* maint:
cvsserver: Fix some typos in asciidoc documentation
cvsserver: Note that CVS_SERVER can also be specified as method variable
cvsserver: Correct inetd.conf example in asciidoc documentation
user-manual: fixed typo in example
Add test case for $Id$ expanded in the repository
git-svn: avoid md5 calculation entirely if SVN doesn't provide one
Makefile: Remove git-fsck and git-verify-pack from PROGRAMS
Fix stupid typo in lookup_tag()
git-gui: Guess our share/git-gui/lib path at runtime if possible
Correct key bindings to Control-<foo>
git-gui: Tighten internal pattern match for lib/ directory
Since this is a trivial variation of the general pserver
authentication, there is really no reason not to support
it.
Signed-off-by: Frank Lichtenheld <frank@lichtenheld.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
If we are too fast with our changes, the file in
the working copy might still have the same mtime
as noted in the CVS/Entries. This will cause CVS
to happily report to the server that the file is
unmodified which can lead to data loss (and in
our case test failure).
CVS sucks!
Work around that by sleeping for a second.
Signed-off-by: Frank Lichtenheld <frank@lichtenheld.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This test case would have caught the bug fixed by revision
c23290d5.
It puts various forms of $Id$ into a file in the repository,
without allowing git to collapse them to uniformity. Then enables the
$Id$ expansion on checkout, and checks that what is checked out has
coped with the various forms.
Signed-off-by: Andy Parkins <andyparkins@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint:
Fix git-svn to handle svn not reporting the md5sum of a file, and test.
Fix mishandling of $Id$ expanded in the repository copy in convert.c
More echo "$user_message" fixes.
Add tests for the last two fixes.
git-commit: use printf '%s\n' instead of echo on user-supplied strings
git-am: use printf instead of echo on user-supplied strings
Documentation: Add definition of "evil merge" to GIT Glossary
Replace the last 'dircache's by 'index'
Documentation: Clean up links in GIT Glossary
* maint-1.5.1:
Fix git-svn to handle svn not reporting the md5sum of a file, and test.
More echo "$user_message" fixes.
Add tests for the last two fixes.
git-commit: use printf '%s\n' instead of echo on user-supplied strings
git-am: use printf instead of echo on user-supplied strings
Documentation: Add definition of "evil merge" to GIT Glossary
Replace the last 'dircache's by 'index'
Documentation: Clean up links in GIT Glossary
This updates t4014 to check the two fixes for git-am and git-commit
we observed with "echo" that does backslash interpolation by default
without being asked with -e option.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When e8438420bb allowed us to reload
the marks table on subsequent runs of fast-import we really broke
things, as we set pack_id to MAX_PACK_ID for any objects we imported
into the marks table. Creating a branch from that mark should fail
as we attempt to read the object through a non-existant packed_git
pointer. Instead we have to use the normal Git object system to
locate the older commit, as we ourselves do not have a reference
to the packed_git it resides in.
This bug only occurred because t9300 was not complete enough.
When we added the --import-marks feature we didn't actually test
its implementation enough to verify the function worked as intended.
I have corrected that, and included the changes as part of this fix.
Prior versions of fast-import fail the new test(s); this commit
allows them to pass.
Credit for this bug find goes to Simon Hausmann <simon@lst.de> as
he recently identified a similiar bug in the tree lazy-loading path.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
While we can easily test the cvs <-> git-cvsserver
communication with :fork: and git-cvsserver server
there are some pserver specifics we should test, too.
Currently this are two tests of the pserver authentication.
Signed-off-by: Frank Lichtenheld <frank@lichtenheld.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Add some cvs update tests that include various merge
situations. Also add a basic test for update -C
since it fits so well in there.
Signed-off-by: Frank Lichtenheld <frank@lichtenheld.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Add a few test cases for the config file parsing
done by git-cvsserver.
Signed-off-by: Frank Lichtenheld <frank@lichtenheld.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
git-add reads this variable, and honours the contents of that file if that
exists. Match this behaviour in git-status, too.
Noticed by Evan Carroll on IRC.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This test runs gitweb (git web interface) as CGI script from
commandline, and checks that it would not write any errors
or warnings to log.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint-1.5.1:
annotate: make it work from subdirectories.
git-config: Correct asciidoc documentation for --int/--bool
t1300: Add tests for git-config --bool --get
unpack-trees.c: verify_uptodate: remove dead code
Use PATH_MAX instead of TEMPFILE_PATH_LEN
branch: fix segfault when resolving an invalid HEAD
Noticed that there were only tests for --int, but not
for --bool. Add some.
Signed-off-by: Frank Lichtenheld <frank@lichtenheld.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
$Id$ is present already in SVN and CVS; it would mean that people
converting their existing repositories won't have to make any changes to
the source files should they want to make use of the ident attribute.
Given that it's a feature that's meant to calm those very people, it
seems obtuse to make them edit every file just to make use of it.
I think that bzr uses $Id$; Mercurial has examples hooks for $Id$;
monotone has $Id$ on its wishlist. I can't think of a good reason not
to stick with the de-facto standard and call ours $Id$ instead of
$ident$.
Signed-off-by: Andy Parkins <andyparkins@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint:
git-svn: don't attempt to minimize URLs by default
git-svn: fix segfaults due to initial SVN pool being cleared
git-svn: clean up caching of SVN::Ra functions
git-svn: don't drop the username from URLs when dcommit is run
RPM spec: include files in technical/ to package.
Remove stale non-static-inline prototype for tree_entry_extract()
git-config: test for 'do not forget "a.b.var" ends "a.var" section'.
git-config: do not forget seeing "a.b.var" means we are out of "a.var" section.
For tracking branches and tags, git-svn prefers to connect
to the root of the repository or at least the level that
houses branches and tags as well as trunk. However, users
that are accustomed to tracking a single directory have
no use for this feature.
As pointed out by Junio, users may not have permissions to
connect to connect to a higher-level path in the repository.
While the current minimize_url() function detects lack of
permissions to certain paths _after_ successful logins, it
cannot effectively determine if it is trying to access a
login-only portion of a repo when the user expects to
connect to a part where anonymous access is allowed.
For people used to the git-svnimport switches of
--trunk, --tags, --branches, they'll already pass the
repository root (or root+subdirectory), so minimize URL
isn't of too much use to them, either.
For people *not* used to git-svnimport, git-svn also
supports:
git svn init --minimize-url \
--trunk http://repository-root/foo/trunk \
--branches http://repository-root/foo/branches \
--tags http://repository-root/foo/tags
And this is where the new --minimize-url command-line switch
comes in to allow for this behavior to continue working.
You cannot currently checkout the tip of an existing branch
without moving to the branch.
This allows you to detach your HEAD and place it at such a
commit, with:
$ git checkout master^0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
git-cvsserver has a bug in its configuration file output parser
that makes it choke if the configuration has these:
[diff]
color = auto
[diff.color]
whitespace = blue reverse
This needs to be fixed, but thanks to that bug, a separate bug
in t9400 test script was discovered. The test discarded
GIT_CONFIG instead of pointing at the proper one to be used in
the exoprted repository. This allowed user's .gitconfig and (if
exists) systemwide /etc/gitconfig to affect the outcome of the
test, which is a big no-no.
The patch fixes the problem in the test. Fixing the
git-cvsserver's configuration parser is left as an exercise to
motivated volunteers ;-)
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Rather than updating all working tree paths, we limit
ourselves to paths listed on the command line.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When switching from a branch with both x86_64/boot/Makefile and
i386/boot/Makefile to another branch that has x86_64/boot as a
symlink pointing at ../i386/boot, the code incorrectly removed
i386/boot/Makefile.
This was because we first removed everything under x86_64/boot
to make room to create a symbolic link x86_64/boot, then removed
x86_64/boot/Makefile which no longer exists but now is pointing
at i386/boot/Makefile, thanks to the symlink we just created.
This fixes it by using the has_symlink_leading_path() function
introduced previously for git-apply in the checkout codepath.
Earlier, "git checkout" was broken in t4122 test due to this
bug, and the test had an extra "git reset --hard" as a
workaround, which is removed because it is not needed anymore.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
HPA noticed that git-rebase fails when changes involve symlinks
in the middle of the hierarchy. Consider:
* The tree state before the patch is applied has arch/x86_64/boot
as a symlink pointing at ../i386/boot/
* The patch tries to remove arch/x86_64/boot symlink, and
create bunch of files there: .gitignore, Makefile, etc.
git-apply tries to be careful while applying patches; it never
touches the working tree until it is convinced that the patch
would apply cleanly. One of the check it does is that when it
knows a path is going to be created by the patch, it runs
lstat() on the path to make sure it does not exist.
This leads to a false alarm. Because we do not touch the
working tree before all the check passes, when we try to make
sure that arch/x86_64/boot/.gitignore does not exist yet, we
haven't removed the arch/x86_64/boot symlink. The lstat() check
ends up seeing arch/i386/boot/.gitignore through the
yet-to-be-removed symlink, and says "Hey, you already have a
file there, but what you fed me is a patch to create a new
file. I am not going to clobber what you have in the working
tree."
We have similar checks to see a file we are going to modify does
exist and match the preimage of the diff, which is done by
directly opening and reading the file.
For a file we are going to delete, we make sure that it does
exist and matches what is going to be removed (a removal patch
records the full preimage, so we check what you have in your
working tree matches it in full -- otherwise we would risk
losing your local changes), which again is done by directly
opening and reading the file.
These checks need to be adjusted so that they are not fooled by
symlinks in the middle.
- To make sure something does not exist, first lstat(). If it
does not exist, it does not, so be happy. If it _does_, we
might be getting fooled by a symlink in the middle, so break
leading paths and see if there are symlinks involved. When
we are checking for a path a/b/c/d, if any of a, a/b, a/b/c
is a symlink, then a/b/c/d does _NOT_ exist, for the purpose
of our test.
This would fix this particular case you saw, and would not
add extra overhead in the usual case.
- To make sure something already exists, first lstat(). If it
does not exist, barf (up to this, we already do). Even if it
does seem to exist, we might be getting fooled by a symlink
in the middle, so make sure leading paths are not symlinks.
This would make the normal codepath much more expensive for
deep trees, which is a bit worrisome.
This patch implements the first side of the check "making sure
it does not exist". The latter "making sure it exists" check is
not done yet, so applying the patch in reverse would still
fail, but we have to start from somewhere.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Use the :fork: access method to force cvs to
call "$CVS_SERVER server" even when accessing a local
repository.
Add a basic test for checkout and some tests for update.
Signed-off-by: Frank Lichtenheld <frank@lichtenheld.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This tests the -d, -n, -f, -x, and -X options to git-clean.
Signed-off-by: Michael Spang <mspang@uwaterloo.ca>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint:
Small correction in reading of commit headers
Documentation: fix typo in git-remote.txt
Add test for blame corner cases.
blame: -C -C -C
blame: Notice a wholesale incorporation of an existing file.
Fix --boundary output
diff format documentation: describe raw combined diff format
Mention version 1.5.1 in tutorial and user-manual
Add --no-rebase option to git-svn dcommit
Fix markup in git-svn man page
* maint:
gitweb: use decode_utf8 directly
posix compatibility for t4200
Document 'opendiff' value in config.txt and git-mergetool.txt
Allow PERL_PATH="/usr/bin/env perl"
Make xstrndup common
diff.c: fix "size cache" handling.
http-fetch: Disable use of curl multi support for libcurl < 7.16.
Fix t4200 so that it also works on OS X by not relying on gnu
extensions to sed.
Signed-off-by: Bryan Larsen <bryan@larsen.st>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
For example Mac OS X lacks the seq command. So we cannot use it
there. A good old while loop works just as good.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Some other programs get the user's email address from $EMAIL, so fall back to
that if we don't have a Git-specific email address.
Signed-off-by: Josh Triplett <josh@freedesktop.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Also leave a warning for future merge-recursive explorers.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The interface is similar to the custom low-level merge drivers.
First you configure your filter driver by defining 'filter.<name>.*'
variables in the configuration.
filter.<name>.clean filter command to run upon checkin
filter.<name>.smudge filter command to run upon checkout
Then you assign filter attribute to each path, whose name
matches the custom filter driver's name.
Example:
(in .gitattributes)
*.c filter=indent
(in config)
[filter "indent"]
clean = indent
smudge = cat
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The 'ident' attribute set to path squashes "$ident:<any bytes
except dollor sign>$" to "$ident$" upon checkin, and expands it
to "$ident: <blob SHA-1> $" upon checkout.
As we have two conversions that affect checkin/checkout paths,
clarify how they interact with each other.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint:
Documentation/git-reset.txt: suggest git commit --amend in example.
Build RPM with ETC_GITCONFIG=/etc/gitconfig
Ignore all man sections as they are generated files.
Fix typo in git-am: s/Was is/Was it/
Reverse the order of -b and --track in the man page.
dir.c(common_prefix): Fix two bugs
Conflicts:
git.spec.in
Instead of running rev-list and picking earlier lines using head/tail pipeline,
grab commit object name as we build commits. This also removes a non POSIX
use of tail with -linenum (more posixly-correct way to say it is "-n linenum")
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
A Large Angry SCM (gitzilla) noticed that on an unnamed platform, tail -c
wants its byte count as part of the option, not as a separate argument.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Now that git-commit got chatty, we have to shut it up again.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The function common_prefix() is used to find the common subdirectory of
a couple of pathnames. When checking if the next pathname matches up with
the prefix, it incorrectly checked the whole path, not just the prefix
(including the slash). Thus, the expensive part of the loop was executed
always.
The other bug is more serious: if the first and the last pathname in the
list have a longer common prefix than the common prefix for _all_ pathnames
in the list, the longer one would be chosen. This bug was probably hidden
by the fact that bash's wildcard expansion sorts the results, and the code
just so happens to work with sorted input.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This enhances the attributes mechanism so that external programs
meant for existing GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF interface can be specifed
per path.
To configure such a custom diff driver, first define a custom
diff driver in the configuration:
[diff "my-c-diff"]
command = <<your command string comes here>>
Then mark the paths that you want to use this custom driver
using the attribute mechanism.
*.c diff=my-c-diff
The intent of this separation is that the attribute mechanism is
used for specifying the type of the contents, while the
configuration mechanism is used to define what needs to be done
to that type of the contents, which would be specific to both
platform and personal taste.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* 'jc/attr': (28 commits)
lockfile: record the primary process.
convert.c: restructure the attribute checking part.
Fix bogus linked-list management for user defined merge drivers.
Simplify calling of CR/LF conversion routines
Document gitattributes(5)
Update 'crlf' attribute semantics.
Documentation: support manual section (5) - file formats.
Simplify code to find recursive merge driver.
Counto-fix in merge-recursive
Fix funny types used in attribute value representation
Allow low-level driver to specify different behaviour during internal merge.
Custom low-level merge driver: change the configuration scheme.
Allow the default low-level merge driver to be configured.
Custom low-level merge driver support.
Add a demonstration/test of customized merge.
Allow specifying specialized merge-backend per path.
merge-recursive: separate out xdl_merge() interface.
Allow more than true/false to attributes.
Document git-check-attr
Change attribute negation marker from '!' to '-'.
...
* lt/gitlink:
Tests for core subproject support
Expose subprojects as special files to "git diff" machinery
Fix some "git ls-files -o" fallout from gitlinks
Teach "git-read-tree -u" to check out submodules as a directory
Teach git list-objects logic to not follow gitlinks
Fix gitlink index entry filesystem matching
Teach "git-read-tree -u" to check out submodules as a directory
Teach git list-objects logic not to follow gitlinks
Don't show gitlink directories when we want "other" files
Teach git-update-index about gitlinks
Teach directory traversal about subprojects
Fix thinko in subproject entry sorting
Teach core object handling functions about gitlinks
Teach "fsck" not to follow subproject links
Add "S_IFDIRLNK" file mode infrastructure for git links
Add 'resolve_gitlink_ref()' helper function
Avoid overflowing name buffer in deep directory structures
diff-lib: use ce_mode_from_stat() rather than messing with modes manually
* np/pack: (27 commits)
document --index-version for index-pack and pack-objects
pack-objects: remove obsolete comments
pack-objects: better check_object() performances
add get_size_from_delta()
pack-objects: make in_pack_header_size a variable of its own
pack-objects: get rid of create_final_object_list()
pack-objects: get rid of reuse_cached_pack
pack-objects: clean up list sorting
pack-objects: rework check_delta_limit usage
pack-objects: equal objects in size should delta against newer objects
pack-objects: optimize preferred base handling a bit
clean up add_object_entry()
tests for various pack index features
use test-genrandom in tests instead of /dev/urandom
simple random data generator for tests
validate reused pack data with CRC when possible
allow forcing index v2 and 64-bit offset treshold
pack-redundant.c: learn about index v2
show-index.c: learn about index v2
sha1_file.c: learn about index version 2
...
* jc/quickfetch:
Make sure quickfetch is not fooled with a previous, incomplete fetch.
git-fetch: use fetch--tool pick-rref to avoid local fetch from alternate
git-fetch--tool pick-rref
This updates the semantics of 'crlf' so that .gitattributes file
can say "this is text, even though it may look funny".
Setting the `crlf` attribute on a path is meant to mark the path
as a "text" file. 'core.autocrlf' conversion takes place
without guessing the content type by inspection.
Unsetting the `crlf` attribute on a path is meant to mark the
path as a "binary" file. The path never goes through line
endings conversion upon checkin/checkout.
Unspecified `crlf` attribute tells git to apply the
`core.autocrlf` conversion when the file content looks like
text.
Setting the `crlf` attribut to string value "input" is similar
to setting the attribute to `true`, but also forces git to act
as if `core.autocrlf` is set to `input` for the path.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The following tests available:
- create subprojects: create a directory in the superproject,
initialize a git repo in it, and try adding it in super project.
Make a commit in superproject
- check if fsck ignores the subprojects: it just should give no errors
- check if commit in a subproject detected: make a commit in
subproject, git-diff-files in superproject should detect it
- check if a changed subproject HEAD can be committed: try
"git-commit -a" in superproject. It should commit changed
HEAD of a subproject
- check if diff-index works for subproject elements: compare the index
(changed by previuos tests) with the initial commit (which created
two subprojects). Should show a change for the recently changed subproject
- check if diff-tree works for subproject elements: do the same, just use
git-diff-tree. This test is somewhat redundant, I just added it for
completeness (diff, diff-files, and diff-index are already used)
- check if git diff works for subproject elements: try to limit
the diff for the name of a subproject in superproject:
git diff HEAD^ HEAD -- subproject
- check if clone works: try a clone of superproject and compare
"git ls-files -s" output in superproject and cloned repo
- removing and adding subproject: rename test. Currently implemented
as "git-update-index --force-remove", "mv" and "git-add".
- checkout in superproject: try to checkout the initial commit
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint:
git-shortlog: Fix two formatting errors in asciidoc documentation
Fix overwriting of files when applying contextually independent diffs
git-svn: don't allow globs to match regular files
Noticed by applying two diffs of different contexts to the same file.
The check for existence of a file was wrong: the test assumed it was
a directory and reset the errno (twice: directly and by calling
lstat). So if an entry existed and was _not_ a directory no attempt
was made to rename into it, because the errno (expected by renaming
code) was already reset to 0. This resulted in error:
fatal: unable to write file file mode 100644
For Linux, removing "errno = 0" is enough, as lstat wont modify errno
if it was successful. The behavior should not be depended upon,
though, so modify the "if" as well.
The test simulates this situation.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This changes the configuration syntax for defining a low-level
merge driver to be:
[merge "<<drivername>>"]
driver = "<<command line>>"
name = "<<driver description>>"
which is much nicer to read and is extensible. Credit goes to
Martin Waitz and Linus.
In addition, when we use an external low-level merge driver, it
is reported as an extra output from merge-recursive, using the
value of merge.<<drivername>.name variable.
The demonstration in t6026 has also been updated.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This allows users to specify custom low-level merge driver per
path, using the attributes mechanism. Just like you can specify
one of built-in "text", "binary", "union" low-level merge
drivers by saying:
* merge=text
.gitignore merge=union
*.jpg merge=binary
pick a name of your favorite merge driver, and assign it as the
value of the 'merge' attribute.
A custom low-level merge driver is defined via the config
mechanism. This patch introduces 'merge.driver', a multi-valued
configuration. Its value is the name (i.e. the one you use as
the value of 'merge' attribute) followed by a command line
specification. The command line can contain %O, %A, and %B to
be interpolated with the names of temporary files that hold the
common ancestor version, the version from your branch, and the
version from the other branch, and the resulting command is
spawned.
The low-level merge driver is expected to update the temporary
file for your branch (i.e. %A) with the result and exit with
status 0 for a clean merge, and non-zero status for a conflicted
merge.
A new test in t6026 demonstrates a sample usage.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* jc/read-tree-df:
t3030: merge-recursive backend test.
merge-recursive: handle D/F conflict case more carefully.
merge-recursive: do not barf on "to be removed" entries.
Treat D/F conflict entry more carefully in unpack-trees.c::threeway_merge()
t1000: fix case table.
This demonstrates how the new low-level per-path merge backends,
union and ours, work, and shows how they are controlled by the
gitattribute mechanism.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This updates git-rev-list --objects to be a bit more careful
when listing a blob object to make sure the blob actually
exists, and uses it to make sure the quick-fetch optimization we
introduced earlier is not fooled by a previous incomplete fetch.
The quick-fetch optimization works by running this command:
git rev-list --objects <<commit-list>> --not --all
where <<commit-list>> is a list of commits that we are going to
fetch from the other side. If there is any object missing to
complete the <<commit-list>>, the rev-list would fail and die
(say, the commit was in our repository, but its tree wasn't --
then it will barf while trying to list the blobs the tree
contains because it cannot read that tree).
Usually we do not have the objects (otherwise why would we
fetching?), but in one important special case we do: when the
remote repository is used as an alternate object store
(i.e. pointed by .git/objects/info/alternates). We could check
.git/objects/info/alternates to see if the remote we are
interacting with is one of them (or is used as an alternate,
recursively, by one of them), but that check is more cumbersome
than it is worth.
The above check however did not catch missing blob, because
object listing code did not read nor check blob objects, knowing
that blobs do not contain any further references to other
objects. This commit fixes it with practically unmeasurable
overhead.
I've benched this with
git rev-list --objects --all >/dev/null
in the kernel repository, with three different implementations
of the "check-blob".
- Checking with has_sha1_file() has negligible (unmeasurable)
performance penalty.
- Checking with sha1_object_info() makes it somewhat slower,
perhaps by 5%.
- Checking with read_sha1_file() to cause a fully re-validation
is prohibitively expensive (about 4 times as much runtime).
In my original patch, I had this as a command line option, but
the overhead is small enough that it is not really worth it.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
[jc: also fix 0a5280a9 that incorrectly changed the title of one test.]
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* js/wrap-log:
Fix permissions on test scripts
Fix t4201: accidental arithmetic expansion
shortlog -w: make wrap-line behaviour optional.
Use print_wrapped_text() in shortlog
Make every test executable. Remove exec-attribute from included shell files,
they can't used standalone anyway.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
instead of embedded subshell. It actually breaks here (dash as /bin/sh):
t4201-shortlog.sh: 27: Syntax error: Missing '))'
FATAL: Unexpected exit with code 2
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
At the same time, we do not want to allow arbitrary strings for
attribute names, as we are likely to want to extend the syntax
later. Allow only alnum, dash, underscore and dot for now.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This defines the semantics of 'crlf' attribute as an example.
When a path has this attribute unset (i.e. '!crlf'), autocrlf
line-end conversion is not applied.
Eventually we would want to let users to build a pipeline of
processing to munge blob data to filesystem format (and in the
other direction) based on combination of attributes, and at that
point the mechanism in convert_to_{git,working_tree}() that
looks at 'crlf' attribute needs to be enhanced. Perhaps the
existing 'crlf' would become the first step in the input chain,
and the last step in the output chain.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This is a fairly complete list of tests for various aspects of pack
index versions 1 and 2.
Tests on index v2 include 32-bit and 64-bit offsets, as well as a nice
demonstration of the flawed repacking integrity checks that index
version 2 intend to solve over index version 1 with the per object CRC.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@cam.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Add testcase for format-patch --subject-prefix support.
Signed-off-by: Robin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
We have fairly extensive coverage of read-tree 3-way machinery,
and many Porcelain-ish tests use git-merge front-end tests, but
we did not have good basic test for merge-recursive, which made
it very hard to hack on it.
I used this during the recent work to teach D/F conflicts to
merge-recursive.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Case #10 is not handled with unpack-trees.c:threeway_merge()
internally, unless under the agressive rule, and it is not a
bug. As the test expects, ND (one side did not do anything,
other side deleted) case was meant to be handled by the caller's
policy (e.g. git-merge-one-file or git-merge-recursive).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Some oneline descriptions are just too long. In shortlog, it looks much
nicer when they are wrapped. Since print_wrapped_text() is UTF-8 aware,
it also works with those descriptions.
[jc: with minimum fixes]
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
As noted by Junio, --format=tar should be assumed if no format
was specified.
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* cc/bisect:
git-bisect: allow bisecting with only one bad commit.
t6030: add a bit more tests to git-bisect
git-bisect: modernization
Documentation: bisect: "start" accepts one bad and many good commits
Bisect: teach "bisect start" to optionally use one bad and many good revs.
* maint:
Documentation: tighten dependency for git.{html,txt}
Makefile: iconv() on Darwin has the old interface
t5300-pack-object.sh: portability issue using /usr/bin/stat
t3200-branch.sh: small language nit
usermanual.txt: some capitalization nits
Make builtin-branch.c handle the git config file
rename_ref(): only print a warning when config-file update fails
Distinguish branches by more than case in tests.
Avoid composing too long "References" header.
cvsimport: Improve formating consistency
cvsimport: Reorder options in documentation for better understanding
cvsimport: Improve usage error reporting
cvsimport: Improve documentation of CVSROOT and CVS module determination
cvsimport: sync usage lines with existing options
Conflicts:
Documentation/Makefile
In the test 'compare delta flavors', /usr/bin/stat is used to get file size.
This isn't portable. There already is a dependency on Perl, use its '-s'
operator to get the file size.
Signed-off-by: Arjen Laarhoven <arjen@yaph.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This allows you to say:
git bisect start
git bisect bad $bad
git bisect next
to start bisection without knowing a good commit. This would
have you try a commit that is half-way since the beginning of
the history, which is rather wasteful if you already know a good
commit, but if you don't (or your history is short enough that
you do not care), there is no reason not to allow this.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The renaming without config test changed a branch from q to Q, which
fails on non-case sensitive file systems. Change the test to use q
and q2.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint:
Fix lseek(2) calls with args 2 and 3 swapped
Honor -p<n> when applying git diffs
Fix dependency of common-cmds.h
Fix renaming branch without config file
DESTDIR support for git/contrib/emacs
gitweb: Fix bug in "blobdiff" view for split (e.g. file to symlink) patches
Document --left-right option to rev-list.
Revert "builtin-archive: use RUN_SETUP"
rename contrib/hooks/post-receieve-email to contrib/hooks/post-receive-email.
rerere: make sorting really stable.
Fix t4200-rerere for white-space from "wc -l"
One bad commit is fundamentally needed for bisect to run,
and if we beforehand know more good commits, we can narrow
the bisect space down without doing the whole tree checkout
every time we give good commits.
This patch implements:
git bisect start [<bad> [<good>...]] [--] [<pathspec>...]
as a short-hand for this command sequence:
git bisect start
git bisect bad $bad
git bisect good $good1 $good2...
On the other hand, there may be some confusion between revs
(<bad> and <good>...) and <pathspec>... if -- is not used
and if an invalid rev or a pathspec that looks like a rev is
given.
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
If the user is trying to apply a Git generated diff file and they
have specified a -p<n> option, where <n> is not 1, the user probably
has a good reason for doing this. Such as they are me, trying to
apply a patch generated in git.git for the git-gui subdirectory to
the git-gui.git repository, where there is no git-gui subdirectory
present.
Users shouldn't supply -p2 unless they mean it. But if they are
supplying it, they probably have thought about how to make this
patch apply to their working directory, and want to risk whatever
results may come from that.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Make git_config_rename_section return success if no config file
exists. Otherwise, renaming a branch would abort, leaving the
repository in an inconsistent state.
[jc: test]
Signed-off-by: Geert Bosch <bosch@gnat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Commit 64edf4b2 cleaned up the initialization of git-archive,
at the cost of 'git-archive --list' now requiring a git repo.
This patch reverts the cleanup and documents the requirement
for this particular dirtyness in a test.
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The earlier code does not swap hunks when the beginning of the
first side is identical to the whole of the second side. In
such a case, the first one should sort later.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
On OS X, wc outputs 6 spaces before the number of lines, so the test
expecting the string "10" failed. Do not quote $cmd to strip away
the problematic whitespace as other tests do.
Also fix the grammar of the test name while making changes to it.
There's only one preimage, so it's "has", not "have".
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* jc/bisect:
make the previous optimization work also on path-limited rev-list --bisect
rev-list --bisect: Fix "halfway" optimization.
t6004: add a bit more path optimization test.
git-rev-list --bisect: optimization
git-rev-list: add --bisect-vars option.
t6002: minor spelling fix.
You cannot currently checkout the tip of an existing branch
without moving to the branch.
This allows you to detach your HEAD and place it at such a
commit, with:
$ git checkout master^0
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When a file has more then one conflicting hunks, it repeated the
contents of previous hunks in output for later ones.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Don't translate the patch to UTF-8, instead preserve the data as
is. This also reverts a test case that was included in the
original patch series.
Also allow overwriting the authorship and title information we
gather from RFC2822 mail headers with additional in-body
headers, which was pointed out by Linus.
Signed-off-by: Don Zickus <dzickus@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Elias Pipping:
> I'm on a mac, hence /usr/bin/sed is not gnu sed, which makes
> t4118 fail.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Ack'd-by: Elias Pipping <pipping@macports.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
There are two breakages in the %P/%p interpolation. It appended
an excess SP at the end of the list, and it gave uninitialized
contents of a buffer on the stack for root commits.
This fixes it, while updating the t6006 test which expected the
wrong output.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
These could stand to be a little more complex, but it should
at least catch obvious problems (like the recently fixed %ct
bug).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This idea was suggested by Bill Lear
(Message-ID: <17920.38942.364466.642979@lisa.zopyra.com>)
and I think it is a very good one.
This patch adds a new test file for "git bisect run", but there
is currently only one basic test.
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Elias Pipping:
> I'm on a mac, hence /usr/bin/sed is not gnu sed, which makes
> t4118 fail.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Ack'd-by: Elias Pipping <pipping@macports.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The test expects --bisect option can be configured with by setting
$_bisect_option. So let's allow that uniformly.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Waaaaaaay back Git was considered to be secure as it never overwrote
an object it already had. This was ensured by always unpacking the
packfile received over the network (both in fetch and receive-pack)
and our already existing logic to not create a loose object for an
object we already have.
Lately however we keep "large-ish" packfiles on both fetch and push
by running them through index-pack instead of unpack-objects. This
would let an attacker perform a birthday attack.
How? Assume the attacker knows a SHA-1 that has two different
data streams. He knows the client is likely to have the "good"
one. So he sends the "evil" variant to the other end as part of
a "large-ish" packfile. The recipient keeps that packfile, and
indexes it. Now since this is a birthday attack there is a SHA-1
collision; two objects exist in the repository with the same SHA-1.
They have *very* different data streams. One of them is "evil".
Currently the poor recipient cannot tell the two objects apart,
short of by examining the timestamp of the packfiles. But lets
say the recipient repacks before he realizes he's been attacked.
We may wind up packing the "evil" version of the object, and deleting
the "good" one. This is made *even more likely* by Junio's recent
rearrange_packed_git patch (b867092f).
It is extremely unlikely for a SHA1 collisions to occur, but if it
ever happens with a remote (hence untrusted) object we simply must
not let the fetch succeed.
Normally received packs should not contain objects we already have.
But when they do we must ensure duplicated objects with the same SHA1
actually contain the same data.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@cam.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* ar/diff:
Add tests for --quiet option of diff programs
try-to-simplify-commit: use diff-tree --quiet machinery.
revision.c: explain what tree_difference does
Teach --quiet to diff backends.
diff --quiet
Remove unused diffcore_std_no_resolve
Allow git-diff exit with codes similar to diff(1)
Make sure pack-objects with --delta-base-offset works fine, and that
it actually produces smaller packs as expected.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@cam.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The 'use packed deltified objects' test was flawed as it failed to
remove the pack and index from the previous test, effectively preventing
the desired pack from being exercised as objects could be found in that
other pack instead.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@cam.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This patch adds support for a dummy remote '.' to avoid having
to declare a fake remote like
[remote "local"]
url = .
fetch = refs/heads/*:refs/heads/*
Such a builtin remote simplifies the operation of "git-fetch",
which will populate FETCH_HEAD but will not pretend that two
repositories are in use, will not create a thin pack, and will
not perform any useless remapping of names. The speed
improvement is around 20%, and it should improve more if
"git-fetch" is converted to a builtin.
To this end, git-parse-remote is grown with a new kind of
remote, 'builtin'. In git-fetch.sh, we treat the builtin remote
specially in that it needs no pack/store operations. In fact,
doing git-fetch on a builtin remote will simply populate
FETCH_HEAD appropriately.
The patch also improves of the --track/--no-track support,
extending it so that branch.<name>.remote items referring '.'
can be created. Finally, it fixes a typo in git-checkout.sh.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <bonzini@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This introduces a new command-line option: --exit-code. The diff
programs will return 1 for differences, return 0 for equality, and
something else for errors.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
I am working on a project that required parsing through regular
mboxes that didn't necessarily have patches embedded in them. I
started by creating my own modified copy of git-am and working
from there. Very quickly, I noticed git-mailinfo wasn't able to
handle a big chunk of my email.
After hacking up numerous solutions and running into more
limitations, I decided it was just easier to rewrite a big chunk
of it. The following patch has a bunch of fixes and features
that I needed in order for me do what I wanted.
Note: I'm didn't follow any email rfc papers but I don't think
any of the changes I did required much knowledge (besides the
boundary stuff).
List of major changes/fixes:
- can't create empty patch files fix
- empty patch files don't fail, this failure will come inside git-am
- multipart boundaries are now handled
- only output inbody headers if a patch exists otherwise assume those
headers are part of the reply and instead output the original headers
- decode and filter base64 patches correctly
- various other accidental fixes
I believe I didn't break any existing functionality or
compatibility (other than what I describe above, which is really
only the empty patch file).
I tested this through various mailing list archives and
everything seemed to parse correctly (a couple thousand emails).
[jc: squashed in another patch from Don's five patch series to
fix the test case, as this patch exposes the bug in the test.]
Signed-off-by: Don Zickus <dzickus@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* 'master' of git://repo.or.cz/git/fastimport:
Remove unnecessary casts from fast-import
New fast-import test case for valid tree sorting
fast-import: grow tree storage more aggressively
POSIX says sed may add a trailing LF if there isn't already
one there. We shouldn't rely on it not adding that LF, as
some systems (Mac OS X for example) will add it.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The Git tree sorting convention is more complex than just the name,
it needs to include the mode too to make sure trees sort as though
their name ends with "/".
This is a simple test case that verifies fast-import keeps the tree
ordering correct after editing the same tree twice in a single
input stream. A recent proposed patch series (that has not yet
been applied) will cause this test to fail, due to a bug in the
way the series handles sorting within the trees.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
* jc/boundary:
git-bundle: prevent overwriting existing bundles
git-bundle: die if a given ref is not included in bundle
git-bundle: handle thin packs in subcommand "unbundle"
git-bundle: Make thin packs
git-bundle: avoid packing objects which are in the prerequisites
bundle: fix wrong check of read_header()'s return value & add tests
revision --boundary: fix uncounted case.
revision --boundary: fix stupid typo
git-bundle: make verify a bit more chatty.
revision traversal: SHOWN means shown
git-bundle: various fixups
revision traversal: retire BOUNDARY_SHOW
revision walker: Fix --boundary when limited
Sergey Vlasov, Andy Parkins and Alex Riesen all pointed out that it
is possible for a single invocation of receive-pack to be given more
refs than the OS might allow us to pass as command line parameters
to a single hook invocation.
We don't want to break these up into multiple invocations (like
xargs might do) as that makes it impossible for the pre-receive
hook to verify multiple related ref updates occur at the same time,
and it makes it harder for post-receive to send out a single batch
notification.
Instead we pass the reference data on a pipe connected to the
hook's stdin, supplying one ref per line to the hook. This way a
single hook invocation can obtain an infinite amount of ref data,
without bumping into any operating system limits.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
In order to track and build on top of a branch 'topic' you track from
your upstream repository, you often would end up doing this sequence:
git checkout -b mytopic origin/topic
git config --add branch.mytopic.remote origin
git config --add branch.mytopic.merge refs/heads/topic
This would first fork your own 'mytopic' branch from the 'topic'
branch you track from the 'origin' repository; then it would set up two
configuration variables so that 'git pull' without parameters does the
right thing while you are on your own 'mytopic' branch.
This commit adds a --track option to git-branch, so that "git
branch --track mytopic origin/topic" performs the latter two actions
when creating your 'mytopic' branch.
If the configuration variable branch.autosetupmerge is set to true, you
do not have to pass the --track option explicitly; further patches in
this series allow setting the variable with a "git remote add" option.
The configuration variable is off by default, and there is a --no-track
option to countermand it even if the variable is set.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <bonzini@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* js/diff-ni:
Get rid of the dependency to GNU diff in the tests
diff --no-index: support /dev/null as filename
diff-ni: fix the diff with standard input
diff: support reading a file from stdin via "-"
* 'master' of git://repo.or.cz/git/fastimport:
Allow fast-import frontends to reload the marks table
Use atomic updates to the fast-import mark file
Preallocate memory earlier in fast-import
When saying something like "--since=1.day.ago" or "--max-count=5",
git-bundle finds the boundary commits which are recorded as
prerequisites. However, it failed to tell pack-objects _not_ to
pack the objects which are in these.
Fix that. And add a test for that.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
I'm giving fast-import a lesson on how to reload the marks table
using the same format it outputs with --export-marks. This way
a frontend can reload the marks table from a prior import, making
incremental imports less painful.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Bill Lear pointed out that it is easy to send out notifications of
changes with the update hook, but successful execution of the update
hook does not necessarily mean that the ref was actually updated.
Lock contention on the ref or being unable to append to the reflog
may prevent the ref from being changed. Sending out notifications
prior to the ref actually changing is very misleading.
To help this situation I am introducing two new hooks to the
receive-pack flow: pre-receive and post-receive. These new hooks
are invoked only once per receive-pack execution and are passed
three arguments per ref (refname, old-sha1, new-sha1).
The new post-receive hook is ideal for sending out notifications,
as it has the complete list of all refnames that were successfully
updated as well as the old and new SHA-1 values. This allows more
interesting notifications to be sent. Multiple ref updates could
be easily summarized into one email, for example.
The new pre-receive hook is ideal for logging update attempts, as it
is run only once for the entire receive-pack operation. It can also
be used to verify multiple updates happen at once, e.g. an update
to the `maint` head must also be accompained by a new annotated tag.
Lots of documentation improvements for receive-pack are included
in this change, as we want to make sure the new hooks are clearly
explained.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
I discovered we did not send an ng line in the report-status feedback
if the ref was not updated because the repository has the config
option receive.denyNonFastForwards enabled. I think the reason this
happened is that it is simply too easy to forget to set error_string
when returning back a failure from update()
We now return an ng line for a non-fastforward update, which in
turn will cause send-pack to exit with a non-zero exit status.
Hence the modified test.
This refactoring changes update to return a const char* describing
the error, which execute_commands always loads into error_string.
The result is what I think is cleaner code, and allows us to
initialize the error_string member to NULL when we read_head_info.
I want error_string to be NULL in all commands before we call
execute_commands, so that we can reuse the run_hook function to
execute a new pre-receive hook.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
They test the behaviour with just a URL in the command line.
Signed-off-by: Santi B,Ai(Bjar <sbejar@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
If read_header() fails, it returns <0, not 0. Further, an open(/dev/null)
was not checked for errors.
Also, this adds two tests to make sure that the bundle file looks
correct, by checking if it has the header has the expected form, and that
the pack contains the right amount of objects.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The test was recently broken to expect sed to leave the
incomplete line at the end without newline.
POSIX says that output of the pattern space is to be followed by
a newline, while GNU adds the newline back only when it was
stripped when input. GNU behaviour is arguably more intuitive
and nicer, but we should not depend on it.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Acked-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Panagiotis Issaris reports that some MUAs seem not to like
folded "content-type" and "content-disposition" headers, so this
makes format-patch --attach output to avoid them.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The existing --attach option did not create a true "attachment"
but multipart/mixed with Content-Disposition: inline. It should
have been with Content-Disposition: attachment.
Introduce --inline to add multipart/mixed that is inlined, and
make --attach to create an attachement.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Now that "git diff" handles stdin and relative paths outside the
working tree correctly, we can convert all instances of "diff -u"
to "git diff".
This commit is really the result of
$ perl -pi.bak -e 's/diff -u/git diff/' $(git grep -l "diff -u" t/)
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
(cherry picked from commit c699a40d68215c7e44a5b26117a35c8a56fbd387)
This patch documents the previously undocumented option --rename-section
and adds a new option to zap an entire section.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <bonzini@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
If the file system does not support symbolic links (core.symlinks=false),
merge-recursive must write the merged symbolic link text into a regular
file.
While we are here, fix a tiny memory leak in the if-branch that writes
real symbolic links.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Some file systems that can host git repositories and their working copies
do not support symbolic links. But then if the repository contains a symbolic
link, it is impossible to check out the working copy.
This patch enables partial support of symbolic links so that it is possible
to check out a working copy on such a file system. A new flag
core.symlinks (which is true by default) can be set to false to indicate
that the filesystem does not support symbolic links. In this case, symbolic
links that exist in the trees are checked out as small plain files, and
checking in modifications of these files preserve the symlink property in
the database (as long as an entry exists in the index).
Of course, this does not magically make symbolic links work on such defective
file systems; hence, this solution does not help if the working copy relies
on that an entry is a real symbolic link.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint:
git-apply: do not fix whitespaces on context lines.
diff --cc: integer overflow given a 2GB-or-larger file
mailinfo: do not get confused with logical lines that are too long.
It basically considers all the continuation lines to be lines of their
own, and if the total line is bigger than what we can fit in it, we just
truncate the result rather than stop in the middle and then get confused
when we try to parse the "next" line (which is just the remainder of the
first line).
[jc: added test, and tightened boundary a bit per list discussion.]
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
test-lib:
Make sure test-chmtime has been built before starting.
t4200-rerere:
Removed non-portable date dependency and avoid touch
Avoid "test -a" which isn't portable, either
lib-git-svn:
Use test-chmtime instead of Perl one-liner to poke
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
These tests are very similar as the ones I used for useSvmProps
and expect the same results because both dumps were generated
from the same original repo.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
svm:mirror is not useful at all for us. Parts of the old unit
test were broken and based on my misunderstanding of the
svm:mirror property.
When we read svm:source; make sure we correctly handle the '!'
in it: it is used to separate the path of the repository root
from the virtual path within the repository. We don't need
to make that distinction, honestly!
We also ensure that subdirectories are also mirrored with the
correct URL if we're using useSvmProps.
We have a new test that uses dumped repo that was really
created using SVN::Mirror to avoid ambiguities and
mis-understandings about the svm: properties.
Note: trailing whitespace in the svm.dump file is unfortunately
a reality and required by SVN; so please ignore it when applying
this patch.
Also, ensure that the -R/--remote/--svn-remote flag is always
in effect if explicitly passed via the command-line. This
allows us to track logically different mirrors sharing the
same URL (probably common with SVN::Mirror/SVK users).
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Having it named as 'config' prevents us from tracking a
ref named 'config', which is a huge mistake.
On the non-technical side, the word 'config' implies that
a user can freely modify it; but that's not the case
here.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
* avoid skipping modification-only changes in fetch
* correctly fetch when we only have branches and tags
to glob from (no fetch keys defined)
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
multi-init is now just an alias that requires -T/-t/-b;
all options that 'init' can now accept.
This will hopefully simplify usage and reduce typing.
Also, allow the --shared option in 'init' to take an optional
argument now that 'git-init --shared' supports an optional
argument.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Some of the repo-config => config renaming missed the git-svn
tests; so I'm just renaming them to be consisten with the
rest of the modern git.
Also, some of the newer tests didn't have 'poke' in them
to workaround race conditions on fast machines. This adds
places where they can _possibly_ occur; but I don't have
fast enough hardware to trigger them.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
A manual test that sets up a repository that looks like an SVK depot,
and then imports it to check that it looks like we mirrored the
'original' source.
There is also a minor modification to the git-svn test library shell
file which sets a variable for the subversion repository's filesystem
path.
[ew: made some of the tests stricter and more thorough]
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
We need a separate .rev_db file for each repository we're
tracking. This allows us to track the same logical path off
multiple mirrors. We preserve a symlink to the old .rev_db
(no-UUID) if we're (auto-)migrating from an old version to
preserve backwards compatibility.
Also, get rid of the uuid() wrapper since we cache UUID in our
private config, and the SVN::Ra::get_uuid() function memoizes
the return value per-connection.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Several bugs were found and fixed while getting this to work:
* Remember the 'R'(eplace) case of actions and treat it like we
would an 'A'(dd) case.
* Fix a small case of follow-parent missing a parent if a
subdirectory was modified in the revision where the parent was
copied.
* dirents returned by get_dir sometimes expire if the data
structure is too big and the pool is destroyed, so we
cache get_dir (along with check_path and get_revprops)
temporarily along with its pool.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
--no-follow-parent disables and reverts it back to the old
default behavior of not following parents (if you don't care for
full history).
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
We can have a branch that was deleted, then re-added under the
same name but copied from another path, in which case we'll have
multiple parents (we don't want to break the original ref, nor
lose copypath info).
Add a test for this, too, of course.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
It can be confusing and redundant, since historically the
default remote ref (not remote itself) has been "git-svn", too.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Having 'fetch' entries in the config file created from
--follow-parent is wasteful because it can cause *future* of
invocations to follow revisions we were never interested in
in the first place.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
We no longer delete the top-level directory even if it got
deleted from the upstream repository. In gs_do_update; we
double-check that the path we're tracking exists at both
endpoints before proceeding. We have also added additional
protection against fetching revisions out-of-order.
To simplify our internal interfaces, I've disabled passing the
'recursive' flag to the gs_do_{switch,update} wrapper functions
since we always want it in git-svn. We also pass the
entire Git::SVN object rather than just the path because it
helped me debug.
When printing progress, the refname is printed out to make
it less confusing when multi-fetch is running.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
We were still skipping path information from get_log if we are
tracking /r9270/drunk/subversion/bindings/..., but got something
like this in the log:
A /r9270/drunk (from /r9270/trunk:14)
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Using path names as refnames breaks horribly if a user is
tracking one large, toplevel directory, and a lower-level
directory is followed from another project is a parent
of another ref, as it will cause refnames such as:
'refs/remotes/trunk/path/to/stuff', which will conflict
with a refname of 'refs/remotes/trunk'.
Now we just append @$revno to the end of it the current
refname. And if we have followed back to a grandparent, then
we'll strip any existing '@$parent_revno' strings before
appending our own '@$revno' string to it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
The do_update or do_switch functions in SVN only allow for a
single path component; so 'path/to/deep/dir' would be
interpreted as 'path'.
SVN 1.4.x has a reparent function that can let us change the
session to use a higher-level root of the repository, so we can
use that for do_switch (which still doesn't seem to work in SVN
1.4.3 (a fix was attempted, but they missed the rest of the
typemap changes needed in trunk...)).
On the do_update side, we can use set_path on higher level
directories and set them to a newer revision so they don't get
updated. We can't do this with do_switch, either, because the
relative path we're tracking can change (directory moving into
a child of itself).
Because of these changes, we need to double check that our Fetch
editor is correctly performing stripping on any prefixed paths
from update, otherwise we'll just die() because that would be
a bug.
Added a test case which helped me notice and fix problems with
do_switch, too.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
I broke this part with the URL minimization; since
git-svn will now try to connect to the root of
the repository and will end up writing files
there if it can...
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
svn_log_changed_path_t structs were being used out of scope
outside of svn_ra_get_log (because I wanted to eventually be
able to use git-svn with only a single connection to the
repository). So now we dup them into a hash.
This was fixed while making --follow-parent fetches more
efficient. I've moved parsing of the command-line --revision
argument outside of the Git::SVN module so Git::SVN::fetch() can
be used in more places (such as find_parent_branch).
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
git-svn has never been able to handle deleted branches very well
because svn_ra_get_log() is all-or-nothing, meaning that if the
max revision passed to it does not contain the path we're
tracking, we miss all the revisions in the repository.
Branches fetched using --follow-parent still do this
sub-optimally (will be fixed soon). --follow-parent will soon
become the default, so we will assume that when using get_log();
We will also avoid tracking revprops for revisions with no
path-related changes since otherwise we just end up pulling
logs to paths we don't care about.
Also added a test for this to t9104-git-svn-follow-parent.sh and
correctly commit the log message in the preceeding test (which
conflicted with a filename).
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
They simply aren't interesting to track, and this will allow
us to avoid get_log().
Since r0 is covered by this, we need to update the tests to not
rely on r0 (which is always empty).
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
This means that tracking the path of:
/another-larger/trunk/thunk/bump/thud inside a repository
would follow:
/larger-parent/trunk/thunk/bump/thud
even if the svn log output looks like this:
--------------------------------------------
Changed paths:
A /another-larger (from /larger-parent:5)
--------------------------------------------
Note: the usage of get_log() in git-svn still makes a
an assumption that shouldn't be made with regard to
revisions existing for a particular path.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
This allows connections to be used more efficiently and not require
users to run 'git-svn migrate --minimize' for new repositories.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Having multiple fetch refspecs pointing to the same local ref
would be a very bad thing. Start avoiding the use of fatal() or
exit() inside the modules so we can libify more easily.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Bugs fixed:
* We didn't allow manually (not using git-svn) init-ed
remotes/fetch refspecs to be used before. It works now
because that's what I did in this test. git-svn init should
offer more control in the future.
* correctly strip paths in the delta editor when using
do_switch().
* Make the -i / GIT_SVN_ID option work correctly when doing
fetch on a multi-ref svn-remote
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
--minimize will update the git-svn configuration to attempt to
connect to the repository root (instead of directly to the
path(s) we are tracking) in order to allow more efficient reuse
of connections (for multi-fetch and follow-parent).
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Of course, we handle metadata migrations from previous versions
and we have added unit tests.
The new .git/config remotes resemble non-SVN remotes. Below
is an example with comments:
[svn-remote "git-svn"]
; like non-svn remotes, we have one URL per-remote
url = http://foo.bar.org/svn
; 'fetch' keys are done in the same way as non-svn
; remotes, too. With the left-hand-side of the ':'
; being the remote (SVN) repository path relative to the
; above 'url' key; and the right-hand-side being a
; remote ref in git (refs/remotes/*).
; An empty left-hand-side means that it will fetch
; the entire contents of the 'url' key.
; old-style (migrated from previous versions of git-svn)
; are like this:
fetch = :refs/remotes/git-svn
; this is created by a current version of git-svn
; using the multi-init command with an explicit
; url (specified above). This allows multi-init
; to reuse SVN::Ra connections.
fetch = trunk:refs/remotes/trunk
fetch = branches/a:refs/remotes/a
fetch = branches/b:refs/remotes/b
fetch = tags/0.1:refs/remotes/tags/0.1
fetch = tags/0.2:refs/remotes/tags/0.2
fetch = tags/0.3:refs/remotes/tags/0.3
[svn-remote "alt"]
; this is another old-style remote migrated over
; to the new config format
url = http://foo.bar.org/alt
fetch = :refs/remotes/alt
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
It's becoming a maintenance burden. I've never found it
particularly useful myself, nor have I heard much feedback about
it; so I'm assuming it's just as useless to everyone else.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
If a user specified a seperate URL and --tags/--branches as
a sepearte URL, allow the Ra object (and therefore the connection)
to be reused.
We'll get rid of libsvn_ls_fullurl() since it was only used
in one place.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Some workflows require use of repositories on machines that cannot be
connected, preventing use of git-fetch / git-push to transport objects and
references between the repositories.
git-bundle provides an alternate transport mechanism, effectively allowing
git-fetch and git-pull to operate using sneakernet transport. `git-bundle
create` allows the user to create a bundle containing one or more branches
or tags, but with specified basis assumed to exist on the target
repository. At the receiving end, git-bundle acts like git-fetch-pack,
allowing the user to invoke git-fetch or git-pull using the bundle file as
the URL. git-fetch and git-ls-remote determine they have a bundle URL by
checking that the URL points to a file, but are otherwise unchanged in
operation with bundles.
The original patch was done by Mark Levedahl <mdl123@verizon.net>.
It was updated to make git-bundle a builtin, and get rid of the tar
format: now, the first line is supposed to say "# v2 git bundle", the next
lines either contain a prerequisite ("-" followed by the hash of the
needed commit), or a ref (the hash of a commit, followed by the name of
the ref), and finally the pack. As a result, the bundle argument can be
"-" now.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This was done by setting $HOME to somewhere bogus. A better method is
to reuse $GIT_CONFIG, which was invented for ignoring the global
config file explicitely.
Technically, setting GIT_CONFIG=.git/config could be wrong, but it
passes all the tests, and we can keep the tests that way.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* lt/crlf:
Teach core.autocrlf to 'git apply'
t0020: add test for auto-crlf
Make AutoCRLF ternary variable.
Lazy man's auto-CRLF
* jc/apply-config:
t4119: test autocomputing -p<n> for traditional diff input.
git-apply: guess correct -p<n> value for non-git patches.
git-apply: notice "diff --git" patch again
Fix botched "leak fix"
t4119: add test for traditional patch and different p_value
apply: fix memory leak in prefix_one()
git-apply: require -p<n> when working in a subdirectory.
git-apply: do not lose cwd when run from a subdirectory.
Teach 'git apply' to look at $HOME/.gitconfig even outside of a repository
Teach 'git apply' to look at $GIT_DIR/config
This enhances the third point in the previous commit. When
applying a non-git patch that begins like this:
--- 2.6.orig/mm/slab.c
+++ 2.6/mm/slab.c
@@ -N,M +L,K @@@
...
and if you are in 'mm' subdirectory, we notice that -p2 is the
right option to use to apply the patch in file slab.c in the
current directory (i.e. mm/slab.c)
The guess function also knows about this pattern, where you
would need to use -p0 if applying from the top-level:
--- mm/slab.c
+++ mm/slab.c
@@ -N,M +L,K @@@
...
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Earlier one that tried to be too consistent with GNU patch by
not stripping the leading path when we _know_ we are in a
subdirectory and the patch is relative to the toplevel was a
mistake. This fixes it.
- No change to behaviour when it is run from the toplevel of
the repository.
- When run from a subdirectory to apply a git-generated patch,
it uses the right -p<n> value automatically, with or without
--index nor --cached option.
- When run from a subdirectory to apply a randomly generated
patch, it wants the right -p<n> value to be given by the
user.
The second one is a pure improvement to correct inconsistency
between --index and non --index case, compared with 1.5.0. The
third point could be further improved to guess what the right
value for -p<n> should be by looking at the patch, but should be
a topic of a separate patch.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
git-apply running inside a subdirectory, with or without --index,
used to always assume that the patch is formatted in such a way
to apply with -p1 from the toplevel, but it is more useful and
consistent with the use of "GNU patch -p1" if it defaulted to
assume that its input is meant to apply at the level it is
invoked in.
This changes the behaviour. It used to be that the patch
generated this way would apply without any trick:
edit Documentation/Makefile
git diff >patch.file
cd Documentation
git apply ../patch.file
You need to give an explicit -p2 to git-apply now. On the other
hand, if you got a patch from somebody else who did not follow
"patch is to apply from the top with -p1" convention, the input
patch would start with:
diff -u Makefile.old Makefile
--- Makefile.old
+++ Makefile
and in such a case, you can apply it with:
git apply -p0 patch.file
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint:
Update draft release notes for 1.5.0.1
Convert update-index references in docs to add.
Attempt to improve git-rebase lead-in description.
Do not take mode bits from index after type change.
git-blame: prevent argument parsing segfault
Make gitk save and restore window pane position on Linux and Cygwin.
Make gitk save and restore the user set window position.
[PATCH] gitk: Use show-ref instead of ls-remote
[PATCH] Make gitk work reasonably well on Cygwin.
[PATCH] gitk - remove trailing whitespace from a few lines.
Change git repo-config to git config
This teaches git-apply that the data read from and written to
the filesystem might need to get converted to adjust for local
line-ending convention.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When neither --index nor --cached was used, git-apply did not
try calling setup_git_directory(), which means it did not look
at configuration files at all. This fixes it to call the setup
function but still allow the command to be run in a directory
not controlled by git.
The bug probably meant that 'git apply', not moving up to the
toplevel, did not apply properly formatted diffs from the
toplevel when you are inside a subdirectory, even though 'git
apply --index' would. As a side effect, this patch fixes it as
well.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When we do not trust executable bit from lstat(2), we copied
existing ce_mode bits without checking if the filesystem object
is a regular file (which is the only thing we apply the "trust
executable bit" business) nor if the blob in the index is a
regular file (otherwise, we should do the same as registering a
new regular file, which is to default non-executable).
Noticed by Johannes Sixt.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This tests lowlevel of update/checkout codepaths and some patch
application. Currently, variants of "git apply" that look at
the working tree files does not work, so it does not test the
patch application without parameter and with --index parameter
when autocrlf is set to produce CRLF files.
We should add test for diff generation too.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Some of the git-svn tests can fail on fast machines due to a race in
Subversion: if a file is modified in the same second it was checked out
(or in for that matter), Subversion will not consider it modified. This
works around the problem by increasing the timestamp by one second
before each commit.
[jc: with "touch -r -d" replacement from Eric]
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Spang <mspang@uwaterloo.ca>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
It was suggested on the mailing list that being able to use `from`
in any commit to reset the current branch is useful in some types of
importers, such as a darcs importer.
We originally did not permit resetting an existing branch with a
new `from` command during a `commit` command, but this restriction
was only to help debug the hacked up cvs2svn that Jon Smirl was
developing in parallel with git-fast-import. It is probably more
of a problem to disallow it than to allow it. So now we permit a
`from` during any `commit`.
While making the changes required to permit multiple `from`
commands on the same branch, I discovered we no longer needed the
last_commit field to be set to 0 during a reset, so that was removed.
(Reset was originally setting the field to 0 to signal cmd_from()
that it was OK to execute on the branch.)
While poking around in this section of fast-import I also realized
the `reset` command was not working as intended if the corresponding
`from` command was omitted (as allowed by the BNF grammar and the
code). If `from` was omitted we cleared out the tree but we left
the tree SHA-1 and parent commit SHA-1 intact. This is not what
the user intended in this case. Instead they would be trying to
reset the branch to have no parent and to have no tree, making the
branch look new-born during the next commit. We now clear these
SHA-1 values during `reset`, ensuring the branch looks new-born if
`from` does not get supplied.
New test cases for these were also added.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
* 'master' of git://repo.or.cz/git/fastimport:
bash: Hide git-fast-import.
fast-import: Add tip about importing renames.
fast-import: Hide the pack boundary commits by default.
Most users don't need the pack boundary information that fast-import
was printing to standard output, especially if they were calling
it with --quiet.
Those users who do want this information probably want it captured
so they can go back and use it to repack the imported repository.
So dumping the boundary commits to a log file makes more sense then
printing them to standard output.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Quite nonstandard "date -d @11111111 +%s" does not even fail on
OpenBSD but gives the current date in "seconds since epoch"
format, which is useless for the purpose of this test. We want
to make sure that this returns exactly the same input before
proceeding.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* 'master' of git://repo.or.cz/git/fastimport:
Add a Tips and Tricks section to fast-import's manual.
Don't crash fast-import if the marks cannot be exported.
Dump all refs and marks during a checkpoint in fast-import.
Teach fast-import how to sit quietly in the corner.
Teach fast-import how to clear the internal branch content.
Minor timestamp related documentation corrections for fast-import.
Use sed instead, it comes with cygwin and there is almost no chance of
someone installing a sed with default CRLF lineendings by accident.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Some frontends may not be able to (easily) keep track of which files
are included in the branch, and which aren't. Performing this
tracking can be tedious and error prone for the frontend to do,
especially if its foreign data source cannot supply the changed
path list on a per-commit basis.
fast-import now allows a frontend to request that a branch's tree
be wiped clean (reset to the empty tree) at the start of a commit,
allowing the frontend to feed in all paths which belong on the branch.
This is ideal for a tar-file importer frontend, for example, as
the frontend just needs to reformat the tar data stream into a gfi
data stream, which may be something a few Perl regexps can take
care of. :)
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
* 'master' of git://repo.or.cz/git/fastimport: (81 commits)
S_IFLNK != 0140000
Don't do non-fastforward updates in fast-import.
Support RFC 2822 date parsing in fast-import.
Minor fast-import documentation corrections.
Remove unnecessary null pointer checks in fast-import.
Correct fast-import timezone documentation.
Correct minor style issue in fast-import.
Correct compiler warnings in fast-import.
Remove --branch-log from fast-import.
Initial draft of fast-import documentation.
Don't support shell-quoted refnames in fast-import.
Reduce memory usage of fast-import.
Include checkpoint command in the BNF.
Accept 'inline' file data in fast-import commit structure.
Reduce value duplication in t9300-fast-import.
Create test case for fast-import.
Support delimited data regions in fast-import.
Remove unnecessary options from fast-import.
Use fixed-size integers when writing out the index in fast-import.
Always use struct pack_header for pack header in fast-import.
...
If fast-import is being used to update an existing branch of
a repository, the user may not want to lose commits if another
process updates the same ref at the same time. For example, the
user might be using fast-import to make just one or two commits
against a live branch.
We now perform a fast-forward check during the ref updating process.
If updating a branch would cause commits in that branch to be lost,
we skip over it and display the new SHA1 to standard error.
This new default behavior can be overridden with `--force`, like
git-push and git-fetch.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Since some frontends may be working with source material where
the dates are only readily available as RFC 2822 strings, it is
more friendly if fast-import exposes Git's parse_date() function
to handle the conversion. This way the frontend doesn't need
to perform the parsing itself.
The new --date-format option to fast-import can be used by a
frontend to select which format it will supply date strings in.
The default is the standard `raw` Git format, which fast-import
has always supported. Format rfc2822 can be used to activate the
parse_date() function instead.
Because fast-import could also be useful for creating new, current
commits, the format `now` is also supported to generate the current
system timestamp. The implementation of `now` is a trivial call
to datestamp(), but is actually a whole whopping 3 lines so that
fast-import can verify the frontend really meant `now`.
As part of this change I have added validation of the `raw` date
format. Prior to this change fast-import would accept anything
in a `committer` command, even if it was seriously malformed.
Now fast-import requires the '> ' near the end of the string and
verifies the timestamp is formatted properly.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
We at least know that the test as written has a problem in an
environment where "touch '$p'; ls | fgrep '$p'" fails, and have
a clear understand why it fails.
This tests if the filesystem has that particular issue we know "git
add" has a problem with, and skips the test in such an environment.
This way, we might catch issues "git add" might have in other environments.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When using --reference to borrow objects from a neighbouring
repository while cloning, we copy the entire set of refs under
temporary "refs/reference-tmp/refs" space and set up the object
alternates. However, a textual symref copied this way would not
point at the right place, and causes later steps to emit error
messages (which is harmless but still alarming). This is most
visible when using a clone created with the separate-remote
layout as a reference, because such a repository would have
refs/remotes/origin/HEAD with 'ref: refs/remotes/origin/master'
as its contents.
Although we do not create symbolic-link based refs anymore, they
have the same problem because they are always supposed to be
relative to refs/ hierarchy (we dereference by hand, so it only
is good for HEAD and nothing else).
In either case, the solution is simply to remove them after
copying under refs/reference-tmp; if a symref points at a true
ref, that true ref itself is enough to ensure that objects
reachable from it do not needlessly get fetched.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Its really nice to be able to run a test with -v and automatically
see the "debugging" dump from merge-recursive, especially if we
are actually trying to debug merge-recursive.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
My earlier fix (8371234e) to delete renamed tracked files from the
working directory also caused merge-recursive to delete untracked
files that were in the working directory.
The problem here is merge-recursive is deleting the working directory
file without regard for which branch it was associated with. What we
really want to do during a merge is to only delete files that were
renamed by the branch we are merging into the current branch,
and that are still tracked by the current branch. These files
definitely don't belong in the working directory anymore.
Anything else is either a merge conflict (already handled in other
parts of the code) or a file that is untracked by the current branch
and thus is not even participating in the merge. Its this latter
class that must be left alone.
For this fix to work we are now assuming that the first non-base
argument passed to git-merge-recursive always corresponds to the
working directory. This is already true for all in-tree callers
of merge-recursive. This assumption is also supported by the
long time usage message of "<base> ... -- <head> <remote>", where
"<head>" is implied to be HEAD, which is generally assumed to be
the current tree-ish.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The last test in t9200 wants to see if executable bit is
retained, which has no chance of succeeding on a filesystem that
does not handle executable bit correctly.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
For the purpose of this test we do not really care if the paths
are in latin-1, but people on Cygwin seem to be having problem
on foreign-looking pathnames that do not play well with their
locale.
Let's try to re-code them in UTF-8 and see who screams,
thanks, or reports no-improvements.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
git-fast-import requires use of inttypes.h, but the master branch has
added it to git-compat-util differently than git-fast-import originally
had used it. This merge back of master to the fast-import topic is to
get (and use) inttypes.h the way master is using it.
This is a partially evil merge to remove the call to setup_ident(),
as the master branch now contains a change which makes this implicit
and therefore removed the function declaration. (commit 01754769).
Conflicts:
git-compat-util.h
Do *NOT* try this on a repository you care about:
git pack-refs --all --prune
git pack-refs
because while the first "pack-refs" does the right thing, the second
pack-refs will totally screw you over.
This is because the second one tries to pack only tags; we should
also pack what are already packed -- otherwise we would lose them.
[jc: with an additional test]
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This allows transfer.unpackLimit to specify what these two
configuration variables want to set.
We would probably want to deprecate the two separate variables,
as I do not see much point in specifying them independently.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This makes git-fetch over git native protocol to automatically
decide to keep the downloaded pack if the fetch results in more
than 100 objects, just like receive-pack invoked by git-push
does. This logic is disabled when --keep is explicitly given
from the command line, so that a very small clone still keeps
the downloaded pack as before.
The 100 threshold can be adjusted with fetch.unpacklimit
configuration. We might want to introduce transfer.unpacklimit
to consolidate the two unpacklimit variables, which will be a
topic for the next patch.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Documentation/config.txt:
Variable value ending in a '`\`' is continued on the next line in the
customary UNIX fashion.
Test it.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Commit c1a4278e switched the "merging checkout" implementation
from 3-way read-tree to merge-recursive, but forgot that
merge-recursive will signal an unmerged state with its own exit
status code. This prevented the clean-up phase (paths cleanly
merged should not be updated in the index) from running.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This reverts commit 9b088c4e39.
Protecting 'mature' objects does not make it any safer. We should
admit that git-prune is inherently unsafe when run in parallel with
other operations without involving unwarranted locking overhead,
and with the latest git, even rebase and reset would not immediately
create crufts anyway.
This option gives grace period to objects that are unreachable
from the refs from getting pruned.
The default value is 24 hours and may be changed using
gc.prunegrace.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Lederhofer <matled@gmx.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
For example, it makes no sense to check the presence of a file
named "HEAD" when calling "git log HEAD" in a bare repository.
Noticed by Han-Wen Nienhuys.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
You can pass an extra argument to the function to receive the
reflog message information. Also when the log does not go back
beyond the point the user asked, the cut-off time and count are
given back to the caller for emitting the error messages as
appropriately.
We could later add configuration for get_sha1_basic() to make it
an error instead of it being just a warning.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Non-GNU touch do not have the -d option to take free form
date strings. The POSIX -t option should be more widespread.
For this to work, date needs to output YYYYMMDDHHMM.SS date strings.
Signed-off-by: Simon 'corecode' Schubert <corecode@fs.ei.tum.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Its very annoying to need to specify the file content ahead of a
commit and use marks to connect the individual blobs to the commit's
file modification entry, especially if the frontend can't/won't
generate the blob SHA1s itself. Instead it would much easier to
use if we can accept the blob data at the same time as we receive
each file_change line.
Now fast-import accepts 'inline' instead of a mark idnum or blob
SHA1 within the 'M' type file_change command. If an inline is
detected the very next line must be a 'data n' command, supplying
the file data.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
It is error prone to list the value of each file twice, instead we
should list the value only once early in the script and reuse the
shell variable when we need to access it.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Now that its easier to craft test cases (thanks to 'data <<')
we should start to verify fast-import works as expected.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This adds --summary output in addition to the --stat to the
output from git-format-patch by default.
I think additions, removals and filemode changes are rare but
notable events and always showing it makes sense.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This allows "git checkout -m <other-branch>" to notice renames and
carry local changes in the working tree forward.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Not all echos know -n. This was causing a test failure in
t5401-update-hooks.sh, but not t3800-mktag.sh for some reason.
Signed-off-by: Jason Riedy <ejr@cs.berkeley.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
My bash refused to run the two scripts missing a #!, and it's
better to use the same line for all the scripts.
Signed-off-by: Jason Riedy <ejr@cs.berkeley.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This makes revert and cherry-pick to use merge-recursive, to
allow them to notice renames. A pair of test scripts
demonstrate that an old change before a rename happened can be
applied (reverted) after a rename with cherry-pick (with revert).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* jc/int:
More tests in t3901.
Consistent message encoding while reusing log from an existing commit.
t3901: test "format-patch | am" pipe with i18n
Use log output encoding in --pretty=email headers.
If the user doesn't have SVN::Core installed or working then the
SVN tests properly turn themselves off. But the user doesn't need
to know that SVN::Core isn't loadable as a Perl module. Unless of
course they are trying to debug the test, so lets relegate the Perl
failures to --verbose only.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This adds tests for "cherry-pick" and "rebase --merge" (and
indirectly "commit -C" since it is used in the latter) to make
sure they create a new commit with correct encoding.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This checks combinations of i18n.commitencoding (declares what
encoding you are feeding commit-tree to make commits) and
i18n.logoutputencoding (instructs what encoding to emit the
commit message out to log output, including e-mail format) to
make sure the "format-patch | am" pipe used in git-rebase works
correctly.
I suspect "git cherry-pick" and "git rebase --merge" may fail
similar tests. We'll see.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Some of the recent changes and shortcuts to the tests broke
things for people using older versions of svn:
t9104-git-svn-follow-parent.sh:
v1.2.3 (from SuSE 10.0 as reported by riddochc on #git
(thanks!)) required an extra 'svn up'. I was also able to
reproduce this with v1.1.4 (Debian Sarge).
lib-git-svn.sh:
SVN::Repos bindings in versions up to and including 1.1.4
(Sarge again) do not pass fs-config options to the underlying
library. BerkeleyDB repositories also seem completely broken
on all my Sarge machines; so not using FSFS does not seem to
be an option for most people.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
While 'init-db' still is and probably will always remain a valid git
command for obvious backward compatibility reasons, it would be a good
idea to move shipped tools and docs to using 'init' instead.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@cam.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* jc/detached-head:
git-checkout: handle local changes sanely when detaching HEAD
git-checkout: safety check for detached HEAD checks existing refs
git-checkout: fix branch name output from the command
git-checkout: safety when coming back from the detached HEAD state.
git-checkout: rewording comments regarding detached HEAD.
git-checkout: do not warn detaching HEAD when it is already detached.
Detached HEAD (experimental)
git-branch: show detached HEAD
git-status: show detached HEAD
Since c869753e, core.filemode is hardwired to false on Cygwin.
So this test had no chance to succeed, since an early commit
(changing just the filemode) failed, and therefore all subsequent
tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Suggested by Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> on the list.
When we send a value to store_write_pair(), make sure that the value
that gets read out matches the one passed in. This means that for any
value that contains leading or trailing whitespace or any comment
character (# and ;), we need to surround it in quotes.
Signed-off-by: Brian Gernhardt <benji@silverinsanity.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* jc/reflog:
reflog --fix-stale: do not check the same trees and commits repeatedly.
reflog expire --fix-stale
Move traversal of reachable objects into a separate library.
builtin-prune: separate ref walking from reflog walking.
builtin-prune: make file-scope static struct to an argument.
When switching branches with "git checkout", we internally did $arg^0
(aka $arg^{commit}) suffix but there was no need to.
The improvement is easily visible in the change to an existing
test t/3200-branch.sh in this commit; it was expecting rather
ugly message.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* sp/mmap: (27 commits)
Spell default packedgitlimit slightly differently
Increase packedGit{Limit,WindowSize} on 64 bit systems.
Update packedGit config option documentation.
mmap: set FD_CLOEXEC for file descriptors we keep open for mmap()
pack-objects: fix use of use_pack().
Fix random segfaults in pack-objects.
Cleanup read_cache_from error handling.
Replace mmap with xmmap, better handling MAP_FAILED.
Release pack windows before reporting out of memory.
Default core.packdGitWindowSize to 1 MiB if NO_MMAP.
Test suite for sliding window mmap implementation.
Create pack_report() as a debugging aid.
Support unmapping windows on 'temporary' packfiles.
Improve error message when packfile mmap fails.
Ensure core.packedGitWindowSize cannot be less than 2 pages.
Load core configuration in git-verify-pack.
Fully activate the sliding window pack access.
Unmap individual windows rather than entire files.
Document why header parsing won't exceed a window.
Loop over pack_windows when inflating/accessing data.
...
Conflicts:
cache.h
pack-check.c
The logic in an earlier round to detect reflog entries that
point at a broken commit was not sufficient. Just like we do
not trust presense of a commit during pack transfer (we trust
only our refs), we should not trust a commit's presense, even if
the tree of that commit is complete.
A repository that had reflog enabled on some of the refs that
was rewound and then run git-repack or git-prune from older
versions of git can have reflog entries that point at a commit
that still exist but lack commits (or trees and blobs needed for
that commit) between it and some commit that is reachable from
one of the refs.
This revamps the logic -- the definition of "broken commit"
becomes: a commit that is not reachable from any of the refs and
there is a missing object among the commit, tree, or blob
objects reachable from it that is not reachable from any of the
refs. Entries in the reflog that refer to such a commit are
expired.
Since this computation involves traversing all the reachable
objects, i.e. it has the same cost as 'git prune', it is enabled
only when a new option --fix-stale. Fortunately, once this is
run, we should not have to ever worry about missing objects,
because the current prune and pack-objects know about reflogs
and protect objects referred by them.
Unfortunately, this will be absolutely necessary to help people
migrate to the newer prune and repack.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The earlier test timestamp was too old; I forgot that the bare
unixtime integer had to be after Jan 1, 2000. This changes
test_tick to use the git-epoch timestamp.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This removes some unnecessary 'svn up' calls throughout
t9103-git-svn-graft-branches.sh:
* removed an 'svn log' call that was leftover from debugging
* removed multiple git-svn calls with a multi-init / multi-fetch
combination (which weren't tested before, either)
* replaced `rev-list ... | head -n1` with `rev-parse ...`
(not sure what I was thinking when I wrote that)
All this saves about 9 seconds from a test run
(53s -> 44s for 'make t91*') on my 1.3GHz Athlon
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
We don't support the svn command-line client anymore; nor
do we support anything before SVN 1.1.0, so we can be certain
symlinks will be supported in the SVN repository.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
We require the libraries now, so we can create repositories
using them (and save some executable load time while we're at
it).
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Verify that the update hooks work as documented/advertised. This is
a simple set of tests to check that the update hooks run with the
parameters expected, have their STDOUT and STDERR redirected to
the client side of the connection, and that their STDIN does not
contain any data (as its actually /dev/null).
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* master:
Documentation/config.txt (and repo-config manpage): mark-up fix.
Teach Git how to parse standard power of 2 suffixes.
Use /dev/null for update hook stdin.
Redirect update hook stdout to stderr.
Remove unnecessary argc parameter from run_command_v.
Automatically detect a bare git repository.
Replace "GIT_DIR" with GIT_DIR_ENVIRONMENT.
Use PATH_MAX constant for --bare.
Force core.filemode to false on Cygwin.
Fix formatting for urls section of fetch, pull, and push manpages
Fix yet another subtle xdl_merge() bug
i18n: drop "encoding" header in the output after re-coding.
commit-tree: cope with different ways "utf-8" can be spelled.
Move commit reencoding parameter parsing to revision.c
Documentation: minor rewording for git-log and git-show pages.
Documentation: i18n commit log message notes.
t3900: test log --encoding=none
commit re-encoding: fix confusion between no and default conversion.
Sometimes its necessary to supply a value as a power of two in a
configuration parameter. In this case the user may want to use the
standard suffixes such as K, M, or G to indicate that the numerical
value should be multiplied by a constant base before being used.
Shell scripts/etc. can also benefit from this automatic option
parsing with `git repo-config --int`.
[jc: with a couple of test and a slight input tightening]
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This is a basic set of tests for the sliding window mmap. We mostly
focus on the verify-pack and pack-objects implementations (including
delta reuse) as these commands appear to cover the bulk of the
affected portions of sha1_file.c.
The test cases don't verify the virtual memory size used, as
this can differ from system to system. Instead it just verifies
that we can run with very low values for core.packedGitLimit and
core.packedGitWindowSize.
Adding pack_report() to the end of both builtin-verify-pack.c and
builtin-pack-objects.c and manually inspecting the statistics output
can help to verify that the total virtual memory size attributed
to pack mmap usage is what one might expect on the current system.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When '*.ig' is ignored, and you have two files f.ig and d.ig/foo
in the working tree,
$ git add .
correctly ignored f.ig but failed to ignore d.ig/foo. This was
caused by a thinko in an earlier commit 4888c534, when we tried
to allow adding otherwise ignored files.
After reverting that commit, this takes a much simpler approach.
When we have an unmatched pathspec that talks about an existing
pathname, we know it is an ignored path the user tried to add,
so we include it in the set of paths directory walker returned.
This does not let you say "git add -f D" on an ignored directory
D and add everything under D. People can submit a patch to
further allow it if they want to, but I think it is a saner
behaviour to require explicit paths to be spelled out in such a
case.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Not that this reveals anything new, but I did test_tick shell
function in test-lib and found it rather cute and nice.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* jc/utf8:
t3900: test conversion to non UTF-8 as well
Rename t3900 test vector file
UTF-8: introduce i18n.logoutputencoding.
Teach log family --encoding
i18n.logToUTF8: convert commit log message to UTF-8
Move encoding conversion routine out of mailinfo to utf8.c
Conflicts:
commit.c
In some environments, certain tests have no way of succeeding
due to platform limitation, such as lack of 'unzip' program, or
filesystem that do not allow arbitrary sequence of non-NUL bytes
as pathnames.
You should be able to say something like
$ cd t
$ GIT_SKIP_TESTS=t9200.8 t9200-git-cvsexport-commit.sh
and even:
$ GIT_SKIP_TESTS='t[0-4]??? t91?? t9200.8' make test
to omit such tests. The value of the environment variable is a
SP separated list of patterns that tells which tests to skip,
and either can match the "t[0-9]{4}" part to skip the whole
test, or t[0-9]{4} followed by ".$number" to say which
particular test to skip.
Note that some tests in the existing test suite rely on previous
test item, so you cannot arbitrarily disable one and expect the
remainder of test to check what the test originally was intended
to check.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The function xdl_refine_conflicts() tries to break down huge
conflicts by doing a diff on the conflicting regions. However,
this does not make sense when one side is empty.
Worse, when one side is not only empty, but after EOF, the code
accessed unmapped memory.
Noticed by Luben Tuikov, Shawn Pearce and Alexandre Julliard, the
latter providing a test case.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
We have less code to worry about now. As a bonus, --revision
can be used to reliably skip parts of history whenever fetch is
run, not just the first time. I'm not sure why anybody would
want to skip history in the middle, however...
For people (nearly everyone at the moment) without the
do_switch() function in their Perl SVN library, the entire tree
must be refetched if --follow-parent is used and a parent is
found. Future versions of SVN will have a working do_switch()
function accessible via Perl.
Accessing repositories on the local machine (especially file://
ones) is also slightly slower as a result; but I suspect most
git-svn users will be using it to access remote repositories.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
I don't think anybody running tests needs to know they're
running init-db and creating a repository for testing.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
We get an extra measure of error checking here as well.
While we're at it, also removed a less portable use of export.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
It appears ISO-2022-JP is more widely accepted than ISO2022JP, so
rename it that way. We probably would need to have a way to skip
this test altogether in locale-challenged environments.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
It is plausible for somebody to want to view the commit log in a
different encoding from i18n.commitencoding -- the project's
policy may be UTF-8 and the user may be using a commit message
hook to run iconv to conform to that policy (and either not have
i18n.commitencoding to default to UTF-8 or have it explicitly
set to UTF-8). Even then, Latin-1 may be more convenient for
the usual pager and the terminal the user uses.
The new variable i18n.logoutputencoding is used in preference to
i18n.commitencoding to decide what encoding to recode the log
output in when git-log and friends formats the commit log message.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This is to adjust to:
count-objects -v: show number of packs as well.
which will break a test in this series.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The latest changes to git-commit have made it more verbose; and
I was running the setup of the tests outside of the test_expect_*,
so errors in those were not caught. Now we move them to where
they can be eval'ed and have their output trapped.
export var=value has been removed
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Displaying the SHA1 of 'their' branch (the branch being merged into
the current branch) is not nearly as friendly as just displaying
the name of that branch, especially if that branch is already local
to this repository.
git-merge now sets the environment variable 'GITHEAD_%(sha1)=%(name)'
for each argument it gets passed, making the actual input name that
resolved to the commit '%(sha1)' easily available to the invoked
merge strategy.
git-merge-recursive makes use of these environment variables when
they are available by using '%(name)' whenever it outputs the commit
identification rather than '%(sha1)'. This is most obvious in the
conflict hunks created by xdl_merge:
$ git mege sideb~1
<<<<<<< HEAD:INSTALL
Good!
=======
Oops.
>>>>>>> sideb~1:INSTALL
[jc: adjusted a test script and a minor constness glitch.]
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This adds --skip=<n> option to revision traversal machinery.
Documentation and test were added by Robert Fitzsimons.
Signed-off-by: Robert Fitzsimons <robfitz@273k.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Because we do not use --no-separate-remote anymore, there is no
reason to create that directory from the template.
t5510 test is updated to test both $GIT_DIR/remotes/ based
configuration and $GIT_DIR/config variable (credits to
Johannes).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Instead of passing --template explicitely to init-db and clone, you can
just set the environment variable GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR.
Also make use of it in the tests, to make sure that the templates are
copied.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This reverts commit 74d20040ca.
Version from Johannes to introduce GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR is simpler,
although I unconsciously stayed away from introducing yet another
environment variable.
The initial t/trash repository for testing was created properly
but over time we gained many tests that create secondary test
repositories with init-db or clone and they were not careful
enough.
This fixes it.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When replacing an existing file A with a directory A that has a
file A/B in it in the index, 'update-index --replace --add A/B'
did not properly remove the file to make room for the new
directory.
There was a trivial logic error, most likely a cut & paste one,
dating back to quite early days of git.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When renaming a branch, the corresponding config section should
be renamed, too.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Given a config like this:
# A config
[very.interesting.section]
not
The command
$ git repo-config --rename-section very.interesting.section bla.1
will lead to this config:
# A config
[bla "1"]
not
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
'set-tree' probably accurately describes what the command
formerly known as 'commit' does.
I'm not entirely sure that 'dcommit' should be renamed to 'commit'
just yet... Perhaps 'push' or 'push-changes'?
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Using the command-line client was great for prototyping and
getting something working quickly. Eventually I found time
to study the library documentation and add support for using
the libraries which are much faster and more flexible when
it comes to supporting new features.
Note that we require version 1.1 of the SVN libraries, whereas
we supported the command-line svn client down to version 1.0.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
For multivars, the "git-repo-config name value ^$" is useful but
nonintuitive and troublesome to do repeatedly (since the value is not
at the end of the command line). This commit simply adds an --add
option that adds a new value to a multivar. Particularly useful for
tracking a new branch on a remote:
git-repo-config --add remote.origin.fetch +next:origin/next
Includes documentation and test.
Signed-off-by: Brian Gernhardt <benji@silverinsanity.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
New and experienced Git users alike are finding out too late that
they forgot to enable reflogs in the current repository, and cannot
use the information stored within it to recover from an incorrectly
entered command such as `git reset --hard HEAD^^^` when they really
meant HEAD^^ (aka HEAD~2).
So enable reflogs by default in all future versions of Git, unless
the user specifically disables it with:
[core]
logAllRefUpdates = false
in their .git/config or ~/.gitconfig.
We only enable reflogs in repositories that have a working directory
associated with them, as shared/bare repositories do not have
an easy means to prune away old log entries, or may fail logging
entirely if the user's gecos information is not valid during a push.
This heuristic was suggested on the mailing list by Junio.
Documentation was also updated to indicate the new default behavior.
We probably should start to teach usuing the reflog to recover
from mistakes in some of the tutorial material, as new users are
likely to make a few along the way and will feel better knowing
they can recover from them quickly and easily, without fsck-objects'
lost+found features.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
It is nicer to let the user know when a commit succeeded all the time,
not only the first time. Also the commit sha1 is much more useful than
the tree sha1 in this case.
This patch also introduces a -q switch to supress this message as well
as the summary of created/deleted files.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@cam.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* jc/read-tree-ignore:
read-tree: document --exclude-per-directory
Loosen "working file will be lost" check in Porcelain-ish
read-tree: further loosen "working file will be lost" check.
* lh/branch-rename:
git-branch: let caller specify logmsg
rename_ref: use lstat(2) when testing for symlink
git-branch: add options and tests for branch renaming
Conflicts:
builtin-branch.c
* js/merge:
merge-recursive: add/add really is modify/modify with an empty base
Get rid of the dependency on RCS' merge program
merge-file: support -p and -q; fix compile warnings
Add builtin merge-file, a minimal replacement for RCS merge
xdl_merge(): fix and simplify conflict handling
xdl_merge(): fix thinko
xdl_merge(): fix an off-by-one bug
merge-recursive: use xdl_merge().
xmerge: make return value from xdl_merge() more usable.
xdiff: add xdl_merge()
Prior to 65ac6e9c3f we deleted a file
from the working directory during a merge if the file existed before
the merge started but was renamed by the branch being merged in.
This broke in 65ac6e as git-merge-recursive did not actually update
the working directory on an uncontested rename.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Unify the handling for cases C (add/add) and D (modify/modify).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* master: (42 commits)
git-svn: correctly handle packed-refs in refs/remotes/
add test case for recursive merge
git-svn: correctly display fatal() error messages
git-svn: allow dcommit to take an alternate head
git-svn: enable logging of information not supported by git
Clarify fetch error for missing objects.
Move Fink and Ports check to after config file
shortlog: fix segfault on empty authorname
shortlog: remove "[PATCH]" prefix from shortlog output
Make sure the empty tree exists when needed in merge-recursive.
Don't use memcpy when source and dest. buffers may overlap
no need to install manpages as executable
Documentation: simpler shared repository creation
shortlog: fix segfault on empty authorname
Add branch.*.merge warning and documentation update
Fix perl/ build.
git-svn: use do_switch for --follow-parent if the SVN library supports it
Fix documentation copy&paste typo
git-svn: extra error check to ensure we open a file correctly
Documentation: update git-clone man page with new behavior
...
Now that we have git-merge-file, an RCS merge lookalike, we no longer
need it. So long, merge, and thanks for all the fish!
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This test case is based on the bug report by Shawn Pearce.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This patch uses git-apply to do the patching which simplifies the code a lot
and also uses one pass to git-diff. git-apply gives information on added,
removed files as well as which files are binary.
Removed the test for checking for matching binary files when deleting them
since git-apply happily deletes the file. This is matter of taste since we
allow some fuzz for text patches also.
Error handling was cleaned up, but not much tested.
Signed-off-by: Robin Rosenberg <robin.rosenberg@dewire.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
merge-file has the same syntax as RCS merge, but supports only the
"-L" option.
For good measure, a test is added, which is quite minimal, though.
[jc: further fix for compliation errors included.]
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The current check for symlinked reflogs was based on stat(2), which is
utterly embarrassing.
Fix it, and add a matching testcase.
Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Extend git-branch with the following options:
git-branch -m|-M [<oldbranch>] newbranch
The -M variation is required to force renaming over an exsisting
branchname.
This also indroduces $GIT_DIR/RENAME_REF which is a "metabranch"
used when renaming branches. It will always hold the original sha1
for the latest renamed branch.
Additionally, if $GIT_DIR/logs/RENAME_REF exists, all branch rename
events are logged there.
Finally, some testcases are added to verify the new options.
Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This follows up commit ed93b449 where we removed overcautious
"working file will be lost" check.
A new option "--exclude-per-directory=.gitignore" can be used to
tell the "git-read-tree" command that the user does not mind
losing contents in untracked files in the working tree, if they
need to be overwritten by a merge (either a two-way "switch
branches" merge, or a three-way merge).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This is _not_ the same as "treat eol as whitespace", since that would mean
that multiple empty lines would be treated as equal to e.g. a space.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint:
receive-pack: do not insist on fast-forward outside refs/heads/
git-mv: search more precisely for source directory in index
Conflicts:
receive-pack.c
Otherwise, an executable script in git would end up being
checked into the CVS repository without the execute bit.
[jc: with an additional test script from Robin Rosenberg.]
Signed-off-by: Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
A move of a directory should find the entries in the index by
searching for the name _including_ the slash. Otherwise, the
directory can be shadowed by a file when it matches the prefix
and is lexicographically smaller, e.g. "ab.c" shadows "ab/".
Noticed by Sergey Vlasov.
[jc: added Sergey's original reproduction recipe as a test case
at the end of t7001.]
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* Enable test for delta transfers in full-svn-test.
* Run tests against the root of the repository so we won't have
to revisit 308906fa6e and
efe4631def again.
The graft-branches test still runs as before.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* branch 'jc/merge':
git-merge: do not leak rev-parse output used for checking internally.
git-merge: tighten error checking.
merge: allow merging into a yet-to-be-born branch.
git-merge: make it usable as the first class UI
remove merge-recursive-old
This allows you to say
git send-pack $URL :refs/heads/$branch
to delete the named remote branch. The refspec $src:$dst means
replace the destination ref with the object known as $src on the
local side, so this is a natural extension to make an empty $src
mean "No object" to delete the target.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This allows one to see a root commit as a diff in commands like git-log,
git-show and git-whatchanged.
Signed-off-by: Peter Baumann <Peter.B.Baumannn@stud.informatik.uni-erlangen.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
An earlier commit f28b34a broke symlinks when trust-executable-bit
is not set because it incorrectly assumed that everything was a
regular file.
Reported by Juergen Ruehle.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This side-ports commit fd19f620 from Cogito, in which I fixed
exactly the same bug. Somehow nobody noticed this for a long
time in git.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
We used to complain that we cannot merge anything we fetched
with a local branch that does not exist yet. Just treat the
case as a natural extension of fast forwarding and make the
local branch'es tip point at the same commit we just fetched.
After all an empty repository without an initial commit is an
ancestor of any commit.
[jc: I added a trivial test. We've become sloppy but we should
stick to the discipline of covering new behaviour with new
tests. ]
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint:
Rework cvsexportcommit to handle binary files for all cases.
Catch errors when writing an index that contains invalid objects.
test-lib.sh: A command dying due to a signal is an unexpected failure.
git-update-index(1): fix use of quoting in section title
Also adds test cases for adding removing and deleting
binary and text files plus two tests for the checks on
binary files.
Signed-off-by: Robin Rosenberg <robin.rosenberg@dewire.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
If git-write-index is called without --missing-ok, it reports invalid
objects that it finds in the index. But without this patch it dies
right away or may run into an infinite loop.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When test_expect_failure detects that a command failed, it still has to
treat a program that crashed from a signal as unexpected failure.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint:
git-rebase: Use --ignore-if-in-upstream option when executing git-format-patch.
git-svn: fix dcommit losing changes when out-of-date from svn
git-svn: don't die on rebuild when --upgrade is specified
git-svn: avoid printing filenames of files we're not tracking
There was a bug in dcommit (and commit-diff) which caused deltas
to be generated against the latest version of the changed file
in a repository, and not the revision we are diffing (the tree)
against locally.
This bug can cause recent changes to the svn repository to be
silently clobbered by git-svn if our repository is out-of-date.
Thanks to Steven Grimm for noticing the bug.
The (few) people using the commit-diff command are now required
to use the -r/--revision argument. dcommit usage is unchanged.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Just make it take over blame's place. Documentation and command
have all stopped mentioning "git-pickaxe". The built-in synonym
is left in the command table, so you can still say "git pickaxe",
but it probably is a good idea to retire it as well.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* jc/read-tree:
t6022: ignoring untracked files by merge-recursive when they do not matter
merge-recursive: adjust to loosened "working file clobbered" check
merge-recursive: make a few functions static.
merge-recursive: use abbreviated commit object name.
merge: loosen overcautious "working file will be lost" check.
* lj/refs: (63 commits)
Fix show-ref usagestring
t3200: git-branch testsuite update
sha1_name.c: avoid compilation warnings.
Make git-branch a builtin
ref-log: fix D/F conflict coming from deleted refs.
git-revert with conflicts to behave as git-merge with conflicts
core.logallrefupdates thinko-fix
git-pack-refs --all
core.logallrefupdates create new log file only for branch heads.
Remove bashism from t3210-pack-refs.sh
ref-log: allow ref@{count} syntax.
pack-refs: call fflush before fsync.
pack-refs: use lockfile as everybody else does.
git-fetch: do not look into $GIT_DIR/refs to see if a tag exists.
lock_ref_sha1_basic does not remove empty directories on BSD
Do not create tag leading directories since git update-ref does it.
Check that a tag exists using show-ref instead of looking for the ref file.
Use git-update-ref to delete a tag instead of rm()ing the ref file.
Fix refs.c;:repack_without_ref() clean-up path
Clean up "git-branch.sh" and add remove recursive dir test cases.
...
The three-way merge complained unconditionally when a path that
does not exist in the index is involved in a merge when it
existed in the working tree. If we are merging an old version
that had that path tracked, but the path is not tracked anymore,
and if we are merging that old version in, the result will be
that the path is not tracked. In that case we should not
complain.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint:
xdiff: Match GNU diff behaviour when deciding hunk comment worthiness of lines
Update cherry documentation.
Refer to git-rev-parse:Specifying Revisions from git.txt
git-fetch.sh printed protocol fix
RPM package re-classification.
Documentation: note about contrib/.
git-svn: fix symlink-to-file changes when using command-line svn 1.4.0
Set $HOME for selftests
The test expected "git branch --help" to exit successfully, but
built-ins spawn "man" when given --help, and when the test is
run, manpages may not be installed yet and "man" can legally
exit non-zero in such a case.
Also the new implementation logs "Created from master", instead
of "Created from HEAD" in the reflog, which makes a lot more
sense, so adjust the test to match that.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Currently it does what git-blame does, but only faster.
More importantly, its internal structure is designed to support
content movement (aka cut-and-paste) more easily by allowing
more than one paths to be taken from the same commit.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The latest GNU diff from CVS emits an empty line to express
an empty context line, instead of more traditional "single
white space followed by a newline". Do not get broken by it.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
After deleting a branch l/k, you should be able to create a
branch l. Earlier we added remove_empty_directories() on the
ref creation side to remove leftover .git/refs/l directory but
we also need a matching code to remove .git/logs/refs/l
directory.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
the repository argument for git-clone should be relative to $PWD
instead of the given target directory. The old behavior gave us
surprising success and you need a few minute to know why it worked.
GIT_DIR is already exported so no need to cd into $D. And this makes
$PWD for git-fetch-pack, which is the actual command to take the given
repository dir, the same as git-clone.
Signed-off-by: Yasushi SHOJI <yashi@atmark-techno.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When whitespace or whitespace change was ignored, the function
xdl_recmatch() returned memcmp() style differences, which is wrong,
since it should return 0 on non-match.
Also, there were three horrible off-by-one bugs, even leading to wrong
hashes in the whitespace special handling.
The issue was noticed by Ray Lehtiniemi.
For good measure, this commit adds a test.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This changes 'git-pack-refs' to pack only tags by default.
Branches are meant to be updated, either by committing onto it
yourself or tracking remote branches, and packed entries can
become stale easily, but tags are usually "create once and live
forever" and benefit more from packing.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Add symlink support to ZIP file creation, and a few tests.
This implementation sets the "version made by" field
(creator_version) to Unix for symlinks, only; regular files and
directories are still marked as originating from FAT/VFAT/NTFS.
Also set "external file attributes" (attr2) to 0 for regular
files and 16 for directories (FAT attribute), and to the file
mode for symlinks.
We could always set the creator_version to Unix and include the
mode, but then Info-ZIP unzip would set the mode of the extracted
files to *exactly* the value stored in attr2. The FAT trick
makes it apply the umask instead. Note: FAT has no executable
bit, so this information is not stored in the ZIP file.
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When running tests with --verbose it is difficult to see where
one test starts and where it ends because everything is printed
in one big lump.
Fix that by printing one single newline between each test.
Signed-off-by: Martin Waitz <tali@admingilde.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This bashism makes the test fail if /bin/sh is not bash.
Signed-off-by: Dennis Stosberg <dennis@stosberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This makes "git log/diff --summary" imply recursive behaviour,
whose effect is summarized in one test output:
--- a/t/t4013/diff.diff-tree_--pretty_--root_--summary_initial
+++ b/t/t4013/diff.diff-tree_--pretty_--root_--summary_initial
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ Date: Mon Jun 26 00:00:00 2006 +0000
Initial
- create mode 040000 dir
+ create mode 100644 dir/sub
create mode 100644 file0
create mode 100644 file2
$
When a file is created in a subdirectory, we used to say just
the directory name only when that directory also was created,
which did not make sense from two reasons. It is not any more
significant to create a new file in a new directory than to
create a new file in an existing directory, and even if it were,
reportinging the new directory name without saying the actual
filename is not useful.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* master: (99 commits)
lock_ref_sha1_basic does not remove empty directories on BSD
git-push: .git/remotes/ file does not require SP after colon
git-mv: invalidate the removed path properly in cache-tree
Makefile: install and clean merge-recur, still.
GIT 1.4.3-rc1
gitweb: tree view: hash_base and hash are now context sensitive
git-diff -B output fix.
fetch: Reset remote refs list each time fetch_main is called
Remove -fPIC which was only needed for Git.xs
Fix approxidate() to understand 12:34 AM/PM are 00:34 and 12:34
git-diff -B output fix.
Make cvsexportcommit remove files.
diff --stat: ensure at least one '-' for deletions, and one '+' for additions
diff --stat=width[,name-width]: allow custom diffstat output width.
gitweb: History: blob and tree are first, then commitdiff, etc
gitweb: Remove redundant "commit" from history
http/ftp: optionally ask curl to not use EPSV command
gitweb: Don't use quotemeta on internally generated strings
gitweb: Add snapshot to shortlog
gitweb: Factor out gitweb_have_snapshot()
...
The command updated the cache without invalidating the cache
tree entries while removing an existing entry.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Now that directory recursive remove works in the core C code, we
don't need to do it in "git-branch.sh".
Also add test cases to check that directory recursive remove will
continue to work.
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* jc/gitpm: (52 commits)
Remove -fPIC which was only needed for Git.xs
Git.pm: Kill Git.xs for now
Revert "Make it possible to set up libgit directly (instead of from the environment)"
Revert "Git.pm: Introduce fast get_object() method"
Revert "Convert git-annotate to use Git.pm"
Fix compilation with Sun CC
pass DESTDIR to the generated perl/Makefile
Eliminate Scalar::Util usage from private-Error.pm
Convert git-annotate to use Git.pm
Git.pm: Introduce fast get_object() method
Make it possible to set up libgit directly (instead of from the environment)
Work around sed and make interactions on the backslash at the end of line.
Git.pm: Introduce ident() and ident_person() methods
Convert git-send-email to use Git.pm
Git.pm: Add config() method
Use $GITPERLLIB instead of $RUNNING_GIT_TESTS and centralize @INC munging
INSTALL: a tip for running after building but without installing.
Perly Git: make sure we do test the freshly built one.
Git.pm: Don't #define around die
Git.xs: older perl do not know const char *
...
Some of these test cases are from Junio.
One test case is commented out because it doesn't work right now.
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* master: (72 commits)
runstatus: do not recurse into subdirectories if not needed
grep: fix --fixed-strings combined with expression.
grep: free expressions and patterns when done.
Corrected copy-and-paste thinko in ignore executable bit test case.
An illustration of rev-list --parents --pretty=raw
Allow git-checkout when on a non-existant branch.
gitweb: Decode long title for link tooltips
git-svn: Fix fetch --no-ignore-externals with GIT_SVN_NO_LIB=1
Ignore executable bit when adding files if filemode=0.
Remove empty ref directories that prevent creating a ref.
Use const for interpolate arguments
git-archive: update documentation
Deprecate merge-recursive.py
gitweb: fix over-eager application of esc_html().
Allow '(no author)' in git-svn's authors file.
Allow 'svn fetch' on '(no date)' revisions in Subversion.
git-repack: allow git-repack to run in subdirectory
Remove upload-tar and make git-tar-tree a thin wrapper to git-archive
git-tar-tree: Move code for git-archive --format=tar to archive-tar.c
git-tar-tree: Remove duplicate git_config() call
...
This test should be testing update-index --add, not git-add as the
latter is implemented in terms of the former.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This script creates two separate histories, A and B, each of
which does:
(A0, B0): create fileA and subdir/fileB
(A1, B1): modify fileA
(A2, B2): modify subdir/fileB
and then grafts them together to make B0 a child of A2. So
the final history looks like (time flows from top to bottom):
true parent touches subdir?
A0 none yes (creates it)
A1 A0 no
A2 A1 yes
B0 none yes (different from what's in A2)
B1 B0 no
B2 B1 yes
"git rev-list --parents --pretty=raw B2" would give "fake"
parents on the "commit " header lines while "parent " header
lines show the parent as recorded in the commit object (i.e. B0
appears to have A2 as its parent on "commit " header but there
is no "parent A2" header line in it).
When you have path limiters, we simplify history to omit
commits that do not affect the specified paths.
So "git rev-list --parents --pretty=raw B2 subdir" would return
"B2 B0 A2 A0" (because B1 and A1 do not touch the path). When
it does so, the "commit " header lines have "fake" parents
(i.e. B2 appears to have B0 as its parent on "commit " header),
but you can still get the true parents by looking at "parent "
header.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
I've seen some users get into situtations where their HEAD
symbolic-ref is pointing at a non-existant ref. (Sometimes this
happens during clone when the remote repository lacks a 'master'
branch.) If this happens the user is unable to use git-checkout
to switch branches as there is no prior commit to merge from.
So instead of giving the user low-level errors about how HEAD
can't be resolved and how not a single revision was given change
the type of checkout to be a force and go through with the user's
request anyway.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
If the user has configured core.filemode=0 then we shouldn't set
the execute bit in the index when adding a new file as the user
has indicated that the local filesystem can't be trusted.
This means that when adding files that should be marked executable
in a repository with core.filemode=0 the user must perform a
'git update-index --chmod=+x' on the file before committing the
addition.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This patch also adds test cases from Linus and Junio.
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This renames merge-recursive written in Python to merge-recursive-old,
and makes merge-recur as a synonym to merge-recursive. We do not remove
merge-recur yet, but we will remove merge-recur and merge-recursive-old
in a few releases down the road.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When there are single-character filenames in the test directory,
the shell tries to expand regexps meant for tr.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
[jc: with a fix to config handling in t5400 test, which took
annoyingly long to diagnose.]
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
It depended on specific error messages to detect failure but the
implementation changed and broke the test. This fixes the breakage
minimally.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
In "git-apply", we have a few sanity checks and heuristics that
expects that the patch fed to us is a unified diff with at least
one line of context.
* When there is no leading context line in a hunk, the hunk
must apply at the beginning of the preimage. Similarly, no
trailing context means that the hunk is anchored at the end.
* We learn a patch deletes the file from a hunk that has no
resulting line (i.e. all lines are prefixed with '-') if it
has not otherwise been known if the patch deletes the file.
Similarly, no old line means the file is being created.
And we declare an error condition when the file created by a
creation patch already exists, and/or when a deletion patch
still leaves content in the file.
These sanity checks are good safety measures, but breaks down
when people feed a diff generated with --unified=0. This was
recently noticed first by Matthew Wilcox and Gerrit Pape.
This adds a new flag, --unified-zero, to allow bypassing these
checks. If you are in control of the patch generation process,
you should not use --unified=0 patch and fix it up with this
flag; rather you should try work with a patch with context. But
if all you have to work with is a patch without context, this
flag may come handy as the last resort.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
I had a hard time figuring out why this test was failing with
the packed-refs update without running it under "sh -x". This
makes output from "sh t1400-update-ref.sh -v" more descriptive.
Updating other tests would be a good janitorial task.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Historically we did not allow binary patch applied without an
explicit permission from the user, and this flag was the way to
do so. This makes the flag a no-op by always allowing binary
patch application.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
If GIT_TRACE is set to an absolute path (starting with a
'/' character), we interpret this as a file path and we
trace into it.
Also if GIT_TRACE is set to an integer value greater than
1 and lower than 10, we interpret this as an open fd value
and we trace into it.
Note that this behavior is not compatible with the
previous one.
We also trace whole messages using one write(2) call to
make sure messages from processes do net get mixed up in
the middle.
This patch makes it possible to get trace information when
running "make test".
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The intention of the test seems to be to build a long chain of
clones that locally borrow objects from their parents and see the
system give up dereferencing long chains. There were two problems:
(1) it did not test the right repository;
(2) it did not build a chain long enough to trigger the limitation.
I do not think it is a good test to make sure the limitation the
current implementation happens to have still exists, but that is
a topic at a totally different level.
At least this fixes the broken test.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Since the normalized basename of "." is "", the check for directory
failed erroneously.
Noticed by Fredrik Kuivinen.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
With the new flag "--reject", hunks that do not apply are sent to
the standard output, and the usable hunks are applied. The command
itself exits with non-zero status when this happens, so that the
user or wrapper can take notice and sort the remaining mess out.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* maint:
finish_connect(): thinkofix
git-mv: succeed even if source is a prefix of destination
Solaris does not support C99 format strings before version 10
As noted by Fredrik Kuivinen, without this patch, git-mv fails on
git-mv README README-renamed
because "README" is a prefix of "README-renamed".
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* master: (166 commits)
git-apply --binary: clean up and prepare for --reverse
Fix detection of ipv6 on Solaris
Look for sockaddr_storage in sys/socket.h
Solaris has strlcpy() at least since version 8
git-apply --reverse: simplify reverse option.
t4116 apply --reverse test
Make sha1flush void and remove conditional return.
Make upload_pack void and remove conditional return.
Make track_tree_refs void.
Make pack_objects void.
Make fsck_dir void.
Make checkout_all void.
Make show_entry void
Make pprint_tag void and cleans up call in cmd_cat_file.
Remove combine-diff.c::uninteresting()
read-cache.c cleanup
http-push.c cleanup
diff.c cleanup
builtin-push.c cleanup
builtin-grep.c cleanup
...
The binary patch test needs to be made more careful not to have
the postimage blob in the repository in which the patch is applied
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
By default, the command shows pathnames relative to the current
directory. Use --full-name (the same flag to do so in ls-files)
if you want to see the full pathname relative to the project root.
This makes it very pleasant to run in Emacs compilation (or
"grep-find") buffer.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The internal representation of the result is counted string
(i.e. char *buf and ulong size), which is fine for writing out
to regular file, but throwing the buf at symlink(2) was a
no-no.
Reported by Willy Tarreau.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
We used to find the first match of the pattern and then if the
match is not for the entire word, declared that the whole line
does not match.
But that is wrong. The command "git grep -w -e mmap" should
find that a line "foo_mmap bar mmap baz" matches, by tring the
second instance of pattern "mmap" on the same line.
Problems an earlier round of "fix" had were pointed out by Morten
Welinder, which have been incorporated in the t7002 tests.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
We still have too few of them, but we have to start from somewhere.
The general rule is to make tests easy to debug when run with -v (notice
use of seemingly useless echo everywhere in the new tests).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The cmd_usage() routine was causing warning messages due to a NULL
format parameter being passed in three out of four calls. This is a
problem if you want to compile with -Werror. A simple solution is to
simply remove the GNU __attribute__ format pragma from the cmd_usage()
declaration in the header file. The function interface was somewhat
muddled anyway, so re-write the code to finesse the problem.
[jc: this incidentally revealed that t9100 test assumed that the output
from "git help" to be fixed in stone, but this patch lower-cases
"Usage" to "usage". Update the test not to rely on "git help" output.]
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Allan Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
These changes were originally part of the next patch, but have been
split out since they were peripheral to the main purpose of that patch.
- update comment describing the signature format to reflect
the current code.
- remove trailing \n in calls to error(), since a \n is already
provided by error().
- remove redundant call to get_sha1_hex().
- call sha1_to_hex(sha1) to convert to ascii, rather than attempting
to print the raw sha1.
The new tests provide a regression suite to support the modifications
to git-mktag in this and the next patch.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Allan Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The t8001-annotate.sh test claimed all tests pass, when in fact
the git-annotate perl script failed to run! (prior to fixing the
script to work with perl 5.5).
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Allan Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Alex Riesen (raa.lkml@gmail.com) recently observed that git branch
would fail with no error message due to unexpected situations with
regards to refs. For example, if .git/refs/heads/gu is a file but
"git branch -b refs/heads/gu/fixa HEAD" was invoked by the user
it would fail silently due to refs/heads/gu being a file and not
a directory.
This change adds a test for trying to create a ref within a directory
that is actually currently a file, and adds error printing within
the ref locking routine should the resolve operation fail.
The error printing code probably belongs at this level of the library
as other failures within the ref locking, writing and logging code
are also currently at this level of the code.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The generated binary patch was _not_ binary -- earlier I made
the --full-index flag to imply binary patch generation to the diff
machinery, but later we made it independent from --binary (although
the latter implies the former).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This fixes the builtin mv for the test which Josef provided, and also
fixes moving directories into existing directories, as noted by Jon Smirl.
In case the destination exists, fail early (this cannot be overridden
by -f).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
If dir2 already exists, git-mv should move dir1 _into_dir2/.
Noticed by Jon Smirl.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* ew/apply:
Fix t4114 on cygwin
apply: handle type-changing patch correctly.
apply: split out removal and creation into different phases.
apply: check D/F conflicts more carefully.
typechange tests for git apply (currently failing)
Linus:
get_pathspec() does turn '.' into an empty string (which is
correct - git internally does _not_ ever understand the notion of
"." as the current working directory), but it doesn't ever do the
optimization of noticing that a pathspec that consists solely of
an empty string is "equivalent" to an empty pathspec.
The test is to ensure that this behaviour stays.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
I've found that git apply is incapable of handling patches
involving object type changes to the same path.
Of course git itself is perfectly capable of making commits that
generate these changes, as it only tracks trees states. It's
just that the diffs between them are less useful if they can't
be applied.
Some of these are rare, but I've hit one of them (file becoming
a symlink) recently in real-world usage, and was inspired to
find more potential breakages :)
I'm not sure when I'll have time to fix these myself and I'm not
very familiar with the apply code. So if someone could get
some or all of these cases working, they would be my hero :)
Some of these are what I would refer to as corner-cases from
hell. Most (if not all) other systems fail some of these. In
fact, they aren't even capable of representing most of these
changes in their histories; much less being able to handle
patches to that effect.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This changes one test commit in the sequence to have more than
one lines of commit log. A few output formats (--pretty=email
aka format-patch and --pretty=oneline) need to behave
differently on single and multi-line log, and this change will
help catching breakages.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* ml/trace:
test-lib: unset GIT_TRACE
GIT_TRACE: fix a mixed declarations and code warning
GIT_TRACE: show which built-in/external commands are executed
This way we don't have to remember to set it for each test; and
if we forget, we won't cause interactive editors to be spawned
for non-interactive tests.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
If committing a merge (.git/MERGE_HEAD exists), an initial tree
(no HEAD) or using --amend to amend the prior commit then denote
the subtype of commit in the reflog. This helps to distinguish
amended or merge commits from normal commits.
In the case of --amend the prior sha1 is probably the commit which
is being thrown away in favor of the new commit. Since it is likely
that the old commit doesn't have any ref pointing to it anymore
it can be interesting to know why that the commit was replaced
and orphaned.
In the case of a merge the prior sha1 is probably the first parent
of the new merge commit. Consequently having its prior sha1 in the
reflog is slightly less interesting but its still informative to
know the commit was the result of a merge which had to be completed
by hand.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The only visible change is that git-blame doesn't understand
"--compability" anymore, but it does accept "--compatibility" instead,
which is already documented.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Roskin <proski@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Check for SVN::Core so test 910[45] don't fail if the user
doesn't have those installed.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Allow NO_SVN_TESTS to be defined to skip git-svn tests. These
tests are time-consuming due to SVN being slow, and even more so
if SVN Perl libraries are not available.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* th/diff:
builtin-diff: turn recursive on when defaulting to --patch format.
t4013: note improvements brought by the new output code.
t4013: add format-patch tests.
format-patch: fix diff format option implementation
combine-diff.c: type sanity.
t4013 test updates for new output code.
Fix some more diff options changes.
Fix diff-tree -s
log --raw: Don't descend into subdirectories by default
diff-tree: Use ---\n as a message separator
Print empty line between raw, stat, summary and patch
t4013: add more tests around -c and --cc
whatchanged: Default to DIFF_FORMAT_RAW
Don't xcalloc() struct diffstat_t
Add msg_sep to diff_options
DIFF_FORMAT_RAW is not default anymore
Set default diff output format after parsing command line
Make --raw option available for all diff commands
Merge with_raw, with_stat and summary variables to output_format
t4013: add tests for diff/log family output options.
As long as we do not need to readline from the terminal, we
should not barf when starting up the program. Without this
patch, t9001 test on Cygwin occasionally died with the following
error message:
Unable to get Terminal Size. The TIOCGWINSZ ioctl didn't work. The COLUMNS and LINES environment variables didn't work. The resize program didn't work. at /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8/cygwin/Term/ReadKey.pm line 362.
Compilation failed in require at /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8/Term/ReadLine/Perl.pm line 58.
Acked-by: Ryan Anderson <ryan@michonline.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This is a bug fix, and cleans up one or two other things spotted during the
course of tracking down the main bug here.
Also, the test-suite is updated to reflect this case.
Signed-off-by: Ryan Anderson <ryan@michonline.com>
(cherry picked from 2f7554b4db3ab2c2d3866b160245c91c9236fc9a commit)
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This makes the Git perl scripts check $GITPERLLIB instead of
$RUNNING_GIT_TESTS, which makes more sense if you are setting up your shell
environment to use a non-installed Git instance.
It also weeds out the @INC munging from the individual scripts and makes
Makefile add it during the .perl files processing, so that we can change
just a single place when we modify this shared logic. It looks ugly in the
scripts, too. ;-)
And instead of doing arcane things with the @INC array, we just do 'use lib'
instead, which is essentialy the same thing anyway.
I first want to do three separate patches but it turned out that it's quite
a lot neater when bundled together, so I hope it's ok.
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
We could BEGIN { push @INC, '@@INSTLIBDIR@@'; } but that is not
a good idea for normal execution. The would prevent a
workaround for a user who is trying to override an old, faulty
Git.pm installed on the system path with a newer version
installed under $HOME/.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* js/patch:
diff.c: fix get_patch_id()
t4014: fix test commit labels.
format-patch: use clear_commit_marks() instead of some ad-hockery
t4014: fix for whitespace from "wc -l"
t4014: add format-patch --ignore-if-in-upstream test
format-patch: introduce "--ignore-if-in-upstream"
add diff_flush_patch_id() to calculate the patch id
The commit tag and commit comments used in the test claimed that
the #1 commit was merged upstream where the test actually let the
upstream merge #2 commit. Fix them.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When we updated "read-tree -m -u" to be careful about not
removing untracked working tree files, we broke "checkout -m" to
switch between branches.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
These are updates to the test vector that shows the "incompatibility" of
the new output code. The changes are actually the good ones, so instead
of keeping the older output we adjust the test to the new code.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Some "wc" insist on putting a TAB in front of the number.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Now that we control the merge base selection, we won't be forced
into rolling things in that we wanted to skip beforehand.
Also, add a test to ensure this all works as intended.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Enhance t3401-rebase-partial to test with --merge as well as
the standard am -3 strategy.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* ew/rebase:
rebase: error out for NO_PYTHON if they use recursive merge
Add renaming-rebase test.
rebase: Allow merge strategies to be used when rebasing
object-refs: avoid division by zero
recursive merge relies on Python, and we can't perform
rename-aware merges without the recursive merge. So bail out
before trying it.
The test won't work w/o recursive merge, either, so skip that,
too.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
There seems to be at least one implementation of Perl which requires the
user to specify an extension for backup files.
Reported by Alex Riesen.
Signed-off-by: Dennis Stosberg <dennis@stosberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When setting a config variable, git_config_set() ignored the variables
GIT_CONFIG and GIT_CONFIG_LOCAL. Now, when GIT_CONFIG_LOCAL is set, it
will write to that file. If not, GIT_CONFIG is checked, and only as a
fallback, the change is written to $GIT_DIR/config.
Add a test for it, and also future-proof the test for the upcoming
$HOME/.gitconfig support.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
These two tests assume that "sed" will not modify the final line of a
stream if it does not end with a newline character. The assumption is
not true at least for FreeBSD and Solaris 9. FreeBSD's "sed" appends
a newline character; "sed" in Solaris 9 even removes the incomplete
final line. This patch makes the test use perl instead.
Signed-off-by: Dennis Stosberg <dennis@stosberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Currently the test passes with 1.3.3 but not with the tip of
"master". This is to verify the fixes from Eric W Biedermann.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Some versions of "diff" (e.g. on FreeBSD and older Linux systems) do
not support the "\ No newline at end of file" remark and are not
able to generate the patches needed for this test. This lets the
test fail, although git-apply is working perfectly. This patch adds
the pre-generated patches to t/t4100/ and makes the test use them.
Signed-off-by: Dennis Stosberg <dennis@stosberg.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* sp/reflog:
fetch.c: do not pass uninitialized lock to unlock_ref().
Test that git-branch -l works.
Verify git-commit provides a reflog message.
Enable ref log creation in git checkout -b.
Create/delete branch ref logs.
Include ref log detail in commit, reset, etc.
Change order of -m option to update-ref.
Correct force_write bug in refs.c
Change 'master@noon' syntax to 'master@{noon}'.
Log ref updates made by fetch.
Force writing ref if it doesn't exist.
Added logs/ directory to repository layout.
General ref log reading improvements.
Fix ref log parsing so it works properly.
Support 'master@2 hours ago' syntax
Log ref updates to logs/refs/<ref>
Convert update-ref to use ref_lock API.
Improve abstraction of ref lock/write.
Moved the setup commands into test_expect_success blocks so their
output is hidden unless -v is used. This makes the test suite look
a little cleaner when the rm test-file setup step fails (and was
expected to fail for most cases).
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Using "-U0" is definitely more portable than using "--unified=0",
so we should do that regardless.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
pdksh doesn't need this patch, of course bash works fine since
that what most users use.
Normally, 'var=val command' seems to work fine with dash, but
perhaps there's something weird going on with "$@". dash is
pretty widespread, so it'll be good to support this even though
it does seem like a bug in dash.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
None of the variables seem to conflict, so local was unnecessary.
Also replaced ${var:pos:len} with the sed equivalent.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The use of heredoc inside quoted strings doesn't seem to be
supported by dash. pdksh seems to handle it fine, however.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
echo isn't remotely standardized for handling backslashes,
so cat + heredoc seems better
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
If the user supplies -l to git-branch when creating a new branch
then the new branch's log should be created automatically and the
branch creation should be logged in that log.
Further if a branch is being deleted and it had a log then also
verify that the log was deleted.
Test git-checkout -b foo -l for creating a new branch foo with a
log and checking out that branch.
Fixed git-checkout -b foo -l as the branch variable name was
incorrect in the script.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The reflog message from git-commit should include the first line
of the commit message as supplied by the user.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* master: (90 commits)
fetch.c: remove an unused variable and dead code.
Clean up sha1 file writing
Builtin git-cat-file
builtin format-patch: squelch content-type for 7-bit ASCII
CMIT_FMT_EMAIL: Q-encode Subject: and display-name part of From: fields.
add more informative error messages to git-mktag
remove the artificial restriction tagsize < 8kb
git-rebase: use canonical A..B syntax to format-patch
git-format-patch: now built-in.
fmt-patch: Support --attach
fmt-patch: understand old <his> notation
Teach fmt-patch about --keep-subject
Teach fmt-patch about --numbered
fmt-patch: implement -o <dir>
fmt-patch: output file names to stdout
Teach fmt-patch to write individual files.
built-in tar-tree and remote tar-tree
Builtin git-diff-files, git-diff-index, git-diff-stages, and git-diff-tree.
Builtin git-show-branch.
Builtin git-apply.
...
When there is no leading context, the patch must match at the
beginning of preimage; otherwise there is a "patch adds these
lines while the other lines were added to the original file"
conflict.
This is the opposite of match_end fix earlier in this series.
Unlike matching at the end case, we can additionally check the
preimage line number recorded in the patch, so the change is not
symmetrical with the earlier one.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
git-apply adding an ending line doesn't seem to fail if the ending line is
already present in the patched file.
Signed-off-by: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Its ambiguous to parse "master@2006-05-17 18:30:foo" when foo is
meant as a file name and ":30" is meant as 30 minutes past 6 pm.
Therefore all date specifications in a sha1 expression must now
appear within brackets and the ':' splitter used for the path name
in a sha1 expression ignores ':' appearing within brackets.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Corrected the log starting time displayed in the error message
(as it was always showing the epoch due to a bad input to strtoul).
Improved the log parser so we only scan backwards towards the
'\n' from the end of the prior log; during this scan the last '>'
is remembered to improve performance (rather than scanning forward
to it).
If the log record matched is the last log record in the file only
use its new sha1 value if the date matches exactly; otherwise we
leave the passed in sha1 alone as it already contains the current
value of the ref. This way lookups of dates later than the log
end to stick with the current ref value in case the ref was updated
without logging.
If it looks like someone changed the ref without logging it and we
are going to return the sha1 which should have been valid during
the missing period then warn the user that there might be log data
missing and thus their query result may not be accurate. The check
isn't perfect as its just based on comparing the old and new sha1
values between the two log records but its better than not checking
at all.
Implemented test cases based on git-rev-parse for most of the
boundary conditions.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
If config parameter core.logAllRefUpdates is true or the log
file already exists then append a line to ".git/logs/refs/<ref>"
whenever git-update-ref <ref> is executed. Each log line contains
the following information:
oldsha1 <SP> newsha1 <SP> committer <LF>
where committer is the current user, date, time and timezone in
the standard GIT ident format. If the caller is unable to append
to the log file then git-update-ref will fail without updating <ref>.
An optional message may be included in the log line with the -m flag.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When a merge results in a creation of a path that did not exist
in HEAD, and if you already have that path on the working tree,
because the index has not been told about the working tree file,
read-tree happily removes it. The issue was brought up by Santi
Béjar on the list.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* fix:
Fix pack-index issue on 64-bit platforms a bit more portably.
Install git-send-email by default
Fix compilation on newer NetBSD systems
git config syntax updates
Another config file parsing fix.
checkout: use --aggressive when running a 3-way merge (-m).
This updates the hierarchical section name syntax to
[section<space>+"<randomstring>"]
where the only rule for "randomstring" is that it can't contain a newline,
and if you really want to insert a double-quote, you do it with \".
It turns that into the section name "secion.randomstring". The
"section" part is still case insensitive, but the "randomstring"
part is case sensitive.
So you could use this for things like
[email "torvalds@osdl.org"]
name = Linus Torvalds
if you wanted to do the "email->name" conversion as part of the config
file format (I'm not claiming that is sensible, I'm just giving it as an
insane example). That would show up as the association
email.torvalds@osdl.org.name -> Linus Torvalds
which is easy to parse (the "." in the email _looks_ ambiguous, but it
isn't: you know that there will always be a single key-name, so you find
the key name with "strrchr(name, '.')" and things are entirely
unambiguous).
Repo-config is updated to be able to parse the new format, and also
write things out in the new format.
[jc: rolled two patches from Linus and one fix-up from Sean into one,
with additional adjustments for t/t1300 test to check the case
insensitiveness of section base and variable and case sensitiveness
of the extended section part. Then stripped some part off to make
the result applicable to the stale 1.3.X series that does not have
recent enhancements. ]
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Signed-off-by: Sean Estabrooks <seanlkml@sympatico.ca>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* fix:
repack: honor -d even when no new pack was created
clone: keep --reference even with -l -s
repo-config: document what value_regexp does a bit more clearly.
Release config lock if the regex is invalid
core-tutorial.txt: escape asterisk
Both -l -s and --reference update objects/info/alternates and used
to write over each other.
Signed-off-by: Martin Waitz <tali@admingilde.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
- correctly insert a new variable into a section that only
contains a single (different) variable.
- correctly insert a new section that matches the initial
substring of an existing section.
Signed-off-by: Sean Estabrooks <seanlkml@sympatico.ca>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When pathspecs are given, update-index --again further limits
the set of paths to be updated to those that match them.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
After running 'git-update-index' for some paths, you may want to
do the update on the same set of paths again.
The new flag --again checks the paths whose index entries are
are different from the HEAD commit and updates them from the
working tree contents.
This was brought up by Carl Worth on #git.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
With --get-regexp, output all key/value pairs where the key matches a
regexp. Example:
git-repo-config --get-regexp remote.*.url
will output something like
remote.junio.url git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git.git
remote.gitk.url git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/gitk/gitk.git
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The "bind" commit can express an aggregation of multiple
projects into a single commit.
In such an organization, there would be one project, root of
whose tree object is at the same level of the root of the
aggregated projects, and other projects have their toplevel in
separate subdirectories. Let's call that root level project the
"primary project", and call other ones just "subprojects".
You would first read-tree the primary project, and then graft
the subprojects under their appropriate location using read-tree
--prefix=<subdir>/ repeatedly.
To write out a tree object from such an index for a subproject,
write-tree --prefix=<subdir>/ is used.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When we updated ls-tree recursive output to omit the tree nodes,
246cc52f38 adjusted the old test
so that we do not expect to see trees in its output. Later,
with 0f8f45cb4a, we added back the
ability to show both with -t option, but we forgot to update the
test as well.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The second installment to libify diff brothers. The pathname
arguments are checked more strictly than before because we now
use the revision.c::setup_revisions() infrastructure.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This is the first installment to libify diff brothers.
The updated diff-files uses revision.c::setup_revisions()
infrastructure to parse its command line arguments, which means
the pathname arguments are checked more strictly than before.
The tests are adjusted to separate possibly missing paths from
the rest of arguments with double-dashes, to show the kosher
way.
As Linus pointed out, renaming diff.c to diff-lib.c was simply
stupid, so I am renaming it back. The new diff-lib.c is to
contain pieces extracted from diff brothers.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When running "git commit --amend" only to fix the commit log
message without any content change, we mistakenly showed the
git-status output that says "nothing to commit" without
commenting it out.
If you have already run update-index but you want to amend the
top commit, "git commit --amend --only" without any paths should
have worked, because --only means "starting from the base
commit, update-index these paths only to prepare the index to
commit, and perform the commit". However, we refused -o without
paths.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* lt/logopt:
Fix "git log --stat": make sure to set recursive with --stat.
combine-diff: show diffstat with the first parent.
git.c: LOGSIZE is unused after log printing cleanup.
Log message printout cleanups (#3): fix --pretty=oneline
Log message printout cleanups (#2)
Log message printout cleanups
rev-list --header: output format fix
Fixes for option parsing
log/whatchanged/show - log formatting cleanup.
Simplify common default options setup for built-in log family.
Tentative built-in "git show"
Built-in git-whatchanged.
rev-list option parser fix.
Split init_revisions() out of setup_revisions()
Fix up rev-list option parsing.
Fix up default abbrev in setup_revisions() argument parser.
Common option parsing for "git log --diff" and friends
On Sun, 16 Apr 2006, Junio C Hamano wrote:
>
> In the mid-term, I am hoping we can drop the generate_header()
> callchain _and_ the custom code that formats commit log in-core,
> found in cmd_log_wc().
Ok, this was nastier than expected, just because the dependencies between
the different log-printing stuff were absolutely _everywhere_, but here's
a patch that does exactly that.
The patch is not very easy to read, and the "--patch-with-stat" thing is
still broken (it does not call the "show_log()" thing properly for
merges). That's not a new bug. In the new world order it _should_ do
something like
if (rev->logopt)
show_log(rev, rev->logopt, "---\n");
but it doesn't. I haven't looked at the --with-stat logic, so I left it
alone.
That said, this patch removes more lines than it adds, and in particular,
the "cmd_log_wc()" loop is now a very clean:
while ((commit = get_revision(rev)) != NULL) {
log_tree_commit(rev, commit);
free(commit->buffer);
commit->buffer = NULL;
}
so it doesn't get much prettier than this. All the complexity is entirely
hidden in log-tree.c, and any code that needs to flush the log literally
just needs to do the "if (rev->logopt) show_log(...)" incantation.
I had to make the combined_diff() logic take a "struct rev_info" instead
of just a "struct diff_options", but that part is pretty clean.
This does change "git whatchanged" from using "diff-tree" as the commit
descriptor to "commit", and I changed one of the tests to reflect that new
reality. Otherwise everything still passes, and my other tests look fine
too.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Relying on eye-candy progress bar was fragile to begin with.
Run fetch-pack with -k option, and count the objects that are in
the pack that were transferred from the other end.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When running t3600-rm test under fakeroot (or as root), we
cannot make a file unremovable with "chmod a-w .". Detect this
case early and skip that test.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The speed of the built-in diff generator is nice; but the function names
shown by `diff -p' are /really/ nice. And I hate having to choose. So,
we hack xdiff to find the function names and print them.
xdiff has grown a flag to say whether to dig up the function names. The
builtin_diff function passes this flag unconditionally. I suppose it
could parse GIT_DIFF_OPTS, but it doesn't at the moment. I've also
reintroduced the `function name' into the test suite, from which it was
removed in commit 3ce8f089.
The function names are parsed by a particularly stupid algorithm at the
moment: it just tries to find a line in the `old' file, from before the
start of the hunk, whose first character looks plausible. Still, it's
most definitely a start.
Signed-off-by: Mark Wooding <mdw@distorted.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This fixes up a couple of minor issues with the real built-in
diff to be more usable:
- Omit ---/+++ header unless we emit diff output;
- Detect and punt binary diff like GNU does;
- Honor GIT_DIFF_OPTS minimally (only -u<number> and
--unified=<number> are currently supported);
- Omit line count of 1 from "@@ -l,k +m,n @@" hunk header
(i.e. when k == 1 or n == 1)
- Adjust testsuite for the lack of -p support.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
... to store parts of the path, if possible. This allows us to avoid
writing extended headers in certain cases (long pathes can only be
split at '/' chars).
Also adds a file to the test repo with a 100 chars long directory name.
Even old versions of tar that don't understand POSIX extended headers
should be able to handle this testcase.
Btw.: The longest path in the kernel tree currently has 70 chars.
Together with a 30 chars long prefix this would already cross the
field limit of 100 chars.
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The tests hang for me waiting for Emacs with its output directed
somewhere strage, because I hedged my bets and set both EDITOR and
VISUAL to run Emacs.
Signed-off-by: Mark Wooding <mdw@distorted.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Just I am old fashioned. Source inclusion in bourne shell is
"." (dot), not "source" -- that's csh.
[jc: yes I know bash groks it, but I am old fashioned.]
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This rewrites the result check code a bit. The earlier one
using awk was splitting columns at any whitespace, which
confused lines attributed incorrectly to the merge made by the
default author "A U Thor <author@example.com>" with lines
attributed to author "A".
The latest test by Ryan to add the "starting from older commit"
test is also included, with another older commit test.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Sometimes it is convient for a Porcelain to be able to checkout all
unmerged files in all stages so that an external merge tool can be
executed by the Porcelain or the end-user. Using git-unpack-file
on each stage individually incurs a rather high penalty due to the
need to fork for each file version obtained. git-checkout-index -a
--stage=all will now do the same thing, but faster.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* lt/rev-list:
setup_revisions(): handle -n<n> and -<n> internally.
git-log (internal): more options.
git-log (internal): add approxidate.
Rip out merge-order and make "git log <paths>..." work again.
Tie it all together: "git log"
Introduce trivial new pager.c helper infrastructure
git-rev-list libification: rev-list walking
Splitting rev-list into revisions lib, end of beginning.
rev-list split: minimum fixup.
First cut at libifying revlist generation
git-mv needs to be run from the base directory so that
the check if a file is under revision also covers files
outside of a subdirectory. Previously, e.g. in the git repo,
cd Documentation; git-mv ../README .
produced the error
Error: '../README' not under version control
The test is extended for this case; it previously only tested
one direction.
Signed-off-by: Josef Weidendorfer <Josef.Weidendorfer@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Some versions of sed lack the "-i" option.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Well, assuming breaking --merge-order is fine, here's a patch (on top of
the other ones) that makes
git log <filename>
actually work, as far as I can tell.
I didn't add the logic for --before/--after flags, but that should be
pretty trivial, and is independent of this anyway.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
New tests are added to the git-rm test case to cover this as well.
Signed-off-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This adds a git-rm command which provides convenience similar to
git-add, (and a bit more since it takes care of the rm as well if
given -f).
Like git-add, git-rm expands the given path names through
git-ls-files. This means it only acts on files listed in the
index. And it does act recursively on directories by default, (no -r
needed as in the case of rm itself). When it recurses, it does not
remove empty directories that are left behind.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* fix:
git-push: Update documentation to describe the no-refspec behavior.
format-patch: pretty-print timestamp correctly.
git-add: Add support for --, documentation, and test.
This adds support to git-add to allow the common -- to separate
command-line options and file names. It adds documentation and a new
git-add test case as well.
[jc: this should apply to 1.2.X maintenance series, so I reworked
git-ls-files --error-unmatch test. ]
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Some versions of GNU make do not understand $(call), and have problems to
interpret rules like this:
some_target: CFLAGS += -Dsome=defs
[jc: simplified substitution a bit. ]
Signed-off-by: Johannes E. Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
In some setups (notably server setups) you do not need that dependency.
Gracefully handle the absence of python when NO_PYTHON is defined.
Signed-off-by: Johannes E. Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When git-reset --hard is used and a subdirectory becomes
empty (as it contains no tracked files in the target tree)
the empty subdirectory should be removed. This matches
the behavior of git-checkout-index and git-read-tree -m
which would not have created the subdirectory or would
have deleted it when updating the working directory.
Subdirectories which are not empty will be left behind.
This may happen if the subdirectory still contains object
files from the user's build process (for example).
[jc: simplified the logic a bit, while keeping the test script.]
FreeBSD 4.11 being one example: the built-in echo doesn't have -e,
and the installed /bin/echo does not do "-e" as well.
"printf" works, laking just "\e" and "\xAB'.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Now pack-object is not as chatty when its stderr is not connected
to a terminal, so the test needs to be adjusted for that.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Without these, running tests with an account with empty gecos
field would fail.
We might want to loosen error from "git-var -l" (but not
"git-var GIT_AUTHOR_NAME") later, but that is more or less an
independent issue.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
It tried to "restore" GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL environment variable but
the variable started out as unset, so ended up setting it to an
empty string. This is now caught as an error.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
- "git commit" without _any_ parameter keeps the traditional
behaviour. It commits the current index.
We commit the whole index even when this form is run from a
subdirectory.
- "git commit --include paths..." (or "git commit -i paths...")
is equivalent to:
git update-index --remove paths...
git commit
- "git commit paths..." acquires a new semantics. This is an
incompatible change that needs user training, which I am
still a bit reluctant to swallow, but enough people seem to
have complained that it is confusing to them. It
1. refuses to run if $GIT_DIR/MERGE_HEAD exists, and reminds
trained git users that the traditional semantics now needs
-i flag.
2. refuses to run if named paths... are different in HEAD and
the index (ditto about reminding). Added paths are OK.
3. reads HEAD commit into a temporary index file.
4. updates named paths... from the working tree in this
temporary index.
5. does the same updates of the paths... from the working
tree to the real index.
6. makes a commit using the temporary index that has the
current HEAD as the parent, and updates the HEAD with this
new commit.
- "git commit --all" can run from a subdirectory, but it updates
the index with all the modified files and does a whole tree
commit.
- In all cases, when the command decides not to create a new
commit, the index is left as it was before the command is
run. This means that the two "git diff" in the following
sequence:
$ git diff
$ git commit -a
$ git diff
would show the same diff if you abort the commit process by
making the commit log message empty.
This commit also introduces much requested --author option.
$ git commit --author 'A U Thor <author@example.com>'
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This test depended on "sleep 1" to be enough to dirty the index
entry for a symlink. Alex noticed that on his Cygwin installation
"sleep 1" was sometimes not enough, and after further discussion with
Christopher Faylor, it was brought up that on FAT filesystem timestamp
granularity is 2 seconds so sleeping 1 second is not enough.
For now this patch takes an easy workaround of sleeping for 3 seconds.
Very strictly speaking, POSIX requires lstat to fill only S_IFMT part
of st_mode and st_size for symlinks, and depending on timestamp might
be considered a bug, but we depend on that anyway, so it is better to
test that.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This changes the character used to mark the commits that is on the
branch from '+' to '*' for the current branch, to make it stand out.
Also we show '-' for merge commits.
When you have a handful branches with relatively long diversion, it
is easier to see which one is the current branch this way.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
In a repository with mainto/1.0 (to keep maintaining the 1.0.X
series) and fixo/1.0 (to keep fixes that apply to both 1.0.X
series and upwards) branches, "git-name-rev mainto/1.0" answered
just "1.0" making things ambiguous. Show refnames unambiguously
like show-branch does.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This test exercises the standard feature that makes rebase useful.
Signed-off-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This test checks that git-cherry finds the expected number of patches
in two simple cases, and then tests the new limit arguments.
[jc: collapsed two patches into one and added sleep to make sure
the two commits would get different timestamps]
Signed-off-by: Yann Dirson <ydirson@altern.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
and was successfully entered. Otherwise git-init-db will create it directly
in the working directory (t/) which can be dangerous.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Move git-rev-list --merge-order usage check for 'OpenSSL not linked' after
test 1; we cannot trigger this unless we try to actually use --merge-order
by giving some ref, and we do not have any ref until we run the first test
to create commits.
Signed-off-by: Gerrit Pape <pape@smarden.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
These tests seem to mean checking the output with expected
result, but was not doing its handrolled test helper function.
Also fix the guard to workaround wc output that have whitespace
padding, which was broken but not exposed because the test was
not testing it ;-).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This patch converts a stat() to an lstat() call, thereby fixing the case
when the date of a symlink was not the same as the one recorded in the
index. The included test case demonstrates this.
This is for the case that the symlink points to a non-existing file. If
the file exists, worse things than just an error message happen.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Johannes found that the test has 1/256 chance of falsely
producing an uncorrupted idx file, causing the check to detect
corruption fail. Now we have 1/2^160 chance of false failure
;-).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Although pack-check.c had routine to verify the checksum for the
pack index file itself, the core did not check it before using
it.
This is stolen from the patch to tighten packname requirements.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
(cherry picked from 797bd6f490 commit)
Although pack-check.c had routine to verify the checksum for the
pack index file itself, the core did not check it before using
it.
This is stolen from the patch to tighten packname requirements.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This changes the way the case two branches rename the same path
to different paths is handled. Earlier, the code removed the
original path and added both destinations to the index at
stage0. This commit changes it to leave the original path at
stage1, and two destination paths at stage2 and stage3,
respectively.
[jc: I am not really sure if this makes much difference in the
real life merge situations. What should happen when our branch
renames A to B and M to N, while their branch renames A to M?
That is, M remains in our tree as is.]
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The previous round caught the most trivial case well, but broke
down once index file is updated again. Smudge problematic
entries (they should be very few if any under normal interactive
workflow) before writing a new index file out.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This fixes the longstanding "Racy GIT" problem, which was pretty
much there from the beginning of time, but was first
demonstrated by Pasky in this message on October 24, 2005:
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=git&m=113014629716878
If you run the following sequence of commands:
echo frotz >infocom
git update-index --add infocom
echo xyzzy >infocom
so that the second update to file "infocom" does not change
st_mtime, what is recorded as the stat information for the cache
entry "infocom" exactly matches what is on the filesystem
(owner, group, inum, mtime, ctime, mode, length). After this
sequence, we incorrectly think "infocom" file still has string
"frotz" in it, and get really confused. E.g. git-diff-files
would say there is no change, git-update-index --refresh would
not even look at the filesystem to correct the situation.
Some ways of working around this issue were already suggested by
Linus in the same thread on the same day, including waiting
until the next second before returning from update-index if a
cache entry written out has the current timestamp, but that
means we can make at most one commit per second, and given that
the e-mail patch workflow used by Linus needs to process at
least 5 commits per second, it is not an acceptable solution.
Linus notes that git-apply is primarily used to update the index
while processing e-mailed patches, which is true, and
git-apply's up-to-date check is fooled by the same problem but
luckily in the other direction, so it is not really a big issue,
but still it is disturbing.
The function ce_match_stat() is called to bypass the comparison
against filesystem data when the stat data recorded in the cache
entry matches what stat() returns from the filesystem. This
patch tackles the problem by changing it to actually go to the
filesystem data for cache entries that have the same mtime as
the index file itself. This works as long as the index file and
working tree files are on the filesystems that share the same
monotonic clock. Files on network mounted filesystems sometimes
get skewed timestamps compared to "date" output, but as long as
working tree files' timestamps are skewed the same way as the
index file's, this approach still works. The only problematic
files are the ones that have the same timestamp as the index
file's, because two file updates that sandwitch the index file
update must happen within the same second to trigger the
problem.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When .git/refs/heads/frotz and .git/refs/tags/frotz existed, and
the object name stored in .git/refs/heads/frotz were corrupt, we
ended up picking tags/frotz without complaining. Worse yet, if
the corrupt .git/refs/heads/frotz was more than 40 bytes and
began with hexadecimal characters, it silently overwritten the
initial part of the returned result.
This commit adds a couple of tests to demonstrate these cases,
with a fix.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
If GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL is of a certain form, `git rebase master' will blow
away the author name and email when fast-forward merging commits. I
have not tracked it down, but here is a testcase that demonstrates the
behavior.
Signed-off-by: Amos Waterland <apw@us.ibm.com>
Acked-by: Michal Ostrowski <mostrows@watson.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
In case some refs couldn't be pushed out due to an error (mostly the
not-a-proper-subset error), make git-send-pack exit with non-zero status
after the push is over (that is, it still tries to push out the rest
of the refs).
[jc: I adjusted a test for this change.]
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This test kicks in only if you built test-delta executable, and
makes sure that the basic delta routine is working properly even
on empty files.
This commit is to make sure we have a test to catch the
breakage. The delitifier code is still broken, which will be
fixed with the next commit.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This adds a couple of tests to cover the following renaming
merge cases:
- one side renames and the other side does not, with and without
content conflicts.
- both side rename to the same path, with and without content
conflicts.
The test setup also prepares a case in which both side rename to
different destination, but currently the code collapses these
destination paths and removes the original path, which may be
wrong. The outcome of this case is not checked by the tests in
this round.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
People seem to be getting test failure from t6021 not becuase
git is faulty but because they forgot to install "merge". Check
this and other trivial pilot errors in the first test.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This is just a belts-and-suspenders check, but makes sure we
have both "git" and "git-init-db" built, executable, and
checking.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This is to catch an error where tests are run without first
building what are being tested. Relying on prefixing $PATH with
the build directory and expect that the PATH mechanism would
find what we just built would silently run an already installed
binaries from the PATH.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Not everybody can rely on /bin/sh to be sane, and we support
SHELL_PATH for that. Use it.
mktemp(1) is not used anywhere else in the core git. Do not
introduce dependency on it.
Not everybody's "which" gives a sane return value. For example,
on Solaris 'which XXX' says "no XXX in /usr/bin /bin ..." and
exits with zero status. The lesson here is to never use 'which'
in your scripts.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@twinsun.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The test is considered OK if it exits with code $1
Signed-off-by: Fredrik Kuivinen <freku045@student.liu.se>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Junio C Hamano, Sat, Nov 26, 2005 03:45:52 +0100:
> I haven't seriously used git-mv myself, so
> somebody needs to test it, and if it actually works and Ack on
> it, please.
It actually works in subdirs.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The diff for this commit is a good illustration of what changed
in ls-tree behaviour.
- With -r, tree nodes themselves are not shown anymore, but
blobs in subtrees are shown.
- The order of paths parameters do not matter, since they are
not like arguments to /bin/ls, but are filter patterns.
- When filter patterns overlap, unintuitive things happen.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
A .git/config like follows becomes valid with this patch:
[remote.junio]
url = git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git.git
pull = master:junio todo:todo +pu:pu
[remote.ibook]
url = ibook:git/
pull = master:ibook
push = master:quetzal
(This patch only does the ini file thing, git-fetch and friends still
ignore these values).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Extend the regex syntax of value_regex so that prepending an exclamation
mark means non-match:
[core]
quetzal = "Dodo" for Brainf*ck
quetzal = "T. Rex" for Malbolge
quetzal = "cat"
You can match the third line with
git-config-set --get quetzal '! for '
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
... namely
--replace-all, to replace any amount of matching lines, not just 0 or 1,
--get, to get the value of one key,
--get-all, the multivar version of --get, and
--unset-all, which deletes all matching lines from .git/config
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
A new option, --allow-binary-replacement, is introduced.
When you feed a diff that records full SHA1 name of pre- and
post-image blob on its index line to git-apply with this option,
the post-image blob replaces the path if what you have in the
working tree matches the pre-image _and_ post-image blob is
already available in the object directory.
Later we _might_ want to enhance the diff output to also include
the full binary data of the post-image, to make this more
useful, but this is good enough for local rebasing application.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Recently we fixed 'git-apply --stat' not to barf on a binary
differences. But it accidentally broke the error detection when
we actually attempt to apply them.
This commit fixes the problem and adds test cases.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The recently we updated rev-list --topo-order to show the heads
in date order, but we had a test that expected to see the old
behaviour.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Make git-update-ref create references with slashes in them. git-branch
and git-checkout already support such reference names.
git-branch can use git-update-ref to create the references in a more
formal manner now.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Because a batch-oriented script creates many commits within a second
on a fast machine, show-branch output of the test results are unstable
without topo-order.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Although it was shown that the "full contamination" was not really full
during the list discussion, the series improves things without incurring
extra parsing cost, and here is a test to check that.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Allow failed tests to be ignored using make's "-i". The patch also
disables parallel make in t/. This doesn't make the testing any
different as before: the tests were run sequentially before.
It also allows to run more tests, ignoring the ones usually failing
just to figure out if something else broke. (Or to ignore plainly
uninteresting situations because of the testing being done on say...
cygwin ;)
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
We checked the result of patch application for full permission bits,
when the only thing we cared about was to make sure the executable
bit was correctly set.
Noticed by Peter Baumann.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
For everyone cursed by dos/windows line endings (aka CRLF):
The code reading the .gitignore files (excludes and excludes per
directory) leaves \r in the patterns, which causes fnmatch to fail for
no obvious reason. Just remove a "\r" preceding a "\n"
unconditionally.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
On Linux, "mktemp tmp-XXXX" will not work. Also, redirect stderr on which,
so it does not complain too loudly. After all, this test should only be
executed when old binaries are available.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The next patches will extend the pack protocol. This test assures that this
extension is compatible to earlier versions of git-fetch-pack/git-upload-pack.
All you need to do to take advantage of this test, is to install older
known-to-be-working binaries in the path as "old-git-fetch-pack" and
"old-git-upload-pack".
Note that the warning when testing with old-git-fetch-pack is to be
expected (it just says that the old version was not taking advantage
of all the information which the server sent).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This test provides a minimal example of what went wrong with the old
git-fetch-pack (and now works beautifully).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This patch allows the testsuite to run properly when the full path to
the git sources contains spaces or other symbols that need to be quoted.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Roskin <proski@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This removes the unoptimization. The previous round does not mind
missing fan-out directories, but still makes sure they exist, lest
older versions choke on a repository created/packed by it.
This round does not play that nicely anymore -- empty fan-out
directories are not created by init-db, and will stay removed by
prune-packed. The prune command also removes empty fan-out directories.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
On FAT/NTFS, filenames cannot contain tabs. So t3300-funny-names would
reliably fail already when trying to create such files.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Individual tests for hooks would want to have their own tests when
written. Also we should not pick up from random templates the user
happens to have.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Lacking reliable symlinks, the instructions in the tutorial did not work
in a cygwin setup. Also, a few outputs were not correct.
This patch fixes these, and adds a test case which follows the
instructions of the tutorial (except git-clone, -fetch and -push, which I
have not done yet).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
git-index-pack builds a pack index file for an existing packed
archive. With this utility a packed archive which was transferred
without the corresponding pack index can be added to objects/pack/
without repacking.
Signed-off-by: Sergey Vlasov <vsu@altlinux.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Since cygwin does not install cpio by default, t5400 results in a very
cryptic failure. So, test for cpio explicitely.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This makes it possible to have a "sparse" git object subdirectory
structure, something that has become much more attractive now that people
use pack-files all the time.
As a result of pack-files, a git object directory doesn't necessarily have
any individual objects lying around, and in that case it's just wasting
space to keep the empty first-level object directories around: on many
filesystems the 256 empty directories will be aboue 1MB of diskspace.
Even more importantly, after you re-pack a project that _used_ to be
unpacked, you could be left with huge directories that no longer contain
anything, but that waste space and take time to look through.
With this change, "git prune-packed" can just do an rmdir() on the
directories, and they'll get removed if empty, and re-created on demand.
This patch also tries to fix up "write_sha1_from_fd()" to use the new
common infrastructure for creating the object files, closing a hole where
we might otherwise leave half-written objects in the object database.
[jc: I unoptimized the part that really removes the fan-out directories
to ease transition. init-db still wastes 1MB of diskspace to hold 256
empty fan-outs, and prune-packed rmdir()'s the grown but empty directories,
but runs mkdir() immediately after that -- reducing the saving from 150KB
to 146KB. These parts will be re-introduced when everybody has the
on-demand capability.]
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This patch fixes a bug in git-ls-tree in which the wrong filenames are
listed if the exact same file and directory contents are present in
another location in the tree.
Added a new series of test cases for directory and filename handling.
Signed-off-by: Robert Fitzsimons <robfitz@273k.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This adds more cruft to diff --git header to record the blob SHA1 and
the mode the patch/diff is intended to be applied against, to help the
receiving end fall back on a three-way merge. The new header looks
like this:
diff --git a/apply.c b/apply.c
index 7be5041..8366082 100644
--- a/apply.c
+++ b/apply.c
@@ -14,6 +14,7 @@
// files that are being modified, but doesn't apply the patch
// --stat does just a diffstat, and doesn't actually apply
+// --show-index-info shows the old and new index info for...
...
Upon receiving such a patch, if the patch did not apply cleanly to the
target tree, the recipient can try to find the matching old objects in
her object database and create a temporary tree, apply the patch to
that temporary tree, and attempt a 3-way merge between the patched
temporary tree and the target tree using the original temporary tree
as the common ancestor.
The patch lifts the code to compute the hash for an on-filesystem
object from update-index.c and makes it available to the diff output
routine.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Useful if you have a file whose name starts with a dash.
Signed-off-by: Fredrik Kuivinen <freku045@student.liu.se>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
- The location of openssl development files got customizable.
- The location of iconv development files got customizable.
- Pass $TAR down to t5000 test so that the user can override with
'gmake TAR=gtar'.
- Solaris 'bc' does not seem to grok "define abs()". There is no
reason to use bc there -- expr would do.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junio@twinsun.com>
This adds the counterpart of git-update-ref that lets you read
and create "symbolic refs". By default it uses a symbolic link
to represent ".git/HEAD -> refs/heads/master", but it can be compiled
to use the textfile symbolic ref.
The places that did 'readlink .git/HEAD' and 'ln -s refs/heads/blah
.git/HEAD' have been converted to use new git-symbolic-ref command, so
that they can deal with either implementation.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junio@twinsun.com>
It still talked about "the proposed alternative semantics" but we have
used those alternative semantics for quite some time. Update them to
avoid confusion.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The textual diff generation with built-in '-p' in diff-* brothers has
proven to be useful enough that git-diff-helper outlived its usefulness.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Add -m/--modified to show files that have been modified wrt. the index.
[jc: The original came from Brian Gerst on Sep 1st but it only checked
if the paths were cache dirty without actually checking the files were
modified. I also added the usage string and a new test.]
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
I do not know why it was spelled git-rev-tree when I meant to say
git-read-tree, but the typo was left since day one.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This will help us detect if real-world example merges have multiple
merge-base candidates and one of them matches one head while another
matches the other head.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Adds support for multiple ancestors, removes --emu23, much simplification.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
We have deprecated the old environment variable names for quite a
while and now it's time to remove them. Gone are:
SHA1_FILE_DIRECTORIES AUTHOR_DATE AUTHOR_EMAIL AUTHOR_NAME
COMMIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL COMMIT_AUTHOR_NAME SHA1_FILE_DIRECTORY
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Earlier we renamed git-foo.sh to git-foo while installing, which
was mostly done by inertia than anything else. This however
made writing tests to use scripts harder.
This patch builds the scripts the same way as we build binaries
from their sources. As a side effect, you can now specify
non-standard paths you have your Perl binary is in when running
the make.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
If you run `git branch --help', you will unexpectedly have created a new
branch named "--help". This simple patch adds logic and a usage
statement to catch this and similar problems, and adds a testcase for it.
Signed-off-by: Amos Waterland <apw@rossby.metr.ou.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
As promised, this is the "big tool rename" patch. The primary differences
since 0.99.6 are:
(1) git-*-script are no more. The commands installed do not
have any such suffix so users do not have to remember if
something is implemented as a shell script or not.
(2) Many command names with 'cache' in them are renamed with
'index' if that is what they mean.
There are backward compatibility symblic links so that you and
Porcelains can keep using the old names, but the backward
compatibility support is expected to be removed in the near
future.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The new test pattern is taken from HPA's klibc and klibc-kbuild trees,
which has many interesting renames (the commits
001eef5a19219e5b0601068a3d13874b88c0653e and
0037d1bc0deaf7daec3778496656cb04b4e4b9d0). The test pattern exposes
problems in the apply.c changes currently in the proposed updates
branch.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Added a new test case for the scanning forwards and backwards for the
correct location to apply a patch fragment.
Signed-off-by: Robert Fitzsimons <robfitz@273k.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Added a test case for patches with multiple fragments.
Signed-off-by: Robert Fitzsimons <robfitz@273k.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Without this patch, git-apply does not retain the mode when renaming or
copying files.
[jc: Good catch, Johannes. I added a test case to demonstrate the
breackage in the original.]
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
It seems that the localtime() libc routine doesn't care for finding a TZ
that's empty. It's ok with TZ not being set. Setting the TZ to GMT allowed
these tests to pass.
$ uname -v
Darwin Kernel Version 7.9.0: Wed Mar 30 20:11:17 PST 2005; root:xnu/xnu-517.12.7.obj~1/RELEASE_PPC
Signed-off-by: Brad Roberts <braddr@puremagic.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
"return" from a test would leave the exit trap set, which could cause a
spurious error message if it's the last test in the script or
--immediate is used.
The easiest solution would be to have a global trap that is set when
test-lib.sh is sourced and unset either by test_done(), error() or by
test_failure_() with --immediate.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Roskin <proski@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
I have noticed that "make test" fails without any explanations when the
"merge" utility is missing. I don't think tests should be silent in
case of failure.
It turned out that the particular test was using "exit" to interrupt the
test in case of an error. This caused the whole test script to exit.
No further tests would be run even if "--immediate" wasn't specified.
No error message was printed.
This patch does following:
All instances of "exit", "exit 1" and "(exit 1)" in tests have been
replaced with "return 1". In fact, "(exit 1)" had no effect.
File descriptor 5 is duplicated from file descriptor 1. This is needed
to print important error messages from tests.
New function test_run_() has been introduced. Any "return" in the test
would merely cause that function to return without skipping calls to
test_failure_() and test_ok_(). The new function also traps "exit" and
treats it like a fatal error (in case somebody reintroduces "exit" in
the tests).
test_expect_failure() and test_expect_success() check both the result of
eval and the return value of test_run_(). If the later is not 0, it's
always a failure because it indicates the the test didn't complete.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Roskin <proski@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
"t5400-send-pack.sh --verbose" stops waiting for user input. It happens
because "git log" uses less for output now. To prevent this, PAGER
should be set to cat.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Roskin <proski@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
All test scripts should end with test_done, which reports the test
results. In the future, it could be used for other purposes, e.g. to
distinguish graceful end from "exit" in a test. This patch fixes
scripts that don't call test_done.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Roskin <proski@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
git-rev-parse HEAD^1 would fail, because of an off-by-one bug (but HEAD^
would yield the expected result). Also, when the parent does not exist, do
not silently return an incorrect SHA1. Of course, this no longer applies
to git-rev-parse alone, but every user of get_sha1().
While at it, add a test.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When built with NO_OPENSSL, rev-list --merge-order does not
work, causing t6001 test to fail. Detect that and skip this
test to allow continuing to the rest of the tests.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Test t6002 unnecessarily fails when bc is a bit older than average.
Signed-off-by: Johannes.Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The check that the source is ahead of the destination incorrectly expects
pop_most_recent_commit() to gracefully handle an empty list.
Fix by just checking the list itself, rather than the return value of the
pop function.
[jc: I did the test script that demonstrated the problem]
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
We use 'A' for added files instead of 'N' to make the it
visually easier to distinguish from 'M' now.
While we are at it, make the test scripts executable. Yes, I
know it does not matter because t/Makefile runs them explicitly
with "sh tXXXX-blah.sh", but being consistent is always better.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Add --exclude-per-directory=<name> option that specifies a file
to contain exclude patterns local to that directory and its
subdirectories. Update the exclusion logic to be able to say
"include files that match this more specific pattern, even
though later exclude patterns may match them". Also enhances
that a pattern can contain '/' in which case fnmatch is called
with FNM_PATHNAME flag to match the entire path.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The output from a failure case had the test description message
and the first line of the actual test script concatenated on the
same line, which was ugly. Correct the output routine a bit to
make it more readable.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The parsing code had a bug that failed to recognize an
incomplete line at the end of a fragment, and the fragment
application code had a comparison bug to recognize such. Fix
them to handle incomplete lines correctly.
Add a test script for patches with various combinations of
complete and incomplete lines to make sure the fix works.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
The Makefile in the test suite directory considers any file
matching t[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]-*.sh as the top-level test script
to be executed. Unfortunately this was not documented, and the
common test library, t6000-lib.sh was named to match that
pattern. This caused t6000-lib.sh to be called from Makefile as
the top-level program, causing it to leave t/sed.script file
behind. Rename it to t6000lib.sh to prevent this, and document
the naming convention a bit more clearly.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
When sed uses \n rather than ; as a separator (for BSD sed(1) compat),
it is cleaner to use a file directly, rather than an environment
variable containing \n characters.
This change changes t/t6000 write to sed.script directly and changes
the other tests to remove knowledge of sed.script.
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This test case demonstrates a problem with --merge-order.
A
|
B
|\
C D
|/
E
|
F
git-rev-list --merge-order A B doesn't produce the expected output of
A
B
D
C
E
F
The problem is fixed by a subsequent patch.
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This trivial patch removes the semicolon as the sed seperator in the t/t6000-lib.sh test script
and replaces it with white space. This makes BSD sed(1) much happier.
Signed-off-by: Mark Allen <mrallen1@yahoo.com>
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This patch introduces some unit tests for the git-rev-list --bisect functionality.
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Functions that are useful to other t6xxx testcases are moved into t6000-lib.sh
To use these functions in a test case, use a test-case pre-amble like:
. ./test-lib.sh
. ../t6000-lib.sh # t6xxx specific functions
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This patch fixes up the t/t5300 unit tests which were broken by the changes in:
Make the name of a pack-file depend on the objects packed there-in.
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This patch removes an unnecessary sort from the t6001 testcase.
Sorts were previously necessary when testing non --merge-order cases
because the output order wasn't entirely deterministic unless commit
date was fixed.
However, commit dates are now fixed, so the need for a sort has
disappeared. So the sort has been removed.
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This fix fixes a t/t6001 test case break that was hidden by a bug in the
test case infrastructure.
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Junio discovered a problem where an actual test case break was hidden
because pipelines are not handled properly by the test infrastructure in
t6001.
This patch fixes the broken infrastructure (and demonstrates the break
explicitly).
A subsequent patch in this series will fix the test case so that it
doesn't fail.
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This patch makes --merge-order produce the same list as git-rev-list
without --merge-order specified.
In particular, if the graph looks like this:
A
| B
|/
C
|
D
The both git-rev-list B ^A and git-rev-list --merge-order will produce B.
The unit tests have been changed to reflect the fact that the prune
points are now formally part of the start list that is used to perform
the --merge-order sort.
That is: git-rev-list --merge-order A ^D used to produce
= A
| C
It now produces:
^ A
| C
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Added a test case that shows that --merge-order doesn't produce the
correct result in the following case.
A
|
| B
|/
C
|
D
git-rev-list --merge-order A ^B should produce just A. Instead
it produces BCD.
A subsequent patch will fix this defect.
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
It now always read from standard input and rejects non-flag
arguments.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Given a list of <pack>.idx files, this command validates the
index file and the corresponding .pack file for consistency.
This patch also uses the same validation mechanism in fsck-cache
when the --full flag is used.
During normal operation, sha1_file.c verifies that a given .idx
file matches the .pack file by comparing the SHA1 checksum
stored in .idx file and .pack file as a minimum sanity check.
We may further want to check the pack signature and version when
we map the pack, but that would be a separate patch.
Earlier, errors to map a pack file was not flagged fatal but led
to a random fatal error later. This version explicitly die()s
when such an error is detected.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This replaces sha1sum(1) with sum(1) in t/t1002. GNU sum(1) runs in
"BSD compatibility" mode by default, and not all systems have GNU
coreutils. On any system without GNU coreutils (or sha1sum) t1002 will
fail. This patch should make t1002 complete successfully everywhere
that sum(1) runs.
I've tested this on Darwin and Linux; it works on both platforms.
Signed-off-by: Mark Allen <mrallen1@yahoo.com>
Acked-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY and GIT_ALTERNATE_OBJECT_DIRECTORIES can
have the "pack" subdirectory that houses "packed GIT" files
produced by git-pack-objects (e.g. .git/objects/pack/foo.pack
and .git/objects/pack/foo.idx; always store them as pairs). The
following functions in sha1_file.c can then read object contents
from such packed file:
- sha1_object_info()
- has_sha1_file()
- read_sha1_file()
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Packed delta files created by git-pack-objects seems to be the
way to go, and existing "delta" object handling code has exposed
the object representation details to too many places. Remove it
while we refactor code to come up with a proper interface in
sha1_file.c.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This finishes the initial round of git-pack-object /
git-unpack-object pair. They are now good enough to be used as
a transport medium:
- Fix delta direction in pack-objects; the original was
computing delta to create the base object from the object to
be squashed, which was quite unfriendly for unpacker ;-).
- Add a script to test the very basics.
- Implement unpacker for both regular and deltified objects.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
An earlier change to optimize directory-file conflict check
broke what "read-tree --emu23" expects. This is fixed by this
commit.
(1) Introduces an explicit flag to tell add_cache_entry() not to
check for conflicts and use it when reading an existing tree
into an empty stage --- by definition this case can never
introduce such conflicts.
(2) Makes read-cache.c:has_file_name() and read-cache.c:has_dir_name()
aware of the cache stages, and flag conflict only with paths
in the same stage.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This adds more tests for --emu23. One is to show how it can
carry forward more local changes than the straightforward
two-way fast forward, and another is to show the recent
overeager optimization of directory/file conflict check broke
things, which will be fixed in the next commit.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
git-rev-list --merge-order is omitting one of the roots when
displaying a merge containing two distinct roots.
A subsequent patch will fix the problem.
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This adds tests (which also serves demonstration) for the --stat
and --summary flags to the git-apply command.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
1. --merge-order doesn't deal properly with a specified head that has no parent
* FAIL 11: head has no parent
2. --merge-order doesn't deal properly with arguments of the form
head ^head
* FAIL 30: head ^head --merge-order git-rev-list --merge-order
--show-breaks a3 ^a3
3. if one of the specified heads is reachable from the other, the
head gets printed twice and this causes problems for upcoming
versions of gitk. This is true for both --merge-order and non
--merge-order style of invocations.
* FAIL 24: one specified head reachable from another a4, c3, --merge-order
* FAIL 26: one specified head reachable from another a4, c3, no --merge-order
* FAIL 27: one specified head reachable from another c3, a4, no --merge-order
4. --merge-order aborts with commits that list the same parent twice...it should handle it more gracefully.
* no longer unit testable
5. broken interaction between --merge-order and --max-age
previously posted as:
"[PATCH 1/2] Test case that demonstrates problem with --merge-order, --max-age interaction"
* FAIL 23: --max-age=c3, --merge-order
Later patches in this patch set fix these problems.
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Patch for a completely rewritten file detected by the -B flag
was shown as a pair of creation followed by deletion in earlier
versions. This was an misguided attempt to make reviewing such
a complete rewrite easier, and unnecessarily ended up confusing
git-apply. Instead, show the entire contents of old version
prefixed with '-', followed by the entire contents of new
version prefixed with '+'. This gives the same easy-to-review
for human consumer while keeping it a single, regular
modification patch for machine consumption, something that even
GNU patch can grok.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Like diff-tree, this patch makes -C option for diff-* brothers
to use only pre-image of modified files as rename/copy detection
by default. Give --find-copies-harder to use unmodified files
to find copies from as well.
This also fixes "diff-files -C" problem earlier noticed by
Linus. It was feeding the null sha1 even when the file in the
work tree was known to match what is in the index file. This
resulted in diff-files showing everything in the project.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Unset TZ to force GMT in test #4 and add a set of parens around
the length function in the awk script.
Signed-off-by: Mark Allen <mrallen1@yahoo.com>
Acked-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This patch teaches read-tree 3-way merge that, when only "the
other tree" changed a path, and if the index file already has
the same change, we are not in a situation that would clobber
the index and the work tree, and lets the merge succeed; this is
case #14ALT in t1000 test. It does not change the result of the
merge, but prevents it from failing when it does not have to.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This adds #3ALT rule (and #2ALT rule for symmetry) to the
read-tree 3-way merge logic that collapses paths that are added
only in one branch and not in the other internally.
This makes --emu23 to succeed in the last remaining case where
the pure 2-way merge succeeded and earlier one failed. Running
diff between t1001 and t1005 test scripts shows that the only
difference between the two is that --emu23 can leave the states
into separate stages so that the user can use usual 3-way merge
resolution techniques to carry forward the local changes when
pure 2-way merge would have refused to run.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This fixes too strong index requirement 3-way merge enforces in
one case: the same file is added in both branches.
In this case, the original code insisted that if the index file
has that path, it must match our branch and be up-to-date.
However in this particular case, it only has to match it, and
can be dirty. We just need to make sure that we keep the
work-tree copy instead of checking out the merge result.
The resolution of such a path, however, cannot be left to
outside script, because we will not keep the original stage0
entries for unmerged paths when read-tree finishes, and at that
point, the knowledge of "if we resolve it to match the new file
added in both branches, the merge succeeds and the work tree
would not lose information, but we should _not_ update the work
tree from the resulting index file" is lost. For this reason,
the now code needs to resolve this case (#5ALT) internally.
This affects some existing tests in the test suite, but all in
positive ways. In t1000 (3-way test), this #5ALT case now gets
one stage0 entry, instead of an identical stage2 and stage3
entry pair, for such a path, and one test that checked for merge
failure (because the test assumed the "stricter-than-necessary"
behaviour) does not have to fail anymore. In t1005 (emu23
test), two tests that involves a case where the work tree
already had a change introduced in the upstream (aka "merged
head"), the merge succeeds instead of failing.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This new flag causes two-way fast forward to internally use the
three-way merge mechanism. This behaviour is intended to offer
a better fast forward semantics when used in a dirty work tree.
The new test t1005 is parallel to the existing t1001 "pure
2-way" tests, but some parts that are commented out would fail.
These failures are due to three-way merge enforcing too strict
index requirements for cases that could succeed. This problem
will be addressed by later patches.
Without even changing three-way mechanism, the --emu23 two-way
fast forward already gives the user an easier-to-handle merge
result when a file that "merged head" updates has local
modifications. This is demonstrated as "case 16" test in t1005.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This is in preparation for "2-way fast-forward emulated with
3-way mechanism" series. It does not change what the tests for
pure 2-way do. It only changes how it tests things, to make
reviewing of differences of the two tests easier in later steps.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This adds a set of tests to make sure that requirements on
existing cache entries are checked when a read-tree -m 3-way
merge is run with an already populated index file.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This updates t1000 (basic 3-way merge test) to check the merge
results for both successful cases (earlier one checked the
result for only one of them). Also fixes typos in t1002 that
broke '&&' chain, potentially missing a test failure before the
chain got broken.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This patch fixes three bugs in --merge-order support
* mark_ancestors_uninteresting was unnecessarily exponential which
caused a problem when a commit with no parents was merged near the
head of something like the linux kernel
* removed a spurious statement from find_base which wasn't
apparently causing problems now, but wasn't correct either.
* removed an unnecessarily strict check from find_base_for_list
that causes a problem if git-rev-list commit ^parent-of-commit
is specified.
* added some unit tests which were accidentally omitted from
original merge-order patch
The fix to mark_ancestors_uninteresting isn't an optimal fix - a full
graph scan will still be performed in this case even though it is
not strictly required. However, a full graph scan is linear
and still no worse than git-rev-list HEAD which runs in less than 2
seconds on a warm cache.
Signed-off-by: Jon Seymour <jon.seymour@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This implements the "never lose the current cache information or
the work tree state, but favor a successful merge over merge
failure" principle in the fast-forward two-tree merge operation.
It comes with a set of tests to cover all the cases described in
the case matrix found in the new documentation.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
The updated git-tread-tree -m is more strict in that it wants to
have the original cache up to date. The initial part of t1000
(merge tests from hell) fails due to it.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Clearly even Junio felt git "rename" header lines should say "from/to"
instead of "old/new", since he wrote the documentation that way.
This way it also matches "copy".
git-apply will accept both versions, at least for a while.
This addresses a concern raised by Jason McMullan in the mailing
list discussion. After retrieving and storing a potentially
deltified object, pull logic tries to check and fulfil its delta
dependency. When the pull procedure is killed at this point,
however, there was no easy way to recover by re-running pull,
since next run would have found that we already have that
deltified object and happily reported success, without really
checking its delta dependency is satisfied.
This patch introduces --recover option to git-*-pull family
which causes them to re-validate dependency of deltified objects
we are fetching. A new test t5100-delta-pull.sh covers such a
failure mode.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
git-tar-tree: remove tests of long path handling out of t5000-tar-tree.sh
and make test script cope with tar programs displaying file modification
date as hh:mm (newer variants show it as hh:mm:ss).
This makes the test cover only basic functionality that is expected to
be handled even by older tar programs. Tests for long filenames (which
require pax extended headers) can be added separately.
I ran this test successfully with GNU tar 1.13, 1.14 and 1.15.1.
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This fixes the problem with ls-tree which failed to show
"drivers/char" directory when the user asked for "drivers/char/"
from the command line. At the same time, if "drivers/char" were
a non directory, "drivers/char/" would not show it. This is
consistent with the way diffcore-pathspec has been recently
fixed.
This adds back the diffcore-pathspec test,dropped when my
earlier diffcore-pathspec fix was rejected.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
There were duplicate script pieces to help comparing diff
output, which this patch consolidates into the t/diff-lib.sh
library.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
A new diffcore transformation, diffcore-break.c, is introduced.
When the -B flag is given, a patch that represents a complete
rewrite is broken into a deletion followed by a creation. This
makes it easier to review such a complete rewrite patch.
The -B flag takes the same syntax as the -M and -C flags to
specify the minimum amount of non-source material the resulting
file needs to have to be considered a complete rewrite, and
defaults to 99% if not specified.
As the new test t4008-diff-break-rewrite.sh demonstrates, if a
file is a complete rewrite, it is broken into a delete/create
pair, which can further be subjected to the usual rename
detection if -M or -C is used. For example, if file0 gets
completely rewritten to make it as if it were rather based on
file1 which itself disappeared, the following happens:
The original change looks like this:
file0 --> file0' (quite different from file0)
file1 --> /dev/null
After diffcore-break runs, it would become this:
file0 --> /dev/null
/dev/null --> file0'
file1 --> /dev/null
Then diffcore-rename matches them up:
file1 --> file0'
The internal score values are finer grained now. Earlier
maximum of 10000 has been raised to 60000; there is no user
visible changes but there is no reason to waste available bits.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
The score number that follow R/C status were parsed but the
parse pointer was not updated, causing the entire line to become
unrecognized. This patch fixes this problem.
There was a test missing to catch this breakage, which this
commit adds as t4009-diff-rename-4.sh. The diff-raw tests used
in related t4005-diff-rename-2.sh (the same test without -z) and
t4007-rename-3.sh were stricter than necessarily, despite that
the comment for the tests said otherwise. This patch also
corrects them.
The documentation is updated to say that the status can
optionally be followed by a number called "score"; it does not
have to stay similarity index forever and there is no reason to
limit it only to C and R.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This is a complete rewrite of ls-tree to make it behave more
like what "/bin/ls -a" does in the current working directory.
Namely, the changes are:
- Unlike the old ls-tree behaviour that used paths arguments to
restrict output (not that it worked as intended---as pointed
out in the mailing list discussion, it was quite incoherent),
this rewrite uses paths arguments to specify what to show.
- Without arguments, it implicitly uses the root level as its
sole argument ("/bin/ls -a" behaves as if "." is given
without argument).
- Without -r (recursive) flag, it shows the named blob (either
file or symlink), or the named tree and its immediate
children.
- With -r flag, it shows the named path, and recursively
descends into it if it is a tree.
- With -d flag, it shows the named path and does not show its
children even if the path is a tree, nor descends into it
recursively.
This is still request-for-comments patch. There is no mailing
list consensus that this proposed new behaviour is a good one.
The patch to t/t3100-ls-tree-restrict.sh illustrates
user-visible behaviour changes. Namely:
* "git-ls-tree $tree path1 path0" lists path1 first and then
path0. It used to use paths as an output restrictor and
showed output in cache entry order (i.e. path0 first and then
path1) regardless of the order of paths arguments.
* "git-ls-tree $tree path2" lists path2 and its immediate
children but having explicit paths argument does not imply
recursive behaviour anymore, hence paths/baz is shown but not
paths/baz/b.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This changes the way how pathspec is used in the three diff-*
brothers. Earlier, they tried to grab as much information from
the original input and used pathspec to limit the output. This
version uses pathspec upfront to narrow the world diffcore
operates in, so "git-diff-* <arguments> some-directory" does not
look at things outside the specified subtree when finding
rename/copy or running pickaxe.
Since diff-tree already takes this view and does not feed
anything outside the specified directotires to begin with, this
patch does not have to touch that command.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Earier version of diffcore-rename used to keep unmodified
filepair in its output so that the last stage of the processing
that tells renames from copies can make all of rename/copy to
copies. However this had a bad interaction with other diffcore
filters that wanted to run after diffcore-rename, in that such
unmodified filepair must be retained for proper distinction
between renames and copies to happen.
This patch fixes the problem by changing the way diffcore-rename
records the information needed to distinguish "all are copies"
case and "the last one is a rename" case.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Actually use GIT_COMMITTER_DATE in git-commit-tree.
(It used to mistakenly re-use the author date)
Add test-case for it.
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Use SP as the column separator except the ones before path which
uses TAB, to make the output format consistent across ls-* and
diff-* commands.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Enhance git-ls-tree to allow optional 'match paths' that
restricts the output of git-ls-tree. This is useful to retrieve
a single file's SHA1 out of a tree without creating an index.
[JC: I added the test case]
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This is the remainder of testcase fix by Mark Allen to make them
work on his Darwin box. I was using "xargs -r" (GNU) where it
was not needed, sed -ne '/^\(author\|committer\)/s|>.*|>|p'
where some sed does not know what to do with '\|', and also
"cmp - file" to compare standard input with a file, which his
cmp does not support.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This fixes another bug.
- Mode-only changes were pruned incorrectly from the output.
- Added test to catch the above problem.
- Normalize rename/copy similarity score in the diff-raw output
to per-cent, no matter what scale we internally use.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
The earlier test was relying on the fact that dotfiles do not
appear in the output to prepare expected test results, which
inevitably got broken when we started handling dotfiles. Change
the test to be honest about what "--other" file it creates.
The problem was originally pointed out by Mark Allen.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This is what Linus wrote, improving what David Greaves
originally submitted.
I just added a test case and verified the patch works.
Author: David Greaves <david@dgreaves.com>
Author: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Earlier implementation had a major screw-up in the memory
management area. Rename/copy logic sometimes borrowed a pointer
to a structure without any provision for downstream to determine
which pointer is shared and which is not. This resulted in the
later clean-up code to sometimes double free such structure,
resulting in a segfault. This made -M and -C useless.
Another problem the earlier implementation had was that it
reordered the patches, and forced the logic to differentiate
renames and copies to depend on that particular order. This
problem was fixed by teaching rename/copy detection logic not to
do any reordering, and rename-copy differentiator not to depend
on the order of the patches. The diffs will leave rename/copy
detector in the same destination path order as the patch that
was fed into it. Some test vectors have been reordered to
accommodate this change.
It also adds a sanity check logic to the human-readable diff-raw
output to detect paths with embedded TAB and LF characters,
which cannot be expressed with that format. This idea came up
during a discussion with Chris Wedgwood.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
For later stages to reorder patches, pruning logic and rename detection
logic should not decide which delete to discard (because another entry
said it will take over the file as a rename) until the very end.
Also fix some tests that were assuming the earlier "last one is rename
or keep everything else is copy" semantics of diff-raw format, which no
longer is true.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This changes the diff-raw format again, following the mailing
list discussion. The new format explicitly expresses which one
is a rename and which one is a copy.
The documentation and tests are updated to match this change.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
The rename/copy detection logic in earlier round was only good
enough to show patch output and discussion on the mailing list
about the diff-raw format updates revealed many problems with
it. This patch fixes all the ones known to me, without making
things I want to do later impossible, mostly related to patch
reordering.
(1) Earlier rename/copy detector determined which one is rename
and which one is copy too early, which made it impossible
to later introduce diffcore transformers to reorder
patches. This patch fixes it by moving that logic to the
very end of the processing.
(2) Earlier output routine diff_flush() was pruning all the
"no-change" entries indiscriminatingly. This was done due
to my false assumption that one of the requirements in the
diff-raw output was not to show such an entry (which
resulted in my incorrect comment about "diff-helper never
being able to be equivalent to built-in diff driver"). My
special thanks go to Linus for correcting me about this.
When we produce diff-raw output, for the downstream to be
able to tell renames from copies, sometimes it _is_
necessary to output "no-change" entries, and this patch
adds diffcore_prune() function for doing it.
(3) Earlier diff_filepair structure was trying to be not too
specific about rename/copy operations, but the purpose of
the structure was to record one or two paths, which _was_
indeed about rename/copy. This patch discards xfrm_msg
field which was trying to be generic for this wrong reason,
and introduces a couple of fields (rename_score and
rename_rank) that are explicitly specific to rename/copy
logic. One thing to note is that the information in a
single diff_filepair structure _still_ does not distinguish
renames from copies, and it is deliberately so. This is to
allow patches to be reordered in later stages.
(4) This patch also adds some tests about diff-raw format
output and makes sure that necessary "no-change" entries
appear on the output.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Earlier round was not treating symbolic links carefully enough,
and would have produced diff output that renamed/copied then
edited the contents of a symbolic link, which made no practical
sense. Change it to detect only pure renames.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Update the diff-raw format as Linus and I discussed, except that
it does not use sequence of underscore '_' letters to express
nonexistence. All '0' mode is used for that purpose instead.
The new diff-raw format can express rename/copy, and the earlier
restriction that -M and -C _must_ be used with the patch format
output is no longer necessary. The patch makes -M and -C flags
independent of -p flag, so you need to say git-whatchanged -M -p
to get the diff/patch format.
Updated are both documentations and tests.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This patch extends diff-cache and diff-files to report the
unmodified files to diff-core as well when -C (copy detection)
is in effect, so that the unmodified files can also be used as
the source candidates. The existing test t4003 has been
extended to cover this case.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This introduces the diff-core, the layer between the diff-tree
family and the external diff interface engine. The calls to the
interface diff-tree family uses (diff_change and diff_addremove)
have not changed and will not change. The purpose of the
diff-core layer is to provide an infrastructure to transform the
set of differences sent from the applications, before sending
them to the external diff interface.
The recently introduced rename detection code has been rewritten
to use the diff-core facility. When applications send in
separate creates and deletes, matching ones are transformed into
a single rename-and-edit diff, and sent out to the external diff
interface as such.
This patch also enhances the rename detection code further to be
able to detect copies. Currently this happens only as long as
copy sources appear as part of the modified files, but there
already is enough provision for callers to report unmodified
files to diff-core, so that they can be also used as copy source
candidates. Extending the callers this way will be done in a
separate patch.
Please see and marvel at how well this works by trying out the
newly added t/t4003-diff-rename-1.sh test script.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
The version of wc I have (GNU textutils-2.1) puts spaces at the beginning
of lines. This patch should work for any version of wc.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Acked-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
The same check we added earlier to update-cache to catch ENOTDIR
turns out to be missing from diff-files. This causes a
difference not being reported when you have DF/DF (a file in a
subdirectory) in the cache and DF is a file on the filesystem.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Add '-R' flag to diff-tree, and change the test subdirectory
shell files to be executable (something that Junio couldn't
get me to do through the pure patch with my current patch
handling infrastructure).
This cleans up the way calls are made into the diff core from diff-tree
family and diff-helper. Earlier, these programs had "if
(generating_patch)" sprinkled all over the place, but those ugliness are
gone and handled uniformly from the diff core, even when not generating
patch format.
This also allowed diff-cache and diff-files to acquire -R
(reverse) option to generate diff in reverse. Users of
diff-tree can swap two trees easily so I did not add -R there.
[ Linus' note: I'll add -R to "diff-tree" too, since a "commit
diff" doesn't have another tree to switch around: the other
tree is always the parent(s) of the commit ]
Also -M<digits-as-mantissa> suggestion made by Linus has been
implemented.
Documentation updates are also included.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
With -u flag, git-checkout-cache picks up the stat information
from newly created file and updates the cache. This removes the
need to run git-update-cache --refresh immediately after running
git-checkout-cache.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This rips out the rename detection engine from diff-helper and moves it
to the diff core, and updates the internal calling convention used by
diff-tree family into the diff core. In order to give the same option
name to diff-tree family as well as to diff-helper, I've changed the
earlier diff-helper '-r' option to '-M' (stands for Move; sorry but the
natural abbreviation 'r' for 'rename' is already taken for 'recursive').
Although I did a fair amount of test with the git-diff-tree with
existing rename commits in the core GIT repository, this should still be
considered beta (preview) release. This patch depends on the diff-delta
infrastructure just committed.
This implements almost everything I wanted to see in this series of
patch, except a few minor cleanups in the calling convention into diff
core, but that will be a separate cleanup patch.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This test would have caught the strbuf eof condition gotcha,
hopefully fixed with my previous patch.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This implements the output format suggested by Linus in
<Pine.LNX.4.58.0505161556260.18337@ppc970.osdl.org>, except the
imaginary diff option is spelled "diff --git" with double dashes as
suggested by Matthias Urlichs.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
The documentation of the test harness still refer to old
numbering and also contains an obvious typo.
Also "make test" should be run after making sure we have built
all binaries, since test is designed to test the newly built
ones.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@ucw.cz>
This test comes from "[PATCH 2/2] The core GIT tests: recent additions and
fixes" but couldn't be included before since it depended on the modechange
diff output changes.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@ucw.cz>
This is an adaptation to the test framework of a historic test
that was used before three way merge form of read-tree was
introduced, and subsequently used to validate the read-tree -m
merge works correctly. It covers all the tricky cases known
back then and also have been updated to cover conflicting
files/directories cases since then.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@ucw.cz>
This test makes sure that use of deprecated environment variables still
works, using both new and old names makes new one take
precedence, and GIT_DIR and GIT_ALTERNATE_OBJECT_DIRECTORIES mechanisms
work.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@ucw.cz>
First digit: "family", e.g. the absolute basics and global stuff (0),
the basic db-side commands (read-tree, write-tree, commit-tree), the
basic working-tree-side commands (checkout-cache, update-cache), the
other basic commands (ls-files), the diff commands, the pull commands,
exporting commands, revision tree commands...
Second digit: the particular command we are testing
Third digit: (optionally) the particular switch or group of switches
we are testing
Freeform part: commandname-details
Described in the README.
mv t1000-checkout-cache.sh t2000-checkout-cache-clash.sh
mv t1001-checkout-cache.sh t2001-checkout-cache-clash.sh
mv t0200-update-cache.sh t2010-update-cache-badpath.sh
mv t0400-ls-files.sh t3000-ls-files-others.sh
mv t0500-ls-files.sh t3010-ls-files-killed.sh
This adds instruction for running tests, and writing new tests.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Updated to the new tidied up output style.
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@ucw.cz>
Exposing test_expect_success and test_expect_failure turns out
to be enough for the test scripts and there is no need for
exposing test_ok or test_failure. This patch cleans it up and
fixes the users of test_ok and test_failure.
Also test scripts have acquired a new command line flag
'--immediate' to cause them to exit upon the first failure.
This is useful especially during the development of a new test.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@ucw.cz>
NO changed to FAIL and ok was right-aligned with it so that it is easier
to visually identify the failed tests, and the removal of # should reduce
the clutter on the line and aid the eye to spot the test number better.
t/Makefile now does not use double-colon rules (why would it?), the rm
-fr trash in the all rule is silent, and OPTS aren't set to blank so
that they can be taken from the environment.
This set of scripts are designed to test the features and fixes
we recently added to core GIT. The convention to call test
helper function has been changed during the framework cleanup
(take two), and these tests have been updated to use the cleaned
up test-lib.sh interface.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Note that this does not include the t2000-diff.sh script since it
tests a patch which was not applied yet.
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@ucw.cz>
This adds t/ directory to host test suite, a test helper
library and a basic set of tests.
Petr Baudis raised many valid points at the earlier attempts in
git mailing list. This round, test-lib.sh has been updated to a
bit more modern style, and the default output is made easier to
read. Also included is one sample test script that tests the
very basics. This test has already found one leftover bug
missed when we introduced symlink support, which has been fixed
since then. The supplied Makefile is designed to run all the
available tests.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@ucw.cz>