The rewrite in C inadvertently broke updating with remote groups: when you
pass parameters to "git remote update", it used to look up "remotes.<group>"
for every parameter, and interpret the value as a list of remotes to update.
Also, no parameter, or a single parameter "default" should update all
remotes that have not been marked with "skipDefaultUpdate".
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Earlier attempt (which was reverted) called added_object() (by the way,
the function should be renamed to resolve_dependents() --- it is called
when we have a complete object data, and is responsible to resolve pending
deltified objects that use this object as their delta base object) without
updating obj_list[nr].sha1 with the correct value.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This adds test for unpacking deltified objects with --strict option.
- unpacking full trees with --strict should pass;
- unpacking only trees with --strict should be rejected due to
missing blobs;
- unpacking only trees with --strict into an existing
repository with necessary blobs should succeed.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
An earlier commit c149184 (allow git-am to run in a subdirectory) taught
git-am to start from a subdirectory by going up to the root of the work
tree byitself, but it did not adjust the path to read the mbox from when
it did so.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If the remote peer upload-pack process supports the include-tag
protocol extension then we can avoid running a second fetch cycle
on the client side by letting the server send us the annotated tags
along with the objects it is packing for us. In the following graph
we can now fetch both "tag1" and "tag2" on the same connection that
we fetched "master" from the remote when we only have L available
on the local side:
T - tag1 S - tag2
/ /
L - o ------ o ------ B
\ \
\ \
origin/master master
The objects for "tag1" are implicitly downloaded without our direct
knowledge. The existing "quickfetch" optimization within git-fetch
discovers that tag1 is complete after the first connection and does
not open a second connection.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The new option "--include-tag" allows the caller to request that
any annotated tag be included into the packfile if the object the tag
references was also included as part of the packfile.
This option can be useful on the server side of a native git transport,
where the server knows what commits it is including into a packfile to
update the client. If new annotated tags have been introduced then we
can also include them in the packfile, saving the client from needing
to request them through a second connection.
This change only introduces the backend option and provides a test.
Protocol extensions to make this useful in fetch-pack/upload-pack
are still necessary to activate the logic during transport.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
Fix 'git remote show' regression on empty repository in 1.5.4
Fix incorrect wording in git-merge.txt.
git-merge.sh: better handling of combined --squash,--no-ff,--no-commit options
Fix random crashes in http_cleanup()
Removing .dotest should actually not be needed, so just test the directory
don't exist after --abort, but exists after starting the rebase.
Also, execute the same tests with rebase --merge, which uses a different code
path.
Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Keep the file open to: the OS does not allow removal of open files.
The saner systems just have a saner permission model and chmod 0
is enough for the test.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Existing test checked --long only for exactly tagged commit. We should
make sure it works sensibly for commits that are not tagged.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Back in 212945d4 ("Teach git-describe to verify annotated tag names
before output") I taught git-describe to output the name shown in the
"tag" header of an annotated tag, rather than the name it is actually
stored under in this repository's ref namespace.
This test case verifies this is working correctly by renaming the ref
for an annotated tag to a different name that what is recorded in the
tag body, and verifying that tag is returned. We also verify there is
a message shown on stderr to inform the user that the tag is possibly
stored under the wrong name locally.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In c374b91c ("git-describe: use tags found in packed-refs correctly")
Junio fixed an issue where git-describe did not parse a tag object it
obtained from a packed-refs file, as the peel information was read in
from packed-refs and not the tag object itself.
This new test case verifies the fix listed above is functioning, and
does not have a regression in the future.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If git-describe fails we never execute the test_expect_success,
so we never actually test for failure. This is horribly wrong.
We need to always run the test case, but the test case is only
supposed to succeed if the prior git-describe returned 0.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git-merge used to use either the --squash,--no-squash, --no-ff,--ff,
--no-commit,--commit option, whichever came last in the command line.
This lead to some un-intuitive behavior, having
git merge --no-commit --no-ff <branch>
actually commit the merge. Now git-merge respects --no-commit together
with --no-ff, as well as other combinations of the options. However,
this broke a selftest in t/t7600-merge.sh which expected to have --no-ff
completely override the --squash option, so that
git merge --squash --no-ff <branch>
fast-forwards, and makes a merge commit; combining --squash with --no-ff
doesn't really make sense though, and is now refused by git-merge. The
test is adapted to test --no-ff without the preceding --squash, and
another test is added to make sure the --squash --no-ff combination is
refused.
The unexpected behavior was reported by John Goerzen through
http://bing.sdebian.org/468568
Signed-off-by: Gerrit Pape <pape@smarden.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* commit '74359821': (128 commits)
tests: introduce test_must_fail
Fix builtin checkout crashing when given an invalid path
templates/Makefile: don't depend on local umask setting
Correct name of diff_flush() in API documentation
Start preparing for 1.5.4.4
format-patch: remove a leftover debugging message
completion: support format-patch's --cover-letter option
Eliminate confusing "won't bisect on seeked tree" failure
builtin-reflog.c: don't install new reflog on write failure
send-email: fix In-Reply-To regression
git-svn: Don't prompt for client cert password everytime.
git.el: Do not display empty directories.
Fix 'git cvsexportcommit -w $cvsdir ...' when used with relative $GIT_DIR
Add testcase for 'git cvsexportcommit -w $cvsdir ...' with relative $GIT_DIR
Prompt to continue when editing during rebase --interactive
Documentation/git svn log: add a note about timezones.
git-p4: Support usage of perforce client spec
git-p4: git-p4 submit cleanups.
git-p4: Removed git-p4 submit --direct.
git-p4: Clean up git-p4 submit's log message handling.
...
If the situation is the following on the remote and L is the common
base between both sides:
T - tag1 S - tag2
/ /
L - A - O - O - B
\ \
origin/master master
and we have decided to fetch "master" to acquire the range L..B we
can also nab tag S at the same time during the first connection,
as we can clearly see from the refs advertised by upload-pack that
S^{} = B and master = B.
Unfortunately we still cannot nab T at the same time as we are not
able to see that T^{} will also be in the range implied by L..B.
Such computations must be performed on the remote side (not yet
supported) or on the client side as post-processing (the current
behavior).
This optimization is an extension of the previous one in that it
helps on projects which tend to publish both a new commit and a
new tag, then lay idle for a while before publishing anything else.
Most followers are able to download both the new commit and the new
tag in one connection, rather than two. git.git tends to follow
such patterns with its roughly once-daily updates from Junio.
A protocol extension and additional server side logic would be
necessary to also ensure T is grabbed on the first connection.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
Update draft release notes for 1.5.4.4
revert: actually check for a dirty index
tests: introduce test_must_fail
git-submodule: Fix typo 'url' which should be '$url'
receive-pack: Initialize PATH to include exec-dir.
Conflicts:
builtin-revert.c
The previous code mistakenly used wt_status_prepare to check whether the
index had anything commitable in it; however, that function is just an
init function, and will never report a dirty index.
The correct way with wt_status_* would be to call wt_status_print with the
output pointing to /dev/null or similar. However, that does extra work by
both examining the working tree and spewing status information to nowhere.
Instead, let's just implement the useful subset of wt_status_print as an
"is_index_dirty" function.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When we expect a git command to notice and signal errors, we
carelessly wrote in our tests:
test_expect_success 'reject bogus request' '
do something &&
do something else &&
! git command
'
but a non-zero exit could come from the "git command" segfaulting.
A new helper function "tset_must_fail" is introduced and it is
meant to be used to make sure the command gracefully fails (iow,
dying and exiting with non zero status is counted as a failure
to "gracefully fail"). The above example should be written as:
test_expect_success 'reject bogus request' '
do something &&
do something else &&
test_must_fail git command
'
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Earlier, overly-long onelines would not be wrapped at all, and indented
with 6 spaces.
Instead, we now wrap around at 72 characters, with a first-line indent
of 2 spaces, and the rest with 4 spaces.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Earlier, when you called "git format-patch --cover-letter -M", the
diffstat in the cover letter would not inherit the "-M". Now it does.
While at it, add a few "|| break" statements in the test's loops;
otherwise, breakages inside the loops would not be caught.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This is meant to be used to keep --not and --all during revision parsing.
Signed-off-by: Pierre Habouzit <madcoder@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When passing "xyz" to make_absolute_path(), make_absolute_path()
erroneously tried to chdir("xyz"), and then append "/xyz". Instead,
skip the chdir() completely when no slash was found.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Ping Yin noticed that "git diff-index --raw" shows 0{40} when work tree
has submodule difference, but "git diff --raw" didn't correctly do so.
There was a mistake in the diffcore_skip_stat_unmatch() that was meant to
clean up the stat-only difference for running diff between the index and
work tree and diff between the tree and the work tree, to cause it re-read
from the submodule repository HEAD. When ce_stat_match() says work tree
is different, we should always say 0{40} on the work tree side.
This patch fixes the issue, and adds tests.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Previously, --abort would end by git resetting to ORIG_HEAD, but some
commands, such as git reset --hard (which happened in git rebase --skip,
but could just as well be typed by the user), would have already modified
ORIG_HEAD.
Just use the orig-head we store in $dotest instead.
Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This adds special handling for mirror remotes.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While at it, also fix a few instances where a cd was done outside of a
subshell.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We expect git rebase --abort to come back to the original (pre-rebase)
head, independently from when it's run during a rebase.
Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "humanish" part of a bundle is made removing the ".bundle" suffix.
Signed-off-by: Santi Béjar <sbejar@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When we expect a git command to notice and signal errors, we
carelessly wrote in our tests:
test_expect_success 'reject bogus request' '
do something &&
do something else &&
! git command
'
but a non-zero exit could come from the "git command" segfaulting.
A new helper function "tset_must_fail" is introduced and it is
meant to be used to make sure the command gracefully fails (iow,
dying and exiting with non zero status is counted as a failure
to "gracefully fail"). The above example should be written as:
test_expect_success 'reject bogus request' '
do something &&
do something else &&
test_must_fail git command
'
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The top-level Makefile now creates a GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS file
which stores any options selected by the make process that
may be of use to further parts of the build process.
Specifically, we store the SHELL_PATH so that it can be used
by tests to construct shell scripts on the fly.
The format of the GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS file is Bourne shell,
and it is sourced by test-lib.sh; all tests can rely on just
having $SHELL_PATH correctly set in the environment.
The GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS file is written every time the
toplevel 'make' is invoked. Since the only users right now
are the test scripts, there's no drawback to updating its
timestamp. If something build-related depends on this, we
can do a trick similar to the one used by GIT-CFLAGS.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We need to rewrite the index file when we check out files, even if we
haven't modified the blob info by reading from another tree, so that
we get the stat cache to include the fact that we just modified the
file so it doesn't need to be refreshed.
While we're at it, move everything that needs to be done to check out
some paths from a tree (or the current index) into checkout_paths().
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t6029 already checks if subtree available and works like recursive. This
patch adds code to test test the extra functionality the subtree merge
strategy provides.
Signed-off-by: Miklos Vajna <vmiklos@frugalware.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
http-push tests require a web server with WebDAV support.
This commit introduces a HTTPD test library, which can be configured using
the following environment variables.
GIT_TEST_HTTPD enable HTTPD tests
LIB_HTTPD_PATH web server path
LIB_HTTPD_MODULE_PATH web server modules path
LIB_HTTPD_PORT listening port
LIB_HTTPD_DAV enable DAV
LIB_HTTPD_SVN enable SVN
LIB_HTTPD_SSL enable SSL
Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
Eliminate confusing "won't bisect on seeked tree" failure
builtin-reflog.c: don't install new reflog on write failure
send-email: fix In-Reply-To regression
Fix 'git cvsexportcommit -w $cvsdir ...' when used with relative $GIT_DIR
Add testcase for 'git cvsexportcommit -w $cvsdir ...' with relative $GIT_DIR
Prompt to continue when editing during rebase --interactive
Documentation/git svn log: add a note about timezones.
Don't use GIT_CONFIG in t5505-remote
Conflicts:
t/t9001-send-email.sh
t/t9200-git-cvsexportcommit.sh
This error message is very confusing---it doesn't tell the user
anything about how to fix the situation. And the actual fix
for the situation ("git bisect reset") does a checkout of a
potentially random branch, (compared to what the user wants to
be on for the bisect she is starting).
The simplest way to eliminate the confusion is to just make
"git bisect start" do the cleanup itself. There's no significant
loss of safety here since we already have a general safety in
the form of the reflog.
Note: We preserve the warning for any cogito users. We do this
by switching from .git/head-name to .git/BISECT_START for the
extra state, (which is a more descriptive name anyway).
Signed-off-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Fix a regression introduced by
1ca3d6e (send-email: squelch warning due to comparing undefined $_ to "")
where if the user was prompted for an initial In-Reply-To and didn't
provide one, messages would be sent out with an invalid In-Reply-To of
"<>"
Also add test cases for the regression and the fix. A small modification
was needed to allow send-email to take its replies from stdin if the
environment variable GIT_SEND_EMAIL_NOTTY is set.
Signed-off-by: Jay Soffian <jaysoffian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* db/checkout: (21 commits)
checkout: error out when index is unmerged even with -m
checkout: show progress when checkout takes long time while switching branches
Add merge-subtree back
checkout: updates to tracking report
builtin-checkout.c: Remove unused prefix arguments in switch_branches path
checkout: work from a subdirectory
checkout: tone down the "forked status" diagnostic messages
Clean up reporting differences on branch switch
builtin-checkout.c: fix possible usage segfault
checkout: notice when the switched branch is behind or forked
Build in checkout
Move code to clean up after a branch change to branch.c
Library function to check for unmerged index entries
Use diff -u instead of diff in t7201
Move create_branch into a library file
Build-in merge-recursive
Add "skip_unmerged" option to unpack_trees.
Discard "deleted" cache entries after using them to update the working tree
Send unpack-trees debugging output to stderr
Add flag to make unpack_trees() not print errors.
...
Conflicts:
Makefile
* db/cover-letter:
Improve collection of information for format-patch --cover-letter
Add API access to shortlog
t4014: Replace sed's non-standard 'Q' by standard 'q'
Support a --cc=<email> option in format-patch
Combine To: and Cc: headers
Fix format.headers not ending with a newline
Add tests for extra headers in format-patch
Add a --cover-letter option to format-patch
Export some email and pretty-printing functions
Improve message-id generation flow control for format-patch
Add more tests for format-patch
Conflicts:
builtin-log.c
builtin-shortlog.c
pretty.c
When using the '-w $cvsdir' option to cvsexportcommit, it will chdir into
$cvsdir before executing several other git commands. If $GIT_DIR is set to
a relative path (e.g. '.'), the git commands executed by cvsexportcommit
will naturally fail.
Therefore, ensure that $GIT_DIR is absolute before the chdir to $cvsdir.
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The testcase verifies that 'git cvsexportcommit' functions correctly when
the '-w' option is used, and GIT_DIR is set to a relative path (e.g. '.').
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
For some reason, t5505-remote was setting GIT_CONFIG to .git/config
and exporting it. This should have been no-op, as test framework did
the same for a long time anyway.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
Documentation/git-am.txt: Pass -r in the example invocation of rm -f .dotest
timezone_names[]: fixed the tz offset for New Zealand.
filter-branch documentation: non-zero exit status in command abort the filter
rev-parse: fix potential bus error with --parseopt option spec handling
Use a single implementation and API for copy_file()
Documentation/git-filter-branch: add a new msg-filter example
Correct fast-export file mode strings to match fast-import standard
A non-empty line containing no spaces should be treated by --parseopt as
an option group header, but was causing a bus error. Also added a test
script for rev-parse --parseopt.
Signed-off-by: Jay Soffian <jaysoffian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This is useful when you want to see parts of the commit object name
in "describe" output, even when the commit in question happens to be
a tagged version. Instead of just emitting the tag name, it will
describe such a commit as v1.2-0-deadbeef (0th commit since tag v1.2
that points at object deadbeef....).
Signed-off-by: Santi Béjar <sbejar@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Git has difficulties on file systems that do not properly
distinguish case or modify filenames in unexpected ways. The two
major examples are Windows and Mac OS X. Both systems preserve
case of file names but do not distinguish between filenames that
differ only by case. Simple operations such as "git mv" or
"git merge" can fail unexpectedly. In addition, Mac OS X normalizes
unicode, which make git's life even harder.
This commit adds tests that currently fail but should pass if
file system as decribed above are fully supported. The test need
to be run on Windows and Mac X as they already pass on Linux.
Mitch Tishmack is the original author of the tests for unicode
normalization.
[jc: fixed-up so that it will use test_expect_success to test
on sanely behaving filesystems.]
Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This allows users with different preferences for access methods to the
same remote repositories to rewrite each other's URLs by pattern
matching across a large set of similiarly set up repositories to each
get the desired access.
For example, if you don't have a kernel.org account, you might want
settings like:
[url "git://git.kernel.org/pub/"]
insteadOf = master.kernel.org:/pub
Then, if you give git a URL like:
master.kernel.org:/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/linville/wireless-2.6.git
it will act like you gave it:
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/linville/wireless-2.6.git
and you can cut-and-paste pull requests in email without fixing them
by hand, for example.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This is just a basic sanity check that --compose works at
all.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Previously, the fake.sendmail test harness would write its
output to a hardcoded file, allowing only a single message
to be tested. Instead, let's have it save the messages for
all of its invocations so that we can see which messages
were sent, and in which order.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This error message is very confusing---it doesn't tell the user
anything about how to fix the situation. And the actual fix
for the situation ("git bisect reset") does a checkout of a
potentially random branch, (compared to what the user wants to
be on for the bisect she is starting).
The simplest way to eliminate the confusion is to just make
"git bisect start" do the cleanup itself. There's no significant
loss of safety here since we already have a general safety in
the form of the reflog.
Note: We preserve the warning for any cogito users. We do this
by switching from .git/head-name to .git/BISECT_START for the
extra state, (which is a more descriptive name anyway).
Signed-off-by: Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jc/apply-whitespace:
ws_fix_copy(): move the whitespace fixing function to ws.c
apply: do not barf on patch with too large an offset
core.whitespace: cr-at-eol
git-apply --whitespace=fix: fix whitespace fuzz introduced by previous run
builtin-apply.c: pass ws_rule down to match_fragment()
builtin-apply.c: move copy_wsfix() function a bit higher.
builtin-apply.c: do not feed copy_wsfix() leading '+'
builtin-apply.c: simplify calling site to apply_line()
builtin-apply.c: clean-up apply_one_fragment()
builtin-apply.c: mark common context lines in lineinfo structure.
builtin-apply.c: optimize match_beginning/end processing a bit.
builtin-apply.c: make it more line oriented
builtin-apply.c: push match-beginning/end logic down
builtin-apply.c: restructure "offset" matching
builtin-apply.c: refactor small part that matches context
t4014 test used GNU extension 'Q' in its sed scripts, but the
uses can safely be replaced with 'q'. Among other platforms,
sed on Mac OS X 10.4 does not accept the former.
Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
An earlier commit e1b3a2c (Build-in merge-recursive) made the
subtree merge strategy backend unavailable. This resurrects
it.
A new test t6029 currently only tests the strategy is available,
but it should be enhanced to check the real "subtree" case.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* bc/reflog-fix: (1490 commits)
builtin-reflog.c: don't install new reflog on write failure
hash: fix lookup_hash semantics
gitweb: Better chopping in commit search results
builtin-tag.c: remove cruft
git-merge-index documentation: clarify synopsis
send-email: fix In-Reply-To regression
git-reset --hard and git-read-tree --reset: fix read_cache_unmerged()
Teach git-grep --name-only as synonym for -l
diff: fix java funcname pattern for solaris
t3404: use configured shell instead of /bin/sh
git_config_*: don't assume we are parsing a config file
prefix_path: use is_absolute_path() instead of *orig == '/'
git-clean: handle errors if removing files fails
Clarified the meaning of git-add -u in the documentation
git-clone.sh: properly configure remote even if remote's head is dangling
git.el: Set process-environment instead of invoking env
Documentation/git-stash: document options for git stash list
send-email: squelch warning due to comparing undefined $_ to ""
cvsexportcommit: be graceful when "cvs status" reorders the arguments
Rename git-core rpm to just git and rename the meta-pacakge to git-all.
...
Conflicts:
Documentation/git-reflog.txt
t/t1410-reflog.sh
git hash-object used to process the --stdin command line argument
before reading subsequent arguments. This caused 'git hash-object
--stdin -w' to fail to actually write the object into the
database, while '-w --stdin' properly did. Now git hash-object
first reads all arguments, and then processes them.
This regresses one insane use case. git hash-object used to allow
multiple --stdin arguments on the command line:
$ git hash-object --stdin --stdin
foo
^D
bar
^D
Now git hash-object errors out if --stdin is given more than once.
Reported by Josh Triplett through
http://bugs.debian.org/464432
Signed-off-by: Gerrit Pape <pape@smarden.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Fix a regression introduced by
1ca3d6e (send-email: squelch warning due to comparing undefined $_ to "")
where if the user was prompted for an initial In-Reply-To and didn't
provide one, messages would be sent out with an invalid In-Reply-To of
"<>"
Also add test cases for the regression and the fix. A small modification
was needed to allow send-email to take its replies from stdin if the
environment variable GIT_SEND_EMAIL_NOTTY is set.
Signed-off-by: Jay Soffian <jaysoffian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When invalidating unmerged entries in the index, we used to set
their ce_mode to 0 to note the fact that they do not matter
anymore which also made sure that later unpack_trees() call
would not reuse them. Instead just remove them from the index.
Acked-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The fake-editor shell script invoked /bin/sh; normally this
is fine, unless the /bin/sh doesn't meet our compatibility
requirements, as is the case with Solaris. Specifically, the
$() syntax used by fake-editor is not understood.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git-clean simply ignored errors if removing a file or directory failed. This
patch makes it raise a warning and the exit code also greater than zero if
there are remaining files.
Signed-off-by: Miklos Vajna <vmiklos@frugalware.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jc/setup:
builtin-mv: minimum fix to avoid losing files
git-add: adjust to the get_pathspec() changes.
Make blame accept absolute paths
setup: sanitize absolute and funny paths in get_pathspec()
* maint:
Clarified the meaning of git-add -u in the documentation
git-clone.sh: properly configure remote even if remote's head is dangling
Documentation/git-stash: document options for git stash list
send-email: squelch warning due to comparing undefined $_ to ""
When switching branches from a subdirectory, checkout rewritten
in C extracted the toplevel of the tree in there.
This should fix it.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When cloning a remote repository which's HEAD refers to a nonexistent
ref, git-clone cloned all existing refs, but failed to write the
configuration for 'remote'. Now it detects the dangling remote HEAD,
refuses to checkout any local branch since HEAD refers to nowhere, but
properly writes the configuration for 'remote', so that subsequent
'git fetch's don't fail.
The problem was reported by Daniel Jacobowitz through
http://bugs.debian.org/466581
Signed-off-by: Gerrit Pape <pape@smarden.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When pushing a refspec like "HEAD", we used to treat it as
"HEAD:HEAD", which didn't work without rewriting. Instead, we should
resolve the ref. If it's a symref, further require it to point to a
branch, to avoid doing anything especially unexpected. Also remove the
rewriting previously added in builtin-push.
Since the code for "HEAD" uses the regular refspec parsing, it
automatically handles "+HEAD" without anything special.
[jc: added a further test to make sure that "remote.*.push = HEAD" works]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In my use cases, "cvs status" sometimes reordered the passed filenames,
which often led to a misdetection of a dirty state (when it was in
reality a clean state).
I finally tracked it down to two filenames having the same basename.
So no longer trust the order of the results blindly, but actually check
the file name.
Since "cvs status" only returns the basename (and the complete path on the
server which is useless for our purposes), run "cvs status" several times
with lists consisting of files with unique (chomped) basenames.
Be a bit clever about new files: these are reported as "no file <blabla>",
so in order to discern it from existing files, prepend "no file " to the
basename.
In other words, one call to "cvs status" will not ask for two files
"blabla" (which does not yet exist) and "no file blabla" (which exists).
This patch makes cvsexportcommit slightly slower, when the list of changed
files has non-unique basenames, but at least it is accurate now.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When you have particular reviewers you want to sent particular series
to, it's nice to be able to generate the whole series with them as
additional recipients, without configuring them into your general
headers or adding them by hand afterwards.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
RFC 2822 only permits a single To: header and a single Cc: header, so
we need to turn multiple values of each of these into a list. This
will be particularly significant with a command-line option to add Cc:
headers, where the user can't make sure to configure valid header sets
in any easy way.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Now each value of format.headers will always be treated as a single
valid header, and newlines will be inserted between them as needed.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Presently, it works with each header ending with a newline, but not
without the newlines.
Also add a test to see that multiple "To:" headers get combined.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If --cover-letter is provided, generate a cover letter message before
the patches, numbered 0.
Original patch thanks to Johannes Schindelin
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git branch" and "git checkout -b" now honor --track option even when
the upstream branch is local. Previously --track was silently ignored
when forking from a local branch. Also the command did not error out
when --track was explicitly asked for but the forked point specified
was not an existing branch (i.e. when there is no way to set up the
tracking configuration), but now it correctly does.
The configuration setting branch.autosetupmerge can now be set to
"always", which is equivalent to using --track from the command line.
Setting branch.autosetupmerge to "true" will retain the former behavior
of only setting up branch.*.merge for remote upstream branches.
Includes test cases for the new functionality.
Signed-off-by: Jay Soffian <jaysoffian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Tests -o, and an excessively long subject, and --thread, with and
without --in-reply-to=
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When a merge conflicts, there are often common lines that are not really
common, such as empty lines or lines containing a single curly bracket.
With XDL_MERGE_ZEALOUS_ALNUM, we use the following heuristics: when a
hunk does not contain any letters or digits, it is treated as conflicting.
In other words, a conflict which used to look like this:
<<<<<<<
a = 1;
=======
output();
>>>>>>>
}
}
}
<<<<<<<
output();
=======
b = 1;
>>>>>>>
will look like this with ZEALOUS_ALNUM:
<<<<<<<
a = 1;
}
}
}
output();
=======
output();
}
}
}
b = 1;
>>>>>>>
To demonstrate this, git-merge-file has been switched from
XDL_MERGE_ZEALOUS to XDL_MERGE_ZEALOUS_ALNUM.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When a merge conflicts, there are often less than three common lines
between two conflicting regions.
Since a conflict takes up as many lines as are conflicting, plus three
lines for the commit markers, the output will be shorter (and thus,
simpler) in this case, if the common lines will be merged into the
conflicting regions.
This patch merges up to three common lines into the conflicts.
For example, what looked like this before this patch:
<<<<<<<
if (a == 1)
=======
if (a != 0)
>>>>>>>
{
int i;
<<<<<<<
a = 0;
=======
a = !a;
>>>>>>>
will now look like this:
<<<<<<<
if (a == 1)
{
int i;
a = 0;
=======
if (a != 0)
{
int i;
a = !a;
>>>>>>>
Suggested Linus (based on ideas by "Voltage Spike" -- if that name is
real, it is mighty cool).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* pb/prepare-commit-msg:
git-commit: add a prepare-commit-msg hook
git-commit: Refactor creation of log message.
git-commit: set GIT_EDITOR=: if editor will not be launched
git-commit: support variable number of hook arguments
The only differences in behavior should be:
- git checkout -m with non-trivial merging won't print out
merge-recursive messages (see the change in t7201-co.sh)
- git checkout -- paths... will give a sensible error message if
HEAD is invalid as a commit.
- some intermediate states which were written to disk in the shell
version (in particular, index states) are only kept in memory in
this version, and therefore these can no longer be revealed by
later write operations becoming impossible.
- when we change branches, we discard MERGE_MSG, SQUASH_MSG, and
rr-cache/MERGE_RR, like reset always has.
I'm not 100% sure I got the merge recursive setup exactly right; the
base for a non-trivial merge in the shell code doesn't seem
theoretically justified to me, but I tried to match it anyway, and the
tests all pass this way.
Other than these items, the results should be identical to the shell
version, so far as I can tell.
[jc: squashed lock-file fix from Dscho in]
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There were several points where we looked at the HEAD
commit; for initial commits, this is meaningless. So instead
we:
- show staged status data as a diff against the empty tree
instead of HEAD
- show file diffs as creation events
- use "git rm --cached" to revert instead of going back to
the HEAD commit
We magically reference the empty tree to implement this.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
commit: discard index after setting up partial commit
filter-branch: handle filenames that need quoting
diff: Fix miscounting of --check output
hg-to-git: fix parent analysis
mailinfo: feed only one line to handle_filter() for QP input
diff.c: add "const" qualifier to "char *cmd" member of "struct ll_diff_driver"
Add "const" qualifier to "char *excludes_file".
Add "const" qualifier to "char *editor_program".
Add "const" qualifier to "char *pager_program".
config: add 'git_config_string' to refactor string config variables.
diff.c: remove useless check for value != NULL
fast-import: check return value from unpack_entry()
Validate nicknames of remote branches to prohibit confusing ones
diff.c: replace a 'strdup' with 'xstrdup'.
diff.c: fixup garding of config parser from value=NULL
There may still be some entries from the original index that
should be discarded before we show the status. In
particular, if a file was added in the index but not
included in the partial commit, it would still show up in
the status listing as staged for commit.
Ultimately the correct fix is to keep the two states in
separate index_state variables. Then we can avoid having
to reload the cache from the temporary file altogether, and
just point wt_status_print at the correct index.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The command used a very old fashioned construct to extract
filenames out of diff-index and ended up corrupting the output.
We can simply use --name-only and pipe into --stdin mode of
update-index. It's been like that for the past 2 years or so
since a94d994 (update-index: work with c-quoted name).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
c1795bb (Unify whitespace checking) incorrectly made the
checking function return without incrementing the line numbers
when there is no whitespace problem is found on a '+' line.
This resurrects the earlier behaviour.
Noticed and reported by Jay Soffian. The test script was stolen
from Jay's independent fix.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The function is intended to be fed one logical line at a time to
inspect, but a QP encoded raw input line can have more than one
lines, just like BASE64 encoded one.
Quoting LF as =0A may be unusual but RFC2045 allows it.
The issue was noticed and fixed by Jay Soffian. JC added a test
to protect the fix from regressing later.
Signed-off-by: Jay Soffian <jaysoffian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
config: add test cases for empty value and no value config variables.
cvsimport: have default merge regex also match beginning of commit message
git clone -s documentation: force a new paragraph for the NOTE
status: suggest "git rm --cached" to unstage for initial commit
Protect get_author_ident_from_commit() from filenames in work tree
upload-pack: Initialize the exec-path.
bisect: use verbatim commit subject in the bisect log
git-cvsimport.txt: fix '-M' description.
Revert "pack-objects: only throw away data during memory pressure"
The tests in 't1300-repo-config.sh' did not check what happens when
an empty value like the following is used in the config file:
[emptyvalue]
variable =
Also it was not checked that a variable with no value like the
following:
[novalue]
variable
gives a boolean "true" value, while an ampty value gives a boolean
"false" value.
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It makes no sense to suggest "git reset HEAD" since we have
no HEAD commit. This actually used to work but regressed in
f26a0012.
wt_status_print_cached_header was updated to take the whole
wt_status struct rather than just the reference field.
Previously the various code paths were sometimes sending in
s->reference and sometimes sending in NULL, making the
decision on whether this was an initial commit before we
even got to this function. Now we must check the initial
flag here.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We used to use "cat-file commit $commit" to extract the original
author information from existing commit, but an earlier commit
5ac2715 (Consistent message encoding while reusing log from an
existing commit) changed it to use "git show -s $commit". If
you have a file in your work tree that can be interpreted as a
valid object name (e.g. "HEAD"), this conversion will not work.
Disambiguate by marking the end of revision parameter on the
comand line with an explicit "--" to fix this.
This breakage is most visible with rebase when a file called
"HEAD" exists in the worktree.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When using the '-w $cvsdir' option to cvsexportcommit, it will chdir into
$cvsdir before executing several other git commands. If $GIT_DIR is set to
a relative path (e.g. '.'), the git commands executed by cvsexportcommit
will naturally fail.
Therefore, ensure that $GIT_DIR is absolute before the chdir to $cvsdir.
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The testcase verifies that 'git cvsexportcommit' functions correctly when
the '-w' option is used, and GIT_DIR is set to a relative path (e.g. '.').
Signed-off-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* lt/in-core-index:
lazy index hashing
Create pathname-based hash-table lookup into index
read-cache.c: introduce is_racy_timestamp() helper
read-cache.c: fix a couple more CE_REMOVE conversion
Also use unpack_trees() in do_diff_cache()
Make run_diff_index() use unpack_trees(), not read_tree()
Avoid running lstat(2) on the same cache entry.
index: be careful when handling long names
Make on-disk index representation separate from in-core one
Previously a patch that records too large a line number caused the
offset matching code in git-apply to overstep its internal buffer.
Noticed by Johannes Schindelin.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This establishes what the "bad" whitespaces are for this
project.
The rules are:
- Unless otherwise specified, indent with SP that could be
replaced with HT are not "bad". But SP before HT in the
indent is "bad", and trailing whitespaces are "bad".
- For C source files, initial indent by SP that can be replaced
with HT is also "bad".
- Test scripts in t/ and test vectors in its subdirectories can
contain anything, so we make it unrestricted for now.
Anything "bad" will be shown in WHITESPACE error indicator in
diff output, and "apply --whitespace=warn" will warn about it.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Write errors when repacking (eg, due to out-of-space conditions)
can leave temporary packs (and possibly other files beginning
with "tmp_") lying around which no existing
codepath removes and which aren't obvious to the casual user.
These can also be multi-megabyte files wasting noticeable space.
Unfortunately there's no way to definitely tell in builtin-prune
that a tmp_ file is not being used by a concurrent process,
such as a fetch. However, it is documented that pruning should
only be done on a quiet repository and --expire is honoured
(using code from Johannes Schindelin, along with a test case
he wrote) so that its safety is the same as that of loose
object pruning.
Since they might be signs of a problem (unlike orphaned loose
objects) the names of any removed files are printed.
Signed-off-by: David Tweed (david.tweed@gmail.com)
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@cam.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Instead of insisting on a symbolic ref, bisect now accepts detached
HEADs, too.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
find_beginning_of_line didn't take into account that the
previous line might have ended with \ in which case it shouldn't
stop but continue its search.
Signed-off-by: Frank Lichtenheld <frank@lichtenheld.de>
Acked-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git pack-objects" has the option --max-pack-size to limit the file
size of the packs to a certain amount of bytes. On platforms where
the pack file size is limited by filesystem constraints, it is easy
to forget this option, and this option does not exist for "git gc"
to begin with.
So introduce a config variable to set the default maximum, but make
this overrideable by the command line.
Suggested by Tor Arvid Lund.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If the test failed, it was giving really unclear ed script
output. Instead, give a diff that sort of suggests the problem. Also
replaces the use of "git diff" for this purpose with "diff -u".
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
There was an embarrassing pair of off-by-one miscounting that
failed to match path "a/b/c" when "a/.gitattributes" tried to
name it with relative path "b/c".
This fixes it.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The tests in 't1300-repo-config.sh' did not check what happens when
an empty value like the following is used in the config file:
[emptyvalue]
variable =
Also it was not checked that a variable with no value like the
following:
[novalue]
variable
gives a boolean "true" value, while an ampty value gives a boolean
"false" value.
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Previously, we set the GIT_CONFIG environment variable in
our tests so that only that file was read. However, setting
it to a static value is not correct, since we are not
necessarily always in the same directory; instead, we want
the usual git config file lookup to happen.
To do this, we stop setting GIT_CONFIG, which means that we
must now suppress the reading of the system-wide and user
configs.
This exposes an incorrect test in t1500, which is also
fixed (the incorrect test worked because we were failing to
read the core.bare value from the config file, since the
GIT_CONFIG variable was pointing us to the wrong file).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Numeric color only worked if it was at end of line.
Noticed by Chris Larson <clarson@kergoth.com>.
Signed-off-by: Timo Hirvonen <tihirvon@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
CRLF conversion bears a slight chance of corrupting data.
autocrlf=true will convert CRLF to LF during commit and LF to
CRLF during checkout. A file that contains a mixture of LF and
CRLF before the commit cannot be recreated by git. For text
files this is the right thing to do: it corrects line endings
such that we have only LF line endings in the repository.
But for binary files that are accidentally classified as text the
conversion can corrupt data.
If you recognize such corruption early you can easily fix it by
setting the conversion type explicitly in .gitattributes. Right
after committing you still have the original file in your work
tree and this file is not yet corrupted. You can explicitly tell
git that this file is binary and git will handle the file
appropriately.
Unfortunately, the desired effect of cleaning up text files with
mixed line endings and the undesired effect of corrupting binary
files cannot be distinguished. In both cases CRLFs are removed
in an irreversible way. For text files this is the right thing
to do because CRLFs are line endings, while for binary files
converting CRLFs corrupts data.
This patch adds a mechanism that can either warn the user about
an irreversible conversion or can even refuse to convert. The
mechanism is controlled by the variable core.safecrlf, with the
following values:
- false: disable safecrlf mechanism
- warn: warn about irreversible conversions
- true: refuse irreversible conversions
The default is to warn. Users are only affected by this default
if core.autocrlf is set. But the current default of git is to
leave core.autocrlf unset, so users will not see warnings unless
they deliberately chose to activate the autocrlf mechanism.
The safecrlf mechanism's details depend on the git command. The
general principles when safecrlf is active (not false) are:
- we warn/error out if files in the work tree can modified in an
irreversible way without giving the user a chance to backup the
original file.
- for read-only operations that do not modify files in the work tree
we do not not print annoying warnings.
There are exceptions. Even though...
- "git add" itself does not touch the files in the work tree, the
next checkout would, so the safety triggers;
- "git apply" to update a text file with a patch does touch the files
in the work tree, but the operation is about text files and CRLF
conversion is about fixing the line ending inconsistencies, so the
safety does not trigger;
- "git diff" itself does not touch the files in the work tree, it is
often run to inspect the changes you intend to next "git add". To
catch potential problems early, safety triggers.
The concept of a safety check was originally proposed in a similar
way by Linus Torvalds. Thanks to Dimitry Potapov for insisting
on getting the naked LF/autocrlf=true case right.
Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
The prepare-commit-msg hook is run whenever a "fresh" commit message
is prepared, just before it is shown in the editor (if it is).
Its purpose is to modify the commit message in-place.
It takes one to three parameters. The first is the name of the file that
the commit log message. The second is the source of the commit message,
and can be: "message" (if a -m or -F option was given); "template" (if a
-t option was given or the configuration option commit.template is set);
"merge" (if the commit is a merge or a .git/MERGE_MSG file exists);
"squash" (if a .git/SQUASH_MSG file exists); or "commit", followed by
a commit SHA1 as the third parameter (if a -c, -C or --amend option
was given).
If its exit status is non-zero, git-commit will abort. The hook is
not suppressed by the --no-verify option, so it should not be used
as a replacement for the pre-commit hook.
The sample prepare-commit-msg comments out the `Conflicts:` part of
a merge's commit message; other examples are commented out, including
adding a Signed-off-by line at the bottom of the commit messsage,
that the user can then edit or discard altogether.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <bonzini@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This patch moves the code of run_commit, up to writing the trees, editing
the message and running the commit-msg hook to prepare_log_message. It also
renames the latter to prepare_to_commit.
This simplifies a little the code for the next patch.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A pattern "foo/" in the exclude list did not match directory
"foo", but a pattern "foo" did. This attempts to extend the
exclude mechanism so that it would while not matching a regular
file or a symbolic link "foo". In order to differentiate a
directory and non directory, this passes down the type of path
being checked to excluded() function.
A downside is that the recursive directory walk may need to run
lstat(2) more often on systems whose "struct dirent" do not give
the type of the entry; earlier it did not have to do so for an
excluded path, but we now need to figure out if a path is a
directory before deciding to exclude it. This is especially bad
because an idea similar to the earlier CE_UPTODATE optimization
to reduce number of lstat(2) calls would by definition not apply
to the codepaths involved, as (1) directories will not be
registered in the index, and (2) excluded paths will not be in
the index anyway.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
An incorrect command "git mv subdir /outer/space" threw the
subdirectory to outside of the repository and then noticed that
/outer/space/subdir/ would be outside of the repository. The
error checking is backwards.
This fixes the issue by being careful about use of the return
value of get_pathspec(). Since the implementation already has
handcrafted loop to munge each path on the command line, we use
prefix_path() instead.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We would need to notice and fail if command line had a nonsense pathspec.
Earlier get_pathspec() returned all the inputs including bad ones, but
the new one issues warnings and removes offending ones from its return
value, so the callers need to be adjusted to notice it.
Additional test scripts were initially from Robin Rosenberg, further fixed.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The prefix_path() function called from get_pathspec() is
responsible for translating list of user-supplied pathspecs to
list of pathspecs that is relative to the root of the work
tree. When working inside a subdirectory, the user-supplied
pathspecs are taken to be relative to the current subdirectory.
Among special path components in pathspecs, we used to accept
and interpret only "." ("the directory", meaning a no-op) and
".." ("up one level") at the beginning. Everything else was
passed through as-is.
For example, if you are in Documentation/ directory of the
project, you can name Documentation/howto/maintain-git.txt as:
howto/maintain-git.txt
../Documentation/howto/maitain-git.txt
../././Documentation/howto/maitain-git.txt
but not as:
howto/./maintain-git.txt
$(pwd)/howto/maintain-git.txt
This patch updates prefix_path() in several ways:
- If the pathspec is not absolute, prefix (i.e. the current
subdirectory relative to the root of the work tree, with
terminating slash, if not empty) and the pathspec is
concatenated first and used in the next step. Otherwise,
that absolute pathspec is used in the next step.
- Then special path components "." (no-op) and ".." (up one
level) are interpreted to simplify the path. It is an error
to have too many ".." to cause the intermediate result to
step outside of the input to this step.
- If the original pathspec was not absolute, the result from
the previous step is the resulting "sanitized" pathspec.
Otherwise, the result from the previous step is still
absolute, and it is an error if it does not begin with the
directory that corresponds to the root of the work tree. The
directory is stripped away from the result and is returned.
- In any case, the resulting pathspec in the array
get_pathspec() returns omit the ones that caused errors.
With this patch, the last two examples also behave as expected.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This new error mode allows a line to have a carriage return at the
end of the line when checking and fixing trailing whitespace errors.
Some people like to keep CRLF line ending recorded in the repository,
and still want to take advantage of the automated trailing whitespace
stripping. We still show ^M in the diff output piped to "less" to
remind them that they do have the CR at the end, but these carriage
return characters at the end are no longer flagged as errors.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When you have more than one patch series, an earlier one of which
tries to introduce whitespace breakages and a later one of which
has such a new line in its context, "git-apply --whitespace=fix"
will apply and fix the whitespace breakages in the earlier one,
making the resulting file not to match the context of the later
patch.
A short demonstration is in the new test, t4125.
For example, suppose the first patch is:
diff a/hello.txt b/hello.txt
--- a/hello.txt
+++ b/hello.txt
@@ -20,3 +20,3 @@
Hello world.$
-How Are you$
-Today?$
+How are you $
+today? $
to fix broken case in the string, but it introduces unwanted
trailing whitespaces to the result (pretend you are looking at
"cat -e" output of the patch --- '$' signs are not in the patch
but are shown to make the EOL stand out). And the second patch
is to change the wording of the greeting further:
diff a/hello.txt b/hello.txt
--- a/hello.txt
+++ b/hello.txt
@@ -18,5 +18,5 @@
Greetings $
-Hello world.$
+Hello, everybody. $
How are you $
-today? $
+these days? $
If you apply the first one with --whitespace=fix, you will get
this as the result:
Hello world.$
How are you$
today?$
and this does not match the preimage of the second patch, which
demands extra whitespace after "How are you" and "today?".
This series is about teaching "git apply --whitespace=fix" to
cope with this situation better. If the patch does not apply,
it rewrites the second patch like this and retries:
diff a/hello.txt b/hello.txt
--- a/hello.txt
+++ b/hello.txt
@@ -18,5 +18,5 @@
Greetings$
-Hello world.$
+Hello, everybody.$
How are you$
-today?$
+these days?$
This is done by rewriting the preimage lines in the hunk
(i.e. the lines that begin with ' ' or '-'), using the same
whitespace fixing rules as it is using to apply the patches, so
that it can notice what it did to the previous ones in the
series.
A careful reader may notice that the first patch in the example
did not touch the "Greetings" line, so the trailing whitespace
that is in the original preimage of the second patch is not from
the series. Is rewriting this context line a problem?
If you think about it, you will realize that the reason for the
difference is because the submitter's tree was based on an
earlier version of the file that had whitespaces wrong on that
"Greetings" line, and the change that introduced the "Greetings"
line was added independently of this two-patch series to our
tree already with an earlier "git apply --whitespace=fix".
So it may appear this logic is rewriting too much, it is not
so. It is just rewriting what we would have rewritten in the
past.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The scripted version might not have handled this correctly
either, but the version rewritten in C definitely does not grok
this and complains $tag is not a commit object.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This is the absolute minimum (and reliable) reproduction recipe
to demonstrate that revision range in a history with clock skew
sometimes fails to mark UNINTERESTING commit in topologically
early parts of the history.
The history looks like this:
o---o---o---o
one four
but one has the largest timestamp. "git rev-list four..one"
fails to notice that "one" should not be emitted.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When we have known breakages, we still said "passed all N
test(s)", which was a bit funny.
This rewords it to read "passed all remaining N test(s)" in such
a case.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Originally, test_expect_failure was designed to be the opposite
of test_expect_success, but this was a bad decision. Most tests
run a series of commands that leads to the single command that
needs to be tested, like this:
test_expect_{success,failure} 'test title' '
setup1 &&
setup2 &&
setup3 &&
what is to be tested
'
And expecting a failure exit from the whole sequence misses the
point of writing tests. Your setup$N that are supposed to
succeed may have failed without even reaching what you are
trying to test. The only valid use of test_expect_failure is to
check a trivial single command that is expected to fail, which
is a minority in tests of Porcelain-ish commands.
This large-ish patch rewrites all uses of test_expect_failure to
use test_expect_success and rewrites the condition of what is
tested, like this:
test_expect_success 'test title' '
setup1 &&
setup2 &&
setup3 &&
! this command should fail
'
test_expect_failure is redefined to serve as a reminder that
that test *should* succeed but due to a known breakage in git it
currently does not pass. So if git-foo command should create a
file 'bar' but you discovered a bug that it doesn't, you can
write a test like this:
test_expect_failure 'git-foo should create bar' '
rm -f bar &&
git foo &&
test -f bar
'
This construct acts similar to test_expect_success, but instead
of reporting "ok/FAIL" like test_expect_success does, the
outcome is reported as "FIXED/still broken".
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We only care about getting what should be an empty string and
sending it to a file, without a trailing LF, so the empty string
translates into a 0 byte file. Earlier when I originally wrote
these lines Mac OS X allowed the format string of printf to be
the empty string, but more recent versions appear to have been
'improved' with error messages if the format is not given.
This may cause problems if we ever wind up with changes to the hook
tests. A minor cleanup makes the test more safe on all systems,
by conforming to accepted printf conventions.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This accompanies c5b09feb78 (Avoid
update hook during git-rebase --interactive) to make sure that
any regression to make Debian's Bug#458782 (git-core: git-rebase
doesn't work when trying to squash changes into commits created
with --no-verify) resurface will be caught.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The exit value of some commands was not being used for the
test output.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When the upstream branch is tracked, we can detect if that branch
was rebased since it was last fetched. Teach git to use that
information to rebase from the old remote head onto the new remote head.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Git histories may have multiple roots, which can cause
git merge-base to fail and this caused git cvsserver to die.
This commit teaches git cvsserver to handle a failing git
merge-base gracefully, and modifies the test case to verify this.
All the test cases now use a history with two roots.
Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
git-cvsserver.perl | 9 ++++++++-
t/t9400-git-cvsserver-server.sh | 10 +++++++++-
2 files changed, 17 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It is preferable to have the test setup in a test case. The
setup itself may fail and having it as a test case handles this
situation more gracefully.
Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If options are aggregated, and that the whole token is an exact
prefix of a long option that is longer than 2 letters, reject
it. This is to prevent a common typo:
$ git commit -amend
to get interpreted as "commit all with message 'end'".
The typo check isn't performed if there is no aggregation,
because the stuck form is the recommended one. If we have `-o`
being a valid short option that takes an argument, and --option
a long one, then we _MUST_ accept -option as "'o' option with
argument 'ption'", which is our official recommended form.
Signed-off-by: Pierre Habouzit <madcoder@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The test 'creating too deep nesting' can fail even when cloning the repos,
but is not its main purpose (it has to prepare nested repos and ensure
the last one is invalid). So split the test into the creation and
invalidity checking parts.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We currently use lower 12-bit (masked with CE_NAMEMASK) in the
ce_flags field to store the length of the name in cache_entry,
without checking the length parameter given to
create_ce_flags(). This can make us store incorrect length.
Currently we are mostly protected by the fact that many
codepaths first copy the path in a variable of size PATH_MAX,
which typically is 4096 that happens to match the limit, but
that feels like a bug waiting to happen. Besides, that would
not allow us to shorten the width of CE_NAMEMASK to use the bits
for new flags.
This redefines the meaning of the name length stored in the
cache_entry. A name that does not fit is represented by storing
CE_NAMEMASK in the field, and the actual length needs to be
computed by actually counting the bytes in the name[] field.
This way, only the unusually long paths need to suffer.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
This modifies the existing t7400 test to use 'init' as the
pathname that a submodule is bound to. Without the earlier
subcommand parser fix, this fails.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since we are now sanity-checking the contents of patches and
refusing to send ones with long lines, this knob provides a
way for the user to override the new behavior (if, e.g., he
knows his SMTP path will handle it).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We try to catch errors early so that we don't end up sending
half of a broken patch series. Right now the only validation
is checking that line-lengths are under the SMTP-mandated
limit of 998.
The validation parsing is very crude (it just checks each
line length without understanding the mailbox format) but
should work fine for this simple check.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This makes write_ref_sha1() more careful: it actually checks the SHA1 of
the ref it is updating, and refuses to update a ref with an object that it
cannot find.
Perhaps more importantly, it also refuses to update a branch head with a
non-commit object. I don't quite know *how* the stable series maintainers
were able to corrupt their repository to have a HEAD that pointed to a tag
rather than a commit object, but they did. Which results in a totally
broken repository that cannot be cloned or committed on.
So make it harder for people to shoot themselves in the foot like that.
The test t1400-update-ref.sh is fixed at the same time, as it
assumed that the commands involved in the particular test would
not care about corrupted repositories whose refs point at
nonexistant bogus objects. That assumption does not hold true
anymore.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We truncate hunk-header line at 80 bytes, but that 80th byte
could be in the middle of a character, which is bad. This uses
pick_one_utf8_char() function to make sure we do not cut a character
in the middle.
This assumes that the internal representation of the text is
UTF-8. This needs to be extended in the future but the optimal
direction has not been decided yet.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When e-mail address is empty (e.g. "A U Thor <>"), --pretty=format
misparsed the commit header and did not pick up the date field correctly.
Noticed by Marco, fixed slightly differently with additional sanity
check and with a test.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It is a good practice to write program output to a temporary file
during the test, as it would allow easier postmortem when the tested
program does break. But there is no benefit in writing the expected
output out to the temporary.
This actually fixes a bug in check_verify_failure() routine.
The intention of the test seems to make sure the "git mktag" command
fails, and it spits out the expected error message. But if the
command did not fail as expected, the shell function as originally
written would not have detected the failure.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There is nothing _wrong_ with egrep per se, but this way we
would have less dependency on external tools.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
As pointed out by Junio, it's unnecessary to use "grep -E" and ".+" when we can
just use "grep" and "..*".
Signed-off-by: Miklos Vajna <vmiklos@frugalware.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It makes no sense since there is no working tree. A soft
reset should be fine, though.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The config parsing routines use the static global
'config_file' to store the FILE* pointing to the current
config file being parsed. The function get_next_char()
automatically converts an EOF on this file to a newline for
the convenience of its callers, and it sets config_file to
NULL to indicate that EOF was reached.
This throws away useful information, though, since some
routines want to call ftell on 'config_file' to find out
exactly _where_ the routine ended. In the case of a key
ending at EOF boundary, we ended up segfaulting in some
cases (changing that key or adding another key in its
section), or failing to provide the necessary newline
(adding a new section).
This patch adds a new flag to indicate EOF and uses that
instead of setting config_file to NULL. It also makes sure
to add newlines where necessary for truncated input. All
three included tests fail without the patch.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* ar/commit-cleanup:
Allow selection of different cleanup modes for commit messages
builtin-commit: avoid double-negation in the code.
builtin-commit: fix amending of the initial commit
t7005: do not exit inside test.
In commit b7bb760d5e (Fix revision
log diff setup, avoid unnecessary diff generation) an optimization was
made to avoid unnecessary diff generation. This was partly fixed in
99516e35d0 (Fix embarrassing "git log
--follow" bug). The '--diff-filter' option also needs the diff machinery
in action.
Signed-off-by: Arjen Laarhoven <arjen@yaph.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If a config file has become mildly corrupted due to a missing LF
we may discover some other option joined up against the end of a
numeric value. For example:
[section]
number = 1auto
where the "auto" flag was meant to occur on the next line, below
"number", but the missing LF has caused it to no longer be its
own option. Instead the word "auto" is parsed as a 'unit factor'
for the value of "number".
Before this change we got the confusing error message:
fatal: unknown unit: 'auto'
which told us nothing about where the problem appeared. Now we get:
fatal: bad config value for 'aninvalid.unit'
which at least points the user in the right direction of where to
search for the incorrectly formatted configuration file.
Noticed by erikh on #git, which received the original error from
a simple `git checkout -b` due to a midly corrupted config.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Although we traditionally stripped away excess blank lines, trailing
whitespaces and lines that begin with "#" from the commit log message,
sometimes the message just has to be the way user wants it.
For instance, a commit message template can contain lines that begin with
"#", the message must be kept as close to its original source as possible
if you are converting from a foreign SCM, or maybe the message has a shell
script including its comments for future reference.
The cleanup modes are default, verbatim, whitespace and strip. The
default mode depends on if the message is being edited and will either
strip whitespace and comments (if editor active) or just strip the
whitespace (for where the message is given explicitely).
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The command itself takes an optional <pattern> argument that
limits the shown tags to the ones that match when in listing
mode that is triggered with '-l' option. The <pattern> is not
an optional option-argument to '-l'.
With this fix, "git tag -l -n 4 v0.99" works as expected.
It also removes a few bogus tests in t7004.
Signed-off-by: Pierre Habouzit <madcoder@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The earlier test stripped away expected number of 'z' but the output
would have been very hard to read once somebody broke the common tail
optimization. Instead, count the number of 'z' and show it, to help
diagnosing the problem better in the future.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This tests a recently fixed regression in which "git clone
-o" didn't work at all.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since commit 376ccb8cbb (rebase -i: style
fixes and minor cleanups), unchanged SHA-1s are no longer mapped via
$REWRITTEN. But the updating phase was not prepared for the old head
not being rewritten.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Some versions of 'tr' only accept octal codes if entered with three digits,
and therefor misinterpret the '\0' in the test suite.
Some versions of 'tr' reject the (needless) use of character classes.
Signed-off-by: H.Merijn Brand <h.m.brand@xs4all.nl>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We need to be extra careful recovering the removed common section, so
that we do not break context nor the changed incomplete line (i.e. the
last line that does not end with LF).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
After this patch, "written" counts the number of bytes up to and
including the most recently seen tab. This allows us to detect (and
count) spaces by comparing to "i".
This allows catching initial indents like '\t ' (a tab followed
by 8 spaces), while previously indent-with-non-tab caught only indents
that consisted entirely of spaces.
This also allows fixing an indent-with-non-tab regression, so we can
again detect indents like '\t \t'.
Also update tests to catch these cases.
Signed-off-by: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@citi.umich.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If there were no tabs, and the last space was at position 7, then
positions 0..7 had spaces, so there were 8 spaces.
Update test to check exactly this case.
Signed-off-by: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@citi.umich.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This is important for the list of clone urls, where if there are
no per-repository clone URL configured, the default base URLs
are never used for URL construction without this patch.
Add tests for different ways of setting project URLs, just in case.
Note that those tests in current form wouldn't detect breakage fixed
by this patch, as it only checks for errors and not for expected
output.
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* wc/diff:
Test interaction between diff --check and --exit-code
Use shorter error messages for whitespace problems
Add tests for "git diff --check" with core.whitespace options
Make "diff --check" output match "git apply"
Unify whitespace checking
diff --check: minor fixups
"diff --check" should affect exit status
Make sure that it works as advertised in the man page.
Signed-off-by: Wincent Colaiuta <win@wincent.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The initial version of the whitespace_error_string() function took the
messages from builtin-apply.c rather than the shorter messages from
diff.c.
This commit addresses Junio's concern that these messages might be too
long (now that we can emit multiple warnings per line).
Signed-off-by: Wincent Colaiuta <win@wincent.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
After tentatively applying a patch from a contributor, you can get a
replacement patch with corrected code and unusable commit log message.
In such a case, this sequence ought to give you an editor based on the
message in the earlier commit, to let you describe an incremental
improvement:
git reset --hard HEAD^ ;# discard the earlier one
git am <corrected-patch
git commit --amend -c HEAD@{1}
Unfortunately, --amend insisted reusing the message from the commit
being amended, ignoring the -c option. This corrects it.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Previously, git-svn would ignore cases where the path we're
tracking is removed from the repository. This was to prevent
heads with follow-parent from ending up with a tree full of
empty revisions (and thus breaking rename detection).
The previous behavior is fine until the path we're tracking
is re-added later on, leading to the old files being merged
in with the new files in the directory (because the old
files were never marked as deleted)
We will now only remove all the old files locally that were
deleted remotely iff we detect the directory we're in is being
created from scratch.
Thanks for Marcus D. Hanwell for the bug report and
Peter Baumann for the analysis.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Make sure that "git diff --check" does the right thing when the
core.whitespace options are set.
While we are at it, correct many uses of test_expect_failure that
ran sequence of commands.
Signed-off-by: Wincent Colaiuta <win@wincent.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This commit unifies three separate places where whitespace checking was
performed:
- the whitespace checking previously done in builtin-apply.c is
extracted into a function in ws.c
- the equivalent logic in "git diff" is removed
- the emit_line_with_ws() function is also removed because that also
rechecks the whitespace, and its functionality is rolled into ws.c
The new function is called check_and_emit_line() and it does two things:
checks a line for whitespace errors and optionally emits it. The checking
is based on lines of content rather than patch lines (in other words, the
caller must strip the leading "+" or "-"); this was suggested by Junio on
the mailing list to allow for a future extension to "git show" to display
whitespace errors in blobs.
At the same time we teach it to report all classes of whitespace errors
found for a given line rather than reporting only the first found error.
Signed-off-by: Wincent Colaiuta <win@wincent.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There is no reason --exit-code and --check-diff must be mutually
exclusive, so assign different bits to different results and allow them
to be returned from the command. Introduce diff_result_code() to factor
out the common code to decide final status code based on diffopt
settings and use it everywhere.
Update tests to match the above fix.
Turning pager off when "diff --check" is used is a regression.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git diff" has a --check option that can be used to check for whitespace
problems but it only reported by printing warnings to the
console.
Now when the --check option is used we give a non-zero exit status,
making "git diff --check" nicer to use in scripts and hooks.
Signed-off-by: Wincent Colaiuta <win@wincent.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"diff --check" would only detect spaces before tabs if a tab was the
last character in the leading indent. Fix that and add a test case to
make sure the bug doesn't regress in the future.
Signed-off-by: Wincent Colaiuta <win@wincent.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 3968658599 broke signed tags using
the "-u" flag when it made builtin-tag.c use parse_options() to parse its
arguments (but it quite possibly was broken even before that, by the
builtin rewrite).
It used to be that passing the signing ID with the -u parameter also
(obviously!) implied that you wanted to sign and annotate the tag, but
that logic got dropped. It also totally ignored the actual key ID that was
passed in.
This reinstates it all.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Migrations are done automatically on an as-needed basis when new
revisions are to be fetched. Stale remote branches do not get
migrated, yet.
However, unless you set noMetadata or useSvkProps it's safe to
just do:
find $GIT_DIR/svn -name '.rev_db*' -print0 | xargs rm -f
to purge all the old .rev_db files.
The new format is a one-way migration and is NOT compatible with
old versions of git-svn.
This is the replacement for the rev_db format, which was too big
and inefficient for large repositories with a lot of sparse history
(mainly tags).
The format is this:
- 24 bytes for every record,
* 4 bytes for the integer representing an SVN revision number
* 20 bytes representing the sha1 of a git commit
- No empty padding records like the old format
- new records are written append-only since SVN revision numbers
increase monotonically
- lookups on SVN revision number are done via a binary search
- Piping the file to xxd(1) -c24 is a good way of dumping it for
viewing or editing, should the need ever arise.
As with .rev_db, these files are disposable unless noMetadata or
useSvmProps is set.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If you have local changes that don't conflict with the
branch-switching changes, these should be kept, not cause errors even
without -m, and be reported afterwards in name-status format.
With -m, the changes carried across should be listed as well. And, for
now, include the merge-recursive output from this process.
Also test the detatched head message in at least one case.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
As pointed out by Junio on the mailing list, surrounding tests in
double quotes can lead to bugs wherein variables get substituted away,
so this isn't just style churn but important to prevent others from
looking at these tests in the future and thinking that this is "the
way" that Git tests should be written.
Signed-off-by: Wincent Colaiuta <win@wincent.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Supplement the existing tests for the commit-msg hook (which all use
"git commit -m") with tests which use an interactive editor (no -m
switch) to ensure that all code paths get tested.
At the same time the quoting of some of the existing tests is changed
to conform to Junio's recommendations for test style (single quotes
used around the test unless there is a compelling reason not to, and
the opening quote on the same line as the test_expect and the closing
quote in column 1).
Signed-off-by: Wincent Colaiuta <win@wincent.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jc/spht:
Use gitattributes to define per-path whitespace rule
core.whitespace: documentation updates.
builtin-apply: teach whitespace_rules
builtin-apply: rename "whitespace" variables and fix styles
core.whitespace: add test for diff whitespace error highlighting
git-diff: complain about >=8 consecutive spaces in initial indent
War on whitespace: first, a bit of retreat.
Conflicts:
cache.h
config.c
diff.c
As desired, these pass for git-commit.sh, fail for builtin-commit (prior
to the fixes), and succeeded for builtin-commit (after the fixes).
Signed-off-by: Wincent Colaiuta <win@wincent.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The output of git-status was recently changed to output relative
paths. Setting this variable to false restores the old behavior for
any old-timers that prefer it.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
for-each-ref can accept only one quoting style. For this reason it uses
OPT_BIT for the quoting style switches so that it is easy to check for
more than one bit being set. However, not all symbolic constants were
actually single bit values. In particular:
$ git for-each-ref --python
error: more than one quoting style ?
This fixes it.
While we are here, let's also remove the space before the question mark.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The `core.whitespace` configuration variable allows you to define what
`diff` and `apply` should consider whitespace errors for all paths in
the project (See gitlink:git-config[1]). This attribute gives you finer
control per path.
For example, if you have these in the .gitattributes:
frotz whitespace
nitfol -whitespace
xyzzy whitespace=-trailing
all types of whitespace problems known to git are noticed in path 'frotz'
(i.e. diff shows them in diff.whitespace color, and apply warns about
them), no whitespace problem is noticed in path 'nitfol', and the
default types of whitespace problems except "trailing whitespace" are
noticed for path 'xyzzy'. A project with mixed Python and C might want
to have:
*.c whitespace
*.py whitespace=-indent-with-non-tab
in its toplevel .gitattributes file.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
git-am -i: report rewritten title
git grep shows the same hit repeatedly for unmerged paths
Do check_repository_format() early (re-fix)
Do check_repository_format() early
Add missing inside_work_tree setting in setup_git_directory_gently
* nd/maint-work-tree-fix:
Do check_repository_format() early (re-fix)
Do check_repository_format() early
Add missing inside_work_tree setting in setup_git_directory_gently
This pushes check_repository_format() (actually _gently() version)
to setup_git_directory_gently() in order to prevent from
using unsupported repositories.
New setup_git_directory_gently()'s behaviour is stop searching
for a valid gitdir and return as if there is no gitdir if a
unsupported repository is found. Warning will be thrown in these
cases.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git pull/fetch" that gets explicit refspecs from the command line should
not update configured tracking refs.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* kh/commit: (33 commits)
git-commit --allow-empty
git-commit: Allow to amend a merge commit that does not change the tree
quote_path: fix collapsing of relative paths
Make git status usage say git status instead of git commit
Fix --signoff in builtin-commit differently.
git-commit: clean up die messages
Do not generate full commit log message if it is not going to be used
Remove git-status from list of scripts as it is builtin
Fix off-by-one error when truncating the diff out of the commit message.
builtin-commit.c: export GIT_INDEX_FILE for launch_editor as well.
Add a few more tests for git-commit
builtin-commit: Include the diff in the commit message when verbose.
builtin-commit: fix partial-commit support
Fix add_files_to_cache() to take pathspec, not user specified list of files
Export three helper functions from ls-files
builtin-commit: run commit-msg hook with correct message file
builtin-commit: do not color status output shown in the message template
file_exists(): dangling symlinks do exist
Replace "runstatus" with "status" in the tests
t7501-commit: Add test for git commit <file> with dirty index.
...
* sp/refspec-match:
refactor fetch's ref matching to use refname_match()
push: use same rules as git-rev-parse to resolve refspecs
add refname_match()
push: support pushing HEAD to real branch name
POSIX says that exit status "0" means that "unset" successfully unset
the variable. However, it is kind of ambiguous if an environment
variable which was not set could be successfully unset.
At least the default shell on HP-UX insists on reporting an error in
such a case, so just ignore the exit status of "unset".
[Dscho: extended the patch to git-submodule.sh, as Junio realized that
this is the only other place where we check the exit status of "unset".]
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git-cvsimport won't run at all with less than cvsps 2.1, because it
lacks the -A flag. But there's no point in preventing people who have an
old cvsps from running the full testsuite.
Tested-by: A Large Angry SCM <gitzilla@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The name 'verbatim' describes much better what this mode does with
signed tags. While at it, fix the documentation what it actually
does.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It does not usually make sense to record a commit that has the exact
same tree as its sole parent commit and that is why git-commit prevents
you from making such a mistake, but when data from foreign scm is
involved, it is a different story. We are equipped to represent such an
(perhaps insane, perhaps by mistake, or perhaps done on purpose) empty
change, and it is better to represent it bypassing the safety valve for
native use.
This is primarily for use by foreign scm interface scripts.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Normally, it should not be allowed to generate an empty commit. A merge
commit generated with git 'merge -s ours' does not change the tree (along
the first parent), but merges are not "empty" even if they do not change
the tree. Hence, commit 8588452ceb allowed to amend a merge commit that
does not change the tree, but 4fb5fd5d30 disallowed it again in an
attempt to avoid that an existing commit is amended such that it becomes
empty. With this change, a commit can be edited (create a new one or amend
an existing one) either if there are changes or if there are at least two
parents.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The code tries to collapse identical leading components
between the prefix and the path. So if we're in "dir1", the
path "dir1/file" should become just "file". However, we were
ending up with "../dir1/file". The included test expected
the wrong output.
The "len" parameter to quote_path can be negative to mean
"this is a NUL terminated string". Simply count it so that
the loop can rely on it being the length of the path.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This program dumps (parts of) a git repository in the format that
fast-import understands.
For clarity's sake, it does not use the 'inline' method of specifying
blobs in the commits, but builds the blobs before building the commits.
Since signed tags' signatures will not necessarily be valid (think
transformations after the export, or excluding revisions, changing
the history), there are 4 modes to handle them: abort (default),
ignore, warn and strip. The latter just turns the tags into
unsigned ones.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When we consider if a path has been totally rewritten, we did not
touch changes from symlinks to files or vice versa. But a change
that modifies even the type of a blob surely should count as a
complete rewrite.
While we are at it, modernise diffcore-break to be aware of gitlinks (we
do not want to touch them).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* cr/tag-options:
git-tag: test that -s implies an annotated tag
"git-tag -s" should create a signed annotated tag
builtin-tag: accept and process multiple -m just like git-commit
Make builtin-tag.c use parse_options.
* maint:
Replace the word 'update-cache' by 'update-index' everywhere
cvsimport: fix usage of cvsimport.module
t7003-filter-branch: Fix test of a failing --msg-filter.
cvsimport: miscellaneous packed-ref fixes
cvsimport: use rev-parse to support packed refs
Add basic cvsimport tests
Earlier, 'git prune' would prune all loose unreachable objects.
This could be quite dangerous, as the objects could be used in
an ongoing operation.
This patch adds a mode to expire only loose, unreachable objects
which are older than a certain time. For example, by
git prune --expire 14.days
you can prune only those objects which are loose, unreachable
and older than 14 days (and thus probably outdated).
The implementation uses st.st_mtime rather than st.st_ctime,
because it can be tested better, using 'touch -d <time>' (and
omitting the test when the platform does not support that
command line switch).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There were two problems:
1. We only look at the config variable if there is no module
given on the command line. We checked this by comparing
@ARGV == 0. However, at the time of the comparison, we
have not yet parsed the dashed options, meaning that
"git cvsimport" would read the variable but "git
cvsimport -a" would not. This is fixed by simply moving
the check after the call to getopt.
2. If the config variable did not exist, we were adding an
empty string to @ARGV. The rest of the script, rather
than barfing for insufficient input, would then try to
import the module '', leading to rather confusing error
messages. Based on patch from Emanuele Giaquinta.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Occasionally, in some setups (*cough* forks on repo.or.cz *cough*) some
refs go stale, e.g. when the forkee rebased and lost some objects needed
by the fork. The quick & dirty way to deal with those refs is to delete
them and push them again.
However, git-push first would first fetch the current commit name for the
ref, would receive a null sha1 since the ref does not point to a valid
object, then tell receive-pack that it should delete the ref with this
commit name. delete_ref() would be subsequently be called, and check that
resolve_ref() (which does _not_ check for validity of the object) returns
the same commit name. Which would fail.
The proper fix is to avoid corrupting repositories, but in the meantime
this is a good fix in any case.
Incidentally, some instances of "cd .." in the test cases were fixed, so
that subsequent test cases run in t/trash/ irrespective of the outcome of
the previous test cases.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The test passed for the wrong reason: If the script given to --msg-filter
fails, it is expected that git-filter-branch aborts. But the test forgot
to tell the branch name to rewrite, and so git-filter-branch failed due to
incorrect usage.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When calling 'git pull' with the '--rebase' option, it performs a
fetch + rebase instead of a fetch + merge.
This behavior is more desirable than fetch + pull when a topic branch
is ready to be submitted and needs to be update.
fetch + rebase might also be considered a better workflow with shared
repositories in any case, or for contributors to a centrally managed
repository, such as WINE's.
As a convenience, you can set the default behavior for a branch by
defining the config variable branch.<name>.rebase, which is
interpreted as a bool. This setting can be overridden on the command
line by --rebase and --no-rebase.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This reverts commit 09fba7a59d.
These tests are superseded by the ones in t5404 (added in
6fa92bf3 and 8736a848), which are more extensive and better
organized.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Previously, if refs were packed, git-cvsimport would assume
that particular refs did not exist. This could lead to, for
example, overwriting previous 'origin' commits that were
packed.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We weren't even testing basic things before, so let's at
least try importing and updating a trivial repository, which
will catch total breakage.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This detects a regression introduced while moving git-tag to a C
builtin.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jc/maint-add-sync-stat:
t2200: test more cases of "add -u"
git-add: make the entry stat-clean after re-adding the same contents
ce_match_stat, run_diff_files: use symbolic constants for readability
* jc/maint-format-patch-encoding:
test format-patch -s: make sure MIME content type is shown as needed
format-patch -s: add MIME encoding header if signer's name requires so
* bs/maint-commit-options:
git-commit: Add tests for invalid usage of -a/--interactive with paths
git-commit.sh: Fix usage checks regarding paths given when they do not make sense
We earlier introduced core.whitespace to allow users to tweak the
definition of what the "whitespace errors" are, for the purpose of diff
output highlighting. This teaches the same to git-apply, so that the
command can both detect (when --whitespace=warn option is given) and fix
(when --whitespace=fix option is given) as configured.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jk/send-pack: (24 commits)
send-pack: cluster ref status reporting
send-pack: fix "everything up-to-date" message
send-pack: tighten remote error reporting
make "find_ref_by_name" a public function
Fix warning about bitfield in struct ref
send-pack: assign remote errors to each ref
send-pack: check ref->status before updating tracking refs
send-pack: track errors for each ref
git-push: add documentation for the newly added --mirror mode
Add tests for git push'es mirror mode
Update the tracking references only if they were succesfully updated on remote
Add a test checking if send-pack updated local tracking branches correctly
git-push: plumb in --mirror mode
Teach send-pack a mirror mode
send-pack: segfault fix on forced push
Reteach builtin-ls-remote to understand remotes
send-pack: require --verbose to show update of tracking refs
receive-pack: don't mention successful updates
more terse push output
Build in ls-remote
...
* js/mingw-fallouts:
fetch-pack: Prepare for a side-band demultiplexer in a thread.
rehabilitate some t5302 tests on 32-bit off_t machines
Allow ETC_GITCONFIG to be a relative path.
Introduce git_etc_gitconfig() that encapsulates access of ETC_GITCONFIG.
Allow a relative builtin template directory.
Close files opened by lock_file() before unlinking.
builtin run_command: do not exit with -1.
Move #include <sys/select.h> and <sys/ioctl.h> to git-compat-util.h.
Use is_absolute_path() in sha1_file.c.
Skip t3902-quoted.sh if the file system does not support funny names.
t5302-pack-index: Skip tests of 64-bit offsets if necessary.
t7501-commit.sh: Not all seds understand option -i
t5300-pack-object.sh: Split the big verify-pack test into smaller parts.
* cc/bisect:
Bisect reset: do nothing when not bisecting.
Bisect: use "$GIT_DIR/BISECT_NAMES" to check if we are bisecting.
Bisect visualize: use "for-each-ref" to list all good refs.
git-bisect: modernize branch shuffling hack
git-bisect: use update-ref to mark good/bad commits
git-bisect: war on "sed"
Bisect reset: remove bisect refs that may have been packed.
We no longer have "runstatus", but running "status" is no longer that
expensive anyway; it is a builtin.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The rule is this: if the last line already contains the sign off by the
current committer, do nothing. If it contains another sign off, just
add the sign off of the current committer. If the last line does not
contain a sign off, add a new line before adding the sign off.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The Signed-off-by: line contained a spurious timestamp. The reason was
a call to git_committer_info(1), which automatically added the
timestamp.
Instead, fmt_ident() was taught to interpret an empty string for the
date (as opposed to NULL, which still triggers the default behavior)
as "do not bother with the timestamp", and builtin-commit.c uses it.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
To show the relative paths, the function formerly called quote_crlf()
(now called quote_path()) takes the prefix as an additional argument.
While at it, the static buffers were replaced by strbufs.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
[PATCH] rebase -i: move help to end of todo file
Many editors start in the first line, so the 9-line help text was an
annoyance. So move it to the end.
Requested by Junio.
While at it, add a hint how to abort the rebase.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When creating a bundle, symbolic refs used to be resolved to the
non-symbolic refs they point to before being written to the list
of contained refs. I.e. "git bundle create a1.bundle HEAD master"
would show something like
388afe7881b33102fada216dd07806728773c011 refs/heads/master
388afe7881b33102fada216dd07806728773c011 refs/heads/master
instead of
388afe7881b33102fada216dd07806728773c011 HEAD
388afe7881b33102fada216dd07806728773c011 refs/heads/master
Introduce a special handling so that the symbolic refs are listed
with the names passed on the command line.
Noticed by Santi Béjar.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn:
git-svn: allow `info' command to work offline
git-svn: info --url [path]
git-svn info: implement info command
git-svn: extract reusable code into utility functions
t9106: fix a race condition that caused svn to miss modifications
663af3422a (Full rework of
quote_c_style and write_name_quoted.) mistakenly used puts()
when writing out a fixed string when it did not want to add a
terminating LF.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Return the svn URL for the given path, or return the svn
repository URL if no path is given.
Added 18 tests to t/t9119-git-svn-info.sh.
Signed-off-by: David D. Kilzer <ddkilzer@kilzer.net>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Implement "git-svn info" for files and directories based on the
"svn info" command. Note that the -r/--revision argument is not
supported yet.
Added 18 tests in t/t9119-git-svn-info.sh.
[ew: small fix to work without arguments on all working directories]
Signed-off-by: David D. Kilzer <ddkilzer@kilzer.net>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Before this patch, using "git bisect reset" when not bisecting
did a "git checkout master" for no good reason.
This also happened using "git bisect replay" when not bisecting
because "bisect_replay" starts by calling "bisect_reset".
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
As a git newbie, it was confusing to set an In-Reply-To header but then
not see it printed when the git-send-email command was run.
This patch prints all headers that would be sent to sendmail or an SMTP
server instead of only printing From, Subject, Cc, To. It also removes
the now-extraneous Date header after the "Log says" line.
Added test to t/t9001-send-email.sh.
Signed-off-by: David D. Kilzer <ddkilzer@kilzer.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Also, this removes those tests ensuring that repeated
-m options don't allocate memory more than once, because now
this is done after parsing options, using the last one
when more are given. The same for -F.
Signed-off-by: Carlos Rica <jasampler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The old rules used by fetch were coded as a series of ifs. The old
rules are:
1) match full refname if it starts with "refs/" or matches "HEAD"
2) verify that full refname starts with "refs/"
3) match abbreviated name in "refs/" if it starts with "heads/",
"tags/", or "remotes/".
4) match abbreviated name in "refs/heads/"
This is replaced by the new rules
a) match full refname
b) match abbreviated name prefixed with "refs/"
c) match abbreviated name prefixed with "refs/heads/"
The details of the new rules are different from the old rules. We no
longer verify that the full refname starts with "refs/". The new rule
(a) matches any full string. The old rules (1) and (2) were stricter.
Now, the caller is responsible for using sensible full refnames. This
should be the case for the current code. The new rule (b) is less
strict than old rule (3). The new rule accepts abbreviated names that
start with a non-standard prefix below "refs/".
Despite this modifications the new rules should handle all cases as
expected. Two tests are added to verify that fetch does not resolve
short tags or HEAD in remotes.
We may even think about loosening the rules a bit more and unify them
with the rev-parse rules. This would be done by replacing
ref_ref_fetch_rules with ref_ref_parse_rules. Note, the two new test
would break.
Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This commit changes the rules for resolving refspecs to match the
rules for resolving refs in rev-parse. git-rev-parse uses clear rules
to resolve a short ref to its full name, which are well documented.
The rules for resolving refspecs documented in git-send-pack were
less strict and harder to understand. This commit replaces them by
the rules of git-rev-parse.
The unified rules are easier to understand and better resolve ambiguous
cases. You can now push from a repository containing several branches
ending on the same short name.
Note, this may break existing setups. For example, "master" will no longer
resolve to "origin/master" even when there is no other "master" elsewhere.
Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This teaches "push <remote> HEAD" to resolve HEAD on the local
side to its real branch name, e.g. master, and then act as if
the real branch name was specified. So we have a shorthand for
pushing the current branch. Besides HEAD, no other symbolic ref
is resolved.
Thanks to Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org> for suggesting
this implementation, which is much simpler than the
implementation proposed before.
Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* git://git.bogomips.org/git-svn:
git-svn: Fix a typo and add a comma in an error message in git-svn
git-svn log: handle unreachable revisions like "svn log"
git-svn log: include commit log for the smallest revision in a range
git-svn log: fix ascending revision ranges
git-svn's dcommit must use subversion's config
git-svn: add tests for command-line usage of init and clone commands
When unreachable revisions are given to "svn log", it displays all commit
logs in the given range that exist in the current tree. (If no commit
logs are found in the current tree, it simply prints a single commit log
separator.) This patch makes "git-svn log" behave the same way.
Ten tests added to t/t9116-git-svn-log.sh.
Signed-off-by: David D Kilzer <ddkilzer@kilzer.net>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
The "svn log -rM:N" command shows commit logs inclusive in the range [M,N].
Previously "git-svn log" always excluded the commit log for the smallest
revision in a range, whether the range was ascending or descending. With
this patch, the smallest revision in a range is always shown.
Updated tests for ascending and descending revision ranges.
Signed-off-by: David D Kilzer <ddkilzer@kilzer.net>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Fixed typo in Git::SVN::Log::git_svn_log_cmd(). Previously a command like
"git-svn log -r1:4" would only show a commit log separator.
Added tests for ascending and descending revision ranges.
Signed-off-by: David D Kilzer <ddkilzer@kilzer.net>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
This lets us show remote errors (e.g., a denied hook) along
with the usual push output.
There is a slightly clever optimization in receive_status
that bears explanation. We need to correlate the returned
status and our ref objects, which naively could be an O(m*n)
operation. However, since the current implementation of
receive-pack returns the errors to us in the same order that
we sent them, we optimistically look for the next ref to be
looked up to come after the last one we have found. So it
should be an O(m+n) merge if the receive-pack behavior
holds, but we fall back to a correct but slower behavior if
it should change.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Previously, we manually checked the 'NONE' and 'UPTODATE'
conditions. Now that we have ref->status, we can easily
say "only update if we pushed successfully".
This adds a test for and fixes a regression introduced in
ed31df31 where deleted refs did not have their tracking
branches removed. This was due to a bogus per-ref error test
that is superseded by the more accurate ref->status flag.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Completely-Acked-By: Alex "Sleepy" Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Instead of keeping the 'ret' variable, we instead have a
status flag for each ref that tracks what happened to it.
We then print the ref status after all of the refs have
been examined.
This paves the way for three improvements:
- updating tracking refs only for non-error refs
- incorporating remote rejection into the printed status
- printing errors in a different order than we processed
(e.g., consolidating non-ff errors near the end with
a special message)
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Brown paper bag fix to avoid using non portable sed syntax. The
test by itself didn't catch what it was supposed to, anyways.
The new test first checks if git-tag correctly errors out when
the user exited the editor without editing the file. Then it
checks if what the user was presented in the editor was any
useful, which we define as the following:
* It begins with a single blank line, where the invoked editor
would typically place the editing curser at, so that the user
can immediately start typing;
* It has some instruction but that comes after that initial
blank line, all lines prefixed with "#". We specifically do
not check for the wording of this instruction.
* And it has nothing else, as the expected behaviour is "Hey
you did not leave any message".
Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The function mark_tree_uninteresting() assumed that the tree entries
are blob when they are not trees. This is not so. Since we do
not traverse into submodules (yet), the gitlinks should be ignored.
In general, we should try to start moving away from using the
"S_ISLNK()" like things for internal git state. It was a mistake to
just assume the numbers all were same across all systems in the first
place. This implementation converts to the "object_type", and then
uses a case statement.
Noticed by Ilari on IRC.
Test script taken from an earlier version by Dscho.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In "dir_struct", each exclusion element in the exclusion stack records a
base string (pointer to the beginning with length) so that we can tell
where it came from, but this pointer is just pointing at the parameter
that is given by the caller to the push_exclude_per_directory()
function.
While read_directory_recursive() runs, calls to excluded() makes use
the data in the exclusion elements, including this base string. The
caller of read_directory_recursive() is not supposed to free the
buffer it gave to push_exclude_per_directory() earlier, until it
returns.
The test case Bruce Stephens gave in the mailing list discussion
was simplified and added to the t3700 test.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If a user has an "auto-prop" in his/her ~/.subversion/config file for
automatically setting the svn:keyword Id property on all ".c" files
(a reasonably common configuration in the Subversion world) then one
of the "svn propset" operations in the very first test would become a
no-op, which in turn would make the next commit a no-op.
This then caused the 25th test ('test propget') to fail because it
expects a certain number of commits to have taken place but the actual
number of commits was off by one.
Björn Steinbrink identified the "auto-prop" feature as the cause
of the failure. This patch avoids it by passing the "--no-auto-prop"
flag to "svn import" when setting up the test repository, thus ensuring
that the "svn propset" operation is no longer a no-op, regardless of the
users' settings in their config.
Signed-off-by: Wincent Colaiuta <win@wincent.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If refs were ever packed in the middle of bisection, the bisect
refs were not removed from the "packed-refs" file.
This patch fixes this problem by using "git update-ref -d $ref $hash"
in "bisect_clean_state".
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In "dir_struct", each exclusion element in the exclusion stack records a
base string (pointer to the beginning with length) so that we can tell
where it came from, but this pointer is just pointing at the parameter
that is given by the caller to the push_exclude_per_directory()
function.
While read_directory_recursive() runs, calls to excluded() makes use
the data in the exclusion elements, including this base string. The
caller of read_directory_recursive() is not supposed to free the
buffer it gave to push_exclude_per_directory() earlier, until it
returns.
The test case Bruce Stephens gave in the mailing list discussion
was simplified and added to the t3700 test.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 8ed2fca458 was a bit draconian in
skipping certain tests which should be perfectly valid even on platform
with a 32-bit off_t.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@cam.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There are platforms where off_t is not 64 bits wide. In this case many tests
are doomed to fail. Let's skip them.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This makes it easier to spot which of the tests failed.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* sp/fetch-fix:
git-fetch: avoid local fetching from alternate (again)
rev-list: Introduce --quiet to avoid /dev/null redirects
run-command: Support sending stderr to /dev/null
git-fetch: Always fetch tags if the object they reference exists
* bs/maint-commit-options:
git-commit: Add tests for invalid usage of -a/--interactive with paths
git-commit.sh: Fix usage checks regarding paths given when they do not make sense
* jc/maint-add-sync-stat:
t2200: test more cases of "add -u"
git-add: make the entry stat-clean after re-adding the same contents
ce_match_stat, run_diff_files: use symbolic constants for readability
Conflicts:
builtin-add.c
* bg/format-patch-N:
Rearrange git-format-patch synopsis to improve clarity.
format-patch: Test --[no-]numbered and format.numbered
format-patch: Add configuration and off switch for --numbered
The function mark_tree_uninteresting() assumed that the tree entries
are blob when they are not trees. This is not so. Since we do
not traverse into submodules (yet), the gitlinks should be ignored.
In general, we should try to start moving away from using the
"S_ISLNK()" like things for internal git state. It was a mistake to
just assume the numbers all were same across all systems in the first
place. This implementation converts to the "object_type", and then
uses a case statement.
Noticed by Ilari on IRC.
Test script taken from an earlier version by Dscho.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
git-clean: honor core.excludesfile
Documentation: Fix man page breakage with DocBook XSL v1.72
git-remote.txt: fix typo
core-tutorial.txt: Fix argument mistake in an example.
replace reference to git-rm with git-reset in git-commit doc
Grammar fixes for gitattributes documentation
Don't allow fast-import tree delta chains to exceed maximum depth
revert/cherry-pick: allow starting from dirty work tree.
t/t3404: fix test for a bogus todo file.
Conflicts:
fast-import.c
* ar/send-pack-remote-track:
Update the tracking references only if they were succesfully updated on remote
Add a test checking if send-pack updated local tracking branches correctly
* db/remote-builtin:
Reteach builtin-ls-remote to understand remotes
Build in ls-remote
Use built-in send-pack.
Build-in send-pack, with an API for other programs to call.
Build-in peek-remote, using transport infrastructure.
Miscellaneous const changes and utilities
Conflicts:
transport.c
git-clean did not honor core.excludesfile configuration
variable, although some other commands such as git-add and
git-status did. Fix this inconsistency.
Original report and patch from Shun'ichi Fuji. Rewritten by me
and bugs and tests are mine.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git-commit was/is broken in that it accepts paths together with -a or
--interactive, which it shouldn't. There tests check those usage errors.
Signed-off-by: Björn Steinbrink <B.Steinbrink@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The --skip case was handled properly when rebasing without --merge,
but the --continue case was not.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
SVN requires that paths be URI-escaped for HTTP(S) repositories.
file:// and svn:// repositories do not need these rules.
Additionally, accessing individual paths inside repositories
(check_path() and get_log() do NOT require escapes to function
and in fact it breaks things).
Noticed-by: Michael J. Cohen <mjc@cruiseplanners.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
for-each-ref: fix off by one read.
git-branch: remove mention of non-existent '-b' option
git-svn: prevent dcommitting if the index is dirty.
Fix memory leak in traverse_commit_list
dcommit uses rebase to sync the history with what has just been pushed to
SVN. Trying to dcommit with a dirty index is troublesome for rebase, so now
the user will get an error message if he attempts to dcommit with a dirty
index.
Signed-off-by: Benoit Sigoure <tsuna@lrde.epita.fr>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Back in e3c6f240fd Junio taught
git-fetch to avoid copying objects when we are fetching from
a repository that is already registered as an alternate object
database. In such a case there is no reason to copy any objects
as we can already obtain them through the alternate.
However we need to ensure the objects are all reachable, so we
run `git rev-list --objects $theirs --not --all` to verify this.
If any object is missing or unreadable then we need to fetch/copy
the objects from the remote. When a missing object is detected
the git-rev-list process will exit with a non-zero exit status,
making this condition quite easy to detect.
Although git-fetch is currently a builtin (and so is rev-list)
we cannot invoke the traverse_objects() API at this point in the
transport code. The object walker within traverse_objects() calls
die() as soon as it finds an object it cannot read. If that happens
we want to resume the fetch process by calling do_fetch_pack().
To get around this we spawn git-rev-list into a background process
to prevent a die() from killing the foreground fetch process,
thus allowing the fetch process to resume into do_fetch_pack()
if copying is necessary.
We aren't interested in the output of rev-list (a list of SHA-1
object names that are reachable) or its errors (a "spurious" error
about an object not being found as we need to copy it) so we redirect
both stdout and stderr to /dev/null.
We run this git-rev-list based check before any fetch as we may
already have the necessary objects local from a prior fetch. If we
don't then its very likely the first $theirs object listed on the
command line won't exist locally and git-rev-list will die very
quickly, allowing us to start the network transfer. This test even
on remote URLs may save bandwidth if someone runs `git pull origin`,
sees a merge conflict, resets out, then redoes the same pull just
a short time later. If the remote hasn't changed between the two
pulls and the local repository hasn't had git-gc run in it then
there is probably no need to perform network transfer as all of
the objects are local.
Documentation for the new quickfetch function was suggested and
written by Junio, based on his original comment in git-fetch.sh.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
When you have a merge conflict and want to bypass the commit causing it,
you don't want to care about the dirty state of the working tree.
Also, don't git reset --hard HEAD in the rebase-skip test, so that the
lack of support for this is detected.
Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The git wrapper executable always prepends the GIT_EXEC_PATH build
variable to the current PATH, so prepending "." to the PATH is not
enough to give precedence to the fake vi executable.
The --exec-path option allows to prepend a directory to PATH even before
GIT_EXEC_PATH (which is added anyway), so we can use that instead.
Signed-off-by: Björn Steinbrink <B.Steinbrink@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Currently, when committing, git-commit ignore the value of
GIT_INDEX_FILE, and always use $GIT_DIR/index. This patch
fix it.
Signed-off-by: Rémi Vanicat <vanicat@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This patch removes a spurious "command not found" error
and actually makes the "Test script did not set test_description."
string follow the command line option "--no-color".
Signed-off-by: Michele Ballabio <barra_cuda@katamail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The option value for --sort is already a pointer to a pointer to struct
ref_sort, so just use it.
Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The interactive version of rebase does all the operations on a detached
HEAD, so that after a successful rebase, <branch>@{1} is the pre-rebase
state. The reflogs of "HEAD" still show all the actions in detail.
This teaches the non-interactive version to do the same.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
Start preparing for 1.5.3.6
git-send-email: Change the prompt for the subject of the initial message.
SubmittingPatches: improve the 'Patch:' section of the checklist
instaweb: Minor cleanups and fixes for potential problems
stop t1400 hiding errors in tests
Makefile: add missing dependency on wt-status.h
refresh_index_quietly(): express "optional" nature of index writing better
Fix sed string regex escaping in module_name.
Avoid a few unportable, needlessly nested "...`...".
git-mailsplit: with maildirs not only process cur/, but also new/
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The last rm in the test was lacking an "&&" before it,
which caused the errors in the commands be silently hidden.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When pushing to overwrite a ref that points at a commit we do
not even have, the recent "terse push" patch tried to get a
unique abbreviation for the non-existent (from our point of
view) object, which resulted in strcpy(buf, NULL) and
segfaulted.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Prior to being made a builtin git-ls-remote understood that when
it was given a remote name we wanted it to resolve that to the
pre-configured URL and connect to that location. That changed when
it was converted to a builtin and many of my automation tools broke.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
These tests check whether git-tag properly sends a comment into the
editor, and whether it reuses previous annotation when overwriting
an existing tag.
Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
upload-pack spawns two processes, rev-list and pack-objects, and carefully
monitors their status so that it can report failure to the remote end.
This change removes the complicated procedures on the grounds of the
following observations:
- If everything is OK, rev-list closes its output pipe end, upon which
pack-objects (which reads from the pipe) sees EOF and terminates itself,
closing its output (and error) pipes. upload-pack reads from both until
it sees EOF in both. It collects the exit codes of the child processes
(which indicate success) and terminates successfully.
- If rev-list sees an error, it closes its output and terminates with
failure. pack-objects sees EOF in its input and terminates successfully.
Again upload-pack reads its inputs until EOF. When it now collects
the exit codes of its child processes, it notices the failure of rev-list
and signals failure to the remote end.
- If pack-objects sees an error, it terminates with failure. Since this
breaks the pipe to rev-list, rev-list is killed with SIGPIPE.
upload-pack reads its input until EOF, then collects the exit codes of
the child processes, notices their failures, and signals failure to the
remote end.
- If upload-pack itself dies unexpectedly, pack-objects is killed with
SIGPIPE, and subsequently also rev-list.
The upshot of this is that precise monitoring of child processes is not
required because both terminate if either one of them dies unexpectedly.
This allows us to use finish_command() and finish_async() instead of
an explicit waitpid(2) call.
The change is smaller than it looks because most of it only reduces the
indentation of a large part of the inner loop.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Instead of forking update-index, call refresh_cache() directly.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since reset is a builtin now, it can use the full power of libgit.a
and check for unmerged entries itself.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When an option could be an ambiguous abbreviation of two options, the code
used to error out. Even if an exact match would have occured later.
Test and original patch by Pierre Habouzit.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
Remove a couple of duplicated include
grep with unmerged index
git-daemon: fix remote port number in log entry
git-svn: t9114: verify merge commit message in test
git-svn: fix dcommit clobbering when committing a series of diffs
On a case insensitive file system, this test fails because git-diff
doesn't know if it is asking for the file "A" or the tag "a".
Adding "--" at the end of the ambiguous commands allows the test to
finish properly.
Signed-off-by: Brian Gernhardt <benji@silverinsanity.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It's possible that we end up with an incorrect commit message
in this test after making changes to fix the clobber bug
in dcommit.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Our revision number sent to SVN is set to the last revision we
committed if we've made any previous commits in a dcommit
invocation.
Although our SVN Editor code uses the delta of two (old) trees
to generate information to send upstream, it'll still send
complete resultant files upstream; even if the tree they're
based against is out-of-date.
The combination of sending a file that does not include the
latest changes, but set with a revision number of a commit we
just made will cause SVN to accept the resultant file even if it
was generated against an old tree.
More trouble was caused when fixing this because we were
rebasing uncessarily at times. We used git-diff-tree to check
the imported SVN revision against our HEAD, not the last tree we
committed to SVN. The unnecessary rebasing caused merge commits
upstream to SVN to fail.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
sq_quote_buf() treats single-quotes and exclamation marks specially, but
it incorrectly parsed the input for single-quotes and backslashes.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This makes the clean.requireForce configuration default to true.
Too many people are burned by typing "git clean" by mistake when
they meant to say "make clean".
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Just because there wasn't a test for --numbered isn't a good reason
not to test format.numbered. So now we test both.
Signed-off-by: Brian Gernhardt <benji@silverinsanity.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jc/format-patch-encoding:
test format-patch -s: make sure MIME content type is shown as needed
format-patch -s: add MIME encoding header if signer's name requires so
* jn/gitweb:
gitweb: Use config file for repository description and URLs
gitweb: Read repo config using 'git config -z -l'
gitweb: Add tests for overriding gitweb config with repo config
gitweb: Use href(-replay=>1, action=>...) to generate alternate views
gitweb: Use href(-replay=>1, page=>...) to generate pagination links
gitweb: Easier adding/changing parameters to current URL
gitweb: Remove CGI::Carp::set_programname() call from t9500 gitweb test
gitweb: Add 'status_str' to parse_difftree_raw_line output
gitweb: Always set 'from_file' and 'to_file' in parse_difftree_raw_line
The purpose of the function update_index_from_diff() (which is the
callback function we give do_diff_cache()) is to update those index
entries which differ from the given commit.
Since do_diff_cache() plays games with the in-memory index, this function
discarded the cache and reread it.
Then, back in the function read_from_tree() we wrote the index.
Of course, this broke down when there were no changes and
update_index_from_diff() was not called, and therefore the mangled index
was not discarded.
The solution is to move the index writing into the function
update_index_from_diff().
Noticed by Björn Steinbrink.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Make blame view and snapshot support overridable by repository
config. Test tree view with both features disabled, and with both
features enabled.
Test with features enabled also tests multiple formats snapshot
support (in tree view).
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
Fixing path quoting in git-rebase
Remove unecessary hard-coding of EDITOR=':' VISUAL=':' in some test suites.
Documentation: quote commit messages consistently.
Remove escaping of '|' in manpage option sections
* ph/parseopt: (24 commits)
gc: use parse_options
Fixed a command line option type for builtin-fsck.c
Make builtin-pack-refs.c use parse_options.
Make builtin-name-rev.c use parse_options.
Make builtin-count-objects.c use parse_options.
Make builtin-fsck.c use parse_options.
Update manpages to reflect new short and long option aliases
Make builtin-for-each-ref.c use parse-opts.
Make builtin-symbolic-ref.c use parse_options.
Make builtin-update-ref.c use parse_options
Make builtin-revert.c use parse_options.
Make builtin-describe.c use parse_options
Make builtin-branch.c use parse_options.
Make builtin-mv.c use parse-options
Make builtin-rm.c use parse_options.
Port builtin-add.c to use the new option parser.
parse-options: allow callbacks to take no arguments at all.
parse-options: Allow abbreviated options when unambiguous
Add shortcuts for very often used options.
parse-options: make some arguments optional, add callbacks.
...
Conflicts:
Makefile
builtin-add.c
They are already set and exoprted by sourcing ./test-lib.sh
in all test scripts.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It does appear to do nothing; gitweb is run as standalone program
and not as CGI script in this test. This call caused problems later.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* js/forkexec:
Use the asyncronous function infrastructure to run the content filter.
Avoid a dup2(2) in apply_filter() - start_command() can do it for us.
t0021-conversion.sh: Test that the clean filter really cleans content.
upload-pack: Run rev-list in an asynchronous function.
upload-pack: Move the revision walker into a separate function.
Use the asyncronous function infrastructure in builtin-fetch-pack.c.
Add infrastructure to run a function asynchronously.
upload-pack: Use start_command() to run pack-objects in create_pack_file().
Have start_command() create a pipe to read the stderr of the child.
Use start_comand() in builtin-fetch-pack.c instead of explicit fork/exec.
Use run_command() to spawn external diff programs instead of fork/exec.
Use start_command() to run content filters instead of explicit fork/exec.
Use start_command() in git_connect() instead of explicit fork/exec.
Change git_connect() to return a struct child_process instead of a pid_t.
Conflicts:
builtin-fetch-pack.c
* cc/skip:
Bisect: add "skip" to the short usage string.
Bisect run: "skip" current commit if script exit code is 125.
Bisect: add a "bisect replay" test case.
Bisect: add "bisect skip" to the documentation.
Bisect: refactor "bisect_{bad,good,skip}" into "bisect_state".
Bisect: refactor some logging into "bisect_write".
Bisect: refactor "bisect_write_*" functions.
Bisect: implement "bisect skip" to mark untestable revisions.
Bisect: fix some white spaces and empty lines breakages.
rev-list documentation: add "--bisect-all".
rev-list: implement --bisect-all
When there is an option "--amend", the option parser now recognizes
"--am" for that option, provided that there is no other option beginning
with "--am".
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This is incompatible with previous versions because an exit code
of 125 used to mark current commit as "bad". But hopefully this exit
code is not much used by test scripts or other programs. (126 and 127
are used by POSIX compliant shells to mean "found but not
executable" and "command not found", respectively.)
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When there are some "skip"ped revisions, we add the '--bisect-all'
option to "git rev-list --bisect-vars". Then we filter out the
"skip"ped revisions from the result of the rev-list command, and we
modify the "bisect_rev" var accordingly.
We don't always use "--bisect-all" because it is slower
than "--bisect-vars" or "--bisect".
When we cannot find for sure the first bad commit because of
"skip"ped commits, we print the hash of each possible first bad
commit and then we exit with code 2.
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Using konsole, I get no colored output at the end of "t7005-editor.sh"
without this patch.
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This shuts down the "* ok ##: `test description`" messages.
Signed-off-by: Pierre Habouzit <madcoder@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* db/fetch-pack: (60 commits)
Define compat version of mkdtemp for systems lacking it
Avoid scary errors about tagged trees/blobs during git-fetch
fetch: if not fetching from default remote, ignore default merge
Support 'push --dry-run' for http transport
Support 'push --dry-run' for rsync transport
Fix 'push --all branch...' error handling
Fix compilation when NO_CURL is defined
Added a test for fetching remote tags when there is not tags.
Fix a crash in ls-remote when refspec expands into nothing
Remove duplicate ref matches in fetch
Restore default verbosity for http fetches.
fetch/push: readd rsync support
Introduce remove_dir_recursively()
bundle transport: fix an alloc_ref() call
Allow abbreviations in the first refspec to be merged
Prevent send-pack from segfaulting when a branch doesn't match
Cleanup unnecessary break in remote.c
Cleanup style nit of 'x == NULL' in remote.c
Fix memory leaks when disconnecting transport instances
Ensure builtin-fetch honors {fetch,transfer}.unpackLimit
...
* maint:
Describe more 1.5.3.5 fixes in release notes
Fix diffcore-break total breakage
Fix directory scanner to correctly ignore files without d_type
Improve receive-pack error message about funny ref creation
fast-import: Fix argument order to die in file_change_m
git-gui: Don't display CR within console windows
git-gui: Handle progress bars from newer gits
git-gui: Correctly report failures from git-write-tree
gitk.txt: Fix markup.
send-pack: respect '+' on wildcard refspecs
git-gui: accept versions containing text annotations, like 1.5.3.mingw.1
git-gui: Don't crash when starting gitk from a browser session
git-gui: Allow gitk to be started on Cygwin with native Tcl/Tk
git-gui: Ensure .git/info/exclude is honored in Cygwin workdirs
git-gui: Handle starting on mapped shares under Cygwin
git-gui: Display message box when we cannot find git in $PATH
git-gui: Avoid using bold text in entire gui for some fonts
This test uses a rot13 filter, which is its own inverse. It tested only
that the content was the same as the original after both the 'clean' and
the 'smudge' filter were applied. This way it would not detect whether
any filter was run at all. Hence, here we add another test that checks
that the repository contained content that was processed by the 'clean'
filter.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
When matching source and destination refs, we were failing
to pull the 'force' parameter from wildcard refspecs (but
not explicit ones) and attach it to the ref struct.
This adds a test for explicit and wildcard refspecs; the
latter fails without this patch.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
* maint:
Further 1.5.3.5 fixes described in release notes
Avoid invoking diff drivers during git-stash
attr: fix segfault in gitattributes parsing code
Define NI_MAXSERV if not defined by operating system
Ensure we add directories in the correct order
Avoid scary errors about tagged trees/blobs during git-fetch
git may segfault if gitattributes contains an invalid
entry. A test is added to t0020 that triggers the segfault.
The parsing code is fixed to avoid the crash.
Signed-off-by: Steffen Prohaska <prohaska@zib.de>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
The first test (updating local refs) should succeed without the
prior commit, but the second one (not updating on error) used to
fail before the prior commit was written.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
* maint:
Yet more 1.5.3.5 fixes mentioned in release notes
cvsserver: Use exit 1 instead of die when req_Root fails.
git-blame shouldn't crash if run in an unmerged tree
git-config: print error message if the config file cannot be read
fixing output of non-fast-forward output of post-receive-email
If we are in the middle of resolving a merge conflict there may be
one or more files whose entries in the index represent an unmerged
state (index entries in the higher-order stages).
Attempting to run git-blame on any file in such a working directory
resulted in "fatal: internal error: ce_mode is 0" as we use the magic
marker for an unmerged entry is 0 (set up by things like diff-lib.c's
do_diff_cache() and builtin-read-tree.c's read_tree_unmerged())
and the ce_match_stat_basic() function gets upset about this.
I'm not entirely sure that the whole "ce_mode = 0" case is a good
idea to begin with, and maybe the right thing to do is to remove
that horrid freakish special case, but removing the internal error
seems to be the simplest fix for now.
Linus
[sp: Thanks to Björn Steinbrink for the test case]
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This commit implements the "delete" subcommand:
git reflog delete master@{2}
will delete the second reflog entry of the "master" branch.
With this, it should be easy to implement "git stash pop" everybody
seems to want these days.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This allows one to easily retrieve a list of svn properties from within
git-svn without requiring svn or knowing the URL of a repository.
* git-svn.perl (%cmd): Add the command `proplist'.
(&cmd_proplist): New.
* t/t9101-git-svn-props.sh: Test git svn proplist.
Signed-off-by: Benoit Sigoure <tsuna@lrde.epita.fr>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This allows one to easily retrieve a single SVN property from within
git-svn without requiring svn or remembering the URL of a repository
* git-svn.perl (%cmd): Add the new command `propget'.
($cmd_dir_prefix): New global.
(&get_svnprops): New helper.
(&cmd_propget): New. Use &get_svnprops.
* t/t9101-git-svn-props.sh: Add a test case for propget.
[ew: make sure the rev-parse --show-prefix call doesn't break
the `git-svn clone' command]
Signed-off-by: Benoit Sigoure <tsuna@lrde.epita.fr>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
git svn create-ignore (to create one .gitignore per directory
from the svn:ignore properties. This has the disadvantage of
committing the .gitignore during the next dcommit, but when you
import a repo with tons of ignores (>1000), using git svn show-ignore
to build .git/info/exclude is *not* a good idea, because things like
git-status will end up doing >1000 fnmatch *per file* in the repo,
which leads to git-status taking more than 4s on my Core2Duo 2Ghz 2G
RAM)
* git-svn.perl (%cmd): Add the new command `create-ignore'.
(&cmd_create_ignore): New.
* t/t9101-git-svn-props.sh: Adjust the test-case for show-ignore and
add a test case for create-ignore.
[ew: added commit message from
<05CAB148-56ED-4FF1-8AAB-4BA2A0B70C2C@lrde.epita.fr> ]
Signed-off-by: Benoit Sigoure <tsuna@lrde.epita.fr>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
* maint:
Document additional 1.5.3.5 fixes in release notes
Avoid 'expr index' on Mac OS X as it isn't supported
filter-branch: update current branch when rewritten
fix filter-branch documentation
helpful error message when send-pack finds no refs in common.
Fix setup_git_directory_gently() with relative GIT_DIR & GIT_WORK_TREE
Correct typos in release notes for 1.5.3.5
Earlier, "git filter-branch --<options> HEAD" would not update the
working tree after rewriting the branch. This commit fixes it.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
There are a few programs, such as config and diff, which allow running
without a git repository. Therefore, they have to call
setup_git_directory_gently().
However, when GIT_DIR and GIT_WORK_TREE were set, and the current
directory was a subdirectory of the work tree,
setup_git_directory_gently() would return a bogus NULL prefix.
This patch fixes that.
Noticed by REPLeffect on IRC.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
When doing "git fetch <remote>" on a remote that does not have the
branch referenced in branch.<current-branch>.merge, git fetch failed.
It failed because it tried to add the "merge" ref to the refs to be
fetched.
Fix that. And add a test case.
Incidentally, this unconvered a bug in our own test suite, where
"git pull <some-path>" was expected to merge the ref given in the
defaults, even if not pulling from the default remote.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
There's a number of tricky conflicts between master and
this topic right now due to the rewrite of builtin-push.
Junio must have handled these via rerere; I'd rather not
deal with them again so I'm pre-merging master into the
topic. Besides this topic somehow started to depend on
the strbuf series that was in next, but is now in master.
It no longer compiles on its own without the strbuf API.
* master: (184 commits)
Whip post 1.5.3.4 maintenance series into shape.
Minor usage update in setgitperms.perl
manual: use 'URL' instead of 'url'.
manual: add some markup.
manual: Fix example finding commits referencing given content.
Fix wording in push definition.
Fix some typos, punctuation, missing words, minor markup.
manual: Fix or remove em dashes.
Add a --dry-run option to git-push.
Add a --dry-run option to git-send-pack.
Fix in-place editing functions in convert.c
instaweb: support for Ruby's WEBrick server
instaweb: allow for use of auto-generated scripts
Add 'git-p4 commit' as an alias for 'git-p4 submit'
hg-to-git speedup through selectable repack intervals
git-svn: respect Subversion's [auth] section configuration values
gtksourceview2 support for gitview
fix contrib/hooks/post-receive-email hooks.recipients error message
Support cvs via git-shell
rebase -i: use diff plumbing instead of porcelain
...
Conflicts:
Makefile
builtin-push.c
rsh.c
The default behaviour of git-push is potentially confusing
for new users, since it will push changes that are not on
the current branch. Publishing patches that were still
cooking on a development branch is hard to undo.
It would also be nice to be able to verify the expansion
of refspecs if you've edited them, so that you know
what branches matched on the server.
Adding a --dry-run flag allows the user to experiment
safely and learn how to use git-push properly. Originally
suggested by Steffen Prohaska.
Signed-off-by: Brian Ewins <brian.ewins@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
When a user runs "git fetch -t", git crashes when it doesn't find any
tags on the remote repository.
Signed-off-by: Väinö Järvelä <v@pp.inet.fi>
Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This fixes an unnecessary empty line that we add to the log message when
we generate diffs, but don't actually end up printing any due to having
DIFF_FORMAT_NO_OUTPUT set.
This can happen with pickaxe or with rename following. The reason is that
we normally add an empty line between the commit and the diff, but we do
that even for the case where we've then suppressed the actual printing of
the diff.
This also updates a couple of tests that assumed the extraneous empty
line would exist at the end of output.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
* ph/strbuf: (44 commits)
Make read_patch_file work on a strbuf.
strbuf_read_file enhancement, and use it.
strbuf change: be sure ->buf is never ever NULL.
double free in builtin-update-index.c
Clean up stripspace a bit, use strbuf even more.
Add strbuf_read_file().
rerere: Fix use of an empty strbuf.buf
Small cache_tree_write refactor.
Make builtin-rerere use of strbuf nicer and more efficient.
Add strbuf_cmp.
strbuf_setlen(): do not barf on setting length of an empty buffer to 0
sq_quote_argv and add_to_string rework with strbuf's.
Full rework of quote_c_style and write_name_quoted.
Rework unquote_c_style to work on a strbuf.
strbuf API additions and enhancements.
nfv?asprintf are broken without va_copy, workaround them.
Fix the expansion pattern of the pseudo-static path buffer.
builtin-for-each-ref.c::copy_name() - do not overstep the buffer.
builtin-apply.c: fix a tiny leak introduced during xmemdupz() conversion.
Use xmemdupz() in many places.
...
* lh/merge:
git-merge: add --ff and --no-ff options
git-merge: add support for --commit and --no-squash
git-merge: add support for branch.<name>.mergeoptions
git-merge: refactor option parsing
git-merge: fix faulty SQUASH_MSG
Add test-script for git-merge porcelain
* ap/dateformat:
Add a test script for for-each-ref, including test of date formatting
dateformat: parse %(xxdate) %(yydate:format) correctly
Make for-each-ref's grab_date() support per-atom formatting
Make for-each-ref allow atom names like "<name>:<something>"
parse_date_format(): convert a format name to an enum date_mode
This tests basic functionality and also exercises a bug noticed
by Keith Packard, (prune_cache followed by add_index_entry can
trigger an attempt to realloc a pointer into the middle of an
allocated buffer).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We lost rsync support when transitioning from shell to C. Support it
again (even if the transport is technically deprecated, some people just
do not have any chance to use anything else).
Also, add a test to t5510. Since rsync transport is not configured by
default on most machines, and especially not such that you can write to
rsync://127.0.0.1$(pwd)/, it is disabled by default; you can enable it by
setting the environment variable TEST_RSYNC.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
git-remote: exit with non-zero status after detecting errors.
rebase -i: squash should retain the authorship of the _first_ commit
git-add--interactive: Improve behavior on bogus input
git-add--interactive: Allow Ctrl-D to exit
It was determined on the mailing list, that it makes more sense for a
"squash" to keep the author of the first commit as the author for the
result of the squash.
Make it so.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Updated post-checkout hook to take a flag specifying whether the checkout is
a branch checkout or a file checkout (from the index).
Signed-off-by: Josh England <jjengla@sandia.gov>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* sv/svn:
git-svn: handle changed svn command-line syntax
git-svn: fix test for trunk svn (transaction out of date)
git-svn: fix test for trunk svn (commit message not needed)
Earlier, rebase -i refused to rebase a detached HEAD. Now it no longer
does.
Incidentally, this fixes "git gc --auto" shadowing the true exit status.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This changes the interporate() to replace entries with NULL values
by the empty string, and uses it to interpolate missing fields in
custom format output used in git-log and friends. It is most useful
to avoid <unknown> output from %b format for a commit log message
that lack any body text.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When doing an "edit" on a commit, editing and git-adding some files,
"git rebase -i" complained about a missing "author-script". The idea was
that the user would call "git commit --amend" herself.
But we can be nice and do that for the user.
Noticed by Dmitry Potapov.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
Do not over-quote the -f envelopesender value.
unexpected Make output (e.g. from --debug) causes build failure
Fixed minor typo in t/t9001-send-email.sh test command line.
The git-send-email command line in the test was missing a single hyphen.
Signed-off-by: Glenn Rempe <glenn@rempe.us>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
These new options can be used to control the policy for fast-forward
merges: --ff allows it (this is the default) while --no-ff will create
a merge commit.
Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
These options can be used to override --no-commit and --squash, which is
needed since --no-commit and --squash now can be specified as default merge
options in $GIT_DIR/config.
The change also introduces slightly different behavior for --no-commit:
when specified, it explicitly overrides --squash. Earlier,
'git merge --squash --no-commit' would result in a squashed merge (i.e. no
$GIT_DIR/MERGE_HEAD was created) but with this patch the command will
behave as if --squash hadn't been specified.
Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This enables per branch configuration of merge options. Currently, the most
useful options to specify per branch are --squash, --summary/--no-summary
and possibly --strategy, but all options are supported.
Note: Options containing whitespace will _not_ be handled correctly. Luckily,
the only option which can include whitespace is --message and it doesn't
make much sense to give that option a default value.
Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This test-script excercises the porcelainish aspects of git-merge, and
does it thoroughly enough to detect a small bug already noticed by Junio:
squashing an octopus generates a faulty .git/SQUASH_MSG.
Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Previously, if you passed a revision and a path to svn cp, it meant to look
back at that revision and select that path. New behaviour is to get the
path then go back to the revision (like other commands that accept @REV
or -rREV do). The more consistent syntax is not supported by the old
tools, so we have to try both in turn.
Signed-off-by: Sam Vilain <sam.vilain@catalyst.net.nz>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Older svn clients did not raise a 'transaction out of date' error here, but
trunk does - so 'svn up'.
Signed-off-by: Sam Vilain <sam.vilain@catalyst.net.nz>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The 'svn mv -m "rename to thunk"' was a local operation, therefore not
needing a commit message, it was silently ignored. Newer svn clients will
instead raise an error.
Signed-off-by: Sam Vilain <sam.vilain@catalyst.net.nz>
Acked-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
My prior bug fix for git-push titled "Don't configure remote "." to
fetch everything to itself" actually broke t5520 as we were unable
to evaluate a branch configuration of:
[branch "copy"]
remote = .
merge = refs/heads/master
as remote "." did not have a "remote...fetch" configuration entry to
offer up refs/heads/master as a possible candidate available to be
fetched and merged. In shell script git-fetch and prior to the above
mentioned commit this was hardcoded for a url of "." to be the set of
local branches.
Chasing down this bug led me to the conclusion that our prior behavior
with regards to branch.$name.merge was incorrect. In the shell script
based git-fetch implementation we only fetched and merged a branch if
it appeared both in branch.$name.merge *and* in remote.$r.fetch, where
$r = branch.$name.remote. In other words in the following config file:
[remote "origin"]
url = git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git.git
fetch = refs/heads/master:refs/remotes/origin/master
[branch "master"]
remote = origin
merge = refs/heads/master
[branch "pu"]
remote = origin
merge = refs/heads/pu
Attempting to run `git pull` while on branch "pu" would always give
the user "Already up-to-date" as git-fetch did not fetch pu and thus
did not mark it for merge in .git/FETCH_HEAD. The configured merge
would always be ignored and the user would be left scratching her
confused head wondering why merge did not work on "pu" but worked
fine on "master".
If we are using the "default fetch" specification for the current
branch and the current branch has a branch.$name.merge configured
we now union it with the list of refs in remote.$r.fetch. This
way the above configuration does what the user expects it to do,
which is to fetch only "master" by default but when on "pu" to
fetch both "master" and "pu".
This uncovered some breakage in the test suite where old-style Cogito
branches (.git/branches/$r) did not fetch the branches listed in
.git/config for merging and thus did not actually merge them if the
user tried to use `git pull` on that branch. Junio and I discussed
it on list and felt that the union approach here makes more sense to
DWIM for the end-user than silently ignoring their configured request
so the test vectors for t5515 have been updated to include for-merge
lines in .git/FETCH_HEAD where they have been configured for-merge
in .git/config.
Since we are now performing a union of the fetch specification and
the merge specification and we cannot allow a branch to be listed
twice (otherwise it comes out twice in .git/FETCH_HEAD) we need to
perform a double loop here over all of the branch.$name.merge lines
and try to set their merge flag if we have already schedule that
branch for fetching by remote.$r.fetch. If no match is found then
we must add new specifications to fetch the branch but not store it
as no local tracking branch has been designated.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This was actually reverted in 756373da by Junio. We no longer
support merging the right hand side of a fetchspec in a branch's
branch.$name.merge configuration setting as we interpret these
names as being only those published by the remote we are going to
fetch from.
The older shell based implementation of git-fetch did not report an
error when branch.$name.merge was referencing a branch that does
not exist on the remote and we are running `git fetch` for the
current branch. The new builtin-fetch does notice this failure
and aborts the fetch, thus breaking the tests.
Junio and I kicked it around on #git earlier today and decided that
the best approach here is to error out and tell the user that their
configuration is wrong, as this is likely more user friendly than
silently ignoring the user's request. Since the new builtin-fetch
is already issuing the error there is no code change required, we
just need to remove the bad configuration from our test.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Thanks to Johannes Schindelin for review and fixes, and Julian
Phillips for the original C translation.
This changes a few small bits of behavior:
branch.<name>.merge is parsed as if it were the lhs of a fetch
refspec, and does not have to exactly match the actual lhs of a
refspec, so long as it is a valid abbreviation for the same ref.
branch.<name>.merge is no longer ignored if the remote is configured
with a branches/* file. Neither behavior is useful, because there can
only be one ref that gets fetched, but this is more consistant.
Also, fetch prints different information to standard out.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* master: (94 commits)
Fixed update-hook example allow-users format.
Documentation/git-svn: updated design philosophy notes
t/t4014: test "am -3" with mode-only change.
git-commit.sh: Shell script cleanup
preserve executable bits in zip archives
Fix lapsus in builtin-apply.c
git-push: documentation and tests for pushing only branches
git-svnimport: Use separate arguments in the pipe for git-rev-parse
contrib/fast-import: add perl version of simple example
contrib/fast-import: add simple shell example
rev-list --bisect: Bisection "distance" clean up.
rev-list --bisect: Move some bisection code into best_bisection.
rev-list --bisect: Move finding bisection into do_find_bisection.
Document ls-files --with-tree=<tree-ish>
git-commit: partial commit of paths only removed from the index
git-commit: Allow partial commit of file removal.
send-email: make message-id generation a bit more robust
git-apply: fix whitespace stripping
git-gui: Disable native platform text selection in "lists"
apply --index-info: fall back to current index for mode changes
...
The post-merge hook enables one to hook in for `git pull` operations in order
to check and/or change attributes of a work tree from the hook. As an example,
it can be used in combination with a pre-commit hook to save/restore file
ownership and permissions data (or file ACLs) within the repository and
transparently update the working tree after a `git pull` operation.
Signed-off-by: Josh England <jjengla@sandia.gov>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
Fixed update-hook example allow-users format.
Documentation/git-svn: updated design philosophy notes
t/t4014: test "am -3" with mode-only change.
Fix lapsus in builtin-apply.c
git-push: documentation and tests for pushing only branches
git-svnimport: Use separate arguments in the pipe for git-rev-parse
Earlier commit ece7b74903 added a test
for rebase that uses "am -3", but this adds a test to check "am -3"
itself.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 098e711e caused git-push to match only branches when
considering which refs to push. This patch updates the
documentation accordingly and adds a test for this behavior.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* cr/reset:
Simplify cache API
An additional test for "git-reset -- path"
Make "git reset" a builtin.
Move make_cache_entry() from merge-recursive.c into read-cache.c
Add tests for documented features of "git reset".
Because a partial commit is meant to be a way to ignore what are
staged in the index, "git rm --cached A && git commit A" should
just record what is in A on the filesystem. The previous patch
made the command sequence to barf, saying that A has not been
added yet. This fixes it.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When making a partial commit, git-commit uses git-ls-files with
the --error-unmatch option to expand and sanity check the user
supplied path patterns. When any path pattern does not match
with the paths known to the index, it errors out, in order to
catch a common mistake to say "git commit Makefiel cache.h"
and end up with a commit that touches only cache.h (notice the
misspelled "Makefile"). This detection however does not work
well when the path has already been removed from the index.
If you drop a path from the index and try to commit that
partially, i.e.
$ git rm COPYING
$ git commit -m 'Remove COPYING' COPYING
the command complains because git does not know anything about
COPYING anymore.
This introduces a new option --with-tree to git-ls-files and
uses it in git-commit when we build a temporary index to
write a tree object for the partial commit.
When --with-tree=<tree-ish> option is specified, names from the
given tree are added to the set of names the index knows about,
so we can treat COPYING file in the example as known.
Of course, there is no reason to use "git rm" and git-aware
people have long time done:
$ rm COPYING
$ git commit -m 'Remove COPYING' COPYING
which works just fine. But this caused a constant confusion.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
git-apply: fix whitespace stripping
apply --index-info: fall back to current index for mode changes
core-tutorial: minor cleanup
documentation: replace Discussion section by link to user-manual chapter
user-manual: todo updates and cleanup
user-manual: fix introduction to packfiles
user-manual: move packfile and dangling object discussion
user-manual: rewrite object database discussion
user-manual: reorder commit, blob, tree discussion
user-manual: rewrite index discussion
user-manual: create new "low-level git operations" chapter
user-manual: rename "git internals" to "git concepts"
user-manual: move object format details to hacking-git chapter
user-manual: adjust section levels in "git internals"
revision walker: --cherry-pick is a limited operation
git-sh-setup: typofix in comments
"git diff" does not record index lines for pure mode changes (i.e. no
lines changed). Therefore, apply --index-info would call out a bogus
error.
Instead, fall back to reading the info from the current index.
Incidentally, this fixes an error where git-rebase would not rebase a
commit including a pure mode change, and changes requiring a threeway
merge.
Noticed and later tested by Chris Shoemaker.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We used to rely on the fact that cherry-pick would trigger the code path
to set limited = 1 in handle_commit(), when an uninteresting commit was
encountered.
However, when cherry picking between two independent branches, i.e. when
there are no merge bases, and there is only linear development (which can
happen when you cvsimport a fork of a project), no uninteresting commit
will be encountered.
So set limited = 1 when --cherry-pick was asked for.
Noticed by Martin Bähr.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jc/partial-remove:
Document ls-files --with-tree=<tree-ish>
git-commit: partial commit of paths only removed from the index
git-commit: Allow partial commit of file removal.
Because a partial commit is meant to be a way to ignore what are
staged in the index, "git rm --cached A && git commit A" should
just record what is in A on the filesystem. The previous patch
made the command sequence to barf, saying that A has not been
added yet. This fixes it.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jc/grep-c:
Split grep arguments in a way that does not requires to add /dev/null.
Documentation/git-config.txt: AsciiDoc tweak to avoid leading dot
Add test to check recent fix to "git add -u"
Documentation/git-archive.txt: a couple of clarifications.
Fix the rename detection limit checking
diff --no-index: do not forget to run diff_setup_done()
In order to (almost) always show the name of the file without
relying on "-H" option of GNU grep, we used to add /dev/null to
the argument list unless we are doing -l or -L. This caused
"/dev/null:0" to show up when -c is given in the output.
It is not enough to add -c to the set of options we do not pass
/dev/null for. When we have too many files, we invoke grep
multiple times and we need to avoid giving a widow filename to
the last invocation -- otherwise we will not see the name.
This keeps two filenames when the argv[] buffer is about to
overflow and we have not finished iterating over the index, so
that the last round will always have at least two paths to work
with (and not require /dev/null).
An obvious and the only exception is when there is only 1 file
that is given to the underlying grep, and in that case we avoid
passing /dev/null and let the external "grep -c" report only the
number of matches.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
An earlier commit fixed type-change case in "git add -u".
This adds a test to make sure we do not introduce regression.
At the same time, it fixes a stupid typo in the error message.
Signed-off-by: Benoit Sigoure <tsuna@lrde.epita.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Before the strbuf conversion, result was a char pointer. The if
statement checked for it being not NULL, which meant that no
"$Format:...$" string had been found and no replacement had to be
made. format_subst() returned NULL in that case -- the caller
then simply kept the original file content, as it was unaffected
by the expansion.
The length of the string being 0 is not the same as the string
being NULL (expansion to an empty string vs. no expansion at all),
so checking result.len != 0 is not a full replacement for the old
NULL check.
However, I doubt the subtle optimization explained above resulted
in a notable speed-up anyway. Simplify the code and add the tail
of the file to the expanded string unconditionally.
[jc: added a test to expose the breakage this fixes]
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When making a partial commit, git-commit uses git-ls-files with
the --error-unmatch option to expand and sanity check the user
supplied path patterns. When any path pattern does not match
with the paths known to the index, it errors out, in order to
catch a common mistake to say "git commit Makefiel cache.h"
and end up with a commit that touches only cache.h (notice the
misspelled "Makefile"). This detection however does not work
well when the path has already been removed from the index.
If you drop a path from the index and try to commit that
partially, i.e.
$ git rm COPYING
$ git commit -m 'Remove COPYING' COPYING
the command complains because git does not know anything about
COPYING anymore.
This introduces a new option --with-tree to git-ls-files and
uses it in git-commit when we build a temporary index to
write a tree object for the partial commit.
When --with-tree=<tree-ish> option is specified, names from the
given tree are added to the set of names the index knows about,
so we can treat COPYING file in the example as known.
Of course, there is no reason to use "git rm" and git-aware
people have long time done:
$ rm COPYING
$ git commit -m 'Remove COPYING' COPYING
which works just fine. But this caused a constant confusion.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This adds the new file t/t7102-reset.sh following the text
and examples in "Documentation/git-reset.txt" in order to
check the behaviour of the upcoming "builtin-reset.c",
and be able to compare it with the original "git-reset.sh".
Signed-off-by: Carlos Rica <jasampler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint:
stash: end index commit log with a newline
git-commit: Disallow amend if it is going to produce an empty non-merge commit
git-send-email.perl: Add angle brackets to In-Reply-To if necessary
Fix a test failure (t9500-*.sh) on cygwin
On filesystems where it is appropriate to set core.filemode
to false, test 29 ("commitdiff(0): mode change") fails when
git-commit does not notice a file (execute) permission change.
A fix requires noting the new file execute permission in the
index with a "git update-index --chmod=+x", prior to the commit.
Add a function (note_chmod) which implements this idea, and
insert a call in each test that modifies the x permission.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* rs/archive:
archive - leakfix for format_subst()
Define NO_MEMMEM on Darwin as it lacks the function
archive: rename attribute specfile to export-subst
archive: specfile syntax change: "$Format:%PLCHLDR$" instead of just "%PLCHLDR" (take 2)
add memmem()
Remove unused function convert_sha1_file()
archive: specfile support (--pretty=format: in archive files)
Export format_commit_message()
Most of this patch code and message was written by Shawn O. Pearce.
I made some tests to know what the problem was, and then I changed
the code related with the SIGPIPE signal.
If the user has misconfigured `user.signingkey` in their .git/config
or just doesn't have any secret keys on their keyring and they ask
for a signed tag with `git tag -s` we better make sure the resulting
tag was actually signed by gpg.
Prior versions of builtin git-tag allowed this failure to slip
by without error as they were not checking the return value of
the finish_command() so they did not notice when gpg exited with
an error exit status. They also did not fail if gpg produced an
empty output or if read_in_full received an error from the read
system call while trying to read the pipe back from gpg.
Finally, we did not actually honor any return value from the do_sign
function as it returns ssize_t but was being stored into an unsigned
long. This caused the compiler to optimize out the die condition,
allowing git-tag to continue along and create the tag object.
However, when gpg gets a wrong username, it exits before any read was done
and then the writing process receives SIGPIPE and program is terminated.
By ignoring this signal, anyway, the function write_or_die gets EPIPE from
write_in_full and exits returning 0 to the system without a message.
Here we better call to write_in_full directly so we can fail
printing a message and return safely to the caller.
With these issues fixed `git-tag -s` will now fail to create the
tag and will report a non-zero exit status to its caller, thereby
allowing automated helper scripts to detect (and recover from)
failure if gpg is not working properly.
Proposed-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Carlos Rica <jasampler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The code to squelch empty diffs introduced by commit
fb13227e08 would inadvertently
populate filespec "two" of a submodule change using the uninitialized
(null) SHA1, thereby replacing the submodule SHA1 by 0{40} in the output.
This change teaches diffcore_skip_stat_unmatch to handle
submodule changes correctly.
Signed-off-by: Sven Verdoolaege <skimo@kotnet.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
As suggested by Junio and Johannes, change the name of the former
attribute specfile to export-subst to indicate its function rather
than purpose and to make clear that it is not applied to working tree
files.
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
As suggested by Johannes, --pretty=format: placeholders in specfiles
need to be wrapped in $Format:...$ now. This syntax change restricts
the expansion of placeholders and makes it easier to use with files
that contain non-placeholder percent signs.
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Kristian Høgsberg pointed out that the two file modifications
we were doing during the 'creating initial files' step are not even
used within the test suite. This was actually confusing as we do
not even need these changes for the tests to pass. All that really
matters here is the specific commit dates are used so that these
appear in the branch's reflog, and that the dates are different so
that the branch will update when asked and the reflog entry is
also updated. There is no need for the file modification.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When the preimage we are patching is shorter than what the patch
text expects, we tried to match the buffer contents at the
"original" line with the fragment in full, without checking we
have enough data to match in the preimage. This caused the size
of a later memmove() to wrap around and attempt to scribble
almost the entire address space. Not good.
The code that follows the part this patch touches tries to match
the fragment with line offsets. Curiously, that code does not
have the problem --- it guards against reading past the end of
the preimage.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add support for a new attribute, specfile. Files marked as being
specfiles are expanded by git-archive when they are written to an
archive. It has no effect on worktree files. The same placeholders
as those for the option --pretty=format: of git-log et al. can be
used.
The attribute is useful for creating auto-updating specfiles. It is
limited by the underlying function format_commit_message(), though.
E.g. currently there is no placeholder for git-describe like output,
and expanded specfiles can't contain NUL bytes. That can be fixed
in format_commit_message() later and will then benefit users of
git-log, too.
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When a topic branch is rebased, some of whose commits are already
cherry-picked upstream:
o--X--A--B--Y <- master
\
A--B--Z <- topic
then 'git rebase -m master' would report:
Already applied: 0001 Y
Already applied: 0002 Y
With this fix it reports the expected:
Already applied: 0001 A
Already applied: 0002 B
As an added bonus, this change also avoids 'echo' of a commit message,
which might contain escapements.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This patch removes certain behaviour of "git tag -l foo", currently
listing every tag name having "foo" as a substring. The same
thing now could be achieved doing "git tag -l '*foo*'".
This feature was added recently when git-tag.sh got the -n option
for showing tag annotations, because that commit also replaced the
old "grep pattern" behaviour with a more preferable "shell pattern"
behaviour (although slightly modified as you can see).
Thus, the following builtin-tag.c implemented it in order to
ensure that tests were passing unchanged with both programs.
Since common "shell patterns" match names with a given substring
_only_ when * is inserted before and after (as in "*substring*"), and
the "plain" behaviour cannot be achieved easily with the current
implementation, this is mostly the right thing to do, in order to
make it more flexible and consistent.
Tests for "git tag" were also changed to reflect this.
Signed-off-by: Carlos Rica <jasampler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Although dcommit could detect if the first commit in the series
would conflict with the HEAD revision in SVN, it could not
detect conflicts in further commits it made.
Now we rebase each uncommitted change after each revision is
committed to SVN to ensure that we are up-to-date. git-rebase
will bail out on conflict errors if our next change cannot be
applied and committed to SVN cleanly, preventing accidental
clobbering of changes on the SVN-side.
--no-rebase users will have trouble with this, and are thus
warned if they are committing more than one commit. Fixing this
for (hopefully uncommon) --no-rebase users would be more complex
and will probably happen at a later date.
Thanks to David Watson for finding this and the original test.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
With this function, a commit filter can leave out unwanted commits
(such as temporary commits). It does _not_ undo the changeset
corresponding to that commit, but it _skips_ the revision. IOW
no tree object is changed by this.
If you like to commit early and often, but want to filter out all
intermediate commits, marked by "@@@" in the commit message, you can
now do this with
git filter-branch --commit-filter '
if git cat-file commit $GIT_COMMIT | grep '@@@' > /dev/null;
then
skip_commit "$@";
else
git commit-tree "$@";
fi' newbranch
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Move the convenience functions to the top of git-filter-branch.sh, and
return from the script when the environment variable SOURCE_FUNCTIONS is
set.
By sourcing git-filter-branch with that variable set automatically, all
commit filters may access the convenience functions like "map".
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This clarifies the logic to omit fast-forward check and omit
trivial merge before running the specified strategy.
The "index_merge" variable started out as a flag to say "do not
do anything clever", but when recursive was changed to skip the
trivial merge, the semantics were changed and the variable alone
does not make sense anymore.
This splits the variable into two, allow_fast_forward (which is
almost always true, and avoids making a merge commit when the
other commit is a descendant of our branch, but is set to false
for ours and subtree) and allow_trivial_merge (which is false
for ours, recursive and subtree).
Unlike the earlier implementation, the "ours" strategy allows an
up-to-date condition. When we are up-to-date, the result will
be our commit, and by definition, we will have our tree as the
result.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Here is my attempt to fix this with a minimally intrusive patch.
* As "git --bare init" cannot tell if it was called with --bare or
just "GIT_DIR=. git init", I added an explicit assignment of
is_bare_repository_cfg on the codepath for "git --bare".
* GIT_WORK_TREE alone without GIT_DIR does not make any sense,
nor GIT_WORK_TREE with an explicit "git --bare". Catch that
mistake. It might make sense to move this check to "git.c"
side as well, but I tried to shoot for the minimum change for
now.
* Some scripts, especially from the olden days, rely on
traditional GIT_DIR behaviour in "git init". Namely, these
are some notable patterns:
(create a bare repository)
- mkdir some.git && cd some.git && GIT_DIR=. git init
- mkdir some.git && cd some.git && git --bare init
(create a non-bare repository)
- mkdir .git && GIT_DIR=.git git init
- mkdir .git && GIT_DIR=`pwd`/.git git init
This comes with a new test script and also passes the existing
test suite, but there may be cases that are still broken with
the current tip of master and this patch does not yet fix. I'd
appreciate help in straightening this mess out.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
After git-write-tree finishes computing the tree, it updates the
index so that later operations can take advantage of fully
populated cache tree.
However, anybody writing the index file has to mark the entries
that are racily clean. For each entry whose cached lstat(3)
data in the index exactly matches what is obtained from the
filesystem, if the timestamp on the index file was the same or
older than the modification timestamp of the file, the blob
contents and the work tree file, after convert_to_git(), need to
be compared, and if they are different, its index entry needs to
be marked not to match the lstat(3) data from the filesystem.
In order for this to work, convert_to_git() needs to work
correctly, which in turn means you need to read the config file
to get the settings of core.crlf and friends.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When squashing, rebase -i did not prevent fast forwards. This could
happen when picking some other commit than the first one, and then
squashing the first commit. So do not allow fast forwards when
squashing.
Noticed by Johannes Sixt.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When a thin pack wants to send a tree object at "sub/dir", and
the commit that is common between the sender and the receiver
that is used as the base object has a subproject at that path,
we should not try to use the data at "sub/dir" of the base tree
as a tree object. It is not a tree to begin with, and more
importantly, the commit object there does not have to even
exist.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The existing checkpoint command is very useful to force fast-import
to dump the branches out to disk so that standard Git tools can
access them and the objects they refer to. However there was not a
way to know when fast-import had finished executing the checkpoint
and it was safe to read those refs.
The progress command can be used to make fast-import output any
message of the frontend's choosing to standard out. The frontend
can scan for these messages using select() or poll() to monitor a
pipe connected to the standard output of fast-import.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
For the same reasons as the prior change we want to allow frontends
to omit the trailing LF that usually delimits commands. In some
cases these just make the input stream more verbose looking than
it needs to be, and its just simpler for the frontend developer to
get started if our parser is slightly more lenient about where an
LF is required and where it isn't.
To make this optional LF feature work we now have to buffer up to one
line of input in command_buf. This buffering can happen if we look
at the current input command but don't recognize it at this point
in the code. In such a case we need to "unget" the entire line,
but we cannot depend upon the stdio library to let us do ungetc()
for that many characters at once.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
A few fast-import frontend developers have found it odd that we
require the LF following a `data` command, especially in the exact
byte count format. Technically we don't need this LF to parse
the stream properly, but having it here does make the stream more
readable to humans. We can easily make the LF optional by peeking
at the next byte available from the stream and pushing it back into
the buffer if its not LF.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Several frontend developers have asked that some form of stream
comments be permitted within a fast-import data stream. This way
they can include information from their own frontend program about
where specific data was taken from in the source system, or about
a decision that their frontend may have made while creating the
fast-import data stream.
This change introduces comments in the Bourne-shell/Tcl/Perl style.
Lines starting with '#' are ignored, up to and including the LF.
Unlike the above mentioned three languages however we do not look for
and ignore leading whitespace. This just simplifies the definition
of the comment format and the code that parses them.
To make comments work we had to stop using read_next_command() within
cmd_data() and directly invoke read_line() during the inline variant
of the function. This is necessary to retain any lines of the
input data that might otherwise look like a comment to fast-import.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu> noticed while debugging a
Git backend for cvs2svn that fast-import was barfing when he tried
to use "TAG_FIXUP" as a branch name for temporary work needed to
cleanup the tree prior to creating an annotated tag object.
The reason we were rejecting the branch name was check_ref_format()
returns -2 when there are less than 2 '/' characters in the input
name. TAG_FIXUP has 0 '/' characters, but is technically just as
valid of a ref as HEAD and MERGE_HEAD, so we really should permit it
(and any other similar looking name) during import.
New test cases have been added to make sure we still detect very
wrong branch names (e.g. containing [ or starting with .) and yet
still permit reasonable names (e.g. TAG_FIXUP).
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
The t1301-shared-repo.sh testscript uses /usr/bin/stat to get the file
mode, which isn't portable. Implement the test in shell using 'ls' as
shown by Junio.
Signed-off-by: Arjen Laarhoven <arjen@yaph.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Apply "Subproject commit HEX" changes produced by git-diff.
As usual in the current git, only the superproject itself is actually
modified (possibly creating empty directories for new submodules).
Any checked-out submodule is left untouched and is not required to
be up-to-date.
With clean-ups from Junio C Hamano.
Signed-off-by: Sven Verdoolaege <skimo@kotnet.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git-add -u also takes the path limiters, but unlike the
command without the -u option, the code forgot that it
could be invoked from a subdirectory, and did not correctly
handle the prefix.
Signed-off-by: Salikh Zakirov <salikh@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This applies to 'maint' to fix a rather serious data corruption
issue. When "git add -u" affects a subdirectory in such a way
that the only changes to its contents are path removals, the
next tree object written out of that index was bogus, as the
remove codepath forgot to invalidate the cache-tree entry.
Reported by Salikh Zakirov.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Running git-svn log <ref> -r<rev> against a <ref> other than the
current HEAD did not work if the <rev> was exclusive to the
other branch.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This makes .gitattributes files to be read from the index when
they are not checked out to the work tree. This is in line with
the way we always allowed low-level tools to operate in sparsely
checked out work tree in a reasonable way.
It swaps the order of new file creation and converting the blob
to work tree representation; otherwise when we are in the middle
of checking out .gitattributes we would notice an empty but
unwritten .gitattributes file in the work tree and will ignore
the copy in the index.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When you try to merge a path that involves binary file-level
merge, merge-recursive died rudely without cleaning up its own
mess. A files added by the merge were left in the working tree,
but the index was not written out (because it just punted and
died), so it was cumbersome for the user to retry it by first
running "git reset --hard".
This changes merge-recursive to still warn but do the "binary"
merge for such a path; leave the "our" version in the working
tree, but still keep the path unmerged so that the user can sort
it out.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Windows / cygwin don't support HT, LF, or TAB in file name so this test
is meaningless there.
Signed-off-by: Mark Levedahl <mdl123@verizon.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This allows to refresh only a subset of the project files, based on
the specified pathspecs.
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Julliard <julliard@winehq.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Here-text to create fake-editor did not use <<\EOF but <<EOF,
but there was no point doing so, as it quoted all the variables
anyway. Simplify it.
Also futureproof the special mode to edit COMMIT_EDITMSG file;
it is interested in editing the COMMIT_EDITMSG file in any
GIT_DIR; GIT_DIR may be given as an absolute path.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* cr/tag:
Teach "git stripspace" the --strip-comments option
Make verify-tag a builtin.
builtin-tag.c: Fix two memory leaks and minor notation changes.
launch_editor(): Heed GIT_EDITOR and core.editor settings
Make git tag a builtin.
While "git bundle" was a useful way to sneakernet incremental
changes, we did not allow:
$ git bundle create v2.6.20.bndl v2.6.20
to create a bundle that contains the whole history to a
well-known good revision. Such a bundle can be mirrored
everywhere, and people can prime their repository with it to
reduce the load on the repository that serves near the tip of
the development.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The old behaviour was to unilaterally default to the cwd is the work tree
when GIT_DIR was set, but GIT_WORK_TREE wasn't, no matter if we are inside
the GIT_DIR, or if GIT_DIR is actually something like ../../../.git.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The hashed contents did not matter in the end result, but it passed
an uninitialized variable to printf, which caused it to emit empty
while giving an error/usage message.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This changes the behaviour of cloning from a repository on the
local machine, by defaulting to "-l" (use hardlinks to share
files under .git/objects) and making "-l" a no-op. A new
option, --no-hardlinks, is also added to cause file-level copy
of files under .git/objects while still avoiding the normal
"pack to pipe, then receive and index pack" network transfer
overhead. The old behaviour of local cloning without -l nor -s
is availble by specifying the source repository with the newly
introduced file:///path/to/repo.git/ syntax (i.e. "same as
network" cloning).
* With --no-hardlinks (i.e. have all .git/objects/ copied via
cpio) would not catch the source repository corruption, and
also risks corrupted recipient repository if an
alpha-particle hits memory cell while indexing and resolving
deltas. As long as the recipient is created uncorrupted, you
have a good back-up.
* same-as-network is expensive, but it would catch the breakage
of the source repository. It still risks corrupted recipient
repository due to hardware failure. As long as the recipient
is created uncorrupted, you have a good back-up.
* The new default on the same filesystem, as long as the source
repository is healthy, it is very likely that the recipient
would be, too. Also it is very cheap. You do not get any
back-up benefit, though.
None of the method is resilient against the source repository
corruption, so let's discount that from the comparison. Then
the difference with and without --no-hardlinks matters primarily
if you value the back-up benefit or not. If you want to use the
cloned repository as a back-up, then it is cheaper to do a clone
with --no-hardlinks and two git-fsck (source before clone,
recipient after clone) than same-as-network clone, especially as
you are likely to do a git-fsck on the recipient if you are so
paranoid anyway.
Which leads me to believe that being able to use file:/// is
probably a good idea, if only for testability, but probably of
little practical value. We default to hardlinked clone for
everyday use, and paranoids can use --no-hardlinks as a way to
make a back-up.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When calling "git rebase -i <upstream> <branch>", git should switch
to <branch> first. This worked before, but I broke it by my
"Shut git rebase -i up" patch.
Fix that, and add a test to make sure that it does not break again.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Acked-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
[jc: adjusted t/t7501 as this makes -F and --amend compatible]
Signed-off-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Non-interactive rebase had this from the beginning -- match it by
using --cherry-pick option to rev-list.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The old version of work-tree support was an unholy mess, barely readable,
and not to the point.
For example, why do you have to provide a worktree, when it is not used?
As in "git status". Now it works.
Another riddle was: if you can have work trees inside the git dir, why
are some programs complaining that they need a work tree?
IOW it is allowed to call
$ git --git-dir=../ --work-tree=. bla
when you really want to. In this case, you are both in the git directory
and in the working tree. So, programs have to actually test for the right
thing, namely if they are inside a working tree, and not if they are
inside a git directory.
Also, GIT_DIR=../.git should behave the same as if no GIT_DIR was
specified, unless there is a repository in the current working directory.
It does now.
The logic to determine if a repository is bare, or has a work tree
(tertium non datur), is this:
--work-tree=bla overrides GIT_WORK_TREE, which overrides core.bare = true,
which overrides core.worktree, which overrides GIT_DIR/.. when GIT_DIR
ends in /.git, which overrides the directory in which .git/ was found.
In related news, a long standing bug was fixed: when in .git/bla/x.git/,
which is a bare repository, git formerly assumed ../.. to be the
appropriate git dir. This problem was reported by Shawn Pearce to have
caused much pain, where a colleague mistakenly ran "git init" in "/" a
long time ago, and bare repositories just would not work.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>