Commit Graph

1248 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy
e721c1544f checkout: avoid unnecessary match_pathspec calls
In checkout_paths() we do this

 - for all updated items, call match_pathspec
 - for all items, call match_pathspec (inside unmerge_cache)
 - for all items, call match_pathspec (for showing "path .. is unmerged)
 - for updated items, call match_pathspec and update paths

That's a lot of duplicate match_pathspec(s) and the function is not
exactly cheap to be called so many times, especially on large indexes.
This patch makes it call match_pathspec once per updated index entry,
save the result in ce_flags and reuse the results in the following
loops.

The changes in 0a1283b (checkout $tree $path: do not clobber local
changes in $path not in $tree - 2011-09-30) limit the affected paths
to ones we read from $tree. We do not do anything to other modified
entries in this case, so the "for all items" above could be modified
to "for all updated items". But..

The command's behavior now is modified slightly: unmerged entries that
match $path, but not updated by $tree, are now NOT touched.  Although
this should be considered a bug fix, not a regression. A new test is
added for this change.

And while at there, free ps_matched after use.

The following command is tested on webkit, 215k entries. The pattern
is chosen mainly to make match_pathspec sweat:

git checkout -- "*[a-zA-Z]*[a-zA-Z]*[a-zA-Z]*"

        before      after
real    0m3.493s    0m2.737s
user    0m2.239s    0m1.586s
sys     0m1.252s    0m1.151s

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-03-27 08:53:15 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
fb3b7b1f95 Merge branch 'jk/alias-in-bare'
An aliased command spawned from a bare repository that does not say
it is bare with "core.bare = yes" is treated as non-bare by mistake.

* jk/alias-in-bare:
  setup: suppress implicit "." work-tree for bare repos
  environment: add GIT_PREFIX to local_repo_env
  cache.h: drop LOCAL_REPO_ENV_SIZE
2013-03-25 14:00:44 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
f5715de54a Merge branch 'nd/count-garbage'
"git count-objects -v" did not count leftover temporary packfiles
and other kinds of garbage.

* nd/count-garbage:
  count-objects: report how much disk space taken by garbage files
  count-objects: report garbage files in pack directory too
  sha1_file: reorder code in prepare_packed_git_one()
  git-count-objects.txt: describe each line in -v output
2013-03-21 14:02:34 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
e4e1c54990 Merge branch 'jc/fetch-raw-sha1'
Allows requests to fetch objects at any tip of refs (including
hidden ones).  It seems that there may be use cases even outside
Gerrit (e.g. $gmane/215701).

* jc/fetch-raw-sha1:
  fetch: fetch objects by their exact SHA-1 object names
  upload-pack: optionally allow fetching from the tips of hidden refs
  fetch: use struct ref to represent refs to be fetched
  parse_fetch_refspec(): clarify the codeflow a bit
2013-03-21 14:02:27 -07:00
René Scharfe
c3c2e1a09b archive-zip: use deflateInit2() to ask for raw compressed data
We use the function git_deflate_init() -- which wraps the zlib function
deflateInit() -- to initialize compression of ZIP file entries.  This
results in compressed data prefixed with a two-bytes long header and
followed by a four-bytes trailer.  ZIP file entries consist of ZIP
headers and raw compressed data instead, so we remove the zlib wrapper
before writing the result.

We can ask zlib for the the raw compressed data without the unwanted
parts in the first place by using deflateInit2() and specifying a
negative number of bits to size the window.  For that purpose, factor
out the function do_git_deflate_init() and add git_deflate_init_raw(),
which wraps it.  Then use the latter in archive-zip.c and get rid of
the code that stripped the zlib header and trailer.

Also rename the helper function zlib_deflate() to zlib_deflate_raw()
to reflect the change.

Thus we avoid generating data that we throw away anyway, the code
becomes shorter and some magic constants are removed.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-03-16 22:07:02 -07:00
Jeff King
2cd83d10bb setup: suppress implicit "." work-tree for bare repos
If an explicit GIT_DIR is given without a working tree, we
implicitly assume that the current working directory should
be used as the working tree. E.g.,:

  GIT_DIR=/some/repo.git git status

would compare against the cwd.

Unfortunately, we fool this rule for sub-invocations of git
by setting GIT_DIR internally ourselves. For example:

  git init foo
  cd foo/.git
  git status ;# fails, as we expect
  git config alias.st status
  git status ;# does not fail, but should

What happens is that we run setup_git_directory when doing
alias lookup (since we need to see the config), set GIT_DIR
as a result, and then leave GIT_WORK_TREE blank (because we
do not have one). Then when we actually run the status
command, we do setup_git_directory again, which sees our
explicit GIT_DIR and uses the cwd as an implicit worktree.

It's tempting to argue that we should be suppressing that
second invocation of setup_git_directory, as it could use
the values we already found in memory. However, the problem
still exists for sub-processes (e.g., if "git status" were
an external command).

You can see another example with the "--bare" option, which
sets GIT_DIR explicitly. For example:

  git init foo
  cd foo/.git
  git status ;# fails
  git --bare status ;# does NOT fail

We need some way of telling sub-processes "even though
GIT_DIR is set, do not use cwd as an implicit working tree".
We could do it by putting a special token into
GIT_WORK_TREE, but the obvious choice (an empty string) has
some portability problems.

Instead, we add a new boolean variable, GIT_IMPLICIT_WORK_TREE,
which suppresses the use of cwd as a working tree when
GIT_DIR is set. We trigger the new variable when we know we
are in a bare setting.

The variable is left intentionally undocumented, as this is
an internal detail (for now, anyway). If somebody comes up
with a good alternate use for it, and once we are confident
we have shaken any bugs out of it, we can consider promoting
it further.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-03-08 14:02:40 -08:00
Jeff King
a6f7f9a325 environment: add GIT_PREFIX to local_repo_env
The GIT_PREFIX variable is set based on our location within
the working tree. It should therefore be cleared whenever
GIT_WORK_TREE is cleared.

In practice, this doesn't cause any bugs, because none of
the sub-programs we invoke with local_repo_env cleared
actually care about GIT_PREFIX. But this is the right thing
to do, and future proofs us against that assumption changing.

While we're at it, let's define a GIT_PREFIX_ENVIRONMENT
macro; this avoids repetition of the string literal, which
can help catch any spelling mistakes in the code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-03-08 14:02:31 -08:00
Jeff King
2163e5dbb4 cache.h: drop LOCAL_REPO_ENV_SIZE
We keep a static array of variables that should be cleared
when invoking a sub-process on another repo. We statically
size the array with the LOCAL_REPO_ENV_SIZE macro so that
any readers do not have to count it themselves.

As it turns out, no readers actually use the macro, and it
creates a maintenance headache, as modifications to the
array need to happen in two places (one to add the new
element, and another to bump the size).

Since it's NULL-terminated, we can just drop the size macro
entirely. While we're at it, we'll clean up some comments
around it, and add a new mention of it at the top of the
list of environment variable macros. Even though
local_repo_env is right below that list, it's easy to miss,
and additions to that list should consider local_repo_env.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-03-08 07:55:54 -08:00
Karsten Blees
2092678cd5 name-hash.c: fix endless loop with core.ignorecase=true
With core.ignorecase=true, name-hash.c builds a case insensitive index of
all tracked directories. Currently, the existing cache entry structures are
added multiple times to the same hashtable (with different name lengths and
hash codes). However, there's only one dir_next pointer, which gets
completely messed up in case of hash collisions. In the worst case, this
causes an endless loop if ce == ce->dir_next (see t7062).

Use a separate hashtable and separate structures for the directory index
so that each directory entry has its own next pointer. Use reference
counting to track which directory entry contains files.

There are only slight changes to the name-hash.c API:
- new free_name_hash() used by read_cache.c::discard_index()
- remove_name_hash() takes an additional index_state parameter
- index_name_exists() for a directory (trailing '/') may return a cache
  entry that has been removed (CE_UNHASHED). This is not a problem as the
  return value is only used to check if the directory exists (dir.c) or to
  normalize casing of directory names (read-cache.c).

Getting rid of cache_entry.dir_next reduces memory consumption, especially
with core.ignorecase=false (which doesn't use that member at all).

With core.ignorecase=true, building the directory index is slightly faster
as we add / check the parent directory first (instead of going through all
directory levels for each file in the index). E.g. with WebKit (~200k
files, ~7k dirs), time spent in lazy_init_name_hash is reduced from 176ms
to 130ms.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-02-27 23:29:04 -08:00
Jeff King
85edf4f58b teach get_remote_heads to read from a memory buffer
Now that we can read packet data from memory as easily as a
descriptor, get_remote_heads can take either one as a
source. This will allow further refactoring in remote-curl.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-02-24 00:17:38 -08:00
Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy
543c5caa6c count-objects: report garbage files in pack directory too
prepare_packed_git_one() is modified to allow count-objects to hook a
report function to so we don't need to duplicate the pack searching
logic in count-objects.c. When report_pack_garbage is NULL, the
overhead is insignificant.

The garbage is reported with warning() instead of error() in packed
garbage case because it's not an error to have garbage. Loose garbage
is still reported as errors and will be converted to warnings later.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-02-15 08:13:13 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
f2db854d24 fetch: use struct ref to represent refs to be fetched
Even though "git fetch" has full infrastructure to parse refspecs to
be fetched and match them against the list of refs to come up with
the final list of refs to be fetched, the list of refs that are
requested to be fetched were internally converted to a plain list of
strings at the transport layer and then passed to the underlying
fetch-pack driver.

Stop this conversion and instead pass around an array of refs.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-02-07 13:53:59 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
370855e967 Merge branch 'jc/push-reject-reasons'
Improve error and advice messages given locally when "git push"
refuses when it cannot compute fast-forwardness by separating these
cases from the normal "not a fast-forward; merge first and push
again" case.

* jc/push-reject-reasons:
  push: finishing touches to explain REJECT_ALREADY_EXISTS better
  push: introduce REJECT_FETCH_FIRST and REJECT_NEEDS_FORCE
  push: further simplify the logic to assign rejection reason
  push: further clean up fields of "struct ref"
2013-02-04 10:25:04 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
099ba556d0 Merge branch 'jk/config-parsing-cleanup'
Configuration parsing for tar.* configuration variables were
broken. Introduce a new config-keyname parser API to make the
callers much less error prone.

* jk/config-parsing-cleanup:
  reflog: use parse_config_key in config callback
  help: use parse_config_key for man config
  submodule: simplify memory handling in config parsing
  submodule: use parse_config_key when parsing config
  userdiff: drop parse_driver function
  convert some config callbacks to parse_config_key
  archive-tar: use parse_config_key when parsing config
  config: add helper function for parsing key names
2013-02-04 10:24:50 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
149a4211a4 Merge branch 'jc/custom-comment-char'
Allow a configuration variable core.commentchar to customize the
character used to comment out the hint lines in the edited text from
the default '#'.

* jc/custom-comment-char:
  Allow custom "comment char"
2013-02-04 10:23:49 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
070c57df42 Merge branch 'rr/minimal-stat'
Some reimplementations of Git does not write all the stat info back
to the index due to their implementation limitations (e.g. jgit
running on Java).  A configuration option can tell Git to ignore
changes to most of the stat fields and only pay attention to mtime
and size, which these implementations can reliably update.  This
avoids excessive revalidation of contents.

* rr/minimal-stat:
  Enable minimal stat checking
2013-01-30 08:53:02 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
ce956fc48e Merge branch 'mh/ceiling' into maint
An element on GIT_CEILING_DIRECTORIES list that does not name the
real path to a directory (i.e. a symbolic link) could have caused
the GIT_DIR discovery logic to escape the ceiling.

* mh/ceiling:
  string_list_longest_prefix(): remove function
  setup_git_directory_gently_1(): resolve symlinks in ceiling paths
  longest_ancestor_length(): require prefix list entries to be normalized
  longest_ancestor_length(): take a string_list argument for prefixes
  longest_ancestor_length(): use string_list_split()
  Introduce new function real_path_if_valid()
  real_path_internal(): add comment explaining use of cwd
  Introduce new static function real_path_internal()
2013-01-28 11:07:18 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
75e5c0dc55 push: introduce REJECT_FETCH_FIRST and REJECT_NEEDS_FORCE
When we push to update an existing ref, if:

 * the object at the tip of the remote is not a commit; or
 * the object we are pushing is not a commit,

it won't be correct to suggest to fetch, integrate and push again,
as the old and new objects will not "merge".  We should explain that
the push must be forced when there is a non-committish object is
involved in such a case.

If we do not have the current object at the tip of the remote, we do
not even know that object, when fetched, is something that can be
merged.  In such a case, suggesting to pull first just like
non-fast-forward case may not be technically correct, but in
practice, most such failures are seen when you try to push your work
to a branch without knowing that somebody else already pushed to
update the same branch since you forked, so "pull first" would work
as a suggestion most of the time.  And if the object at the tip is
not a commit, "pull first" will fail, without making any permanent
damage.  As a side effect, it also makes the error message the user
will get during the next "push" attempt easier to understand, now
the user is aware that a non-commit object is involved.

In these cases, the current code already rejects such a push on the
client end, but we used the same error and advice messages as the
ones used when rejecting a non-fast-forward push, i.e. pull from
there and integrate before pushing again.

Introduce new rejection reasons and reword the messages
appropriately.

[jc: with help by Peff on message details]

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-01-24 14:37:23 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
5ece083fc7 push: further clean up fields of "struct ref"
The "nonfastforward" and "update" fields are only used while
deciding what value to assign to the "status" locally in a single
function.  Remove them from the "struct ref".

The "requires_force" field is not used to decide if the proposed
update requires a --force option to succeed, or to record such a
decision made elsewhere.  It is used by status reporting code that
the particular update was "forced".  Rename it to "forced_update",
and move the code to assign to it around to further clarify how it
is used and what it is used for.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-01-24 14:37:17 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
fa2f83c654 Merge branch 'jk/suppress-clang-warning'
* jk/suppress-clang-warning:
  fix clang -Wunused-value warnings for error functions
2013-01-23 21:19:00 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
d82dd26964 Merge branch 'cr/push-force-tag-update'
Regression fix to stop "git push" complaining "target ref already
exists", when it is not the real reason the command rejected the
request (e.g. non-fast-forward).

* cr/push-force-tag-update:
  push: fix "refs/tags/ hierarchy cannot be updated without --force"
2013-01-23 21:16:49 -08:00
Jeff King
1b86bbb0ad config: add helper function for parsing key names
The config callback functions get keys of the general form:

  section.subsection.key

(where the subsection may be contain arbitrary data, or may
be missing). For matching keys without subsections, it is
simple enough to call "strcmp". Matching keys with
subsections is a little more complicated, and each callback
does it in an ad-hoc way, usually involving error-prone
pointer arithmetic.

Let's provide a helper that keeps the pointer arithmetic all
in one place.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-01-23 08:41:49 -08:00
Robin Rosenberg
c08e4d5b5c Enable minimal stat checking
Specifically the fields uid, gid, ctime, ino and dev are set to zero
by JGit. Other implementations, eg. Git in cygwin are allegedly also
somewhat incompatible with Git For Windows and on *nix platforms
the resolution of the timestamps may differ.

Any stat checking by git will then need to check content, which may
be very slow, particularly on Windows. Since mtime and size
is typically enough we should allow the user to tell git to avoid
checking these fields if they are set to zero in the index.

This change introduces a core.checkstat config option where the
the user can select to check all fields (default), or just size
and the whole second part of mtime (minimal).

Signed-off-by: Robin Rosenberg <robin.rosenberg@dewire.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-01-22 09:33:16 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
256b9d70a4 push: fix "refs/tags/ hierarchy cannot be updated without --force"
When pushing to update a branch with a commit that is not a
descendant of the commit at the tip, a wrong message "already
exists" was given, instead of the correct "non-fast-forward", if we
do not have the object sitting in the destination repository at the
tip of the ref we are updating.

The primary cause of the bug is that the check in a new helper
function is_forwardable() assumed both old and new objects are
available and can be checked, which is not always the case.

The way the caller uses the result of this function is also wrong.
If the helper says "we do not want to let this push go through", the
caller unconditionally translates it into "we blocked it because the
destination already exists", which is not true at all in this case.

Fix this by doing these three things:

 * Remove unnecessary not_forwardable from "struct ref"; it is only
   used inside set_ref_status_for_push();

 * Make "refs/tags/" the only hierarchy that cannot be replaced
   without --force;

 * Remove the misguided attempt to force that everything that
   updates an existing ref has to be a commit outside "refs/tags/"
   hierarchy.

The policy last one tried to implement may later be resurrected and
extended to ensure fast-forwardness (defined as "not losing
objects", extending from the traditional "not losing commits from
the resulting history") when objects that are not commit are
involved (e.g. an annotated tag in hierarchies outside refs/tags),
but such a logic belongs to "is this a fast-forward?" check that is
done by ref_newer(); is_forwardable(), which is now removed, was not
the right place to do so.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-01-16 13:03:57 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
eff80a9fd9 Allow custom "comment char"
Some users do want to write a line that begin with a pound sign, #,
in their commit log message.  Many tracking system recognise
a token of #<bugid> form, for example.

The support we offer these use cases is not very friendly to the end
users.  They have a choice between

 - Don't do it.  Avoid such a line by rewrapping or indenting; and

 - Use --cleanup=whitespace but remove all the hint lines we add.

Give them a way to set a custom comment char, e.g.

    $ git -c core.commentchar="%" commit

so that they do not have to do either of the two workarounds.

[jc: although I started the topic, all the tests and documentation
updates, many of the call sites of the new strbuf_add_commented_*()
functions, and the change to git-submodule.sh scripted Porcelain are
from Ralf.]

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-01-16 12:48:22 -08:00
Max Horn
5ded807f7c fix clang -Wunused-value warnings for error functions
Commit a469a10 wraps some error calls in macros to give the
compiler a chance to do more static analysis on their
constant -1 return value.  We limit the use of these macros
to __GNUC__, since gcc is the primary beneficiary of the new
information, and because we use GNU features for handling
variadic macros.

However, clang also defines __GNUC__, but generates warnings
with -Wunused-value when these macros are used in a void
context, because the constant "-1" ends up being useless.
Gcc does not complain about this case (though it is unclear
if it is because it is smart enough to see what we are
doing, or too dumb to realize that the -1 is unused).  We
can squelch the warning by just disabling these macros when
clang is in use.

Signed-off-by: Max Horn <max@quendi.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2013-01-16 12:47:46 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
971e829cd8 Merge branch 'jk/pathspec-literal'
Allow scripts to feed literal paths to commands that take
pathspecs, by disabling wildcard globbing.

* jk/pathspec-literal:
  add global --literal-pathspecs option

Conflicts:
	dir.c
2013-01-05 23:42:07 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
29fb151525 Merge branch 'jk/error-const-return'
Help compilers' flow analysis by making it more explicit that
error() always returns -1, to reduce false "variable used
uninitialized" warnings.  Looks somewhat ugly but not too much.

* jk/error-const-return:
  silence some -Wuninitialized false positives
  make error()'s constant return value more visible
2013-01-05 23:42:00 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
3a3100a889 Merge branch 'jk/mailmap-from-blob'
Allow us to read, and default to read, mailmap files from the tip
of the history in bare repositories.  This will help running tools
like shortlog in server settings.

* jk/mailmap-from-blob:
  mailmap: default mailmap.blob in bare repositories
  mailmap: fix some documentation loose-ends for mailmap.blob
  mailmap: clean up read_mailmap error handling
  mailmap: support reading mailmap from blobs
  mailmap: refactor mailmap parsing for non-file sources
2013-01-05 23:41:42 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
9a2c83d24c Merge branch 'cr/push-force-tag-update'
Require "-f" for push to update a tag, even if it is a fast-forward.

* cr/push-force-tag-update:
  push: allow already-exists advice to be disabled
  push: rename config variable for more general use
  push: cleanup push rules comment
  push: clarify rejection of update to non-commit-ish
  push: require force for annotated tags
  push: require force for refs under refs/tags/
  push: flag updates that require force
  push: keep track of "update" state separately
  push: add advice for rejected tag reference
  push: return reject reasons as a bitset
2013-01-05 23:41:34 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
990a4fea96 Merge branch 'nd/pathspec-wildcard'
Optimize matching paths with common forms of pathspecs that contain
wildcard characters.

* nd/pathspec-wildcard:
  tree_entry_interesting: do basedir compare on wildcard patterns when possible
  pathspec: apply "*.c" optimization from exclude
  pathspec: do exact comparison on the leading non-wildcard part
  pathspec: save the non-wildcard length part
2013-01-05 23:40:15 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
f470e901f2 Merge branch 'mh/ceiling'
An element on GIT_CEILING_DIRECTORIES list that does not name the
real path to a directory (i.e. a symbolic link) could have caused
the GIT_DIR discovery logic to escape the ceiling.

* mh/ceiling:
  string_list_longest_prefix(): remove function
  setup_git_directory_gently_1(): resolve symlinks in ceiling paths
  longest_ancestor_length(): require prefix list entries to be normalized
  longest_ancestor_length(): take a string_list argument for prefixes
  longest_ancestor_length(): use string_list_split()
  Introduce new function real_path_if_valid()
  real_path_internal(): add comment explaining use of cwd
  Introduce new static function real_path_internal()
2013-01-02 10:36:59 -08:00
Jeff King
823ab40fd4 add global --literal-pathspecs option
Git takes pathspec arguments in many places to limit the
scope of an operation. These pathspecs are treated not as
literal paths, but as glob patterns that can be fed to
fnmatch. When a user is giving a specific pattern, this is a
nice feature.

However, when programatically providing pathspecs, it can be
a nuisance. For example, to find the latest revision which
modified "$foo", one can use "git rev-list -- $foo". But if
"$foo" contains glob characters (e.g., "f*"), it will
erroneously match more entries than desired. The caller
needs to quote the characters in $foo, and even then, the
results may not be exactly the same as with a literal
pathspec. For instance, the depth checks in
match_pathspec_depth do not kick in if we match via fnmatch.

This patch introduces a global command-line option (i.e.,
one for "git" itself, not for specific commands) to turn
this behavior off. It also has a matching environment
variable, which can make it easier if you are a script or
porcelain interface that is going to issue many such
commands.

This option cannot turn off globbing for particular
pathspecs. That could eventually be done with a ":(noglob)"
magic pathspec prefix. However, that level of granularity is
more cumbersome to use for many cases, and doing ":(noglob)"
right would mean converting the whole codebase to use
"struct pathspec", as the usual "const char **pathspec"
cannot represent extra per-item flags.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-12-19 14:58:59 -08:00
Jeff King
a469a10193 silence some -Wuninitialized false positives
There are a few error functions that simply wrap error() and
provide a standardized message text. Like error(), they
always return -1; knowing that can help the compiler silence
some false positive -Wuninitialized warnings.

One strategy would be to just declare these as inline in the
header file so that the compiler can see that they always
return -1. However, gcc does not always inline them (e.g.,
it will not inline opterror, even with -O3), which renders
our change pointless.

Instead, let's follow the same route we did with error() in
the last patch, and define a macro that makes the constant
return value obvious to the compiler.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-12-15 10:45:59 -08:00
Jeff King
086109006f mailmap: support reading mailmap from blobs
In a bare repository, there isn't a simple way to respect an
in-tree mailmap without extracting it to a temporary file.
This patch provides a config variable, similar to
mailmap.file, which reads the mailmap from a blob in the
repository.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-12-12 11:12:35 -08:00
Chris Rorvick
dbfeddb12e push: require force for refs under refs/tags/
References are allowed to update from one commit-ish to another if the
former is an ancestor of the latter.  This behavior is oriented to
branches which are expected to move with commits.  Tag references are
expected to be static in a repository, though, thus an update to
something under refs/tags/ should be rejected unless the update is
forced.

Signed-off-by: Chris Rorvick <chris@rorvick.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-12-02 01:44:34 -08:00
Chris Rorvick
8c5f6f717d push: flag updates that require force
Add a flag for indicating an update to a reference requires force.
Currently the `nonfastforward` flag is used for this when generating the
status message.  A separate flag insulates dependent logic from the
details of set_ref_status_for_push().

Signed-off-by: Chris Rorvick <chris@rorvick.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-12-02 01:44:15 -08:00
Chris Rorvick
ffe81ef2ac push: keep track of "update" state separately
If the reference exists on the remote and it is not being removed, then
mark as an update.  This is in preparation for handling tags (lightweight
and annotated) exceptionally.

Signed-off-by: Chris Rorvick <chris@rorvick.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-12-02 01:43:28 -08:00
Chris Rorvick
b24e6047a8 push: add advice for rejected tag reference
Advising the user to fetch and merge only makes sense if the rejected
reference is a branch.  If none of the rejections are for branches, just
tell the user the reference already exists.

Signed-off-by: Chris Rorvick <chris@rorvick.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-12-02 01:39:50 -08:00
Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy
8c6abbcd27 pathspec: apply "*.c" optimization from exclude
When a pattern contains only a single asterisk as wildcard,
e.g. "foo*bar", after literally comparing the leading part "foo" with
the string, we can compare the tail of the string and make sure it
matches "bar", instead of running fnmatch() on "*bar" against the
remainder of the string.

-O2 build on linux-2.6, without the patch:

$ time git rev-list --quiet HEAD -- '*.c'

real    0m40.770s
user    0m40.290s
sys     0m0.256s

With the patch

$ time ~/w/git/git rev-list --quiet HEAD -- '*.c'

real    0m34.288s
user    0m33.997s
sys     0m0.205s

The above command is not supposed to be widely popular. It's chosen
because it exercises pathspec matching a lot. The point is it cuts
down matching time for popular patterns like *.c, which could be used
as pathspec in other places.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-11-26 11:13:13 -08:00
Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy
170260ae90 pathspec: save the non-wildcard length part
We mark pathspec with wildcards with the field use_wildcard. We
could do better by saving the length of the non-wildcard part, which
can be used for optimizations such as f9f6e2c (exclude: do strcmp as
much as possible before fnmatch - 2012-06-07).

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-11-19 13:08:28 -08:00
Jeff King
d6991ceedc ident: keep separate "explicit" flags for author and committer
We keep track of whether the user ident was given to us
explicitly, or if we guessed at it from system parameters
like username and hostname. However, we kept only a single
variable. This covers the common cases (because the author
and committer will usually come from the same explicit
source), but can miss two cases:

  1. GIT_COMMITTER_* is set explicitly, but we fallback for
     GIT_AUTHOR. We claim the ident is explicit, even though
     the author is not.

  2. GIT_AUTHOR_* is set and we ask for author ident, but
     not committer ident. We will claim the ident is
     implicit, even though it is explicit.

This patch uses two variables instead of one, updates both
when we set the "fallback" values, and updates them
individually when we read from the environment.

Rather than keep user_ident_sufficiently_given as a
compatibility wrapper, we update the only two callers to
check the committer_ident, which matches their intent and
what was happening already.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-11-15 17:47:24 -08:00
Jeff King
452802309c ident: make user_ident_explicitly_given static
In v1.5.6-rc0~56^2 (2008-05-04) "user_ident_explicitly_given"
was introduced as a global for communication between config,
ident, and builtin-commit.  In v1.7.0-rc0~72^2 (2010-01-07)
readers switched to using the common wrapper
user_ident_sufficiently_given().  After v1.7.11-rc1~15^2~18
(2012-05-21), the var is only written in ident.c.

Now we can make it static, which will enable further
refactoring without worrying about upsetting other code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-11-15 17:47:24 -08:00
Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy
4914c9629c Move setup_diff_pager to libgit.a
This is used by diff-no-index.c, part of libgit.a while it stays in
builtin/diff.c. Move it to diff.c so that we won't get undefined
reference if a program that uses libgit.a happens to pull it in.

While at it, move check_pager from git.c to pager.c. It makes more
sense there and pager.c is also part of libgit.a

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2012-10-29 03:08:30 -04:00
Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy
db699a8a1f Move try_merge_command and checkout_fast_forward to libgit.a
These functions are called in sequencer.c, which is part of
libgit.a. This makes libgit.a potentially require builtin/merge.c for
external git commands.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2012-10-29 03:08:30 -04:00
Michael Haggerty
31171d9e45 longest_ancestor_length(): take a string_list argument for prefixes
Change longest_ancestor_length() to take the prefixes argument as a
string_list rather than as a colon-separated string.  This will make
it easier for the caller to alter the entries before calling
longest_ancestor_length().

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2012-10-29 02:34:58 -04:00
Michael Haggerty
e3e46cdbd4 Introduce new function real_path_if_valid()
The function is like real_path(), except that it returns NULL on error
instead of dying.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2012-10-29 02:34:58 -04:00
Junio C Hamano
dad148c359 ident.c: mark private file-scope symbols as static
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-09-15 22:58:21 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
cbfb93a12b trace.c: mark a private file-scope symbol as static
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-09-15 22:58:21 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
357e9c69c9 read-cache.c: mark a private file-scope symbol as static
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-09-15 22:58:21 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
72f3196a2d symlinks.c: mark private file-scope symbols as static
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-09-15 22:58:21 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
3e06f5ff38 Merge branch 'jc/maint-config-exit-status'
The exit status code from "git config" was way overspecified while
being incorrect.  Update the implementation to give the documented
status for a case that was documented, and introduce a new code for
"all other errors".

* jc/maint-config-exit-status:
  config: "git config baa" should exit with status 1
2012-09-03 15:53:07 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
97349a2a74 Merge branch 'jc/capabilities'
Some capabilities were asked by fetch-pack even when upload-pack did
not advertise that they are available.  Fix fetch-pack not to do so.

* jc/capabilities:
  fetch-pack: mention server version with verbose output
  parse_feature_request: make it easier to see feature values
  fetch-pack: do not ask for unadvertised capabilities
  do not send client agent unless server does first
  send-pack: fix capability-sending logic
  include agent identifier in capability string
2012-08-29 14:50:07 -07:00
Jeff King
9442710801 parse_feature_request: make it easier to see feature values
We already take care to parse key/value capabilities like
"foo=bar", but the code does not provide a good way of
actually finding out what is on the right-hand side of the
"=".

A server using "parse_feature_request" could accomplish this
with some extra parsing. You must skip past the "key"
portion manually, check for "=" versus NUL or space, and
then find the length by searching for the next space (or
NUL).  But clients can't even do that, since the
"server_supports" interface does not even return the
pointer.

Instead, let's have our parser share more information by
providing a pointer to the value and its length. The
"parse_feature_value" function returns a pointer to the
feature's value portion, along with the length of the value.
If the feature is missing, NULL is returned. If it does not
have an "=", then a zero-length value is returned.

Similarly, "server_feature_value" behaves in the same way,
but always checks the static server_feature_list variable.

We can then implement "server_supports" in terms of
"server_feature_value". We cannot implement the original
"parse_feature_request" in terms of our new function,
because it returned a pointer to the beginning of the
feature. However, no callers actually cared about the value
of the returned pointer, so we can simplify it to a boolean
just as we do for "server_supports".

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-08-13 21:52:36 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
9409c7a5b3 config: "git config baa" should exit with status 1
We instead failed with an undocumented exit status 255.
Also define a "catch-all" status and document it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-07-30 08:51:26 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
30ea575876 Merge branch 'tg/ce-namelen-field'
Split lower bits of ce_flags field and creates a new ce_namelen
field in the in-core index structure.

* tg/ce-namelen-field:
  Strip namelen out of ce_flags into a ce_namelen field
2012-07-23 20:55:21 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
0958a24d73 Merge branch 'jc/sha1-name-more'
Teaches the object name parser things like a "git describe" output
is always a commit object, "A" in "git log A" must be a committish,
and "A" and "B" in "git log A...B" both must be committish, etc., to
prolong the lifetime of abbreviated object names.

* jc/sha1-name-more: (27 commits)
  t1512: match the "other" object names
  t1512: ignore whitespaces in wc -l output
  rev-parse --disambiguate=<prefix>
  rev-parse: A and B in "rev-parse A..B" refer to committish
  reset: the command takes committish
  commit-tree: the command wants a tree and commits
  apply: --build-fake-ancestor expects blobs
  sha1_name.c: add support for disambiguating other types
  revision.c: the "log" family, except for "show", takes committish
  revision.c: allow handle_revision_arg() to take other flags
  sha1_name.c: introduce get_sha1_committish()
  sha1_name.c: teach lookup context to get_sha1_with_context()
  sha1_name.c: many short names can only be committish
  sha1_name.c: get_sha1_1() takes lookup flags
  sha1_name.c: get_describe_name() by definition groks only commits
  sha1_name.c: teach get_short_sha1() a commit-only option
  sha1_name.c: allow get_short_sha1() to take other flags
  get_sha1(): fix error status regression
  sha1_name.c: restructure disambiguation of short names
  sha1_name.c: correct misnamed "canonical" and "res"
  ...
2012-07-22 12:55:07 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
b856ad623e Merge branch 'tb/sanitize-decomposed-utf-8-pathname'
Teaches git to normalize pathnames read from readdir(3) and all
arguments from the command line into precomposed UTF-8 (assuming
that they come as decomposed UTF-8) to work around issues on Mac OS.

I think there still are other places that need conversion
(e.g. paths that are read from stdin for some commands), but this
should be a good first step in the right direction.

* tb/sanitize-decomposed-utf-8-pathname:
  git on Mac OS and precomposed unicode
2012-07-13 15:37:51 -07:00
Thomas Gummerer
b60e188c51 Strip namelen out of ce_flags into a ce_namelen field
Strip the name length from the ce_flags field and move it
into its own ce_namelen field in struct cache_entry. This
will both give us a tiny bit of a performance enhancement
when working with long pathnames and is a refactoring for
more readability of the code.

It enhances readability, by making it more clear what
is a flag, and where the length is stored and make it clear
which functions use stages in comparisions and which only
use the length.

It also makes CE_NAMEMASK private, so that users don't
mistakenly write the name length in the flags.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-07-11 09:42:45 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
957d74062c rev-parse --disambiguate=<prefix>
The new option allows you to feed an ambiguous prefix and enumerate
all the objects that share it as a prefix of their object names.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-07-09 16:42:23 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
daba53aeaf sha1_name.c: add support for disambiguating other types
This teaches the revision parser that in "$name:$path" (used for a
blob object name), "$name" must be a tree-ish.

There are many more places where we know what types of objects are
called for.  This patch adds support for "commit", "treeish", "tree",
and "blob", which could be used in the following contexts:

 - "git apply --build-fake-ancestor" reads the "index" lines from
   the patch; they must name blob objects (not even "blob-ish");

 - "git commit-tree" reads a tree object name (not "tree-ish"), and
   zero or more commit object names (not "committish");

 - "git reset $rev" wants a committish; "git reset $rev -- $path"
   wants a treeish.

They will come in later patches in the series.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-07-09 16:42:22 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
cd74e4733d sha1_name.c: introduce get_sha1_committish()
Many callers know that the user meant to name a committish by
syntactical positions where the object name appears.  Calling this
function allows the machinery to disambiguate shorter-than-unique
abbreviated object names between committish and others.

Note that this does NOT error out when the named object is not a
committish. It is merely to give a hint to the disambiguation
machinery.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-07-09 16:42:22 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
33bd598c39 sha1_name.c: teach lookup context to get_sha1_with_context()
The function takes user input string and returns the object name
(binary SHA-1) with mode bits and path when the object was looked
up in a tree.

Additionally give hints to help disambiguation of abbreviated object
names when the caller knows what it is looking for.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-07-09 16:42:22 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
e2643617d7 sha1_name.c: many short names can only be committish
We know that the token "$name" that appear in "$name^{commit}",
"$name^4", "$name~4" etc. can only name a committish (either a
commit or a tag that peels to a commit).  Teach get_short_sha1() to
take advantage of that knowledge when disambiguating an abbreviated
SHA-1 given as an object name.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-07-09 16:42:22 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
d02d7ac303 Merge branch 'mm/config-xdg'
Teach git to read various information from $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/ to allow
the user to avoid cluttering $HOME.

* mm/config-xdg:
  config: write to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/config file when appropriate
  Let core.attributesfile default to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/attributes
  Let core.excludesfile default to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/ignore
  config: read (but not write) from $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/config file
2012-07-09 09:00:36 -07:00
Torsten Bögershausen
76759c7dff git on Mac OS and precomposed unicode
Mac OS X mangles file names containing unicode on file systems HFS+,
VFAT or SAMBA.  When a file using unicode code points outside ASCII
is created on a HFS+ drive, the file name is converted into
decomposed unicode and written to disk. No conversion is done if
the file name is already decomposed unicode.

Calling open("\xc3\x84", ...) with a precomposed "Ä" yields the same
result as open("\x41\xcc\x88",...) with a decomposed "Ä".

As a consequence, readdir() returns the file names in decomposed
unicode, even if the user expects precomposed unicode.  Unlike on
HFS+, Mac OS X stores files on a VFAT drive (e.g. an USB drive) in
precomposed unicode, but readdir() still returns file names in
decomposed unicode.  When a git repository is stored on a network
share using SAMBA, file names are send over the wire and written to
disk on the remote system in precomposed unicode, but Mac OS X
readdir() returns decomposed unicode to be compatible with its
behaviour on HFS+ and VFAT.

The unicode decomposition causes many problems:

- The names "git add" and other commands get from the end user may
  often be precomposed form (the decomposed form is not easily input
  from the keyboard), but when the commands read from the filesystem
  to see what it is going to update the index with already is on the
  filesystem, readdir() will give decomposed form, which is different.

- Similarly "git log", "git mv" and all other commands that need to
  compare pathnames found on the command line (often but not always
  precomposed form; a command line input resulting from globbing may
  be in decomposed) with pathnames found in the tree objects (should
  be precomposed form to be compatible with other systems and for
  consistency in general).

- The same for names stored in the index, which should be
  precomposed, that may need to be compared with the names read from
  readdir().

NFS mounted from Linux is fully transparent and does not suffer from
the above.

As Mac OS X treats precomposed and decomposed file names as equal,
we can

 - wrap readdir() on Mac OS X to return the precomposed form, and

 - normalize decomposed form given from the command line also to the
   precomposed form,

to ensure that all pathnames used in Git are always in the
precomposed form.  This behaviour can be requested by setting
"core.precomposedunicode" configuration variable to true.

The code in compat/precomposed_utf8.c implements basically 4 new
functions: precomposed_utf8_opendir(), precomposed_utf8_readdir(),
precomposed_utf8_closedir() and precompose_argv().  The first three
are to wrap opendir(3), readdir(3), and closedir(3) functions.

The argv[] conversion allows to use the TAB filename completion done
by the shell on command line.  It tolerates other tools which use
readdir() to feed decomposed file names into git.

When creating a new git repository with "git init" or "git clone",
"core.precomposedunicode" will be set "false".

The user needs to activate this feature manually.  She typically
sets core.precomposedunicode to "true" on HFS and VFAT, or file
systems mounted via SAMBA.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-07-08 22:03:46 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
60ad08bfdf Merge branch 'th/diff-no-index-fixes'
"git diff --no-index" did not correctly handle relative paths and
did not give correct exit codes when run under "--quiet" option.

* th/diff-no-index-fixes:
  diff-no-index: exit(1) if 'diff --quiet <repo file> <external file>' finds changes
  diff: handle relative paths in no-index
2012-07-04 23:40:38 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
aa1dec9ef6 sha1_name.c: teach get_short_sha1() a commit-only option
When the caller knows that the parameter is meant to name a commit,
e.g. "56789a" in describe name "v1.2.3-4-g56789a", pass that as a
hint so that lower level can use it to disambiguate objects when
there is only one commit whose name begins with 56789a even if there
are objects of other types whose names share the same prefix.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-07-03 11:17:59 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
37c00e5590 sha1_name.c: allow get_short_sha1() to take other flags
Instead of a separate "int quietly" argument, make it take "unsigned
flags" so that we can pass other options to it.

The bit assignment of this flag word is exposed in cache.h because
the mechanism will be exposed to callers of the higher layer in
later commits in this series.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-07-03 11:17:59 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
249c8f4a16 sha1_name.c: get rid of get_sha1_with_mode()
There are only two callers, and they will benefit from being able to
pass disambiguation hints to underlying get_sha1_with_context() API
once it happens.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-07-03 10:24:11 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
8c135ea260 sha1_name.c: get rid of get_sha1_with_mode_1()
The only external caller is setup.c that tries to give a nicer error
message when an object name is misspelt (e.g. "HEAD:cashe.h").
Retire it and give the caller a dedicated and more intuitive API
function maybe_die_on_misspelt_object_name().

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-07-03 10:22:37 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
f01cc14c3c sha1_name.c: hide get_sha1_with_context_1() ugliness
There is no outside caller that cares about the "only-to-die" ugliness.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-07-02 11:22:57 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
08080894b7 Merge branch 'mm/verify-filename-fix'
"git diff COPYING HEAD:COPYING" gave a nonsense error message that
claimed that the treeish HEAD did not have COPYING in it.
2012-06-28 15:19:32 -07:00
Huynh Khoi Nguyen Nguyen
21cf322791 config: read (but not write) from $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/config file
Teach git to read the "gitconfig" information from a new location,
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/config; this allows the user to avoid
cluttering $HOME with many per-application configuration files.

In the order of reading, this file comes between the global
configuration file (typically $HOME/.gitconfig) and the system wide
configuration file (typically /etc/gitconfig).

We do not write to this new location (yet).

If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is either not set or empty, $HOME/.config/git/config
will be used. This is in line with XDG specification.

If the new file does not exist, the behavior is unchanged.

Signed-off-by: Huynh Khoi Nguyen Nguyen <Huynh-Khoi-Nguyen.Nguyen@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Valentin Duperray <Valentin.Duperray@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Franck Jonas <Franck.Jonas@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Lucien Kong <Lucien.Kong@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Nguy <Thomas.Nguy@ensimag.imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-06-25 09:05:55 -07:00
Jeff King
546e0fd9e9 diff: handle relative paths in no-index
When diff-no-index is given a relative path to a file outside the
repository, it aborts with error. However, if the file is given
using an absolute path, the diff runs as expected. The two cases
should be treated the same.

Tests and commit message by Tim Henigan.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Tim Henigan <tim.henigan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-06-22 10:20:18 -07:00
Matthieu Moy
023e37c377 verify_filename(): ask the caller to chose the kind of diagnosis
verify_filename() can be called in two different contexts. Either we
just tried to interpret a string as an object name, and it fails, so
we try looking for a working tree file (i.e. we finished looking at
revs that come earlier on the command line, and the next argument
must be a pathname), or we _know_ that we are looking for a
pathname, and shouldn't even try interpreting the string as an
object name.

For example, with this change, we get:

  $ git log COPYING HEAD:inexistant
  fatal: HEAD:inexistant: no such path in the working tree.
  Use '-- <path>...' to specify paths that do not exist locally.
  $ git log HEAD:inexistant
  fatal: Path 'inexistant' does not exist in 'HEAD'

Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-06-18 15:21:42 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
261ec7d02a Merge branch 'jk/ident-gecos-strbuf'
Fixes quite a lot of brokenness when ident information needs to be taken
from the system and cleans up the code.

By Jeff King
* jk/ident-gecos-strbuf: (22 commits)
  format-patch: do not use bogus email addresses in message ids
  ident: reject bogus email addresses with IDENT_STRICT
  ident: rename IDENT_ERROR_ON_NO_NAME to IDENT_STRICT
  format-patch: use GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL in message ids
  ident: let callers omit name with fmt_indent
  ident: refactor NO_DATE flag in fmt_ident
  ident: reword empty ident error message
  format-patch: refactor get_patch_filename
  ident: trim whitespace from default name/email
  ident: use a dynamic strbuf in fmt_ident
  ident: use full dns names to generate email addresses
  ident: report passwd errors with a more friendly message
  drop length limitations on gecos-derived names and emails
  ident: don't write fallback username into git_default_name
  fmt_ident: drop IDENT_WARN_ON_NO_NAME code
  format-patch: use default email for generating message ids
  ident: trim trailing newline from /etc/mailname
  move git_default_* variables to ident.c
  move identity config parsing to ident.c
  fmt-merge-msg: don't use static buffer in record_person
  ...
2012-05-29 13:09:13 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
69e82602b9 Merge branch 'hv/submodule-alt-odb' into maint
When a submodule repository uses alternate object store mechanism, some
commands that were started from the superproject did not notice it and
failed with "No such object" errors.  The subcommands of "git submodule"
command that recursed into the submodule in a separate process were OK;
only the ones that cheated and peeked directly into the submodule's
repository from the primary process were affected.

By Heiko Voigt
* hv/submodule-alt-odb:
  teach add_submodule_odb() to look for alternates
2012-05-25 11:26:38 -07:00
Jeff King
f9bc573fda ident: rename IDENT_ERROR_ON_NO_NAME to IDENT_STRICT
Callers who ask for ERROR_ON_NO_NAME are not so much
concerned that the name will be blank (because, after all,
we will fall back to using the username), but rather it is a
check to make sure that low-quality identities do not end up
in things like commit messages or emails (whereas it is OK
for them to end up in things like reflogs).

When future commits add more quality checks on the identity,
each of these callers would want to use those checks, too.
Rather than modify each of them later to add a new flag,
let's refactor the flag.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-05-24 17:16:41 -07:00
Jeff King
c15e1987ae ident: let callers omit name with fmt_indent
Most callers want to see all of "$name <$email> $date", but
a few want only limited parts, omitting the date, or even
the name. We already have IDENT_NO_DATE to handle the date
part, but there's not a good option for getting just the
email. Callers have to done one of:

  1. Call ident_default_email; this does not respect
     environment variables, nor does it promise to trim
     whitespace or other crud from the result.

  2. Call git_{committer,author}_info; this returns the name
     and email, leaving the caller to parse out the wanted
     bits.

This patch adds IDENT_NO_NAME; it stops short of adding
IDENT_NO_EMAIL, as no callers want it (nor are likely to),
and it complicates the error handling of the function.

When no name is requested, the angle brackets (<>) around
the email address are also omitted.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-05-24 17:16:40 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
4809ff858b Merge branch 'hv/submodule-alt-odb'
When peeking into object stores of submodules, the code forgot that they
might borrow objects from alternate object stores on their own.

By Heiko Voigt
* hv/submodule-alt-odb:
  teach add_submodule_odb() to look for alternates
2012-05-23 13:35:06 -07:00
Jeff King
b9f0ac1710 fmt_ident: drop IDENT_WARN_ON_NO_NAME code
There are no more callers who want this, so we can drop it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-05-22 09:07:54 -07:00
Jeff King
2d4b4fcebd move git_default_* variables to ident.c
There's no reason anybody outside of ident.c should access
these directly (they should use the new accessors which make
sure the variables are initialized), so we can make them
file-scope statics.

While we're at it, move user_ident_explicitly_given into
ident.c; while still globally visible, it makes more sense
to reside with the ident code.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-05-22 09:07:53 -07:00
Jeff King
9597921b6c move identity config parsing to ident.c
There's no reason for this to be in config, except that once
upon a time all of the config parsing was there. It makes
more sense to keep the ident code together.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-05-22 09:07:53 -07:00
Jeff King
bcb2b0044b ident: split setup_ident into separate functions
This function sets up the default name, email, and date, and
is not publicly available. Let's split it into three public
functions so that callers can get just the parts they need.

While we're at it, let's change the interface to simple
accessors. The original function was called only by fmt_ident,
and contained logic for "if we already have some other
value, don't load the default" which properly belongs in
fmt_ident.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-05-22 09:07:52 -07:00
Heiko Voigt
5e73633dbf teach add_submodule_odb() to look for alternates
Since we allow to link other object databases when loading a submodules
database we should also load possible alternates.

Signed-off-by: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-05-14 11:56:42 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
07e74b0da2 Merge branch 'ct/advise-push-default' into maint
The cases "git push" fails due to non-ff can be broken into three
categories; each case is given a separate advise message.

By Christopher Tiwald (2) and Jeff King (1)
* ct/advise-push-default:
  Fix httpd tests that broke when non-ff push advice changed
  clean up struct ref's nonfastforward field
  push: Provide situational hints for non-fast-forward errors
2012-05-11 11:18:43 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
1be65eda6a Merge branch 'nd/i18n'
More message strings marked for i18n.

By Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy (10) and Jonathan Nieder (1)
* nd/i18n:
  help: replace underlining "help -a" headers using hyphens with a blank line
  i18n: bundle: mark strings for translation
  i18n: index-pack: mark strings for translation
  i18n: apply: update say_patch_name to give translators complete sentence
  i18n: apply: mark strings for translation
  i18n: remote: mark strings for translation
  i18n: make warn_dangling_symref() automatically append \n
  i18n: help: mark strings for translation
  i18n: mark relative dates for translation
  strbuf: convenience format functions with \n automatically appended
  Makefile: feed all header files to xgettext
2012-05-02 13:51:35 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
a3db8511b7 Merge branch 'mm/simple-push'
New users tend to work on one branch at a time and push the result
out. The current and upstream modes of push is a more suitable default
mode than matching mode for these people, but neither is surprise-free
depending on how the project is set up. Introduce a "simple" mode that
is a subset of "upstream" but only works when the branch is named the same
between the remote and local repositories.

The plan is to make it the new default when push.default is not
configured.

By Matthieu Moy (5) and others
* mm/simple-push:
  push.default doc: explain simple after upstream
  push: document the future default change for push.default (matching -> simple)
  t5570: use explicit push refspec
  push: introduce new push.default mode "simple"
  t5528-push-default.sh: add helper functions
  Undocument deprecated alias 'push.default=tracking'
  Documentation: explain push.default option a bit more
2012-05-02 13:51:24 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
d4a5d872c0 Merge branch 'jc/index-v4'
Trivially shrinks the on-disk size of the index file to save both I/O and
checksum overhead.

The topic should give a solid base to build on further updates, with the
code refactoring in its earlier parts, and the backward compatibility
mechanism in its later parts.

* jc/index-v4:
  index-v4: document the entry format
  unpack-trees: preserve the index file version of original
  update-index: upgrade/downgrade on-disk index version
  read-cache.c: write prefix-compressed names in the index
  read-cache.c: read prefix-compressed names in index on-disk version v4
  read-cache.c: move code to copy incore to ondisk cache to a helper function
  read-cache.c: move code to copy ondisk to incore cache to a helper function
  read-cache.c: report the header version we do not understand
  read-cache.c: make create_from_disk() report number of bytes it consumed
  read-cache.c: allow unaligned mapping of the index file
  cache.h: hide on-disk index details
  varint: make it available outside the context of pack
2012-05-02 13:51:13 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
8c1ba21314 Merge branch 'jk/run-command-eacces' into maint
When PATH contains an unreadable directory, alias expansion code did
not kick in, and failed with an error that said "git-subcmd" was not
found.

By Jeff King (1) and Ramsay Jones (1)
* jk/run-command-eacces:
  run-command: treat inaccessible directories as ENOENT
  compat/mingw.[ch]: Change return type of exec functions to int
2012-04-26 10:51:41 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
3f231e235f Merge branch 'jk/diff-no-rename-empty' into maint
Rename detection logic used to match two empty files as renames during
merge-recursive, leading unnatural mismerges.

By Jeff King
* jk/diff-no-rename-empty:
  merge-recursive: don't detect renames of empty files
  teach diffcore-rename to optionally ignore empty content
  make is_empty_blob_sha1 available everywhere
  drop casts from users EMPTY_TREE_SHA1_BIN
2012-04-26 10:35:33 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
695db86ad7 Merge branch 'jc/commit-hook-authorship' into maint
"git commit --author=$name" did not tell the name that was being
recorded in the resulting commit to hooks, even though it does do so
when the end user overrode the authorship via the "GIT_AUTHOR_NAME"
environment variable.

* jc/commit-hook-authorship:
  commit: pass author/committer info to hooks
  t7503: does pre-commit-hook learn authorship?
  ident.c: add split_ident_line() to parse formatted ident line
2012-04-26 10:34:53 -07:00
Matthieu Moy
b55e677522 push: introduce new push.default mode "simple"
When calling "git push" without argument, we want to allow Git to do
something simple to explain and safe. push.default=matching is unsafe
when used to push to shared repositories, and hard to explain to
beginners in some contexts. It is debatable whether 'upstream' or
'current' is the safest or the easiest to explain, so introduce a new
mode called 'simple' that is the intersection of them: push to the
upstream branch, but only if it has the same name remotely. If not, give
an error that suggests the right command to push explicitely to
'upstream' or 'current'.

A question is whether to allow pushing when no upstream is configured. An
argument in favor of allowing the push is that it makes the new mode work
in more cases. On the other hand, refusing to push when no upstream is
configured encourages the user to set the upstream, which will be
beneficial on the next pull. Lacking better argument, we chose to deny
the push, because it will be easier to change in the future if someone
shows us wrong.

Original-patch-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-04-24 15:22:16 -07:00
Jonathan Nieder
7d29afd43c i18n: mark relative dates for translation
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-04-24 14:55:48 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
c5da24a73a Merge branch 'ct/advise-push-default'
Break down the cases in which "git push" fails due to non-ff into
three categories, and give separate advise messages for each case.

By Christopher Tiwald (2) and Jeff King (1)
* ct/advise-push-default:
  Fix httpd tests that broke when non-ff push advice changed
  clean up struct ref's nonfastforward field
  push: Provide situational hints for non-fast-forward errors
2012-04-20 15:50:37 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
bd6f71d1fc Merge branch 'jk/run-command-eacces'
When PATH contains an unreadable directory, alias expansion code did not
kick in, and failed with an error that said "git-subcmd" was not found.

By Jeff King (1) and Ramsay Jones (1)
* jk/run-command-eacces:
  run-command: treat inaccessible directories as ENOENT
  compat/mingw.[ch]: Change return type of exec functions to int
2012-04-20 15:50:03 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
c0599f6993 Merge branch 'jk/diff-no-rename-empty'
Forbids rename detection logic from matching two empty files as renames
during merge-recursive to prevent mismerges.

By Jeff King
* jk/diff-no-rename-empty:
  merge-recursive: don't detect renames of empty files
  teach diffcore-rename to optionally ignore empty content
  make is_empty_blob_sha1 available everywhere
  drop casts from users EMPTY_TREE_SHA1_BIN
2012-04-16 12:41:49 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
9eefd8ae8a Merge branch 'jc/commit-hook-authorship'
"git commit --author=$name" did not tell the name that was being recorded
in the resulting commit to hooks, even though it does do so when the end
user overrode the authorship via the "GIT_AUTHOR_NAME" environment
variable.

* jc/commit-hook-authorship:
  commit: pass author/committer info to hooks
  t7503: does pre-commit-hook learn authorship?
  ident.c: add split_ident_line() to parse formatted ident line
2012-04-15 22:51:01 -07:00
Jeff King
38f865c27d run-command: treat inaccessible directories as ENOENT
When execvp reports EACCES, it can be one of two things:

  1. We found a file to execute, but did not have
     permissions to do so.

  2. We did not have permissions to look in some directory
     in the $PATH.

In the former case, we want to consider this a
permissions problem and report it to the user as such (since
getting this for something like "git foo" is likely a
configuration error).

In the latter case, there is a good chance that the
inaccessible directory does not contain anything of
interest. Reporting "permission denied" is confusing to the
user (and prevents our usual "did you mean...?" lookup). It
also prevents git from trying alias lookup, since we do so
only when an external command does not exist (not when it
exists but has an error).

This patch detects EACCES from execvp, checks whether we are
in case (2), and if so converts errno to ENOENT. This
behavior matches that of "bash" (but not of simpler shells
that use execvp more directly, like "dash").

Test stolen from Junio.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-04-05 16:24:13 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
9d227781b6 read-cache.c: write prefix-compressed names in the index
Teach the code to write the index in the v4 on-disk format.

Record the format version of the on-disk index we read from in the
index_state, and use the format when writing the new index out.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-04-04 09:57:49 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
db3b313c84 cache.h: hide on-disk index details
The on-disk format of the index file is a detail whose implementation is
neatly encapsulated in read-cache.c; there is no need to expose it to the
general public that include the cache.h header file.

Also add a prominent mark to read-cache.c to delineate the parts that deal
with the index file I/O routines from the remainder of the file.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-04-03 16:24:45 -07:00
Jeff King
e339aa92ae clean up struct ref's nonfastforward field
Each ref structure contains a "nonfastforward" field which
is set during push to show whether the ref rewound history.
Originally this was a single bit, but it was changed in
f25950f (push: Provide situational hints for non-fast-forward
errors) to an enum differentiating a non-ff of the current
branch versus another branch.

However, we never actually set the member according to the
enum values, nor did we ever read it expecting anything but
a boolean value. But we did use the side effect of declaring
the enum constants to store those values in a totally
different integer variable. The code as-is isn't buggy, but
the enum declaration inside "struct ref" is somewhat
misleading.

Let's convert nonfastforward back into a single bit, and
then define the NON_FF_* constants closer to where they
would be used (they are returned via the "int *nonfastforward"
parameter to transport_push, so we can define them there).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-03-26 12:59:04 -07:00
Jeff King
f8582cad8d make is_empty_blob_sha1 available everywhere
The read-cache implementation defines this static function,
but it is a generally useful concept in git. Let's give
the empty blob the same treatment as the empty tree,
providing both hex and binary forms of the sha1.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-03-23 13:52:13 -07:00
Christopher Tiwald
f25950f347 push: Provide situational hints for non-fast-forward errors
Pushing a non-fast-forward update to a remote repository will result in
an error, but the hint text doesn't provide the correct resolution in
every case. Give better resolution advice in three push scenarios:

1) If you push your current branch and it triggers a non-fast-forward
error, you should merge remote changes with 'git pull' before pushing
again.

2) If you push to a shared repository others push to, and your local
tracking branches are not kept up to date, the 'matching refs' default
will generate non-fast-forward errors on outdated branches. If this is
your workflow, the 'matching refs' default is not for you. Consider
setting the 'push.default' configuration variable to 'current' or
'upstream' to ensure only your current branch is pushed.

3) If you explicitly specify a ref that is not your current branch or
push matching branches with ':', you will generate a non-fast-forward
error if any pushed branch tip is out of date. You should checkout the
offending branch and merge remote changes before pushing again.

Teach transport.c to recognize these scenarios and configure push.c
to hint for them. If 'git push's default behavior changes or we
discover more scenarios, extension is easy. Standardize on the
advice API and add three new advice variables, 'pushNonFFCurrent',
'pushNonFFDefault', and 'pushNonFFMatching'. Setting any of these
to 'false' will disable their affiliated advice. Setting
'pushNonFastForward' to false will disable all three, thus preserving the
config option for users who already set it, but guaranteeing new
users won't disable push advice accidentally.

Based-on-patch-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Christopher Tiwald <christiwald@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-03-19 21:42:06 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
4b340cfab9 ident.c: add split_ident_line() to parse formatted ident line
The commit formatting logic format_person_part() in pretty.c
implements the logic to split an author/committer ident line into
its parts, intermixed with logic to compute its output using these
piece it computes.

Separate the former out to a helper function split_ident_line() so
that other codepath can use the same logic, and rewrite the function
using the helper function.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-03-11 03:56:50 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
713194ce54 Merge branch 'jh/threadable-symlink-check'
By Jared Hance
* jh/threadable-symlink-check:
  Add threaded versions of functions in symlinks.c.
2012-03-06 14:53:07 -08:00
Jared Hance
15438d5a56 Add threaded versions of functions in symlinks.c.
check_leading_path() and has_dirs_only_path() both always use the default
cache, which could be a caveat for adding parallelism (which is a concern
and even a GSoC proposal).

Reimplement these two in terms of new threaded_check_leading_path() and
threaded_has_dirs_only_path() that take their own copy of the cache.

Signed-off-by: Jared Hance <jaredhance@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-03-02 23:56:28 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
fd1727f5fa Merge branch 'jk/config-include'
* jk/config-include:
  : An assignment to the include.path pseudo-variable causes the named file
  : to be included in-place when Git looks up configuration variables.
  config: add include directive
  config: eliminate config_exclusive_filename
  config: stop using config_exclusive_filename
  config: provide a version of git_config with more options
  config: teach git_config_rename_section a file argument
  config: teach git_config_set_multivar_in_file a default path
  config: copy the return value of prefix_filename
  t1300: add missing &&-chaining
  docs/api-config: minor clarifications
  docs: add a basic description of the config API
2012-02-23 13:30:14 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
0cfba96121 Merge branch 'jk/git-dir-lookup' into maint
* jk/git-dir-lookup:
  standardize and improve lookup rules for external local repos
2012-02-21 15:13:16 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
c17ff2a361 Merge branch 'zj/term-columns' into maint
* zj/term-columns:
  pager: find out the terminal width before spawning the pager
2012-02-21 15:00:15 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
4d9e079e82 Merge branch 'zj/decimal-width'
* zj/decimal-width:
  make lineno_width() from blame reusable for others

Conflicts:
	cache.h
	pager.c
2012-02-20 00:15:11 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
583c389e7e Merge branch 'zj/term-columns'
* zj/term-columns:
  pager: find out the terminal width before spawning the pager
2012-02-20 00:15:06 -08:00
Jeff King
9b25a0b52e config: add include directive
It can be useful to split your ~/.gitconfig across multiple
files. For example, you might have a "main" file which is
used on many machines, but a small set of per-machine
tweaks. Or you may want to make some of your config public
(e.g., clever aliases) while keeping other data back (e.g.,
your name or other identifying information). Or you may want
to include a number of config options in some subset of your
repos without copying and pasting (e.g., you want to
reference them from the .git/config of participating repos).

This patch introduces an include directive for config files.
It looks like:

  [include]
    path = /path/to/file

This is syntactically backwards-compatible with existing git
config parsers (i.e., they will see it as another config
entry and ignore it unless you are looking up include.path).

The implementation provides a "git_config_include" callback
which wraps regular config callbacks. Callers can pass it to
git_config_from_file, and it will transparently follow any
include directives, passing all of the discovered options to
the real callback.

Include directives are turned on automatically for "regular"
git config parsing. This includes calls to git_config, as
well as calls to the "git config" program that do not
specify a single file (e.g., using "-f", "--global", etc).
They are not turned on in other cases, including:

  1. Parsing of other config-like files, like .gitmodules.
     There isn't a real need, and I'd rather be conservative
     and avoid unnecessary incompatibility or confusion.

  2. Reading single files via "git config". This is for two
     reasons:

       a. backwards compatibility with scripts looking at
          config-like files.

       b. inspection of a specific file probably means you
	  care about just what's in that file, not a general
          lookup for "do we have this value anywhere at
	  all". If that is not the case, the caller can
	  always specify "--includes".

  3. Writing files via "git config"; we want to treat
     include.* variables as literal items to be copied (or
     modified), and not expand them. So "git config
     --unset-all foo.bar" would operate _only_ on
     .git/config, not any of its included files (just as it
     also does not operate on ~/.gitconfig).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-02-17 07:59:55 -08:00
Jeff King
4a7bb5ba95 config: eliminate config_exclusive_filename
This is a magic global variable that was intended as an
override to the usual git-config lookup process. Once upon a
time, you could specify GIT_CONFIG to any git program, and
it would look only at that file. This turned out to be
confusing and cause a lot of bugs for little gain. As a
result, dc87183 (Only use GIT_CONFIG in "git config", not
other programs, 2008-06-30) took this away for all callers
except git-config.

Since git-config no longer uses it either, the variable can
just go away. As the diff shows, nobody was setting to
anything except NULL, so we can just replace any sites where
it was read with NULL.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-02-17 07:58:54 -08:00
Jeff King
c9b5e2a57d config: provide a version of git_config with more options
Callers may want to provide a specific version of a file in which to look
for config. Right now this can be done by setting the magic global
config_exclusive_filename variable.  By providing a version of git_config
that takes a filename, we can take a step towards making this magic global
go away.

Furthermore, by providing a more "advanced" interface, we now have a a
natural place to add new options for callers like git-config, which care
about tweaking the specifics of config lookup, without disturbing the
large number of "simple" users (i.e., every other part of git).

The astute reader of this patch may notice that the logic for handling
config_exclusive_filename was taken out of git_config_early, but added
into git_config. This means that git_config_early will no longer respect
config_exclusive_filename.  That's OK, because the only other caller of
git_config_early is check_repository_format_gently, but the only function
which sets config_exclusive_filename is cmd_config, which does not call
check_repository_format_gently (and if it did, it would have been a bug,
anyway, as we would be checking the repository format in the wrong file).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-02-17 07:58:07 -08:00
Jeff King
42bd39b57f config: teach git_config_rename_section a file argument
The other config-writing functions (git_config_set and
git_config_set_multivar) each have an -"in_file" version to
write a specific file. Let's add one for rename_section,
with the eventual goal of moving away from the magic
config_exclusive_filename global.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-02-17 07:52:41 -08:00
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
ec7ff5ba27 make lineno_width() from blame reusable for others
builtin/blame.c has a helper function to compute how many columns
we need to show a line-number, whose implementation is reusable as
a more generic helper function to count the number of columns
necessary to show any cardinal number.

Rename it to decimal_width(), move it to pager.c and export it for
use by future callers.

Signed-off-by: Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek <zbyszek@in.waw.pl>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-02-14 16:16:19 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
0364bb135e Merge branch 'jk/git-dir-lookup'
* jk/git-dir-lookup:
  standardize and improve lookup rules for external local repos
2012-02-14 12:57:18 -08:00
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
ad6c3739a3 pager: find out the terminal width before spawning the pager
term_columns() checks for terminal width via ioctl(2) on the standard
output, but we spawn the pager too early for this check to be useful.

The effect of this buglet can be observed by opening a wide terminal and
running "git -p help --all", which still shows 80-column output, while
"git help --all" uses the full terminal width. Run the check before we
spawn the pager to fix this.

While at it, move term_columns() to pager.c and export it from cache.h so
that callers other than the help subsystem can use it.

Signed-off-by: Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek <zbyszek@in.waw.pl>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-02-13 15:08:47 -08:00
Jeff King
b3256eb8b3 standardize and improve lookup rules for external local repos
When you specify a local repository on the command line of
clone, ls-remote, upload-pack, receive-pack, or upload-archive,
or in a request to git-daemon, we perform a little bit of
lookup magic, doing things like looking in working trees for
.git directories and appending ".git" for bare repos.

For clone, this magic happens in get_repo_path. For
everything else, it happens in enter_repo. In both cases,
there are some ambiguous or confusing cases that aren't
handled well, and there is one case that is not handled the
same by both methods.

This patch tries to provide (and test!) standard, sensible
lookup rules for both code paths. The intended changes are:

  1. When looking up "foo", we have always preferred
     a working tree "foo" (containing "foo/.git" over the
     bare "foo.git". But we did not prefer a bare "foo" over
     "foo.git". With this patch, we do so.

  2. We would select directories that existed but didn't
     actually look like git repositories. With this patch,
     we make sure a selected directory looks like a git
     repo. Not only is this more sensible in general, but it
     will help anybody who is negatively affected by change
     (1) negatively (e.g., if they had "foo.git" next to its
     separate work tree "foo", and expect to keep finding
     "foo.git" when they reference "foo").

  3. The enter_repo code path would, given "foo", look for
     "foo.git/.git" (i.e., do the ".git" append magic even
     for a repo with working tree). The clone code path did
     not; with this patch, they now behave the same.

In the unlikely case of a working tree overlaying a bare
repo (i.e., a ".git" directory _inside_ a bare repo), we
continue to treat it as a working tree (prefering the
"inner" .git over the bare repo). This is mainly because the
combination seems nonsensical, and I'd rather stick with
existing behavior on the off chance that somebody is relying
on it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-02-02 16:41:55 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
f47182c852 server_supports(): parse feature list more carefully
We have been carefully choosing feature names used in the protocol
extensions so that the vocabulary does not contain a word that is a
substring of another word, so it is not a real problem, but we have
recently added "quiet" feature word, which would mean we cannot later
add some other word with "quiet" (e.g. "quiet-push"), which is awkward.

Let's make sure that we can eventually be able to do so by teaching the
clients and servers that feature words consist of non whitespace
letters. This parser also allows us to later add features with parameters
e.g. "feature=1.5" (parameter values need to be quoted for whitespaces,
but we will worry about the detauls when we do introduce them).

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2012-01-08 14:26:28 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
ded408fd20 Merge branch 'jk/git-prompt'
* jk/git-prompt:
  contrib: add credential helper for OS X Keychain
  Makefile: OS X has /dev/tty
  Makefile: linux has /dev/tty
  credential: use git_prompt instead of git_getpass
  prompt: use git_terminal_prompt
  add generic terminal prompt function
  refactor git_getpass into generic prompt function
  move git_getpass to its own source file
  imap-send: don't check return value of git_getpass
  imap-send: avoid buffer overflow

Conflicts:
	Makefile
2011-12-22 11:27:23 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
8d68493f20 Merge branch 'mh/ref-api'
* mh/ref-api:
  add_ref(): take a (struct ref_entry *) parameter
  create_ref_entry(): extract function from add_ref()
  repack_without_ref(): remove temporary
  resolve_gitlink_ref_recursive(): change to work with struct ref_cache
  Pass a (ref_cache *) to the resolve_gitlink_*() helper functions
  resolve_gitlink_ref(): improve docstring
  get_ref_dir(): change signature
  refs: change signatures of get_packed_refs() and get_loose_refs()
  is_dup_ref(): extract function from sort_ref_array()
  add_ref(): add docstring
  parse_ref_line(): add docstring
  is_refname_available(): remove the "quiet" argument
  clear_ref_array(): rename from free_ref_array()
  refs: rename parameters result -> sha1
  refs: rename "refname" variables
  struct ref_entry: document name member

Conflicts:
	cache.h
	refs.c
2011-12-20 13:25:53 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
b3ae9d8e57 Merge branch 'jk/fetch-no-tail-match-refs'
* jk/fetch-no-tail-match-refs:
  connect.c: drop path_match function
  fetch-pack: match refs exactly
  t5500: give fully-qualified refs to fetch-pack
  drop "match" parameter from get_remote_heads
2011-12-19 16:05:55 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
2e05710a16 Merge branch 'nd/resolve-ref'
* nd/resolve-ref:
  Rename resolve_ref() to resolve_ref_unsafe()
  Convert resolve_ref+xstrdup to new resolve_refdup function
  revert: convert resolve_ref() to read_ref_full()
2011-12-19 16:05:50 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
48b303675a Merge branch 'jc/stream-to-pack'
* jc/stream-to-pack:
  bulk-checkin: replace fast-import based implementation
  csum-file: introduce sha1file_checkpoint
  finish_tmp_packfile(): a helper function
  create_tmp_packfile(): a helper function
  write_pack_header(): a helper function

Conflicts:
	pack.h
2011-12-16 22:33:40 -08:00
Jeff King
bab8d28e77 connect.c: drop path_match function
This function was used for comparing local and remote ref
names during fetch (which makes it a candidate for "most
confusingly named function of the year").

It no longer has any callers, so let's get rid of it.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-12-13 10:18:12 -08:00
Jeff King
afe7c5ff1f drop "match" parameter from get_remote_heads
The get_remote_heads function reads the list of remote refs
during git protocol session. It dates all the way back to
def88e9 (Commit first cut at "git-fetch-pack", 2005-07-04).
At that time, the idea was to come up with a list of refs we
were interested in, and then filter the list as we got it
from the remote side.

Later, 1baaae5 (Make maximal use of the remote refs,
2005-10-28) stopped filtering at the get_remote_heads layer,
letting us use the non-matching refs to find common history.

As a result, all callers now simply pass an empty match
list (and any future callers will want to do the same). So
let's drop these now-useless parameters.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-12-13 10:08:24 -08:00
Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy
8cad4744ee Rename resolve_ref() to resolve_ref_unsafe()
resolve_ref() may return a pointer to a shared buffer and can be
overwritten by the next resolve_ref() calls. Callers need to
pay attention, not to keep the pointer when the next call happens.

Rename with "_unsafe" suffix to warn developers (or reviewers) before
introducing new call sites.

This patch is generated using the following command

git grep -l 'resolve_ref(' -- '*.[ch]'|xargs sed -i 's/resolve_ref(/resolve_ref_unsafe(/g'

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-12-13 09:39:46 -08:00
Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy
96ec7b1e70 Convert resolve_ref+xstrdup to new resolve_refdup function
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-12-13 09:26:52 -08:00
Jeff King
d3c58b83ae move git_getpass to its own source file
This is currently in connect.c, but really has nothing to
do with the git protocol itself. Let's make a new source
file all about prompting the user, which will make it
cleaner to refactor.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-12-12 16:09:38 -08:00
Michael Haggerty
dfefa935ae refs: rename "refname" variables
Try to consistently use the variable name "refname" when referring to
a string that names a reference.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-12-12 09:08:51 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
b7f7c07977 Merge branch 'nd/resolve-ref'
* nd/resolve-ref:
  Copy resolve_ref() return value for longer use
  Convert many resolve_ref() calls to read_ref*() and ref_exists()

Conflicts:
	builtin/fmt-merge-msg.c
	builtin/merge.c
	refs.c
2011-12-09 13:37:14 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
eb8aa3d2c2 Merge branch 'jc/pull-signed-tag'
* jc/pull-signed-tag:
  commit-tree: teach -m/-F options to read logs from elsewhere
  commit-tree: update the command line parsing
  commit: teach --amend to carry forward extra headers
  merge: force edit and no-ff mode when merging a tag object
  commit: copy merged signed tags to headers of merge commit
  merge: record tag objects without peeling in MERGE_HEAD
  merge: make usage of commit->util more extensible
  fmt-merge-msg: Add contents of merged tag in the merge message
  fmt-merge-msg: package options into a structure
  fmt-merge-msg: avoid early returns
  refs DWIMmery: use the same rule for both "git fetch" and others
  fetch: allow "git fetch $there v1.0" to fetch a tag
  merge: notice local merging of tags and keep it unwrapped
  fetch: do not store peeled tag object names in FETCH_HEAD
  Split GPG interface into its own helper library

Conflicts:
	builtin/fmt-merge-msg.c
	builtin/merge.c
2011-12-09 13:37:09 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
568508e765 bulk-checkin: replace fast-import based implementation
This extends the earlier approach to stream a large file directly from the
filesystem to its own packfile, and allows "git add" to send large files
directly into a single pack. Older code used to spawn fast-import, but the
new bulk-checkin API replaces it.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-12-01 11:46:09 -08:00
Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy
c689332391 Convert many resolve_ref() calls to read_ref*() and ref_exists()
resolve_ref() may return a pointer to a static buffer, which is not
safe for long-term use because if another resolve_ref() call happens,
the buffer may be changed.  Many call sites though do not care about
this buffer. They simply check if the return value is NULL or not.

Convert all these call sites to new wrappers to reduce resolve_ref()
calls from 57 to 34. If we change resolve_ref() prototype later on
to avoid passing static buffer out, this helps reduce changes.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-11-13 12:21:06 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
dd621df9cd refs DWIMmery: use the same rule for both "git fetch" and others
"git log frotz" can DWIM to "refs/remotes/frotz/HEAD", but in the remote
access context, "git fetch frotz" to fetch what the other side happened to
have fetched from what it calls 'frotz' (which may not have any relation
to what we consider is 'frotz') the last time would not make much sense,
so the fetch rules table did not include "refs/remotes/%.*s/HEAD".

When the user really wants to, "git fetch $there remotes/frotz/HEAD" would
let her do so anyway, so this is not about safety or security; it merely
is about confusion avoidance and discouraging meaningless usage.

Specifically, it is _not_ about ambiguity avoidance. A name that would
become ambiguous if we use the same rules table for both fetch and local
rev-parse would be ambiguous locally at the remote side.

So for the same reason as we added rule to allow "git fetch $there v1.0"
instead of "git fetch $there tags/v1.0" in the previous commit, here is a
bit longer rope for the users, which incidentally simplifies our code.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-11-07 15:34:30 -08:00
René Scharfe
ee7825b58c cache.h: put single NUL at end of struct cache_entry
Since in-memory index entries are allocated individually now, the
variable slack at the end meant to provide an eight byte alignment
is not needed anymore.  Have a single NUL instead.  This saves zero
to seven bytes for an entry, depending on its filename length.

Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-10-26 15:25:59 -07:00
René Scharfe
debed2a629 read-cache.c: allocate index entries individually
The code to estimate the in-memory size of the index based on its on-disk
representation is subtly wrong for certain architecture-dependent struct
layouts.  Instead of fixing it, replace the code to keep the index entries
in a single large block of memory and allocate each entry separately
instead.  This is both simpler and more flexible, as individual entries
can now be freed.  Actually using that added flexibility is left for a
later patch.

Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-10-26 15:25:59 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
2070950633 Merge branch 'jk/maint-pack-objects-compete-with-delete'
* jk/maint-pack-objects-compete-with-delete:
  downgrade "packfile cannot be accessed" errors to warnings
  pack-objects: protect against disappearing packs
2011-10-21 16:04:33 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
afd6284a7f Merge branch 'ph/transport-with-gitfile'
* ph/transport-with-gitfile:
  Fix is_gitfile() for files too small or larger than PATH_MAX to be a gitfile
  Add test showing git-fetch groks gitfiles
  Teach transport about the gitfile mechanism
  Learn to handle gitfiles in enter_repo
  enter_repo: do not modify input
2011-10-21 16:04:32 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
a200dc8e62 Merge branch 'bc/attr-ignore-case'
* bc/attr-ignore-case:
  attr.c: respect core.ignorecase when matching attribute patterns
  attr: read core.attributesfile from git_default_core_config
  builtin/mv.c: plug miniscule memory leak
  cleanup: use internal memory allocation wrapper functions everywhere
  attr.c: avoid inappropriate access to strbuf "buf" member

Conflicts:
	transport-helper.c
2011-10-17 21:37:14 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
6f55f02815 Merge branch 'jk/name-hash-dirent'
* jk/name-hash-dirent:
  fix phantom untracked files when core.ignorecase is set
2011-10-17 21:37:11 -07:00
Jeff King
4c08018204 pack-objects: protect against disappearing packs
It's possible that while pack-objects is running, a
simultaneously running prune process might delete a pack
that we are interested in. Because we load the pack indices
early on, we know that the pack contains our item, but by
the time we try to open and map it, it is gone.

Since c715f78, we already protect against this in the normal
object access code path, but pack-objects accesses the packs
at a lower level.  In the normal access path, we call
find_pack_entry, which will call find_pack_entry_one on each
pack index, which does the actual lookup. If it gets a hit,
we will actually open and verify the validity of the
matching packfile (using c715f78's is_pack_valid). If we
can't open it, we'll issue a warning and pretend that we
didn't find it, causing us to go on to the next pack (or on
to loose objects).

Furthermore, we will cache the descriptor to the opened
packfile. Which means that later, when we actually try to
access the object, we are likely to still have that packfile
opened, and won't care if it has been unlinked from the
filesystem.

Notice the "likely" above. If there is another pack access
in the interim, and we run out of descriptors, we could
close the pack. And then a later attempt to access the
closed pack could fail (we'll try to re-open it, of course,
but it may have been deleted). In practice, this doesn't
happen because we tend to look up items and then access them
immediately.

Pack-objects does not follow this code path. Instead, it
accesses the packs at a much lower level, using
find_pack_entry_one directly. This means we skip the
is_pack_valid check, and may end up with the name of a
packfile, but no open descriptor.

We can add the same is_pack_valid check here. Unfortunately,
the access patterns of pack-objects are not quite as nice
for keeping lookup and object access together. We look up
each object as we find out about it, and the only later when
writing the packfile do we necessarily access it. Which
means that the opened packfile may be closed in the interim.

In practice, however, adding this check still has value, for
three reasons.

  1. If you have a reasonable number of packs and/or a
     reasonable file descriptor limit, you can keep all of
     your packs open simultaneously. If this is the case,
     then the race is impossible to trigger.

  2. Even if you can't keep all packs open at once, you
     may end up keeping the deleted one open (i.e., you may
     get lucky).

  3. The race window is shortened. You may notice early that
     the pack is gone, and not try to access it. Triggering
     the problem without this check means deleting the pack
     any time after we read the list of index files, but
     before we access the looked-up objects.  Triggering it
     with this check means deleting the pack means deleting
     the pack after we do a lookup (and successfully access
     the packfile), but before we access the object. Which
     is a smaller window.

Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-10-14 11:42:37 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
9bd500048d Merge branch 'mh/check-ref-format-3'
* mh/check-ref-format-3: (23 commits)
  add_ref(): verify that the refname is formatted correctly
  resolve_ref(): expand documentation
  resolve_ref(): also treat a too-long SHA1 as invalid
  resolve_ref(): emit warnings for improperly-formatted references
  resolve_ref(): verify that the input refname has the right format
  remote: avoid passing NULL to read_ref()
  remote: use xstrdup() instead of strdup()
  resolve_ref(): do not follow incorrectly-formatted symbolic refs
  resolve_ref(): extract a function get_packed_ref()
  resolve_ref(): turn buffer into a proper string as soon as possible
  resolve_ref(): only follow a symlink that contains a valid, normalized refname
  resolve_ref(): use prefixcmp()
  resolve_ref(): explicitly fail if a symlink is not readable
  Change check_refname_format() to reject unnormalized refnames
  Inline function refname_format_print()
  Make collapse_slashes() allocate memory for its result
  Do not allow ".lock" at the end of any refname component
  Refactor check_refname_format()
  Change check_ref_format() to take a flags argument
  Change bad_ref_char() to return a boolean value
  ...
2011-10-10 15:56:18 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
ca3ef81ad7 Merge branch 'cb/common-prefix-unification'
* cb/common-prefix-unification:
  rename pathspec_prefix() to common_prefix() and move to dir.[ch]
  consolidate pathspec_prefix and common_prefix
  remove prefix argument from pathspec_prefix
2011-10-10 15:56:17 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
efc5fb6a77 Merge branch 'fg/submodule-git-file-git-dir'
* fg/submodule-git-file-git-dir:
  Move git-dir for submodules
  rev-parse: add option --resolve-git-dir <path>

Conflicts:
	cache.h
	git-submodule.sh
2011-10-10 15:56:17 -07:00
Jeff King
2548183bad fix phantom untracked files when core.ignorecase is set
When core.ignorecase is turned on and there are stale index
entries, "git commit" can sometimes report directories as
untracked, even though they contain tracked files.

You can see an example of this with:

    # make a case-insensitive repo
    git init repo && cd repo &&
    git config core.ignorecase true &&

    # with some tracked files in a subdir
    mkdir subdir &&
    > subdir/one &&
    > subdir/two &&
    git add . &&
    git commit -m base &&

    # now make the index entries stale
    touch subdir/* &&

    # and then ask commit to update those entries and show
    # us the status template
    git commit -a

which will report "subdir/"  as untracked, even though it
clearly contains two tracked files. What is happening in the
commit program is this:

  1. We load the index, and for each entry, insert it into the index's
     name_hash. In addition, if ignorecase is turned on, we make an
     entry in the name_hash for the directory (e.g., "contrib/"), which
     uses the following code from 5102c61's hash_index_entry_directories:

        hash = hash_name(ce->name, ptr - ce->name);
        if (!lookup_hash(hash, &istate->name_hash)) {
                pos = insert_hash(hash, &istate->name_hash);
		if (pos) {
			ce->next = *pos;
			*pos = ce;
		}
        }

     Note that we only add the directory entry if there is not already an
     entry.

  2. We run add_files_to_cache, which gets updated information for each
     cache entry. It helpfully inserts this information into the cache,
     which calls replace_index_entry. This in turn calls
     remove_name_hash() on the old entry, and add_name_hash() on the new
     one. But remove_name_hash doesn't actually remove from the hash, it
     only marks it as "no longer interesting" (from cache.h):

      /*
       * We don't actually *remove* it, we can just mark it invalid so that
       * we won't find it in lookups.
       *
       * Not only would we have to search the lists (simple enough), but
       * we'd also have to rehash other hash buckets in case this makes the
       * hash bucket empty (common). So it's much better to just mark
       * it.
       */
      static inline void remove_name_hash(struct cache_entry *ce)
      {
              ce->ce_flags |= CE_UNHASHED;
      }

     This is OK in the specific-file case, since the entries in the hash
     form a linked list, and we can just skip the "not here anymore"
     entries during lookup.

     But for the directory hash entry, we will _not_ write a new entry,
     because there is already one there: the old one that is actually no
     longer interesting!

  3. While traversing the directories, we end up in the
     directory_exists_in_index_icase function to see if a directory is
     interesting. This in turn checks index_name_exists, which will
     look up the directory in the index's name_hash. We see the old,
     deleted record, and assume there is nothing interesting. The
     directory gets marked as untracked, even though there are index
     entries in it.

The problem is in the code I showed above:

        hash = hash_name(ce->name, ptr - ce->name);
        if (!lookup_hash(hash, &istate->name_hash)) {
                pos = insert_hash(hash, &istate->name_hash);
		if (pos) {
			ce->next = *pos;
			*pos = ce;
		}
        }

Having a single cache entry that represents the directory is
not enough; that entry may go away if the index is changed.
It may be tempting to say that the problem is in our removal
method; if we removed the entry entirely instead of simply
marking it as "not here anymore", then we would know we need
to insert a new entry. But that only covers this particular
case of remove-replace. In the more general case, consider
something like this:

  1. We add "foo/bar" and "foo/baz" to the index. Each gets
     their own entry in name_hash, plus we make a "foo/"
     entry that points to "foo/bar".

  2. We remove the "foo/bar" entry from the index, and from
     the name_hash.

  3. We ask if "foo/" exists, and see no entry, even though
     "foo/baz" exists.

So we need that directory entry to have the list of _all_
cache entries that indicate that the directory is tracked.
So that implies making a linked list as we do for other
entries, like:

  hash = hash_name(ce->name, ptr - ce->name);
  pos = insert_hash(hash, &istate->name_hash);
  if (pos) {
	  ce->next = *pos;
	  *pos = ce;
  }

But that's not right either. In fact, it shows a second bug
in the current code, which is that the "ce->next" pointer is
supposed to be linking entries for a specific filename
entry, but here we are overwriting it for the directory
entry. So the same cache entry ends up in two linked lists,
but they share the same "next" pointer.

As it turns out, this second bug can't be triggered in the
current code. The "if (pos)" conditional is totally dead
code; pos will only be non-NULL if there was an existing
hash entry, and we already checked that there wasn't one
through our call to lookup_hash.

But fixing the first bug means taking out that call to
lookup_hash, which is going to activate the buggy dead code,
and we'll end up splicing the two linked lists together.

So we need to have a separate next pointer for the list in
the directory bucket, and we need to traverse that list in
index_name_exists when we are looking up a directory.

This bloats "struct cache_entry" by a few bytes. Which is
annoying, because it's only necessary when core.ignorecase
is enabled. There's not an easy way around it, short of
separating out the "next" pointers from cache_entry entirely
(i.e., having a separate "cache_entry_list" struct that gets
stored in the name_hash). In practice, it probably doesn't
matter; we have thousands of cache entries, compared to the
millions of objects (where adding 4 bytes to the struct
actually does impact performance).

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-10-07 17:54:04 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
64589a03a8 attr: read core.attributesfile from git_default_core_config
This code calls git_config from a helper function to parse the config entry
it is interested in.  Calling git_config in this way may cause a problem if
the helper function can be called after a previous call to git_config by
another function since the second call to git_config may reset some
variable to the value in the config file which was previously overridden.

The above is not a problem in this case since the function passed to
git_config only parses one config entry and the variable it sets is not
assigned outside of the parsing function.  But a programmer who desires
all of the standard config options to be parsed may be tempted to modify
git_attr_config() so that it falls back to git_default_config() and then it
_would_ be vulnerable to the above described behavior.

So, move the call to git_config up into the top-level cmd_* function and
move the responsibility for parsing core.attributesfile into the main
config file parser.

Which is only the logical thing to do ;-)

Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <drafnel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-10-06 13:54:32 -07:00
Michael Haggerty
7cb368421f resolve_ref(): expand documentation
Record information about resolve_ref(), hard-won via reverse
engineering, in a comment for future spelunkers.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-10-05 13:45:31 -07:00
Michael Haggerty
d4e85a1afe get_sha1_hex(): do not read past a NUL character
Previously, get_sha1_hex() would read one character past the end of a
null-terminated string whose strlen was an even number less than 40.
Although the function correctly returned -1 in these cases, the extra
memory access might have been to uninitialized (or even, conceivably,
unallocated) memory.

Add a check to avoid reading past the end of a string.

This problem was discovered by Thomas Rast <trast@student.ethz.ch>
using valgrind.

Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-10-05 13:45:16 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
cd4093b603 Merge branch 'rr/revert-cherry-pick-continue'
* rr/revert-cherry-pick-continue:
  builtin/revert.c: make commit_list_append() static
  revert: Propagate errors upwards from do_pick_commit
  revert: Introduce --continue to continue the operation
  revert: Don't implicitly stomp pending sequencer operation
  revert: Remove sequencer state when no commits are pending
  reset: Make reset remove the sequencer state
  revert: Introduce --reset to remove sequencer state
  revert: Make pick_commits functionally act on a commit list
  revert: Save command-line options for continuing operation
  revert: Save data for continuing after conflict resolution
  revert: Don't create invalid replay_opts in parse_args
  revert: Separate cmdline parsing from functional code
  revert: Introduce struct to keep command-line options
  revert: Eliminate global "commit" variable
  revert: Rename no_replay to record_origin
  revert: Don't check lone argument in get_encoding
  revert: Simplify and inline add_message_to_msg
  config: Introduce functions to write non-standard file
  advice: Introduce error_resolve_conflict
2011-10-05 12:36:19 -07:00
Erik Faye-Lund
1c64b48e67 enter_repo: do not modify input
entr_repo(..., 0) currently modifies the input to strip away
trailing slashes. This means that we some times need to copy the
input to keep the original.

Change it to unconditionally copy it into the used_path buffer so
we can safely use the input without having to copy it. Also store
a working copy in validated_path up-front before we start
resolving anything.

Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Phil Hord <hordp@cisco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-10-04 13:30:38 -07:00
Clemens Buchacher
f950eb9560 rename pathspec_prefix() to common_prefix() and move to dir.[ch]
Also make common_prefix_len() static as this refactoring makes dir.c
itself the only caller of this helper function.

Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-09-12 14:38:32 -07:00
Clemens Buchacher
5879f5684c remove prefix argument from pathspec_prefix
Passing a prefix to a function that is supposed to find the prefix is
strange. And it's really only used if the pathspec is NULL. Make the
callers handle this case instead.

As we are always returning a fresh copy of a string (or NULL), change the
type of the returned value to non-const "char *".

Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-09-06 12:50:10 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
2730f55527 Merge branch 'nd/maint-clone-gitdir'
* nd/maint-clone-gitdir:
  clone: allow to clone from .git file
  read_gitfile_gently(): rename misnamed function to read_gitfile()
2011-08-28 21:20:28 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
6133e4da54 Merge branch 'cb/maint-ls-files-error-report'
* cb/maint-ls-files-error-report:
  ls-files: fix pathspec display on error
2011-08-23 15:34:31 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
13d6ec9133 read_gitfile_gently(): rename misnamed function to read_gitfile()
The function was not gentle at all to the callers and died without giving
them a chance to deal with possible errors. Rename it to read_gitfile(),
and update all the callers.

As no existing caller needs a true "gently" variant, we do not bother
adding one at this point.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-08-22 14:04:56 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
6ed547b53b Merge branch 'js/ref-namespaces'
* js/ref-namespaces:
  ref namespaces: tests
  ref namespaces: documentation
  ref namespaces: Support remote repositories via upload-pack and receive-pack
  ref namespaces: infrastructure
  Fix prefix handling in ref iteration functions
2011-08-17 17:35:38 -07:00
Fredrik Gustafsson
abc06822af rev-parse: add option --resolve-git-dir <path>
Check if <path> is a valid git-dir or a valid git-file that points
to a valid git-dir.

We want tests to be independent from the fact that a git-dir may
be a git-file. Thus we changed tests to use this feature.

Signed-off-by: Fredrik Gustafsson <iveqy@iveqy.com>
Mentored-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Mentored-by: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-08-16 11:04:31 -07:00
Clemens Buchacher
0f64bfa956 ls-files: fix pathspec display on error
The following sequence of commands reveals an issue with error
reporting of relative paths:

 $ mkdir sub
 $ cd sub
 $ git ls-files --error-unmatch ../bbbbb
 error: pathspec 'b' did not match any file(s) known to git.
 $ git commit --error-unmatch ../bbbbb
 error: pathspec 'b' did not match any file(s) known to git.

This bug is visible only if the normalized path (i.e., the relative
path from the repository root) is longer than the prefix.
Otherwise, the code skips over the normalized path and reads from
an unused memory location which still contains a leftover of the
original command line argument.

So instead, use the existing facilities to deal with relative paths
correctly.

Also fix inconsistency between "checkout" and "commit", e.g.

    $ cd Documentation
    $ git checkout nosuch.txt
    error: pathspec 'Documentation/nosuch.txt' did not match...
    $ git commit nosuch.txt
    error: pathspec 'nosuch.txt' did not match...

by propagating the prefix down the codepath that reports the error.

Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-08-11 13:04:16 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
0af53e188a Merge branch 'cb/partial-commit-relative-pathspec'
* cb/partial-commit-relative-pathspec:
  commit: allow partial commits with relative paths
2011-08-11 11:04:28 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
96790ca029 Merge branch 'jc/pack-order-tweak'
* jc/pack-order-tweak:
  pack-objects: optimize "recency order"
  core: log offset pack data accesses happened
2011-08-05 14:54:57 -07:00
Ramkumar Ramachandra
5ec3118293 config: Introduce functions to write non-standard file
Introduce two new functions corresponding to "git_config_set" and
"git_config_set_multivar" to write a non-standard configuration file.
Expose these new functions in cache.h for other git programs to use.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-08-04 15:40:41 -07:00
Clemens Buchacher
8894d53580 commit: allow partial commits with relative paths
In order to do partial commits, git-commit overlays a tree on the
cache and checks pathspecs against the result. Currently, the
overlaying is done using "prefix" which prevents relative pathspecs
with ".." and absolute pathspec from matching when they refer to
files not under "prefix" and absent from the index, but still in
the tree (i.e.  files staged for removal).

The point of providing a prefix at all is performance optimization.
If we say there is no common prefix for the files of interest, then
we have to read the entire tree into the index.

But even if we cannot use the working directory as a prefix, we can
still figure out if there is a common prefix for all given paths,
and use that instead. The pathspec_prefix() routine from ls-files.c
does exactly that.

Any use of global variables is removed from pathspec_prefix() so
that it can be called from commit.c.

Reported-by: Reuben Thomas <rrt@sc3d.org>
Analyzed-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-08-02 14:20:35 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
d907bf8ef3 Merge branch 'jc/index-pack'
* jc/index-pack:
  verify-pack: use index-pack --verify
  index-pack: show histogram when emulating "verify-pack -v"
  index-pack: start learning to emulate "verify-pack -v"
  index-pack: a miniscule refactor
  index-pack --verify: read anomalous offsets from v2 idx file
  write_idx_file: need_large_offset() helper function
  index-pack: --verify
  write_idx_file: introduce a struct to hold idx customization options
  index-pack: group the delta-base array entries also by type

Conflicts:
	builtin/verify-pack.c
	cache.h
	sha1_file.c
2011-07-19 09:54:51 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
ff94409da9 Merge branch 'jk/clone-cmdline-config'
* jk/clone-cmdline-config:
  clone: accept config options on the command line
  config: make git_config_parse_parameter a public function
  remote: use new OPT_STRING_LIST
  parse-options: add OPT_STRING_LIST helper
2011-07-19 09:45:24 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
eb4f4076aa Merge branch 'jc/zlib-wrap'
* jc/zlib-wrap:
  zlib: allow feeding more than 4GB in one go
  zlib: zlib can only process 4GB at a time
  zlib: wrap deflateBound() too
  zlib: wrap deflate side of the API
  zlib: wrap inflateInit2 used to accept only for gzip format
  zlib: wrap remaining calls to direct inflate/inflateEnd
  zlib wrapper: refactor error message formatter

Conflicts:
	sha1_file.c
2011-07-19 09:33:04 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
5f44324d88 core: log offset pack data accesses happened
In a workload other than "git log" (without pathspec nor any option that
causes us to inspect trees and blobs), the recency pack order is said to
cause the access jump around quite a bit. Add a hook to allow us observe
how bad it is.

"git config core.logpackaccess /var/tmp/pal.txt" will give you the log
in the specified file.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-07-06 19:09:29 -07:00
Josh Triplett
a1bea2c1fc ref namespaces: infrastructure
Add support for dividing the refs of a single repository into multiple
namespaces, each of which can have its own branches, tags, and HEAD.
Git can expose each namespace as an independent repository to pull from
and push to, while sharing the object store, and exposing all the refs
to operations such as git-gc.

Storing multiple repositories as namespaces of a single repository
avoids storing duplicate copies of the same objects, such as when
storing multiple branches of the same source.  The alternates mechanism
provides similar support for avoiding duplicates, but alternates do not
prevent duplication between new objects added to the repositories
without ongoing maintenance, while namespaces do.

To specify a namespace, set the GIT_NAMESPACE environment variable to
the namespace.  For each ref namespace, git stores the corresponding
refs in a directory under refs/namespaces/.  For example,
GIT_NAMESPACE=foo will store refs under refs/namespaces/foo/.  You can
also specify namespaces via the --namespace option to git.

Note that namespaces which include a / will expand to a hierarchy of
namespaces; for example, GIT_NAMESPACE=foo/bar will store refs under
refs/namespaces/foo/refs/namespaces/bar/.  This makes paths in
GIT_NAMESPACE behave hierarchically, so that cloning with
GIT_NAMESPACE=foo/bar produces the same result as cloning with
GIT_NAMESPACE=foo and cloning from that repo with GIT_NAMESPACE=bar.  It
also avoids ambiguity with strange namespace paths such as
foo/refs/heads/, which could otherwise generate directory/file conflicts
within the refs directory.

Add the infrastructure for ref namespaces: handle the GIT_NAMESPACE
environment variable and --namespace option, and support iterating over
refs in a namespace.

Signed-off-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
Signed-off-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-07-06 11:19:24 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
9901923cf0 Merge branch 'jc/streaming-filter' into next
* jc/streaming-filter:
  t0021: test application of both crlf and ident
  t0021-conversion.sh: fix NoTerminatingSymbolAtEOF test
  streaming: filter cascading
  streaming filter: ident filter
  Add LF-to-CRLF streaming conversion
  stream filter: add "no more input" to the filters
  Add streaming filter API
  convert.h: move declarations for conversion from cache.h
2011-06-29 17:09:28 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
55ac692661 Merge branch 'jc/streaming' into next
* jc/streaming:
  sha1_file: use the correct type (ssize_t, not size_t) for read-style function
  streaming: read loose objects incrementally
  sha1_file.c: expose helpers to read loose objects
  streaming: read non-delta incrementally from a pack
  streaming_write_entry(): support files with holes
  convert: CRLF_INPUT is a no-op in the output codepath
  streaming_write_entry(): use streaming API in write_entry()
  streaming: a new API to read from the object store
  write_entry(): separate two helper functions out
  unpack_object_header(): make it public
  sha1_object_info_extended(): hint about objects in delta-base cache
  sha1_object_info_extended(): expose a bit more info
  packed_object_info_detail(): do not return a string
2011-06-29 17:09:27 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
033c2dc436 Merge branch 'ef/maint-win-verify-path'
* ef/maint-win-verify-path:
  verify_dotfile(): do not assume '/' is the path seperator
  verify_path(): simplify check at the directory boundary
  verify_path: consider dos drive prefix
  real_path: do not assume '/' is the path seperator
  A Windows path starting with a backslash is absolute
2011-06-29 17:09:17 -07:00
Jeff King
2496844bb2 config: make git_config_parse_parameter a public function
We use this internally to parse "git -c core.foo=bar", but
the general format of "key=value" is useful for other
places.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-06-22 11:25:21 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
ef49a7a012 zlib: zlib can only process 4GB at a time
The size of objects we read from the repository and data we try to put
into the repository are represented in "unsigned long", so that on larger
architectures we can handle objects that weigh more than 4GB.

But the interface defined in zlib.h to communicate with inflate/deflate
limits avail_in (how many bytes of input are we calling zlib with) and
avail_out (how many bytes of output from zlib are we ready to accept)
fields effectively to 4GB by defining their type to be uInt.

In many places in our code, we allocate a large buffer (e.g. mmap'ing a
large loose object file) and tell zlib its size by assigning the size to
avail_in field of the stream, but that will truncate the high octets of
the real size. The worst part of this story is that we often pass around
z_stream (the state object used by zlib) to keep track of the number of
used bytes in input/output buffer by inspecting these two fields, which
practically limits our callchain to the same 4GB limit.

Wrap z_stream in another structure git_zstream that can express avail_in
and avail_out in unsigned long. For now, just die() when the caller gives
a size that cannot be given to a single zlib call. In later patches in the
series, we would make git_inflate() and git_deflate() internally loop to
give callers an illusion that our "improved" version of zlib interface can
operate on a buffer larger than 4GB in one go.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-06-10 11:52:15 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
225a6f1068 zlib: wrap deflateBound() too
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-06-10 11:18:17 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
55bb5c9147 zlib: wrap deflate side of the API
Wrap deflateInit, deflate, and deflateEnd for everybody, and the sole use
of deflateInit2 in remote-curl.c to tell the library to use gzip header
and trailer in git_deflate_init_gzip().

There is only one caller that cares about the status from deflateEnd().
Introduce git_deflate_end_gently() to let that sole caller retrieve the
status and act on it (i.e. die) for now, but we would probably want to
make inflate_end/deflate_end die when they ran out of memory and get
rid of the _gently() kind.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-06-10 11:10:29 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
5e86c1fb86 zlib: wrap inflateInit2 used to accept only for gzip format
http-backend.c uses inflateInit2() to tell the library that it wants to
accept only gzip format. Wrap it in a helper function so that readers do
not have to wonder what the magic numbers 15 and 16 are for.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-06-10 10:51:02 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
3de89c9d42 verify-pack: use index-pack --verify
This finally gets rid of the inefficient verify-pack implementation that
walks objects in the packfile in their object name order and replaces it
with a call to index-pack --verify. As a side effect, it also removes
packed_object_info_detail() API which is rather expensive.

As this changes the way errors are reported (verify-pack used to rely on
the usual runtime error detection routine unpack_entry() to diagnose the
CRC errors in an entry in the *.idx file; index-pack --verify checks the
whole *.idx file in one go), update a test that expected the string "CRC"
to appear in the error message.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-06-05 22:45:38 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
1c6e3514d0 Merge branch 'jk/maint-config-alias-fix' into maint
* jk/maint-config-alias-fix:
  handle_options(): do not miscount how many arguments were used
  config: always parse GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS during git_config
  git_config: don't peek at global config_parameters
  config: make environment parsing routines static
2011-06-01 14:05:22 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
1f9a980636 Merge branch 'jk/maint-config-alias-fix'
* jk/maint-config-alias-fix:
  handle_options(): do not miscount how many arguments were used
  config: always parse GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS during git_config
  git_config: don't peek at global config_parameters
  config: make environment parsing routines static

Conflicts:
	config.c
2011-05-30 20:19:14 -07:00
Theo Niessink
88135203af A Windows path starting with a backslash is absolute
This fixes prefix_path() not recognizing e.g. \foo\bar as an absolute path
on Windows.

Signed-off-by: Theo Niessink <theo@taletn.com>
Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-27 10:59:13 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
d1bf0e0831 convert.h: move declarations for conversion from cache.h
Before adding the streaming filter API to the conversion layer,
move the existing declarations related to the conversion to its
own header file.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-26 16:47:15 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
bac9c06ba0 Merge branch 'jk/git-connection-deadlock-fix' into maint-1.7.4
* jk/git-connection-deadlock-fix:
  test core.gitproxy configuration
  send-pack: avoid deadlock on git:// push with failed pack-objects
  connect: let callers know if connection is a socket
  connect: treat generic proxy processes like ssh processes

Conflicts:
	connect.c
2011-05-26 10:28:10 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
5590fe762f Merge branch 'jk/git-connection-deadlock-fix' into maint
* jk/git-connection-deadlock-fix:
  test core.gitproxy configuration
  send-pack: avoid deadlock on git:// push with failed pack-objects
  connect: let callers know if connection is a socket
  connect: treat generic proxy processes like ssh processes

Conflicts:
	connect.c
2011-05-26 09:33:25 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
5cfe4256d9 Merge branch 'jc/bigfile'
* jc/bigfile:
  Bigfile: teach "git add" to send a large file straight to a pack
  index_fd(): split into two helper functions
  index_fd(): turn write_object and format_check arguments into one flag
2011-05-25 16:23:26 -07:00
Jeff King
3ddf0968c2 config: make environment parsing routines static
Nobody outside of git_config_from_parameters should need
to use the GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS parsing functions, so let's
make them private.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-24 16:20:48 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
6bb696c304 Merge branch 'mg/config-symbolic-constants'
* mg/config-symbolic-constants:
  config: Give error message when not changing a multivar
  config: define and document exit codes
2011-05-23 09:59:05 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
be5ab43566 Merge branch 'jc/magic-pathspec'
* jc/magic-pathspec:
  setup.c: Fix some "symbol not declared" sparse warnings
  t3703: Skip tests using directory name ":" on Windows
  revision.c: leave a note for "a lone :" enhancement
  t3703, t4208: add test cases for magic pathspec
  rev/path disambiguation: further restrict "misspelled index entry" diag
  fix overslow :/no-such-string-ever-existed diagnostics
  fix overstrict :<path> diagnosis
  grep: use get_pathspec() correctly
  pathspec: drop "lone : means no pathspec" from get_pathspec()
  Revert "magic pathspec: add ":(icase)path" to match case insensitively"
  magic pathspec: add ":(icase)path" to match case insensitively
  magic pathspec: futureproof shorthand form
  magic pathspec: add tentative ":/path/from/top/level" pathspec support
2011-05-23 09:58:35 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
f0270efd46 sha1_file.c: expose helpers to read loose objects
Make map_sha1_file(), parse_sha1_header() and unpack_sha1_header()
available to the streaming read API by exporting them via cache.h header
file.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-20 23:16:53 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
dd8e912190 streaming_write_entry(): use streaming API in write_entry()
When the output to a path does not have to be converted, we can read from
the object database from the streaming API and write to the file in the
working tree, without having to hold everything in the memory.

The ident, auto- and safe- crlf conversions inherently require you to read
the whole thing before deciding what to do, so while it is technically
possible to support them by using a buffer of an unbound size or rewinding
and reading the stream twice, it is less practical than the traditional
"read the whole thing in core and convert" approach.

Adding streaming filters for the other conversions on top of this should
be doable by tweaking the can_bypass_conversion() function (it should be
renamed to can_filter_stream() when it happens). Then the streaming API
can be extended to wrap the git_istream streaming_write_entry() opens on
the underlying object in another git_istream that reads from it, filters
what is read, and let the streaming_write_entry() read the filtered
result. But that is outside the scope of this series.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-20 18:46:58 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
f8c8abc5b7 unpack_object_header(): make it public
This function is used to read and skip over the per-object header
in a packfile.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-20 18:38:54 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
5266d369b2 sha1_object_info_extended(): hint about objects in delta-base cache
An object found in the delta-base cache is not guaranteed to
stay there, but we know it came from a pack and it is likely
to give us a quick access if we read_sha1_file() it right now,
which is a piece of useful information.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-20 18:38:50 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
61d7503da1 Merge branch 'jc/replacing'
* jc/replacing:
  read_sha1_file(): allow selective bypassing of replacement mechanism
  inline lookup_replace_object() calls
  read_sha1_file(): get rid of read_sha1_file_repl() madness
  t6050: make sure we test not just commit replacement
  Declare lookup_replace_object() in cache.h, not in commit.h

Conflicts:
	environment.c
2011-05-19 20:37:21 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
a66fae3827 Merge branch 'jk/git-connection-deadlock-fix'
* jk/git-connection-deadlock-fix:
  test core.gitproxy configuration
  send-pack: avoid deadlock on git:// push with failed pack-objects
  connect: let callers know if connection is a socket
  connect: treat generic proxy processes like ssh processes

Conflicts:
	connect.c
2011-05-19 20:37:20 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
9a49059022 sha1_object_info_extended(): expose a bit more info
The original interface for sha1_object_info() takes an object name and
gives back a type and its size (the latter is given only when it was
asked).  The new interface wraps its implementation and exposes a bit
more pieces of information that the interface used to discard, namely:

 - where the object is stored (loose? cached? packed?)
 - if packed, where in which packfile?

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
---

 * In the earlier round, this used u.pack.delta to record the length of
   the delta chain, but the caller is not necessarily interested in the
   length of the delta chain per-se, but may only want to know if it is a
   delta against another object or is stored as a deflated data. Calling
   packed_object_info_detail() involves walking the reverse index chain to
   compute the store size of the object and is unnecessarily expensive.

   We could resurrect the code if a new caller wants to know, but I doubt
   it.
2011-05-19 14:22:47 -07:00
Michael J Gruber
7a39741999 config: define and document exit codes
The return codes of git_config_set() and friends are magic numbers right
in the source. #define them in cache.h where the functions are declared,
and use the constants in the source.

Also, mention the resulting exit codes of "git config" in its man page
(and complete the list).

Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-17 21:01:17 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
b9a62cbeb9 packed_object_info_detail(): do not return a string
Instead return an integer that can be given to typename() if
the caller wants a string, just like everybody else does.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-16 22:13:34 -07:00
Jeff King
7ffe853b10 connect: let callers know if connection is a socket
They might care because they want to do a half-duplex close.
With pipes, that means simply closing the output descriptor;
with a socket, you must actually call shutdown.

Instead of exposing the magic no_fork child_process struct,
let's encapsulate the test in a function.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-16 16:20:01 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
02071b27f1 Merge branches 'jc/convert', 'jc/bigfile' and 'jc/replacing' into jc/streaming
* jc/convert:
  convert: make it harder to screw up adding a conversion attribute
  convert: make it safer to add conversion attributes
  convert: give saner names to crlf/eol variables, types and functions
  convert: rename the "eol" global variable to "core_eol"

* jc/bigfile:
  Bigfile: teach "git add" to send a large file straight to a pack
  index_fd(): split into two helper functions
  index_fd(): turn write_object and format_check arguments into one flag

* jc/replacing:
  read_sha1_file(): allow selective bypassing of replacement mechanism
  inline lookup_replace_object() calls
  read_sha1_file(): get rid of read_sha1_file_repl() madness
  t6050: make sure we test not just commit replacement
  Declare lookup_replace_object() in cache.h, not in commit.h
2011-05-15 16:30:13 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
5bf29b9500 read_sha1_file(): allow selective bypassing of replacement mechanism
The way "object replacement" mechanism was tucked to the read_sha1_file()
interface was suboptimal in a couple of ways:

 - Callers that want it to die with useful diagnosis upon seeing a corrupt
   object does not have a way to say that they do not want any object
   replacement.

 - Callers who do not want it to die but want to handle the errors
   themselves are told to arrange to call read_object(), but the function
   does not use the replacement mechanism, and also it is a file scope
   static function that not many callers can call to begin with.

This adds a read_sha1_file_extended() that takes a set of flags; the
callers of read_sha1_file() passes a flag READ_SHA1_FILE_REPLACE to ask
for object replacement mechanism to kick in.

Later, we could add another flag bit to tell the function to return an
error instead of dying and then remove the misguided "call read_object()
yourself".

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-15 15:23:34 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
e1111cef23 inline lookup_replace_object() calls
In a repository without object replacement, lookup_replace_object() should
be a no-op. Check the flag "read_replace_refs" on the side of the caller,
and bypess a function call when we know we are not dealing with replacement.

Also, even when we are set up to replace objects, if we do not find any
replacement defined, flip that flag off to avoid function call overhead
for all the later object accesses.

As this change the semantics of the flag from "do we need read the
replacement definition?" to "do we need to check with the lookup table?"
the flag needs to be renamed later to something saner, e.g. "use_replace",
when the codebase is calmer, but not now.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-15 15:23:33 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
4bbf5a2615 read_sha1_file(): get rid of read_sha1_file_repl() madness
Most callers want to silently get a replacement object, and they do not
care what the real name of the replacement object is.  Worse yet, no sane
interface to return the underlying object without replacement is provided.

Remove the function and make only the few callers that want the name of
the replacement object find it themselves.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-15 15:23:33 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
fea33a1ef3 Declare lookup_replace_object() in cache.h, not in commit.h
The declaration is misplaced as the replace API is supposed to affect
not just commits, but all types of objects.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-15 15:23:31 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
2e83b66c32 fix overslow :/no-such-string-ever-existed diagnostics
"git cmd :/no-such-string-ever-existed" runs an extra round of get_sha1()
since 009fee4 (Detailed diagnosis when parsing an object name fails.,
2009-12-07).  Once without error diagnosis to see there is no commit with
such a string in the log message (hence "it cannot be a ref"), and after
seeing that :/no-such-string-ever-existed is not a filename (hence "it
cannot be a path, either"), another time to give "better diagnosis".

The thing is, the second time it runs, we already know that traversing the
history all the way down to the root will _not_ find any matching commit.

Rename misguided "gently" parameter, which is turned off _only_ when the
"detailed diagnosis" codepath knows that it cannot be a ref and making the
call only for the caller to die with a message.  Flip its meaning (and
adjust the callers) and call it "only_to_die", which is not a great name,
but it describes far more clearly what the codepaths that switches their
behaviour based on this variable do.

On my box, the command spends ~1.8 seconds without the patch to make the
report; with the patch it spends ~1.12 seconds.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-10 12:37:54 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
ec70f52f6f convert: rename the "eol" global variable to "core_eol"
Yes, it is clear that "eol" wants to mean some sort of end-of-line thing,
but as the name of a global variable, it is way too short to describe what
kind of end-of-line thing it wants to represent. Besides, there are many
codepaths that want to use their own local "char *eol" variable to point
at the end of the current line they are processing.

This global variable holds what we read from core.eol configuration
variable. Name it as such.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-09 14:58:52 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
c4ce46fc7a index_fd(): turn write_object and format_check arguments into one flag
The "format_check" parameter tucked after the existing parameters is too
ugly an afterthought to live in any reasonable API.

Combine it with the other boolean parameter "write_object" into a single
"flags" parameter.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-05-09 11:58:19 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
efa67bfd16 Merge branch 'im/hashcmp-optim'
* im/hashcmp-optim:
  hashcmp(): inline memcmp() by hand to optimize
2011-05-06 11:00:36 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
1273738f05 Merge branch 'nd/struct-pathspec'
* nd/struct-pathspec:
  pathspec: rename per-item field has_wildcard to use_wildcard
  Improve tree_entry_interesting() handling code
  Convert read_tree{,_recursive} to support struct pathspec
  Reimplement read_tree_recursive() using tree_entry_interesting()
2011-05-06 10:50:06 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
f28d2e33c6 Merge branch 'jc/pack-objects-bigfile' into maint
* jc/pack-objects-bigfile:
  Teach core.bigfilethreashold to pack-objects
2011-05-04 14:57:38 -07:00
Ingo Molnar
1a812f3a70 hashcmp(): inline memcmp() by hand to optimize
This is reported to speed "git gc" by 18%.

Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-04-28 13:18:30 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
9cedd16c62 Merge branch 'jc/pack-objects-bigfile'
* jc/pack-objects-bigfile:
  Teach core.bigfilethreashold to pack-objects
2011-04-27 11:36:41 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
15366280c2 Teach core.bigfilethreashold to pack-objects
The pack-objects command should take notice of the object file and
refrain from attempting to delta large ones, to be consistent with
the fast-import command.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-04-05 20:25:49 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
33e0f62ba9 pathspec: rename per-item field has_wildcard to use_wildcard
As the point of the last change is to allow use of strings as
literals no matter what characters are in them, "has_wildcard"
does not match what we use this field for anymore.

It is used to decide if the wildcard matching should be used, so
rename it to match the usage better.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-04-05 09:30:36 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
44ec754dc7 Merge branch 'jc/index-update-if-able' into maint
* jc/index-update-if-able:
  update $GIT_INDEX_FILE when there are racily clean entries
  diff/status: refactor opportunistic index update
2011-04-03 12:33:05 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
be57695d77 Merge branch 'lt/default-abbrev' into maint
* lt/default-abbrev:
  Rename core.abbrevlength back to core.abbrev
  Make the default abbrev length configurable
2011-04-03 12:32:51 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
625589b5be Merge branch 'lp/config-vername-check' into maint
* lp/config-vername-check:
  Disallow empty section and variable names
  Sanity-check config variable names
2011-04-03 12:29:45 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
c4b2ce6953 Merge branch 'nd/init-gitdir'
* nd/init-gitdir:
  init, clone: support --separate-git-dir for .git file
  git-init.txt: move description section up

Conflicts:
	builtin/clone.c
2011-04-01 17:57:37 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
149971badc Merge branch 'jc/index-update-if-able'
* jc/index-update-if-able:
  update $GIT_INDEX_FILE when there are racily clean entries
  diff/status: refactor opportunistic index update
2011-03-26 20:13:16 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
ad7bb2f68c Merge branch 'jc/maint-rerere-in-workdir'
* jc/maint-rerere-in-workdir:
  rerere: make sure it works even in a workdir attached to a young repository
2011-03-26 20:13:16 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
90a6464b4a rerere: make sure it works even in a workdir attached to a young repository
The git-new-workdir script in contrib/ makes a new work tree by sharing
many subdirectories of the .git directory with the original repository.
When rerere.enabled is set in the original repository, but the user has
not encountered any conflicts yet, the original repository may not yet
have .git/rr-cache directory.

When rerere wants to run in a new work tree created from such a young
original repository, it fails to mkdir(2) .git/rr-cache that is a symlink
to a yet-to-be-created directory.

There are three possible approaches to this:

 - A naive solution is not to create a symlink in the git-new-workdir
   script to a directory the original does not have (yet).  This is not a
   solution, as we tend to lazily create subdirectories of .git/, and
   having rerere.enabled configuration set is a strong indication that the
   user _wants_ to have this lazy creation to happen;

 - We could always create .git/rr-cache upon repository creation.  This is
   tempting but will not help people with existing repositories.

 - Detect this case by seeing that mkdir(2) failed with EEXIST, checking
   that the path is a symlink, and try running mkdir(2) on the link
   target.

This patch solves the issue by doing the third one.

Strictly speaking, this is incomplete.  It does not attempt to handle
relative symbolic link that points into the original repository, but this
is good enough to help people who use contrib/workdir/git-new-workdir
script.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-23 16:05:44 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
da2584243e Merge branch 'lt/default-abbrev'
* lt/default-abbrev:
  Rename core.abbrevlength back to core.abbrev
  Make the default abbrev length configurable
2011-03-23 14:55:40 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
50aaeca008 Merge branch 'jn/test-sanitize-git-env'
* jn/test-sanitize-git-env:
  tests: scrub environment of GIT_* variables
  config: drop support for GIT_CONFIG_NOGLOBAL
  gitattributes: drop support for GIT_ATTR_NOGLOBAL
  tests: suppress system gitattributes
  tests: stop worrying about obsolete environment variables
2011-03-22 21:38:12 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
ccdc4ec304 diff/status: refactor opportunistic index update
When we had to refresh the index internally before running diff or status,
we opportunistically updated the $GIT_INDEX_FILE so that later invocation
of git can use the lstat(2) we already did in this invocation.

Make them share a helper function to do so.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-21 12:43:10 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
0bd20f10ea Merge branch 'sp/maint-fd-limit' into maint
* sp/maint-fd-limit:
  sha1_file.c: Don't retain open fds on small packs
  mingw: add minimum getrlimit() compatibility stub
  Limit file descriptors used by packs
2011-03-20 22:11:46 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
1e239079f7 Merge branch 'ab/i18n-basic'
* ab/i18n-basic:
  i18n: "make distclean" should clean up after "make pot"
  i18n: Makefile: "pot" target to extract messages marked for translation
  i18n: add stub Q_() wrapper for ngettext
  i18n: do not poison translations unless GIT_GETTEXT_POISON envvar is set
  i18n: add GETTEXT_POISON to simulate unfriendly translator
  i18n: add no-op _() and N_() wrappers
  commit, status: use status_printf{,_ln,_more} helpers
  commit: refer to commit template as s->fp
  wt-status: add helpers for printing wt-status lines

Conflicts:
	builtin/commit.c
2011-03-19 23:24:42 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
0d7f242110 Merge branch 'jk/trace-sifter'
* jk/trace-sifter:
  trace: give repo_setup trace its own key
  add packet tracing debug code
  trace: add trace_strbuf
  trace: factor out "do we want to trace" logic
  trace: refactor to support multiple env variables
  trace: add trace_vprintf
2011-03-19 23:24:12 -07:00
Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy
b57fb80a7d init, clone: support --separate-git-dir for .git file
--separate-git-dir tells git to create git dir at the specified
location, instead of where it is supposed to be. A .git file that
points to that location will be put in place so that it appears normal
to repo discovery process.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-19 21:48:19 -07:00
Carlos Martín Nieto
e2a57aac8a Name make_*_path functions more accurately
Rename the make_*_path functions so it's clearer what they do, in
particlar make clear what the differnce between make_absolute_path and
make_nonrelative_path is by renaming them real_path and absolute_path
respectively. make_relative_path has an understandable name and is
renamed to relative_path to maintain the name convention.

The function calls have been replaced 1-to-1 in their usage.

Signed-off-by: Carlos Martín Nieto <cmn@elego.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-17 16:08:30 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
b2f6eab402 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  Prepare draft release notes to 1.7.4.2
  gitweb: highlight: replace tabs with spaces
  make_absolute_path: return the input path if it points to our buffer
  valgrind: ignore SSE-based strlen invalid reads
  diff --submodule: split into bite-sized pieces
  cherry: split off function to print output lines
  branch: split off function that writes tracking info and commit subject
  standardize brace placement in struct definitions
  compat: make gcc bswap an inline function
  enums: omit trailing comma for portability

Conflicts:
	RelNotes
2011-03-16 16:59:30 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
61a6f1faec Merge branch 'jh/push-default-upstream-configname' into maint
* jh/push-default-upstream-configname:
  push.default: Rename 'tracking' to 'upstream'
2011-03-16 16:47:26 -07:00
Jonathan Nieder
c9b6782a08 enums: omit trailing comma for portability
Since v1.7.2-rc0~23^2~2 (Add per-repository eol normalization,
2010-05-19), building with gcc -std=gnu89 -pedantic produces warnings
like the following:

 convert.c:21:11: warning: comma at end of enumerator list [-pedantic]

gcc is right to complain --- these commas are not permitted in C89.
In the spirit of v1.7.2-rc0~32^2~16 (2010-05-14), remove them.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-16 12:31:32 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
276e017f2f Merge branch 'nd/struct-pathspec'
* nd/struct-pathspec:
  declare 1-bit bitfields to be unsigned
2011-03-16 00:17:05 -07:00
Jonathan Nieder
9ddf17268c declare 1-bit bitfields to be unsigned
As "gcc -pedantic" notices, a two's complement 1-bit signed integer
cannot represent the value '1'.

 dir.c: In function 'init_pathspec':
 dir.c:1291:4: warning: overflow in implicit constant conversion [-Woverflow]

In the spirit of v1.7.1-rc1~10 (2010-04-06), 'unsigned' is what was
intended, so let's make the flags unsigned.

Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-15 22:24:29 -07:00
Junio C Hamano
674ef90904 Merge branch 'sp/maint-fd-limit'
* sp/maint-fd-limit:
  sha1_file.c: Don't retain open fds on small packs
  mingw: add minimum getrlimit() compatibility stub
  Limit file descriptors used by packs
2011-03-15 14:22:23 -07:00
Jonathan Nieder
8f323c00dd config: drop support for GIT_CONFIG_NOGLOBAL
Now that test-lib sets $HOME to protect against pollution from user
settings, GIT_CONFIG_NOGLOBAL is not needed for use by the test
suite any more.  And as luck would have it, a quick code search
reveals no other users in the wild.

This patch does not affect GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM, which is still
needed.

Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-15 12:23:30 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
dce9648916 Make the default abbrev length configurable
The default of 7 comes from fairly early in git development, when
seven hex digits was a lot (it covers about 250+ million hash
values). Back then I thought that 65k revisions was a lot (it was what
we were about to hit in BK), and each revision tends to be about 5-10
new objects or so, so a million objects was a big number.

These days, the kernel isn't even the largest git project, and even
the kernel has about 220k revisions (_much_ bigger than the BK tree
ever was) and we are approaching two million objects. At that point,
seven hex digits is still unique for a lot of them, but when we're
talking about just two orders of magnitude difference between number
of objects and the hash size, there _will_ be collisions in truncated
hash values. It's no longer even close to unrealistic - it happens all
the time.

We should both increase the default abbrev that was unrealistically
small, _and_ add a way for people to set their own default per-project
in the git config file.

This is the first step to first make it configurable; the default of 7
is not raised yet.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-11 14:42:54 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
adfe4e1ff2 Merge branch 'maint'
* maint:
  Revert "core.abbrevguard: Ensure short object names stay unique a bit longer"
2011-03-10 22:45:49 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
ea2c69ed47 Revert "core.abbrevguard: Ensure short object names stay unique a bit longer"
This reverts commit 72a5b561fc, as adding
fixed number of hexdigits more than necessary to make one object name
locally unique does not help in futureproofing the uniqueness of names
we generate today.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-10 22:41:14 -08:00
Jeff King
bbc30f9963 add packet tracing debug code
This shows a trace of all packets coming in or out of a given
program. This can help with debugging object negotiation or
other protocol issues.

To keep the code changes simple, we operate at the lowest
level, meaning we don't necessarily understand what's in the
packets. The one exception is a packet starting with "PACK",
which causes us to skip that packet and turn off tracing
(since the gigantic pack data will not be interesting to
read, at least not in the trace format).

We show both written and read packets. In the local case,
this may mean you will see packets twice (written by the
sender and read by the receiver). However, for cases where
the other end is remote, this allows you to see the full
conversation.

Packet tracing can be enabled with GIT_TRACE_PACKET=<foo>,
where <foo> takes the same arguments as GIT_TRACE.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-08 12:12:04 -08:00
Jeff King
94b3b37464 trace: add trace_strbuf
If you happen to have a strbuf, it is a little more readable
and a little more efficient to be able to print it directly
instead of jamming it through the trace_printf interface.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-08 12:12:04 -08:00
Jeff King
39bc5e4680 trace: factor out "do we want to trace" logic
As we add more tracing areas, this will avoid repeated code.

Technically, trace_printf already checks this and will avoid
printing if the trace key is not set. However, callers may
want to find out early whether or not tracing is enabled so
they can avoid doing work in the common non-trace case.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-08 12:12:04 -08:00
Jeff King
06796607ef trace: refactor to support multiple env variables
Right now you turn all tracing off and on with GIT_TRACE. To
support new types of tracing without forcing the user to see
all of them, we will soon support turning each tracing area
on with GIT_TRACE_*.

This patch lays the groundwork by providing an interface
which does not assume GIT_TRACE. However, we still maintain
the trace_printf interface so that existing callers do not
need to be refactored.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-08 12:12:04 -08:00
Jeff King
c6053543f2 trace: add trace_vprintf
This is a necessary cleanup to adding new types of trace
functions.

Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-08 12:12:04 -08:00
Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason
6578483036 i18n: add no-op _() and N_() wrappers
The _ function is for translating strings into the user's chosen
language.  The N_ macro just marks translatable strings for the
xgettext(1) tool without translating them; it is intended for use in
contexts where a function call cannot be used.  So, for example:

	fprintf(stderr, _("Expansion of alias '%s' failed; "
		"'%s' is not a git command\n"),
		cmd, argv[0]);

and

	const char *unpack_plumbing_errors[NB_UNPACK_TREES_ERROR_TYPES] = {
		/* ERROR_WOULD_OVERWRITE */
		N_("Entry '%s' would be overwritten by merge. Cannot merge."),
	[...]

Define such _ and N_ in a new gettext.h and include it in cache.h, so
they can be used everywhere.  Each just returns its argument for now.
_ is a function rather than a macro like N_ to avoid the temptation to
use _("foo") as a string literal (which would be a compile-time error
once _(s) expands to an expression for the translation of s).

Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-08 12:10:03 -08:00
Shawn O. Pearce
d131b7afea sha1_file.c: Don't retain open fds on small packs
If a pack file is small enough that its entire contents fits within
one mmap window, mmap the file and then immediately close its file
descriptor.  This reduces the number of file descriptors that are
needed to read from repositories with many tiny pack files, such
as one that has received 1000 pushes (and created 1000 small pack
files) since its last repack.

Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-03-02 11:25:30 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
8978166e53 Merge branch 'jh/push-default-upstream-configname'
* jh/push-default-upstream-configname:
  push.default: Rename 'tracking' to 'upstream'
2011-02-27 21:58:31 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
fbfeeaf294 Merge branch 'lp/config-vername-check'
* lp/config-vername-check:
  Disallow empty section and variable names
  Sanity-check config variable names
2011-02-27 21:58:31 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
fc7ae9c156 Merge branch 'nd/hash-object-sanity'
* nd/hash-object-sanity:
  Make hash-object more robust against malformed objects

Conflicts:
	cache.h
2011-02-27 21:58:30 -08:00