"git maintenance run/start/stop" needed to be run in a repository
to hold the lockfile they use, but didn't make sure they are
actually in a repository, which has been corrected.
* rs/maintenance-run-outside-repo:
t7900: fix typo: "test_execpt_success"
maintenance: fix SEGFAULT when no repository
The transport layer was taught to optionally exchange the session
ID assigned by the trace2 subsystem during fetch/push transactions.
* js/trace2-session-id:
receive-pack: log received client session ID
send-pack: advertise session ID in capabilities
upload-pack, serve: log received client session ID
fetch-pack: advertise session ID in capabilities
transport: log received server session ID
serve: advertise session ID in v2 capabilities
receive-pack: advertise session ID in v0 capabilities
upload-pack: advertise session ID in v0 capabilities
trace2: add a public function for getting the SID
docs: new transfer.advertiseSID option
docs: new capability to advertise session IDs
"git apply" adjusted the permission bits of working-tree files and
directories according core.sharedRepository setting by mistake and
for a long time, which has been corrected.
* mt/do-not-use-scld-in-working-tree:
apply: don't use core.sharedRepository to create working tree files
"git maintenance" command had trouble working in a directory whose
pathname contained an ERE metacharacter like '+'.
* ds/maintenance-part-3:
maintenance: use 'git config --fixed-value'
Various subcommands of "git config" that takes value_regex
learn the "--literal-value" option to take the value_regex option
as a literal string.
* ds/config-literal-value:
config doc: value-pattern is not necessarily a regexp
config: implement --fixed-value with --get*
config: plumb --fixed-value into config API
config: add --fixed-value option, un-implemented
t1300: add test for --replace-all with value-pattern
t1300: test "set all" mode with value-pattern
config: replace 'value_regex' with 'value_pattern'
config: convert multi_replace to flags
Processes that access packdata while the .idx file gets removed
(e.g. while repacking) did not fail or fall back gracefully as they
could.
* tb/idx-midx-race-fix:
midx.c: protect against disappearing packs
packfile.c: protect against disappearing indexes
"git update-ref --stdin" learns to take multiple transactions in a
single session.
* ps/update-ref-multi-transaction:
update-ref: disallow "start" for ongoing transactions
p1400: use `git-update-ref --stdin` to test multiple transactions
update-ref: allow creation of multiple transactions
t1400: avoid touching refs on filesystem
"git add -i" failed to honor custom colors configured to show
patches, which has been corrected.
* js/add-i-color-fix:
add -i: verify in the tests that colors can be overridden
add -p: prefer color.diff.context over color.diff.plain
add -i (Perl version): color header to match the C version
add -i (built-in): use the same indentation as the Perl version
add -p (built-in): do not color the progress indicator separately
add -i (built-in): use correct names to load color.diff.* config
add -i (built-in): prevent the `reset` "color" from being configured
add -i: use `reset_color` consistently
add -p (built-in): imitate `xdl_format_hunk_hdr()` generating hunk headers
add -i (built-in): send error messages to stderr
add -i (built-in): do show an error message for incorrect inputs
The previous commits improved the bitmap computation process for very
long, linear histories with many refs by removing quadratic growth in
how many objects were walked. The strategy of computing "intermediate
commits" using bitmasks for which refs can reach those commits
partitioned the poset of reachable objects so each part could be walked
exactly once. This was effective for linear histories.
However, there was a (significant) drawback: wide histories with many
refs had an explosion of memory costs to compute the commit bitmasks
during the exploration that discovers these intermediate commits. Since
these wide histories are unlikely to repeat walking objects, the benefit
of walking objects multiple times was not expensive before. But now, the
commit walk *before computing bitmaps* is incredibly expensive.
In an effort to discover a happy medium, this change reduces the walk
for intermediate commits to only the first-parent history. This focuses
the walk on how the histories converge, which still has significant
reduction in repeat object walks. It is still possible to create
quadratic behavior in this version, but it is probably less likely in
realistic data shapes.
Here is some data taken on a fresh clone of the kernel:
| runtime (sec) | peak heap (GB) |
| | |
| from | with | from | with |
| scratch | existing | scratch | existing |
-----------+---------+----------+---------+-----------
original | 64.044 | 83.241 | 2.088 | 2.194 |
last patch | 45.049 | 37.624 | 2.267 | 2.334 |
this patch | 88.478 | 53.218 | 2.157 | 2.224 |
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The bitmap_writer_build() method calls bitmap_builder_init() to
construct a list of commits reachable from the selected commits along
with a "reverse graph". This reverse graph has edges pointing from a
commit to other commits that can reach that commit. After computing a
reachability bitmap for a commit, the values in that bitmap are then
copied to the reachability bitmaps across the edges in the reverse
graph.
We can now relax the role of the reverse graph to greatly reduce the
number of intermediate reachability bitmaps we compute during this
reverse walk. The end result is that we walk objects the same number of
times as before when constructing the reachability bitmaps, but we also
spend much less time copying bits between bitmaps and have much lower
memory pressure in the process.
The core idea is to select a set of "important" commits based on
interactions among the sets of commits reachable from each selected commit.
The first technical concept is to create a new 'commit_mask' member in the
bb_commit struct. Note that the selected commits are provided in an
ordered array. The first thing to do is to mark the ith bit in the
commit_mask for the ith selected commit. As we walk the commit-graph, we
copy the bits in a commit's commit_mask to its parents. At the end of
the walk, the ith bit in the commit_mask for a commit C stores a boolean
representing "The ith selected commit can reach C."
As we walk, we will discover non-selected commits that are important. We
will get into this later, but those important commits must also receive
bit positions, growing the width of the bitmasks as we walk. At the true
end of the walk, the ith bit means "the ith _important_ commit can reach
C."
MAXIMAL COMMITS
---------------
We use a new 'maximal' bit in the bb_commit struct to represent whether
a commit is important or not. The term "maximal" comes from the
partially-ordered set of commits in the commit-graph where C >= P if P
is a parent of C, and then extending the relationship transitively.
Instead of taking the maximal commits across the entire commit-graph, we
instead focus on selecting each commit that is maximal among commits
with the same bits on in their commit_mask. This definition is
important, so let's consider an example.
Suppose we have three selected commits A, B, and C. These are assigned
bitmasks 100, 010, and 001 to start. Each of these can be marked as
maximal immediately because they each will be the uniquely maximal
commit that contains their own bit. Keep in mind that that these commits
may have different bitmasks after the walk; for example, if B can reach
C but A cannot, then the final bitmask for C is 011. Even in these
cases, C would still be a maximal commit among all commits with the
third bit on in their masks.
Now define sets X, Y, and Z to be the sets of commits reachable from A,
B, and C, respectively. The intersections of these sets correspond to
different bitmasks:
* 100: X - (Y union Z)
* 010: Y - (X union Z)
* 001: Z - (X union Y)
* 110: (X intersect Y) - Z
* 101: (X intersect Z) - Y
* 011: (Y intersect Z) - X
* 111: X intersect Y intersect Z
This can be visualized with the following Hasse diagram:
100 010 001
| \ / \ / |
| \/ \/ |
| /\ /\ |
| / \ / \ |
110 101 011
\___ | ___/
\ | /
111
Some of these bitmasks may not be represented, depending on the topology
of the commit-graph. In fact, we are counting on it, since the number of
possible bitmasks is exponential in the number of selected commits, but
is also limited by the total number of commits. In practice, very few
bitmasks are possible because most commits converge on a common "trunk"
in the commit history.
With this three-bit example, we wish to find commits that are maximal
for each bitmask. How can we identify this as we are walking?
As we walk, we visit a commit C. Since we are walking the commits in
topo-order, we know that C is visited after all of its children are
visited. Thus, when we get C from the revision walk we inspect the
'maximal' property of its bb_data and use that to determine if C is truly
important. Its commit_mask is also nearly final. If C is not one of the
originally-selected commits, then assign a bit position to C (by
incrementing num_maximal) and set that bit on in commit_mask. See
"MULTIPLE MAXIMAL COMMITS" below for more detail on this.
Now that the commit C is known to be maximal or not, consider each
parent P of C. Compute two new values:
* c_not_p : true if and only if the commit_mask for C contains a bit
that is not contained in the commit_mask for P.
* p_not_c : true if and only if the commit_mask for P contains a bit
that is not contained in the commit_mask for P.
If c_not_p is false, then P already has all of the bits that C would
provide to its commit_mask. In this case, move on to other parents as C
has nothing to contribute to P's state that was not already provided by
other children of P.
We continue with the case that c_not_p is true. This means there are
bits in C's commit_mask to copy to P's commit_mask, so use bitmap_or()
to add those bits.
If p_not_c is also true, then set the maximal bit for P to one. This means
that if no other commit has P as a parent, then P is definitely maximal.
This is because no child had the same bitmask. It is important to think
about the maximal bit for P at this point as a temporary state: "P is
maximal based on current information."
In contrast, if p_not_c is false, then set the maximal bit for P to
zero. Further, clear all reverse_edges for P since any edges that were
previously assigned to P are no longer important. P will gain all
reverse edges based on C.
The final thing we need to do is to update the reverse edges for P.
These reverse edges respresent "which closest maximal commits
contributed bits to my commit_mask?" Since C contributed bits to P's
commit_mask in this case, C must add to the reverse edges of P.
If C is maximal, then C is a 'closest' maximal commit that contributed
bits to P. Add C to P's reverse_edges list.
Otherwise, C has a list of maximal commits that contributed bits to its
bitmask (and this list is exactly one element). Add all of these items
to P's reverse_edges list. Be careful to ignore duplicates here.
After inspecting all parents P for a commit C, we can clear the
commit_mask for C. This reduces the memory load to be limited to the
"width" of the commit graph.
Consider our ABC/XYZ example from earlier and let's inspect the state of
the commits for an interesting bitmask, say 011. Suppose that D is the
only maximal commit with this bitmask (in the first three bits). All
other commits with bitmask 011 have D as the only entry in their
reverse_edges list. D's reverse_edges list contains B and C.
COMPUTING REACHABILITY BITMAPS
------------------------------
Now that we have our definition, let's zoom out and consider what
happens with our new reverse graph when computing reachability bitmaps.
We walk the reverse graph in reverse-topo-order, so we visit commits
with largest commit_masks first. After we compute the reachability
bitmap for a commit C, we push the bits in that bitmap to each commit D
in the reverse edge list for C. Then, when we finally visit D we already
have the bits for everything reachable from maximal commits that D can
reach and we only need to walk the objects in the set-difference.
In our ABC/XYZ example, when we finally walk for the commit A we only
need to walk commits with bitmask equal to A's bitmask. If that bitmask
is 100, then we are only walking commits in X - (Y union Z) because the
bitmap already contains the bits for objects reachable from (X intersect
Y) union (X intersect Z) (i.e. the bits from the reachability bitmaps
for the maximal commits with bitmasks 110 and 101).
The behavior is intended to walk each commit (and the trees that commit
introduces) at most once while allocating and copying fewer reachability
bitmaps. There is one caveat: what happens when there are multiple
maximal commits with the same bitmask, with respect to the initial set
of selected commits?
MULTIPLE MAXIMAL COMMITS
------------------------
Earlier, we mentioned that when we discover a new maximal commit, we
assign a new bit position to that commit and set that bit position to
one for that commit. This is absolutely important for interesting
commit-graphs such as git/git and torvalds/linux. The reason is due to
the existence of "butterflies" in the commit-graph partial order.
Here is an example of four commits forming a butterfly:
I J
|\ /|
| \/ |
| /\ |
|/ \|
M N
\ /
|/
Q
Here, I and J both have parents M and N. In general, these do not need
to be exact parent relationships, but reachability relationships. The
most important part is that M and N cannot reach each other, so they are
independent in the partial order. If I had commit_mask 10 and J had
commit_mask 01, then M and N would both be assigned commit_mask 11 and
be maximal commits with the bitmask 11. Then, what happens when M and N
can both reach a commit Q? If Q is also assigned the bitmask 11, then it
is not maximal but is reachable from both M and N.
While this is not necessarily a deal-breaker for our abstract definition
of finding maximal commits according to a given bitmask, we have a few
issues that can come up in our larger picture of constructing
reachability bitmaps.
In particular, if we do not also consider Q to be a "maximal" commit,
then we will walk commits reachable from Q twice: once when computing
the reachability bitmap for M and another time when computing the
reachability bitmap for N. This becomes much worse if the topology
continues this pattern with multiple butterflies.
The solution has already been mentioned: each of M and N are assigned
their own bits to the bitmask and hence they become uniquely maximal for
their bitmasks. Finally, Q also becomes maximal and thus we do not need
to walk its commits multiple times. The final bitmasks for these commits
are as follows:
I:10 J:01
|\ /|
| \ _____/ |
| /\____ |
|/ \ |
M:111 N:1101
\ /
Q:1111
Further, Q's reverse edge list is { M, N }, while M and N both have
reverse edge list { I, J }.
PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENTS
------------------------
Now that we've spent a LOT of time on the theory of this algorithm,
let's show that this is actually worth all that effort.
To test the performance, use GIT_TRACE2_PERF=1 when running
'git repack -abd' in a repository with no existing reachability bitmaps.
This avoids any issues with keeping existing bitmaps to skew the
numbers.
Inspect the "building_bitmaps_total" region in the trace2 output to
focus on the portion of work that is affected by this change. Here are
the performance comparisons for a few repositories. The timings are for
the following versions of Git: "multi" is the timing from before any
reverse graph is constructed, where we might perform multiple
traversals. "reverse" is for the previous change where the reverse graph
has every reachable commit. Finally "maximal" is the version introduced
here where the reverse graph only contains the maximal commits.
Repository: git/git
multi: 2.628 sec
reverse: 2.344 sec
maximal: 2.047 sec
Repository: torvalds/linux
multi: 64.7 sec
reverse: 205.3 sec
maximal: 44.7 sec
So in all cases we've not only recovered any time lost to switching to
the reverse-edge algorithm, but we come out ahead of "multi" in all
cases. Likewise, peak heap has gone back to something reasonable:
Repository: torvalds/linux
multi: 2.087 GB
reverse: 3.141 GB
maximal: 2.288 GB
While I do not have access to full fork networks on GitHub, Peff has run
this algorithm on the chromium/chromium fork network and reported a
change from 3 hours to ~233 seconds. That network is particularly
beneficial for this approach because it has a long, linear history along
with many tags. The "multi" approach was obviously quadratic and the new
approach is linear.
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The current rev-list tests that check the bitmap data only work on HEAD
instead of multiple branches. Expand the test cases to handle both
'master' and 'other' branches.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We truncate the .bitmap file to 512 bytes and expect to run into
problems reading an individual ewah file. But this length is somewhat
arbitrary, and just happened to work when the test was added in
9d2e330b17 (ewah_read_mmap: bounds-check mmap reads, 2018-06-14).
An upcoming commit will change the size of the history we create in the
test repo, which will cause this test to fail. We can future-proof it a
bit more by reducing the size of the truncated bitmap file.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A .bitmap file may have a "name hash cache" extension, which puts a
sequence of uint32_t values (one per object) at the end of the file.
When we see a flag indicating this extension, we blindly subtract the
appropriate number of bytes from our available length. However, if the
.bitmap file is too short, we'll underflow our length variable and wrap
around, thinking we have a very large length. This can lead to reading
out-of-bounds bytes while loading individual ewah bitmaps.
We can fix this by checking the number of available bytes when we parse
the header. The existing "truncated bitmap" test is now split into two
tests: one where we don't have this extension at all (and hence actually
do try to read a truncated ewah bitmap) and one where we realize
up-front that we can't even fit in the cache structure. We'll check
stderr in each case to make sure we hit the error we're expecting.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
To allow us to consider a change in the default behavior of `git init`
where it uses a more inclusive name for the initial branch, we must
first teach the test suite not to rely on a specific default branch
name. In this patch, we teach t7064 that trick.
To that end, we set a specific name for the initial branch. Ideally, we
would simply start out by calling `git branch -M initial-branch`, but
there is a bug in `git branch -M` that does not allow renaming branches
unless they already have commits. This will be fixed in the
`js/init-defaultbranch-advice` topic, and until that time, we use the
equivalent (but less intuitive) `git checkout -f --orphan`.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Git diff reports a submodule directory as -dirty even when there are
only untracked files in the submodule directory. This is inconsistent
with what `git describe --dirty` says when run in the submodule
directory in that state.
Make `--ignore-submodules=untracked` the default for `git diff` when
there is no configuration variable or command line option, so that the
command would not give '-dirty' suffix to a submodule whose working
tree has untracked files, to make it consistent with `git
describe --dirty` that is run in the submodule working tree.
And also make `--ignore-submodules=none` the default for `git status`
so that the user doesn't end up deleting a submodule that has
uncommitted (untracked) files.
Signed-off-by: Sangeeta Jain <sangunb09@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Our test suite currently only passes when `git init` uses the name
`master` for the initial branch. This would stop us from changing the
default branch name.
Let's adjust t6300 so that it does not rely on any specific default
branch name. This trick is done by (force-)renaming the initial branch
to the name `main` in the `setup` and the `:remotename and :remoteref`
test cases, and then replacing all mentions of `master` and `MASTER`
with `main` and `MAIN`, respectively.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Split a very long line in a test introduced in 0b691d8685 (pretty:
add support for separator option in %(trailers), 2019-01-28). This
makes it easier to read, especially as follow-up commits will copy
this test as a template.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Our tests for handling duplicates in oid-array provide only a single
duplicate for each number, so our sorted array looks like:
44 44 55 55 88 88 aa aa
A slightly more interesting test is to have multiple duplicates, which
makes sure that we not only skip the duplicate, but keep skipping until
we are out of the set of matching duplicates.
Unsurprisingly this works just fine, but it's worth beefing up this test
since we're about to change the duplicate-detection code.
Note that we do need to adjust the results on the lookup test, since it
is returning the index of the found item (and now we have more items
before our range, and the range itself is slightly larger, since we'll
accept a match of any element).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The data type is an oid_array these days, and we are using "test-tool
oid-array", so let's name the test script appropriately.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Initially, we started converting this test script in anticipation for
renaming the default branch name to `main`. To that end, we partially
converted it to accommodate for that default branch name, marking the
now-failing test cases with a prereq that was designed to be fulfilled
once the rename was complete.
However, the effort to move to the branch name `main` needs quite a bit
longer, as it was decided that we need a deprecation phase first.
To avoid keeping t5526 in limbo for such a long time, we just made it
independent of the actual default branch name used by Git. Therefore,
that prereq is no longer necessary, and we can drop it.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While at it, use different default branch names for the three different
repositories involved in the test script: this makes it easier to debug
failures, too (otherwise you have to wonder which `master` branch was
meant: the super project's? The submodule's? The nested submodule's?).
Note: this touches code that was originally modified to prepare for
renaming the default branch name to `main`. This patch side-steps that
effort completely by overriding the initial branch name explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
To keep track of which object filters are allowed or not, 'git
upload-pack' stores the name of each filter in a string_list, and sets
it ->util pointer to be either 0 or 1, indicating whether it is banned
or allowed.
Later on, we attempt to clear that list, but we incorrectly ask for the
util pointers to be free()'d, too. This behavior (introduced back in
6dd3456a8c (upload-pack.c: allow banning certain object filter(s),
2020-08-03)) leads to an invalid free, and causes us to crash.
In order to trigger this, one needs to fetch from a server that (a) has
at least one object filter allowed, and (b) issue a fetch that contains
a subset of the allowed filters (i.e., we cannot ask for a banned
filter, since this causes us to die() before we hit the bogus
string_list_clear()).
In that case, whatever banned filters exist will cause a noop free()
(since those ->util pointers are set to 0), but the first allowed filter
we try to free will crash us.
We never noticed this in the tests because we didn't have an example of
setting 'uploadPackFilter' configuration variables and then following up
with a valid fetch. The first new 'git clone' prevents further
regression here. For good measure on top, add a test which checks the
same behavior at a tree depth greater than 0.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If we encounter an error in parse_filter_object_config(), we'll complain
to stderr but won't actually propagate the return value up the stack.
This is unlike most of our config callbacks, which return the error to
git_config() so it can die (this includes the call just below us to
parse_hide_refs_config(), which can also produce errors).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
An earlier attempt to fix "git fetch --recurse-submodules" broke
another use case; revert it until a better fix is found.
* pk/subsub-fetch-fix:
Revert "submodules: fix of regression on fetching of non-init subsub-repo"
"git pull --rebase --recurse-submodules" checked for local changes
in a wrong range and failed to run correctly when it should.
* pb/pull-rebase-recurse-submodules:
pull: check for local submodule modifications with the right range
t5572: describe '--rebase' tests a little more
t5572: add notes on a peculiar test
pull --rebase: compute rebase arguments in separate function
This reverts commit 1b7ac4e6d4d490b224f5206af7418ed74e490608; in
<CAN0XMOLiS_8JZKF_wW70BvRRxkDHyUoa=Z3ODtB_Bd6f5Y=7JQ@mail.gmail.com>,
Ralf Thielow reports that "git fetch" with submodule.recurse set can
result in a bogus and infinitely recursive fetching of the same
submodule.
core.sharedRepository defines which permissions Git should set when
creating files in $GIT_DIR, so that the repository may be shared with
other users. But (in its current form) the setting shouldn't affect how
files are created in the working tree. This is not respected by apply
and am (which uses apply), when creating leading directories:
$ cat d.patch
diff --git a/d/f b/d/f
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e69de29
Apply without the setting:
$ umask 0077
$ git apply d.patch
$ ls -ld d
drwx------
Apply with the setting:
$ umask 0077
$ git -c core.sharedRepository=0770 apply d.patch
$ ls -ld d
drwxrws---
Only the leading directories are affected. That's because they are
created with safe_create_leading_directories(), which calls
adjust_shared_perm() to set the directories' permissions based on
core.sharedRepository. To fix that, let's introduce a variant of this
function that ignores the setting, and use it in apply. Also add a
regression test and a note in the function documentation about the use
of each variant according to the destination (working tree or git
dir).
Signed-off-by: Matheus Tavares <matheus.bernardino@usp.br>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A test marked with EXPENSIVE creates two 2.5GB files and adds them to
the repository. This takes 194s to run on my machine, versus 2s when the
EXPENSIVE prereq isn't set. We can trim this down a bit by doing two
things:
- use "git commit --quiet" to avoid spending time generating a diff
summary (this actually only helps for the second commit, but I've
added it here to both for consistency). This shaves off 8s.
- set core.compression to 0. We know these files are full of random
bytes, and so won't compress (that's the point of the test!).
Spending cycles on zlib is pointless. This shaves off 122s.
After this, my total time to run the script is 64s. That won't help
normal runs without GIT_TEST_LONG set, of course, but it's easy enough
to do.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
sparse-checkouts are built on the patterns in the
$GIT_DIR/info/sparse-checkout file, where commands have modified
behavior for paths that do not match those patterns. The differences in
behavior, as far as the bugs concerned here, fall into three different
categories (with git subcommands that fall into each category listed):
* commands that only look at files matching the patterns:
* status
* diff
* clean
* update-index
* commands that remove files from the working tree that do not match
the patterns, and restore files that do match them:
* read-tree
* switch
* checkout
* reset (--hard)
* commands that omit writing files to the working tree that do not
match the patterns, unless those files are not clean:
* merge
* rebase
* cherry-pick
* revert
There are some caveats above, e.g. a plain `git diff` ignores files
outside the sparsity patterns but will show diffs for paths outside the
sparsity patterns when revision arguments are passed. (Technically,
diff is treating the sparse paths as matching HEAD.) So, there is some
internal inconsistency among these commands. There are also additional
commands that should behave differently in the face of sparse-checkouts,
as the sparse-checkout documentation alludes to, but the above is
sufficient for me to explain how `git stash` is affected.
What is relevant here is that logically 'stash' should behave like a
merge; it three-way merges the changes the user had in progress at stash
creation time, the HEAD at the time the stash was created, and the
current HEAD, in order to get the stashed changes applied to the current
branch. However, this simplistic view doesn't quite work in practice,
because stash tweaks it a bit due to two factors: (1) flags like
--keep-index and --include-untracked (why we used two different verbs,
'keep' and 'include', is a rant for another day) modify what should be
staged at the end and include more things that should be quasi-merged,
(2) stash generally wants changes to NOT be staged. It only provides
exceptions when (a) some of the changes had conflicts and thus we want
to use stages to denote the clean merges and higher order stages to
mark the conflicts, or (b) if there is a brand new file we don't want
it to become untracked.
stash has traditionally gotten this special behavior by first doing a
merge, and then when it's clean, applying a pipeline of commands to
modify the result. This series of commands for
unstaging-non-newly-added-files came from the following commands:
git diff-index --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A $CTREE >"$a"
git read-tree --reset $CTREE
git update-index --add --stdin <"$a"
rm -f "$a"
Looking back at the different types of special sparsity handling listed
at the beginning of this message, you may note that we have at least one
of each type covered here: merge, diff-index, and read-tree. The weird
mix-and-match led to 3 different bugs:
(1) If a path merged cleanly and it didn't match the sparsity patterns,
the merge backend would know to avoid writing it to the working tree and
keep the SKIP_WORKTREE bit, simply only updating it in the index.
Unfortunately, the subsequent commands would essentially undo the
changes in the index and thus simply toss the changes altogether since
there was nothing left in the working tree. This means the stash is
only partially applied.
(2) If a path existed in the worktree before `git stash apply` despite
having the SKIP_WORKTREE bit set, then the `git read-tree --reset` would
print an error message of the form
error: Entry 'modified' not uptodate. Cannot merge.
and cause stash to abort early.
(3) If there was a brand new file added by the stash, then the
diff-index command would save that pathname to the temporary file, the
read-tree --reset would remove it from the index, and the update-index
command would barf due to no such file being present in the working
copy; it would print a message of the form:
error: NEWFILE: does not exist and --remove not passed
fatal: Unable to process path NEWFILE
and then cause stash to abort early.
Basically, the whole idea of unstage-unless-brand-new requires special
care when you are dealing with a sparse-checkout. Fix these problems
by applying the following simple rule:
When we unstage files, if they have the SKIP_WORKTREE bit set,
clear that bit and write the file out to the working directory.
(*) If there's already a file present in the way, rename it first.
This fixes all three problems in t7012.13 and allows us to mark it as
passing.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When stash was converted from shell to a builtin, it merely
transliterated the forking of various git commands from shell to a C
program that would fork the same commands. Some of those were converted
over to actual library calls, but much of the pipeline-of-commands
design still remains. Fix some of this by replacing the portion
corresponding to
git diff-index --cached --name-only --diff-filter=A $CTREE >"$a"
git read-tree --reset $CTREE
git update-index --add --stdin <"$a"
rm -f "$a"
into a library function that does the same thing. (The read-tree
--reset was already partially converted over to a library call, but as
an independent piece.) Note here that this came after a merge operation
was performed. The merge machinery always stages anything that cleanly
merges, and the above code only runs if there are no conflicts. Its
purpose is to make it so that when there are no conflicts, all the
changes from the stash are unstaged. However, that causes brand new
files from the stash to become untracked, so the code above first saves
those files off and then re-adds them afterwards.
We replace the whole series of commands with a simple function that will
unstage files that are not newly added. This doesn't fix any bugs in
the usage of these commands, it simply matches the existing behavior but
makes it into a single atomic operation that we can then operate on as a
whole. A subsequent commit will take advantage of this to fix issues
with these commands in sparse-checkouts.
This conversion incidentally fixes t3906.1, because the separate
update-index process would die with the following error messages:
error: uninitialized_sub: is a directory - add files inside instead
fatal: Unable to process path uninitialized_sub
The unstaging of the directory as a submodule meant it was no longer
tracked, and thus as an uninitialized directory it could not be added
back using `git update-index --add`, thus resulting in this error and
early abort. Most of the submodule tests in 3906 continue to fail after
this change, this change was just enough to push the first of those
tests to success.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Applying stashes in sparse-checkouts, particularly when the patterns
used to define the sparseness have changed between when the stash was
created and when it is applied, has a number of bugs. The primary
problem is that stashes are sometimes only partially applied. In most
such cases, it does so silently without any warning or error being
displayed and with 0 exit status.
There are, however, a few cases when non-translated error messages are
shown and the stash application aborts early. The first is when there
are files present despite the SKIP_WORKTREE bit being set, in which case
the error message shown is:
error: Entry 'PATHNAME' not uptodate. Cannot merge.
The other situation is when a stash contains new files to add to the
working tree; in this case, the code aborts early but still has the
stash partially applied, and shows the following error message:
error: NEWFILE: does not exist and --remove not passed
fatal: Unable to process path NEWFILE
Add a test that can trigger all three of these problems. Have it
carefully check that the working copy and SKIP_WORKTREE bits are as
expected after the stash application. The test is currently marked as
expected to fail, but subsequent commits will implement the fixes and
toggle the expectation.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A test script got cleaned up and then made not to depend on the
value of init.defaultBranch.
* js/t3404-master-to-primary:
t3404: do not depend on any specific default branch name
Config parser fix for "git notes".
* na/notes-displayref-is-not-boolean:
t3301: test proper exit response to no-value notes.displayRef.
notes.c: fix a segfault in notes_display_config()
A test script got cleaned up not to depend on the value of
init.defaultBranch.
* js/t4015-wo-master:
t4015: let the test pass with any default branch name
A test script got cleaned up and then made not to depend on the
value of init.defaultBranch.
* js/t2106-cleanup:
t2106: ensure that the checkout fails for the expected reason
t2106: make test independent of the current main branch name
t2106: adjust style to the current conventions
Since commit 9ba89f484e git learned how to push to a remote branch using
the source @, for example:
git push origin @:master
However, if the right-hand side is missing, the push fails:
git push origin @
It is obvious what is the desired behavior, and allowing the push makes
things more consistent.
Additionally, @:master now has the same semantics as HEAD:master.
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
So that we are not left in an inconsistent state between them.
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Simplify test and make error messages more clear here.
Per feedback from Junio in
33226af42b (t/perf/fsmonitor: improve error message if typoing hook
name, 2020-10-26)
Signed-off-by: Nipunn Koorapati <nipunn@dropbox.com>
Acked-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "git maintenance run" and "git maintenance start/stop" commands
holds a file-based lock at the .git/maintenance.lock and
.git/schedule.lock respectively. These locks are used to ensure only
one maintenance process is executed at the time as both operations
involves writing data into the git repository.
The path to the lock file is built using
"the_repository->objects->odb->path" that results in SEGFAULT when we
have no repository available as "the_repository->objects->odb" is
set to NULL.
Let's teach maintenance command to use RUN_SETUP option that will
provide the validation and fail when running outside of a repository.
Hence fixing the SEGFAULT for all three operations and making the
behaviour consistent across all subcommands.
Setting the RUN_SETUP also provides the same protection for all
subcommands given that the "register" and "unregister" also requires to
be executed inside a repository.
Furthermore let's remove the local validation implemented by the
"register" and "unregister" as this will not be required anymore with
the new option.
Signed-off-by: Rafael Silva <rafaeloliveira.cs@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A lazily defined test prerequisite can now be defined in terms of
another lazily defined test prerequisite.
* sg/tests-prereq:
tests: fix description of 'test_set_prereq'
tests: make sure nested lazy prereqs work reliably
Since jgit does not yet work with SHA-256 repositories, mark the
tests that uses it not to run unless we are testing with ShA-1
repositories.
* sg/t5310-jgit-wants-sha1:
t5310-pack-bitmaps: skip JGit tests with SHA256
"git fetch" did not work correctly with nested submodules where the
innermost submodule that is not of interest got updated in the
upstream, which has been corrected.
* pk/subsub-fetch-fix:
submodules: fix of regression on fetching of non-init subsub-repo
The exchange between receive-pack and proc-receive hook did not
carefully check for errors.
* jx/t5411-flake-fix:
receive-pack: use default version 0 for proc-receive
receive-pack: gently write messages to proc-receive
t5411: new helper filter_out_user_friendly_and_stable_output
The command line completion script (in contrib/) learned to expand
commands that are alias of alias.
* fc/bash-completion-alias-of-alias:
completion: bash: improve alias loop detection
completion: bash: check for alias loop
completion: bash: support recursive aliases
When a repository's leading directories contain regex metacharacters,
the config calls for 'git maintenance register' and 'git maintenance
unregister' are not careful enough. Use the new --fixed-value option
to direct the config machinery to use exact string matches. This is a
more robust option than escaping these arguments in a piecemeal fashion.
For the test, require that we are not running on Windows since the '+'
and '*' characters are not allowed on that filesystem.
Reported-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com>
Reported-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The config builtin does its own regex matching of values for the --get,
--get-all, and --get-regexp modes. Plumb the existing 'flags' parameter
to the get_value() method so we can initialize the value-pattern argument
as a fixed string instead of a regex pattern.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The git_config_set_multivar_in_file_gently() and related methods now
take a 'flags' bitfield, so add a new bit representing the --fixed-value
option from 'git config'. This alters the purpose of the value_pattern
parameter to be an exact string match. This requires some initialization
changes in git_config_set_multivar_in_file_gently() and a new strcmp()
call in the matches() method.
The new CONFIG_FLAGS_FIXED_VALUE flag is initialized in builtin/config.c
based on the --fixed-value option, and that needs to be updated in
several callers.
This patch only affects some of the modes of 'git config', and the rest
will be completed in the next change.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The 'git config' builtin takes a 'value-pattern' parameter for several
actions. This can cause confusion when expecting exact value matches
instead of regex matches, especially when the input string contains
metacharacters. While callers can escape the patterns themselves, it
would be more friendly to allow an argument to disable the pattern
matching in favor of an exact string match.
Add a new '--fixed-value' option that does not currently change the
behavior. The implementation will be filled in by later changes for
each appropriate action. For now, check and test that --fixed-value
will abort the command when included with an incompatible action or
without a 'value-pattern' argument.
The name '--fixed-value' was chosen over something simpler like
'--fixed' because some commands allow regular expressions on the
key in addition to the value.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The --replace-all option was added in 4ddba79d (git-config-set: add more
options) but was not tested along with the 'value-pattern' parameter.
Since we will be updating this option to optionally treat 'value-pattern'
as a fixed string, let's add a test here that documents the current
behavior.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Without additional modifiers, 'git config <key> <value>' attempts
to set a single value in the .git/config file. When the
value-pattern parameter is supplied, this command behaves in a
non-trivial manner.
Consider 'git config <key> <value> <value-pattern>'. The expected
behavior is as follows:
1. If there are multiple existing values that match 'value-pattern',
then the command fails. Users should use --replace-all instead.
2. If there is no existing values match 'value-pattern', then the
'key=value' pair is appended, making this 'key' a multi-valued
config setting.
3. If there is one existing value that matches 'value-pattern', then
the new config has one entry where 'key=value'.
Add a test that demonstrates these options. Break from the existing
pattern in t1300-config.sh to use 'git config --file=<file>' instead of
modifying .git/config directly to prevent possibly incompatible repo
states. Also use 'git config --file=<file> --list' for config state
comparison instead of the config file format. This makes the tests
more readable.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When a packed object is stored in a multi-pack index, but that pack has
racily gone away, the MIDX code simply calls die(), when it could be
returning an error to the caller, which would in turn lead to
re-scanning the pack directory.
A pack can racily disappear, for example, due to a simultaneous 'git
repack -ad',
You can also reproduce this with two terminals, where one is running:
git init
while true; do
git commit -q --allow-empty -m foo
git repack -ad
git multi-pack-index write
done
(in effect, constantly writing new MIDXs), and the other is running:
obj=$(git rev-parse HEAD)
while true; do
echo $obj | git cat-file --batch-check='%(objectsize:disk)' || break
done
That will sometimes hit the error preparing packfile from
multi-pack-index message, which this patch fixes.
Right now, that path to discovering a missing pack looks something like
'find_pack_entry()' calling 'fill_midx_entry()' and eventually making
its way to call 'nth_midxed_pack_entry()'.
'nth_midxed_pack_entry()' already checks 'is_pack_valid()' and
propagates an error if the pack is invalid. So, this works if the pack
has gone away between calling 'prepare_midx_pack()' and before calling
'is_pack_valid()', but not if it disappears before then.
Catch the case where the pack has already disappeared before
'prepare_midx_pack()' by returning an error in that case, too.
Co-authored-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 17c35c8969 (packfile: skip loading index if in multi-pack-index,
2018-07-12) we stopped loading the .idx file for packs that are
contained within a multi-pack index.
This saves us the effort of loading an .idx and doing some lightweight
validity checks by way of 'packfile.c:load_idx()', but introduces a race
between processes that need to load the index (e.g., to generate a
reverse index) and processes that can delete the index.
For example, running the following in your shell:
$ git init repo && cd repo
$ git commit --allow-empty -m 'base'
$ git repack -ad && git multi-pack-index write
followed by:
$ rm -f .git/objects/pack/pack-*.idx
$ git rev-parse HEAD | git cat-file --batch-check='%(objectsize:disk)'
will result in a segfault prior to this patch. What's happening here is
that we notice that the pack is in the multi-pack index, and so don't
check that it still has a .idx. When we then try and load that index to
generate a reverse index, we don't have it, so the call to
'find_pack_revindex()' in 'packfile.c:packed_object_info()' returns
NULL, and then dereferencing it causes a segfault.
Of course, we don't ever expect someone to remove the index file by
hand, or to be in a state where we never wrote it to begin with (yet
find that pack in the multi-pack-index). But, this can happen in a
timing race with 'git repack -ad', which removes all existing packs
after writing a new pack containing all of their objects.
Avoid this by reverting the hunk of 17c35c8969 which stops loading the
index when the pack is contained in a MIDX. This makes the latter half
of 17c35c8969 useless, since we'll always have a non-NULL
'p->index_data', in which case that if statement isn't guarding
anything.
These two together effectively revert 17c35c8969, and avoid the race
explained above.
Co-authored-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While help.autocorrect can be set to 0 to decline auto-execution of
possibly mistyped commands, it still spends cycles to compute the
suggestions, and it wastes screen real estate.
Update help.autocorrect to accept the string "never" to just exit
with error upon mistyped commands to help users who prefer to never
see suggested corrections at all.
While at it, introduce "immediate" as a more readable way to
immediately execute the auto-corrected command, which can be done
with negative value.
Signed-off-by: Drew DeVault <sir@cmpwn.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Now that we can override the default branch name in the tests via
`GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME`, we should avoid expecting a
particular hard-coded name.
So let's rename the initial branch immediately to `primary` and work
with that.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The existing schedule mechanism using 'cron' is supported by POSIX
platforms, but not Windows. It also works slightly differently on
macOS to significant detriment of the user experience. To allow for
new implementations on these platforms, extract a method that
performs the platform-specific scheduling mechanism. This will be
swapped at compile time with new implementations on specialized
platforms.
As we add this generality, rename GIT_TEST_CRONTAB to
GIT_TEST_MAINT_SCHEDULER. Further, this variable is now parsed as
"<scheduler>:<command>" so we can test platform-specific scheduling
logic even when not on the correct platform. By specifying the
<scheduler> in this string, we will be able to test all three sets of
Git logic from a Linux machine.
Co-authored-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A specialization of hashmap that uses a string as key has been
introduced. Hopefully it will see wider use over time.
* en/strmap:
shortlog: use strset from strmap.h
Use new HASHMAP_INIT macro to simplify hashmap initialization
strmap: take advantage of FLEXPTR_ALLOC_STR when relevant
strmap: enable allocations to come from a mem_pool
strmap: add a strset sub-type
strmap: split create_entry() out of strmap_put()
strmap: add functions facilitating use as a string->int map
strmap: enable faster clearing and reusing of strmaps
strmap: add more utility functions
strmap: new utility functions
hashmap: provide deallocation function names
hashmap: introduce a new hashmap_partial_clear()
hashmap: allow re-use after hashmap_free()
hashmap: adjust spacing to fix argument alignment
hashmap: add usage documentation explaining hashmap_free[_entries]()
Running "git diff" while allowing external diff in a state with
unmerged paths used to segfault, which has been corrected.
* jk/diff-release-filespec-fix:
t7800: simplify difftool test
diff: allow passing NULL to diff_free_filespec_data()
"git rev-parse" learned the "--end-of-options" to help scripts to
safely take a parameter that is supposed to be a revision, e.g.
"git rev-parse --verify -q --end-of-options $rev".
* jk/rev-parse-end-of-options:
rev-parse: handle --end-of-options
rev-parse: put all options under the "-" check
rev-parse: don't accept options after dashdash
The maximum length of output filenames "git format-patch" creates
has become configurable (used to be capped at 64).
* jc/format-patch-name-max:
format-patch: make output filename configurable
We introduced the `PREPARE_FOR_MAIN_BRANCH` prereq for the sole purpose
of allowing us to perform the non-trivial adjustments regarding the
`master` -> `main` rename before the automatable ones.
Now that the transition is almost complete, we can stop using it in most
instances. The only two exceptions are t5526 and t9902: at the time of
writing, there are other patches in flight that touch these test
scripts, therefore their transition to `main` is postponed to a later
date.
This patch is the result of this command:
sed -i 's/PREPARE_FOR_MAIN_BRANCH[ ,]//' t/t[0-9]*.sh &&
git checkout HEAD -- t/t5526\* t/t9902\*
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Carefully excluding t9902, which sees independent development elsewhere
at the time of writing, we use `main` as the default branch name in
t9903. This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t99*.sh lib-cvs.sh &&
git checkout HEAD -- t9902\*)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for all tests (except the ones we specifically excluded for now).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In the previous commits, we adjusted the test suite to use the branch
name `main` for initial branches.
The `git p4`-related tests are a bit harder to adjust because `git p4`
uses the ref `refs/heads/p4/master` to track the remote branches, and
for now, we do not want to change that (this might be the subject of a
future patch series). We only need to adjust for the actual initial
branch name to be changed to `main`.
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t9[5-7]*.sh lib-cvs.sh)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t9[0-4]*.sh)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t8*.sh annotate*.sh)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Excluding t7817, which is added in an unrelated patch series at the time
of writing, this adjusts t7[5-9]*. This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t7[5-9]*.sh)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Carefully excluding t7064, which sees independent development elsewhere
at the time of writing, we use `main` as the default branch name in
t7[0-4]*. This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t7[0-4]*.sh &&
git checkout HEAD -- t7064\*)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t6[4-9]*.sh)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We are in the process of renaming the default branch name to `main`,
which is two characters shorter than `master`. Therefore, some lines
need to be adjusted in t6416, t6422 and t6427 that want to align text
involving the default branch name.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Carefully excluding t6300, which sees independent development elsewhere
at the time of writing, we use `main` as the default branch name in
t6[0-3]*. This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t6[0-3]*.sh &&
git checkout HEAD -- t6300\*)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t5[6-9]*.sh)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -e 's/retsam/niam/g' \
-- t55[4-9]*.sh t556x*)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Note that t5541 uses the reversed `master` name: `retsam`. We replace it
by the equivalent for `main`: `niam`.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Carefully excluding t5526, which sees independent development elsewhere
at the time of writing, we use `main` as the default branch name in
t55[23]*. This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -e 's/naster/nain/g' -- \
t55[23]*.sh &&
git checkout HEAD -- t5526\*)
Note that t5533 contains a variation of the name `master` (`naster`)
that we rename here, too.
This commit allows us to define
`GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main` for that range of tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t551*.sh)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t550*.sh)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In an upcoming commit, we will use `main` as the default branch name in
t5503 instead of `master`. This will require extra padding in ASCII-art
commit graphs, which we hereby add preemptively.
By doing this preemptively rather than after the commit applying the
search-and-replace, it is more obvious that we caught all aligned
comments that are affected by the latter commit.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Carefully excluding t5310, which is developed independently of the
current patch series at the time of writing, we now use `main` as
default branch in t5[0-4]*. This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t5[0-4]*.sh &&
git checkout HEAD -- t5310\*)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We are about to search-and-replace all mentions of `master` in t5323 by
`main`, which is two characters shorter. To prepare for that, let's add
padding to centered lines that will make them briefly uncentered, but
will be re-centered in the commit that performs that rename.
Doing it this way (instead of padding after replacing) makes it easier
to verify the validity of the patch that replaces `master` by `main`.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Carefully excluding t4013 and t4015, which see independent development
elsewhere at the time of writing, we use `main` as the default branch
name in t4*. This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t4*.sh t4211/*.export &&
git checkout HEAD -- t4013\*)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t3[5-9]*.sh)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Carefully excluding t3404, which sees independent development elsewhere
at the time of writing, we use `main` as the default branch name in
t34*. This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t34*.sh &&
git checkout HEAD -- t34\*)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We are about to adjust t3416 for the new default branch name `main`.
This name is two characters shorter and therefore needs two spaces more
padding to align correctly.
Adjusting the alignment before the big search-and-replace makes it
easier to verify that the final result does not leave any misaligned
lines behind.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Carefully excluding t3040, which sees independent development elsewhere
at the time of writing, we transition above-mentioned tests to the
default branch name `main`. This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t3[0-3]*.sh t3206/* &&
git checkout HEAD -- t3040\*)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Carefully excluding t2106, which sees independent development elsewhere
at the time of writing, we transition above-mentioned tests to the
default branch name `main`. This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t2*.sh &&
git checkout HEAD -- t2106\*)
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Carefully excluding t1309, which sees independent development elsewhere
at the time of writing, we transition above-mentioned tests to the
default branch name `main`. This trick was performed via
$ (cd t &&
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -e 's/naster/nain/g' -- t[01]*.sh &&
git checkout HEAD -- t1309\*)
Note that t5533 contains a variation of the name `master` (`naster`)
that we rename here, too.
This allows us to define `GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=main`
for those tests.
Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We are about to adjust t0060 for the new default branch name `main`.
This name is two characters shorter and therefore needs two spaces more
padding to align correctly.
Adjusting the alignment before the big search-and-replace makes it
easier to verify that the final result does not leave any misaligned
lines behind.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In addition to the manual adjustment to let the `linux-gcc` CI job run
the test suite with `master` and then with `main`, this patch makes sure
that GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME is set in all test scripts
that currently rely on the initial branch name being `master by default.
To determine which test scripts to mark up, the first step was to
force-set the default branch name to `master` in
- all test scripts that contain the keyword `master`,
- t4211, which expects `t/t4211/history.export` with a hard-coded ref to
initialize the default branch,
- t5560 because it sources `t/t556x_common` which uses `master`,
- t8002 and t8012 because both source `t/annotate-tests.sh` which also
uses `master`)
This trick was performed by this command:
$ sed -i '/^ *\. \.\/\(test-lib\|lib-\(bash\|cvs\|git-svn\)\|gitweb-lib\)\.sh$/i\
GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=master\
export GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME\
' $(git grep -l master t/t[0-9]*.sh) \
t/t4211*.sh t/t5560*.sh t/t8002*.sh t/t8012*.sh
After that, careful, manual inspection revealed that some of the test
scripts containing the needle `master` do not actually rely on a
specific default branch name: either they mention `master` only in a
comment, or they initialize that branch specificially, or they do not
actually refer to the current default branch. Therefore, the
aforementioned modification was undone in those test scripts thusly:
$ git checkout HEAD -- \
t/t0027-auto-crlf.sh t/t0060-path-utils.sh \
t/t1011-read-tree-sparse-checkout.sh \
t/t1305-config-include.sh t/t1309-early-config.sh \
t/t1402-check-ref-format.sh t/t1450-fsck.sh \
t/t2024-checkout-dwim.sh \
t/t2106-update-index-assume-unchanged.sh \
t/t3040-subprojects-basic.sh t/t3301-notes.sh \
t/t3308-notes-merge.sh t/t3423-rebase-reword.sh \
t/t3436-rebase-more-options.sh \
t/t4015-diff-whitespace.sh t/t4257-am-interactive.sh \
t/t5323-pack-redundant.sh t/t5401-update-hooks.sh \
t/t5511-refspec.sh t/t5526-fetch-submodules.sh \
t/t5529-push-errors.sh t/t5530-upload-pack-error.sh \
t/t5548-push-porcelain.sh \
t/t5552-skipping-fetch-negotiator.sh \
t/t5572-pull-submodule.sh t/t5608-clone-2gb.sh \
t/t5614-clone-submodules-shallow.sh \
t/t7508-status.sh t/t7606-merge-custom.sh \
t/t9302-fast-import-unpack-limit.sh
We excluded one set of test scripts in these commands, though: the range
of `git p4` tests. The reason? `git p4` stores the (foreign) remote
branch in the branch called `p4/master`, which is obviously not the
default branch. Manual analysis revealed that only five of these tests
actually require a specific default branch name to pass; They were
modified thusly:
$ sed -i '/^ *\. \.\/lib-git-p4\.sh$/i\
GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME=master\
export GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_INITIAL_BRANCH_NAME\
' t/t980[0167]*.sh t/t9811*.sh
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In d18c950a69 (pull: warn if the user didn't say whether to rebase or
to merge, 2020-03-09), a new hint was introduced to encourage users to
make a conscious decision about whether they want their pull to merge or
to rebase by configuring the `pull.rebase` setting.
This warning was clearly intended to advise users, but as pointed out in
https://lore.kernel.org/git/87ima2rdsm.fsf%40evledraar.gmail.com, it
uses `warning()` instead of `advise()`.
One consequence is that the advice is not colorized in the same manner
as other, similar messages. So let's use `advise()` instead.
Pointed-out-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We do not need to hard-code the actual branch name, as we can use the
`test_commit` function to simplify the code and use the tag it
generates, thereby being a lot more precise in what we want.
Strangely enough, this test case would have succeeded even with an
overridden default branch name, obviously for the wrong reason. Let's
verify that it passes for the expected reason, by looking for a
tell-tale in Git's output.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The `onbranch` test cases touched by this patch do not actually try to
include any other config. Their purpose is to avoid regressing on two
bugs in the `include.onbranch:<name>.path` code that we fixed in the
past, bugs that are actually unrelated to any concrete branch name.
The first bug was fixed in 85fe0e800c (config: work around bug with
includeif:onbranch and early config, 2019-07-31). Essentially, when
reading early config, there would be a catch-22 trying to access the
refs, and therefore we simply cannot evaluate the condition at that
point. The test case ensures that we avoid emitting this bogus message:
BUG: refs.c:1851: attempting to get main_ref_store outside of repository
The second test case concerns the non-Git scenario, where we simply do
not have a current branch to begin with (because we don't have a
repository in the first place), and the test case was introduced in
22932d9169 (config: stop checking whether the_repository is NULL,
2019-08-06) to ensure that we don't cause a segmentation fault should
the code still incorrectly try to look at any ref.
In short, neither of these two test cases will ever look at a current
branch name, even in case of regressions. Therefore, the actual branch
name does not matter at all. We can therefore easily avoid
racially-charged branch names here, and that's what this patch does.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git blame --ignore-revs-file=<file>" learned to ignore a
non-existent object name in the input, instead of complaining.
* jc/blame-ignore-fix:
blame: silently ignore invalid ignore file objects
"git blame -L :funcname -- path" did not work well for a path for
which a userdiff driver is defined.
* pb/blame-funcname-range-userdiff:
blame: simplify 'setup_blame_bloom_data' interface
blame: simplify 'setup_scoreboard' interface
blame: enable funcname blaming with userdiff driver
line-log: mention both modes in 'blame' and 'log' short help
doc: add more pointers to gitattributes(5) for userdiff
blame-options.txt: also mention 'funcname' in '-L' description
doc: line-range: improve formatting
doc: log, gitk: move '-L' description to 'line-range-options.txt'
Preparation for a new merge strategy.
* en/merge-ort-api-null-impl:
merge,rebase,revert: select ort or recursive by config or environment
fast-rebase: demonstrate merge-ort's API via new test-tool command
merge-ort-wrappers: new convience wrappers to mimic the old merge API
merge-ort: barebones API of new merge strategy with empty implementation
Parts of "git maintenance" to ease writing crontab entries (and
other scheduling system configuration) for it.
* ds/maintenance-part-3:
maintenance: add troubleshooting guide to docs
maintenance: use 'incremental' strategy by default
maintenance: create maintenance.strategy config
maintenance: add start/stop subcommands
maintenance: add [un]register subcommands
for-each-repo: run subcommands on configured repos
maintenance: add --schedule option and config
maintenance: optionally skip --auto process
"git rebase -i" did not store ORIG_HEAD correctly.
* pw/rebase-i-orig-head:
rebase -i: simplify get_revision_ranges()
rebase -i: use struct object_id when writing state
rebase -i: use struct object_id rather than looking up commit
rebase -i: stop overwriting ORIG_HEAD buffer
"git format-patch --output=there" did not work as expected and
instead crashed. The option is now supported.
* jk/format-patch-output:
format-patch: support --output option
format-patch: tie file-opening logic to output_directory
format-patch: refactor output selection
"git log -L<range>:<path>" is documented to take no pathspec, but
this was not enforced by the command line option parser, which has
been corrected.
* jc/line-log-takes-no-pathspec:
log: diagnose -L used with pathspec as an error
Add t/perf support for fsmonitor.
* nk/perf-fsmonitor:
t/perf/fsmonitor: add benchmark for dirty status
t/perf/fsmonitor: perf comparison of multiple fsmonitor integrations
t/perf/fsmonitor: initialize test with git reset
t/perf/fsmonitor: factor setup for fsmonitor into function
t/perf/fsmonitor: silence initial git commit
t/perf/fsmonitor: shorten DESC to basename
t/perf/fsmonitor: factor description out for readability
t/perf/fsmonitor: improve error message if typoing hook name
t/perf/fsmonitor: move watchman setup to one-time-repo-setup
t/perf/fsmonitor: separate one time repo initialization
Preparation for a new merge strategy.
* en/merge-tests:
t6423: add more details about direct resolution of directories
t6423: note improved ort handling with untracked files
t6423, t6436: note improved ort handling with dirty files
merge tests: expect slight differences in output for recursive vs. ort
t6423: expect improved conflict markers labels in the ort backend
t6404, t6423: expect improved rename/delete handling in ort backend
t6416: correct expectation for rename/rename(1to2) + directory/file
merge tests: expect improved directory/file conflict handling in ort
t/: new helper for tests that pass with ort but fail with recursive
Prepare a test script to transition of the default branch name to
'main'.
* js/default-branch-name-adjust-t5515:
t5515: use `main` as the name of the main branch for testing (conclusion)
t5515: use `main` as the name of the main branch for testing (part 3)
t5515: use `main` as the name of the main branch for testing (part 2)
t5515: use `main` as the name of the main branch for testing (part 1)
"git fetch --depth=<n>" over the stateless RPC / smart HTTP
transport handled EOF from the client poorly at the server end.
* dd/upload-pack-stateless-eof:
upload-pack: allow stateless client EOF just prior to haves
This comment was most likely a "note to self" during the development of
1c3e5c4ebc (Tests for core subproject support, 2007-04-19) and is
neither needed nor comprehensible at this point. Let's remove it.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
'test_set_prereq's description claims that prereqs can be specified to
'test_expect_code', but that is not the case (it is not meant to run a
test _case_, but a git command), so remove it.
OTOH that description doesn't mention 'test_external' and
'test_external_without_stderr' that do accept prereqs, so mention
them.
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Some test prereqs depend on other prereqs, so in a couple of cases we
have nested prereqs that look something like this:
test_lazy_prereq FOO '
test_have_prereq BAR &&
check-foo
'
This can be problematic, because lazy prereqs are evaluated in the
'$TRASH_DIRECTORY/prereq-test-dir' directory, which is the same for
every prereq, and which is automatically removed after the prereq has
been evaluated. So if the inner prereq (BAR above) is a lazy prereq
that hasn't been evaluated yet, then after its evaluation the
'prereq-test-dir' shared with the outer prereq will be removed.
Consequently, 'check-foo' will find itself in a non-existing
directory, and won't be able to create/access any files in its cwd,
which could result in an unfulfilled outer prereq.
Luckily, this doesn't affect any of our current nested prereqs, either
because the inner prereq is not a lazy prereq (e.g. MINGW, CYGWIN or
PERL), or because the outer prereq happens to be checked without
touching any paths in its cwd (GPGSM and RFC1991 in 'lib-gpg.sh').
So to prevent nested prereqs from interfering with each other let's
evaluate each prereq in its own dedicated directory by appending the
prereq's name to the directory name, e.g. 'prereq-test-dir-SYMLINKS'.
In the test we check not only that the prereq test dir is still there,
but also that the inner prereq can't mess with the outer prereq's
files.
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
During the transition of the test suite to a new default branch name, it
was noticed that this test case succeeded for the wrong reason when the
default branch name was overridden.
While we fixed that in the previous commit, let's make sure that we look
for a tell-tale in the error message that the `git checkout` failed for
the reason we wanted it to fail.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We do have this wonderful shortcut `git checkout -` to go back to the
previous branch, thanks to the reflog.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We settled on the style where the test cases' code starts by the opening
single quote being on the `test_expect_*` line, and the closing quote
being in its own line after the code.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Ever since 'git pull' learned '--recurse-submodules' in a6d7eb2c7a
(pull: optionally rebase submodules (remote submodule changes only),
2017-06-23), we check if there are local submodule modifications by
checking the revision range 'curr_head --not rebase_fork_point'.
The goal of this check is to abort the pull if there are submodule
modifications in the local commits being rebased, since this scenario is
not supported.
However, the actual range of commits being rebased is not
'rebase_fork_point..curr_head', as the logic in
'get_rebase_newbase_and_upstream' reveals, it is 'upstream..curr_head'.
If the 'git merge-base --fork-point' invocation in
'get_rebase_fork_point' fails to find a fork point between the current
branch and the remote-tracking branch we are pulling from,
'rebase_fork_point' is null and since 4d36f88be7 (submodule: do not pass
null OID to setup_revisions, 2018-05-24), 'submodule_touches_in_range'
checks 'curr_head' and all its ancestors for submodule modifications.
Since it is highly likely that there are submodule modifications in this
range (which is in effect the whole history of the current branch), this
prevents 'git pull --rebase --recurse-submodules' from succeeding if no
fork point exists between the current branch and the remote-tracking
branch being pulled. This can happen, for example, when the current
branch was forked from a commit which was never recorded in the reflog
of the remote-tracking branch we are pulling, as the last two paragraphs
of the "Discussion on fork-point mode" section in git-merge-base(1)
explain.
Fix this bug by passing 'upstream' instead of 'rebase_fork_point' as the
'excl_oid' argument to 'submodule_touches_in_range'.
Reported-by: Brice Goglin <bgoglin@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It can be hard at first glance to distinguish what is different between
the two tests 'recursive rebasing pull' and 'pull rebase recursing fails
with conflicts' in 't5572-pull-submodule.sh', and to understand how they
relate to the scenarios described in a6d7eb2c7a (pull: optionally rebase
submodules (remote submodule changes only), 2017-06-23), which
implemented '--recurse-submodules' for 'git pull' and added these tests.
Rename the tests to be more descriptive and add some bullet points
comments describing the different scenarios.
Signed-off-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Test 5572.63 ("branch has no merge base with remote-tracking
counterpart") was introduced in 4d36f88be7 (submodule: do not pass null
OID to setup_revisions, 2018-05-24), as a regression test for the bug
this commit was fixing (preventing a 'fatal: bad object' error when the
current branch and the remote-tracking branch we are pulling have no
merge-base).
However, the commit message for 4d36f88be7 does not describe in which
real-life situation this bug was encountered. The brief discussion on the
mailing list [1] does not either.
The regression test is not really representative of a real-life
scenario: both the local repository and its upstream have only a single
commit, and the "no merge-base" scenario is simulated by recreating this
root commit in the local repository using 'git commit-tree' before
calling 'git pull --rebase --recurse-submodules'. The rebase succeeds
and results in the local branch being reset to the same root commit as
the upstream branch.
The fix in 4d36f88be7 modifies 'submodule.c::submodule_touches_in_range'
so that if 'excl_oid' is null, which is the case when the 'git merge-base
--fork-point' invocation in 'builtin/pull.c::get_rebase_fork_point'
errors (no fork-point), then instead of 'incl_oid --not excl_oid' being
passed to setup_revisions, only 'incl_oid' is passed, and
'submodule_touches_in_range' examines 'incl_oid' and all its ancestors
to verify that they do not touch the submodule.
In test 5572.63, the recreated lone root commit in the local repository is
thus the only commit being examined by 'submodule_touches_in_range', and
this commit *adds* the submodule. However, 'submodule_touches_in_range'
*succeeds* because 'combine-diff.c::diff_tree_combined' (see the
backtrace below) returns early since this commit is the root commit
and has no parents.
#0 diff_tree_combined at combine-diff.c:1494
#1 0x0000000100150cbe in diff_tree_combined_merge at combine-diff.c:1649
#2 0x00000001002c7147 in collect_changed_submodules at submodule.c:869
#3 0x00000001002c7d6f in submodule_touches_in_range at submodule.c:1268
#4 0x00000001000ad58b in cmd_pull at builtin/pull.c:1040
In light of all this, add a note in t5572 documenting this peculiar
test.
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/20180524204729.19896-1-jonathantanmy@google.com/t/#u
Signed-off-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Now that the Perl version produces the same output as the built-in
version (mostly fixing bugs in the latter), let's add a regression test
to verify that it stays this way.
Note that we only `grep` for the colored error message instead of
verifying that the entire `stderr` consists of just this one line: when
running the test script using the `-x` option to trace the
commands, the sub-shell in `force_color` causes those commands to be
traced into `err.raw` (unless running in Bash where we set the
`BASH_XTRACEFD` variable to avoid that).
Also note that the color reset in the `<BLUE>+<RESET><BLUE>new<RESET>`
line might look funny and unnecessary, as the corresponding `old` line
does not reset the color after the diff marker only to turn the color
back on right away.
However, this is a (necessary) side effect of the white-space check: in
`emit_line_ws_markup()`, we first emit the diff marker via
`emit_line_0()` and then the rest of the line via `ws_check_emit()`. To
leave them somewhat decoupled, the color has to be reset after the diff
marker to allow for the rest of the line to start with another color (or
inverted, in case of white-space issues).
Finally, we have to simulate hunk editing: the `git add -p` command
cannot rely on the internal diff machinery for coloring after letting
the user edit a hunk; It has to "re-color" the edited hunk. This is the
primary reason why that command is interested in the exact values of the
`color.diff.*` settings in the first place. To test this re-coloring, we
therefore have to pretend to edit a hunk and then show that hunk in the
regression test.
Co-authored-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It is currently possible to write multiple "start" commands into
git-update-ref(1) for a single session, but none of them except for the
first one actually have any effect.
Using such nested "start"s may eventually have a sensible effect. One
may imagine that it restarts the current transaction, effectively
emptying it and creating a new one. It may also allow for creation of
nested transactions. But currently, none of these are implemented.
Silently ignoring this misuse is making it hard to iterate in the future
if "start" is ever going to have meaningful semantics in such a context.
This commit thus makes sure to error out in case we see such use.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In commit 0a0fbbe3ff (refs: remove lookup cache for
reference-transaction hook, 2020-08-25), a new benchmark was added to
p1400 which has the intention to exercise creation of multiple
transactions in a single process. As git-update-ref wasn't yet able to
create multiple transactions with a single run we instead used git-push.
As its non-atomic version creates a transaction per reference update,
this was the best approximation we could make at that point in time.
Now that `git-update-ref --stdin` supports creation of multiple
transactions, let's convert the benchmark to use that instead. It has
less overhead and it's also a lot clearer what the actual intention is.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While git-update-ref has recently grown commands which allow interactive
control of transactions in e48cf33b61 (update-ref: implement interactive
transaction handling, 2020-04-02), it is not yet possible to create
multiple transactions in a single session. To do so, one currently still
needs to invoke the executable multiple times.
This commit addresses this shortcoming by allowing the "start" command
to create a new transaction if the current transaction has already been
either committed or aborted.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The testcase t1400 exercises the git-update-ref(1) utility. To do so,
many tests directly read and write references via the filesystem,
assuming that we always use loose and/or packed references. While this
is true now, it'll change with the introduction of the reftable backend.
Convert those tests to use git-update-ref(1) and git-show-ref(1) where
possible. Furthermore, two tests are converted to not delete HEAD
anymore, as this results in a broken repository. They've instead been
updated to create a non-mandatory symbolic reference and delete that
one instead.
Some tests remain which exercise behaviour with broken references, which
cannot currently be converted to use regular git tooling.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 't5310-pack-bitmaps.sh' two tests make sure that our pack bitmaps
are compatible with JGit's bitmaps. Alas, not even the most recent
JGit version (5.9.0.202009080501-r) supports SHA256 yet, so when this
test script is run with GIT_TEST_DEFAULT_HASH=sha256 on a setup with
JGit installed in PATH, then these two tests fail.
Protect these two tests with the SHA1 prereq in order to skip them
when testing with SHA256.
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A regression has been introduced by a62387b (submodule.c: fetch in
submodules git directory instead of in worktree, 2018-11-28).
The scenario in which it triggers is when one has a remote repository
with a subrepository inside a subrepository like this:
superproject/middle_repo/inner_repo
Person A and B have both a clone of it, while Person B is not working
with the inner_repo and thus does not have it initialized in his working
copy.
Now person A introduces a change to the inner_repo and propagates it
through the middle_repo and the superproject.
Once person A pushed the changes and person B wants to fetch them using
"git fetch" on superproject level, B's git call will return with error
saying:
Could not access submodule 'inner_repo'
Errors during submodule fetch:
middle_repo
Expectation is that in this case the inner submodule will be recognized
as uninitialized subrepository and skipped by the git fetch command.
This used to work correctly before 'a62387b (submodule.c: fetch in
submodules git directory instead of in worktree, 2018-11-28)'.
Starting with a62387b the code wants to evaluate "is_empty_dir()" inside
.git/modules for a directory only existing in the worktree, delivering
then of course wrong return value.
This patch reverts the changes of a62387b and introduces a regression
test.
Signed-off-by: Peter Kaestle <peter.kaestle@nokia.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When receive-pack receives a session-id capability from the client, log
the received session ID via a trace2 data event.
Signed-off-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When upload-pack (protocol v0/v1) or a protocol v2 server receives a
session-id capability from a client, log the received session ID via a
trace2 data event.
Signed-off-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When a client receives a session-id capability from a protocol v0, v1,
or v2 server, log the received session ID via a trace2 data event.
Signed-off-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Test code clean-up.
* js/test-whitespace-fixes:
t9603: use tabs for indentation
t5570: remove trailing padding
t5400,t5402: consistently indent with tabs, not with spaces
t3427: adjust stale comment
t3406: indent with tabs, not spaces
t1004: insert missing "branch" in a message
Now that hashamp has lazy initialization and a HASHMAP_INIT macro,
hashmaps allocated on the stack can be initialized without a call to
hashmap_init() and in some cases makes the code a bit shorter. Convert
some callsites over to take advantage of this.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In the verison negotiation phase between "receive-pack" and
"proc-receive", "proc-receive" can send an empty flush-pkt to end the
negotiation and use default version 0. Capabilities (such as
"push-options") are not supported in version 0.
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Johannes found a flaky hang in `t5411/test-0013-bad-protocol.sh` in the
osx-clang job of the CI/PR builds, and ran into an issue when using
the `--stress` option with the following error messages:
fatal: unable to write flush packet: Broken pipe
send-pack: unexpected disconnect while reading sideband packet
fatal: the remote end hung up unexpectedly
In this test case, the "proc-receive" hook sends an error message and
dies earlier. While "receive-pack" on the other side of the pipe
should forward the error message of the "proc-receive" hook to the
client side, but it fails to do so. This is because "receive-pack"
uses `packet_write_fmt()` and `packet_flush()` to write pkt-line
message to "proc-receive" hook, and these functions die immediately
when pipe is broken. Using "gently" forms for these functions will get
more predicable output.
Add more "--die-*" options to test helper to test different stages of
the protocol between "receive-pack" and "proc-receive" hook.
Reported-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
New helper `filter_out_user_friendly_and_stable_output` will call
common helpr function `make_user_friendly_and_stable_output` and use
additional arguments to filter out messages for specific test cases.
Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The new test added by the previous commit can be simplified a lot.
Let's do so.
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Jinoh Kang <luke1337@theori.io>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We taught rev-list a new way to separate options from revisions in
19e8789b23 (revision: allow --end-of-options to end option parsing,
2019-08-06), but rev-parse uses its own parser. It should know about
--end-of-options not only for consistency, but because it may be
presented with similarly ambiguous cases. E.g., if a caller does:
git rev-parse "$rev" -- "$path"
to parse an untrusted input, then it will get confused if $rev contains
an option-like string like "--local-env-vars". Or even "--not-real",
which we'd keep as an option to pass along to rev-list.
Or even more importantly:
git rev-parse --verify "$rev"
can be confused by options, even though its purpose is safely parsing
untrusted input. On the plus side, it will always fail the --verify
part, as it will not have parsed a revision, so the caller will
generally "fail closed" rather than continue to use the untrusted
string. But it will still trigger whatever option was in "$rev"; this
should be mostly harmless, since rev-parse options are all read-only,
but I didn't carefully audit all paths.
This patch lets callers write:
git rev-parse --end-of-options "$rev" -- "$path"
and:
git rev-parse --verify --end-of-options "$rev"
which will both treat "$rev" always as a revision parameter. The latter
is a bit clunky. It would be nicer if we had defined "--verify" to
require that its next argument be the revision. But we have not
historically done so, and:
git rev-parse --verify -q "$rev"
does currently work. I added a test here to confirm that we didn't break
that.
A few implementation notes:
- We don't document --end-of-options explicitly in commands, but rather
in gitcli(7). So I didn't give it its own section in git-rev-parse(1).
But I did call it out specifically in the --verify section, and
include it in the examples, which should show best practices.
- We don't have to re-indent the main option-parsing block, because we
can combine our "did we see end of options" check with "does it start
with a dash". The exception is the pre-setup options, which need
their own block.
- We do however have to pull the "--" parsing out of the "does it start
with dash" block, because we want to parse it even if we've seen
--end-of-options.
- We'll leave "--end-of-options" in the output. This is probably not
technically necessary, as a careful caller will do:
git rev-parse --end-of-options $revs -- $paths
and anything in $revs will be resolved to an object id. However, it
does help a slightly less careful caller like:
git rev-parse --end-of-options $revs_or_paths
where a path "--foo" will remain in the output as long as it also
exists on disk. In that case, it's helpful to retain --end-of-options
to get passed along to rev-list, s it would otherwise see just
"--foo".
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Because of the order in which we check options in rev-parse, there are a
few options we accept even after a "--". This is wrong, because the
whole point of "--" is to say "everything after here is a path". Let's
move the "did we see a dashdash" check (it's called "as_is" in the code)
to the top of the parsing loop.
Note there is one subtlety here. The options are ordered so that some
are checked before we even see if we're in a repository (they continue
the loop, and if we get past a certain point, then we do the repository
setup). By moving the as_is check higher, it's also in that "before
setup" section, even though it might look at the repository via
verify_filename(). However, this works out: we'd never set as_is until
we parse "--", and we don't parse that until after doing the setup.
An alternative here to avoid the subtlety is to put the as_is check at
the top of the post-setup options. But then every pre-setup option would
have to remember to check "if (!as_is && !strcmp(...))". So while this
is a bit magical, it's harder for future code to get wrong.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since 610e2b9240 (blame: validate and peel the object names on the
ignore list, 2020-09-24) git blame reports checks if objects specified
with --ignore-rev and in files loaded with --ignore-revs-file and config
option blame.ignoreRevsFile are actual objects and dies if they aren't.
The intent is to report typos to the user.
This also breaks the ability to use a single ignore file for multiple
repositories. Typos are presumably less likely in files than on the
command line, so alerting is less useful here. Restore that feature by
skipping non-commits without dying.
Reported-by: Jean-Yves Avenard <jyavenard@mozilla.com>
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Reviewed-by: Barret Rhoden <brho@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It is possible to have recursive aliases like:
l = log --oneline
lg = l --graph
So the completion should detect such aliases as well.
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
For the past 15 years, we've used the hardcoded 64 as the length
limit of the filename of the output from the "git format-patch"
command. Since the value is shorter than the 80-column terminal, it
could grow without line wrapping a bit. At the same time, since the
value is longer than half of the 80-column terminal, we could fit
two or more of them in "ls" output on such a terminal if we allowed
to lower it.
Introduce a new command line option --filename-max-length=<n> and a
new configuration variable format.filenameMaxLength to override the
hardcoded default.
While we are at it, remove a check that the name of output directory
does not exceed PATH_MAX---this check is pointless in that by the
time control reaches the function, the caller would already have
done an equivalent of "mkdir -p", so if the system does not like an
overly long directory name, the control wouldn't have reached here,
and otherwise, we know that the system allowed the output directory
to exist. In the worst case, we will get an error when we try to
open the output file and handle the error correctly anyway.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Prepare a test script to transition of the default branch name to
'main'.
* js/default-branch-name-adjust-t5411:
t5411: finish preparing for `main` being the default branch name
t5411: adjust the remaining support files for init.defaultBranch=main
t5411: start adjusting the support files for init.defaultBranch=main
t5411: start using the default branch name "main"
The code to detect premature EOF in the sideband demultiplexer has
been cleaned up.
* jk/sideband-more-error-checking:
sideband: diagnose more sideband anomalies
Exit codes from "git remote add" etc. were not usable by scripted
callers.
* ab/git-remote-exit-code:
remote: add meaningful exit code on missing/existing
A commit and tag object may have CR at the end of each and
every line (you can create such an object with hash-object or
using --cleanup=verbatim to decline the default clean-up
action), but it would make it impossible to have a blank line
to separate the title from the body of the message. Be lenient
and accept a line with lone CR on it as a blank line, too.
* pb/ref-filter-with-crlf:
log, show: add tests for messages containing CRLF
ref-filter: handle CRLF at end-of-line more gracefully
"git checkout-index" did not consistently signal an error with its
exit status.
* jk/checkout-index-errors:
checkout-index: propagate errors to exit code
checkout-index: drop error message from empty --stage=all
"git diff" and other commands that share the same machinery to
compare with working tree files have been taught to take advantage
of the fsmonitor data when available.
* nk/diff-files-vs-fsmonitor:
p7519-fsmonitor: add a git add benchmark
p7519-fsmonitor: refactor to avoid code duplication
perf lint: add make test-lint to perf tests
t/perf: add fsmonitor perf test for git diff
t/perf/p7519-fsmonitor.sh: warm cache on first git status
t/perf/README: elaborate on output format
fsmonitor: use fsmonitor data in `git diff`
More preliminary tests have been added to document desired outcome
of various "directory rename" situations.
* en/dir-rename-tests:
t6423: more involved rules for renaming directories into each other
t6423: update directory rename detection tests with new rule
t6423: more involved directory rename test
directory-rename-detection.txt: update references to regression tests
This patch will let the new `check-whitespace` GitHub workflow be happy
with the upcoming patch series that wants to search-and-replace `master`
with `main` in t9603 and some other test scripts.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Two blocks in t5570 want to align the closing double quotes, padding
with spaces if needed. Since the maximum length of those lines is
defined by the branch name `master`, the upcoming rename to `main` would
unalign the quotes.
But then, it is unclear how those aligned closing quotes should help
readability anyway, so let's just remove that padding altogether.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This patch actually prepares for the upcoming patches to replace
`master` with `main` in these tests: we do not want those changes to be
flagged by the new `check-whitespace` GitHub workflow (even if those
changes do not introduce the whitespace issues, they touch lines
affected by those issues without fixing them).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In b6211b89eb (tests: avoid variations of the `master` branch name,
2020-09-26), the `master[123]` branch names were renamed to
`topic_[123]`. A non-literal mention of the corresponding files was
missed in that commit.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The message in question reads awkward with the name "master", but will
be even more confusing once that is renamed to "main". Let's adjust it
in advance of said rename.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 8de7eeb54b (compression: unify pack.compression configuration
parsing, 2016-11-15), we introduced identical copies of the `file_size`
helper into three test scripts, with the plan to eventually consolidate
them into a single copy.
Let's do that, and adjust the function name to adhere to the `test_*`
naming convention.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 3aef54e8b8 ("diff: munmap() file contents before running external
diff") introduced calls to diff_free_filespec_data in
run_external_diff, which may pass NULL pointers.
Fix this and prevent any such bugs in the future by making
`diff_free_filespec_data(NULL)` a no-op.
Fixes: 3aef54e8b8 ("diff: munmap() file contents before running external diff")
Signed-off-by: Jinoh Kang <luke1337@theori.io>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
After rebasing, ORIG_HEAD is supposed to point to the old HEAD of the
rebased branch. The code used find_unique_abbrev() to obtain the
object name of the old HEAD and wrote to both
.git/rebase-merge/orig-head (used by `rebase --abort` to go back to
the previous state) and to ORIG_HEAD. The buffer find_unique_abbrev()
gives back is volatile, unfortunately, and was overwritten after the
former file is written but before ORIG_FILE is written, leaving an
incorrect object name in it.
Avoid relying on the volatile buffer of find_unique_abbrev(), and
instead supply our own buffer to keep the object name.
I think that all of the users of head_hash should actually be using
opts->orig_head instead as passing a string rather than a struct
object_id around is a hang over from the scripted implementation. This
patch just fixes the immediate bug and adds a regression test based on
Caspar's reproduction example[1]. The users will be converted to use
struct object_id and head_hash removed in the next few commits.
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/CAFzd1+7PDg2PZgKw7U0kdepdYuoML9wSN4kofmB_-8NHrbbrHg@mail.gmail.com
Reported-by: Caspar Duregger <herr.kaste@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We've never intended to support diff's --output option in format-patch.
And until baa4adc66a (parse-options: disable option abbreviation with
PARSE_OPT_KEEP_UNKNOWN, 2019-01-27), it was impossible to trigger. We
first parse the format-patch options before handing the remainder off to
setup_revisions(). Before that commit, we'd accept "--output=foo" as an
abbreviation for "--output-directory=foo". But afterwards, we don't
check abbreviations, and --output gets passed to the diff code.
This results in nonsense behavior and bugs. The diff code will have
opened a filehandle at rev.diffopt.file, but we'll overwrite that with
our own handles that we open for each individual patch file. So the
--output file will always just be empty. But worse, the diff code also
sets rev.diffopt.close_file, so log_tree_commit() will close the
filehandle itself. And then the main loop in cmd_format_patch() will try
to close it again, resulting in a double-free.
The simplest solution would be to just disallow --output with
format-patch, as nobody ever intended it to work. However, we have
accidentally documented it (because format-patch includes diff-options).
And it does work with "git log", which writes the whole output to the
specified file. It's easy enough to make that work for format-patch,
too: it's really the same as --stdout, but pointed at a specific file.
We can detect the use of the --output option by the "close_file" flag
(note that we can't use rev.diffopt.file, since the diff setup will
otherwise set it to stdout). So we just need to unset that flag, but
don't have to do anything else. Our situation is otherwise exactly like
--stdout (note that we don't fclose() the file, but nor does the stdout
case; exiting the program takes care of that for us).
Reported-by: Johannes Postler <johannes.postler@txture.io>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The --stdout and --output-directory options are mutually exclusive, but
it's hard to tell from reading the code. We have three separate
conditionals that check for use_stdout, and it's only after we've set up
the output_directory fully that we check whether the user also specified
--stdout.
Instead, let's check the exclusion explicitly first, then have a single
conditional that handles stdout versus an output directory. This is
slightly easier to follow now, and also will keep things sane when we
add another output mode in a future patch.
We'll add a few tests as well, covering the mutual exclusion and the
fact that we are not confused by a configured output directory.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The -L option is documented to accept no pathspec, but the
command line option parser has allowed the combination without
checking so far. Ensure that there is no pathspec when the -L
option is in effect to fix this.
Incidentally, this change fixes another bug in the command line
option parser, which has allowed the -L option used together
with the --follow option. Because the latter requires exactly
one path given, but the former takes no pathspec, they become
mutually incompatible automatically. Because the -L option
follows renames on its own, there is no reason to give --follow
at the same time.
The new tests say they may fail with "-L and --follow being
incompatible" instead of "-L and pathspec being incompatible".
Currently the expected failure can come only from the latter, but
this is to futureproof them, in case we decide to add code to
explicititly die on -L and --follow used together.
Heled-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In c57b3367be (worktree: teach `list` to annotate locked worktree,
2020-10-11), we introduced a test case that wanted to talk about
"worktrees" but talked about "worktress" instead. Let's fix that.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In the previous three commits, We prepared the `t5515` script and the
files in `t/t5515/` for the upcoming change of the default branch name
to `main`. The changes were made over the course of three commits
because the overall patch would have been too big to send to the Git
mailing list for review.
Naturally, the test could not pass in the transitional stages and was
therefore disabled via the `PREPARE_FOR_MAIN_BRANCH` prereq. Now that
the transition is complete, we can re-enable it.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In the previous two commits, We just started preparing the `t5515` script
and part of `t/t5515/` for the upcoming change of the default
branch name to `main`. This patch adjusts the remainder of the supporting
material in `t/t5515/` (the patch adjusting all of `t/t5515/` would have
weighed more than 100kB and therefore not made it to the Git mailing
list for review).
Similar to what we did for the `t5515` script itself in the previous
commit, this patch was generated via:
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/Master/Main/g' \
-e 's/6c9dec2b923228c9ff994c6cfe4ae16c12408dc5/ecf3b3627b498bdcb735cc4343bf165f76964e9a/g' \
-e 's/8521c3072461fcfe8f32d67f95cc6e6b832a2db2fa29769ffc788bce85ebcd75/fff666109892bb4b1c80cd1649d2d8762a0663db8b5d46c8be98360b64fbba5f/g' \
-e 's/754b754407bf032e9a2f9d5a9ad05ca79a6b228f/b4ab76b1a01ea602209932134a44f1e6bd610832/g' \
-e 's/6c7abaea8a6d8ef4d89877e68462758dc6774690fbbbb0e6d7dd57415c9abde0/380ebae0113f877ce46fcdf39d5bc33e4dc0928db5c5a4d5fdc78381c4d55ae3/g' \
-- t/t5515/refs.*
In addition to that, we need to adjust some file _names_ in `t/t5515/`
because they encode the branch name:
eval "$(git ls-files t/t5515/refs.\* | sed -n \
-e 's/\(.*\)master\(.*\)/git mv & \1main\2;/p')"
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We just started preparing t5515 for the upcoming change of the default
branch name to `main`. This patch adjusts roughly half of the supporting
material in `t/t5515/` (the patch adjusting all of `t/t5515/` would have
weighed more than 100kB and therefore not made it to the Git mailing
list for review).
Similar to what we did for the `t5515` script itself in the previous
commit, this patch was generated via:
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/Master/Main/g' \
-e 's/6c9dec2b923228c9ff994c6cfe4ae16c12408dc5/ecf3b3627b498bdcb735cc4343bf165f76964e9a/g' \
-e 's/8521c3072461fcfe8f32d67f95cc6e6b832a2db2fa29769ffc788bce85ebcd75/fff666109892bb4b1c80cd1649d2d8762a0663db8b5d46c8be98360b64fbba5f/g' \
-e 's/754b754407bf032e9a2f9d5a9ad05ca79a6b228f/b4ab76b1a01ea602209932134a44f1e6bd610832/g' \
-e 's/6c7abaea8a6d8ef4d89877e68462758dc6774690fbbbb0e6d7dd57415c9abde0/380ebae0113f877ce46fcdf39d5bc33e4dc0928db5c5a4d5fdc78381c4d55ae3/g' \
-- t/t5515/fetch.*
In addition to that, we need to adjust some file _names_ in `t/t5515/`
because they encode the branch name:
eval "$(git ls-files t/t5515/fetch.\* | sed -n \
-e 's/\(.*\)master\(.*\)/git mv & \1main\2;/p')"
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
As part of the effort to change the default branch name to `main`, let's
prepare t5515.
In addition to adjusting the references to the branch name itself, this
also requires two commit hashes to be adjusted (actually four, as there
is a SHA-1 _and_ a SHA-256 of both).
That trick was performed by running
sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/Master/Main/g' \
-e 's/6c9dec2b923228c9ff994c6cfe4ae16c12408dc5/ecf3b3627b498bdcb735cc4343bf165f76964e9a/g' \
-e 's/8521c3072461fcfe8f32d67f95cc6e6b832a2db2fa29769ffc788bce85ebcd75/fff666109892bb4b1c80cd1649d2d8762a0663db8b5d46c8be98360b64fbba5f/g' \
-e 's/754b754407bf032e9a2f9d5a9ad05ca79a6b228f/b4ab76b1a01ea602209932134a44f1e6bd610832/g' \
-e 's/6c7abaea8a6d8ef4d89877e68462758dc6774690fbbbb0e6d7dd57415c9abde0/380ebae0113f877ce46fcdf39d5bc33e4dc0928db5c5a4d5fdc78381c4d55ae3/g' \
-- t/t5515-*.sh
These commit hashes have been determined manually, of course, by running
the test after adjusting only the branch names, and then copying the
hashes from the log of the failed run.
Note: this patch only touches the t5515 script so far, not the
supporting material in t/t5515/. The resulting patch would have weighed
over 100kB and therefore the Git mailing list would have dropped it. The
files in t/t5515/ will be adjusted in the next two commits. As t5515
would fail without these adjustments, we temporarily skip it via the
`PREPARE_FOR_MAIN_BRANCH` prereq.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Adjust tests so that they won't scream when the default initial
branch name is changed to 'main'.
* js/default-branch-name-part-4-minus-1:
t1400: prepare for `main` being default branch name
tests: prepare aligned mentions of the default branch name
t9902: prepare a test for the upcoming default branch name
t3200: prepare for `main` being shorter than `master`
t5703: adjust a test case for the upcoming default branch name
t6200: adjust suppression pattern to also match "main"
tests: start moving to a different default main branch name
t9801: use `--` in preparation for default branch rename
fmt-merge-msg: also suppress "into main" by default
"git diff" family of commands learned the "-I<regex>" option to
ignore hunks whose changed lines all match the given pattern.
* mk/diff-ignore-regex:
diff: add -I<regex> that ignores matching changes
merge-base, xdiff: zero out xpparam_t structures
"git apply -R" did not handle patches that touch the same path
twice correctly, which has been corrected. This is most relevant
in a patch that changes a path from a regular file to a symbolic
link (and vice versa).
* jt/apply-reverse-twice:
apply: when -R, also reverse list of sections
"git rebase --rebase-merges" did not correctly pass --gpg-sign
command line option to underlying "git merge" when replaying a merge
using non-default merge strategy or when replaying an octopus merge
(because replaying a two-head merge with the default strategy was
done in a separate codepath, the problem did not trigger for most
users), which has been corrected.
* sc/sequencer-gpg-octopus:
t3435: add tests for rebase -r GPG signing
sequencer: pass explicit --no-gpg-sign to merge
sequencer: fix gpg option passed to merge subcommand
Our test scripts can be told to run only individual pieces while
skipping others with the "--run=..." option; they were taught to
take a substring of test title, in addition to numbers, to name the
test pieces to run.
* en/test-selector:
test-lib: reduce verbosity of skipped tests
t6006, t6012: adjust tests to use 'setup' instead of synonyms
test-lib: allow selecting tests by substring/glob with --run
"git credential' didn't honor the core.askPass configuration
variable (among other things), which has been corrected.
* tk/credential-config:
credential: load default config
Test-coverage enhancement of running commit-graph task "git
maintenance" as needed led to discovery and fix of a bug.
* ds/maintenance-commit-graph-auto-fix:
maintenance: core.commitGraph=false prevents writes
maintenance: test commit-graph auto condition
When "git commit-graph" detects the same commit recorded more than
once while it is merging the layers, it used to die. The code now
ignores all but one of them and continues.
* ds/commit-graph-merging-fix:
commit-graph: don't write commit-graph when disabled
commit-graph: ignore duplicates when merging layers
A test helper "test_cmp A B" was taught to diagnose missing files A
or B as a bug in test, but some tests legitimately wanted to notice
a failure to even create file B as an error, in addition to leaving
the expected result in it, and were misdiagnosed as a bug. This
has been corrected.
* es/test-cmp-typocatcher:
Revert "test_cmp: diagnose incorrect arguments"
"git fast-import" wasted a lot of memory when many marks were in use.
* jk/fast-import-marks-alloc-fix:
fast-import: fix over-allocation of marks storage
The side-band status report can be sent at the same time as the
primary payload multiplexed, but the demultiplexer on the receiving
end incorrectly split a single status report into two, which has
been corrected.
* js/avoid-split-sideband-message:
test-pkt-line: drop colon from sideband identity
sideband: report unhandled incomplete sideband messages as bugs
sideband: avoid reporting incomplete sideband messages
hashmap_free(), hashmap_free_entries(), and hashmap_free_() have existed
for a while, but aren't necessarily the clearest names, especially with
hashmap_partial_clear() being added to the mix and lazy-initialization
now being supported. Peff suggested we adopt the following names[1]:
- hashmap_clear() - remove all entries and de-allocate any
hashmap-specific data, but be ready for reuse
- hashmap_clear_and_free() - ditto, but free the entries themselves
- hashmap_partial_clear() - remove all entries but don't deallocate
table
- hashmap_partial_clear_and_free() - ditto, but free the entries
This patch provides the new names and converts all existing callers over
to the new naming scheme.
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/20201030125059.GA3277724@coredump.intra.peff.net/
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In blame.c::cmd_blame, we send the 'path' field of the 'sb' 'struct
blame_scoreboard' as the 'path' argument to
'line-range.c::parse_range_arg', but 'sb.path' is not set yet; it's set
to the local variable 'path' a few lines later at line 1137.
This 'path' argument is only used in 'parse_range_arg' if we are blaming
a funcname, i.e. `git blame -L :<funcname> <path>`, and in that case it
is sent to 'parse_range_funcname', where it is used to determine if a
userdiff driver should be used for said <path> to match the given
funcname.
Since 'path' is yet unset, the userdiff driver is never used, so we fall
back to the default funcname regex, which is usually not appropriate for
paths that are set to use a specific userdiff driver, and thus either we
match some unrelated lines, or we die with
fatal: -L parameter '<funcname>' starting at line 1: no match
This has been the case ever since `git blame` learned to blame a
funcname in 13b8f68c1f (log -L: :pattern:file syntax to find by
funcname, 2013-03-28).
Enable funcname blaming for paths using specific userdiff drivers by
initializing 'sb.path' earlier in 'cmd_blame', when some of its other
fields are initialized, so that it is set when passed to
'parse_range_arg'.
Add a regression test in 'annotate-tests.sh', which is sourced in
t8001-annotate.sh and t8002-blame.sh, leveraging an existing file used
to test the userdiff patterns in t4018-diff-funcname.
Also, use 'sb.path' instead of 'path' when constructing the error
message at line 1114, for consistency.
Signed-off-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In addition to the trivial search-and-replace performed over the course
of the previous three commits, there is one test in t5411 that depends
on the length of the default branch name.
Adjust it and use `main` as the default branch name in this test.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This trick was performed via
$ sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t/t5411/*
In the previous commit, we adjusted roughly half of the support files,
to stay under the 100kB limit (mails larger than that are rejected by
the Git mailing list).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This trick was performed via
$ sed -i -e 's/master/main/g' -e 's/MASTER/MAIN/g' \
-e 's/Master/Main/g' -- t/t5411/test-00[3-5]*
We do not convert the files in `t/t5411/` in one go because the patch
would be too big (mails larger than 100kB are rejected by the Git
mailing list). Instead, we start with roughly half of the support files.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This is a straight-forward search-and-replace in the test script;
However, this is not yet complete because it requires many more
replacements in `t/t5411/`, too many for a single patch (the Git mailing
list rejects mails larger than 100kB). For that reason, we disable this
test script temporarily via the `PREPARE_FOR_MAIN_BRANCH` prereq.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
During stateless packfile negotiation where a depth is given, stateless
RPC clients (e.g. git-remote-curl) will send multiple upload-pack
requests with the first containing only the
wants/shallows/deepens/filters and the subsequent containing haves/done.
When upload-pack handles such requests, entering get_common_commits
without checking whether the client has hung up can result in unexpected
EOF during the negotiation loop and a die() with message "fatal: the
remote end hung up unexpectedly".
Real world effects include:
- A client speaking to git-http-backend via a server that doesn't check
the exit codes of CGIs (e.g. mod_cgi) doesn't know and doesn't care
about the fatal. It continues to process the response body as normal.
- A client speaking to a server that does check the exit code and
returns an errant HTTP status as a result will fail with the message
"error: RPC failed; HTTP 500 curl 22 The requested URL returned error:
500."
- Admins running servers that surface the failure must workaround it by
patching code that handles execution of git-http-backend to ignore exit
codes or take other heuristic approaches.
- Admins may have to deal with "hung up unexpectedly" log spam related
to the failures even in cases where the exit code isn't surfaced as an
HTTP server-side error status.
To avoid these EOF related fatals, have upload-pack gently peek for an
EOF between the sending of shallow/unshallow lines (followed by flush)
and the reading of client haves. If the client has hung up at this
point, exit normally.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Duvall <dan@mutual.io>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Micro clean-up.
* cm/t7xxx-cleanup:
t7102: prepare expected output inside test_expect_* block
t7201: put each command on a separate line
t7201: use 'git -C' to avoid subshell
t7102,t7201: remove whitespace after redirect operator
t7102,t7201: remove unnecessary blank spaces in test body
t7101,t7102,t7201: modernize test formatting
In 2.29, "--committer-date-is-author-date" option of "rebase" and
"am" subcommands lost the e-mail address by mistake, which has been
corrected.
* jk/committer-date-is-author-date-fix:
rebase: fix broken email with --committer-date-is-author-date
am: fix broken email with --committer-date-is-author-date
t3436: check --committer-date-is-author-date result more carefully
Add a new test-tool command named 'fast-rebase', which is a
super-slimmed down and nowhere near as capable version of 'git rebase'.
'test-tool fast-rebase' is not currently planned for usage in the
testsuite, but is here for two purposes:
1) Demonstrate the desired API of merge-ort. In particular,
fast-rebase takes advantage of the separation of the merging
operation from the updating of the index and working tree, to
allow it to pick N commits, but only update the index and working
tree once at the end. Look for the calls to
merge_incore_nonrecursive() and merge_switch_to_result().
2) Provide a convenient benchmark that isn't polluted by the heavy
disk writing and forking of unnecessary processes that comes from
sequencer.c and merge-recursive.c. fast-rebase is not meant to
replace sequencer.c, just give ideas on how sequencer.c can be
changed. Updating sequencer.c with these goals is probably a
large amount of work; writing a simple targeted command with
no documentation, less-than-useful help messages, numerous
limitations in terms of flags it can accept and situations it can
handle, and which is flagged off from users is a much easier
interim step.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A previous commit adjusted the code in ref-filter.c so that messages
containing CRLF are now correctly parsed and displayed.
Add tests to also check that `git log` and `git show` correctly handle
such messages, to prevent futur regressions if these commands are
refactored to use the ref-filter API.
Signed-off-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The ref-filter code does not correctly handle commit or tag messages
that use CRLF as the line terminator. Such messages can be created with
the `--cleanup=verbatim` option of `git commit` and `git tag`, or by
using `git commit-tree` directly.
The function `find_subpos` in ref-filter.c looks for two consecutive
LFs to find the end of the subject line, a sequence which is absent in
messages using CRLF. This results in the whole message being parsed as
the subject line (`%(contents:subject)`), and the body of the message
(`%(contents:body)`) being empty.
Moreover, in `copy_subject`, which wants to return the subject as a
single line, '\n' is replaced by space, but '\r' is
untouched.
This impacts the output of `git branch`, `git tag` and `git
for-each-ref`.
This behaviour is a regression for `git branch --verbose`, which
bisects down to 949af0684c (branch: use ref-filter printing APIs,
2017-01-10).
Adjust the ref-filter code to be more lenient by hardening the logic in
`copy_subject` and `find_subpos` to correctly parse messages containing
CRLF.
Add a new test script, 't3920-crlf-messages.sh', to test the behaviour
of commands using either the ref-filter or the pretty APIs with messages
using CRLF line endings. The function `test_crlf_subject_body_and_contents`
can be used to test that the `--format` option of `branch`, `tag`,
`for-each-ref`, `log` and `show` correctly displays the subject, body
and raw content of commit and tag messages using CRLF. Test the
output of `branch`, `tag` and `for-each-ref` with such commits.
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In demultiplex_sideband(), there are two oddities when we check an
incoming packet:
- if it has zero length, then we assume it's a flush packet. This
means we fail to notice the difference between a real flush and a
true zero-length packet that's missing its sideband designator. It's
not a huge problem in practice because we'd never send a zero-length
data packet (even our keepalives are otherwise-empty sideband-1
packets).
But it would be nice to detect and report the error, since it's
likely to cause other confusion (we think the other side flushed,
but they do not).
- we try to detect packets missing their designator by checking for
"if (len < 1)". But this will never trigger for "len == 0"; we've
already detected that and left the function before then.
It _could_ detect a negative "len" parameter. But in that case, the
error message is wrong. The issue is not "no sideband" but rather
"eof while reading the packet". However, this can't actually be
triggered in practice, because neither of the two callers uses
pkt_read's GENTLE_ON_EOF flag. Which means they'd die with "the
remote end hung up unexpectedly" before we even get here.
So this truly is dead code.
We can improve these cases by passing in a pkt-line status to the
demultiplexer, and by having recv_sideband() use GENTLE_ON_EOF. This
gives us two improvements:
- we can now reliably detect flush packets, and will report a normal
packet missing its sideband designator as an error
- we'll report an eof with a more detailed "protocol error: eof while
reading sideband packet", rather than the generic "the remote end
hung up unexpectedly"
- when we see an eof, we'll flush the sideband scratch buffer, which
may provide some hints from the remote about why they hung up
(though note we already flush on newlines, so it's likely that most
such messages already made it through)
In some sense this patch goes against fbd76cd450 (sideband: reverse its
dependency on pkt-line, 2019-01-16), which caused the sideband code not
to depend on the pkt-line code. But that commit was really just trying
to deal with the circular header dependency. The two modules are
conceptually interlinked, and it was just trying to keep things
compiling. And indeed, there's a sticking point in this patch: because
pkt-line.h includes sideband.h, we can't add the reverse include we need
for the sideband code to have an "enum packet_read_status" parameter.
Nor can we forward declare it, because you can't forward declare an enum
in C. However, C does guarantee that enums fit in an int, so we can just
use that type.
One alternative would be for the callers to check themselves that they
got something sane from the pkt-line code. But besides duplicating
logic, this gets quite tricky. Any error condition requires flushing the
sideband #2 scratch buffer, which only demultiplex_sideband() knows how
to do.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>