Since the beginning in 118250728e (credential: apply helper config,
2011-12-10), the declaration for that function used a different order
than the implementation.
All callers use the same order than the implementation, so update
the declaration in credential.h to match.
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Carlo Marcelo Arenas Belón <carenas@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
c44088ecc4 (credential: treat URL without scheme as invalid, 2020-04-18)
changes the implementation for this function to return -1 if protocol is
missing.
Update blurb to match implementation.
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Carlo Marcelo Arenas Belón <carenas@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Sometimes a bitmap traversal still has to walk some commits manually,
because those commits aren't included in the bitmap packfile (e.g., due
to a push or commit since the last full repack). If we're given an
object filter, we don't pass it down to this traversal. It's not
necessary for correctness because the bitmap code has its own filters to
post-process the bitmap result (which it must, to filter out the objects
that _are_ mentioned in the bitmapped packfile).
And with blob filters, there was no performance reason to pass along
those filters, either. The fill-in traversal could omit them from the
result, but it wouldn't save us any time to do so, since we'd still have
to walk each tree entry to see if it's a blob or not.
But now that we support tree filters, there's opportunity for savings. A
tree:depth=0 filter means we can avoid accessing trees entirely, since
we know we won't them (or any of the subtrees or blobs they point to).
The new test in p5310 shows this off (the "partial bitmap" state is one
where HEAD~100 and its ancestors are all in a bitmapped pack, but
HEAD~100..HEAD are not). Here are the results (run against linux.git):
Test HEAD^ HEAD
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[...]
5310.16: rev-list with tree filter (partial bitmap) 0.19(0.17+0.02) 0.03(0.02+0.01) -84.2%
The absolute number of savings isn't _huge_, but keep in mind that we
only omitted 100 first-parent links (in the version of linux.git here,
that's 894 actual commits). In a more pathological case, we might have a
much larger proportion of non-bitmapped commits. I didn't bother
creating such a case in the perf script because the setup is expensive,
and this is plenty to show the savings as a percentage.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In the previous patch, we made it easy to define other filters that
exclude all objects of a certain type. Use that in order to implement
bitmap-level filtering for the '--filter=tree:<n>' filter when 'n' is
equal to 0.
The general case is not helped by bitmaps, since for values of 'n > 0',
the object filtering machinery requires a full-blown tree traversal in
order to determine the depth of a given tree. Caching this is
non-obvious, too, since the same tree object can have a different depth
depending on the context (e.g., a tree was moved up in the directory
hierarchy between two commits).
But, the 'n = 0' case can be helped, and this patch does so. Running
p5310.11 in this tree and on master with the kernel, we can see that
this case is helped substantially:
Test master this tree
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5310.11: rev-list count with tree:0 10.68(10.39+0.27) 0.06(0.04+0.01) -99.4%
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 4f3bd5606a (pack-bitmap: implement BLOB_NONE filtering, 2020-02-14),
filtering support for bitmaps was added for the 'LOFC_BLOB_NONE' filter.
In the future, we would like to add support for filters that behave as
if they exclude a certain type of object, for e.g., the tree depth
filter with depth 0.
To prepare for this, make some of the functions used for filtering more
generic, such as 'find_tip_blobs' and 'filter_bitmap_blob_none' so that
they can work over arbitrary object types.
To that end, create 'find_tip_objects' and
'filter_bitmap_exclude_type', and redefine the aforementioned functions
in terms of those.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In most callers, we have an actual list_objects_filter_options struct,
and if no filtering is desired its "choice" element will be
LOFC_DISABLED. However, some code may have only a pointer to such a
struct which may be NULL (because _their_ callers didn't care about
filtering, either). Rather than forcing them to handle this explicitly
like:
if (filter_options)
traverse_commit_list_filtered(filter_options, revs,
show_commit, show_object,
show_data, NULL);
else
traverse_commit_list(revs, show_commit, show_object,
show_data);
let's just treat a NULL filter_options the same as LOFC_DISABLED. We
only need a small change, since that option struct is converted into a
real filter only in the "init" function.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A fuzzer running on the entry point provided by fuzz-commit-graph.c
revealed a memory leak when parse_commit_graph() creates a struct
bloom_filter_settings and then returns early due to error. Fix that
error by always freeing that struct first (if it exists) before
returning early due to error.
While making that change, I also noticed another possible memory leak -
when the BLOOMDATA chunk is provided but not BLOOMINDEXES. Also fix that
error.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 9e468334b4 (ref-filter: fallback on alphabetical comparison,
2015-10-30) taught ref-filter's sort to fallback to comparing refnames.
But it did it at the wrong level, overriding the comparison result for a
single "--sort" key from the user, rather than after all sort keys have
been exhausted.
This worked correctly for a single "--sort" option, but not for multiple
ones. We'd break any ties in the first key with the refname and never
evaluate the second key at all.
To make matters even more interesting, we only applied this fallback
sometimes! For a field like "taggeremail" which requires a string
comparison, we'd truly return the result of strcmp(), even if it was 0.
But for numerical "value" fields like "taggerdate", we did apply the
fallback. And that's why our multiple-sort test missed this: it uses
taggeremail as the main comparison.
So let's start by adding a much more rigorous test. We'll have a set of
commits expressing every combination of two tagger emails, dates, and
refnames. Then we can confirm that our sort is applied with the correct
precedence, and we'll be hitting both the string and value comparators.
That does show the bug, and the fix is simple: moving the fallback to
the outer compare_refs() function, after all ref_sorting keys have been
exhausted.
Note that in the outer function we don't have an "ignore_case" flag, as
it's part of each individual ref_sorting element. It's debatable what
such a fallback should do, since we didn't use the user's keys to match.
But until now we have been trying to respect that flag, so the
least-invasive thing is to try to continue to do so. Since all callers
in the current code either set the flag for all keys or for none, we can
just pull the flag from the first key. In a hypothetical world where the
user really can flip the case-insensitivity of keys separately, we may
want to extend the code to distinguish that case from a blanket
"--ignore-case".
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
All of the ref-filter users (for-each-ref, branch, and tag) take an
--ignore-case option which makes filtering and sorting case-insensitive.
However, this option was applied only to the first element of the
ref_sorting list. So:
git for-each-ref --ignore-case --sort=refname
would do what you expect, but:
git for-each-ref --ignore-case --sort=refname --sort=taggername
would sort the primary key (taggername) case-insensitively, but sort the
refname case-sensitively. We have two options here:
- teach callers to set ignore_case on the whole list
- replace the ref_sorting list with a struct that contains both the
list of sorting keys, as well as options that apply to _all_
keys
I went with the first one here, as it gives more flexibility if we later
want to let the users set the flag per-key (presumably through some
special syntax when defining the key; for now it's all or nothing
through --ignore-case).
The new test covers this by sorting on both tagger and subject
case-insensitively, which should compare "a" and "A" identically, but
still sort them before "b" and "B". We'll break ties by sorting on the
refname to give ourselves a stable output (this is actually supposed to
be done automatically, but there's another bug which will be fixed in
the next commit).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Remove the error condition when updating the sparse-checkout leaves
an empty working directory.
This behavior was added in 9e1afb167 (sparse checkout: inhibit empty
worktree, 2009-08-20). The comment was added in a7bc906f2 (Add
explanation why we do not allow to sparse checkout to empty working
tree, 2011-09-22) in response to a "dubious" comment in 84563a624
(unpack-trees.c: cosmetic fix, 2010-12-22).
With the recent "cone mode" and "git sparse-checkout init [--cone]"
command, it is common to set a reasonable sparse-checkout pattern
set of
/*
!/*/
which matches only files at root. If the repository has no such files,
then their "git sparse-checkout init" command will fail.
Now that we expect this to be a common pattern, we should not have the
commands fail on an empty working directory. If it is a confusing
result, then the user can recover with "git sparse-checkout disable"
or "git sparse-checkout set". This is especially simple when using cone
mode.
Reported-by: Lars Schneider <larsxschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The advice to use "$x" rather than "x" in arithmetric expansion was
working around a dash bug fixed in 0.5.4. Even Debian oldstable has
0.5.8 these days. And in the meantime, we've added almost two dozen
instances of the "x" form which you can find with:
git grep '$(([a-z]'
and nobody seems to have complained. Let's declare this workaround
obsolete and simplify our style guide.
Helped-by: Danh Doan <congdanhqx@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Carlo Marcelo Arenas Belón <carenas@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
With the added checks for invalid URLs in credentials, any locally
modified store files which might have empty lines or even comments
were reported[1] failing to parse as valid credentials.
Instead of doing a hard check for credentials, do a soft one and
therefore avoid the reported fatal error.
While at it add tests for all known corruptions that are currently
ignored to keep track of them and avoid the risk of regressions.
[1] https://stackoverflow.com/a/61420852/5005936
Reported-by: Dirk <dirk@ed4u.de>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Based-on-patch-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Carlo Marcelo Arenas Belón <carenas@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It's typical to find Markdown documentation alongside source code, and
having better context for documentation changes is useful; see also
commit 69f9c87d4 (userdiff: add support for Fountain documents,
2015-07-21).
The pattern is based on the CommonMark specification 0.29, section 4.2
<https://spec.commonmark.org/> but doesn't match empty headings, as
seeing them in a hunk header is unlikely to be useful.
Only ATX headings are supported, as detecting setext headings would
require printing the line before a pattern matches, or matching a
multiline pattern. The word-diff pattern is the same as the pattern for
HTML, because many Markdown parsers accept inline HTML.
Signed-off-by: Ash Holland <ash@sorrel.sh>
Acked-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The upload-pack protocol v2 gave up too early before finding a
common ancestor, resulting in a wasteful fetch from a fork of a
project. This has been corrected to match the behaviour of v0
protocol.
* jt/v2-fetch-nego-fix:
fetch-pack: in protocol v2, reset in_vain upon ACK
fetch-pack: in protocol v2, in_vain only after ACK
fetch-pack: return enum from process_acks()
Error and verbose trace messages from "git push" did not redact
credential material embedded in URLs.
* js/anonymise-push-url-in-errors:
push: anonymize URLs in error messages and warnings
The "bugreport" tool.
* es/bugreport:
bugreport: drop extraneous includes
bugreport: add compiler info
bugreport: add uname info
bugreport: gather git version and build info
bugreport: add tool to generate debugging info
help: move list_config_help to builtin/help
Incompatible options "--root" and "--fork-point" of "git rebase"
have been marked and documented as being incompatible.
* en/rebase-root-and-fork-point-are-incompatible:
rebase: display an error if --root and --fork-point are both provided
Recent update to Homebrew used by macOS folks breaks build by
moving gettext library and necessary headers.
* ds/build-homebrew-gettext-fix:
macOS/brew: let the build find gettext headers/libraries/msgfmt
Compilation fix.
* dd/sparse-fixes:
progress.c: silence cgcc suggestion about internal linkage
graph.c: limit linkage of internal variable
compat/regex: move stdlib.h up in inclusion chain
test-parse-pathspec-file.c: s/0/NULL/ for pointer type
The multi-pack-index left mmapped file descriptors open when it
does not have to.
* ds/multi-pack-index:
multi-pack-index: close file descriptor after mmap
"git blame" learns to take advantage of the "changed-paths" Bloom
filter stored in the commit-graph file.
* ds/blame-on-bloom:
test-bloom: check that we have expected arguments
test-bloom: fix some whitespace issues
blame: drop unused parameter from maybe_changed_path
blame: use changed-path Bloom filters
tests: write commit-graph with Bloom filters
revision: complicated pathspecs disable filters
Introduce an extension to the commit-graph to make it efficient to
check for the paths that were modified at each commit using Bloom
filters.
* gs/commit-graph-path-filter:
bloom: ignore renames when computing changed paths
commit-graph: add GIT_TEST_COMMIT_GRAPH_CHANGED_PATHS test flag
t4216: add end to end tests for git log with Bloom filters
revision.c: add trace2 stats around Bloom filter usage
revision.c: use Bloom filters to speed up path based revision walks
commit-graph: add --changed-paths option to write subcommand
commit-graph: reuse existing Bloom filters during write
commit-graph: write Bloom filters to commit graph file
commit-graph: examine commits by generation number
commit-graph: examine changed-path objects in pack order
commit-graph: compute Bloom filters for changed paths
diff: halt tree-diff early after max_changes
bloom.c: core Bloom filter implementation for changed paths.
bloom.c: introduce core Bloom filter constructs
bloom.c: add the murmur3 hash implementation
commit-graph: define and use MAX_NUM_CHUNKS
The commit-graph code exhausted file descriptors easily when it
does not have to.
* tb/commit-graph-fd-exhaustion-fix:
commit-graph: close descriptors after mmap
commit-graph.c: gracefully handle file descriptor exhaustion
t/test-lib.sh: make ULIMIT_FILE_DESCRIPTORS available to tests
commit-graph.c: don't use discarded graph_name in error
Fix in-core inconsistency after fetching into a shallow repository
that broke the code to write out commit-graph.
* tb/reset-shallow:
shallow.c: use '{commit,rollback}_shallow_file'
t5537: use test_write_lines and indented heredocs for readability
Tighten "git mailinfo" to notice and error out when decoded result
contains NUL in it.
* dd/mailinfo-with-nul:
mailinfo: disallow NUL character in mail's header
mailinfo.c: avoid strlen on strings that can contains NUL
t4254: merge 2 steps of a single test
Test clean-up.
* dl/test-must-fail-fixes-4:
t9819: don't use test_must_fail with p4
t9164: use test_must_fail only on git commands
t9160: use test_path_is_missing()
t9141: use test_path_is_missing()
t7508: don't use `test_must_fail test_cmp`
t7408: replace incorrect uses of test_must_fail
t6030: use test_path_is_missing()
The build procedure did not use the libcurl library and its include
files correctly for a custom-built installation.
* jk/build-with-right-curl:
Makefile: avoid running curl-config unnecessarily
Makefile: use curl-config --cflags
Makefile: avoid running curl-config multiple times
Fix alignment issues that were likely introduced due to an editor
using tab lengths of 4 instead of 8.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There's an example of using your own bit of shell to act as a credential
helper, but it's not very realistic:
- It's stupid to hand out your secret password to _every_ host. In the
real world you'd use the config-matcher to limit it to a particular
host.
- We never provided a username. We can easily do that in another config
option (you can do it in the helper, too, but this is much more
readable).
- We were sending the secret even for store/erase operations. This
is OK because Git would just ignore it, but a real system would
probably be unlocking a password store, which you wouldn't want to do
more than necessary.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We give several helper config examples, but don't make clear that these
are raw values. It's up to the user to add the appropriate quoting to
put them into a config file (either by running with "git config" and
quoting against the shell, or by adding double-quotes as appropriate
within the git-config file).
Let's flesh them out as full config blocks, which makes the syntax more
clear (and makes it possible for people to just cut-and-paste them as a
starting point). I added double-quotes to any values larger than a
single word. That isn't strictly necessary in all cases, but it
sidesteps explaining the rules about exactly when you need to quote a
value.
The existing quotes can be converted to single-quotes in one instance,
and backslash-esccaped in the other. I also swapped out backticks for
our preferred $().
Reported-by: douglas.fuller@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In previous patches, the functions 'commit_shallow_file' and
'rollback_shallow_file' were introduced to reset the shallowness
validity checks on a repository after potentially modifying
'.git/shallow'.
These functions can be made safer by wrapping the 'struct lockfile *' in
a new type, 'shallow_lock', so that they cannot be called with a raw
lock (and potentially misused by other code that happens to possess a
lockfile, but has nothing to do with shallowness).
This patch introduces that type as a thin wrapper around 'struct
lockfile', and updates the two aforementioned functions and their
callers to use it.
Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When 'commit_shallow_file()' and 'rollback_shallow_file()' were
introduced, they did not have a documenting comment, when they could
have benefited from one.
Add a brief note about what these functions do, and make a special note
that they reset stat-validity checks.
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There are many functions in commit.h that are more related to shallow
repositories than they are to any sort of generic commit machinery.
Likely this began when there were only a few shallow-related functions,
and commit.h seemed a reasonable enough place to put them.
But, now there are a good number of shallow-related functions, and
placing them all in 'commit.h' doesn't make sense.
This patch extracts a 'shallow.h', which takes all of the declarations
from 'commit.h' for functions which already exist in 'shallow.c'. We
will bring the remaining shallow-related functions defined in 'commit.c'
in a subsequent patch.
For now, move only the ones that already are implemented in 'shallow.c',
and update the necessary includes.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In the next patch, some functions will be moved from 'commit.c' to have
prototypes in a new 'shallow.h' and their implementations in
'shallow.c'.
Three functions in 'commit.c' use 'commit_graft_pos()' (they are
'register_commit_graft()', 'lookup_commit_graft()', and
'unregister_shallow()'). The first two of these will stay in 'commit.c',
but the latter will move to 'shallow.c', and thus needs
'commit_graft_pos' to be non-static.
Prepare for that by making 'commit_graft_pos' non-static so that it can
be called from both 'commit.c' and 'shallow.c'.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In d787d311db (checkout: split part of it to new command 'switch',
2019-03-29), the `git switch` command was created by extracting the
common functionality of cmd_checkout() in checkout_main(). However, in
b7b5fce270 (switch: better names for -b and -B, 2019-03-29), the branch
creation and force creation options for 'switch' were changed to -c and
-C, respectively. As a result of this, error messages and comments that
previously referred to `-b` and `-B` became invalid for `git switch`.
For error messages that refer to `-b` and `-B`, use a format string
instead so that `-c` and `-C` can be printed when `git switch` is
invoked.
Reported-by: Robert Simpson
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git update-ref --stdin" learned a handful of new verbs to let the
user control ref update transactions more explicitly, which helps
as an ingredient to implement two-phase commit-style atomic
ref-updates across multiple repositories.
* ps/transactional-update-ref-stdin:
update-ref: implement interactive transaction handling
update-ref: read commands in a line-wise fashion
update-ref: move transaction handling into `update_refs_stdin()`
update-ref: pass end pointer instead of strbuf
update-ref: drop unused argument for `parse_refname`
update-ref: organize commands in an array
strbuf: provide function to append whole lines
git-update-ref.txt: add missing word
refs: fix segfault when aborting empty transaction
The directory traversal code had redundant recursive calls which
made its performance characteristics exponential with respect to
the depth of the tree, which was corrected.
* en/fill-directory-exponential:
completion: fix 'git add' on paths under an untracked directory
Fix error-prone fill_directory() API; make it only return matches
dir: replace double pathspec matching with single in treat_directory()
dir: include DIR_KEEP_UNTRACKED_CONTENTS handling in treat_directory()
dir: replace exponential algorithm with a linear one
dir: refactor treat_directory to clarify control flow
dir: fix confusion based on variable tense
dir: fix broken comment
dir: consolidate treat_path() and treat_one_path()
dir: fix simple typo in comment
t3000: add more testcases testing a variety of ls-files issues
t7063: more thorough status checking
"sparse-checkout" UI improvements.
* en/sparse-checkout:
sparse-checkout: provide a new reapply subcommand
unpack-trees: failure to set SKIP_WORKTREE bits always just a warning
unpack-trees: provide warnings on sparse updates for unmerged paths too
unpack-trees: make sparse path messages sound like warnings
unpack-trees: split display_error_msgs() into two
unpack-trees: rename ERROR_* fields meant for warnings to WARNING_*
unpack-trees: move ERROR_WOULD_LOSE_SUBMODULE earlier
sparse-checkout: use improved unpack_trees porcelain messages
sparse-checkout: use new update_sparsity() function
unpack-trees: add a new update_sparsity() function
unpack-trees: pull sparse-checkout pattern reading into a new function
unpack-trees: do not mark a dirty path with SKIP_WORKTREE
unpack-trees: allow check_updates() to work on a different index
t1091: make some tests a little more defensive against failures
unpack-trees: simplify pattern_list freeing
unpack-trees: simplify verify_absent_sparse()
unpack-trees: remove unused error type
unpack-trees: fix minor typo in comment
Update the CI configuration to use GitHub Actions, retiring the one
based on Azure Pipelines.
* dd/ci-swap-azure-pipelines-with-github-actions:
ci: let GitHub Actions upload failed tests' directories
ci: add a problem matcher for GitHub Actions
tests: when run in Bash, annotate test failures with file name/line number
ci: retire the Azure Pipelines definition
README: add a build badge for the GitHub Actions runs
ci: configure GitHub Actions for CI/PR
ci: run gem with sudo to install asciidoctor
ci: explicit install all required packages
ci: fix the `jobname` of the `GETTEXT_POISON` job
ci/lib: set TERM environment variable if not exist
ci/lib: allow running in GitHub Actions
ci/lib: if CI type is unknown, show the environment variables
A new CI job to build and run test suite on linux with musl libc
has been added.
* dd/ci-musl-libc:
travis: build and test on Linux with musl libc and busybox
ci/linux32: libify install-dependencies step
ci: refactor docker runner script
ci/linux32: parameterise command to switch arch
ci/lib-docker: preserve required environment variables
ci: make MAKEFLAGS available inside the Docker container in the Linux32 job
The stash entry created by "git rebase --autosquash" to keep the
initial dirty state were discarded by mistake upon "git rebase
--quit", which has been corrected.
* dl/merge-autostash-rebase-quit-fix:
rebase: save autostash entry into stash reflog on --quit