git-commit-vandalism/t/t4124-apply-ws-rule.sh

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#!/bin/sh
test_description='core.whitespace rules and git apply'
. ./test-lib.sh
prepare_test_file () {
# A line that has character X is touched iff RULE is in effect:
# X RULE
# ! trailing-space
# @ space-before-tab
# # indent-with-non-tab (default tab width 8)
# = indent-with-non-tab,tabwidth=16
# % tab-in-indent
sed -e "s/_/ /g" -e "s/>/ /" <<-\EOF
An_SP in an ordinary line>and a HT.
>A HT (%).
_>A SP and a HT (@%).
_>_A SP, a HT and a SP (@%).
_______Seven SP.
________Eight SP (#).
_______>Seven SP and a HT (@%).
________>Eight SP and a HT (@#%).
_______>_Seven SP, a HT and a SP (@%).
________>_Eight SP, a HT and a SP (@#%).
_______________Fifteen SP (#).
_______________>Fifteen SP and a HT (@#%).
________________Sixteen SP (#=).
________________>Sixteen SP and a HT (@#%=).
_____a__Five SP, a non WS, two SP.
A line with a (!) trailing SP_
A line with a (!) trailing HT>
EOF
}
apply_patch () {
>target &&
sed -e "s|\([ab]\)/file|\1/target|" <patch |
git apply "$@"
}
test_fix () {
# fix should not barf
apply_patch --whitespace=fix || return 1
# find touched lines
$DIFF file target | sed -n -e "s/^> //p" >fixed
# the changed lines are all expected to change
fixed_cnt=$(wc -l <fixed)
case "$1" in
'') expect_cnt=$fixed_cnt ;;
?*) expect_cnt=$(grep "[$1]" <fixed | wc -l) ;;
esac
test $fixed_cnt -eq $expect_cnt || return 1
# and we are not missing anything
case "$1" in
'') expect_cnt=0 ;;
?*) expect_cnt=$(grep "[$1]" <file | wc -l) ;;
esac
test $fixed_cnt -eq $expect_cnt || return 1
# Get the patch actually applied
git diff-files -p target >fixed-patch
test -s fixed-patch && return 0
# Make sure it is complaint-free
>target
git apply --whitespace=error-all <fixed-patch
}
test_expect_success setup '
>file &&
git add file &&
prepare_test_file >file &&
git diff-files -p >patch &&
>target &&
git add target
'
test_expect_success 'whitespace=nowarn, default rule' '
apply_patch --whitespace=nowarn &&
test_cmp file target
'
test_expect_success 'whitespace=warn, default rule' '
apply_patch --whitespace=warn &&
test_cmp file target
'
test_expect_success 'whitespace=error-all, default rule' '
test_must_fail apply_patch --whitespace=error-all &&
test_must_be_empty target
'
test_expect_success 'whitespace=error-all, no rule' '
git config core.whitespace -trailing,-space-before,-indent &&
apply_patch --whitespace=error-all &&
test_cmp file target
'
test_expect_success 'whitespace=error-all, no rule (attribute)' '
git config --unset core.whitespace &&
echo "target -whitespace" >.gitattributes &&
apply_patch --whitespace=error-all &&
test_cmp file target
'
test_expect_success 'spaces inserted by tab-in-indent' '
git config core.whitespace -trailing,-space,-indent,tab &&
rm -f .gitattributes &&
test_fix % &&
sed -e "s/_/ /g" -e "s/>/ /" <<-\EOF >expect &&
An_SP in an ordinary line>and a HT.
________A HT (%).
________A SP and a HT (@%).
_________A SP, a HT and a SP (@%).
_______Seven SP.
________Eight SP (#).
________Seven SP and a HT (@%).
________________Eight SP and a HT (@#%).
_________Seven SP, a HT and a SP (@%).
_________________Eight SP, a HT and a SP (@#%).
_______________Fifteen SP (#).
________________Fifteen SP and a HT (@#%).
________________Sixteen SP (#=).
________________________Sixteen SP and a HT (@#%=).
_____a__Five SP, a non WS, two SP.
A line with a (!) trailing SP_
A line with a (!) trailing HT>
EOF
test_cmp expect target
'
for t in - ''
do
case "$t" in '') tt='!' ;; *) tt= ;; esac
for s in - ''
do
case "$s" in '') ts='@' ;; *) ts= ;; esac
for i in - ''
do
case "$i" in '') ti='#' ti16='=';; *) ti= ti16= ;; esac
for h in - ''
do
[ -z "$h$i" ] && continue
case "$h" in '') th='%' ;; *) th= ;; esac
rule=${t}trailing,${s}space,${i}indent,${h}tab
rm -f .gitattributes
test_expect_success "rule=$rule" '
git config core.whitespace "$rule" &&
test_fix "$tt$ts$ti$th"
'
test_expect_success "rule=$rule,tabwidth=16" '
git config core.whitespace "$rule,tabwidth=16" &&
test_fix "$tt$ts$ti16$th"
'
test_expect_success "rule=$rule (attributes)" '
git config --unset core.whitespace &&
echo "target whitespace=$rule" >.gitattributes &&
test_fix "$tt$ts$ti$th"
'
test_expect_success "rule=$rule,tabwidth=16 (attributes)" '
echo "target whitespace=$rule,tabwidth=16" >.gitattributes &&
test_fix "$tt$ts$ti16$th"
'
done
done
done
done
create_patch () {
sed -e "s/_/ /" <<-\EOF
diff --git a/target b/target
index e69de29..8bd6648 100644
--- a/target
+++ b/target
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+An empty line follows
+
+A line with trailing whitespace and no newline_
\ No newline at end of file
EOF
}
test_expect_success 'trailing whitespace & no newline at the end of file' '
>target &&
create_patch >patch-file &&
git apply --whitespace=fix patch-file &&
grep "newline$" target &&
grep "^$" target
'
test_expect_success 'blank at EOF with --whitespace=fix (1)' '
test_might_fail git config --unset core.whitespace &&
rm -f .gitattributes &&
{ echo a; echo b; echo c; } >one &&
git add one &&
{ echo a; echo b; echo c; } >expect &&
{ cat expect; echo; } >one &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
git checkout one &&
git apply --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp expect one
'
test_expect_success 'blank at EOF with --whitespace=fix (2)' '
{ echo a; echo b; echo c; } >one &&
git add one &&
{ echo a; echo c; } >expect &&
{ cat expect; echo; echo; } >one &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
git checkout one &&
git apply --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp expect one
'
test_expect_success 'blank at EOF with --whitespace=fix (3)' '
{ echo a; echo b; echo; } >one &&
git add one &&
{ echo a; echo c; echo; } >expect &&
{ cat expect; echo; echo; } >one &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
git checkout one &&
git apply --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp expect one
'
test_expect_success 'blank at end of hunk, not at EOF with --whitespace=fix' '
{ echo a; echo b; echo; echo; echo; echo; echo; echo d; } >one &&
git add one &&
{ echo a; echo c; echo; echo; echo; echo; echo; echo; echo d; } >expect &&
cp expect one &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
git checkout one &&
git apply --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp expect one
'
test_expect_success 'blank at EOF with --whitespace=warn' '
{ echo a; echo b; echo c; } >one &&
git add one &&
echo >>one &&
cat one >expect &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
git checkout one &&
git apply --whitespace=warn patch 2>error &&
test_cmp expect one &&
grep "new blank line at EOF" error
'
test_expect_success 'blank at EOF with --whitespace=error' '
{ echo a; echo b; echo c; } >one &&
git add one &&
cat one >expect &&
echo >>one &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
git checkout one &&
test_must_fail git apply --whitespace=error patch 2>error &&
test_cmp expect one &&
grep "new blank line at EOF" error
'
test_expect_success 'blank but not empty at EOF' '
{ echo a; echo b; echo c; } >one &&
git add one &&
echo " " >>one &&
cat one >expect &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
git checkout one &&
git apply --whitespace=warn patch 2>error &&
test_cmp expect one &&
grep "new blank line at EOF" error
'
test_expect_success 'applying beyond EOF requires one non-blank context line' '
{ echo; echo; echo; echo; } >one &&
git add one &&
{ echo b; } >>one &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
git checkout one &&
{ echo a; echo; } >one &&
cp one expect &&
test_must_fail git apply --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp one expect &&
test_must_fail git apply --ignore-space-change --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp one expect
'
test_expect_success 'tons of blanks at EOF should not apply' '
for i in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16; do
echo; echo; echo; echo;
done >one &&
git add one &&
echo a >>one &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
>one &&
test_must_fail git apply --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_must_fail git apply --ignore-space-change --whitespace=fix patch
'
test_expect_success 'missing blank line at end with --whitespace=fix' '
echo a >one &&
echo >>one &&
git add one &&
echo b >>one &&
cp one expect &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
echo a >one &&
cp one saved-one &&
test_must_fail git apply patch &&
git apply --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp one expect &&
mv saved-one one &&
git apply --ignore-space-change --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp one expect
'
test_expect_success 'two missing blank lines at end with --whitespace=fix' '
{ echo a; echo; echo b; echo c; } >one &&
cp one no-blank-lines &&
{ echo; echo; } >>one &&
git add one &&
echo d >>one &&
cp one expect &&
echo >>one &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
cp no-blank-lines one &&
test_must_fail git apply patch &&
git apply --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp one expect &&
mv no-blank-lines one &&
test_must_fail git apply patch &&
git apply --ignore-space-change --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp one expect
'
test_expect_success 'missing blank line at end, insert before end, --whitespace=fix' '
{ echo a; echo; } >one &&
git add one &&
{ echo b; echo a; echo; } >one &&
cp one expect &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
echo a >one &&
test_must_fail git apply patch &&
git apply --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp one expect
'
test_expect_success 'shrink file with tons of missing blanks at end of file' '
{ echo a; echo b; echo c; } >one &&
cp one no-blank-lines &&
for i in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16; do
echo; echo; echo; echo;
done >>one &&
git add one &&
echo a >one &&
cp one expect &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
cp no-blank-lines one &&
test_must_fail git apply patch &&
git apply --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp one expect &&
mv no-blank-lines one &&
git apply --ignore-space-change --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp one expect
'
test_expect_success 'missing blanks at EOF must only match blank lines' '
{ echo a; echo b; } >one &&
git add one &&
{ echo c; echo d; } >>one &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
echo a >one &&
test_must_fail git apply patch &&
test_must_fail git apply --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_must_fail git apply --ignore-space-change --whitespace=fix patch
'
sed -e's/Z//' >one <<EOF
a
b
c
Z
EOF
test_expect_success 'missing blank line should match context line with spaces' '
git add one &&
echo d >>one &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
{ echo a; echo b; echo c; } >one &&
cp one expect &&
{ echo; echo d; } >>expect &&
git add one &&
git apply --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp one expect
'
sed -e's/Z//' >one <<EOF
a
b
c
Z
EOF
test_expect_success 'same, but with the --ignore-space-option' '
git add one &&
echo d >>one &&
cp one expect &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
{ echo a; echo b; echo c; } >one &&
git add one &&
git checkout-index -f one &&
git apply --ignore-space-change --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp one expect
'
test_expect_success 'same, but with CR-LF line endings && cr-at-eol set' '
git config core.whitespace cr-at-eol &&
printf "a\r\n" >one &&
printf "b\r\n" >>one &&
printf "c\r\n" >>one &&
cp one save-one &&
printf " \r\n" >>one &&
git add one &&
printf "d\r\n" >>one &&
cp one expect &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
mv save-one one &&
git apply --ignore-space-change --whitespace=fix patch &&
test_cmp one expect
'
apply: file commited with CRLF should roundtrip diff and apply When a file had been commited with CRLF but now .gitattributes say "* text=auto" (or core.autocrlf is true), the following does not roundtrip, `git apply` fails: printf "Added line\r\n" >>file && git diff >patch && git checkout -- . && git apply patch Before applying the patch, the file from working tree is converted into the index format (clean filter, CRLF conversion, ...). Here, when commited with CRLF, the line endings should not be converted. Note that `git apply --index` or `git apply --cache` doesn't call convert_to_git() because the source material is already in index format. Analyze the patch if there is a) any context line with CRLF, or b) if any line with CRLF is to be removed. In this case the patch file `patch` has mixed line endings, for a) it looks like this: diff --git a/one b/one index 533790e..c30dea8 100644 --- a/one +++ b/one @@ -1 +1,2 @@ a\r +b\r And for b) it looks like this: diff --git a/one b/one index 533790e..485540d 100644 --- a/one +++ b/one @@ -1 +1 @@ -a\r +b\r If `git apply` detects that the patch itself has CRLF, (look at the line " a\r" or "-a\r" above), the new flag crlf_in_old is set in "struct patch" and two things will happen: - read_old_data() will not convert CRLF into LF by calling convert_to_git(..., SAFE_CRLF_KEEP_CRLF); - The WS_CR_AT_EOL bit is set in the "white space rule", CRLF are no longer treated as white space. While at there, make it clear that read_old_data() in apply.c knows what it wants convert_to_git() to do with respect to CRLF. In fact, this codepath is about applying a patch to a file in the filesystem, which may not exist in the index, or may exist but may not match what is recorded in the index, or in the extreme case, we may not even be in a Git repository. If convert_to_git() peeked at the index while doing its work, it *would* be a bug. Pass NULL instead of &the_index to convert_to_git() to make sure we catch future bugs to clarify this. Update the test in t4124: split one test case into 3: - Detect the " a\r" line in the patch - Detect the "-a\r" line in the patch - Use LF in repo and CLRF in the worktree. Reported-by: Anthony Sottile <asottile@umich.edu> Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-08-19 13:28:01 +02:00
test_expect_success 'CR-LF line endings && add line && text=auto' '
git config --unset core.whitespace &&
printf "a\r\n" >one &&
apply: file commited with CRLF should roundtrip diff and apply When a file had been commited with CRLF but now .gitattributes say "* text=auto" (or core.autocrlf is true), the following does not roundtrip, `git apply` fails: printf "Added line\r\n" >>file && git diff >patch && git checkout -- . && git apply patch Before applying the patch, the file from working tree is converted into the index format (clean filter, CRLF conversion, ...). Here, when commited with CRLF, the line endings should not be converted. Note that `git apply --index` or `git apply --cache` doesn't call convert_to_git() because the source material is already in index format. Analyze the patch if there is a) any context line with CRLF, or b) if any line with CRLF is to be removed. In this case the patch file `patch` has mixed line endings, for a) it looks like this: diff --git a/one b/one index 533790e..c30dea8 100644 --- a/one +++ b/one @@ -1 +1,2 @@ a\r +b\r And for b) it looks like this: diff --git a/one b/one index 533790e..485540d 100644 --- a/one +++ b/one @@ -1 +1 @@ -a\r +b\r If `git apply` detects that the patch itself has CRLF, (look at the line " a\r" or "-a\r" above), the new flag crlf_in_old is set in "struct patch" and two things will happen: - read_old_data() will not convert CRLF into LF by calling convert_to_git(..., SAFE_CRLF_KEEP_CRLF); - The WS_CR_AT_EOL bit is set in the "white space rule", CRLF are no longer treated as white space. While at there, make it clear that read_old_data() in apply.c knows what it wants convert_to_git() to do with respect to CRLF. In fact, this codepath is about applying a patch to a file in the filesystem, which may not exist in the index, or may exist but may not match what is recorded in the index, or in the extreme case, we may not even be in a Git repository. If convert_to_git() peeked at the index while doing its work, it *would* be a bug. Pass NULL instead of &the_index to convert_to_git() to make sure we catch future bugs to clarify this. Update the test in t4124: split one test case into 3: - Detect the " a\r" line in the patch - Detect the "-a\r" line in the patch - Use LF in repo and CLRF in the worktree. Reported-by: Anthony Sottile <asottile@umich.edu> Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-08-19 13:28:01 +02:00
cp one save-one &&
git add one &&
printf "b\r\n" >>one &&
apply: file commited with CRLF should roundtrip diff and apply When a file had been commited with CRLF but now .gitattributes say "* text=auto" (or core.autocrlf is true), the following does not roundtrip, `git apply` fails: printf "Added line\r\n" >>file && git diff >patch && git checkout -- . && git apply patch Before applying the patch, the file from working tree is converted into the index format (clean filter, CRLF conversion, ...). Here, when commited with CRLF, the line endings should not be converted. Note that `git apply --index` or `git apply --cache` doesn't call convert_to_git() because the source material is already in index format. Analyze the patch if there is a) any context line with CRLF, or b) if any line with CRLF is to be removed. In this case the patch file `patch` has mixed line endings, for a) it looks like this: diff --git a/one b/one index 533790e..c30dea8 100644 --- a/one +++ b/one @@ -1 +1,2 @@ a\r +b\r And for b) it looks like this: diff --git a/one b/one index 533790e..485540d 100644 --- a/one +++ b/one @@ -1 +1 @@ -a\r +b\r If `git apply` detects that the patch itself has CRLF, (look at the line " a\r" or "-a\r" above), the new flag crlf_in_old is set in "struct patch" and two things will happen: - read_old_data() will not convert CRLF into LF by calling convert_to_git(..., SAFE_CRLF_KEEP_CRLF); - The WS_CR_AT_EOL bit is set in the "white space rule", CRLF are no longer treated as white space. While at there, make it clear that read_old_data() in apply.c knows what it wants convert_to_git() to do with respect to CRLF. In fact, this codepath is about applying a patch to a file in the filesystem, which may not exist in the index, or may exist but may not match what is recorded in the index, or in the extreme case, we may not even be in a Git repository. If convert_to_git() peeked at the index while doing its work, it *would* be a bug. Pass NULL instead of &the_index to convert_to_git() to make sure we catch future bugs to clarify this. Update the test in t4124: split one test case into 3: - Detect the " a\r" line in the patch - Detect the "-a\r" line in the patch - Use LF in repo and CLRF in the worktree. Reported-by: Anthony Sottile <asottile@umich.edu> Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-08-19 13:28:01 +02:00
cp one expect &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
mv save-one one &&
echo "one text=auto" >.gitattributes &&
git apply patch &&
test_cmp one expect
'
test_expect_success 'CR-LF line endings && change line && text=auto' '
printf "a\r\n" >one &&
cp one save-one &&
git add one &&
apply: file commited with CRLF should roundtrip diff and apply When a file had been commited with CRLF but now .gitattributes say "* text=auto" (or core.autocrlf is true), the following does not roundtrip, `git apply` fails: printf "Added line\r\n" >>file && git diff >patch && git checkout -- . && git apply patch Before applying the patch, the file from working tree is converted into the index format (clean filter, CRLF conversion, ...). Here, when commited with CRLF, the line endings should not be converted. Note that `git apply --index` or `git apply --cache` doesn't call convert_to_git() because the source material is already in index format. Analyze the patch if there is a) any context line with CRLF, or b) if any line with CRLF is to be removed. In this case the patch file `patch` has mixed line endings, for a) it looks like this: diff --git a/one b/one index 533790e..c30dea8 100644 --- a/one +++ b/one @@ -1 +1,2 @@ a\r +b\r And for b) it looks like this: diff --git a/one b/one index 533790e..485540d 100644 --- a/one +++ b/one @@ -1 +1 @@ -a\r +b\r If `git apply` detects that the patch itself has CRLF, (look at the line " a\r" or "-a\r" above), the new flag crlf_in_old is set in "struct patch" and two things will happen: - read_old_data() will not convert CRLF into LF by calling convert_to_git(..., SAFE_CRLF_KEEP_CRLF); - The WS_CR_AT_EOL bit is set in the "white space rule", CRLF are no longer treated as white space. While at there, make it clear that read_old_data() in apply.c knows what it wants convert_to_git() to do with respect to CRLF. In fact, this codepath is about applying a patch to a file in the filesystem, which may not exist in the index, or may exist but may not match what is recorded in the index, or in the extreme case, we may not even be in a Git repository. If convert_to_git() peeked at the index while doing its work, it *would* be a bug. Pass NULL instead of &the_index to convert_to_git() to make sure we catch future bugs to clarify this. Update the test in t4124: split one test case into 3: - Detect the " a\r" line in the patch - Detect the "-a\r" line in the patch - Use LF in repo and CLRF in the worktree. Reported-by: Anthony Sottile <asottile@umich.edu> Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-08-19 13:28:01 +02:00
printf "b\r\n" >one &&
cp one expect &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
mv save-one one &&
apply: file commited with CRLF should roundtrip diff and apply When a file had been commited with CRLF but now .gitattributes say "* text=auto" (or core.autocrlf is true), the following does not roundtrip, `git apply` fails: printf "Added line\r\n" >>file && git diff >patch && git checkout -- . && git apply patch Before applying the patch, the file from working tree is converted into the index format (clean filter, CRLF conversion, ...). Here, when commited with CRLF, the line endings should not be converted. Note that `git apply --index` or `git apply --cache` doesn't call convert_to_git() because the source material is already in index format. Analyze the patch if there is a) any context line with CRLF, or b) if any line with CRLF is to be removed. In this case the patch file `patch` has mixed line endings, for a) it looks like this: diff --git a/one b/one index 533790e..c30dea8 100644 --- a/one +++ b/one @@ -1 +1,2 @@ a\r +b\r And for b) it looks like this: diff --git a/one b/one index 533790e..485540d 100644 --- a/one +++ b/one @@ -1 +1 @@ -a\r +b\r If `git apply` detects that the patch itself has CRLF, (look at the line " a\r" or "-a\r" above), the new flag crlf_in_old is set in "struct patch" and two things will happen: - read_old_data() will not convert CRLF into LF by calling convert_to_git(..., SAFE_CRLF_KEEP_CRLF); - The WS_CR_AT_EOL bit is set in the "white space rule", CRLF are no longer treated as white space. While at there, make it clear that read_old_data() in apply.c knows what it wants convert_to_git() to do with respect to CRLF. In fact, this codepath is about applying a patch to a file in the filesystem, which may not exist in the index, or may exist but may not match what is recorded in the index, or in the extreme case, we may not even be in a Git repository. If convert_to_git() peeked at the index while doing its work, it *would* be a bug. Pass NULL instead of &the_index to convert_to_git() to make sure we catch future bugs to clarify this. Update the test in t4124: split one test case into 3: - Detect the " a\r" line in the patch - Detect the "-a\r" line in the patch - Use LF in repo and CLRF in the worktree. Reported-by: Anthony Sottile <asottile@umich.edu> Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-08-19 13:28:01 +02:00
echo "one text=auto" >.gitattributes &&
git apply patch &&
test_cmp one expect
'
apply: file commited with CRLF should roundtrip diff and apply When a file had been commited with CRLF but now .gitattributes say "* text=auto" (or core.autocrlf is true), the following does not roundtrip, `git apply` fails: printf "Added line\r\n" >>file && git diff >patch && git checkout -- . && git apply patch Before applying the patch, the file from working tree is converted into the index format (clean filter, CRLF conversion, ...). Here, when commited with CRLF, the line endings should not be converted. Note that `git apply --index` or `git apply --cache` doesn't call convert_to_git() because the source material is already in index format. Analyze the patch if there is a) any context line with CRLF, or b) if any line with CRLF is to be removed. In this case the patch file `patch` has mixed line endings, for a) it looks like this: diff --git a/one b/one index 533790e..c30dea8 100644 --- a/one +++ b/one @@ -1 +1,2 @@ a\r +b\r And for b) it looks like this: diff --git a/one b/one index 533790e..485540d 100644 --- a/one +++ b/one @@ -1 +1 @@ -a\r +b\r If `git apply` detects that the patch itself has CRLF, (look at the line " a\r" or "-a\r" above), the new flag crlf_in_old is set in "struct patch" and two things will happen: - read_old_data() will not convert CRLF into LF by calling convert_to_git(..., SAFE_CRLF_KEEP_CRLF); - The WS_CR_AT_EOL bit is set in the "white space rule", CRLF are no longer treated as white space. While at there, make it clear that read_old_data() in apply.c knows what it wants convert_to_git() to do with respect to CRLF. In fact, this codepath is about applying a patch to a file in the filesystem, which may not exist in the index, or may exist but may not match what is recorded in the index, or in the extreme case, we may not even be in a Git repository. If convert_to_git() peeked at the index while doing its work, it *would* be a bug. Pass NULL instead of &the_index to convert_to_git() to make sure we catch future bugs to clarify this. Update the test in t4124: split one test case into 3: - Detect the " a\r" line in the patch - Detect the "-a\r" line in the patch - Use LF in repo and CLRF in the worktree. Reported-by: Anthony Sottile <asottile@umich.edu> Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-08-19 13:28:01 +02:00
test_expect_success 'LF in repo, CRLF in worktree && change line && text=auto' '
printf "a\n" >one &&
git add one &&
printf "b\r\n" >one &&
git diff -- one >patch &&
printf "a\r\n" >one &&
echo "one text=auto" >.gitattributes &&
git -c core.eol=CRLF apply patch &&
printf "b\r\n" >expect &&
test_cmp one expect
'
test_expect_success 'whitespace=fix to expand' '
qz_to_tab_space >preimage <<-\EOF &&
QQa
QQb
QQc
ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZd
QQe
QQf
QQg
EOF
qz_to_tab_space >patch <<-\EOF &&
diff --git a/preimage b/preimage
--- a/preimage
+++ b/preimage
@@ -1,7 +1,6 @@
QQa
QQb
QQc
-QQd
QQe
QQf
QQg
EOF
git -c core.whitespace=tab-in-indent apply --whitespace=fix patch
'
test_expect_success 'whitespace check skipped for excluded paths' '
git config core.whitespace blank-at-eol &&
>used &&
>unused &&
git add used unused &&
echo "used" >used &&
echo "unused " >unused &&
git diff-files -p used unused >patch &&
git apply --include=used --stat --whitespace=error <patch
'
test_done