"Can not" suggests one has the option to not do something, whereas
"cannot" more strongly suggests something is disallowed or impossible.
Noticed "can not", mistakenly used instead of "cannot" in git help
glossary, then ran git grep 'can not' and found many other instances.
Only files in the Documentation folder were modified.
'Can not' also occurs in some source code comments and some test
assertion messages, and there is an error message and translation "can
not move directory into itself" which I may fix and submit separately
from the documentation change.
Also noticed and fixed "is does" in git help fetch, but there are no
other occurrences of that typo according to git grep.
Signed-off-by: Mark Rushakoff <mark.rushakoff@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Support building Git with Visual Studio
The bits about .git/branches/* have been dropped from the series.
We may want to drop the support for it, but until that happens, the
tests should rely on the existence of the support to pass.
* js/visual-studio: (23 commits)
git: avoid calling aliased builtins via their dashed form
bin-wrappers: append `.exe` to target paths if necessary
.gitignore: ignore Visual Studio's temporary/generated files
.gitignore: touch up the entries regarding Visual Studio
vcxproj: also link-or-copy builtins
msvc: add a Makefile target to pre-generate the Visual Studio solution
contrib/buildsystems: add a backend for modern Visual Studio versions
contrib/buildsystems: handle options starting with a slash
contrib/buildsystems: also handle -lexpat
contrib/buildsystems: handle libiconv, too
contrib/buildsystems: handle the curl library option
contrib/buildsystems: error out on unknown option
contrib/buildsystems: optionally capture the dry-run in a file
contrib/buildsystems: redirect errors of the dry run into a log file
contrib/buildsystems: ignore gettext stuff
contrib/buildsystems: handle quoted spaces in filenames
contrib/buildsystems: fix misleading error message
contrib/buildsystems: ignore irrelevant files in Generators/
contrib/buildsystems: ignore invalidcontinue.obj
Vcproj.pm: urlencode '<' and '>' when generating VC projects
...
Hotfix for making "git log" use the mailmap by default.
* jc/log-mailmap-flip-defaults:
log: really flip the --mailmap default
log: flip the --mailmap default unconditionally
The recently added [includeif "onbranch:branch"] feature does not
work well with an early config mechanism, as it attempts to find
out what branch we are on before we even haven't located the git
repository. The inclusion during early config scan is ignored to
work around this issue.
* js/early-config-with-onbranch:
config: work around bug with includeif:onbranch and early config
`git restore --staged` uses the same machinery as `git checkout HEAD`,
so there should be a similar test case for "restore" as the existing
test case for "checkout" with deleted ita files.
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Varun Naik <vcnaik94@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It is possible to delete a committed file from the index and then add it
as intent-to-add. After `git checkout HEAD <pathspec>`, the file should
be identical in the index and HEAD. The command already works correctly
if the file has contents in HEAD. This patch provides the desired
behavior even when the file is empty in HEAD.
`git checkout HEAD <pathspec>` calls tree.c:read_tree_1(), with fn
pointing to checkout.c:update_some(). update_some() creates a new cache
entry but discards it when its mode and oid match those of the old
entry. A cache entry for an ita file and a cache entry for an empty file
have the same oid. Therefore, an empty deleted ita file previously
passed both of these checks, and the new entry was discarded, so the
file remained unchanged in the index. After this fix, if the file is
marked as ita in the cache, then we avoid discarding the new entry and
add the new entry to the cache instead.
This change should not affect newly added ita files. For those, inside
tree.c:read_tree_1(), tree_entry_interesting() returns
entry_not_interesting, so fn is never called.
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Varun Naik <vcnaik94@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When a packed ref is deleted, the whole packed-refs file is
rewritten to omit the ref that no longer exists. However if another
gc command is running and calls `pack-refs --all` simultaneously,
there is a chance that a ref that was just updated lose the newly
created commits.
Through these steps, losing commits on newly updated refs can be
demonstrated:
# step 1: compile git without `USE_NSEC` option
Some kernel releases do enable it by default while some do
not. And if we compile git without `USE_NSEC`, it will be easier
demonstrated by the following steps.
# step 2: setup a repository and add the first commit
git init repo &&
(cd repo &&
git config core.logallrefupdates true &&
git commit --allow-empty -m foo)
# step 3: in one terminal, repack the refs repeatedly
cd repo &&
while true
do
git pack-refs --all
done
# step 4: in another terminal, simultaneously update the
# master with update-ref, and create and delete an
# unrelated ref also with update-ref
cd repo &&
while true
do
us=$(git commit-tree -m foo -p HEAD HEAD^{tree}) &&
git update-ref refs/heads/newbranch $us &&
git update-ref refs/heads/master $us &&
git update-ref -d refs/heads/newbranch &&
them=$(git rev-parse master) &&
if test "$them" != "$us"
then
echo >&2 "lost commit: $us"
exit 1
fi
# eye candy
printf .
done
Though we have the packed-refs lock file and loose refs lock
files to avoid updating conflicts, a ref will lost its newly
commits if racy stat-validity of `packed-refs` file happens
(which is quite same as the racy-git described in
`Documentation/technical/racy-git.txt`), the following
specific set of operations demonstrates the problem:
1. Call `pack-refs --all` to pack all the loose refs to
packed-refs, and let say the modify time of the
packed-refs is DATE_M.
2. Call `update-ref` to update a new commit to master while
it is already packed. the old value (let us call it
OID_A) remains in the packed-refs file and write the new
value (let us call it OID_B) to $GIT_DIR/refs/heads/master.
3. Call `update-ref -d` within the same DATE_M from the 1th
step to delete a different ref newbranch which is packed
in the packed-refs file. It check newbranch's oid from
packed-refs file without locking it.
Meanwhile it keeps a snapshot of the packed-refs file in
memory and record the file's attributes with the snapshot.
The oid of master in the packed-refs's snapshot is OID_A.
4. Call a new `pack-refs --all` to pack the loose refs, the
oid of master in packe-refs file is OID_B, and the loose
refs $GIT_DIR/refs/heads/master is removed. Let's say
the `pack-refs --all` is very quickly done and the new
packed-refs file's modify time is still DATE_M, and it
has the same file size, even the same inode.
5. 3th step now goes on after checking the newbranch, it
begin to rewrite the packed-refs file. After get the
lock file of packed-ref file, it checks it's on-disk
file attributes with the snapshot, suck as the timestamp,
the file size and the inode value. If they are both the
same values, and the snapshot is not refreshed.
Because the loose ref of master is removed by 4th step,
`update-ref -d` will updates the new packed-ref to disk
which contains master with the oid OID_A. So now the
newly commit OID_B of master is lost.
The best path forward is just always refreshing after take
the lock file of `packed-refs` file. Traditionally we avoided
that because refreshing it implied parsing the whole file.
But these days we mmap it, so it really is just an extra
open()/mmap() and a quick read of the header. That doesn't seem
like an outrageous cost to pay when we're already taking the lock.
Signed-off-by: Sun Chao <sunchao9@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Sun Chao <sunchao9@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Update the docs, test the interaction between the new default,
configuration and command line option, in addition to actually
flipping the default.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We have a couple of test scripts that are not completely
httpd-specific, but do run a few httpd-specific tests at the end.
These test scripts source 'lib-httpd.sh' somewhere mid-script, which
then skips all the rest of the test script if the dependencies for
running httpd tests are not fulfilled.
As the previous two patches in this series show, already on two
occasions non-httpd-specific tests were appended at the end of such
test scripts, and, consequently, they were skipped as well when httpd
tests couldn't be run.
Add a comment at the end of these test scripts to warn against adding
non-httpd-specific tests at the end, in the hope that they will help
prevent similar issues in the future.
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The make_traverse_path() function isn't very careful about checking its
output buffer boundaries. In fact, it doesn't even _know_ the size of
the buffer it's writing to, and just assumes that the caller used
traverse_path_len() correctly. And even then we assume that our
traverse_info.pathlen components are all correct, and just blindly write
into the buffer.
Let's improve this situation a bit:
- have the caller pass in their allocated buffer length, which we'll
check against our own computations
- check for integer underflow as we do our backwards-insertion of
pathnames into the buffer
- check that we do not run out items in our list to traverse before
we've filled the expected number of bytes
None of these should be triggerable in practice (especially since our
switch to size_t everywhere in a previous commit), but it doesn't hurt
to check our assumptions.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
All but one of the callers of make_traverse_path() allocate a new heap
buffer to store the path. Let's give them an easy way to write to a
strbuf, which saves them from computing the length themselves (which is
especially tricky when they want to add to the path). It will also make
it easier for us to change the make_traverse_path() interface in a
future patch to improve its bounds-checking.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We take a "struct name_entry", but only care about the length of the
path name. Let's just take that length directly, making it easier to use
the function from callers that sometimes do not have a name_entry at
all.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We store and manipulate the cumulative traverse_info.pathlen as an
"int", which can overflow when we are fed ridiculously long pathnames
(e.g., ones at the edge of 2GB or 4GB, even if the individual tree entry
names are smaller than that). The results can be confusing, though
after some prodding I was not able to use this integer overflow to cause
an under-allocated buffer.
Let's consistently use size_t to generate and store these, and make
sure our addition doesn't overflow.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
't5703-upload-pack-ref-in-want.sh' sources 'lib-httpd.sh' near the end
to run a couple of httpd-specific tests, but 'lib-httpd.sh' skips all
the rest of the test script if the dependencies for running httpd
tests are not fulfilled. However, the last six tests in 't5703' are
not httpd-specific, but they are skipped as well when httpd tests
can't be run.
Move these six tests earlier in the test script, before 'lib-httpd.sh'
is sourced, so they will be run even when httpd tests aren't. Note
that this is not merely a pure code movement, because the setup test
case for the httpd tests needed an additional 'rm -rf
"$LOCAL_PRISTINE"' to clean up a directory left behind by the moved
non-httpd-specific tests.
Also add a comment at the end of this test script to warn against
adding non-httpd-specific tests at the end, in the hope that it will
help prevent similar issues in the future.
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
't5510-fetch.sh' sources 'lib-httpd.sh' near the end to run a
httpd-specific test, but 'lib-httpd.sh' skips all the rest of the test
script if the dependencies for running httpd tests are not fulfilled.
Alas, recently cdbd70c437 (fetch: add --[no-]show-forced-updates
argument, 2019-06-18) appended a non-httpd-specific test at the end,
and this test is then skipped as well when httpd tests can't be run.
Move this new test earlier in the test script, before 'lib-httpd.sh'
is sourced, so it will be run even when httpd tests aren't.
Also add a comment at the end of this test script to warn against
adding non-httpd-specific tests at the end, in the hope that it will
help prevent similar issues in the future.
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Squelch unneeded and misleading warnings from "repack" when the
command attempts to generate pack bitmaps without explicitly asked
for by the user.
* jk/repack-silence-auto-bitmap-warning:
repack: simplify handling of auto-bitmaps and .keep files
repack: silence warnings when auto-enabled bitmaps cannot be built
t7700: clean up .keep file in bitmap-writing test
Update to the tests to help SHA-256 transition continues.
* bc/hash-independent-tests-part-4:
t2203: avoid hard-coded object ID values
t1710: make hash independent
t1007: remove SHA1 prerequisites
t0090: make test pass with SHA-256
t0027: make hash size independent
t6030: make test work with SHA-256
t5000: make hash independent
t1450: make hash size independent
t1410: make hash size independent
t: add helper to convert object IDs to paths
Fix the spelling of the new "--no-show-forced-updates" option that "git
fetch/pull" learned. Similarly, spell "--function-context" correctly and
fix a few typos, grammos and minor mistakes.
Signed-off-by: Martin Ågren <martin.agren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It turns out that being cautious to warn against upcoming default
change was an unpopular behaviour, and such a care can easily be
defeated by distro packagers to render it ineffective anyway.
Just flip the default, with only a mention in the release notes.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Update the Italian translation for Git v2.23.0 (l10n round 1), as
well as adding some minor localization fixes.
Signed-off-by: Alessandro Menti <alessandro.menti@alessandromenti.it>
Since 07b2c0eaca (config: learn the "onbranch:" includeIf condition,
2019-06-05), there is a potential catch-22 in the early config path: if
the `include.onbranch:` feature is used, Git assumes that the Git
directory has been initialized already. However, in the early config
code path that is not true.
One way to trigger this is to call the following commands in any
repository:
git config includeif.onbranch:refs/heads/master.path broken
git help -a
The symptom triggered by the `git help -a` invocation reads like this:
BUG: refs.c:1851: attempting to get main_ref_store outside of repository
Let's work around this, simply by ignoring the `includeif.onbranch:`
setting when parsing the config when the ref store has not been
initialized (yet).
Technically, there is a way to solve this properly: teach the refs
machinery to initialize the ref_store from a given gitdir/commondir pair
(which we _do_ have in the early config code path), and then use that in
`include_by_branch()`. This, however, is a pretty involved project, and
we're already in the feature freeze for Git v2.23.0.
Note: when calling above-mentioned two commands _outside_ of any Git
worktree (passing the `--global` flag to `git config`, as there is
obviously no repository config available), at the point when
`include_by_branch()` is called, `the_repository` is `NULL`, therefore
we have to be extra careful not to dereference it in that case.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Compilation fix.
* cb/xdiff-no-system-includes-in-dot-c:
xdiff: remove duplicate headers from xpatience.c
xdiff: remove duplicate headers from xhistogram.c
xdiff: drop system includes in xutils.c
As the previous commit shows, the presence of an oid in each level of
the traverse_info is confusing and ultimately not necessary. Let's drop
it to make it clear that it will not always be set (as well as convince
us that it's unused, and let the compiler catch any merges with other
branches that do add new uses).
Since the oid is part of name_entry, we'll actually stop embedding a
name_entry entirely, and instead just separately hold the pathname, its
length, and the mode.
This makes the resulting code slightly more verbose as we have to pass
those elements around individually. But it also makes it more clear what
each code path is going to use (and in most of the paths, we really only
care about the pathname itself).
A few of these conversions are noisier than they need to be, as they
also take the opportunity to rename "len" to "namelen" for clarity
(especially where we also have "pathlen" or "ce_len" alongside).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We assume that if setup_traverse_info() is passed a non-empty "base"
string, that string is pointing into a tree object and we can read the
object oid by skipping past the trailing NUL.
As it turns out, this is not true for either of the two calls, and we
may end up reading garbage bytes:
1. In git-merge-tree, our base string is either empty (in which case
we'd never run this code), or it comes from our traverse_path()
helper. The latter overallocates a buffer by the_hash_algo->rawsz
bytes, but then fills it with only make_traverse_path(), leaving
those extra bytes uninitialized (but part of a legitimate heap
buffer).
2. In unpack_trees(), we pass o->prefix, which is some arbitrary
string from the caller. In "git read-tree --prefix=foo", for
instance, it will point to the command-line parameter, and we'll
read 20 bytes past the end of the string.
Interestingly, tools like ASan do not detect (2) because the process
argv is part of a big pre-allocated buffer. So we're reading trash, but
it's trash that's probably part of the next argument, or the
environment.
You can convince it to fail by putting something like this at the
beginning of common-main.c's main() function:
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < argc; i++)
argv[i] = xstrdup_or_null(argv[i]);
}
That puts the arguments into their own heap buffers, so running:
make SANITIZE=address test
will find problems when "read-tree --prefix" is used (e.g., in t3030).
Doubly interesting, even with the hackery above, this does not fail
prior to ea82b2a085 (tree-walk: store object_id in a separate member,
2019-01-15). That commit switched setup_traverse_info() to actually
copying the hash, rather than simply pointing to it. That pointer was
always pointing to garbage memory, but that commit started actually
dereferencing the bytes, which is what triggers ASan.
That also implies that nobody actually cares about reading these oid
bytes anyway (or at least no path covered by our tests). And manual
inspection of the code backs that up (I'll follow this patch with some
cleanups that show definitively this is the case, but they're quite
invasive, so it's worth doing this fix on its own).
So let's drop the bogus hashcpy(), along with the confusing oversizing
in merge-tree.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 7328482253 (repack: disable bitmaps-by-default if .keep files
exist, 2019-06-29) taught repack to prefer disabling bitmaps to
duplicating objects (unless bitmaps were asked for explicitly).
But there's an easier way to do this: if we keep passing the
--honor-pack-keep flag to pack-objects when auto-enabling bitmaps, then
pack-objects already makes the same decision (it will disable bitmaps
rather than duplicate). Better still, pack-objects can actually decide
to do so based not just on the presence of a .keep file, but on whether
that .keep file actually impacts the new pack we're making (so if we're
racing with a push or fetch, for example, their temporary .keep file
will not block us from generating bitmaps if they haven't yet updated
their refs).
And because repack uses the --write-bitmap-index-quiet flag, we don't
have to worry about pack-objects generating confusing warnings when it
does see a .keep file. We can confirm this by tweaking the .keep test to
check repack's stderr.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Depending on various config options, a full repack may not be able to
build a reachability bitmap index (e.g., if pack.packSizeLimit forces us
to write multiple packs). In these cases pack-objects may write a
warning to stderr.
Since 36eba0323d (repack: enable bitmaps by default on bare repos,
2019-03-14), we may generate these warnings even when the user did not
explicitly ask for bitmaps. This has two downsides:
- it can be confusing, if they don't know what bitmaps are
- a daemonized auto-gc will write this to its log file, and the
presence of the warning may suppress further auto-gc (until
gc.logExpiry has elapsed)
Let's have repack communicate to pack-objects that the choice to turn on
bitmaps was not made explicitly by the user, which in turn allows
pack-objects to suppress these warnings.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
After our test snippet finishes, the .keep file is left in place, making
it hard to do further tests of the auto-bitmap-writing code (since it
suppresses the feature completely). Let's clean it up.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The test '--no-show-forced-updates' in 't5510-fetch.sh' added in
cdbd70c437 (fetch: add --[no-]show-forced-updates argument,
2019-06-18) runs '! test_i18ngrep ...'. This is wrong, because when
running the test with GIT_TEST_GETTEXT_POISON=true, then
'test_i18ngrep' is basically a noop and always returns with success,
the leading ! turns that into a failure, which then fails the test.
Use 'test_i18ngrep ! ...' instead.
This went unnoticed by our GETTEXT_POISON CI builds, because those
builds don't run this test case: in those builds we don't install
Apache, and this test comes after 't5510' sources 'lib-httpd.sh',
which, consequently, skips all the remaining tests, including this
one.
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The iteration order of a hashmap is undefined, and may depend on things
like the exact set of items added, or the table has been grown or
shrunk. In the case of an oidmap, it even depends on endianness, because
we take the oid hash by casting sha1 bytes directly into an unsigned
int.
Let's sort the test-tool output from any hash iterators. In the case of
t0011, this is just future-proofing. But for t0016, it actually fixes a
reported failure on the big-endian s390 and nonstop ports.
I didn't bother to teach the helper functions to optionally sort output.
They are short enough that it's simpler to just repeat them inline for
the iteration tests than it is to add a --sort option.
Reported-by: Randall S. Becker <rsbecker@nexbridge.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Running git-grep with --recurse-submodules results in a cached grep for
the submodules even when --cached is not used. This makes all
modifications in submodules' tracked files be always ignored when
grepping. Solve that making git-grep respect the cached option when
invoking grep_cache() inside grep_submodule(). Also, add tests to
ensure that the desired behavior is performed.
Reported-by: Daniel Zaoui <jackdanielz@eyomi.org>
Signed-off-by: Matheus Tavares <matheus.bernardino@usp.br>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A few tests printed 'errno' as an integer and compared with
hardcoded integers; this is obviously not portable.
A two things to note are:
- the string obtained by strerror() is not portable, and cannot be
used for the purpose of these tests.
- there unfortunately isn't a portable way to map error numbers to
error names.
As we only care about a few selected errors, just map the error
number to the name before emitting for comparison.
Reported-by: Randall S. Becker <rsbecker@nexbridge.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Merge tag 'v2.23.0-rc0' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git
Git 2.23-rc0
* tag 'v2.23.0-rc0' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git: (420 commits)
Git 2.23-rc0
Merge fixes made on the 'master' front
Flush fixes up to the third batch post 2.22.0
The seventh batch
git: mark cmd_rebase as requiring a worktree
rebase: fix white-space
xdiff: clamp function context indices in post-image
grep: print the pcre2_jit_on value
t6200: use test_commit_bulk
travis-ci: build with GCC 4.8 as well
The sixth batch
clean: show an error message when the path is too long
CodingGuidelines: spell out post-C89 rules
README: fix rendering of text in angle brackets
rm: resolving by removal is not a warning-worthy event
transport-helper: avoid var decl in for () loop control
stash: fix handling removed files with --keep-index
mingw: support spawning programs containing spaces in their names
gpg-interface: do not scan past the end of buffer
tests: defang pager tests by explicitly disabling the log.mailmap warning
...
This is one of the few places where Git violates its own deprecation of
the dashed form. It is not necessary, either.
As of 595d59e2b5 (git.c: ignore pager.* when launching builtin as
dashed external, 2017-08-02), Git wants to ignore the pager.* config
setting when expanding aliases. So let's strip out the
check_pager_config(<command-name>) call from the copy-edited code.
This code actually made it into upstream git.git already, but it was
disabled in `#if 0 ... #endif` guards so far.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When compiling with Visual Studio, the projects' names are identical to
the executables modulo the extensions. Read: there will exist both a
directory called `git` as well as an executable called `git.exe` in the
end. Which means that the bin-wrappers *need* to target the `.exe` files
lest they try to execute directories.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add the Microsoft .manifest pattern, and do not anchor the 'Debug'
and 'Release' entries at the top-level directory, to allow for
multiple projects (one per target).
Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>