When we define a macro to point a system function (e.g., flockfile) to
our custom wrapper, we should make sure that the system did not already
define it as a macro. This is rarely a problem, but can cause
compilation failures if both of these are true:
- we decide to define our own wrapper even though the system provides
the function; we know this happens at least with uclibc, which may
declare flockfile, etc, without _POSIX_THREAD_SAFE_FUNCTIONS
- the system version is declared as a macro; we know this happens at
least with uclibc's version of getc_unlocked()
So just handling getc_unlocked() would be sufficient to deal with the
real-world case we've seen. But since it's easy to do, we may as well be
defensive about the other macro wrappers added in the previous patch.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Our git-compat-util header defines a few noop wrappers for system
functions if they are not available. This was originally done with a
macro, but in 15b52a44e0 (compat-util: type-check parameters of no-op
replacement functions, 2020-08-06) we switched to inline functions,
because it gives us basic type-checking.
This can cause compilation failures when the system _does_ declare those
functions but we choose not to use them, since the compiler will
complain about the redeclaration. This was seen in the real world when
compiling against certain builds of uclibc, which may leave
_POSIX_THREAD_SAFE_FUNCTIONS unset, but still declare flockfile() and
funlockfile().
It can also be seen on any platform that has setitimer() if you choose
to compile without it (which plausibly could happen if the system
implementation is buggy). E.g., on Linux:
$ make NO_SETITIMER=IWouldPreferNotTo git.o
CC git.o
In file included from builtin.h:4,
from git.c:1:
git-compat-util.h:344:19: error: conflicting types for ‘setitimer’; have ‘int(int, const struct itimerval *, struct itimerval *)’
344 | static inline int setitimer(int which UNUSED,
| ^~~~~~~~~
In file included from git-compat-util.h:234:
/usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/sys/time.h:155:12: note: previous declaration of ‘setitimer’ with type ‘int(__itimer_which_t, const struct itimerval * restrict, struct itimerval * restrict)’
155 | extern int setitimer (__itimer_which_t __which,
| ^~~~~~~~~
make: *** [Makefile:2714: git.o] Error 1
Here I think the compiler is complaining about the lack of "restrict"
annotations in our version, but even if we matched it completely (and
there is no way to match all platforms anyway), it would still complain
about a static declaration following a non-static one. Using macros
doesn't have this problem, because the C preprocessor rewrites the name
in our code before we hit this level of compilation.
One way to fix this would just be to revert most of 15b52a44e0. What we
really cared about there was catching build problems with
precompose_argv(), which most platforms _don't_ build, and which is our
custom function. So we could just switch the system wrappers back to
macros; most people build the real versions anyway, and they don't
change. So the extra type-checking isn't likely to catch bugs.
But with a little work, we can have our cake and eat it, too. If we
define the type-checking wrappers with a unique name, and then redirect
the system names to them with macros, we still get our type checking,
but without redeclaring the system function names.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Adjust the GitHub CI to newer ubuntu release.
* jx/ci-ubuntu-fix:
ci: install python on ubuntu
ci: use the same version of p4 on both Linux and macOS
ci: remove the pipe after "p4 -V" to catch errors
github-actions: run gcc-8 on ubuntu-20.04 image
The format of a line in /proc/cpuinfo that describes a CPU on s390x
looked different from everybody else, and the code in chainlint.pl
failed to parse it.
* ah/chainlint-cpuinfo-parse-fix:
chainlint.pl: fix /proc/cpuinfo regexp
Resolve symbolic links when processing the locations of alternate
object stores, since failing to do so can lead to confusing and buggy
behavior.
* gc/resolve-alternate-symlinks:
object-file: use real paths when adding alternates
A handful of leaks in the line-log machinery have been plugged.
* sg/plug-line-log-leaks:
diff.c: use diff_free_queue()
line-log: free the diff queues' arrays when processing merge commits
line-log: free diff queue when processing non-merge commits
Add one more candidate directory that may house httpd modules while
running tests.
* es/locate-httpd-module-location-in-test:
lib-httpd: extend module location auto-detection
"git prune" may try to iterate over .git/objects/pack for trash
files to remove in it, and loudly fail when the directory is
missing, which is not necessary. The command has been taught to
ignore such a failure.
* ew/prune-with-missing-objects-pack:
prune: quiet ENOENT on missing directories
Assorted fixes of parsing end-user input as integers.
* pw/config-int-parse-fixes:
git_parse_signed(): avoid integer overflow
config: require at least one digit when parsing numbers
git_parse_unsigned: reject negative values
`parse_object()` hardening when checking for the existence of a
suspected blob object.
* jk/parse-object-type-mismatch:
parse_object(): simplify blob conditional
parse_object(): check on-disk type of suspected blob
parse_object(): drop extra "has" check before checking object type
A GNU make pattern rule with multiple targets has always meant that
a single invocation of the recipe will build all the targets.
However in older versions of GNU make a recipe that did not really
build all the targets would be tolerated.
Starting with GNU make 4.4 this behavior is deprecated and pattern
rules are expected to generate files to match all the patterns.
If not all targets are created then GNU make will not consider any
target up to date and will re-run the recipe when it is run again.
Modify Documentation/Makefile to split the man page-creating pattern
rule into a separate pattern rule for each pattern.
Reported-by: Alexander Kanavin <alex.kanavin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Smith <psmith@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Python is missing from the default ubuntu-22.04 runner image, which
prevents git-p4 from working. To install python on ubuntu, we need
to provide the correct package names:
* On Ubuntu 18.04 (bionic), "/usr/bin/python2" is provided by the
"python" package, and "/usr/bin/python3" is provided by the "python3"
package.
* On Ubuntu 20.04 (focal) and above, "/usr/bin/python2" is provided by
the "python2" package which has a different name from bionic, and
"/usr/bin/python3" is provided by "python3".
Since the "ubuntu-latest" runner image has a higher version, its
safe to use "python2" or "python3" package name.
Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There would be a segmentation fault when running p4 v16.2 on ubuntu
22.04 which is the latest version of ubuntu runner image for github
actions.
By checking each version from [1], p4d version 21.1 and above can work
properly on ubuntu 22.04. But version 22.x will break some p4 test
cases. So p4 version 21.x is exactly the version we can use.
With this update, the versions of p4 for Linux and macOS happen to be
the same. So we can add the version number directly into the "P4WHENCE"
variable, and reuse it in p4 installation for macOS.
By removing the "LINUX_P4_VERSION" variable from "ci/lib.sh", the
comment left above has nothing to do with p4, but still applies to
git-lfs. Since we have a fixed version of git-lfs installed on Linux,
we may have a different version on macOS.
[1]: https://cdist2.perforce.com/perforce/
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When installing p4 as a dependency, we used to pipe output of "p4 -V"
and "p4d -V" to validate the installation and output a condensed version
information. But this would hide potential errors of p4 and would stop
with an empty output. E.g.: p4d version 16.2 running on ubuntu 22.04
causes sigfaults, even before it produces any output.
By removing the pipe after "p4 -V" and "p4d -V", we may get a
verbose output, and stop immediately on errors because we have "set
-e" in "ci/lib.sh". Since we won't look at these trace logs unless
something fails, just including the raw output seems most sensible.
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
GitHub starts to upgrade its runner image "ubuntu-latest" from version
"ubuntu-20.04" to version "ubuntu-22.04". It will fail to find and
install "gcc-8" package on the new runner image.
Change some of the runner images from "ubuntu-latest" to "ubuntu-20.04"
in order to install "gcc-8" as a dependency.
The first revision of this patch tried to replace "$runs_on_pool" in
"ci/*.sh" with a new "$runs_on_os" environment variable based on the
"os" field in the matrix strategy. But these "os" fields in matrix
strategies are obsolete legacies from commit [1] and commit [2], and
are no longer useful. So remove these unused "os" fields.
[1]: c08bb26010 (CI: rename the "Linux32" job to lower-case "linux32",
2021-11-23)
[2]: 25715419bf (CI: don't run "make test" twice in one job, 2021-11-23)
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When adding an alternate ODB, we check if the alternate has the same
path as the object dir, and if so, we do nothing. However, that
comparison does not resolve symlinks. This makes it possible to add the
object dir as an alternate, which may result in bad behavior. For
example, it can trick "git repack -a -l -d" (possibly run by "git gc")
into thinking that all packs come from an alternate and delete all
objects.
rm -rf test &&
git clone https://github.com/git/git test &&
(
cd test &&
ln -s objects .git/alt-objects &&
# -c repack.updateserverinfo=false silences a warning about not
# being able to update "info/refs", it isn't needed to show the
# bad behavior
GIT_ALTERNATE_OBJECT_DIRECTORIES=".git/alt-objects" git \
-c repack.updateserverinfo=false repack -a -l -d &&
# It's broken!
git status
# Because there are no more objects!
ls .git/objects/pack
)
Fix this by resolving symlinks and relative paths before comparing the
alternate and object dir. This lets us clean up a number of issues noted
in 37a95862c6 (alternates: re-allow relative paths from environment,
2016-11-07):
- Now that we compare the real paths, duplicate detection is no longer
foiled by relative paths.
- Using strbuf_realpath() allows us to "normalize" paths that
strbuf_normalize_path() can't, so we can stop silently ignoring errors
when "normalizing" paths from the environment.
- We now store an absolute path based on getcwd() (the "future
direction" named in 37a95862c6), so chdir()-ing in the process no
longer changes the directory pointed to by the alternate. This is a
change in behavior, but a desirable one.
Signed-off-by: Glen Choo <chooglen@google.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since 81071626ba (trace2: add global counter mechanism, 2022-10-24)
these tests have been failing when git is compiled with NO_PTHREADS=Y,
which is always the case e.g. if 'uname -s' is "NONSTOP_KERNEL".
Reported-by: Randall S. Becker <randall.becker@nexbridge.ca>
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git receive-pack" used to use all the local refs as the boundary for
checking connectivity of the data "git push" sent, but now it uses
only the refs that it advertised to the pusher. In a repository with
the .hideRefs configuration, this reduces the resources needed to
perform the check.
cf. <221028.86bkpw805n.gmgdl@evledraar.gmail.com>
cf. <xmqqr0yrizqm.fsf@gitster.g>
* ps/receive-use-only-advertised:
receive-pack: only use visible refs for connectivity check
rev-parse: add `--exclude-hidden=` option
revision: add new parameter to exclude hidden refs
revision: introduce struct to handle exclusions
revision: move together exclusion-related functions
refs: get rid of global list of hidden refs
refs: fix memory leak when parsing hideRefs config
Fix an issue where core.fsmonitor on macOS would not notice created
or modified symbolic links.
* sz/macos-fsmonitor-symlinks:
fsmonitor--daemon: on macOS support symlink
A pair of bugfixes to the Documentation/howto/maintain-git.txt guide.
* tb/howto-maintain-git-fixes:
Documentation: build redo-seen.sh from jch..seen
Documentation: build redo-jch.sh from master..jch
Teach chainlint.pl to show corresponding line numbers when printing
the source of a test.
* es/chainlint-lineno:
chainlint: prefix annotated test definition with line numbers
chainlint: latch line numbers at which each token starts and ends
chainlint: sidestep impoverished macOS "terminfo"
Fix a source of flakiness in CI when compiling with SANITIZE=leak.
* ab/t7610-timeout:
t7610: use "file:///dev/null", not "/dev/null", fixes MinGW
t7610: fix flaky timeout issue, don't clone from example.com
'git maintenance register' is taught to write configuration to an
arbitrary path, and 'git for-each-repo' is taught to expand tilde
characters in paths.
* rp/maintenance-qol:
builtin/gc.c: fix use-after-free in maintenance_unregister()
maintenance --unregister: fix uninit'd data use & -Wdeclaration-after-statement
maintenance: add option to register in a specific config
for-each-repo: interpolate repo path arguments
Correct an error where `git rebase` would mistakenly use a branch or
tag named "refs/rewritten/xyz" when missing a rebase label.
* pw/strict-label-lookups:
sequencer: tighten label lookups
sequencer: unify label lookup
Redact headers from cURL's h2h3 module in GIT_CURL_VERBOSE and
others.
* gc/redact-h2h3-headers:
http: redact curl h2h3 headers in info
t: run t5551 tests with both HTTP and HTTP/2
"make coccicheck" is time consuming. It has been made to run more
incrementally.
* ab/coccicheck-incremental:
Makefile: don't create a ".build/.build/" for cocci, fix output
spatchcache: add a ccache-alike for "spatch"
cocci: run against a generated ALL.cocci
cocci rules: remove <id>'s from rules that don't need them
Makefile: copy contrib/coccinelle/*.cocci to build/
cocci: optimistically use COMPUTE_HEADER_DEPENDENCIES
cocci: make "coccicheck" rule incremental
cocci: split off "--all-includes" from SPATCH_FLAGS
cocci: split off include-less "tests" from SPATCH_FLAGS
Makefile: split off SPATCH_BATCH_SIZE comment from "cocci" heading
Makefile: have "coccicheck" re-run if flags change
Makefile: add ability to TAB-complete cocci *.patch rules
cocci rules: remove unused "F" metavariable from pending rule
Makefile + shared.mak: rename and indent $(QUIET_SPATCH_T)
Teach chainlint.pl to annotate the original test definition instead
of the token stream.
* es/chainlint-output:
chainlint: annotate original test definition rather than token stream
chainlint: latch start/end position of each token
chainlint: tighten accuracy when consuming input stream
chainlint: add explanatory comments
'scalar reconfigure -a' is taught to automatically remove
scalar.repo entires which no longer exist.
* js/remove-stale-scalar-repos:
tests(scalar): tighten the stale `scalar.repo` test some
scalar reconfigure -a: remove stale `scalar.repo` entries
Fix a regression in the bisect-helper which mistakenly treats
arguments to the command given to 'git bisect run' as arguments to
the helper.
* dd/bisect-helper-subcommand:
bisect--helper: parse subcommand with OPT_SUBCOMMAND
bisect--helper: move all subcommands into their own functions
bisect--helper: remove unused options