Two new facilities, "timer" and "counter", are introduced to the
trace2 API.
* jh/trace2-timers-and-counters:
trace2: add global counter mechanism
trace2: add stopwatch timers
trace2: convert ctx.thread_name from strbuf to pointer
trace2: improve thread-name documentation in the thread-context
trace2: rename the thread_name argument to trace2_thread_start
api-trace2.txt: elminate section describing the public trace2 API
tr2tls: clarify TLS terminology
trace2: use size_t alloc,nr_open_regions in tr2tls_thread_ctx
Update to build procedure with VS using CMake/CTest.
* js/cmake-updates:
cmake: increase time-out for a long-running test
cmake: avoid editing t/test-lib.sh
add -p: avoid ambiguous signed/unsigned comparison
cmake: copy the merge tools for testing
cmake: make it easier to diagnose regressions in CTest runs
Add global counters mechanism to Trace2.
The Trace2 counters mechanism adds the ability to create a set of
global counter variables and an API to increment them efficiently.
Counters can optionally report per-thread usage in addition to the sum
across all threads.
Counter events are emitted to the Trace2 logs when a thread exits and
at process exit.
Counters are an alternative to `data` and `data_json` events.
Counters are useful when you want to measure something across the life
of the process, when you don't want per-measurement events for
performance reasons, when the data does not fit conveniently within a
region, or when your control flow does not easily let you write the
final total. For example, you might use this to report the number of
calls to unzip() or the number of de-delta steps during a checkout.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <jeffhost@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add stopwatch timer mechanism to Trace2.
Timers are an alternative to Trace2 Regions. Regions are useful for
measuring the time spent in various computation phases, such as the
time to read the index, time to scan for unstaged files, time to scan
for untracked files, and etc.
However, regions are not appropriate in all places. For example,
during a checkout, it would be very inefficient to use regions to
measure the total time spent inflating objects from the ODB from
across the entire lifetime of the process; a per-unzip() region would
flood the output and significantly slow the command; and some form of
post-processing would be requried to compute the time spent in unzip().
Timers can be used to measure a series of timer intervals and emit
a single summary event (at thread and/or process exit).
Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <jeffhost@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 7f5397a07c (cmake: support for testing git when building out of the
source tree, 2020-06-26), we implemented support for running Git's test
scripts even after building Git in a different directory than the source
directory.
The way we did this was to edit the file `t/test-lib.sh` to override
`GIT_BUILD_DIR` to point somewhere else than the parent of the `t/`
directory.
This is unideal because it always leaves a tracked file marked as
modified, and it is all too easy to commit that change by mistake.
Let's change the strategy by teaching `t/test-lib.sh` to detect the
presence of a file called `GIT-BUILD-DIR` in the source directory. If it
exists, the contents are interpreted as the location to the _actual_
build directory. We then write this file as part of the CTest
definition.
To support building Git via a regular `make` invocation after building
it using CMake, we ensure that the `GIT-BUILD-DIR` file is deleted (for
convenience, this is done as part of the Makefile rule that is already
run with every `make` invocation to ensure that `GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS` is
up to date).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Compiling with -O2 can interact badly with LSan's leak-checker, causing
false positives. Imagine a simplified example like:
char *str = allocate_some_string();
if (some_func(str) < 0)
die("bad str");
free(str);
The compiler may eliminate "str" as a stack variable, and just leave it
in a register. The register is preserved through most of the function,
including across the call to some_func(), since we'd eventually need to
free it. But because die() is marked with NORETURN, the compiler knows
that it doesn't need to save registers, and just clobbers it.
When die() eventually exits, the leak-checker runs. It looks in
registers and on the stack for any reference to the memory allocated by
str (which would indicate that it's not leaked), but can't find one. So
it reports it as a leak.
Neither system is wrong, really. The C standard (mostly section 5.1.2.3)
defines an abstract machine, and compilers are allowed to modify the
program as long as the observable behavior of that abstract machine is
unchanged. Looking at random memory values on the stack is undefined
behavior, and not something that the optimizer needs to support. But
there really isn't any other way for a leak checker to work; it
inherently has to do undefined things like scouring memory for pointers.
So the two things are inherently at odds with each other. We can't fix
it by changing the code, because from the perspective of the program
running in an abstract machine, there is no leak.
This has caused real false positives in the past, like:
- https://lore.kernel.org/git/patch-v3-5.6-9a44204c4c9-20211022T175227Z-avarab@gmail.com/
- https://lore.kernel.org/git/Yy4eo6500C0ijhk+@coredump.intra.peff.net/
- https://lore.kernel.org/git/Y07yeEQu+C7AH7oN@nand.local/
This patch makes those go away by forcing -O0 when compiling with LSan.
There are a few ways we could do this:
- we could just teach the linux-leaks CI job to set -O0. That's the
smallest change, and means we wouldn't get spurious CI failures. But
it doesn't help people looking for leaks manually or in a specific
test (and because the problem depends on the vagaries of the
optimizer, investigating these can waste a lot of time in
head-scratching as the problem comes and goes)
- we default to -O2 in CFLAGS; we could pull this out to a separate
variable ("-O$(O)" or something) and modify "O" when LSan is in use.
This is the most flexible, in that you could still build with "make
O=2 SANITIZE=leak" if you really wanted to (say, for experimenting).
But it would also fail to kick in if the user defines their own
CFLAGS variable, which again leads to head-scratching.
- we can just stick -O0 into BASIC_CFLAGS when enabling LSan. Since
this comes after the user-provided CFLAGS, it will override any
previous -O setting found there. This is more foolproof, albeit less
flexible. If you want to experiment with an optimized leak-checking
build, you'll have to put "-O2 -fsanitize=leak" into CFLAGS
manually, rather than using our SANITIZE=leak Makefile magic.
Since the final one is the least likely to break in normal use, this
patch uses that approach.
The resulting build is a little slower, of course, but since LSan is
already about 2x slower than a regular build, another 10% slowdown isn't
that big a deal.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Update comment in the Makefile about the RUNTIME_PREFIX config knob.
* dd/document-runtime-prefix-better:
Makefile: clarify runtime relative gitexecdir
By default, use of fsmonitor on a repository on networked
filesystem is disabled. Add knobs to make it workable on macOS.
* ed/fsmonitor-on-networked-macos:
fsmonitor: fix leak of warning message
fsmonitor: add documentation for allowRemote and socketDir options
fsmonitor: check for compatability before communicating with fsmonitor
fsmonitor: deal with synthetic firmlinks on macOS
fsmonitor: avoid socket location check if using hook
fsmonitor: relocate socket file if .git directory is remote
fsmonitor: refactor filesystem checks to common interface
With a bit of header twiddling, use the native regexp library on
macOS instead of the compat/ one.
* ds/use-platform-regex-on-macos:
grep: fix multibyte regex handling under macOS
"git" built with RUNTIME_PREFIX flag turned on could figure out
gitexecdir and other paths as relative to "git" executable.
However, in the section specifies gitexecdir, RUNTIME_PREFIX wasn't
mentioned, thus users may wrongly assume that "git" always locates
gitexecdir as relative path to the executable.
Let's clarify that only "git" built with RUNTIME_PREFIX will locate
gitexecdir as relative path.
Signed-off-by: Đoàn Trần Công Danh <congdanhqx@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If the .git directory is on a remote filesystem, create the socket
file in 'fsmonitor.socketDir' if it is defined, else create it in $HOME.
Signed-off-by: Eric DeCosta <edecosta@mathworks.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Provide a common interface for getting basic filesystem information
including filesystem type and whether the filesystem is remote.
Refactor existing code for getting basic filesystem info and detecting
remote file systems to the new interface.
Refactor filesystem checks to leverage new interface. For macOS,
error-out if the Unix Domain socket (UDS) file is on a remote
filesystem.
Signed-off-by: Eric DeCosta <edecosta@mathworks.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Like most builtins, 'version' is documented in a corresponding
'Documentation/git-version.txt' and can be invoked with 'git version'.
However, the 'check-docs' Makefile target showed that it was "removed but
documented: git-version." This was cause by the fact that it is not built as
a standalone 'git-version' executable, therefore appearing "removed" to
'check-docs'.
Without a precedent for documented builtins that aren't built into an
executable *or* any clear reason why a standalone 'git-version' shouldn't
exist, the 'check-docs' error appears to correctly identify an issue. To
correct that mismatch, add 'git-version' to the 'BUILT_INS' list in the root
Makefile (indicating that the 'cmd_version()' function appears in a file
that is *not* 'builtin/version.c'). Additionally, to avoid the "no link"
message in 'check-docs', list 'git-version' as an "ancilliaryinterrogator"
(like 'git help') in 'command-list.txt'.
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Hoist the remainder of "scalar" out of contrib/ to the main part of
the codebase.
* vd/scalar-to-main:
Documentation/technical: include Scalar technical doc
t/perf: add 'GIT_PERF_USE_SCALAR' run option
t/perf: add Scalar performance tests
scalar-clone: add test coverage
scalar: add to 'git help -a' command list
scalar: implement the `help` subcommand
git help: special-case `scalar`
scalar: include in standard Git build & installation
scalar: fix command documentation section header
In order to provide a better organisation for oss-fuzz fuzzers and
to avoid top-level clustters in the git repository when more fuzzers
are introduced, move the existing fuzzer-related sources to their
own oss-fuzz/ hierarchy. Grouping the fuzzers into their own
directory, separate their application on fuzz-testing from the core
functionalities of the git code, prvides better and tidier structure
the oss-fuzz fuzzing library to manage, locate, build and execute
those fuzzers for fuzz-testing purposes in future development.
Signed-off-by: Arthur Chan <arthur.chan@adalogics.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Remove the assembly version of SHA-1 implementation for PPC.
* ab/retire-ppc-sha1:
Makefile: use $(OBJECTS) instead of $(C_OBJ)
Makefile + hash.h: remove PPC_SHA1 implementation
Move 'scalar' out of 'contrib/' and into the root of the Git tree. The goal
of this change is to build 'scalar' as part of the standard Git build &
install processes.
This patch includes both the physical move of Scalar's files out of
'contrib/' ('scalar.c', 'scalar.txt', and 't9xxx-scalar.sh'), and the
changes to the build definitions in 'Makefile' and 'CMakelists.txt' to
accommodate the new program.
At a high level, Scalar is built so that:
- there is a 'scalar-objs' target (similar to those created in 029bac01a8
(Makefile: add {program,xdiff,test,git,fuzz}-objs & objects targets,
2021-02-23)) for debugging purposes.
- it appears in the root of the install directory (rather than the
gitexecdir).
- it is included in the 'bin-wrappers/' directory for use in tests.
- it receives a platform-specific executable suffix (e.g., '.exe'), if
applicable.
- 'scalar.txt' is installed as 'man1' documentation.
- the 'clean' target removes the 'scalar' executable.
Additionally, update the root level '.gitignore' file to ignore the Scalar
executable.
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Create a new "test-tool submodule" and move the "is-active" subcommand
over to it. It was added in 5c2bd8b77a (submodule--helper: add
is-active subcommand, 2017-03-16), since
a452128a36 (submodule--helper: introduce add-config subcommand,
2021-08-06) it hasn't been used by git-submodule.sh.
Since we're creating a command dispatch similar to test-tool.c itself
let's split out the "struct test_cmd" into a new test-tool-utils.h,
which both this new code and test-tool.c itself can use.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Glen Choo <chooglen@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In the preceding commit $(C_OBJ) added in c373991375 (Makefile: list
generated object files in OBJECTS, 2010-01-26) became synonymous with
$(OBJECTS). Let's avoid the indirection and use the $(OBJECTS)
variable directly instead.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Remove the PPC_SHA1 implementation added in a6ef3518f9 ([PATCH] PPC
assembly implementation of SHA1, 2005-04-22). When this was added
Apple consumer hardware used the PPC architecture, and the
implementation was intended to improve SHA-1 speed there.
Since it was added we've moved to using sha1collisiondetection by
default, and anyone wanting hard-rolled non-DC SHA-1 implementation
can use OpenSSL's via the OPENSSL_SHA1 knob.
The PPC_SHA1 originally originally targeted 32 bit PPC, and later the
64 bit PPC 970 (a.k.a. Apple PowerPC G5). See 926172c5e4 (block-sha1:
improve code on large-register-set machines, 2009-08-10) for a
reference about the performance on G5 (a comment in block-sha1/sha1.c
being removed here).
I can't get it to do anything but segfault on both the BE and LE POWER
machines in the GCC compile farm[1]. Anyone who's concerned about
performance on PPC these days is likely to be using the IBM POWER
processors.
There have been proposals to entirely remove non-sha1collisiondetection
implementations from the tree[2]. I think per [3] that would be a bit
overzealous. I.e. there are various set-ups git's speed is going to be
more important than the relatively implausible SHA-1 collision attack,
or where such attacks are entirely mitigated by other means (e.g. by
incoming objects being checked with DC_SHA1).
But that really doesn't apply to PPC_SHA1 in particular, which seems
to have outlived its usefulness.
As this gets rid of the only in-tree *.S assembly file we can remove
the small bits of logic from the Makefile needed to build objects
from *.S (as opposed to *.c)
The code being removed here was also throwing warnings with the
"-pedantic" flag, it could have been fixed as 544d93bc3b (block-sha1:
remove use of obsolete x86 assembly, 2022-03-10) did for block-sha1/*,
but as noted above let's remove it instead.
1. https://cfarm.tetaneutral.net/machines/list/
Tested on gcc{110,112,135,203}, a mixture of POWER [789] ppc64 and
ppc64le. All segfault in anything needing object
hashing (e.g. t/t1007-hash-object.sh) when compiled with
PPC_SHA1=Y.
2. https://lore.kernel.org/git/20200223223758.120941-1-mh@glandium.org/
3. https://lore.kernel.org/git/20200224044732.GK1018190@coredump.intra.peff.net/
Acked-by: brian m. carlson" <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Test portability improvements.
* mt/rot13-in-c:
tests: use the new C rot13-filter helper to avoid PERL prereq
t0021: implementation the rot13-filter.pl script in C
t0021: avoid grepping for a Perl-specific string at filter output
The commit 29de20504e (Makefile: fix default regex settings on
Darwin, 2013-05-11) fixed t0070-fundamental.sh under Darwin (macOS) by
adopting Git's regex library. However, this library is compiled with
NO_MBSUPPORT, which causes git-grep to work incorrectly on multibyte
(e.g. UTF-8) files. Current macOS versions pass t0070-fundamental.sh
with the native macOS regex library, which also supports multibyte
characters.
Adjust the Makefile to use the native regex library, and call
setlocale(3) to set CTYPE according to the user's preference.
The setlocale call is required on all platforms, but in platforms
supporting gettext(3), setlocale was called as a side-effect of
initializing gettext. Therefore, move the CTYPE setlocale call from
gettext.c to common-main.c and the corresponding locale.h include
into git-compat-util.h.
Thanks to the global initialization of CTYPE setlocale, the test-tool
regex command now works correctly with supported multibyte regexes, and
is used to set the MB_REGEX test prerequisite by assessing a platform's
support for them.
Signed-off-by: Diomidis Spinellis <dds@aueb.gr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "diagnose" feature to create a zip archive for diagnostic
material has been lifted from "scalar" and made into a feature of
"git bugreport".
* vd/scalar-generalize-diagnose:
scalar: update technical doc roadmap
scalar-diagnose: use 'git diagnose --mode=all'
builtin/bugreport.c: create '--diagnose' option
builtin/diagnose.c: add '--mode' option
builtin/diagnose.c: create 'git diagnose' builtin
diagnose.c: add option to configure archive contents
scalar-diagnose: move functionality to common location
scalar-diagnose: move 'get_disk_info()' to 'compat/'
scalar-diagnose: add directory to archiver more gently
scalar-diagnose: avoid 32-bit overflow of size_t
scalar-diagnose: use "$GIT_UNZIP" in test
Fix deadlocks between main Git process and subprocess spawned via
the pipe_command() API, that can kill "git add -p" that was
reimplemented in C recently.
* jk/pipe-command-nonblock:
pipe_command(): mark stdin descriptor as non-blocking
pipe_command(): handle ENOSPC when writing to a pipe
pipe_command(): avoid xwrite() for writing to pipe
git-compat-util: make MAX_IO_SIZE define globally available
nonblock: support Windows
compat: add function to enable nonblocking pipes
We'd like to be able to make some of our pipes nonblocking so that
poll() can be used effectively, but O_NONBLOCK isn't portable. Let's
introduce a compat wrapper so this can be abstracted for each platform.
The interface is as narrow as possible to let platforms do what's
natural there (rather than having to implement fcntl() and a fake
O_NONBLOCK for example, or having to handle other types of descriptors).
The next commit will add Windows support, at which point we should be
covering all platforms in practice. But if we do find some other
platform without O_NONBLOCK, we'll return ENOSYS. Arguably we could just
trigger a build-time #error in this case, which would catch the problem
earlier. But since we're not planning to use this compat wrapper in many
code paths, a seldom-seen runtime error may be friendlier for such a
platform than blocking compilation completely. Our test suite would
still notice it.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Expose a lot of "tech docs" via "git help" interface.
* ab/tech-docs-to-help:
docs: move http-protocol docs to man section 5
docs: move cruft pack docs to gitformat-pack
docs: move pack format docs to man section 5
docs: move signature docs to man section 5
docs: move index format docs to man section 5
docs: move protocol-related docs to man section 5
docs: move commit-graph format docs to man section 5
git docs: add a category for file formats, protocols and interfaces
git docs: add a category for user-facing file, repo and command UX
git help doc: use "<doc>" instead of "<guide>"
help.c: remove common category behavior from drop_prefix() behavior
help.c: refactor drop_prefix() to use a "switch" statement"
This script is currently used by three test files: t0021-conversion.sh,
t2080-parallel-checkout-basics.sh, and
t2082-parallel-checkout-attributes.sh. To avoid the need for the PERL
dependency at these tests, let's convert the script to a C test-tool
command. The following commit will take care of actually modifying the
said tests to use the new C helper and removing the Perl script.
The Perl script flushes the log file handler after each write. As
commented in [1], this seems to be an early design decision that was
later reconsidered, but possibly ended up being left in the code by
accident:
>> +$debug->flush();
>
> Isn't $debug flushed automatically?
Maybe, but autoflush is not explicitly enabled. I will
enable it again (I disabled it because of Eric's comment
but I re-read the comment and he is only talking about
pipes).
Anyways, this behavior is not really needed for the tests and the
flush() calls make the code slightly larger, so let's avoid them
altogether in the new C version.
[1]: https://lore.kernel.org/git/7F1F1A0E-8FC3-4FBD-81AA-37786DE0EF50@gmail.com/
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Matheus Tavares <matheus.bernardino@usp.br>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Create a 'git diagnose' builtin to generate a standalone zip archive of
repository diagnostics.
The "diagnose" functionality was originally implemented for Scalar in
aa5c79a331 (scalar: implement `scalar diagnose`, 2022-05-28). However, the
diagnostics gathered are not specific to Scalar-cloned repositories and
can be useful when diagnosing issues in any Git repository.
Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Derrick Stolee <derrickstolee@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Move the core functionality of 'scalar diagnose' into a new 'diagnose.[c,h]'
library to prepare for new callers in the main Git tree generating
diagnostic archives. These callers will be introduced in subsequent patches.
While this patch appears large, it is mostly made up of moving code out of
'scalar.c' and into 'diagnose.c'. Specifically, the functions
- dir_file_stats_objects()
- dir_file_stats()
- count_files()
- loose_objs_stats()
- add_directory_to_archiver()
are all copied verbatim from 'scalar.c'. The 'create_diagnostics_archive()'
function is a mostly identical (partial) copy of 'cmd_diagnose()', with the
primary changes being that 'zip_path' is an input and "Enlistment root" is
corrected to "Repository root" in the archiver log.
Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Before implementing a way to fetch bundles into a repository, create the
basic logic. Assume that the URI is actually a file path. Future logic
will make this more careful to other protocols.
For now, we also only succeed if the content at the URI is a bundle
file, not a bundle list. Bundle lists will be implemented in a future
change.
Note that the discovery of a temporary filename is slightly racy because
the odb_mkstemp() relies on the temporary file not existing. With the
current implementation being limited to file copies, we could replace
the copy_file() with copy_fd(). The tricky part comes in future changes
that send the filename to 'git remote-https' and its 'get' capability.
At that point, we need the file descriptor closed _and_ the file
unlinked. If we were to keep the file descriptor open for the sake of
normal file copies, then we would pollute the rest of the code for
little benefit. This is especially the case because we expect that most
bundle URI use will be based on HTTPS instead of file copies.
Reviewed-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <derrickstolee@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Create a new "Repository, command and file interfaces" section in the
main "git help git" manual page. Move things that belong under this
new criteria from the generic "Guides" section.
The "Guides" section was added in f442f28a81 (git.txt: add list of
guides, 2020-08-05). It makes sense to have e.g. "giteveryday(7)" and
"gitfaq(7)" listed under "Guides".
But placing e.g. "gitignore(5)" in it is stretching the meaning of
what a "guide" is, ideally that section should list things similar to
"giteveryday(7)" and "gitcore-tutorial(7)".
An alternate name that was considered for this new section was "User
formats", for consistency with the nomenclature used for man section 5
in general. My man(1) lists it as "File formats and conventions,
e.g. /etc/passwd".
So calling this "git help --formats" or "git help --user-formats"
would make sense for e.g. gitignore(5), but would be stretching it
somewhat for githooks(5), and would seem really suspect for the likes
of gitcli(7).
Let's instead pick a name that's closer to the generic term "User
interface", which is really what this documentation discusses: General
user-interface documentation that doesn't obviously belong elsewhere.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Make our mergesort implementation type-safe.
* rs/mergesort:
mergesort: remove llist_mergesort()
packfile: use DEFINE_LIST_SORT
fetch-pack: use DEFINE_LIST_SORT
commit: use DEFINE_LIST_SORT
blame: use DEFINE_LIST_SORT
test-mergesort: use DEFINE_LIST_SORT
test-mergesort: use DEFINE_LIST_SORT_DEBUG
mergesort: add macros for typed sort of linked lists
mergesort: tighten merge loop
mergesort: unify ranks loops
Add Coccinelle rules to detect the pattern of initializing and then
finalizing a structure without using it in between at all, which
happens after code restructuring and the compilers fail to
recognize as an unused variable.
* ab/cocci-unused:
cocci: generalize "unused" rule to cover more than "strbuf"
cocci: add and apply a rule to find "unused" strbufs
cocci: have "coccicheck{,-pending}" depend on "coccicheck-test"
cocci: add a "coccicheck-test" target and test *.cocci rules
Makefile & .gitignore: ignore & clean "git.res", not "*.res"
Makefile: remove mandatory "spatch" arguments from SPATCH_FLAGS
Teach "make all" to build gitweb as well.
* ab/build-gitweb:
gitweb/Makefile: add a "NO_GITWEB" parameter
Makefile: build 'gitweb' in the default target
gitweb/Makefile: include in top-level Makefile
gitweb: remove "test" and "test-installed" targets
gitweb/Makefile: prepare to merge into top-level Makefile
gitweb/Makefile: clear up and de-duplicate the gitweb.{css,js} vars
gitweb/Makefile: add a $(GITWEB_ALL) variable
gitweb/Makefile: define all .PHONY prerequisites inline
Now that all of its callers are gone, remove llist_mergesort().
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
For SHA-256, we currently have support for OpenSSL and libgcrypt because
these two libraries contain optimized implementations that can take
advantage of native processor instructions. However, OpenSSL is not
suitable for linking against for Linux distros due to licensing
incompatibilities with the GPLv2, and libgcrypt has been less favored by
cryptographers due to some security-related implementation issues,
which, while not affecting our use of hash algorithms, has affected its
reputation.
Let's add another option that's compatible with the GPLv2, which is
Nettle. This is an option which is generally better than libgcrypt
because on many distros GnuTLS (which uses Nettle) is used for HTTPS and
therefore as a practical matter it will be available on most systems.
As a result, prefer it over libgcrypt and our built-in implementation.
Nettle also has recently gained support for Intel's SHA-NI instructions,
which compare very favorably to other implementations, as well as
assembly implementations for when SHA-NI is not available.
A git gc on git.git sees a 12% performance improvement with Nettle over
our block SHA-256 implementation due to general assembly improvements.
With SHA-NI, the performance of raw SHA-256 on a 2 GiB file goes from
7.296 seconds with block SHA-256 to 1.523 seconds with Nettle.
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Have the newly introduced "coccicheck-test" target run implicitly when
"coccicheck" itself is run. As with e.g. the "check-chainlint"
target (see [1]) it makes sense to run this unconditionally before we
run other "spatch" rules as a basic sanity check. See
1. 803394459d (t/Makefile: add machinery to check correctness of
chainlint.sed, 2018-07-11)
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add a "coccicheck-test" target to test our *.cocci rules, and as a
demonstration add tests for the rules added in 39ea59a257 (remove
unnecessary NULL check before free(3), 2016-10-08) and
1b83d1251e (coccinelle: add a rule to make "expression" code use
FREE_AND_NULL(), 2017-06-15).
I considered making use of the "spatch --test" option, and the choice
of a "tests" over a "t" directory is to make these tests compatible
with such a future change.
Unfortunately "spatch --test" doesn't return meaningful exit codes,
AFAICT you need to "grep" its output to see if the *.res is what you
expect. There's "--test-okfailed", but I didn't find a way to sensibly
integrate those (it relies on some in-between status files, but
doesn't help with the status codes).
Instead let's use a "--sp-file" pattern similar to the main
"coccicheck" rule, with the difference that we use and compare the
two *.res files with cmp(1).
The --very-quiet and --no-show-diff options ensure that we don't need
to pipe stdout and stderr somewhere. Unlike the "%.cocci.patch" rule
we're not using the diff.
The "cmp || git diff" is optimistically giving us better output on
failure, but even if we only have POSIX cmp and no system git
installed we'll still fail with the "cmp", just with an error message
that isn't as friendly. The "2>/dev/null" is in case we don't have a
"git" installed.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Adjust the overly broad .gitignore and "make clean" rule added in
ce39c2e04c (Provide a Windows version resource for the git
executables., 2012-05-24).
For now this is merely a correctness fix, but needed because a
subsequent commit will want to check in *.res files elsewhere in the
tree, which we shouldn't have to "git add -f".
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "--patch ." part of SPATCH_FLAGS added in f57d11728d (coccinelle:
put sane filenames into output patches, 2018-07-23) should have been
added unconditionally to the "spatch" invocation instead, using it
isn't optional.
Let's also move the other mandatory flag to come after
$(SPATCH_FLAGS), to ensure that our "--sp-file" overrides any provided
in the environment, both --sp-file <arg> and --patch <arg> are
last-option-wins as far as spatch(1) option parsing is concerned.
The environment variable override was initially added in
a9a884aea5 (coccicheck: use --all-includes by default,
2016-09-30). In practice there's probably nobody that's using
SPATCH_FLAGS to try to intentionally break our invocations, but since
we're changing this let's make it clear what (if anything) we expect
to be overridden by user-supplied flags.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
From looking at the {Free,Net,Dragonfly}BSD packages for git[1]
they've been monkeypatching "gitweb" out of the Makefile, let's be
nicer and provide a NO_GITWEB=Y for their use.
For the "all" target this allows for optionally restoring what's been
the status quo before the preceding commit, but now we'll also behave
correctly on the subsequent "make install".
As before our installation of gitweb can be suppressed with
NO_PERL. For backwards compatibility the NO_PERL=Y flag by itself
still doesn't change whether or not we build gitweb, unlike the new
NO_GITWEB=Y flag.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Our Makefile's default target used to build 'gitweb', though
indirectly: the 'all' target depended on 'git-instaweb', which in turn
depended on 'gitweb'. Then e25c7cc146 (Makefile: drop dependency
between git-instaweb and gitweb, 2015-05-29) removed the latter
dependency, and for good reasons (quoting its commit message):
"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."
Since then a simple 'make' doesn't build 'gitweb'.
Luckily, installing 'gitweb' is not broken: although 'make install'
doesn't depend on the 'gitweb' target, it has a dependency on the
'install-gitweb' target, which does generate all the necessary files
for 'gitweb' and installs them. However, if someone runs 'make &&
sudo make install', then those files in the 'gitweb' directory will be
generated and owned by root, which is not nice.
List 'gitweb' as a direct dependency of the default target, so a plain
'make' will build it.
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Include the gitweb/Makefile in the top-level Makefile rather than
calling it as a sub-Makefile. As noted in the thread starting at at
[1] (in particular [2]) we'll pay a high cost on NOOP runs of "make"
just to figure out that we have nothing to do for "make gitweb".
The "gitweb" script also isn't maintained out-of-tree, unlike
"gitk-git" or "git-gui", which both have their own "Makefile". Other
parts of it are already integrated into our main Makefiles, e.g. the
documentation is built by Documentation/Makefile since
07ea4df278 (gitweb: Add gitweb(1) manpage for gitweb itself,
2011-10-16).
1. https://lore.kernel.org/git/20220525205651.825669-1-szeder.dev@gmail.com/
2. https://lore.kernel.org/git/220526.86k0a96sv2.gmgdl@evledraar.gmail.com/
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
More fsmonitor--daemon.
* jh/builtin-fsmonitor-part3: (30 commits)
t7527: improve implicit shutdown testing in fsmonitor--daemon
fsmonitor--daemon: allow --super-prefix argument
t7527: test Unicode NFC/NFD handling on MacOS
t/lib-unicode-nfc-nfd: helper prereqs for testing unicode nfc/nfd
t/helper/hexdump: add helper to print hexdump of stdin
fsmonitor: on macOS also emit NFC spelling for NFD pathname
t7527: test FSMonitor on case insensitive+preserving file system
fsmonitor: never set CE_FSMONITOR_VALID on submodules
t/perf/p7527: add perf test for builtin FSMonitor
t7527: FSMonitor tests for directory moves
fsmonitor: optimize processing of directory events
fsm-listen-darwin: shutdown daemon if worktree root is moved/renamed
fsm-health-win32: force shutdown daemon if worktree root moves
fsm-health-win32: add polling framework to monitor daemon health
fsmonitor--daemon: stub in health thread
fsmonitor--daemon: rename listener thread related variables
fsmonitor--daemon: prepare for adding health thread
fsmonitor--daemon: cd out of worktree root
fsm-listen-darwin: ignore FSEvents caused by xattr changes on macOS
unpack-trees: initialize fsmonitor_has_run_once in o->result
...
A mechanism to pack unreachable objects into a "cruft pack",
instead of ejecting them into loose form to be reclaimed later, has
been introduced.
* tb/cruft-packs:
sha1-file.c: don't freshen cruft packs
builtin/gc.c: conditionally avoid pruning objects via loose
builtin/repack.c: add cruft packs to MIDX during geometric repack
builtin/repack.c: use named flags for existing_packs
builtin/repack.c: allow configuring cruft pack generation
builtin/repack.c: support generating a cruft pack
builtin/pack-objects.c: --cruft with expiration
reachable: report precise timestamps from objects in cruft packs
reachable: add options to add_unseen_recent_objects_to_traversal
builtin/pack-objects.c: --cruft without expiration
builtin/pack-objects.c: return from create_object_entry()
t/helper: add 'pack-mtimes' test-tool
pack-mtimes: support writing pack .mtimes files
chunk-format.h: extract oid_version()
pack-write: pass 'struct packing_data' to 'stage_tmp_packfiles'
pack-mtimes: support reading .mtimes files
Documentation/technical: add cruft-packs.txt
A workflow change for translators are being proposed.
* jx/l10n-workflow-change:
l10n: Document the new l10n workflow
Makefile: add "po-init" rule to initialize po/XX.po
Makefile: add "po-update" rule to update po/XX.po
po/git.pot: don't check in result of "make pot"
po/git.pot: this is now a generated file
Makefile: remove duplicate and unwanted files in FOUND_SOURCE_FILES
i18n CI: stop allowing non-ASCII source messages in po/git.pot
Makefile: have "make pot" not "reset --hard"
Makefile: generate "po/git.pot" from stable LOCALIZED_C
Makefile: sort source files before feeding to xgettext