The symlink setup in t0066 makes several directories with links, dir4
through dir6. But ever since dir5 was introduced in fa1da7d2ee
(dir-iterator: add flags parameter to dir_iterator_begin, 2019-07-10),
it has never actually been used. It was left over from an earlier
iteration of the patch which tried to handle recursive symlinks
specially, as seen in:
https://lore.kernel.org/git/20190502144829.4394-7-matheus.bernardino@usp.br/
It's not hurting any of the existing tests to be there, but the extra
setup is confusing to anybody trying to read and understand the tests.
Let's drop the extra directory, and we'll rename "dir6" to "dir5" so
nobody wonders whether the gap in naming is important.
Helped-by: Matheus Tavares Bernardino <matheus.tavb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We do not test our http proxy functionality at all in the test suite, so
this is a pretty big blind spot. Let's at least add a basic check that
we can go through an authenticating proxy to perform a clone.
A few notes on the implementation:
- I'm using a single apache instance to proxy to itself. This seems to
work fine in practice, and we can check with a test that this rather
unusual setup is doing what we expect.
- I've put the proxy tests into their own script, and it's the only
one which loads the apache proxy config. If any platform can't
handle this (e.g., doesn't have the right modules), the start_httpd
step should fail and gracefully skip the rest of the script (but all
the other http tests in existing scripts will continue to run).
- I used a separate passwd file to make sure we don't ever get
confused between proxy and regular auth credentials. It's using the
antiquated crypt() format. This is a terrible choice security-wise
in the modern age, but it's what our existing passwd file uses, and
should be portable. It would probably be reasonable to switch both
of these to bcrypt, but we can do that in a separate patch.
- On the client side, we test two situations with credentials: when
they are present in the url, and when the username is present but we
prompt for the password. I think we should be able to handle the
case that _neither_ is present, but an HTTP 407 causes us to prompt
for them. However, this doesn't seem to work. That's either a bug,
or at the very least an opportunity for a feature, but I punted on
it for now. The point of this patch is just getting basic coverage,
and we can explore possible deficiencies later.
- this doesn't work with LIB_HTTPD_SSL. This probably would be
valuable to have, as https over an http proxy is totally different
(it uses CONNECT to tunnel the session). But adding in
mod_proxy_connect and some basic config didn't seem to work for me,
so I punted for now. Much of the rest of the test suite does not
currently work with LIB_HTTPD_SSL either, so we shouldn't be making
anything much worse here.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The `FOLLOW_SYMLINKS` flag was added to the dir-iterator API in
fa1da7d2ee (dir-iterator: add flags parameter to dir_iterator_begin,
2019-07-10) in order to follow symbolic links while traversing through a
directory.
`FOLLOW_SYMLINKS` gained its first caller in ff7ccc8c9a (clone: use
dir-iterator to avoid explicit dir traversal, 2019-07-10), but it was
subsequently removed in 6f054f9fb3 (builtin/clone.c: disallow `--local`
clones with symlinks, 2022-07-28).
Since then, we've held on to the code for `DIR_ITERATOR_FOLLOW_SYMLINKS`
in the name of making minimally invasive changes during a security
embargo.
In fact, we even changed the dir-iterator API in bffc762f87
(dir-iterator: prevent top-level symlinks without FOLLOW_SYMLINKS,
2023-01-24) without having any non-test callers of that flag.
Now that we're past those security embargo(s), let's finalize our
cleanup of the `DIR_ITERATOR_FOLLOW_SYMLINKS` code and remove its
implementation since there are no remaining callers.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This test helper feeds 256kB of data at once to a single invocation
of the write(2) system call, which may be too much for some
platforms.
Call our xwrite() wrapper that knows to honor MAX_IO_SIZE limit and
cope with short writes due to EINTR instead, and die a bit more
loudly by calling die_errno() when xwrite() indicates an error.
Reported-by: Randall S. Becker <rsbecker@nexbridge.com>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The documentation mistakenly said that the default format was
similar to RFC 2822 format and tried to specify it by enumerating
differences, which had two problems:
* There are some more differences from the 2822 format that are not
mentioned; worse yet
* The default format is not modeled after RFC 2822 format at all.
As can be seen in f80cd783 (date.c: add "show_date()" function.,
2005-05-06), it is a derivative of ctime(3) format.
Stop saying that it is similar to RFC 2822, and rewrite the
description to explain the format without requiring the reader to
know any other format.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Finally retire the scripted "git add -p/-i" implementation and have
everybody use the one reimplemented in C.
* ab/retire-scripted-add-p:
docs & comments: replace mentions of "git-add--interactive.perl"
add API: remove run_add_interactive() wrapper function
add: remove "add.interactive.useBuiltin" & Perl "git add--interactive"
Userdiff regexp update for Java language.
* ar/userdiff-java-update:
userdiff: support Java sealed classes
userdiff: support Java record types
userdiff: support Java type parameters
In-tree .gitattributes update to match the way we recommend our
users to mark a file as text.
* po/attributes-text:
.gitattributes: include `text` attribute for eol attributes
Plug leaks in sequencer subsystem and its users.
* ab/sequencer-unleak:
commit.c: free() revs.commit in get_fork_point()
builtin/rebase.c: free() "options.strategy_opts"
sequencer.c: always free() the "msgbuf" in do_pick_commit()
builtin/rebase.c: fix "options.onto_name" leak
builtin/revert.c: move free-ing of "revs" to replay_opts_release()
sequencer API users: fix get_replay_opts() leaks
sequencer.c: split up sequencer_remove_state()
rebase: use "cleanup" pattern in do_interactive_rebase()
The bundle-URI subsystem adds support for creation-token heuristics
to help incremental fetches.
* ds/bundle-uri-5:
bundle-uri: test missing bundles with heuristic
bundle-uri: store fetch.bundleCreationToken
fetch: fetch from an external bundle URI
bundle-uri: drop bundle.flag from design doc
clone: set fetch.bundleURI if appropriate
bundle-uri: download in creationToken order
bundle-uri: parse bundle.<id>.creationToken values
bundle-uri: parse bundle.heuristic=creationToken
t5558: add tests for creationToken heuristic
bundle: verify using check_connected()
bundle: test unbundling with incomplete history
In an environment where dynamically generated code is prohibited to
run (e.g. SELinux), failure to JIT pcre patterns is expected. Fall
back to interpreted execution in such a case.
* cb/grep-fallback-failing-jit:
grep: fall back to interpreter if JIT memory allocation fails
There are few things more frustrating when signing a commit fails than
reading a terse "error: gpg failed to sign the data" message followed by
the unsurprising "fatal: failed to write commit object" message.
In many cases where signing a commit or tag fails, `gpg` actually said
something helpful, on its stderr, and Git even consumed that, but then
keeps mum about it.
Teach Git to stop withholding that rather important information.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This test case not only increases test coverage in setups without
working gpg, but also prepares for verifying that the error message of
`gpg.program` is shown upon failure.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
To shorten a fully qualified ref (e.g., taking "refs/heads/foo" to just
"foo"), we munge the usual lookup rules ("refs/heads/%.*s", etc) to drop
the ".*" modifier (so "refs/heads/%s"), and then use sscanf() to match
that against the refname, pulling the "%s" content into a separate
buffer.
This has a few downsides:
- sscanf("%s") reportedly misbehaves on macOS with some input and
locale combinations, returning a partial or garbled string. See
this thread:
https://lore.kernel.org/git/CAGF3oAcCi+fG12j-1U0hcrWwkF5K_9WhOi6ZPHBzUUzfkrZDxA@mail.gmail.com/
- scanf's matching of "%s" is greedy. So the "refs/remotes/%s/HEAD"
rule would never pull "origin" out of "refs/remotes/origin/HEAD".
Instead it always produced "origin/HEAD", which is redundant with
the "refs/remotes/%s" rule.
- scanf in general is an error-prone interface. For example, scanning
for "%s" will copy bytes into a destination string, which must have
been correctly sized ahead of time to avoid a buffer overflow. In
this case, the code is OK (the buffer is pessimistically sized to
match the original string, which should give us a maximum). But in
general, we do not want to encourage people to use scanf at all.
So instead, let's note that our lookup rules are not arbitrary format
strings, but all contain exactly one "%.*s" placeholder. We already rely
on this, both for lookup (we feed the lookup format along with exactly
one int/ptr combo to snprintf, etc) and for shortening (we munge "%.*s"
to "%s", and then insist that sscanf() finds exactly one result).
We can parse this manually by just matching the bytes that occur before
and after the "%.*s" placeholder. While we have a few extra lines of
parsing code, the result is arguably simpler, as can skip the
preprocessing step and its tricky memory management entirely.
The in-code comments should explain the parsing strategy, but there's
one subtle change here. The original code allocated a single buffer, and
then overwrote it in each loop iteration, since that's the only option
sscanf() gives us. But our parser can actually return a ptr/len combo
for the matched string, which is all we need (since we just feed it back
to the lookup rules with "%.*s"), and then copy it only when returning
to the caller.
There are a few new tests here, all using symbolic-ref (the code can be
triggered in many ways, but symrefs are convenient in that we don't need
to create a real ref, which avoids any complications from the filesystem
munging the name):
- the first covers the real-world case which misbehaved on macOS.
Setting LC_ALL is required to trigger the problem there (since
otherwise our tests use LC_ALL=C), and hopefully is at worst simply
ignored on other systems (and doesn't cause libc to complain, etc,
on systems without that locale).
- the second covers the "origin/HEAD" case as discussed above, which
is now fixed
- the remainder are for "weird" cases that work both before and after
this patch, but would be easy to get wrong with off-by-one problems
in the parsing (and came out of discussions and earlier iterations
of the patch that did get them wrong).
- absent here are tests of boring, expected-to-work cases like
"refs/heads/foo", etc. Those are covered all over the test suite
both explicitly (for-each-ref's refname:short) and implicitly (in
the output of git-status, etc).
Reported-by: 孟子易 <mengziyi540841@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The ref_rev_parse_rules[] array is terminated with a NULL entry, and we
count it and store the result in the local nr_rules variable. But we
don't need to do so; since the array is a constant, we can compute its
size directly. The original code probably didn't do that because it was
written as part of for-each-ref, and saw the array only as a pointer. It
was migrated in 7c2b3029df (make get_short_ref a public function,
2009-04-07) and could have been updated then, but that subtlety was not
noticed.
We even have a constant that represents this value already, courtesy of
60650a48c0 (remote: make refspec follow the same disambiguation rule as
local refs, 2018-08-01), though again, nobody noticed at the time that
it could be used here, too.
The current count-up isn't a big deal, as we need to preprocess that
array anyway. But it will become more cumbersome as we refactor the
shortening code. So let's get rid of it and just use the constant
everywhere.
Note that there are two things here that aren't just simple text
replacements:
1. We also use nr_rules to see if a previous call has initialized the
static pre-processing variables. We can just use the scanf_fmts
pointer to do the same thing, as it is non-NULL only after we've
done that initialization.
2. If nr_rules is zero after we've counted it up, we bail from the
function. This code is unreachable, though, as the set of rules is
hard-coded and non-empty. And that becomes even more apparent now
that we are using the constant. So we can drop this conditional
completely (and ironically, the code would have the same output if
it _did_ trigger, as we'd simply skip the loop entirely and return
the whole refname).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We parse the shortened name "foo" out of the full refname
"refs/heads/foo", and then assign the result of strlen(short_name) to an
int, which may truncate or wrap to negative.
In practice, this should never happen, as it requires a 2GB refname. And
even somebody trying to do something malicious should at worst end up
with a confused answer (we use the size only to feed back as a
placeholder length to strbuf_addf() to see if there are any collisions
in the lookup rules).
And it may even be impossible to trigger this, as we parse the string
with sscanf(), and stdio formatting functions are not known for handling
large strings well. I didn't test, but I wouldn't be surprised if
sscanf() on many platforms simply reports no match here.
But even if it is not a problem in practice so far, it is worth fixing
for two reasons:
1. We'll shortly be replacing the sscanf() call with a real parser
which will handle arbitrary-sized strings.
2. Assigning strlen() to an int is an anti-pattern that requires
people to look twice when auditing for real overflow problems.
So we'll make this a size_t. Unfortunately we still have to cast to int
eventually for the strbuf_addf() call, but at least we can localize the
cast there, and check that it will be valid. I used our new cast helper
here, which will just bail completely. That should be OK, as anybody
with a 2GB refname is up to no good, but if we really wanted to, we
could detect it manually and just refuse to shorten the refname.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Code clean-up around unused function parameters.
* jk/unused-post-2.39:
userdiff: mark unused parameter in internal callback
list-objects-filter: mark unused parameters in virtual functions
diff: mark unused parameters in callbacks
xdiff: mark unused parameter in xdl_call_hunk_func()
xdiff: drop unused parameter in def_ff()
ws: drop unused parameter from ws_blank_line()
list-objects: drop process_gitlink() function
blob: drop unused parts of parse_blob_buffer()
ls-refs: use repository parameter to iterate refs
Clarify how "checkout -b/-B" and "git branch [-f]" are similar but
different in the documentation.
* jc/doc-checkout-b:
checkout: document -b/-B to highlight the differences from "git branch"
Document that "branch -f <branch>" disables only the safety to
avoid recreating an existing branch.
* jc/doc-branch-update-checked-out-branch:
branch: document `-f` and linked worktree behaviour
"git ls-tree --format='%(path) %(path)' $tree $path" showed the
path three times, which has been corrected.
* rs/ls-tree-path-expansion-fix:
ls-tree: remove dead store and strbuf for quote_c_style()
ls-tree: fix expansion of repeated %(path)
Document ORIG_HEAD a bit more.
* pb/doc-orig-head:
git-rebase.txt: add a note about 'ORIG_HEAD' being overwritten
revisions.txt: be explicit about commands writing 'ORIG_HEAD'
git-merge.txt: mention 'ORIG_HEAD' in the Description
git-reset.txt: mention 'ORIG_HEAD' in the Description
git-cherry-pick.txt: do not use 'ORIG_HEAD' in example
The logic to see if we are using the "cone" mode by checking the
sparsity patterns has been tightened to avoid mistaking a pattern
that names a single file as specifying a cone.
* ws/single-file-cone:
dir: check for single file cone patterns
"git diff --relative" did not mix well with "git diff --ext-diff",
which has been corrected.
* jk/ext-diff-with-relative:
diff: drop "name" parameter from prepare_temp_file()
diff: clean up external-diff argv setup
diff: use filespec path to set up tempfiles for ext-diff
Fix to a small regression in 2.38 days.
* ab/bundle-wo-args:
bundle <cmd>: have usage_msg_opt() note the missing "<file>"
builtin/bundle.c: remove superfluous "newargc" variable
bundle: don't segfault on "git bundle <subcmd>"
Fix the sequence to fsync $GIT_DIR/packed-refs file that forgot to
flush its output to the disk..
* ps/fsync-refs-fix:
refs: fix corruption by not correctly syncing packed-refs to disk
When given a pattern that matches an empty string at the end of a
line, the code to parse the "git diff" line-ranges fell into an
infinite loop, which has been corrected.
* lk/line-range-parsing-fix:
line-range: fix infinite loop bug with '$' regex
Newer regex library macOS stopped enabling GNU-like enhanced BRE,
where '\(A\|B\)' works as alternation, unless explicitly asked with
the REG_ENHANCED flag. "git grep" now can be compiled to do so, to
retain the old behaviour.
* rs/use-enhanced-bre-on-macos:
use enhanced basic regular expressions on macOS