When you have "t" directory that is marked as ignored in the top-level
.gitignore file (or $GIT_DIR/info/exclude), running
$ git ls-files -o --exclude-standard
from the top-level correctly excludes files in "t" directory, but
any of the following:
$ git ls-files -o --exclude-standard t/
$ cd t && git ls-files -o --exclude-standard
would show untracked files in that directory.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* sb/maint-octopus:
octopus: remove dead code
octopus: reenable fast-forward merges
octopus: make merge process simpler to follow
Conflicts:
git-merge-octopus.sh
* mo/bin-wrappers:
INSTALL: document a simpler way to run uninstalled builds
run test suite without dashed git-commands in PATH
build dashless "bin-wrappers" directory similar to installed bindir
This makes the traversal of index be in sync with the tree traversal.
When unpack_callback() is fed a set of tree entries from trees, it
inspects the name of the entry and checks if the an index entry with
the same name could be hiding behind the current index entry, and
(1) if the name appears in the index as a leaf node, it is also
fed to the n_way_merge() callback function;
(2) if the name is a directory in the index, i.e. there are entries in
that are underneath it, then nothing is fed to the n_way_merge()
callback function;
(3) otherwise, if the name comes before the first eligible entry in the
index, the index entry is first unpacked alone.
When traverse_trees_recursive() descends into a subdirectory, the
cache_bottom pointer is moved to walk index entries within that directory.
All of these are omitted for diff-index, which does not even want to be
fed an index entry and a tree entry with D/F conflicts.
This fixes 3-way read-tree and exposes a bug in other parts of the system
in t6035, test #5. The test prepares these three trees:
O = HEAD^
100644 blob e69de29bb2 a/b-2/c/d
100644 blob e69de29bb2 a/b/c/d
100644 blob e69de29bb2 a/x
A = HEAD
100644 blob e69de29bb2 a/b-2/c/d
100644 blob e69de29bb2 a/b/c/d
100644 blob 587be6b4c3f93f93c489c0111bba5596147a26cb a/x
B = master
120000 blob a36b77384451ea1de7bd340ffca868249626bc52 a/b
100644 blob e69de29bb2 a/b-2/c/d
100644 blob e69de29bb2 a/x
With a clean index that matches HEAD, running
git read-tree -m -u --aggressive $O $A $B
now yields
120000 a36b77384451ea1de7bd340ffca868249626bc52 3 a/b
100644 e69de29bb2 0 a/b-2/c/d
100644 e69de29bb2 1 a/b/c/d
100644 e69de29bb2 2 a/b/c/d
100644 587be6b4c3f93f93c489c0111bba5596147a26cb 0 a/x
which is correct. "master" created "a/b" symlink that did not exist,
and removed "a/b/c/d" while HEAD did not do touch either path.
Before this series, read-tree did not notice the situation and resolved
addition of "a/b" and removal of "a/b/c/d" independently. If A = HEAD had
another path "a/b/c/e" added, this merge should conflict but instead it
silently resolved "a/b" and then immediately overwrote it to add
"a/b/c/e", which was quite bogus.
Tests in t1012 start to work with this.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When rewriting commits on a topic branch, sometimes it is easier to
compare the version of commits before and after the rewrite if they are
based on the same commit that forked from the upstream. An earlier commit
by Junio (fixed up by the previous commit) gives "--onto A...B" syntax to
rebase command, and rebases on top of the merge base between A and B;
teach the same to the interactive version, too.
Signed-off-by: しらいし ななこ <nanako3@lavabit.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The previous patch didn't parse "rebase --onto A...B" correctly when A
isn't an empty string. It also tried to be careful to notice a case in
which there are more than one merge bases, but forgot to give --all option
to merge-base, making the test pointless.
Fix these problems and add a test script to verify. Improvements to the
script to parse A...B syntax was taken from review comments by Johannes
Schindelin.
Signed-off-by: しらいし ななこ <nanako3@lavabit.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add another test to set prerequisite EXTGREP if the current build supports
external grep. This can be used to skip external grep only tests on builds
that do not support this optimization.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Teach a new option, --autosquash, to the interactive rebase.
When the commit log message begins with "!fixup ...", and there
is a commit whose title begins with the same ..., automatically
modify the todo list of rebase -i so that the commit marked for
squashing come right after the commit to be modified, and change
the action of the moved commit from pick to squash.
Signed-off-by: Nanako Shiraishi <nanako3@lavabit.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We should tell ll_merge() that the 3-way merge between stages #2 and #3 is
an outermost merge, not a virtual-ancestor creation.
Back when this code was originally written, users couldn't write custom
merge drivers easily, so the bug didn't matter, but these days it does.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This reuses many of the tests from the old t5560 but runs those tests
without curl or a webserver. This will hopefully increase the testing
coverage for http-backend because it does not require users to set
GIT_TEST_HTTPD.
Signed-off-by: Tarmigan Casebolt <tarmigan+git@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This should introduce no functional change in the tests or the amount
of test coverage.
Acked-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Tarmigan Casebolt <tarmigan+git@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 34b6cb8bb ("http-backend: Protect GIT_PROJECT_ROOT from /../
requests") added the path_info helper function to test t5560 but did
not use it. We should use it as it provides another level of error
checking.
The /etc/.../passwd case is one that is not special (and the test
fails for reasons other than being aliased), so we remove that test
case.
Also rename the function from 'path_info' to 'expect_aliased'.
Acked-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Tarmigan Casebolt <tarmigan+git@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Similar to how git-daemon checks whether a repository is OK to be
exported, smart-http should also check. This check can be satisfied
in two different ways: the environmental variable GIT_HTTP_EXPORT_ALL
may be set to export all repositories, or the individual repository
may have the file git-daemon-export-ok.
Acked-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Tarmigan Casebolt <tarmigan+git@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
On CentOS 5, httpd is located at /usr/sbin/httpd, and the modules are
located at /usr/lib64/httpd/modules. To enable easy testing of httpd,
we would like those locations to be detected automatically.
uname might not be the best way to determine the default location for
httpd since different Linux distributions apparently put httpd in
different places, so we test a couple different locations for httpd,
and use the first one that we come across. We do the same for the
modules directory.
cc: Jay Soffian <jaysoffian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Tarmigan Casebolt <tarmigan+git@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Recall that MSYS bash converts POSIX style absolute paths to Windows style
absolute paths. Unfortunately, it converts a program argument that begins
with a double-quote and otherwise looks like an absolute POSIX path, but
in doing so, it strips everything past the second double-quote[*]. This
case is triggered in the two test scripts. The work-around is to place the
Windows style path returned by $(pwd) between the quotes to avoid the path
conversion.
[*] It is already bogus that a conversion is even considered when a program
argument begins with a double-quote because it cannot be an absolute POSIX
path.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Currently textconv helpers are run directly. Running through
the shell is useful because the user can provide a program
with command line arguments, like "antiword -f".
It also makes textconv more consistent with other parts of
git, most of which run their helpers using the shell.
The downside is that textconv helpers with shell
metacharacters (like space) in the filename will be broken.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
On Windows, we need the shbang line to correctly invoke shell scripts via
a POSIX shell, except when the script is invoked via 'sh -c' because sh (a
bash) does "the right thing". But the clean and smudge filters will not
always be invoked via 'sh -c'; to futureproof, we should mark the the one
in t0021-conversion with #!$SHELL_PATH.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When the ancestor used to have a blob "P", your tree removed it, and the
tree you are merging with also removed it, the agressive three-way cleanly
merges to remove that blob. If the other tree added a new blob "P/Q"
while removing "P", it should also merge cleanly to remove "P" and create
"P/Q" (since neither the ancestor nor your tree could have had it, so it
is a typical "created in one").
The "aggressive" rule is not new anymore. Reword the stale comment.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
traverse_trees() is supposed to call its callback with all the matching
entries from the given trees. The current algorithm keeps a pointer to
each of the tree being traversed, and feeds the entry with the earliest
name to the callback.
This breaks down if the trees being traversed looks like this:
A B
t-1 t
t-2 u
t/a v
When we are currently looking at an entry "t-1" in tree A, and tree B has
returned "t", feeding "t" from the B and not feeding anything from A, only
because "t-1" sorts later than "t", will miss an entry for a subtree "t"
behind the current entry in tree A.
This introduces extended_entry_extract() helper function that gives what
name is expected from the tree, and implements a mechanism to look-ahead
in the tree object using it, to make sure such a case is handled sanely.
Traversal in tree A in the above example will first return "t" to match
that of B, and then the next request for an entry to A then returns "t-1".
This roughly corresponds to what Linus's "prepare for one-entry lookahead"
wanted to do, but because this does implement look ahead, t6035 and one more
test in t1012 reveal that the approach would not work without adjusting the
side that walks the index in unpack_trees() as well.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 9e8ecea (Add 'merge' mode to 'git reset', 2008-12-01) disallowed
"git reset --merge" when there was unmerged entries. But it wished if
unmerged entries were reset as if --hard (instead of --merge) has been
used. This makes sense because all "mergy" operations makes sure that
any path involved in the merge does not have local modifications before
starting, so resetting such a path away won't lose any information.
The previous commit changed the behavior of --merge to accept resetting
unmerged entries if they are reset to a different state than HEAD, but it
did not reset the changes in the work tree, leaving the conflict markers
in the resulting file in the work tree.
Fix it by doing three things:
- Update the documentation to match the wish of original "reset --merge"
better, namely, "An unmerged entry is a sign that the path didn't have
any local modification and can be safely resetted to whatever the new
HEAD records";
- Update read_index_unmerged(), which reads the index file into the cache
while dropping any higher-stage entries down to stage #0, not to copy
the object name from the higher stage entry. The code used to take the
object name from the a stage entry ("base" if you happened to have
stage #1, or "ours" if both sides added, etc.), which essentially meant
that you are getting random results depending on what the merge did.
The _only_ reason we want to keep a previously unmerged entry in the
index at stage #0 is so that we don't forget the fact that we have
corresponding file in the work tree in order to be able to remove it
when the tree we are resetting to does not have the path. In order to
differentiate such an entry from ordinary cache entry, the cache entry
added by read_index_unmerged() is marked as CE_CONFLICTED.
- Update merged_entry() and deleted_entry() so that they pay attention to
cache entries marked as CE_CONFLICTED. They are previously unmerged
entries, and the files in the work tree that correspond to them are
resetted away by oneway_merge() to the version from the tree we are
resetting to.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This patch makes "reset_index_file()" call "unpack_trees()" directly
instead of forking and execing "git read-tree". So the code is more
efficient.
And it's also easier to see which unpack_tree() options will be used,
as we don't need to follow "git read-tree"'s command line parsing
which is quite complex.
As Daniel Barkalow found, there is a difference between this new
version and the old one. The old version gives an error for
"git reset --merge" with unmerged entries, and the new version does
not when we reset the entries to some states that differ from HEAD.
Instead, it resets the index entry and succeeds, while leaving the
conflict markers in the corresponding file in the work tree (which
will be corrected by the next patch).
The code comes from the sequencer GSoC project:
git://repo.or.cz/git/sbeyer.git
(at commit 5a78908b70ceb5a4ea9fd4b82f07ceba1f019079)
Mentored-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Stephan Beyer <s-beyer@gmx.net>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Users might prefer to have git-difftool use a different
tool when run from a Git GUI.
This teaches git-difftool to honor 'diff.guitool' when
the '--gui' option is specified. This allows users to
configure their preferred command-line diff tool in
'diff.tool' and a GUI diff tool in 'diff.guitool'.
Reference: http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/133386
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If a difftool test has an error then running the git test suite
may end up invoking a GUI diff tool. We now guard against this
by setting a difftool.bogus-tool.cmd variable.
The tests already used --tool=bogus-tool in various places so
this is simply ensuring that nothing ever falls back and
finds a real diff tool.
Signed-off-by: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
branch: die explicitly why when calling "git branch [-a|-r] branchname".
fast-import: Document author/committer/tagger name is optional
SubmittingPatches: hints to know the status of a submitted patch.
The -a and -r options used to be silently ignored in such a command.
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Starting from commit 8db35596, "git remote update" (with no
group name given) will fail with the following message if
remotes.default has been set in the config file:
fatal: 'default' does not appear to be a git repository
fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly
The problem is that the --multiple option is not passed to
"git fetch" if no remote or group name is given on the command
line. Fix the problem by always passing the --multiple
option to "git fetch" (which actually simplifies the code).
Reported-by: YONETANI Tomokazu
Signed-off-by: Björn Gustavsson <bgustavsson@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
395de250 (Expand ~ and ~user in core.excludesfile, commit.template)
introduced a C function git_config_pathname, doing ~/ and ~user/
expansion. This patch makes the feature available to scripts with 'git
config --get --path'.
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Refspecs without a source side have been reported as confusing by many.
As an alternative, this adds support for commands like:
git push origin --delete somebranch
git push origin --delete tag sometag
Specifically, --delete will prepend a colon to all colon-less refspecs
given on the command line, and will refuse to accept refspecs with
colons to prevent undue confusion.
Signed-off-by: Jan Krüger <jk@jk.gs>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
textconv: stop leaking file descriptors
commit: --cleanup is a message option
git count-objects: handle packs bigger than 4G
t7102: make the test fail if one of its check fails
Documentation: always respect core.worktree if set
When a branch is marked to merge with another ref (e.g. local 'next' that
merges from and pushes back to origin's 'next', with 'branch.next.merge'
set to 'refs/heads/next'), it makes little sense to base the "branch -d"
safety, whose purpose is not to lose commits that are not merged to other
branches, on the current branch. It is much more sensible to check if it
is merged with the other branch it merges with.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint-1.6.1:
textconv: stop leaking file descriptors
commit: --cleanup is a message option
git count-objects: handle packs bigger than 4G
t7102: make the test fail if one of its check fails
Conflicts:
builtin-commit.c
diff.c
Commit 9e8eceab ("Add 'merge' mode to 'git reset'", 2008-12-01),
added the --merge option to git reset, but there were no test cases
for it.
This was not a big problem because "git reset" was just forking and
execing "git read-tree", but this will change in a following patch.
So let's add a few test cases to make sure that there will be no
regression.
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 952dfc6 tried to tighten the safety valves for doing
a "reset --hard" in a bare repository or outside the work
tree, but accidentally broke the case for GIT_WORK_TREE.
This patch unbreaks it.
Most git commands which need a work tree simply use
NEED_WORK_TREE in git.c to die before they get to their
cmd_* function. Reset, however, only needs a work tree in
some cases, and so must handle the work tree itself. The
error that 952dfc6 made was to simply forbid certain
operations if the work tree was not set up; instead, we need
to do the same thing that NEED_WORK_TREE does, which is to
call setup_work_tree(). We no longer have to worry about dying
in the non-worktree case, as setup_work_tree handles that
for us.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Follow the argument convention of git-pack-objects, such that a
separate option (--preogress) is used to force progress reporting
instead of -v/--verbose.
-v/--verbose now does not force progress reporting. Make git-clone.txt
say so.
This should cover all the bases in 21188b1 (Implement git clone -v),
which implemented the option to force progress reporting.
Signed-off-by: Tay Ray Chuan <rctay89@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jk/1.7.0-status:
status/commit: do not suggest "reset HEAD <path>" while merging
commit/status: "git add <path>" is not necessarily how to resolve
commit/status: check $GIT_DIR/MERGE_HEAD only once
t7508-status: test all modes with color
t7508-status: status --porcelain ignores relative paths setting
status: reduce duplicated setup code
status: disable color for porcelain format
status -s: obey color.status
builtin-commit: refactor short-status code into wt-status.c
t7508-status.sh: Add tests for status -s
status -s: respect the status.relativePaths option
docs: note that status configuration affects only long format
commit: support alternate status formats
status: add --porcelain output format
status: refactor format option parsing
status: refactor short-mode printing to its own function
status: typo fix in usage
git status: not "commit --dry-run" anymore
git stat -s: short status output
git stat: the beginning of "status that is not a dry-run of commit"
Conflicts:
t/t4034-diff-words.sh
wt-status.c
* maint:
Makefile: FreeBSD (both 7 and 8) needs OLD_ICONV
Start 1.6.6.X maintenance track
Add git-http-backend to command-list.
t4019 "grep" portability fix
t1200: work around a bug in some implementations of "find"
Conflicts:
RelNotes
* jc/1.7.0-diff-whitespace-only-status:
diff.c: fix typoes in comments
Make test case number unique
diff: Rename QUIET internal option to QUICK
diff: change semantics of "ignore whitespace" options
Conflicts:
diff.h
* sr/vcs-helper:
tests: handle NO_PYTHON setting
builtin-push: don't access freed transport->url
Add Python support library for remote helpers
Basic build infrastructure for Python scripts
Allow helpers to report in "list" command that the ref is unchanged
Fix various memory leaks in transport-helper.c
Allow helper to map private ref names into normal names
Add support for "import" helper command
Allow specifying the remote helper in the url
Add a config option for remotes to specify a foreign vcs
Allow fetch to modify refs
Use a function to determine whether a remote is valid
Allow programs to not depend on remotes having urls
Fix memory leak in helper method for disconnect
Conflicts:
Documentation/git-remote-helpers.txt
Makefile
builtin-ls-remote.c
builtin-push.c
transport-helper.c
Input to "grep" is supposed to be "text", but we deliberately feed output
from "git diff --color" to sift it into two sets of lines (ones with
errors, the other without). Some implementations of "grep" only report
matches with the exit status, without showing the matched lines in their
output (e.g. OpenBSD 4.6, which says "Binary file .. matches").
Fortunately, "grep -a" is often a way to force the command to treat its
input as text.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"find path ..." command should exit with zero status only when all path
operands were traversed successfully. When a non-existent path is given,
however, some implementations of "find" (e.g. OpenBSD 4.6) exit with zero
status and break the last test in t1200.
Rewrite the test to check that there is no regular files in the objects
fan-out directories to work around this bug; it is closer to what we are
testing anyway.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The update-index plumbing command had a hacky --unresolve implementation
that was written back in the days when merge was the only way for users to
end up with higher stages in the index, and assumed that stage #2 must
have come from HEAD, stage #3 from MERGE_HEAD and didn't bother to compute
the stage #1 information.
There were several issues with this approach:
- These days, merge is not the only command, and conflicts coming from
commands like cherry-pick, "am -3", etc. cannot be recreated by looking
at MERGE_HEAD;
- For a conflict that came from a merge that had renames, picking up the
same path from MERGE_HEAD and HEAD wouldn't help recreating it, either;
- It may have been Ok not to recreate stage #1 back when it was written,
because "diff --ours/--theirs" were the only availble ways to review
conflicts and they don't need stage #1 information. "diff --cc" that
was invented much later is a lot more useful way but it needs stage #1.
We can use resolve-undo information recorded in the index extension to
solve all of these issues.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Once you resolved conflicts by "git add path", you cannot recreate the
conflicted state with "git checkout -m path", because you lost information
from higher stages in the index when you resolved them.
Since we record the necessary information in the resolve-undo index
extension these days, we can reproduce the unmerged state in the index and
check it out.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
At the Porcelain level, operations such as merge that populate an
initially cleanly merged index with conflicted entries clear the
resolve-undo information upfront. Give scripted Porcelains a way
to do the same, by implementing "update-index --clear-resolve-info".
With this, a scripted Porcelain may "update-index --clear-resolve-info"
first and repeatedly run "update-index --cacheinfo" to stuff unmerged
entries to the index, to be resolved by the user with "git add" and
stuff.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Make sure that resolving a failed merge with git add records
the conflicted state, committing the result keeps that state,
and checking out another commit clears the state.
"git ls-files" learns a new option --resolve-undo to show the
recorded information.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git svn gc will compress the unhandled.log files that git svn mkdirs reads,
causing git svn mkdirs to skip directory creation.
[ew: trivial whitespace cleanups]
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Robert Zeh <robert.a.zeh@gmail.com>
The human-readable author and committer name can be missing from
commits imported from foreign SCM interfaces. Make sure we parse
the "author" and "committer" line a bit more leniently and avoid
segfaulting by assuming the name always exists.
Signed-off-by: David Reiss <dreiss@facebook.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The old function was incorrect; in some instances it marks a cherry picked
range as a merged branch (because of an incorrect assumption that
'rev-list COMMIT --not RANGE' would work). This is replaced with a
function which should detect them correctly, memoized to limit the expense
of dealing with branches with many cherry picks to one 'merge-base' call
per merge, per branch which used cherry picking.
Signed-off-by: Sam Vilain <sam@vilain.net>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
SVN's list of commit ranges in mergeinfo tickets is inclusive, whereas
git commit ranges are exclusive on the left hand side. Also, the end
points of the commit ranges may not exist; they simply delineate
ranges of commits which may or may not exist. Fix these two mistakes.
Signed-off-by: Sam Vilain <sam@vilain.net>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
As shown, git-svn has some problems; not all svn merges are correctly
detected, and cherry picks may incorrectly be detected as real merges.
These test cases will be marked as _success once the relevant fixes are in.
Signed-off-by: Sam Vilain <sam@vilain.net>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
The "git svn gc" command creates and appends to unhandled.log.gz
files which should be parsed before the uncompressed
unhandled.log files.
Reported-by: Robert Zeh
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
* maint:
Git 1.6.5.7
worktree: don't segfault with an absolute pathspec without a work tree
ignore unknown color configuration
help.autocorrect: do not run a command if the command given is junk
Illustrate "filter" attribute with an example
If a command is run with an absolute path as a pathspec inside a bare
repository, e.g. "rev-list HEAD -- /home", the code tried to run strlen()
on NULL, which is the result of get_git_work_tree(), and segfaulted. It
should just fail instead.
Currently the function returns NULL even inside .git/ in a repository
with a work tree, but that is a separate issue.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When parsing the config file, if there is a value that is
syntactically correct but unused, we generally ignore it.
This lets non-core porcelains store arbitrary information in
the config file, and it means that configuration files can
be shared between new and old versions of git (the old
versions might simply ignore certain configuration).
The one exception to this is color configuration; if we
encounter a color.{diff,branch,status}.$slot variable, we
die if it is not one of the recognized slots (presumably as
a safety valve for user misconfiguration). This behavior
has existed since 801235c (diff --color: use
$GIT_DIR/config, 2006-06-24), but hasn't yet caused a
problem. No porcelain has wanted to store extra colors, and
we once a color area (like color.diff) has been introduced,
we've never changed the set of color slots.
However, that changed recently with the addition of
color.diff.func. Now a user with color.diff.func in their
config can no longer freely switch between v1.6.6 and older
versions; the old versions will complain about the existence
of the variable.
This patch loosens the check to match the rest of
git-config; unknown color slots are simply ignored. This
doesn't fix this particular problem, as the older version
(without this patch) is the problem, but it at least
prevents it from happening again in the future.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit b4d1690 (Teach Git to respect skip-worktree bit (reading part))
fails to make "git commit -- a b c" respect skip-worktree
(i.e. not committing paths that are skip-worktree). This is because
when the index is reset back to HEAD, all skip-worktree information is
gone.
This patch saves skip-worktree information in the string list of
committed paths, then reuse it later on to skip skip-worktree paths.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The fast-forward logic is never being triggered because $common and
$MRC are never equivalent. $common is initialized to a commit id by
merge-base and MRC is initialized to HEAD. Fix this by initializing
$MRC to the commit id for HEAD so that its possible for $MRC and
$common to be equal.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <bebarino@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Its not very easy to understand what heads are being merged given
the current output of an octopus merge. Fix this by replacing the
sha1 with the (usually) better description in GITHEAD_<SHA1>.
Suggested-by: Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@cante.net>
Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <bebarino@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Suggesting "'reset HEAD <path>' to unstage" is dead wrong if we are about
to record a merge commit. For either an unmerged path (i.e. with
unresolved conflicts), or an updated path, it would result in discarding
what the other branch did.
Note that we do not do anything special in a case where we are amending a
merge. The user is making an evil merge starting from an already
committed merge, and running "reset HEAD <path>" is the right way to get
rid of the local edit that has been added to the index.
Once "reset --unresolve <path>" becomes available, we might want to
suggest it for a merged path that has unresolve information, but until
then, just remove the incorrect advice.
We might also want to suggest "checkout --conflict <path>" to revert the
file in the work tree to the state of failed automerge for an unmerged
path, but we never did that, and this commit does not change that.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When the desired resolution is to remove the path, "git rm <path>" is the
command the user needs to use. Just like in "Changed but not updated"
section, suggest to use "git add/rm" as appropriate.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This hook runs after "git fetch" in the repository the objects are
fetched from as the user who fetched, and has security implications.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Move a useful script function to decode colored output to
text form from t4034 and use it in this test as well.
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 24ab81a fixed the deletion of empty files, but broke
deletion of non-empty files. The approach it took was to
factor out the "deleted" line from the patch header into its
own hunk, the same way we do for mode changes. However,
unlike mode changes, we only showed the special "delete this
file" hunk if there were no other hunks. Otherwise, the user
would annoyingly be presented with _two_ hunks: one for
deleting the file and one for deleting the content.
This meant that in the non-empty case, we forgot about the
deleted line entirely, and we submitted a bogus patch to
git-apply (with "/dev/null" as the destination file, but not
marked as a deletion).
Instead, this patch combines the file deletion hunk and the
content deletion hunk (if there is one) into a single
deletion hunk which is either staged or not.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This also adds a test case for:
"git svn: Don't create empty directories whose parents were deleted"
which was the reason we found this bug in the first place.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
This patch adds testcases verifying correct behaviour in several scenarios
regarding fast-import of notes:
- using a mixture of 'N' and 'M' commands
- updating existing notes
- concatenation of notes
- 'deleteall' also removes notes
- fanout schemes is added/removed when needed
- git-fast-import's branch unload/reload preserves notes
- non-notes are not clobbered in the presence of notes
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This patch teaches 'git fast-import' to automatically organize note objects
in a fast-import stream into an appropriate fanout structure. The notes API
in notes.h is NOT used to accomplish this, because trying to keep the
fast-import and notes data structures in sync would yield a significantly
larger patch with higher complexity.
Note objects are added with the 'N' command, and accounted for with a
per-branch counter, which is used to trigger fanout restructuring when
needed. Note that when restructuring the branch tree, _any_ entry whose
path consists of 40 hex chars (not including directory separators) will
be recognized as a note object. It is therefore not advisable to
manipulate note entries with M/D/R/C commands.
Since note objects are stored in the same tree structure as other objects,
the unloading and reloading of a fast-import branches handle note objects
transparently.
This patch has been improved by the following contributions:
- Shawn O. Pearce: Several style- and logic-related improvements
Cc: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The command is like "squash", except that it discards the commit message
of the corresponding commit.
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The previous error message was the same in many situations (unknown
revision or path not in the working tree). We try to help the user as
much as possible to understand the error, especially with the
sha1:filename notation. In this case, we say whether the sha1 or the
filename is problematic, and diagnose the confusion between
relative-to-root and relative-to-$PWD confusion precisely.
The 7 new error messages are tested.
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Without this, test-lib checks that the git_remote_helpers
directory has been built. However, if we are building
without python, we will not have done anything at all in
that directory, and test-lib's sanity check will fail.
We bump the inclusion of GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS further up in
test-lib; it contains configuration, and as such should be
read before we do any checks (and in this particular case,
we need its value to do our check properly).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Looks-fine-to-me-by: Brandon Casey <brandon.casey.ctr@nrlssc.navy.mil>
Acked-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Also adjust "expected" text to reflect the file contents generated by
test_commit, which are slightly different than those generated by the
old code.
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* master: (334 commits)
bash: update 'git commit' completion
Git 1.6.5.5
Fix diff -B/--dirstat miscounting of newly added contents
reset: improve worktree safety valves
Documentation: Avoid use of xmlto --stringparam
archive: clarify description of path parameter
rerere: don't segfault on failure to open rr-cache
Prepare for 1.6.5.5
gitweb: Describe (possible) gitweb.js minification in gitweb/README
Documentation: xmlto 0.0.18 does not know --stringparam
Fix crasher on encountering SHA1-like non-note in notes tree
t9001: use older Getopt::Long boolean prefix '--no' rather than '--no-'
t4201: use ISO8859-1 rather than ISO-8859-1
Git 1.6.5.4
Unconditionally set man.base.url.for.relative.links
Documentation/Makefile: allow man.base.url.for.relative.link to be set from Make
Git 1.6.6-rc1
git-pull.sh: Fix call to git-merge for new command format
Prepare for 1.6.5.4
merge: do not add standard message when message is given with -m option
...
Conflicts:
Documentation/git-remote-helpers.txt
Makefile
builtin-ls-remote.c
builtin-push.c
transport-helper.c
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
After specifying 'feature relative-marks' the paths specified with
'feature import-marks' and 'feature export-marks' are relative to an
internal directory in the current repository.
In git-fast-import this means that the paths are relative to the
'.git/info/fast-import' directory. However, other importers may use a
different location.
Add 'feature non-relative-marks' to disable this behavior, this way
it is possible to, for example, specify the import-marks location as
relative, and the export-marks location as non-relative.
Also add tests to verify this behavior.
Cc: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Sverre Rabbelier <srabbelier@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The existing code checked to make sure we were not in a bare
repository when doing a hard reset. However, we should take
this one step further, and make sure we are in a worktree.
Otherwise, we can end up munging files inside of '.git'.
Furthermore, we should do the same check for --merge resets,
which have the same properties. Actually, a merge reset of
HEAD^ would already complain, since further down in the code
we want a worktree. However, it is nicer to check up-front;
then we are sure we cover all cases ("git reset --merge"
would run, even though it wasn't doing anything) and we can
give a more specific message.
Add tests to t7103 to cover these cases and some missing ones.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The --import-marks= option may be specified multiple times on the
commandline and should result in all marks being read in. Only one
import-marks feature may be specified in the stream, which is
overriden by any --import-marks= commandline options.
If one wishes to specify import-marks files in addition to the one
specified in the stream, it is easy to repeat the stream option as a
--import-marks= commandline option.
Also verify this behavior with tests.
Signed-off-by: Sverre Rabbelier <srabbelier@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Test the quiet option and verify that the commandline options
override it.
Also make sure that an unknown option command is rejected and that
non-git options are ignored.
Lastly, show that unknown options are rejected when parsed on the
commandline.
Signed-off-by: Sverre Rabbelier <srabbelier@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This allows the fronted to require a specific feature to be supported
by the backend, or abort.
Also add support for four initial feature, date-format=, force=,
import-marks=, export-marks=.
Signed-off-by: Sverre Rabbelier <srabbelier@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Introduce a command line option to override rerere.autoupdate configuration
variable to make it more useful.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This is like --author: allow a user to specify a given date without
using the GIT_AUTHOR_DATE environment variable.
Signed-off-by: Miklos Vajna <vmiklos@frugalware.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Only put bin-wrappers in the PATH (not GIT_EXEC_PATH), to emulate the
default installed user environment, and ensure all the programs run
correctly in such an environment. This is now the default, although
it can be overridden with a --with-dashes test option when running
tests.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ogilvie <mmogilvi_git@miniinfo.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When loading a notes tree, the code primarily looks for SHA1-like paths
whose total length (discounting directory separators) are 40 chars
(interpreted as valid note entries) or less (interpreted as subtree
entries that may in turn contain note entries when unpacked).
However, there is an additional condition that must hold for valid
subtree entries: They must be _tree_ objects (duh).
This patch adds an appropriate test for this condition, thereby fixing
the crash that occured when passing a non-tree object to the tree-walk
API.
The patch also adds another selftest verifying correct behaviour of
non-notes in note trees.
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The '--no-chain-reply-to' option is a Getopt::Long boolean option. The
'--no-' prefix (as in --no-chain-reply-to) for boolean options is not
supported in Getopt::Long version 2.32 which was released with Perl 5.8.0.
This version only supports '--no' as in '--nochain-reply-to'. More recent
versions of Getopt::Long, such as version 2.34, support either prefix. So
use the older form in the tests.
Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <casey@nrlssc.navy.mil>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Some ancient platforms do not have an extensive list of alternate names for
character encodings. For example, Solaris 7 and IRIX 6.5 do not know that
ISO-8859-1 is the same as ISO8859-1. Modern platforms do know this, so use
the older name.
Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <casey@nrlssc.navy.mil>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
Prepare for 1.6.5.4
merge: do not add standard message when message is given with -m option
Do not misidentify "git merge foo HEAD" as an old-style invocation
Conflicts:
RelNotes
Even if the user explicitly gave her own message to "git merge", the
command still added its standard merge message. It resulted in a
useless repetition like this:
% git merge -m "Merge early part of side branch" `git rev-parse side~2`
% git show -s
commit 37217141e7519629353738d5e4e677a15096206f
Merge: e68e646 a1d2374
Author: しらいし ななこ <nanako3@lavabit.com>
Date: Wed Dec 2 14:33:20 2009 +0900
Merge early part of side branch
Merge commit 'a1d2374f8f52f4e8a53171601a920b538a6cec23'
The gave her own message because she didn't want git to add the
standard message (if she wanted to, she wouldn't have given one,
or she would have prepared it using git-fmt-merge-msg command).
Noticed by Nanako Shiraishi
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
These were added without documentation in 2009-03-16 (6720721).
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ogilvie <mmogilvi_git@miniinfo.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This is needed to allow test suite to run against a standard
install bin directory instead of GIT_EXEC_PATH.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ogilvie <mmogilvi_git@miniinfo.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This is needed to allow the test suite to run against a standard
install bin directory instead of GIT_EXEC_PATH.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ogilvie <mmogilvi_git@miniinfo.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Give a warning message when send-email uses chain-reply-to to thread the
messages because of the current default, not because the user explicitly
asked to, either from the command line or from the configuration.
This way, by the time 1.7.0 switches the default, everybody will be ready.
Signed-off-by: Nanako Shiraishi <nanako3@lavabit.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Inspired by the coloring of quilt.
Introduce a separate color and paint the hunk comment part, i.e. the name
of the function, in a separate color "diff.func" (defaults to plain).
Whitespace between hunk header and hunk comment is printed in plain color.
Signed-off-by: Bert Wesarg <bert.wesarg@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This adds the option to specify the envelope sender as "auto" which
would pick the 'from' address. This is good because now we can specify
the address only in one place in $HOME/.gitconfig and change it easily.
[jc: added tests]
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When emit_line() is called with an empty line (but non-zero length, as we
send line terminating LF or CRLF to the function), it used to emit
<SET><RESET> followed by a newline. Stop the wastefulness.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The new short status has been completely untested so far. Introduce
tests by duplicating all tests which are present for the long format.
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The patch structure has def_name component that is used to validate the
sanity of a "diff --git" patch by checking pathnames that appear on the
patch header lines for consistency. The git_header_name() function is
used to compute this out of "diff --git a/... b/..." line, but the code
always stripped one level of prefix (i.e. "a/" and "b/"), without paying
attention to -p<n> option. Code in find_name() function that parses other
lines in the patch header (e.g. "--- a/..." and "+++ b/..." lines) however
did strip the correct number of leading paths prefixes, and the sanity
check between these computed values failed.
Teach git_header_name() to honor -p<n> option like find_name() function
does.
Found and reported by Steven J. Murdoch who also wrote tests.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We should avoid duplicate test numbers, since things like
GIT_SKIP_TESTS consider something like t1009.5 to be
unambiguous.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Don't take the author name information without re-encoding from the raw
commit object buffer.
Signed-off-by: Uwe Kleine-König <u.kleine-koenig@pengutronix.de>
Cc: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The fourth test of show-branch in t1200 test was failing but only
sometimes. It only failed when two commits created in an earlier
test had different timestamps. When they were created within the
same second, the actual output matched the expected output.
Fix this by using test_tick to force reliable timestamps and update
the expected output so it does not to depend on the commits made in
the same sacond.
Signed-off-by: Nanako Shiraishi <nanako3@lavabit.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This patch introduces parts of a Python package called
"git_remote_helpers" containing the building blocks for
remote helpers written in Python.
No actual remote helpers are part of this patch, this patch only
includes the common basics needed to start writing such helpers.
The patch includes the necessary Makefile additions to build and
install the git_remote_helpers Python package along with the rest of
Git.
This patch is based on Johan Herland's git_remote_cvs patch and
has been improved by the following contributions:
- David Aguilar: Lots of Python coding style fixes
- David Aguilar: DESTDIR support in Makefile
Cc: David Aguilar <davvid@gmail.com>
Cc: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Sverre Rabbelier <srabbelier@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jc/log-stdin:
Add trivial tests for --stdin option to log family
Make --stdin option to "log" family read also pathspecs
setup_revisions(): do not call get_pathspec() too early
Teach --stdin option to "log" family
read_revision_from_stdin(): use strbuf
Conflicts:
revision.c
* mr/gitweb-snapshot:
t/gitweb-lib: Split HTTP response with non-GNU sed
gitweb: Smarter snapshot names
gitweb: Document current snapshot rules via new tests
t/gitweb-lib.sh: Split gitweb output into headers and body
gitweb: check given hash before trying to create snapshot
Recognizing \r in a regex is something GNU sed will do, but other sed
implementation's won't (e.g. BSD sed on OS X). Instead of two sed
invocations, use a single Perl script to split output into headers
and body.
Signed-off-by: Brian Gernhardt <brian@gernhardtsoftware.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* cc/replace:
Documentation: talk a little bit about GIT_NO_REPLACE_OBJECTS
Documentation: fix typos and spelling in replace documentation
replace: use a GIT_NO_REPLACE_OBJECTS env variable
One test case used 'xargs test', which assumes that 'test' is available
as external program. At least on MinGW it is not.
Moreover, 'git format-patch' was invoked in a pipeline, but not as the
last command. Rewrite the test case to catch breakage in 'git format-patch'
as well.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* bg/fetch-multi:
Re-implement 'git remote update' using 'git fetch'
builtin-fetch: add --dry-run option
builtin-fetch: add --prune option
teach warn_dangling_symref to take a FILE argument
remote: refactor some logic into get_stale_heads()
Add missing test for 'git remote update --prune'
Add the configuration option skipFetchAll
Teach the --multiple option to 'git fetch'
Teach the --all option to 'git fetch'
Since unhandled.log stores paths relative to the repository
root, we need to strip out leading path components if the
directories we're tracking are not the repository root.
Reported-by: Björn Steinbrink
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Add a new helper function, strbuf_add_indented_text(), to indent text
without a width limit, and call it from strbuf_add_wrapped_text(). It
respects both indent (applied to the first line) and indent2 (applied to
the rest of the lines); indent2 was ignored by the indent-only path of
strbuf_add_wrapped_text() before the patch.
Two simple test cases are added, one exercising strbuf_add_wrapped_text()
and the other strbuf_add_indented_text().
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While we're at it, also unset GREP_COLOR and GREP_COLORS in case colouring
is not enabled, to be on the safe side. The presence of these variables
alone is not sufficient to trigger coloured output with GNU grep, but
other implementations may behave differently.
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* 'jh/notes' (early part):
Add selftests verifying concatenation of multiple notes for the same commit
Refactor notes code to concatenate multiple notes annotating the same object
Add selftests verifying that we can parse notes trees with various fanouts
Teach the notes lookup code to parse notes trees with various fanout schemes
Teach notes code to free its internal data structures on request
Add '%N'-format for pretty-printing commit notes
Add flags to get_commit_notes() to control the format of the note string
t3302-notes-index-expensive: Speed up create_repo()
fast-import: Add support for importing commit notes
Teach "-m <msg>" and "-F <file>" to "git notes edit"
Add an expensive test for git-notes
Speed up git notes lookup
Add a script to edit/inspect notes
Introduce commit notes
Conflicts:
.gitignore
Documentation/pretty-formats.txt
pretty.c
* sp/smart-http: (37 commits)
http-backend: Let gcc check the format of more printf-type functions.
http-backend: Fix access beyond end of string.
http-backend: Fix bad treatment of uintmax_t in Content-Length
t5551-http-fetch: Work around broken Accept header in libcurl
t5551-http-fetch: Work around some libcurl versions
http-backend: Protect GIT_PROJECT_ROOT from /../ requests
Git-aware CGI to provide dumb HTTP transport
http-backend: Test configuration options
http-backend: Use http.getanyfile to disable dumb HTTP serving
test smart http fetch and push
http tests: use /dumb/ URL prefix
set httpd port before sourcing lib-httpd
t5540-http-push: remove redundant fetches
Smart HTTP fetch: gzip requests
Smart fetch over HTTP: client side
Smart push over HTTP: client side
Discover refs via smart HTTP server when available
http-backend: more explict LocationMatch
http-backend: add example for gitweb on same URL
http-backend: use mod_alias instead of mod_rewrite
...
Conflicts:
.gitignore
remote-curl.c
* jn/editor-pager:
Provide a build time default-pager setting
Provide a build time default-editor setting
am -i, git-svn: use "git var GIT_PAGER"
add -i, send-email, svn, p4, etc: use "git var GIT_EDITOR"
Teach git var about GIT_PAGER
Teach git var about GIT_EDITOR
Suppress warnings from "git var -l"
Do not use VISUAL editor on dumb terminals
Handle more shell metacharacters in editor names
* bg/format-patch-doc-update:
format-patch: Add "--no-stat" as a synonym for "-p"
format-patch documentation: Fix formatting
format-patch documentation: Remove diff options that are not useful
format-patch: Always generate a patch
* jp/fetch-cull-many-refs:
remote: fix use-after-free error detected by glibc in ref_remove_duplicates
fetch: Speed up fetch of large numbers of refs
remote: Make ref_remove_duplicates faster for large numbers of refs
When we are rebasing we know that the header lines in the
patch are good and that we don't need to pick up any headers
from the body of the patch.
This makes it possible to rebase commits whose commit message
start with "From" or "Date".
Test vectors by Jeff King.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Sandström <luksan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This has the same effect as --no-replace-objects option; git ignores the
replace refs. When --no-replace-objects option is passed to git, this
environment variable is set to "1" and exported to subprocesses in order
to propagate the same setting.
It is useful for example for scripts, as the git commands used in them can
now be aware that they must not read replace refs.
Tested-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Change git-diff's whitespace-ignoring modes to generate
output only if a non-empty patch results, which git-apply
rejects.
Update the tests to look for the new behavior.
Signed-off-by: Greg Bacon <gbacon@dbresearch.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
4d23660 (describe: when failing, tell the user about options that
work, 2009-10-28) forgot to update the shortcut path where the code
detected and used a possible exact match. This means that an
unannotated tag on HEAD would be used by 'git describe'.
Guard this code path against the new circumstances, where unannotated
tags can be present in ->util even if we're not actually planning to
use them.
While there, also add some tests for --all.
Reported by 'yashi' on IRC.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@student.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The t/t9700/test.pl script uses method invocation syntax when
using the Cwd module to determine the current working directory.
This fails on cygwin, since cygwin perl specifically checks for
any arguments to the cwd() function and croak()'s with the message
"Usage: Cwd::cwd()". (In perl v5.8.8 distribution, see the file
perl-5.8.8/cygwin/cygwin.c lines 139-157)
In order to avoid the problem, we replace the method invocation
syntax with a simple function call.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* sb/tutorial-test:
t1200: prepare for merging with Fast-forward bikeshedding
t1200: further modernize test script style
t1200: Make documentation and test agree
t1200: cleanup and modernize test style
This patch adds basic boilerplate support (based on corresponding Perl
sections) for enabling the building and installation Python scripts.
There are currently no Python scripts being built, and when Python
scripts are added in future patches, their building and installation
can be disabled by defining NO_PYTHON.
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn:
Document git-svn's first-parent rule
git svn: attempt to create empty dirs on clone+rebase
git svn: add authorsfile test case for ~/.gitconfig
git svn: read global+system config for clone+init
git svn: handle SVN merges from revisions past the tip of the branch
Some test scripts run Perl scripts as if they were git-* scripts, and
thus need to use the same perl that will be put in the shebang line of
git*.perl commands. $PERL_PATH therefore needs to be used instead of
a bare "perl".
The tests can fail if another perl is found in $PATH before the one
defined in $PERL_PATH.
Example test failure caused by this: the perl defined in $PERL_PATH has
Error.pm installed, and therefore the Git.pm's Makefile.PL doesn't install
the private copy. The perl from $PATH doesn't have Error.pm installed, and
all git*.perl scripts invoked during the test will fail loading Error.pm.
Makefile patch by Jeff King <peff@peff.net>.
Signed-off-by: Philippe Bruhat (BooK) <book@cpan.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add tests for --full-name, --full-tree, --abbrev, and --name-only.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <bebarino@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git grep" currently an error when you combine the -F and -i flags.
This isn't in line with how GNU grep handles it.
This patch allows the simultaneous use of those flags.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Brian Collins <bricollins@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* js/maint-diff-color-words:
diff --color-words: bit of clean-up
diff --color-words -U0: fix the location of hunk headers
t4034-diff-words: add a test for word diff without context
Conflicts:
diff.c
* jc/maint-blank-at-eof:
diff -B: colour whitespace errors
diff.c: emit_add_line() takes only the rest of the line
diff.c: split emit_line() from the first char and the rest of the line
diff.c: shuffling code around
diff --whitespace: fix blank lines at end
core.whitespace: split trailing-space into blank-at-{eol,eof}
diff --color: color blank-at-eof
diff --whitespace=warn/error: fix blank-at-eof check
diff --whitespace=warn/error: obey blank-at-eof
diff.c: the builtin_diff() deals with only two-file comparison
apply --whitespace: warn blank but not necessarily empty lines at EOF
apply --whitespace=warn/error: diagnose blank at EOF
apply.c: split check_whitespace() into two
apply --whitespace=fix: detect new blank lines at eof correctly
apply --whitespace=fix: fix handling of blank lines at the eof
We parse unhandled.log files for empty_dir statements and make a
best effort attempt to recreate empty directories on fresh
clones and rebase. This should cover the majority of cases
where users work off a single branch or for projects where
branches do not differ in empty directories.
Since this cannot affect "normal" git commands like "checkout"
or "reset", so users switching between branches in a single
working directory should use the new "git svn mkdirs" command
after switching branches.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
* js/maint-diff-color-words:
diff --color-words: bit of clean-up
diff --color-words -U0: fix the location of hunk headers
t4034-diff-words: add a test for word diff without context
Conflicts:
diff.c
In ref_remove_duplicates, when we encounter a duplicate and remove it
from the list we need to make sure that the prev pointer stays
pointing at the last entry and also skip over adding the just freed
entry to the string_list.
Previously fetch could crash with:
*** glibc detected *** git: corrupted double-linked list: ...
Also add a test to try and catch problems with duplicate removal in
the future.
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Julian Phillips <julian@quantumfyre.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The commit for:
git svn: read global+system config for clone+init
Initially lacked a test case because the author was unable to
reproduce it under his test environment, this adds it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
When recording the revisions that it has merged, SVN sets the top
revision to be the latest revision in the repository, which is not
necessarily a revision on the branch that is being merged from. When
it is not on the branch, git-svn fails to add the extra parent to
represent the merge because it relies on finding the commit on the
branch that corresponds to the top of the SVN merge range.
In order to correctly handle this case, we look for the maximum
revision less than or equal to the top of the SVN merge range that is
actually on the branch being merged from.
[ew: This includes the following (squashed) commit to prevent
errors during bisect:]
Author: Toby Allsopp <toby.allsopp@navman.co.nz>
Date: Fri Nov 13 09:48:39 2009 +1300
git-svn: add (failing) test for SVN 1.5+ merge with intervening commit
This test exposes a bug in git-svn's handling of SVN 1.5+ mergeinfo
properties. The problematic case is when there is some commit on an
unrelated branch after the last commit on the merged-from branch.
When SVN records the mergeinfo property, it records the latest
revision in the whole repository, which, in the problematic case, is
not on the branch it is merging from.
To trigger the git-svn bug, we modify t9151 to include two SVN merges,
the second of which has an intervening commit. The SVN dump was
generated using SVN 1.6.6 (on Debian squeeze amd64).
Signed-off-by: Toby Allsopp <toby.allsopp@navman.co.nz>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Provide a DEFAULT_EDITOR knob to allow setting the fallback
editor to use instead of vi (when VISUAL, EDITOR, and GIT_EDITOR
are unset). The value can be set at build time according to a
system’s policy. For example, on Debian systems, the default
editor should be the 'editor' command.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ben Walton <bwalton@artsci.utoronto.ca>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Refuse to use $VISUAL and fall back to $EDITOR if TERM is unset
or set to "dumb". Traditionally, VISUAL is set to a screen
editor and EDITOR to a line-based editor, which should be more
useful in that situation.
vim, for example, is happy to assume a terminal supports ANSI
sequences even if TERM is dumb (e.g., when running from a text
editor like Acme). git already refuses to fall back to vi on a
dumb terminal if GIT_EDITOR, core.editor, VISUAL, and EDITOR are
unset, but without this patch, that check is suppressed by
VISUAL=vi.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since a0e4639 (filter-branch: fix ref rewriting with
--subdirectory-filter, 2008-08-12) git-filter-branch has done
nearest-ancestor rewriting when using a --subdirectory-filter.
However, that rewriting strategy is also a useful building block in
other tasks. For example, if you want to split out a subset of files
from your history, you would typically call
git filter-branch -- <refs> -- <files>
But this fails for all refs that do not point directly to a commit
that affects <files>, because their referenced commit will not be
rewritten and the ref remains untouched.
The code was already there for the --subdirectory-filter case, so just
introduce an option that enables it independently.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@student.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King recently reinstated -p to suppress the default diffstat
(as -p used to work before 68daa64, about 14 months ago).
However, -p is also needed in combination with certain options
(e.g. --stat or --numstat) in order to produce any patch at all.
The documentation does not mention this.
Since the purpose of format-patch is to produce a patch that
can be emailed, it does not make sense that certain combination
of options will suppress the generation of the patch itself.
Therefore:
* Update 'git format-patch' to always generate a patch.
* Since the --name-only, --name-status, and --check suppresses
the generation of the patch, disallow those options,
and remove the description of them in the documentation.
* Remove the reference to -p in the description of -U.
* Remove the descriptions of the options that are synonyms for -p
plus another option (--patch-with-raw and --patch-with-stat).
* While at it, slightly tweak the description of -p itself
to say that it generates "plain patches", so that you can
think of -p as "plain patch" as an mnemonic aid.
Signed-off-by: Björn Gustavsson <bgustavsson@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Implement the configuration skipFetchAll option to allow
certain remotes to be skipped when doing 'git fetch --all' and
'git remote update'. The existing skipDefaultUpdate variable
is still honored (by 'git fetch --all' and 'git remote update').
(If both are set in the configuration file with different values,
the value of the last occurrence will be used.)
Signed-off-by: Björn Gustavsson <bgustavsson@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add the --multiple option to specify that all arguments are either
groups or remotes. The primary reason for adding this option is
to allow us to re-implement 'git remote update' using fetch.
It would have been nice if this option was not needed, but since
the colon in a refspec is optional, it is in general not possible
to know whether a single, colon-less argument is a remote or a
refspec.
Signed-off-by: Björn Gustavsson <bgustavsson@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
'git remote' is meant for managing remotes and 'git fetch' is meant
for actually fetching data from remote repositories. Therefore, it is
not logical that you must use 'git remote update' to fetch from
more than one repository at once.
Add the --all option to 'git fetch', to tell it to attempt to fetch
from all remotes. Also, if --all is not given, the <repository>
argument is allowed to be the name of a group, to allow fetching
from all repositories in the group.
Other options except -v and -q are silently ignored.
Signed-off-by: Björn Gustavsson <bgustavsson@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Unfortunately at least one version of libcurl has a bug causing
it to include "Accept: */*" in the same POST request where we have
already asked for "Accept: application/x-git-upload-pack-response".
This is a bug in libcurl, not Git, or our test vector. The
application has explicitly asked the server for a single content
type, but libcurl has mistakenly also told the server the client
application will accept */*, which is any content type.
Based on the libcurl change log, this "Accept: */*" header bug
may have been fixed in version 7.18.1 released March 30, 2008:
http://curl.haxx.se/changes.html#7_18_1
Rather than require users to upgrade libcurl we change the test
vector to trim this line out of the 2nd request.
Reported-by: Tarmigan <tarmigan+git@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Some versions of libcurl report their output when GIT_CURL_VERBOSE
is set differently than other versions do. At least one variant
(version unknown but likely pre-7.18.1) reports the POST payload to
stderr, and omits the blank line after each HTTP request/response.
We clip these lines out of the stderr output now before doing the
compare, so we aren't surprised by this trivial difference.
Reported-by: Tarmigan <tarmigan+git@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Eons ago HPA taught git-daemon how to protect itself from /../
attacks, which Junio brought back into service in d79374c7b5
("daemon.c and path.enter_repo(): revamp path validation").
I did not carry this into git-http-backend as originally we relied
only upon PATH_TRANSLATED, and assumed the HTTP server had done
its access control checks to validate the resolved path was within
a directory permitting access from the remote client. This would
usually be sufficient to protect a server from requests for its
/etc/passwd file by http://host/smart/../etc/passwd sorts of URLs.
However in 917adc0360 Mark Lodato added GIT_PROJECT_ROOT as an
additional method of configuring the CGI. When this environment
variable is used the web server does not generate the final access
path and therefore may blindly pass through "/../etc/passwd"
in PATH_INFO under the assumption that "/../" might have special
meaning to the invoked CGI.
Instead of permitting these sorts of malformed path requests, we
now reject them back at the client, with an error message for the
server log. This matches git-daemon behavior.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Teach gitweb how to produce nicer snapshot names by only using the
short hash id. If clients make requests using a tree-ish that is not
a partial or full SHA-1 hash, then the short hash will also be appended
to whatever they asked for. If clients request snapshot of a tag
(which means that $hash ('h') parameter has 'refs/tags/' prefix),
use only tag name.
Update tests cases in t9502-gitweb-standalone-parse-output.
Gitweb uses the following format for snapshot filenames:
<sanitized project name>-<version info>.<snapshot suffix>
where <sanitized project name> is project name with '.git' or '/.git'
suffix stripped, unless '.git' is the whole project name. For
snapshot prefix it uses:
<sanitized project name>-<version info>/
as compared to <sanitized project name>/ before (without version info).
Current rules for <version info>:
* if 'h' / $hash parameter is SHA-1 or shortened SHA-1, use SHA-1
shortened to to 7 characters
* otherwise if 'h' / $hash parameter is tag name (it begins with
'refs/tags/' prefix, use tag name (with 'refs/tags/' stripped
* otherwise if 'h' / $hash parameter starts with 'refs/heads/' prefix,
strip this prefix, convert '/' into '.', and append shortened SHA-1
after '-', i.e. use <sanitized hash>-<shortened sha1>
Signed-off-by: Mark Rada <marada@uwaterloo.ca>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add t9502-gitweb-standalone-parse-output test script, which runs
gitweb as a CGI script from the commandline and checks that it
produces the correct output.
Currently this test script contains only tests of snapshot naming
(proposed name of snapshot file) and snapshot prefix (prefix of files
in the archive / snapshot). It defines and uses 'tar' snapshot
format, without compression, for easy checking of snapshot prefix.
Testing is done using check_snapshot function.
Gitweb uses the following format for snapshot filenames:
<sanitized project name>-<hash parameter><snapshot suffix>
where <sanitized project name> is project name with '.git' or '/.git'
suffix stripped, unless '.git' is the whole project name. For
snapshot prefix it uses simply:
<sanitized project name>/
Disadvantages of current snapshot rules:
* There exists convention that <basename>.<suffix> archive unpacks to
<basename>/ directory (<basename>/ is prefix of archive). Gitweb
does not respect it
* Snapshot links generated by gitweb use full SHA-1 id as a value of
'h' / $hash parameter. With current rules it leads to long file
names like e.g. repo-1005c80cc11c531d327b12195027cbbb4ff9e3cb.tgz
* For handcrafted URLs, where 'h' / $hash parameter is a symbolic
'volatile' revision name such as "HEAD" or "next" snapshot name
doesn't tell us what exact version it was created from
* Proposed filename in Content-Disposition header should not contain
any directory path information, which means that it should not
contain '/' (see RFC2183)... which means that snapshot naming is
broken for $hash being e.g. hirearchical branch name such as
'xx/test'
This would be improved in next commit.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Once upon a time, format-patch would use its default stat
plus patch format only when no diff format was given on the
command line. This meant that "format-patch -p" would
suppress the stat and show just the patch.
Commit 68daa64 changed this to keep the stat format when we
had an "implicit" patch format, like "-U5". As a side
effect, this meant that an explicit patch format was now
ignored (because cmd_format_patch didn't know the reason
that the format was set way down in diff_opt_parse).
This patch unbreaks what 68daa64 did (while still preserving
what 68daa64 was trying to do), reinstating "-p" to suppress
the default behavior. We do this by parsing "-p" ourselves
in format-patch, and noting whether it was used explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"commit -s" used to add an empty line before adding S-o-b line only when
the last line of the existing log message is not another S-o-b line, but
c1e01b0 (commit: More generous accepting of RFC-2822 footer lines.,
2009-10-28) introduced logic to omit this empty line when the message ends
with a run of "footer" lines, to cover S-o-b's friends, e.g. Acked-by.
However, the logic was overzealous and missed one corner case. A message
that consists of a single line that begins with Token + colon, it can be
mistaken as a S-o-b's friend. We do want an empty line in such a case.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A tree-wide bikeshedding to replace "fast forward" into "fast-forward" is
in 'master'. Since we want to keep this "test modernization" series
mergeable also to the maintenance track, we would need to tweak the test
to accept both old spellings and new spellings.
Sigh... This kind of headache is the primary reason we try not to allow
such a tree-wide bike-shedding, but the damage has already been done.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Instead of using bare "cmp", use "test_cmp". Output when the test is run
with a -v option becomes easier to diagnose when something goes wrong
because on saner platforms test_cmp uses "diff -u".
There is no need to put an extra backslash to a line that ends with a '|'
(i.e. the upstream of a pipe).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There were some differences between t1200 and the gitcore-tutorial. Add
missing tests for manually merging two branches, and use the same
commands in both files.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <bebarino@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Many parts of the tests in t1200 are run outside the test harness,
circumventing the usefulness of -v and spewing messages to stdout when
-v isn't used. Fix these problems by modernizing the test a bit.
An extra test_done has existed since commit 6a74642 (git-commit --amend:
two fixes., 2006-04-20) leading to the last 6 tests never being run.
Remove it and teach the resolve merge test about fast-forward merges.
Also fix the last test's incorrect find command and prune before
checking for unpacked objects so we remove the unreachable conflict-marked
blob.
Finally, we remove the TODO notes, because fetch, push, and clone have
their own tests since t1200 was introduced and we're not going to add
them here 4 years later.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <bebarino@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Test the major configuration settings which control access to
the repository:
http.getanyfile
http.uploadpack
http.receivepack
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The top level directory "/smart/" of the test Apache server is mapped
through our git-http-backend CGI, but uses the same underlying
repository space as the server's document root. This is the most
simple installation possible.
Server logs are checked to verify the client has accessed only the
smart URLs during the test. During fetch testing the headers are
also logged from libcurl to ensure we are making a reasonably sane
HTTP request, and getting back reasonably sane response headers
from the CGI.
When validating the request headers used during smart fetch we munge
away the actual Content-Length and replace it with the placeholder
"xxx". This avoids unnecessary varability in the test caused by
an unrelated change in the requested capabilities in the first want
line of the request. However, we still want to look for and verify
that Content-Length was used, because smaller payloads should be
using Content-Length and not "Transfer-Encoding: chunked".
When validating the server response headers we must discard both
Content-Length and Transfer-Encoding, as Apache2 can use either
format to return our response.
During development of this test I observed Apache returning both
forms, depending on when the processes got CPU time. If our CGI
returned the pack data quickly, Apache just buffered the whole
thing and returned a Content-Length. If our CGI took just a bit
too long to complete, Apache flushed its buffer and instead used
"Transfer-Encoding: chunked".
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
To clarify what part of the HTTP transprot is being tested we change
the URLs used by existing tests to include /dumb/ at the start,
indicating they use the non-Git aware code paths.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
CC: Tay Ray Chuan <rctay89@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If LIB_HTTPD_PORT is not set already, lib-httpd will set it to the
default 8111.
Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Tay Ray Chuan <rctay89@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When we use -c, -C, or --amend, we are trying one of two things: using the
source as a template or modifying a commit with corrections.
When these options are used, the authorship and timestamp recorded in the
newly created commit are always taken from the original commit. This is
inconvenient when we just want to borrow the commit log message or when
our change to the code is so significant that we should take over the
authorship (with the blame for bugs we introduce, of course).
The new --reset-author option is meant to solve this need by regenerating
the timestamp and setting the committer as the new author.
Signed-off-by: Erick Mattos <erick.mattos@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The remote helper interface now supports the push capability,
which can be used to ask the implementation to push one or more
specs to the remote repository. For remote-curl we implement this
by calling the existing WebDAV based git-http-push executable.
Internally the helper interface uses the push_refs transport hook
so that the complexity of the refspec parsing and matching can be
reused between remote implementations. When possible however the
helper protocol uses source ref name rather than the source SHA-1,
thereby allowing the helper to access this name if it is useful.
>From Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>:
update http tests according to remote-curl capabilities
o Pushing packed refs is now fixed.
o The transport helper fails if refs are already up-to-date. Add
a test for that.
o The transport helper will notice if refs are already
up-to-date. We therefore need to update server info in the
unpacked-refs test.
o The transport helper will purge deleted branches automatically.
o Use a variable ($ORIG_HEAD) instead of full SHA-1 name.
Signed-off-by: Tay Ray Chuan <rctay89@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
CC: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
CC: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Save HTTP headers into gitweb.headers, and the body of message into
gitweb.body in gitweb_run()
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
For convenience in scripts and aliases, add the option
--ff-only to only allow fast-forwards (and up-to-date,
despite the name).
Disallow combining --ff-only and --no-ff, since they
flatly contradict each other.
Allow all other options to be combined with --ff-only
(i.e. do not add any code to handle them specially),
including the following options:
* --strategy (one or more): As long as the chosen merge
strategy results in up-to-date or fast-forward, the
command will succeed.
* --squash: I cannot imagine why anyone would want to
squash commits only if fast-forward is possible, but I
also see no reason why it should not be allowed.
* --message: The message will always be ignored, but I see
no need to explicitly disallow providing a redundant message.
Acknowledgements: I did look at Yuval Kogman's earlier
patch (107768 in gmane), mainly as shortcut to find my
way in the code, but I did not copy anything directly.
Signed-off-by: Björn Gustavsson <bgustavsson@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Because --root can put our trash directories elsewhere,
using ".." may not always work.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
so that they can be run individually as
(cd t && ./t9150-svk-mergetickets.sh)
etc. just like all other test scripts.
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit b5227d8 changed the behavior of "ls-files" with
respect to includes, but accidentally broke the "-i" option
The original behavior was:
1. if no "-i" is given, cull all results according to --exclude*
2. if "-i" is given, show the inverse of (1)
The broken behavior was:
1. if no "-i" is given:
a. for "-o", cull results according to --exclude*
b. for index files, always show all
2. if "-i" is given:
a. for "-o", shows the inverse of (1a)
b. for index files, always show all
The fixed behavior keeps the new (1b) behavior introduced
by b5227d8, but fixes the (2b) behavior to show only ignored
files, not all files.
This patch also tweaks the documentation. The original text
was somewhat obscure in the first place, but it is also now
inaccurate (the relationship between (1b) and (2b) is not
quite a "reverse").
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Colored word diff without context lines firstly printed all the hunk
headers among each other and then printed the diff.
This was due to the code relying on getting at least one context line at
the end of each hunk, where the colored words would be flushed (it is
done that way to be able to ignore rewrapped lines).
Noticed by Markus Heidelberg.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
'git commit -s' will insert a blank line before the Signed-off-by
line at the end of the message, unless this last line is a
Signed-off-by line itself. Common use has other trailing lines
at the ends of commit text, in the style of RFC2822 headers.
Be more generous in considering lines to be part of this footer.
If the last paragraph of the commit message reasonably resembles
RFC-2822 formatted lines, don't insert that blank line.
The new Signed-off-by line is still only suppressed when the
author's existing Signed-off-by is the last line of the message.
Signed-off-by: David Brown <davidb@quicinc.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Usually we show deletion as a big hunk deleting all of the
file's text. However, for files with no content, the diff
shows just the 'deleted file mode ...' line. This patch
cause "add -p" (and related commands) to recognize that line
and explicitly ask about deleting the file.
We only add the "stage this deletion" hunk for empty files,
since other files will already ask about the big content
deletion hunk. We could also change those files to simply
display "stage this deletion", but showing the actual
deleted content is probably what an interactive user wants.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
With the --dirty option, git describe works on HEAD but append s"-dirty"
iff the contents of the work tree differs from HEAD. E.g.
$ git describe --dirty
v1.6.5-15-gc274db7
$ echo >> Makefile
$ git describe --dirty
v1.6.5-15-gc274db7-dirty
The --dirty option can also be used to specify what is appended, instead
of the default string "-dirty".
$ git describe --dirty=.mod
v1.6.5-15-gc274db7.mod
Many build scripts use `git describe` to produce a version number based on
the description of HEAD (on which the work tree is based) + saying that if
the build contains uncommitted changes. This patch helps the writing of
such scripts since `git describe --dirty` does directly the intended thing.
Three possiblities were considered while discussing this new feature:
1. Describe the work tree by default and describe HEAD only if "HEAD" is
explicitly specified
Pro: does the right thing by default (both for users and for scripts)
Pro: other git commands that works on the work tree by default
Con: breaks existing scripts used by the Linux kernel and other projects
2. Use --worktree instead of --dirty
Pro: does what it says: "git describe --worktree" describes the work tree
Con: other commands do not require a --worktree option when working
on the work tree (it often is the default mode for them)
Con: unusable with an optional value: "git describe --worktree=.mod"
is quite unintuitive.
3. Use --dirty as in this patch
Pro: makes sense to specify an optional value (what the dirty mark is)
Pro: does not have any of the big cons of previous alternatives
* does not break scripts
* is not inconsistent with other git commands
This patch takes the third approach.
Signed-off-by: Jean Privat <jean@pryen.org>
Acked-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This feature is long overdue; convert SVN's merge representation to git's
as revisions are imported. This works by converting the list of revisions
in each line of the svn:mergeinfo into git revision ranges, and then
checking the latest of each of these revision ranges for A) being new and
B) now being completely merged.
Signed-off-by: Sam Vilain <sam.vilain@catalyst.net.nz>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Dump generated with SVN 1.5.1 (on lenny amd64). This test
should hopefully cover all but a few intermediate versions of
the svnmerge.py script.
Signed-off-by: Sam Vilain <sam.vilain@catalyst.net.nz>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
SVK is a simple case to start with, as its idea of merge parents
matches git's one. When a svk:merge ticket is encountered, check each
of the listed merged revisions to see if they are in the history of
this commit; if not, then we have encountered a merge - record it.
[ew: minor formatting cleanups]
Signed-off-by: Sam Vilain <sam.vilain@catalyst.net.nz>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Possibly the 'perl' in the PATH is not the one to be used for the tests;
let PERL set in the environment select it.
Signed-off-by: Sam Vilain <sam.vilain@catalyst.net.nz>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Dump generated with SVK 2.0.2 and SVN 1.5.1 (on lenny amd64).
Signed-off-by: Sam Vilain <sam.vilain@catalyst.net.nz>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
GIT_DIFFTOOL_PROMPT doesn't have any effect if overridden with --prompt.
Signed-off-by: Markus Heidelberg <markus.heidelberg@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Copied from the submodule summary test and changed to reflect the
differences in the output of git diff --submodule.
Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This fixes a regression introduce by d68dc34 (git-describe: Die early if
there are no possible descriptions, 2009-08-06).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This enables gitk to show the patch text with correct glyphs if the locale
is not UTF-8.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This mbox file must have been added by accident in e9fe804 (git-mailinfo:
Fix getting the subject from the in-body [PATCH] line, 2008-07-14).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add three new --pretty=format escapes:
%gD long reflog descriptor (e.g. refs/stash@{0})
%gd short reflog descriptor (e.g. stash@{0})
%gs reflog message
This is achieved by passing down the reflog info, if any, inside the
pretty_print_context struct.
We use the newly refactored get_reflog_selector(), and give it some
extra functionality to extract a shortened ref. The shortening is
cached inside the commit_reflogs struct; the only allocation of it
happens in read_complete_reflog(), where it is initialised to 0. Also
add another helper get_reflog_message() for the message extraction.
Note that the --format="%h %gD: %gs" tests may not work in real
repositories, as the --pretty formatter doesn't know to leave away the
": " on the last commit in an incomplete (because git-gc removed the
old part) reflog. This equivalence is nevertheless the main goal of
this patch.
Thanks to Jeff King for reviews, the %gd testcase and documentation.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@student.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Also verify that multiple references to the _same_ note blob are _not_
concatenated.
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Creating repos with 10/100/1000/10000 commits and notes takes a lot of time.
However, using git-fast-import to do the job is a lot more efficient than
using plumbing commands to do the same.
This patch decreases the overall run-time of this test on my machine from
~3 to ~1 minutes.
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Introduce a 'notemodify' subcommand of the 'commit' command. This subcommand
is similar to 'filemodify', except that no mode is supplied (all notes have
mode 0644), and the path is set to the hex SHA1 of the given "comittish".
This enables fast import of note objects along with their associated commits,
since the notes can now be named using the mark references of their
corresponding commits.
The patch also includes a test case of the added functionality.
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Acked-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "-m" and "-F" options are already the established method
(in both git-commit and git-tag) to specify a commit/tag message
without invoking the editor. This patch teaches "git notes edit"
to respect the same options for specifying a notes message without
invoking the editor.
Multiple "-m" and/or "-F" options are concatenated as separate
paragraphs.
The patch also updates the "git notes" documentation and adds
selftests for the new functionality. Unfortunately, the added
selftests include a couple of lines with trailing whitespace
(without these the test will fail). This may cause git to warn
about "whitespace errors".
This patch has been improved by the following contributions:
- Thomas Rast: fix trailing whitespace in t3301
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git-notes have the potential of being pretty expensive, so test with
a lot of commits. A lot. So to make things cheaper, you have to
opt-in explicitely, by setting the environment variable
GIT_NOTES_TIMING_TESTS.
This patch has been improved by the following contributions:
- Junio C Hamano: tests: fix "export var=val"
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The script 'git notes' allows you to edit and show commit notes, by
calling either
git notes show <commit>
or
git notes edit <commit>
This patch has been improved by the following contributions:
- Tor Arne Vestbø: fix printing of multi-line notes
- Michael J Gruber: test and handle empty notes gracefully
- Thomas Rast:
- only clean up message file when editing
- use GIT_EDITOR and core.editor over VISUAL/EDITOR
- t3301: fix confusing quoting in test for valid notes ref
- t3301: use test_must_fail instead of !
- refuse to edit notes outside refs/notes/
- Junio C Hamano: tests: fix "export var=val"
- Christian Couder: documentation: fix 'linkgit' macro in "git-notes.txt"
- Johan Herland: minor cleanup and bugfixing in git-notes.sh (v2)
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tavestbo@trolltech.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@student.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When flipping commits around on topic branches, I often end up doing
this sequence:
* Run "log --oneline next..jc/frotz" to find out the first commit
on 'jc/frotz' branch not yet merged to 'next';
* Run "checkout $that_commit^" to detach HEAD to the parent of it;
* Rebuild the series on top of that commit; and
* "show-branch jc/frotz HEAD" and "diff jc/frotz HEAD" to verify.
Introduce a new syntax to "git checkout" to name the commit to switch to,
to make the first two steps easier. When the branch to switch to is
specified as A...B (you can omit either A or B but not both, and HEAD
is used instead of the omitted side), the merge base between these two
commits are computed, and if there is one unique one, we detach the HEAD
at that commit.
With this, I can say "checkout next...jc/frotz".
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jc/maint-blank-at-eof:
diff -B: colour whitespace errors
diff.c: emit_add_line() takes only the rest of the line
diff.c: split emit_line() from the first char and the rest of the line
diff.c: shuffling code around
diff --whitespace: fix blank lines at end
core.whitespace: split trailing-space into blank-at-{eol,eof}
diff --color: color blank-at-eof
diff --whitespace=warn/error: fix blank-at-eof check
diff --whitespace=warn/error: obey blank-at-eof
diff.c: the builtin_diff() deals with only two-file comparison
apply --whitespace: warn blank but not necessarily empty lines at EOF
apply --whitespace=warn/error: diagnose blank at EOF
apply.c: split check_whitespace() into two
apply --whitespace=fix: detect new blank lines at eof correctly
apply --whitespace=fix: fix handling of blank lines at the eof
"git grep" would segfault if its -f option was used because it would
try to use an uninitialized strbuf, so initialize the strbuf.
Thanks to Johannes Sixt <j.sixt@viscovery.net> for the help with the
test cases.
Signed-off-by: Matt Kraai <kraai@ftbfs.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Some types of corruption to a pack may confuse the deflate stream
which stores an object. In Andy's reported case a 36 byte region
of the pack was overwritten, leading to what appeared to be a valid
deflate stream that was trying to produce a result larger than our
allocated output buffer could accept.
Z_BUF_ERROR is returned from inflate() if either the input buffer
needs more input bytes, or the output buffer has run out of space.
Previously we only considered the former case, as it meant we needed
to move the stream's input buffer to the next window in the pack.
We now abort the loop if inflate() returns Z_BUF_ERROR without
consuming the entire input buffer it was given, or has filled
the entire output buffer but has not yet returned Z_STREAM_END.
Either state is a clear indicator that this loop is not working
as expected, and should not continue.
This problem cannot occur with loose objects as we open the entire
loose object as a single buffer and treat Z_BUF_ERROR as an error.
Reported-by: Andy Isaacson <adi@hexapodia.org>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@fluxnic.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit dae556b (environment: add global variable to disable replacement)
adds a variable to enable/disable replacement, and it is enabled by
default for most commands.
So there is no way to disable it for some commands, which is annoying
when we want to get information about a commit that has been replaced.
For example:
$ git cat-file -p N
would output information about the replacement commit if commit N is
replaced.
With the "--no-replace-objects" option that this patch adds it is
possible to get information about the original commit using:
$ git --no-replace-objects cat-file -p N
While at it, let's add some documentation about this new option in the
"git replace" man page too.
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Tolerating empty path components in ref names means each ref does
not have a unique name. This creates difficulty for porcelains
that want to see if two branches are equal. Add a helper associating
to each ref a canonical name.
If a user asks a porcelain to create a ref "refs/heads//master",
the porcelain can run "git check-ref-format --print refs/heads//master"
and only deal with "refs/heads/master" from then on.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "git check-ref-format" command is a basic command various
porcelains rely on. Test its functionality to make sure it does
not unintentionally change.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
'git log --graph --oneline --decorate --all' is a useful way to get a
general overview of the repository state, similar to 'gitk --all'.
Let it indicate the position of HEAD by loading that ref too, so that
the --decorate code can see it.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@student.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In all parts of git, .gitignore and other exclude files
impact only how we treat untracked files; they should have
no effect on files listed in the index.
This behavior was originally implemented very early on in
9ff768e, but only for --exclude-from. Later, commit 63d285c
accidentally caused us to trigger the behavior for
--exclude-per-directory.
This patch totally ignores excludes for files found in the
index. This means we are reversing the original intent of
9ff768e, while at the same time fixing the accidental
behavior of 63d285c. This is a good thing, though, as the
way that 9ff768e behaved does not really make sense with the
way exclusions are used in modern git.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Make "git add -p" to not skip files that are in index even if they are
excluded (by .gitignore etc.). This fixes the contradictory behavior
that "git status" and "git commit -a" listed such files as modified, but
"git add -p FILENAME" ignored them.
Signed-off-by: Pauli Virtanen <pav@iki.fi>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Some MTAs reject Cc: lines longer than 78 chars.
Avoid this by using the same join as "To:" ",\n\t"
so each subsequent Cc entry is on a new line.
RCPT TO: should have a single entry per line.
see: http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2821.txt
Signed-off-by: Joe Perches <joe@perches.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
With --prefix=string that does not end with a slash, the top-level entries
are written out with the specified prefix as expected, but no paths in the
directories are added.
Fix this by adding the prefix in write_archive_entry() instead of letting
get_pathspec() and read_tree_recursive() pair; they are designed to only
handle prefixes that are path components.
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Make it easier to edit just the commit message for a commit
using 'git rebase -i' by introducing the "reword" command.
Signed-off-by: Björn Gustavsson <bgustavsson@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This teaches the "pretty" machinery to expand '%+x' to a LF followed by
the expansion of '%x' if and only if '%x' expands to a non-empty string,
and to remove LFs before '%-x' if '%x' expands to an empty string. This
works for any supported expansion placeholder 'x'.
This is expected to be immediately useful to reproduce the commit log
message with "%s%+b%n"; "%s%n%b%n" adds one extra LF if the log message is
a one-liner.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When running "git show-branch" without any parameter in a repository that
has showbranch.default defined, we used to rely on the fact that our
handcrafted option parsing loop never looked at av[0].
The array of default strings had the first real command line argument in
default_arg[0], but the option parser wanted to look at the array starting
at av[1], so we assigned the address of -1th element to av to force the
loop start working from default_arg[0].
This no longer worked since 5734365 (show-branch: migrate to parse-options
API, 2009-05-21), as parse_options_start() saved the incoming &av[0] in
its ctx->out and later in parse_options_end() it did memmove to ctx->out
(with ctx->cpidx == 0), overwriting the memory before default_arg[] array.
I am not sure if this is a bug in parse_options(), or a bug in the caller,
and tonight I do not have enough concentration to figure out which. In
any case, this patch works the issue around.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This fixes '--relative-date' so that it does not give '0
year, 12 months', for the interval 360 <= diff < 365.
Signed-off-by: Johan Sageryd <j416@1616.se>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Makes things nicer in cases when you hand craft the snapshot URL but
make a typo in defining the hash variable (e.g. netx instead of next);
you will now get an error message instead of a broken tarball.
Tests for t9501 are included to demonstrate added functionality.
Signed-off-by: Mark Rada <marada@uwaterloo.ca>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
parse_long_opt always matches both --opt and --no-opt for any option
"opt", and only get_value checks whether --no-opt is actually valid.
Since the options for git branch contains both "no-merged" and "merged"
there are two matches for --no-merge, but no exact match. With this
patch the negation of a NONEG option is rejected earlier, but it changes
the error message from "option `no-opt' isn't available" to "unknown
option `no-opt'".
[jk: added test]
Signed-off-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
When <path> is not given, use the "humanish" part of the source repository
instead.
Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* 'jc/maint-1.6.0-blank-at-eof' (early part):
diff --whitespace: fix blank lines at end
core.whitespace: split trailing-space into blank-at-{eol,eof}
diff --color: color blank-at-eof
diff --whitespace=warn/error: fix blank-at-eof check
diff --whitespace=warn/error: obey blank-at-eof
diff.c: the builtin_diff() deals with only two-file comparison
apply --whitespace: warn blank but not necessarily empty lines at EOF
apply --whitespace=warn/error: diagnose blank at EOF
apply.c: split check_whitespace() into two
apply --whitespace=fix: detect new blank lines at eof correctly
apply --whitespace=fix: fix handling of blank lines at the eof
The earlier logic tried to colour any and all blank lines that were added
beyond the last blank line in the original, but this was very wrong. If
you added 96 blank lines, a non-blank line, and then 3 blank lines at the
end, only the last 3 lines should trigger the error, not the earlier 96
blank lines.
We need to also make sure that the lines are after the last non-blank line
in the postimage as well before deciding to paint them.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Test the effect of an earlier change by f7835a2 (preserve mtime of local
clone, 2009-09-12) to keep stale loose object files stale in the new
repository when a local clone is made by copying files in .git/
directory.
Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Previously, the call to authors-prog was not properly escaped, so any
special characters in the Subversion username, such as spaces and
semi-colons, would be interpreted by the shell rather than being passed
in as the first argument. Now all unsafe characters are escaped using
"git rev-parse --sq-quote"
[ew: switched from "\Q..\E" to "rev-parse --sq-quote"]
Signed-off-by: Mark Lodato <lodatom@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* cb/maint-1.6.3-grep-relative-up:
grep: accept relative paths outside current working directory
grep: fix exit status if external_grep() punts
Conflicts:
t/t7002-grep.sh
This configuration option allows systematically rewriting fetch-only URLs
to push-capable URLs when used with push. For instance:
[url "ssh://example.org/"]
pushInsteadOf = "git://example.org/"
This will allow clones of "git://example.org/path/to/repo" to subsequently
push to "ssh://example.org/path/to/repo", without manually configuring
pushurl for that remote.
Includes documentation for the new option, bash completion updates, and
test cases (both that pushInsteadOf applies to push, that it does not
apply to fetch, and that it is ignored when pushURL is already defined).
Signed-off-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jc/mailinfo-scissors:
mailinfo.scissors: new configuration
am/mailinfo: Disable scissors processing by default
Documentation: describe the scissors mark support of "git am"
Teach mailinfo to ignore everything before -- >8 -- mark
builtin-mailinfo.c: fix confusing internal API to mailinfo()
* tr/reset-checkout-patch:
stash: simplify defaulting to "save" and reject unknown options
Make test case number unique
tests: disable interactive hunk selection tests if perl is not available
DWIM 'git stash save -p' for 'git stash -p'
Implement 'git stash save --patch'
Implement 'git checkout --patch'
Implement 'git reset --patch'
builtin-add: refactor the meat of interactive_add()
Add a small patch-mode testing library
git-apply--interactive: Refactor patch mode code
Make 'git stash -k' a short form for 'git stash save --keep-index'
"git grep" would barf at relative paths pointing outside the current
working directory (or subdirectories thereof). Use quote_path_relative(),
which can handle such cases just fine.
[jc: added tests.]
Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since the coloring logic processed the patch output one line at a time, we
couldn't easily color code the new blank lines at the end of file.
Reuse the adds_blank_at_eof() function to find where the runs of such
blank lines start, keep track of the line number in the preimage while
processing the patch output one line at a time, and paint the new blank
lines that appear after that line to implement this.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "diff --check" logic used to share the same issue as the one fixed for
"git apply" earlier in this series, in that a patch that adds new blank
lines at end could appear as
@@ -l,5 +m,7 @@$
_context$
_context$
-deleted$
+$
+$
+$
_$
_$
where _ stands for SP and $ shows a end-of-line. Instead of looking at
each line in the patch in the callback, simply count the blank lines from
the end in two versions, and notice the presence of new ones.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "diff --check" code used to conflate trailing-space whitespace error
class with this, but now we have a proper separate error class, we should
check it under blank-at-eof, not trailing-space.
The whitespace error is not about _having_ blank lines at end, but about
adding _new_ blank lines. To keep the message consistent with what is
given by "git apply", call whitespace_error_string() to generate it,
instead of using a hardcoded custom message.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The whitespace error of adding blank lines at the end of file should
trigger if you added a non-empty line at the end, if the contents of the
line is full of whitespaces.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git apply" strips new blank lines at EOF under --whitespace=fix option,
but neigher --whitespace=warn nor --whitespace=error paid any attention to
these errors.
Introduce a new whitespace error class, blank-at-eof, to make the
whitespace error handling more consistent.
The patch adds a new "linenr" field to the struct fragment in order to
record which line the hunk started in the input file, but this is needed
solely for reporting purposes. The detection of this class of whitespace
errors cannot be done while parsing a patch like we do for all the other
classes of whitespace errors. It instead has to wait until we find where
to apply the hunk, but at that point, we do not have an access to the
original line number in the input file anymore, hence the new field.
Depending on your point of view, this may be a bugfix that makes warn and
error in line with fix. Or you could call it a new feature. The line
between them is somewhat fuzzy in this case.
Strictly speaking, triggering more errors than before is a change in
behaviour that is not backward compatible, even though the reason for the
change is because the code was not checking for an error that it should
have. People who do not want added blank lines at EOF to trigger an error
can disable the new error class.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The command tries to strip blank lines at the end of the file added by a
patch. It is done by first detecting if a hunk in patch has additional
blank lines at the end of itself, and if so checking if such a hunk
applies at the end of file. This patch addresses a bug in the logic to
implement the former (the previous one addressed a bug in the latter).
If the original ends with blank lines, often the patch hunk ends like
this:
@@ -l,5 +m,7 @@$
_context$
_context$
-deleted$
+$
+$
+$
_$
_$
where _ stands for SP and $ shows a end-of-line. This example patch adds
three trailing blank lines, but the code fails to notice it, because it
only pays attention to added blank lines at the very end of the hunk. In
this example, the three added blank lines do not appear textually at the
end in the patch, even though you can see that they are indeed added at
the end, if you rearrange the diff like this:
@@ -l,5 +m,7 @@$
_context$
_context$
-deleted$
_$
_$
+$
+$
+$
The fix is not to reset the number of (candidate) added blank lines at the
end when the loop sees a context line that is empty.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
b94f2ed (builtin-apply.c: make it more line oriented, 2008-01-26) broke
the logic used to detect if a hunk adds blank lines at the end of the
file. With the new code after that commit:
- img holds the contents of the file that the hunk is being applied to;
- preimage has the lines the hunk expects to be in img; and
- postimage has the lines the hunk wants to update the part in img that
corresponds to preimage with.
and we need to compare if the last line of preimage (not postimage)
matches the last line of img to see if the hunk applies at the end of the
file.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint-1.6.3:
git-clone: add missing comma in --reference documentation
git-cvsserver: no longer use deprecated 'git-subcommand' commands
clone: disconnect transport after fetching
The current code just leaves the transport in whatever state
it was in after performing the fetch. For a non-empty clone
over the git protocol, the transport code already
disconnects at the end of the fetch.
But for an empty clone, we leave the connection hanging, and
eventually close the socket when clone exits. This causes
the remote upload-pack to complain "the remote end hung up
unexpectedly". While this message is harmless to the clone
itself, it is unnecessarily scary for a user to see and may
pollute git-daemon logs.
This patch just explicitly calls disconnect after we are
done with the remote end, which sends a flush packet to
upload-pack and cleanly disconnects, avoiding the error
message.
Other transports are unaffected or slightly improved:
- for a non-empty repo over the git protocol, the second
disconnect is a no-op (since we are no longer connected)
- for "walker" transports (like HTTP or FTP), we actually
free some used memory (which previously just sat until
the clone process exits)
- for "rsync", disconnect is always a no-op anyway
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
With the earlier DWIM patches, certain combination of options defaulted
to the "save" command correctly while certain equally valid combination
did not. For example, "git stash -k" were Ok but "git stash -q -k" did
not work.
This makes the logic of defaulting to "save" much simpler. If there are no
non-flag arguments, it is clear that there is no command word, and we
default to "save" subcommand. This rule prevents "git stash -q apply"
from quietly creating a stash with "apply" as the message.
This also teaches "git stash save" to reject an unknown option. This is
to keep a mistyped "git stash save --quite" from creating a stash with a
message "--quite", and this safety is more important with the new logic
to default to "save" with any option-looking argument without an explicit
comand word.
[jc: this is based on Matthieu's 3-patch series, and a follow-up
discussion, and he and Peff take all the credit; if I have introduced bugs
while reworking, they are mine.]
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* lt/approxidate:
fix approxidate parsing of relative months and years
tests: add date printing and parsing tests
refactor test-date interface
Add date formatting and parsing functions relative to a given time
Further 'approxidate' improvements
Improve on 'approxidate'
Conflicts:
date.c
* mr/gitweb-snapshot:
gitweb: add t9501 tests for checking HTTP status codes
gitweb: split test suite into library and tests
gitweb: improve snapshot error handling
These were broken by b5373e9. The problem is that the code
marks the month and year with "-1" for "we don't know it
yet", but the month and year code paths were not adjusted to
fill in the current time before doing their calculations
(whereas other units follow a different code path and are
fine).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Until now, there was no coverage of relative date printing
or approxidate parsing routines (mainly because we had no
way of faking the "now" time for relative date calculations,
which made consistent testing impossible).
This new script tries to exercise the basic features of
show_date and approxidate. Most of the tests are just "this
obvious thing works" to prevent future regressions, with a
few exceptions:
- We confirm the fix in 607a9e8 that relative year/month
dates in the latter half of a year round correctly.
- We confirm that the improvements in b5373e9 and 1bddb25
work.
- A few tests are marked to expect failure, which are
regressions recently introduced by the two commits
above.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This file is no longer used since 54bc13c (t8005: Nobody writes Russian in
shift_jis, 2009-06-18).
Signed-off-by: Nanako Shiraishi <nanako3@lavabit.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A request to clone the repository does not give any "have" but asks for
all the refs we offer with "want". When a request does not ask to clone
the repository fully, but asks to fetch some refs into an empty
repository, it will not give any "have" but its "want" won't ask for all
the refs we offer.
If we suppose (and I would say this is a rather big if) that it makes
sense to distinguish these two cases, a hook cannot reliably do this
alone. The hook can detect lack of "have" and bunch of "want", but there
is no direct way to tell if the other end asked for all refs we offered,
or merely most of them.
Between the time we talked with the other end and the time the hook got
called, we may have acquired more refs or lost some refs in the repository
by concurrent operations. Given that we plan to introduce selective
advertisement of refs with a protocol extension, it would become even more
difficult for hooks to guess between these two cases.
This adds "kind [clone|fetch]" to hook's input, as a stable interface to
allow the hooks to tell these cases apart.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
After upload-pack successfully finishes its operation, post-upload-pack
hook can be called for logging purposes.
The hook is passed various pieces of information, one per line, from its
standard input. Currently the following items can be fed to the hook, but
more types of information may be added in the future:
want SHA-1::
40-byte hexadecimal object name the client asked to include in the
resulting pack. Can occur one or more times in the input.
have SHA-1::
40-byte hexadecimal object name the client asked to exclude from
the resulting pack, claiming to have them already. Can occur zero
or more times in the input.
time float::
Number of seconds spent for creating the packfile.
size decimal::
Size of the resulting packfile in bytes.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jc/shortstatus:
git commit --dry-run -v: show diff in color when asked
Documentation/git-commit.txt: describe --dry-run
wt-status: collect untracked files in a separate "collect" phase
Make git_status_config() file scope static to builtin-commit.c
wt-status: move wt_status_colors[] into wt_status structure
wt-status: move many global settings to wt_status structure
commit: --dry-run
status: show worktree status of conflicted paths separately
wt-status.c: rework the way changes to the index and work tree are summarized
diff-index: keep the original index intact
diff-index: report unmerged new entries
Some platforms (IRIX 6.5, Solaris 7) do not provide the 'yes' utility.
Currently, some tests, including t7610 and t9001, try to call this program.
Due to the way the tests are structured, the tests still pass even though
this program is missing. Rather than succeeding by chance, let's provide
an implementation of the simple 'yes' utility in shell for all platforms to
use.
Signed-off-by: Brandon Casey <casey@nrlssc.navy.mil>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Adds a new test file, t9501, that checks HTTP status codes and messages
from gitweb.
Currently, the only tests are for the snapshot feature.
Signed-off-by: Mark Rada <marada@uwaterloo.ca>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
To accommodate additions to the test cases for gitweb, the preamble
from t9500 is now in its own library so that new sets of tests for
gitweb can use the same setup without copying the code.
Signed-off-by: Mark Rada <marada@uwaterloo.ca>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jh/submodule-foreach:
git clone: Add --recursive to automatically checkout (nested) submodules
t7407: Use 'rev-parse --short' rather than bash's substring expansion notation
git submodule status: Add --recursive to recurse into nested submodules
git submodule update: Introduce --recursive to update nested submodules
git submodule foreach: Add --recursive to recurse into nested submodules
git submodule foreach: test access to submodule name as '$name'
Add selftest for 'git submodule foreach'
git submodule: Cleanup usage string and add option parsing to cmd_foreach()
git submodule foreach: Provide access to submodule name, as '$name'
Conflicts:
Documentation/git-submodule.txt
git-submodule.sh
This teaches mailinfo the scissors -- >8 -- mark; the command ignores
everything before it in the message body.
For lefties among us, we also support -- 8< -- ;-)
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We currently point the HEAD of a newly cloned repo to the
same ref as the parent repo's HEAD. While a user can then
"git checkout -b foo origin/foo" whichever branch they
choose, it is more convenient and more efficient to tell
clone which branch you want in the first place.
Based on a patch by Kirill A. Korinskiy.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
git-log: allow --decorate[=short|full]
Minor improvement to the write-tree documentation
git-bisect: call the found commit "*the* first bad commit"
Commit de435ac0 changed the behavior of --decorate from printing the
full ref (e.g., "refs/heads/master") to a shorter, more human-readable
version (e.g., just "master"). While this is nice for human readers,
external tools using the output from "git log" may prefer the full
version.
This patch introduces an extension to --decorate to allow the caller to
specify either the short or the full versions.
Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jp/symlink-dirs:
t6035-merge-dir-to-symlink depends on SYMLINKS prerequisite
git-checkout: be careful about untracked symlinks
lstat_cache: guard against full match of length of 'name' parameter
Demonstrate bugs when a directory is replaced with a symlink
When checkout sees that HEAD points to a non-existent ref,
it currently acts as if "-f" was given; this behavior dates
back to 5a03e7f, which enabled checkout from unborn branches
in the shell version of "git-checkout". The reasoning given
is to avoid the code path which tries to merge the tree
contents. When checkout was converted to C, this code
remained intact.
The unfortunate side effect of this strategy is that the
"force" code path will overwrite working tree and index
state that may be precious to the user. Instead of enabling
"force", this patch uses the normal "merge" codepath for an
unborn branch, but substitutes the empty tree for the "old"
commit.
This means that in the absence of an index, any files in the
working tree will be treated as untracked files, and a
checkout which would overwrite them is aborted. Similarly,
any paths in the index will be merged with an empty entry
as the base, meaning that unless the new branch's content is
identical to what's in the index, there will be a conflict
and the checkout will be aborted.
The user is then free to correct the situation or proceed
with "-f" as appropriate.
This patch also removes the "warning: you are on a branch
yet to be born" message. Its function was to warn the user
that we were enabling the "-f" option. Since we are no
longer doing that, there is no reason for the user to care
whether we are switching away from an unborn branch.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If all refs sent by the remote repo during a fetch are reachable
locally, then no further conversation is performed with the remote. This
check is skipped when the --depth argument is provided to allow the
deepening of a shallow clone which corresponding remote repo has no
changed.
However, some additional filtering was added in commit c29727d5 to
remove those refs which are equal on both sides. If the remote repo has
not changed, then the list of refs to give the remote process becomes
empty and simply attempting to deepen a shallow repo always fails.
Let's stop being smart in that case and simply send the whole list over
when that condition is met. The remote will do the right thing anyways.
Test cases for this issue are also provided.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@cam.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
These tests help make sure graph_is_interesting() is doing the right
thing.
Signed-off-by: Adam Simpkins <simpkins@facebook.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The way sparse checkout works, users may empty their worktree
completely, because of non-matching sparse-checkout spec, or empty
spec. I believe this is not desired. This patch makes Git refuse to
produce such worktree.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This adds index as a prerequisite for directory listing (with
exclude). At the moment directory listing is used by "git clean",
"git add", "git ls-files" and "git status"/"git commit" and
unpack_trees()-related commands. These commands have been
checked/modified to populate index before doing directory listing.
add_excludes_from_file() does not enable this feature, because it
is used to read .git/info/exclude and some explicit files specified
by "git ls-files".
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This part is mainly to remove CE_VALID shortcuts (and as a
consequence, ce_uptodate() shortcuts as it may be turned on by
CE_VALID) in writing code path if skip-worktree is used. Various tests
are added to avoid future breakages.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
grep: turn on --cached for files that is marked skip-worktree
ls-files: do not check for deleted file that is marked skip-worktree
update-index: ignore update request if it's skip-worktree, while still allows removing
diff*: skip worktree version
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Detail about this bit is in Documentation/git-update-index.txt.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This removes tentative "git stat" and make it take over "git status".
There are some tests that expect "git status" to exit with non-zero status
when there is something staged. Some tests expect "git status path..." to
show the status for a partial commit.
For these, replace "git status" with "git commit --dry-run". For the
ones that do not attempt a dry-run of a partial commit that check the
output from the command, check the output from "git status" as well, as
they should be identical.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git reset without argument displays a summary of the local modification,
like this:
$ git reset
Makefile: locally modified
Some people have problems with this; they look like an error message.
This patch makes its output mimic how "git checkout $another_branch"
reports the paths with local modifications. "git add --refresh --verbose"
is changed in the same way.
It also adds a header to make it clear that the output is informative,
and not an error.
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
* cc/replace:
t6050: check pushing something based on a replaced commit
Documentation: add documentation for "git replace"
Add git-replace to .gitignore
builtin-replace: use "usage_msg_opt" to give better error messages
parse-options: add new function "usage_msg_opt"
builtin-replace: teach "git replace" to actually replace
Add new "git replace" command
environment: add global variable to disable replacement
mktag: call "check_sha1_signature" with the replacement sha1
replace_object: add a test case
object: call "check_sha1_signature" with the replacement sha1
sha1_file: add a "read_sha1_file_repl" function
replace_object: add mechanism to replace objects found in "refs/replace/"
refs: add a "for_each_replace_ref" function
* bc/mailsplit-cr-at-eol:
Allow mailsplit (and hence git-am) to handle mails with CRLF line-endings
builtin-mailsplit.c: remove read_line_with_nul() since it is no longer used
builtin-mailinfo,builtin-mailsplit: use strbufs
strbuf: add new function strbuf_getwholeline()
Previously, graph_is_interesting() did not behave quite the same way as
the code in get_revision(). As a result, it would sometimes think
commits were uninteresting, even though get_revision() would return
them. This resulted in incorrect lines in the graph output.
This change creates a get_commit_action() function, which
graph_is_interesting() and simplify_commit() both now use to determine
if a commit will be shown. It is identical to the old simplify_commit()
behavior, except that it never calls rewrite_parents().
This problem was reported by Santi Béjar. The following command
would exhibit the problem before, but now works correctly:
git log --graph --simplify-by-decoration --oneline v1.6.3.3
Previously git graph did not display the output for this command
correctly between f29ac4f and 66996ec, among other places.
Signed-off-by: Adam Simpkins <simpkins@facebook.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We skip t7407 because a patch series is cooking that uses is.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Many projects using submodules expect all submodules to be checked out
in order to build/work correctly. A common command sequence for
developers on such projects is:
git clone url/to/project
cd project
git submodule update --init (--recursive)
This patch introduces the --recursive option to git-clone. The new
option causes git-clone to recursively clone and checkout all
submodules of the cloned project. Hence, the above command sequence
can be reduced to:
git clone --recursive url/to/project
--recursive is ignored if no checkout is done by the git-clone.
The patch also includes documentation and a selftest.
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The substring expansion notation is a bashism that we have not so far
adopted. Use 'git rev-parse --short' instead, as this also handles
the case where the unique abbreviation is longer than 7 characters.
Also fix the typo; the object name for submodule #2 was copied from
submodule #1's by mistake.
Suggested-by: Brandon Casey <casey@nrlssc.navy.mil>
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In very large and hierarchically structured projects, one may encounter
nested submodules. In these situations, it is valuable to not only show
status for all the submodules in the current repo (which is what is
currently done by 'git submodule status'), but also to show status for
all submodules at all levels (i.e. recursing into nested submodules as
well).
This patch teaches the new --recursive option to the 'git submodule status'
command. The patch also includes documentation and selftests.
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In very large and hierarchically structured projects, one may encounter
nested submodules. In these situations, it is valuable to not only update
the submodules in the current repo (which is what is currently done by
'git submodule update'), but also to operate on all submodules at all
levels (i.e. recursing into nested submodules as well).
This patch teaches the new --recursive option to the 'git submodule update'
command. The patch also includes documentation and selftests.
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In very large and hierarchically structured projects, one may encounter
nested submodules. In these situations, it is valuable to not only operate
on all the submodules in the current repo (which is what is currently done
by 'git submodule foreach'), but also to operate on all submodules at all
levels (i.e. recursing into nested submodules as well).
This patch teaches the new --recursive option to the 'git submodule foreach'
command. The patch also includes documentation and selftests.
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add verification of the behaviour of '$name' to the git submodule
foreach selftest.
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The selftest verifies that:
- only checked out submodules are visited by 'git submodule foreach'
- the $path, and $sha1 variables are set correctly for each submodule
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
And then unescape them when writing to $GIT_CONFIG.
SVN has different rules for repository URLs (usually the root)
and for paths within that repository (below the HTTP layer).
Thus, for the request URI path at the HTTP level, the URI needs
to be encoded. However, in the body of the HTTP request (the
with underlying SVN XML protocol), those paths should not be
URI-encoded[1]. For non-HTTP(S) requests, SVN appears to be
more flexible and will except weird characters in the URL as
well as URI-encoded ones.
Since users are used to using URLs being entirely URI-encoded,
git svn will now attempt to unescape the path portion of URLs
while leaving the actual repository URL untouched.
This change will be reflected in newly-created $GIT_CONFIG files
only. This allows users to switch between svn(+ssh)://, file://
and http(s):// urls without changing the fetch/branches/tags
config keys. This won't affect existing imports at all (since
things didn't work before this commit anyways), and will allow
users to force escaping into repository paths that look like
they're escaped (but are not).
Thanks to Mike Smullin for the original bug report and Björn
Steinbrink for summarizing it into testable cases for me.
[1] Except when committing copies/renames, see
commit 29633bb91c
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Commit de435ac0 changed the behavior of --decorate from printing the
full ref (e.g., "refs/heads/master") to a shorter, more human-readable
version (e.g., just "master"). While this is nice for human readers,
external tools using the output from "git log" may prefer the full
version.
This patch introduces an extension to --decorate to allow the caller to
specify either the short or the full versions.
Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
These are all backed by git-add--interactive.perl under the hood.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-By: Thomas Rast <trast@student.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Merlyn noticed that Documentation/install-doc-quick.sh no longer correctly
removes old installed documents when the target directory has a leading
path that is a symlink. It turns out that "checkout-index --prefix" was
broken by recent b6986d8 (git-checkout: be careful about untracked
symlinks, 2009-07-29).
I suspect has_symlink_leading_path() could learn the third parameter
(prefix that is allowed to be symlinked directories) to allow us to retire
a similar function has_dirs_only_path().
Another avenue of fixing this I considered was to get rid of base_dir and
base_dir_len from "struct checkout", and instead make "git checkout-index"
when run with --prefix mkdir the leading path and chdir in there. It
might be the best longer term solution to this issue, as the base_dir
feature is used only by that rather obscure codepath as far as I know.
But at least this patch should fix this breakage.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Reading the index into an empty file has been broken by
5a56da5806, since it causes the existing
index to always be loaded first, and dies if it's an empty file:
$ GIT_INDEX_FILE=`mktemp` git read-tree master
fatal: index file smaller than expected
It breaks for instance committing from git.el. This patch reverts to the
previous behavior of only loading the index when merging it.
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Julliard <julliard@winehq.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This adds a hunk-based mode to git-stash. You can select hunks from
the difference between HEAD and worktree, and git-stash will build a
stash that reflects these changes. The index state of the stash is
the same as your current index, and we also let --patch imply
--keep-index.
Note that because the selected hunks are rolled back from the worktree
but not the index, the resulting state may appear somewhat confusing
if you had also staged these changes. This is not entirely
satisfactory, but due to the way stashes are applied, other solutions
would require a change to the stash format.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@student.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This introduces a --patch mode for git-checkout. In the index usage
git checkout --patch -- [files...]
it lets the user discard edits from the <files> at the granularity of
hunks (by selecting hunks from 'git diff' and then reverse applying
them to the worktree).
We also accept a revision argument. In the case
git checkout --patch HEAD -- [files...]
we offer hunks from the difference between HEAD and the worktree, and
reverse applies them to both index and worktree, allowing you to
discard staged changes completely. In the non-HEAD usage
git checkout --patch <revision> -- [files...]
it offers hunks from the difference between the worktree and
<revision>. The chosen hunks are then applied to both index and
worktree.
The application to worktree and index is done "atomically" in the
sense that we first check if the patch applies to the index (it should
always apply to the worktree). If it does not, we give the user a
choice to either abort or apply to the worktree anyway.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@student.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This introduces a --patch mode for git-reset. The basic case is
git reset --patch -- [files...]
which acts as the opposite of 'git add --patch -- [files...]': it
offers hunks for *un*staging. Advanced usage is
git reset --patch <revision> -- [files...]
which offers hunks from the diff between the index and <revision> for
forward application to the index. (That is, the basic case is just
<revision> = HEAD.)
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@student.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 0392513 (add-interactive: refactor mode hunk handling, 2009-04-16),
we merged the interaction loops for mode changes and hunk staging.
This was fine at the time, because 0beee4c (git-add--interactive:
remove hunk coalescing, 2008-07-02) removed hunk coalescing.
However, in 7a26e65 (Revert "git-add--interactive: remove hunk
coalescing", 2009-05-16), we resurrected it. Since then, the code
would attempt in vain to merge mode changes with diff hunks,
corrupting both in the process.
We add a check to the coalescing loop to ensure it only looks at diff
hunks, thus skipping mode changes.
Noticed-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@student.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When trying to stage changes to file which has also pending `chmod +x`,
`git add -p` produces lots of 'Use of uninitialized value ...' warnings
and fails to do the job:
$ echo content >> file
$ chmod +x file
$ git add -p
diff --git a/file b/file
index e69de29..d95f3ad
--- a/file
+++ b/file
old mode 100644
new mode 100755
Stage mode change [y,n,q,a,d,/,j,J,g,?]? y
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+content
Stage this hunk [y,n,q,a,d,/,K,g,e,?]? y
Use of uninitialized value $o_ofs in addition (+) at .../git-add--interactive line 776.
Use of uninitialized value $ofs in numeric le (<=) at .../git-add--interactive line 806.
Use of uninitialized value $o0_ofs in concatenation (.) or string at .../git-add--interactive line 830.
Use of uninitialized value $n0_ofs in concatenation (.) or string at .../git-add--interactive line 830.
Use of uninitialized value $o_ofs in addition (+) at .../git-add--interactive line 776.
fatal: corrupt patch at line 5
diff --git a/file b/file
index e69de29..d95f3ad
--- a/file
+++ b/file
@@ -,0 + @@
+content
Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git submodule summary is providing similar functionality for submodules as
git diff-index does for a git project (including the meaning of --cached).
But the analogon to git diff-files is missing, so add a --files option to
summarize the differences between the index of the super project and the
last commit checked out in the working tree of the submodule.
Signed-off-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The tests for {reset,commit,stash} -p will frequently have to set both
worktree and index states to known values, and verify that the outcome
(again both worktree and index) are what was expected.
Add a small helper library that lets us do these tasks more easily.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Rast <trast@student.ethz.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When unpack-objects is run under the --strict option, objects that have
pointers to other objects are verified for the reachability at the end, by
calling check_object() on each of them, and letting check_object to walk
the reachable objects from them using fsck_walk() recursively.
The function however misunderstands the semantics of fsck_walk() function
when it makes a call to it, setting itself as the callback. fsck_walk()
expects the callback function to return a non-zero value to signal an
error (negative value causes an immediate abort, positive value is still
an error but allows further checks on sibling objects) and return zero to
signal a success. The function however returned 1 on some non error
cases, and to cover up this mistake, complained only when fsck_walk() did
not detect any error.
To fix this double-bug, make the function return zero on all success
cases, and also check for non-zero return from fsck_walk() for an error.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It may be convenient for some users to store svn remote tracking
branches outside of the refs/remotes/ heirarchy.
To accomplish this feat, this patch includes the entire path to
the ref in $r->{'refname'} in &read_all_remotes and tries to change
references to this entry so the new value makes sense.
[ew: fixed backwards compatibility, long lines]
Signed-off-by: Adam Brewster <adambrewster@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Since "trunk" is a convention for the main development branch in
the SVN world, try to make that the master branch upon initial
checkout if it exists. This is probably less surprising based
on user requests.
t9135 was the only test which relied on the previous behavior
and thus needed to be modified.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
When doing a "pull --rebase", we check to make sure that the index and
working tree are clean. The index-clean check compares the index against
HEAD. The test erroneously reports dirtiness if we don't have a HEAD yet.
In such an "unborn branch" case, by definition, a non-empty index won't
be based on whatever we are pulling down from the remote, and will lose
the local change. Just check if $GIT_DIR/index exists and error out.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jp/symlink-dirs:
t6035-merge-dir-to-symlink depends on SYMLINKS prerequisite
git-checkout: be careful about untracked symlinks
lstat_cache: guard against full match of length of 'name' parameter
Demonstrate bugs when a directory is replaced with a symlink
* js/run-command-updates:
api-run-command.txt: describe error behavior of run_command functions
run-command.c: squelch a "use before assignment" warning
receive-pack: remove unnecessary run_status report
run_command: report failure to execute the program, but optionally don't
run_command: encode deadly signal number in the return value
run_command: report system call errors instead of returning error codes
run_command: return exit code as positive value
MinGW: simplify waitpid() emulation macros