perl / Git.pmon commit tree: convert read_tree_recursive to struct object_id (df46d77)
   1=head1 NAME
   2
   3Git - Perl interface to the Git version control system
   4
   5=cut
   6
   7
   8package Git;
   9
  10use 5.008;
  11use strict;
  12
  13
  14BEGIN {
  15
  16our ($VERSION, @ISA, @EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK);
  17
  18# Totally unstable API.
  19$VERSION = '0.01';
  20
  21
  22=head1 SYNOPSIS
  23
  24  use Git;
  25
  26  my $version = Git::command_oneline('version');
  27
  28  git_cmd_try { Git::command_noisy('update-server-info') }
  29              '%s failed w/ code %d';
  30
  31  my $repo = Git->repository (Directory => '/srv/git/cogito.git');
  32
  33
  34  my @revs = $repo->command('rev-list', '--since=last monday', '--all');
  35
  36  my ($fh, $c) = $repo->command_output_pipe('rev-list', '--since=last monday', '--all');
  37  my $lastrev = <$fh>; chomp $lastrev;
  38  $repo->command_close_pipe($fh, $c);
  39
  40  my $lastrev = $repo->command_oneline( [ 'rev-list', '--all' ],
  41                                        STDERR => 0 );
  42
  43  my $sha1 = $repo->hash_and_insert_object('file.txt');
  44  my $tempfile = tempfile();
  45  my $size = $repo->cat_blob($sha1, $tempfile);
  46
  47=cut
  48
  49
  50require Exporter;
  51
  52@ISA = qw(Exporter);
  53
  54@EXPORT = qw(git_cmd_try);
  55
  56# Methods which can be called as standalone functions as well:
  57@EXPORT_OK = qw(command command_oneline command_noisy
  58                command_output_pipe command_input_pipe command_close_pipe
  59                command_bidi_pipe command_close_bidi_pipe
  60                version exec_path html_path hash_object git_cmd_try
  61                remote_refs prompt
  62                get_tz_offset get_record
  63                credential credential_read credential_write
  64                temp_acquire temp_is_locked temp_release temp_reset temp_path
  65                unquote_path);
  66
  67
  68=head1 DESCRIPTION
  69
  70This module provides Perl scripts easy way to interface the Git version control
  71system. The modules have an easy and well-tested way to call arbitrary Git
  72commands; in the future, the interface will also provide specialized methods
  73for doing easily operations which are not totally trivial to do over
  74the generic command interface.
  75
  76While some commands can be executed outside of any context (e.g. 'version'
  77or 'init'), most operations require a repository context, which in practice
  78means getting an instance of the Git object using the repository() constructor.
  79(In the future, we will also get a new_repository() constructor.) All commands
  80called as methods of the object are then executed in the context of the
  81repository.
  82
  83Part of the "repository state" is also information about path to the attached
  84working copy (unless you work with a bare repository). You can also navigate
  85inside of the working copy using the C<wc_chdir()> method. (Note that
  86the repository object is self-contained and will not change working directory
  87of your process.)
  88
  89TODO: In the future, we might also do
  90
  91        my $remoterepo = $repo->remote_repository (Name => 'cogito', Branch => 'master');
  92        $remoterepo ||= Git->remote_repository ('http://git.or.cz/cogito.git/');
  93        my @refs = $remoterepo->refs();
  94
  95Currently, the module merely wraps calls to external Git tools. In the future,
  96it will provide a much faster way to interact with Git by linking directly
  97to libgit. This should be completely opaque to the user, though (performance
  98increase notwithstanding).
  99
 100=cut
 101
 102
 103use Carp qw(carp croak); # but croak is bad - throw instead
 104use Git::Error qw(:try);
 105use Cwd qw(abs_path cwd);
 106use IPC::Open2 qw(open2);
 107use Fcntl qw(SEEK_SET SEEK_CUR);
 108use Time::Local qw(timegm);
 109}
 110
 111
 112=head1 CONSTRUCTORS
 113
 114=over 4
 115
 116=item repository ( OPTIONS )
 117
 118=item repository ( DIRECTORY )
 119
 120=item repository ()
 121
 122Construct a new repository object.
 123C<OPTIONS> are passed in a hash like fashion, using key and value pairs.
 124Possible options are:
 125
 126B<Repository> - Path to the Git repository.
 127
 128B<WorkingCopy> - Path to the associated working copy; not strictly required
 129as many commands will happily crunch on a bare repository.
 130
 131B<WorkingSubdir> - Subdirectory in the working copy to work inside.
 132Just left undefined if you do not want to limit the scope of operations.
 133
 134B<Directory> - Path to the Git working directory in its usual setup.
 135The C<.git> directory is searched in the directory and all the parent
 136directories; if found, C<WorkingCopy> is set to the directory containing
 137it and C<Repository> to the C<.git> directory itself. If no C<.git>
 138directory was found, the C<Directory> is assumed to be a bare repository,
 139C<Repository> is set to point at it and C<WorkingCopy> is left undefined.
 140If the C<$GIT_DIR> environment variable is set, things behave as expected
 141as well.
 142
 143You should not use both C<Directory> and either of C<Repository> and
 144C<WorkingCopy> - the results of that are undefined.
 145
 146Alternatively, a directory path may be passed as a single scalar argument
 147to the constructor; it is equivalent to setting only the C<Directory> option
 148field.
 149
 150Calling the constructor with no options whatsoever is equivalent to
 151calling it with C<< Directory => '.' >>. In general, if you are building
 152a standard porcelain command, simply doing C<< Git->repository() >> should
 153do the right thing and setup the object to reflect exactly where the user
 154is right now.
 155
 156=cut
 157
 158sub repository {
 159        my $class = shift;
 160        my @args = @_;
 161        my %opts = ();
 162        my $self;
 163
 164        if (defined $args[0]) {
 165                if ($#args % 2 != 1) {
 166                        # Not a hash.
 167                        $#args == 0 or throw Error::Simple("bad usage");
 168                        %opts = ( Directory => $args[0] );
 169                } else {
 170                        %opts = @args;
 171                }
 172        }
 173
 174        if (not defined $opts{Repository} and not defined $opts{WorkingCopy}
 175                and not defined $opts{Directory}) {
 176                $opts{Directory} = '.';
 177        }
 178
 179        if (defined $opts{Directory}) {
 180                -d $opts{Directory} or throw Error::Simple("Directory not found: $opts{Directory} $!");
 181
 182                my $search = Git->repository(WorkingCopy => $opts{Directory});
 183                my $dir;
 184                try {
 185                        $dir = $search->command_oneline(['rev-parse', '--git-dir'],
 186                                                        STDERR => 0);
 187                } catch Git::Error::Command with {
 188                        $dir = undef;
 189                };
 190
 191                if ($dir) {
 192                        _verify_require();
 193                        File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute($dir) or $dir = $opts{Directory} . '/' . $dir;
 194                        $opts{Repository} = abs_path($dir);
 195
 196                        # If --git-dir went ok, this shouldn't die either.
 197                        my $prefix = $search->command_oneline('rev-parse', '--show-prefix');
 198                        $dir = abs_path($opts{Directory}) . '/';
 199                        if ($prefix) {
 200                                if (substr($dir, -length($prefix)) ne $prefix) {
 201                                        throw Error::Simple("rev-parse confused me - $dir does not have trailing $prefix");
 202                                }
 203                                substr($dir, -length($prefix)) = '';
 204                        }
 205                        $opts{WorkingCopy} = $dir;
 206                        $opts{WorkingSubdir} = $prefix;
 207
 208                } else {
 209                        # A bare repository? Let's see...
 210                        $dir = $opts{Directory};
 211
 212                        unless (-d "$dir/refs" and -d "$dir/objects" and -e "$dir/HEAD") {
 213                                # Mimic git-rev-parse --git-dir error message:
 214                                throw Error::Simple("fatal: Not a git repository: $dir");
 215                        }
 216                        my $search = Git->repository(Repository => $dir);
 217                        try {
 218                                $search->command('symbolic-ref', 'HEAD');
 219                        } catch Git::Error::Command with {
 220                                # Mimic git-rev-parse --git-dir error message:
 221                                throw Error::Simple("fatal: Not a git repository: $dir");
 222                        }
 223
 224                        $opts{Repository} = abs_path($dir);
 225                }
 226
 227                delete $opts{Directory};
 228        }
 229
 230        $self = { opts => \%opts };
 231        bless $self, $class;
 232}
 233
 234=back
 235
 236=head1 METHODS
 237
 238=over 4
 239
 240=item command ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] )
 241
 242=item command ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS... ], { Opt => Val ... } )
 243
 244Execute the given Git C<COMMAND> (specify it without the 'git-'
 245prefix), optionally with the specified extra C<ARGUMENTS>.
 246
 247The second more elaborate form can be used if you want to further adjust
 248the command execution. Currently, only one option is supported:
 249
 250B<STDERR> - How to deal with the command's error output. By default (C<undef>)
 251it is delivered to the caller's C<STDERR>. A false value (0 or '') will cause
 252it to be thrown away. If you want to process it, you can get it in a filehandle
 253you specify, but you must be extremely careful; if the error output is not
 254very short and you want to read it in the same process as where you called
 255C<command()>, you are set up for a nice deadlock!
 256
 257The method can be called without any instance or on a specified Git repository
 258(in that case the command will be run in the repository context).
 259
 260In scalar context, it returns all the command output in a single string
 261(verbatim).
 262
 263In array context, it returns an array containing lines printed to the
 264command's stdout (without trailing newlines).
 265
 266In both cases, the command's stdin and stderr are the same as the caller's.
 267
 268=cut
 269
 270sub command {
 271        my ($fh, $ctx) = command_output_pipe(@_);
 272
 273        if (not defined wantarray) {
 274                # Nothing to pepper the possible exception with.
 275                _cmd_close($ctx, $fh);
 276
 277        } elsif (not wantarray) {
 278                local $/;
 279                my $text = <$fh>;
 280                try {
 281                        _cmd_close($ctx, $fh);
 282                } catch Git::Error::Command with {
 283                        # Pepper with the output:
 284                        my $E = shift;
 285                        $E->{'-outputref'} = \$text;
 286                        throw $E;
 287                };
 288                return $text;
 289
 290        } else {
 291                my @lines = <$fh>;
 292                defined and chomp for @lines;
 293                try {
 294                        _cmd_close($ctx, $fh);
 295                } catch Git::Error::Command with {
 296                        my $E = shift;
 297                        $E->{'-outputref'} = \@lines;
 298                        throw $E;
 299                };
 300                return @lines;
 301        }
 302}
 303
 304
 305=item command_oneline ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] )
 306
 307=item command_oneline ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS... ], { Opt => Val ... } )
 308
 309Execute the given C<COMMAND> in the same way as command()
 310does but always return a scalar string containing the first line
 311of the command's standard output.
 312
 313=cut
 314
 315sub command_oneline {
 316        my ($fh, $ctx) = command_output_pipe(@_);
 317
 318        my $line = <$fh>;
 319        defined $line and chomp $line;
 320        try {
 321                _cmd_close($ctx, $fh);
 322        } catch Git::Error::Command with {
 323                # Pepper with the output:
 324                my $E = shift;
 325                $E->{'-outputref'} = \$line;
 326                throw $E;
 327        };
 328        return $line;
 329}
 330
 331
 332=item command_output_pipe ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] )
 333
 334=item command_output_pipe ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS... ], { Opt => Val ... } )
 335
 336Execute the given C<COMMAND> in the same way as command()
 337does but return a pipe filehandle from which the command output can be
 338read.
 339
 340The function can return C<($pipe, $ctx)> in array context.
 341See C<command_close_pipe()> for details.
 342
 343=cut
 344
 345sub command_output_pipe {
 346        _command_common_pipe('-|', @_);
 347}
 348
 349
 350=item command_input_pipe ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] )
 351
 352=item command_input_pipe ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS... ], { Opt => Val ... } )
 353
 354Execute the given C<COMMAND> in the same way as command_output_pipe()
 355does but return an input pipe filehandle instead; the command output
 356is not captured.
 357
 358The function can return C<($pipe, $ctx)> in array context.
 359See C<command_close_pipe()> for details.
 360
 361=cut
 362
 363sub command_input_pipe {
 364        _command_common_pipe('|-', @_);
 365}
 366
 367
 368=item command_close_pipe ( PIPE [, CTX ] )
 369
 370Close the C<PIPE> as returned from C<command_*_pipe()>, checking
 371whether the command finished successfully. The optional C<CTX> argument
 372is required if you want to see the command name in the error message,
 373and it is the second value returned by C<command_*_pipe()> when
 374called in array context. The call idiom is:
 375
 376        my ($fh, $ctx) = $r->command_output_pipe('status');
 377        while (<$fh>) { ... }
 378        $r->command_close_pipe($fh, $ctx);
 379
 380Note that you should not rely on whatever actually is in C<CTX>;
 381currently it is simply the command name but in future the context might
 382have more complicated structure.
 383
 384=cut
 385
 386sub command_close_pipe {
 387        my ($self, $fh, $ctx) = _maybe_self(@_);
 388        $ctx ||= '<unknown>';
 389        _cmd_close($ctx, $fh);
 390}
 391
 392=item command_bidi_pipe ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] )
 393
 394Execute the given C<COMMAND> in the same way as command_output_pipe()
 395does but return both an input pipe filehandle and an output pipe filehandle.
 396
 397The function will return C<($pid, $pipe_in, $pipe_out, $ctx)>.
 398See C<command_close_bidi_pipe()> for details.
 399
 400=cut
 401
 402sub command_bidi_pipe {
 403        my ($pid, $in, $out);
 404        my ($self) = _maybe_self(@_);
 405        local %ENV = %ENV;
 406        my $cwd_save = undef;
 407        if ($self) {
 408                shift;
 409                $cwd_save = cwd();
 410                _setup_git_cmd_env($self);
 411        }
 412        $pid = open2($in, $out, 'git', @_);
 413        chdir($cwd_save) if $cwd_save;
 414        return ($pid, $in, $out, join(' ', @_));
 415}
 416
 417=item command_close_bidi_pipe ( PID, PIPE_IN, PIPE_OUT [, CTX] )
 418
 419Close the C<PIPE_IN> and C<PIPE_OUT> as returned from C<command_bidi_pipe()>,
 420checking whether the command finished successfully. The optional C<CTX>
 421argument is required if you want to see the command name in the error message,
 422and it is the fourth value returned by C<command_bidi_pipe()>.  The call idiom
 423is:
 424
 425        my ($pid, $in, $out, $ctx) = $r->command_bidi_pipe('cat-file --batch-check');
 426        print $out "000000000\n";
 427        while (<$in>) { ... }
 428        $r->command_close_bidi_pipe($pid, $in, $out, $ctx);
 429
 430Note that you should not rely on whatever actually is in C<CTX>;
 431currently it is simply the command name but in future the context might
 432have more complicated structure.
 433
 434C<PIPE_IN> and C<PIPE_OUT> may be C<undef> if they have been closed prior to
 435calling this function.  This may be useful in a query-response type of
 436commands where caller first writes a query and later reads response, eg:
 437
 438        my ($pid, $in, $out, $ctx) = $r->command_bidi_pipe('cat-file --batch-check');
 439        print $out "000000000\n";
 440        close $out;
 441        while (<$in>) { ... }
 442        $r->command_close_bidi_pipe($pid, $in, undef, $ctx);
 443
 444This idiom may prevent potential dead locks caused by data sent to the output
 445pipe not being flushed and thus not reaching the executed command.
 446
 447=cut
 448
 449sub command_close_bidi_pipe {
 450        local $?;
 451        my ($self, $pid, $in, $out, $ctx) = _maybe_self(@_);
 452        _cmd_close($ctx, (grep { defined } ($in, $out)));
 453        waitpid $pid, 0;
 454        if ($? >> 8) {
 455                throw Git::Error::Command($ctx, $? >>8);
 456        }
 457}
 458
 459
 460=item command_noisy ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] )
 461
 462Execute the given C<COMMAND> in the same way as command() does but do not
 463capture the command output - the standard output is not redirected and goes
 464to the standard output of the caller application.
 465
 466While the method is called command_noisy(), you might want to as well use
 467it for the most silent Git commands which you know will never pollute your
 468stdout but you want to avoid the overhead of the pipe setup when calling them.
 469
 470The function returns only after the command has finished running.
 471
 472=cut
 473
 474sub command_noisy {
 475        my ($self, $cmd, @args) = _maybe_self(@_);
 476        _check_valid_cmd($cmd);
 477
 478        my $pid = fork;
 479        if (not defined $pid) {
 480                throw Error::Simple("fork failed: $!");
 481        } elsif ($pid == 0) {
 482                _cmd_exec($self, $cmd, @args);
 483        }
 484        if (waitpid($pid, 0) > 0 and $?>>8 != 0) {
 485                throw Git::Error::Command(join(' ', $cmd, @args), $? >> 8);
 486        }
 487}
 488
 489
 490=item version ()
 491
 492Return the Git version in use.
 493
 494=cut
 495
 496sub version {
 497        my $verstr = command_oneline('--version');
 498        $verstr =~ s/^git version //;
 499        $verstr;
 500}
 501
 502
 503=item exec_path ()
 504
 505Return path to the Git sub-command executables (the same as
 506C<git --exec-path>). Useful mostly only internally.
 507
 508=cut
 509
 510sub exec_path { command_oneline('--exec-path') }
 511
 512
 513=item html_path ()
 514
 515Return path to the Git html documentation (the same as
 516C<git --html-path>). Useful mostly only internally.
 517
 518=cut
 519
 520sub html_path { command_oneline('--html-path') }
 521
 522
 523=item get_tz_offset ( TIME )
 524
 525Return the time zone offset from GMT in the form +/-HHMM where HH is
 526the number of hours from GMT and MM is the number of minutes.  This is
 527the equivalent of what strftime("%z", ...) would provide on a GNU
 528platform.
 529
 530If TIME is not supplied, the current local time is used.
 531
 532=cut
 533
 534sub get_tz_offset {
 535        # some systems don't handle or mishandle %z, so be creative.
 536        my $t = shift || time;
 537        my @t = localtime($t);
 538        $t[5] += 1900;
 539        my $gm = timegm(@t);
 540        my $sign = qw( + + - )[ $gm <=> $t ];
 541        return sprintf("%s%02d%02d", $sign, (gmtime(abs($t - $gm)))[2,1]);
 542}
 543
 544=item get_record ( FILEHANDLE, INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR )
 545
 546Read one record from FILEHANDLE delimited by INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR,
 547removing any trailing INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR.
 548
 549=cut
 550
 551sub get_record {
 552        my ($fh, $rs) = @_;
 553        local $/ = $rs;
 554        my $rec = <$fh>;
 555        chomp $rec if defined $rs;
 556        $rec;
 557}
 558
 559=item prompt ( PROMPT , ISPASSWORD  )
 560
 561Query user C<PROMPT> and return answer from user.
 562
 563Honours GIT_ASKPASS and SSH_ASKPASS environment variables for querying
 564the user. If no *_ASKPASS variable is set or an error occoured,
 565the terminal is tried as a fallback.
 566If C<ISPASSWORD> is set and true, the terminal disables echo.
 567
 568=cut
 569
 570sub prompt {
 571        my ($prompt, $isPassword) = @_;
 572        my $ret;
 573        if (exists $ENV{'GIT_ASKPASS'}) {
 574                $ret = _prompt($ENV{'GIT_ASKPASS'}, $prompt);
 575        }
 576        if (!defined $ret && exists $ENV{'SSH_ASKPASS'}) {
 577                $ret = _prompt($ENV{'SSH_ASKPASS'}, $prompt);
 578        }
 579        if (!defined $ret) {
 580                print STDERR $prompt;
 581                STDERR->flush;
 582                if (defined $isPassword && $isPassword) {
 583                        require Term::ReadKey;
 584                        Term::ReadKey::ReadMode('noecho');
 585                        $ret = '';
 586                        while (defined(my $key = Term::ReadKey::ReadKey(0))) {
 587                                last if $key =~ /[\012\015]/; # \n\r
 588                                $ret .= $key;
 589                        }
 590                        Term::ReadKey::ReadMode('restore');
 591                        print STDERR "\n";
 592                        STDERR->flush;
 593                } else {
 594                        chomp($ret = <STDIN>);
 595                }
 596        }
 597        return $ret;
 598}
 599
 600sub _prompt {
 601        my ($askpass, $prompt) = @_;
 602        return unless length $askpass;
 603        $prompt =~ s/\n/ /g;
 604        my $ret;
 605        open my $fh, "-|", $askpass, $prompt or return;
 606        $ret = <$fh>;
 607        $ret =~ s/[\015\012]//g; # strip \r\n, chomp does not work on all systems (i.e. windows) as expected
 608        close ($fh);
 609        return $ret;
 610}
 611
 612=item repo_path ()
 613
 614Return path to the git repository. Must be called on a repository instance.
 615
 616=cut
 617
 618sub repo_path { $_[0]->{opts}->{Repository} }
 619
 620
 621=item wc_path ()
 622
 623Return path to the working copy. Must be called on a repository instance.
 624
 625=cut
 626
 627sub wc_path { $_[0]->{opts}->{WorkingCopy} }
 628
 629
 630=item wc_subdir ()
 631
 632Return path to the subdirectory inside of a working copy. Must be called
 633on a repository instance.
 634
 635=cut
 636
 637sub wc_subdir { $_[0]->{opts}->{WorkingSubdir} ||= '' }
 638
 639
 640=item wc_chdir ( SUBDIR )
 641
 642Change the working copy subdirectory to work within. The C<SUBDIR> is
 643relative to the working copy root directory (not the current subdirectory).
 644Must be called on a repository instance attached to a working copy
 645and the directory must exist.
 646
 647=cut
 648
 649sub wc_chdir {
 650        my ($self, $subdir) = @_;
 651        $self->wc_path()
 652                or throw Error::Simple("bare repository");
 653
 654        -d $self->wc_path().'/'.$subdir
 655                or throw Error::Simple("subdir not found: $subdir $!");
 656        # Of course we will not "hold" the subdirectory so anyone
 657        # can delete it now and we will never know. But at least we tried.
 658
 659        $self->{opts}->{WorkingSubdir} = $subdir;
 660}
 661
 662
 663=item config ( VARIABLE )
 664
 665Retrieve the configuration C<VARIABLE> in the same manner as C<config>
 666does. In scalar context requires the variable to be set only one time
 667(exception is thrown otherwise), in array context returns allows the
 668variable to be set multiple times and returns all the values.
 669
 670=cut
 671
 672sub config {
 673        return _config_common({}, @_);
 674}
 675
 676
 677=item config_bool ( VARIABLE )
 678
 679Retrieve the bool configuration C<VARIABLE>. The return value
 680is usable as a boolean in perl (and C<undef> if it's not defined,
 681of course).
 682
 683=cut
 684
 685sub config_bool {
 686        my $val = scalar _config_common({'kind' => '--bool'}, @_);
 687
 688        # Do not rewrite this as return (defined $val && $val eq 'true')
 689        # as some callers do care what kind of falsehood they receive.
 690        if (!defined $val) {
 691                return undef;
 692        } else {
 693                return $val eq 'true';
 694        }
 695}
 696
 697
 698=item config_path ( VARIABLE )
 699
 700Retrieve the path configuration C<VARIABLE>. The return value
 701is an expanded path or C<undef> if it's not defined.
 702
 703=cut
 704
 705sub config_path {
 706        return _config_common({'kind' => '--path'}, @_);
 707}
 708
 709
 710=item config_int ( VARIABLE )
 711
 712Retrieve the integer configuration C<VARIABLE>. The return value
 713is simple decimal number.  An optional value suffix of 'k', 'm',
 714or 'g' in the config file will cause the value to be multiplied
 715by 1024, 1048576 (1024^2), or 1073741824 (1024^3) prior to output.
 716It would return C<undef> if configuration variable is not defined.
 717
 718=cut
 719
 720sub config_int {
 721        return scalar _config_common({'kind' => '--int'}, @_);
 722}
 723
 724# Common subroutine to implement bulk of what the config* family of methods
 725# do. This currently wraps command('config') so it is not so fast.
 726sub _config_common {
 727        my ($opts) = shift @_;
 728        my ($self, $var) = _maybe_self(@_);
 729
 730        try {
 731                my @cmd = ('config', $opts->{'kind'} ? $opts->{'kind'} : ());
 732                unshift @cmd, $self if $self;
 733                if (wantarray) {
 734                        return command(@cmd, '--get-all', $var);
 735                } else {
 736                        return command_oneline(@cmd, '--get', $var);
 737                }
 738        } catch Git::Error::Command with {
 739                my $E = shift;
 740                if ($E->value() == 1) {
 741                        # Key not found.
 742                        return;
 743                } else {
 744                        throw $E;
 745                }
 746        };
 747}
 748
 749=item get_colorbool ( NAME )
 750
 751Finds if color should be used for NAMEd operation from the configuration,
 752and returns boolean (true for "use color", false for "do not use color").
 753
 754=cut
 755
 756sub get_colorbool {
 757        my ($self, $var) = @_;
 758        my $stdout_to_tty = (-t STDOUT) ? "true" : "false";
 759        my $use_color = $self->command_oneline('config', '--get-colorbool',
 760                                               $var, $stdout_to_tty);
 761        return ($use_color eq 'true');
 762}
 763
 764=item get_color ( SLOT, COLOR )
 765
 766Finds color for SLOT from the configuration, while defaulting to COLOR,
 767and returns the ANSI color escape sequence:
 768
 769        print $repo->get_color("color.interactive.prompt", "underline blue white");
 770        print "some text";
 771        print $repo->get_color("", "normal");
 772
 773=cut
 774
 775sub get_color {
 776        my ($self, $slot, $default) = @_;
 777        my $color = $self->command_oneline('config', '--get-color', $slot, $default);
 778        if (!defined $color) {
 779                $color = "";
 780        }
 781        return $color;
 782}
 783
 784=item remote_refs ( REPOSITORY [, GROUPS [, REFGLOBS ] ] )
 785
 786This function returns a hashref of refs stored in a given remote repository.
 787The hash is in the format C<refname =\> hash>. For tags, the C<refname> entry
 788contains the tag object while a C<refname^{}> entry gives the tagged objects.
 789
 790C<REPOSITORY> has the same meaning as the appropriate C<git-ls-remote>
 791argument; either a URL or a remote name (if called on a repository instance).
 792C<GROUPS> is an optional arrayref that can contain 'tags' to return all the
 793tags and/or 'heads' to return all the heads. C<REFGLOB> is an optional array
 794of strings containing a shell-like glob to further limit the refs returned in
 795the hash; the meaning is again the same as the appropriate C<git-ls-remote>
 796argument.
 797
 798This function may or may not be called on a repository instance. In the former
 799case, remote names as defined in the repository are recognized as repository
 800specifiers.
 801
 802=cut
 803
 804sub remote_refs {
 805        my ($self, $repo, $groups, $refglobs) = _maybe_self(@_);
 806        my @args;
 807        if (ref $groups eq 'ARRAY') {
 808                foreach (@$groups) {
 809                        if ($_ eq 'heads') {
 810                                push (@args, '--heads');
 811                        } elsif ($_ eq 'tags') {
 812                                push (@args, '--tags');
 813                        } else {
 814                                # Ignore unknown groups for future
 815                                # compatibility
 816                        }
 817                }
 818        }
 819        push (@args, $repo);
 820        if (ref $refglobs eq 'ARRAY') {
 821                push (@args, @$refglobs);
 822        }
 823
 824        my @self = $self ? ($self) : (); # Ultra trickery
 825        my ($fh, $ctx) = Git::command_output_pipe(@self, 'ls-remote', @args);
 826        my %refs;
 827        while (<$fh>) {
 828                chomp;
 829                my ($hash, $ref) = split(/\t/, $_, 2);
 830                $refs{$ref} = $hash;
 831        }
 832        Git::command_close_pipe(@self, $fh, $ctx);
 833        return \%refs;
 834}
 835
 836
 837=item ident ( TYPE | IDENTSTR )
 838
 839=item ident_person ( TYPE | IDENTSTR | IDENTARRAY )
 840
 841This suite of functions retrieves and parses ident information, as stored
 842in the commit and tag objects or produced by C<var GIT_type_IDENT> (thus
 843C<TYPE> can be either I<author> or I<committer>; case is insignificant).
 844
 845The C<ident> method retrieves the ident information from C<git var>
 846and either returns it as a scalar string or as an array with the fields parsed.
 847Alternatively, it can take a prepared ident string (e.g. from the commit
 848object) and just parse it.
 849
 850C<ident_person> returns the person part of the ident - name and email;
 851it can take the same arguments as C<ident> or the array returned by C<ident>.
 852
 853The synopsis is like:
 854
 855        my ($name, $email, $time_tz) = ident('author');
 856        "$name <$email>" eq ident_person('author');
 857        "$name <$email>" eq ident_person($name);
 858        $time_tz =~ /^\d+ [+-]\d{4}$/;
 859
 860=cut
 861
 862sub ident {
 863        my ($self, $type) = _maybe_self(@_);
 864        my $identstr;
 865        if (lc $type eq lc 'committer' or lc $type eq lc 'author') {
 866                my @cmd = ('var', 'GIT_'.uc($type).'_IDENT');
 867                unshift @cmd, $self if $self;
 868                $identstr = command_oneline(@cmd);
 869        } else {
 870                $identstr = $type;
 871        }
 872        if (wantarray) {
 873                return $identstr =~ /^(.*) <(.*)> (\d+ [+-]\d{4})$/;
 874        } else {
 875                return $identstr;
 876        }
 877}
 878
 879sub ident_person {
 880        my ($self, @ident) = _maybe_self(@_);
 881        $#ident == 0 and @ident = $self ? $self->ident($ident[0]) : ident($ident[0]);
 882        return "$ident[0] <$ident[1]>";
 883}
 884
 885=item hash_object ( TYPE, FILENAME )
 886
 887Compute the SHA1 object id of the given C<FILENAME> considering it is
 888of the C<TYPE> object type (C<blob>, C<commit>, C<tree>).
 889
 890The method can be called without any instance or on a specified Git repository,
 891it makes zero difference.
 892
 893The function returns the SHA1 hash.
 894
 895=cut
 896
 897# TODO: Support for passing FILEHANDLE instead of FILENAME
 898sub hash_object {
 899        my ($self, $type, $file) = _maybe_self(@_);
 900        command_oneline('hash-object', '-t', $type, $file);
 901}
 902
 903
 904=item hash_and_insert_object ( FILENAME )
 905
 906Compute the SHA1 object id of the given C<FILENAME> and add the object to the
 907object database.
 908
 909The function returns the SHA1 hash.
 910
 911=cut
 912
 913# TODO: Support for passing FILEHANDLE instead of FILENAME
 914sub hash_and_insert_object {
 915        my ($self, $filename) = @_;
 916
 917        carp "Bad filename \"$filename\"" if $filename =~ /[\r\n]/;
 918
 919        $self->_open_hash_and_insert_object_if_needed();
 920        my ($in, $out) = ($self->{hash_object_in}, $self->{hash_object_out});
 921
 922        unless (print $out $filename, "\n") {
 923                $self->_close_hash_and_insert_object();
 924                throw Error::Simple("out pipe went bad");
 925        }
 926
 927        chomp(my $hash = <$in>);
 928        unless (defined($hash)) {
 929                $self->_close_hash_and_insert_object();
 930                throw Error::Simple("in pipe went bad");
 931        }
 932
 933        return $hash;
 934}
 935
 936sub _open_hash_and_insert_object_if_needed {
 937        my ($self) = @_;
 938
 939        return if defined($self->{hash_object_pid});
 940
 941        ($self->{hash_object_pid}, $self->{hash_object_in},
 942         $self->{hash_object_out}, $self->{hash_object_ctx}) =
 943                $self->command_bidi_pipe(qw(hash-object -w --stdin-paths --no-filters));
 944}
 945
 946sub _close_hash_and_insert_object {
 947        my ($self) = @_;
 948
 949        return unless defined($self->{hash_object_pid});
 950
 951        my @vars = map { 'hash_object_' . $_ } qw(pid in out ctx);
 952
 953        command_close_bidi_pipe(@$self{@vars});
 954        delete @$self{@vars};
 955}
 956
 957=item cat_blob ( SHA1, FILEHANDLE )
 958
 959Prints the contents of the blob identified by C<SHA1> to C<FILEHANDLE> and
 960returns the number of bytes printed.
 961
 962=cut
 963
 964sub cat_blob {
 965        my ($self, $sha1, $fh) = @_;
 966
 967        $self->_open_cat_blob_if_needed();
 968        my ($in, $out) = ($self->{cat_blob_in}, $self->{cat_blob_out});
 969
 970        unless (print $out $sha1, "\n") {
 971                $self->_close_cat_blob();
 972                throw Error::Simple("out pipe went bad");
 973        }
 974
 975        my $description = <$in>;
 976        if ($description =~ / missing$/) {
 977                carp "$sha1 doesn't exist in the repository";
 978                return -1;
 979        }
 980
 981        if ($description !~ /^[0-9a-fA-F]{40} \S+ (\d+)$/) {
 982                carp "Unexpected result returned from git cat-file";
 983                return -1;
 984        }
 985
 986        my $size = $1;
 987
 988        my $blob;
 989        my $bytesLeft = $size;
 990
 991        while (1) {
 992                last unless $bytesLeft;
 993
 994                my $bytesToRead = $bytesLeft < 1024 ? $bytesLeft : 1024;
 995                my $read = read($in, $blob, $bytesToRead);
 996                unless (defined($read)) {
 997                        $self->_close_cat_blob();
 998                        throw Error::Simple("in pipe went bad");
 999                }
1000                unless (print $fh $blob) {
1001                        $self->_close_cat_blob();
1002                        throw Error::Simple("couldn't write to passed in filehandle");
1003                }
1004                $bytesLeft -= $read;
1005        }
1006
1007        # Skip past the trailing newline.
1008        my $newline;
1009        my $read = read($in, $newline, 1);
1010        unless (defined($read)) {
1011                $self->_close_cat_blob();
1012                throw Error::Simple("in pipe went bad");
1013        }
1014        unless ($read == 1 && $newline eq "\n") {
1015                $self->_close_cat_blob();
1016                throw Error::Simple("didn't find newline after blob");
1017        }
1018
1019        return $size;
1020}
1021
1022sub _open_cat_blob_if_needed {
1023        my ($self) = @_;
1024
1025        return if defined($self->{cat_blob_pid});
1026
1027        ($self->{cat_blob_pid}, $self->{cat_blob_in},
1028         $self->{cat_blob_out}, $self->{cat_blob_ctx}) =
1029                $self->command_bidi_pipe(qw(cat-file --batch));
1030}
1031
1032sub _close_cat_blob {
1033        my ($self) = @_;
1034
1035        return unless defined($self->{cat_blob_pid});
1036
1037        my @vars = map { 'cat_blob_' . $_ } qw(pid in out ctx);
1038
1039        command_close_bidi_pipe(@$self{@vars});
1040        delete @$self{@vars};
1041}
1042
1043
1044=item credential_read( FILEHANDLE )
1045
1046Reads credential key-value pairs from C<FILEHANDLE>.  Reading stops at EOF or
1047when an empty line is encountered.  Each line must be of the form C<key=value>
1048with a non-empty key.  Function returns hash with all read values.  Any white
1049space (other than new-line character) is preserved.
1050
1051=cut
1052
1053sub credential_read {
1054        my ($self, $reader) = _maybe_self(@_);
1055        my %credential;
1056        while (<$reader>) {
1057                chomp;
1058                if ($_ eq '') {
1059                        last;
1060                } elsif (!/^([^=]+)=(.*)$/) {
1061                        throw Error::Simple("unable to parse git credential data:\n$_");
1062                }
1063                $credential{$1} = $2;
1064        }
1065        return %credential;
1066}
1067
1068=item credential_write( FILEHANDLE, CREDENTIAL_HASHREF )
1069
1070Writes credential key-value pairs from hash referenced by
1071C<CREDENTIAL_HASHREF> to C<FILEHANDLE>.  Keys and values cannot contain
1072new-lines or NUL bytes characters, and key cannot contain equal signs nor be
1073empty (if they do Error::Simple is thrown).  Any white space is preserved.  If
1074value for a key is C<undef>, it will be skipped.
1075
1076If C<'url'> key exists it will be written first.  (All the other key-value
1077pairs are written in sorted order but you should not depend on that).  Once
1078all lines are written, an empty line is printed.
1079
1080=cut
1081
1082sub credential_write {
1083        my ($self, $writer, $credential) = _maybe_self(@_);
1084        my ($key, $value);
1085
1086        # Check if $credential is valid prior to writing anything
1087        while (($key, $value) = each %$credential) {
1088                if (!defined $key || !length $key) {
1089                        throw Error::Simple("credential key empty or undefined");
1090                } elsif ($key =~ /[=\n\0]/) {
1091                        throw Error::Simple("credential key contains invalid characters: $key");
1092                } elsif (defined $value && $value =~ /[\n\0]/) {
1093                        throw Error::Simple("credential value for key=$key contains invalid characters: $value");
1094                }
1095        }
1096
1097        for $key (sort {
1098                # url overwrites other fields, so it must come first
1099                return -1 if $a eq 'url';
1100                return  1 if $b eq 'url';
1101                return $a cmp $b;
1102        } keys %$credential) {
1103                if (defined $credential->{$key}) {
1104                        print $writer $key, '=', $credential->{$key}, "\n";
1105                }
1106        }
1107        print $writer "\n";
1108}
1109
1110sub _credential_run {
1111        my ($self, $credential, $op) = _maybe_self(@_);
1112        my ($pid, $reader, $writer, $ctx) = command_bidi_pipe('credential', $op);
1113
1114        credential_write $writer, $credential;
1115        close $writer;
1116
1117        if ($op eq "fill") {
1118                %$credential = credential_read $reader;
1119        }
1120        if (<$reader>) {
1121                throw Error::Simple("unexpected output from git credential $op response:\n$_\n");
1122        }
1123
1124        command_close_bidi_pipe($pid, $reader, undef, $ctx);
1125}
1126
1127=item credential( CREDENTIAL_HASHREF [, OPERATION ] )
1128
1129=item credential( CREDENTIAL_HASHREF, CODE )
1130
1131Executes C<git credential> for a given set of credentials and specified
1132operation.  In both forms C<CREDENTIAL_HASHREF> needs to be a reference to
1133a hash which stores credentials.  Under certain conditions the hash can
1134change.
1135
1136In the first form, C<OPERATION> can be C<'fill'>, C<'approve'> or C<'reject'>,
1137and function will execute corresponding C<git credential> sub-command.  If
1138it's omitted C<'fill'> is assumed.  In case of C<'fill'> the values stored in
1139C<CREDENTIAL_HASHREF> will be changed to the ones returned by the C<git
1140credential fill> command.  The usual usage would look something like:
1141
1142        my %cred = (
1143                'protocol' => 'https',
1144                'host' => 'example.com',
1145                'username' => 'bob'
1146        );
1147        Git::credential \%cred;
1148        if (try_to_authenticate($cred{'username'}, $cred{'password'})) {
1149                Git::credential \%cred, 'approve';
1150                ... do more stuff ...
1151        } else {
1152                Git::credential \%cred, 'reject';
1153        }
1154
1155In the second form, C<CODE> needs to be a reference to a subroutine.  The
1156function will execute C<git credential fill> to fill the provided credential
1157hash, then call C<CODE> with C<CREDENTIAL_HASHREF> as the sole argument.  If
1158C<CODE>'s return value is defined, the function will execute C<git credential
1159approve> (if return value yields true) or C<git credential reject> (if return
1160value is false).  If the return value is undef, nothing at all is executed;
1161this is useful, for example, if the credential could neither be verified nor
1162rejected due to an unrelated network error.  The return value is the same as
1163what C<CODE> returns.  With this form, the usage might look as follows:
1164
1165        if (Git::credential {
1166                'protocol' => 'https',
1167                'host' => 'example.com',
1168                'username' => 'bob'
1169        }, sub {
1170                my $cred = shift;
1171                return !!try_to_authenticate($cred->{'username'},
1172                                             $cred->{'password'});
1173        }) {
1174                ... do more stuff ...
1175        }
1176
1177=cut
1178
1179sub credential {
1180        my ($self, $credential, $op_or_code) = (_maybe_self(@_), 'fill');
1181
1182        if ('CODE' eq ref $op_or_code) {
1183                _credential_run $credential, 'fill';
1184                my $ret = $op_or_code->($credential);
1185                if (defined $ret) {
1186                        _credential_run $credential, $ret ? 'approve' : 'reject';
1187                }
1188                return $ret;
1189        } else {
1190                _credential_run $credential, $op_or_code;
1191        }
1192}
1193
1194{ # %TEMP_* Lexical Context
1195
1196my (%TEMP_FILEMAP, %TEMP_FILES);
1197
1198=item temp_acquire ( NAME )
1199
1200Attempts to retrieve the temporary file mapped to the string C<NAME>. If an
1201associated temp file has not been created this session or was closed, it is
1202created, cached, and set for autoflush and binmode.
1203
1204Internally locks the file mapped to C<NAME>. This lock must be released with
1205C<temp_release()> when the temp file is no longer needed. Subsequent attempts
1206to retrieve temporary files mapped to the same C<NAME> while still locked will
1207cause an error. This locking mechanism provides a weak guarantee and is not
1208threadsafe. It does provide some error checking to help prevent temp file refs
1209writing over one another.
1210
1211In general, the L<File::Handle> returned should not be closed by consumers as
1212it defeats the purpose of this caching mechanism. If you need to close the temp
1213file handle, then you should use L<File::Temp> or another temp file faculty
1214directly. If a handle is closed and then requested again, then a warning will
1215issue.
1216
1217=cut
1218
1219sub temp_acquire {
1220        my $temp_fd = _temp_cache(@_);
1221
1222        $TEMP_FILES{$temp_fd}{locked} = 1;
1223        $temp_fd;
1224}
1225
1226=item temp_is_locked ( NAME )
1227
1228Returns true if the internal lock created by a previous C<temp_acquire()>
1229call with C<NAME> is still in effect.
1230
1231When temp_acquire is called on a C<NAME>, it internally locks the temporary
1232file mapped to C<NAME>.  That lock will not be released until C<temp_release()>
1233is called with either the original C<NAME> or the L<File::Handle> that was
1234returned from the original call to temp_acquire.
1235
1236Subsequent attempts to call C<temp_acquire()> with the same C<NAME> will fail
1237unless there has been an intervening C<temp_release()> call for that C<NAME>
1238(or its corresponding L<File::Handle> that was returned by the original
1239C<temp_acquire()> call).
1240
1241If true is returned by C<temp_is_locked()> for a C<NAME>, an attempt to
1242C<temp_acquire()> the same C<NAME> will cause an error unless
1243C<temp_release> is first called on that C<NAME> (or its corresponding
1244L<File::Handle> that was returned by the original C<temp_acquire()> call).
1245
1246=cut
1247
1248sub temp_is_locked {
1249        my ($self, $name) = _maybe_self(@_);
1250        my $temp_fd = \$TEMP_FILEMAP{$name};
1251
1252        defined $$temp_fd && $$temp_fd->opened && $TEMP_FILES{$$temp_fd}{locked};
1253}
1254
1255=item temp_release ( NAME )
1256
1257=item temp_release ( FILEHANDLE )
1258
1259Releases a lock acquired through C<temp_acquire()>. Can be called either with
1260the C<NAME> mapping used when acquiring the temp file or with the C<FILEHANDLE>
1261referencing a locked temp file.
1262
1263Warns if an attempt is made to release a file that is not locked.
1264
1265The temp file will be truncated before being released. This can help to reduce
1266disk I/O where the system is smart enough to detect the truncation while data
1267is in the output buffers. Beware that after the temp file is released and
1268truncated, any operations on that file may fail miserably until it is
1269re-acquired. All contents are lost between each release and acquire mapped to
1270the same string.
1271
1272=cut
1273
1274sub temp_release {
1275        my ($self, $temp_fd, $trunc) = _maybe_self(@_);
1276
1277        if (exists $TEMP_FILEMAP{$temp_fd}) {
1278                $temp_fd = $TEMP_FILES{$temp_fd};
1279        }
1280        unless ($TEMP_FILES{$temp_fd}{locked}) {
1281                carp "Attempt to release temp file '",
1282                        $temp_fd, "' that has not been locked";
1283        }
1284        temp_reset($temp_fd) if $trunc and $temp_fd->opened;
1285
1286        $TEMP_FILES{$temp_fd}{locked} = 0;
1287        undef;
1288}
1289
1290sub _temp_cache {
1291        my ($self, $name) = _maybe_self(@_);
1292
1293        _verify_require();
1294
1295        my $temp_fd = \$TEMP_FILEMAP{$name};
1296        if (defined $$temp_fd and $$temp_fd->opened) {
1297                if ($TEMP_FILES{$$temp_fd}{locked}) {
1298                        throw Error::Simple("Temp file with moniker '" .
1299                                $name . "' already in use");
1300                }
1301        } else {
1302                if (defined $$temp_fd) {
1303                        # then we're here because of a closed handle.
1304                        carp "Temp file '", $name,
1305                                "' was closed. Opening replacement.";
1306                }
1307                my $fname;
1308
1309                my $tmpdir;
1310                if (defined $self) {
1311                        $tmpdir = $self->repo_path();
1312                }
1313
1314                my $n = $name;
1315                $n =~ s/\W/_/g; # no strange chars
1316
1317                ($$temp_fd, $fname) = File::Temp::tempfile(
1318                        "Git_${n}_XXXXXX", UNLINK => 1, DIR => $tmpdir,
1319                        ) or throw Error::Simple("couldn't open new temp file");
1320
1321                $$temp_fd->autoflush;
1322                binmode $$temp_fd;
1323                $TEMP_FILES{$$temp_fd}{fname} = $fname;
1324        }
1325        $$temp_fd;
1326}
1327
1328sub _verify_require {
1329        eval { require File::Temp; require File::Spec; };
1330        $@ and throw Error::Simple($@);
1331}
1332
1333=item temp_reset ( FILEHANDLE )
1334
1335Truncates and resets the position of the C<FILEHANDLE>.
1336
1337=cut
1338
1339sub temp_reset {
1340        my ($self, $temp_fd) = _maybe_self(@_);
1341
1342        truncate $temp_fd, 0
1343                or throw Error::Simple("couldn't truncate file");
1344        sysseek($temp_fd, 0, SEEK_SET) and seek($temp_fd, 0, SEEK_SET)
1345                or throw Error::Simple("couldn't seek to beginning of file");
1346        sysseek($temp_fd, 0, SEEK_CUR) == 0 and tell($temp_fd) == 0
1347                or throw Error::Simple("expected file position to be reset");
1348}
1349
1350=item temp_path ( NAME )
1351
1352=item temp_path ( FILEHANDLE )
1353
1354Returns the filename associated with the given tempfile.
1355
1356=cut
1357
1358sub temp_path {
1359        my ($self, $temp_fd) = _maybe_self(@_);
1360
1361        if (exists $TEMP_FILEMAP{$temp_fd}) {
1362                $temp_fd = $TEMP_FILEMAP{$temp_fd};
1363        }
1364        $TEMP_FILES{$temp_fd}{fname};
1365}
1366
1367sub END {
1368        unlink values %TEMP_FILEMAP if %TEMP_FILEMAP;
1369}
1370
1371} # %TEMP_* Lexical Context
1372
1373=item prefix_lines ( PREFIX, STRING [, STRING... ])
1374
1375Prefixes lines in C<STRING> with C<PREFIX>.
1376
1377=cut
1378
1379sub prefix_lines {
1380        my $prefix = shift;
1381        my $string = join("\n", @_);
1382        $string =~ s/^/$prefix/mg;
1383        return $string;
1384}
1385
1386=item unquote_path ( PATH )
1387
1388Unquote a quoted path containing c-escapes as returned by ls-files etc.
1389when not using -z or when parsing the output of diff -u.
1390
1391=cut
1392
1393{
1394        my %cquote_map = (
1395                "a" => chr(7),
1396                "b" => chr(8),
1397                "t" => chr(9),
1398                "n" => chr(10),
1399                "v" => chr(11),
1400                "f" => chr(12),
1401                "r" => chr(13),
1402                "\\" => "\\",
1403                "\042" => "\042",
1404        );
1405
1406        sub unquote_path {
1407                local ($_) = @_;
1408                my ($retval, $remainder);
1409                if (!/^\042(.*)\042$/) {
1410                        return $_;
1411                }
1412                ($_, $retval) = ($1, "");
1413                while (/^([^\\]*)\\(.*)$/) {
1414                        $remainder = $2;
1415                        $retval .= $1;
1416                        for ($remainder) {
1417                                if (/^([0-3][0-7][0-7])(.*)$/) {
1418                                        $retval .= chr(oct($1));
1419                                        $_ = $2;
1420                                        last;
1421                                }
1422                                if (/^([\\\042abtnvfr])(.*)$/) {
1423                                        $retval .= $cquote_map{$1};
1424                                        $_ = $2;
1425                                        last;
1426                                }
1427                                # This is malformed
1428                                throw Error::Simple("invalid quoted path $_[0]");
1429                        }
1430                        $_ = $remainder;
1431                }
1432                $retval .= $_;
1433                return $retval;
1434        }
1435}
1436
1437=item get_comment_line_char ( )
1438
1439Gets the core.commentchar configuration value.
1440The value falls-back to '#' if core.commentchar is set to 'auto'.
1441
1442=cut
1443
1444sub get_comment_line_char {
1445        my $comment_line_char = config("core.commentchar") || '#';
1446        $comment_line_char = '#' if ($comment_line_char eq 'auto');
1447        $comment_line_char = '#' if (length($comment_line_char) != 1);
1448        return $comment_line_char;
1449}
1450
1451=item comment_lines ( STRING [, STRING... ])
1452
1453Comments lines following core.commentchar configuration.
1454
1455=cut
1456
1457sub comment_lines {
1458        my $comment_line_char = get_comment_line_char;
1459        return prefix_lines("$comment_line_char ", @_);
1460}
1461
1462=back
1463
1464=head1 ERROR HANDLING
1465
1466All functions are supposed to throw Perl exceptions in case of errors.
1467See the L<Error> module on how to catch those. Most exceptions are mere
1468L<Error::Simple> instances.
1469
1470However, the C<command()>, C<command_oneline()> and C<command_noisy()>
1471functions suite can throw C<Git::Error::Command> exceptions as well: those are
1472thrown when the external command returns an error code and contain the error
1473code as well as access to the captured command's output. The exception class
1474provides the usual C<stringify> and C<value> (command's exit code) methods and
1475in addition also a C<cmd_output> method that returns either an array or a
1476string with the captured command output (depending on the original function
1477call context; C<command_noisy()> returns C<undef>) and $<cmdline> which
1478returns the command and its arguments (but without proper quoting).
1479
1480Note that the C<command_*_pipe()> functions cannot throw this exception since
1481it has no idea whether the command failed or not. You will only find out
1482at the time you C<close> the pipe; if you want to have that automated,
1483use C<command_close_pipe()>, which can throw the exception.
1484
1485=cut
1486
1487{
1488        package Git::Error::Command;
1489
1490        @Git::Error::Command::ISA = qw(Error);
1491
1492        sub new {
1493                my $self = shift;
1494                my $cmdline = '' . shift;
1495                my $value = 0 + shift;
1496                my $outputref = shift;
1497                my(@args) = ();
1498
1499                local $Error::Depth = $Error::Depth + 1;
1500
1501                push(@args, '-cmdline', $cmdline);
1502                push(@args, '-value', $value);
1503                push(@args, '-outputref', $outputref);
1504
1505                $self->SUPER::new(-text => 'command returned error', @args);
1506        }
1507
1508        sub stringify {
1509                my $self = shift;
1510                my $text = $self->SUPER::stringify;
1511                $self->cmdline() . ': ' . $text . ': ' . $self->value() . "\n";
1512        }
1513
1514        sub cmdline {
1515                my $self = shift;
1516                $self->{'-cmdline'};
1517        }
1518
1519        sub cmd_output {
1520                my $self = shift;
1521                my $ref = $self->{'-outputref'};
1522                defined $ref or undef;
1523                if (ref $ref eq 'ARRAY') {
1524                        return @$ref;
1525                } else { # SCALAR
1526                        return $$ref;
1527                }
1528        }
1529}
1530
1531=over 4
1532
1533=item git_cmd_try { CODE } ERRMSG
1534
1535This magical statement will automatically catch any C<Git::Error::Command>
1536exceptions thrown by C<CODE> and make your program die with C<ERRMSG>
1537on its lips; the message will have %s substituted for the command line
1538and %d for the exit status. This statement is useful mostly for producing
1539more user-friendly error messages.
1540
1541In case of no exception caught the statement returns C<CODE>'s return value.
1542
1543Note that this is the only auto-exported function.
1544
1545=cut
1546
1547sub git_cmd_try(&$) {
1548        my ($code, $errmsg) = @_;
1549        my @result;
1550        my $err;
1551        my $array = wantarray;
1552        try {
1553                if ($array) {
1554                        @result = &$code;
1555                } else {
1556                        $result[0] = &$code;
1557                }
1558        } catch Git::Error::Command with {
1559                my $E = shift;
1560                $err = $errmsg;
1561                $err =~ s/\%s/$E->cmdline()/ge;
1562                $err =~ s/\%d/$E->value()/ge;
1563                # We can't croak here since Error.pm would mangle
1564                # that to Error::Simple.
1565        };
1566        $err and croak $err;
1567        return $array ? @result : $result[0];
1568}
1569
1570
1571=back
1572
1573=head1 COPYRIGHT
1574
1575Copyright 2006 by Petr Baudis E<lt>pasky@suse.czE<gt>.
1576
1577This module is free software; it may be used, copied, modified
1578and distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public Licence,
1579either version 2, or (at your option) any later version.
1580
1581=cut
1582
1583
1584# Take raw method argument list and return ($obj, @args) in case
1585# the method was called upon an instance and (undef, @args) if
1586# it was called directly.
1587sub _maybe_self {
1588        UNIVERSAL::isa($_[0], 'Git') ? @_ : (undef, @_);
1589}
1590
1591# Check if the command id is something reasonable.
1592sub _check_valid_cmd {
1593        my ($cmd) = @_;
1594        $cmd =~ /^[a-z0-9A-Z_-]+$/ or throw Error::Simple("bad command: $cmd");
1595}
1596
1597# Common backend for the pipe creators.
1598sub _command_common_pipe {
1599        my $direction = shift;
1600        my ($self, @p) = _maybe_self(@_);
1601        my (%opts, $cmd, @args);
1602        if (ref $p[0]) {
1603                ($cmd, @args) = @{shift @p};
1604                %opts = ref $p[0] ? %{$p[0]} : @p;
1605        } else {
1606                ($cmd, @args) = @p;
1607        }
1608        _check_valid_cmd($cmd);
1609
1610        my $fh;
1611        if ($^O eq 'MSWin32') {
1612                # ActiveState Perl
1613                #defined $opts{STDERR} and
1614                #       warn 'ignoring STDERR option - running w/ ActiveState';
1615                $direction eq '-|' or
1616                        die 'input pipe for ActiveState not implemented';
1617                # the strange construction with *ACPIPE is just to
1618                # explain the tie below that we want to bind to
1619                # a handle class, not scalar. It is not known if
1620                # it is something specific to ActiveState Perl or
1621                # just a Perl quirk.
1622                tie (*ACPIPE, 'Git::activestate_pipe', $cmd, @args);
1623                $fh = *ACPIPE;
1624
1625        } else {
1626                my $pid = open($fh, $direction);
1627                if (not defined $pid) {
1628                        throw Error::Simple("open failed: $!");
1629                } elsif ($pid == 0) {
1630                        if ($opts{STDERR}) {
1631                                open (STDERR, '>&', $opts{STDERR})
1632                                        or die "dup failed: $!";
1633                        } elsif (defined $opts{STDERR}) {
1634                                open (STDERR, '>', '/dev/null')
1635                                        or die "opening /dev/null failed: $!";
1636                        }
1637                        _cmd_exec($self, $cmd, @args);
1638                }
1639        }
1640        return wantarray ? ($fh, join(' ', $cmd, @args)) : $fh;
1641}
1642
1643# When already in the subprocess, set up the appropriate state
1644# for the given repository and execute the git command.
1645sub _cmd_exec {
1646        my ($self, @args) = @_;
1647        _setup_git_cmd_env($self);
1648        _execv_git_cmd(@args);
1649        die qq[exec "@args" failed: $!];
1650}
1651
1652# set up the appropriate state for git command
1653sub _setup_git_cmd_env {
1654        my $self = shift;
1655        if ($self) {
1656                $self->repo_path() and $ENV{'GIT_DIR'} = $self->repo_path();
1657                $self->repo_path() and $self->wc_path()
1658                        and $ENV{'GIT_WORK_TREE'} = $self->wc_path();
1659                $self->wc_path() and chdir($self->wc_path());
1660                $self->wc_subdir() and chdir($self->wc_subdir());
1661        }
1662}
1663
1664# Execute the given Git command ($_[0]) with arguments ($_[1..])
1665# by searching for it at proper places.
1666sub _execv_git_cmd { exec('git', @_); }
1667
1668# Close pipe to a subprocess.
1669sub _cmd_close {
1670        my $ctx = shift @_;
1671        foreach my $fh (@_) {
1672                if (close $fh) {
1673                        # nop
1674                } elsif ($!) {
1675                        # It's just close, no point in fatalities
1676                        carp "error closing pipe: $!";
1677                } elsif ($? >> 8) {
1678                        # The caller should pepper this.
1679                        throw Git::Error::Command($ctx, $? >> 8);
1680                }
1681                # else we might e.g. closed a live stream; the command
1682                # dying of SIGPIPE would drive us here.
1683        }
1684}
1685
1686
1687sub DESTROY {
1688        my ($self) = @_;
1689        $self->_close_hash_and_insert_object();
1690        $self->_close_cat_blob();
1691}
1692
1693
1694# Pipe implementation for ActiveState Perl.
1695
1696package Git::activestate_pipe;
1697use strict;
1698
1699sub TIEHANDLE {
1700        my ($class, @params) = @_;
1701        # FIXME: This is probably horrible idea and the thing will explode
1702        # at the moment you give it arguments that require some quoting,
1703        # but I have no ActiveState clue... --pasky
1704        # Let's just hope ActiveState Perl does at least the quoting
1705        # correctly.
1706        my @data = qx{git @params};
1707        bless { i => 0, data => \@data }, $class;
1708}
1709
1710sub READLINE {
1711        my $self = shift;
1712        if ($self->{i} >= scalar @{$self->{data}}) {
1713                return undef;
1714        }
1715        my $i = $self->{i};
1716        if (wantarray) {
1717                $self->{i} = $#{$self->{'data'}} + 1;
1718                return splice(@{$self->{'data'}}, $i);
1719        }
1720        $self->{i} = $i + 1;
1721        return $self->{'data'}->[ $i ];
1722}
1723
1724sub CLOSE {
1725        my $self = shift;
1726        delete $self->{data};
1727        delete $self->{i};
1728}
1729
1730sub EOF {
1731        my $self = shift;
1732        return ($self->{i} >= scalar @{$self->{data}});
1733}
1734
1735
17361; # Famous last words