9ce9fcdd3ec95f08a7bf6c00bdd6da2931c01cde
   1=head1 NAME
   2
   3Git - Perl interface to the Git version control system
   4
   5=cut
   6
   7
   8package Git;
   9
  10use strict;
  11
  12
  13BEGIN {
  14
  15our ($VERSION, @ISA, @EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK);
  16
  17# Totally unstable API.
  18$VERSION = '0.01';
  19
  20
  21=head1 SYNOPSIS
  22
  23  use Git;
  24
  25  my $version = Git::command_oneline('version');
  26
  27  git_cmd_try { Git::command_noisy('update-server-info') }
  28              '%s failed w/ code %d';
  29
  30  my $repo = Git->repository (Directory => '/srv/git/cogito.git');
  31
  32
  33  my @revs = $repo->command('rev-list', '--since=last monday', '--all');
  34
  35  my ($fh, $c) = $repo->command_output_pipe('rev-list', '--since=last monday', '--all');
  36  my $lastrev = <$fh>; chomp $lastrev;
  37  $repo->command_close_pipe($fh, $c);
  38
  39  my $lastrev = $repo->command_oneline( [ 'rev-list', '--all' ],
  40                                        STDERR => 0 );
  41
  42=cut
  43
  44
  45require Exporter;
  46
  47@ISA = qw(Exporter);
  48
  49@EXPORT = qw(git_cmd_try);
  50
  51# Methods which can be called as standalone functions as well:
  52@EXPORT_OK = qw(command command_oneline command_noisy
  53                command_output_pipe command_input_pipe command_close_pipe
  54                version exec_path hash_object git_cmd_try);
  55
  56
  57=head1 DESCRIPTION
  58
  59This module provides Perl scripts easy way to interface the Git version control
  60system. The modules have an easy and well-tested way to call arbitrary Git
  61commands; in the future, the interface will also provide specialized methods
  62for doing easily operations which are not totally trivial to do over
  63the generic command interface.
  64
  65While some commands can be executed outside of any context (e.g. 'version'
  66or 'init-db'), most operations require a repository context, which in practice
  67means getting an instance of the Git object using the repository() constructor.
  68(In the future, we will also get a new_repository() constructor.) All commands
  69called as methods of the object are then executed in the context of the
  70repository.
  71
  72Part of the "repository state" is also information about path to the attached
  73working copy (unless you work with a bare repository). You can also navigate
  74inside of the working copy using the C<wc_chdir()> method. (Note that
  75the repository object is self-contained and will not change working directory
  76of your process.)
  77
  78TODO: In the future, we might also do
  79
  80        my $remoterepo = $repo->remote_repository (Name => 'cogito', Branch => 'master');
  81        $remoterepo ||= Git->remote_repository ('http://git.or.cz/cogito.git/');
  82        my @refs = $remoterepo->refs();
  83
  84Currently, the module merely wraps calls to external Git tools. In the future,
  85it will provide a much faster way to interact with Git by linking directly
  86to libgit. This should be completely opaque to the user, though (performance
  87increate nonwithstanding).
  88
  89=cut
  90
  91
  92use Carp qw(carp croak); # but croak is bad - throw instead
  93use Error qw(:try);
  94use Cwd qw(abs_path);
  95
  96require XSLoader;
  97XSLoader::load('Git', $VERSION);
  98
  99}
 100
 101
 102=head1 CONSTRUCTORS
 103
 104=over 4
 105
 106=item repository ( OPTIONS )
 107
 108=item repository ( DIRECTORY )
 109
 110=item repository ()
 111
 112Construct a new repository object.
 113C<OPTIONS> are passed in a hash like fashion, using key and value pairs.
 114Possible options are:
 115
 116B<Repository> - Path to the Git repository.
 117
 118B<WorkingCopy> - Path to the associated working copy; not strictly required
 119as many commands will happily crunch on a bare repository.
 120
 121B<WorkingSubdir> - Subdirectory in the working copy to work inside.
 122Just left undefined if you do not want to limit the scope of operations.
 123
 124B<Directory> - Path to the Git working directory in its usual setup.
 125The C<.git> directory is searched in the directory and all the parent
 126directories; if found, C<WorkingCopy> is set to the directory containing
 127it and C<Repository> to the C<.git> directory itself. If no C<.git>
 128directory was found, the C<Directory> is assumed to be a bare repository,
 129C<Repository> is set to point at it and C<WorkingCopy> is left undefined.
 130If the C<$GIT_DIR> environment variable is set, things behave as expected
 131as well.
 132
 133You should not use both C<Directory> and either of C<Repository> and
 134C<WorkingCopy> - the results of that are undefined.
 135
 136Alternatively, a directory path may be passed as a single scalar argument
 137to the constructor; it is equivalent to setting only the C<Directory> option
 138field.
 139
 140Calling the constructor with no options whatsoever is equivalent to
 141calling it with C<< Directory => '.' >>. In general, if you are building
 142a standard porcelain command, simply doing C<< Git->repository() >> should
 143do the right thing and setup the object to reflect exactly where the user
 144is right now.
 145
 146=cut
 147
 148sub repository {
 149        my $class = shift;
 150        my @args = @_;
 151        my %opts = ();
 152        my $self;
 153
 154        if (defined $args[0]) {
 155                if ($#args % 2 != 1) {
 156                        # Not a hash.
 157                        $#args == 0 or throw Error::Simple("bad usage");
 158                        %opts = ( Directory => $args[0] );
 159                } else {
 160                        %opts = @args;
 161                }
 162        }
 163
 164        if (not defined $opts{Repository} and not defined $opts{WorkingCopy}) {
 165                $opts{Directory} ||= '.';
 166        }
 167
 168        if ($opts{Directory}) {
 169                -d $opts{Directory} or throw Error::Simple("Directory not found: $!");
 170
 171                my $search = Git->repository(WorkingCopy => $opts{Directory});
 172                my $dir;
 173                try {
 174                        $dir = $search->command_oneline(['rev-parse', '--git-dir'],
 175                                                        STDERR => 0);
 176                } catch Git::Error::Command with {
 177                        $dir = undef;
 178                };
 179
 180                if ($dir) {
 181                        $dir =~ m#^/# or $dir = $opts{Directory} . '/' . $dir;
 182                        $opts{Repository} = $dir;
 183
 184                        # If --git-dir went ok, this shouldn't die either.
 185                        my $prefix = $search->command_oneline('rev-parse', '--show-prefix');
 186                        $dir = abs_path($opts{Directory}) . '/';
 187                        if ($prefix) {
 188                                if (substr($dir, -length($prefix)) ne $prefix) {
 189                                        throw Error::Simple("rev-parse confused me - $dir does not have trailing $prefix");
 190                                }
 191                                substr($dir, -length($prefix)) = '';
 192                        }
 193                        $opts{WorkingCopy} = $dir;
 194                        $opts{WorkingSubdir} = $prefix;
 195
 196                } else {
 197                        # A bare repository? Let's see...
 198                        $dir = $opts{Directory};
 199
 200                        unless (-d "$dir/refs" and -d "$dir/objects" and -e "$dir/HEAD") {
 201                                # Mimick git-rev-parse --git-dir error message:
 202                                throw Error::Simple('fatal: Not a git repository');
 203                        }
 204                        my $search = Git->repository(Repository => $dir);
 205                        try {
 206                                $search->command('symbolic-ref', 'HEAD');
 207                        } catch Git::Error::Command with {
 208                                # Mimick git-rev-parse --git-dir error message:
 209                                throw Error::Simple('fatal: Not a git repository');
 210                        }
 211
 212                        $opts{Repository} = abs_path($dir);
 213                }
 214
 215                delete $opts{Directory};
 216        }
 217
 218        $self = { opts => \%opts };
 219        bless $self, $class;
 220}
 221
 222
 223=back
 224
 225=head1 METHODS
 226
 227=over 4
 228
 229=item command ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] )
 230
 231=item command ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS... ], { Opt => Val ... } )
 232
 233Execute the given Git C<COMMAND> (specify it without the 'git-'
 234prefix), optionally with the specified extra C<ARGUMENTS>.
 235
 236The second more elaborate form can be used if you want to further adjust
 237the command execution. Currently, only one option is supported:
 238
 239B<STDERR> - How to deal with the command's error output. By default (C<undef>)
 240it is delivered to the caller's C<STDERR>. A false value (0 or '') will cause
 241it to be thrown away. If you want to process it, you can get it in a filehandle
 242you specify, but you must be extremely careful; if the error output is not
 243very short and you want to read it in the same process as where you called
 244C<command()>, you are set up for a nice deadlock!
 245
 246The method can be called without any instance or on a specified Git repository
 247(in that case the command will be run in the repository context).
 248
 249In scalar context, it returns all the command output in a single string
 250(verbatim).
 251
 252In array context, it returns an array containing lines printed to the
 253command's stdout (without trailing newlines).
 254
 255In both cases, the command's stdin and stderr are the same as the caller's.
 256
 257=cut
 258
 259sub command {
 260        my ($fh, $ctx) = command_output_pipe(@_);
 261
 262        if (not defined wantarray) {
 263                # Nothing to pepper the possible exception with.
 264                _cmd_close($fh, $ctx);
 265
 266        } elsif (not wantarray) {
 267                local $/;
 268                my $text = <$fh>;
 269                try {
 270                        _cmd_close($fh, $ctx);
 271                } catch Git::Error::Command with {
 272                        # Pepper with the output:
 273                        my $E = shift;
 274                        $E->{'-outputref'} = \$text;
 275                        throw $E;
 276                };
 277                return $text;
 278
 279        } else {
 280                my @lines = <$fh>;
 281                chomp @lines;
 282                try {
 283                        _cmd_close($fh, $ctx);
 284                } catch Git::Error::Command with {
 285                        my $E = shift;
 286                        $E->{'-outputref'} = \@lines;
 287                        throw $E;
 288                };
 289                return @lines;
 290        }
 291}
 292
 293
 294=item command_oneline ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] )
 295
 296=item command_oneline ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS... ], { Opt => Val ... } )
 297
 298Execute the given C<COMMAND> in the same way as command()
 299does but always return a scalar string containing the first line
 300of the command's standard output.
 301
 302=cut
 303
 304sub command_oneline {
 305        my ($fh, $ctx) = command_output_pipe(@_);
 306
 307        my $line = <$fh>;
 308        defined $line and chomp $line;
 309        try {
 310                _cmd_close($fh, $ctx);
 311        } catch Git::Error::Command with {
 312                # Pepper with the output:
 313                my $E = shift;
 314                $E->{'-outputref'} = \$line;
 315                throw $E;
 316        };
 317        return $line;
 318}
 319
 320
 321=item command_output_pipe ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] )
 322
 323=item command_output_pipe ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS... ], { Opt => Val ... } )
 324
 325Execute the given C<COMMAND> in the same way as command()
 326does but return a pipe filehandle from which the command output can be
 327read.
 328
 329The function can return C<($pipe, $ctx)> in array context.
 330See C<command_close_pipe()> for details.
 331
 332=cut
 333
 334sub command_output_pipe {
 335        _command_common_pipe('-|', @_);
 336}
 337
 338
 339=item command_input_pipe ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] )
 340
 341=item command_input_pipe ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS... ], { Opt => Val ... } )
 342
 343Execute the given C<COMMAND> in the same way as command_output_pipe()
 344does but return an input pipe filehandle instead; the command output
 345is not captured.
 346
 347The function can return C<($pipe, $ctx)> in array context.
 348See C<command_close_pipe()> for details.
 349
 350=cut
 351
 352sub command_input_pipe {
 353        _command_common_pipe('|-', @_);
 354}
 355
 356
 357=item command_close_pipe ( PIPE [, CTX ] )
 358
 359Close the C<PIPE> as returned from C<command_*_pipe()>, checking
 360whether the command finished successfuly. The optional C<CTX> argument
 361is required if you want to see the command name in the error message,
 362and it is the second value returned by C<command_*_pipe()> when
 363called in array context. The call idiom is:
 364
 365        my ($fh, $ctx) = $r->command_output_pipe('status');
 366        while (<$fh>) { ... }
 367        $r->command_close_pipe($fh, $ctx);
 368
 369Note that you should not rely on whatever actually is in C<CTX>;
 370currently it is simply the command name but in future the context might
 371have more complicated structure.
 372
 373=cut
 374
 375sub command_close_pipe {
 376        my ($self, $fh, $ctx) = _maybe_self(@_);
 377        $ctx ||= '<unknown>';
 378        _cmd_close($fh, $ctx);
 379}
 380
 381
 382=item command_noisy ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] )
 383
 384Execute the given C<COMMAND> in the same way as command() does but do not
 385capture the command output - the standard output is not redirected and goes
 386to the standard output of the caller application.
 387
 388While the method is called command_noisy(), you might want to as well use
 389it for the most silent Git commands which you know will never pollute your
 390stdout but you want to avoid the overhead of the pipe setup when calling them.
 391
 392The function returns only after the command has finished running.
 393
 394=cut
 395
 396sub command_noisy {
 397        my ($self, $cmd, @args) = _maybe_self(@_);
 398        _check_valid_cmd($cmd);
 399
 400        my $pid = fork;
 401        if (not defined $pid) {
 402                throw Error::Simple("fork failed: $!");
 403        } elsif ($pid == 0) {
 404                _cmd_exec($self, $cmd, @args);
 405        }
 406        if (waitpid($pid, 0) > 0 and $?>>8 != 0) {
 407                throw Git::Error::Command(join(' ', $cmd, @args), $? >> 8);
 408        }
 409}
 410
 411
 412=item version ()
 413
 414Return the Git version in use.
 415
 416Implementation of this function is very fast; no external command calls
 417are involved.
 418
 419=cut
 420
 421# Implemented in Git.xs.
 422
 423
 424=item exec_path ()
 425
 426Return path to the Git sub-command executables (the same as
 427C<git --exec-path>). Useful mostly only internally.
 428
 429Implementation of this function is very fast; no external command calls
 430are involved.
 431
 432=cut
 433
 434# Implemented in Git.xs.
 435
 436
 437=item repo_path ()
 438
 439Return path to the git repository. Must be called on a repository instance.
 440
 441=cut
 442
 443sub repo_path { $_[0]->{opts}->{Repository} }
 444
 445
 446=item wc_path ()
 447
 448Return path to the working copy. Must be called on a repository instance.
 449
 450=cut
 451
 452sub wc_path { $_[0]->{opts}->{WorkingCopy} }
 453
 454
 455=item wc_subdir ()
 456
 457Return path to the subdirectory inside of a working copy. Must be called
 458on a repository instance.
 459
 460=cut
 461
 462sub wc_subdir { $_[0]->{opts}->{WorkingSubdir} ||= '' }
 463
 464
 465=item wc_chdir ( SUBDIR )
 466
 467Change the working copy subdirectory to work within. The C<SUBDIR> is
 468relative to the working copy root directory (not the current subdirectory).
 469Must be called on a repository instance attached to a working copy
 470and the directory must exist.
 471
 472=cut
 473
 474sub wc_chdir {
 475        my ($self, $subdir) = @_;
 476        $self->wc_path()
 477                or throw Error::Simple("bare repository");
 478
 479        -d $self->wc_path().'/'.$subdir
 480                or throw Error::Simple("subdir not found: $!");
 481        # Of course we will not "hold" the subdirectory so anyone
 482        # can delete it now and we will never know. But at least we tried.
 483
 484        $self->{opts}->{WorkingSubdir} = $subdir;
 485}
 486
 487
 488=item config ( VARIABLE )
 489
 490Retrieve the configuration C<VARIABLE> in the same manner as C<repo-config>
 491does. In scalar context requires the variable to be set only one time
 492(exception is thrown otherwise), in array context returns allows the
 493variable to be set multiple times and returns all the values.
 494
 495Must be called on a repository instance.
 496
 497This currently wraps command('repo-config') so it is not so fast.
 498
 499=cut
 500
 501sub config {
 502        my ($self, $var) = @_;
 503        $self->repo_path()
 504                or throw Error::Simple("not a repository");
 505
 506        try {
 507                if (wantarray) {
 508                        return $self->command('repo-config', '--get-all', $var);
 509                } else {
 510                        return $self->command_oneline('repo-config', '--get', $var);
 511                }
 512        } catch Git::Error::Command with {
 513                my $E = shift;
 514                if ($E->value() == 1) {
 515                        # Key not found.
 516                        return undef;
 517                } else {
 518                        throw $E;
 519                }
 520        };
 521}
 522
 523
 524=item ident ( TYPE | IDENTSTR )
 525
 526=item ident_person ( TYPE | IDENTSTR | IDENTARRAY )
 527
 528This suite of functions retrieves and parses ident information, as stored
 529in the commit and tag objects or produced by C<var GIT_type_IDENT> (thus
 530C<TYPE> can be either I<author> or I<committer>; case is insignificant).
 531
 532The C<ident> method retrieves the ident information from C<git-var>
 533and either returns it as a scalar string or as an array with the fields parsed.
 534Alternatively, it can take a prepared ident string (e.g. from the commit
 535object) and just parse it.
 536
 537C<ident_person> returns the person part of the ident - name and email;
 538it can take the same arguments as C<ident> or the array returned by C<ident>.
 539
 540The synopsis is like:
 541
 542        my ($name, $email, $time_tz) = ident('author');
 543        "$name <$email>" eq ident_person('author');
 544        "$name <$email>" eq ident_person($name);
 545        $time_tz =~ /^\d+ [+-]\d{4}$/;
 546
 547Both methods must be called on a repository instance.
 548
 549=cut
 550
 551sub ident {
 552        my ($self, $type) = @_;
 553        my $identstr;
 554        if (lc $type eq lc 'committer' or lc $type eq lc 'author') {
 555                $identstr = $self->command_oneline('var', 'GIT_'.uc($type).'_IDENT');
 556        } else {
 557                $identstr = $type;
 558        }
 559        if (wantarray) {
 560                return $identstr =~ /^(.*) <(.*)> (\d+ [+-]\d{4})$/;
 561        } else {
 562                return $identstr;
 563        }
 564}
 565
 566sub ident_person {
 567        my ($self, @ident) = @_;
 568        $#ident == 0 and @ident = $self->ident($ident[0]);
 569        return "$ident[0] <$ident[1]>";
 570}
 571
 572
 573=item hash_object ( TYPE, FILENAME )
 574
 575=item hash_object ( TYPE, FILEHANDLE )
 576
 577Compute the SHA1 object id of the given C<FILENAME> (or data waiting in
 578C<FILEHANDLE>) considering it is of the C<TYPE> object type (C<blob>,
 579C<commit>, C<tree>).
 580
 581In case of C<FILEHANDLE> passed instead of file name, all the data
 582available are read and hashed, and the filehandle is automatically
 583closed. The file handle should be freshly opened - if you have already
 584read anything from the file handle, the results are undefined (since
 585this function works directly with the file descriptor and internal
 586PerlIO buffering might have messed things up).
 587
 588The method can be called without any instance or on a specified Git repository,
 589it makes zero difference.
 590
 591The function returns the SHA1 hash.
 592
 593Implementation of this function is very fast; no external command calls
 594are involved.
 595
 596=cut
 597
 598sub hash_object {
 599        my ($self, $type, $file) = _maybe_self(@_);
 600
 601        # hash_object_* implemented in Git.xs.
 602
 603        if (ref($file) eq 'GLOB') {
 604                my $hash = hash_object_pipe($type, fileno($file));
 605                close $file;
 606                return $hash;
 607        } else {
 608                hash_object_file($type, $file);
 609        }
 610}
 611
 612
 613
 614=back
 615
 616=head1 ERROR HANDLING
 617
 618All functions are supposed to throw Perl exceptions in case of errors.
 619See the L<Error> module on how to catch those. Most exceptions are mere
 620L<Error::Simple> instances.
 621
 622However, the C<command()>, C<command_oneline()> and C<command_noisy()>
 623functions suite can throw C<Git::Error::Command> exceptions as well: those are
 624thrown when the external command returns an error code and contain the error
 625code as well as access to the captured command's output. The exception class
 626provides the usual C<stringify> and C<value> (command's exit code) methods and
 627in addition also a C<cmd_output> method that returns either an array or a
 628string with the captured command output (depending on the original function
 629call context; C<command_noisy()> returns C<undef>) and $<cmdline> which
 630returns the command and its arguments (but without proper quoting).
 631
 632Note that the C<command_*_pipe()> functions cannot throw this exception since
 633it has no idea whether the command failed or not. You will only find out
 634at the time you C<close> the pipe; if you want to have that automated,
 635use C<command_close_pipe()>, which can throw the exception.
 636
 637=cut
 638
 639{
 640        package Git::Error::Command;
 641
 642        @Git::Error::Command::ISA = qw(Error);
 643
 644        sub new {
 645                my $self = shift;
 646                my $cmdline = '' . shift;
 647                my $value = 0 + shift;
 648                my $outputref = shift;
 649                my(@args) = ();
 650
 651                local $Error::Depth = $Error::Depth + 1;
 652
 653                push(@args, '-cmdline', $cmdline);
 654                push(@args, '-value', $value);
 655                push(@args, '-outputref', $outputref);
 656
 657                $self->SUPER::new(-text => 'command returned error', @args);
 658        }
 659
 660        sub stringify {
 661                my $self = shift;
 662                my $text = $self->SUPER::stringify;
 663                $self->cmdline() . ': ' . $text . ': ' . $self->value() . "\n";
 664        }
 665
 666        sub cmdline {
 667                my $self = shift;
 668                $self->{'-cmdline'};
 669        }
 670
 671        sub cmd_output {
 672                my $self = shift;
 673                my $ref = $self->{'-outputref'};
 674                defined $ref or undef;
 675                if (ref $ref eq 'ARRAY') {
 676                        return @$ref;
 677                } else { # SCALAR
 678                        return $$ref;
 679                }
 680        }
 681}
 682
 683=over 4
 684
 685=item git_cmd_try { CODE } ERRMSG
 686
 687This magical statement will automatically catch any C<Git::Error::Command>
 688exceptions thrown by C<CODE> and make your program die with C<ERRMSG>
 689on its lips; the message will have %s substituted for the command line
 690and %d for the exit status. This statement is useful mostly for producing
 691more user-friendly error messages.
 692
 693In case of no exception caught the statement returns C<CODE>'s return value.
 694
 695Note that this is the only auto-exported function.
 696
 697=cut
 698
 699sub git_cmd_try(&$) {
 700        my ($code, $errmsg) = @_;
 701        my @result;
 702        my $err;
 703        my $array = wantarray;
 704        try {
 705                if ($array) {
 706                        @result = &$code;
 707                } else {
 708                        $result[0] = &$code;
 709                }
 710        } catch Git::Error::Command with {
 711                my $E = shift;
 712                $err = $errmsg;
 713                $err =~ s/\%s/$E->cmdline()/ge;
 714                $err =~ s/\%d/$E->value()/ge;
 715                # We can't croak here since Error.pm would mangle
 716                # that to Error::Simple.
 717        };
 718        $err and croak $err;
 719        return $array ? @result : $result[0];
 720}
 721
 722
 723=back
 724
 725=head1 COPYRIGHT
 726
 727Copyright 2006 by Petr Baudis E<lt>pasky@suse.czE<gt>.
 728
 729This module is free software; it may be used, copied, modified
 730and distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public Licence,
 731either version 2, or (at your option) any later version.
 732
 733=cut
 734
 735
 736# Take raw method argument list and return ($obj, @args) in case
 737# the method was called upon an instance and (undef, @args) if
 738# it was called directly.
 739sub _maybe_self {
 740        # This breaks inheritance. Oh well.
 741        ref $_[0] eq 'Git' ? @_ : (undef, @_);
 742}
 743
 744# Check if the command id is something reasonable.
 745sub _check_valid_cmd {
 746        my ($cmd) = @_;
 747        $cmd =~ /^[a-z0-9A-Z_-]+$/ or throw Error::Simple("bad command: $cmd");
 748}
 749
 750# Common backend for the pipe creators.
 751sub _command_common_pipe {
 752        my $direction = shift;
 753        my ($self, @p) = _maybe_self(@_);
 754        my (%opts, $cmd, @args);
 755        if (ref $p[0]) {
 756                ($cmd, @args) = @{shift @p};
 757                %opts = ref $p[0] ? %{$p[0]} : @p;
 758        } else {
 759                ($cmd, @args) = @p;
 760        }
 761        _check_valid_cmd($cmd);
 762
 763        my $fh;
 764        if ($^O eq '##INSERT_ACTIVESTATE_STRING_HERE##') {
 765                # ActiveState Perl
 766                #defined $opts{STDERR} and
 767                #       warn 'ignoring STDERR option - running w/ ActiveState';
 768                $direction eq '-|' or
 769                        die 'input pipe for ActiveState not implemented';
 770                tie ($fh, 'Git::activestate_pipe', $cmd, @args);
 771
 772        } else {
 773                my $pid = open($fh, $direction);
 774                if (not defined $pid) {
 775                        throw Error::Simple("open failed: $!");
 776                } elsif ($pid == 0) {
 777                        if (defined $opts{STDERR}) {
 778                                close STDERR;
 779                        }
 780                        if ($opts{STDERR}) {
 781                                open (STDERR, '>&', $opts{STDERR})
 782                                        or die "dup failed: $!";
 783                        }
 784                        _cmd_exec($self, $cmd, @args);
 785                }
 786        }
 787        return wantarray ? ($fh, join(' ', $cmd, @args)) : $fh;
 788}
 789
 790# When already in the subprocess, set up the appropriate state
 791# for the given repository and execute the git command.
 792sub _cmd_exec {
 793        my ($self, @args) = @_;
 794        if ($self) {
 795                $self->repo_path() and $ENV{'GIT_DIR'} = $self->repo_path();
 796                $self->wc_path() and chdir($self->wc_path());
 797                $self->wc_subdir() and chdir($self->wc_subdir());
 798        }
 799        _execv_git_cmd(@args);
 800        die "exec failed: $!";
 801}
 802
 803# Execute the given Git command ($_[0]) with arguments ($_[1..])
 804# by searching for it at proper places.
 805# _execv_git_cmd(), implemented in Git.xs.
 806
 807# Close pipe to a subprocess.
 808sub _cmd_close {
 809        my ($fh, $ctx) = @_;
 810        if (not close $fh) {
 811                if ($!) {
 812                        # It's just close, no point in fatalities
 813                        carp "error closing pipe: $!";
 814                } elsif ($? >> 8) {
 815                        # The caller should pepper this.
 816                        throw Git::Error::Command($ctx, $? >> 8);
 817                }
 818                # else we might e.g. closed a live stream; the command
 819                # dying of SIGPIPE would drive us here.
 820        }
 821}
 822
 823
 824# Trickery for .xs routines: In order to avoid having some horrid
 825# C code trying to do stuff with undefs and hashes, we gate all
 826# xs calls through the following and in case we are being ran upon
 827# an instance call a C part of the gate which will set up the
 828# environment properly.
 829sub _call_gate {
 830        my $xsfunc = shift;
 831        my ($self, @args) = _maybe_self(@_);
 832
 833        if (defined $self) {
 834                # XXX: We ignore the WorkingCopy! To properly support
 835                # that will require heavy changes in libgit.
 836
 837                # XXX: And we ignore everything else as well. libgit
 838                # at least needs to be extended to let us specify
 839                # the $GIT_DIR instead of looking it up in environment.
 840                #xs_call_gate($self->{opts}->{Repository});
 841        }
 842
 843        # Having to call throw from the C code is a sure path to insanity.
 844        local $SIG{__DIE__} = sub { throw Error::Simple("@_"); };
 845        &$xsfunc(@args);
 846}
 847
 848sub AUTOLOAD {
 849        my $xsname;
 850        our $AUTOLOAD;
 851        ($xsname = $AUTOLOAD) =~ s/.*:://;
 852        throw Error::Simple("&Git::$xsname not defined") if $xsname =~ /^xs_/;
 853        $xsname = 'xs_'.$xsname;
 854        _call_gate(\&$xsname, @_);
 855}
 856
 857sub DESTROY { }
 858
 859
 860# Pipe implementation for ActiveState Perl.
 861
 862package Git::activestate_pipe;
 863use strict;
 864
 865sub TIEHANDLE {
 866        my ($class, @params) = @_;
 867        # FIXME: This is probably horrible idea and the thing will explode
 868        # at the moment you give it arguments that require some quoting,
 869        # but I have no ActiveState clue... --pasky
 870        my $cmdline = join " ", @params;
 871        my @data = qx{$cmdline};
 872        bless { i => 0, data => \@data }, $class;
 873}
 874
 875sub READLINE {
 876        my $self = shift;
 877        if ($self->{i} >= scalar @{$self->{data}}) {
 878                return undef;
 879        }
 880        return $self->{'data'}->[ $self->{i}++ ];
 881}
 882
 883sub CLOSE {
 884        my $self = shift;
 885        delete $self->{data};
 886        delete $self->{i};
 887}
 888
 889sub EOF {
 890        my $self = shift;
 891        return ($self->{i} >= scalar @{$self->{data}});
 892}
 893
 894
 8951; # Famous last words