00
1fd63cac50 Merge branch 'mc/commit-doc-grammofix'
Doc grammar fix.

* mc/commit-doc-grammofix:
  Documentation/git-commit: grammofix
2015-06-01 12:45:13 -07:00
152722f155 Merge branch 'jh/filter-empty-contents'
The clean/smudge interface did not work well when filtering an
empty contents (failed and then passed the empty input through).
It can be argued that a filter that produces anything but empty for
an empty input is nonsense, but if the user wants to do strange
things, then why not?

* jh/filter-empty-contents:
  sha1_file: pass empty buffer to index empty file
2015-06-01 12:45:11 -07:00
6e0ac8e45f Merge branch 'ah/usage-strings'
A few usage string updates.

* ah/usage-strings:
  blame, log: format usage strings similarly to those in documentation
2015-06-01 12:45:10 -07:00
777e75b605 Merge branch 'jk/http-backend-deadlock'
Communication between the HTTP server and http_backend process can
lead to a dead-lock when relaying a large ref negotiation request.
Diagnose the situation better, and mitigate it by reading such a
request first into core (to a reasonable limit).

* jk/http-backend-deadlock:
  http-backend: spool ref negotiation requests to buffer
  t5551: factor out tag creation
  http-backend: fix die recursion with custom handler
2015-06-01 12:45:09 -07:00
f93a393787 Merge branch 'dt/clean-pathspec-filter-then-lstat'
"git clean pathspec..." tried to lstat(2) and complain even for
paths outside the given pathspec.

* dt/clean-pathspec-filter-then-lstat:
  clean: only lstat files in pathspec
2015-06-01 12:45:08 -07:00
ad6e8ed37b apply: reject a hunk that does not do anything
A hunk like this in a hand-edited patch without correctly adjusting
the line counts:

     @@ -660,2 +660,2 @@ inline struct sk_buff *ieee80211_authentic...
             auth = (struct ieee80211_authentication *)
                     skb_put(skb, sizeof(struct ieee80211_authentication));
     -       some old text
     +       some new text
     --
     2.1.0

     dev mailing list

at the end of the input does not have a good way for us to diagnose
it as a corrupt patch.  We just read two context lines and discard
the remainder as cruft, which we must do in order to ignore the
e-mail footer.  Notice that the patch does not change anything and
signal an error.

Note that this fix will not help if the hand-edited hunk header were
"@@ -660,3, +660,2" to include the removal.  We would just remove
the old text without adding the new one, and treat "+ some new text"
and everything after that line as trailing cruft.  So it is dubious
that this patch alone would help very much in practice, but it may
be better than nothing.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 12:12:04 -07:00
ce4e7b2ac3 suppress errors on missing UNINTERESTING links
When we are traversing commit parents along the
UNINTERESTING side of a revision walk, we do not care if
the parent turns out to be missing. That lets us limit
traversals using unreachable and possibly incomplete
sections of history. However, we do still print error
messages about the missing commits; this patch suppresses
the error, as well.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 09:29:51 -07:00
daf7d86783 silence broken link warnings with revs->ignore_missing_links
We set revs->ignore_missing_links to instruct the
revision-walking machinery that we know the history graph
may be incomplete. For example, we use it when walking
unreachable but recent objects; we want to add what we can,
but it's OK if the history is incomplete.

However, we still print error messages for the missing
objects, which can be confusing. This is not an error, but
just a normal situation when transitioning from a repository
last pruned by an older git (which can leave broken segments
of history) to a more recent one (where we try to preserve
whole reachable segments).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 09:29:50 -07:00
9cc2b07a7c add quieter versions of parse_{tree,commit}
When we call parse_commit, it will complain to stderr if the
object does not exist or cannot be read. This means that we
may produce useless error messages if this situation is
expected (e.g., because the object is marked UNINTERESTING,
or because revs->ignore_missing_links is set).

We can fix this by adding a new "parse_X_gently" form that
takes a flag to suppress the messages. The existing
"parse_X" form is already gentle in the sense that it
returns an error rather than dying, and we could in theory
just add a "quiet" flag to it (with existing callers passing
"0"). But doing it this way means we do not have to disturb
existing callers.

Note also that the new flag is "quiet_on_missing", and not
just "quiet". We could add a flag to suppress _all_ errors,
but besides being a more invasive change (we would have to
pass the flag down to sub-functions, too), there is a good
reason not to: we would never want to use it. Missing a
linked object is expected in some circumstances, but it is
never expected to have a malformed commit, or to get a tree
when we wanted a commit.  We should always complain about
these corruptions.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 09:29:42 -07:00
956352b67e completion: suggest sequencer commands for revert
Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@virtuell-zuhause.de>
Acked-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-06-01 08:41:47 -07:00
e6a268c534 glossary: add "remote", "submodule", "superproject"
Noticed-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-29 13:36:47 -07:00
fada767463 setup_git_directory: delay core.bare/core.worktree errors
If both core.bare and core.worktree are set, we complain
about the bogus config and die. Dying is good, because it
avoids commands running and doing damage in a potentially
incorrect setup. But dying _there_ is bad, because it means
that commands which do not even care about the work tree
cannot run. This can make repairing the situation harder:

  [setup]
  $ git config core.bare true
  $ git config core.worktree /some/path

  [OK, expected.]
  $ git status
  fatal: core.bare and core.worktree do not make sense

  [Hrm...]
  $ git config --unset core.worktree
  fatal: core.bare and core.worktree do not make sense

  [Nope...]
  $ git config --edit
  fatal: core.bare and core.worktree do not make sense

  [Gaaah.]
  $ git help config
  fatal: core.bare and core.worktree do not make sense

Instead, let's issue a warning about the bogus config when
we notice it (i.e., for all commands), but only die when the
command tries to use the work tree (by calling setup_work_tree).
So we now get:

  $ git status
  warning: core.bare and core.worktree do not make sense
  fatal: unable to set up work tree using invalid config

  $ git config --unset core.worktree
  warning: core.bare and core.worktree do not make sense

We have to update t1510 to accomodate this; it uses
symbolic-ref to check whether the configuration works or
not, but of course that command does not use the working
tree. Instead, we switch it to use `git status`, as it
requires a work-tree, does not need any special setup, and
is read-only (so a failure will not adversely affect further
tests).

In addition, we add a new test that checks the desired
behavior (i.e., that running "git config" with the bogus
config does in fact work).

Reported-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-29 09:27:27 -07:00
7c37a5dc82 Makefile: silence perl/PM.stamp recipe
Every time we run "make", we update perl/PM.stamp, which
contains a list of all of the perl module files (if it's
updated, we need to rebuild perl/perl.mak, since the
Makefile will not otherwise know about the new files).

This means that every time "make" is run, we see:

      GEN perl/PM.stamp

in the output, even though it is not likely to have changed.
Let's make this recipe completely silent, as we do for other
auto-generated dependency files (e.g., GIT-CFLAGS).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-29 09:22:19 -07:00
a2d25ef07f Makefile: avoid timestamp updates to GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS
We force the GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS recipe to run every time
"make" is invoked. We must do this to catch new options
which may have come from the command-line or environment.

However, we actually update the file's timestamp each time
the recipe is run, whether anything changed or not. As a
result, any files which depend on it (for example, all of
the perl scripts, which need to know whether NO_PERL was
set) will be re-built every time.

Let's do our usual trick of writing to a tempfile, then
doing a "cmp || mv" to update the file only when something
changed.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-29 09:22:18 -07:00
e25c7cc146 Makefile: drop dependency between git-instaweb and gitweb
The rule for "git-instaweb" depends on "gitweb". This makes
no sense, because:

  1. git-instaweb has no build-time dependency on gitweb; it
     is a run-time dependency

  2. gitweb is a directory that we want to recursively make
     in. As a result, its recipe is marked .PHONY, which
     causes "make" to rebuild git-instaweb every time it is
     run.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-29 09:21:27 -07:00
80ea984da6 t5520: check reflog action in fast-forward merge
When testing a fast-forward merge with git-pull, check to see if the
reflog action is "pull" with the arguments passed to git-pull.

While we are in the vicinity, remove the empty line as well.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-29 09:16:11 -07:00
5504f13a7c t5521: test --dry-run does not make any changes
Test that when --dry-run is provided to git-pull, it does not make any
changes, namely:

* --dry-run gets passed to git-fetch, so no FETCH_HEAD will be created
  and no refs will be fetched.

* The index and work tree will not be modified.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-29 09:16:01 -07:00
fa14ee77ac t5520: test --rebase failure on unborn branch with index
Commit 19a7fcb (allow pull --rebase on branch yet to be born,
2009-08-11) special cases git-pull on an unborn branch in a different
code path such that git-pull --rebase is still valid even though there
is no HEAD yet.

This code path still ensures that there is no index in order not to lose
any staged changes. Implement a test to ensure that this check is
triggered.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-29 09:15:35 -07:00
9570d67c00 t5520: test --rebase with multiple branches
Since rebasing on top of multiple upstream branches does not make sense,
since 51b2ead (disallow providing multiple upstream branches to rebase,
pull --rebase, 2009-02-18), git-pull explicitly disallowed specifying
multiple branches in the rebase case.

Implement tests to ensure that git-pull fails and prints out the
user-friendly error message in such a case.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-29 09:15:24 -07:00
9f992262fb t5520: test work tree fast-forward when fetch updates head
Since b10ac50 (Fix pulling into the same branch., 2005-08-25), git-pull,
upon detecting that git-fetch updated the current head, will
fast-forward the working tree to the updated head commit.

Implement tests to ensure that the fast-forward occurs in such a case,
as well as to ensure that the user-friendly advice is printed upon
failure.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-29 09:15:10 -07:00
05438afca7 t5520: test for failure if index has unresolved entries
Commit d38a30d (Be more user-friendly when refusing to do something
because of conflict., 2010-01-12) introduced code paths to git-pull
which will error out with user-friendly advices if the user is in the
middle of a merge or has unmerged files.

Implement tests to ensure that git-pull will not run, and will print
these advices, if the user is in the middle of a merge or has unmerged
files in the index.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-29 09:14:52 -07:00
ec48a76306 submodule doc: reorder introductory paragraphs
It's better to start the man page with a description of what
submodules actually are, instead of saying what they are not.

Reorder the paragraphs such that

 - the first short paragraph introduces the submodule concept,
 - the second paragraph highlights the usage of the submodule command,
 - the third paragraph giving background information, and finally
 - the fourth paragraph discusing alternatives such as subtrees and
   remotes, which we don't want to be confused with.

This ordering deepens the knowledge on submodules with each paragraph.
First the basic questions like "How/what" will be answered, while the
underlying concepts will be taught at a later time.

Making sure it is not confused with subtrees and remotes is not really
enhancing knowledge of submodules itself, but rather painting the big
picture of git concepts, so you could also argue to have it as the second
paragraph. Personally I think this may confuse readers, specially
newcomers though.

Additionally to reordering the paragraphs, they have been slightly
reworded.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-28 15:18:11 -07:00
fc0aa395f3 Documentation: include 'merge.branchdesc' for merge and config as well
'merge.branchdesc' is only mentioned in the docs of 'git fmt-merge-msg'.

The description of 'merge.log' is already duplicated between
'merge-config.txt' and 'git-fmt-merge-msg.txt'; instead of duplicating the
description of another config variable, extract the descriptions of both
of these variables from 'git-fmt-merge-msg.txt' into a separate file and
include it there and in 'merge-config.txt'.

Leave 'merge.summary' only in git-fmt-merge-msg.txt, as it is marked
as deprecated.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-28 12:38:46 -07:00
9ca0aaf6de xmmap(): drop "Out of memory?"
We show that message with die_errno(), but the OS is ought to know
why mmap(2) failed much better than we do.  There is no reason for
us to say "Out of memory?" here.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-28 11:35:25 -07:00
0e8771f198 config.c: rewrite ENODEV into EISDIR when mmap fails
If we try to mmap a directory, we'll get ENODEV. This
translates to "no such device" for the user, which is not
very helpful. Since we've just fstat()'d the file, we can
easily check whether the problem was a directory to give a
better message.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-28 11:34:06 -07:00
1570856b51 config.c: avoid xmmap error messages
The config-writing code uses xmmap to map the existing
config file, which will die if the map fails. This has two
downsides:

  1. The error message is not very helpful, as it lacks any
     context about the file we are mapping:

       $ mkdir foo
       $ git config --file=foo some.key value
       fatal: Out of memory? mmap failed: No such device

  2. We normally do not die in this code path; instead, we'd
     rather report the error and return an appropriate exit
     status (which is part of the public interface
     documented in git-config.1).

This patch introduces a "gentle" form of xmmap which lets us
produce our own error message. We do not want to use mmap
directly, because we would like to use the other
compatibility elements of xmmap (e.g., handling 0-length
maps portably).

The end result is:

    $ git.compile config --file=foo some.key value
    error: unable to mmap 'foo': No such device
    $ echo $?
    3

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-28 11:33:18 -07:00
3a1b3126ed config.c: fix mmap leak when writing config
We mmap the existing config file, but fail to unmap it if we
hit an error. The function already has a shared exit path,
so we can fix this by moving the mmap pointer to the
function scope and clearing it in the shared exit.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-28 11:32:04 -07:00
a1293ef7c3 read-cache.c: drop PROT_WRITE from mmap of index
Once upon a time, git's in-memory representation of a cache
entry actually pointed to the mmap'd on-disk data. So in
520fc24 (Allow writing to the private index file mapping.,
2005-04-26), we specified PROT_WRITE so that we could tweak
the entries while we run (in our own MAP_PRIVATE copy-on-write
version, of course).

Later, 7a51ed6 (Make on-disk index representation separate
from in-core one, 2008-01-14) stopped doing this; we copy
the data into our in-core representation, and then drop the
mmap immediately. We can therefore drop the PROT_WRITE flag.
It's probably not hurting anything as it is, but it's
potentially confusing.

Note that we could also mark the mapping as "const" to
verify that we never write to it. However, we don't
typically do that for our other maps, as it then requires
casting to munmap() it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-28 11:32:04 -07:00
f5f53f1410 p4: retrieve the right revision of the file in UTF-16 codepath
Fixing bug with UTF-16 files when they are retrieved by git-p4.  It
was always getting the tip version of the file and the history of
the file was lost.

Signed-off-by: Miguel Torroja <miguel.torroja@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-27 16:23:02 -07:00
c2e0a718c6 ref_transaction_commit(): do not capitalize error messages
Our convention is for error messages to start with a lower-case
letter.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-27 15:58:42 -07:00
000f0da57a verify_lock(): do not capitalize error messages
Our convention is for error messages to start with a lower-case
letter.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-27 15:58:42 -07:00
33ffc176d6 verify_lock(): report errors via a strbuf
Instead of writing error messages directly to stderr, write them to
a "strbuf *err".  The caller, lock_ref_sha1_basic(), uses this error
reporting convention with all the other callees, and reports its
error this way to its callers.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-27 15:57:47 -07:00
8dbf3eb685 diff.h: rename DIFF_PLAIN color slot to DIFF_CONTEXT
The latter is a much more descriptive name (and we support
"color.diff.context" now). This also updates the name of any
local variables which were used to store the color.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-27 13:54:42 -07:00
74b15bfbf6 diff: accept color.diff.context as a synonym for "plain"
The term "plain" is a bit ambiguous; let's allow the more
specific "context", but keep "plain" around for
compatibility.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-27 13:54:37 -07:00
77bd3ea9f5 Merge branch 'nd/untracked-cache'
* nd/untracked-cache:
  t7063: hide stderr from setup inside prereq
2015-05-27 13:14:38 -07:00
fa73a582b5 t7063: hide stderr from setup inside prereq
When t7063 starts, it runs "update-index --untracked-cache"
to see if we support the untracked cache. Its output goes
straight to stderr, even if the test is not run with "-v".
Let's wrap it in a prereq that will hide the output by
default, but show it with "-v".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-27 13:14:29 -07:00
587089c195 t9001: write $HOME/, not ~/, to help shells without tilde expansion
Even though it is in POSIX, we do not have to use it, only to hurt
shells that may lack the support.

The .mailrc test tries to define an alias in .mailrc in the home
directory by shell redirection, and then tries to see ~/.mailrc in
config is tilde-expanded by Git without help from shell.  So the
creation should become $HOME/ to be portable for shells that may
lack tilde expansion but the reference should be done as "~/.mailrc".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-27 13:03:44 -07:00
3169e06daf send-email: add sendmail email aliases format
Teach send-email to read aliases in the sendmail aliases format, i.e.

	<alias>: <address|alias>[, <address|alias>...]

Examples:

	alice: Alice W Land <awol@example.com>
	bob: Robert Bobbyton <bob@example.com>
	# this is a comment
	   # this is also a comment
	chloe: chloe@example.com
	abgroup: alice, bob
	bcgrp: bob, chloe, Other <o@example.com>

 - Quoted aliases and quoted addresses are not supported.
 - Line continuations are not supported.

Warnings are printed for explicitly unsupported constructs, and any
other lines that are not matched by the parser.

Signed-off-by: Allen Hubbe <allenbh@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-27 13:01:48 -07:00
f41d632970 verify_lock(): on errors, let the caller unlock the lock
The caller already knows how to do it, so always do it in the same
place.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-27 12:40:29 -07:00
a5e2499e54 verify_lock(): return 0/-1 rather than struct ref_lock *
Its return value wasn't conveying any extra information, but it made
the reader wonder whether the ref_lock that it returned might be
different than the one that was passed to it. So change the function
to the traditional "return 0 on success or a negative value on error".

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-27 12:39:41 -07:00
14f8b9b494 clone: reorder --dissociate and --reference options
These options are intimately related, so it makes sense to
list them nearby in the "-h" output (they are already
adjacent in the manpage).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-27 12:37:39 -07:00
8ade009c95 clone: use OPT_STRING_LIST for --reference
Not only does this save us having to implement a custom
callback, but it handles "--no-reference" in the usual way
(to clear the list).

The generic callback does copy the string, which we don't
technically need, but that should not hurt anything.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-27 12:37:28 -07:00
b8767f791c diff.c: --ws-error-highlight=<kind> option
Traditionally, we only cared about whitespace breakages introduced
in new lines.  Some people want to paint whitespace breakages on old
lines, too.  When they see a whitespace breakage on a new line, they
can spot the same kind of whitespace breakage on the corresponding
old line and want to say "Ah, those breakages are there but they
were inherited from the original, so let's not touch them for now."

Introduce `--ws-error-highlight=<kind>` option, that lets them pass
a comma separated list of `old`, `new`, and `context` to specify
what lines to highlight whitespace errors on.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-26 23:00:01 -07:00
0e383e185a diff.c: add emit_del_line() and emit_context_line()
Traditionally, we only had emit_add_line() helper, which knows how
to find and paint whitespace breakages on the given line, because we
only care about whitespace breakages introduced in new lines.  The
context lines and old (i.e. deleted) lines are emitted with a
simpler emit_line_0() that paints the entire line in plain or old
colors.

Identify callers of emit_line_0() that show deleted lines and
context lines, have them call new helpers, emit_del_line() and
emit_context_line(), so that we can later tweak what is done to
these two classes of lines.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-26 22:13:02 -07:00
fae46aa0ae Sync with 2.4.2 2015-05-26 13:50:51 -07:00
9eabf5b536 Git 2.4.2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-26 13:49:59 -07:00
df08eb357d Merge branch 'jk/still-interesting' into maint
"git rev-list --objects $old --not --all" to see if everything that
is reachable from $old is already connected to the existing refs
was very inefficient.

* jk/still-interesting:
  limit_list: avoid quadratic behavior from still_interesting
2015-05-26 13:49:26 -07:00
1e6c8babf8 Merge branch 'jc/hash-object' into maint
"hash-object --literally" introduced in v2.2 was not prepared to
take a really long object type name.

* jc/hash-object:
  write_sha1_file(): do not use a separate sha1[] array
  t1007: add hash-object --literally tests
  hash-object --literally: fix buffer overrun with extra-long object type
  git-hash-object.txt: document --literally option
2015-05-26 13:49:25 -07:00
5d53433864 Merge branch 'jk/rebase-quiet-noop' into maint
"git rebase --quiet" was not quite quiet when there is nothing to
do.

* jk/rebase-quiet-noop:
  rebase: silence "git checkout" for noop rebase
2015-05-26 13:49:23 -07:00
23903b9e29 Merge branch 'sg/complete-decorate-full-not-long' into maint
The completion for "log --decorate=" parameter value was incorrect.

* sg/complete-decorate-full-not-long:
  completion: fix and update 'git log --decorate=' options
2015-05-26 13:49:22 -07:00
a2e5c79c69 Merge branch 'jk/filter-branch-use-of-sed-on-incomplete-line' into maint
"filter-branch" corrupted commit log message that ends with an
incomplete line on platforms with some "sed" implementations that
munge such a line.  Work it around by avoiding to use "sed".

* jk/filter-branch-use-of-sed-on-incomplete-line:
  filter-branch: avoid passing commit message through sed
2015-05-26 13:49:20 -07:00
6fd58363a4 Merge branch 'jc/daemon-no-ipv6-for-2.4.1' into maint
"git daemon" fails to build from the source under NO_IPV6
configuration (regression in 2.4).

* jc/daemon-no-ipv6-for-2.4.1:
  daemon: unbreak NO_IPV6 build regression
2015-05-26 13:49:19 -07:00
cb9ec8e23e Merge branch 'jk/stash-require-clean-index' into maint
"git stash pop/apply" forgot to make sure that not just the working
tree is clean but also the index is clean. The latter is important
as a stash application can conflict and the index will be used for
conflict resolution.

* jk/stash-require-clean-index:
  stash: require a clean index to apply
  t3903: avoid applying onto dirty index
  t3903: stop hard-coding commit sha1s
2015-05-26 13:49:19 -07:00
af6d7a6231 Merge branch 'jk/git-no-more-argv0-path-munging' into maint
We have prepended $GIT_EXEC_PATH and the path "git" is installed in
(typically "/usr/bin") to $PATH when invoking subprograms and hooks
for almost eternity, but the original use case the latter tried to
support was semi-bogus (i.e. install git to /opt/foo/git and run it
without having /opt/foo on $PATH), and more importantly it has
become less and less relevant as Git grew more mainstream (i.e. the
users would _want_ to have it on their $PATH).  Stop prepending the
path in which "git" is installed to users' $PATH, as that would
interfere the command search order people depend on (e.g. they may
not like versions of programs that are unrelated to Git in /usr/bin
and want to override them by having different ones in /usr/local/bin
and have the latter directory earlier in their $PATH).

* jk/git-no-more-argv0-path-munging:
  stop putting argv[0] dirname at front of PATH
2015-05-26 13:49:18 -07:00
4ebdeb68ba Fifth batch for 2.5 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-26 13:33:35 -07:00
38ccaf93bb Merge branch 'nd/untracked-cache'
Teach the index to optionally remember already seen untracked files
to speed up "git status" in a working tree with tons of cruft.

* nd/untracked-cache: (24 commits)
  git-status.txt: advertisement for untracked cache
  untracked cache: guard and disable on system changes
  mingw32: add uname()
  t7063: tests for untracked cache
  update-index: test the system before enabling untracked cache
  update-index: manually enable or disable untracked cache
  status: enable untracked cache
  untracked-cache: temporarily disable with $GIT_DISABLE_UNTRACKED_CACHE
  untracked cache: mark index dirty if untracked cache is updated
  untracked cache: print stats with $GIT_TRACE_UNTRACKED_STATS
  untracked cache: avoid racy timestamps
  read-cache.c: split racy stat test to a separate function
  untracked cache: invalidate at index addition or removal
  untracked cache: load from UNTR index extension
  untracked cache: save to an index extension
  ewah: add convenient wrapper ewah_serialize_strbuf()
  untracked cache: don't open non-existent .gitignore
  untracked cache: mark what dirs should be recursed/saved
  untracked cache: record/validate dir mtime and reuse cached output
  untracked cache: make a wrapper around {open,read,close}dir()
  ...
2015-05-26 13:24:46 -07:00
a26d48a46e Merge branch 'rs/plug-leak-in-pack-bitmaps'
The code to read pack-bitmap wanted to allocate a few hundred
pointers to a structure, but by mistake allocated and leaked memory
enough to hold that many actual structures.  Correct the allocation
size and also have it on stack, as it is small enough.

* rs/plug-leak-in-pack-bitmaps:
  pack-bitmaps: plug memory leak, fix allocation size for recent_bitmaps
2015-05-26 13:24:44 -07:00
22a1ae6ef2 Merge branch 'pt/pull-ff-vs-merge-ff'
The pull.ff configuration was supposed to override the merge.ff
configuration, but it didn't.

* pt/pull-ff-vs-merge-ff:
  pull: parse pull.ff as a bool or string
  pull: make pull.ff=true override merge.ff
2015-05-26 13:24:44 -07:00
14230580af Merge branch 'pt/pull-log-n'
"git pull --log" and "git pull --no-log" worked as expected, but
"git pull --log=20" did not.

* pt/pull-log-n:
  pull: handle --log=<n>
2015-05-26 13:24:43 -07:00
c37d7b50f3 Merge branch 'jk/rerere-forget-check-enabled'
"git rerere forget" in a repository without rerere enabled gave a
cryptic error message; it should be a silent no-op instead.

* jk/rerere-forget-check-enabled:
  rerere: exit silently on "forget" when rerere is disabled
2015-05-26 13:24:42 -07:00
f3b5b07c3c git-p4: tests: use test-chmtime in place of touch
Using "touch" for P4EDITOR means that the tests can be a bit
racy, since git-p4 checks the timestamp has been updated and
fails if the timestamp is not updated.

Use test-chmtime instead, which is designed for this.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-26 13:18:02 -07:00
0ad782f240 t4015: separate common setup and per-test expectation
The last two tests in the script were to

 - set up color.diff.* slots
 - set up an expectation for a single test
 - run that test and check the result

but split in a wrong way.  It did the first two in the first test
and the third one in the second test.  The latter two belong to each
other.  This matters when you plan to add more of these tests that
share the common coloring.

While at it, make sure we use a color different from old, which is
also red.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-26 12:45:20 -07:00
d55ef3e044 t4015: modernise style
Move the preparatory steps that create the expected output inside
the test bodies, remove unnecessary blank lines before and after the
test bodies, and drop SP between redirection operator and its target.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-26 12:45:20 -07:00
636614f337 Merge branch 'jk/http-backend-deadlock-2.3' into jk/http-backend-deadlock
* jk/http-backend-deadlock-2.3:
  http-backend: spool ref negotiation requests to buffer
  t5551: factor out tag creation
  http-backend: fix die recursion with custom handler
2015-05-25 20:44:42 -07:00
7419a03fdb Merge branch 'jk/http-backend-deadlock-2.2' into jk/http-backend-deadlock-2.3
* jk/http-backend-deadlock-2.2:
  http-backend: spool ref negotiation requests to buffer
  t5551: factor out tag creation
  http-backend: fix die recursion with custom handler
2015-05-25 20:44:04 -07:00
6bc0cb5176 http-backend: spool ref negotiation requests to buffer
When http-backend spawns "upload-pack" to do ref
negotiation, it streams the http request body to
upload-pack, who then streams the http response back to the
client as it reads. In theory, git can go full-duplex; the
client can consume our response while it is still sending
the request.  In practice, however, HTTP is a half-duplex
protocol. Even if our client is ready to read and write
simultaneously, we may have other HTTP infrastructure in the
way, including the webserver that spawns our CGI, or any
intermediate proxies.

In at least one documented case[1], this leads to deadlock
when trying a fetch over http. What happens is basically:

  1. Apache proxies the request to the CGI, http-backend.

  2. http-backend gzip-inflates the data and sends
     the result to upload-pack.

  3. upload-pack acts on the data and generates output over
     the pipe back to Apache. Apache isn't reading because
     it's busy writing (step 1).

This works fine most of the time, because the upload-pack
output ends up in a system pipe buffer, and Apache reads
it as soon as it finishes writing. But if both the request
and the response exceed the system pipe buffer size, then we
deadlock (Apache blocks writing to http-backend,
http-backend blocks writing to upload-pack, and upload-pack
blocks writing to Apache).

We need to break the deadlock by spooling either the input
or the output. In this case, it's ideal to spool the input,
because Apache does not start reading either stdout _or_
stderr until we have consumed all of the input. So until we
do so, we cannot even get an error message out to the
client.

The solution is fairly straight-forward: we read the request
body into an in-memory buffer in http-backend, freeing up
Apache, and then feed the data ourselves to upload-pack. But
there are a few important things to note:

  1. We limit the in-memory buffer to prevent an obvious
     denial-of-service attack. This is a new hard limit on
     requests, but it's unlikely to come into play. The
     default value is 10MB, which covers even the ridiculous
     100,000-ref negotation in the included test (that
     actually caps out just over 5MB). But it's configurable
     on the off chance that you don't mind spending some
     extra memory to make even ridiculous requests work.

  2. We must take care only to buffer when we have to. For
     pushes, the incoming packfile may be of arbitrary
     size, and we should connect the input directly to
     receive-pack. There's no deadlock problem here, though,
     because we do not produce any output until the whole
     packfile has been read.

     For upload-pack's initial ref advertisement, we
     similarly do not need to buffer. Even though we may
     generate a lot of output, there is no request body at
     all (i.e., it is a GET, not a POST).

[1] http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/269020

Test-adapted-from: Dennis Kaarsemaker <dennis@kaarsemaker.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 20:43:18 -07:00
5cb901a4b0 struct ref_lock: convert old_sha1 member to object_id
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:40 -07:00
4e675d1732 warn_if_dangling_symref(): convert local variable "junk" to object_id
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:39 -07:00
0a0c953217 each_ref_fn_adapter(): remove adapter
All of the callers of the for_each_ref family of functions have now
been rewritten to work with object_ids, so this adapter is no longer
needed.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:39 -07:00
c38cd1c89d rev_list_insert_ref(): remove unneeded arguments
Now that the function is not being used as an each_ref_sha1_fn, we can
delete the unused arguments in its signature.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:39 -07:00
b1b49c6eb6 rev_list_insert_ref_oid(): new function, taking an object_oid
This function can be used with for_each_ref() without having to be
wrapped.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:39 -07:00
6e20a51a80 mark_complete(): remove unneeded arguments
Now that the function is not being used as an each_ref_sha1_fn, we can
delete the unused arguments in its signature.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:38 -07:00
f8ee4d8522 mark_complete_oid(): new function, taking an object_oid
This function can be used with for_each_ref() without having to be
wrapped.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:38 -07:00
c50fb6cee6 clear_marks(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:38 -07:00
b4ebaf9eea mark_complete(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:37 -07:00
21758affae send_ref(): convert local variable "peeled" to object_id
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:37 -07:00
363e98bfc2 upload-pack: rewrite functions to take object_id arguments
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:37 -07:00
e45a4949a2 find_symref(): convert local variable "unused" to object_id
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:37 -07:00
7dabd05634 find_symref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:37 -07:00
1700cb3b05 write_one_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:36 -07:00
f31ba7e116 write_refs_to_temp_dir(): convert local variable sha1 to object_id
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:36 -07:00
7290ef5898 submodule: rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:36 -07:00
580b04ef98 shallow: rewrite functions to take object_id arguments
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:36 -07:00
9c5fe0b846 handle_one_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:35 -07:00
e2b0bcdf4a add_info_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:35 -07:00
a89caf4bd4 handle_one_reflog(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:35 -07:00
00530834fb register_replace_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:35 -07:00
455ade6598 remote: rewrite functions to take object_id arguments
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:34 -07:00
635170f2bb add_one_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:34 -07:00
fd95035fdb string_list_add_one_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:34 -07:00
3d79f65735 add_ref_decoration(): convert local variable original_sha1 to object_id
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:34 -07:00
f124b73023 add_ref_decoration(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:33 -07:00
5f9cf5abd2 show_head_ref(): convert local variable "unused" to object_id
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:33 -07:00
f72f542107 http-backend: rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:33 -07:00
91d6e94ea6 append_similar_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:33 -07:00
6c4461e8d9 builtin/show-ref: rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:33 -07:00
a0cde90ebf show_ref(): convert local variable peeled to object_id
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:32 -07:00
f0a011fa1f builtin/show-ref: rewrite to use object_id
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:32 -07:00
635b99a0c7 fsck: change functions to use object_id
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:32 -07:00
96062b5762 cmd_show_branch(): fix error message
We need to convert the SHA-1 to hexadecimal before printing it.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:31 -07:00
d1516bf462 builtin/show-branch: rewrite functions to work with object_id
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:31 -07:00
7a456c1eea append_one_rev(): rewrite to work with object_id
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:31 -07:00
2e253a4a12 builtin/show-branch: rewrite functions to take object_id arguments
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:31 -07:00
a00595fbd2 append_matching_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:31 -07:00
d70d7a8a4d show_reference(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:30 -07:00
53dc95b5cf builtin/remote: rewrite functions to take object_id arguments
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:30 -07:00
e26cdf91c1 add_branch_for_removal(): don't set "util" field of string_list entries
They were never used.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:30 -07:00
45690a57a3 add_branch_for_removal(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:30 -07:00
5bcad1bce2 builtin/reflog: rewrite ref functions to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:30 -07:00
ce2a987329 show_ref_cb(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:29 -07:00
d155254c73 builtin/pack-objects: rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:29 -07:00
73868486f0 name_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:29 -07:00
30a3fd4050 grab_single_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:29 -07:00
0e0b7de4c7 builtin/fetch: rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:29 -07:00
99a2cfbfe6 get_name(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Rewrite to take an object_id argument and convert the local variable
"peeled" object_id.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:29 -07:00
fcb615f51f add_pending_uninteresting_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:28 -07:00
a55ce97185 append_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:28 -07:00
eed2514802 register_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:28 -07:00
a217dcbd1e handle_one_ref(): rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:28 -07:00
e23b036863 builtin/rev-parse: rewrite to take an object_id argument
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:27 -07:00
2b2a5be394 each_ref_fn: change to take an object_id parameter
Change typedef each_ref_fn to take a "const struct object_id *oid"
parameter instead of "const unsigned char *sha1".

To aid this transition, implement an adapter that can be used to wrap
old-style functions matching the old typedef, which is now called
"each_ref_sha1_fn"), and make such functions callable via the new
interface. This requires the old function and its cb_data to be
wrapped in a "struct each_ref_fn_sha1_adapter", and that object to be
used as the cb_data for an adapter function, each_ref_fn_adapter().

This is an enormous diff, but most of it consists of simple,
mechanical changes to the sites that call any of the "for_each_ref"
family of functions. Subsequent to this change, the call sites can be
rewritten one by one to use the new interface.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:27 -07:00
8353847e85 refs: convert struct ref_entry to use struct object_id
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-25 12:19:27 -07:00
2dade7a7b2 git-p4: fix handling of multi-word P4EDITOR
This teaches git-p4 to pass the P4EDITOR variable to the
shell for expansion, so that any command-line arguments are
correctly handled. Without this, git-p4 can only launch the
editor if P4EDITOR is solely the path to the binary, without
any arguments.

This also adjusts t9805, which relied on the previous behaviour.

Suggested-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-24 11:50:12 -07:00
9afbb2dc37 git-p4: add failing test for P4EDITOR handling
Add test case that git-p4 handles a setting of P4EDITOR
that takes arguments, e.g. "gvim -f". This currently fails.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-24 11:50:12 -07:00
68ee628932 upload-pack: optionally allow fetching reachable sha1
With uploadpack.allowReachableSHA1InWant configuration option set on the
server side, "git fetch" can make a request with a "want" line that names
an object that has not been advertised (likely to have been obtained out
of band or from a submodule pointer). Only objects reachable from the
branch tips, i.e. the union of advertised branches and branches hidden by
transfer.hideRefs, will be processed. Note that there is an associated
cost of having to walk back the history to check the reachability.

This feature can be used when obtaining the content of a certain commit,
for which the sha1 is known, without the need of cloning the whole
repository, especially if a shallow fetch is used. Useful cases are e.g.
repositories containing large files in the history, fetching only the
needed data for a submodule checkout, when sharing a sha1 without telling
which exact branch it belongs to and in Gerrit, if you think in terms of
commits instead of change numbers. (The Gerrit case has already been
solved through allowTipSHA1InWant as every Gerrit change has a ref.)

Signed-off-by: Fredrik Medley <fredrik.medley@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 18:25:36 -07:00
7199c093ad upload-pack: prepare to extend allow-tip-sha1-in-want
To allow future extensions, e.g. allowing non-tip sha1, replace the
boolean allow_tip_sha1_in_want variable with the flag-style
allow_request_with_bare_object_name variable.

Signed-off-by: Fredrik Medley <fredrik.medley@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 18:25:35 -07:00
862e730ec1 commit-slab: introduce slabname##_peek() function
There is no API to ask "Does this commit have associated data in
slab?".  If an application wants to (1) parse just a few commits at
the beginning of a process, (2) store data for only these commits,
and then (3) start processing many commits, taking into account the
data stored (for a few of them) in the slab, the application would
use slabname##_at() to allocate a space to store data in (2), but
there is no API other than slabname##_at() to use in step (3).  This
allocates and wastes new space for these commits the caller is only
interested in checking if they have data stored in step (2).

Introduce slabname##_peek(), which is similar to slabname##_at() but
returns NULL when there is no data already associated to it in such
a use case.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 14:40:30 -07:00
9532ead987 Fourth batch for 2.5 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 12:53:21 -07:00
e4b4e7d704 Merge branch 'ps/doc-packfile-vs-pack-file'
Doc consistency updates.

* ps/doc-packfile-vs-pack-file:
  doc: fix inconsistent spelling of "packfile"
  pack-protocol.txt: fix insconsistent spelling of "packfile"
  git-unpack-objects.txt: fix inconsistent spelling of "packfile"
  git-verify-pack.txt: fix inconsistent spelling of "packfile"
2015-05-22 12:42:00 -07:00
ce6ab232ca Merge branch 'sb/t1020-cleanup'
There was a commented-out (instead of being marked to expect
failure) test that documented a breakage that was fixed since the
test was written; turn it into a proper test.

* sb/t1020-cleanup:
  subdirectory tests: code cleanup, uncomment test
2015-05-22 12:42:00 -07:00
17e785f6ba Merge branch 'lm/squelch-bg-progress'
The controlling tty-based heuristics to squelch progress output did
not consider that the process may not be talking to a tty at all
(e.g. sending the progress to sideband #2).  This is a finishing
touch to a topic that is already in 'master'.

* lm/squelch-bg-progress:
  progress: treat "no terminal" as being in the foreground
2015-05-22 12:41:58 -07:00
ddaf4e2e9a Merge branch 'jc/ignore-epipe-in-filter'
Filter scripts were run with SIGPIPE disabled on the Git side,
expecting that they may not read what Git feeds them to filter.
We however treated a filter that does not read its input fully
before exiting as an error.

This changes semantics, but arguably in a good way.  If a filter
can produce its output without consuming its input using whatever
magic, we now let it do so, instead of diagnosing it as a
programming error.

* jc/ignore-epipe-in-filter:
  filter_buffer_or_fd(): ignore EPIPE
  copy.c: make copy_fd() report its status silently
2015-05-22 12:41:57 -07:00
5bf66689d5 Merge branch 'mh/clone-verbosity-fix'
Git 2.4 broke setting verbosity and progress levels on "git clone"
with native transports.

* mh/clone-verbosity-fix:
  clone: call transport_set_verbosity before anything else on the newly created transport
2015-05-22 12:41:56 -07:00
cc77b99612 Merge branch 'pt/pull-tags-error-diag'
There was a dead code that used to handle "git pull --tags" and
show special-cased error message, which was made irrelevant when
the semantics of the option changed back in Git 1.9 days.

* pt/pull-tags-error-diag:
  pull: remove --tags error in no merge candidates case
2015-05-22 12:41:56 -07:00
fb257bfa17 Merge branch 'mh/lockfile-retry'
Instead of dying immediately upon failing to obtain a lock, retry
after a short while with backoff.

* mh/lockfile-retry:
  lock_packed_refs(): allow retries when acquiring the packed-refs lock
  lockfile: allow file locking to be retried with a timeout
2015-05-22 12:41:55 -07:00
29b2041c2a Merge branch 'jk/add-e-kill-editor'
"git add -e" did not allow the user to abort the operation by
killing the editor.

* jk/add-e-kill-editor:
  add: check return value of launch_editor
2015-05-22 12:41:55 -07:00
935d937644 Merge branch 'sg/completion-config'
Code clean-up for completion script (in contrib/).

* sg/completion-config:
  completion: simplify query for config variables
  completion: add a helper function to get config variables
2015-05-22 12:41:54 -07:00
faa4b2ecbb Merge branch 'mh/ref-directory-file'
The ref API did not handle cases where 'refs/heads/xyzzy/frotz' is
removed at the same time as 'refs/heads/xyzzy' is added (or vice
versa) very well.

* mh/ref-directory-file:
  reflog_expire(): integrate lock_ref_sha1_basic() errors into ours
  ref_transaction_commit(): delete extra "the" from error message
  ref_transaction_commit(): provide better error messages
  rename_ref(): integrate lock_ref_sha1_basic() errors into ours
  lock_ref_sha1_basic(): improve diagnostics for ref D/F conflicts
  lock_ref_sha1_basic(): report errors via a "struct strbuf *err"
  verify_refname_available(): report errors via a "struct strbuf *err"
  verify_refname_available(): rename function
  refs: check for D/F conflicts among refs created in a transaction
  ref_transaction_commit(): use a string_list for detecting duplicates
  is_refname_available(): use dirname in first loop
  struct nonmatching_ref_data: store a refname instead of a ref_entry
  report_refname_conflict(): inline function
  entry_matches(): inline function
  is_refname_available(): convert local variable "dirname" to strbuf
  is_refname_available(): avoid shadowing "dir" variable
  is_refname_available(): revamp the comments
  t1404: new tests of ref D/F conflicts within transactions
2015-05-22 12:41:53 -07:00
91c90876de Merge branch 'mh/write-refs-sooner-2.4'
Multi-ref transaction support we merged a few releases ago
unnecessarily kept many file descriptors open, risking to fail with
resource exhaustion.  This is for 2.4.x track.

* mh/write-refs-sooner-2.4:
  ref_transaction_commit(): fix atomicity and avoid fd exhaustion
  ref_transaction_commit(): remove the local flags variable
  ref_transaction_commit(): inline call to write_ref_sha1()
  rename_ref(): inline calls to write_ref_sha1() from this function
  commit_ref_update(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
  write_ref_to_lockfile(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
  t7004: rename ULIMIT test prerequisite to ULIMIT_STACK_SIZE
  update-ref: test handling large transactions properly
  ref_transaction_commit(): fix atomicity and avoid fd exhaustion
  ref_transaction_commit(): remove the local flags variable
  ref_transaction_commit(): inline call to write_ref_sha1()
  rename_ref(): inline calls to write_ref_sha1() from this function
  commit_ref_update(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
  write_ref_to_lockfile(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
  t7004: rename ULIMIT test prerequisite to ULIMIT_STACK_SIZE
  update-ref: test handling large transactions properly
2015-05-22 12:41:52 -07:00
fd707807f0 Merge branch 'mg/log-decorate-HEAD'
The "log --decorate" enhancement in Git 2.4 that shows the commit
at the tip of the current branch e.g. "HEAD -> master", did not
work with --decorate=full.

* mg/log-decorate-HEAD:
  log: do not shorten decoration names too early
  log: decorate HEAD with branch name under --decorate=full, too
2015-05-22 12:41:51 -07:00
d1caa58954 Merge branch 'jk/asciidoc-markup-fix'
Various documentation mark-up fixes to make the output more
consistent in general and also make AsciiDoctor (an alternative
formatter) happier.

* jk/asciidoc-markup-fix:
  doc: convert AsciiDoc {?foo} to ifdef::foo[]
  doc: put example URLs and emails inside literal backticks
  doc: drop backslash quoting of some curly braces
  doc: convert \--option to --option
  doc/add: reformat `--edit` option
  doc: fix length of underlined section-title
  doc: fix hanging "+"-continuation
  doc: fix unquoted use of "{type}"
  doc: fix misrendering due to `single quote'
2015-05-22 12:41:50 -07:00
c24e0e7751 Merge branch 'jk/stripspace-asciidoctor-fix'
A literal block in the tutorial had lines with unequal lengths to
delimit it from the rest of the document, which choke GitHub's
AsciiDoc renderer.

* jk/stripspace-asciidoctor-fix:
  doc: fix unmatched code fences in git-stripspace
2015-05-22 12:41:49 -07:00
236794f1eb Merge branch 'ja/tutorial-asciidoctor-fix'
A literal block in the tutorial had lines with unequal lengths to
delimit it from the rest of the document, which choke GitHub's
AsciiDoc renderer.

* ja/tutorial-asciidoctor-fix:
  doc: fix unmatched code fences
2015-05-22 12:41:48 -07:00
7928eae1dd Merge branch 'sg/help-subcommands'
A preparatory clean-up step.

* sg/help-subcommands:
  command-list.txt: fix whitespace inconsistency
2015-05-22 12:41:47 -07:00
44fa796793 Merge branch 'ps/bundle-verify-arg'
"git bundle verify" did not diagnose extra parameters on the
command line.

* ps/bundle-verify-arg:
  bundle: verify arguments more strictly
2015-05-22 12:41:46 -07:00
39fa79178f Merge branch 'ls/http-ssl-cipher-list'
Introduce http.<url>.SSLCipherList configuration variable to tweak
the list of cipher suite to be used with libcURL when talking with
https:// sites.

* ls/http-ssl-cipher-list:
  http: add support for specifying an SSL cipher list
2015-05-22 12:41:45 -07:00
b54301bdad Merge branch 'dl/subtree-avoid-tricky-echo'
"git subtree" script (in contrib/) used "echo -n" to produce
progress messages in a non-portable way.

* dl/subtree-avoid-tricky-echo:
  contrib/subtree: portability fix for string printing
2015-05-22 12:41:45 -07:00
8087a62086 Merge branch 'jk/skip-http-tests-under-no-curl'
Test clean-up.

* jk/skip-http-tests-under-no-curl:
  tests: skip dav http-push tests under NO_EXPAT=NoThanks
  t/lib-httpd.sh: skip tests if NO_CURL is defined
2015-05-22 12:41:44 -07:00
6263f58f86 Merge branch 'dl/subtree-push-no-squash'
"git subtree" script (in contrib/) does not have --squash option
when pushing, but the documentation and help text pretended as if
it did.

* dl/subtree-push-no-squash:
  contrib/subtree: there's no push --squash
2015-05-22 12:41:43 -07:00
823ac2b633 Merge branch 'sg/completion-omit-credential-helpers'
The Git subcommand completion (in contrib/) listed credential
helpers among candidates, which is not something the end user would
invoke interatively.

* sg/completion-omit-credential-helpers:
  completion: remove credential helpers from porcelain commands
2015-05-22 12:41:42 -07:00
086d0d4ab6 Merge branch 'dl/branch-error-message'
Error messages from "git branch" called remote-tracking branches as
"remote branches".

* dl/branch-error-message:
  branch: do not call a "remote-tracking branch" a "remote branch"
2015-05-22 12:41:41 -07:00
29bc88505f for-each-ref: accept "%(push)" format
Just as we have "%(upstream)" to report the "@{upstream}"
for each ref, this patch adds "%(push)" to match "@{push}".
It supports the same tracking format modifiers as upstream
(because you may want to know, for example, which branches
have commits to push).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 09:33:09 -07:00
3dbe9db01b for-each-ref: use skip_prefix instead of starts_with
This saves us having to maintain a magic number to skip past
the matched prefix.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 09:33:08 -07:00
adfe5d0434 sha1_name: implement @{push} shorthand
In a triangular workflow, each branch may have two distinct
points of interest: the @{upstream} that you normally pull
from, and the destination that you normally push to. There
isn't a shorthand for the latter, but it's useful to have.

For instance, you may want to know which commits you haven't
pushed yet:

  git log @{push}..

Or as a more complicated example, imagine that you normally
pull changes from origin/master (which you set as your
@{upstream}), and push changes to your own personal fork
(e.g., as myfork/topic). You may push to your fork from
multiple machines, requiring you to integrate the changes
from the push destination, rather than upstream. With this
patch, you can just do:

  git rebase @{push}

rather than typing out the full name.

The heavy lifting is all done by branch_get_push; here we
just wire it up to the "@{push}" syntax.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 09:33:08 -07:00
48c58471c2 sha1_name: refactor interpret_upstream_mark
Now that most of the logic for our local get_upstream_branch
has been pushed into the generic branch_get_upstream, we can
fold the remainder into interpret_upstream_mark.

Furthermore, what remains is generic to any branch-related
"@{foo}" we might add in the future, and there's enough
boilerplate that we'd like to reuse it. Let's parameterize
the two operations (parsing the mark and computing its
value) so that we can reuse this for "@{push}" in the near
future.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 09:33:08 -07:00
a1ad0eb0cb sha1_name: refactor upstream_mark
We will be adding new mark types in the future, so separate
the suffix data from the logic.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 09:33:08 -07:00
e291c75a95 remote.c: add branch_get_push
In a triangular workflow, the place you pull from and the
place you push to may be different. As we have
branch_get_upstream for the former, this patch adds
branch_get_push for the latter (and as the former implements
@{upstream}, so will this implement @{push} in a future
patch).

Note that the memory-handling for the return value bears
some explanation. Some code paths require allocating a new
string, and some let us return an existing string. We should
provide a consistent interface to the caller, so it knows
whether to free the result or not.

We could do so by xstrdup-ing any existing strings, and
having the caller always free. But that makes us
inconsistent with branch_get_upstream, so we would prefer to
simply take ownership of the resulting string. We do so by
storing it inside the "struct branch", just as we do with
the upstream refname (in that case we compute it when the
branch is created, but there's no reason not to just fill
it in lazily in this case).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 09:33:08 -07:00
979cb245e2 remote.c: return upstream name from stat_tracking_info
After calling stat_tracking_info, callers often want to
print the name of the upstream branch (in addition to the
tracking count). To do this, they have to access
branch->merge->dst[0] themselves. This is not wrong, as the
return value from stat_tracking_info tells us whether we
have an upstream branch or not. But it is a bit leaky, as we
make an assumption about how it calculated the upstream
name.

Instead, let's add an out-parameter that lets the caller
know the upstream name we found.

As a bonus, we can get rid of the unusual tri-state return
from the function. We no longer need to use it to
differentiate between "no tracking config" and "tracking ref
does not exist" (since you can check the upstream_name for
that), so we can just use the usual 0/-1 convention for
success/error.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 09:32:34 -07:00
1ca41a1932 remote.c: untangle error logic in branch_get_upstream
The error-diagnosis logic in branch_get_upstream was copied
straight from sha1_name.c in the previous commit. However,
because we check all error cases and upfront and then later
diagnose them, the logic is a bit tangled. In particular:

  - if branch->merge[0] is NULL, we may end up dereferencing
    it for an error message (in practice, it should never be
    NULL, so this is probably not a triggerable bug).

  - We may enter the code path because branch->merge[0]->dst
    is NULL, but we then start our error diagnosis by
    checking whether our local branch exists. But that is
    only relevant to diagnosing missing merge config, not a
    missing tracking ref; our diagnosis may hide the real
    problem.

Instead, let's just use a sequence of "if" blocks to check
for each error type, diagnose it, and return NULL.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 09:30:51 -07:00
d201a1ecdb test_bitmap_walk: free bitmap with bitmap_free
Commit f86a374 (pack-bitmap.c: fix a memleak, 2015-03-30)
noticed that we leak the "result" bitmap. But we should use
"bitmap_free" rather than straight "free", as the former
remembers to free the bitmap array pointed to by the struct.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 09:03:04 -07:00
bbf431c9ae doc: fix inconsistent spelling of "packfile"
Fix remaining instances where "pack-file" is used instead of
"packfile". Some places remain where we still use "pack-file",
This is the case when we explicitly refer to a file with a
".pack" extension as opposed to a data source providing a pack
data stream.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 09:00:17 -07:00
141ff8f9e7 t5407: use <<- to align the expected output
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 08:41:31 -07:00
b12d3e904d rebase -i: fix post-rewrite hook with failed exec command
Usually, when 'git rebase' stops before completing the rebase, it is to
give the user an opportunity to edit a commit (e.g. with the 'edit'
command). In such cases, 'git rebase' leaves the sha1 of the commit being
rewritten in "$state_dir"/stopped-sha, and subsequent 'git rebase
--continue' will call the post-rewrite hook with this sha1 as <old-sha1>
argument to the post-rewrite hook.

The case of 'git rebase' stopping because of a failed 'exec' command is
different: it gives the opportunity to the user to examine or fix the
failure, but does not stop saying "here's a commit to edit, use
--continue when you're done". So, there's no reason to call the
post-rewrite hook for 'exec' commands. If the user did rewrite the
commit, it would be with 'git commit --amend' which already called the
post-rewrite hook.

Fix the behavior to leave no stopped-sha file in case of failed exec
command, and teach 'git rebase --continue' to skip record_in_rewritten if
no stopped-sha file is found.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 08:39:02 -07:00
1d968ca698 rebase -i: demonstrate incorrect behavior of post-rewrite
The 'exec' command is sending the current commit to stopped-sha, which is
supposed to contain the original commit (before rebase). As a result, if
an 'exec' command fails, the next 'git rebase --continue' will send the
current commit as <old-sha1> to the post-rewrite hook.

The test currently fails with :

  --- expected.data       2015-05-21 17:55:29.000000000 +0000
  +++ [...]post-rewrite.data      2015-05-21 17:55:29.000000000 +0000
  @@ -1,2 +1,3 @@
   2362ae8e1b1b865e6161e6f0e165ffb974abf018 488028e9fac0b598b70cbeb594258a917e3f6fab
  +488028e9fac0b598b70cbeb594258a917e3f6fab 488028e9fac0b598b70cbeb594258a917e3f6fab
   babc8a4c7470895886fc129f1a015c486d05a351 8edffcc4e69a4e696a1d4bab047df450caf99507

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-22 08:39:01 -07:00
bc0a474149 config.txt: clarify allowTipSHA1InWant with camelCase
Most of the options in config.txt are camelCase. Improve the readability
for allowtipsha1inwant by changing to allowTipSHA1InWant.

Signed-off-by: Fredrik Medley <fredrik.medley@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 13:40:22 -07:00
224147704a help: respect new common command grouping
'git help' shows common commands in alphabetical order:

The most commonly used git commands are:
   add        Add file contents to the index
   bisect     Find by binary search the change that introduced a bug
   branch     List, create, or delete branches
   checkout   Checkout a branch or paths to the working tree
   clone      Clone a repository into a new directory
   commit     Record changes to the repository
   [...]

without any indication of how commands relate to high-level
concepts or each other. Revise the output to explain their relationship
with the typical Git workflow:

  These are common Git commands used in various situations:

  start a working area (see also: git help tutorial)
     clone      Clone a repository into a new directory
     init       Create an empty Git repository or reinitialize [...]

  work on the current change (see also: git help everyday)
     add        Add file contents to the index
     reset      Reset current HEAD to the specified state

  examine the history and state (see also: git help revisions)
     log        Show commit logs
     status     Show the working tree status

     [...]

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Guimmara <sebastien.guimmara@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 13:03:37 -07:00
2f5b4950b9 command-list.txt: drop the "common" tag
command-list.sh, retired in the previous patch, was the only
consumer of the "common" tag, so drop this now-unnecessary
attribute.

before:
    git-add          mainporcelain        common worktree

after:
    git-add          mainporcelain        worktree

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Guimmara <sebastien.guimmara@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 13:03:37 -07:00
527ec3980b generate-cmdlist: parse common group commands
Parse the group block to create the array of group descriptions:

static char *common_cmd_groups[] = {
    N_("starting a working area"),
    N_("working on the current change"),
    N_("working with others"),
    N_("examining the history and state"),
    N_("growing, marking and tweaking your history"),
};

then map each element of common_cmds[] to a group via its index:

static struct cmdname_help common_cmds[] = {
    {"add", N_("Add file contents to the index"), 1},
    {"branch", N_("List, create, or delete branches"), 4},
    {"checkout", N_("Checkout a branch or paths to the ..."), 4},
    {"clone", N_("Clone a repository into a new directory"), 0},
    {"commit", N_("Record changes to the repository"), 4},
    ...
};

so that 'git help' can print those commands grouped by theme.

Only commands tagged with an attribute from the group block are emitted to
common_cmds[].

[commit message by Sébastien Guimmara <sebastien.guimmara@gmail.com>]

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Guimmara <sebastien.guimmara@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 13:03:37 -07:00
413f50b901 command-list.txt: add the common groups block
The ultimate goal is for "git help" to display common commands in
groups rather than alphabetically. As a first step, define the
groups in a new block, and then assign a group to each
common command.

Add a block at the beginning of command-list.txt:

    init         start a working area (see also: git help tutorial)
    worktree     work on the current change (see also:[...]
    info         examine the history and state (see also: git [...]
    history      grow, mark and tweak your history
    remote       collaborate (see also: git help workflows)

storing information about common commands group, then map each common
command to a group:

    git-add          mainporcelain        common worktree

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by:  Emma Jane Hogbin Westby <emma.westby@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Guimmara <sebastien.guimmara@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 13:03:37 -07:00
11c6659d85 command-list: prepare machinery for upcoming "common groups" section
The ultimate goal is for "git help" to classify common commands by
group. Toward this end, a subsequent patch will add a new "common
groups" section to command-list.txt preceding the actual command list.
As preparation, teach existing command-list.txt parsing machinery, which
doesn't care about grouping, to skip over this upcoming "common groups"
section.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Guimmara <sebastien.guimmara@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 13:03:37 -07:00
3a429d0af3 remote.c: report specific errors from branch_get_upstream
When the previous commit introduced the branch_get_upstream
helper, there was one call-site that could not be converted:
the one in sha1_name.c, which gives detailed error messages
for each possible failure.

Let's teach the helper to optionally report these specific
errors. This lets us convert another callsite, and means we
can use the helper in other locations that want to give the
same error messages.

The logic and error messages come straight from sha1_name.c,
with the exception that we start each error with a lowercase
letter, as is our usual style (note that a few tests need
updated as a result).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 11:07:46 -07:00
a9f9f8cc1f remote.c: introduce branch_get_upstream helper
All of the information needed to find the @{upstream} of a
branch is included in the branch struct, but callers have to
navigate a series of possible-NULL values to get there.
Let's wrap that logic up in an easy-to-read helper.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 11:04:42 -07:00
8770e6fbb2 remote.c: hoist read_config into remote_get_1
Before the previous commit, we had to make sure that
read_config() was called before entering remote_get_1,
because we needed to pass pushremote_name by value. But now
that we pass a function, we can let remote_get_1 handle
loading the config itself, turning our wrappers into true
one-liners.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 11:04:10 -07:00
da66b2743c remote.c: provide per-branch pushremote name
When remote.c loads its config, it records the
branch.*.pushremote for the current branch along with the
global remote.pushDefault value, and then binds them into a
single value: the default push for the current branch. We
then pass this value (which may be NULL) to remote_get_1
when looking up a remote for push.

This has a few downsides:

  1. It's confusing. The early-binding of the "current
     value" led to bugs like the one fixed by 98b406f
     (remote: handle pushremote config in any order,
     2014-02-24). And the fact that pushremotes fall back to
     ordinary remotes is not explicit at all; it happens
     because remote_get_1 cannot tell the difference between
     "we are not asking for the push remote" and "there is
     no push remote configured".

  2. It throws away intermediate data. After read_config()
     finishes, we have no idea what the value of
     remote.pushDefault was, because the string has been
     overwritten by the current branch's
     branch.*.pushremote.

  3. It doesn't record other data. We don't note the
     branch.*.pushremote value for anything but the current
     branch.

Let's make this more like the fetch-remote config. We'll
record the pushremote for each branch, and then explicitly
compute the correct remote for the current branch at the
time of reading.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 11:03:58 -07:00
f052154db3 remote.c: hoist branch.*.remote lookup out of remote_get_1
We'll want to use this logic as a fallback when looking up
the pushremote, so let's pull it out into its own function.

We don't technically need to make this available outside of
remote.c, but doing so will provide a consistent API with
pushremote_for_branch, which we will add later.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 11:03:49 -07:00
9e3751d443 remote.c: drop "remote" pointer from "struct branch"
When we create each branch struct, we fill in the
"remote_name" field from the config, and then fill in the
actual "remote" field (with a "struct remote") based on that
name. However, it turns out that nobody really cares about
the latter field. The only two sites that access it at all
are:

  1. git-merge, which uses it to notice when the branch does
     not have a remote defined. But we can easily replace this
     with looking at remote_name instead.

  2. remote.c itself, when setting up the @{upstream} merge
     config. But we don't need to save the "remote" in the
     "struct branch" for that; we can just look it up for
     the duration of the operation.

So there is no need to have both fields; they are redundant
with each other (the struct remote contains the name, or you
can look up the struct from the name). It would be nice to
simplify this, especially as we are going to add matching
pushremote config in a future patch (and it would be nice to
keep them consistent).

So which one do we keep and which one do we get rid of?

If we had a lot of callers accessing the struct, it would be
more efficient to keep it (since you have to do a lookup to
go from the name to the struct, but not vice versa). But we
don't have a lot of callers; we have exactly one, so
efficiency doesn't matter. We can decide this based on
simplicity and readability.

And the meaning of the struct value is somewhat unclear. Is
it always the remote matching remote_name? If remote_name is
NULL (i.e., no per-branch config), does the struct fall back
to the "origin" remote, or is it also NULL? These questions
will get even more tricky with pushremotes, whose fallback
behavior is more complicated. So let's just store the name,
which pretty clearly represents the branch.*.remote config.
Any lookup or fallback behavior can then be implemented in
helper functions.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 10:48:10 -07:00
ee2499fe38 remote.c: refactor setup of branch->merge list
When we call branch_get() to lookup or create a "struct
branch", we make sure the "merge" field is filled in so that
callers can access it. But the conditions under which we do
so are a little confusing, and can lead to two funny
situations:

  1. If there's no branch.*.remote config, we cannot provide
     branch->merge (because it is really just an application
     of branch.*.merge to our remote's refspecs). But
     branch->merge_nr may be non-zero, leading callers to be
     believe they can access branch->merge (e.g., in
     branch_merge_matches and elsewhere).

     It doesn't look like this can cause a segfault in
     practice, as most code paths dealing with merge config
     will bail early if there is no remote defined. But it's
     a bit of a dangerous construct.

     We can fix this by setting merge_nr to "0" explicitly
     when we realize that we have no merge config. Note that
     merge_nr also counts the "merge_name" fields (which we
     _do_ have; that's how merge_nr got incremented), so we
     will "lose" access to them, in the sense that we forget
     how many we had. But no callers actually care; we use
     merge_name only while iteratively reading the config,
     and then convert it to the final "merge" form the first
     time somebody calls branch_get().

  2. We set up the "merge" field every time branch_get is
     called, even if it has already been done. This leaks
     memory.

     It's not a big deal in practice, since most code paths
     will access only one branch, or perhaps each branch
     only one time. But if you want to be pathological, you
     can leak arbitrary memory with:

       yes @{upstream} | head -1000 | git rev-list --stdin

     We can fix this by skipping setup when branch->merge is
     already non-NULL.

In addition to those two fixes, this patch pushes the "do we
need to setup merge?" logic down into set_merge, where it is
a bit easier to follow.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-21 10:43:50 -07:00
92de92172d Documentation/log: clarify sha1 non-abbreviation in log --raw
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-20 15:28:51 -07:00
22570b68e3 dir: remove unused variable sb
It had never been used.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-20 13:50:22 -07:00
5cd83e1885 clean: remove unused variable buf
It had never been used.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-20 13:50:21 -07:00
dbe44faadb use file_exists() to check if a file exists in the worktree
Call file_exists() instead of open-coding it.  That's shorter, simpler
and the intent becomes clearer.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-20 13:49:10 -07:00
5ba28313f2 stash: recognize "--help" for subcommands
If you run "git stash --help", you get the help for stash
(this magic is done by the git wrapper itself). But if you
run "git stash drop --help", you get an error. We
cannot show help specific to "stash drop", of course, but we
can at least give the user the normal stash manpage.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-20 13:47:41 -07:00
d6cc2df5c8 stash: complain about unknown flags
The option parser for git-stash stuffs unknown flags into
the $FLAGS variable, where they can be accessed by the
individual commands. However, most commands do not even look
at these extra flags, leading to unexpected results like
this:

  $ git stash drop --help
  Dropped refs/stash@{0} (e6cf6d80faf92bb7828f7b60c47fc61c03bd30a1)

We should notice the extra flags and bail. Rather than
annotate each command to reject a non-empty $FLAGS variable,
we can notice that "stash show" is the only command that
actually _wants_ arbitrary flags. So we switch the default
mode to reject unknown flags, and let stash_show() opt into
the feature.

Reported-by: Vincent Legoll <vincent.legoll@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-20 13:47:30 -07:00
122d53464b cat-file: add --follow-symlinks to --batch
This wires the in-repo-symlink following code through to the cat-file
builtin.  In the event of an out-of-repo link, cat-file will print
the link in a new format.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-20 13:46:21 -07:00
c4ec96774b sha1_name: get_sha1_with_context learns to follow symlinks
Wire up get_sha1_with_context to call get_tree_entry_follow_symlinks
when GET_SHA1_FOLLOW_SYMLINKS is passed in flags. G_S_FOLLOW_SYMLINKS
is incompatible with G_S_ONLY_TO_DIE because the diagnosis
that ONLY_TO_DIE triggers does not at present consider symlinks, and
it would be a significant amount of additional code to allow it to
do so.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-20 13:46:13 -07:00
275721c267 tree-walk: learn get_tree_entry_follow_symlinks
Add a new function, get_tree_entry_follow_symlinks, to tree-walk.[ch].
The function is not yet used.  It will be used to implement git
cat-file --batch --follow-symlinks.

The function locates an object by path, following symlinks in the
repository.  If the symlinks lead outside the repository, the function
reports this to the caller.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-20 13:45:49 -07:00
3e4f2373b2 mergetools: add winmerge as a builtin tool
Add a winmerge scriptlet with the commands described in [1] so
that users can use winmerge without needing to perform any
additional configuration.

[1] http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/268631

Helped-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Helped-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Helped-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-20 13:13:44 -07:00
719518f5ce mergetool--lib: set IFS for difftool and mergetool
git-sh-setup sets IFS but it is not used by git-difftool--helper.
Set IFS in git-mergetool--lib so that the mergetool scriptlets,
difftool, and mergetool do not need to do so.

Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-20 13:13:42 -07:00
cc969c8dc1 t5551: factor out tag creation
One of our tests in t5551 creates a large number of tags,
and jumps through some hoops to do it efficiently. Let's
factor that out into a function so we can make other similar
tests.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-20 10:38:31 -07:00
0c4dd67a04 filter_buffer_or_fd(): ignore EPIPE
We are explicitly ignoring SIGPIPE, as we fully expect that the
filter program may not read our output fully.  Ignore EPIPE that
may come from writing to it as well.

A new test was stolen from Jeff's suggestion.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-20 10:19:12 -07:00
5c2a581dc9 Documentation/git-commit: grammofix
Signed-off-by: Michael Coleman <michael.karl.coleman@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-19 21:20:58 -07:00
00b7cbfcb3 copy.c: make copy_fd() report its status silently
When copy_fd() function encounters errors, it emits error messages
itself, which makes it impossible for callers to take responsibility
for reporting errors, especially when they want to ignore certain
errors.

Move the error reporting to its callers in preparation.

 - copy_file() and copy_file_with_time() by indirection get their
   own calls to error().

 - hold_lock_file_for_append(), when told to die on error, used to
   exit(128) relying on the error message from copy_fd(), but now it
   does its own die() instead.  Note that the callers that do not
   pass LOCK_DIE_ON_ERROR need to be adjusted for this change, but
   fortunately there is none ;-)

 - filter_buffer_or_fd() has its own error() already, in addition to
   the message from copy_fd(), so this will change the output but
   arguably in a better way.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-19 14:48:54 -07:00
6c1249c503 Third batch for 2.5 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-19 13:24:08 -07:00
4295abc040 Merge branch 'sb/ref-lock-lose-lock-fd'
The refs API uses ref_lock struct which had its own "int fd", even
though the same file descriptor was in the lock struct it contains.
Clean-up the code to lose this redundant field.

* sb/ref-lock-lose-lock-fd:
  refs.c: remove lock_fd from struct ref_lock
2015-05-19 13:17:59 -07:00
3b7d373ae2 Merge branch 'kn/cat-file-literally'
Add the "--allow-unknown-type" option to "cat-file" to allow
inspecting loose objects of an experimental or a broken type.

* kn/cat-file-literally:
  t1006: add tests for git cat-file --allow-unknown-type
  cat-file: teach cat-file a '--allow-unknown-type' option
  cat-file: make the options mutually exclusive
  sha1_file: support reading from a loose object of unknown type
2015-05-19 13:17:58 -07:00
949d16795c Merge branch 'nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs'
A heuristic to help the "git <cmd> <revs> <pathspec>" command line
convention to catch mistyped paths is to make sure all the non-rev
parameters in the later part of the command line are names of the
files in the working tree, but that means "git grep $str -- \*.c"
must always be disambiguated with "--", because nobody sane will
create a file whose name literally is asterisk-dot-see.  Loosen the
heuristic to declare that with a wildcard string the user likely
meant to give us a pathspec.

* nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs:
  pathspec: avoid the need of "--" when wildcard is used
2015-05-19 13:17:58 -07:00
bcd1ecd08a Merge branch 'jc/merge'
"git merge FETCH_HEAD" learned that the previous "git fetch" could
be to create an Octopus merge, i.e. recording multiple branches
that are not marked as "not-for-merge"; this allows us to lose an
old style invocation "git merge <msg> HEAD $commits..." in the
implementation of "git pull" script; the old style syntax can now
be deprecated.

* jc/merge:
  merge: deprecate 'git merge <message> HEAD <commit>' syntax
  merge: handle FETCH_HEAD internally
  merge: decide if we auto-generate the message early in collect_parents()
  merge: make collect_parents() auto-generate the merge message
  merge: extract prepare_merge_message() logic out
  merge: narrow scope of merge_names
  merge: split reduce_parents() out of collect_parents()
  merge: clarify collect_parents() logic
  merge: small leakfix and code simplification
  merge: do not check argc to determine number of remote heads
  merge: clarify "pulling into void" special case
  t5520: test pulling an octopus into an unborn branch
  t5520: style fixes
  merge: simplify code flow
  merge: test the top-level merge driver
2015-05-19 13:17:57 -07:00
eae0216646 Merge branch 'ph/rebase-i-redo'
"git rebase -i" moved the "current" command from "todo" to "done" a
bit too prematurely, losing a step when a "pick" did not even start.

* ph/rebase-i-redo:
  rebase -i: redo tasks that die during cherry-pick
2015-05-19 13:17:56 -07:00
072f391c53 Merge branch 'jc/test-prereq-validate'
Help us to find broken test script that splits the body part of the
test by mistaken use of wrong kind of quotes.

* jc/test-prereq-validate:
  test: validate prerequistes syntax
2015-05-19 13:17:55 -07:00
7a4f891329 Merge branch 'bc/connect-plink'
The connection initiation code for "ssh" transport tried to absorb
differences between the stock "ssh" and Putty-supplied "plink" and
its derivatives, but the logic to tell that we are using "plink"
variants were too loose and falsely triggered when "plink" appeared
anywhere in the path (e.g. "/home/me/bin/uplink/ssh").

* bc/connect-plink:
  connect: improve check for plink to reduce false positives
  t5601: fix quotation error leading to skipped tests
  connect: simplify SSH connection code path
2015-05-19 13:17:55 -07:00
da3d507ce0 Merge branch 'jk/test-chain-lint'
Developer support to automatically detect broken &&-chain in the
test scripts is now turned on by default.

* jk/test-chain-lint:
  test-lib: turn on GIT_TEST_CHAIN_LINT by default
  t7502-commit.sh: fix a broken and-chain
2015-05-19 13:17:54 -07:00
3e199decd5 Merge branch 'fg/document-commit-message-stripping'
* fg/document-commit-message-stripping:
  Documentation: clarify how "git commit" cleans up the edited log message
2015-05-19 13:17:53 -07:00
05c39674f3 Merge branch 'jk/stash-require-clean-index'
"git stash pop/apply" forgot to make sure that not just the working
tree is clean but also the index is clean. The latter is important
as a stash application can conflict and the index will be used for
conflict resolution.

* jk/stash-require-clean-index:
  stash: require a clean index to apply
  t3903: avoid applying onto dirty index
  t3903: stop hard-coding commit sha1s
2015-05-19 13:17:52 -07:00
1645dbeff7 Merge branch 'jk/git-no-more-argv0-path-munging'
We have prepended $GIT_EXEC_PATH and the path "git" is installed in
(typically "/usr/bin") to $PATH when invoking subprograms and hooks
for almost eternity, but the original use case the latter tried to
support was semi-bogus (i.e. install git to /opt/foo/git and run it
without having /opt/foo on $PATH), and more importantly it has
become less and less relevant as Git grew more mainstream (i.e. the
users would _want_ to have it on their $PATH).  Stop prepending the
path in which "git" is installed to users' $PATH, as that would
interfere the command search order people depend on (e.g. they may
not like versions of programs that are unrelated to Git in /usr/bin
and want to override them by having different ones in /usr/local/bin
and have the latter directory earlier in their $PATH).

* jk/git-no-more-argv0-path-munging:
  stop putting argv[0] dirname at front of PATH
2015-05-19 13:17:52 -07:00
20cf8b548e Merge branch 'jc/gitignore-precedence'
core.excludesfile (defaulting to $XDG_HOME/git/ignore) is supposed
to be overridden by repository-specific .git/info/exclude file, but
the order was swapped from the beginning. This belatedly fixes it.

* jc/gitignore-precedence:
  ignore: info/exclude should trump core.excludesfile
2015-05-19 13:17:51 -07:00
d0c692263f Merge branch 'nd/diff-i-t-a'
After "git add -N", the path appeared in output of "git diff HEAD"
and "git diff --cached HEAD", leading "git status" to classify it
as "Changes to be committed".  Such a path, however, is not yet to
be scheduled to be committed.  "git diff" showed the change to the
path as modification, not as a "new file", in the header of its
output.

Treat such paths as "yet to be added to the index but Git already
know about them"; "git diff HEAD" and "git diff --cached HEAD"
should not talk about them, and "git diff" should show them as new
files yet to be added to the index.

* nd/diff-i-t-a:
  diff-lib.c: adjust position of i-t-a entries in diff
2015-05-19 13:17:49 -07:00
a4fb76ce19 progress: treat "no terminal" as being in the foreground
progress: treat "no terminal" as being in the foreground

Commit 85cb890 (progress: no progress in background,
2015-04-13) avoids sending progress from background
processes by checking that the process group id of the
current process is the same as that of the controlling
terminal.

If we don't have a terminal, however, this check never
succeeds, and we print no progress at all (until the final
"done" message). This can be seen when cloning a large
repository; instead of getting progress updates for
"counting objects", it will appear to hang then print the
final count.

We can fix this by treating an error return from tcgetpgrp()
as a signal to show the progress.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-19 09:35:14 -07:00
599dc766e8 pack-bitmaps: plug memory leak, fix allocation size for recent_bitmaps
Use an automatic variable for recent_bitmaps, an array of pointers.
This way we don't allocate too much and don't have to free the memory
at the end.  The old code over-allocated because it reserved enough
memory to store all of the structs it is only pointing to and never
freed it.  160 64-bit pointers take up 1280 bytes, which is not too
much to be placed on the stack.

MAX_XOR_OFFSET is turned into a preprocessor constant to make it
constant enough for use in an non-variable array declaration.

Noticed-by: Stefan Beller <stefanbeller@gmail.com>
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>
2015-05-19 09:31:09 -07:00
822f0c4ff7 clone: call transport_set_verbosity before anything else on the newly created transport
Commit 2879bc3 made the progress and verbosity options sent to remote helper
earlier than they previously were. But nothing else after that would send
updates if the value is changed later on with transport_set_verbosity.

While for fetch and push, transport_set_verbosity is the first thing that
is done after creating the transport, it was not the case for clone. So
commit 2879bc3 broke changing progress and verbosity for clone, for urls
requiring a remote helper only (so, not git:// urls, for instance).

Moving transport_set_verbosity to just after the transport is created
works around the issue.

Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-19 09:05:55 -07:00
66d2e04ec9 subdirectory tests: code cleanup, uncomment test
Back when these tests were written, we wanted to make sure that Git
notices it is in a bare repository and "git show -s HEAD" would
refrain from complaining that HEAD might mean a file it sees in its
current working directory (because it does not).  But the version of
Git back then didn't behave well, without (doubly) being told that
it is inside a bare repository by exporting "GIT_DIR=.".  The form
of the test we originally wanted to have was left commented out as
a reminder.

Nowadays the test as originally intended works, so add it to the
test suite.  We'll keep the old test that explicitly sets GIT_DIR=.
to make sure that use case will not regress.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-18 15:22:49 -07:00
838d6a928f clean: only lstat files in pathspec
Even though "git clean" takes pathspec to limit the part of the
working tree to be cleaned, it checked the paths it encounters
during its directory traversal with lstat(2), before checking if
the path is within the pathspec.

Ignore paths outside pathspec and proceed without checking with
lstat(2).  Even if such a path is unreadable due to e.g. EPERM,
"git clean" should not care.

Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-18 14:04:15 -07:00
d89df367f6 Documentation/log: clarify what --raw means
There are several "raw formats", and describing --raw as "Generate the
raw format" in the documentation for git-log seems to imply that it
generates the raw *log* format.

Clarify the wording by saying "raw diff format" explicitly, and make a
special-case for "git log": "git log --raw" does not just change the
format, it shows something which is not shown by default.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-18 13:42:52 -07:00
db9bb280ed pull: parse pull.ff as a bool or string
Since b814da8 (pull: add pull.ff configuration, 2014-01-15) git-pull
supported setting --(no-)ff via the pull.ff configuration value.
However, as it only matches the string values of "true" and "false", it
does not support other boolean aliases such as "on", "off", "1", "0".
This is inconsistent with the merge.ff setting, which supports these
aliases.

Fix this by using the bool_or_string_config function to retrieve the
value of pull.ff.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-18 11:22:38 -07:00
eb8dc05c3d pull: make pull.ff=true override merge.ff
Since b814da8 (pull: add pull.ff configuration, 2014-01-15), running
git-pull with the configuration pull.ff=false or pull.ff=only is
equivalent to passing --no-ff and --ff-only to git-merge. However, if
pull.ff=true, no switch is passed to git-merge. This leads to the
confusing behavior where pull.ff=false or pull.ff=only is able to
override merge.ff, while pull.ff=true is unable to.

Fix this by adding the --ff switch if pull.ff=true, and add a test to
catch future regressions.

Furthermore, clarify in the documentation that pull.ff overrides
merge.ff.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-18 11:22:27 -07:00
5061a44bcc pull: handle --log=<n>
Since efb779f (merge, pull: add '--(no-)log' command line option,
2008-04-06) git-pull supported the (--no-)log switch and would pass it
to git-merge.

96e9420 (merge: Make '--log' an integer option for number of shortlog
entries, 2010-09-08) implemented support for the --log=<n> switch, which
would explicitly set the number of shortlog entries. However, git-pull
does not recognize this option, and will instead pass it to git-fetch,
leading to "unknown option" errors.

Fix this by matching --log=* in addition to --log and --no-log.

Implement a test for this use case.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-18 11:19:36 -07:00
d12f455e44 t5520: test no merge candidates cases
a8c9bef (pull: improve advice for unconfigured error case, 2009-10-05)
fully established the current advices given by git-pull for the
different cases where git-fetch will not have anything marked for merge:

1. We fetched from a specific remote, and a refspec was given, but it
   ended up not fetching anything. This is usually because the user
   provided a wildcard refspec which had no matches on the remote end.

2. We fetched from a non-default remote, but didn't specify a branch to
   merge. We can't use the configured one because it applies to the
   default remote, and thus the user must specify the branches to merge.

3. We fetched from the branch's or repo's default remote, but:

   a. We are not on a branch, so there will never be a configured branch
      to merge with.

   b. We are on a branch, but there is no configured branch to merge
      with.

4. We fetched from the branch's or repo's default remote, but the
   configured branch to merge didn't get fetched (either it doesn't
   exist, or wasn't part of the configured fetch refspec)

Implement tests for the above 5 cases to ensure that the correct code
paths are triggered for each of these cases.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-18 10:38:44 -07:00
c998b38147 t5520: prevent field splitting in content comparisons
Many tests in t5520 used the following to test the contents of files:

	test `cat file` = expected

or

	test $(cat file) = expected

These 2 forms, however, will be affected by field splitting and,
depending on the value of $IFS, may be split into multiple arguments,
making the test fail in mysterious ways.

Replace the above 2 forms with:

	test "$(cat file)" = expected

as quoting the command substitution will prevent field splitting.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-18 10:33:01 -07:00
f6a1e1e288 sha1_file: pass empty buffer to index empty file
`git add` of an empty file with a filter pops complaints from
`copy_fd` about a bad file descriptor.

This traces back to these lines in sha1_file.c:index_core:

	if (!size) {
		ret = index_mem(sha1, NULL, size, type, path, flags);

The problem here is that content to be added to the index can be
supplied from an fd, or from a memory buffer, or from a pathname. This
call is supplying a NULL buffer pointer and a zero size.

Downstream logic takes the complete absence of a buffer to mean the
data is to be found elsewhere -- for instance, these, from convert.c:

	if (params->src) {
		write_err = (write_in_full(child_process.in, params->src, params->size) < 0);
	} else {
		write_err = copy_fd(params->fd, child_process.in);
	}

~If there's a buffer, write from that, otherwise the data must be coming
from an open fd.~

Perfectly reasonable logic in a routine that's going to write from
either a buffer or an fd.

So change `index_core` to supply an empty buffer when indexing an empty
file.

There's a patch out there that instead changes the logic quoted above to
take a `-1` fd to mean "use the buffer", but it seems to me that the
distinction between a missing buffer and an empty one carries intrinsic
semantics, where the logic change is adapting the code to handle
incorrect arguments.

Signed-off-by: Jim Hill <gjthill@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-18 10:15:20 -07:00
3890dae970 pack-protocol.txt: fix insconsistent spelling of "packfile"
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-17 11:25:00 -07:00
4667391958 git-unpack-objects.txt: fix inconsistent spelling of "packfile"
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-17 11:24:58 -07:00
d017a450ed git-verify-pack.txt: fix inconsistent spelling of "packfile"
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-17 11:24:57 -07:00
9c11578b00 gitk: Update .po files
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-05-17 14:33:26 +10:00
cbdf203f88 gitk: Update Bulgarian translation (304t)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-05-17 14:28:19 +10:00
5ee1c99ad1 gitk: Use translated version of "Command line" in getcommitlines
This is needed for getcommitlines to work properly when a language
translation is being used.

Signed-off-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-05-17 14:26:46 +10:00
0deb5c9721 gitk: Make it easier to go quickly to a specific commit
Binds "g" to focus and clear the sha1 entry box.

Signed-off-by: Ismael Luceno <ismael@iodev.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-05-17 14:23:12 +10:00
9922c5a334 gitk: Show the current view's name in the window title
If the current view is the "Command line" view, show the command line
arguments instead of the view name.

Signed-off-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-05-17 11:38:47 +10:00
427cf16985 gitk: Add mouse right-click options to copy path and branch name
This adds menu entries to two of the right-click menus:
 - 'Copy path' in the file list
 - 'Copy branch name' on a branch in the commit list

Signed-off-by: Michael Rappazzo <rappazzo@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-05-17 10:55:24 +10:00
ef87a4801a gitk: Remove mc parameter from proc show_error
This is a better fix for 8d849957d8.

This new fix makes the strings "Sorry, gitk cannot run..." and "OK"
translatable and the string "mc" not translatable. It will take effect
the next time `make update-po` is run.

msgcat is now imported before the Tcl/Tk version check so that the mc
function is available even if the version check fails. This should not
be a problem because msgcat and ::msgcat::mc were officially added in
Tcl 8.1 (released April 29, 1999) and we are not trying to support
versions of Tcl older than that.

Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-05-17 10:45:55 +10:00
7253a02348 http-backend: fix die recursion with custom handler
When we die() in http-backend, we call a custom handler that
writes an HTTP 500 response to stdout, then reports the
error to stderr. Our routines for writing out the HTTP
response may themselves die, leading to us entering die()
again.

When it was originally written, that was OK; our custom
handler keeps a variable to notice this and does not
recurse. However, since cd163d4 (usage.c: detect recursion
in die routines and bail out immediately, 2012-11-14), the
main die() implementation detects recursion before we even
get to our custom handler, and bails without printing
anything useful.

We can handle this case by doing two things:

  1. Installing a custom die_is_recursing handler that
     allows us to enter up to one level of recursion. Only
     the first call to our custom handler will try to write
     out the error response. So if we die again, that is OK.
     If we end up dying more than that, it is a sign that we
     are in an infinite recursion.

  2. Reporting the error to stderr before trying to write
     out the HTTP response. In the current code, if we do
     die() trying to write out the response, we'll exit
     immediately from this second die(), and never get a
     chance to output the original error (which is almost
     certainly the more interesting one; the second die is
     just going to be along the lines of "I tried to write
     to stdout but it was closed").

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-15 11:13:47 -07:00
f4ab4f3ab1 lock_packed_refs(): allow retries when acquiring the packed-refs lock
Currently, there is only one attempt to acquire any lockfile, and if
the lock is held by another process, the locking attempt fails
immediately.

This is not such a limitation for loose reference files. First, they
don't take long to rewrite. Second, most reference updates have a
known "old" value, so if another process is updating a reference at
the same moment that we are trying to lock it, then probably the
expected "old" value will not longer be valid, and the update will
fail anyway.

But these arguments do not hold for packed-refs:

* The packed-refs file can be large and take significant time to
  rewrite.

* Many references are stored in a single packed-refs file, so it could
  be that the other process was changing a different reference than
  the one that we are interested in.

Therefore, it is much more likely for there to be spurious lock
conflicts in connection to the packed-refs file, resulting in
unnecessary command failures.

So, if the first attempt to lock the packed-refs file fails, continue
retrying for a configurable length of time before giving up. The
default timeout is 1 second.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-14 14:51:51 -07:00
044b6a9efe lockfile: allow file locking to be retried with a timeout
Currently, there is only one attempt to lock a file. If it fails, the
whole operation fails.

But it might sometimes be advantageous to try acquiring a file lock a
few times before giving up. So add a new function,
hold_lock_file_for_update_timeout(), that allows a timeout to be
specified. Make hold_lock_file_for_update() a thin wrapper around the
new function.

If timeout_ms is positive, then retry for at least that many
milliseconds to acquire the lock. On each failed attempt, use select()
to wait for a backoff time that increases quadratically (capped at 1
second) and has a random component to prevent two processes from
getting synchronized. If timeout_ms is negative, retry indefinitely.

In a moment we will switch to using the new function when locking
packed-refs.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-14 14:51:08 -07:00
0544574cdc rerere: exit silently on "forget" when rerere is disabled
If you run "git rerere forget foo" in a repository that does
not have rerere enabled, git hits an internal error:

  $ git init -q
  $ git rerere forget foo
  fatal: BUG: attempt to commit unlocked object

The problem is that setup_rerere() will not actually take
the lock if the rerere system is disabled. We should notice
this and return early. We can return with a success code
here, because we know there is nothing to forget.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-14 12:33:15 -07:00
19d122bf1b pull: remove --tags error in no merge candidates case
Since 441ed41 ("git pull --tags": error out with a better message.,
2007-12-28), git pull --tags would print a different error message if
git-fetch did not return any merge candidates:

   It doesn't make sense to pull all tags; you probably meant:
        git fetch --tags

This is because at that time, git-fetch --tags would override any
configured refspecs, and thus there would be no merge candidates. The
error message was thus introduced to prevent confusion.

However, since c5a84e9 (fetch --tags: fetch tags *in addition to*
other stuff, 2013-10-30), git fetch --tags would fetch tags in addition
to any configured refspecs. Hence, if any no merge candidates situation
occurs, it is not because --tags was set. As such, this special error
message is now irrelevant.

To prevent confusion, remove this error message.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-14 09:52:51 -07:00
d0258b93e6 doc: convert AsciiDoc {?foo} to ifdef::foo[]
The former seems to just be syntactic sugar for the latter.
And as it's sugar that AsciiDoctor doesn't understand, it
would be nice to avoid it. Since there are only two spots,
and the resulting source is not significantly harder to
read, it's worth doing.

Note that this does slightly affect the generated HTML (it
has an extra newline), but the rendered result for both HTML
and docbook should be the same (since the newline is not
syntactically significant there).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-14 09:38:29 -07:00
1ea28e1494 Sync with 2.4.1
* maint:
  Git 2.4.1
2015-05-13 14:35:05 -07:00
aaa7e0d7f8 Git 2.4.1
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-13 14:11:43 -07:00
a379f25462 Merge branch 'sb/line-log-plug-pairdiff-leak' into maint
* sb/line-log-plug-pairdiff-leak:
  line-log.c: fix a memleak
2015-05-13 14:05:56 -07:00
071e93a148 Merge branch 'sb/test-bitmap-free-at-end' into maint
* sb/test-bitmap-free-at-end:
  pack-bitmap.c: fix a memleak
2015-05-13 14:05:56 -07:00
36ec67d1ea Merge branch 'nd/t1509-chroot-test' into maint
Correct test bitrot.

* nd/t1509-chroot-test:
  t1509: update prepare script to be able to run t1509 in chroot again
2015-05-13 14:05:55 -07:00
c1c4a878bb Merge branch 'jk/type-from-string-gently' into maint
"git cat-file bl $blob" failed to barf even though there is no
object type that is "bl".

* jk/type-from-string-gently:
  type_from_string_gently: make sure length matches
2015-05-13 14:05:54 -07:00
21b56b9259 Merge branch 'ep/fix-test-lib-functions-report' into maint
* ep/fix-test-lib-functions-report:
  test-lib-functions.sh: fix the second argument to some helper functions
2015-05-13 14:05:53 -07:00
8a1d89745d Merge branch 'cn/bom-in-gitignore' into maint
Teach the codepaths that read .gitignore and .gitattributes files
that these files encoded in UTF-8 may have UTF-8 BOM marker at the
beginning; this makes it in line with what we do for configuration
files already.

* cn/bom-in-gitignore:
  attr: skip UTF8 BOM at the beginning of the input file
  config: use utf8_bom[] from utf.[ch] in git_parse_source()
  utf8-bom: introduce skip_utf8_bom() helper
  add_excludes_from_file: clarify the bom skipping logic
  dir: allow a BOM at the beginning of exclude files
2015-05-13 14:05:51 -07:00
ebb464f0cb Merge branch 'jk/prune-mtime' into maint
Access to objects in repositories that borrow from another one on a
slow NFS server unnecessarily got more expensive due to recent code
becoming more cautious in a naive way not to lose objects to pruning.

* jk/prune-mtime:
  sha1_file: only freshen packs once per run
  sha1_file: freshen pack objects before loose
  reachable: only mark local objects as recent
2015-05-13 14:05:50 -07:00
a60abe10f2 Merge branch 'jk/init-core-worktree-at-root' into maint
We avoid setting core.worktree when the repository location is the
".git" directory directly at the top level of the working tree, but
the code misdetected the case in which the working tree is at the
root level of the filesystem (which arguably is a silly thing to
do, but still valid).

* jk/init-core-worktree-at-root:
  init: don't set core.worktree when initializing /.git
2015-05-13 14:05:49 -07:00
429ad20413 log: do not shorten decoration names too early
The DECORATE_SHORT_REFS option given to load_ref_decorations()
affects the way a copy of the refname is stored for each decorated
commit, and this forces later steps like current_pointed_by_HEAD()
to adjust their behaviour based on this initial settings.

Instead, we can always store the full refname and then shorten them
when producing the output.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-13 12:40:57 -07:00
76c61fbdba log: decorate HEAD with branch name under --decorate=full, too
The previous step to teach "log --decorate" to show "HEAD -> master"
instead of "HEAD, master" when showing the commit at the tip of the
'master' branch, when the 'master' branch is checked out, did not
work for "log --decorate=full".

The commands in the "log" family prepare commit decorations for all
refs upfront, and the actual string used in a decoration depends on
how load_ref_decorations() is called very early in the process.  By
default, "git log --decorate" stores names with common prefixes such
as "refs/heads" stripped; "git log --decorate=full" stores the full
refnames.

When the current_pointed_by_HEAD() function has to decide if "HEAD"
points at the branch a decoration describes, however, what was
passed to load_ref_decorations() to decide to strip (or keep) such a
common prefix is long lost.  This makes it impossible to reliably
tell if a decoration that stores "refs/heads/master", for example,
is the 'master' branch (under "--decorate" with prefix omitted) or
'refs/heads/master' branch (under "--decorate=full").

Keep what was passed to load_ref_decorations() in a global next to
the global variable name_decoration, and use that to decide how to
match what was read from "HEAD" and what is in a decoration.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-13 10:25:18 -07:00
d595bdc17f doc: put example URLs and emails inside literal backticks
This makes sure that AsciiDoc does not turn them into links.
Regular AsciiDoc does not catch these cases, but AsciiDoctor
does treat them as links.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 22:14:46 -07:00
4538a88256 doc: drop backslash quoting of some curly braces
Text like "{foo}" triggers an AsciiDoc attribute; we have to
write "\{foo}" to suppress this. But when the "foo" is not a
syntactically valid attribute, we can skip the quoting. This
makes the source nicer to read, and looks better under
Asciidoctor. With AsciiDoc itself, this patch produces no
changes.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 22:14:46 -07:00
1c262bb7b2 doc: convert \--option to --option
Older versions of AsciiDoc would convert the "--" in
"--option" into an emdash. According to 565e135
(Documentation: quote double-dash for AsciiDoc, 2011-06-29),
this is fixed in AsciiDoc 8.3.0. According to bf17126, we
don't support anything older than 8.4.1 anyway, so we no
longer need to worry about quoting.

Even though this does not change the output at all, there
are a few good reasons to drop the quoting:

  1. It makes the source prettier to read.

  2. We don't quote consistently, which may be confusing when
     reading the source.

  3. Asciidoctor does not like the quoting, and renders a
     literal backslash.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 22:14:46 -07:00
0a3ca9c011 doc/add: reformat --edit option
All of the other options in the list put short and long as
two separate headings.

We can also drop the backslashing of `--`. It isn't used
elsewhere and is unnecessary for modern asciidoc (plus it
confuses asciidoctor).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 22:13:40 -07:00
a367b8699d doc: fix length of underlined section-title
In AsciiDoc, it is OK to say:

   this is my title
   -------------------------

but AsciiDoctor is more strict. Let's match the underline to
the title (which also makes the source prettier to read).
The output from AsciiDoc is the same either way.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 22:13:40 -07:00
5a8a19e903 doc: fix hanging "+"-continuation
In list content that wants to continue to a second
paragraph, the "+" continuation and subsequent paragraph
need to be left-aligned. Otherwise AsciiDoc seems to insert
only a linebreak.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 22:13:40 -07:00
b50bfb8fd5 doc: fix unquoted use of "{type}"
Curly braces open an "attribute" in AsciiDoc; if there's no
such attribute, strange things may happen. In this case, the
unquoted "{type}" causes AsciiDoc to omit an entire line of
text from the output. We can fix it by putting the whole
phrase inside literal backticks (which also lets us get rid
of ugly backslash escaping).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 22:13:40 -07:00
e08bc7a9ec doc: fix misrendering due to `single quote'
AsciiDoc misparses some text that contains a `literal`
word followed by a fancy `single quote' word, and treats
everything from the start of the literal to the end of the
quote as a single-quoted phrase.

We can work around this by switching the latter to be a
literal, as well. In the first case, this is perhaps what
was intended anyway, as it makes us consistent with the the
earlier literals in the same paragraph. In the second, the
output is arguably better, as we will format our commit
references as <code> blocks.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 22:13:39 -07:00
ad3967a5a2 doc: fix unmatched code fences in git-stripspace
The asciidoctor renderer is more picky than classic asciidoc,
and insists that the start and end of a code fence be the
same size.

Found with this hacky perl script:

    foreach my $fn (@ARGV) {
      open(my $fh, '<', $fn);
      my ($fence, $fence_lineno, $prev);
      while (<$fh>) {
        chomp;
        if (/^----+$/) {
          if ($fence_lineno) {
            if ($_ ne $fence) {
              print "$fn:$fence_lineno:mismatched fence: ",
                    length($fence), " != ", length($_), "\n";
            }
            $fence_lineno = undef;
          }
	  # hacky check to avoid title-underlining
          elsif ($prev eq '' || $prev eq '+') {
            $fence = $_;
            $fence_lineno = $.;
          }
        }
        $prev = $_;
      }
    }

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:33:09 -07:00
185ce3a98c Merge branch 'mh/write-refs-sooner-2.3' into mh/write-refs-sooner-2.4
* mh/write-refs-sooner-2.3:
  ref_transaction_commit(): fix atomicity and avoid fd exhaustion
  ref_transaction_commit(): remove the local flags variable
  ref_transaction_commit(): inline call to write_ref_sha1()
  rename_ref(): inline calls to write_ref_sha1() from this function
  commit_ref_update(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
  write_ref_to_lockfile(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
  t7004: rename ULIMIT test prerequisite to ULIMIT_STACK_SIZE
  update-ref: test handling large transactions properly
2015-05-12 21:28:54 -07:00
cf018ee0cd ref_transaction_commit(): fix atomicity and avoid fd exhaustion
The old code was roughly

    for update in updates:
        acquire locks and check old_sha
    for update in updates:
        if changing value:
            write_ref_to_lockfile()
            commit_ref_update()
    for update in updates:
        if deleting value:
            unlink()
    rewrite packed-refs file
    for update in updates:
        if reference still locked:
            unlock_ref()

This has two problems.

Non-atomic updates
==================

The atomicity of the reference transaction depends on all pre-checks
being done in the first loop, before any changes have started being
committed in the second loop. The problem is that
write_ref_to_lockfile() (previously part of write_ref_sha1()), which
is called from the second loop, contains two more checks:

* It verifies that new_sha1 is a valid object

* If the reference being updated is a branch, it verifies that
  new_sha1 points at a commit object (as opposed to a tag, tree, or
  blob).

If either of these checks fails, the "transaction" is aborted during
the second loop. But this might happen after some reference updates
have already been permanently committed. In other words, the
all-or-nothing promise of "git update-ref --stdin" could be violated.

So these checks have to be moved to the first loop.

File descriptor exhaustion
==========================

The old code locked all of the references in the first loop, leaving
all of the lockfiles open until later loops. Since we might be
updating a lot of references, this could result in file descriptor
exhaustion.

The solution
============

After this patch, the code looks like

    for update in updates:
        acquire locks and check old_sha
        if changing value:
            write_ref_to_lockfile()
        else:
            close_ref()
    for update in updates:
        if changing value:
            commit_ref_update()
    for update in updates:
        if deleting value:
            unlink()
    rewrite packed-refs file
    for update in updates:
        if reference still locked:
            unlock_ref()

This fixes both problems:

1. The pre-checks in write_ref_to_lockfile() are now done in the first
   loop, before any changes have been committed. If any of the checks
   fails, the whole transaction can now be rolled back correctly.

2. All lockfiles are closed in the first loop immediately after they
   are created (either by write_ref_to_lockfile() or by close_ref()).
   This means that there is never more than one open lockfile at a
   time, preventing file descriptor exhaustion.

To simplify the bookkeeping across loops, add a new REF_NEEDS_COMMIT
bit to update->flags, which keeps track of whether the corresponding
lockfile needs to be committed, as opposed to just unlocked. (Since
"struct ref_update" is internal to the refs module, this change is not
visible to external callers.)

This change fixes two tests in t1400.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:28:03 -07:00
cbf50f9e3d ref_transaction_commit(): remove the local flags variable
Instead, work directly with update->flags. This has the advantage that
the REF_DELETING bit, set in the first loop, can be read in the second
loop instead of having to be recomputed. Plus, it was potentially
confusing having both update->flags and flags, which sometimes had
different values.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:28:03 -07:00
61e51e0000 ref_transaction_commit(): inline call to write_ref_sha1()
That was the last caller, so delete function write_ref_sha1().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:28:03 -07:00
ba43b7f29c rename_ref(): inline calls to write_ref_sha1() from this function
Most of what it does is unneeded from these call sites.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:28:02 -07:00
ad4cd6c297 commit_ref_update(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:28:02 -07:00
e6fd3c6730 write_ref_to_lockfile(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
This is the first step towards separating the checking and writing of
the new reference value to committing the change.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:28:02 -07:00
fc38a9bb4d t7004: rename ULIMIT test prerequisite to ULIMIT_STACK_SIZE
During creation of the patch series our discussion we could have a
more descriptive name for the prerequisite for the test so it stays
unique when other limits of ulimit are introduced.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:28:02 -07:00
d415ad022d update-ref: test handling large transactions properly
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:28:02 -07:00
4ec6591dd7 Merge branch 'mh/write-refs-sooner-2.2' into mh/write-refs-sooner-2.3
* mh/write-refs-sooner-2.2:
  ref_transaction_commit(): fix atomicity and avoid fd exhaustion
  ref_transaction_commit(): remove the local flags variable
  ref_transaction_commit(): inline call to write_ref_sha1()
  rename_ref(): inline calls to write_ref_sha1() from this function
  commit_ref_update(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
  write_ref_to_lockfile(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
  t7004: rename ULIMIT test prerequisite to ULIMIT_STACK_SIZE
  update-ref: test handling large transactions properly
2015-05-12 21:26:09 -07:00
6c34492ab4 ref_transaction_commit(): fix atomicity and avoid fd exhaustion
The old code was roughly

    for update in updates:
        acquire locks and check old_sha
    for update in updates:
        if changing value:
            write_ref_to_lockfile()
            commit_ref_update()
    for update in updates:
        if deleting value:
            unlink()
    rewrite packed-refs file
    for update in updates:
        if reference still locked:
            unlock_ref()

This has two problems.

Non-atomic updates
==================

The atomicity of the reference transaction depends on all pre-checks
being done in the first loop, before any changes have started being
committed in the second loop. The problem is that
write_ref_to_lockfile() (previously part of write_ref_sha1()), which
is called from the second loop, contains two more checks:

* It verifies that new_sha1 is a valid object

* If the reference being updated is a branch, it verifies that
  new_sha1 points at a commit object (as opposed to a tag, tree, or
  blob).

If either of these checks fails, the "transaction" is aborted during
the second loop. But this might happen after some reference updates
have already been permanently committed. In other words, the
all-or-nothing promise of "git update-ref --stdin" could be violated.

So these checks have to be moved to the first loop.

File descriptor exhaustion
==========================

The old code locked all of the references in the first loop, leaving
all of the lockfiles open until later loops. Since we might be
updating a lot of references, this could result in file descriptor
exhaustion.

The solution
============

After this patch, the code looks like

    for update in updates:
        acquire locks and check old_sha
        if changing value:
            write_ref_to_lockfile()
        else:
            close_ref()
    for update in updates:
        if changing value:
            commit_ref_update()
    for update in updates:
        if deleting value:
            unlink()
    rewrite packed-refs file
    for update in updates:
        if reference still locked:
            unlock_ref()

This fixes both problems:

1. The pre-checks in write_ref_to_lockfile() are now done in the first
   loop, before any changes have been committed. If any of the checks
   fails, the whole transaction can now be rolled back correctly.

2. All lockfiles are closed in the first loop immediately after they
   are created (either by write_ref_to_lockfile() or by close_ref()).
   This means that there is never more than one open lockfile at a
   time, preventing file descriptor exhaustion.

To simplify the bookkeeping across loops, add a new REF_NEEDS_COMMIT
bit to update->flags, which keeps track of whether the corresponding
lockfile needs to be committed, as opposed to just unlocked. (Since
"struct ref_update" is internal to the refs module, this change is not
visible to external callers.)

This change fixes two tests in t1400.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:25:27 -07:00
805cf6e938 ref_transaction_commit(): remove the local flags variable
Instead, work directly with update->flags. This has the advantage that
the REF_DELETING bit, set in the first loop, can be read in the second
loop instead of having to be recomputed. Plus, it was potentially
confusing having both update->flags and flags, which sometimes had
different values.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:25:27 -07:00
4da50def5b ref_transaction_commit(): inline call to write_ref_sha1()
And remove the function write_ref_sha1(), as it is no longer used.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:25:26 -07:00
29957fda0b rename_ref(): inline calls to write_ref_sha1() from this function
Most of what it does is unneeded from these call sites.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:25:26 -07:00
38e50e81e3 commit_ref_update(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:25:26 -07:00
1d455231a0 write_ref_to_lockfile(): new function, extracted from write_ref_sha1()
This is the first step towards separating the checking and writing of
the new reference value to committing the change.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:25:26 -07:00
71ad0505cc t7004: rename ULIMIT test prerequisite to ULIMIT_STACK_SIZE
During creation of the patch series, our discussion revealed that
we could have a more descriptive name for the prerequisite for the
test so it stays unique when other limits of ulimit are introduced.

Let's rename the existing ulimit about setting the stack size to
a more explicit ULIMIT_STACK_SIZE.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 21:24:36 -07:00
cb64800d83 add: check return value of launch_editor
When running "add -e", if launching the editor fails, we do
not notice and continue as if the output is what the user
asked for. The likely case is that the editor did not touch
the contents at all, and we end up adding everything.

Reported-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 20:25:08 -07:00
12bdc880c7 completion: simplify query for config variables
To get the name of all config variables in a given section we perform a
'git config --get-regex' query for all config variables containing the
name of that section, and then filter its output through a case statement
to throw away those that though contain but don't start with the given
section.

Modify the regex to match only at the beginning, so the case statement
becomes unnecessary and we can get rid of it.  Add a test to check that a
match in the middle doesn't fool us.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 15:16:46 -07:00
e8f9e42829 completion: add a helper function to get config variables
Currently there are a few completion functions that perform similar 'git
config' queries and filtering to get config variable names: the completion
of pretty aliases, aliases, and remote groups for 'git remote update'.

Unify those 'git config' queries in a helper function to eliminate code
duplication.

Though the helper functions to get pretty aliases and alieses are reduced
to mere one-liner wrappers around the newly added function, keep these
helpers still, because users' completion functions out there might depend
on them.  And they keep their callers a tad easier to read, too.

Add tests for the pretty alias and alias helper to show that they work
as before; not for the remote groups query, though, because that's not
extracted into a helper function and it's not worth the effort to do so
for a sole callsite.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 15:12:19 -07:00
975e382d13 doc: fix unmatched code fences
This mismatch upsets the renderer on git-scm.com.

Signed-off-by: Jean-Noel Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-12 13:08:13 -07:00
c518059b26 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  Git 2.3.8
2015-05-11 14:39:39 -07:00
c99fec6e35 Sync with 2.3.8
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-11 14:39:28 -07:00
9a3d637541 Git 2.3.8
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-11 14:36:31 -07:00
811ce1b47c Merge branch 'mm/usage-log-l-can-take-regex' into maint-2.3
Documentation fix.

* mm/usage-log-l-can-take-regex:
  log -L: improve error message on malformed argument
  Documentation: change -L:<regex> to -L:<funcname>
2015-05-11 14:34:01 -07:00
cd0120857b Merge branch 'jc/diff-no-index-d-f' into maint-2.3
The usual "git diff" when seeing a file turning into a directory
showed a patchset to remove the file and create all files in the
directory, but "git diff --no-index" simply refused to work.  Also,
when asked to compare a file and a directory, imitate POSIX "diff"
and compare the file with the file with the same name in the
directory, instead of refusing to run.

* jc/diff-no-index-d-f:
  diff-no-index: align D/F handling with that of normal Git
  diff-no-index: DWIM "diff D F" into "diff D/F F"
2015-05-11 14:34:00 -07:00
1add9aed85 Merge branch 'oh/fix-config-default-user-name-section' into maint-2.3
The default $HOME/.gitconfig file created upon "git config --global"
that edits it had incorrectly spelled user.name and user.email
entries in it.

* oh/fix-config-default-user-name-section:
  config: fix settings in default_user_config template
2015-05-11 14:33:59 -07:00
13ec221d8c Merge branch 'jc/epochtime-wo-tz' into maint-2.3
"git commit --date=now" or anything that relies on approxidate lost
the daylight-saving-time offset.

* jc/epochtime-wo-tz:
  parse_date_basic(): let the system handle DST conversion
  parse_date_basic(): return early when given a bogus timestamp
2015-05-11 14:33:58 -07:00
22aca1b3ac Second batch for 2.5 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-11 14:31:28 -07:00
558e5a8c40 Merge branch 'pt/xdg-config-path'
Code clean-up for xdg configuration path support.

* pt/xdg-config-path:
  path.c: remove home_config_paths()
  git-config: replace use of home_config_paths()
  git-commit: replace use of home_config_paths()
  credential-store.c: replace home_config_paths() with xdg_config_home()
  dir.c: replace home_config_paths() with xdg_config_home()
  attr.c: replace home_config_paths() with xdg_config_home()
  path.c: implement xdg_config_home()
2015-05-11 14:24:01 -07:00
7cb5073fca Merge branch 'ep/do-not-feed-a-pointer-to-array-size'
Catch a programmer mistake to feed a pointer not an array to
ARRAY_SIZE() macro, by using a couple of GCC extensions.

* ep/do-not-feed-a-pointer-to-array-size:
  git-compat-util.h: implement a different ARRAY_SIZE macro for for safely deriving the size of array
2015-05-11 14:24:00 -07:00
051086b947 Merge branch 'jc/hash-object'
"hash-object --literally" introduced in v2.2 was not prepared to
take a really long object type name.

* jc/hash-object:
  write_sha1_file(): do not use a separate sha1[] array
  t1007: add hash-object --literally tests
  hash-object --literally: fix buffer overrun with extra-long object type
  git-hash-object.txt: document --literally option
2015-05-11 14:23:59 -07:00
b9f5d3874f Merge branch 'sb/prefix-path-free-results'
Code clean-up (not a leak-fix).

* sb/prefix-path-free-results:
  prefix_path(): unconditionally free results in the callers
2015-05-11 14:23:58 -07:00
5c38a1fad7 Merge branch 'sg/completion-no-redundant-all-command-list'
Code simplification.

* sg/completion-no-redundant-all-command-list:
  completion: remove redundant __git_compute_all_commands() call
2015-05-11 14:23:57 -07:00
465868a225 Merge branch 'sg/complete-decorate-full-not-long'
The completion for "log --decorate=" parameter value was incorrect.

* sg/complete-decorate-full-not-long:
  completion: fix and update 'git log --decorate=' options
2015-05-11 14:23:56 -07:00
02f8203740 Merge branch 'jk/filter-branch-use-of-sed-on-incomplete-line'
"filter-branch" corrupted commit log message that ends with an
incomplete line on platforms with some "sed" implementations that
munge such a line.  Work it around by avoiding to use "sed".

* jk/filter-branch-use-of-sed-on-incomplete-line:
  filter-branch: avoid passing commit message through sed
2015-05-11 14:23:54 -07:00
9e4d2f6d45 Merge branch 'jc/daemon-no-ipv6-for-2.4.1'
"git daemon" fails to build from the source under NO_IPV6
configuration (regression in 2.4).

* jc/daemon-no-ipv6-for-2.4.1:
  daemon: unbreak NO_IPV6 build regression
2015-05-11 14:23:53 -07:00
a0c0c2e5c2 Merge branch 'jn/clean-use-error-not-fprintf-on-stderr'
Some error messages in "git config" were emitted without calling
the usual error() facility.

* jn/clean-use-error-not-fprintf-on-stderr:
  config: use error() instead of fprintf(stderr, ...)
2015-05-11 14:23:53 -07:00
5fa9e4c4f1 Merge branch 'tb/blame-resurrect-convert-to-git'
Some time ago, "git blame" (incorrectly) lost the convert_to_git()
call when synthesizing a fake "tip" commit that represents the
state in the working tree, which broke folks who record the history
with LF line ending to make their project portabile across
platforms while terminating lines in their working tree files with
CRLF for their platform.

* tb/blame-resurrect-convert-to-git:
  blame: CRLF in the working tree and LF in the repo
2015-05-11 14:23:52 -07:00
1efadd79d6 Merge branch 'va/fix-git-p4-tests'
* va/fix-git-p4-tests:
  git-p4: t9814: prevent --chain-lint failure
2015-05-11 14:23:51 -07:00
ee2309dfe2 Merge branch 'ld/p4-case-fold'
* ld/p4-case-fold:
  git-p4: add failing tests for case-folding p4d
2015-05-11 14:23:50 -07:00
352618287e Merge branch 'jk/rebase-quiet-noop'
"git rebase --quiet" was not quite quiet when there is nothing to
do.

* jk/rebase-quiet-noop:
  rebase: silence "git checkout" for noop rebase
2015-05-11 14:23:49 -07:00
0495983679 Merge branch 'va/p4-client-path'
git p4 attempts to better handle branches in Perforce.

* va/p4-client-path:
  git-p4: improve client path detection when branches are used
  t9801: check git-p4's branch detection with client spec enabled
2015-05-11 14:23:48 -07:00
331fe94fed Merge branch 'mm/add-p-split-error'
When "add--interactive" splits a hunk into two overlapping hunks
and then let the user choose only one, it sometimes feeds an
incorrect patch text to "git apply".  Add tests to demonstrate
this.

I have a slight suspicion that this may be $gmane/87202 coming back
and biting us (I seem to have said "let's run with this and see
what happens" back then).

* mm/add-p-split-error:
  stash -p: demonstrate failure of split with mixed y/n
  t3904-stash-patch: factor PERL prereq at the top of the file
  t3904-stash-patch: fix test description
  add -p: demonstrate failure when running 'edit' after a split
  t3701-add-interactive: simplify code
2015-05-11 14:23:47 -07:00
7e98292653 Merge branch 'tb/t0027-crlf'
More line-ending tests.

* tb/t0027-crlf:
  t0027: Add repoMIX and LF_nul
  t0027: support NATIVE_CRLF platforms
  t0027: cleanup: rename functions; avoid non-leading TABs
2015-05-11 14:23:47 -07:00
120c585b22 Merge branch 'ls/p4-changes-block-size'
"git p4" learned "--changes-block-size <n>" to read the changes in
chunks from Perforce, instead of making one call to "p4 changes"
that may trigger "too many rows scanned" error from Perforce.

* ls/p4-changes-block-size:
  git-p4: use -m when running p4 changes
2015-05-11 14:23:46 -07:00
789e98df82 Merge branch 'jc/plug-fmt-merge-msg-leak'
* jc/plug-fmt-merge-msg-leak:
  fmt-merge-msg: plug small leak of commit buffer
2015-05-11 14:23:46 -07:00
eb10a85098 Merge branch 'nd/slim-index-pack-memory-usage'
Memory usage of "git index-pack" has been trimmed by tens of
per-cent.

* nd/slim-index-pack-memory-usage:
  index-pack: kill union delta_base to save memory
  index-pack: reduce object_entry size to save memory
2015-05-11 14:23:44 -07:00
84e55dcb34 Merge branch 'jk/still-interesting'
"git rev-list --objects $old --not --all" to see if everything that
is reachable from $old is already connected to the existing refs
was very inefficient.

* jk/still-interesting:
  limit_list: avoid quadratic behavior from still_interesting
2015-05-11 14:23:43 -07:00
6cc983d0ad Merge branch 'jk/reading-packed-refs'
An earlier rewrite to use strbuf_getwholeline() instead of fgets(3)
to read packed-refs file revealed that the former is unacceptably
inefficient.

* jk/reading-packed-refs:
  t1430: add another refs-escape test
  read_packed_refs: avoid double-checking sane refs
  strbuf_getwholeline: use getdelim if it is available
  strbuf_getwholeline: avoid calling strbuf_grow
  strbuf_addch: avoid calling strbuf_grow
  config: use getc_unlocked when reading from file
  strbuf_getwholeline: use getc_unlocked
  git-compat-util: add fallbacks for unlocked stdio
  strbuf_getwholeline: use getc macro
2015-05-11 14:23:42 -07:00
66ff763ebb Merge branch 'lm/squelch-bg-progress'
Many long-running operations show progress eye-candy, even when
they are later backgrounded.  Hide the eye-candy when the process
is sent to the background instead.

* lm/squelch-bg-progress:
  compat/mingw: stubs for getpgid() and tcgetpgrp()
  progress: no progress in background
2015-05-11 14:23:42 -07:00
cedeffeee0 Merge branch 'jk/sha1-file-reduce-useless-warnings'
* jk/sha1-file-reduce-useless-warnings:
  sha1_file: squelch "packfile cannot be accessed" warnings
2015-05-11 14:23:41 -07:00
68a2e6a2c8 Merge branch 'nd/multiple-work-trees'
A replacement for contrib/workdir/git-new-workdir that does not
rely on symbolic links and make sharing of objects and refs safer
by making the borrowee and borrowers aware of each other.

* nd/multiple-work-trees: (41 commits)
  prune --worktrees: fix expire vs worktree existence condition
  t1501: fix test with split index
  t2026: fix broken &&-chain
  t2026 needs procondition SANITY
  git-checkout.txt: a note about multiple checkout support for submodules
  checkout: add --ignore-other-wortrees
  checkout: pass whole struct to parse_branchname_arg instead of individual flags
  git-common-dir: make "modules/" per-working-directory directory
  checkout: do not fail if target is an empty directory
  t2025: add a test to make sure grafts is working from a linked checkout
  checkout: don't require a work tree when checking out into a new one
  git_path(): keep "info/sparse-checkout" per work-tree
  count-objects: report unused files in $GIT_DIR/worktrees/...
  gc: support prune --worktrees
  gc: factor out gc.pruneexpire parsing code
  gc: style change -- no SP before closing parenthesis
  checkout: clean up half-prepared directories in --to mode
  checkout: reject if the branch is already checked out elsewhere
  prune: strategies for linked checkouts
  checkout: support checking out into a new working directory
  ...
2015-05-11 14:23:39 -07:00
17c7f4d8e4 Merge branch 'pt/credential-xdg'
Tweak the sample "store" backend of the credential helper to honor
XDG configuration file locations when specified.

* pt/credential-xdg:
  t0302: "unreadable" test needs POSIXPERM
  t0302: test credential-store support for XDG_CONFIG_HOME
  git-credential-store: support XDG_CONFIG_HOME
  git-credential-store: support multiple credential files
2015-05-11 14:23:38 -07:00
c628edfddb reflog_expire(): integrate lock_ref_sha1_basic() errors into ours
Now that lock_ref_sha1_basic() gives us back its error messages via a
strbuf, incorporate its error message into our error message rather
than emitting two separate error messages.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:20 -07:00
3553944aa8 ref_transaction_commit(): delete extra "the" from error message
While we are in the area, let's remove a superfluous definite article
from the error message that is emitted when the reference cannot be
locked. This improves how it reads and makes it a bit shorter.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:20 -07:00
cbaabcbc6f ref_transaction_commit(): provide better error messages
Now that lock_ref_sha1_basic() gives us back its error messages via a
strbuf, incorporate its error message into our error message rather
than emitting one error messages to stderr immediately and returning a
second to our caller.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:20 -07:00
abeef9c856 rename_ref(): integrate lock_ref_sha1_basic() errors into ours
Now that lock_ref_sha1_basic() gives us back its error messages via a
strbuf, incorporate its error message into our error message rather
than emitting two separate error messages.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:20 -07:00
5b2d8d6f21 lock_ref_sha1_basic(): improve diagnostics for ref D/F conflicts
If there is a failure to lock a reference that is likely caused by a
D/F conflict (e.g., trying to lock "refs/foo/bar" when reference
"refs/foo" already exists), invoke verify_refname_available() to try
to generate a more helpful error message.

That function might not detect an error. For example, some
non-reference file might be blocking the deletion of an
otherwise-empty directory tree, or there might be a race with another
process that just deleted the offending reference. In such cases,
generate the strerror-based error message like before.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:20 -07:00
4a32b2e08b lock_ref_sha1_basic(): report errors via a "struct strbuf *err"
For now, change the callers to spew the error to stderr like before.
But soon we will change them to incorporate the reason for the failure
into their own error messages.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:19 -07:00
1146f17e2c verify_refname_available(): report errors via a "struct strbuf *err"
It shouldn't be spewing errors directly to stderr.

For now, change its callers to spew the errors to stderr.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:19 -07:00
5baf37d383 verify_refname_available(): rename function
Rename is_refname_available() to verify_refname_available() and change
its return value from 1 for success to 0 for success, to be consistent
with our error-handling convention. In a moment it will also get a
"struct strbuf *err" parameter.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:19 -07:00
e911104c84 refs: check for D/F conflicts among refs created in a transaction
If two references that D/F conflict (e.g., "refs/foo" and
"refs/foo/bar") are created in a single transaction, the old code
discovered the problem only after the "commit" phase of
ref_transaction_commit() had already begun. This could leave some
references updated and others not, which violates the promise of
atomicity.

Instead, check for such conflicts during the "locking" phase:

* Teach is_refname_available() to take an "extras" parameter that can
  contain extra reference names with which the specified refname must
  not conflict.

* Change lock_ref_sha1_basic() to take an "extras" parameter, which it
  passes through to is_refname_available().

* Change ref_transaction_commit() to pass "affected_refnames" to
  lock_ref_sha1_basic() as its "extras" argument.

This change fixes a test case in t1404.

This code is a bit stricter than it needs to be. We could conceivably
allow reference "refs/foo/bar" to be created in the same transaction
as "refs/foo" is deleted (or vice versa). But that would be
complicated to implement, because it is not possible to lock
"refs/foo/bar" while "refs/foo" exists as a loose reference, but on
the other hand we don't want to delete some references before adding
others (because that could leave a gap during which required objects
are unreachable). There is also a complication that reflog files'
paths can conflict.

Any less-strict implementation would probably require tricks like the
packing of all references before the start of the real transaction, or
the use of temporary intermediate reference names.

So for now let's accept too-strict checks. Some reference update
transactions will be rejected unnecessarily, but they will be rejected
in their entirety rather than leaving the repository in an
intermediate state, as would happen now.

Please note that there is still one kind of D/F conflict that is *not*
handled correctly. If two processes are running at the same time, and
one tries to create "refs/foo" at the same time that the other tries
to create "refs/foo/bar", then they can race with each other. Both
processes can obtain their respective locks ("refs/foo.lock" and
"refs/foo/bar.lock"), proceed to the "commit" phase of
ref_transaction_commit(), and then the slower process will discover
that it cannot rename its lockfile into place (after possibly having
committed changes to other references). There appears to be no way to
fix this race without changing the locking policy, which in turn would
require a change to *all* Git clients.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:19 -07:00
07f9c881d6 ref_transaction_commit(): use a string_list for detecting duplicates
Detect duplicates by storing the reference names in a string_list and
sorting that, instead of sorting the ref_updates directly.

* In a moment the string_list will be used for another purpose, too.

* This removes the need for the custom comparison function
  ref_update_compare().

* This means that we can carry out the updates in the order that the
  user specified them instead of reordering them. This might be handy
  someday if, we want to permit multiple updates to a single reference
  as long as they are compatible with each other.

Note: we can't use string_list_remove_duplicates() to check for
duplicates, because we need to know the name of the reference that
appeared multiple times, to be used in the error message.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:19 -07:00
61da596992 is_refname_available(): use dirname in first loop
In the first loop (over prefixes of refname), use dirname to keep
track of the current prefix. This is not an improvement in itself, but
in a moment we will start using dirname for a role where a
NUL-terminated string is needed.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:18 -07:00
521331cc9f struct nonmatching_ref_data: store a refname instead of a ref_entry
Now that we don't need a ref_entry to pass to
report_refname_conflict(), it is sufficient to store the refname of
the conflicting reference.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:18 -07:00
385e8af5a2 report_refname_conflict(): inline function
It wasn't pulling its weight. And we are about to need code similar to
this where no ref_entry is available and with more diverse error
messages. Rather than try to generalize the function, just inline it.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:18 -07:00
8bfac19ab4 entry_matches(): inline function
It wasn't pulling its weight. And in a moment we will need similar
tests that take a refname rather than a ref_entry as parameter, which
would have made entry_matches() even less useful.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:18 -07:00
6075f3076e is_refname_available(): convert local variable "dirname" to strbuf
This change wouldn't be worth it by itself, but in a moment we will
use the strbuf for more string juggling.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:17 -07:00
9ef6eaa287 is_refname_available(): avoid shadowing "dir" variable
The function had a "dir" parameter that was shadowed by a local "dir"
variable within a code block. Use the former in place of the latter.
(This is consistent with "dir"'s use elsewhere in the function.)

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:17 -07:00
49e818762a is_refname_available(): revamp the comments
Change the comments to a running example of running the function with
refname set to "refs/foo/bar". Add some more explanation of the logic.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:17 -07:00
433efcad9d t1404: new tests of ref D/F conflicts within transactions
Add some tests of reference D/F conflicts (by which I mean the fact
that references like "refs/foo" and "refs/foo/bar" are not allowed to
coexist) in the context of reference transactions.

The test of creating two conflicting references in the same
transaction fails, leaving the transaction half-completed. This will
be fixed later in this patch series.

Please note that the error messages emitted in the case of conflicts
are not very user-friendly. In particular, when the conflicts involve
loose references, then the errors are reported as

    error: there are still refs under 'refs/foo'
    fatal: Cannot lock the ref 'refs/foo'.

or

    error: unable to resolve reference refs/foo/bar: Not a directory
    fatal: Cannot lock the ref 'refs/foo/bar'.

This is because lock_ref_sha1_basic() fails while trying to lock the
new reference, before it even gets to the is_refname_available()
check. This situation will also be improved later in this patch
series.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
2015-05-11 11:50:16 -07:00
1238ac8c5d refs.c: remove lock_fd from struct ref_lock
The 'lock_fd' is the same as 'lk->fd'. No need to store it twice so remove
it.

No functional changes intended.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-10 21:13:26 -07:00
5322b837af update-ref: test handling large transactions properly
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-10 10:50:41 -07:00
bf990a29a0 command-list.txt: fix whitespace inconsistency
The overwhelming majority of lines were single space aligned,
except a few ones aligned by tabs. Fix inconsistency by using
single space everywhere.

Signed-off-by: Sébastien Guimmara <sebastien.guimmara@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-08 12:36:20 -07:00
2ded109b51 contrib/subtree: portability fix for string printing
'echo -n' is not portable, but this script used it as a way to give
a string followed by a carriage return for progress messages.
Introduce a new helper shell function "progress" and use printf as a
more portable way to do this.  As a side effect, this makes it
unnecessary to have a raw CR in our source, which can be munged in
some shells.  For example, MsysGit trims CR before executing a shell
script file in order to make it work right on Windows even if it
uses CRLF as linefeeds.

While at it, replace "echo" using printf in debug() and say() to
eliminate the temptation of reintroducing the same bug.

Signed-off-by: Danny Lin <danny0838@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-08 12:09:38 -07:00
f6f2a9e42d http: add support for specifying an SSL cipher list
Teach git about a new option, "http.sslCipherList", which permits one to
specify a list of ciphers to use when negotiating SSL connections.  The
setting can be overwridden by the GIT_SSL_CIPHER_LIST environment
variable.

Signed-off-by: Lars Kellogg-Stedman <lars@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-08 10:56:26 -07:00
7886cfa080 bundle: verify arguments more strictly
The `verify` and `create` subcommands of the bundle builtin do
not properly verify the command line arguments that have been
passed in. While the `verify` subcommand accepts an arbitrary
amount of ignored arguments the `create` subcommand does not
complain about being passed too few arguments, resulting in a
bogus call to `git rev-list`. Fix these errors by verifying that
the correct amount of arguments has been passed in.

Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-08 10:52:11 -07:00
6ccc71a9d0 contrib/subtree: there's no push --squash
The documentation says that --squash is for 'add', 'merge',
'pull' and 'push', while --squash actually doesn't change
the behavior of 'push'. Correct the documentation.

Signed-off-by: Danny Lin <danny0838@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-07 11:03:32 -07:00
309a9e3373 tests: skip dav http-push tests under NO_EXPAT=NoThanks
When built with NO_EXPAT=NoThanks, we will not have a working http-push
over webdav.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-07 09:48:43 -07:00
c9d441a899 t/lib-httpd.sh: skip tests if NO_CURL is defined
If we built git without curl, we can't actually test against
an http server. In fact, all of the test scripts which
include lib-httpd.sh already perform this check, with one
exception: t5540. For those scripts, this is a noop, and for
t5540, this is a bugfix (it used to fail when built with
NO_CURL, though it could go unnoticed if you had a stale
git-remote-https in your build directory).

Noticed-by: Junio C Hamano <junio@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-07 08:26:02 -07:00
a074aa90a8 completion: remove credential helpers from porcelain commands
Don't offer the "main" 'git credential' command or any of the credential
helpers from contrib/credential/ when completing git commands.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-06 15:17:05 -07:00
3e370f9faf t1006: add tests for git cat-file --allow-unknown-type
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-06 13:47:18 -07:00
39e4ae3880 cat-file: teach cat-file a '--allow-unknown-type' option
'git cat-file' throws an error while trying to print the type or
size of a broken/corrupt object. This is because these objects are
usually of unknown types.

Teach git cat-file a '--allow-unknown-type' option where it prints
the type or size of a broken/corrupt object without throwing
an error.

Modify '-t' and '-s' options to call sha1_object_info_extended()
directly to support the '--allow-unknown-type' option.

Add documentation for 'cat-file --allow-unknown-type'.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>

cat-file: add documentation for '--allow-unknown-type' option.

Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-06 13:35:48 -07:00
b48158ac94 cat-file: make the options mutually exclusive
We only parse the options if 2 or 3 arguments are specified.
Update 'struct option options[]' to use OPT_CMDMODE rather than
OPT_SET_INT to allow only one mutually exclusive option and avoid the
need for checking number of arguments. This was written by Junio C Hamano,
tested by me.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-06 13:35:48 -07:00
46f034483e sha1_file: support reading from a loose object of unknown type
Update sha1_loose_object_info() to optionally allow it to read
from a loose object file of unknown/bogus type; as the function
usually returns the type of the object it read in the form of enum
for known types, add an optional "typename" field to receive the
name of the type in textual form and a flag to indicate the reading
of a loose object file of unknown/bogus type.

Add parse_sha1_header_extended() which acts as a wrapper around
parse_sha1_header() allowing more information to be obtained.

Add unpack_sha1_header_to_strbuf() to unpack sha1 headers of
unknown/corrupt objects which have a unknown sha1 header size to
a strbuf structure. This was written by Junio C Hamano but tested
by me.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Hepled-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-06 13:35:48 -07:00
ccd593cffa branch: do not call a "remote-tracking branch" a "remote branch"
"git branch -r -d" mentions "delete remote branch", which should be
"remote-tracking branch".

Signed-off-by: Danny Lin <danny0838@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-06 13:01:32 -07:00
846e5dfbab path.c: remove home_config_paths()
home_config_paths() combines distinct functionality already implemented
by expand_user_path() and xdg_config_home(), and it also hard-codes the
path ~/.gitconfig, which makes it unsuitable to use for other home
config file paths. Since its use will just add unnecessary complexity to
the code, remove it.

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-06 11:33:53 -07:00
509adc3352 git-config: replace use of home_config_paths()
Since home_config_paths() combines distinct functionality already
implemented by expand_user_path() and xdg_config_home(), and hides the
home config file path ~/.gitconfig. Make the code more explicit by
replacing the use of home_config_paths() with expand_user_path() and
xdg_config_home().

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-06 11:33:48 -07:00
e682c9db1a git-commit: replace use of home_config_paths()
Since home_config_paths() combines two distinct functionality already
implemented by expand_user_path() and xdg_config_home(), and hides the
home config file path ~/.gitconfig. Make the code more explicit by
replacing the use of home_config_paths() with expand_user_path() and
xdg_config_home().

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-06 11:33:42 -07:00
64ab71db3a credential-store.c: replace home_config_paths() with xdg_config_home()
Since only the xdg credentials file path is required, and
home_config_paths() is unable to construct the path ~/.git-credentials,
simplify the code by replacing home_config_paths() with
xdg_config_home().

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-06 11:33:24 -07:00
2845ce7ff1 dir.c: replace home_config_paths() with xdg_config_home()
Since only the xdg excludes file path is required, simplify the code by
replacing use of home_config_paths() with xdg_config_home().

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-06 11:33:17 -07:00
2527bbce25 attr.c: replace home_config_paths() with xdg_config_home()
Since only the xdg attributes file path is required, simplify the code
by using xdg_config_home() instead of home_config_paths().

Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-06 11:32:46 -07:00
ea19289bc8 path.c: implement xdg_config_home()
The XDG base dir spec[1] specifies that configuration files be stored in
a subdirectory in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME. To construct such a configuration
file path, home_config_paths() can be used. However, home_config_paths()
combines distinct functionality:

1. Retrieve the home git config file path ~/.gitconfig

2. Construct the XDG config path of the file specified by `file`.

This function was introduced in commit 21cf3227 ("read (but not write)
from $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/config file").  While the intention of the
function was to allow the home directory configuration file path and the
xdg directory configuration file path to be retrieved with one function
call, the hard-coding of the path ~/.gitconfig prevents it from being
used for other configuration files. Furthermore, retrieving a file path
relative to the user's home directory can be done with
expand_user_path(). Hence, it can be seen that home_config_paths()
introduces unnecessary complexity, especially if a user just wants to
retrieve the xdg config file path.

As such, implement a simpler function xdg_config_home() for constructing
the XDG base dir spec configuration file path. This function, together
with expand_user_path(), can replace all uses of home_config_paths().

[1] http://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-0.7.html

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-06 11:21:04 -07:00
8440f74997 First batch for 2.5 cycle
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-05 21:13:30 -07:00
e3b199aef1 Merge branch 'jk/prune-mtime'
Access to objects in repositories that borrow from another one on a
slow NFS server unnecessarily got more expensive due to recent code
becoming more cautious in a naive way not to lose objects to pruning.

* jk/prune-mtime:
  sha1_file: only freshen packs once per run
  sha1_file: freshen pack objects before loose
  reachable: only mark local objects as recent
2015-05-05 21:00:37 -07:00
6749850769 Merge branch 'mm/usage-log-l-can-take-regex'
Documentation fix.

* mm/usage-log-l-can-take-regex:
  log -L: improve error message on malformed argument
  Documentation: change -L:<regex> to -L:<funcname>
2015-05-05 21:00:36 -07:00
64c9e02765 Merge branch 'ep/fix-test-lib-functions-report'
* ep/fix-test-lib-functions-report:
  test-lib-functions.sh: fix the second argument to some helper functions
2015-05-05 21:00:36 -07:00
2e1dfd62dc Merge branch 'cn/bom-in-gitignore'
Teach the codepaths that read .gitignore and .gitattributes files
that these files encoded in UTF-8 may have UTF-8 BOM marker at the
beginning; this makes it in line with what we do for configuration
files already.

* cn/bom-in-gitignore:
  attr: skip UTF8 BOM at the beginning of the input file
  config: use utf8_bom[] from utf.[ch] in git_parse_source()
  utf8-bom: introduce skip_utf8_bom() helper
  add_excludes_from_file: clarify the bom skipping logic
  dir: allow a BOM at the beginning of exclude files
2015-05-05 21:00:34 -07:00
39a5d50d62 Merge branch 'jc/epochtime-wo-tz'
"git commit --date=now" or anything that relies on approxidate lost
the daylight-saving-time offset.

* jc/epochtime-wo-tz:
  parse_date_basic(): let the system handle DST conversion
  parse_date_basic(): return early when given a bogus timestamp
2015-05-05 21:00:33 -07:00
ef8163ce57 Merge branch 'nd/t1509-chroot-test'
Correct test bitrot.

* nd/t1509-chroot-test:
  t1509: update prepare script to be able to run t1509 in chroot again
2015-05-05 21:00:32 -07:00
67e5a00d0a Merge branch 'oh/fix-config-default-user-name-section'
The default $HOME/.gitconfig file created upon "git config --global"
that edits it had incorrectly spelled user.name and user.email
entries in it.

* oh/fix-config-default-user-name-section:
  config: fix settings in default_user_config template
2015-05-05 21:00:31 -07:00
1156097296 Merge branch 'jk/type-from-string-gently'
"git cat-file bl $blob" failed to barf even though there is no
object type that is "bl".

* jk/type-from-string-gently:
  type_from_string_gently: make sure length matches
2015-05-05 21:00:29 -07:00
b9032b284f Merge branch 'sb/test-bitmap-free-at-end'
* sb/test-bitmap-free-at-end:
  pack-bitmap.c: fix a memleak
2015-05-05 21:00:28 -07:00
a9d00b662f Merge branch 'ld/p4-filetype-detection'
* ld/p4-filetype-detection:
  git-p4: fix filetype detection on files opened exclusively
  git-p4: small fix for locked-file-move-test
  git-p4: fix small bug in locked test scripts
2015-05-05 21:00:28 -07:00
e971a1f9d5 Merge branch 'ts/checkout-advice-plural'
* ts/checkout-advice-plural:
  checkout: call a single commit "it" intead of "them"
2015-05-05 21:00:27 -07:00
7502b230ce Merge branch 'jk/init-core-worktree-at-root'
We avoid setting core.worktree when the repository location is the
".git" directory directly at the top level of the working tree, but
the code misdetected the case in which the working tree is at the
root level of the filesystem (which arguably is a silly thing to
do, but still valid).

* jk/init-core-worktree-at-root:
  init: don't set core.worktree when initializing /.git
2015-05-05 21:00:27 -07:00
b02a94d663 Merge branch 'mh/show-branch-topic'
"git show-branch --topics HEAD" (with no other arguments) did not
do anything interesting.  Instead, contrast the given revision
against all the local branches by default.

* mh/show-branch-topic:
  show-branch: show all local heads when only giving one rev along --topics
2015-05-05 21:00:26 -07:00
8ff1ddd717 Merge branch 'sb/line-log-plug-pairdiff-leak'
* sb/line-log-plug-pairdiff-leak:
  line-log.c: fix a memleak
2015-05-05 21:00:25 -07:00
03761c922b Merge branch 'jc/diff-no-index-d-f'
The usual "git diff" when seeing a file turning into a directory
showed a patchset to remove the file and create all files in the
directory, but "git diff --no-index" simply refused to work.  Also,
when asked to compare a file and a directory, imitate POSIX "diff"
and compare the file with the file with the same name in the
directory, instead of refusing to run.

* jc/diff-no-index-d-f:
  diff-no-index: align D/F handling with that of normal Git
  diff-no-index: DWIM "diff D F" into "diff D/F F"
2015-05-05 21:00:24 -07:00
a916cb5fb4 Merge branch 'bc/object-id'
Identify parts of the code that knows that we use SHA-1 hash to
name our objects too much, and use (1) symbolic constants instead
of hardcoded 20 as byte count and/or (2) use struct object_id
instead of unsigned char [20] for object names.

* bc/object-id:
  apply: convert threeway_stage to object_id
  patch-id: convert to use struct object_id
  commit: convert parts to struct object_id
  diff: convert struct combine_diff_path to object_id
  bulk-checkin.c: convert to use struct object_id
  zip: use GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ for trailers
  archive.c: convert to use struct object_id
  bisect.c: convert leaf functions to use struct object_id
  define utility functions for object IDs
  define a structure for object IDs
2015-05-05 21:00:23 -07:00
89c855ed3c git-compat-util.h: implement a different ARRAY_SIZE macro for for safely deriving the size of array
To get number of elements in an array git use the ARRAY_SIZE macro
defined as:

       #define ARRAY_SIZE(x) (sizeof(x)/sizeof((x)[0]))

The problem with it is a possibility of mistakenly passing to it a
pointer instead an array. The ARRAY_SIZE macro as conventionally
defined does not provide good type-safety and the open-coded
approach is more fragile, more verbose and provides no improvement in
type-safety.

Use instead a different but compatible ARRAY_SIZE() macro,
which will also break compile if you try to
use it on a pointer. This implemention revert to the original code
if the compiler doesn't know the typeof and __builtin_types_compatible_p
GCC extensions.

This can ensure our code is robust to changes, without
needing a gratuitous macro or constant. A similar
ARRAY_SIZE implementation also exists in the linux kernel.

Credits to Rusty Russell and his ccan library.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-05 15:26:48 -07:00
d358f771e3 daemon: unbreak NO_IPV6 build regression
When 01cec54e (daemon: deglobalize hostname information, 2015-03-07)
wrapped the global variables such as hostname inside a struct, it
forgot to convert one location that spelled "hostname" that needs to
be updated to "hi->hostname".

This was inside NO_IPV6 block, and was not caught by anybody.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-05 11:03:24 -07:00
d7a643b73f prefix_path(): unconditionally free results in the callers
As of d089ebaa (setup: sanitize absolute and funny paths in
get_pathspec(), 2008-01-28), prefix_path() always returns a
newly allocated string, so callers should free its result.

Additionally, drop the const from variables to which the result of
the prefix_path() is assigned, so they can be free()'d without
having to cast-away the constness.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-05 10:31:51 -07:00
1427a7ff70 write_sha1_file(): do not use a separate sha1[] array
In the beginning, write_sha1_file() did not have a way to tell the
caller the name of the object it wrote to the caller.  This was
changed in d6d3f9d0 (This implements the new "recursive tree"
write-tree., 2005-04-09) by adding the "returnsha1" parameter to the
function so that the callers who are interested in the value can
optionally pass a pointer to receive it.

It turns out that all callers do want to know the name of the object
it just has written.  Nobody passes a NULL to this parameter, hence
it is not necessary to use a separate sha1[] array to receive the
result from  write_sha1_file_prepare(), and copy the result to the
returnsha1 supplied by the caller.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-05 10:17:56 -07:00
383c3427af t1007: add hash-object --literally tests
git-hash-object learned a --literally option in 5ba9a93
(hash-object: add --literally option, 2014-09-11). Check that
--literally allows object creation with a bogus type, with two
type strings whose length is reasonably short and very long.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-05 10:17:54 -07:00
0c3db67cc8 hash-object --literally: fix buffer overrun with extra-long object type
"hash-object" learned in 5ba9a93 (hash-object: add --literally
option, 2014-09-11) to allow crafting a corrupt/broken object of
unknown type.

When the user-provided type is particularly long, however, it can
overflow the relatively small stack-based character array handed to
write_sha1_file_prepare() by hash_sha1_file() and write_sha1_file(),
leading to stack corruption (and crash).  Introduce a custom helper
to allow arbitrarily long typenames just for "hash-object --literally".

[jc: Eric's original used a strbuf in the more common codepaths, and
I rewrote it to avoid penalizing the non-literally code. Bugs are mine]

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-05 10:14:18 -07:00
95d621217a config: use error() instead of fprintf(stderr, ...)
The die() / error() / warning() helpers put a fatal: / error: /
warning: prefix in front of the error message they print describing
the message's severity, which users are likely to be accustomed to
seeing these days.

This change will also be useful when marking the message for
translation: the argument to error() includes no newline at the end,
so it is less fussy for translators to translate without lines running
together in the translated output.

While we're here, start the error messages with a lowercase letter to
match the usual typography of error messages.

A quick web search and a code search at codesearch.debian.net finds no
scripts trying to parse these error messages, so this change should be
safe.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-04 14:38:15 -07:00
83115ac4a8 git-hash-object.txt: document --literally option
Document the git-hash-object --literally option added by 5ba9a93
(hash-object: add --literally option, 2014-09-11).

While here, also correct a minor typesetting oversight.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-04 14:19:23 -07:00
ce41720cad blame, log: format usage strings similarly to those in documentation
Earlier, 9c9b4f2f (standardize usage info string format, 2015-01-13)
tried to make usage-string in line with the documentation by

    - Placing angle brackets around fill-in-the-blank parameters
    - Putting dashes in multiword parameter names
    - Adding spaces to [-f|--foobar] to make [-f | --foobar]
    - Replacing <foobar>* with [<foobar>...]

but it missed a few places.

Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-03 16:55:26 -07:00
af16bdaa3f completion: fix and update 'git log --decorate=' options
'git log --decorate=' understands the 'full', 'short' and 'no' options.
From these the completion script only offered 'short' and it offered
'long' instead of 'full'.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-03 11:46:14 -07:00
110062a134 completion: remove redundant __git_compute_all_commands() call
During lazy-initialization of the lists of all commands and porcelain
commands the function __git_compute_all_commands() is called twice.  The
relevant part of the call sequence looks like this:

  __git_compute_porcelain_commands()
     __git_compute_all_commands()
        <finds list of all commands uninitialized>
        __git_list_all_commands()
        <initializes list of all commands>
     __git_list_porcelain_commands()
        __git_compute_all_commands()
           <finds list of all commands already initialized, does nothing>
        <filters porcelains from list of all commands>

Either one of the two calls could be removed and the initialization of
both command lists would still work as a whole, but let's remove the call
from __git_compute_porcelain_commands(), because this way
__git_list_porcelain_commands() will keep working in itself.

Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder@ira.uka.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-03 11:44:49 -07:00
e41bf352e3 remote.c: drop default_remote_name variable
When we read the remote config from disk, we update a
default_remote_name variable if we see branch.*.remote
config for the current branch. This isn't wrong, or even all
that complicated, but it is a bit simpler (because it
reduces our overall state) to just lazily compute the
default when we need it.

The ulterior motive here is that the push config uses a
similar structure, and _is_ much more complicated as a
result. That will be simplified in a future patch, and it's
more readable if the logic for remotes and push-remotes
matches.

Note that we also used default_remote_name as a signal that
the remote config has been loaded; after this patch, we now
use an explicit flag.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-03 11:42:28 -07:00
28fcc0b71a pathspec: avoid the need of "--" when wildcard is used
When "--" is lacking from the command line and a command can take
both revs and paths, the idea is if an argument can be seen as both
an extended SHA-1 and a path, then "--" is required or git refuses
to continue. It's currently implemented as:

 (1) if an argument is rev, then it must not exist in worktree

 (2) else, it must exist in worktree

 (3) else, "--" is required.

These rules work for literal paths, but when non-literal pathspec is
involved, it almost always requires the user to add "--" because it
fails (2) and (1) is really rarely met (take "*.c" for example, (1)
is met if there is a ref named "*.c").

This patch modifies the rules a bit by considering any valid (*)
wildcard pathspec "exist in worktree". The rules become:

 (1) if an arg is a rev, then it must either exist in worktree or
     not be a valid wildcard pathspec.

 (2) else, it either exists in worktree or is a wildcard pathspec

 (3) else, "--" is required.

With the new rules, "--" is not needed most of the time when
wildcard pathspec is involved.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-03 11:40:13 -07:00
4bf256d67a blame: CRLF in the working tree and LF in the repo
A typical setup under Windows is to set core.eol to CRLF, and text
files are marked as "text" in .gitattributes, or core.autocrlf is
set to true.

After 4d4813a5 "git blame" no longer works as expected for such a
set-up.  Every line is annotated as "Not Committed Yet", even though
the working directory is clean.  This is because the commit removed
the conversion in blame.c for all files, with or without CRLF in the
repo.

Having files with CRLF in the repo and core.autocrlf=input is a
temporary situation, and the files, if committed as is, will be
normalized in the repo, which _will_ be a notable change.  Blaming
them with "Not Committed Yet" is the right result.  Revert commit
4d4813a5 which was a misguided attempt to "solve" a non-problem.

Add two test cases in t8003 to verify the correct CRLF conversion.

Suggested-By: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-03 11:00:10 -07:00
eb859df85e gitk: Fix error when changing colors after closing "List references" window
This fixes an error that manifests itself if the user opens the
"List references" window and the closes it, and subsequently opens
the Preferences window and changes one of the colors.  When the
user clicks OK, and error popup appears with the message:

Error: invalid command name ".showrefs.list"

This is because .showrefs.list was added to the list of windows to
be notified on foreground/background color changes, but the window
no longer exists.  We fix the bug by checking whether the window
exists before trying to change its colors.  As an optimization, we
also avoid adding the .showrefs.list window to the list a second
time.

Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-05-03 15:11:29 +10:00
009409fe72 gitk: Replace catch {unset foo} with unset -nocomplain foo
This generates better bytecode in Tcl 8.6 according to
http://wiki.tcl.tk/1506.

Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-05-02 20:53:36 +10:00
d45366e8aa merge: deprecate 'git merge <message> HEAD <commit>' syntax
We had this in "git merge" manual for eternity:

    'git merge' <msg> HEAD <commit>...

    [This] syntax (<msg> `HEAD` <commit>...) is supported for
    historical reasons.  Do not use it from the command line or in
    new scripts.  It is the same as `git merge -m <msg> <commit>...`.

With the update to "git merge" to make it understand what is
recorded in FETCH_HEAD directly, including Octopus merge cases, we
now can rewrite the use of this syntax in "git pull" with a simple
"git merge FETCH_HEAD".

Also there are quite a few fallouts in the test scripts, and it
turns out that "git cvsimport" also uses this old syntax to record
a merge.

Judging from this result, I would not be surprised if dropping the
support of the old syntax broke scripts people have written and been
relying on for the past ten years.  But at least we can start the
deprecation process by throwing a warning message when the syntax is
used.

With luck, we might be able to drop the support in a few years.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:28:10 -07:00
74e8bc59cb merge: handle FETCH_HEAD internally
The collect_parents() function now is responsible for

 1. parsing the commits given on the command line into a list of
    commits to be merged;

 2. filtering these parents into independent ones; and

 3. optionally calling fmt_merge_msg() via prepare_merge_message()
    to prepare an auto-generated merge log message, using fake
    contents that FETCH_HEAD would have had if these commits were
    fetched from the current repository with "git pull . $args..."

Make "git merge FETCH_HEAD" to be the same as the traditional

    git merge "$(git fmt-merge-msg <.git/FETCH_HEAD)" $commits

invocation of the command in "git pull", where $commits are the ones
that appear in FETCH_HEAD that are not marked as not-for-merge, by
making it do a bit more, specifically:

 - noticing "FETCH_HEAD" is the only "commit" on the command line
   and picking the commits that are not marked as not-for-merge as
   the list of commits to be merged (substitute for step #1 above);

 - letting the resulting list fed to step #2 above;

 - doing the step #3 above, using the contents of the FETCH_HEAD
   instead of fake contents crafted from the list of commits parsed
   in the step #1 above.

Note that this changes the semantics.  "git merge FETCH_HEAD" has
always behaved as if the first commit in the FETCH_HEAD file were
directly specified on the command line, creating a two-way merge
whose auto-generated merge log said "merge commit xyz".  With this
change, if the previous fetch was to grab multiple branches (e.g.
"git fetch $there topic-a topic-b"), the new world order is to
create an octopus, behaving as if "git pull $there topic-a topic-b"
were run.  This is a deliberate change to make that happen, and
can be seen in the changes to t3033 tests.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:27:31 -07:00
770380156d merge: decide if we auto-generate the message early in collect_parents()
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:26:03 -07:00
1cf32f4d54 merge: make collect_parents() auto-generate the merge message
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:24:40 -07:00
52fecab20c merge: extract prepare_merge_message() logic out
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:19:21 -07:00
018b3fbc7e merge: narrow scope of merge_names
In order to pass the list of parents to fmt_merge_msg(), cmd_merge()
uses this strbuf to create something that look like FETCH_HEAD that
describes commits that are being merged.  This is necessary only
when we are creating the merge commit message ourselves, but was
done unconditionally.

Move the variable and the logic to populate it to confine them in a
block that needs them.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:19:21 -07:00
34349dbff8 merge: split reduce_parents() out of collect_parents()
The latter does two separate things:

 - Parse the list of commits on the command line, and formulate the
   list of commits to be merged (including the current HEAD);

 - Compute the list of parents to be recorded in the resulting merge
   commit.

Split the latter into a separate helper function, so that we can
later supply the list commits to be merged from a different source
(namely, FETCH_HEAD).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:19:21 -07:00
0b10b8a3d5 merge: clarify collect_parents() logic
Clarify this small function in three ways.

 - The function initially collects all commits to be merged into a
   commit_list "remoteheads"; the "remotes" pointer always points at
   the tail of this list (either the remoteheads variable itself, or
   the ->next slot of the element at the end of the list) to help
   elongate the list by repeated calls to commit_list_insert().
   Because the new element appended by commit_list_insert() will
   always have its ->next slot NULLed out, there is no need for us
   to assign NULL to *remotes to terminate the list at the end.

 - The variable "head_subsumed" always confused me every time I read
   this code.  What is happening here is that we inspect what the
   caller told us to merge (including the current HEAD) and come up
   with the list of parents to be recorded for the resulting merge
   commit, omitting commits that are ancestor of other commits.
   This filtering may remove the current HEAD from the resulting
   parent list---and we signal that fact with this variable, so that
   we can later record it as the first parent when "--no-ff" is in
   effect.

 - The "parents" list is created for this function by reduce_heads()
   and was not deallocated after its use, even though the loop
   control was written in such a way to allow us to do so by taking
   the "next" element in a separate variable so that it can be used
   in the next-step part of the loop control.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:17:53 -07:00
1016658de3 merge: small leakfix and code simplification
When parsing a merged object name like "foo~20" to formulate a merge
summary "Merge branch foo (early part)", a temporary strbuf is used,
but we forgot to deallocate it when we failed to find the named
branch.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:17:52 -07:00
eaa4e59c85 merge: do not check argc to determine number of remote heads
To reject merging multiple commits into an unborn branch, we check
argc, thinking that collect_parents() that reads the remaining
command line arguments from <argc, argv> will give us the same
number of commits as its input, i.e. argc.

Because what we really care about is the number of commits, let the
function run and then make sure it returns only one commit instead.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:17:52 -07:00
1faac1cedc merge: clarify "pulling into void" special case
Instead of having it as one of the three if/elseif/.. case arms,
test the condition and handle this special case upfront.  This makes
it easier to follow the flow of logic.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:17:52 -07:00
7ad39a2784 t5520: test pulling an octopus into an unborn branch
The code comment for "git merge" in builtin/merge.c, we say

    If the merged head is a valid one there is no reason
    to forbid "git merge" into a branch yet to be born.
    We do the same for "git pull".

and t5520 does have an existing test for that behaviour.  However,
there was no test to make sure that 'git pull' to pull multiple
branches into an unborn branch must fail.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:17:52 -07:00
5569113329 t5520: style fixes
Fix style funnies in early part of this test script that checks "git
pull" into an unborn branch.  The primary change is that 'chdir' to
a newly created empty test repository is now protected by being done
in a subshell to make it more robust without having to chdir back to
the original place.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:17:52 -07:00
00c7e7e7e8 merge: simplify code flow
One of the first things cmd_merge() does is to see if the "--abort"
option is given and run "reset --merge" and exit.  When the control
reaches this point, we know "--abort" was not given.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:17:52 -07:00
9e62316df7 merge: test the top-level merge driver
We seem to have tests for specific merge strategy backends
(e.g. recursive), but not much test coverage for the "git merge"
itself.  As I am planning to update the semantics of merging
"FETCH_HEAD" in such a way that these two

    git pull . topic_a topic_b...

vs.

    git fetch . topic_a topic_b...
    git merge FETCH_HEAD

are truly equivalent, let me add a few test cases to cover the
tricky ones.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 13:14:50 -07:00
df0620108b filter-branch: avoid passing commit message through sed
On some systems (like OS X), if sed encounters input without
a trailing newline, it will silently add it. As a result,
"git filter-branch" on such systems may silently rewrite
commit messages that omit a trailing newline. Even though
this is not something we generate ourselves with "git
commit", it's better for filter-branch to preserve the
original data as closely as possible.

We're using sed here only to strip the header fields from
the commit object. We can accomplish the same thing with a
shell loop. Since shell "read" calls are slow (usually one
syscall per byte), we use "cat" once we've skipped past the
header. Depending on the size of your commit messages, this
is probably faster (you pay the cost to fork, but then read
the data in saner-sized chunks). This idea is shamelessly
stolen from Junio.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 10:01:04 -07:00
8cbc57ca11 rebase -i: redo tasks that die during cherry-pick
When rebase--interactive processes a task, it removes the item from
the todo list and appends it to another list of executed tasks. If a
pick (this includes squash and fixup) fails before the index has
recorded the changes, take the corresponding item and put it on the todo
list again. Otherwise, the changes introduced by the scheduled commit
would be lost.

That kind of decision is possible since the cherry-pick command
signals why it failed to apply the changes of the given commit. Either
the changes are recorded in the index using a conflict (return value 1)
and rebase does not continue until they are resolved or the changes
are not recorded in the index (return value neither 0 nor 1) and
rebase has to try again with the same task.

Add a test cases for regression testing to the "rebase-interactive"
test suite.

Signed-off-by: Fabian Ruch <bafain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Phil Hord <hordp@cisco.com>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-29 08:49:22 -07:00
92b269f5c5 test-lib: turn on GIT_TEST_CHAIN_LINT by default
Now that the feature has had time to prove itself, and any
topics in flight have had a chance to clean up any broken
&&-chains, we can flip this feature on by default. This
makes one less thing submitters need to configure or check
before sending their patches.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-28 15:55:51 -07:00
f84df81f65 t7502-commit.sh: fix a broken and-chain
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-28 15:55:51 -07:00
baaf233755 connect: improve check for plink to reduce false positives
The git_connect function has code to handle plink and tortoiseplink
specially, as they require different command line arguments from
OpenSSH (-P instead of -p for ports; tortoiseplink additionally requires
-batch).  However, the match was done by checking for "plink" anywhere
in the string, which led to a GIT_SSH value containing "uplink" being
treated as an invocation of putty's plink.

Improve the check by looking for "plink" or "tortoiseplink" (or those
names suffixed with ".exe") only in the final component of the path.
This has the downside that a program such as "plink-0.63" would no
longer be recognized, but the increased robustness is likely worth it.
Add tests to cover these cases to avoid regressions.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-28 15:23:12 -07:00
d1018c2494 t5601: fix quotation error leading to skipped tests
One of the tests in t5601 used single quotes to delimit an argument
containing spaces.  However, this caused test_expect_success to be
passed three arguments instead of two, which in turn caused the test
name to be treated as a prerequisite instead of a test name.  As there
was no prerequisite called "bracketed hostnames are still ssh", the test
was always skipped.

Because this test was always skipped, the fact that it passed the
arguments in the wrong order was obscured.  Use double quotes inside the
test and reorder the arguments so that the test runs and properly
reflects the arguments that are passed to ssh.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-28 15:23:12 -07:00
37ee646e72 connect: simplify SSH connection code path
The code path used in git_connect pushed the majority of the SSH
connection code into an else block, even though the if block returns.
Simplify the code by eliminating the else block, as it is unneeded.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-28 15:23:12 -07:00
d93d5d51e3 test: validate prerequistes syntax
Brian Carson noticed that a test piece in t5601 had a pair of single
quotes in the body, which made it into 4 parameter call to
test_expect_success, as if its test title were a prerequisite.

As the prerequisites have a specific syntax (i.e. comma separated
tokens spelled in capital letters, possibly prefixed with ! for
negation), validate them to catch such a mistake in the future.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-28 15:20:33 -07:00
e80967b287 git-p4: add failing tests for case-folding p4d
When p4d runs on a case-folding OS, git-p4 can end up getting
very confused. This adds failing tests to demonstrate the problem.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-28 12:19:43 -07:00
896e700ad9 git-p4: t9814: prevent --chain-lint failure
Use test_lazy_prereq to setup prerequisites for the p4 move
test. This both makes the test simpler and clearer, and also
means it no longer fails the new --chain-lint tests.

Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-28 12:16:01 -07:00
22946a9426 rebase: silence "git checkout" for noop rebase
When the branch to be rebased is already up to date, we
"git checkout" the branch, print an "up to date" message,
and end the rebase early. However, our checkout may print
"Switched to branch 'foo'" or "Already on 'foo'", even if
the user has asked for "--quiet".

We should avoid printing these messages at all, "--quiet" or
no. Since the rebase is a noop, this checkout can be seen as
optimizing out these other two checkout operations (that
happen in a real rebase):

  1. Moving to the detached HEAD to start the rebase; we
     always feed "-q" to checkout there, and instead rely on
     our own custom message (which respects --quiet).

  2. Finishing a rebase, where we move to the final branch.
     Here we actually use update-ref rather than
     git-checkout, and produce no messages.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-28 11:38:40 -07:00
9a35c14d64 Documentation: clarify how "git commit" cleans up the edited log message
The `-v` shows a unified diff in the editor to edit the commit
message to help the user to describe the change.  The diff is
stripped and will not become a part of the commit message.

Add a note about this with the `-v` description and slightly modify
the description for the default `--cleanup` mode.

Signed-off-by: Fredrik Gustafsson <iveqy@iveqy.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-27 11:32:55 -07:00
8eeab92f02 t0027: Add repoMIX and LF_nul
"new safer autocrlf handling":

  - Check if eols in a file are converted at commit, when the file has
    CR (or CRLF) in the repo (technically speaking in the index).
  - Add a test-file repoMIX with mixed line-endings.
  - When converting LF->CRLF or CRLF->LF: check the warnings

checkout_files():

  - Checking out CRLF_nul and checking for eol coversion does not
    make much sense (CRLF will stay CRLF).
  - Use the file LF_nul instead: It is handled a binary in "auto" modes,
    and when declared as text the LF may be replaced with CRLF, depending
    on the configuration.

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-25 09:41:29 -07:00
cd88410618 git-p4: improve client path detection when branches are used
Perforce allows client side file/directory remapping through
the use of the client view definition that is part of the
user's client spec.

To support this functionality while branch detection is
enabled it is important to determine the branch location in
the workspace such that the correct files are patched before
Perforce submission. Perforce provides a command that
facilitates this process: p4 where.

This patch does two things to fix improve file location
detection when git-p4 has branch detection and use of client
spec enabled:

 1. Enable usage of "p4 where" when Perforce branches exist
    in the git repository, even when client specification is
    used. This makes use of the already existing function
    p4Where.

 2. Allow identifying partial matches of the branch's depot
    path while processing the output of "p4 where". For
    robustness, paths will only match if ending in "/...".

Signed-off-by: Vitor Antunes <vitor.hda@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-23 10:17:02 -07:00
099d2d86a8 ignore: info/exclude should trump core.excludesfile
$GIT_DIR/info/exclude and core.excludesfile (which falls back to
$XDG_HOME/git/ignore) are both ways to override the ignore pattern
lists given by the project in .gitignore files.  The former, which
is per-repository personal preference, should take precedence over
the latter, which is a personal preference default across different
repositories that are accessed from that machine.  The existing
documentation also agrees.

However, the precedence order was screwed up between these two from
the very beginning when 896bdfa2 (add: Support specifying an
excludes file with a configuration variable, 2007-02-27) introduced
core.excludesfile variable.

Noticed-by: Yohei Endo <yoheie@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-22 14:31:49 -07:00
a0b4507ef7 stop putting argv[0] dirname at front of PATH
When the "git" wrapper is invoked, we prepend the baked-in
exec-path to our PATH, so that any sub-processes we exec
will all find the git-foo commands that match the wrapper
version.

If you invoke git with an absolute path, like:

  /usr/bin/git foo

we also prepend "/usr/bin" to the PATH. This was added long
ago by by 231af83 (Teach the "git" command to handle some
commands internally, 2006-02-26), with the intent that
things would just work if you did something like:

  cd /opt
  tar xzf premade-git-package.tar.gz
  alias git=/opt/git/bin/git

as we would then find all of the related external commands
in /opt/git/bin. I.e., it made git runtime-relocatable,
since at the time of 231af83, we installed all of the git
commands into $(bindir). But these days, that is not enough.
Since f28ac70 (Move all dashed-form commands to libexecdir,
2007-11-28), we do not put commands into $(bindir), and you
actually need to convert "/usr/bin" into "/usr/libexec". And
not just for finding binaries; we want to find $(sharedir),
etc, the same way.  The RUNTIME_PREFIX build knob does this
the right way, by assuming a sane hierarchy rooted at
"$prefix" when we run "$prefix/bin/git", and inferring
"$prefix/libexec/git-core", etc.

So this feature (prepending the argv[0] dirname to the PATH)
is broken for providing a runtime prefix, and has been for
many years. Does it do anything for other cases?

For the "git" wrapper itself, as well as any commands
shipped by "git", the answer is no. Those are already in
git's exec-path, which is consulted first. For third-party
commands which you've dropped into the same directory, it
does include them. So if you do

  cd /opt
  tar xzf git-built-specifically-for-opt-git.tar.gz
  cp third-party/git-foo /opt/git/bin/git-foo
  alias git=/opt/git/bin/git

it does mean that we will find the third-party "git-foo",
even if you do not put /opt/git/bin into your $PATH. But
the flipside of this is that we will bump the precedence of
_other_ third-party tools that happen to be in the same
directory as git. For example, consider this setup:

  1. Git is installed by the system in /usr/bin. There are
     other system utilities in /usr/bin. E.g., a system
     "vi".

  2. The user installs tools they prefer in /usr/local/bin.
     E.g., vim with a "vi" symlink. They set their PATH to
     /usr/local/bin:/usr/bin to prefer their custom tools.

  3. Running /usr/bin/git puts "/usr/bin" at the front of
     their PATH. When git invokes the editor on behalf of
     the user, they get the system vi, not their normal vim.

There are other variants of this, including overriding
system ruby and python (which is quite common using tools
like "rvm" and "virtualenv", which use relocatable
hierarchies and $PATH settings to get a consistent
environment).

Given that the main motivation for git placing the argv[0]
dirname into the PATH has been broken for years, that the
remaining cases are obscure and unlikely (and easily fixed
by the user just setting up their $PATH sanely), and that
the behavior is hurting real, reasonably common use cases,
it's not worth continuing to do so.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-22 13:41:31 -07:00
ed178ef13a stash: require a clean index to apply
If you have staged contents in your index and run "stash
apply", we may hit a conflict and put new entries into the
index. Recovering to your original state is difficult at
that point, because tools like "git reset --keep" will blow
away anything staged.  We can make this safer by refusing to
apply when there are staged changes.

It's possible we could provide better tooling here, as "git
stash apply" should be writing only conflicts to the index
(so we know that any stage-0 entries are potentially
precious). But it is the odd duck; most "mergy" commands
will update the index for cleanly merged entries, and it is
not worth updating our tooling to support this use case
which is unlikely to be of interest (besides which, we would
still need to block a dirty index for "stash apply --index",
since that case _would_ be ambiguous).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-22 13:38:58 -07:00
88bab59c5b t3903: avoid applying onto dirty index
One of the tests in t3903 wants to make sure that applying a
stash that touches only "file" can still happen even if there
are working tree changes to "other-file". To do so, it adds
"other-file" to the index (since otherwise it is an
untracked file, voiding the purpose of the test).

But as we are about to refactor the dirty-index handling,
and as this test does not actually care about having a dirty
index (only a dirty working tree), let's bump the tracking
of "other-file" into the setup phase, so we can have _just_
a dirty working tree here.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-22 13:38:58 -07:00
f2f3fc9547 t3903: stop hard-coding commit sha1s
When testing the diff output of "git stash list", we look
for the stash's subject of "WIP on master: $sha1", even
though it's not relevant to the diff output. This makes the
test brittle to refactoring, as any changes to earlier tests
may impact the commit sha1.

Since we don't care about the commit subject here, we can
simply ask stash not to print it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-22 13:38:58 -07:00
591707a736 t9801: check git-p4's branch detection with client spec enabled
Add failing scenario when branch detection (--detect-branches) is
enabled together with use client spec (--use-client-spec). In this
specific scenario git-p4 will break when the Perforce client view
removes part of the depot path, as in the following example:

  //depot/branch1/base/... //client/branch1/...

The test case also includes an extra sub-file mapping to enforce
robustness check of git-p4's client view support:

  //depot/branch1/base/dir/sub_file1 //client/branch1/sub_file1

Signed-off-by: Vitor Antunes <vitor.hda@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-22 10:11:18 -07:00
1154aa4215 fmt-merge-msg: plug small leak of commit buffer
A broken or badly formatted commit might not record author or
committer lines or we may not find a valid name on them.  The
function record_person() returned after calling get_commit_buffer()
without calling unuse_commit_buffer() on the memory it obtained in
such cases, potentially leaking it.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-20 14:38:07 -07:00
ee1c6c34ac sha1_file: only freshen packs once per run
Since 33d4221 (write_sha1_file: freshen existing objects,
2014-10-15), we update the mtime of existing objects that we
would have written out (had they not existed). For the
common case in which many objects are packed, we may update
the mtime on a single packfile repeatedly. This can result
in a noticeable performance problem if calling utime() is
expensive (e.g., because your storage is on NFS).

We can fix this by keeping a per-pack flag that lets us
freshen only once per program invocation.

An alternative would be to keep the packed_git.mtime flag up
to date as we freshen, and freshen only once every N
seconds. In practice, it's not worth the complexity. We are
racing against prune expiration times here, which inherently
must be set to accomodate reasonable program running times
(because they really care about the time between an object
being written and it becoming referenced, and the latter is
typically the last step a program takes).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-20 13:09:40 -07:00
b5f52f372e sha1_file: freshen pack objects before loose
When writing out an object file, we first check whether it
already exists and if so optimize out the write. Prior to
33d4221, we did this by calling has_sha1_file(), which will
check for packed objects followed by loose. Since that
commit, we check loose objects first.

For the common case of a repository whose objects are mostly
packed, this means we will make a lot of extra access()
system calls checking for loose objects. We should follow
the same packed-then-loose order that all of our other
lookups use.

Reported-by: Stefan Saasen <ssaasen@atlassian.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-20 13:09:38 -07:00
1385bb7ba3 reachable: only mark local objects as recent
When pruning and repacking a repository that has an
alternate object store configured, we may traverse a large
number of objects in the alternate. This serves no purpose,
and may be expensive to do. A longer explanation is below.

Commits d3038d2 and abcb865 taught prune and pack-objects
(respectively) to treat "recent" objects as tips for
reachability, so that we keep whole chunks of history. They
built on the object traversal in 660c889 (sha1_file: add
for_each iterators for loose and packed objects,
2014-10-15), which covers both local and alternate objects.

In both cases, covering alternate objects is unnecessary, as
both commands can only drop objects from the local
repository. In the case of prune, we traverse only the local
object directory. And in the case of repacking, while we may
or may not include local objects in our pack, we will never
reach into the alternate with "repack -d". The "-l" option
is only a question of whether we are migrating objects from
the alternate into our repository, or leaving them
untouched.

It is possible that we may drop an object that is depended
upon by another object in the alternate. For example,
imagine two repositories, A and B, with A pointing to B as
an alternate. Now imagine a commit that is in B which
references a tree that is only in A. Traversing from recent
objects in B might prevent A from dropping that tree. But
this case isn't worth covering. Repo B should take
responsibility for its own objects. It would never have had
the commit in the first place if it did not also have the
tree, and assuming it is using the same "keep recent chunks
of history" scheme, then it would itself keep the tree, as
well.

So checking the alternate objects is not worth doing, and
come with a significant performance impact. In both cases,
we skip any recent objects that have already been marked
SEEN (i.e., that we know are already reachable for prune, or
included in the pack for a repack). So there is a slight
waste of time in opening the alternate packs at all, only to
notice that we have already considered each object. But much
worse, the alternate repository may have a large number of
objects that are not reachable from the local repository at
all, and we end up adding them to the traversal.

We can fix this by considering only local unseen objects.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-20 13:09:27 -07:00
96b2d54aee git-p4: use -m when running p4 changes
Simply running "p4 changes" on a large branch can result in a "too
many rows scanned" error from the Perforce server. It is better to
use a sequence of smaller calls to "p4 changes", using the "-m"
option to limit the size of each call.

Signed-off-by: Lex Spoon <lex@lexspoon.org>
Acked-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-20 12:36:00 -07:00
0269f968b7 log -L: improve error message on malformed argument
The old message did not mention the :regex:file form.

To avoid overly long lines, split the message into two lines (in case
item->string is long, it will be the only part truncated in a narrow
terminal).

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-20 11:06:10 -07:00
d349e0ee60 Documentation: change -L:<regex> to -L:<funcname>
The old wording was somehow implying that <start> and <end> were not
regular expressions. Also, the common case is to use a plain function
name here so <funcname> makes sense (the fact that it is a regular
expression is documented in line-range-format.txt).

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-20 11:05:50 -07:00
64f2589a09 t1509: update prepare script to be able to run t1509 in chroot again
Tested on Gentoo and OpenSUSE 13.1, both x86-64

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-18 17:51:04 -07:00
c6458e60ed index-pack: kill union delta_base to save memory
Once we know the number of objects in the input pack, we allocate an
array of nr_objects of struct delta_entry. On x86-64, this struct is
32 bytes long. The union delta_base, which is part of struct
delta_entry, provides enough space to store either ofs-delta (8 bytes)
or ref-delta (20 bytes).

Because ofs-delta encoding is more efficient space-wise and more
performant at runtime than ref-delta encoding, Git packers try to use
ofs-delta whenever possible, and it is expected that objects encoded
as ref-delta are minority.

In the best clone case where no ref-delta object is present, we waste
(20-8) * nr_objects bytes because of this union. That's about 38MB out
of 100MB for deltas[] with 3.4M objects, or 38%. deltas[] would be
around 62MB without the waste.

This patch attempts to eliminate that. deltas[] array is split into
two: one for ofs-delta and one for ref-delta. Many functions are also
duplicated because of this split. With this patch, ofs_deltas[] array
takes 51MB. ref_deltas[] should remain unallocated in clone case (0
bytes). This array grows as we see ref-delta. We save about half in
this case, or 25% of total bookkeeping.

The saving is more than the calculation above because some padding in
the old delta_entry struct is removed. ofs_delta_entry is 16 bytes,
including the 4 bytes padding. That's 13MB for padding, but packing
the struct could break platforms that do not support unaligned
access. If someone on 32-bit is really low on memory and only deals
with packs smaller than 2G, using 32-bit off_t would eliminate the
padding and save 27MB on top.

A note about ofs_deltas allocation. We could use ref_deltas memory
allocation strategy for ofs_deltas. But that probably just adds more
overhead on top. ofs-deltas are generally the majority (1/2 to 2/3) in
any pack. Incremental realloc may lead to too many memcpy. And if we
preallocate, say 1/2 or 2/3 of nr_objects initially, the growth rate
of ALLOC_GROW() could make this array larger than nr_objects, wasting
more memory.

Brought-up-by: Matthew Sporleder <msporleder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-18 17:48:32 -07:00
d6d6673e66 t0027: support NATIVE_CRLF platforms
t0027 expects the native end-of-lines to be a single line feed
character.  On Windows, however, we set it to a carriage return
character followed by a line feed character.  Thus, we have to
modify t0027 to expect different warnings depending on the
end-of-line markers.

Adjust the check of the warnings and use these macros:

  WILC:  Warn if LF becomes CRLF
  WICL:  Warn if CRLF becomes LF
  WAMIX: Mixed line endings: either CRLF->LF or LF->CRLF

Improve the information given by check_warning().

Use test_cmp to show which warning is missing (or shouldn't be
there).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-18 11:47:33 -07:00
ad295bbca2 t0027: cleanup: rename functions; avoid non-leading TABs
Make more clear what the tests are doing:

  commit_check_warn():
    Commit files and checks for conversion warnings.
    Old name: create_file_in_repo()

  checkout_files():
    Checkout files from the repo and check if they have
    the appropriate line endings in the work space.
    Old name: check_files_in_ws()

Replace non-leading TABS with spaces

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-18 11:47:23 -07:00
b6e8a3b540 limit_list: avoid quadratic behavior from still_interesting
When we are limiting a rev-list traversal due to
UNINTERESTING refs, we have to walk down the tips (both
interesting and uninteresting) to find where they intersect.
We keep a queue of commits to examine, pop commits off
the queue one by one, and potentially add their parents.  The
size of the queue will naturally fluctuate based on the
"width" of the history graph; i.e., the number of
simultaneous lines of development. But for the most part it
will stay in the same ballpark as the initial number of tips
we fed, shrinking over time (as we hit common ancestors of
the tips). So roughly speaking, if we start with `N` tips,
we'll spend much of the time with a queue around `N` items.

For each UNINTERESTING commit we pop, we call
still_interesting to check whether marking its parents as
UNINTERESTING has made the whole queue uninteresting (in
which case we can quit early).  Because the queue is stored
as a linked list, this is `O(N)`, where `N` is the number of
items in the queue. So processing a queue with `N` commits
marked UNINTERESTING (and one or more interesting commits)
will take `O(N^2)`.

If you feed a lot of positive tips, this isn't a problem.
They aren't UNINTERESTING, so they don't incur the
still_interesting check.  It also isn't a problem if you
traverse from an interesting tip to some UNINTERESTING
bases. We order the queue by recency, so the interesting
commits stay at the front of the queue as we walk down them.
The linear check can exit early as soon as it sees one
interesting commit left in the queue.

But if you want to know whether an older commit is reachable
from a set of newer tips, we end up processing in the
opposite direction: from the UNINTERESTING ones down to the
interesting one. This may happen when we call:

  git rev-list $commits --not --all

in check_everything_connected after a fetch. If we fetched
something much older than most of our refs, and if we have a
large number of refs, the traversal cost is dominated by the
quadratic behavior.

These commands simulate the connectivity check of such a
fetch, when you have `$n` distinct refs in the receiver:

    # positive ref is 100,000 commits deep
    git rev-list --all | head -100000 | tail -1 >input

    # huge number of more recent negative refs
    git rev-list --all | head -$n | sed s/^/^/ >>input

    time git rev-list --stdin <input

Here are timings for various `n` on the linux.git
repository. The `n=1` case provides a baseline for just
walking the commits, which lets us see the still_interesting
overhead. The times marked with `+` subtract that baseline
to show just the extra time growth due to the large number
of refs. The `x` numbers show the slowdown of the adjusted
time versus the prior trial.

       n  | before                 | after
    --------------------------------------------------------
        1 | 0.991s                 | 0.848s
    10000 | 1.120s (+0.129s)       | 0.885s (+0.037s)
    20000 | 1.451s (+0.460s, 3.5x) | 0.923s (+0.075s, 2.0x)
    40000 | 2.731s (+1.740s, 3.8x) | 0.994s (+0.146s, 1.9x)
    80000 | 8.235s (+7.244s, 4.2x) | 1.123s (+0.275s, 1.9x)

Each trial doubles `n`, so you can see the quadratic (`4x`)
behavior before this patch. Afterwards, we have a roughly
linear relationship.

The implementation is fairly straightforward. Whenever we do
the linear search, we cache the interesting commit we find,
and next time check it before doing another linear search.
If that commit is removed from the list or becomes
UNINTERESTING itself, then we fall back to the linear
search. This is very similar to the trick used by fce87ae
(Fix quadratic performance in rewrite_one., 2008-07-12).

I considered and rejected several possible alternatives:

  1. Keep a count of UNINTERESTING commits in the queue.
     This requires managing the count not only when removing
     an item from the queue, but also when marking an item
     as UNINTERESTING. That requires touching the other
     functions which mark commits, and would require knowing
     quickly which commits are in the queue (lookup in the
     queue is linear, so we would need an auxiliary
     structure or to also maintain an IN_QUEUE flag in each
     commit object).

  2. Keep a separate list of interesting commits. Drop items
     from it when they are dropped from the queue, or if
     they become UNINTERESTING. This again suffers from
     extra complexity to maintain the list, not to mention
     CPU and memory.

  3. Use a better data structure for the queue. This is
     something that could help the fix in fce87ae, because
     we order the queue by recency, and it is about
     inserting quickly in recency order. So a normal
     priority queue would help there. But here, we cannot
     disturb the order of the queue, which makes things
     harder. We really do need an auxiliary index to track
     the flag we care about, which is basically option (2)
     above.

The "cache" trick is simple, and the numbers above show that
it works well in practice. This is because the length of
time it takes to find an interesting commit is proportional
to the length of time it will remain cached (i.e., if we
have to walk a long way to find it, it also means we have to
pop a lot of elements in the queue until we get rid of it
and have to find another interesting commit).

The worst case is still quadratic, though. We could have `N`
uninteresting commits at the front of the queue, followed by
`N` interesting commits, where commit `i` has parent `i+N`.
When we pop commit `i`, we will notice that the parent of
the next commit, `i+1+N` is still interesting and cache it.
But then handling commit `i+1`, we will mark its parent
`i+1+N` uninteresting, and immediately invalidate our cache.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-17 15:22:05 -07:00
b7994af0f9 type_from_string_gently: make sure length matches
When commit fe8e3b7 refactored type_from_string to allow
input that was not NUL-terminated, it switched to using
strncmp instead of strcmp. But this means we check only the
first "len" bytes of the strings, and ignore any remaining
bytes in the object_type_string. We should make sure that it
is also "len" bytes, or else we would accept "comm" as
"commit", and so forth.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-17 13:54:39 -07:00
7e11052442 config: fix settings in default_user_config template
The name (not user) and email setting should be in config section
"user" and not in "core" as documented in Documentation/config.txt.

Signed-off-by: Ossi Herrala <oherrala@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-17 10:32:46 -07:00
7e9e048661 stash -p: demonstrate failure of split with mixed y/n
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 14:14:12 -07:00
798a5b03fb t3904-stash-patch: factor PERL prereq at the top of the file
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 14:14:11 -07:00
470b11e805 t3904-stash-patch: fix test description
The old description is rather clearly a wrong cut-and-paste from
t2016-checkout-patch.sh.

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 14:14:11 -07:00
1bf01040f0 add -p: demonstrate failure when running 'edit' after a split
The test passes if one replaces the 'e' command with a 'y' command in
the 'add -p' session.

Reported-by: Tanky Woo <wtq1990@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 14:14:10 -07:00
416145f07a t3701-add-interactive: simplify code
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 14:14:09 -07:00
de248e92c1 test-lib-functions.sh: fix the second argument to some helper functions
The second argument to test_path_is_file and test_path_is_dir
must be $2 and not $*, which instead would repeat the file
name in the error message.

Signed-off-by: Elia Pinto <gitter.spiros@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 13:31:35 -07:00
27547e5fcc attr: skip UTF8 BOM at the beginning of the input file
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 11:35:38 -07:00
599446dc32 config: use utf8_bom[] from utf.[ch] in git_parse_source()
Because the function reads one character at the time, unfortunately
we cannot use the easier skip_utf8_bom() helper, but at least we do
not have to duplicate the constant string this way.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 11:35:27 -07:00
dde843e737 utf8-bom: introduce skip_utf8_bom() helper
With the recent change to ignore the UTF8 BOM at the beginning of
.gitignore files, we now have two codepaths that do such a skipping
(the other one is for reading the configuration files).

Introduce utf8_bom[] constant string and skip_utf8_bom() helper
and teach .gitignore code how to use it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 11:35:06 -07:00
cb0abea870 add_excludes_from_file: clarify the bom skipping logic
Even though the previous step shifts where the "entry" begins, we
still iterate over the original buf[], which may begin with the
UTF-8 BOM we are supposed to be skipping.  At the end of the first
line, the code grabs the contents of it starting at "entry", so
there is nothing wrong per-se, but the logic looks really confused.

Instead, move the buf pointer and shrink its size, to truly
pretend that UTF-8 BOM did not exist in the input.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 11:26:29 -07:00
245e1c196d dir: allow a BOM at the beginning of exclude files
Some text editors like Notepad or LibreOffice write an UTF-8 BOM in
order to indicate that the file is Unicode text rather than whatever the
current locale would indicate.

If someone uses such an editor to edit a gitignore file, we are left
with those three bytes at the beginning of the file. If we do not skip
them, we will attempt to match a filename with the BOM as prefix, which
won't match the files the user is expecting.

Signed-off-by: Carlos Martín Nieto <cmn@elego.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 10:17:04 -07:00
a337292675 t1430: add another refs-escape test
In t1430, we check whether deleting the branch "../../foo"
will delete ".git/foo". However, this is not that
interesting a test; the precious file ".git/foo" does not
look like a ref, so even if we did not notice the "escape"
from the "refs/" hierarchy, we would fail for that reason
(i.e., if you turned refname_is_safe into a noop, the test
still passes).

Let's add an additional test for the same thing, but with a
file that actually looks like a ref. That will make sure we
are exercising the refname_is_safe code. While we're at it,
let's also make the code work a little harder by adding some
extra paths and some empty path components.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 08:15:06 -07:00
03afcbee9b read_packed_refs: avoid double-checking sane refs
Prior to d0f810f (refs.c: allow listing and deleting badly
named refs, 2014-09-03), read_packed_refs would barf on any
malformed refnames by virtue of calling create_ref_entry
with the "check" parameter set to 1. That commit loosened
our reading so that we call check_refname_format ourselves
and just set a REF_BAD_NAME flag.

We then call create_ref_entry with the check parameter set
to 0. That function learned to do an extra safety check even
when the check parameter is 0, so that we don't load any
dangerous refnames (like "../../../etc/passwd"). This is
implemented by calling refname_is_safe() in
create_ref_entry().

However, we can observe that refname_is_safe() can only be
true if check_refname_format() also failed. So in the common
case of a sanely named ref, we perform _both_ checks, even
though we know that the latter will never trigger. This has
a noticeable performance impact when the packed-refs file is
large.

Let's drop the refname_is_safe check from create_ref_entry(),
and make it the responsibility of the caller.  Of the three
callers that pass a check parameter of "0", two will have
just called check_refname_format(), and can check the
refname-safety only when it fails. The third case,
pack_if_possible_fn, is copying from an existing ref entry,
which must have previously passed our safety check.

With this patch, running "git rev-parse refs/heads/does-not-exist"
on a repo with a large (1.6GB) packed-refs file went from:

  real    0m6.768s
  user    0m6.340s
  sys     0m0.432s

to:

  real    0m5.703s
  user    0m5.276s
  sys     0m0.432s

for a wall-clock speedup of 15%.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 08:15:05 -07:00
0cc30e0e84 strbuf_getwholeline: use getdelim if it is available
We spend a lot of time in strbuf_getwholeline in a tight
loop reading characters from a stdio handle into a buffer.
The libc getdelim() function can do this for us with less
overhead. It's in POSIX.1-2008, and was a GNU extension
before that. Therefore we can't rely on it, but can fall
back to the existing getc loop when it is not available.

The HAVE_GETDELIM knob is turned on automatically for Linux,
where we have glibc. We don't need to set any new
feature-test macros, because we already define _GNU_SOURCE.
Other systems that implement getdelim may need to other
macros (probably _POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 200809L), but we can
address that along with setting the Makefile knob after
testing the feature on those systems.

Running "git rev-parse refs/heads/does-not-exist" on a repo
with an extremely large (1.6GB) packed-refs file went from
(best-of-5):

  real    0m8.601s
  user    0m8.084s
  sys     0m0.524s

to:

  real    0m6.768s
  user    0m6.340s
  sys     0m0.432s

for a wall-clock speedup of 21%.

Based on a patch from Rasmus Villemoes <rv@rasmusvillemoes.dk>.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 08:15:05 -07:00
f80c153bea strbuf_getwholeline: avoid calling strbuf_grow
As with the recent speedup to strbuf_addch, we can avoid
calling strbuf_grow() in a tight loop of single-character
adds by instead checking strbuf_avail.

Note that we would instead call strbuf_addch directly here,
but it does more work than necessary: it will NUL-terminate
the result for each character read. Instead, in this loop we
read the characters one by one and then add the terminator
manually at the end.

Running "git rev-parse refs/heads/does-not-exist" on a repo
with an extremely large (1.6GB) packed-refs file went from
(best-of-5):

  real    0m10.948s
  user    0m10.548s
  sys     0m0.412s

to:

  real    0m8.601s
  user    0m8.084s
  sys     0m0.524s

for a wall-clock speedup of 21%.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 08:15:05 -07:00
fec501dae8 strbuf_addch: avoid calling strbuf_grow
We mark strbuf_addch as inline, because we expect it may be
called from a tight loop. However, the first thing it does
is call the non-inline strbuf_grow(), which can handle
arbitrary-sized growth. Since we know that we only need a
single character, we can use the inline strbuf_avail() to
quickly check whether we need to grow at all.

Our check is redundant when we do call strbuf_grow(), but
that's OK. The common case is that we avoid calling it at
all, and we have made that case faster.

On a silly pathological case:

  perl -le '
    print "[core]";
    print "key$_ = value$_" for (1..1000000)
  ' >input
  git config -f input core.key1

this dropped the time to run git-config from:

  real    0m0.159s
  user    0m0.152s
  sys     0m0.004s

to:

  real    0m0.140s
  user    0m0.136s
  sys     0m0.004s

for a savings of 12%.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 08:15:05 -07:00
260d408e32 config: use getc_unlocked when reading from file
We read config files character-by-character from a stdio
handle using fgetc(). This incurs significant locking
overhead, even though we know that only one thread can
possibly access the handle. We can speed this up by taking
the lock ourselves, and then using getc_unlocked to read
each character.

On a silly pathological case:

  perl -le '
    print "[core]";
    print "key$_ = value$_" for (1..1000000)
  ' >input
  git config -f input core.key1

this dropped the time to run git-config from:

  real    0m0.263s
  user    0m0.260s
  sys     0m0.000s

to:

  real    0m0.159s
  user    0m0.152s
  sys     0m0.004s

for a savings of 39%.  Most config files are not this big,
but the savings should be proportional to the size of the
file (i.e., we always save 39%, just of a much smaller
number).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 08:15:05 -07:00
82912d1de8 strbuf_getwholeline: use getc_unlocked
strbuf_getwholeline calls getc in a tight loop. On modern
libc implementations, the stdio code locks the handle for
every operation, which means we are paying a significant
overhead.  We can get around this by locking the handle for
the whole loop and using the unlocked variant.

Running "git rev-parse refs/heads/does-not-exist" on a repo
with an extremely large (1.6GB) packed-refs file went from:

  real    0m18.900s
  user    0m18.472s
  sys     0m0.448s

to:

  real    0m10.953s
  user    0m10.384s
  sys     0m0.580s

for a wall-clock speedup of 42%. All times are best-of-3,
and done on a glibc 2.19 system.

Note that we call into strbuf_grow while holding the lock.
It's possible for that function to call other stdio
functions (e.g., printing to stderr when dying due to malloc
error); however, the POSIX.1-2001 definition of flockfile
makes it clear that the locks are per-handle, so we are fine
unless somebody else tries to read from our same handle.
This doesn't ever happen in the current code, and is
unlikely to be added in the future (we would have to do
something exotic like add a die_routine that tried to read
from stdin).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 08:15:04 -07:00
f43cce23ad git-compat-util: add fallbacks for unlocked stdio
POSIX.1-2001 specifies some functions for optimizing the
locking out of tight getc() loops. Not all systems are
POSIX, though, and even not all POSIX systems are required
to implement these functions. We can check for the
feature-test macro to see if they are available, and if not,
provide a noop implementation.

There's no Makefile knob here, because we should just detect
this automatically. If there are very bizarre systems, we
may need to add one, but it's not clear yet in which
direction:

  1. If a system defines _POSIX_THREAD_SAFE_FUNCTIONS but
     these functions are missing or broken, we would want a
     knob to manually turn them off.

  2. If a system has these functions but does not define
     _POSIX_THREAD_SAFE_FUNCTIONS, we would want a knob to
     manually turn them on.

We can add such a knob when we find a real-world system that
matches this.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 08:15:04 -07:00
3446a59b39 strbuf_getwholeline: use getc macro
strbuf_getwholeline calls fgetc in a tight loop. Using the
getc form, which can be implemented as a macro, should be
faster (and we do not care about it evaluating our argument
twice, as we just have a plain variable).

On my glibc system, running "git rev-parse
refs/heads/does-not-exist" on a file with an extremely large
(1.6GB) packed-refs file went from (best of 3 runs):

  real    0m19.383s
  user    0m18.876s
  sys     0m0.528s

to:

  real    0m18.900s
  user    0m18.472s
  sys     0m0.448s

for a wall-clock speedup of 2.5%.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-16 08:15:04 -07:00
9a9a41db83 compat/mingw: stubs for getpgid() and tcgetpgrp()
Windows does not have process groups. It is, therefore, the simplest
to pretend that each process is in its own process group.

While here, move the getppid() stub from its old location (between
two sync related functions) next to the two new functions.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-15 11:50:34 -07:00
85cb8906f0 progress: no progress in background
Disable the display of the progress if stderr is not the
current foreground process.
Still display the final result when done.

Signed-off-by: Luke Mewburn <luke@mewburn.net>
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-15 11:50:24 -07:00
f6e6362107 parse_date_basic(): let the system handle DST conversion
The function parses the input to compute the broken-down time in
"struct tm", and the GMT timezone offset.  If the timezone offset
does not exist in the input, the broken-down time is turned into the
number of seconds since epoch both in the current timezone and in
GMT and the offset is computed as their difference.

However, we forgot to make sure tm.tm_isdst is set to -1 (i.e. let
the system figure out if DST is in effect in the current timezone
when turning the broken-down time to the number of seconds since
epoch); it is done so at the beginning of the function, but a call
to match_digit() in the function can lead to a call to gmtime_r() to
clobber the field.

Reported-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Diagnosed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-15 10:25:32 -07:00
7fcec48da9 parse_date_basic(): return early when given a bogus timestamp
When the input does not have GMT timezone offset, the code computes
it by computing the local and GMT time for the given timestamp. But
there is no point doing so if the given timestamp is known to be a
bogus one.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-15 10:25:05 -07:00
f86a3747ab pack-bitmap.c: fix a memleak
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-12 21:45:27 -07:00
157c8e3ddf gitk: Rearrange window title to be more conventional
Signed-off-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-04-06 14:38:17 +10:00
c47f86c56a gitk: sv.po: Update Swedish translation (305t0f0u)
Signed-off-by: Peter Krefting <peter@softwolves.pp.se>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-04-06 13:48:27 +10:00
0013251fe2 gitk: Fix bad English grammar "Matches none Commit Info"
Signed-off-by: Alex Henrie <alexhenrie24@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
2015-04-06 13:44:46 +10:00
34a0dbfc6b git-p4: fix filetype detection on files opened exclusively
If a Perforce server is configured to automatically set +l
(exclusive lock) on add of certain file types, git p4 submit will
fail during getP4OpenedType, as the regex doesn't expect the
trailing '*exclusive*' from p4 opened:

  //depot/file.png#1 - add default change (binary+l) *exclusive*

Signed-off-by: Blair Holloway <blair_holloway@playstation.sony.com>
Acked-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-04 12:43:20 -07:00
d077c2db8d git-p4: small fix for locked-file-move-test
The test for handling of failure when trying to move a file
that is locked by another client was not quite correct - it
failed early on because the target file in the move already
existed.

The test now fails because git-p4 does not properly detect
that p4 has rejected the move, and instead just crashes. At
present, git-p4 has no support for detecting that a file
has been locked and reporting it to the user, so this is
the expected outcome.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-04 12:41:51 -07:00
2cce675a63 git-p4: fix small bug in locked test scripts
Test script t9816-git-p4-locked.sh test #4 tests for
adding a file that is locked by Perforce automatically.
This is currently not supported by git-p4 and so is
expected to fail.

However, a small typo meant it always failed, even with
a fixed git-p4. Fix the typo to resolve this.

Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-04 12:41:41 -07:00
fc792ca860 checkout: call a single commit "it" intead of "them"
When detached and checking out a branch again, git checkout warns
about commit(s) that might get lost.  It says "If you want to keep
them ..." even for only one commit.

Use Q_() to allow differentiating singular vs plural.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Schneider <thosch97@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-02 16:44:59 -07:00
84ccad8dec init: don't set core.worktree when initializing /.git
If you create a git repository in the root directory with
"git init /", we erroneously write a core.worktree entry.
This isn't _wrong_, in the sense that it's OK to set
core.worktree when we don't need to. But it is unnecessarily
surprising if you later move the .git directory to another
path (which usually moves the relative working tree, but is
foiled if there is an explicit worktree set).

The problem is that we check whether core.worktree is
necessary by seeing if we can make the git_dir by
concatenating "/.git" onto the working tree. That would lead
to "//.git" in this instance, but we actually have "/.git"
(without the doubled slash).

We can fix this by special-casing the root directory. I also
split the logic out into its own function to make the
conditional a bit more readable (and used skip_prefix, which
I think makes it a little more obvious what is going on).

No tests, as we would need to be able to write to "/" to do
so. I did manually confirm that:

  sudo git init /
  cd /
  git rev-parse --show-toplevel
  git config core.worktree

still finds the top-level correctly (as "/"), and does not
set any core.worktree variable.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-02 12:29:15 -07:00
539d09c3b4 show-branch: show all local heads when only giving one rev along --topics
"git show-branch --topics <rev> <revs>..." displays ancestry graph, only
considering commits that are in all given revs, except the first one.

"git show-branch" displays ancestry graph for all local branches.

Unfortunately, "git show-branch --topics <rev>" only prints out the rev
info for the given rev, and nothing else, e.g.:

  $ git show-branch --topics origin/master
  [origin/master] Sync with 2.3.3

While there is an option to add all remote-tracking branches (-r), and
another to add all local+remote branches (-a), there is no option to add
only local branches. Adding such an option could be considered, but a
user would likely already expect that the above command line considers
the lack of rev other than for --topics as meaning all local branches,
like when there is no argument at all.

Moreover, when using -r and -a along with --topics, the first local or
remote-tracking branch, depending on alphabetic order is used instead of
the one given after --topics (any rev given on the command line is
actually simply ignored when either -r or -a is given). And if no rev is
given at all, the fact that the first alphetical branch is the base of
topics is probably not expected by users (Maybe --topics should always
require one rev on the command line?)

This change makes
  "show-branch --topics $rev"
act as
  "show-branch --topics $rev $(git for-each-ref refs/heads
                               --format='%(refname:short)')"

  "show-branch -r --topics $rev ..."
act as
  "show-branch --topics $rev ... $(git for-each-ref refs/remotes
                                   --format='%(refname:short)')"
instead of
  "show-branch --topics $(git for-each-ref refs/remotes
                          --format='%(refname:short)')"

and
  "show-branch -a --topics $rev ..."
act as
  "show-branch --topics $rev ... $(git for-each-ref refs/heads refs/remotes
                                   --format='%(refname:short)')"
instead of
  "show-branch --topics $(git for-each-ref refs/heads refs/remotes
                          --format='%(refname:short)')"

Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-31 11:42:53 -07:00
562bc08093 prune --worktrees: fix expire vs worktree existence condition
`git prune --worktrees` was pruning worktrees which were non-existent OR
expired, while it rather should prune those which are orphaned AND
expired, as git-checkout documentation describes. Fix it.

Add test 'not prune proper checkouts', which uses valid but expired
worktree.

Modify test 'not prune recent checkouts' to remove the worktree before
pruning - link in worktrees still must survive. In older form it is
useless because would pass always when the other test passes.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Acked-by: Duy Nguyen <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-31 11:02:11 -07:00
05bfc7dcaa line-log.c: fix a memleak
The `filepair` is assigned new memory with any iteration via
process_diff_filepair, so free it before the current iteration ends.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-30 21:59:57 -07:00
319b678a7b sha1_file: squelch "packfile cannot be accessed" warnings
When we find an object in a packfile index, we make sure we
can still open the packfile itself (or that it is already
open), as it might have been deleted by a simultaneous
repack. If we can't access the packfile, we print a warning
for the user and tell the caller that we don't have the
object (we can then look in other packfiles, or find a loose
version, before giving up).

The warning we print to the user isn't really accomplishing
anything, and it is potentially confusing to users. In the
normal case, it is complete noise; we find the object
elsewhere, and the user does not have to care that we racily
saw a packfile index that became stale. It didn't affect the
operation at all.

A possibly more interesting case is when we later can't find
the object, and report failure to the user. In this case the
warning could be considered a clue toward that ultimate
failure. But it's not really a useful clue in practice. We
wouldn't even print it consistently (since we are racing
with another process, we might not even see the .idx file,
or we might win the race and open the packfile, completing
the operation).

This patch drops the warning entirely (not only from the
fill_pack_entry site, but also from an identical use in
pack-objects). If we did find the warning interesting in the
error case, we could stuff it away and reveal it to the user
when we later die() due to the broken object. But that
complexity just isn't worth it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-30 21:47:39 -07:00
0615173998 diff-no-index: align D/F handling with that of normal Git
When a commit changes a path P that used to be a file to a directory
and creates a new path P/X in it, "git show" would say that file P
was removed and file P/X was created for such a commit.

However, if we compare two directories, D1 and D2, where D1 has a
file D1/P in it and D2 has a directory D2/P under which there is a
file D2/P/X, and ask "git diff --no-index D1 D2" to show their
differences, we simply get a refusal "file/directory conflict".

Surely, that may be what GNU diff does, but we can do better and it
is easy to do so.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-26 14:08:43 -07:00
c9e1f2c7f2 diff-no-index: DWIM "diff D F" into "diff D/F F"
"git diff --no-index" was supposed to be a poor-man's approach to
allow using Git diff goodies outside of a Git repository, without
having to patch mainstream diff implementations.

Unlike a POSIX diff that treats "diff D F" (or "diff F D") as a
request to compare D/F and F (or F and D/F) when D is a directory
and F is a file, however, we did not accept such a command line and
instead barfed with "file/directory conflict".

Imitate what POSIX diff does and append the basename of the file
after the name of the directory before comparing.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-25 22:39:07 -07:00
efee5981d3 t0302: "unreadable" test needs POSIXPERM
Noticed and fixed by Eric Sunshine, confirmed by Johannes Sixt.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-25 13:23:21 -07:00
466e8d5d66 t1501: fix test with split index
t1501-worktree.sh does not copy the shared index in the "relative
$GIT_WORK_TREE and git subprocesses" test, which makes the test fail
when GIT_TEST_SPLIT_INDEX is set.  Copy the shared index as well in
order to fix this.

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>
2015-03-24 12:32:12 -07:00
7e314539d6 t0302: test credential-store support for XDG_CONFIG_HOME
t0302 now tests git-credential-store's support for the XDG user-specific
configuration file $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/credentials. Specifically:

* Ensure that the XDG file is strictly opt-in. It should not be created
  by git at all times if it does not exist.

* Conversely, if the XDG file exists, ~/.git-credentials should
  not be created at all times.

* If both the XDG file and ~/.git-credentials exists, then both files
  should be used for credential lookups. However, credentials should
  only be written to ~/.git-credentials.

* Credentials must be erased from both files.

* $XDG_CONFIG_HOME can be a custom directory set by the user as per the
  XDG base directory specification. Test that git-credential-store
  respects that, but defaults to "~/.config/git/credentials" if it does
  not exist or is empty.

Helped-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-24 08:08:10 -07:00
44b228985e git-credential-store: support XDG_CONFIG_HOME
Add $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/credentials to the default credential search
path of git-credential-store. This allows git-credential-store to
support user-specific configuration files in accordance with the XDG
base directory specification[1].

[1] http://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-0.7.html

~/.git-credentials has a higher precedence than
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/credentials when looking up credentials.  This
means that if any duplicate matching credentials are found in the xdg
file (due to ~/.git-credentials being updated by old versions of git or
outdated tools), they will not be used at all. This is to give the user
some leeway in switching to old versions of git while keeping the xdg
directory. This is consistent with the behavior of git-config.

However, the higher precedence of ~/.git-credentials means that as long
as ~/.git-credentials exist, all credentials will be written to the
~/.git-credentials file even if the user has an xdg file as having a
~/.git-credentials file indicates that the user wants to preserve
backwards-compatibility. This is also consistent with the behavior of
git-config.

To make this precedence explicit in docs/git-credential-store, add a new
section FILES that lists out the credential file paths in their order of
precedence, and explain how the ordering affects the lookup, storage and
erase operations.

Also, update the documentation for --file to briefly explain the
operations on multiple files if the --file option is not provided.

Since the xdg file will not be used unless it actually exists, to
prevent the situation where some credentials are present in the xdg file
while some are present in the home file, users are recommended to not
create the xdg file if they require compatibility with old versions of
git or outdated tools. Note, though, that "erase" can be used to
explicitly erase matching credentials from all files.

Helped-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-24 08:08:02 -07:00
cb2c2796e0 git-credential-store: support multiple credential files
Previously, git-credential-store only supported storing credentials in a
single file: ~/.git-credentials. In order to support the XDG base
directory specification[1], git-credential-store needs to be able to
lookup and erase credentials from multiple files, as well as to pick the
appropriate file to write to so that the credentials can be found on
subsequent lookups.

[1] http://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-0.7.html

Note that some credential storage files may not be owned, readable or
writable by the user, as they may be system-wide files that are meant to
apply to every user.

Instead of a single file path, lookup_credential(), remove_credential()
and store_credential() now take a precedence-ordered string_list of
file paths. lookup_credential() expects both user-specific and
system-wide credential files to be provided to support the use case of
system administrators setting default credentials for users.
remove_credential() and store_credential() expect only the user-specific
credential files to be provided as usually the only config files that
users are allowed to edit are their own user-specific ones.

lookup_credential() will read these (user-specific and system-wide) file
paths in order until it finds the 1st matching credential and print it.
As some files may be private and thus unreadable, any file which cannot
be read will be ignored silently.

remove_credential() will erase credentials from all (user-specific)
files in the list.  This is because if credentials are only erased from
the file with the highest precedence, a matching credential may still be
found in a file further down the list. (Note that due to the lockfile
code, this requires the directory to be writable, which should be so for
user-specific config files)

store_credential() will write the credentials to the first existing
(user-specific) file in the list. If none of the files in the list
exist, store_credential() will write to the filename specified by the
first item of the filename list. For backwards compatibility, this
filename should be "~/.git-credentials".

Helped-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@grenoble-inp.fr>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Paul Tan <pyokagan@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-24 08:07:54 -07:00
d95d728aba diff-lib.c: adjust position of i-t-a entries in diff
Entries added by "git add -N" are reminder for the user so that they
don't forget to add them before committing. These entries appear in
the index even though they are not real. Their presence in the index
leads to a confusing "git status" like this:

    On branch master
    Changes to be committed:
            new file:   foo

    Changes not staged for commit:
            modified:   foo

If you do a "git commit", "foo" will not be included even though
"status" reports it as "to be committed". This patch changes the
output to become

    On branch master
    Changes not staged for commit:
            new file:   foo

    no changes added to commit

The two hunks in diff-lib.c adjust "diff-index" and "diff-files" so
that i-t-a entries appear as new files in diff-files and nothing in
diff-index.

Due to this change, diff-files may start to report "new files" for the
first time. "add -u" needs to be told about this or it will die in
denial, screaming "new files can't exist! Reality is wrong." Luckily,
it's the only one among run_diff_files() callers that needs fixing.

Now in the new world order, a hierarchy in the index that contain
i-t-a paths is written out as a tree object as if these i-t-a
entries do not exist, and comparing the index with such a tree
object that would result from writing out the hierarchy will result
in no difference.  Update a test in t2203 that expected the i-t-a
entries to appear as "added to the index" in the comparison to
instead expect no output.

An earlier change eec3e7e4 (cache-tree: invalidate i-t-a paths after
generating trees, 2012-12-16) becomes an unnecessary pessimization
in the new world order---a cache-tree in the index that corresponds
to a hierarchy with i-t-a paths can now be marked as valid and
record the object name of the tree that results from writing a tree
object out of that hierarchy, as it will compare equal to that tree.

Reverting the commit is left for the future, though, as it is purely
a performance issue and no longer affects correctness.

Helped-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Helped-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>
2015-03-23 13:42:33 -07:00
807e3cac46 t2026: fix broken &&-chain
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-20 10:53:57 -07:00
270f0a8cb2 gitweb: fix typo in man page
Signed-off-by: Tony Finch <dot@dotat.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-19 13:42:26 -07:00
d07d4ab401 apply: convert threeway_stage to object_id
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-13 22:43:14 -07:00
1a876a69af patch-id: convert to use struct object_id
Convert some magic numbers to the new GIT_SHA1 constants.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-13 22:43:14 -07:00
7683e2e6e3 commit: convert parts to struct object_id
Convert struct commit_graft and necessary local parts of commit.c.
Also, convert several constants based on the hex length of an SHA-1 to
use GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ, and move several magic constants into variables for
readability.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-13 22:43:13 -07:00
1ff57c13c5 diff: convert struct combine_diff_path to object_id
Also, convert a constant to GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-13 22:43:13 -07:00
fa33c3aae2 bulk-checkin.c: convert to use struct object_id
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-13 22:43:13 -07:00
aeecdcd4c1 zip: use GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ for trailers
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-13 22:43:12 -07:00
13609673c4 archive.c: convert to use struct object_id
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-13 22:43:12 -07:00
3c5ff9956c bisect.c: convert leaf functions to use struct object_id
Convert some constants to GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-13 22:43:12 -07:00
aa1c6fdf47 define utility functions for object IDs
There are several utility functions (hashcmp and friends) that are used
for comparing object IDs (SHA-1 values).  Using these functions, which
take pointers to unsigned char, with struct object_id requires tiresome
access to the sha1 member, which bloats code and violates the desired
encapsulation.  Provide wrappers around these functions for struct
object_id for neater, more maintainable code.  Use the new constants to
avoid the hard-coded 20s and 40s throughout the original functions.

These functions simply call the underlying pointer-to-unsigned-char
versions to ensure that any performance improvements will be passed
through to the new functions.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-13 22:43:11 -07:00
5f7817c85d define a structure for object IDs
Many places throughout the code use "unsigned char [20]" to store object IDs
(SHA-1 values).  This leads to lots of hardcoded numbers throughout the
codebase.  It also leads to confusion about the purposes of a buffer.

Introduce a structure for object IDs.  This allows us to obtain the benefits
of compile-time checking for misuse.  The structure is expected to remain
the same size and have the same alignment requirements on all known
platforms, compared to the array of unsigned char, although this is not
required for correctness.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-13 22:43:11 -07:00
1e8fef609e untracked cache: guard and disable on system changes
If the user enables untracked cache, then

 - move worktree to an unsupported filesystem
 - or simply upgrade OS
 - or move the whole (portable) disk from one machine to another
 - or access a shared fs from another machine

there's no guarantee that untracked cache can still function properly.
Record the worktree location and OS footprint in the cache. If it
changes, err on the safe side and disable the cache. The user can
'update-index --untracked-cache' again to make sure all conditions are
met.

This adds a new requirement that setup_git_directory* must be called
before read_cache() because we need worktree location by then, or the
cache is dropped.

This change does not cover all bases, you can fool it if you try
hard. The point is to stop accidents.

Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:18 -07:00
aeb6f8b3a2 git-status.txt: advertisement for untracked cache
When a good user sees the "too long, consider -uno" advice when
running `git status`, they should check out the man page to find out
more. This change suggests they try untracked cache before -uno.

Helped-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:18 -07:00
7b6aff0655 mingw32: add uname()
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>
2015-03-12 13:45:18 -07:00
a3ddcefd97 t7063: tests for untracked cache
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:18 -07:00
f64cb88d35 update-index: test the system before enabling untracked cache
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-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>
2015-03-12 13:45:18 -07:00
9e5972413b update-index: manually enable or disable untracked cache
Overall time saving on "git status" is about 40% in the best case
scenario, removing ..collect_untracked() as the most time consuming
function. read and refresh index operations are now at the top (which
should drop when index-helper and/or watchman support is added). More
numbers and analysis below.

webkit.git
==========

169k files. 6k dirs. Lots of test data (i.e. not touched most of the
time)

Base status
-----------

Index version 4 in split index mode and cache-tree populated. No
untracked cache. It shows how time is consumed by "git status". The
same settings are used for other repos below.

18:28:10.199679 builtin/commit.c:1394   performance: 0.000000451 s: cmd_status:setup
18:28:10.474847 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.274873831 s: read_index
18:28:10.475295 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.000000656 s: read_index
18:28:10.728443 preload-index.c:131     performance: 0.253147487 s: read_index_preload
18:28:10.741422 read-cache.c:1254       performance: 0.012868340 s: refresh_index
18:28:10.752300 wt-status.c:623         performance: 0.010421357 s: wt_status_collect_changes_worktree
18:28:10.762069 wt-status.c:629         performance: 0.009644748 s: wt_status_collect_changes_index
18:28:11.601019 wt-status.c:632         performance: 0.838859547 s: wt_status_collect_untracked
18:28:11.605939 builtin/commit.c:1421   performance: 0.004835004 s: cmd_status:update_index
18:28:11.606580 trace.c:415             performance: 1.407878388 s: git command: 'git' 'status'

Populating status
-----------------

This is after enabling untracked cache and the cache is still empty.
We see a slight increase in .._collect_untracked() and update_index
(because new cache has to be written to $GIT_DIR/index).

18:28:18.915213 builtin/commit.c:1394   performance: 0.000000326 s: cmd_status:setup
18:28:19.197364 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.281901416 s: read_index
18:28:19.197754 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.000000546 s: read_index
18:28:19.451355 preload-index.c:131     performance: 0.253599607 s: read_index_preload
18:28:19.464400 read-cache.c:1254       performance: 0.012935336 s: refresh_index
18:28:19.475115 wt-status.c:623         performance: 0.010236920 s: wt_status_collect_changes_worktree
18:28:19.486022 wt-status.c:629         performance: 0.010801685 s: wt_status_collect_changes_index
18:28:20.362660 wt-status.c:632         performance: 0.876551366 s: wt_status_collect_untracked
18:28:20.396199 builtin/commit.c:1421   performance: 0.033447969 s: cmd_status:update_index
18:28:20.396939 trace.c:415             performance: 1.482695902 s: git command: 'git' 'status'

Populated status
----------------

After the cache is populated, wt_status_collect_untracked() drops 82%
from 0.838s to 0.144s. Overall time drops 45%. Top offenders are now
read_index() and read_index_preload().

18:28:20.408605 builtin/commit.c:1394   performance: 0.000000457 s: cmd_status:setup
18:28:20.692864 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.283980458 s: read_index
18:28:20.693273 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.000000661 s: read_index
18:28:20.958814 preload-index.c:131     performance: 0.265540254 s: read_index_preload
18:28:20.972375 read-cache.c:1254       performance: 0.013437429 s: refresh_index
18:28:20.983959 wt-status.c:623         performance: 0.011146646 s: wt_status_collect_changes_worktree
18:28:20.993948 wt-status.c:629         performance: 0.009879094 s: wt_status_collect_changes_index
18:28:21.138125 wt-status.c:632         performance: 0.144084737 s: wt_status_collect_untracked
18:28:21.173678 builtin/commit.c:1421   performance: 0.035463949 s: cmd_status:update_index
18:28:21.174251 trace.c:415             performance: 0.766707355 s: git command: 'git' 'status'

gentoo-x86.git
==============

This repository is a strange one with a balanced, wide and shallow
worktree (about 100k files and 23k dirs) and no .gitignore in
worktree. .._collect_untracked() time drops 88%, total time drops 56%.

Base status
-----------
18:20:40.828642 builtin/commit.c:1394   performance: 0.000000496 s: cmd_status:setup
18:20:41.027233 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.198130532 s: read_index
18:20:41.027670 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.000000581 s: read_index
18:20:41.171716 preload-index.c:131     performance: 0.144045594 s: read_index_preload
18:20:41.179171 read-cache.c:1254       performance: 0.007320424 s: refresh_index
18:20:41.185785 wt-status.c:623         performance: 0.006144638 s: wt_status_collect_changes_worktree
18:20:41.192701 wt-status.c:629         performance: 0.006780184 s: wt_status_collect_changes_index
18:20:41.991723 wt-status.c:632         performance: 0.798927029 s: wt_status_collect_untracked
18:20:41.994664 builtin/commit.c:1421   performance: 0.002852772 s: cmd_status:update_index
18:20:41.995458 trace.c:415             performance: 1.168427502 s: git command: 'git' 'status'
Populating status
-----------------
18:20:48.968848 builtin/commit.c:1394   performance: 0.000000380 s: cmd_status:setup
18:20:49.172918 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.203734214 s: read_index
18:20:49.173341 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.000000562 s: read_index
18:20:49.320013 preload-index.c:131     performance: 0.146671391 s: read_index_preload
18:20:49.328039 read-cache.c:1254       performance: 0.007921957 s: refresh_index
18:20:49.334680 wt-status.c:623         performance: 0.006172020 s: wt_status_collect_changes_worktree
18:20:49.342526 wt-status.c:629         performance: 0.007731746 s: wt_status_collect_changes_index
18:20:50.257510 wt-status.c:632         performance: 0.914864222 s: wt_status_collect_untracked
18:20:50.338371 builtin/commit.c:1421   performance: 0.080776477 s: cmd_status:update_index
18:20:50.338900 trace.c:415             performance: 1.371462446 s: git command: 'git' 'status'
Populated status
----------------
18:20:50.351160 builtin/commit.c:1394   performance: 0.000000571 s: cmd_status:setup
18:20:50.577358 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.225917338 s: read_index
18:20:50.577794 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.000000617 s: read_index
18:20:50.734140 preload-index.c:131     performance: 0.156345564 s: read_index_preload
18:20:50.745717 read-cache.c:1254       performance: 0.011463075 s: refresh_index
18:20:50.755176 wt-status.c:623         performance: 0.008877929 s: wt_status_collect_changes_worktree
18:20:50.763768 wt-status.c:629         performance: 0.008471633 s: wt_status_collect_changes_index
18:20:50.854885 wt-status.c:632         performance: 0.090988721 s: wt_status_collect_untracked
18:20:50.857765 builtin/commit.c:1421   performance: 0.002789097 s: cmd_status:update_index
18:20:50.858411 trace.c:415             performance: 0.508647673 s: git command: 'git' 'status'

linux-2.6
=========

Reference repo. Not too big. .._collect_status() drops 84%. Total time
drops 42%.

Base status
-----------
18:34:09.870122 builtin/commit.c:1394   performance: 0.000000385 s: cmd_status:setup
18:34:09.943218 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.072871177 s: read_index
18:34:09.943614 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.000000491 s: read_index
18:34:10.004364 preload-index.c:131     performance: 0.060748102 s: read_index_preload
18:34:10.008190 read-cache.c:1254       performance: 0.003714285 s: refresh_index
18:34:10.012087 wt-status.c:623         performance: 0.002775446 s: wt_status_collect_changes_worktree
18:34:10.016054 wt-status.c:629         performance: 0.003862140 s: wt_status_collect_changes_index
18:34:10.214747 wt-status.c:632         performance: 0.198604837 s: wt_status_collect_untracked
18:34:10.216102 builtin/commit.c:1421   performance: 0.001244166 s: cmd_status:update_index
18:34:10.216817 trace.c:415             performance: 0.347670735 s: git command: 'git' 'status'
Populating status
-----------------
18:34:16.595102 builtin/commit.c:1394   performance: 0.000000456 s: cmd_status:setup
18:34:16.666600 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.070992413 s: read_index
18:34:16.667012 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.000000606 s: read_index
18:34:16.729375 preload-index.c:131     performance: 0.062362492 s: read_index_preload
18:34:16.732565 read-cache.c:1254       performance: 0.003075517 s: refresh_index
18:34:16.736148 wt-status.c:623         performance: 0.002422201 s: wt_status_collect_changes_worktree
18:34:16.739990 wt-status.c:629         performance: 0.003746618 s: wt_status_collect_changes_index
18:34:16.948505 wt-status.c:632         performance: 0.208426710 s: wt_status_collect_untracked
18:34:16.961744 builtin/commit.c:1421   performance: 0.013151887 s: cmd_status:update_index
18:34:16.962233 trace.c:415             performance: 0.368537535 s: git command: 'git' 'status'
Populated status
----------------
18:34:16.970026 builtin/commit.c:1394   performance: 0.000000631 s: cmd_status:setup
18:34:17.046235 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.075904673 s: read_index
18:34:17.046644 read-cache.c:1407       performance: 0.000000681 s: read_index
18:34:17.113564 preload-index.c:131     performance: 0.066920253 s: read_index_preload
18:34:17.117281 read-cache.c:1254       performance: 0.003604055 s: refresh_index
18:34:17.121115 wt-status.c:623         performance: 0.002508345 s: wt_status_collect_changes_worktree
18:34:17.125089 wt-status.c:629         performance: 0.003871636 s: wt_status_collect_changes_index
18:34:17.156089 wt-status.c:632         performance: 0.030895703 s: wt_status_collect_untracked
18:34:17.169861 builtin/commit.c:1421   performance: 0.013686404 s: cmd_status:update_index
18:34:17.170391 trace.c:415             performance: 0.201474531 s: git command: 'git' 'status'

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:18 -07:00
226c051adb status: enable untracked cache
update_index_if_able() is moved down so that the updated untracked
cache could be written out.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:17 -07:00
76e6b090a0 untracked-cache: temporarily disable with $GIT_DISABLE_UNTRACKED_CACHE
This can be used to double check if results with untracked cache are
correctly, compared to vanilla version. Untracked cache remains in
index, but not used.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:17 -07:00
1bbb3dba3f untracked cache: mark index dirty if untracked cache is updated
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:17 -07:00
c9ccb5d327 untracked cache: print stats with $GIT_TRACE_UNTRACKED_STATS
This could be used to verify correct behavior in tests

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:17 -07:00
ed4efab1b1 untracked cache: avoid racy timestamps
When a directory is updated within the same second that its timestamp
is last saved, we cannot realize the directory has been updated by
checking timestamps. Assume the worst (something is update). See
29e4d36 (Racy GIT - 2005-12-20) for more information.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:17 -07:00
2bb4cda198 read-cache.c: split racy stat test to a separate function
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:17 -07:00
83c094ad0d untracked cache: save to an index extension
Helped-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:16 -07:00
e931371a8f untracked cache: invalidate at index addition or removal
Ideally we should implement untracked_cache_remove_from_index() and
untracked_cache_add_to_index() so that they update untracked cache
right away instead of invalidating it and wait for read_directory()
next time to deal with it. But that may need some more work in
unpack-trees.c. So stay simple as the first step.

The new call in add_index_entry_with_check() may look strange because
new calls usually stay close to cache_tree_invalidate_path(). We do it
a bit later than c_t_i_p() in this function because if it's about
replacing the entry with the same name, we don't care (but cache-tree
does).

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:16 -07:00
be0d9d5323 ewah: add convenient wrapper ewah_serialize_strbuf()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:16 -07:00
f9e6c64958 untracked cache: load from UNTR index extension
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:16 -07:00
27b099ae87 untracked cache: don't open non-existent .gitignore
This cuts down a signficant number of open(.gitignore) because most
directories usually don't have .gitignore files.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:16 -07:00
26cb0182b8 untracked cache: mark what dirs should be recursed/saved
If we redo this thing in a functional style, we would have one struct
untracked_dir as input tree and another as output. The input is used
for verification. The output is a brand new tree, reflecting current
worktree.

But that means recreate a lot of dir nodes even if a lot could be
shared between input and output trees in good cases. So we go with the
messy but efficient way, combining both input and output trees into
one. We need a way to know which node in this combined tree belongs to
the output. This is the purpose of this "recurse" flag.

"valid" bit can't be used for this because it's about data of the node
except the subdirs. When we invalidate a directory, we want to keep
cached data of the subdirs intact even though we don't really know
what subdir still exists (yet). Then we check worktree to see what
actual subdir remains on disk. Those will have 'recurse' bit set
again. If cached data for those are still valid, we may be able to
avoid computing exclude files for them. Those subdirs that are deleted
will have 'recurse' remained clear and their 'valid' bits do not
matter.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:16 -07:00
91a2288b5f untracked cache: record/validate dir mtime and reuse cached output
The main readdir loop in read_directory_recursive() is replaced with a
new one that checks if cached results of a directory is still valid.

If a file is added or removed from the index, the containing directory
is invalidated (but not its subdirs). If directory's mtime is changed,
the same happens. If a .gitignore is updated, the containing directory
and all subdirs are invalidated recursively. If dir_struct#flags or
other conditions change, the cache is ignored.

If a directory is invalidated, we opendir/readdir/closedir and run the
exclude machinery on that directory listing as usual. If untracked
cache is also enabled, we'll update the cache along the way. If a
directory is validated, we simply pull the untracked listing out from
the cache. The cache also records the list of direct subdirs that we
have to recurse in. Fully excluded directories are seen as "untracked
files".

In the best case when no dirs are invalidated, read_directory()
becomes a series of

  stat(dir), open(.gitignore), fstat(), read(), close() and optionally
  hash_sha1_file()

For comparison, standard read_directory() is a sequence of

  opendir(), readdir(), open(.gitignore), fstat(), read(), close(), the
  expensive last_exclude_matching() and closedir().

We already try not to open(.gitignore) if we know it does not exist,
so open/fstat/read/close sequence does not apply to every
directory. The sequence could be reduced further, as noted in
prep_exclude() in another patch. So in theory, the entire best-case
read_directory sequence could be reduced to a series of stat() and
nothing else.

This is not a silver bullet approach. When you compile a C file, for
example, the old .o file is removed and a new one with the same name
created, effectively invalidating the containing directory's cache
(but not its subdirectories). If your build process touches every
directory, this cache adds extra overhead for nothing, so it's a good
idea to separate generated files from tracked files.. Editors may use
the same strategy for saving files. And of course you're out of luck
running your repo on an unsupported filesystem and/or operating system.

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>
2015-03-12 13:45:15 -07:00
cf7c61484f untracked cache: make a wrapper around {open,read,close}dir()
This allows us to feed different info to read_directory_recursive()
based on untracked cache in the next patch.

Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:15 -07:00
5ebf79ad4b untracked cache: invalidate dirs recursively if .gitignore changes
It's easy to see that if an existing .gitignore changes, its SHA-1
would be different and invalidate_gitignore() is called.

If .gitignore is removed, add_excludes() will treat it like an empty
.gitignore, which again should invalidate the cached directory data.

if .gitignore is added, lookup_untracked() already fills initial
.gitignore SHA-1 as "empty file", so again invalidate_gitignore() is
called.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:15 -07:00
ccad261f07 untracked cache: initial untracked cache validation
Make sure the starting conditions and all global exclude files are
good to go. If not, either disable untracked cache completely, or wipe
out the cache and start fresh.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:15 -07:00
0dcb8d7fe0 untracked cache: record .gitignore information and dir hierarchy
The idea is if we can capture all input and (non-rescursive) output of
read_directory_recursive(), and can verify later that all the input is
the same, then the second r_d_r() should produce the same output as in
the first run.

The requirement for this to work is stat info of a directory MUST
change if an entry is added to or removed from that directory (and
should not change often otherwise). If your OS and filesystem do not
meet this requirement, untracked cache is not for you. Most file
systems on *nix should be fine. On Windows, NTFS is fine while FAT may
not be [1] even though FAT on Linux seems to be fine.

The list of input of r_d_r() is in the big comment block in dir.h. In
short, the output of a directory (not counting subdirs) mainly depends
on stat info of the directory in question, all .gitignore leading to
it and the check_only flag when r_d_r() is called recursively. This
patch records all this info (and the output) as r_d_r() runs.

Two hash_sha1_file() are required for $GIT_DIR/info/exclude and
core.excludesfile unless their stat data matches. hash_sha1_file() is
only needed when .gitignore files in the worktree are modified,
otherwise their SHA-1 in index is used (see the previous patch).

We could store stat data for .gitignore files so we don't have to
rehash them if their content is different from index, but I think
.gitignore files are rarely modified, so not worth extra cache data
(and hashing penalty read-cache.c:verify_hdr(), as we will be storing
this as an index extension).

The implication is, if you change .gitignore, you better add it to the
index soon or you lose all the benefit of untracked cache because a
modified .gitignore invalidates all subdirs recursively. This is
especially bad for .gitignore at root.

This cached output is about untracked files only, not ignored files
because the number of tracked files is usually small, so small cache
overhead, while the number of ignored files could go really high
(e.g. *.o files mixing with source code).

[1] "Description of NTFS date and time stamps for files and folders"
    http://support.microsoft.com/kb/299648

Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Helped-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>
2015-03-12 13:45:14 -07:00
55fe6f51f4 dir.c: optionally compute sha-1 of a .gitignore file
This is not used anywhere yet. But the goal is to compare quickly if a
.gitignore file has changed when we have the SHA-1 of both old (cached
somewhere) and new (from index or a tree) versions.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-12 13:45:08 -07:00
417305764a index-pack: reduce object_entry size to save memory
For each object in the input pack, we need one struct object_entry. On
x86-64, this struct is 64 bytes long. Although:

 - The 8 bytes for delta_depth and base_object_no are only useful when
   show_stat is set. And it's never set unless someone is debugging.

 - The three fields hdr_size, type and real_type take 4 bytes each
   even though they never use more than 4 bits.

By moving delta_depth and base_object_no out of struct object_entry
and make the other 3 fields one byte long instead of 4, we shrink 25%
of this struct.

On a 3.4M object repo (*) that's about 53MB. The saving is less
impressive compared to index-pack memory use for basic bookkeeping (**),
about 16%.

(*) linux-2.6.git already has 4M objects as of v3.19-rc7 so this is
not an unrealistic number of objects that we have to deal with.

(**)  3.4M * (sizeof(object_entry) + sizeof(delta_entry)) = 311MB

Brought-up-by: Matthew Sporleder <msporleder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-02-27 12:23:25 -08:00
ecf2ff6ace t2026 needs procondition SANITY
When running t0026 as root 'prune directories with unreadable gitdir' fails.
Skip this test if SANITY is not set (the use of POSIXPERM is wrong here)

Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-27 14:20:47 -08:00
a83a66aca2 git-checkout.txt: a note about multiple checkout support for submodules
The goal seems to be using multiple checkouts to reduce disk space.
But we have not reached an agreement how things should be. There are a
couple options.

 - You may want to keep $SUB repos elsewhere (perhaps in a central
   place) outside $SUPER. This is also true for nested submodules
   where a superproject may be a submodule of another superproject.

 - You may want to keep all $SUB repos in $SUPER/modules (or some
   other place in $SUPER)

 - We could even push it further and merge all $SUB repos into $SUPER
   instead of storing them separately. But that would at least require
   ref namespace enabled.

On top of that, git-submodule.sh expects $GIT_DIR/config to be
per-worktree, at least for the submodule.* part. Here I think we have
two options, either update config.c to also read
$GIT_DIR/config.worktree (which is per worktree) in addition to
$GIT_DIR/config (shared) and store worktree-specific vars in the new
place, or update git-submodule.sh to read/write submodule.* directly
from $GIT_DIR/config.submodule (per worktree).

These take time to address properly. Meanwhile, make a note to the
user that they should not use multiple worktrees in submodule context.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 10:25:20 -08:00
1d0fa898ea checkout: add --ignore-other-wortrees
Noticed-by: Mark Levedahl <mlevedahl@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 10:23:08 -08:00
10f102be21 checkout: pass whole struct to parse_branchname_arg instead of individual flags
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-01-07 10:23:04 -08:00
df56607dff git-common-dir: make "modules/" per-working-directory directory
Each working directory of main repository has its own working directory
of submodule, and in most cases they should be checked out to different
revisions. So they should be separated.

It looks logical to make submodule instances in different working
directories to reuse the submodule directory in the common dir of
the main repository, and probably this is how "checkout --to" should
initialize them called on the main repository, but they also should work
fine being completely separated clones.

Testfile t7410-submodule-checkout-to.sh demostrates the behavior.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:19 -08:00
ee4fb8435e checkout: do not fail if target is an empty directory
Non-recursive checkout creates empty directpries in place of submodules.
If then I try to "checkout --to" submodules there, it refuses to do so,
because directory already exists.

Fix by allowing checking out to empty directory. Add test and modify the
existing one so that it uses non-empty directory.

Signed-off-by: Max Kirillov <max@max630.net>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:19 -08:00
ad35f61518 t2025: add a test to make sure grafts is working from a linked checkout
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:19 -08:00
3473ad0cf6 checkout: don't require a work tree when checking out into a new one
For normal use cases, it does not make sense for 'checkout' to work on
a bare repository, without a worktree. But "checkout --to" is an
exception because it _creates_ a new worktree. Allow this option to
run on bare repositories.

People who check out from a bare repository should remember that
core.logallrefupdates is off by default and it should be turned back
on. `--to` cannot do this automatically behind the user's back because
some user may deliberately want no reflog.

For people interested in repository setup/discovery code,
is_bare_repository_cfg (aka "core.bare") is unchanged by this patch,
which means 'true' by default for bare repos. Fortunately when we get
the repo through a linked checkout, is_bare_repository_cfg is never
used. So all is still good.

[nd: commit message]

Signed-off-by: Dennis Kaarsemaker <dennis@kaarsemaker.net>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:18 -08:00
6cfbdcb2ab git_path(): keep "info/sparse-checkout" per work-tree
Currently git_path("info/sparse-checkout") resolves to
$GIT_COMMON_DIR/info/sparse-checkout in multiple worktree mode. It
makes more sense for the sparse checkout patterns to be per worktree,
so you can have multiple checkouts with different parts of the tree.

With this, "git checkout --to <new>" on a sparse checkout will create
<new> as a full checkout. Which is expected, it's how a new checkout
is made. The user can reshape the worktree afterwards.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:18 -08:00
77a6d84045 count-objects: report unused files in $GIT_DIR/worktrees/...
In linked checkouts, borrowed parts like config is taken from
$GIT_COMMON_DIR. $GIT_DIR/config is never used. Report them as
garbage.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:18 -08:00
e3df33bb1b gc: support prune --worktrees
Helped-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:18 -08:00
09dbb90b09 gc: factor out gc.pruneexpire parsing code
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:17 -08:00
2cfe2a7878 gc: style change -- no SP before closing parenthesis
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:17 -08:00
3b8925c78b checkout: clean up half-prepared directories in --to mode
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:17 -08:00
5883034c61 checkout: reject if the branch is already checked out elsewhere
One branch obviously can't be checked out at two places (but detached
heads are ok). Give the user a choice in this case: --detach, -b
new-branch, switch branch in the other checkout first or simply 'cd'
and continue to work there.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:17 -08:00
23af91d102 prune: strategies for linked checkouts
(alias R=$GIT_COMMON_DIR/worktrees/<id>)

 - linked checkouts are supposed to keep its location in $R/gitdir up
   to date. The use case is auto fixup after a manual checkout move.

 - linked checkouts are supposed to update mtime of $R/gitdir. If
   $R/gitdir's mtime is older than a limit, and it points to nowhere,
   worktrees/<id> is to be pruned.

 - If $R/locked exists, worktrees/<id> is not supposed to be pruned. If
   $R/locked exists and $R/gitdir's mtime is older than a really long
   limit, warn about old unused repo.

 - "git checkout --to" is supposed to make a hard link named $R/link
   pointing to the .git file on supported file systems to help detect
   the user manually deleting the checkout. If $R/link exists and its
   link count is greated than 1, the repo is kept.

Helped-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:17 -08:00
529fef20cf checkout: support checking out into a new working directory
"git checkout --to" sets up a new working directory with a .git file
pointing to $GIT_DIR/worktrees/<id>. It then executes "git checkout"
again on the new worktree with the same arguments except "--to" is
taken out. The second checkout execution, which is not contaminated
with any info from the current repository, will actually check out and
everything that normal "git checkout" does.

Helped-by: Marc Branchaud <marcnarc@xiplink.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:16 -08:00
91aacda85a use new wrapper write_file() for simple file writing
This fixes common problems in these code about error handling,
forgetting to close the file handle after fprintf() fails, or not
printing out the error string..

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:16 -08:00
316e53e68c wrapper.c: wrapper to open a file, fprintf then close
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:16 -08:00
31e26ebcb5 setup.c: support multi-checkout repo setup
The repo setup procedure is updated to detect $GIT_DIR/commondir and
set $GIT_COMMON_DIR properly.

The core.worktree is ignored when $GIT_COMMON_DIR is set. This is
because the config file is shared in multi-checkout setup, but
checkout directories _are_ different. Making core.worktree effective
in all checkouts mean it's back to a single checkout.

Helped-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:15 -08:00
e61a509a49 setup.c: detect $GIT_COMMON_DIR check_repository_format_gently()
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:15 -08:00
7d0fb0da95 setup.c: convert check_repository_format_gently to use strbuf
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:15 -08:00
4dc4e1457e setup.c: detect $GIT_COMMON_DIR in is_git_directory()
If the file "$GIT_DIR/commondir" exists, it contains the value of
$GIT_COMMON_DIR.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:14 -08:00
1d186b6f35 setup.c: convert is_git_directory() to use strbuf
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:14 -08:00
337959b491 git-stash: avoid hardcoding $GIT_DIR/logs/....
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:14 -08:00
b849b954d2 *.sh: avoid hardcoding $GIT_DIR/hooks/...
If $GIT_COMMON_DIR is set, it should be $GIT_COMMON_DIR/hooks/, not
$GIT_DIR/hooks/. Just let rev-parse --git-path handle it.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:13 -08:00
3bc518084a git-sh-setup.sh: use rev-parse --git-path to get $GIT_DIR/objects
If $GIT_COMMON_DIR is set, $GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY should be
$GIT_COMMON_DIR/objects, not $GIT_DIR/objects. Just let rev-parse
--git-path handle it.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:13 -08:00
c7b3a3d2fe $GIT_COMMON_DIR: a new environment variable
This variable is intended to support multiple working directories
attached to a repository. Such a repository may have a main working
directory, created by either "git init" or "git clone" and one or more
linked working directories. These working directories and the main
repository share the same repository directory.

In linked working directories, $GIT_COMMON_DIR must be defined to point
to the real repository directory and $GIT_DIR points to an unused
subdirectory inside $GIT_COMMON_DIR. File locations inside the
repository are reorganized from the linked worktree view point:

 - worktree-specific such as HEAD, logs/HEAD, index, other top-level
   refs and unrecognized files are from $GIT_DIR.

 - the rest like objects, refs, info, hooks, packed-refs, shallow...
   are from $GIT_COMMON_DIR (except info/sparse-checkout, but that's
   a separate patch)

Scripts are supposed to retrieve paths in $GIT_DIR with "git rev-parse
--git-path", which will take care of "$GIT_DIR vs $GIT_COMMON_DIR"
business.

The redirection is done by git_path(), git_pathdup() and
strbuf_git_path(). The selected list of paths goes to $GIT_COMMON_DIR,
not the other way around in case a developer adds a new
worktree-specific file and it's accidentally promoted to be shared
across repositories (this includes unknown files added by third party
commands)

The list of known files that belong to $GIT_DIR are:

ADD_EDIT.patch BISECT_ANCESTORS_OK BISECT_EXPECTED_REV BISECT_LOG
BISECT_NAMES CHERRY_PICK_HEAD COMMIT_MSG FETCH_HEAD HEAD MERGE_HEAD
MERGE_MODE MERGE_RR NOTES_EDITMSG NOTES_MERGE_WORKTREE ORIG_HEAD
REVERT_HEAD SQUASH_MSG TAG_EDITMSG fast_import_crash_* logs/HEAD
next-index-* rebase-apply rebase-merge rsync-refs-* sequencer/*
shallow_*

Path mapping is NOT done for git_path_submodule(). Multi-checkouts are
not supported as submodules.

Helped-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:13 -08:00
af07b20d51 commit: use SEQ_DIR instead of hardcoding "sequencer"
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:12 -08:00
aaa26805ad fast-import: use git_path() for accessing .git dir instead of get_git_dir()
This allows git_path() to redirect info/fast-import to another place
if needed

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:12 -08:00
1fdc2abf1b reflog: avoid constructing .lock path with git_path
Among pathnames in $GIT_DIR, e.g. "index" or "packed-refs", we want to
automatically and silently map some of them to the $GIT_DIR of the
repository we are borrowing from via $GIT_COMMON_DIR mechanism.  When
we formulate the pathname for its lockfile, we want it to be in the
same location as its final destination.  "index" is not shared and
needs to remain in the borrowing repository, while "packed-refs" is
shared and needs to go to the borrowed repository.

git_path() could be taught about the ".lock" suffix and map
"index.lock" and "packed-refs.lock" the same way their basenames are
mapped, but instead the caller can help by asking where the basename
(e.g. "index") is mapped to git_path() and then appending ".lock"
after the mapping is done.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:12 -08:00
c697b577a2 *.sh: respect $GIT_INDEX_FILE
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:12 -08:00
557bd833bb git_path(): be aware of file relocation in $GIT_DIR
We allow the user to relocate certain paths out of $GIT_DIR via
environment variables, e.g. GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY, GIT_INDEX_FILE and
GIT_GRAFT_FILE. Callers are not supposed to use git_path() or
git_pathdup() to get those paths. Instead they must use
get_object_directory(), get_index_file() and get_graft_file()
respectively. This is inconvenient and could be missed in review (for
example, there's git_path("objects/info/alternates") somewhere in
sha1_file.c).

This patch makes git_path() and git_pathdup() understand those
environment variables. So if you set GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY to /foo/bar,
git_path("objects/abc") should return /foo/bar/abc. The same is done
for the two remaining env variables.

"git rev-parse --git-path" is the wrapper for script use.

This patch kinda reverts a0279e1 (setup_git_env: use git_pathdup
instead of xmalloc + sprintf - 2014-06-19) because using git_pathdup
here would result in infinite recursion:

  setup_git_env() -> git_pathdup("objects") -> .. -> adjust_git_path()
  -> get_object_directory() -> oops, git_object_directory is NOT set
  yet -> setup_git_env()

I wanted to make git_pathdup_literal() that skips adjust_git_path().
But that won't work because later on when $GIT_COMMON_DIR is
introduced, git_pathdup_literal("objects") needs adjust_git_path() to
replace $GIT_DIR with $GIT_COMMON_DIR.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:11 -08:00
57a23b770a path.c: group git_path(), git_pathdup() and strbuf_git_path() together
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:11 -08:00
8afdaf39e3 path.c: rename vsnpath() to do_git_path()
The name vsnpath() gives an impression that this is general path
handling function. It's not. This is the underlying implementation of
git_path(), git_pathdup() and strbuf_git_path() which will prefix
$GIT_DIR in the result string.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:11 -08:00
1a83c240f2 git_snpath(): retire and replace with strbuf_git_path()
In the previous patch, git_snpath() is modified to allocate a new
strbuf buffer because vsnpath() needs that. But that makes it
awkward because git_snpath() receives a pre-allocated buffer from
outside and has to copy data back. Rename it to strbuf_git_path()
and make it receive strbuf directly.

Using git_path() in update_refs_for_switch() which used to call
git_snpath() is safe because that function and all of its callers do
not keep any pointer to the round-robin buffer pool allocated by
get_pathname().

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:11 -08:00
dcf692625a path.c: make get_pathname() call sites return const char *
Before the previous commit, get_pathname returns an array of PATH_MAX
length. Even if git_path() and similar functions does not use the
whole array, git_path() caller can, in theory.

After the commit, get_pathname() may return a buffer that has just
enough room for the returned string and git_path() caller should never
write beyond that.

Make git_path(), mkpath() and git_path_submodule() return a const
buffer to make sure callers do not write in it at all.

This could have been part of the previous commit, but the "const"
conversion is too much distraction from the core changes in path.c.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:10 -08:00
4ef9caf543 path.c: make get_pathname() return strbuf instead of static buffer
We've been avoiding PATH_MAX whenever possible. This patch makes
get_pathname() return a strbuf and updates the callers to take
advantage of this. The code is simplified as we no longer need to
worry about buffer overflow.

vsnpath() behavior is changed slightly: previously it always clears
the buffer before writing, now it just appends. Fortunately this is a
static function and all of its callers prepare the buffer properly:
git_path() gets the buffer from get_pathname() which resets the
buffer, the remaining call sites start with STRBUF_INIT'd buffer.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-12-01 11:00:10 -08:00
1181 changed files with 157101 additions and 63501 deletions

2
.gitattributes vendored
View File

@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
* whitespace=!indent,trail,space
*.[ch] whitespace=indent,trail,space
*.[ch] whitespace=indent,trail,space diff=cpp
*.sh whitespace=indent,trail,space

32
.gitignore vendored
View File

@ -155,6 +155,7 @@
/git-status
/git-stripspace
/git-submodule
/git-submodule--helper
/git-svn
/git-symbolic-ref
/git-tag
@ -171,42 +172,13 @@
/git-verify-tag
/git-web--browse
/git-whatchanged
/git-worktree
/git-write-tree
/git-core-*/?*
/gitweb/GITWEB-BUILD-OPTIONS
/gitweb/gitweb.cgi
/gitweb/static/gitweb.js
/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
/test-mergesort
/test-mktemp
/test-parse-options
/test-path-utils
/test-prio-queue
/test-read-cache
/test-regex
/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
*.dsc

View File

@ -33,6 +33,7 @@ Cheng Renquan <crquan@gmail.com>
Chris Shoemaker <c.shoemaker@cox.net>
Chris Wright <chrisw@sous-sol.org> <chrisw@osdl.org>
Cord Seele <cowose@gmail.com> <cowose@googlemail.com>
Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org> <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Christian Stimming <stimming@tuhh.de> <chs@ckiste.goetheallee>
Csaba Henk <csaba@gluster.com> <csaba@lowlife.hu>
Dan Johnson <computerdruid@gmail.com>
@ -46,11 +47,14 @@ David D. Kilzer <ddkilzer@kilzer.net>
David Kågedal <davidk@lysator.liu.se>
David Reiss <dreiss@facebook.com> <dreiss@dreiss-vmware.(none)>
David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
David Turner <novalis@novalis.org> <dturner@twopensource.com>
David Turner <novalis@novalis.org> <dturner@twosigma.com>
Deskin Miller <deskinm@umich.edu>
Dirk Süsserott <newsletter@dirk.my1.cc>
Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> <ebb9@byu.net>
Eric Hanchrow <eric.hanchrow@gmail.com> <offby1@blarg.net>
Eric S. Raymond <esr@thyrsus.com>
Eric Wong <e@80x24.org> <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com> <kusmabite@googlemail.com>
Eyvind Bernhardsen <eyvind.bernhardsen@gmail.com> <eyvind-git@orakel.ntnu.no>
Florian Achleitner <florian.achleitner.2.6.31@gmail.com> <florian.achleitner2.6.31@gmail.com>
@ -186,7 +190,7 @@ Philip Jägenstedt <philip@foolip.org> <philip.jagenstedt@gmail.com>
Philipp A. Hartmann <pah@qo.cx> <ph@sorgh.de>
Philippe Bruhat <book@cpan.org>
Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com> <ralf.thielow@googlemail.com>
Ramsay Allan Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com> <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de> <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Robert Fitzsimons <robfitz@273k.net>
Robert Shearman <robertshearman@gmail.com> <rob@codeweavers.com>

123
.travis.yml Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,123 @@
language: c
sudo: false
cache:
directories:
- $HOME/travis-cache
os:
- linux
- osx
compiler:
- clang
- gcc
addons:
apt:
packages:
- language-pack-is
- git-svn
- apache2
env:
global:
- DEVELOPER=1
# The Linux build installs the defined dependency versions below.
# The OS X build installs the latest available versions. Keep that
# in mind when you encounter a broken OS X build!
- LINUX_P4_VERSION="16.1"
- LINUX_GIT_LFS_VERSION="1.2.0"
- DEFAULT_TEST_TARGET=prove
- GIT_PROVE_OPTS="--timer --jobs 3 --state=failed,slow,save"
- GIT_TEST_OPTS="--verbose-log"
- GIT_TEST_CLONE_2GB=YesPlease
# t9810 occasionally fails on Travis CI OS X
# t9816 occasionally fails with "TAP out of sequence errors" on Travis CI OS X
- GIT_SKIP_TESTS="t9810 t9816"
matrix:
include:
- env: Documentation
os: linux
compiler: clang
addons:
apt:
packages:
- asciidoc
- xmlto
before_install:
before_script:
script: ci/test-documentation.sh
after_failure:
before_install:
- >
case "${TRAVIS_OS_NAME:-linux}" in
linux)
export GIT_TEST_HTTPD=YesPlease
mkdir --parents custom/p4
pushd custom/p4
wget --quiet http://filehost.perforce.com/perforce/r$LINUX_P4_VERSION/bin.linux26x86_64/p4d
wget --quiet http://filehost.perforce.com/perforce/r$LINUX_P4_VERSION/bin.linux26x86_64/p4
chmod u+x p4d
chmod u+x p4
export PATH="$(pwd):$PATH"
popd
mkdir --parents custom/git-lfs
pushd custom/git-lfs
wget --quiet https://github.com/github/git-lfs/releases/download/v$LINUX_GIT_LFS_VERSION/git-lfs-linux-amd64-$LINUX_GIT_LFS_VERSION.tar.gz
tar --extract --gunzip --file "git-lfs-linux-amd64-$LINUX_GIT_LFS_VERSION.tar.gz"
cp git-lfs-$LINUX_GIT_LFS_VERSION/git-lfs .
export PATH="$(pwd):$PATH"
popd
;;
osx)
brew_force_set_latest_binary_hash () {
FORMULA=$1
SHA=$(brew fetch --force $FORMULA 2>&1 | grep ^SHA256: | cut -d ' ' -f 2)
sed -E -i.bak "s/sha256 \"[0-9a-f]{64}\"/sha256 \"$SHA\"/g" \
"$(brew --repository homebrew/homebrew-binary)/$FORMULA.rb"
}
brew update --quiet
brew tap homebrew/binary --quiet
brew_force_set_latest_binary_hash perforce
brew_force_set_latest_binary_hash perforce-server
# Uncomment this if you want to run perf tests:
# brew install gnu-time
brew install git-lfs perforce-server perforce gettext
brew link --force gettext
;;
esac;
echo "$(tput setaf 6)Perforce Server Version$(tput sgr0)";
p4d -V | grep Rev.;
echo "$(tput setaf 6)Perforce Client Version$(tput sgr0)";
p4 -V | grep Rev.;
echo "$(tput setaf 6)Git-LFS Version$(tput sgr0)";
git-lfs version;
mkdir -p $HOME/travis-cache;
ln -s $HOME/travis-cache/.prove t/.prove;
before_script: make --jobs=2
script: make --quiet test
after_failure:
- >
: '<-- Click here to see detailed test output! ';
for TEST_EXIT in t/test-results/*.exit;
do
if [ "$(cat "$TEST_EXIT")" != "0" ];
then
TEST_OUT="${TEST_EXIT%exit}out";
echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------";
echo "$(tput setaf 1)${TEST_OUT}...$(tput sgr0)";
echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------";
cat "${TEST_OUT}";
fi;
done;
notifications:
email: false

View File

@ -171,6 +171,11 @@ For C programs:
- We try to keep to at most 80 characters per line.
- As a Git developer we assume you have a reasonably modern compiler
and we recommend you to enable the DEVELOPER makefile knob to
ensure your patch is clear of all compiler warnings we care about,
by e.g. "echo DEVELOPER=1 >>config.mak".
- We try to support a wide range of C compilers to compile Git with,
including old ones. That means that you should not use C99
initializers, even if a lot of compilers grok it.
@ -521,12 +526,20 @@ Writing Documentation:
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.
Literal examples (e.g. use of command-line options, command names,
branch names, configuration and environment variables) must be
typeset in monospace (i.e. wrapped with backticks):
`--pretty=oneline`
`git rev-list`
`remote.pushDefault`
`GIT_DIR`
`HEAD`
An environment variable must be prefixed with "$" only when referring to its
value and not when referring to the variable itself, in this case there is
nothing to add except the backticks:
`GIT_DIR` is specified
`$GIT_DIR/hooks/pre-receive`
Word phrases enclosed in `backtick characters` are rendered literally
and will not be further expanded. The use of `backticks` to achieve the

View File

@ -76,6 +76,7 @@ TECH_DOCS += technical/protocol-common
TECH_DOCS += technical/racy-git
TECH_DOCS += technical/send-pack-pipeline
TECH_DOCS += technical/shallow
TECH_DOCS += technical/signature-format
TECH_DOCS += technical/trivial-merge
SP_ARTICLES += $(TECH_DOCS)
SP_ARTICLES += technical/api-index
@ -146,7 +147,7 @@ else
ASCIIDOC_EXTRA += -a git-asciidoc-no-roff
endif
endif
ifdef MAN_BOLD_LITERAL
ifndef NO_MAN_BOLD_LITERAL
XMLTO_EXTRA += -m manpage-bold-literal.xsl
endif
ifdef DOCBOOK_SUPPRESS_SP
@ -204,6 +205,7 @@ ifndef V
QUIET_DBLATEX = @echo ' ' DBLATEX $@;
QUIET_XSLTPROC = @echo ' ' XSLTPROC $@;
QUIET_GEN = @echo ' ' GEN $@;
QUIET_LINT = @echo ' ' LINT $@;
QUIET_STDERR = 2> /dev/null
QUIET_SUBDIR0 = +@subdir=
QUIET_SUBDIR1 = ;$(NO_SUBDIR) echo ' ' SUBDIR $$subdir; \
@ -427,4 +429,7 @@ quick-install-html: require-htmlrepo
print-man1:
@for i in $(MAN1_TXT); do echo $$i; done
lint-docs::
$(QUIET_LINT)$(PERL_PATH) lint-gitlink.perl
.PHONY: FORCE

View File

@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ Updates since v1.7.6
logic used by "git diff" to determine the hunk header.
* Invoking the low-level "git http-fetch" without "-a" option (which
git itself never did---normal users should not have to worry about
git itself never did--normal users should not have to worry about
this) is now deprecated.
* The "--decorate" option to "git log" and its family learned to

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
Git v1.8.3.1 Release Notes
========================
==========================
Fixes since v1.8.3
------------------

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
Git v1.8.4.1 Release Notes
========================
==========================
Fixes since v1.8.4
------------------

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
Git v1.8.4.2 Release Notes
========================
==========================
Fixes since v1.8.4.1
--------------------

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
Git v1.8.4.3 Release Notes
========================
==========================
Fixes since v1.8.4.2
--------------------

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
Git v1.8.4.4 Release Notes
========================
==========================
Fixes since v1.8.4.3
--------------------

View File

@ -177,7 +177,7 @@ Performance, Internal Implementation, etc.
* 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
result is represented--packing the same set of objects using
different settings (or delta order) would produce a pack with
different name.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,675 @@
Git 2.10 Release Notes
======================
Backward compatibility notes
----------------------------
Updates since v2.9
------------------
UI, Workflows & Features
* "git pull --rebase --verify-signature" learned to warn the user
that "--verify-signature" is a no-op when rebasing.
* An upstream project can make a recommendation to shallowly clone
some submodules in the .gitmodules file it ships.
* "git worktree add" learned that '-' can be used as a short-hand for
"@{-1}", the previous branch.
* Update the funcname definition to support css files.
* The completion script (in contrib/) learned to complete "git
status" options.
* Messages that are generated by auto gc during "git push" on the
receiving end are now passed back to the sending end in such a way
that they are shown with "remote: " prefix to avoid confusing the
users.
* "git add -i/-p" learned to honor diff.compactionHeuristic
experimental knob, so that the user can work on the same hunk split
as "git diff" output.
* "upload-pack" allows a custom "git pack-objects" replacement when
responding to "fetch/clone" via the uploadpack.packObjectsHook.
(merge b738396 jk/upload-pack-hook later to maint).
* Teach format-patch and mailsplit (hence "am") how a line that
happens to begin with "From " in the e-mail message is quoted with
">", so that these lines can be restored to their original shape.
(merge d9925d1 ew/mboxrd-format-am later to maint).
* "git repack" learned the "--keep-unreachable" option, which sends
loose unreachable objects to a pack instead of leaving them loose.
This helps heuristics based on the number of loose objects
(e.g. "gc --auto").
(merge e26a8c4 jk/repack-keep-unreachable later to maint).
* "log --graph --format=" learned that "%>|(N)" specifies the width
relative to the terminal's left edge, not relative to the area to
draw text that is to the right of the ancestry-graph section. It
also now accepts negative N that means the column limit is relative
to the right border.
* A careless invocation of "git send-email directory/" after editing
0001-change.patch with an editor often ends up sending both
0001-change.patch and its backup file, 0001-change.patch~, causing
embarrassment and a minor confusion. Detect such an input and
offer to skip the backup files when sending the patches out.
(merge 531220b jc/send-email-skip-backup later to maint).
* "git submodule update" that drives many "git clone" could
eventually hit flaky servers/network conditions on one of the
submodules; the command learned to retry the attempt.
* The output coloring scheme learned two new attributes, italic and
strike, in addition to existing bold, reverse, etc.
* "git log" learns log.showSignature configuration variable, and a
command line option "--no-show-signature" to countermand it.
(merge fce04c3 mj/log-show-signature-conf later to maint).
* More markings of messages for i18n, with updates to various tests
to pass GETTEXT_POISON tests.
* "git archive" learned to handle files that are larger than 8GB and
commits far in the future than expressible by the traditional US-TAR
format.
(merge 560b0e8 jk/big-and-future-archive-tar later to maint).
* A new configuration variable core.sshCommand has been added to
specify what value for GIT_SSH_COMMAND to use per repository.
* "git worktree prune" protected worktrees that are marked as
"locked" by creating a file in a known location. "git worktree"
command learned a dedicated command pair to create and remove such
a file, so that the users do not have to do this with editor.
* A handful of "git svn" updates.
* "git push" learned to accept and pass extra options to the
receiving end so that hooks can read and react to them.
* "git status" learned to suggest "merge --abort" during a conflicted
merge, just like it already suggests "rebase --abort" during a
conflicted rebase.
* "git jump" script (in contrib/) has been updated a bit.
(merge a91e692 jk/git-jump later to maint).
* "git push" and "git clone" learned to give better progress meters
to the end user who is waiting on the terminal.
* An entry "git log --decorate" for the tip of the current branch is
shown as "HEAD -> name" (where "name" is the name of the branch);
the arrow is now painted in the same color as "HEAD", not in the
color for commits.
* "git format-patch" learned format.from configuration variable to
specify the default settings for its "--from" option.
* "git am -3" calls "git merge-recursive" when it needs to fall back
to a three-way merge; this call has been turned into an internal
subroutine call instead of spawning a separate subprocess.
* The command line completion scripts (in contrib/) now knows about
"git branch --delete/--move [--remote]".
(merge 2703c22 vs/completion-branch-fully-spelled-d-m-r later to maint).
* "git rev-parse --git-path hooks/<hook>" learned to take
core.hooksPath configuration variable (introduced during 2.9 cycle)
into account.
(merge 9445b49 ab/hooks later to maint).
* "git log --show-signature" and other commands that display the
verification status of PGP signature now shows the longer key-id,
as 32-bit key-id is so last century.
Performance, Internal Implementation, Development Support etc.
* "git fast-import" learned the same performance trick to avoid
creating too small a packfile as "git fetch" and "git push" have,
using *.unpackLimit configuration.
* When "git daemon" is run without --[init-]timeout specified, a
connection from a client that silently goes offline can hang around
for a long time, wasting resources. The socket-level KEEPALIVE has
been enabled to allow the OS to notice such failed connections.
* "git upload-pack" command has been updated to use the parse-options
API.
* The "git apply" standalone program is being libified; the first
step to move many state variables into a structure that can be
explicitly (re)initialized to make the machinery callable more
than once has been merged.
* HTTP transport gained an option to produce more detailed debugging
trace.
(merge 73e57aa ep/http-curl-trace later to maint).
* Instead of taking advantage of the fact that a struct string_list
that is allocated with all NULs happens to be the INIT_NODUP kind,
the users of string_list structures are taught to initialize them
explicitly as such, to document their behaviour better.
(merge 2721ce2 jk/string-list-static-init later to maint).
* HTTPd tests learned to show the server error log to help diagnosing
a failing tests.
(merge 44f243d nd/test-lib-httpd-show-error-log-in-verbose later to maint).
* The ownership rule for the piece of memory that hold references to
be fetched in "git fetch" was screwy, which has been cleaned up.
* "git bisect" makes an internal call to "git diff-tree" when
bisection finds the culprit, but this call did not initialize the
data structure to pass to the diff-tree API correctly.
* Further preparatory clean-up for "worktree" feature continues.
(merge 0409e0b nd/worktree-cleanup-post-head-protection later to maint).
* Formats of the various data (and how to validate them) where we use
GPG signature have been documented.
* A new run-command API function pipe_command() is introduced to
sanely feed data to the standard input while capturing data from
the standard output and the standard error of an external process,
which is cumbersome to hand-roll correctly without deadlocking.
* The codepath to sign data in a prepared buffer with GPG has been
updated to use this API to read from the status-fd to check for
errors (instead of relying on GPG's exit status).
(merge efee955 jk/gpg-interface-cleanup later to maint).
* Allow t/perf framework to use the features from the most recent
version of Git even when testing an older installed version.
* The commands in the "log/diff" family have had an FILE* pointer in the
data structure they pass around for a long time, but some codepaths
used to always write to the standard output. As a preparatory step
to make "git format-patch" available to the internal callers, these
codepaths have been updated to consistently write into that FILE*
instead.
* Conversion from unsigned char sha1[20] to struct object_id
continues.
* Improve the look of the way "git fetch" reports what happened to
each ref that was fetched.
* The .c/.h sources are marked as such in our .gitattributes file so
that "git diff -W" and friends would work better.
* Code clean-up to avoid using a variable string that compilers may
feel untrustable as printf-style format given to write_file()
helper function.
* "git p4" used a location outside $GIT_DIR/refs/ to place its
temporary branches, which has been moved to refs/git-p4-tmp/.
* Existing autoconf generated test for the need to link with pthread
library did not check all the functions from pthread libraries;
recent FreeBSD has some functions in libc but not others, and we
mistakenly thought linking with libc is enough when it is not.
* When "git fsck" reports a broken link (e.g. a tree object contains
a blob that does not exist), both containing object and the object
that is referred to were reported with their 40-hex object names.
The command learned the "--name-objects" option to show the path to
the containing object from existing refs (e.g. "HEAD~24^2:file.txt").
* Allow http daemon tests in Travis CI tests.
* Makefile assumed that -lrt is always available on platforms that
want to use clock_gettime() and CLOCK_MONOTONIC, which is not a
case for recent Mac OS X. The necessary symbols are often found in
libc on many modern systems and having -lrt on the command line, as
long as the library exists, had no effect, but when the platform
removes librt.a that is a different matter--having -lrt will break
the linkage.
This change could be seen as a regression for those who do need to
specify -lrt, as they now specifically ask for NEEDS_LIBRT when
building. Hopefully they are in the minority these days.
* Further preparatory work on the refs API before the pluggable
backend series can land.
* Error handling in the codepaths that updates refs has been
improved.
* The API to iterate over all the refs (i.e. for_each_ref(), etc.)
has been revamped.
* The handling of the "text=auto" attribute has been corrected.
$ echo "* text=auto eol=crlf" >.gitattributes
used to have the same effect as
$ echo "* text eol=crlf" >.gitattributes
i.e. declaring all files are text (ignoring "auto"). The
combination has been fixed to be equivalent to doing
$ git config core.autocrlf true
* Documentation has been updated to show better example usage
of the updated "text=auto" attribute.
* A few tests that specifically target "git rebase -i" have been
added.
* Dumb http transport on the client side has been optimized.
(merge ecba195 ew/http-walker later to maint).
* Users of the parse_options_concat() API function need to allocate
extra slots in advance and fill them with OPT_END() when they want
to decide the set of supported options dynamically, which makes the
code error-prone and hard to read. This has been corrected by tweaking
the API to allocate and return a new copy of "struct option" array.
* "git fetch" exchanges batched have/ack messages between the sender
and the receiver, initially doubling every time and then falling
back to enlarge the window size linearly. The "smart http"
transport, being an half-duplex protocol, outgrows the preset limit
too quickly and becomes inefficient when interacting with a large
repository. The internal mechanism learned to grow the window size
more aggressively when working with the "smart http" transport.
* Tests for "git svn" have been taught to reuse the lib-httpd test
infrastructure when testing the subversion integration that
interacts with subversion repositories served over the http://
protocol.
(merge a8a5d25 ew/git-svn-http-tests later to maint).
* "git pack-objects" has a few options that tell it not to pack
objects found in certain packfiles, which require it to scan .idx
files of all available packs. The codepaths involved in these
operations have been optimized for a common case of not having any
non-local pack and/or any .kept pack.
* The t3700 test about "add --chmod=-x" have been made a bit more
robust and generally cleaned up.
(merge 766cdc4 ib/t3700-add-chmod-x-updates later to maint).
* The build procedure learned PAGER_ENV knob that lists what default
environment variable settings to export for popular pagers. This
mechanism is used to tweak the default settings to MORE on FreeBSD.
(merge 995bc22 ew/build-time-pager-tweaks later to maint).
* The http-backend (the server-side component of smart-http
transport) used to trickle the HTTP header one at a time. Now
these write(2)s are batched.
(merge b36045c ew/http-backend-batch-headers later to maint).
* When "git rebase" tries to compare set of changes on the updated
upstream and our own branch, it computes patch-id for all of these
changes and attempts to find matches. This has been optimized by
lazily computing the full patch-id (which is expensive) to be
compared only for changes that touch the same set of paths.
(merge ba67504 kw/patch-ids-optim later to maint).
* A handful of tests that were broken under gettext-poison build have
been fixed.
* The recent i18n patch we added during this cycle did a bit too much
refactoring of the messages to avoid word-legos; the repetition has
been reduced to help translators.
Also contains various documentation updates and code clean-ups.
Fixes since v2.9
----------------
Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes since v2.8 in the maintenance
track are contained in this release (see the maintenance releases'
notes for details).
* The commands in `git log` family take %C(auto) in a custom format
string. This unconditionally turned the color on, ignoring
--no-color or with --color=auto when the output is not connected to
a tty; this was corrected to make the format truly behave as
"auto".
* "git rev-list --count" whose walk-length is limited with "-n"
option did not work well with the counting optimized to look at the
bitmap index.
* "git show -W" (extend hunks to cover the entire function, delimited
by lines that match the "funcname" pattern) used to show the entire
file when a change added an entire function at the end of the file,
which has been fixed.
* The documentation set has been updated so that literal commands,
configuration variables and environment variables are consistently
typeset in fixed-width font and bold in manpages.
* "git svn propset" subcommand that was added in 2.3 days is
documented now.
* The documentation tries to consistently spell "GPG"; when
referring to the specific program name, "gpg" is used.
* "git reflog" stopped upon seeing an entry that denotes a branch
creation event (aka "unborn"), which made it appear as if the
reflog was truncated.
* The git-prompt scriptlet (in contrib/) was not friendly with those
who uses "set -u", which has been fixed.
* compat/regex code did not cleanly compile.
* A codepath that used alloca(3) to place an unbounded amount of data
on the stack has been updated to avoid doing so.
* "git update-index --add --chmod=+x file" may be usable as an escape
hatch, but not a friendly thing to force for people who do need to
use it regularly. "git add --chmod=+x file" can be used instead.
* Build improvements for gnome-keyring (in contrib/)
* "git status" used to say "working directory" when it meant "working
tree".
* Comments about misbehaving FreeBSD shells have been clarified with
the version number (9.x and before are broken, newer ones are OK).
* "git cherry-pick A" worked on an unborn branch, but "git
cherry-pick A..B" didn't.
* Fix an unintended regression in v2.9 that breaks "clone --depth"
that recurses down to submodules by forcing the submodules to also
be cloned shallowly, which many server instances that host upstream
of the submodules are not prepared for.
* Fix unnecessarily waste in the idiomatic use of ': ${VAR=default}'
to set the default value, without enclosing it in double quotes.
* Some platform-specific code had non-ANSI strict declarations of C
functions that do not take any parameters, which has been
corrected.
* The internal code used to show local timezone offset is not
prepared to handle timestamps beyond year 2100, and gave a
bogus offset value to the caller. Use a more benign looking
+0000 instead and let "git log" going in such a case, instead
of aborting.
* One among four invocations of readlink(1) in our test suite has
been rewritten so that the test can run on systems without the
command (others are in valgrind test framework and t9802).
* t/perf needs /usr/bin/time with GNU extension; the invocation of it
is updated to "gtime" on Darwin.
* A bug, which caused "git p4" while running under verbose mode to
report paths that are omitted due to branch prefix incorrectly, has
been fixed; the command said "Ignoring file outside of prefix" for
paths that are _inside_.
* The top level documentation "git help git" still pointed at the
documentation set hosted at now-defunct google-code repository.
Update it to point to https://git.github.io/htmldocs/git.html
instead.
* A helper function that takes the contents of a commit object and
finds its subject line did not ignore leading blank lines, as is
commonly done by other codepaths. Make it ignore leading blank
lines to match.
* For a long time, we carried an in-code comment that said our
colored output would work only when we use fprintf/fputs on
Windows, which no longer is the case for the past few years.
* "gc.autoPackLimit" when set to 1 should not trigger a repacking
when there is only one pack, but the code counted poorly and did
so.
* Add a test to specify the desired behaviour that currently is not
available in "git rebase -Xsubtree=...".
* More mark-up updates to typeset strings that are expected to
literally typed by the end user in fixed-width font.
* "git commit --amend --allow-empty-message -S" for a commit without
any message body could have misidentified where the header of the
commit object ends.
* "git rebase -i --autostash" did not restore the auto-stashed change
when the operation was aborted.
* Git does not know what the contents in the index should be for a
path added with "git add -N" yet, so "git grep --cached" should not
show hits (or show lack of hits, with -L) in such a path, but that
logic does not apply to "git grep", i.e. searching in the working
tree files. But we did so by mistake, which has been corrected.
* "git blame -M" missed a single line that was moved within the file.
* Fix recently introduced codepaths that are involved in parallel
submodule operations, which gave up on reading too early, and
could have wasted CPU while attempting to write under a corner
case condition.
* "git grep -i" has been taught to fold case in non-ascii locales
correctly.
* A test that unconditionally used "mktemp" learned that the command
is not necessarily available everywhere.
* There are certain house-keeping tasks that need to be performed at
the very beginning of any Git program, and programs that are not
built-in commands had to do them exactly the same way as "git"
potty does. It was easy to make mistakes in one-off standalone
programs (like test helpers). A common "main()" function that
calls cmd_main() of individual program has been introduced to
make it harder to make mistakes.
(merge de61ceb jk/common-main later to maint).
* The test framework learned a new helper test_match_signal to
check an exit code from getting killed by an expected signal.
* General code clean-up around a helper function to write a
single-liner to a file.
(merge 7eb6e10 jk/write-file later to maint).
* One part of "git am" had an oddball helper function that called
stuff from outside "his" as opposed to calling what we have "ours",
which was not gender-neutral and also inconsistent with the rest of
the system where outside stuff is usuall called "theirs" in
contrast to "ours".
* "git blame file" allowed the lineage of lines in the uncommitted,
unadded contents of "file" to be inspected, but it refused when
"file" did not appear in the current commit. When "file" was
created by renaming an existing file (but the change has not been
committed), this restriction was unnecessarily tight.
* "git add -N dir/file && git write-tree" produced an incorrect tree
when there are other paths in the same directory that sorts after
"file".
* "git fetch http://user:pass@host/repo..." scrubbed the userinfo
part, but "git push" didn't.
* "git merge" with renormalization did not work well with
merge-recursive, due to "safer crlf" conversion kicking in when it
shouldn't.
(merge 1335d76 jc/renormalize-merge-kill-safer-crlf later to maint).
* The use of strbuf in "git rm" to build filename to remove was a bit
suboptimal, which has been fixed.
* An age old bug that caused "git diff --ignore-space-at-eol"
misbehave has been fixed.
* "git notes merge" had a code to see if a path exists (and fails if
it does) and then open the path for writing (when it doesn't).
Replace it with open with O_EXCL.
* "git pack-objects" and "git index-pack" mostly operate with off_t
when talking about the offset of objects in a packfile, but there
were a handful of places that used "unsigned long" to hold that
value, leading to an unintended truncation.
* Recent update to "git daemon" tries to enable the socket-level
KEEPALIVE, but when it is spawned via inetd, the standard input
file descriptor may not necessarily be connected to a socket.
Suppress an ENOTSOCK error from setsockopt().
* Recent FreeBSD stopped making perl available at /usr/bin/perl;
switch the default the built-in path to /usr/local/bin/perl on not
too ancient FreeBSD releases.
* "git commit --help" said "--no-verify" is only about skipping the
pre-commit hook, and failed to say that it also skipped the
commit-msg hook.
* "git merge" in Git v2.9 was taught to forbid merging an unrelated
lines of history by default, but that is exactly the kind of thing
the "--rejoin" mode of "git subtree" (in contrib/) wants to do.
"git subtree" has been taught to use the "--allow-unrelated-histories"
option to override the default.
* The build procedure for "git persistent-https" helper (in contrib/)
has been updated so that it can be built with more recent versions
of Go.
* There is an optimization used in "git diff $treeA $treeB" to borrow
an already checked-out copy in the working tree when it is known to
be the same as the blob being compared, expecting that open/mmap of
such a file is faster than reading it from the object store, which
involves inflating and applying delta. This however kicked in even
when the checked-out copy needs to go through the convert-to-git
conversion (including the clean filter), which defeats the whole
point of the optimization. The optimization has been disabled when
the conversion is necessary.
* "git -c grep.patternType=extended log --basic-regexp" misbehaved
because the internal API to access the grep machinery was not
designed well.
* Windows port was failing some tests in t4130, due to the lack of
inum in the returned values by its lstat(2) emulation.
* The reflog output format is documented better, and a new format
--date=unix to report the seconds-since-epoch (without timezone)
has been added.
(merge 442f6fd jk/reflog-date later to maint).
* "git difftool <paths>..." started in a subdirectory failed to
interpret the paths relative to that directory, which has been
fixed.
* The characters in the label shown for tags/refs for commits in
"gitweb" output are now properly escaped for proper HTML output.
* FreeBSD can lie when asked mtime of a directory, which made the
untracked cache code to fall back to a slow-path, which in turn
caused tests in t7063 to fail because it wanted to verify the
behaviour of the fast-path.
* Squelch compiler warnings for nedmalloc (in compat/) library.
* A small memory leak in the command line parsing of "git blame"
has been plugged.
* The API documentation for hashmap was unclear if hashmap_entry
can be safely discarded without any other consideration. State
that it is safe to do so.
* Not-so-recent rewrite of "git am" that started making internal
calls into the commit machinery had an unintended regression, in
that no matter how many seconds it took to apply many patches, the
resulting committer timestamp for the resulting commits were all
the same.
* "git push --force-with-lease" already had enough logic to allow
ensuring that such a push results in creation of a ref (i.e. the
receiving end did not have another push from sideways that would be
discarded by our force-pushing), but didn't expose this possibility
to the users. It does so now.
(merge 9eed4f3 jk/push-force-with-lease-creation later to maint).
* The mechanism to limit the pack window memory size, when packing is
done using multiple threads (which is the default), is per-thread,
but this was not documented clearly.
(merge 954176c ms/document-pack-window-memory-is-per-thread later to maint).
* "import-tars" fast-import script (in contrib/) used to ignore a
hardlink target and replaced it with an empty file, which has been
corrected to record the same blob as the other file the hardlink is
shared with.
(merge 04e0869 js/import-tars-hardlinks later to maint).
* "git mv dir non-existing-dir/" did not work in some environments
the same way as existing mainstream platforms. The code now moves
"dir" to "non-existing-dir", without relying on rename("A", "B/")
that strips the trailing slash of '/'.
(merge 189d035 js/mv-dir-to-new-directory later to maint).
* The "t/" hierarchy is prone to get an unusual pathname; "make test"
has been taught to make sure they do not contain paths that cannot
be checked out on Windows (and the mechanism can be reusable to
catch pathnames that are not portable to other platforms as need
arises).
(merge c2cafd3 js/test-lint-pathname later to maint).
* When "git merge-recursive" works on history with many criss-cross
merges in "verbose" mode, the names the command assigns to the
virtual merge bases could have overwritten each other by unintended
reuse of the same piece of memory.
(merge 5447a76 rs/pull-signed-tag later to maint).
* "git checkout --detach <branch>" used to give the same advice
message as that is issued when "git checkout <tag>" (or anything
that is not a branch name) is given, but asking with "--detach" is
an explicit enough sign that the user knows what is going on. The
advice message has been squelched in this case.
(merge 779b88a sb/checkout-explit-detach-no-advice later to maint).
* "git difftool" by default ignores the error exit from the backend
commands it spawns, because often they signal that they found
differences by exiting with a non-zero status code just like "diff"
does; the exit status codes 126 and above however are special in
that they are used to signal that the command is not executable,
does not exist, or killed by a signal. "git difftool" has been
taught to notice these exit status codes.
(merge 45a4f5d jk/difftool-command-not-found later to maint).
* On Windows, help.browser configuration variable used to be ignored,
which has been corrected.
(merge 6db5967 js/no-html-bypass-on-windows later to maint).
* The "git -c var[=val] cmd" facility to append a configuration
variable definition at the end of the search order was described in
git(1) manual page, but not in git-config(1), which was more likely
place for people to look for when they ask "can I make a one-shot
override, and if so how?"
(merge ae1f709 dg/document-git-c-in-git-config-doc later to maint).
* The tempfile (hence its user lockfile) API lets the caller to open
a file descriptor to a temporary file, write into it and then
finalize it by first closing the filehandle and then either
removing or renaming the temporary file. When the process spawns a
subprocess after obtaining the file descriptor, and if the
subprocess has not exited when the attempt to remove or rename is
made, the last step fails on Windows, because the subprocess has
the file descriptor still open. Open tempfile with O_CLOEXEC flag
to avoid this (on Windows, this is mapped to O_NOINHERIT).
(merge 05d1ed6 bw/mingw-avoid-inheriting-fd-to-lockfile later to maint).
* Correct an age-old calco (is that a typo-like word for calc)
in the documentation.
(merge 7841c48 ls/packet-line-protocol-doc-fix later to maint).
* Other minor clean-ups and documentation updates
(merge 02a8cfa rs/merge-add-strategies-simplification later to maint).
(merge af4941d rs/merge-recursive-string-list-init later to maint).
(merge 1eb47f1 rs/use-strbuf-add-unique-abbrev later to maint).
(merge ddd0bfa jk/tighten-alloc later to maint).
(merge ecf30b2 rs/mailinfo-lib later to maint).
(merge 0eb75ce sg/reflog-past-root later to maint).
(merge 4369523 hv/doc-commit-reference-style later to maint).

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Git v2.10.1 Release Notes
=========================
Fixes since v2.10
-----------------
* Clarify various ways to specify the "revision ranges" in the
documentation.
* "diff-highlight" script (in contrib/) learned to work better with
"git log -p --graph" output.
* The test framework left the number of tests and success/failure
count in the t/test-results directory, keyed by the name of the
test script plus the process ID. The latter however turned out not
to serve any useful purpose. The process ID part of the filename
has been removed.
* Having a submodule whose ".git" repository is somehow corrupt
caused a few commands that recurse into submodules loop forever.
* "git symbolic-ref -d HEAD" happily removes the symbolic ref, but
the resulting repository becomes an invalid one. Teach the command
to forbid removal of HEAD.
* A test spawned a short-lived background process, which sometimes
prevented the test directory from getting removed at the end of the
script on some platforms.
* Update a few tests that used to use GIT_CURL_VERBOSE to use the
newer GIT_TRACE_CURL.
* Update Japanese translation for "git-gui".
* "git fetch http::/site/path" did not die correctly and segfaulted
instead.
* "git commit-tree" stopped reading commit.gpgsign configuration
variable that was meant for Porcelain "git commit" in Git 2.9; we
forgot to update "git gui" to look at the configuration to match
this change.
* "git log --cherry-pick" used to include merge commits as candidates
to be matched up with other commits, resulting a lot of wasted time.
The patch-id generation logic has been updated to ignore merges to
avoid the wastage.
* The http transport (with curl-multi option, which is the default
these days) failed to remove curl-easy handle from a curlm session,
which led to unnecessary API failures.
* "git diff -W" output needs to extend the context backward to
include the header line of the current function and also forward to
include the body of the entire current function up to the header
line of the next one. This process may have to merge to adjacent
hunks, but the code forgot to do so in some cases.
* Performance tests done via "t/perf" did not use the same set of
build configuration if the user relied on autoconf generated
configuration.
* "git format-patch --base=..." feature that was recently added
showed the base commit information after "-- " e-mail signature
line, which turned out to be inconvenient. The base information
has been moved above the signature line.
* Even when "git pull --rebase=preserve" (and the underlying "git
rebase --preserve") can complete without creating any new commit
(i.e. fast-forwards), it still insisted on having a usable ident
information (read: user.email is set correctly), which was less
than nice. As the underlying commands used inside "git rebase"
would fail with a more meaningful error message and advice text
when the bogus ident matters, this extra check was removed.
* "git gc --aggressive" used to limit the delta-chain length to 250,
which is way too deep for gaining additional space savings and is
detrimental for runtime performance. The limit has been reduced to
50.
* Documentation for individual configuration variables to control use
of color (like `color.grep`) said that their default value is
'false', instead of saying their default is taken from `color.ui`.
When we updated the default value for color.ui from 'false' to
'auto' quite a while ago, all of them broke. This has been
corrected.
* A shell script example in check-ref-format documentation has been
fixed.
* "git checkout <word>" does not follow the usual disambiguation
rules when the <word> can be both a rev and a path, to allow
checking out a branch 'foo' in a project that happens to have a
file 'foo' in the working tree without having to disambiguate.
This was poorly documented and the check was incorrect when the
command was run from a subdirectory.
* Some codepaths in "git diff" used regexec(3) on a buffer that was
mmap(2)ed, which may not have a terminating NUL, leading to a read
beyond the end of the mapped region. This was fixed by introducing
a regexec_buf() helper that takes a <ptr,len> pair with REG_STARTEND
extension.
* The procedure to build Git on Mac OS X for Travis CI hardcoded the
internal directory structure we assumed HomeBrew uses, which was a
no-no. The procedure has been updated to ask HomeBrew things we
need to know to fix this.
* When "git rebase -i" is given a broken instruction, it told the
user to fix it with "--edit-todo", but didn't say what the step
after that was (i.e. "--continue").
* "git add --chmod=+x" added recently lacked documentation, which has
been corrected.
* "git add --chmod=+x <pathspec>" added recently only toggled the
executable bit for paths that are either new or modified. This has
been corrected to flip the executable bit for all paths that match
the given pathspec.
* "git pack-objects --include-tag" was taught that when we know that
we are sending an object C, we want a tag B that directly points at
C but also a tag A that points at the tag B. We used to miss the
intermediate tag B in some cases.
* Documentation around tools to import from CVS was fairly outdated.
* In the codepath that comes up with the hostname to be used in an
e-mail when the user didn't tell us, we looked at ai_canonname
field in struct addrinfo without making sure it is not NULL first.
Also contains minor documentation updates and code clean-ups.

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Git v2.10.2 Release Notes
=========================
Fixes since v2.10.1
-------------------
* The code that parses the format parameter of for-each-ref command
has seen a micro-optimization.
* The "graph" API used in "git log --graph" miscounted the number of
output columns consumed so far when drawing a padding line, which
has been fixed; this did not affect any existing code as nobody
tried to write anything after the padding on such a line, though.
* Almost everybody uses DEFAULT_ABBREV to refer to the default
setting for the abbreviation, but "git blame" peeked into
underlying variable bypassing the macro for no good reason.
* Doc update to clarify what "log -3 --reverse" does.
* An author name, that spelled a backslash-quoted double quote in the
human readable part "My \"double quoted\" name", was not unquoted
correctly while applying a patch from a piece of e-mail.
* The original command line syntax for "git merge", which was "git
merge <msg> HEAD <parent>...", has been deprecated for quite some
time, and "git gui" was the last in-tree user of the syntax. This
is finally fixed, so that we can move forward with the deprecation.
* Codepaths that read from an on-disk loose object were too loose in
validating what they are reading is a proper object file and
sometimes read past the data they read from the disk, which has
been corrected. H/t to Gustavo Grieco for reporting.
* "git worktree", even though it used the default_abbrev setting that
ought to be affected by core.abbrev configuration variable, ignored
the variable setting. The command has been taught to read the
default set of configuration variables to correct this.
* A low-level function verify_packfile() was meant to show errors
that were detected without dying itself, but under some conditions
it didn't and died instead, which has been fixed.
* When "git fetch" tries to find where the history of the repository
it runs in has diverged from what the other side has, it has a
mechanism to avoid digging too deep into irrelevant side branches.
This however did not work well over the "smart-http" transport due
to a design bug, which has been fixed.
* When we started cURL to talk to imap server when a new enough
version of cURL library is available, we forgot to explicitly add
imap(s):// before the destination. To some folks, that didn't work
and the library tried to make HTTP(s) requests instead.
* The ./configure script generated from configure.ac was taught how
to detect support of SSL by libcurl better.
* http.emptyauth configuration is a way to allow an empty username to
pass when attempting to authenticate using mechanisms like
Kerberos. We took an unspecified (NULL) username and sent ":"
(i.e. no username, no password) to CURLOPT_USERPWD, but did not do
the same when the username is explicitly set to an empty string.
* "git clone" of a local repository can be done at the filesystem
level, but the codepath did not check errors while copying and
adjusting the file that lists alternate object stores.
* Documentation for "git commit" was updated to clarify that "commit
-p <paths>" adds to the current contents of the index to come up
with what to commit.
* A stray symbolic link in $GIT_DIR/refs/ directory could make name
resolution loop forever, which has been corrected.
* The "submodule.<name>.path" stored in .gitmodules is never copied
to .git/config and such a key in .git/config has no meaning, but
the documentation described it and submodule.<name>.url next to
each other as if both belong to .git/config. This has been fixed.
* Recent git allows submodule.<name>.branch to use a special token
"." instead of the branch name; the documentation has been updated
to describe it.
* In a worktree connected to a repository elsewhere, created via "git
worktree", "git checkout" attempts to protect users from confusion
by refusing to check out a branch that is already checked out in
another worktree. However, this also prevented checking out a
branch, which is designated as the primary branch of a bare
reopsitory, in a worktree that is connected to the bare
repository. The check has been corrected to allow it.
* "git rebase" immediately after "git clone" failed to find the fork
point from the upstream.
* When fetching from a remote that has many tags that are irrelevant
to branches we are following, we used to waste way too many cycles
when checking if the object pointed at by a tag (that we are not
going to fetch!) exists in our repository too carefully.
* The Travis CI configuration we ship ran the tests with --verbose
option but this risks non-TAP output that happens to be "ok" to be
misinterpreted as TAP signalling a test that passed. This resulted
in unnecessary failure. This has been corrected by introducing a
new mode to run our tests in the test harness to send the verbose
output separately to the log file.
* Some AsciiDoc formatter mishandles a displayed illustration with
tabs in it. Adjust a few of them in merge-base documentation to
work around them.
Also contains minor documentation updates and code clean-ups.

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Git v2.10.3 Release Notes
=========================
Fixes since v2.10.2
-------------------
* Extract a small helper out of the function that reads the authors
script file "git am" internally uses.
This by itself is not useful until a second caller appears in the
future for "rebase -i" helper.
* The command-line completion script (in contrib/) learned to
complete "git cmd ^mas<HT>" to complete the negative end of
reference to "git cmd ^master".
* "git send-email" attempts to pick up valid e-mails from the
trailers, but people in real world write non-addresses there, like
"Cc: Stable <add@re.ss> # 4.8+", which broke the output depending
on the availability and vintage of Mail::Address perl module.
* The code that we have used for the past 10+ years to cycle
4-element ring buffers turns out to be not quite portable in
theoretical world.
* "git daemon" used fixed-length buffers to turn URL to the
repository the client asked for into the server side directory
path, using snprintf() to avoid overflowing these buffers, but
allowed possibly truncated paths to the directory. This has been
tightened to reject such a request that causes overlong path to be
required to serve.
* Recent update to git-sh-setup (a library of shell functions that
are used by our in-tree scripted Porcelain commands) included
another shell library git-sh-i18n without specifying where it is,
relying on the $PATH. This has been fixed to be more explicit by
prefixing $(git --exec-path) output in front.
* Fix for a racy false-positive test failure.
* Portability update and workaround for builds on recent Mac OS X.
* Update to the test framework made in 2.9 timeframe broke running
the tests under valgrind, which has been fixed.
* Improve the rule to convert "unsigned char [20]" into "struct
object_id *" in contrib/coccinelle/
* "git-shell" rejects a request to serve a repository whose name
begins with a dash, which makes it no longer possible to get it
confused into spawning service programs like "git-upload-pack" with
an option like "--help", which in turn would spawn an interactive
pager, instead of working with the repository user asked to access
(i.e. the one whose name is "--help").
Also contains minor documentation updates and code clean-ups.

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Git v2.2.3 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.2.2
------------------
* A handful of codepaths that used to use fixed-sized arrays to hold
pathnames have been corrected to use strbuf and other mechanisms to
allow longer pathnames without fearing overflows.

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Git v2.3.10 Release Notes
=========================
Fixes since v2.3.9
------------------
* xdiff code we use to generate diffs is not prepared to handle
extremely large files. It uses "int" in many places, which can
overflow if we have a very large number of lines or even bytes in
our input files, for example. Cap the input size to somewhere
around 1GB for now.
* Some protocols (like git-remote-ext) can execute arbitrary code
found in the URL. The URLs that submodules use may come from
arbitrary sources (e.g., .gitmodules files in a remote
repository), and can hurt those who blindly enable recursive
fetch. Restrict the allowed protocols to well known and safe
ones.

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Git v2.3.8 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.3.7
------------------
* The usual "git diff" when seeing a file turning into a directory
showed a patchset to remove the file and create all files in the
directory, but "git diff --no-index" simply refused to work. Also,
when asked to compare a file and a directory, imitate POSIX "diff"
and compare the file with the file with the same name in the
directory, instead of refusing to run.
* The default $HOME/.gitconfig file created upon "git config --global"
that edits it had incorrectly spelled user.name and user.email
entries in it.
* "git commit --date=now" or anything that relies on approxidate lost
the daylight-saving-time offset.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.3.9 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.3.8
------------------
* A handful of codepaths that used to use fixed-sized arrays to hold
pathnames have been corrected to use strbuf and other mechanisms to
allow longer pathnames without fearing overflows.

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Git v2.4.1 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.4
----------------
* The usual "git diff" when seeing a file turning into a directory
showed a patchset to remove the file and create all files in the
directory, but "git diff --no-index" simply refused to work. Also,
when asked to compare a file and a directory, imitate POSIX "diff"
and compare the file with the file with the same name in the
directory, instead of refusing to run.
* The default $HOME/.gitconfig file created upon "git config --global"
that edits it had incorrectly spelled user.name and user.email
entries in it.
* "git commit --date=now" or anything that relies on approxidate lost
the daylight-saving-time offset.
* "git cat-file bl $blob" failed to barf even though there is no
object type that is "bl".
* Teach the codepaths that read .gitignore and .gitattributes files
that these files encoded in UTF-8 may have UTF-8 BOM marker at the
beginning; this makes it in line with what we do for configuration
files already.
* Access to objects in repositories that borrow from another one on a
slow NFS server unnecessarily got more expensive due to recent code
becoming more cautious in a naive way not to lose objects to pruning.
* We avoid setting core.worktree when the repository location is the
".git" directory directly at the top level of the working tree, but
the code misdetected the case in which the working tree is at the
root level of the filesystem (which arguably is a silly thing to
do, but still valid).
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.4.10 Release Notes
=========================
Fixes since v2.4.9
------------------
* xdiff code we use to generate diffs is not prepared to handle
extremely large files. It uses "int" in many places, which can
overflow if we have a very large number of lines or even bytes in
our input files, for example. Cap the input size to somewhere
around 1GB for now.
* Some protocols (like git-remote-ext) can execute arbitrary code
found in the URL. The URLs that submodules use may come from
arbitrary sources (e.g., .gitmodules files in a remote
repository), and can hurt those who blindly enable recursive
fetch. Restrict the allowed protocols to well known and safe
ones.

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Git v2.4.11 Release Notes
=========================
Fixes since v2.4.10
-------------------
* Bugfix patches were backported from the 'master' front to plug heap
corruption holes, to catch integer overflow in the computation of
pathname lengths, and to get rid of the name_path API. Both of
these would have resulted in writing over an under-allocated buffer
when formulating pathnames while tree traversal.

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Git v2.4.12 Release Notes
=========================
Fixes since v2.4.11
-------------------
* "git-shell" rejects a request to serve a repository whose name
begins with a dash, which makes it no longer possible to get it
confused into spawning service programs like "git-upload-pack" with
an option like "--help", which in turn would spawn an interactive
pager, instead of working with the repository user asked to access
(i.e. the one whose name is "--help").

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Git v2.4.2 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.4.1
------------------
* "git rev-list --objects $old --not --all" to see if everything that
is reachable from $old is already connected to the existing refs
was very inefficient.
* "hash-object --literally" introduced in v2.2 was not prepared to
take a really long object type name.
* "git rebase --quiet" was not quite quiet when there is nothing to
do.
* The completion for "log --decorate=" parameter value was incorrect.
* "filter-branch" corrupted commit log message that ends with an
incomplete line on platforms with some "sed" implementations that
munge such a line. Work it around by avoiding to use "sed".
* "git daemon" fails to build from the source under NO_IPV6
configuration (regression in 2.4).
* "git stash pop/apply" forgot to make sure that not just the working
tree is clean but also the index is clean. The latter is important
as a stash application can conflict and the index will be used for
conflict resolution.
* We have prepended $GIT_EXEC_PATH and the path "git" is installed in
(typically "/usr/bin") to $PATH when invoking subprograms and hooks
for almost eternity, but the original use case the latter tried to
support was semi-bogus (i.e. install git to /opt/foo/git and run it
without having /opt/foo on $PATH), and more importantly it has
become less and less relevant as Git grew more mainstream (i.e. the
users would _want_ to have it on their $PATH). Stop prepending the
path in which "git" is installed to users' $PATH, as that would
interfere the command search order people depend on (e.g. they may
not like versions of programs that are unrelated to Git in /usr/bin
and want to override them by having different ones in /usr/local/bin
and have the latter directory earlier in their $PATH).
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.4.3 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.4.3
------------------
* Error messages from "git branch" called remote-tracking branches as
"remote branches".
* "git rerere forget" in a repository without rerere enabled gave a
cryptic error message; it should be a silent no-op instead.
* "git pull --log" and "git pull --no-log" worked as expected, but
"git pull --log=20" did not.
* The pull.ff configuration was supposed to override the merge.ff
configuration, but it didn't.
* The code to read pack-bitmap wanted to allocate a few hundred
pointers to a structure, but by mistake allocated and leaked memory
enough to hold that many actual structures. Correct the allocation
size and also have it on stack, as it is small enough.
* Various documentation mark-up fixes to make the output more
consistent in general and also make AsciiDoctor (an alternative
formatter) happier.
* "git bundle verify" did not diagnose extra parameters on the
command line.
* Multi-ref transaction support we merged a few releases ago
unnecessarily kept many file descriptors open, risking to fail with
resource exhaustion.
* The ref API did not handle cases where 'refs/heads/xyzzy/frotz' is
removed at the same time as 'refs/heads/xyzzy' is added (or vice
versa) very well.
* The "log --decorate" enhancement in Git 2.4 that shows the commit
at the tip of the current branch e.g. "HEAD -> master", did not
work with --decorate=full.
* There was a commented-out (instead of being marked to expect
failure) test that documented a breakage that was fixed since the
test was written; turn it into a proper test.
* core.excludesfile (defaulting to $XDG_HOME/git/ignore) is supposed
to be overridden by repository-specific .git/info/exclude file, but
the order was swapped from the beginning. This belatedly fixes it.
* The connection initiation code for "ssh" transport tried to absorb
differences between the stock "ssh" and Putty-supplied "plink" and
its derivatives, but the logic to tell that we are using "plink"
variants were too loose and falsely triggered when "plink" appeared
anywhere in the path (e.g. "/home/me/bin/uplink/ssh").
* "git rebase -i" moved the "current" command from "todo" to "done" a
bit too prematurely, losing a step when a "pick" did not even start.
* "git add -e" did not allow the user to abort the operation by
killing the editor.
* Git 2.4 broke setting verbosity and progress levels on "git clone"
with native transports.
* Some time ago, "git blame" (incorrectly) lost the convert_to_git()
call when synthesizing a fake "tip" commit that represents the
state in the working tree, which broke folks who record the history
with LF line ending to make their project portabile across
platforms while terminating lines in their working tree files with
CRLF for their platform.
* Code clean-up for xdg configuration path support.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.4.4 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.4.3
------------------
* l10n updates for German.
* An earlier leakfix to bitmap testing code was incomplete.
* "git clean pathspec..." tried to lstat(2) and complain even for
paths outside the given pathspec.
* Communication between the HTTP server and http_backend process can
lead to a dead-lock when relaying a large ref negotiation request.
Diagnose the situation better, and mitigate it by reading such a
request first into core (to a reasonable limit).
* The clean/smudge interface did not work well when filtering an
empty contents (failed and then passed the empty input through).
It can be argued that a filter that produces anything but empty for
an empty input is nonsense, but if the user wants to do strange
things, then why not?
* Make "git stash something --help" error out, so that users can
safely say "git stash drop --help".
* Clarify that "log --raw" and "log --format=raw" are unrelated
concepts.
* Catch a programmer mistake to feed a pointer not an array to
ARRAY_SIZE() macro, by using a couple of GCC extensions.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.4.5 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.4.4
------------------
* The setup code used to die when core.bare and core.worktree are set
inconsistently, even for commands that do not need working tree.
* There was a dead code that used to handle "git pull --tags" and
show special-cased error message, which was made irrelevant when
the semantics of the option changed back in Git 1.9 days.
* "color.diff.plain" was a misnomer; give it 'color.diff.context' as
a more logical synonym.
* The configuration reader/writer uses mmap(2) interface to access
the files; when we find a directory, it barfed with "Out of memory?".
* Recent "git prune" traverses young unreachable objects to safekeep
old objects in the reachability chain from them, which sometimes
showed unnecessary error messages that are alarming.
* "git rebase -i" fired post-rewrite hook when it shouldn't (namely,
when it was told to stop sequencing with 'exec' insn).
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.4.6 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.4.5
------------------
* "git fetch --depth=<depth>" and "git clone --depth=<depth>" issued
a shallow transfer request even to an upload-pack that does not
support the capability.
* "git fsck" used to ignore missing or invalid objects recorded in reflog.
* The tcsh completion writes a bash scriptlet but that would have
failed for users with noclobber set.
* Recent Mac OS X updates breaks the logic to detect that the machine
is on the AC power in the sample pre-auto-gc script.
* "git format-patch --ignore-if-upstream A..B" did not like to be fed
tags as boundary commits.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.4.7 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.4.6
------------------
* A minor regression to "git fsck" in v2.2 era was fixed; it
complained about a body-less tag object when it lacked a
separator empty line after its header to separate it with a
non-existent body.
* We used to ask libCURL to use the most secure authentication method
available when talking to an HTTP proxy only when we were told to
talk to one via configuration variables. We now ask libCURL to
always use the most secure authentication method, because the user
can tell libCURL to use an HTTP proxy via an environment variable
without using configuration variables.
* When you say "!<ENTER>" while running say "git log", you'd confuse
yourself in the resulting shell, that may look as if you took
control back to the original shell you spawned "git log" from but
that isn't what is happening. To that new shell, we leaked
GIT_PAGER_IN_USE environment variable that was meant as a local
communication between the original "Git" and subprocesses that was
spawned by it after we launched the pager, which caused many
"interesting" things to happen, e.g. "git diff | cat" still paints
its output in color by default.
Stop leaking that environment variable to the pager's half of the
fork; we only need it on "Git" side when we spawn the pager.
* Avoid possible ssize_t to int truncation.
* "git config" failed to update the configuration file when the
underlying filesystem is incapable of renaming a file that is still
open.
* A minor bugfix when pack bitmap is used with "rev-list --count".
* An ancient test framework enhancement to allow color was not
entirely correct; this makes it work even when tput needs to read
from the ~/.terminfo under the user's real HOME directory.
* Fix a small bug in our use of umask() return value.
* "git rebase" did not exit with failure when format-patch it invoked
failed for whatever reason.
* Disable "have we lost a race with competing repack?" check while
receiving a huge object transfer that runs index-pack.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.4.8 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.4.7
------------------
* Abandoning an already applied change in "git rebase -i" with
"--continue" left CHERRY_PICK_HEAD and confused later steps.
* Various fixes around "git am" that applies a patch to a history
that is not there yet.
* "git for-each-ref" reported "missing object" for 0{40} when it
encounters a broken ref. The lack of object whose name is 0{40} is
not the problem; the ref being broken is.
* "git commit --cleanup=scissors" was not careful enough to protect
against getting fooled by a line that looked like scissors.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.4.9 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.4.9
------------------
* A handful of codepaths that used to use fixed-sized arrays to hold
pathnames have been corrected to use strbuf and other mechanisms to
allow longer pathnames without fearing overflows.

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Git 2.5 Release Notes
=====================
Updates since v2.4
------------------
UI, Workflows & Features
* The bash completion script (in contrib/) learned a few options that
"git revert" takes.
* Whitespace breakages in deleted and context lines can also be
painted in the output of "git diff" and friends with the new
--ws-error-highlight option.
* List of commands shown by "git help" are grouped along the workflow
elements to help early learners.
* "git p4" now detects the filetype (e.g. binary) correctly even when
the files are opened exclusively.
* git p4 attempts to better handle branches in Perforce.
* "git p4" learned "--changes-block-size <n>" to read the changes in
chunks from Perforce, instead of making one call to "p4 changes"
that may trigger "too many rows scanned" error from Perforce.
* More workaround for Perforce's row number limit in "git p4".
* Unlike "$EDITOR" and "$GIT_EDITOR" that can hold the path to the
command and initial options (e.g. "/path/to/emacs -nw"), 'git p4'
did not let the shell interpolate the contents of the environment
variable that name the editor "$P4EDITOR" (and "$EDITOR", too).
This release makes it in line with the rest of Git, as well as with
Perforce.
* A new short-hand <branch>@{push} denotes the remote-tracking branch
that tracks the branch at the remote the <branch> would be pushed
to.
* "git show-branch --topics HEAD" (with no other arguments) did not
do anything interesting. Instead, contrast the given revision
against all the local branches by default.
* A replacement for contrib/workdir/git-new-workdir that does not
rely on symbolic links and make sharing of objects and refs safer
by making the borrowee and borrowers aware of each other.
Consider this as still an experimental feature; its UI is still
likely to change.
* Tweak the sample "store" backend of the credential helper to honor
XDG configuration file locations when specified.
* A heuristic we use to catch mistyped paths on the command line
"git <cmd> <revs> <pathspec>" is to make sure that all the non-rev
parameters in the later part of the command line are names of the
files in the working tree, but that means "git grep $str -- \*.c"
must always be disambiguated with "--", because nobody sane will
create a file whose name literally is asterisk-dot-see. Loosen the
heuristic to declare that with a wildcard string the user likely
meant to give us a pathspec.
* "git merge FETCH_HEAD" learned that the previous "git fetch" could
be to create an Octopus merge, i.e. recording multiple branches
that are not marked as "not-for-merge"; this allows us to lose an
old style invocation "git merge <msg> HEAD $commits..." in the
implementation of "git pull" script; the old style syntax can now
be deprecated (but not removed yet).
* Filter scripts were run with SIGPIPE disabled on the Git side,
expecting that they may not read what Git feeds them to filter.
We however treated a filter that does not read its input fully
before exiting as an error. We no longer do and ignore EPIPE
when writing to feed the filter scripts.
This changes semantics, but arguably in a good way. If a filter
can produce its output without fully consuming its input using
whatever magic, we now let it do so, instead of diagnosing it
as a programming error.
* Instead of dying immediately upon failing to obtain a lock, the
locking (of refs etc) retries after a short while with backoff.
* Introduce http.<url>.SSLCipherList configuration variable to tweak
the list of cipher suite to be used with libcURL when talking with
https:// sites.
* "git subtree" script (in contrib/) used "echo -n" to produce
progress messages in a non-portable way.
* "git subtree" script (in contrib/) does not have --squash option
when pushing, but the documentation and help text pretended as if
it did.
* The Git subcommand completion (in contrib/) no longer lists credential
helpers among candidates; they are not something the end user would
invoke interactively.
* The index file can be taught with "update-index --untracked-cache"
to optionally remember already seen untracked files, in order to
speed up "git status" in a working tree with tons of cruft.
* "git mergetool" learned to drive WinMerge as a backend.
* "git upload-pack" that serves "git fetch" can be told to serve
commits that are not at the tip of any ref, as long as they are
reachable from a ref, with uploadpack.allowReachableSHA1InWant
configuration variable.
* "git cat-file --batch(-check)" learned the "--follow-symlinks"
option that follows an in-tree symbolic link when asked about an
object via extended SHA-1 syntax, e.g. HEAD:RelNotes that points at
Documentation/RelNotes/2.5.0.txt. With the new option, the command
behaves as if HEAD:Documentation/RelNotes/2.5.0.txt was given as
input instead.
Consider this as still an experimental and incomplete feature:
- We may want to do the same for in-index objects, e.g.
asking for :RelNotes with this option should give
:Documentation/RelNotes/2.5.0.txt, too
- "git cat-file --follow-symlinks blob HEAD:RelNotes"
may also be something we want to allow in the future.
* "git send-email" learned the alias file format used by the sendmail
program (in a simplified form; we obviously do not feed pipes).
* Traditionally, external low-level 3-way merge drivers are expected
to produce their results based solely on the contents of the three
variants given in temporary files named by %O, %A and %B on their
command line. Additionally allow them to look at the final path
(given by %P).
* "git blame" learned blame.showEmail configuration variable.
* "git apply" cannot diagnose a patch corruption when the breakage is
to mark the length of the hunk shorter than it really is on the
hunk header line "@@ -l,k +m,n @@"; one special case it could is
when the hunk becomes no-op (e.g. k == n == 2 for two-line context
patch output), and it learned to do so in this special case.
* Add the "--allow-unknown-type" option to "cat-file" to allow
inspecting loose objects of an experimental or a broken type.
* Many long-running operations show progress eye-candy, even when
they are later backgrounded. Hide the eye-candy when the process
is sent to the background instead.
(merge a4fb76c lm/squelch-bg-progress later to maint).
Performance, Internal Implementation, Development Support etc.
* "unsigned char [20]" used throughout the code to represent object
names are being converted into a semi-opaque "struct object_id".
This effort is expected to interfere with other topics in flight,
but hopefully will give us one extra level of abstraction in the
end, when completed.
* for_each_ref() callback functions were taught to name the objects
not with "unsigned char sha1[20]" but with "struct object_id".
* Catch a programmer mistake to feed a pointer not an array to
ARRAY_SIZE() macro, by using a couple of GCC extensions.
* Some error messages in "git config" were emitted without calling
the usual error() facility.
* When "add--interactive" splits a hunk into two overlapping hunks
and then let the user choose only one, it sometimes feeds an
incorrect patch text to "git apply". Add tests to demonstrate
this.
I have a slight suspicion that this may be $gmane/87202 coming back
and biting us (I seem to have said "let's run with this and see
what happens" back then).
* More line-ending tests.
* An earlier rewrite to use strbuf_getwholeline() instead of fgets(3)
to read packed-refs file revealed that the former is unacceptably
inefficient. It has been optimized by using getdelim(3) when
available.
* The refs API uses ref_lock struct which had its own "int fd", even
though the same file descriptor was in the lock struct it contains.
Clean-up the code to lose this redundant field.
* There was a dead code that used to handle "git pull --tags" and
show special-cased error message, which was made irrelevant when
the semantics of the option changed back in Git 1.9 days.
(merge 19d122b pt/pull-tags-error-diag later to maint).
* Help us to find broken test script that splits the body part of the
test by mistaken use of wrong kind of quotes.
(merge d93d5d5 jc/test-prereq-validate later to maint).
* Developer support to automatically detect broken &&-chain in the
test scripts is now turned on by default.
(merge 92b269f jk/test-chain-lint later to maint).
* Error reporting mechanism used in "refs" API has been made more
consistent.
* "git pull" has more test coverage now.
* "git pull" has become more aware of the options meant for
underlying "git fetch" and then learned to use parse-options
parser.
* Clarify in the Makefile a guideline to decide use of USE_NSEC.
Also contains various documentation updates and code clean-ups.
Fixes since v2.4
----------------
Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes since v2.4 in the maintenance
track are contained in this release (see the maintenance releases'
notes for details).
* Git 2.4 broke setting verbosity and progress levels on "git clone"
with native transports.
(merge 822f0c4 mh/clone-verbosity-fix later to maint).
* "git add -e" did not allow the user to abort the operation by
killing the editor.
(merge cb64800 jk/add-e-kill-editor later to maint).
* Memory usage of "git index-pack" has been trimmed by tens of
per-cent.
(merge f0e7f11 nd/slim-index-pack-memory-usage later to maint).
* "git rev-list --objects $old --not --all" to see if everything that
is reachable from $old is already connected to the existing refs
was very inefficient.
(merge b6e8a3b jk/still-interesting later to maint).
* "hash-object --literally" introduced in v2.2 was not prepared to
take a really long object type name.
(merge 1427a7f jc/hash-object later to maint).
* "git rebase --quiet" was not quite quiet when there is nothing to
do.
(merge 22946a9 jk/rebase-quiet-noop later to maint).
* The completion for "log --decorate=" parameter value was incorrect.
(merge af16bda sg/complete-decorate-full-not-long later to maint).
* "filter-branch" corrupted commit log message that ends with an
incomplete line on platforms with some "sed" implementations that
munge such a line. Work it around by avoiding to use "sed".
(merge df06201 jk/filter-branch-use-of-sed-on-incomplete-line later to maint).
* "git daemon" fails to build from the source under NO_IPV6
configuration (regression in 2.4).
(merge d358f77 jc/daemon-no-ipv6-for-2.4.1 later to maint).
* Some time ago, "git blame" (incorrectly) lost the convert_to_git()
call when synthesizing a fake "tip" commit that represents the
state in the working tree, which broke folks who record the history
with LF line ending to make their project portable across platforms
while terminating lines in their working tree files with CRLF for
their platform.
(merge 4bf256d tb/blame-resurrect-convert-to-git later to maint).
* We avoid setting core.worktree when the repository location is the
".git" directory directly at the top level of the working tree, but
the code misdetected the case in which the working tree is at the
root level of the filesystem (which arguably is a silly thing to
do, but still valid).
(merge 84ccad8 jk/init-core-worktree-at-root later to maint).
* "git commit --date=now" or anything that relies on approxidate lost
the daylight-saving-time offset.
(merge f6e6362 jc/epochtime-wo-tz later to maint).
* Access to objects in repositories that borrow from another one on a
slow NFS server unnecessarily got more expensive due to recent code
becoming more cautious in a naive way not to lose objects to pruning.
(merge ee1c6c3 jk/prune-mtime later to maint).
* The codepaths that read .gitignore and .gitattributes files have been
taught that these files encoded in UTF-8 may have UTF-8 BOM marker at
the beginning; this makes it in line with what we do for configuration
files already.
(merge 27547e5 cn/bom-in-gitignore later to maint).
* a few helper scripts in the test suite did not report errors
correctly.
(merge de248e9 ep/fix-test-lib-functions-report later to maint).
* The default $HOME/.gitconfig file created upon "git config --global"
that edits it had incorrectly spelled user.name and user.email
entries in it.
(merge 7e11052 oh/fix-config-default-user-name-section later to maint).
* "git cat-file bl $blob" failed to barf even though there is no
object type that is "bl".
(merge b7994af jk/type-from-string-gently later to maint).
* The usual "git diff" when seeing a file turning into a directory
showed a patchset to remove the file and create all files in the
directory, but "git diff --no-index" simply refused to work. Also,
when asked to compare a file and a directory, imitate POSIX "diff"
and compare the file with the file with the same name in the
directory, instead of refusing to run.
(merge 0615173 jc/diff-no-index-d-f later to maint).
* "git rebase -i" moved the "current" command from "todo" to "done" a
bit too prematurely, losing a step when a "pick" did not even start.
(merge 8cbc57c ph/rebase-i-redo later to maint).
* The connection initiation code for "ssh" transport tried to absorb
differences between the stock "ssh" and Putty-supplied "plink" and
its derivatives, but the logic to tell that we are using "plink"
variants were too loose and falsely triggered when "plink" appeared
anywhere in the path (e.g. "/home/me/bin/uplink/ssh").
(merge baaf233 bc/connect-plink later to maint).
* We have prepended $GIT_EXEC_PATH and the path "git" is installed in
(typically "/usr/bin") to $PATH when invoking subprograms and hooks
for almost eternity, but the original use case the latter tried to
support was semi-bogus (i.e. install git to /opt/foo/git and run it
without having /opt/foo on $PATH), and more importantly it has
become less and less relevant as Git grew more mainstream (i.e. the
users would _want_ to have it on their $PATH). Stop prepending the
path in which "git" is installed to users' $PATH, as that would
interfere the command search order people depend on (e.g. they may
not like versions of programs that are unrelated to Git in /usr/bin
and want to override them by having different ones in /usr/local/bin
and have the latter directory earlier in their $PATH).
(merge a0b4507 jk/git-no-more-argv0-path-munging later to maint).
* core.excludesfile (defaulting to $XDG_HOME/git/ignore) is supposed
to be overridden by repository-specific .git/info/exclude file, but
the order was swapped from the beginning. This belatedly fixes it.
(merge 099d2d8 jc/gitignore-precedence later to maint).
* There was a commented-out (instead of being marked to expect
failure) test that documented a breakage that was fixed since the
test was written; turn it into a proper test.
(merge 66d2e04 sb/t1020-cleanup later to maint).
* The "log --decorate" enhancement in Git 2.4 that shows the commit
at the tip of the current branch e.g. "HEAD -> master", did not
work with --decorate=full.
(merge 429ad20 mg/log-decorate-HEAD later to maint).
* The ref API did not handle cases where 'refs/heads/xyzzy/frotz' is
removed at the same time as 'refs/heads/xyzzy' is added (or vice
versa) very well.
(merge c628edf mh/ref-directory-file later to maint).
* Multi-ref transaction support we merged a few releases ago
unnecessarily kept many file descriptors open, risking to fail with
resource exhaustion. This is for 2.4.x track.
(merge 185ce3a mh/write-refs-sooner-2.4 later to maint).
* "git bundle verify" did not diagnose extra parameters on the
command line.
(merge 7886cfa ps/bundle-verify-arg later to maint).
* Various documentation mark-up fixes to make the output more
consistent in general and also make AsciiDoctor (an alternative
formatter) happier.
(merge d0258b9 jk/asciidoc-markup-fix later to maint).
(merge ad3967a jk/stripspace-asciidoctor-fix later to maint).
(merge 975e382 ja/tutorial-asciidoctor-fix later to maint).
* The code to read pack-bitmap wanted to allocate a few hundred
pointers to a structure, but by mistake allocated and leaked memory
enough to hold that many actual structures. Correct the allocation
size and also have it on stack, as it is small enough.
(merge 599dc76 rs/plug-leak-in-pack-bitmaps later to maint).
* The pull.ff configuration was supposed to override the merge.ff
configuration, but it didn't.
(merge db9bb28 pt/pull-ff-vs-merge-ff later to maint).
* "git pull --log" and "git pull --no-log" worked as expected, but
"git pull --log=20" did not.
(merge 5061a44 pt/pull-log-n later to maint).
* "git rerere forget" in a repository without rerere enabled gave a
cryptic error message; it should be a silent no-op instead.
(merge 0544574 jk/rerere-forget-check-enabled later to maint).
* "git rebase -i" fired post-rewrite hook when it shouldn't (namely,
when it was told to stop sequencing with 'exec' insn).
(merge 141ff8f mm/rebase-i-post-rewrite-exec later to maint).
* Clarify that "log --raw" and "log --format=raw" are unrelated
concepts.
(merge 92de921 mm/log-format-raw-doc later to maint).
* Make "git stash something --help" error out, so that users can
safely say "git stash drop --help".
(merge 5ba2831 jk/stash-options later to maint).
* The clean/smudge interface did not work well when filtering an
empty contents (failed and then passed the empty input through).
It can be argued that a filter that produces anything but empty for
an empty input is nonsense, but if the user wants to do strange
things, then why not?
(merge f6a1e1e jh/filter-empty-contents later to maint).
* Communication between the HTTP server and http_backend process can
lead to a dead-lock when relaying a large ref negotiation request.
Diagnose the situation better, and mitigate it by reading such a
request first into core (to a reasonable limit).
(merge 636614f jk/http-backend-deadlock later to maint).
* "git clean pathspec..." tried to lstat(2) and complain even for
paths outside the given pathspec.
(merge 838d6a9 dt/clean-pathspec-filter-then-lstat later to maint).
* Recent "git prune" traverses young unreachable objects to safekeep
old objects in the reachability chain from them, which sometimes
caused error messages that are unnecessarily alarming.
(merge ce4e7b2 jk/squelch-missing-link-warning-for-unreachable later to maint).
* The configuration reader/writer uses mmap(2) interface to access
the files; when we find a directory, it barfed with "Out of memory?".
(merge 9ca0aaf jk/diagnose-config-mmap-failure later to maint).
* "color.diff.plain" was a misnomer; give it 'color.diff.context' as
a more logical synonym.
(merge 8dbf3eb jk/color-diff-plain-is-context later to maint).
* The setup code used to die when core.bare and core.worktree are set
inconsistently, even for commands that do not need working tree.
(merge fada767 jk/die-on-bogus-worktree-late later to maint).
* Recent Mac OS X updates breaks the logic to detect that the machine
is on the AC power in the sample pre-auto-gc script.
(merge c54c7b3 pa/auto-gc-mac-osx later to maint).
* "git commit --cleanup=scissors" was not careful enough to protect
against getting fooled by a line that looked like scissors.
(merge fbfa097 sg/commit-cleanup-scissors later to maint).
* "Have we lost a race with competing repack?" check was too
expensive, especially while receiving a huge object transfer
that runs index-pack (e.g. "clone" or "fetch").
(merge 0eeb077 jk/index-pack-reduce-recheck later to maint).
* The tcsh completion writes a bash scriptlet but that would have
failed for users with noclobber set.
(merge 0b1f688 af/tcsh-completion-noclobber later to maint).
* "git for-each-ref" reported "missing object" for 0{40} when it
encounters a broken ref. The lack of object whose name is 0{40} is
not the problem; the ref being broken is.
(merge 501cf47 mh/reporting-broken-refs-from-for-each-ref later to maint).
* Various fixes around "git am" that applies a patch to a history
that is not there yet.
(merge 6ea3b67 pt/am-abort-fix later to maint).
* "git fsck" used to ignore missing or invalid objects recorded in reflog.
(merge 19bf6c9 mh/fsck-reflog-entries later to maint).
* "git format-patch --ignore-if-upstream A..B" did not like to be fed
tags as boundary commits.
(merge 9b7a61d jc/do-not-feed-tags-to-clear-commit-marks later to maint).
* "git fetch --depth=<depth>" and "git clone --depth=<depth>" issued
a shallow transfer request even to an upload-pack that does not
support the capability.
(merge eb86a50 me/fetch-into-shallow-safety later to maint).
* "git rebase" did not exit with failure when format-patch it invoked
failed for whatever reason.
(merge 60d708b cb/rebase-am-exit-code later to maint).
* Fix a small bug in our use of umask() return value.
(merge 3096b2e jk/fix-refresh-utime later to maint).
* An ancient test framework enhancement to allow color was not
entirely correct; this makes it work even when tput needs to read
from the ~/.terminfo under the user's real HOME directory.
(merge d5c1b7c rh/test-color-avoid-terminfo-in-original-home later to maint).
* A minor bugfix when pack bitmap is used with "rev-list --count".
(merge c8a70d3 jk/rev-list-no-bitmap-while-pruning later to maint).
* "git config" failed to update the configuration file when the
underlying filesystem is incapable of renaming a file that is still
open.
(merge 7a64592 kb/config-unmap-before-renaming later to maint).
* Avoid possible ssize_t to int truncation.
(merge 6c8afe4 mh/strbuf-read-file-returns-ssize-t later to maint).
* When you say "!<ENTER>" while running say "git log", you'd confuse
yourself in the resulting shell, that may look as if you took
control back to the original shell you spawned "git log" from but
that isn't what is happening. To that new shell, we leaked
GIT_PAGER_IN_USE environment variable that was meant as a local
communication between the original "Git" and subprocesses that was
spawned by it after we launched the pager, which caused many
"interesting" things to happen, e.g. "git diff | cat" still paints
its output in color by default.
Stop leaking that environment variable to the pager's half of the
fork; we only need it on "Git" side when we spawn the pager.
(merge 124b519 jc/unexport-git-pager-in-use-in-pager later to maint).
* Abandoning an already applied change in "git rebase -i" with
"--continue" left CHERRY_PICK_HEAD and confused later steps.
(merge 0e0aff4 js/rebase-i-clean-up-upon-continue-to-skip later to maint).
* We used to ask libCURL to use the most secure authentication method
available when talking to an HTTP proxy only when we were told to
talk to one via configuration variables. We now ask libCURL to
always use the most secure authentication method, because the user
can tell libCURL to use an HTTP proxy via an environment variable
without using configuration variables.
(merge 5841520 et/http-proxyauth later to maint).
* A fix to a minor regression to "git fsck" in v2.2 era that started
complaining about a body-less tag object when it lacks a separator
empty line after its header to separate it with a non-existent body.
(merge 84d18c0 jc/fsck-retire-require-eoh later to maint).
* Code cleanups and documentation updates.
(merge 0269f96 mm/usage-log-l-can-take-regex later to maint).
(merge 64f2589 nd/t1509-chroot-test later to maint).
(merge d201a1e sb/test-bitmap-free-at-end later to maint).
(merge 05bfc7d sb/line-log-plug-pairdiff-leak later to maint).
(merge 846e5df pt/xdg-config-path later to maint).
(merge 1154aa4 jc/plug-fmt-merge-msg-leak later to maint).
(merge 319b678 jk/sha1-file-reduce-useless-warnings later to maint).
(merge 9a35c14 fg/document-commit-message-stripping later to maint).
(merge bbf431c ps/doc-packfile-vs-pack-file later to maint).
(merge 309a9e3 jk/skip-http-tests-under-no-curl later to maint).
(merge ccd593c dl/branch-error-message later to maint).
(merge 22570b6 rs/janitorial later to maint).
(merge 5c2a581 mc/commit-doc-grammofix later to maint).
(merge ce41720 ah/usage-strings later to maint).
(merge e6a268c sb/glossary-submodule later to maint).
(merge ec48a76 sb/submodule-doc-intro later to maint).
(merge 14f8b9b jk/clone-dissociate later to maint).
(merge 055c7e9 sb/pack-protocol-mention-smart-http later to maint).
(merge 7c37a5d jk/make-fix-dependencies later to maint).
(merge fc0aa39 sg/merge-summary-config later to maint).
(merge 329af6c pt/t0302-needs-sanity later to maint).
(merge d614f07 fk/doc-format-patch-vn later to maint).
(merge 72dbb36 sg/completion-commit-cleanup later to maint).
(merge e654eb2 es/utf8-stupid-compiler-workaround later to maint).
(merge 34b935c es/osx-header-pollutes-mask-macro later to maint).
(merge ab7fade jc/prompt-document-ps1-state-separator later to maint).
(merge 25f600e mm/describe-doc later to maint).
(merge 83fe167 mm/branch-doc-updates later to maint).
(merge 75d2e5a ls/hint-rev-list-count later to maint).
(merge edc8f71 cb/subtree-tests-update later to maint).
(merge 5330e6e sb/p5310-and-chain later to maint).
(merge c4ac525 tb/checkout-doc later to maint).
(merge e479c5f jk/pretty-encoding-doc later to maint).
(merge 7e837c6 ss/clone-guess-dir-name-simplify later to maint).

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Git v2.5.1 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.5
----------------
* Running an aliased command from a subdirectory when the .git thing
in the working tree is a gitfile pointing elsewhere did not work.
* Often a fast-import stream builds a new commit on top of the
previous commit it built, and it often unconditionally emits a
"from" command to specify the first parent, which can be omitted in
such a case. This caused fast-import to forget the tree of the
previous commit and then re-read it from scratch, which was
inefficient. Optimize for this common case.
* The "rev-parse --parseopt" mode parsed the option specification
and the argument hint in a strange way to allow '=' and other
special characters in the option name while forbidding them from
the argument hint. This made it impossible to define an option
like "--pair <key>=<value>" with "pair=key=value" specification,
which instead would have defined a "--pair=key <value>" option.
* A "rebase" replays changes of the local branch on top of something
else, as such they are placed in stage #3 and referred to as
"theirs", while the changes in the new base, typically a foreign
work, are placed in stage #2 and referred to as "ours". Clarify
the "checkout --ours/--theirs".
* An experimental "untracked cache" feature used uname(2) in a
slightly unportable way.
* "sparse checkout" misbehaved for a path that is excluded from the
checkout when switching between branches that differ at the path.
* The low-level "git send-pack" did not honor 'user.signingkey'
configuration variable when sending a signed-push.
* An attempt to delete a ref by pushing into a repository whose HEAD
symbolic reference points at an unborn branch that cannot be
created due to ref D/F conflict (e.g. refs/heads/a/b exists, HEAD
points at refs/heads/a) failed.
* "git subtree" (in contrib/) depended on "git log" output to be
stable, which was a no-no. Apply a workaround to force a
particular date format.
* "git clone $URL" in recent releases of Git contains a regression in
the code that invents a new repository name incorrectly based on
the $URL. This has been corrected.
(merge db2e220 jk/guess-repo-name-regression-fix later to maint).
* Running tests with the "-x" option to make them verbose had some
unpleasant interactions with other features of the test suite.
(merge 9b5fe78 jk/test-with-x later to maint).
* "git pull" in recent releases of Git has a regression in the code
that allows custom path to the --upload-pack=<program>. This has
been corrected.
* pipe() emulation used in Git for Windows looked at a wrong variable
when checking for an error from an _open_osfhandle() call.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.5.2 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.5.1
------------------
* "git init empty && git -C empty log" said "bad default revision 'HEAD'",
which was found to be a bit confusing to new users.
* The "interpret-trailers" helper mistook a multi-paragraph title of
a commit log message with a colon in it as the end of the trailer
block.
* When re-priming the cache-tree opportunistically while committing
the in-core index as-is, we mistakenly invalidated the in-core
index too aggressively, causing the experimental split-index code
to unnecessarily rewrite the on-disk index file(s).
* "git archive" did not use zip64 extension when creating an archive
with more than 64k entries, which nobody should need, right ;-)?
* The code in "multiple-worktree" support that attempted to recover
from an inconsistent state updated an incorrect file.
* "git rev-list" does not take "--notes" option, but did not complain
when one is given.
* Because the configuration system does not allow "alias.0foo" and
"pager.0foo" as the configuration key, the user cannot use '0foo'
as a custom command name anyway, but "git 0foo" tried to look these
keys up and emitted useless warnings before saying '0foo is not a
git command'. These warning messages have been squelched.
* We recently rewrote one of the build scripts in Perl, which made it
necessary to have Perl to build Git. Reduced Perl dependency by
rewriting it again using sed.
* t1509 test that requires a dedicated VM environment had some
bitrot, which has been corrected.
* strbuf_read() used to have one extra iteration (and an unnecessary
strbuf_grow() of 8kB), which was eliminated.
* The codepath to produce error messages had a hard-coded limit to
the size of the message, primarily to avoid memory allocation while
calling die().
* When trying to see that an object does not exist, a state errno
leaked from our "first try to open a packfile with O_NOATIME and
then if it fails retry without it" logic on a system that refuses
O_NOATIME. This confused us and caused us to die, saying that the
packfile is unreadable, when we should have just reported that the
object does not exist in that packfile to the caller.
* An off-by-one error made "git remote" to mishandle a remote with a
single letter nickname.
* A handful of codepaths that used to use fixed-sized arrays to hold
pathnames have been corrected to use strbuf and other mechanisms to
allow longer pathnames without fearing overflows.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.5.3 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.5.2
------------------
* The experimental untracked-cache feature were buggy when paths with
a few levels of subdirectories are involved.
* Recent versions of scripted "git am" has a performance regression
in "git am --skip" codepath, which no longer exists in the
built-in version on the 'master' front. Fix the regression in
the last scripted version that appear in 2.5.x maintenance track
and older.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.5.4 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.5.4
------------------
* xdiff code we use to generate diffs is not prepared to handle
extremely large files. It uses "int" in many places, which can
overflow if we have a very large number of lines or even bytes in
our input files, for example. Cap the input size to somewhere
around 1GB for now.
* Some protocols (like git-remote-ext) can execute arbitrary code
found in the URL. The URLs that submodules use may come from
arbitrary sources (e.g., .gitmodules files in a remote
repository), and can hurt those who blindly enable recursive
fetch. Restrict the allowed protocols to well known and safe
ones.

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Git v2.5.5 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.5.4
------------------
* Bugfix patches were backported from the 'master' front to plug heap
corruption holes, to catch integer overflow in the computation of
pathname lengths, and to get rid of the name_path API. Both of
these would have resulted in writing over an under-allocated buffer
when formulating pathnames while tree traversal.

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Git v2.5.6 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.5.5
------------------
* "git-shell" rejects a request to serve a repository whose name
begins with a dash, which makes it no longer possible to get it
confused into spawning service programs like "git-upload-pack" with
an option like "--help", which in turn would spawn an interactive
pager, instead of working with the repository user asked to access
(i.e. the one whose name is "--help").

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Git 2.6 Release Notes
=====================
Updates since v2.5
------------------
UI, Workflows & Features
* An asterisk as a substring (as opposed to the entirety) of a path
component for both side of a refspec, e.g.
"refs/heads/o*:refs/remotes/heads/i*", is now allowed.
* New userdiff pattern definition for fountain screenwriting markup
format has been added.
* "git log" and friends learned a new "--date=format:..." option to
format timestamps using system's strftime(3).
* "git fast-import" learned to respond to the get-mark command via
its cat-blob-fd interface.
* "git rebase -i" learned "drop commit-object-name subject" command
as another way to skip replaying of a commit.
* A new configuration variable can enable "--follow" automatically
when "git log" is run with one pathspec argument.
* "git status" learned to show a more detailed information regarding
the "rebase -i" session in progress.
* "git cat-file" learned "--batch-all-objects" option to enumerate all
available objects in the repository more quickly than "rev-list
--all --objects" (the output includes unreachable objects, though).
* "git fsck" learned to ignore errors on a set of known-to-be-bad
objects, and also allows the warning levels of various kinds of
non-critical breakages to be tweaked.
* "git rebase -i"'s list of todo is made configurable.
* "git send-email" now performs alias-expansion on names that are
given via --cccmd, etc.
* An environment variable GIT_REPLACE_REF_BASE tells Git to look into
refs hierarchy other than refs/replace/ for the object replacement
data.
* Allow untracked cache (experimental) to be used when sparse
checkout (experimental) is also in use.
* "git pull --rebase" has been taught to pay attention to
rebase.autostash configuration.
* The command-line completion script (in contrib/) has been updated.
* A negative !ref entry in multi-value transfer.hideRefs
configuration can be used to say "don't hide this one".
* After "git am" without "-3" stops, running "git am -3" pays attention
to "-3" only for the patch that caused the original invocation
to stop.
* When linked worktree is used, simultaneous "notes merge" instances
for the same ref in refs/notes/* are prevented from stomping on
each other.
* "git send-email" learned a new option --smtp-auth to limit the SMTP
AUTH mechanisms to be used to a subset of what the system library
supports.
* A new configuration variable http.sslVersion can be used to specify
what specific version of SSL/TLS to use to make a connection.
* "git notes merge" can be told with "--strategy=<how>" option how to
automatically handle conflicts; this can now be configured by
setting notes.mergeStrategy configuration variable.
* "git log --cc" did not show any patch, even though most of the time
the user meant "git log --cc -p -m" to see patch output for commits
with a single parent, and combined diff for merge commits. The
command is taught to DWIM "--cc" (without "--raw" and other forms
of output specification) to "--cc -p -m".
* "git config --list" output was hard to parse when values consist of
multiple lines. "--name-only" option is added to help this.
* A handful of usability & cosmetic fixes to gitk and l10n updates.
* A completely empty e-mail address <> is now allowed in the authors
file used by git-svn, to match the way it accepts the output from
authors-prog.
Performance, Internal Implementation, Development Support etc.
* In preparation for allowing different "backends" to store the refs
in a way different from the traditional "one ref per file in
$GIT_DIR or in a $GIT_DIR/packed-refs file" filesystem storage,
direct filesystem access to ref-like things like CHERRY_PICK_HEAD
from scripts and programs has been reduced.
* Computation of untracked status indicator by bash prompt
script (in contrib/) has been optimized.
* Memory use reduction when commit-slab facility is used to annotate
sparsely (which is not recommended in the first place).
* Clean up refs API and make "git clone" less intimate with the
implementation detail.
* "git pull" was reimplemented in C.
* The packet tracing machinery allows to capture an incoming pack
data to a file for debugging.
* Move machinery to parse human-readable scaled numbers like 1k, 4M,
and 2G as an option parameter's value from pack-objects to
parse-options API, to make it available to other codepaths.
* "git verify-tag" and "git verify-commit" have been taught to share
more code, and then learned to optionally show the verification
message from the underlying GPG implementation.
* Various enhancements around "git am" reading patches generated by
foreign SCM have been made.
* Ref listing by "git branch -l" and "git tag -l" commands has
started to be rebuilt, based on the for-each-ref machinery.
* The code to perform multi-tree merges has been taught to repopulate
the cache-tree upon a successful merge into the index, so that
subsequent "diff-index --cached" (hence "status") and "write-tree"
(hence "commit") will go faster.
The same logic in "git checkout" may now be removed, but that is a
separate issue.
* Tests that assume how reflogs are represented on the filesystem too
much have been corrected.
* "git am" has been rewritten in "C".
* git_path() and mkpath() are handy helper functions but it is easy
to misuse, as the callers need to be careful to keep the number of
active results below 4. Their uses have been reduced.
* The "lockfile" API has been rebuilt on top of a new "tempfile" API.
* To prepare for allowing a different "ref" backend to be plugged in
to the system, update_ref()/delete_ref() have been taught about
ref-like things like MERGE_HEAD that are per-worktree (they will
always be written to the filesystem inside $GIT_DIR).
* The gitmodules API that is accessed from the C code learned to
cache stuff lazily.
Also contains various documentation updates and code clean-ups.
Fixes since v2.5
----------------
Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes since v2.5 in the maintenance
track are contained in this release (see the maintenance releases'
notes for details).
* "git subtree" (in contrib/) depended on "git log" output to be
stable, which was a no-no. Apply a workaround to force a
particular date format.
(merge e7aac44 da/subtree-date-confusion later to maint).
* An attempt to delete a ref by pushing into a repository whose HEAD
symbolic reference points at an unborn branch that cannot be
created due to ref D/F conflict (e.g. refs/heads/a/b exists, HEAD
points at refs/heads/a) failed.
(merge b112b14 jx/do-not-crash-receive-pack-wo-head later to maint).
* The low-level "git send-pack" did not honor 'user.signingkey'
configuration variable when sending a signed-push.
(merge d830d39 db/send-pack-user-signingkey later to maint).
* "sparse checkout" misbehaved for a path that is excluded from the
checkout when switching between branches that differ at the path.
(merge 7d78241 as/sparse-checkout-removal later to maint).
* An experimental "untracked cache" feature used uname(2) in a
slightly unportable way.
(merge 100e433 cb/uname-in-untracked later to maint).
* A "rebase" replays changes of the local branch on top of something
else, as such they are placed in stage #3 and referred to as
"theirs", while the changes in the new base, typically a foreign
work, are placed in stage #2 and referred to as "ours". Clarify
the "checkout --ours/--theirs".
(merge f303016 se/doc-checkout-ours-theirs later to maint).
* The "rev-parse --parseopt" mode parsed the option specification
and the argument hint in a strange way to allow '=' and other
special characters in the option name while forbidding them from
the argument hint. This made it impossible to define an option
like "--pair <key>=<value>" with "pair=key=value" specification,
which instead would have defined a "--pair=key <value>" option.
(merge 2d893df ib/scripted-parse-opt-better-hint-string later to maint).
* Often a fast-import stream builds a new commit on top of the
previous commit it built, and it often unconditionally emits a
"from" command to specify the first parent, which can be omitted in
such a case. This caused fast-import to forget the tree of the
previous commit and then re-read it from scratch, which was
inefficient. Optimize for this common case.
(merge 0df3245 mh/fast-import-optimize-current-from later to maint).
* Running an aliased command from a subdirectory when the .git thing
in the working tree is a gitfile pointing elsewhere did not work.
(merge d95138e nd/export-worktree later to maint).
* "Is this subdirectory a separate repository that should not be
touched?" check "git clean" was inefficient. This was replaced
with a more optimized check.
(merge fbf2fec ee/clean-remove-dirs later to maint).
* The "new-worktree-mode" hack in "checkout" that was added in
nd/multiple-work-trees topic has been removed by updating the
implementation of new "worktree add".
(merge 65f9b75 es/worktree-add-cleanup later to maint).
* Remove remaining cruft from "git checkout --to", which
transitioned to "git worktree add".
(merge 114ff88 es/worktree-add later to maint).
* An off-by-one error made "git remote" to mishandle a remote with a
single letter nickname.
(merge bc598c3 mh/get-remote-group-fix later to maint).
* "git clone $URL", when cloning from a site whose sole purpose is to
host a single repository (hence, no path after <scheme>://<site>/),
tried to use the site name as the new repository name, but did not
remove username or password when <site> part was of the form
<user>@<pass>:<host>. The code is taught to redact these.
(merge adef956 ps/guess-repo-name-at-root later to maint).
* Running tests with the "-x" option to make them verbose had some
unpleasant interactions with other features of the test suite.
(merge 9b5fe78 jk/test-with-x later to maint).
* t1509 test that requires a dedicated VM environment had some
bitrot, which has been corrected.
(merge faacc5a ps/t1509-chroot-test-fixup later to maint).
* "git pull" in recent releases of Git has a regression in the code
that allows custom path to the --upload-pack=<program>. This has
been corrected.
Note that this is irrelevant for 'master' with "git pull" rewritten
in C.
(merge 13e0e28 mm/pull-upload-pack later to maint).
* When trying to see that an object does not exist, a state errno
leaked from our "first try to open a packfile with O_NOATIME and
then if it fails retry without it" logic on a system that refuses
O_NOATIME. This confused us and caused us to die, saying that the
packfile is unreadable, when we should have just reported that the
object does not exist in that packfile to the caller.
(merge dff6f28 cb/open-noatime-clear-errno later to maint).
* The codepath to produce error messages had a hard-coded limit to
the size of the message, primarily to avoid memory allocation while
calling die().
(merge f4c3edc jk/long-error-messages later to maint).
* strbuf_read() used to have one extra iteration (and an unnecessary
strbuf_grow() of 8kB), which was eliminated.
(merge 3ebbd00 jh/strbuf-read-use-read-in-full later to maint).
* We rewrote one of the build scripts in Perl but this reimplements
in Bourne shell.
(merge 57cee8a sg/help-group later to maint).
* The experimental untracked-cache feature were buggy when paths with
a few levels of subdirectories are involved.
(merge 73f9145 dt/untracked-subdir later to maint).
* "interpret-trailers" helper mistook a single-liner log message that
has a colon as the end of existing trailer.
* The "interpret-trailers" helper mistook a multi-paragraph title of
a commit log message with a colon in it as the end of the trailer
block.
(merge 5c99995 cc/trailers-corner-case-fix later to maint).
* "git describe" without argument defaulted to describe the HEAD
commit, but "git describe --contains" didn't. Arguably, in a
repository used for active development, such defaulting would not
be very useful as the tip of branch is typically not tagged, but it
is better to be consistent.
(merge 2bd0706 sg/describe-contains later to maint).
* The client side codepaths in "git push" have been cleaned up
and the user can request to perform an optional "signed push",
i.e. sign only when the other end accepts signed push.
(merge 68c757f db/push-sign-if-asked later to maint).
* Because the configuration system does not allow "alias.0foo" and
"pager.0foo" as the configuration key, the user cannot use '0foo'
as a custom command name anyway, but "git 0foo" tried to look these
keys up and emitted useless warnings before saying '0foo is not a
git command'. These warning messages have been squelched.
(merge 9e9de18 jk/fix-alias-pager-config-key-warnings later to maint).
* "git rev-list" does not take "--notes" option, but did not complain
when one is given.
(merge 2aea7a5 jk/rev-list-has-no-notes later to maint).
* When re-priming the cache-tree opportunistically while committing
the in-core index as-is, we mistakenly invalidated the in-core
index too aggressively, causing the experimental split-index code
to unnecessarily rewrite the on-disk index file(s).
(merge 475a344 dt/commit-preserve-base-index-upon-opportunistic-cache-tree-update later to maint).
* "git archive" did not use zip64 extension when creating an archive
with more than 64k entries, which nobody should need, right ;-)?
(merge 88329ca rs/archive-zip-many later to maint).
* The code in "multiple-worktree" support that attempted to recover
from an inconsistent state updated an incorrect file.
(merge 82fde87 nd/fixup-linked-gitdir later to maint).
* On case insensitive systems, "git p4" did not work well with client
specs.
* "git init empty && git -C empty log" said "bad default revision 'HEAD'",
which was found to be a bit confusing to new users.
(merge ce11360 jk/log-missing-default-HEAD later to maint).
* Recent versions of scripted "git am" has a performance regression in
"git am --skip" codepath, which no longer exists in the built-in
version on the 'master' front. Fix the regression in the last
scripted version that appear in 2.5.x maintenance track and older.
(merge b9d6689 js/maint-am-skip-performance-regression later to maint).
* The branch descriptions that are set with "git branch --edit-description"
option were used in many places but they weren't clearly documented.
(merge 561d2b7 po/doc-branch-desc later to maint).
* Code cleanups and documentation updates.
(merge 1c601af es/doc-clean-outdated-tools later to maint).
(merge 3581304 kn/tag-doc-fix later to maint).
(merge 3a59e59 kb/i18n-doc later to maint).
(merge 45abdee sb/remove-unused-var-from-builtin-add later to maint).
(merge 14691e3 sb/parse-options-codeformat later to maint).
(merge 4a6ada3 ad/bisect-cleanup later to maint).
(merge da4c5ad ta/docfix-index-format-tech later to maint).
(merge ae25fd3 sb/check-return-from-read-ref later to maint).
(merge b3325df nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs later to maint).
(merge 7aa9b9b sg/wt-status-header-inclusion later to maint).
(merge f04c690 as/docfix-reflog-expire-unreachable later to maint).
(merge 1269847 sg/t3020-typofix later to maint).
(merge 8b54c23 jc/calloc-pathspec later to maint).
(merge a6926b8 po/po-readme later to maint).
(merge 54d160e ss/fix-config-fd-leak later to maint).
(merge b80fa84 ah/submodule-typofix-in-error later to maint).
(merge 99885bc ah/reflog-typofix-in-error later to maint).
(merge 9476c2c ah/read-tree-usage-string later to maint).
(merge b8c1d27 ah/pack-objects-usage-strings later to maint).
(merge 486e1e1 br/svn-doc-include-paths-config later to maint).
(merge 1733ed3 ee/clean-test-fixes later to maint).
(merge 5fcadc3 gb/apply-comment-typofix later to maint).
(merge b894d3e mp/t7060-diff-index-test later to maint).
(merge d238710 as/config-doc-markup-fix later to maint).

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Git v2.6.1 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.6
----------------
* xdiff code we use to generate diffs is not prepared to handle
extremely large files. It uses "int" in many places, which can
overflow if we have a very large number of lines or even bytes in
our input files, for example. Cap the input size to somewhere
around 1GB for now.
* Some protocols (like git-remote-ext) can execute arbitrary code
found in the URL. The URLs that submodules use may come from
arbitrary sources (e.g., .gitmodules files in a remote
repository), and can hurt those who blindly enable recursive
fetch. Restrict the allowed protocols to well known and safe
ones.

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Git v2.6.2 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.6.1
------------------
* There were some classes of errors that "git fsck" diagnosed to its
standard error that did not cause it to exit with non-zero status.
* A test script for the HTTP service had a timing dependent bug,
which was fixed.
* Performance-measurement tests did not work without an installed Git.
* On a case insensitive filesystems, setting GIT_WORK_TREE variable
using a random cases that does not agree with what the filesystem
thinks confused Git that it wasn't inside the working tree.
* When "git am" was rewritten as a built-in, it stopped paying
attention to user.signingkey, which was fixed.
* After "git checkout --detach", "git status" reported a fairly
useless "HEAD detached at HEAD", instead of saying at which exact
commit.
* "git rebase -i" had a minor regression recently, which stopped
considering a line that begins with an indented '#' in its insn
sheet not a comment, which is now fixed.
* Description of the "log.follow" configuration variable in "git log"
documentation is now also copied to "git config" documentation.
* Allocation related functions and stdio are unsafe things to call
inside a signal handler, and indeed killing the pager can cause
glibc to deadlock waiting on allocation mutex as our signal handler
tries to free() some data structures in wait_for_pager(). Reduce
these unsafe calls.
* The way how --ref/--notes to specify the notes tree reference are
DWIMmed was not clearly documented.
* Customization to change the behaviour with "make -w" and "make -s"
in our Makefile was broken when they were used together.
* The Makefile always runs the library archiver with hardcoded "crs"
options, which was inconvenient for exotic platforms on which
people want to use programs with totally different set of command
line options.
* The ssh transport, just like any other transport over the network,
did not clear GIT_* environment variables, but it is possible to
use SendEnv and AcceptEnv to leak them to the remote invocation of
Git, which is not a good idea at all. Explicitly clear them just
like we do for the local transport.
* "git blame --first-parent v1.0..v2.0" was not rejected but did not
limit the blame to commits on the first parent chain.
* Very small number of options take a parameter that is optional
(which is not a great UI element as they can only appear at the end
of the command line). Add notice to documentation of each and
every one of them.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.6.3 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.6.2
------------------
* The error message from "git blame --contents --reverse" incorrectly
talked about "--contents --children".
* "git merge-file" tried to signal how many conflicts it found, which
obviously would not work well when there are too many of them.
* The name-hash subsystem that is used to cope with case insensitive
filesystems keeps track of directories and their on-filesystem
cases for all the paths in the index by holding a pointer to a
randomly chosen cache entry that is inside the directory (for its
ce->ce_name component). This pointer was not updated even when the
cache entry was removed from the index, leading to use after free.
This was fixed by recording the path for each directory instead of
borrowing cache entries and restructuring the API somewhat.
* When the "git am" command was reimplemented in C, "git am -3" had a
small regression where it is aborted in its error handling codepath
when underlying merge-recursive failed in some ways.
* The synopsis text and the usage string of subcommands that read
list of things from the standard input are often shown as if they
only take input from a file on a filesystem, which was misleading.
* A couple of commands still showed "[options]" in their usage string
to note where options should come on their command line, but we
spell that "[<options>]" in most places these days.
* The submodule code has been taught to work better with separate
work trees created via "git worktree add".
* When "git gc --auto" is backgrounded, its diagnosis message is
lost. It now is saved to a file in $GIT_DIR and is shown next time
the "gc --auto" is run.
* Work around "git p4" failing when the P4 depot records the contents
in UTF-16 without UTF-16 BOM.
* Recent update to "rebase -i" that tries to sanity check the edited
insn sheet before it uses it has become too picky on Windows where
CRLF left by the editor is turned into a trailing CR on the line
read via the "read" built-in command.
* "git clone --dissociate" runs a big "git repack" process at the
end, and it helps to close file descriptors that are open on the
packs and their idx files before doing so on filesystems that
cannot remove a file that is still open.
* Correct "git p4 --detect-labels" so that it does not fail to create
a tag that points at a commit that is also being imported.
* The internal stripspace() function has been moved to where it
logically belongs to, i.e. strbuf API, and the command line parser
of "git stripspace" has been updated to use the parse_options API.
* Prepare for Git on-disk repository representation to undergo
backward incompatible changes by introducing a new repository
format version "1", with an extension mechanism.
* "git gc" used to barf when a symbolic ref has gone dangling
(e.g. the branch that used to be your upstream's default when you
cloned from it is now gone, and you did "fetch --prune").
* The normalize_ceiling_entry() function does not muck with the end
of the path it accepts, and the real world callers do rely on that,
but a test insisted that the function drops a trailing slash.
* "git gc" is safe to run anytime only because it has the built-in
grace period to protect young objects. In order to run with no
grace period, the user must make sure that the repository is
quiescent.
* A recent "filter-branch --msg-filter" broke skipping of the commit
object header, which is fixed.
* "git --literal-pathspecs add -u/-A" without any command line
argument misbehaved ever since Git 2.0.
* Merging a branch that removes a path and another that changes the
mode bits on the same path should have conflicted at the path, but
it didn't and silently favoured the removal.
* "git imap-send" did not compile well with older version of cURL library.
* The linkage order of libraries was wrong in places around libcurl.
* It was not possible to use a repository-lookalike created by "git
worktree add" as a local source of "git clone".
* When "git send-email" wanted to talk over Net::SMTP::SSL,
Net::Cmd::datasend() did not like to be fed too many bytes at the
same time and failed to send messages. Send the payload one line
at a time to work around the problem.
* We peek objects from submodule's object store by linking it to the
list of alternate object databases, but the code to do so forgot to
correctly initialize the list.
* "git status --branch --short" accessed beyond the constant string
"HEAD", which has been corrected.
* "git daemon" uses "run_command()" without "finish_command()", so it
needs to release resources itself, which it forgot to do.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.6.4 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.6.3
------------------
* The "configure" script did not test for -lpthread correctly, which
upset some linkers.
* Add support for talking http/https over socks proxy.
* Portability fix for Windows, which may rewrite $SHELL variable using
non-POSIX paths.
* We now consistently allow all hooks to ignore their standard input,
rather than having git complain of SIGPIPE.
* Fix shell quoting in contrib script.
* Test portability fix for a topic in v2.6.1.
* Allow tilde-expansion in some http config variables.
* Give a useful special case "diff/show --word-diff-regex=." as an
example in the documentation.
* Fix for a corner case in filter-branch.
* Make git-p4 work on a detached head.
* Documentation clarification for "check-ignore" without "--verbose".
* Just like the working tree is cleaned up when the user cancelled
submission in P4Submit.applyCommit(), clean up the mess if "p4
submit" fails.
* Having a leftover .idx file without corresponding .pack file in
the repository hurts performance; "git gc" learned to prune them.
* The code to prepare the working tree side of temporary directory
for the "dir-diff" feature forgot that symbolic links need not be
copied (or symlinked) to the temporary area, as the code already
special cases and overwrites them. Besides, it was wrong to try
computing the object name of the target of symbolic link, which may
not even exist or may be a directory.
* There was no way to defeat a configured rebase.autostash variable
from the command line, as "git rebase --no-autostash" was missing.
* Allow "git interpret-trailers" to run outside of a Git repository.
* Produce correct "dirty" marker for shell prompts, even when we
are on an orphan or an unborn branch.
* Some corner cases have been fixed in string-matching done in "git
status".
* Apple's common crypto implementation of SHA1_Update() does not take
more than 4GB at a time, and we now have a compile-time workaround
for it.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.6.5 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.6.4
------------------
* Because "test_when_finished" in our test framework queues the
clean-up tasks to be done in a shell variable, it should not be
used inside a subshell. Add a mechanism to allow 'bash' to catch
such uses, and fix the ones that were found.
* Update "git subtree" (in contrib/) so that it can take whitespaces
in the pathnames, not only in the in-tree pathname but the name of
the directory that the repository is in.
* Cosmetic improvement to lock-file error messages.
* mark_tree_uninteresting() has code to handle the case where it gets
passed a NULL pointer in its 'tree' parameter, but the function had
'object = &tree->object' assignment before checking if tree is
NULL. This gives a compiler an excuse to declare that tree will
never be NULL and apply a wrong optimization. Avoid it.
* The helper used to iterate over loose object directories to prune
stale objects did not closedir() immediately when it is done with a
directory--a callback such as the one used for "git prune" may want
to do rmdir(), but it would fail on open directory on platforms
such as WinXP.
* "git p4" used to import Perforce CLs that touch only paths outside
the client spec as empty commits. It has been corrected to ignore
them instead, with a new configuration git-p4.keepEmptyCommits as a
backward compatibility knob.
* The exit code of git-fsck did not reflect some types of errors
found in packed objects, which has been corrected.
* The completion script (in contrib/) used to list "git column"
(which is not an end-user facing command) as one of the choices
* Improve error reporting when SMTP TLS fails.
* When getpwuid() on the system returned NULL (e.g. the user is not
in the /etc/passwd file or other uid-to-name mappings), the
codepath to find who the user is to record it in the reflog barfed
and died. Loosen the check in this codepath, which already accepts
questionable ident string (e.g. host part of the e-mail address is
obviously bogus), and in general when we operate fmt_ident() function
in non-strict mode.
* "git symbolic-ref" forgot to report a failure with its exit status.
* History traversal with "git log --source" that starts with an
annotated tag failed to report the tag as "source", due to an
old regression in the command line parser back in v2.2 days.
Also contains typofixes, documentation updates and trivial code
clean-ups.

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Git v2.6.6 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.6.5
------------------
* Bugfix patches were backported from the 'master' front to plug heap
corruption holes, to catch integer overflow in the computation of
pathname lengths, and to get rid of the name_path API. Both of
these would have resulted in writing over an under-allocated buffer
when formulating pathnames while tree traversal.

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Git v2.6.7 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.6.6
------------------
* "git-shell" rejects a request to serve a repository whose name
begins with a dash, which makes it no longer possible to get it
confused into spawning service programs like "git-upload-pack" with
an option like "--help", which in turn would spawn an interactive
pager, instead of working with the repository user asked to access
(i.e. the one whose name is "--help").

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Git 2.7 Release Notes
=====================
Updates since v2.6
------------------
UI, Workflows & Features
* The appearance of "gitk", particularly on high DPI monitors, have
been improved. "gitk" also comes with an undated translation for
Swedish and Japanese.
* "git remote" learned "get-url" subcommand to show the URL for a
given remote name used for fetching and pushing.
* There was no way to defeat a configured rebase.autostash variable
from the command line, as "git rebase --no-autostash" was missing.
* "git log --date=local" used to only show the normal (default)
format in the local timezone. The command learned to take 'local'
as an instruction to use the local timezone with other formats,
* The refs used during a "git bisect" session is now per-worktree so
that independent bisect sessions can be done in different worktrees
created with "git worktree add".
* Users who are too busy to type three extra keystrokes to ask for
"git stash show -p" can now set stash.showPatch configuration
variable to true to always see the actual patch, not just the list
of paths affected with feel for the extent of damage via diffstat.
* "quiltimport" allows to specify the series file by honoring the
$QUILT_SERIES environment and also --series command line option.
* The use of 'good/bad' in "git bisect" made it confusing to use when
hunting for a state change that is not a regression (e.g. bugfix).
The command learned 'old/new' and then allows the end user to
say e.g. "bisect start --term-old=fast --term-new=slow" to find a
performance regression.
* "git interpret-trailers" can now run outside of a Git repository.
* "git p4" learned to reencode the pathname it uses to communicate
with the p4 depot with a new option.
* Give progress meter to "git filter-branch".
* Allow a later "!/abc/def" to override an earlier "/abc" that
appears in the same .gitignore file to make it easier to express
"everything in /abc directory is ignored, except for ...".
* Teach "git p4" to send large blobs outside the repository by
talking to Git LFS.
* Prepare for Git on-disk repository representation to undergo
backward incompatible changes by introducing a new repository
format version "1", with an extension mechanism.
* "git worktree" learned a "list" subcommand.
* "git clone --dissociate" learned that it can be used even when
"--reference" was not used at the same time.
* "git blame" learnt to take "--first-parent" and "--reverse" at the
same time when it makes sense.
* "git checkout" did not follow the usual "--[no-]progress"
convention and implemented only "--quiet" that is essentially
a superset of "--no-progress". Extend the command to support the
usual "--[no-]progress".
* The semantics of transfer.hideRefs configuration variable have been
extended to work better with the ref "namespace" feature that lets
you throw unrelated bunches of repositories in a single physical
repository and virtually serve them as separate ones.
* send-email config variables whose values are pathnames now go
through the ~username/ expansion.
* bash completion learnt to TAB-complete recipient addresses given
to send-email.
* The credential-cache daemon can be told to ignore SIGHUP to work
around issue when running Git from inside emacs.
* "git push" learned new configuration for doing "--recurse-submodules"
on each push.
* "format-patch" has learned a new option to zero-out the commit
object name on the mbox "From " line.
Performance, Internal Implementation, Development Support etc.
* The infrastructure to rewrite "git submodule" in C is being built
incrementally. Let's polish these early parts well enough and make
them graduate to 'next' and 'master', so that the more involved
follow-up can start cooking on a solid ground.
* Some features from "git tag -l" and "git branch -l" have been made
available to "git for-each-ref" so that eventually the unified
implementation can be shared across all three. The version merged
to the 'master' branch earlier had a performance regression in "tag
--contains", which has since been corrected.
* Because "test_when_finished" in our test framework queues the
clean-up tasks to be done in a shell variable, it should not be
used inside a subshell. Add a mechanism to allow 'bash' to catch
such uses, and fix the ones that were found.
* The debugging infrastructure for pkt-line based communication has
been improved to mark the side-band communication specifically.
* Update "git branch" that list existing branches, using the
ref-filter API that is shared with "git tag" and "git
for-each-ref".
* The test for various line-ending conversions has been enhanced.
* A few test scripts around "git p4" have been improved for
portability.
* Many allocations that is manually counted (correctly) that are
followed by strcpy/sprintf have been replaced with a less error
prone constructs such as xstrfmt.
* The internal stripspace() function has been moved to where it
logically belongs to, i.e. strbuf API, and the command line parser
of "git stripspace" has been updated to use the parse_options API.
* "git am" used to spawn "git mailinfo" via run_command() API once
per each patch, but learned to make a direct call to mailinfo()
instead.
* The implementation of "git mailinfo" was refactored so that a
mailinfo() function can be directly called from inside a process.
* With a "debug" helper, debugging of a single "git" invocation in
our test scripts has become a lot easier.
* The "configure" script did not test for -lpthread correctly, which
upset some linkers.
* Cross completed task off of subtree project's todo list.
* Test cleanups for the subtree project.
* Clean up style in an ancient test t9300.
* Work around some test flakiness with p4d.
* Fsck did not correctly detect a NUL-truncated header in a tag.
* Use a safer behavior when we hit errors verifying remote certificates.
* Speed up filter-branch for cases where we only care about rewriting
commits, not tree data.
* The parse-options API has been updated to make "-h" command line
option work more consistently in all commands.
* "git svn rebase/mkdirs" got optimized by keeping track of empty
directories better.
* Fix some racy client/server tests by treating SIGPIPE the same as a
normal non-zero exit.
* The necessary infrastructure to build topics using the free Travis
CI has been added. Developers forking from this topic (and enabling
Travis) can do their own builds, and we can turn on auto-builds for
git/git (including build-status for pull requests that people
open).
* The write(2) emulation for Windows learned to set errno to EPIPE
when necessary.
Also contains various documentation updates and code clean-ups.
Fixes since v2.6
----------------
Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes since v2.6 in the maintenance
track are contained in this release (see the maintenance releases'
notes for details).
* Very small number of options take a parameter that is optional
(which is not a great UI element as they can only appear at the end
of the command line). Add notice to documentation of each and
every one of them.
* "git blame --first-parent v1.0..v2.0" was not rejected but did not
limit the blame to commits on the first parent chain.
* "git subtree" (in contrib/) now can take whitespaces in the
pathnames, not only in the in-tree pathname but the name of the
directory that the repository is in.
* The ssh transport, just like any other transport over the network,
did not clear GIT_* environment variables, but it is possible to
use SendEnv and AcceptEnv to leak them to the remote invocation of
Git, which is not a good idea at all. Explicitly clear them just
like we do for the local transport.
* Correct "git p4 --detect-labels" so that it does not fail to create
a tag that points at a commit that is also being imported.
* The Makefile always runs the library archiver with hardcoded "crs"
options, which was inconvenient for exotic platforms on which
people want to use programs with totally different set of command
line options.
* Customization to change the behaviour with "make -w" and "make -s"
in our Makefile was broken when they were used together.
* Allocation related functions and stdio are unsafe things to call
inside a signal handler, and indeed killing the pager can cause
glibc to deadlock waiting on allocation mutex as our signal handler
tries to free() some data structures in wait_for_pager(). Reduce
these unsafe calls.
* The way how --ref/--notes to specify the notes tree reference are
DWIMmed was not clearly documented.
* "git gc" used to barf when a symbolic ref has gone dangling
(e.g. the branch that used to be your upstream's default when you
cloned from it is now gone, and you did "fetch --prune").
* "git clone --dissociate" runs a big "git repack" process at the
end, and it helps to close file descriptors that are open on the
packs and their idx files before doing so on filesystems that
cannot remove a file that is still open.
* Description of the "log.follow" configuration variable in "git log"
documentation is now also copied to "git config" documentation.
* "git rebase -i" had a minor regression recently, which stopped
considering a line that begins with an indented '#' in its insn
sheet not a comment. Further, the code was still too picky on
Windows where CRLF left by the editor is turned into a trailing CR
on the line read via the "read" built-in command of bash. Both of
these issues are now fixed.
* After "git checkout --detach", "git status" reported a fairly
useless "HEAD detached at HEAD", instead of saying at which exact
commit.
* When "git send-email" wanted to talk over Net::SMTP::SSL,
Net::Cmd::datasend() did not like to be fed too many bytes at the
same time and failed to send messages. Send the payload one line
at a time to work around the problem.
* When "git am" was rewritten as a built-in, it stopped paying
attention to user.signingkey, which was fixed.
* It was not possible to use a repository-lookalike created by "git
worktree add" as a local source of "git clone".
* On a case insensitive filesystems, setting GIT_WORK_TREE variable
using a random cases that does not agree with what the filesystem
thinks confused Git that it wasn't inside the working tree.
* Performance-measurement tests did not work without an installed Git.
* A test script for the HTTP service had a timing dependent bug,
which was fixed.
* There were some classes of errors that "git fsck" diagnosed to its
standard error that did not cause it to exit with non-zero status.
* Work around "git p4" failing when the P4 depot records the contents
in UTF-16 without UTF-16 BOM.
* When "git gc --auto" is backgrounded, its diagnosis message is
lost. Save it to a file in $GIT_DIR and show it next time the "gc
--auto" is run.
* The submodule code has been taught to work better with separate
work trees created via "git worktree add".
* "git gc" is safe to run anytime only because it has the built-in
grace period to protect young objects. In order to run with no
grace period, the user must make sure that the repository is
quiescent.
* A recent "filter-branch --msg-filter" broke skipping of the commit
object header, which is fixed.
* The normalize_ceiling_entry() function does not muck with the end
of the path it accepts, and the real world callers do rely on that,
but a test insisted that the function drops a trailing slash.
* A test for interaction between untracked cache and sparse checkout
added in Git 2.5 days were flaky.
* A couple of commands still showed "[options]" in their usage string
to note where options should come on their command line, but we
spell that "[<options>]" in most places these days.
* The synopsis text and the usage string of subcommands that read
list of things from the standard input are often shown as if they
only take input from a file on a filesystem, which was misleading.
* "git am -3" had a small regression where it is aborted in its error
handling codepath when underlying merge-recursive failed in certain
ways, as it assumed that the internal call to merge-recursive will
never die, which is not the case (yet).
* The linkage order of libraries was wrong in places around libcurl.
* The name-hash subsystem that is used to cope with case insensitive
filesystems keeps track of directories and their on-filesystem
cases for all the paths in the index by holding a pointer to a
randomly chosen cache entry that is inside the directory (for its
ce->ce_name component). This pointer was not updated even when the
cache entry was removed from the index, leading to use after free.
This was fixed by recording the path for each directory instead of
borrowing cache entries and restructuring the API somewhat.
* "git merge-file" tried to signal how many conflicts it found, which
obviously would not work well when there are too many of them.
* The error message from "git blame --contents --reverse" incorrectly
talked about "--contents --children".
* "git imap-send" did not compile well with older version of cURL library.
* Merging a branch that removes a path and another that changes the
mode bits on the same path should have conflicted at the path, but
it didn't and silently favoured the removal.
* "git --literal-pathspecs add -u/-A" without any command line
argument misbehaved ever since Git 2.0.
* "git daemon" uses "run_command()" without "finish_command()", so it
needs to release resources itself, which it forgot to do.
* "git status --branch --short" accessed beyond the constant string
"HEAD", which has been corrected.
* We peek objects from submodule's object store by linking it to the
list of alternate object databases, but the code to do so forgot to
correctly initialize the list.
* The code to prepare the working tree side of temporary directory
for the "dir-diff" feature forgot that symbolic links need not be
copied (or symlinked) to the temporary area, as the code already
special cases and overwrites them. Besides, it was wrong to try
computing the object name of the target of symbolic link, which may
not even exist or may be a directory.
* A Range: request can be responded with a full response and when
asked properly libcurl knows how to strip the result down to the
requested range. However, we were hand-crafting a range request
and it did not kick in.
* Having a leftover .idx file without corresponding .pack file in
the repository hurts performance; "git gc" learned to prune them.
* Apple's common crypto implementation of SHA1_Update() does not take
more than 4GB at a time, and we now have a compile-time workaround
for it.
* Produce correct "dirty" marker for shell prompts, even when we
are on an orphan or an unborn branch.
* A build without NO_IPv6 used to use gethostbyname() when guessing
user's hostname, instead of getaddrinfo() that is used in other
codepaths in such a build.
* The exit code of git-fsck did not reflect some types of errors
found in packed objects, which has been corrected.
* The helper used to iterate over loose object directories to prune
stale objects did not closedir() immediately when it is done with a
directory--a callback such as the one used for "git prune" may want
to do rmdir(), but it would fail on open directory on platforms
such as WinXP.
* "git p4" used to import Perforce CLs that touch only paths outside
the client spec as empty commits. It has been corrected to ignore
them instead, with a new configuration git-p4.keepEmptyCommits as a
backward compatibility knob.
* The completion script (in contrib/) used to list "git column"
(which is not an end-user facing command) as one of the choices
(merge 160fcdb sg/completion-no-column later to maint).
* The error reporting from "git send-email", when SMTP TLS fails, has
been improved.
(merge 9d60524 jk/send-email-ssl-errors later to maint).
* When getpwuid() on the system returned NULL (e.g. the user is not
in the /etc/passwd file or other uid-to-name mappings), the
codepath to find who the user is to record it in the reflog barfed
and died. Loosen the check in this codepath, which already accepts
questionable ident string (e.g. host part of the e-mail address is
obviously bogus), and in general when we operate fmt_ident() function
in non-strict mode.
(merge 92bcbb9 jk/ident-loosen-getpwuid later to maint).
* "git symbolic-ref" forgot to report a failure with its exit status.
(merge f91b273 jk/symbolic-ref-maint later to maint).
* History traversal with "git log --source" that starts with an
annotated tag failed to report the tag as "source", due to an
old regression in the command line parser back in v2.2 days.
(merge 728350b jk/pending-keep-tag-name later to maint).
* "git p4" when interacting with multiple depots at the same time
used to incorrectly drop changes.
* Code clean-up, minor fixes etc.

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Git v2.7.1 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.7
----------------
* An earlier change in 2.5.x-era broke users' hooks and aliases by
exporting GIT_WORK_TREE to point at the root of the working tree,
interfering when they tried to use a different working tree without
setting GIT_WORK_TREE environment themselves.
* The "exclude_list" structure has the usual "alloc, nr" pair of
fields to be used by ALLOC_GROW(), but clear_exclude_list() forgot
to reset 'alloc' to 0 when it cleared 'nr' to discard the managed
array.
* "git send-email" was confused by escaped quotes stored in the alias
files saved by "mutt", which has been corrected.
* A few unportable C construct have been spotted by clang compiler
and have been fixed.
* The documentation has been updated to hint the connection between
the '--signoff' option and DCO.
* "git reflog" incorrectly assumed that all objects that used to be
at the tip of a ref must be commits, which caused it to segfault.
* The ignore mechanism saw a few regressions around untracked file
listing and sparse checkout selection areas in 2.7.0; the change
that is responsible for the regression has been reverted.
* Some codepaths used fopen(3) when opening a fixed path in $GIT_DIR
(e.g. COMMIT_EDITMSG) that is meant to be left after the command is
done. This however did not work well if the repository is set to
be shared with core.sharedRepository and the umask of the previous
user is tighter. They have been made to work better by calling
unlink(2) and retrying after fopen(3) fails with EPERM.
* Asking gitweb for a nonexistent commit left a warning in the server
log.
* "git rebase", unlike all other callers of "gc --auto", did not
ignore the exit code from "gc --auto".
* Many codepaths that run "gc --auto" before exiting kept packfiles
mapped and left the file descriptors to them open, which was not
friendly to systems that cannot remove files that are open. They
now close the packs before doing so.
* A recent optimization to filter-branch in v2.7.0 introduced a
regression when --prune-empty filter is used, which has been
corrected.
* The description for SANITY prerequisite the test suite uses has
been clarified both in the comment and in the implementation.
* "git tag" started listing a tag "foo" as "tags/foo" when a branch
named "foo" exists in the same repository; remove this unnecessary
disambiguation, which is a regression introduced in v2.7.0.
* The way "git svn" uses auth parameter was broken by Subversion
1.9.0 and later.
* The "split" subcommand of "git subtree" (in contrib/) incorrectly
skipped merges when it shouldn't, which was corrected.
* A few options of "git diff" did not work well when the command was
run from a subdirectory.
* dirname() emulation has been added, as Msys2 lacks it.
* The underlying machinery used by "ls-files -o" and other commands
have been taught not to create empty submodule ref cache for a
directory that is not a submodule. This removes a ton of wasted
CPU cycles.
* Drop a few old "todo" items by deciding that the change one of them
suggests is not such a good idea, and doing the change the other
one suggested to do.
* Documentation for "git fetch --depth" has been updated for clarity.
* The command line completion learned a handful of additional options
and command specific syntax.
Also includes a handful of documentation and test updates.

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Git v2.7.2 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.7.1
------------------
* The low-level merge machinery has been taught to use CRLF line
termination when inserting conflict markers to merged contents that
are themselves CRLF line-terminated.
* "git worktree" had a broken code that attempted to auto-fix
possible inconsistency that results from end-users moving a
worktree to different places without telling Git (the original
repository needs to maintain backpointers to its worktrees, but
"mv" run by end-users who are not familiar with that fact will
obviously not adjust them), which actually made things worse
when triggered.
* "git push --force-with-lease" has been taught to report if the push
needed to force (or fast-forwarded).
* The emulated "yes" command used in our test scripts has been
tweaked not to spend too much time generating unnecessary output
that is not used, to help those who test on Windows where it would
not stop until it fills the pipe buffer due to lack of SIGPIPE.
* The vimdiff backend for "git mergetool" has been tweaked to arrange
and number buffers in the order that would match the expectation of
majority of people who read left to right, then top down and assign
buffers 1 2 3 4 "mentally" to local base remote merge windows based
on that order.
* The documentation for "git clean" has been corrected; it mentioned
that .git/modules/* are removed by giving two "-f", which has never
been the case.
* Paths that have been told the index about with "add -N" are not
quite yet in the index, but a few commands behaved as if they
already are in a harmful way.
Also includes tiny documentation and test updates.

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Git v2.7.3 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.7.2
------------------
* Traditionally, the tests that try commands that work on the
contents in the working tree were named with "worktree" in their
filenames, but with the recent addition of "git worktree"
subcommand, whose tests are also named similarly, it has become
harder to tell them apart. The traditional tests have been renamed
to use "work-tree" instead in an attempt to differentiate them.
* Many codepaths forget to check return value from git_config_set();
the function is made to die() to make sure we do not proceed when
setting a configuration variable failed.
* Handling of errors while writing into our internal asynchronous
process has been made more robust, which reduces flakiness in our
tests.
* "git show 'HEAD:Foo[BAR]Baz'" did not interpret the argument as a
rev, i.e. the object named by the the pathname with wildcard
characters in a tree object.
* "git rev-parse --git-common-dir" used in the worktree feature
misbehaved when run from a subdirectory.
* The "v(iew)" subcommand of the interactive "git am -i" command was
broken in 2.6.0 timeframe when the command was rewritten in C.
* "git merge-tree" used to mishandle "both sides added" conflict with
its own "create a fake ancestor file that has the common parts of
what both sides have added and do a 3-way merge" logic; this has
been updated to use the usual "3-way merge with an empty blob as
the fake common ancestor file" approach used in the rest of the
system.
* The memory ownership rule of fill_textconv() API, which was a bit
tricky, has been documented a bit better.
* The documentation did not clearly state that the 'simple' mode is
now the default for "git push" when push.default configuration is
not set.
* Recent versions of GNU grep are pickier when their input contains
arbitrary binary data, which some of our tests uses. Rewrite the
tests to sidestep the problem.
* A helper function "git submodule" uses since v2.7.0 to list the
modules that match the pathspec argument given to its subcommands
(e.g. "submodule add <repo> <path>") has been fixed.
* "git config section.var value" to set a value in per-repository
configuration file failed when it was run outside any repository,
but didn't say the reason correctly.
* The code to read the pack data using the offsets stored in the pack
idx file has been made more carefully check the validity of the
data in the idx.
Also includes documentation and test updates.

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Git v2.7.4 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.7.3
------------------
* Bugfix patches were backported from the 'master' front to plug heap
corruption holes, to catch integer overflow in the computation of
pathname lengths, and to get rid of the name_path API. Both of
these would have resulted in writing over an under-allocated buffer
when formulating pathnames while tree traversal.

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Git v2.7.5 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.7.4
------------------
* "git-shell" rejects a request to serve a repository whose name
begins with a dash, which makes it no longer possible to get it
confused into spawning service programs like "git-upload-pack" with
an option like "--help", which in turn would spawn an interactive
pager, instead of working with the repository user asked to access
(i.e. the one whose name is "--help").
Also contains a few fixes backported from later development tracks.

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Git 2.8 Release Notes
=====================
Backward compatibility note
---------------------------
The rsync:// transport has been removed.
Updates since v2.7
------------------
UI, Workflows & Features
* It turns out "git clone" over rsync transport has been broken when
the source repository has packed references for a long time, and
nobody noticed nor complained about it.
* "push" learned that its "--delete" option can be shortened to
"-d", just like "branch --delete" and "branch -d" are the same
thing.
* "git blame" learned to produce the progress eye-candy when it takes
too much time before emitting the first line of the result.
* "git grep" can now be configured (or told from the command line)
how many threads to use when searching in the working tree files.
* Some "git notes" operations, e.g. "git log --notes=<note>", should
be able to read notes from any tree-ish that is shaped like a notes
tree, but the notes infrastructure required that the argument must
be a ref under refs/notes/. Loosen it to require a valid ref only
when the operation would update the notes (in which case we must
have a place to store the updated notes tree, iow, a ref).
* "git grep" by default does not fall back to its "--no-index"
behavior outside a directory under Git's control (otherwise the
user may by mistake end up running a huge recursive search); with a
new configuration (set in $HOME/.gitconfig--by definition this
cannot be set in the config file per project), this safety can be
disabled.
* "git pull --rebase" has been extended to allow invoking
"rebase -i".
* "git p4" learned to cope with the type of a file getting changed.
* "git format-patch" learned to notice format.outputDirectory
configuration variable. This allows "-o <dir>" option to be
omitted on the command line if you always use the same directory in
your workflow.
* "interpret-trailers" has been taught to optionally update a file in
place, instead of always writing the result to the standard output.
* Many commands that read files that are expected to contain text
that is generated (or can be edited) by the end user to control
their behavior (e.g. "git grep -f <filename>") have been updated
to be more tolerant to lines that are terminated with CRLF (they
used to treat such a line to contain payload that ends with CR,
which is usually not what the users expect).
* "git notes merge" used to limit the source of the merged notes tree
to somewhere under refs/notes/ hierarchy, which was too limiting
when inventing a workflow to exchange notes with remote
repositories using remote-tracking notes trees (located in e.g.
refs/remote-notes/ or somesuch).
* "git ls-files" learned a new "--eol" option to help diagnose
end-of-line problems.
* "ls-remote" learned an option to show which branch the remote
repository advertises as its primary by pointing its HEAD at.
* New http.proxyAuthMethod configuration variable can be used to
specify what authentication method to use, as a way to work around
proxies that do not give error response expected by libcurl when
CURLAUTH_ANY is used. Also, the codepath for proxy authentication
has been taught to use credential API to store the authentication
material in user's keyrings.
* Update the untracked cache subsystem and change its primary UI from
"git update-index" to "git config".
* There were a few "now I am doing this thing" progress messages in
the TCP connection code that can be triggered by setting a verbose
option internally in the code, but "git fetch -v" and friends never
passed the verbose option down to that codepath.
* Clean/smudge filters defined in a configuration file of lower
precedence can now be overridden to be a pass-through no-op by
setting the variable to an empty string.
* A new "<branch>^{/!-<pattern>}" notation can be used to name a
commit that is reachable from <branch> that does not match the
given <pattern>.
* The "user.useConfigOnly" configuration variable can be used to
force the user to always set user.email & user.name configuration
variables, serving as a reminder for those who work on multiple
projects and do not want to put these in their $HOME/.gitconfig.
* "git fetch" and friends that make network connections can now be
told to only use ipv4 (or ipv6).
* Some authentication methods do not need username or password, but
libcurl needs some hint that it needs to perform authentication.
Supplying an empty username and password string is a valid way to
do so, but you can set the http.[<url>.]emptyAuth configuration
variable to achieve the same, if you find it cleaner.
* You can now set http.[<url>.]pinnedpubkey to specify the pinned
public key when building with recent enough versions of libcURL.
* The configuration system has been taught to phrase where it found a
bad configuration variable in a better way in its error messages.
"git config" learnt a new "--show-origin" option to indicate where
the values come from.
* The "credential-cache" daemon process used to run in whatever
directory it happened to start in, but this made umount(2)ing the
filesystem that houses the repository harder; now the process
chdir()s to the directory that house its own socket on startup.
* When "git submodule update" did not result in fetching the commit
object in the submodule that is referenced by the superproject, the
command learned to retry another fetch, specifically asking for
that commit that may not be connected to the refs it usually
fetches.
* "git merge-recursive" learned "--no-renames" option to disable its
rename detection logic.
* Across the transition at around Git version 2.0, the user used to
get a pretty loud warning when running "git push" without setting
push.default configuration variable. We no longer warn because the
transition was completed a long time ago.
* README has been renamed to README.md and its contents got tweaked
slightly to make it easier on the eyes.
Performance, Internal Implementation, Development Support etc.
* Add a framework to spawn a group of processes in parallel, and use
it to run "git fetch --recurse-submodules" in parallel.
* A slight update to the Makefile to mark ".PHONY" targets as such
correctly.
* In-core storage of the reverse index for .pack files (which lets
you go from a pack offset to an object name) has been streamlined.
* d95138e6 (setup: set env $GIT_WORK_TREE when work tree is set, like
$GIT_DIR, 2015-06-26) attempted to work around a glitch in alias
handling by overwriting GIT_WORK_TREE environment variable to
affect subprocesses when set_git_work_tree() gets called, which
resulted in a rather unpleasant regression to "clone" and "init".
Try to address the same issue by always restoring the environment
and respawning the real underlying command when handling alias.
* The low-level code that is used to create symbolic references has
been updated to share more code with the code that deals with
normal references.
* strbuf_getline() and friends have been redefined to make it easier
to identify which callsite of (new) strbuf_getline_lf() should
allow and silently ignore carriage-return at the end of the line to
help users on DOSsy systems.
* "git shortlog" used to accumulate various pieces of information
regardless of what was asked to be shown in the final output. It
has been optimized by noticing what need not to be collected
(e.g. there is no need to collect the log messages when showing
only the number of changes).
* "git checkout $branch" (and other operations that share the same
underlying machinery) has been optimized.
* Automated tests in Travis CI environment has been optimized by
persisting runtime statistics of previous "prove" run, executing
tests that take longer before other ones; this reduces the total
wallclock time.
* Test scripts have been updated to remove assumptions that are not
portable between Git for POSIX and Git for Windows, or to skip ones
with expectations that are not satisfiable on Git for Windows.
* Some calls to strcpy(3) triggers a false warning from static
analyzers that are less intelligent than humans, and reducing the
number of these false hits helps us notice real issues. A few
calls to strcpy(3) in a couple of protrams that are already safe
has been rewritten to avoid false warnings.
* The "name_path" API was an attempt to reduce the need to construct
the full path out of a series of path components while walking a
tree hierarchy, but over time made less efficient because the path
needs to be flattened, e.g. to be compared with another path that
is already flat. The API has been removed and its users have been
rewritten to simplify the overall code complexity.
* Help those who debug http(s) part of the system.
(merge 0054045 sp/remote-curl-ssl-strerror later to maint).
* The internal API to interact with "remote.*" configuration
variables has been streamlined.
* The ref-filter's format-parsing code has been refactored, in
preparation for "branch --format" and friends.
* Traditionally, the tests that try commands that work on the
contents in the working tree were named with "worktree" in their
filenames, but with the recent addition of "git worktree"
subcommand, whose tests are also named similarly, it has become
harder to tell them apart. The traditional tests have been renamed
to use "work-tree" instead in an attempt to differentiate them.
(merge 5549029 mg/work-tree-tests later to maint).
* Many codepaths forget to check return value from git_config_set();
the function is made to die() to make sure we do not proceed when
setting a configuration variable failed.
(merge 3d18064 ps/config-error later to maint).
* Handling of errors while writing into our internal asynchronous
process has been made more robust, which reduces flakiness in our
tests.
(merge 43f3afc jk/epipe-in-async later to maint).
* There is a new DEVELOPER knob that enables many compiler warning
options in the Makefile.
* The way the test scripts configure the Apache web server has been
updated to work also for Apache 2.4 running on RedHat derived
distros.
* Out of maintenance gcc on OSX 10.6 fails to compile the code in
'master'; work it around by using clang by default on the platform.
* The "name_path" API was an attempt to reduce the need to construct
the full path out of a series of path components while walking a
tree hierarchy, but over time made less efficient because the path
needs to be flattened, e.g. to be compared with another path that
is already flat, in many cases. The API has been removed and its
users have been rewritten to simplify the overall code complexity.
This incidentally also closes some heap-corruption holes.
* Recent versions of GNU grep is pickier than before to decide if a
file is "binary" and refuse to give line-oriented hits when we
expect it to, unless explicitly told with "-a" option. As our
scripted Porcelains use sane_grep wrapper for line-oriented data,
even when the line may contain non-ASCII payload we took from
end-user data, use "grep -a" to implement sane_grep wrapper when
using an implementation of "grep" that takes the "-a" option.
Also contains various documentation updates and code clean-ups.
Fixes since v2.7
----------------
Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes since v2.7 in the maintenance
track are contained in this release (see the maintenance releases'
notes for details).
* An earlier change in 2.5.x-era broke users' hooks and aliases by
exporting GIT_WORK_TREE to point at the root of the working tree,
interfering when they tried to use a different working tree without
setting GIT_WORK_TREE environment themselves.
* The "exclude_list" structure has the usual "alloc, nr" pair of
fields to be used by ALLOC_GROW(), but clear_exclude_list() forgot
to reset 'alloc' to 0 when it cleared 'nr' to discard the managed
array.
* Paths that have been told the index about with "add -N" are not
quite yet in the index, but a few commands behaved as if they
already are in a harmful way.
* "git send-email" was confused by escaped quotes stored in the alias
files saved by "mutt", which has been corrected.
* A few non-portable C construct have been spotted by clang compiler
and have been fixed.
* The documentation has been updated to hint the connection between
the '--signoff' option and DCO.
* "git reflog" incorrectly assumed that all objects that used to be
at the tip of a ref must be commits, which caused it to segfault.
* The ignore mechanism saw a few regressions around untracked file
listing and sparse checkout selection areas in 2.7.0; the change
that is responsible for the regression has been reverted.
* Some codepaths used fopen(3) when opening a fixed path in $GIT_DIR
(e.g. COMMIT_EDITMSG) that is meant to be left after the command is
done. This however did not work well if the repository is set to
be shared with core.sharedRepository and the umask of the previous
user is tighter. They have been made to work better by calling
unlink(2) and retrying after fopen(3) fails with EPERM.
* Asking gitweb for a nonexistent commit left a warning in the server
log.
Somebody may want to follow this up with an additional test, perhaps?
IIRC, we do test that no Perl warnings are given to the server log,
so this should have been caught if our test coverage were good.
* "git rebase", unlike all other callers of "gc --auto", did not
ignore the exit code from "gc --auto".
* Many codepaths that run "gc --auto" before exiting kept packfiles
mapped and left the file descriptors to them open, which was not
friendly to systems that cannot remove files that are open. They
now close the packs before doing so.
* A recent optimization to filter-branch in v2.7.0 introduced a
regression when --prune-empty filter is used, which has been
corrected.
* The description for SANITY prerequisite the test suite uses has
been clarified both in the comment and in the implementation.
* "git tag" started listing a tag "foo" as "tags/foo" when a branch
named "foo" exists in the same repository; remove this unnecessary
disambiguation, which is a regression introduced in v2.7.0.
* The way "git svn" uses auth parameter was broken by Subversion
1.9.0 and later.
* The "split" subcommand of "git subtree" (in contrib/) incorrectly
skipped merges when it shouldn't, which was corrected.
* A few options of "git diff" did not work well when the command was
run from a subdirectory.
* The command line completion learned a handful of additional options
and command specific syntax.
* dirname() emulation has been added, as Msys2 lacks it.
* The underlying machinery used by "ls-files -o" and other commands
has been taught not to create empty submodule ref cache for a
directory that is not a submodule. This removes a ton of wasted
CPU cycles.
* "git worktree" had a broken code that attempted to auto-fix
possible inconsistency that results from end-users moving a
worktree to different places without telling Git (the original
repository needs to maintain back-pointers to its worktrees,
but "mv" run by end-users who are not familiar with that fact
will obviously not adjust them), which actually made things
worse when triggered.
* The low-level merge machinery has been taught to use CRLF line
termination when inserting conflict markers to merged contents that
are themselves CRLF line-terminated.
* "git push --force-with-lease" has been taught to report if the push
needed to force (or fast-forwarded).
* The emulated "yes" command used in our test scripts has been
tweaked not to spend too much time generating unnecessary output
that is not used, to help those who test on Windows where it would
not stop until it fills the pipe buffer due to lack of SIGPIPE.
* The documentation for "git clean" has been corrected; it mentioned
that .git/modules/* are removed by giving two "-f", which has never
been the case.
* The vimdiff backend for "git mergetool" has been tweaked to arrange
and number buffers in the order that would match the expectation of
majority of people who read left to right, then top down and assign
buffers 1 2 3 4 "mentally" to local base remote merge windows based
on that order.
* "git show 'HEAD:Foo[BAR]Baz'" did not interpret the argument as a
rev, i.e. the object named by the the pathname with wildcard
characters in a tree object.
(merge aac4fac nd/dwim-wildcards-as-pathspecs later to maint).
* "git rev-parse --git-common-dir" used in the worktree feature
misbehaved when run from a subdirectory.
(merge 17f1365 nd/git-common-dir-fix later to maint).
* "git worktree add -B <branchname>" did not work.
* The "v(iew)" subcommand of the interactive "git am -i" command was
broken in 2.6.0 timeframe when the command was rewritten in C.
(merge 708b8cc jc/am-i-v-fix later to maint).
* "git merge-tree" used to mishandle "both sides added" conflict with
its own "create a fake ancestor file that has the common parts of
what both sides have added and do a 3-way merge" logic; this has
been updated to use the usual "3-way merge with an empty blob as
the fake common ancestor file" approach used in the rest of the
system.
(merge 907681e jk/no-diff-emit-common later to maint).
* The memory ownership rule of fill_textconv() API, which was a bit
tricky, has been documented a bit better.
(merge a64e6a4 jk/more-comments-on-textconv later to maint).
* Update various codepaths to avoid manually-counted malloc().
(merge 08c95df jk/tighten-alloc later to maint).
* The documentation did not clearly state that the 'simple' mode is
now the default for "git push" when push.default configuration is
not set.
(merge f6b1fb3 mm/push-simple-doc later to maint).
* Recent versions of GNU grep are pickier when their input contains
arbitrary binary data, which some of our tests uses. Rewrite the
tests to sidestep the problem.
(merge 3b1442d jk/grep-binary-workaround-in-test later to maint).
* A helper function "git submodule" uses since v2.7.0 to list the
modules that match the pathspec argument given to its subcommands
(e.g. "submodule add <repo> <path>") has been fixed.
(merge 2b56bb7 sb/submodule-module-list-fix later to maint).
* "git config section.var value" to set a value in per-repository
configuration file failed when it was run outside any repository,
but didn't say the reason correctly.
(merge 638fa62 js/config-set-in-non-repository later to maint).
* The code to read the pack data using the offsets stored in the pack
idx file has been made more carefully check the validity of the
data in the idx.
(merge 7465feb jk/pack-idx-corruption-safety later to maint).
* Other minor clean-ups and documentation updates
(merge f459823 ak/extract-argv0-last-dir-sep later to maint).
(merge 63ca1c0 ak/git-strip-extension-from-dashed-command later to maint).
(merge 4867f11 ps/plug-xdl-merge-leak later to maint).
(merge 4938686 dt/initial-ref-xn-commit-doc later to maint).
(merge 9537f21 ma/update-hooks-sample-typofix later to maint).

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Git v2.8.1 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.8
----------------
* "make rpmbuild" target was broken as its input, git.spec.in, was
not updated to match a file it describes that has been renamed
recently. This has been fixed.

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Git v2.8.2 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.8.1
------------------
* The embedded args argv-array in the child process is used to build
the command line to run pack-objects instead of using a separate
array of strings.
* Bunch of tests on "git clone" has been renumbered for better
organization.
* The tests that involve running httpd leaked the system-wide
configuration in /etc/gitconfig to the tested environment.
* "index-pack --keep=<msg>" was broken since v2.1.0 timeframe.
* "git config --get-urlmatch", unlike other variants of the "git
config --get" family, did not signal error with its exit status
when there was no matching configuration.
* The "--local-env-vars" and "--resolve-git-dir" options of "git
rev-parse" failed to work outside a repository when the command's
option parsing was rewritten in 1.8.5 era.
* Fetching of history by naming a commit object name directly didn't
work across remote-curl transport.
* A small memory leak in an error codepath has been plugged in xdiff
code.
* strbuf_getwholeline() did not NUL-terminate the buffer on certain
corner cases in its error codepath.
* The startup_info data, which records if we are working inside a
repository (among other things), are now uniformly available to Git
subcommand implementations, and Git avoids attempting to touch
references when we are not in a repository.
* "git mergetool" did not work well with conflicts that both sides
deleted.
* "git send-email" had trouble parsing alias file in mailrc format
when lines in it had trailing whitespaces on them.
* When "git merge --squash" stopped due to conflict, the concluding
"git commit" failed to read in the SQUASH_MSG that shows the log
messages from all the squashed commits.
* "git merge FETCH_HEAD" dereferenced NULL pointer when merging
nothing into an unborn history (which is arguably unusual usage,
which perhaps was the reason why nobody noticed it).
* Build updates for MSVC.
* "git diff -M" used to work better when two originally identical
files A and B got renamed to X/A and X/B by pairing A to X/A and B
to X/B, but this was broken in the 2.0 timeframe.
* "git send-pack --all <there>" was broken when its command line
option parsing was written in the 2.6 timeframe.
* When running "git blame $path" with unnormalized data in the index
for the path, the data in the working tree was blamed, even though
"git add" would not have changed what is already in the index, due
to "safe crlf" that disables the line-end conversion. It has been
corrected.
Also contains minor documentation updates and code clean-ups.

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Git v2.8.3 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.8.2
------------------
* "git send-email" now uses a more readable timestamps when
formulating a message ID.
* The repository set-up sequence has been streamlined (the biggest
change is that there is no longer git_config_early()), so that we
do not attempt to look into refs/* when we know we do not have a
Git repository.
* When "git worktree" feature is in use, "git branch -d" allowed
deletion of a branch that is checked out in another worktree
* When "git worktree" feature is in use, "git branch -m" renamed a
branch that is checked out in another worktree without adjusting
the HEAD symbolic ref for the worktree.
* "git format-patch --help" showed `-s` and `--no-patch` as if these
are valid options to the command. We already hide `--patch` option
from the documentation, because format-patch is about showing the
diff, and the documentation now hides these options as well.
* A change back in version 2.7 to "git branch" broke display of a
symbolic ref in a non-standard place in the refs/ hierarchy (we
expect symbolic refs to appear in refs/remotes/*/HEAD to point at
the primary branch the remote has, and as .git/HEAD to point at the
branch we locally checked out).
* A partial rewrite of "git submodule" in the 2.7 timeframe changed
the way the gitdir: pointer in the submodules point at the real
repository location to use absolute paths by accident. This has
been corrected.
* "git commit" misbehaved in a few minor ways when an empty message
is given via -m '', all of which has been corrected.
* Support for CRAM-MD5 authentication method in "git imap-send" did
not work well.
* The socks5:// proxy support added back in 2.6.4 days was not aware
that socks5h:// proxies behave differently.
* "git config" had a codepath that tried to pass a NULL to
printf("%s"), which nobody seems to have noticed.
* On Cygwin, object creation uses the "create a temporary and then
rename it to the final name" pattern, not "create a temporary,
hardlink it to the final name and then unlink the temporary"
pattern.
This is necessary to use Git on Windows shared directories, and is
already enabled for the MinGW and plain Windows builds. It also
has been used in Cygwin packaged versions of Git for quite a while.
See http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/291853
and http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/275680.
* "git replace -e" did not honour "core.editor" configuration.
* Upcoming OpenSSL 1.1.0 will break compilation b updating a few APIs
we use in imap-send, which has been adjusted for the change.
* "git submodule" reports the paths of submodules the command
recurses into, but this was incorrect when the command was not run
from the root level of the superproject.
* The test scripts for "git p4" (but not "git p4" implementation
itself) has been updated so that they would work even on a system
where the installed version of Python is python 3.
* The "user.useConfigOnly" configuration variable makes it an error
if users do not explicitly set user.name and user.email. However,
its check was not done early enough and allowed another error to
trigger, reporting that the default value we guessed from the
system setting was unusable. This was a suboptimal end-user
experience as we want the users to set user.name/user.email without
relying on the auto-detection at all.
* "git mv old new" did not adjust the path for a submodule that lives
as a subdirectory inside old/ directory correctly.
* "git push" from a corrupt repository that attempts to push a large
number of refs deadlocked; the thread to relay rejection notices
for these ref updates blocked on writing them to the main thread,
after the main thread at the receiving end notices that the push
failed and decides not to read these notices and return a failure.
* A question by "git send-email" to ask the identity of the sender
has been updated.
* Recent update to Git LFS broke "git p4" by changing the output from
its "lfs pointer" subcommand.
* Some multi-byte encoding can have a backslash byte as a later part
of one letter, which would confuse "highlight" filter used in
gitweb.
Also contains minor documentation updates and code clean-ups.

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Git v2.8.4 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.8.3
------------------
* Documentation for "git merge --verify-signatures" has been updated
to clarify that the signature of only the commit at the tip is
verified. Also the phrasing used for signature and key validity is
adjusted to align with that used by OpenPGP.
* On Windows, .git and optionally any files whose name starts with a
dot are now marked as hidden, with a core.hideDotFiles knob to
customize this behaviour.
* Portability enhancement for "rebase -i" to help platforms whose
shell does not like "for i in <empty>" (which is not POSIX-kosher).
* "git fsck" learned to catch NUL byte in a commit object as
potential error and warn.
* CI test was taught to build documentation pages.
* Many 'linkgit:<git documentation page>' references were broken,
which are all fixed with this.
* "git describe --contains" often made a hard-to-justify choice of
tag to give name to a given commit, because it tried to come up
with a name with smallest number of hops from a tag, causing an old
commit whose close descendant that is recently tagged were not
described with respect to an old tag but with a newer tag. It did
not help that its computation of "hop" count was further tweaked to
penalize being on a side branch of a merge. The logic has been
updated to favor using the tag with the oldest tagger date, which
is a lot easier to explain to the end users: "We describe a commit
in terms of the (chronologically) oldest tag that contains the
commit."
* Running tests with '-x' option to trace the individual command
executions is a useful way to debug test scripts, but some tests
that capture the standard error stream and check what the command
said can be broken with the trace output mixed in. When running
our tests under "bash", however, we can redirect the trace output
to another file descriptor to keep the standard error of programs
being tested intact.
* "http.cookieFile" configuration variable clearly wants a pathname,
but we forgot to treat it as such by e.g. applying tilde expansion.
* When de-initialising all submodules, "git submodule deinit" gave a
faulty recommendation to use "git submodule deinit .", which would
result in a strange error message in a pathological corner case.
This has been corrected to suggest "submodule deinit --all" instead.
* Many commands normalize command line arguments from NFD to NFC
variant of UTF-8 on OSX, but commands in the "diff" family did
not, causing "git diff $path" to complain that no such path is
known to Git. They have been taught to do the normalization.
* A couple of bugs around core.autocrlf have been fixed.
* "git difftool" learned to handle unmerged paths correctly in
dir-diff mode.
* The "are we talking with TTY, doing an interactive session?"
detection has been updated to work better for "Git for Windows".
Also contains other minor documentation updates and code clean-ups.

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Git v2.8.5 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.8.4
------------------
* "git-shell" rejects a request to serve a repository whose name
begins with a dash, which makes it no longer possible to get it
confused into spawning service programs like "git-upload-pack" with
an option like "--help", which in turn would spawn an interactive
pager, instead of working with the repository user asked to access
(i.e. the one whose name is "--help").

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Git 2.9 Release Notes
=====================
Backward compatibility notes
----------------------------
The end-user facing Porcelain level commands in the "git diff" and
"git log" family by default enable the rename detection; you can still
use "diff.renames" configuration variable to disable this.
Merging two branches that have no common ancestor with "git merge" is
by default forbidden now to prevent creating such an unusual merge by
mistake.
The output formats of "git log" that indents the commit log message by
4 spaces now expands HT in the log message by default. You can use
the "--no-expand-tabs" option to disable this.
"git commit-tree" plumbing command required the user to always sign
its result when the user sets the commit.gpgsign configuration
variable, which was an ancient mistake, which this release corrects.
A script that drives commit-tree, if it relies on this mistake, now
needs to read commit.gpgsign and pass the -S option as necessary.
Updates since v2.8
------------------
UI, Workflows & Features
* Comes with git-multimail 1.3.1 (in contrib/).
* The end-user facing commands like "git diff" and "git log"
now enable the rename detection by default.
* The credential.helper configuration variable is cumulative and
there is no good way to override it from the command line. As
a special case, giving an empty string as its value now serves
as the signal to clear the values specified in various files.
* A new "interactive.diffFilter" configuration can be used to
customize the diff shown in "git add -i" sessions.
* "git p4" now allows P4 author names to be mapped to Git author
names.
* "git rebase -x" can be used without passing "-i" option.
* "git -c credential.<var>=<value> submodule" can now be used to
propagate configuration variables related to credential helper
down to the submodules.
* "git tag" can create an annotated tag without explicitly given an
"-a" (or "-s") option (i.e. when a tag message is given). A new
configuration variable, tag.forceSignAnnotated, can be used to tell
the command to create signed tag in such a situation.
* "git merge" used to allow merging two branches that have no common
base by default, which led to a brand new history of an existing
project created and then get pulled by an unsuspecting maintainer,
which allowed an unnecessary parallel history merged into the
existing project. The command has been taught not to allow this by
default, with an escape hatch "--allow-unrelated-histories" option
to be used in a rare event that merges histories of two projects
that started their lives independently.
* "git pull" has been taught to pass the "--allow-unrelated-histories"
option to underlying "git merge".
* "git apply -v" learned to report paths in the patch that were
skipped via --include/--exclude mechanism or being outside the
current working directory.
* Shell completion (in contrib/) updates.
* The commit object name reported when "rebase -i" stops has been
shortened.
* "git worktree add" can be given "--no-checkout" option to only
create an empty worktree without checking out the files.
* "git mergetools" learned to drive ExamDiff.
* "git pull --rebase" learned "--[no-]autostash" option, so that
the rebase.autostash configuration variable set to true can be
overridden from the command line.
* When "git log" shows the log message indented by 4-spaces, the
remainder of a line after a HT does not align in the way the author
originally intended. The command now expands tabs by default to help
such a case, and allows the users to override it with a new option,
"--no-expand-tabs".
* "git send-email" now uses a more readable timestamps when
formulating a message ID.
* "git rerere" can encounter two or more files with the same conflict
signature that have to be resolved in different ways, but there was
no way to record these separate resolutions.
* "git p4" learned to record P4 jobs in Git commit that imports from
the history in Perforce.
* "git describe --contains" often made a hard-to-justify choice of
tag to name a given commit, because it tried to come up
with a name with smallest number of hops from a tag, causing an old
commit whose close descendant that is recently tagged were not
described with respect to an old tag but with a newer tag. It did
not help that its computation of "hop" count was further tweaked to
penalize being on a side branch of a merge. The logic has been
updated to favor using the tag with the oldest tagger date, which
is a lot easier to explain to the end users: "We describe a commit
in terms of the (chronologically) oldest tag that contains the
commit."
* "git clone" learned the "--shallow-submodules" option.
* HTTP transport clients learned to throw extra HTTP headers at the
server, specified via http.extraHeader configuration variable.
* The "--compaction-heuristic" option to "git diff" family of
commands enables a heuristic to make the patch output more readable
by using a blank line as a strong hint that the contents before and
after it belong to logically separate units. It is still
experimental.
* A new configuration variable core.hooksPath allows customizing
where the hook directory is.
* An earlier addition of "sanitize_submodule_env" with 14111fc4 (git:
submodule honor -c credential.* from command line, 2016-02-29)
turned out to be a convoluted no-op; implement what it wanted to do
correctly, and stop filtering settings given via "git -c var=val".
* "git commit --dry-run" reported "No, no, you cannot commit." in one
case where "git commit" would have allowed you to commit, and this
improves it a little bit ("git commit --dry-run --short" still does
not give you the correct answer, for example). This is a stop-gap
measure in that "commit --short --dry-run" still gives an incorrect
result.
* The experimental "multiple worktree" feature gains more safety to
forbid operations on a branch that is checked out or being actively
worked on elsewhere, by noticing that e.g. it is being rebased.
* "git format-patch" learned a new "--base" option to record what
(public, well-known) commit the original series was built on in
its output.
* "git commit" learned to pay attention to the "commit.verbose"
configuration variable and act as if the "--verbose" option
was given from the command line.
* Updated documentation gives hints to GMail users with two-factor
auth enabled that they need app-specific-password when using
"git send-email".
* The manpage output of our documentation did not render well in
terminal; typeset literals in bold by default to make them stand
out more.
* The mark-up in the top-level README.md file has been updated to
typeset CLI command names differently from the body text.
Performance, Internal Implementation, Development Support etc.
* The embedded args argv-array in the child process is used to build
the command line to run pack-objects instead of using a separate
array of strings.
* A test for tags has been restructured so that more parts of it can
easily be run on a platform without a working GnuPG.
* The startup_info data, which records if we are working inside a
repository (among other things), are now uniformly available to Git
subcommand implementations, and Git avoids attempting to touch
references when we are not in a repository.
* The command line argument parser for "receive-pack" has been
rewritten to use parse-options.
* A major part of "git submodule update" has been ported to C to take
advantage of the recently added framework to run download tasks in
parallel. Other updates to "git submodule" that move pieces of
logic to C continues.
* Rename bunch of tests on "git clone" for better organization.
* The tests that involve running httpd leaked the system-wide
configuration in /etc/gitconfig to the tested environment.
* Build updates for MSVC.
* The repository set-up sequence has been streamlined (the biggest
change is that there is no longer git_config_early()), so that we
do not attempt to look into refs/* when we know we do not have a
Git repository.
* Code restructuring around the "refs" API to prepare for pluggable
refs backends.
* Sources to many test helper binaries and the generated helpers
have been moved to t/helper/ subdirectory to reduce clutter at the
top level of the tree.
* Unify internal logic between "git tag -v" and "git verify-tag"
commands by making one directly call into the other.
* "merge-recursive" strategy incorrectly checked if a path that is
involved in its internal merge exists in the working tree.
* The test scripts for "git p4" (but not "git p4" implementation
itself) has been updated so that they would work even on a system
where the installed version of Python is python 3.
* As nobody maintains our in-tree git.spec.in and distros use their
own spec file, we stopped pretending that we support "make rpm".
* Move from "unsigned char[20]" to "struct object_id" continues.
* The code for warning_errno/die_errno has been refactored and a new
error_errno() reporting helper is introduced.
(merge 1da045f nd/error-errno later to maint).
* Running tests with '-x' option to trace the individual command
executions is a useful way to debug test scripts, but some tests
that capture the standard error stream and check what the command
said can be broken with the trace output mixed in. When running
our tests under "bash", however, we can redirect the trace output
to another file descriptor to keep the standard error of programs
being tested intact.
* t0040 had too many unnecessary repetitions in its test data. Teach
test-parse-options program so that a caller can tell what it
expects in its output, so that these repetitions can be cleaned up.
* Add perf test for "rebase -i".
* Common mistakes when writing gitlink: in our documentation are
found by "make check-docs".
* t9xxx series has been updated primarily for readability, while
fixing small bugs in it. A few scripted Porcelain commands have
also been updated to fix possible bugs around their use of
"test -z" and "test -n".
* CI test was taught to run git-svn tests.
* "git cat-file --batch-all" has been sped up, by taking advantage
of the fact that it does not have to read a list of objects, in two
ways.
* test updates to make it more readable and maintainable.
(merge e6273f4 es/t1500-modernize later to maint).
* "make DEVELOPER=1" worked as expected; setting DEVELOPER=1 in
config.mak didn't.
(merge 51dd3e8 mm/makefile-developer-can-be-in-config-mak later to maint).
* The way how "submodule--helper list" signals unmatch error to its
callers has been updated.
* A bash-ism "local" has been removed from "git submodule" scripted
Porcelain.
Also contains various documentation updates and code clean-ups.
Fixes since v2.8
----------------
Unless otherwise noted, all the fixes since v2.8 in the maintenance
track are contained in this release (see the maintenance releases'
notes for details).
* "git config --get-urlmatch", unlike other variants of the "git
config --get" family, did not signal error with its exit status
when there was no matching configuration.
* The "--local-env-vars" and "--resolve-git-dir" options of "git
rev-parse" failed to work outside a repository when the command's
option parsing was rewritten in 1.8.5 era.
* "git index-pack --keep[=<msg>] pack-$name.pack" simply did not work.
* Fetching of history by naming a commit object name directly didn't
work across remote-curl transport.
* A small memory leak in an error codepath has been plugged in xdiff
code.
* strbuf_getwholeline() did not NUL-terminate the buffer on certain
corner cases in its error codepath.
* "git mergetool" did not work well with conflicts that both sides
deleted.
* "git send-email" had trouble parsing alias file in mailrc format
when lines in it had trailing whitespaces on them.
* When "git merge --squash" stopped due to conflict, the concluding
"git commit" failed to read in the SQUASH_MSG that shows the log
messages from all the squashed commits.
* "git merge FETCH_HEAD" dereferenced NULL pointer when merging
nothing into an unborn history (which is arguably unusual usage,
which perhaps was the reason why nobody noticed it).
* When "git worktree" feature is in use, "git branch -d" allowed
deletion of a branch that is checked out in another worktree,
which was wrong.
* When "git worktree" feature is in use, "git branch -m" renamed a
branch that is checked out in another worktree without adjusting
the HEAD symbolic ref for the worktree.
* "git diff -M" used to work better when two originally identical
files A and B got renamed to X/A and X/B by pairing A to X/A and B
to X/B, but this was broken in the 2.0 timeframe.
* "git send-pack --all <there>" was broken when its command line
option parsing was written in the 2.6 timeframe.
* "git format-patch --help" showed `-s` and `--no-patch` as if these
are valid options to the command. We already hide `--patch` option
from the documentation, because format-patch is about showing the
diff, and the documentation now hides these options as well.
* When running "git blame $path" with unnormalized data in the index
for the path, the data in the working tree was blamed, even though
"git add" would not have changed what is already in the index, due
to "safe crlf" that disables the line-end conversion. It has been
corrected.
* A change back in version 2.7 to "git branch" broke display of a
symbolic ref in a non-standard place in the refs/ hierarchy (we
expect symbolic refs to appear in refs/remotes/*/HEAD to point at
the primary branch the remote has, and as .git/HEAD to point at the
branch we locally checked out).
* A partial rewrite of "git submodule" in the 2.7 timeframe changed
the way the gitdir: pointer in the submodules point at the real
repository location to use absolute paths by accident. This has
been corrected.
* "git commit" misbehaved in a few minor ways when an empty message
is given via -m '', all of which has been corrected.
* Support for CRAM-MD5 authentication method in "git imap-send" did
not work well.
* Upcoming OpenSSL 1.1.0 will break compilation by updating a few API
elements we use in imap-send, which has been adjusted for the change.
* The socks5:// proxy support added back in 2.6.4 days was not aware
that socks5h:// proxies behave differently from socks5:// proxies.
* "git config" had a codepath that tried to pass a NULL to
printf("%s"), which nobody seems to have noticed.
* On Cygwin, object creation uses the "create a temporary and then
rename it to the final name" pattern, not "create a temporary,
hardlink it to the final name and then unlink the temporary"
pattern.
This is necessary to use Git on Windows shared directories, and is
already enabled for the MinGW and plain Windows builds. It also
has been used in Cygwin packaged versions of Git for quite a while.
See http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/291853
* "merge-octopus" strategy did not ensure that the index is clean
when merge begins.
* When "git merge" notices that the merge can be resolved purely at
the tree level (without having to merge blobs) and the resulting
tree happens to already exist in the object store, it forgot to
update the index, which left an inconsistent state that would
break later operations.
* "git submodule" reports the paths of submodules the command
recurses into, but these paths were incorrectly reported when
the command was not run from the root level of the superproject.
* The "user.useConfigOnly" configuration variable makes it an error
if users do not explicitly set user.name and user.email. However,
its check was not done early enough and allowed another error to
trigger, reporting that the default value we guessed from the
system setting was unusable. This was a suboptimal end-user
experience as we want the users to set user.name/user.email without
relying on the auto-detection at all.
* "git mv old new" did not adjust the path for a submodule that lives
as a subdirectory inside old/ directory correctly.
* "git replace -e" did not honour "core.editor" configuration.
* "git push" from a corrupt repository that attempts to push a large
number of refs deadlocked; the thread to relay rejection notices
for these ref updates blocked on writing them to the main thread,
after the main thread at the receiving end notices that the push
failed and decides not to read these notices and return a failure.
* mmap emulation on Windows has been optimized and work better without
consuming paging store when not needed.
* A question by "git send-email" to ask the identity of the sender
has been updated.
* UI consistency improvements for "git mergetool".
* "git rebase -m" could be asked to rebase an entire branch starting
from the root, but failed by assuming that there always is a parent
commit to the first commit on the branch.
* Fix a broken "p4 lfs" test.
* Recent update to Git LFS broke "git p4" by changing the output from
its "lfs pointer" subcommand.
* "git fetch" test t5510 was flaky while running a (forced) automagic
garbage collection.
* Documentation updates to help contributors setting up Travis CI
test for their patches.
* Some multi-byte encoding can have a backslash byte as a later part
of one letter, which would confuse "highlight" filter used in
gitweb.
* "git commit-tree" plumbing command required the user to always sign
its result when the user sets the commit.gpgsign configuration
variable, which was an ancient mistake. Rework "git rebase" that
relied on this mistake so that it reads commit.gpgsign and pass (or
not pass) the -S option to "git commit-tree" to keep the end-user
expectation the same, while teaching "git commit-tree" to ignore
the configuration variable. This will stop requiring the users to
sign commit objects used internally as an implementation detail of
"git stash".
* "http.cookieFile" configuration variable clearly wants a pathname,
but we forgot to treat it as such by e.g. applying tilde expansion.
* Consolidate description of tilde-expansion that is done to
configuration variables that take pathname to a single place.
* Correct faulty recommendation to use "git submodule deinit ." when
de-initialising all submodules, which would result in a strange
error message in a pathological corner case.
* Many 'linkgit:<git documentation page>' references were broken,
which are all fixed with this.
* "git rerere" can get confused by conflict markers deliberately left
by the inner merge step, because they are indistinguishable from
the real conflict markers left by the outermost merge which are
what the end user and "rerere" need to look at. This was fixed by
making the conflict markers left by the inner merges a bit longer.
(merge 0f9fd5c jc/ll-merge-internal later to maint).
* CI test was taught to build documentation pages.
* "git fsck" learned to catch NUL byte in a commit object as
potential error and warn.
* Portability enhancement for "rebase -i" to help platforms whose
shell does not like "for i in <empty>" (which is not POSIX-kosher).
* On Windows, .git and optionally any files whose name starts with a
dot are now marked as hidden, with a core.hideDotFiles knob to
customize this behaviour.
* Documentation for "git merge --verify-signatures" has been updated
to clarify that the signature of only the commit at the tip is
verified. Also the phrasing used for signature and key validity is
adjusted to align with that used by OpenPGP.
* A couple of bugs around core.autocrlf have been fixed.
* Many commands normalize command line arguments from NFD to NFC
variant of UTF-8 on OSX, but commands in the "diff" family did
not, causing "git diff $path" to complain that no such path is
known to Git. They have been taught to do the normalization.
* "git difftool" learned to handle unmerged paths correctly in
dir-diff mode.
* The "are we talking with TTY, doing an interactive session?"
detection has been updated to work better for "Git for Windows".
* We forgot to add "git log --decorate=auto" to documentation when we
added the feature back in v2.1.0 timeframe.
(merge 462cbb4 rj/log-decorate-auto later to maint).
* "git fast-import --export-marks" would overwrite the existing marks
file even when it makes a dump from its custom die routine.
Prevent it from doing so when we have an import-marks file but
haven't finished reading it.
(merge f4beed6 fc/fast-import-broken-marks-file later to maint).
* "git rebase -i", after it fails to auto-resolve the conflict, had
an unnecessary call to "git rerere" from its very early days, which
was spotted recently; the call has been removed.
(merge 7063693 js/rebase-i-dedup-call-to-rerere later to maint).
* Other minor clean-ups and documentation updates
(merge cd82b7a pa/cherry-pick-doc-typo later to maint).
(merge 2bb73ae rs/patch-id-use-skip-prefix later to maint).
(merge aa20cbc rs/apply-name-terminate later to maint).
(merge fe17fc0 jc/t2300-setup later to maint).
(merge e256eec jk/shell-portability later to maint).

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@ -0,0 +1,117 @@
Git v2.9.1 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.9
----------------
* When "git daemon" is run without --[init-]timeout specified, a
connection from a client that silently goes offline can hang around
for a long time, wasting resources. The socket-level KEEPALIVE has
been enabled to allow the OS to notice such failed connections.
* The commands in `git log` family take %C(auto) in a custom format
string. This unconditionally turned the color on, ignoring
--no-color or with --color=auto when the output is not connected to
a tty; this was corrected to make the format truly behave as
"auto".
* "git rev-list --count" whose walk-length is limited with "-n"
option did not work well with the counting optimized to look at the
bitmap index.
* "git show -W" (extend hunks to cover the entire function, delimited
by lines that match the "funcname" pattern) used to show the entire
file when a change added an entire function at the end of the file,
which has been fixed.
* The documentation set has been updated so that literal commands,
configuration variables and environment variables are consistently
typeset in fixed-width font and bold in manpages.
* "git svn propset" subcommand that was added in 2.3 days is
documented now.
* The documentation tries to consistently spell "GPG"; when
referring to the specific program name, "gpg" is used.
* "git reflog" stopped upon seeing an entry that denotes a branch
creation event (aka "unborn"), which made it appear as if the
reflog was truncated.
* The git-prompt scriptlet (in contrib/) was not friendly with those
who uses "set -u", which has been fixed.
* A codepath that used alloca(3) to place an unbounded amount of data
on the stack has been updated to avoid doing so.
* "git update-index --add --chmod=+x file" may be usable as an escape
hatch, but not a friendly thing to force for people who do need to
use it regularly. "git add --chmod=+x file" can be used instead.
* Build improvements for gnome-keyring (in contrib/)
* "git status" used to say "working directory" when it meant "working
tree".
* Comments about misbehaving FreeBSD shells have been clarified with
the version number (9.x and before are broken, newer ones are OK).
* "git cherry-pick A" worked on an unborn branch, but "git
cherry-pick A..B" didn't.
* "git add -i/-p" learned to honor diff.compactionHeuristic
experimental knob, so that the user can work on the same hunk split
as "git diff" output.
* "log --graph --format=" learned that "%>|(N)" specifies the width
relative to the terminal's left edge, not relative to the area to
draw text that is to the right of the ancestry-graph section. It
also now accepts negative N that means the column limit is relative
to the right border.
* The ownership rule for the piece of memory that hold references to
be fetched in "git fetch" was screwy, which has been cleaned up.
* "git bisect" makes an internal call to "git diff-tree" when
bisection finds the culprit, but this call did not initialize the
data structure to pass to the diff-tree API correctly.
* Formats of the various data (and how to validate them) where we use
GPG signature have been documented.
* Fix an unintended regression in v2.9 that breaks "clone --depth"
that recurses down to submodules by forcing the submodules to also
be cloned shallowly, which many server instances that host upstream
of the submodules are not prepared for.
* Fix unnecessarily waste in the idiomatic use of ': ${VAR=default}'
to set the default value, without enclosing it in double quotes.
* Some platform-specific code had non-ANSI strict declarations of C
functions that do not take any parameters, which has been
corrected.
* The internal code used to show local timezone offset is not
prepared to handle timestamps beyond year 2100, and gave a
bogus offset value to the caller. Use a more benign looking
+0000 instead and let "git log" going in such a case, instead
of aborting.
* One among four invocations of readlink(1) in our test suite has
been rewritten so that the test can run on systems without the
command (others are in valgrind test framework and t9802).
* t/perf needs /usr/bin/time with GNU extension; the invocation of it
is updated to "gtime" on Darwin.
* A bug, which caused "git p4" while running under verbose mode to
report paths that are omitted due to branch prefix incorrectly, has
been fixed; the command said "Ignoring file outside of prefix" for
paths that are _inside_.
* The top level documentation "git help git" still pointed at the
documentation set hosted at now-defunct google-code repository.
Update it to point to https://git.github.io/htmldocs/git.html
instead.
Also contains minor documentation updates and code clean-ups.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
Git v2.9.2 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.9.1
------------------
* A fix merged to v2.9.1 had a few tests that are not meant to be
run on platforms without 64-bit long, which caused unnecessary
test failures on them because we didn't detect the platform and
skip them. These tests are now skipped on platforms that they
are not applicable to.
No other change is included in this update.

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@ -0,0 +1,170 @@
Git v2.9.3 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.9.2
------------------
* A helper function that takes the contents of a commit object and
finds its subject line did not ignore leading blank lines, as is
commonly done by other codepaths. Make it ignore leading blank
lines to match.
* Git does not know what the contents in the index should be for a
path added with "git add -N" yet, so "git grep --cached" should not
show hits (or show lack of hits, with -L) in such a path, but that
logic does not apply to "git grep", i.e. searching in the working
tree files. But we did so by mistake, which has been corrected.
* "git rebase -i --autostash" did not restore the auto-stashed change
when the operation was aborted.
* "git commit --amend --allow-empty-message -S" for a commit without
any message body could have misidentified where the header of the
commit object ends.
* More mark-up updates to typeset strings that are expected to
literally typed by the end user in fixed-width font.
* For a long time, we carried an in-code comment that said our
colored output would work only when we use fprintf/fputs on
Windows, which no longer is the case for the past few years.
* "gc.autoPackLimit" when set to 1 should not trigger a repacking
when there is only one pack, but the code counted poorly and did
so.
* One part of "git am" had an oddball helper function that called
stuff from outside "his" as opposed to calling what we have "ours",
which was not gender-neutral and also inconsistent with the rest of
the system where outside stuff is usuall called "theirs" in
contrast to "ours".
* The test framework learned a new helper test_match_signal to
check an exit code from getting killed by an expected signal.
* "git blame -M" missed a single line that was moved within the file.
* Fix recently introduced codepaths that are involved in parallel
submodule operations, which gave up on reading too early, and
could have wasted CPU while attempting to write under a corner
case condition.
* "git grep -i" has been taught to fold case in non-ascii locales
correctly.
* A test that unconditionally used "mktemp" learned that the command
is not necessarily available everywhere.
* "git blame file" allowed the lineage of lines in the uncommitted,
unadded contents of "file" to be inspected, but it refused when
"file" did not appear in the current commit. When "file" was
created by renaming an existing file (but the change has not been
committed), this restriction was unnecessarily tight.
* "git add -N dir/file && git write-tree" produced an incorrect tree
when there are other paths in the same directory that sorts after
"file".
* "git fetch http://user:pass@host/repo..." scrubbed the userinfo
part, but "git push" didn't.
* An age old bug that caused "git diff --ignore-space-at-eol"
misbehave has been fixed.
* "git notes merge" had a code to see if a path exists (and fails if
it does) and then open the path for writing (when it doesn't).
Replace it with open with O_EXCL.
* "git pack-objects" and "git index-pack" mostly operate with off_t
when talking about the offset of objects in a packfile, but there
were a handful of places that used "unsigned long" to hold that
value, leading to an unintended truncation.
* Recent update to "git daemon" tries to enable the socket-level
KEEPALIVE, but when it is spawned via inetd, the standard input
file descriptor may not necessarily be connected to a socket.
Suppress an ENOTSOCK error from setsockopt().
* Recent FreeBSD stopped making perl available at /usr/bin/perl;
switch the default the built-in path to /usr/local/bin/perl on not
too ancient FreeBSD releases.
* "git status" learned to suggest "merge --abort" during a conflicted
merge, just like it already suggests "rebase --abort" during a
conflicted rebase.
* The .c/.h sources are marked as such in our .gitattributes file so
that "git diff -W" and friends would work better.
* Existing autoconf generated test for the need to link with pthread
library did not check all the functions from pthread libraries;
recent FreeBSD has some functions in libc but not others, and we
mistakenly thought linking with libc is enough when it is not.
* Allow http daemon tests in Travis CI tests.
* Users of the parse_options_concat() API function need to allocate
extra slots in advance and fill them with OPT_END() when they want
to decide the set of supported options dynamically, which makes the
code error-prone and hard to read. This has been corrected by tweaking
the API to allocate and return a new copy of "struct option" array.
* The use of strbuf in "git rm" to build filename to remove was a bit
suboptimal, which has been fixed.
* "git commit --help" said "--no-verify" is only about skipping the
pre-commit hook, and failed to say that it also skipped the
commit-msg hook.
* "git merge" in Git v2.9 was taught to forbid merging an unrelated
lines of history by default, but that is exactly the kind of thing
the "--rejoin" mode of "git subtree" (in contrib/) wants to do.
"git subtree" has been taught to use the "--allow-unrelated-histories"
option to override the default.
* The build procedure for "git persistent-https" helper (in contrib/)
has been updated so that it can be built with more recent versions
of Go.
* There is an optimization used in "git diff $treeA $treeB" to borrow
an already checked-out copy in the working tree when it is known to
be the same as the blob being compared, expecting that open/mmap of
such a file is faster than reading it from the object store, which
involves inflating and applying delta. This however kicked in even
when the checked-out copy needs to go through the convert-to-git
conversion (including the clean filter), which defeats the whole
point of the optimization. The optimization has been disabled when
the conversion is necessary.
* "git -c grep.patternType=extended log --basic-regexp" misbehaved
because the internal API to access the grep machinery was not
designed well.
* Windows port was failing some tests in t4130, due to the lack of
inum in the returned values by its lstat(2) emulation.
* The characters in the label shown for tags/refs for commits in
"gitweb" output are now properly escaped for proper HTML output.
* FreeBSD can lie when asked mtime of a directory, which made the
untracked cache code to fall back to a slow-path, which in turn
caused tests in t7063 to fail because it wanted to verify the
behaviour of the fast-path.
* Squelch compiler warnings for netmalloc (in compat/) library.
* The API documentation for hashmap was unclear if hashmap_entry
can be safely discarded without any other consideration. State
that it is safe to do so.
* Not-so-recent rewrite of "git am" that started making internal
calls into the commit machinery had an unintended regression, in
that no matter how many seconds it took to apply many patches, the
resulting committer timestamp for the resulting commits were all
the same.
* "git difftool <paths>..." started in a subdirectory failed to
interpret the paths relative to that directory, which has been
fixed.
Also contains minor documentation updates and code clean-ups.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,90 @@
Git v2.9.4 Release Notes
========================
Fixes since v2.9.3
------------------
* There are certain house-keeping tasks that need to be performed at
the very beginning of any Git program, and programs that are not
built-in commands had to do them exactly the same way as "git"
potty does. It was easy to make mistakes in one-off standalone
programs (like test helpers). A common "main()" function that
calls cmd_main() of individual program has been introduced to
make it harder to make mistakes.
* "git merge" with renormalization did not work well with
merge-recursive, due to "safer crlf" conversion kicking in when it
shouldn't.
* The reflog output format is documented better, and a new format
--date=unix to report the seconds-since-epoch (without timezone)
has been added.
* "git push --force-with-lease" already had enough logic to allow
ensuring that such a push results in creation of a ref (i.e. the
receiving end did not have another push from sideways that would be
discarded by our force-pushing), but didn't expose this possibility
to the users. It does so now.
* "import-tars" fast-import script (in contrib/) used to ignore a
hardlink target and replaced it with an empty file, which has been
corrected to record the same blob as the other file the hardlink is
shared with.
* "git mv dir non-existing-dir/" did not work in some environments
the same way as existing mainstream platforms. The code now moves
"dir" to "non-existing-dir", without relying on rename("A", "B/")
that strips the trailing slash of '/'.
* The "t/" hierarchy is prone to get an unusual pathname; "make test"
has been taught to make sure they do not contain paths that cannot
be checked out on Windows (and the mechanism can be reusable to
catch pathnames that are not portable to other platforms as need
arises).
* When "git merge-recursive" works on history with many criss-cross
merges in "verbose" mode, the names the command assigns to the
virtual merge bases could have overwritten each other by unintended
reuse of the same piece of memory.
* "git checkout --detach <branch>" used to give the same advice
message as that is issued when "git checkout <tag>" (or anything
that is not a branch name) is given, but asking with "--detach" is
an explicit enough sign that the user knows what is going on. The
advice message has been squelched in this case.
* "git difftool" by default ignores the error exit from the backend
commands it spawns, because often they signal that they found
differences by exiting with a non-zero status code just like "diff"
does; the exit status codes 126 and above however are special in
that they are used to signal that the command is not executable,
does not exist, or killed by a signal. "git difftool" has been
taught to notice these exit status codes.
* On Windows, help.browser configuration variable used to be ignored,
which has been corrected.
* The "git -c var[=val] cmd" facility to append a configuration
variable definition at the end of the search order was described in
git(1) manual page, but not in git-config(1), which was more likely
place for people to look for when they ask "can I make a one-shot
override, and if so how?"
* The tempfile (hence its user lockfile) API lets the caller to open
a file descriptor to a temporary file, write into it and then
finalize it by first closing the filehandle and then either
removing or renaming the temporary file. When the process spawns a
subprocess after obtaining the file descriptor, and if the
subprocess has not exited when the attempt to remove or rename is
made, the last step fails on Windows, because the subprocess has
the file descriptor still open. Open tempfile with O_CLOEXEC flag
to avoid this (on Windows, this is mapped to O_NOINHERIT).
* "git-shell" rejects a request to serve a repository whose name
begins with a dash, which makes it no longer possible to get it
confused into spawning service programs like "git-upload-pack" with
an option like "--help", which in turn would spawn an interactive
pager, instead of working with the repository user asked to access
(i.e. the one whose name is "--help").
Also contains minor documentation updates and code clean-ups.

View File

@ -61,23 +61,28 @@ 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
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.
the feature triggers the new behavior when it should, and to show the
feature does not trigger when it shouldn't. After any code change, make
sure that the entire test suite passes.
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.
If you have an account at GitHub (and you can get one for free to work
on open source projects), you can use their Travis CI integration to
test your changes on Linux, Mac (and hopefully soon Windows). See
GitHub-Travis CI hints section for details.
Do not forget to update the documentation to describe the updated
behavior and make sure that the resulting documentation set formats
well. 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
@ -116,6 +121,16 @@ its behaviour. Try to make sure your explanation can be understood
without external resources. Instead of giving a URL to a mailing list
archive, summarize the relevant points of the discussion.
If you want to reference a previous commit in the history of a stable
branch, use the format "abbreviated sha1 (subject, date)",
with the subject enclosed in a pair of double-quotes, like this:
Commit f86a374 ("pack-bitmap.c: fix a memleak", 2015-03-30)
noticed that ...
The "Copy commit summary" command of gitk can be used to obtain this
format.
(3) Generate your patch using Git tools out of your commits.
@ -370,6 +385,47 @@ Know the status of your patch after submission
entitled "What's cooking in git.git" and "What's in git.git" giving
the status of various proposed changes.
--------------------------------------------------
GitHub-Travis CI hints
With an account at GitHub (you can get one for free to work on open
source projects), you can use Travis CI to test your changes on Linux,
Mac (and hopefully soon Windows). You can find a successful example
test build here: https://travis-ci.org/git/git/builds/120473209
Follow these steps for the initial setup:
(1) Fork https://github.com/git/git to your GitHub account.
You can find detailed instructions how to fork here:
https://help.github.com/articles/fork-a-repo/
(2) Open the Travis CI website: https://travis-ci.org
(3) Press the "Sign in with GitHub" button.
(4) Grant Travis CI permissions to access your GitHub account.
You can find more information about the required permissions here:
https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/github-oauth-scopes
(5) Open your Travis CI profile page: https://travis-ci.org/profile
(6) Enable Travis CI builds for your Git fork.
After the initial setup, Travis CI will run whenever you push new changes
to your fork of Git on GitHub. You can monitor the test state of all your
branches here: https://travis-ci.org/<Your GitHub handle>/git/branches
If a branch did not pass all test cases then it is marked with a red
cross. In that case you can click on the failing Travis CI job and
scroll all the way down in the log. Find the line "<-- Click here to see
detailed test output!" and click on the triangle next to the log line
number to expand the detailed test output. Here is such a failing
example: https://travis-ci.org/git/git/jobs/122676187
Fix the problem and push your fix to your Git fork. This will trigger
a new Travis CI build to ensure all tests pass.
------------------------------------------------
MUA specific hints

View File

@ -10,7 +10,7 @@
Include additional statistics at the end of blame output.
-L <start>,<end>::
-L :<regex>::
-L :<funcname>::
Annotate only the given line range. May be specified multiple times.
Overlapping ranges are allowed.
+
@ -63,13 +63,19 @@ include::line-range-format.txt[]
`-` to make the command read from the standard input).
--date <format>::
The value is one of the following alternatives:
{relative,local,default,iso,rfc,short}. If --date is not
Specifies the format used to output dates. If --date is not
provided, the value of the blame.date config variable is
used. If the blame.date config variable is also not set, the
iso format is used. For more information, See the discussion
iso format is used. For supported values, see the discussion
of the --date option at linkgit:git-log[1].
--[no-]progress::
Progress status is reported on the standard error stream
by default when it is attached to a terminal. This flag
enables progress reporting even if not attached to a
terminal. Can't use `--progress` together with `--porcelain`
or `--incremental`.
-M|<num>|::
Detect moved or copied lines within a file. When a commit
moves or copies a block of lines (e.g. the original file

View File

@ -38,6 +38,10 @@ sub format_one {
}
}
while (<>) {
last if /^### command list/;
}
my %cmds = ();
for (sort <>) {
next if /^#/;

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
DATE FORMATS
------------
The GIT_AUTHOR_DATE, GIT_COMMITTER_DATE environment variables
The `GIT_AUTHOR_DATE`, `GIT_COMMITTER_DATE` environment variables
ifdef::git-commit[]
and the `--date` option
endif::git-commit[]

View File

@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ diff.ignoreSubmodules::
commands such as 'git diff-files'. 'git checkout' also honors
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
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.
@ -105,12 +105,16 @@ diff.orderFile::
diff.renameLimit::
The number of files to consider when performing the copy/rename
detection; equivalent to the 'git diff' option '-l'.
detection; equivalent to the 'git diff' option `-l`.
diff.renames::
Tells Git to detect renames. If set to any boolean value, it
will enable basic rename detection. If set to "copies" or
"copy", it will detect copies, as well.
Whether and how Git detects renames. If set to "false",
rename detection is disabled. If set to "true", basic rename
detection is enabled. If set to "copies" or "copy", Git will
detect copies, as well. Defaults to true. Note that this
affects only 'git diff' Porcelain like linkgit:git-diff[1] and
linkgit:git-log[1], and not lower level commands such as
linkgit:git-diff-files[1].
diff.suppressBlankEmpty::
A boolean to inhibit the standard behavior of printing a space
@ -166,6 +170,11 @@ diff.tool::
include::mergetools-diff.txt[]
diff.compactionHeuristic::
Set this option to `true` to enable an experimental heuristic that
shifts the hunk boundary in an attempt to make the resulting
patch easier to read.
diff.algorithm::
Choose a diff algorithm. The variants are as follows:
+

View File

@ -46,11 +46,11 @@ That is, from the left to the right:
. sha1 for "dst"; 0\{40\} if creation, unmerged or "look at work tree".
. a space.
. status, followed by optional "score" number.
. a tab or a NUL when '-z' option is used.
. a tab or a NUL when `-z` option is used.
. path for "src"
. a tab or a NUL when '-z' option is used; only exists for C or R.
. a tab or a NUL when `-z` option is used; only exists for C or R.
. path for "dst"; only exists for C or R.
. an LF or a NUL when '-z' option is used, to terminate the record.
. an LF or a NUL when `-z` option is used, to terminate the record.
Possible status letters are:
@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ diff format for merges
----------------------
"git-diff-tree", "git-diff-files" and "git-diff --raw"
can take '-c' or '--cc' option
can take `-c` or `--cc` option
to generate diff output also for merge commits. The output differs
from the format described above in the following way:

View File

@ -2,11 +2,11 @@ Generating patches with -p
--------------------------
When "git-diff-index", "git-diff-tree", or "git-diff-files" are run
with a '-p' option, "git diff" without the '--raw' option, or
with a `-p` option, "git diff" without the `--raw` option, or
"git log" with the "-p" option, they
do not produce the output described above; instead they produce a
patch file. You can customize the creation of such patches via the
GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF and the GIT_DIFF_OPTS environment variables.
`GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF` and the `GIT_DIFF_OPTS` environment variables.
What the -p option produces is slightly different from the traditional
diff format:
@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ combined diff format
Any diff-generating command can take the `-c` or `--cc` option to
produce a 'combined diff' when showing a merge. This is the default
format when showing merges with linkgit:git-diff[1] or
linkgit:git-show[1]. Note also that you can give the `-m' option to any
linkgit:git-show[1]. Note also that you can give the `-m` option to any
of these commands to force generation of diffs with individual parents
of a merge.
@ -114,11 +114,11 @@ index fabadb8,cc95eb0..4866510
------------
1. It is preceded with a "git diff" header, that looks like
this (when '-c' option is used):
this (when `-c` option is used):
diff --combined file
+
or like this (when '--cc' option is used):
or like this (when `--cc` option is used):
diff --cc file

View File

@ -23,13 +23,15 @@ ifndef::git-format-patch[]
-u::
--patch::
Generate patch (see section on generating patches).
{git-diff? This is the default.}
endif::git-format-patch[]
ifdef::git-diff[]
This is the default.
endif::git-diff[]
-s::
--no-patch::
Suppress diff output. Useful for commands like `git show` that
show the patch by default, or to cancel the effect of `--patch`.
endif::git-format-patch[]
-U<n>::
--unified=<n>::
@ -41,8 +43,19 @@ endif::git-format-patch[]
ifndef::git-format-patch[]
--raw::
Generate the raw format.
{git-diff-core? This is the default.}
ifndef::git-log[]
Generate the diff in raw format.
ifdef::git-diff-core[]
This is the default.
endif::git-diff-core[]
endif::git-log[]
ifdef::git-log[]
For each commit, show a summary of changes using the raw diff
format. See the "RAW OUTPUT FORMAT" section of
linkgit:git-diff[1]. This is different from showing the log
itself in raw format, which you can achieve with
`--format=raw`.
endif::git-log[]
endif::git-format-patch[]
ifndef::git-format-patch[]
@ -50,6 +63,13 @@ ifndef::git-format-patch[]
Synonym for `-p --raw`.
endif::git-format-patch[]
--compaction-heuristic::
--no-compaction-heuristic::
These are to help debugging and tuning an experimental
heuristic (which is off by default) that shifts the hunk
boundary in an attempt to make the resulting patch easier
to read.
--minimal::
Spend extra time to make sure the smallest possible
diff is produced.
@ -254,8 +274,11 @@ expression to make sure that it matches all non-whitespace characters.
A match that contains a newline is silently truncated(!) at the
newline.
+
For example, `--word-diff-regex=.` will treat each character as a word
and, correspondingly, show differences character by character.
+
The regex can also be set via a diff driver or configuration option, see
linkgit:gitattributes[1] or linkgit:git-config[1]. Giving it explicitly
linkgit:gitattributes[5] or linkgit:git-config[1]. Giving it explicitly
overrides any diff driver or configuration setting. Diff drivers
override configuration settings.
@ -270,14 +293,24 @@ endif::git-format-patch[]
ifndef::git-format-patch[]
--check::
Warn if changes introduce whitespace errors. What are
considered whitespace errors is controlled by `core.whitespace`
Warn if changes introduce conflict markers or whitespace errors.
What are considered whitespace errors is controlled by `core.whitespace`
configuration. By default, trailing whitespaces (including
lines that solely consist of whitespaces) and a space character
that is immediately followed by a tab character inside the
initial indent of the line are considered whitespace errors.
Exits with non-zero status if problems are found. Not compatible
with --exit-code.
--ws-error-highlight=<kind>::
Highlight whitespace errors on lines specified by <kind>
in the color specified by `color.diff.whitespace`. <kind>
is a comma separated list of `old`, `new`, `context`. When
this option is not given, only whitespace errors in `new`
lines are highlighted. E.g. `--ws-error-highlight=new,old`
highlights whitespace errors on both deleted and added lines.
`all` can be used as a short-hand for `old,new,context`.
endif::git-format-patch[]
--full-index::
@ -386,6 +419,9 @@ ifndef::git-format-patch[]
paths are selected if there is any file that matches
other criteria in the comparison; if there is no file
that matches other criteria, nothing is selected.
+
Also, these upper-case letters can be downcased to exclude. E.g.
`--diff-filter=ad` excludes added and deleted paths.
-S<string>::
Look for differences that change the number of occurrences of

View File

@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
Everyday Git With 20 Commands Or So
===================================
This document has been moved to linkgit:giteveryday[1].
This document has been moved to linkgit:giteveryday[7].
Please let the owners of the referring site know so that they can update the
link you clicked to get here.

View File

@ -8,10 +8,11 @@
option old data in `.git/FETCH_HEAD` will be overwritten.
--depth=<depth>::
Deepen or shorten the history of a 'shallow' repository created by
`git clone` with `--depth=<depth>` option (see linkgit:git-clone[1])
to the specified number of commits from the tip of each remote
branch history. Tags for the deepened commits are not fetched.
Limit fetching to the specified number of commits from the tip of
each remote branch history. If fetching to a 'shallow' repository
created by `git clone` with `--depth=<depth>` option (see
linkgit:git-clone[1]), deepen or shorten the history to the specified
number of commits. Tags for the deepened commits are not fetched.
--unshallow::
If the source repository is complete, convert a shallow
@ -51,7 +52,7 @@ ifndef::git-pull[]
-p::
--prune::
After fetching, remove any remote-tracking references that no
Before 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
@ -87,7 +88,7 @@ ifndef::git-pull[]
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').
destination of an explicit refspec; see `--prune`).
--recurse-submodules[=yes|on-demand|no]::
This option controls if and under what conditions new commits of
@ -100,9 +101,16 @@ ifndef::git-pull[]
reference to a commit that isn't already in the local submodule
clone.
-j::
--jobs=<n>::
Number of parallel children to be used for fetching submodules.
Each will fetch from different submodules, such that fetching many
submodules will be faster. By default submodules will be fetched
one at a time.
--no-recurse-submodules::
Disable recursive fetching of submodules (this has the same effect as
using the '--recurse-submodules=no' option).
using the `--recurse-submodules=no` option).
--submodule-prefix=<path>::
Prepend <path> to paths printed in informative messages
@ -129,7 +137,7 @@ endif::git-pull[]
--upload-pack <upload-pack>::
When given, and the repository to fetch from is handled
by 'git fetch-pack', '--exec=<upload-pack>' is passed to
by 'git fetch-pack', `--exec=<upload-pack>` is passed to
the command to specify non-default path for the command
run on the other end.
@ -150,3 +158,11 @@ endif::git-pull[]
by default when it is attached to a terminal, unless -q
is specified. This flag forces progress status even if the
standard error stream is not directed to a terminal.
-4::
--ipv4::
Use IPv4 addresses only, ignoring IPv6 addresses.
-6::
--ipv6::
Use IPv6 addresses only, ignoring IPv4 addresses.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
merge.branchdesc::
In addition to branch names, populate the log message with
the branch description text associated with them. Defaults
to false.
merge.log::
In addition to branch names, populate the log message with at
most the specified number of one-line descriptions from the
actual commits that are being merged. Defaults to false, and
true is a synonym for 20.

View File

@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
'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>...]
[--chmod=(+|-)x] [--] [<pathspec>...]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ remove paths that do not exist in the working tree anymore.
The "index" holds a snapshot of the content of the working tree, and it
is this snapshot that is taken as the contents of the next commit. Thus
after making any changes to the working directory, and before running
after making any changes to the working tree, and before running
the commit command, you must use the `add` command to add any new or
modified files to the index.
@ -93,7 +93,8 @@ This effectively runs `add --interactive`, but bypasses the
initial command menu and directly jumps to the `patch` subcommand.
See ``Interactive mode'' for details.
-e, \--edit::
-e::
--edit::
Open the diff vs. the index in an editor and let the user
edit it. After the editor was closed, adjust the hunk headers
and apply the patch to the index.
@ -164,6 +165,11 @@ for "git add --no-all <pathspec>...", i.e. ignored removed files.
be ignored, no matter if they are already present in the work
tree or not.
--chmod=(+|-)x::
Override the executable bit of the added files. The executable
bit is only changed in the index, the files on disk are left
unchanged.
\--::
This option can be used to separate command-line options from
the list of files, (useful when filenames might be mistaken

View File

@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git am' [--signoff] [--keep] [--[no-]keep-cr] [--[no-]utf8]
[--3way] [--interactive] [--committer-date-is-author-date]
[--[no-]3way] [--interactive] [--committer-date-is-author-date]
[--ignore-date] [--ignore-space-change | --ignore-whitespace]
[--whitespace=<option>] [-C<n>] [-p<n>] [--directory=<dir>]
[--exclude=<path>] [--include=<path>] [--reject] [-q | --quiet]
@ -35,6 +35,7 @@ OPTIONS
--signoff::
Add a `Signed-off-by:` line to the commit message, using
the committer identity of yourself.
See the signoff option in linkgit:git-commit[1] for more information.
-k::
--keep::
@ -90,10 +91,13 @@ default. You can use `--no-utf8` to override this.
-3::
--3way::
--no-3way::
When the patch does not apply cleanly, fall back on
3-way merge if the patch records the identity of blobs
it is supposed to apply to and we have those blobs
available locally.
available locally. `--no-3way` can be used to override
am.threeWay configuration variable. For more information,
see am.threeWay in linkgit:git-config[1].
--ignore-space-change::
--ignore-whitespace::
@ -112,7 +116,8 @@ default. You can use `--no-utf8` to override this.
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.
interpreted as. Valid formats are mbox, mboxrd,
stgit, stgit-series and hg.
-i::
--interactive::
@ -138,7 +143,9 @@ default. You can use `--no-utf8` to override this.
-S[<keyid>]::
--gpg-sign[=<keyid>]::
GPG-sign commits.
GPG-sign commits. The `keyid` argument is optional and
defaults to the committer identity; if specified, it must be
stuck to the option without a space.
--continue::
-r::
@ -192,12 +199,12 @@ When initially invoking `git am`, you give it the names of the mailboxes
to process. Upon seeing the first patch that does not apply, it
aborts in the middle. You can recover from this in one of two ways:
. skip the current patch by re-running the command with the '--skip'
. skip the current patch by re-running the command with the `--skip`
option.
. hand resolve the conflict in the working directory, and update
the index file to bring it into a state that the patch should
have produced. Then run the command with the '--continue' option.
have produced. Then run the command with the `--continue` option.
The command refuses to process new mailboxes until the current
operation is finished, so if you decide to start over from scratch,

View File

@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
[--apply] [--no-add] [--build-fake-ancestor=<file>] [-R | --reverse]
[--allow-binary-replacement | --binary] [--reject] [-z]
[-p<n>] [-C<n>] [--inaccurate-eof] [--recount] [--cached]
[--ignore-space-change | --ignore-whitespace ]
[--ignore-space-change | --ignore-whitespace]
[--whitespace=(nowarn|warn|fix|error|error-all)]
[--exclude=<path>] [--include=<path>] [--directory=<root>]
[--verbose] [--unsafe-paths] [<patch>...]
@ -21,6 +21,8 @@ SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
-----------
Reads the supplied diff output (i.e. "a patch") and applies it to files.
When running from a subdirectory in a repository, patched paths
outside the directory are ignored.
With the `--index` option the patch is also applied to the index, and
with the `--cached` option the patch is only applied to the index.
Without these options, the command applies the patch only to files,

View File

@ -366,7 +366,7 @@ skip" to do the same thing. (In fact the special exit code 125 makes
Or if you want more control, you can inspect the current state using
for example "git bisect visualize". It will launch gitk (or "git log"
if the DISPLAY environment variable is not set) to help you find a
if the `DISPLAY` environment variable is not set) to help you find a
better bisection point.
Either way, if you have a string of untestable commits, it might
@ -1321,7 +1321,7 @@ So git bisect is unconditional goodness - and feel free to quote that
_____________
Acknowledgments
----------------
---------------
Many thanks to Junio Hamano for his help in reviewing this paper, for
reviewing the patches I sent to the Git mailing list, for discussing

View File

@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ git-bisect(1)
NAME
----
git-bisect - Find by binary search the change that introduced a bug
git-bisect - Use binary search to find the commit that introduced a bug
SYNOPSIS
@ -16,74 +16,89 @@ DESCRIPTION
The command takes various subcommands, and different options depending
on the subcommand:
git bisect help
git bisect start [--no-checkout] [<bad> [<good>...]] [--] [<paths>...]
git bisect bad [<rev>]
git bisect good [<rev>...]
git bisect start [--term-{old,good}=<term> --term-{new,bad}=<term>]
[--no-checkout] [<bad> [<good>...]] [--] [<paths>...]
git bisect (bad|new) [<rev>]
git bisect (good|old) [<rev>...]
git bisect terms [--term-good | --term-bad]
git bisect skip [(<rev>|<range>)...]
git bisect reset [<commit>]
git bisect visualize
git bisect replay <logfile>
git bisect log
git bisect run <cmd>...
git bisect help
This command uses 'git rev-list --bisect' to help drive the
binary search process to find which change introduced a bug, given an
old "good" commit object name and a later "bad" commit object name.
This command uses a binary search algorithm to find which commit in
your project's history introduced a bug. You use it by first telling
it a "bad" commit that is known to contain the bug, and a "good"
commit that is known to be before the bug was introduced. Then `git
bisect` picks a commit between those two endpoints and asks you
whether the selected commit is "good" or "bad". It continues narrowing
down the range until it finds the exact commit that introduced the
change.
Getting help
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Use "git bisect" to get a short usage description, and "git bisect
help" or "git bisect -h" to get a long usage description.
In fact, `git bisect` can be used to find the commit that changed
*any* property of your project; e.g., the commit that fixed a bug, or
the commit that caused a benchmark's performance to improve. To
support this more general usage, the terms "old" and "new" can be used
in place of "good" and "bad", or you can choose your own terms. See
section "Alternate terms" below for more information.
Basic bisect commands: start, bad, good
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Using the Linux kernel tree as an example, basic use of the bisect
command is as follows:
As an example, suppose you are trying to find the commit that broke a
feature that was known to work in version `v2.6.13-rc2` of your
project. You start a bisect session as follows:
------------------------------------------------
$ git bisect start
$ git bisect bad # Current version is bad
$ git bisect good v2.6.13-rc2 # v2.6.13-rc2 was the last version
# tested that was good
$ git bisect good v2.6.13-rc2 # v2.6.13-rc2 is known to be good
------------------------------------------------
When you have specified at least one bad and one good version, the
command bisects the revision tree and outputs something similar to
the following:
Once you have specified at least one bad and one good commit, `git
bisect` selects a commit in the middle of that range of history,
checks it out, and outputs something similar to the following:
------------------------------------------------
Bisecting: 675 revisions left to test after this
Bisecting: 675 revisions left to test after this (roughly 10 steps)
------------------------------------------------
The state in the middle of the set of revisions is then checked out.
You would now compile that kernel and boot it. If the booted kernel
works correctly, you would then issue the following command:
You should now compile the checked-out version and test it. If that
version works correctly, type
------------------------------------------------
$ git bisect good # this one is good
$ git bisect good
------------------------------------------------
The output of this command would be something similar to the following:
If that version is broken, type
------------------------------------------------
Bisecting: 337 revisions left to test after this
$ git bisect bad
------------------------------------------------
You keep repeating this process, compiling the tree, testing it, and
depending on whether it is good or bad issuing the command "git bisect good"
or "git bisect bad" to ask for the next bisection.
Then `git bisect` will respond with something like
------------------------------------------------
Bisecting: 337 revisions left to test after this (roughly 9 steps)
------------------------------------------------
Keep repeating the process: compile the tree, test it, and depending
on whether it is good or bad run `git bisect good` or `git bisect bad`
to ask for the next commit that needs testing.
Eventually there will be no more revisions left to inspect, and the
command will print out a description of the first bad commit. The
reference `refs/bisect/bad` will be left pointing at that commit.
Eventually there will be no more revisions left to bisect, and you
will have been left with the first bad kernel revision in "refs/bisect/bad".
Bisect reset
~~~~~~~~~~~~
After a bisect session, to clean up the bisection state and return to
the original HEAD (i.e., to quit bisecting), issue the following command:
the original HEAD, issue the following command:
------------------------------------------------
$ git bisect reset
@ -100,9 +115,83 @@ instead:
$ git bisect reset <commit>
------------------------------------------------
For example, `git bisect reset HEAD` will leave you on the current
bisection commit and avoid switching commits at all, while `git bisect
reset bisect/bad` will check out the first bad revision.
For example, `git bisect reset bisect/bad` will check out the first
bad revision, while `git bisect reset HEAD` will leave you on the
current bisection commit and avoid switching commits at all.
Alternate terms
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sometimes you are not looking for the commit that introduced a
breakage, but rather for a commit that caused a change between some
other "old" state and "new" state. For example, you might be looking
for the commit that introduced a particular fix. Or you might be
looking for the first commit in which the source-code filenames were
finally all converted to your company's naming standard. Or whatever.
In such cases it can be very confusing to use the terms "good" and
"bad" to refer to "the state before the change" and "the state after
the change". So instead, you can use the terms "old" and "new",
respectively, in place of "good" and "bad". (But note that you cannot
mix "good" and "bad" with "old" and "new" in a single session.)
In this more general usage, you provide `git bisect` with a "new"
commit has some property and an "old" commit that doesn't have that
property. Each time `git bisect` checks out a commit, you test if that
commit has the property. If it does, mark the commit as "new";
otherwise, mark it as "old". When the bisection is done, `git bisect`
will report which commit introduced the property.
To use "old" and "new" instead of "good" and bad, you must run `git
bisect start` without commits as argument and then run the following
commands to add the commits:
------------------------------------------------
git bisect old [<rev>]
------------------------------------------------
to indicate that a commit was before the sought change, or
------------------------------------------------
git bisect new [<rev>...]
------------------------------------------------
to indicate that it was after.
To get a reminder of the currently used terms, use
------------------------------------------------
git bisect terms
------------------------------------------------
You can get just the old (respectively new) term with `git bisect term
--term-old` or `git bisect term --term-good`.
If you would like to use your own terms instead of "bad"/"good" or
"new"/"old", you can choose any names you like (except existing bisect
subcommands like `reset`, `start`, ...) by starting the
bisection using
------------------------------------------------
git bisect start --term-old <term-old> --term-new <term-new>
------------------------------------------------
For example, if you are looking for a commit that introduced a
performance regression, you might use
------------------------------------------------
git bisect start --term-old fast --term-new slow
------------------------------------------------
Or if you are looking for the commit that fixed a bug, you might use
------------------------------------------------
git bisect start --term-new fixed --term-old broken
------------------------------------------------
Then, use `git bisect <term-old>` and `git bisect <term-new>` instead
of `git bisect good` and `git bisect bad` to mark commits.
Bisect visualize
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@ -116,7 +205,7 @@ $ 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
If the `DISPLAY` environment variable is not set, 'git log' is used
instead. You can also give command-line options such as `-p` and
`--stat`.
@ -147,17 +236,17 @@ $ git bisect replay that-file
Avoiding testing a commit
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If, in the middle of a bisect session, you know that the next suggested
revision is not a good one to test (e.g. the change the commit
introduces is known not to work in your environment and you know it
does not have anything to do with the bug you are chasing), you may
want to find a nearby commit and try that instead.
If, in the middle of a bisect session, you know that the suggested
revision is not a good one to test (e.g. it fails to build and you
know that the failure does not have anything to do with the bug you
are chasing), you can manually select a nearby commit and test that
one instead.
For example:
------------
$ git bisect good/bad # previous round was good or bad.
Bisecting: 337 revisions left to test after this
Bisecting: 337 revisions left to test after this (roughly 9 steps)
$ git bisect visualize # oops, that is uninteresting.
$ git reset --hard HEAD~3 # try 3 revisions before what
# was suggested
@ -167,20 +256,21 @@ Then compile and test the chosen revision, and afterwards mark
the revision as good or bad in the usual manner.
Bisect skip
~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~
Instead of choosing by yourself a nearby commit, you can ask Git
to do it for you by issuing the command:
Instead of choosing a nearby commit by yourself, you can ask Git to do
it for you by issuing the command:
------------
$ git bisect skip # Current version cannot be tested
------------
But Git may eventually be unable to tell the first bad commit among
a bad commit and one or more skipped commits.
However, if you skip a commit adjacent to the one you are looking for,
Git will be unable to tell exactly which of those commits was the
first bad one.
You can even skip a range of commits, instead of just one commit,
using the "'<commit1>'..'<commit2>'" notation. For example:
You can also skip a range of commits, instead of just one commit,
using range notation. For example:
------------
$ git bisect skip v2.5..v2.6
@ -196,8 +286,8 @@ would issue the command:
$ git bisect skip v2.5 v2.5..v2.6
------------
This tells the bisect process that the commits between `v2.5` included
and `v2.6` included should be skipped.
This tells the bisect process that the commits between `v2.5` and
`v2.6` (inclusive) should be skipped.
Cutting down bisection by giving more parameters to bisect start
@ -231,23 +321,23 @@ or bad, you can bisect by issuing the command:
$ git bisect run my_script arguments
------------
Note that the script (`my_script` in the above example) should
exit with code 0 if the current source code is good, and exit with a
code between 1 and 127 (inclusive), except 125, if the current
source code is bad.
Note that the script (`my_script` in the above example) should exit
with code 0 if the current source code is good/old, and exit with a
code between 1 and 127 (inclusive), except 125, if the current source
code is bad/new.
Any other exit code will abort the bisect process. It should be noted
that a program that terminates via "exit(-1)" leaves $? = 255, (see the
exit(3) manual page), as the value is chopped with "& 0377".
that a program that terminates via `exit(-1)` leaves $? = 255, (see the
exit(3) manual page), as the value is chopped with `& 0377`.
The special exit code 125 should be used when the current source code
cannot be tested. If the script exits with this code, the current
revision will be skipped (see `git bisect skip` above). 125 was chosen
as the highest sensible value to use for this purpose, because 126 and 127
are used by POSIX shells to signal specific error status (127 is for
command not found, 126 is for command found but not executable---these
command not found, 126 is for command found but not executable--these
details do not matter, as they are normal errors in the script, as far as
"bisect run" is concerned).
`bisect run` is concerned).
You may often find that during a bisect session you want to have
temporary modifications (e.g. s/#define DEBUG 0/#define DEBUG 1/ in a
@ -260,7 +350,7 @@ next revision to test, the script can apply the patch
before compiling, run the real test, and afterwards decide if the
revision (possibly with the needed patch) passed the test and then
rewind the tree to the pristine state. Finally the script should exit
with the status of the real test to let the "git bisect run" command loop
with the status of the real test to let the `git bisect run` command loop
determine the eventual outcome of the bisect session.
OPTIONS
@ -268,7 +358,7 @@ OPTIONS
--no-checkout::
+
Do not checkout the new working tree at each iteration of the bisection
process. Instead just update a special reference named 'BISECT_HEAD' to make
process. Instead just update a special reference named `BISECT_HEAD` to make
it point to the commit that should be tested.
+
This option may be useful when the test you would perform in each step
@ -307,12 +397,12 @@ $ git bisect run ~/test.sh
$ git bisect reset # quit the bisect session
------------
+
Here we use a "test.sh" custom script. In this script, if "make"
Here we use a `test.sh` custom script. In this script, if `make`
fails, we skip the current commit.
"check_test_case.sh" should "exit 0" if the test case passes,
and "exit 1" otherwise.
`check_test_case.sh` should `exit 0` if the test case passes,
and `exit 1` otherwise.
+
It is safer if both "test.sh" and "check_test_case.sh" are
It is safer if both `test.sh` and `check_test_case.sh` are
outside the repository to prevent interactions between the bisect,
make and test processes and the scripts.
@ -379,6 +469,26 @@ In this case, when 'git bisect run' finishes, bisect/bad will refer to a commit
has at least one parent whose reachable graph is fully traversable in the sense
required by 'git pack objects'.
* Look for a fix instead of a regression in the code
+
------------
$ git bisect start
$ git bisect new HEAD # current commit is marked as new
$ git bisect old HEAD~10 # the tenth commit from now is marked as old
------------
+
or:
------------
$ git bisect start --term-old broken --term-new fixed
$ git bisect fixed
$ git bisect broken HEAD~10
------------
Getting help
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Use `git bisect` to get a short usage description, and `git bisect
help` or `git bisect -h` to get a long usage description.
SEE ALSO
--------

View File

@ -10,7 +10,8 @@ SYNOPSIS
[verse]
'git blame' [-c] [-b] [-l] [--root] [-t] [-f] [-n] [-s] [-e] [-p] [-w] [--incremental]
[-L <range>] [-S <revs-file>] [-M] [-C] [-C] [-C] [--since=<date>]
[--abbrev=<n>] [<rev> | --contents <file> | --reverse <rev>] [--] <file>
[--progress] [--abbrev=<n>] [<rev> | --contents <file> | --reverse <rev>]
[--] <file>
DESCRIPTION
-----------
@ -76,6 +77,8 @@ include::blame-options.txt[]
-e::
--show-email::
Show the author email instead of author name (Default: off).
This can also be controlled via the `blame.showEmail` config
option.
-w::
Ignore whitespace when comparing the parent's version and

View File

@ -11,7 +11,8 @@ SYNOPSIS
'git branch' [--color[=<when>] | --no-color] [-r | -a]
[--list] [-v [--abbrev=<length> | --no-abbrev]]
[--column[=<options>] | --no-column]
[(--merged | --no-merged | --contains) [<commit>]] [<pattern>...]
[(--merged | --no-merged | --contains) [<commit>]] [--sort=<key>]
[--points-at <object>] [<pattern>...]
'git branch' [--set-upstream | --track | --no-track] [-l] [-f] <branchname> [<start-point>]
'git branch' (--set-upstream-to=<upstream> | -u <upstream>) [<branchname>]
'git branch' --unset-upstream [<branchname>]
@ -38,10 +39,10 @@ named commit). With `--merged`, only branches merged into the named
commit (i.e. the branches whose tip commits are reachable from the named
commit) will be listed. With `--no-merged` only branches not merged into
the named commit will be listed. If the <commit> argument is missing it
defaults to 'HEAD' (i.e. the tip of the current branch).
defaults to `HEAD` (i.e. the tip of the current branch).
The command's second form creates a new branch head named <branchname>
which points to the current 'HEAD', or <start-point> if given.
which points to the current `HEAD`, or <start-point> if given.
Note that this will create the new branch, but it will not switch the
working tree to it; use "git checkout <newbranch>" to switch to the
@ -81,7 +82,7 @@ OPTIONS
`--track` or `--set-upstream`.
-D::
Delete a branch irrespective of its merged status.
Shortcut for `--delete --force`.
-l::
--create-reflog::
@ -95,13 +96,17 @@ OPTIONS
--force::
Reset <branchname> to <startpoint> if <branchname> exists
already. Without `-f` 'git branch' refuses to change an existing branch.
In combination with `-d` (or `--delete`), allow deleting the
branch irrespective of its merged status. In combination with
`-m` (or `--move`), allow renaming the branch even if the new
branch name already exists.
-m::
--move::
Move/rename a branch and the corresponding reflog.
-M::
Move/rename a branch even if the new branch name already exists.
Shortcut for `--move --force`.
--color[=<when>]::
Color branches to highlight current, local, and
@ -167,7 +172,7 @@ This option is only applicable in non-verbose mode.
+
This behavior is the default when the start point is a remote-tracking branch.
Set the branch.autoSetupMerge configuration variable to `false` if you
want `git checkout` and `git branch` to always behave as if '--no-track'
want `git checkout` and `git branch` to always behave as if `--no-track`
were given. Set it to `always` if you want this behavior when the
start-point is either a local or remote-tracking branch.
@ -193,7 +198,9 @@ start-point is either a local or remote-tracking branch.
--edit-description::
Open an editor and edit the text to explain what the branch is
for, to be used by various other commands (e.g. `request-pull`).
for, to be used by various other commands (e.g. `format-patch`,
`request-pull`, and `merge` (if enabled)). Multi-line explanations
may be used.
--contains [<commit>]::
Only list branches which contain the specified commit (HEAD
@ -225,6 +232,19 @@ start-point is either a local or remote-tracking branch.
The new name for an existing branch. The same restrictions as for
<branchname> apply.
--sort=<key>::
Sort based on the key given. Prefix `-` to sort in descending
order of the value. You may use the --sort=<key> option
multiple times, in which case the last key becomes the primary
key. The keys supported are the same as those in `git
for-each-ref`. Sort order defaults to sorting based on the
full refname (including `refs/...` prefix). This lists
detached HEAD (if present) first, then local branches and
finally remote-tracking branches.
--points-at <object>::
Only list branches of the given object.
Examples
--------

View File

@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ DESCRIPTION
Some workflows require that one or more branches of development on one
machine be replicated on another machine, but the two machines cannot
be directly connected, and therefore the interactive Git protocols (git,
ssh, rsync, http) cannot be used. This command provides support for
ssh, http) cannot be used. This command provides support for
'git fetch' and 'git pull' to operate by packaging objects and references
in an archive at the originating machine, then importing those into
another repository using 'git fetch' and 'git pull'

View File

@ -9,14 +9,14 @@ git-cat-file - Provide content or type and size information for repository objec
SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git cat-file' (-t | -s | -e | -p | <type> | --textconv ) <object>
'git cat-file' (--batch | --batch-check) < <list-of-objects>
'git cat-file' (-t [--allow-unknown-type]| -s [--allow-unknown-type]| -e | -p | <type> | --textconv ) <object>
'git cat-file' (--batch | --batch-check) [--follow-symlinks]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
In its first form, the command provides the content or the type of an object in
the repository. The type is required unless '-t' or '-p' is used to find the
object type, or '-s' is used to find the object size, or '--textconv' is used
the repository. The type is required unless `-t` or `-p` is used to find the
object type, or `-s` is used to find the object size, or `--textconv` is used
(which implies type "blob").
In the second form, a list of objects (separated by linefeeds) is provided on
@ -69,15 +69,88 @@ OPTIONS
not be combined with any other options or arguments. See the
section `BATCH OUTPUT` below for details.
--batch-all-objects::
Instead of reading a list of objects on stdin, perform the
requested batch operation on all objects in the repository and
any alternate object stores (not just reachable objects).
Requires `--batch` or `--batch-check` be specified. Note that
the objects are visited in order sorted by their hashes.
--buffer::
Normally batch output is flushed after each object is output, so
that a process can interactively read and write from
`cat-file`. With this option, the output uses normal stdio
buffering; this is much more efficient when invoking
`--batch-check` on a large number of objects.
--allow-unknown-type::
Allow -s or -t to query broken/corrupt objects of unknown type.
--follow-symlinks::
With --batch or --batch-check, follow symlinks inside the
repository when requesting objects with extended SHA-1
expressions of the form tree-ish:path-in-tree. Instead of
providing output about the link itself, provide output about
the linked-to object. If a symlink points outside the
tree-ish (e.g. a link to /foo or a root-level link to ../foo),
the portion of the link which is outside the tree will be
printed.
+
This option does not (currently) work correctly when an object in the
index is specified (e.g. `:link` instead of `HEAD:link`) rather than
one in the tree.
+
This option cannot (currently) be used unless `--batch` or
`--batch-check` is used.
+
For example, consider a git repository containing:
+
--
f: a file containing "hello\n"
link: a symlink to f
dir/link: a symlink to ../f
plink: a symlink to ../f
alink: a symlink to /etc/passwd
--
+
For a regular file `f`, `echo HEAD:f | git cat-file --batch` would print
+
--
ce013625030ba8dba906f756967f9e9ca394464a blob 6
--
+
And `echo HEAD:link | git cat-file --batch --follow-symlinks` would
print the same thing, as would `HEAD:dir/link`, as they both point at
`HEAD:f`.
+
Without `--follow-symlinks`, these would print data about the symlink
itself. In the case of `HEAD:link`, you would see
+
--
4d1ae35ba2c8ec712fa2a379db44ad639ca277bd blob 1
--
+
Both `plink` and `alink` point outside the tree, so they would
respectively print:
+
--
symlink 4
../f
symlink 11
/etc/passwd
--
OUTPUT
------
If '-t' is specified, one of the <type>.
If `-t` is specified, one of the <type>.
If '-s' is specified, the size of the <object> in bytes.
If `-s` is specified, the size of the <object> in bytes.
If '-e' is specified, no output.
If `-e` is specified, no output.
If '-p' is specified, the contents of <object> are pretty-printed.
If `-p` is specified, the contents of <object> are pretty-printed.
If <type> is specified, the raw (though uncompressed) contents of the <object>
will be returned.
@ -148,6 +221,47 @@ the repository, then `cat-file` will ignore any custom format and print:
<object> SP missing LF
------------
If --follow-symlinks is used, and a symlink in the repository points
outside the repository, then `cat-file` will ignore any custom format
and print:
------------
symlink SP <size> LF
<symlink> LF
------------
The symlink will either be absolute (beginning with a /), or relative
to the tree root. For instance, if dir/link points to ../../foo, then
<symlink> will be ../foo. <size> is the size of the symlink in bytes.
If --follow-symlinks is used, the following error messages will be
displayed:
------------
<object> SP missing LF
------------
is printed when the initial symlink requested does not exist.
------------
dangling SP <size> LF
<object> LF
------------
is printed when the initial symlink exists, but something that
it (transitive-of) points to does not.
------------
loop SP <size> LF
<object> LF
------------
is printed for symlink loops (or any symlinks that
require more than 40 link resolutions to resolve).
------------
notdir SP <size> LF
<object> LF
------------
is printed when, during symlink resolution, a file is used as a
directory name.
CAVEATS
-------

View File

@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git check-attr' [-a | --all | attr...] [--] pathname...
'git check-attr' --stdin [-z] [-a | --all | attr...] < <list-of-paths>
'git check-attr' --stdin [-z] [-a | --all | attr...]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
@ -28,7 +28,8 @@ OPTIONS
Consider `.gitattributes` in the index only, ignoring the working tree.
--stdin::
Read file names from stdin instead of from the command-line.
Read pathnames from the standard input, one per line,
instead of from the command-line.
-z::
The output format is modified to be machine-parseable.

View File

@ -10,16 +10,15 @@ SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git check-ignore' [options] pathname...
'git check-ignore' [options] --stdin < <list-of-paths>
'git check-ignore' [options] --stdin
DESCRIPTION
-----------
For each pathname given via the command-line or from a file via
`--stdin`, show the pattern from .gitignore (or other input files to
the exclude mechanism) that decides if the pathname is excluded or
included. Later patterns within a file take precedence over earlier
ones.
`--stdin`, check whether the file is excluded by .gitignore (or other
input files to the exclude mechanism) and output the path if it is
excluded.
By default, tracked files are not shown at all since they are not
subject to exclude rules; but see `--no-index'.
@ -32,10 +31,12 @@ OPTIONS
-v, --verbose::
Also output details about the matching pattern (if any)
for each given pathname.
for each given pathname. For precedence rules within and
between exclude sources, see linkgit:gitignore[5].
--stdin::
Read file names from stdin instead of from the command-line.
Read pathnames from the standard input, one per line,
instead of from the command-line.
-z::
The output format is modified to be machine-parseable (see
@ -111,7 +112,7 @@ EXIT STATUS
SEE ALSO
--------
linkgit:gitignore[5]
linkgit:gitconfig[5]
linkgit:git-config[1]
linkgit:git-ls-files[1]
GIT

View File

@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ Git imposes the following rules on how references are named:
These rules make it easy for shell script based tools to parse
reference names, pathname expansion by the shell when a reference name is used
unquoted (by mistake), and also avoids ambiguities in certain
unquoted (by mistake), and also avoid ambiguities in certain
reference name expressions (see linkgit:gitrevisions[7]):
. A double-dot `..` is often used as in `ref1..ref2`, and in some
@ -94,8 +94,8 @@ OPTIONS
Interpret <refname> as a reference name pattern for a refspec
(as used with remote repositories). If this option is
enabled, <refname> is allowed to contain a single `*`
in place of a one full pathname component (e.g.,
`foo/*/bar` but not `foo/bar*`).
in the refspec (e.g., `foo/bar*/baz` or `foo/bar*baz/`
but not `foo/bar*/baz*`).
--normalize::
Normalize 'refname' by removing any leading slash (`/`)
@ -118,8 +118,8 @@ $ git check-ref-format --branch @{-1}
* Determine the reference name to use for a new branch:
+
------------
$ ref=$(git check-ref-format --normalize "refs/heads/$newbranch") ||
die "we do not like '$newbranch' as a branch name."
$ ref=$(git check-ref-format --normalize "refs/heads/$newbranch")||
{ echo "we do not like '$newbranch' as a branch name." >&2 ; exit 1 ; }
------------
GIT

View File

@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ git-checkout(1)
NAME
----
git-checkout - Checkout a branch or paths to the working tree
git-checkout - Switch branches or restore working tree files
SYNOPSIS
--------
@ -89,6 +89,10 @@ Omitting <branch> detaches HEAD at the tip of the current branch.
(i.e. commit, tag or tree) to update the index for the given
paths before updating the working tree.
+
'git checkout' with <paths> or `--patch` is used to restore modified or
deleted paths to their original contents from the index or replace paths
with the contents from a named <tree-ish> (most often a commit-ish).
+
The index may contain unmerged entries because of a previous failed merge.
By default, if you try to check out such an entry from the index, the
checkout operation will fail and nothing will be checked out.
@ -103,6 +107,12 @@ OPTIONS
--quiet::
Quiet, suppress feedback messages.
--[no-]progress::
Progress status is reported on the standard error stream
by default when it is attached to a terminal, unless `--quiet`
is specified. This flag enables progress reporting even if not
attached to a terminal, regardless of `--quiet`.
-f::
--force::
When switching branches, proceed even if the index or the
@ -116,6 +126,21 @@ entries; instead, unmerged entries are ignored.
--theirs::
When checking out paths from the index, check out stage #2
('ours') or #3 ('theirs') for unmerged paths.
+
Note that during `git rebase` and `git pull --rebase`, 'ours' and
'theirs' may appear swapped; `--ours` gives the version from the
branch the changes are rebased onto, while `--theirs` gives the
version from the branch that holds your work that is being rebased.
+
This is because `rebase` is used in a workflow that treats the
history at the remote as the shared canonical one, and treats the
work done on the branch you are rebasing as the third-party work to
be integrated, and you are temporarily assuming the role of the
keeper of the canonical history during the rebase. As the keeper of
the canonical history, you need to view the history from the remote
as `ours` (i.e. "our shared canonical history"), while what you did
on your side branch as `theirs` (i.e. "one contributor's work on top
of it").
-b <new_branch>::
Create a new branch named <new_branch> and start it at
@ -132,7 +157,7 @@ entries; instead, unmerged entries are ignored.
When creating a new branch, set up "upstream" configuration. See
"--track" in linkgit:git-branch[1] for details.
+
If no '-b' option is given, the name of the new branch will be
If no `-b` option is given, the name of the new branch will be
derived from the remote-tracking branch, by looking at the local part of
the refspec configured for the corresponding remote, and then stripping
the initial part up to the "*".
@ -140,7 +165,7 @@ This would tell us to use "hack" as the local branch when branching
off of "origin/hack" (or "remotes/origin/hack", or even
"refs/remotes/origin/hack"). If the given name has no slash, or the above
guessing results in an empty name, the guessing is aborted. You can
explicitly give a name with '-b' in such a case.
explicitly give a name with `-b` in such a case.
--no-track::
Do not set up "upstream" configuration, even if the
@ -225,6 +250,12 @@ This means that you can use `git checkout -p` to selectively discard
edits from your current working tree. See the ``Interactive Mode''
section of linkgit:git-add[1] to learn how to operate the `--patch` mode.
--ignore-other-worktrees::
`git checkout` refuses when the wanted ref is already checked
out by another worktree. This option makes it check the ref
out anyway. In other words, the ref can be held by more than one
worktree.
<branch>::
Branch to checkout; if it refers to a branch (i.e., a name that,
when prepended with "refs/heads/", is a valid ref), then that
@ -388,6 +419,18 @@ $ git reflog -2 HEAD # or
$ git log -g -2 HEAD
------------
ARGUMENT DISAMBIGUATION
-----------------------
When there is only one argument given and it is not `--` (e.g. "git
checkout abc"), and when the argument is both a valid `<tree-ish>`
(e.g. a branch "abc" exists) and a valid `<pathspec>` (e.g. a file
or a directory whose name is "abc" exists), Git would usually ask
you to disambiguate. Because checking out a branch is so common an
operation, however, "git checkout abc" takes "abc" as a `<tree-ish>`
in such a situation. Use `git checkout -- <pathspec>` if you want
to checkout these paths out of the index.
EXAMPLES
--------

View File

@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git cherry-pick' [--edit] [-n] [-m parent-number] [-s] [-x] [--ff]
[-S[<key-id>]] <commit>...
[-S[<keyid>]] <commit>...
'git cherry-pick' --continue
'git cherry-pick' --quit
'git cherry-pick' --abort
@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ OPTIONS
For a more complete list of ways to spell commits, see
linkgit:gitrevisions[7].
Sets of commits can be passed but no traversal is done by
default, as if the '--no-walk' option was specified, see
default, as if the `--no-walk` option was specified, see
linkgit:git-rev-list[1]. Note that specifying a range will
feed all <commit>... arguments to a single revision walk
(see a later example that uses 'maint master..next').
@ -100,10 +100,13 @@ effect to your index in a row.
-s::
--signoff::
Add Signed-off-by line at the end of the commit message.
See the signoff option in linkgit:git-commit[1] for more information.
-S[<key-id>]::
--gpg-sign[=<key-id>]::
GPG-sign commits.
-S[<keyid>]::
--gpg-sign[=<keyid>]::
GPG-sign commits. The `keyid` argument is optional and
defaults to the committer identity; if specified, it must be
stuck to the option without a space.
--ff::
If the current HEAD is the same as the parent of the
@ -125,7 +128,7 @@ effect to your index in a row.
--allow-empty-message::
By default, cherry-picking a commit with an empty message will fail.
This option overrides that behaviour, allowing commits with empty
This option overrides that behavior, allowing commits with empty
messages to be cherry picked.
--keep-redundant-commits::

View File

@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ DESCRIPTION
Cleans the working tree by recursively removing files that are not
under version control, starting from the current directory.
Normally, only files unknown to Git are removed, but if the '-x'
Normally, only files unknown to Git are removed, but if the `-x`
option is specified, ignored files are also removed. This can, for
example, be useful to remove all build products.
@ -37,9 +37,7 @@ OPTIONS
to false, 'git clean' will refuse to delete files or directories
unless given -f, -n or -i. Git will refuse to delete directories
with .git sub directory or file unless a second -f
is given. This affects also git submodules where the storage area
of the removed submodule under .git/modules/ is not removed until
-f is given twice.
is given.
-i::
--interactive::

View File

@ -14,8 +14,8 @@ SYNOPSIS
[-o <name>] [-b <name>] [-u <upload-pack>] [--reference <repository>]
[--dissociate] [--separate-git-dir <git dir>]
[--depth <depth>] [--[no-]single-branch]
[--recursive | --recurse-submodules] [--] <repository>
[<directory>]
[--recursive | --recurse-submodules] [--[no-]shallow-submodules]
[--jobs <n>] [--] <repository> [<directory>]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
@ -104,14 +104,18 @@ objects from the source repository into a pack in the cloned repository.
--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.
transfer, and stop borrowing from them after a clone is made
by making necessary local copies of borrowed objects. This
option can also be used when cloning locally from a
repository that already borrows objects from another
repository--the new repository will borrow objects from the
same repository, and this option can be used to stop the
borrowing.
--quiet::
-q::
Operate quietly. Progress is not reported to the standard
error stream. This flag is also passed to the `rsync'
command when given.
error stream.
--verbose::
-v::
@ -185,15 +189,15 @@ 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.
specified number of commits. Implies `--single-branch` unless
`--no-single-branch` is given to fetch the histories near the
tips of all branches. If you want to clone submodules shallowly,
also pass `--shallow-submodules`.
--[no-]single-branch::
Clone only the history leading to the tip of a single branch,
either specified by the `--branch` option or the primary
branch remote's `HEAD` points at. When creating a shallow
clone with the `--depth` option, this is the default, unless
`--no-single-branch` is given to fetch the histories near the
tips of all branches.
branch remote's `HEAD` points at.
Further fetches into the resulting repository will only update the
remote-tracking branch for the branch this option was used for the
initial cloning. If the HEAD at the remote did not point at any
@ -209,6 +213,9 @@ objects from the source repository into a pack in the cloned repository.
repository does not have a worktree/checkout (i.e. if any of
`--no-checkout`/`-n`, `--bare`, or `--mirror` is given)
--[no-]shallow-submodules::
All submodules which are cloned will be shallow with a depth of 1.
--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,
@ -216,6 +223,10 @@ objects from the source repository into a pack in the cloned repository.
The result is Git repository can be separated from working
tree.
-j <n>::
--jobs <n>::
The number of submodules fetched at the same time.
Defaults to the `submodule.fetchJobs` option.
<repository>::
The (possibly remote) repository to clone from. See the

View File

@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ git-commit-tree - Create a new commit object
SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git commit-tree' <tree> [(-p <parent>)...] < changelog
'git commit-tree' <tree> [(-p <parent>)...]
'git commit-tree' [(-p <parent>)...] [-S[<keyid>]] [(-m <message>)...]
[(-F <file>)...] <tree>
@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ OPTIONS
An existing tree object
-p <parent>::
Each '-p' indicates the id of a parent commit object.
Each `-p` indicates the id of a parent commit object.
-m <message>::
A paragraph in the commit log message. This can be given more than
@ -56,11 +56,13 @@ OPTIONS
-S[<keyid>]::
--gpg-sign[=<keyid>]::
GPG-sign commit.
GPG-sign commits. The `keyid` argument is optional and
defaults to the committer identity; if specified, it must be
stuck to the option without a space.
--no-gpg-sign::
Countermand `commit.gpgSign` configuration variable that is
set to force each and every commit to be signed.
Do not GPG-sign commit, to countermand a `--gpg-sign` option
given earlier on the command line.
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[<key-id>]] [--] [<file>...]
[-i | -o] [-S[<keyid>]] [--] [<file>...]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
@ -29,7 +29,8 @@ The content to be added can be specified in several ways:
2. by using 'git rm' to remove files from the working tree
and the index, again before using the 'commit' command;
3. by listing files as arguments to the 'commit' command, in which
3. by listing files as arguments to the 'commit' command
(without --interactive or --patch switch), in which
case the commit will ignore changes staged in the index, and instead
record the current content of the listed files (which must already
be known to Git);
@ -41,7 +42,8 @@ The content to be added can be specified in several ways:
actual commit;
5. by using the --interactive or --patch switches with the 'commit' command
to decide one by one which files or hunks should be part of the commit,
to decide one by one which files or hunks should be part of the commit
in addition to contents in the index,
before finalizing the operation. See the ``Interactive Mode'' section of
linkgit:git-add[1] to learn how to operate these modes.
@ -75,7 +77,7 @@ OPTIONS
-c <commit>::
--reedit-message=<commit>::
Like '-C', but with '-c' the editor is invoked, so that
Like '-C', but with `-c` the editor is invoked, so that
the user can further edit the commit message.
--fixup=<commit>::
@ -94,7 +96,7 @@ OPTIONS
--reset-author::
When used with -C/-c/--amend options, or when committing after a
a conflicting cherry-pick, declare that the authorship of the
resulting commit now belongs of the committer. This also renews
resulting commit now belongs to the committer. This also renews
the author timestamp.
--short::
@ -154,7 +156,11 @@ OPTIONS
-s::
--signoff::
Add Signed-off-by line by the committer at the end of the commit
log message.
log message. The meaning of a signoff depends on the project,
but it typically certifies that committer has
the rights to submit this work under the same license and
agrees to a Developer Certificate of Origin
(see http://developercertificate.org/ for more information).
-n::
--no-verify::
@ -180,8 +186,8 @@ OPTIONS
+
--
strip::
Strip leading and trailing empty lines, trailing whitespace, and
#commentary and collapse consecutive empty lines.
Strip leading and trailing empty lines, trailing whitespace,
commentary and collapse consecutive empty lines.
whitespace::
Same as `strip` except #commentary is not removed.
verbatim::
@ -197,7 +203,7 @@ default::
Otherwise `whitespace`.
--
+
The default can be changed by the 'commit.cleanup' configuration
The default can be changed by the `commit.cleanup` configuration
variable (see linkgit:git-config[1]).
-e::
@ -256,7 +262,7 @@ FROM UPSTREAM REBASE" section in linkgit:git-rebase[1].)
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
If this option is specified together with `--amend`, then
no paths need to be specified, which can be used to amend
the last commit without committing changes that have
already been staged.
@ -282,8 +288,12 @@ configuration variable documented in linkgit:git-config[1].
--verbose::
Show unified diff between the HEAD commit and what
would be committed at the bottom of the commit message
template. Note that this diff output doesn't have its
lines prefixed with '#'.
template to help the user describe the commit by reminding
what changes the commit has.
Note that this diff output doesn't have its
lines prefixed with '#'. This diff will not be a part
of the commit message. See the `commit.verbose` configuration
variable in linkgit:git-config[1].
+
If specified twice, show in addition the unified diff between
what would be committed and the worktree files, i.e. the unstaged
@ -311,7 +321,9 @@ changes to tracked files.
-S[<keyid>]::
--gpg-sign[=<keyid>]::
GPG-sign commit.
GPG-sign commits. The `keyid` argument is optional and
defaults to the committer identity; if specified, it must be
stuck to the option without a space.
--no-gpg-sign::
Countermand `commit.gpgSign` configuration variable that is
@ -440,8 +452,8 @@ include::i18n.txt[]
ENVIRONMENT AND CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
---------------------------------------
The editor used to edit the commit log message will be chosen from the
GIT_EDITOR environment variable, the core.editor configuration variable, the
VISUAL environment variable, or the EDITOR environment variable (in that
`GIT_EDITOR` environment variable, the core.editor configuration variable, the
`VISUAL` environment variable, or the `EDITOR` environment variable (in that
order). See linkgit:git-var[1] for details.
HOOKS

View File

@ -9,18 +9,18 @@ git-config - Get and set repository or global options
SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
'git config' [<file-option>] [type] [-z|--null] name [value [value_regex]]
'git config' [<file-option>] [type] [--show-origin] [-z|--null] name [value [value_regex]]
'git config' [<file-option>] [type] --add name value
'git config' [<file-option>] [type] --replace-all name value [value_regex]
'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] [--show-origin] [-z|--null] --get name [value_regex]
'git config' [<file-option>] [type] [--show-origin] [-z|--null] --get-all name [value_regex]
'git config' [<file-option>] [type] [--show-origin] [-z|--null] [--name-only] --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
'git config' [<file-option>] --remove-section name
'git config' [<file-option>] [-z|--null] -l | --list
'git config' [<file-option>] [--show-origin] [-z|--null] [--name-only] -l | --list
'git config' [<file-option>] --get-color name [default]
'git config' [<file-option>] --get-colorbool name [stdout-is-tty]
'git config' [<file-option>] -e | --edit
@ -31,40 +31,40 @@ You can query/set/replace/unset options with this command. The name is
actually the section and the key separated by a dot, and the value will be
escaped.
Multiple lines can be added to an option by using the '--add' option.
Multiple lines can be added to an option by using the `--add` option.
If you want to update or unset an option which can occur on multiple
lines, a POSIX regexp `value_regex` needs to be given. Only the
existing values that match the regexp are updated or unset. If
you want to handle the lines that do *not* match the regex, just
prepend a single exclamation mark in front (see also <<EXAMPLES>>).
The type specifier can be either '--int' or '--bool', to make
The type specifier can be either `--int` or `--bool`, to make
'git config' ensure that the variable(s) are of the given type and
convert the value to the canonical form (simple decimal number for int,
a "true" or "false" string for bool), or '--path', which does some
path expansion (see '--path' below). If no type specifier is passed, no
a "true" or "false" string for bool), or `--path`, which does some
path expansion (see `--path` below). If no type specifier is passed, no
checks or transformations are performed on the value.
When reading, the values are read from the system, global and
repository local configuration files by default, and options
'--system', '--global', '--local' and '--file <filename>' can be
`--system`, `--global`, `--local` and `--file <filename>` can be
used to tell the command to read from only that location (see <<FILES>>).
When writing, the new value is written to the repository local
configuration file by default, and options '--system', '--global',
'--file <filename>' can be used to tell the command to write to
that location (you can say '--local' but that is the default).
configuration file by default, and options `--system`, `--global`,
`--file <filename>` can be used to tell the command to write to
that location (you can say `--local` but that is the default).
This command will fail with non-zero status upon error. Some exit
codes are:
. The config file is invalid (ret=3),
. can not write to the config file (ret=4),
. no section or name was provided (ret=2),
. the section or key is invalid (ret=1),
. you try to unset an option which does not exist (ret=5),
. you try to unset/set an option for which multiple lines match (ret=5), or
. you try to use an invalid regexp (ret=6).
- The section or key is invalid (ret=1),
- no section or name was provided (ret=2),
- the config file is invalid (ret=3),
- the config file cannot be written (ret=4),
- you try to unset an option which does not exist (ret=5),
- you try to unset/set an option for which multiple lines match (ret=5), or
- you try to use an invalid regexp (ret=6).
On success, the command returns the exit code 0.
@ -86,8 +86,7 @@ OPTIONS
found and the last value if multiple key values were found.
--get-all::
Like get, but does not fail if the number of values for the key
is not exactly one.
Like get, but returns all values for a multi-valued key.
--get-regexp::
Like --get-all, but interprets the name as a regular expression and
@ -102,7 +101,7 @@ OPTIONS
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.
list them. Returns error code 1 if no value is found.
--global::
For writing options: write to global `~/.gitconfig` file
@ -139,7 +138,7 @@ See also <<FILES>>.
Use the given config file instead of the one specified by GIT_CONFIG.
--blob blob::
Similar to '--file' but use the given blob instead of a file. E.g.
Similar to `--file` but use the given blob instead of a file. E.g.
you can use 'master:.gitmodules' to read values from the file
'.gitmodules' in the master branch. See "SPECIFYING REVISIONS"
section in linkgit:gitrevisions[7] for a more complete list of
@ -159,7 +158,7 @@ See also <<FILES>>.
-l::
--list::
List all variables set in config file.
List all variables set in config file, along with their values.
--bool::
'git config' will ensure that the output is "true" or "false"
@ -190,6 +189,16 @@ See also <<FILES>>.
output without getting confused e.g. by values that
contain line breaks.
--name-only::
Output only the names of config variables for `--list` or
`--get-regexp`.
--show-origin::
Augment the output of all queried config options with the
origin type (file, standard input, blob, command line) and
the actual origin (config file path, ref, or blob id if
applicable).
--get-colorbool name [stdout-is-tty]::
Find the color setting for `name` (e.g. `color.diff`) and output
@ -211,17 +220,19 @@ See also <<FILES>>.
-e::
--edit::
Opens an editor to modify the specified config file; either
'--system', '--global', or repository (default).
`--system`, `--global`, or repository (default).
--[no-]includes::
Respect `include.*` directives in config files when looking up
values. Defaults to on.
values. Defaults to `off` when a specific file is given (e.g.,
using `--file`, `--global`, etc) and `on` when searching all
config files.
[[FILES]]
FILES
-----
If not set explicitly with '--file', there are four files where
If not set explicitly with `--file`, there are four files where
'git config' will search for configuration options:
$(prefix)/etc/gitconfig::
@ -252,13 +263,16 @@ The files are read in the order given above, with last value found taking
precedence over values read earlier. When multiple values are taken then all
values of a key from all files will be used.
You may override individual configuration parameters when running any git
command by using the `-c` option. See linkgit:git[1] for details.
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*.
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
variables. The '--global' and the '--system' options will limit the file used
to the global or system-wide file respectively. The GIT_CONFIG 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.

View File

@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ OPTIONS
cache daemon if one is not started). Defaults to
`~/.git-credential-cache/socket`. If your home directory is on a
network-mounted filesystem, you may need to change this to a
local filesystem.
local filesystem. You must specify an absolute path.
CONTROLLING THE DAEMON
----------------------

View File

@ -31,10 +31,41 @@ OPTIONS
--file=<path>::
Use `<path>` to store credentials. The file will have its
Use `<path>` to lookup and store credentials. The file will have its
filesystem permissions set to prevent other users on the system
from reading it, but will not be encrypted or otherwise
protected. Defaults to `~/.git-credentials`.
protected. If not specified, credentials will be searched for from
`~/.git-credentials` and `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/credentials`, and
credentials will be written to `~/.git-credentials` if it exists, or
`$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/credentials` if it exists and the former does
not. See also <<FILES>>.
[[FILES]]
FILES
-----
If not set explicitly with `--file`, there are two files where
git-credential-store will search for credentials in order of precedence:
~/.git-credentials::
User-specific credentials file.
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/credentials::
Second user-specific credentials file. If '$XDG_CONFIG_HOME' is not set
or empty, `$HOME/.config/git/credentials` will be used. Any credentials
stored in this file will not be used if `~/.git-credentials` has a
matching credential as well. It is a good idea not to create this file
if you sometimes use older versions of Git that do not support it.
For credential lookups, the files are read in the order given above, with the
first matching credential found taking precedence over credentials found in
files further down the list.
Credential storage will by default write to the first existing file in the
list. If none of these files exist, `~/.git-credentials` will be created and
written to.
When erasing credentials, matching credentials will be erased from all files.
EXAMPLES
--------

View File

@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ DESCRIPTION
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
http://cvs2svn.tigris.org/cvs2git.html[cvs2git] or
https://github.com/BartMassey/parsecvs[parsecvs].
http://www.catb.org/esr/cvs-fast-export/[cvs-fast-export].
Imports a CVS repository into Git. It will either create a new
repository, or incrementally import into an existing one.
@ -74,10 +74,10 @@ OPTIONS
akin to the way 'git clone' uses 'origin' by default.
-o <branch-for-HEAD>::
When no remote is specified (via -r) the 'HEAD' branch
When no remote is specified (via -r) the `HEAD` branch
from CVS is imported to the 'origin' branch within the Git
repository, as 'HEAD' already has a special meaning for Git.
When a remote is specified the 'HEAD' branch is named
repository, as `HEAD` already has a special meaning for Git.
When a remote is specified the `HEAD` branch is named
remotes/<remote>/master mirroring 'git clone' behaviour.
Use this option if you want to import into a different
branch.
@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ the old cvs2git tool.
-p <options-for-cvsps>::
Additional options for cvsps.
The options '-u' and '-A' are implicit and should not be used here.
The options `-u` and '-A' are implicit and should not be used here.
+
If you need to pass multiple options, separate them with a comma.
@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ If you need to pass multiple options, separate them with a comma.
-M <regex>::
Attempt to detect merges based on the commit message with a custom
regex. It can be used with '-m' to enable the default regexes
regex. It can be used with `-m` to enable the default regexes
as well. You must escape forward slashes.
+
The regex must capture the source branch name in $1.
@ -186,7 +186,7 @@ messages, bug-tracking systems, email archives, and the like.
OUTPUT
------
If '-v' is specified, the script reports what it is doing.
If `-v` is specified, the script reports what it is doing.
Otherwise, success is indicated the Unix way, i.e. by simply exiting with
a zero exit status.

View File

@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ Print usage information and exit
You can specify a list of allowed directories. If no directories
are given, all are allowed. This is an additional restriction, gitcvs
access still needs to be enabled by the `gitcvs.enabled` config option
unless '--export-all' was given, too.
unless `--export-all` was given, too.
DESCRIPTION
@ -332,7 +332,7 @@ To get a checkout with the Eclipse CVS client:
3. Browse the 'modules' available. It will give you a list of the heads in
the repository. You will not be able to browse the tree from there. Only
the heads.
4. Pick 'HEAD' when it asks what branch/tag to check out. Untick the
4. Pick `HEAD` when it asks what branch/tag to check out. Untick the
"launch commit wizard" to avoid committing the .project file.
Protocol notes: If you are using anonymous access via pserver, just select that.
@ -402,12 +402,12 @@ Exports and tagging (tags and branches) are not supported at this stage.
CRLF Line Ending Conversions
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
By default the server leaves the '-k' mode blank for all files,
By default the server leaves the `-k` mode blank for all files,
which causes the CVS client to treat them as a text files, subject
to end-of-line conversion on some platforms.
You can make the server use the end-of-line conversion attributes to
set the '-k' modes for files by setting the `gitcvs.usecrlfattr`
set the `-k` modes for files by setting the `gitcvs.usecrlfattr`
config variable. See linkgit:gitattributes[5] for more information
about end-of-line conversion.
@ -415,9 +415,9 @@ Alternatively, if `gitcvs.usecrlfattr` config is not enabled
or the attributes do not allow automatic detection for a filename, then
the server uses the `gitcvs.allBinary` config for the default setting.
If `gitcvs.allBinary` is set, then file not otherwise
specified will default to '-kb' mode. Otherwise the '-k' mode
specified will default to '-kb' mode. Otherwise the `-k` mode
is left blank. But if `gitcvs.allBinary` is set to "guess", then
the correct '-k' mode will be guessed based on the contents of
the correct `-k` mode will be guessed based on the contents of
the file.
For best consistency with 'cvs', it is probably best to override the

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