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
Preparation to remove git-submodule.sh and replace it with a builtin.
* ab/submodule-helper-prep-only:
submodule--helper: use OPT_SUBCOMMAND() API
submodule--helper: drop "update --prefix <pfx>" for "-C <pfx> update"
submodule--helper: remove --prefix from "absorbgitdirs"
submodule API & "absorbgitdirs": remove "----recursive" option
submodule.c: refactor recursive block out of absorb function
submodule tests: test for a "foreach" blind-spot
submodule--helper: fix a memory leak in "status"
submodule tests: add tests for top-level flag output
submodule--helper: move "config" to a test-tool
Avoid calling 'cache_tree_update()' when doing so would be redundant.
* vd/skip-cache-tree-update:
rebase: use 'skip_cache_tree_update' option
read-tree: use 'skip_cache_tree_update' option
reset: use 'skip_cache_tree_update' option
unpack-trees: add 'skip_cache_tree_update' option
cache-tree: add perf test comparing update and prime
Update the credential-cache documentation to provide a more realistic
example.
* mh/increase-credential-cache-timeout:
Documentation: increase example cache timeout to 1 hour
`git rebase --update-refs` would delete references when all `update-ref`
commands in the sequencer were removed, which has been corrected.
* vd/update-refs-delete:
rebase --update-refs: avoid unintended ref deletion
"git repack" learns to send cruft objects out of the way into
packfiles outside the repository.
* tb/repack-expire-to:
builtin/repack.c: implement `--expire-to` for storing pruned objects
builtin/repack.c: write cruft packs to arbitrary locations
builtin/repack.c: pass "cruft_expiration" to `write_cruft_pack`
builtin/repack.c: pass "out" to `prepare_pack_objects`
Makefile comments updates and reordering to clarify knobs used to
choose SHA implementations.
* ab/sha-makefile-doc:
Makefile: discuss SHAttered in *_SHA{1,256} discussion
Makefile: document default SHA-1 backend on OSX
Makefile & test-tool: replace "DC_SHA1" variable with a "define"
Makefile: document SHA-1 and SHA-256 default and selection order
Makefile: document default SHA-256 backend
Makefile: rephrase the discussion of *_SHA1 knobs
Makefile: create and use sections for "define" flag listing
Makefile: correct DC_SHA1 documentation
INSTALL: remove discussion of SHA-1 backends
Makefile: always (re)set DC_SHA1 on fallback
Various test updates.
* ab/misc-hook-submodule-run-command:
run-command tests: test stdout of run_command_parallel()
submodule tests: reset "trace.out" between "grep" invocations
hook tests: fix redirection logic error in 96e7225b31
Add trace2 counters to the region to clear skip worktree bits in a
sparse checkout.
* al/trace2-clearing-skip-worktree:
index: raise a bug if the index is materialised more than once
index: add trace2 region for clear skip worktree
With GIT_TRACE_CURL=1 or GIT_CURL_VERBOSE=1, sensitive headers like
"Authorization" and "Cookie" get redacted. However, since [1], curl's
h2h3 module (invoked when using HTTP/2) also prints headers in its
"info", which don't get redacted. For example,
echo 'github.com TRUE / FALSE 1698960413304 o foo=bar' >cookiefile &&
GIT_TRACE_CURL=1 GIT_TRACE_CURL_NO_DATA=1 git \
-c 'http.cookiefile=cookiefile' \
-c 'http.version=' \
ls-remote https://github.com/git/git refs/heads/main 2>output &&
grep 'cookie' output
produces output like:
23:04:16.920495 http.c:678 == Info: h2h3 [cookie: o=foo=bar]
23:04:16.920562 http.c:637 => Send header: cookie: o=<redacted>
Teach http.c to check for h2h3 headers in info and redact them using the
existing header redaction logic. This fixes the broken redaction logic
that we noted in the previous commit, so mark the redaction tests as
passing under HTTP2.
[1] f8c3724aa9
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Glen Choo <chooglen@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
We have occasionally seen bugs that affect Git running only against an
HTTP/2 web server, not an HTTP one. For instance, b66c77a64e (http:
match headers case-insensitively when redacting, 2021-09-22). But since
we have no test coverage using HTTP/2, we only uncover these bugs in the
wild.
That commit gives a recipe for converting our Apache setup to support
HTTP/2, but:
- it's not necessarily portable
- we don't want to just test HTTP/2; we really want to do a variety of
basic tests for _both_ protocols
This patch handles both problems by running a duplicate of t5551
(labeled as t5559 here) with an alternate-universe setup that enables
HTTP/2. So we'll continue to run t5551 as before, but run the same
battery of tests again with HTTP/2. If HTTP/2 isn't supported on a given
platform, then t5559 should bail during the webserver setup, and
gracefully skip all tests (unless GIT_TEST_HTTPD has been changed from
"auto" to "yes", where the point is to complain when webserver setup
fails).
In theory other http-related test scripts could benefit from the same
duplication, but doing t5551 should give us a reasonable check of basic
functionality, and would have caught both bugs we've seen in the wild
with HTTP/2.
A few notes on the implementation:
- a script enables the server side config by calling enable_http2
before starting the webserver. This avoids even trying to load any
HTTP/2 config for t5551 (which is what lets it keep working with
regular HTTP even on systems that don't support it). This also sets
a prereq which can be used by individual tests.
- As discussed in b66c77a64e, the http2 module isn't compatible with
the "prefork" mpm, so we need to pick something else. I chose
"event" here, which works on my Debian system, but it's possible
there are platforms which would prefer something else. We can adjust
that later if somebody finds such a platform.
- The test "large fetch-pack requests can be sent using chunked
encoding" makes sure we use a chunked transfer-encoding by looking
for that header in the trace. But since HTTP/2 has its own streaming
mechanisms, we won't find such a header. We could skip the test
entirely by marking it with !HTTP2. But there's some value in making
sure that the fetch itself succeeded. So instead, we'll confirm that
either we're using HTTP2 _or_ we saw the expected chunked header.
- the redaction tests fail under HTTP/2 with recent versions of curl.
This is a bug! I've marked them with !HTTP2 here to skip them under
t5559 for the moment. Using test_expect_failure would be more
appropriate, but would require a bunch of boilerplate. Since we'll
be fixing them momentarily, let's just skip them for now to keep the
test suite bisectable, and we can re-enable them in the commit that
fixes the bug.
- one alternative layout would be to push most of t5551 into a
lib-t5551.sh script, then source it from both t5551 and t5559.
Keeping t5551 intact seemed a little simpler, as its one less level
of indirection for people fixing bugs/regressions in the non-HTTP/2
tests.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
It was previously unclear how unrecognised attributes are handled.
Signed-off-by: M Hickford <mirth.hickford@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
As pointed out by Stolee, the previous incarnation of this test case was
not stringent enough: we want to verify that _only_ the stale entries
are removed (previously, the test case would have succeeded even if all
entries had been removed).
Let's rectify this and verify that the other entries are left intact.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Remotes are considered "promisor" if extensions.partialClone and some
other configuration variables are set. The casing for this in
Documentation/technical/repository-version.txt is not proper and may
cause confusion. This change corrects this casing.
Signed-off-by: Kousik Sanagavarapu <five231003@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Fix a couple of issues in the recently merged 0f3c55d4c2b (Merge
branch 'ab/coccicheck-incremental' into next, 2022-11-08):
In copying over the "contrib/coccinelle/" rules to
".build/contrib/coccinelle/" we inadvertently ended up with a
".build/.build/contrib/coccinelle/" as well. We'd generate the
per-file patches in the former, and keep the rule and overall result
in the latter. E.g. running:
make contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.patch COCCI_SOURCES="attr.c grep.c"
Would, per "tree -a .build" yield the following result:
.build
├── .build
│ └── contrib
│ └── coccinelle
│ └── free.cocci.patch
│ ├── attr.c
│ ├── attr.c.log
│ ├── grep.c
│ └── grep.c.log
└── contrib
└── coccinelle
├── FOUND_H_SOURCES
├── free.cocci
└── free.cocci.patch
Now we'll instead generate all of our files in
".build/contrib/coccinelle/". Fixing this required renaming the
directory where we keep our per-file patches, as we'd otherwise
conflict with the result.
Now the per-file patch directory is named e.g. "free.cocci.d". And the
end result will now be:
.build
└── contrib
└── coccinelle
├── FOUND_H_SOURCES
├── free.cocci
├── free.cocci.d
│ ├── attr.c.patch
│ ├── attr.c.patch.log
│ ├── grep.c.patch
│ └── grep.c.patch.log
└── free.cocci.patch
The per-file patches now have a ".patch" file suffix, which fixes
another issue reported against 0f3c55d4c2b: The summary output was
confusing. Before for the "make" command above we'd emit:
[...]
MKDIR -p .build/contrib/coccinelle
CP contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci .build/contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci
GEN .build/contrib/coccinelle/FOUND_H_SOURCES
MKDIR -p .build/.build/contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.patch
SPATCH .build/.build/contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.patch/grep.c
SPATCH .build/.build/contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.patch/attr.c
SPATCH CAT $^ >.build/contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.patch
CP .build/contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.patch contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.patch
But now we'll instead emit (identical output at the start omitted):
[...]
MKDIR -p .build/contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.d
SPATCH grep.c >.build/contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.d/grep.c.patch
SPATCH attr.c >.build/contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.d/attr.c.patch
SPATCH CAT .build/contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.d/**.patch >.build/contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.patch
CP .build/contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.patch contrib/coccinelle/free.cocci.patch
I.e. we have an "SPATCH" line that makes it clear that we're running
against the "{attr,grep}.c" file. The "SPATCH CAT" is then altered to
correspond to it, showing that we're concatenating the
"free.cocci.d/**.patch" files into one generated "free.cocci.patch" at
the end.
Reported-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
As of it is, we're parsing subcommand with OPT_CMDMODE, which will
continue to parse more options even if the command has been found.
When we're running "git bisect run" with a command that expecting
a "--log" or "--no-log" arguments, or one of those "--bisect-..."
arguments, bisect--helper may mistakenly think those options are
bisect--helper's option.
We may fix those problems by passing "--" when calling from
git-bisect.sh, and skip that "--" in bisect--helper. However, it may
interfere with user's "--".
Let's parse subcommand with OPT_SUBCOMMAND since that API was born for
this specific use-case.
Reported-by: Lukáš Doktor <ldoktor@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Đoàn Trần Công Danh <congdanhqx@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
In a later change, we will use OPT_SUBCOMMAND to parse sub-commands to
avoid consuming non-option opts.
Since OPT_SUBCOMMAND needs a function pointer to operate,
let's move it now.
Signed-off-by: Đoàn Trần Công Danh <congdanhqx@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
'git-bisect.sh' used to have a 'bisect_next_check' to check if we have
both good/bad, old/new terms set or not. In commit 129a6cf344
(bisect--helper: `bisect_next_check` shell function in C, 2019-01-02),
a subcommand for bisect--helper was introduced to port the check to C.
Since d1bbbe45df (bisect--helper: reimplement `bisect_run` shell
function in C, 2021-09-13), all users of 'bisect_next_check' was
re-implemented in C, this subcommand was no longer used but we forgot
to remove '--bisect-next-check'.
'git-bisect.sh' also used to have a 'bisect_write' function, whose
third positional parameter was a "nolog" flag. This flag was only used
when 'bisect_start' invoked 'bisect_write' to write the starting good
and bad revisions. Then 0f30233a11 (bisect--helper: `bisect_write`
shell function in C, 2019-01-02) ported it to C as a command mode of
'bisect--helper', which (incorrectly) added the '--no-log' option,
and convert the only place ('bisect_start') that call 'bisect_write'
with 'nolog' to 'git bisect--helper --bisect-write' with 'nolog'
instead of '--no-log', since 'bisect--helper' has command modes not
subcommands, all other command modes see and handle that option as well.
This bogus state didn't last long, however, because in the same patch
series 06f5608c14 (bisect--helper: `bisect_start` shell function
partially in C, 2019-01-02) the C reimplementation of bisect_start()
started calling the bisect_write() C function, this time with the
right 'nolog' function parameter. From then on there was no need for
the '--no-log' option in 'bisect--helper'. Eventually all bisect
subcommands were ported to C as 'bisect--helper' command modes, each
calling the bisect_write() C function instead, but when the
'--bisect-write' command mode was removed in 68efed8c8a
(bisect--helper: retire `--bisect-write` subcommand, 2021-02-03) it
forgot to remove that '--no-log' option.
'--no-log' option had never been used and it's unused now.
Let's remove --bisect-next-check and --no-log from option parsing.
Signed-off-by: Đoàn Trần Công Danh <congdanhqx@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
The `label` command creates a ref refs/rewritten/<label> that the
`reset` and `merge` commands resolve by calling lookup_label(). That
uses lookup_commit_reference_by_name() to look up the label ref. As
lookup_commit_reference_by_name() uses the dwim rules when looking up
the label it will look for a branch named
refs/heads/refs/rewritten/<label> and return that instead of an error if
the branch exists and the label does not. Fix this by using read_ref()
followed by lookup_commit_object() when looking up labels.
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
The arguments to the `reset` and `merge` commands may be a label created
with a `label` command or an arbitrary commit name. The `merge` command
uses the lookup_label() function to lookup its arguments but `reset` has
a slightly different version of that function in do_reset(). Reduce this
code duplication by calling lookup_label() from do_reset() as well.
This change improves the behavior of `reset` when the argument is a
tree. Previously `reset` would accept a tree only for the rebase to
fail with
update_ref failed for ref 'HEAD': cannot update ref 'HEAD': trying to write non-commit object da5497437fd67ca928333aab79c4b4b55036ea66 to branch 'HEAD'
Using lookup_label() means do_reset() will now error out straight away
if its argument is not a commit.
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Enable the 'skip_cache_tree_update' option in both 'do_reset()'
('sequencer.c') and 'reset_head()' ('reset.c'). Both of these callers invoke
'prime_cache_tree()' after 'unpack_trees()', so we can remove an unnecessary
cache tree rebuild by skipping 'cache_tree_update()'.
When testing with 'p3400-rebase.sh' and 'p3404-rebase-interactive.sh', the
performance change of this update was negligible, likely due to the
operation being dominated by more expensive operations (like checking out
trees). However, since the change doesn't harm performance, it's worth
keeping this 'unpack_trees()' usage consistent with others that subsequently
invoke 'prime_cache_tree()'.
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
When running 'read-tree' with a single tree and no prefix,
'prime_cache_tree()' is called after the tree is unpacked. In that
situation, skip a redundant call to 'cache_tree_update()' in
'unpack_trees()' by enabling the 'skip_cache_tree_update' unpack option.
Removing the redundant cache tree update provides a substantial performance
improvement to 'git read-tree <tree-ish>', as shown by a test added to
'p0006-read-tree-checkout.sh':
Test before after
----------------------------------------------------------------------
read-tree br_ballast_plus_1 3.94(1.80+1.57) 3.00(1.14+1.28) -23.9%
Note that the 'read-tree' in 't1022-read-tree-partial-clone.sh' is updated
to read two trees, rather than one. The test was first introduced in
d3da223f22 (cache-tree: prefetch in partial clone read-tree, 2021-07-23) to
exercise the 'cache_tree_update()' code path, as used in 'git merge'. Since
this patch drops the call to 'cache_tree_update()' in single-tree 'git
read-tree', change the test to use the two-tree variant so that
'cache_tree_update()' is called as intended.
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Enable the 'skip_cache_tree_update' option in the variants that call
'prime_cache_tree()' after 'unpack_trees()' (specifically, 'git reset
--mixed' and 'git reset --hard'). This avoids redundantly rebuilding the
cache tree in both 'cache_tree_update()' at the end of 'unpack_trees()' and
in 'prime_cache_tree()', resulting in a small (but consistent) performance
improvement. From the newly-added 'p7102-reset.sh' test:
Test before after
--------------------------------------------------------------------
7102.1: reset --hard (...) 2.11(0.40+1.54) 1.97(0.38+1.47) -6.6%
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Add (disabled by default) option to skip the 'cache_tree_update()' at the
end of 'unpack_trees()'. In many cases, this cache tree update is redundant
because the caller of 'unpack_trees()' immediately follows it with
'prime_cache_tree()', rebuilding the entire cache tree from scratch. While
these operations aren't the most expensive part of operations like 'git
reset', the duplicate calls still create a minor unnecessary slowdown.
Introduce an option for callers to skip the 'cache_tree_update()' in
'unpack_trees()' if it is redundant (that is, if 'prime_cache_tree()' is
called afterwards). At the moment, no 'unpack_trees()' callers use the new
option; they will be updated in subsequent patches.
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Add a performance test comparing the execution times of 'prime_cache_tree()'
and 'cache_tree_update(_, WRITE_TREE_SILENT | WRITE_TREE_REPAIR)'. The goal
of comparing these two is to identify which is the faster method for
rebuilding an invalid cache tree, ultimately to remove one when both are
(reundantly) called in immediate succession.
Both methods are fast, so the new tests in 'p0090-cache-tree.sh' must call
each tested function multiple times to ensure the reported times (to 0.01s
resolution) convey the differences between them.
The tests compare the timing of a 'test-tool cache-tree' run as a no-op (to
capture a baseline for the overhead associated with running the tool),
'cache_tree_update()', and 'prime_cache_tree()' on four scenarios:
- A completely valid cache tree
- A cache tree with 2 invalid paths
- A cache tree with 50 invalid paths
- A completely empty cache tree
Example results:
Test this tree
-----------------------------------------------------------
0090.2: no-op, clean 1.27(0.48+0.52)
0090.3: prime_cache_tree, clean 2.02(0.83+0.85)
0090.4: cache_tree_update, clean 1.30(0.49+0.54)
0090.5: no-op, invalidate 2 1.29(0.48+0.54)
0090.6: prime_cache_tree, invalidate 2 1.98(0.81+0.83)
0090.7: cache_tree_update, invalidate 2 2.12(0.94+0.86)
0090.8: no-op, invalidate 50 1.32(0.50+0.55)
0090.9: prime_cache_tree, invalidate 50 2.10(0.86+0.89)
0090.10: cache_tree_update, invalidate 50 2.35(1.14+0.90)
0090.11: no-op, empty 1.33(0.50+0.54)
0090.12: prime_cache_tree, empty 2.04(0.84+0.87)
0090.13: cache_tree_update, empty 2.51(1.27+0.92)
These timings show that, while 'cache_tree_update()' is faster when the
cache tree is completely valid, it is equal to or slower than
'prime_cache_tree()' when there are any invalid paths. Since the redundant
calls are mostly in scenarios where the cache tree will be at least
partially invalid (e.g., 'git reset --hard'), 'prime_cache_tree()' will
likely perform better than 'cache_tree_update()' in typical cases.
Helped-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
When deleting a branch, "git branch -d" has a safety check that ensures
the branch is merged to its upstream (if any), or to HEAD. To do that,
naturally we try to resolve HEAD to a commit object. If we're on an
orphan branch (i.e., HEAD points to a branch that does not yet exist),
that will fail, and we'll bail with an error:
$ git branch -d to-delete
fatal: Couldn't look up commit object for HEAD
This usually isn't that big of a deal. The deletion would fail anyway,
since the branch isn't merged to HEAD, and you'd need to use "-D" (or
"-f"). And doing so skips the HEAD resolution, courtesy of 67affd5173
(git-branch -D: make it work even when on a yet-to-be-born branch,
2006-11-24).
But there are still two problems:
1. The error message isn't very helpful. We should give the usual "not
fully merged" message, which points the user at "branch -D". That
was a problem even back in 67affd5173.
2. Even without a HEAD, these days it's still possible for the
deletion to succeed. After 67affd5173, commit 99c419c915 (branch
-d: base the "already-merged" safety on the branch it merges with,
2009-12-29) made it OK to delete a branch if it is merged to its
upstream.
We can fix both by removing the die() in delete_branches() completely,
leaving head_rev NULL in this case. It's tempting to stop there, as it
appears at first glance that the rest of the code does the right thing
with a NULL. But sadly, it's not quite true.
We end up feeding the NULL to repo_is_descendant_of(). In the
traditional code path there, we call repo_in_merge_bases_many(). It
feeds the NULL to repo_parse_commit(), which is smart enough to return
an error, and we immediately return "no, it's not a descendant".
But there's an alternate code path: if we have a commit graph with
generation numbers, we end up in can_all_from_reach(), which does
eventually try to set a flag on the NULL commit and segfaults.
So instead, we'll teach the local branch_merged() helper to treat a NULL
as "not merged". This would be a little more elegant in in_merge_bases()
itself, but that function is called in a lot of places, and it's not
clear that quietly returning "not merged" is the right thing everywhere
(I'd expect in many cases, feeding a NULL is a sign of a bug).
There are four tests here:
a. The first one confirms that deletion succeeds with an orphaned HEAD
when the branch is merged to its upstream. This is case (2) above.
b. Same, but with commit graphs enabled. Even if it is merged to
upstream, we still check head_rev so that we can say "deleting
because it's merged to upstream, even though it's not merged to
HEAD". Without the second hunk in branch_merged(), this test would
segfault in can_all_from_reach().
c. The third one confirms that we correctly say "not merged to HEAD"
when we can't resolve HEAD, and reject the deletion.
d. Same, but with commit graphs enabled. Without the first hunk in
branch_merged(), this one would segfault.
Reported-by: Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Previously, the example *decreased* the cache timeout compared to the
default, making it less user friendly.
Instead, nudge users to make cache more usable. Many users choose
store over cache.
https://lore.kernel.org/git/CAGJzqskRYN49SeS8kSEN5-vbB_Jt1QvAV9QhS6zNuKh0u8wxPQ@mail.gmail.com/
The default timeout remains 15 minutes. A stronger nudge would
be to increase that.
Signed-off-by: M Hickford <mirth.hickford@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Simplify the run-command API.
* rs/no-more-run-command-v:
replace and remove run_command_v_opt()
replace and remove run_command_v_opt_cd_env_tr2()
replace and remove run_command_v_opt_tr2()
replace and remove run_command_v_opt_cd_env()
use child_process members "args" and "env" directly
use child_process member "args" instead of string array variable
sequencer: simplify building argument list in do_exec()
bisect--helper: factor out do_bisect_run()
bisect: simplify building "checkout" argument list
am: simplify building "show" argument list
run-command: fix return value comment
merge: remove always-the-same "verbose" arguments
"git archive" mistakenly complained twice about a missing executable,
which has been corrected.
* rs/archive-filter-error-once:
archive-tar: report filter start error only once
A redundant diagnostic message is dropped from test_path_is_missing().
* ma/drop-redundant-diagnostic:
test-lib-functions: drop redundant diagnostic print
Various tests exercising the transfer.credentialsInUrl configuration
are taught to avoid making requests which require resolving localhost
to reduce CI-flakiness.
* jk/ref-filter-parsing-bugs:
ref-filter: fix parsing of signatures with CRLF and no body
ref-filter: fix parsing of signatures without blank lines