Prepare tests not to be affected by the name of the default branch
"git init" creates.
* js/default-branch-name-tests-final-stretch: (28 commits)
tests: drop prereq `PREPARE_FOR_MAIN_BRANCH` where no longer needed
t99*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
tests(git-p4): transition to the default branch name `main`
t9[5-7]*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
t9[0-4]*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
t8*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
t7[5-9]*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
t7[0-4]*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
t6[4-9]*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
t64*: preemptively adjust alignment to prepare for `master` -> `main`
t6[0-3]*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
t5[6-9]*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
t55[4-9]*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
t55[23]*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
t551*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
t550*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
t5503: prepare aligned comment for replacing `master` with `main`
t5[0-4]*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
t5323: prepare centered comment for `master` -> `main`
t4*: adjust the references to the default branch name "main"
...
After expiring a reflog and making a single commit, the reflog for
the branch would record a single entry that knows both @{0} and
@{1}, but we failed to answer "what commit were we on?", i.e. @{1}
* dl/reflog-with-single-entry:
refs: allow @{n} to work with n-sized reflog
refs: factor out set_read_ref_cutoffs()
"git diff" showed a submodule working tree with untracked cruft as
"Submodule commit <objectname>-dirty", but a natural expectation is
that the "-dirty" indicator would align with "git describe --dirty",
which does not consider having untracked files in the working tree
as source of dirtiness. The inconsistency has been fixed.
* sj/untracked-files-in-submodule-directory-is-not-dirty:
diff: do not show submodule with untracked files as "-dirty"
Warn loudly when the "pack-redundant" command, which has been left
stale with almost unusable performance issues, gets used, as we no
longer want to recommend its use (instead just "repack -d" instead).
* jc/deprecate-pack-redundant:
pack-redundant: gauge the usage before proposing its removal
Newline characters in the host and path part of git:// URL are
now forbidden.
* jk/forbid-lf-in-git-url:
fsck: reject .gitmodules git:// urls with newlines
git_connect_git(): forbid newlines in host and path
The implementation of "git branch --sort" wrt the detached HEAD
display has always been hacky, which has been cleaned up.
* ab/branch-sort:
branch: show "HEAD detached" first under reverse sort
branch: sort detached HEAD based on a flag
ref-filter: move ref_sorting flags to a bitfield
ref-filter: move "cmp_fn" assignment into "else if" arm
ref-filter: add braces to if/else if/else chain
branch tests: add to --sort tests
branch: change "--local" to "--list" in comment
File-level rename detection updates.
* en/diffcore-rename:
diffcore-rename: remove unnecessary duplicate entry checks
diffcore-rename: accelerate rename_dst setup
diffcore-rename: simplify and accelerate register_rename_src()
t4058: explore duplicate tree entry handling in a bit more detail
t4058: add more tests and documentation for duplicate tree entry handling
diffcore-rename: reduce jumpiness in progress counters
diffcore-rename: simplify limit check
diffcore-rename: avoid usage of global in too_many_rename_candidates()
diffcore-rename: rename num_create to num_destinations
"git mktag" validates its input using its own rules before writing
a tag object---it has been updated to share the logic with "git
fsck".
* ab/mktag: (23 commits)
mktag: add a --[no-]strict option
mktag: mark strings for translation
mktag: convert to parse-options
mktag: allow omitting the header/body \n separator
mktag: allow turning off fsck.extraHeaderEntry
fsck: make fsck_config() re-usable
mktag: use fsck instead of custom verify_tag()
mktag: use puts(str) instead of printf("%s\n", str)
mktag: remove redundant braces in one-line body "if"
mktag: use default strbuf_read() hint
mktag tests: test verify_object() with replaced objects
mktag tests: improve verify_object() test coverage
mktag tests: test "hash-object" compatibility
mktag tests: stress test whitespace handling
mktag tests: run "fsck" after creating "mytag"
mktag tests: don't create "mytag" twice
mktag tests: don't redirect stderr to a file needlessly
mktag tests: remove needless SHA-1 hardcoding
mktag tests: use "test_commit" helper
mktag tests: don't needlessly use a subshell
...
Fix 2.29 regression where "git mergetool --tool-help" fails to list
all the available tools.
* pb/mergetool-tool-help-fix:
mergetool--lib: fix '--tool-help' to correctly show available tools
"git for-each-repo --config=<var> <cmd>" should not run <cmd> for
any repository when the configuration variable <var> is not defined
even once.
* ds/for-each-repo-noopfix:
for-each-repo: do nothing on empty config
Some tests expect that "ls -l" output has either '-' or 'x' for
group executable bit, but setgid bit can be inherited from parent
directory and make these fields 'S' or 's' instead, causing test
failures.
* mt/t4129-with-setgid-dir:
t4129: don't fail if setgid is set in the test directory
Follow-up on the "maintenance part-3" which introduced scheduled
maintenance tasks to support platforms whose native scheduling
methods are not 'cron'.
* ds/maintenance-part-4:
maintenance: use Windows scheduled tasks
maintenance: use launchctl on macOS
maintenance: include 'cron' details in docs
maintenance: extract platform-specific scheduling
Bash completion (in contrib/) update to make it easier for
end-users to add completion for their custom "git" subcommands.
* fc/completion-aliases-support:
completion: add proper public __git_complete
test: completion: add tests for __git_complete
completion: bash: improve function detection
completion: bash: add __git_have_func helper
"git stash" did not work well in a sparsely checked out working
tree.
* en/stash-apply-sparse-checkout:
stash: fix stash application in sparse-checkouts
stash: remove unnecessary process forking
t7012: add a testcase demonstrating stash apply bugs in sparse checkouts
Retire more names with "sha1" in it.
* ma/sha1-is-a-hash:
hash-lookup: rename from sha1-lookup
sha1-lookup: rename `sha1_pos()` as `hash_pos()`
object-file.c: rename from sha1-file.c
object-name.c: rename from sha1-name.c
Code clean-up.
* ma/t1300-cleanup:
t1300: don't needlessly work with `core.foo` configs
t1300: remove duplicate test for `--file no-such-file`
t1300: remove duplicate test for `--file ../foo`
"git rev-parse" can be explicitly told to give output as absolute
or relative path with the `--path-format=(absolute|relative)` option.
* bc/rev-parse-path-format:
rev-parse: add option for absolute or relative path formatting
abspath: add a function to resolve paths with missing components
The configuration variable 'core.abbrev' can be set to 'no' to
force no abbreviation regardless of the hash algorithm.
* ew/decline-core-abbrev:
core.abbrev=no disables abbreviations
This sequence works
$ git checkout -b newbranch
$ git commit --allow-empty -m one
$ git show -s newbranch@{1}
and shows the state that was immediately after the newbranch was
created.
But then if you do
$ git reflog expire --expire=now refs/heads/newbranch
$ git commit --allow=empty -m two
$ git show -s newbranch@{1}
you'd be scolded with
fatal: log for 'newbranch' only has 1 entries
While it is true that it has only 1 entry, we have enough
information in that single entry that records the transition between
the state in which the tip of the branch was pointing at commit
'one' to the new commit 'two' built on it, so we should be able to
answer "what object newbranch was pointing at?". But we refuse to
do so.
Make @{0} the special case where we use the new side to look up that
entry. Otherwise, look up @{n} using the old side of the (n-1)th entry
of the reflog.
Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 014ade7484 (upload-pack: send ERR packet for non-tip objects,
2019-04-13) added a test that greps the output of a failed fetch to make
sure that upload-pack sent us the ERR packet we expected. But checking
this is racy; despite the argument in that commit, the client may still
be sending a "done" line after the server exits, causing it to die() on
a failed write() and never see the ERR packet at all.
This fails quite rarely on Linux, but more often on macOS. However, it
can be triggered reliably with:
diff --git a/fetch-pack.c b/fetch-pack.c
index 876f90c759..cf40de9092 100644
--- a/fetch-pack.c
+++ b/fetch-pack.c
@@ -489,6 +489,7 @@ static int find_common(struct fetch_negotiator *negotiator,
done:
trace2_region_leave("fetch-pack", "negotiation_v0_v1", the_repository);
if (!got_ready || !no_done) {
+ sleep(1);
packet_buf_write(&req_buf, "done\n");
send_request(args, fd[1], &req_buf);
}
This is a real user-visible race that it would be nice to fix, but it's
tricky to do so: the client would have to speculatively try to read an
ERR packet after hitting a write() error. And at least for this error,
it's specific to v0 (since v2 does not enforce reachability at all).
So let's loosen the test to avoid annoying racy failures. If we
eventually do the read-after-failed-write thing, we can tighten it. And
if not, v0 will grow increasingly obsolete as servers support v2, so the
utility of this test will decrease over time anyway.
Note that we can still check stderr to make sure upload-pack bailed for
the reason we expected. It writes a similar message to stderr, and
because the server side is just another process connected by pipes,
we'll reliably see it. This would not be the case for git://, or for
ssh servers that do not relay stderr (e.g., GitHub's custom endpoint
does not).
Helped-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When running this test in Cygwin, it's necessary to remove the inherited
access control lists from the Git working directory in order for later
permissions tests to work as expected.
As such, fix an error in the test script so that the ACLs are set for
the working directory, not a nonexistent subdirectory.
Signed-off-by: Adam Dinwoodie <adam@dinwoodie.org>
Reviewed-by: Matheus Tavares <matheus.bernardino@usp.br>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
'git for-each-repo --config=X' should return success without calling any
subcommands when the config key 'X' has no value. The current
implementation instead segfaults.
A user could run into this issue if they used 'git maintenance start' to
initialize their cron schedule using 'git for-each-repo
--config=maintenance.repo ...' but then using 'git maintenance
unregister' to remove the config option. (Note: 'git maintenance stop'
would remove the config _and_ remove the cron schedule.)
Add a simple test to ensure this works. Use 'git help --no-such-option'
as the potential subcommand to ensure that we will hit a failure if the
subcommand is ever run.
Reported-by: Andreas Bühmann <dev@uuml.de>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Change the output of the likes of "git branch -l --sort=-objectsize"
to show the "(HEAD detached at <hash>)" message at the start of the
output. Before the compare_detached_head() function added in a
preceding commit we'd emit this output as an emergent effect.
It doesn't make any sense to consider the objectsize, type or other
non-attribute of the "(HEAD detached at <hash>)" message for the
purposes of sorting. Let's always emit it at the top instead. The only
reason it was sorted in the first place is because we're injecting it
into the ref-filter machinery so builtin/branch.c doesn't need to do
its own "am I detached?" detection.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Change the ref-filter sorting of detached HEAD to check the
FILTER_REFS_DETACHED_HEAD flag, instead of relying on the ref
description filled-in by get_head_description() to start with "(",
which in turn we expect to ASCII-sort before any other reference.
For context, we'd like the detached line to appear first at the start
of "git branch -l", e.g.:
$ git branch -l
* (HEAD detached at <hash>)
master
This doesn't change that, but improves on a fix made in
28438e84e0 (ref-filter: sort detached HEAD lines firstly, 2019-06-18)
and gives the Chinese translation the ability to use its preferred
punctuation marks again.
In Chinese the fullwidth versions of punctuation like "()" are
typically written as (U+FF08 fullwidth left parenthesis), (U+FF09
fullwidth right parenthesis) instead[1]. This form is used in both
po/zh_{CN,TW}.po in most cases where "()" is translated in a string.
Aside from that improvement to the Chinese translation, it also just
makes for cleaner code that we mark any special cases in the ref_array
we're sorting with flags and make the sort function aware of them,
instead of piggy-backing on the general-case of strcmp() doing the
right thing.
As seen in the amended tests this made reverse sorting a bit more
consistent. Before this we'd sometimes sort this message in the
middle, now it's consistently at the beginning or end, depending on
whether we're doing a normal or reverse sort. Having it at the end
doesn't make much sense either, but at least it behaves consistently
now. A follow-up commit will make this behavior under reverse sorting
even better.
I'm removing the "TRANSLATORS" comments that were in the old code
while I'm at it. Those were added in d4919bb288 (ref-filter: move
get_head_description() from branch.c, 2017-01-10). I think it's
obvious from context, string and translation memory in typical
translation tools that these are the same or similar string.
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_punctuation#Marks_similar_to_European_punctuation
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The previous commit taught the clone/fetch client side to reject a
git:// URL with a newline in it. Let's also catch these when fscking a
.gitmodules file, which will give an earlier warning.
Note that it would be simpler to just complain about newline in _any_
URL, but an earlier tightening for http/ftp made sure we kept allowing
newlines for unknown protocols (and this is covered in the tests). So
we'll stick to that precedent.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When we connect to a git:// server, we send an initial request that
looks something like:
002dgit-upload-pack repo.git\0host=example.com
If the repo path contains a newline, then it's included literally, and
we get:
002egit-upload-pack repo
.git\0host=example.com
This works fine if you really do have a newline in your repository name;
the server side uses the pktline framing to parse the string, not
newlines. However, there are many _other_ protocols in the wild that do
parse on newlines, such as HTTP. So a carefully constructed git:// URL
can actually turn into a valid HTTP request. For example:
git://localhost:1234/%0d%0a%0d%0aGET%20/%20HTTP/1.1 %0d%0aHost:localhost%0d%0a%0d%0a
becomes:
0050git-upload-pack /
GET / HTTP/1.1
Host:localhost
host=localhost:1234
on the wire. Again, this isn't a problem for a real Git server, but it
does mean that feeding a malicious URL to Git (e.g., through a
submodule) can cause it to make unexpected cross-protocol requests.
Since repository names with newlines are presumably quite rare (and
indeed, we already disallow them in git-over-http), let's just disallow
them over this protocol.
Hostnames could likewise inject a newline, but this is unlikely a
problem in practice; we'd try resolving the hostname with a newline in
it, which wouldn't work. Still, it doesn't hurt to err on the side of
caution there, since we would not expect them to work in the first
place.
The ssh and local code paths are unaffected by this patch. In both cases
we're trying to run upload-pack via a shell, and will quote the newline
so that it makes it intact. An attacker can point an ssh url at an
arbitrary port, of course, but unless there's an actual ssh server
there, we'd never get as far as sending our shell command anyway. We
_could_ similarly restrict newlines in those protocols out of caution,
but there seems little benefit to doing so.
The new test here is run alongside the git-daemon tests, which cover the
same protocol, but it shouldn't actually contact the daemon at all. In
theory we could make the test more robust by setting up an actual
repository with a newline in it (so that our clone would succeed if our
new check didn't kick in). But a repo directory with newline in it is
likely not portable across all filesystems. Likewise, we could check
git-daemon's log that it was not contacted at all, but we do not
currently record the log (and anyway, it would make the test racy with
the daemon's log write). We'll just check the client-side stderr to make
sure we hit the expected code path.
Reported-by: Harold Kim <h.kim@flatt.tech>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A 3-year old test that was not testing anything useful has been
corrected.
* fc/t6030-bisect-reset-removes-auxiliary-files:
test: bisect-porcelain: fix location of files
"git worktree repair" learned to deal with the case where both the
repository and the worktree moved.
* es/worktree-repair-both-moved:
worktree: teach `repair` to fix multi-directional breakage
When a user does not tell "git pull" to use rebase or merge, the
command gives a loud message telling a user to choose between
rebase or merge but creates a merge anyway, forcing users who would
want to rebase to redo the operation. Fix an early part of this
problem by tightening the condition to give the message---there is
no reason to stop or force the user to choose between rebase or
merge if the history fast-forwards.
* fc/pull-merge-rebase:
pull: display default warning only when non-ff
pull: correct condition to trigger non-ff advice
pull: get rid of unnecessary global variable
pull: give the advice for choosing rebase/merge much later
pull: refactor fast-forward check
Various improvements to the codepath that writes out pack bitmaps.
* tb/pack-bitmap: (24 commits)
pack-bitmap-write: better reuse bitmaps
pack-bitmap-write: relax unique revwalk condition
pack-bitmap-write: use existing bitmaps
pack-bitmap: factor out 'add_commit_to_bitmap()'
pack-bitmap: factor out 'bitmap_for_commit()'
pack-bitmap-write: ignore BITMAP_FLAG_REUSE
pack-bitmap-write: build fewer intermediate bitmaps
pack-bitmap.c: check reads more aggressively when loading
pack-bitmap-write: rename children to reverse_edges
t5310: add branch-based checks
commit: implement commit_list_contains()
bitmap: implement bitmap_is_subset()
pack-bitmap-write: fill bitmap with commit history
pack-bitmap-write: pass ownership of intermediate bitmaps
pack-bitmap-write: reimplement bitmap writing
ewah: add bitmap_dup() function
ewah: implement bitmap_or()
ewah: make bitmap growth less aggressive
ewah: factor out bitmap growth
rev-list: die when --test-bitmap detects a mismatch
...
The "--format=%(trailers)" mechanism gets enhanced to make it
easier to design output for machine consumption.
* ab/trailers-extra-format:
pretty format %(trailers): add a "key_value_separator"
pretty format %(trailers): add a "keyonly"
pretty-format %(trailers): fix broken standalone "valueonly"
pretty format %(trailers) doc: avoid repetition
pretty format %(trailers) test: split a long line
Commit 83bbf9b92e (mergetool--lib: improve support for vimdiff-style tool
variants, 2020-07-29) introduced a regression in the output of `git mergetool
--tool-help` and `git difftool --tool-help` [1].
In function 'show_tool_names' in git-mergetool--lib.sh, we loop over the
supported mergetools and their variants and accumulate them in the variable
'variants', separating them with a literal '\n'.
The code then uses 'echo $variants' to turn these '\n' into newlines, but this
behaviour is not portable, it just happens to work in some shells, like
dash(1)'s 'echo' builtin.
For shells in which 'echo' does not turn '\n' into newlines, the end
result is that the only tools that are shown are the existing variants
(except the last variant alphabetically), since the variants are
separated by actual newlines in '$variants' because of the several
'echo' calls in mergetools/{bc,vimdiff}::list_tool_variants.
Fix this bug by embedding an actual line feed into `variants` in
show_tool_names(). While at it, replace `sort | uniq` by `sort -u`.
To prevent future regressions, add a simple test that checks that a few
known tools are correctly shown (let's avoid counting the total number
of tools to lessen the maintenance burden when new tools are added or if
'--tool-help' learns additional logic, like hiding tools depending on
the current platform).
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/CADtb9DyozjgAsdFYL8fFBEWmq7iz4=prZYVUdH9W-J5CKVS4OA@mail.gmail.com/
Reported-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Based-on-patch-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The last test of t4129 creates a directory and expects its setgid bit
(g+s) to be off. But this makes the test fail when the parent directory
has the bit set, as setgid's state is inherited by newly created
subdirectories.
One way to solve this problem is to allow the presence of this bit when
comparing the return of `test_modebits` with the expected value. But
then we may have the same problem in the future when other tests start
using `test_modebits` on directories (currently t4129 is the only one)
and forget about setgid. Instead, let's make the helper function more
robust with respect to the state of the setgid bit in the test directory
by removing this bit from the returning value. There should be no
problem with existing callers as no one currently expects this bit to be
on.
Note that the sticky bit (+t) and the setuid bit (u+s) are not
inherited, so we don't have to worry about those.
Reported-by: Kevin Daudt <me@ikke.info>
Signed-off-by: Matheus Tavares <matheus.bernardino@usp.br>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Further stress the --sort callback in ref-filter.c. The implementation
uses certain short-circuiting logic, let's make sure it behaves the
same way on e.g. name & version sort. Improves a test added in
aedcb7dc75 (branch.c: use 'ref-filter' APIs, 2015-09-23).
I don't think all of this output makes sense, but let's test for the
behavior as-is, we can fix bugs in it in a later commit.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Now that mktag has been migrated to use the fsck machinery to check
its input, it makes sense to teach it to run in the equivalent of "git
fsck"'s default mode.
For cases where mktag is used to (re)create a tag object using data
from an existing and malformed tag object, the validation may
optionally have to be loosened. Teach the command to take the
"--[no-]strict" option to do so.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
p7519 measures the performance of the fsmonitor code. To do this, it
uses the installed copy of Watchman. If Watchman isn't installed, a noop
integration script is installed in its place.
When in the latter mode, it is expected that the script should not write
a "last update token": in fact, it doesn't write anything at all since
the script is blank.
Commit 33226af42b (t/perf/fsmonitor: improve error message if typoing
hook name, 2020-10-26) made sure that running 'git update-index
--fsmonitor' did not write anything to stderr, but this is not the case
when using the empty Watchman script, since Git will complain that:
$ which watchman
watchman not found
$ cat .git/hooks/fsmonitor-empty
$ git -c core.fsmonitor=.git/hooks/fsmonitor-empty update-index --fsmonitor
warning: Empty last update token.
Prior to 33226af42b, the output wasn't checked at all, which allowed
this noop mode to work. But, 33226af42b breaks p7519 when running it
without a 'watchman(1)' on your system.
Handle this by only checking that the stderr is empty only when running
with a real watchman executable. Otherwise, assert that the error
message is the expected one when running in the noop mode.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Acked-by: Nipunn Koorapati <nipunn@dropbox.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Convert the "mktag" command to use parse-options.h instead of its own
ad-hoc argc handling. This doesn't matter much in practice since it
doesn't support any options, but removes another special-case in our
codebase, and makes it easier to add options to it in the future.
It does marginally improve the situation for programs that want to
execute git commands in a consistent manner and e.g. always use
--end-of-options. E.g. "gitaly" does that, and has a blacklist of
built-ins that don't support --end-of-options. This is one less
special case for it and other similar programs to support.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Change mktag's acceptance rules to accept an empty body without an
empty line after the header again. This fixes an ancient unintended
dregression in "mktag".
When "mktag" was introduced in ec4465adb3 (Add "tag" objects that can
be used to sign other objects., 2005-04-25) the input checks were much
looser. When it was documented it 6cfec03680 (mktag: minimally update
the description., 2007-06-10) it was clearly intended for this \n to
be optional:
The message, when [it] exists, is separated by a blank line from
the header.
But then in e0aaf781f6 (mktag.c: improve verification of tagger field
and tests, 2008-03-27) this was made an error, seemingly by
accident. It was just a result of the general header checks, and all
the tests after that patch have a trailing empty line (but did not
before).
Let's allow this again, and tweak the test semantics changed in
e0aaf781f6 to remove the redundant empty line. New tests added in
previous commits of mine already added an explicit test for allowing
the empty line between header and body.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In earlier commits mktag learned to use the fsck machinery, at which
point we needed to add fsck.extraHeaderEntry so it could be as strict
about extra headers as it's been ever since it was implemented.
But it's not nice to need to switch away from "mktag" to "hash-object"
+ manual "fsck" just because you'd like to have an extra header. So
let's support turning it off by getting "fsck.*" variables from the
config.
Pedantically speaking it's still not possible to make "mktag" behave
just like "hash-object -t tag" does, since we're unconditionally going
to check the referenced object in verify_object_in_tag(), which is our
own check, and not one that exists in fsck.c.
But the spirit of "this works like fsck" is preserved, in that if you
created such a tag with "hash-object" and did a full "fsck" on the
repository it would also error out about that invalid object, it just
wouldn't emit the same message as fsck does.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Change the validation logic in "mktag" to use fsck's fsck_tag()
instead of its own custom parser. Curiously the logic for both dates
back to the same commit[1]. Let's unify them so we're not maintaining
two sets functions to verify that a tag is OK.
The behavior of fsck_tag() and the old "mktag" code being removed here
is different in few aspects.
I think it makes sense to remove some of those checks, namely:
A. fsck only cares that the timezone matches [-+][0-9]{4}. The mktag
code disallowed values larger than 1400.
Yes there's currently no timezone with a greater offset[2], but
since we allow any number of non-offical timezones (e.g. +1234)
passing this through seems fine. Git also won't break in the
future if e.g. French Polynesia decides it needs to outdo the Line
Islands when it comes to timezone extravagance.
B. fsck allows missing author names such as "tagger <email>", mktag
wouldn't, but would allow e.g. "tagger [2 spaces] <email>" (but
not "tagger [1 space] <email>"). Now we allow all of these.
C. Like B, but "mktag" disallowed spaces in the <email> part, fsck
allows it.
In some ways fsck_tag() is stricter than "mktag" was, namely:
D. fsck disallows zero-padded dates, but mktag didn't care. So
e.g. the timestamp "0000000000 +0000" produces an error now. A
test in "t1006-cat-file.sh" relied on this, it's been changed to
use "hash-object" (without fsck) instead.
There was one check I deemed worth keeping by porting it over to
fsck_tag():
E. "mktag" did not allow any custom headers, and by extension (as an
empty commit is allowed) also forbade an extra stray trailing
newline after the headers it knew about.
Add a new check in the "ignore" category to fsck and use it. This
somewhat abuses the facility added in efaba7cc77 (fsck:
optionally ignore specific fsck issues completely, 2015-06-22).
This is somewhat of hack, but probably the least invasive change
we can make here. The fsck command will shuffle these categories
around, e.g. under --strict the "info" becomes a "warn" and "warn"
becomes "error". Existing users of fsck's (and others,
e.g. index-pack) --strict option rely on this.
So we need to put something into a category that'll be ignored by
all existing users of the API. Pretending that
fsck.extraHeaderEntry=error ("ignore" by default) was set serves
to do this for us.
1. ec4465adb3 (Add "tag" objects that can be used to sign other
objects., 2005-04-25)
2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_UTC_time_offsets
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add tests to demonstrate what "mktag" does in the face of replaced
objects.
There was an existing test for replaced objects fed to "mktag" added
in cc400f5011 (mktag: call "check_sha1_signature" with the
replacement sha1, 2009-01-23), but that one only tests a
commit->commit mapping. Not a mapping to a different type as like
we're also testing for here. We could remove the "mktag" test in
t6050-replace.sh now if the created tag wasn't being used by a
subsequent "fsck" test.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The verify_object() function in "mktag.c" is tasked with ensuring that
our tag refers to a valid object.
The existing test for this might fail because it was also testing that
"type taggg" didn't refer to a valid object type (it should be "type
tag"), or because we referred to a valid object but got the type
wrong.
Let's split these tests up, so we're testing all combinations of a
non-existing object and in invalid/wrong "type" lines.
We need to provide GIT_TEST_GETTEXT_POISON=false here because the
"invalid object type" error is emitted by
parse_loose_header_extended(), which has that message already marked
for translation. Another option would be to use test_i18ngrep, but I
prefer always running the test, not skipping it under gettext poison
testing.
I'm not testing this in combination with "git replace". That'll be
done in a subsequent commit.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Change all the successful "mktag" tests to test that "hash-object"
produces the same hash for the input, and that fsck passes for
both.
This tests e.g. that "mktag" doesn't trim its input or otherwise munge
it in a way that "hash-object" doesn't.
Since we're doing an "fsck --strict" here at the end let's incorporate
the creation of the "mytag" name into this test, removing the
special-case at the end of the file.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add tests for a couple of whitespace edge cases around the header/body
boundary.
I consider the requirement for a blank line before the empty body a
bug, it's a long-standing regression which goes against the command's
documented behavior. This bug will be addressed in a follow-up change.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>