return NULL;
ext++;
if (!strcasecmp(ext, "zip"))
- return "zip";
+ return "--format=zip";
return NULL;
}
const char *exec = "git-upload-archive";
const char *output = NULL;
const char *remote = NULL;
- const char *format = NULL;
+ const char *format_option = NULL;
struct option local_opts[] = {
OPT_STRING('o', "output", &output, "file",
"write the archive to this file"),
"retrieve the archive from remote repository <repo>"),
OPT_STRING(0, "exec", &exec, "cmd",
"path to the remote git-upload-archive command"),
- OPT_STRING(0, "format", &format, "fmt", "archive format"),
OPT_END()
};
- char fmt_opt[32];
argc = parse_options(argc, argv, prefix, local_opts, NULL,
PARSE_OPT_KEEP_ALL);
if (output) {
create_output_file(output);
- if (!format)
- format = format_from_name(output);
+ format_option = format_from_name(output);
}
- if (format) {
- sprintf(fmt_opt, "--format=%s", format);
- /*
- * This is safe because either --format and/or --output must
- * have been given on the original command line if we get to
- * this point, and parse_options() must have eaten at least
- * one argument, i.e. we have enough room to append to argv[].
- */
- argv[argc++] = fmt_opt;
- argv[argc] = NULL;
+ /*
+ * We have enough room in argv[] to muck it in place, because
+ * --output must have been given on the original command line
+ * if we get to this point, and parse_options() must have eaten
+ * it, i.e. we can add back one element to the array.
+ *
+ * We add a fake --format option at the beginning, with the
+ * format inferred from our output filename. This way explicit
+ * --format options can override it, and the fake option is
+ * inserted before any "--" that might have been given.
+ */
+ if (format_option) {
+ memmove(argv + 2, argv + 1, sizeof(*argv) * argc);
+ argv[1] = format_option;
+ argv[++argc] = NULL;
}
if (remote)