
We presently use the ".txt" extension for our AsciiDoc files. While not wrong, most editors do not associate this extension with AsciiDoc, meaning that contributors don't get automatic editor functionality that could be useful, such as syntax highlighting and prose linting. It is much more common to use the ".adoc" extension for AsciiDoc files, since this helps editors automatically detect files and also allows various forges to provide rich (HTML-like) rendering. Let's do that here, renaming all of the files and updating the includes where relevant. Adjust the various build scripts and makefiles to use the new extension as well. Note that this should not result in any user-visible changes to the documentation. Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
19 lines
711 B
Plaintext
19 lines
711 B
Plaintext
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.
|