The builtin/notes.c::copy() function is prepared to handle either
one or two arguments given from the command line; when one argument
is given, to-obj defaults to HEAD.
bbb1b8a3 ("notes: check number of parameters to "git notes copy"",
2010-06-28) tried to make sure "git notes copy" (with *no* other
argument) does not dereference NULL by checking the number of
parameters, but it incorrectly insisted that we need two arguments,
instead of either one or two. This disabled the defaulting to-obj
to HEAD.
Correct it.
Signed-off-by: Doan Tran Cong Danh <congdanhqx@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit bbb1b8a35a ("notes: check number of parameters to "git notes
copy"", 2010-06-28) added a test for too many or too few of
parameters provided to `git notes copy'.
However, the test only ensures that the command will fail but it
doesn't really check if it fails because of number of parameters.
If we accidentally lifted the check inside our code base, the test
may still have failed because the provided parameter is not a valid
ref.
Correct it.
Signed-off-by: Doan Tran Cong Danh <congdanhqx@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When pushing more than one reference with the --atomic option, the
server is supposed to perform a single atomic transaction to update the
references, leaving them either all to succeed or all to fail. This
works fine when pushing locally or over SSH, but when pushing over HTTP,
we fail to pass the atomic capability to the remote side. In fact, we
have not reported this capability to any remote helpers during the life
of the feature.
Now normally, things happen to work nevertheless, since we actually
check for most types of failures, such as non-fast-forward updates, on
the client side, and just abort the entire attempt. However, if the
server side reports a problem, such as the inability to lock a ref, the
transaction isn't atomic, because we haven't passed the appropriate
capability over and the remote side has no way of knowing that we wanted
atomic behavior.
Fix this by passing the option from the transport code through to remote
helpers, and from the HTTP remote helper down to send-pack. With this
change, we can detect if the server side rejects the push and report
back appropriately. Note the difference in the messages: the remote
side reports "atomic transaction failed", while our own checking rejects
pushes with the message "atomic push failed".
Document the atomic option in the remote helper documentation, so other
implementers can implement it if they like.
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 04005834ed ("log: fix coloring of certain octopus merge shapes",
2018-09-01) there is a fix for the coloring of dashes following an
octopus merge. It makes a distinction between the case where all parents
introduce a new column, versus the case where the first parent collapses
into an existing column:
| *-. | *-.
| |\ \ | |\ \
| | | | |/ / /
The latter case means that the columns for the merge parents begin one
place to the left in the `new_columns` array compared to the former
case.
However, the implementation only works if the commit's parents are kept
in order as they map onto the visual columns, as we get the colors by
iterating over `new_columns` as we print the dashes. In general, the
commit's parents can arbitrarily merge with existing columns, and change
their ordering in the process.
For example, in the following diagram, the number of each column
indicates which commit parent appears in each column.
| | *---.
| | |\ \ \
| | |/ / /
| |/| | /
| |_|_|/
|/| | |
3 1 0 2
If the columns are colored (red, green, yellow, blue), then the dashes
will currently be colored yellow and blue, whereas they should be blue
and red.
To fix this, we need to look up each column in the `mapping` array,
which before the `GRAPH_COLLAPSING` state indicates which logical column
is displayed in each visual column. This implementation is simpler as it
doesn't have any edge cases, and it also handles how left-skewed first
parents are now displayed:
| *-.
|/|\ \
| | | |
0 1 2 3
The color of the first dashes is always the color found in `mapping` two
columns to the right of the commit symbol. Because commits are displayed
after all edges have been collapsed together and the visual columns
match the logical ones, we can find the visual offset of the commit
symbol using `commit_index`.
Signed-off-by: James Coglan <jcoglan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When a merge commit is printed and its final parent is the same commit
that occupies the column to the right of the merge, this results in a
kink in the displayed edges:
* |
|\ \
| |/
| *
Graphs containing these shapes can be hard to read, as the expansion to
the right followed immediately by collapsing back to the left creates a
lot of zig-zagging edges, especially when many columns are present.
We can improve this by eliminating the zig-zag and having the merge's
final parent edge fuse immediately with its neighbor:
* |
|\|
| *
This reduces the horizontal width for the current commit by 2, and
requires one less row, making the graph display more compact. Taken in
combination with other graph-smoothing enhancements, it greatly
compresses the space needed to display certain histories:
*
|\
| * *
| |\ |\
| | * | *
| | | | |\
| | \ | | *
| *-. \ | * |
| |\ \ \ => |/|\|
|/ / / / | | *
| | | / | * |
| | |/ | |/
| | * * /
| * | |/
| |/ *
* |
|/
*
One of the test cases here cannot be correctly rendered in Git v2.23.0;
it produces this output following commit E:
| | *-. \ 5_E
| | |\ \ \
| |/ / / /
| | | / _
| |_|/
|/| |
The new implementation makes sure that the rightmost edge in this
history is not left dangling as above.
Signed-off-by: James Coglan <jcoglan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When a graph contains edges that are in the process of collapsing to the
left, but those edges cross a commit line, the effect is that the edges
have a jagged appearance:
*
|\
| *
| \
*-. \
|\ \ \
| | * |
| * | |
| |/ /
* | |
|/ /
* |
|/
*
We already takes steps to smooth edges like this when they're expanding;
when an edge appears to the right of a merge commit marker on a
GRAPH_COMMIT line immediately following a GRAPH_POST_MERGE line, we
render it as a `\`:
* \
|\ \
| * \
| |\ \
We can make a similar improvement to collapsing edges, making them
easier to follow and giving the overall graph a feeling of increased
symmetry:
*
|\
| *
| \
*-. \
|\ \ \
| | * |
| * | |
| |/ /
* / /
|/ /
* /
|/
*
To do this, we introduce a new special case for edges on GRAPH_COMMIT
lines that immediately follow a GRAPH_COLLAPSING line. By retaining a
copy of the `mapping` array used to render the GRAPH_COLLAPSING line in
the `old_mapping` array, we can determine that an edge is collapsing
through the GRAPH_COMMIT line and should be smoothed.
Signed-off-by: James Coglan <jcoglan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The change I'm about to make requires being able to inspect the mapping
array that was used to render the last GRAPH_COLLAPSING line while
rendering a GRAPH_COMMIT line. The `new_mapping` array currently exists
as a pre-allocated space for computing the next `mapping` array during
`graph_output_collapsing_line()`, but we can repurpose it to let us see
the previous `mapping` state.
To support this use it will make more sense if this array is named
`old_mapping`, as it will contain the mapping data for the previous line
we rendered, at the point we're rendering a commit line.
Signed-off-by: James Coglan <jcoglan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Following the introduction of "left-skewed" merges, which are merges
whose first parent fuses with another edge to its left, we have some
more edge cases to deal with in the display of commit and post-merge
lines.
The current graph code handles the following cases for edges appearing
to the right of the commit (*) on commit lines. A 2-way merge is usually
followed by vertical lines:
| | |
| * |
| |\ \
An octopus merge (more than two parents) is always followed by edges
sloping to the right:
| | \ | | \
| *-. \ | *---. \
| |\ \ \ | |\ \ \ \
A 2-way merge is followed by a right-sloping edge if the commit line
immediately follows a post-merge line for a commit that appears in the
same column as the current commit, or any column to the left of that:
| * | * |
| |\ | |\ \
| * \ | | * \
| |\ \ | | |\ \
This commit introduces the following new cases for commit lines. If a
2-way merge skews to the left, then the edges to its right are always
vertical lines, even if the commit follows a post-merge line:
| | | | |\
| * | | * |
|/| | |/| |
A commit with 3 parents that skews left is followed by vertical edges:
| | |
| * |
|/|\ \
If a 3-way left-skewed merge commit appears immediately after a
post-merge line, then it may be followed the right-sloping edges, just
like a 2-way merge that is not skewed.
| |\
| * \
|/|\ \
Octopus merges with 4 or more parents that skew to the left will always
be followed by right-sloping edges, because the existing columns need to
expand around the merge.
| | \
| *-. \
|/|\ \ \
On post-merge lines, usually all edges following the current commit
slope to the right:
| * | |
| |\ \ \
However, if the commit is a left-skewed 2-way merge, the edges to its
right remain vertical. We also need to display a space after the
vertical line descending from the commit marker, whereas this line would
normally be followed by a backslash.
| * | |
|/| | |
If a left-skewed merge has more than 2 parents, then the edges to its
right are still sloped as they bend around the edges introduced by the
merge.
| * | |
|/|\ \ \
To handle these new cases, we need to know not just how many parents
each commit has, but how many new columns it adds to the display; this
quantity is recorded in the `edges_added` field for the current commit,
and `prev_edges_added` field for the previous commit.
Here, "column" refers to visual columns, not the logical columns of the
`columns` array. This is because even if all the commit's parents end up
fusing with existing edges, they initially introduce distinct edges in
the commit and post-merge lines before those edges collapse. For
example, a 3-way merge whose 2nd and 3rd parents fuse with existing
edges still introduces 2 visual columns that affect the display of edges
to their right.
| | | \
| | *-. \
| | |\ \ \
| |_|/ / /
|/| | / /
| | |/ /
| |/| |
| | | |
This merge does not introduce any *logical* columns; there are 4 edges
before and after this commit once all edges have collapsed. But it does
initially introduce 2 new edges that need to be accommodated by the
edges to their right.
Signed-off-by: James Coglan <jcoglan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Currently, when we display a merge whose first parent is already present
in a column to the left of the merge commit, we display the first parent
as a vertical pipe `|` in the GRAPH_POST_MERGE line and then immediately
enter the GRAPH_COLLAPSING state. The first-parent line tracks to the
left and all the other parent lines follow it; this creates a "kink" in
those lines:
| *---.
| |\ \ \
|/ / / /
| | | *
This change tidies the display of such commits such that if the first
parent appears to the left of the merge, we render it as a `/` and the
second parent as a `|`. This reduces the horizontal and vertical space
needed to render the merge, and makes the resulting lines easier to
read.
| *-.
|/|\ \
| | | *
If the first parent is separated from the merge by several columns, a
horizontal line is drawn in a similar manner to how the GRAPH_COLLAPSING
state displays the line.
| | | *-.
| |_|/|\ \
|/| | | | *
This effect is applied to both "normal" two-parent merges, and to
octopus merges. It also reduces the vertical space needed for pre-commit
lines, as the merge occupies one less column than usual.
Before: After:
| * | *
| |\ | |\
| | \ | * \
| | \ |/|\ \
| *-. \
| |\ \ \
Signed-off-by: James Coglan <jcoglan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The commits following this one introduce a series of improvements to the
layout of graphs, tidying up a few edge cases, namely:
- merge whose first parent fuses with an existing column to the left
- merge whose last parent fuses with its immediate neighbor on the right
- edges that collapse to the left above and below a commit line
This test case exemplifies these cases and provides a motivating example
of the kind of history I'm aiming to clear up.
The first parent of merge E is the same as the parent of H, so those
edges fuse together.
* H
|
| *-. E
| |\ \
|/ / /
|
* B
We can "skew" the display of this merge so that it doesn't introduce
additional columns that immediately collapse:
* H
|
| * E
|/|\
|
* B
The last parent of E is D, the same as the parent of F which is the edge
to the right of the merge.
* F
|
\
*-. \ E
|\ \ \
/ / / /
| /
|/
* D
The two edges leading to D could be fused sooner: rather than expanding
the F edge around the merge and then letting the edges collapse, the F
edge could fuse with the E edge in the post-merge line:
* F
|
\
*-. | E
|\ \|
/ / /
|
* D
If this is combined with the "skew" effect above, we get a much cleaner
graph display for these edges:
* F
|
* | E
/|\|
|
* D
Finally, the edge leading from C to A appears jagged as it passes
through the commit line for B:
| * | C
| |/
* | B
|/
* A
This can be smoothed out so that such edges are easier to read:
| * | C
| |/
* / B
|/
* A
Signed-off-by: James Coglan <jcoglan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This computation is repeated in a couple of places and I need to add
another condition to it to implement a further improvement to the graph
rendering, so I'm extracting this into a function.
Signed-off-by: James Coglan <jcoglan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There's a duplication of logic between `graph_insert_into_new_columns()`
and `graph_update_width()`. `graph_insert_into_new_columns()` is called
repeatedly by `graph_update_columns()` with an `int *` that tracks the
offset into the `mapping` array where we should write the next value.
Each call to `graph_insert_into_new_columns()` effectively pushes one
column index and one "null" value (-1) onto the `mapping` array and
therefore increments `mapping_idx` by 2.
`graph_update_width()` duplicates this process: the `width` of the graph
is essentially the initial width of the `mapping` array before edges
begin collapsing. The `graph_update_width()` function's logic
effectively works out how many times `graph_insert_into_new_columns()`
was called based on the relationship of the current commit to the rest
of the graph.
I'm about to make some changes that make the assignment of values into
the `mapping` array more complicated. Rather than make
`graph_update_width()` more complicated at the same time, we can simply
remove this function and use `graph->width` to track the offset into the
`mapping` array as we're building it. This removes the duplication and
makes sure that `graph->width` is the same as the visual width of the
`mapping` array once `graph_update_columns()` is complete.
Signed-off-by: James Coglan <jcoglan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
I will shortly be making some changes to this function and so am trying
to simplify it. It currently contains some duplicated logic; both
branches the function can take assign the commit's column index into
the `mapping` array and increment `mapping_index`.
Here I change the function so that the only conditional behaviour is
that it appends the commit to `new_columns` if it's not present. All
manipulation of `mapping` now happens on a single code path.
Signed-off-by: James Coglan <jcoglan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
I will shortly be making some changes to
`graph_insert_into_new_columns()` and so am trying to simplify it. One
possible simplification is that we can extract the loop for finding the
element in `new_columns` containing the given commit.
`find_new_column_by_commit()` contains a very similar loop but it
returns a `struct column *` rather than an `int` offset into the array.
Here I'm introducing a version that returns `int` and using that in
`graph_insert_into_new_columns()` and `graph_output_post_merge_line()`.
Signed-off-by: James Coglan <jcoglan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Now that the display width of graph lines is implicitly tracked via the
`graph_line` interface, the calls to `graph_pad_horizontally()` no
longer need to be located inside the individual output functions, where
the character counting was previously being done.
All the functions called by `graph_next_line()` generate a line of
output, then call `graph_pad_horizontally()`, and finally change the
graph state if necessary. As padding is the final change to the output
done by all these functions, it can be removed from all of them and done
in `graph_next_line()` instead.
I've also moved the guard in `graph_output_padding_line()` that checks
the graph has a commit; this function is only called by
`graph_next_line()` and we must not pad the `graph_line` if no commit is
set.
Signed-off-by: James Coglan <jcoglan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
All the output functions called by `graph_next_line()` currently keep
track of how many printable chars they've written to the buffer, before
calling `graph_pad_horizontally()` to pad the line with spaces. Some
functions do this by incrementing a counter whenever they write to the
buffer, and others do it by encoding an assumption about how many chars
are written, as in:
graph_pad_horizontally(graph, sb, graph->num_columns * 2);
This adds a fair amount of noise to the functions' logic and is easily
broken if one forgets to increment the right counter or update the
calculations used for padding.
To make this easier to use, I'm introducing a new struct called
`graph_line` that wraps a `strbuf` and keeps count of its display width
implicitly. `graph_next_line()` wraps this around the `struct strbuf *`
it's given and passes a `struct graph_line *` to the output functions,
which use its interface.
The `graph_line` interface wraps the `strbuf_addch()`,
`strbuf_addchars()` and `strbuf_addstr()` functions, and adds the
`graph_line_write_column()` function for adding a single character with
color formatting. The `graph_pad_horizontally()` function can then use
the `width` field from the struct rather than taking a character count
as a parameter.
Signed-off-by: James Coglan <jcoglan@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The specification of promisor packfiles (in partial-clone.txt) states
that the .promisor files that accompany packfiles do not matter (just
like .keep files), so whenever a packfile is fetched from the promisor
remote, Git has been writing empty .promisor files. But these files
could contain more useful information.
So instead of writing empty files, write the refs fetched to these
files. This makes it easier to debug issues with partial clones, as we
can identify what refs (and their associated hashes) were fetched at the
time the packfile was downloaded, and if necessary, compare those hashes
against what the promisor remote reports now.
This is implemented by teaching fetch-pack to write its own non-empty
.promisor file whenever it knows the name of the pack's lockfile. This
covers the case wherein the user runs "git fetch" with an internal
protocol or HTTP protocol v2 (fetch_refs_via_pack() in transport.c sets
lock_pack) and with HTTP protocol v0/v1 (fetch_git() in remote-curl.c
passes "--lock-pack" to "fetch-pack").
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com>
Acked-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Prior to commit 356ee4659b ("sequencer: try to commit without forking
'git commit'", 2017-11-24) the sequencer would always run the
post-commit hook after each pick or revert as it forked `git commit` to
create the commit. The conversion to committing without forking `git
commit` omitted to call the post-commit hook after creating the commit.
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This function was declared in commit.h but was implemented in
builtin/commit.c so was not part of libgit. Move it to libgit so we can
use it in the sequencer. This simplifies the implementation of
run_prepare_commit_msg_hook() and will be used in the next commit.
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 65850686cf ("rebase -i: rewrite write_basic_state() in C",
2018-08-28) accidentially added new function declarations after
the #endif at the end of the include guard.
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Some tests were calling set_fake_editor to ensure they had a sane no-op
editor set. Now that all the editor setting is done in subshells these
tests can rely on EDITOR=: and so do not need to call set_fake_editor.
Also add a test at the end to detect any future additions messing with
the exported value of $EDITOR.
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
As $EDITOR is exported setting it in one test affects all subsequent
tests. Avoid this by always setting it in a subshell. This commit leaves
20 calls to set_fake_editor that are not in subshells as they can
safely be removed in the next commit once all the other editor setting
is done inside subshells.
I have moved the call to set_fake_editor in some tests so it comes
immediately before the call to 'git rebase' to avoid moving unrelated
commands into the subshell. In one case ('rebase -ix with
--autosquash') the call to set_fake_editor is moved past an invocation
of 'git rebase'. This is safe as that invocation of 'git rebase'
requires EDITOR=: or EDITOR=fake-editor.sh without FAKE_LINES being
set which will be the case as the preceding tests either set their
editor in a subshell or call set_fake_editor without setting FAKE_LINES.
In a one test ('auto-amend only edited commits after "edit"') a call
to test_tick are now in a subshell. I think this is OK as it is there
to set the date for the next commit which is executed in the same
subshell rather than updating GIT_COMMITTER_DATE for later tests (the
next test calls test_tick before doing anything else).
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Neither of the commands executed in the subshell change any shell
variables or the current directory so there is no need for them to be
executed in a subshell.
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Before, when format-patch generated a cover letter, only the body would
be populated with a branch's description while the subject would be
populated with placeholder text. However, users may want to have the
subject of their cover letter automatically populated in the same way.
Teach format-patch to accept the `--cover-from-description` option and
corresponding `format.coverFromDescription` config, allowing users to
populate different parts of the cover letter (including the subject
now).
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Before, `thread` and `config_cover_letter` were defined as ints even
though they behaved as enums. Define actual enums and change these
variables to use these new definitions.
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 30984ed2e9 (format-patch: support deep threading, 2009-02-19),
introduced the following lines:
#define THREAD_SHALLOW 1
[...]
thread = git_config_bool(var, value) && THREAD_SHALLOW;
Since git_config_bool() returns a bool, the trailing `&& THREAD_SHALLOW`
is a no-op. Replace this errorneous and condition with a ternary
statement so that it is clear what the configured value is when a
boolean is given.
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This changes the indent from
"<tab><sp><sp><sp><sp><sp><sp><sp><sp>"
to
"<tab><tab>"
so that the statement lines up with the rest of the block.
Signed-off-by: Norman Rasmussen <norman@rasmussen.co.za>
Acked-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git range-diff" failed to handle mode-only change, which has been
corrected.
* tg/range-diff-output-update:
range-diff: don't segfault with mode-only changes
Pretty-printed command line formatter (used in e.g. reporting the
command being run by the tracing API) had a bug that lost an
argument that is an empty string, which has been corrected.
* gs/sq-quote-buf-pretty:
sq_quote_buf_pretty: don't drop empty arguments
The trace2 output, when sending them to files in a designated
directory, can populate the directory with too many files; a
mechanism is introduced to set the maximum number of files and
discard further logs when the maximum is reached.
* js/trace2-cap-max-output-files:
trace2: write discard message to sentinel files
trace2: discard new traces if target directory has too many files
docs: clarify trace2 version invariants
docs: mention trace2 target-dir mode in git-config
"git log --graph" for an octopus merge is sometimes colored
incorrectly, which is demonstrated and documented but not yet
fixed.
* dl/octopus-graph-bug:
t4214: demonstrate octopus graph coloring failure
t4214: explicitly list tags in log
t4214: generate expect in their own test cases
t4214: use test_merge
test-lib: let test_merge() perform octopus merges
Updates to fast-import/export.
* en/fast-imexport-nested-tags:
fast-export: handle nested tags
t9350: add tests for tags of things other than a commit
fast-export: allow user to request tags be marked with --mark-tags
fast-export: add support for --import-marks-if-exists
fast-import: add support for new 'alias' command
fast-import: allow tags to be identified by mark labels
fast-import: fix handling of deleted tags
fast-export: fix exporting a tag and nothing else
CI updates.
* js/azure-pipelines-msvc:
ci: also build and test with MS Visual Studio on Azure Pipelines
ci: really use shallow clones on Azure Pipelines
tests: let --immediate and --write-junit-xml play well together
test-tool run-command: learn to run (parts of) the testsuite
vcxproj: include more generated files
vcxproj: only copy `git-remote-http.exe` once it was built
msvc: work around a bug in GetEnvironmentVariable()
msvc: handle DEVELOPER=1
msvc: ignore some libraries when linking
compat/win32/path-utils.h: add #include guards
winansi: use FLEX_ARRAY to avoid compiler warning
msvc: avoid using minus operator on unsigned types
push: do not pretend to return `int` from `die_push_simple()`
"git fetch --jobs=<n>" allowed <n> parallel jobs when fetching
submodules, but this did not apply to "git fetch --multiple" that
fetches from multiple remote repositories. It now does.
* js/fetch-jobs:
fetch: let --jobs=<n> parallelize --multiple, too
The merge-recursive machiery is one of the most complex parts of
the system that accumulated cruft over time. This large series
cleans up the implementation quite a bit.
* en/merge-recursive-cleanup: (26 commits)
merge-recursive: fix the fix to the diff3 common ancestor label
merge-recursive: fix the diff3 common ancestor label for virtual commits
merge-recursive: alphabetize include list
merge-recursive: add sanity checks for relevant merge_options
merge-recursive: rename MERGE_RECURSIVE_* to MERGE_VARIANT_*
merge-recursive: split internal fields into a separate struct
merge-recursive: avoid losing output and leaking memory holding that output
merge-recursive: comment and reorder the merge_options fields
merge-recursive: consolidate unnecessary fields in merge_options
merge-recursive: move some definitions around to clean up the header
merge-recursive: rename merge_options argument to opt in header
merge-recursive: rename 'mrtree' to 'result_tree', for clarity
merge-recursive: use common name for ancestors/common/base_list
merge-recursive: fix some overly long lines
cache-tree: share code between functions writing an index as a tree
merge-recursive: don't force external callers to do our logging
merge-recursive: remove useless parameter in merge_trees()
merge-recursive: exit early if index != head
Ensure index matches head before invoking merge machinery, round N
merge-recursive: remove another implicit dependency on the_repository
...
Use argv_array to build an array of strings instead of open-coding it.
This simplifies the code a bit.
We also need to make the specs parameter of push(), push_dav() and
push_git() const to match the argv member of the argv_array. That's
fine, as all three only actually read from the specs array anyway.
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Make use of utf8_strnwidth()'s feature to skip ANSI escape sequences
instead of open-coding it. This shortens the code and makes it more
consistent.
This changes the behavior, though: The old code skips all kinds of
Control Sequence Introducer sequences, while utf8_strnwidth() only skips
the Select Graphic Rendition kind, i.e. those ending with "m". They are
used for specifying color and font attributes like boldness. The only
other kind of escape sequence we print in Git is Erase in Line, ending
with "K". That's not used for columnar output, so this difference
actually doesn't matter here.
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The first step for deleting an item from a linked list is to locate the
item preceding it. Be more careful in release_request() and handle an
empty list. This only has consequences for invalid delete requests
(removing the same item twice, or deleting an item that was never added
to the list), but simplifies the loop condition as well as the check
after the loop.
Once we found the item's predecessor in the list, update its next
pointer to skip over the item, which removes it from the list. In other
words: Make the item's successor the successor of its predecessor.
(At this point entry->next == request and prev->next == lock,
respectively.) This is a bit simpler and saves a pointer dereference.
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git stash push does not recursively stash submodules, but if
submodule.recurse is set, it may recursively reset --hard them. Having
only the destructive action recurse is likely to be surprising
behaviour, and unlikely to be desirable, so the easiest fix should be to
ensure that the call to git reset --hard never recurses into submodules.
This matches the behavior of check_changes_tracked_files, which ignores
submodules.
Signed-off-by: Jakob Jarmar <jakob@jarmar.se>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>