"git branch --format=..." and "git format-patch --format=..."
learns "--omit-empty" to hide refs that whose formatting result
becomes an empty string from the output.
* ow/ref-filter-omit-empty:
branch, for-each-ref, tag: add option to omit empty lines
"git archive" run from a subdirectory mishandled attributes and
paths outside the current directory.
* rs/archive-from-subdirectory-fixes:
archive: improve support for running in subdirectory
"git clone --local" stops copying from an original repository that
has symbolic links inside its $GIT_DIR; an error message when that
happens has been updated.
* gc/better-error-when-local-clone-fails-with-symlink:
clone: error specifically with --local and symlinked objects
The approxidate() API has been simplified by losing an extra
function that did the same thing as another one.
* rs/remove-approxidate-relative:
date: remove approxidate_relative()
The userdiff regexp patterns for various filetypes that are built
into the system have been updated to avoid triggering regexp errors
from UTF-8 aware regex engines.
* rs/userdiff-multibyte-regex:
userdiff: support regexec(3) with multi-byte support
Clean-up of the code path that deals with merge strategy option
handling in "git rebase".
* pw/rebase-cleanup-merge-strategy-option-handling:
rebase: remove a couple of redundant strategy tests
rebase -m: fix serialization of strategy options
rebase -m: cleanup --strategy-option handling
sequencer: use struct strvec to store merge strategy options
rebase: stop reading and writing unnecessary strategy state
"git mergetool" and "git difftool" learns a new configuration
guiDefault to optionally favor configured guitool over non-gui-tool
automatically when $DISPLAY is set.
* tk/mergetool-gui-default-config:
mergetool: new config guiDefault supports auto-toggling gui by DISPLAY
If the given format string expands to the empty string, a newline is
still printed. This makes using the output linewise more tedious. For
example, git update-ref --stdin does not accept empty lines.
Add options to "git branch", "git for-each-ref", and "git tag" to
not print these empty lines. The default behavior remains the same.
Signed-off-by: Øystein Walle <oystwa@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Tests had a few places where we ignored PERL_PATH and blindly used
/usr/bin/perl, which have been corrected.
* jk/use-perl-path-consistently:
t/lib-httpd: pass PERL_PATH to CGI scripts
"git clone" from an empty repository learned to propagate the
choice of the hash algorithm from the source repository to the
newly created repository.
* jc/clone-object-format-from-void:
clone: propagate object-format when cloning from void
Consistently spell "Message-ID" as such, not "Message-Id".
* jc/spell-id-in-both-caps-in-message-id:
e-mail workflow: Message-ID is spelled with ID in both capital letters
"git sparse-checkout" command learns a debugging aid for the sparse
rule definitions.
* ws/sparse-check-rules:
builtin/sparse-checkout: add check-rules command
builtin/sparse-checkout: remove NEED_WORK_TREE flag
6f054f9fb3 (builtin/clone.c: disallow --local clones with
symlinks, 2022-07-28) gives a good error message when "git clone
--local" fails when the repo to clone has symlinks in
"$GIT_DIR/objects". In bffc762f87 (dir-iterator: prevent top-level
symlinks without FOLLOW_SYMLINKS, 2023-01-24), we later extended this
restriction to the case where "$GIT_DIR/objects" is itself a symlink,
but we didn't update the error message then - bffc762f87's tests show
that we print a generic "failed to start iterator over" message.
This is exacerbated by the fact that Documentation/git-clone.txt
mentions neither restriction, so users are left wondering if this is
intentional behavior or not.
Fix this by adding a check to builtin/clone.c: when doing a local clone,
perform an extra check to see if "$GIT_DIR/objects" is a symlink, and if
so, assume that that was the reason for the failure and report the
relevant information. Ideally, dir_iterator_begin() would tell us that
the real failure reason is the presence of the symlink, but (as far as I
can tell) there isn't an appropriate errno value for that.
Also, update Documentation/git-clone.txt to reflect that this
restriction exists.
Signed-off-by: Glen Choo <chooglen@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Test 'loosely defined local base branch is reported correctly' in
t2024-checkout-dwim.sh, which was introduced in [1] compares output of
two invocations of "git checkout", invoked with two different branches
named "strict" and "loose". As per description in [1], the test is
validating that output of tracking information for these two branches.
This tracking information is printed to standard output:
Your branch is behind 'main' by 1 commit, and can be fast-forwarded.
(use "git pull" to update your local branch)
The test assumes that the names of the two branches (strict and loose)
are in that output, and pipes the output through sed to replace names of
the branches with "BRANCHNAME". Command "git checkout", however,
outputs the branch name to standard error, not standard output -- see
message "Switched to branch '%s'\n" in function "update_refs_for_switch"
in "builtin/checkout.c". This means that the two invocations of sed do
nothing.
Redirect both the standard output and the standard error of "git
checkout" for these assertions. Ensure that compared files have the
string "BRANCHNAME".
In a series of piped commands, only the return code of the last command
is used. Thus, all other commands will have their return codes masked.
Avoid piping of output of git directly into sed to preserve the exit
status code of "git checkout", while we're here.
[1] 05e73682cd (checkout: report upstream correctly even with loosely
defined branch.*.merge, 2014-10-14)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Rybak <rybak.a.v@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Remove a test in t3402 that has been redundant ever since 80ff47957b
(rebase: remember strategy and strategy options, 2011-02-06). That
commit added a new test, the first part of which (as noted in the old
commit message) duplicated an existing test.
Also remove a test t3418 that has been redundant since the merge backend
was removed in 68aa495b59 (rebase: implement --merge via the interactive
machinery, 2018-12-11), since it now tests the same code paths as the
preceding test.
Helped-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
To store the strategy options rebase prepends " --" to each one and
writes them to a file. To load them it reads the file and passes the
contents to split_cmdline(). This roughly mimics the behavior of the
scripted rebase but has a couple of limitations, (1) options containing
whitespace are not properly preserved (this is true of the scripted
rebase as well) and (2) options containing '"' or '\' are incorrectly
parsed and may cause the parser to return an error.
Fix these limitations by quoting each option when they are stored so
that they can be parsed correctly. Now that "--preserve-merges" no
longer exist this change also stops prepending "--" to the options when
they are stored as that was an artifact of the scripted rebase.
These changes are backwards compatible so the files written by an older
version of git can still be read. They are also forwards compatible,
the file can still be parsed by recent versions of git as they treat the
"--" prefix as optional.
Reviewed-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When handling "--strategy-option" rebase collects the commands into a
struct string_list, then concatenates them into a string, prepending "--"
to each one before splitting the string and removing the "--" prefix.
This is an artifact of the scripted rebase and the need to support
"rebase --preserve-merges". Now that "--preserve-merges" no-longer
exists we can cleanup the way the argument is handled.
The tests for a bad strategy option are adjusted now that
parse_strategy_opts() is no-longer called when starting a rebase. The
fact that it only errors out when running "git rebase --continue" is a
mixed blessing but the next commit will fix the root cause of the
parsing problem so lets not worry about that here.
Reviewed-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When 29f4332e66 (Quit passing 'now' to date code, 2019-09-11) removed
its timeval parameter, approxidate_relative() became equivalent to
approxidate(). Convert its last two call sites and remove the redundant
function.
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since 1819ad327b (grep: fix multibyte regex handling under macOS,
2022-08-26) we use the system library for all regular expression
matching on macOS, not just for git grep. It supports multi-byte
strings and rejects invalid multi-byte characters.
This broke all built-in userdiff word regexes in UTF-8 locales because
they all include such invalid bytes in expressions that are intended to
match multi-byte characters without explicit support for that from the
regex engine.
"|[^[:space:]]|[\xc0-\xff][\x80-\xbf]+" is added to all built-in word
regexes to match a single non-space or multi-byte character. The \xNN
characters are invalid if interpreted as UTF-8 because they have their
high bit set, which indicates they are part of a multi-byte character,
but they are surrounded by single-byte characters.
Replace that expression with "|[^[:space:]]" if the regex engine
supports multi-byte matching, as there is no need to have an explicit
range for multi-byte characters then. Check for that capability at
runtime, because it depends on the locale and thus on environment
variables. Construct the full replacement expression at build time
and just switch it in if necessary to avoid string manipulation and
allocations at runtime.
Additionally the word regex for tex contains the expression
"[a-zA-Z0-9\x80-\xff]+" with a similarly invalid range. The best
replacement with only valid characters that I can come up with is
"([a-zA-Z0-9]|[^\x01-\x7f])+". Unlike the original it matches NUL
characters, though. Assuming that tex files usually don't contain NUL
this should be acceptable.
Reported-by: D. Ben Knoble <ben.knoble@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git fetch --all" does not have to download and handle the same
bundleURI over and over, which has been corrected.
* ds/fetch-bundle-uri-with-all:
fetch: download bundles once, even with --all
Test framework fix.
* jk/chainlint-fixes:
tests: skip test_eval_ in internal chain-lint
tests: drop here-doc check from internal chain-linter
tests: diagnose unclosed here-doc in chainlint.pl
tests: replace chainlint subshell with a function
tests: run internal chain-linter under "make test"
Split key function and data structure definitions out of cache.h to
new header files and adjust the users.
* en/header-split-cleanup:
csum-file.h: remove unnecessary inclusion of cache.h
write-or-die.h: move declarations for write-or-die.c functions from cache.h
treewide: remove cache.h inclusion due to setup.h changes
setup.h: move declarations for setup.c functions from cache.h
treewide: remove cache.h inclusion due to environment.h changes
environment.h: move declarations for environment.c functions from cache.h
treewide: remove unnecessary includes of cache.h
wrapper.h: move declarations for wrapper.c functions from cache.h
path.h: move function declarations for path.c functions from cache.h
cache.h: remove expand_user_path()
abspath.h: move absolute path functions from cache.h
environment: move comment_line_char from cache.h
treewide: remove unnecessary cache.h inclusion from several sources
treewide: remove unnecessary inclusion of gettext.h
treewide: be explicit about dependence on gettext.h
treewide: remove unnecessary cache.h inclusion from a few headers
Code clean-up around the use of the_repository.
* ab/remove-implicit-use-of-the-repository:
libs: use "struct repository *" argument, not "the_repository"
post-cocci: adjust comments for recent repo_* migration
cocci: apply the "revision.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "rerere.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "refs.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "promisor-remote.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "packfile.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "pretty.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "object-store.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "diff.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "commit.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "commit-reach.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "cache.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: add missing "the_repository" macros to "pending"
cocci: sort "the_repository" rules by header
cocci: fix incorrect & verbose "the_repository" rules
cocci: remove dead rule from "the_repository.pending.cocci"
Assorted config API updates.
* ab/config-multi-and-nonbool:
for-each-repo: with bad config, don't conflate <path> and <cmd>
config API: add "string" version of *_value_multi(), fix segfaults
config API users: test for *_get_value_multi() segfaults
for-each-repo: error on bad --config
config API: have *_multi() return an "int" and take a "dest"
versioncmp.c: refactor config reading next commit
config API: add and use a "git_config_get()" family of functions
config tests: add "NULL" tests for *_get_value_multi()
config tests: cover blind spots in git_die_config() tests
Code clean-up for "-Wunused-parameter" build.
* jk/unused-post-2.40-part2:
parse-options: drop parse_opt_unknown_cb()
t/helper: mark unused argv/argc arguments
mark "argv" as unused when we check argc
builtins: mark unused prefix parameters
builtins: annotate always-empty prefix parameters
builtins: always pass prefix to parse_options()
fast-import: fix file access when run from subdir
"git for-each-ref" learns '%(ahead-behind:<base>)' that computes the
distances from a single reference point in the history with bunch
of commits in bulk.
* ds/ahead-behind:
commit-reach: add tips_reachable_from_bases()
for-each-ref: add ahead-behind format atom
commit-reach: implement ahead_behind() logic
commit-graph: introduce `ensure_generations_valid()`
commit-graph: return generation from memory
commit-graph: simplify compute_generation_numbers()
commit-graph: refactor compute_topological_levels()
for-each-ref: explicitly test no matches
for-each-ref: add --stdin option
As discussed in t/README, tests should aim to use PERL_PATH rather than
straight "perl". We usually do this automatically with a "perl" function
in test-lib.sh, but a few cases need to be handled specially.
One such case is the apply-one-time-perl.sh CGI, which invokes plain
"perl". It should be using $PERL_PATH, but to make that work, we must
also instruct Apache to pass through the variable.
Prior to this patch, doing:
mv /usr/bin/perl /usr/bin/my-perl
make PERL_PATH=/usr/bin/my-perl test
would fail t5702, t5703, and t5616. After this it passes. This is a
pretty extreme case, as even if you install perl elsewhere, you'd likely
still have it in your $PATH. A more realistic case is that you don't
want to use the perl in your $PATH (because it's older, broken, etc) and
expect PERL_PATH to consistently override that (since that's what it's
documented to do). Removing it completely is just a convenient way of
completely breaking it for testing purposes.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When no merge.tool or diff.tool is configured or manually selected, the
selection of a default tool is sensitive to the DISPLAY variable; in a
GUI session a gui-specific tool will be proposed if found, and
otherwise a terminal-based one. This "GUI-optimizing" behavior is
important because a GUI can make a huge difference to a user's ability
to understand and correctly complete a non-trivial conflicting merge.
Some time ago the merge.guitool and diff.guitool config options were
introduced to enable users to configure both a GUI tool, and a non-GUI
tool (with fallback if no GUI tool configured), in the same environment.
Unfortunately, the --gui argument introduced to support the selection of
the guitool is still explicit. When using configured tools, there is no
equivalent of the no-tool-configured "propose a GUI tool if we are in a GUI
environment" behavior.
As proposed in <xmqqmtb8jsej.fsf@gitster.g>, introduce new configuration
options, difftool.guiDefault and mergetool.guiDefault, supporting a special
value "auto" which causes the corresponding tool or guitool to be selected
depending on the presence of a non-empty DISPLAY value. Also support "true"
to say "default to the guitool (unless --no-gui is passed on the
commandline)", and "false" as the previous default behavior when these new
configuration options are not specified.
Signed-off-by: Tao Klerks <tao@klerks.biz>
Acked-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A user could prepare an empty repository and set it to use SHA256 as
the object format. The new repository created by "git clone" from
such a repository however would not record that it is expecting
objects in the same SHA256 format. This works as expected if the
source repository is not empty.
Just like we started copying the name of the primary branch from the
remote repository even if it is unborn in 3d8314f8 (clone: propagate
empty remote HEAD even with other branches, 2022-07-07), lift the
code that records the object format out of the block executed only
when cloning from an instantiated repository, so that it works also
when cloning from an empty repository.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git blame --contents=<file> <rev> -- <path>" used to be forbidden,
but now it finds the origins of lines starting at <file> contents
through the history that leads to <rev>.
* jk/blame-contents-with-arbitrary-commit:
blame: allow --contents to work with non-HEAD commit
Streamline --rebase-merges command line option handling and
introduce rebase.merges configuration variable.
* ah/rebase-merges-config:
rebase: add a config option for --rebase-merges
rebase: deprecate --rebase-merges=""
rebase: add documentation and test for --no-rebase-merges
Code clean-up.
* jk/fast-export-cleanup:
fast-export: drop unused parameter from anonymize_commit_message()
fast-export: drop data parameter from anonymous generators
fast-export: de-obfuscate --anonymize-map handling
fast-export: factor out anonymized_entry creation
fast-export: simplify initialization of anonymized hashmaps
fast-export: drop const when storing anonymized values
The index files can become corrupt under certain conditions when
the split-index feature is in use, especially together with
fsmonitor, which have been corrected.
* js/split-index-fixes:
unpack-trees: take care to propagate the split-index flag
fsmonitor: avoid overriding `cache_changed` bits
split-index; stop abusing the `base_oid` to strip the "link" extension
split-index & fsmonitor: demonstrate a bug
The wildmatch library code unlearns exponential behaviour it
acquired some time ago since it was borrowed from rsync.
* pw/wildmatch-fixes:
t3070: make chain lint tester happy
wildmatch: hide internal return values
wildmatch: avoid undefined behavior
wildmatch: fix exponential behavior
Update 'git write-tree' to allow using the sparse-index in memory
without expanding to a full one.
The recursive algorithm for update_one() was already updated in 2de37c5
(cache-tree: integrate with sparse directory entries, 2021-03-03) to
handle sparse directory entries in the index. Hence we can just set the
requires-full-index to false for "write-tree".
The `p2000` tests demonstrate a ~96% execution time reduction for 'git
write-tree' using a sparse index:
Test before after
-----------------------------------------------------------------
2000.78: git write-tree (full-v3) 0.34 0.33 -2.9%
2000.79: git write-tree (full-v4) 0.32 0.30 -6.3%
2000.80: git write-tree (sparse-v3) 0.47 0.02 -95.8%
2000.81: git write-tree (sparse-v4) 0.45 0.02 -95.6%
Signed-off-by: Shuqi Liang <cheskaqiqi@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git describe compares the index with the working tree when (and only
when) it is run with the "--dirty" flag. This is done by the
run_diff_index() function. The function has been made aware of the
sparse-index in the series that led to 8d2c3732 (Merge branch
'ld/sparse-diff-blame', 2021-12-21). Hence we can just set the
requires-full-index to false for "describe".
Performance metrics
Test HEAD~1 HEAD
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2000.2: git describe --dirty (full-v3) 0.08(0.09+0.01) 0.08(0.06+0.03) +0.0%
2000.3: git describe --dirty (full-v4) 0.09(0.07+0.03) 0.08(0.05+0.04) -11.1%
2000.4: git describe --dirty (sparse-v3) 0.88(0.82+0.06) 0.02(0.01+0.05) -97.7%
2000.5: git describe --dirty (sparse-v4) 0.68(0.60+0.08) 0.02(0.02+0.04) -97.1%
2000.6: echo >>new && git describe --dirty (full-v3) 0.08(0.04+0.05) 0.08(0.05+0.04) +0.0%
2000.7: echo >>new && git describe --dirty (full-v4) 0.08(0.07+0.03) 0.08(0.05+0.04) +0.0%
2000.8: echo >>new && git describe --dirty (sparse-v3) 0.75(0.69+0.07) 0.02(0.03+0.03) -97.3%
2000.9: echo >>new && git describe --dirty (sparse-v4) 0.81(0.73+0.09) 0.02(0.01+0.05) -97.5%
Signed-off-by: Raghul Nanth A <nanth.raghul@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We used to write "Message-Id:" and "Message-ID:" pretty much
interchangeably, and the header name is defined to be case
insensitive by the RFCs, but the canonical form "Message-ID:" is
used throughout the RFC documents, so let's imitate it ourselves.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Reviewed-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>