* mh/object-code-cleanup:
sha1_file.c: document a bunch of functions defined in the file
sha1_file_name(): declare to return a const string
find_pack_entry(): document last_found_pack
replace_object: use struct members instead of an array
"git push" did not pay attention to branch.*.pushremote if it is
defined earlier than remote.pushdefault; the order of these two
variables in the configuration file should not matter, but it did by
mistake.
* jk/remote-pushremote-config-reading:
remote: handle pushremote config in any order
Tighten codepaths that parse timestamps in commit objects.
* jk/commit-dates-parsing-fix:
show_ident_date: fix tz range check
log: do not segfault on gmtime errors
log: handle integer overflow in timestamps
date: check date overflow against time_t
fsck: report integer overflow in author timestamps
t4212: test bogus timestamps with git-log
"git diff --external-diff" incorrectly fed the submodule directory
in the working tree to the external diff driver when it knew it is
the same as one of the versions being compared.
* tr/diff-submodule-no-reuse-worktree:
diff: do not reuse_worktree_file for submodules
"git reset" needs to refresh the index when working in a working
tree (it can also be used to match the index to the HEAD in an
otherwise bare repository), but it failed to set up the working
tree properly, causing GIT_WORK_TREE to be ignored.
* nd/reset-setup-worktree:
reset: optionally setup worktree and refresh index on --mixed
"git config" learned to read from the standard input when "-" is
given as the value to its "--file" parameter (attempting an
operation to update the configuration in the standard input of
course is rejected).
* ks/config-file-stdin:
config: teach "git config --file -" to read from the standard input
config: change git_config_with_options() interface
builtin/config.c: rename check_blob_write() -> check_write()
config: disallow relative include paths from blobs
* jk/janitorial-fixes:
open_istream(): do not dereference NULL in the error case
builtin/mv: don't use memory after free
utf8: use correct type for values in interval table
utf8: fix iconv error detection
notes-utils: handle boolean notes.rewritemode correctly
Uses of curl's "multi" interface and "easy" interface do not mix
well when we attempt to reuse outgoing connections. Teach the RPC
over http code, used in the smart HTTP transport, not to use the
"easy" interface.
* jk/http-no-curl-easy:
http: never use curl_easy_perform
Trailing whitespaces in .gitignore files, unless they are quoted for
fnmatch(3), e.g. "path\ ", are warned and ignored.
Strictly speaking, this is a backward incompatible change, but very
unlikely to bite any sane user and adjusting should be obvious and
easy.
* nd/gitignore-trailing-whitespace:
t0008: skip trailing space test on Windows
dir: ignore trailing spaces in exclude patterns
dir: warn about trailing spaces in exclude patterns
"git check-attr" when (trying to) work on a repository with a
working tree did not work well when the working tree was specified
via --work-tree (and obviously with --git-dir).
The command also works in a bare repository but it reads from the
(possibly stale, irrelevant and/or nonexistent) index, which may
need to be fixed to read from HEAD, but that is a completely
separate issue. As a related tangent to this separate issue, we
may want to also fix "check-ignore", which refuses to work in a
bare repository, to also operate in a bare one.
* jc/check-attr-honor-working-tree:
check-attr: move to the top of working tree when in non-bare repository
t0003: do not chdir the whole test process
The Windows API does not preserve file names with trailing spaces (and
dots), but rather strips them. Our tools (MSYS bash, git) base the POSIX
emulation on the Windows API. As a consequence, it is impossible for bash
on Windows to allocate a file whose name has trailing spaces, and for git
to stat such a file. Both operate on a file whose name has the spaces
stripped. Skip the test that needs such a file name.
Note that we do not use (another incarnation of) prerequisite FUNNYNAMES.
The reason is that FUNNYNAMES is intended to represent a property of the
file system. But the inability to have trailing spaces in a file name is
a property of the Windows API. The file system (NTFS) does not have this
limitation.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 1dca155fe3fa (log: handle integer overflow in
timestamps, 2014-02-24) tried to catch integer overflow
coming from strtol() on the timezone field by comparing against
LONG_MIN/LONG_MAX. However, the intermediate "tz" variable
is an "int", which means it can never be LONG_MAX on LP64
systems; we would truncate the output from strtol before the
comparison.
Clang's -Wtautological-constant-out-of-range-compare notices
this and rightly complains.
Let's instead store the result of strtol in a long, and then
compare it against INT_MIN/INT_MAX. This will catch overflow
from strtol, and also overflow when we pass the result as an
int to show_date.
Reported-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Teach combine-diff to honour the path-output-order imposed by
diffcore-order, and optimize how matching paths are found in
the N-way diffs made with parents.
* ks/combine-diff:
tests: add checking that combine-diff emits only correct paths
combine-diff: simplify intersect_paths() further
combine-diff: combine_diff_path.len is not needed anymore
combine-diff: optimize combine_diff_path sets intersection
diff test: add tests for combine-diff with orderfile
diffcore-order: export generic ordering interface
Add missing leading dash to proposed commands in french output when
using the command:
git branch --set-upstream remotename/branchname
and when upstream is gone
Signed-off-by: Sandy Carter <sandy.carter@savoirfairelinux.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Attempting to deepen a shallow repository by fetching over smart
HTTP transport failed in the protocol exchange, when no-done
extension was used. The fetching side waited for the list of
shallow boundary commits after the sending end stopped talking to
it.
* nd/http-fetch-shallow-fix:
t5537: move http tests out to t5539
fetch-pack: fix deepen shallow over smart http with no-done cap
protocol-capabilities.txt: document no-done
protocol-capabilities.txt: refer multi_ack_detailed back to pack-protocol.txt
pack-protocol.txt: clarify 'obj-id' in the last ACK after 'done'
test: rename http fetch and push test files
Borrow the bitmap index into packfiles from JGit to speed up
enumeration of objects involved in a commit range without having to
fully traverse the history.
* jk/pack-bitmap: (26 commits)
ewah: unconditionally ntohll ewah data
ewah: support platforms that require aligned reads
read-cache: use get_be32 instead of hand-rolled ntoh_l
block-sha1: factor out get_be and put_be wrappers
do not discard revindex when re-preparing packfiles
pack-bitmap: implement optional name_hash cache
t/perf: add tests for pack bitmaps
t: add basic bitmap functionality tests
count-objects: recognize .bitmap in garbage-checking
repack: consider bitmaps when performing repacks
repack: handle optional files created by pack-objects
repack: turn exts array into array-of-struct
repack: stop using magic number for ARRAY_SIZE(exts)
pack-objects: implement bitmap writing
rev-list: add bitmap mode to speed up object lists
pack-objects: use bitmaps when packing objects
pack-objects: split add_object_entry
pack-bitmap: add support for bitmap indexes
documentation: add documentation for the bitmap format
ewah: compressed bitmap implementation
...
* dk/blame-janitorial:
builtin/blame.c::find_copy_in_blob: no need to scan for region end
blame.c: prepare_lines should not call xrealloc for every line
builtin/blame.c::prepare_lines: fix allocation size of sb->lineno
builtin/blame.c: eliminate same_suspect()
builtin/blame.c: struct blame_entry does not need a prev link
Teach "--gpg-sign" option to many commands that create commits.
* bc/gpg-sign-everywhere:
pull: add the --gpg-sign option.
rebase: add the --gpg-sign option
rebase: parse options in stuck-long mode
rebase: don't try to match -M option
rebase: remove useless arguments check
am: add the --gpg-sign option
am: parse options in stuck-long mode
git-sh-setup.sh: add variable to use the stuck-long mode
cherry-pick, revert: add the --gpg-sign option
A handful of documentation updates, all trivially harmless.
* al/docs:
docs/git-blame: explain more clearly the example pickaxe use
docs/git-clone: clarify use of --no-hardlinks option
docs/git-remote: capitalize first word of initial blurb
docs/merge-strategies: remove hyphen from mis-merges
* ks/tree-diff-walk:
tree-walk: finally switch over tree descriptors to contain a pre-parsed entry
revision: convert to using diff_tree_sha1()
line-log: convert to using diff_tree_sha1()
tree-diff: convert diff_root_tree_sha1() to just call diff_tree_sha1 with old=NULL
tree-diff: allow diff_tree_sha1 to accept NULL sha1
All subcommands that take pathspecs mishandled an in-tree symbolic
link when given it as a full path from the root (which arguably is
a sick way to use pathspecs). "git ls-files -s $(pwd)/RelNotes" in
our tree is an easy reproduction recipe.
* mw/symlinks:
setup: don't dereference in-tree symlinks for absolute paths
setup: add abspath_part_inside_repo() function
t0060: add tests for prefix_path when path begins with work tree
t0060: add test for prefix_path when path == work tree
t0060: add test for prefix_path on symlinks via absolute paths
t3004: add test for ls-files on symlinks via absolute paths
Make sure 'submodule update' modes that do not detach HEADs can
be used more pleasantly by checking out a concrete branch when
cloning them to prime the well.
* wk/submodule-on-branch:
Documentation: describe 'submodule update --remote' use case
submodule: explicit local branch creation in module_clone
submodule: document module_clone arguments in comments
submodule: make 'checkout' update_module mode more explicit
include.path variable (or any variable that expects a path that can
use ~username expansion) in the configuration file is not a
boolean, but the code failed to check it.
* jk/config-path-include-fix:
handle_path_include: don't look at NULL value
expand_user_path: do not look at NULL path
Allow "git cmd path/", when the 'path' is where a submodule is
bound to the top-level working tree, to match 'path', despite the
extra and unnecessary trailing slash.
* nd/submodule-pathspec-ending-with-slash:
clean: use cache_name_is_other()
clean: replace match_pathspec() with dir_path_match()
pathspec: pass directory indicator to match_pathspec_item()
match_pathspec: match pathspec "foo/" against directory "foo"
dir.c: prepare match_pathspec_item for taking more flags
pathspec: rename match_pathspec_depth() to match_pathspec()
pathspec: convert some match_pathspec_depth() to dir_path_match()
pathspec: convert some match_pathspec_depth() to ce_path_match()
Allow "merge-recursive" to work in an empty (temporary) working
tree again when there are renames involved, correcting an old
regression in 1.7.7 era.
* bk/refresh-missing-ok-in-merge-recursive:
merge-recursive.c: tolerate missing files while refreshing index
read-cache.c: extend make_cache_entry refresh flag with options
read-cache.c: refactor --ignore-missing implementation
t3030-merge-recursive: test known breakage with empty work tree
Improvements to our hash table to get it to meet the needs of the
msysgit fscache project, with some nice performance improvements.
* kb/fast-hashmap:
name-hash: retire unused index_name_exists()
hashmap.h: use 'unsigned int' for hash-codes everywhere
test-hashmap.c: drop unnecessary #includes
.gitignore: test-hashmap is a generated file
read-cache.c: fix memory leaks caused by removed cache entries
builtin/update-index.c: cleanup update_one
fix 'git update-index --verbose --again' output
remove old hash.[ch] implementation
name-hash.c: remove cache entries instead of marking them CE_UNHASHED
name-hash.c: use new hash map implementation for cache entries
name-hash.c: remove unreferenced directory entries
name-hash.c: use new hash map implementation for directories
diffcore-rename.c: use new hash map implementation
diffcore-rename.c: simplify finding exact renames
diffcore-rename.c: move code around to prepare for the next patch
buitin/describe.c: use new hash map implementation
add a hashtable implementation that supports O(1) removal
submodule: don't access the .gitmodules cache entry after removing it
Introduce commit.gpgsign configuration variable to force every
commit to be GPG signed. The variable cannot be overriden from the
command line of some of the commands that create commits except for
"git commit" and "git commit-tree", but I am not convinced that it
is a good idea to sprinkle support for --no-gpg-sign everywhere,
which in turn means that this configuration variable may not be
such a good idea.
* nv/commit-gpgsign-config:
test the commit.gpgsign config option
commit-tree: add and document --no-gpg-sign
commit-tree: add the commit.gpgsign option to sign all commits
db5360f3f496 (name-hash: refactor polymorphic index_name_exists();
2013-09-17) split index_name_exists() into index_file_exists() and
index_dir_exists() but retained index_name_exists() as a thin wrapper
to avoid disturbing possible in-flight topics. Since this change
landed in 'master' some time ago and there are no in-flight topics
referencing index_name_exists(), retire it.
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Document how to override commit.gpgsign configuration that is set to
true per "git commit" invocation (parse-options machinery lets us
say "--no-gpg-sign" to do so).
"git commit-tree" does not use parse-options, so manually add the
corresponding option for now.
commit-tree: add the commit.gpgsign option to sign all commits
If you want to GPG sign all your commits, you have to add the -S option
all the time. The commit.gpgsign config option allows to sign all
commits automatically.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When QUICK is set (i.e. with --quiet) we try to do as little work as
possible, stopping after seeing the first change. stat-dirty is
considered a "change" but it may turn out not, if no actual content is
changed. The actual content test is performed too late in the process
and the shortcut may be taken prematurely, leading to incorrect return
code.
Assume we do "git diff --quiet". If we have a stat-dirty file "a" and
a really dirty file "b". We break the loop in run_diff_files() and
stop after "a" because we have got a "change". Later in
diffcore_skip_stat_unmatch() we find out "a" is actually not
changed. But there's nothing else in the diff queue, we incorrectly
declare "no change", ignoring the fact that "b" is changed.
This also happens to "git diff --quiet HEAD" when it hits
diff_can_quit_early() in oneway_diff().
This patch does the content test earlier in order to keep going if "a"
is unchanged. The test result is cached so that when
diffcore_skip_stat_unmatch() is done in the end, we spend no cycles on
re-testing "a".
Reported-by: IWAMOTO Toshihiro <iwamoto@valinux.co.jp> Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
tests: add checking that combine-diff emits only correct paths
where "correct paths" stands for paths that are different to all
parents.
Up until now, we were testing combined diff only on one file, or on
several files which were all different (t4038-diff-combined.sh).
As recent thinko in "simplify intersect_paths() further" showed, and
also, since we are going to rework code for finding paths different to
all parents, lets write at least basic tests.
Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
I actually wish more people understood the really core low-level
kind of coding. Not big, complex stuff like the lockless name
lookup, but simply good use of pointers-to-pointers etc. For
example, I've seen too many people who delete a singly-linked
list entry by keeping track of the "prev" entry, and then to
delete the entry, doing something like
if (prev)
prev->next = entry->next;
else
list_head = entry->next;
and whenever I see code like that, I just go "This person
doesn't understand pointers". And it's sadly quite common.
People who understand pointers just use a "pointer to the entry
pointer", and initialize that with the address of the
list_head. And then as they traverse the list, they can remove
the entry without using any conditionals, by just doing a "*pp =
entry->next".
Applying that simplification lets us lose 7 lines from this function
even while adding 2 lines of comment.
I was tempted to squash this into the original commit, but because
the benchmarking described in the commit log is without this
simplification, I decided to keep it a separate follow-up patch.
combine-diff: combine_diff_path.len is not needed anymore
The field was used in order to speed-up name comparison and also to
mark removed paths by setting it to 0.
Because the updated code does significantly less strcmp and also
just removes paths from the list and free right after we know a path
will not be needed, it is not needed anymore.
Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When generating combined diff, for each commit, we intersect diff
paths from diff(parent_0,commit) to diff(parent_i,commit) comparing
all paths pairs, i.e. doing it the quadratic way. That is correct,
but could be optimized.
Paths come from trees in sorted (= tree) order, and so does diff_tree()
emits resulting paths in that order too. Now if we look at diffcore
transformations, all of them, except diffcore_order, preserve resulting
path ordering:
- skip_stat_unmatch, grep, pickaxe, filter
-- just skip elements -> order stays preserved
- break -- just breaks diff for a path, adding path
dup after the path -> order stays preserved
So only diffcore_order changes diff paths ordering.
But diffcore_order meaning affects only presentation - i.e. only how to
show the diff, so we could do all the internal computations without
paths reordering, and order only resultant paths set. This is faster,
since, if we know two paths sets are all ordered, their intersection
could be done in linear time.
This patch does just that.
Timings for `git log --raw --no-abbrev --no-renames` without `-c` ("git log")
and with `-c` ("git log -c") before and after the patch are as follows:
linux.git v3.10..v3.11
log log -c
before 1.9s 20.4s
after 1.9s 16.6s
navy.git (private repo)
log log -c
before 0.83s 15.6s
after 0.83s 2.1s
P.S.
I think linux.git case is sped up not so much as the second one, since
in navy.git, there are more exotic (subtree, etc) merges.
P.P.S.
My tracing showed that the rest of the time (16.6s vs 1.9s) is usually
spent in computing huge diffs from commit to second parent. Will try to
deal with it, if I'll have time.
P.P.P.S.
For combine_diff_path, ->len is not needed anymore - will remove it in
the next noisy cleanup path, to maintain good signal/noise ratio here.
Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
diff test: add tests for combine-diff with orderfile
In the next patch combine-diff will have special code-path for taking
orderfile into account. Prepare for making changes by introducing
coverage tests for that case.
Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
diffcore_order() interface only accepts a queue of `struct
diff_filepair`.
In the next patches, we'll want to order `struct combine_diff_path`
by path, so let's first rework diffcore-order to also provide
generic low-level interface for ordering arbitrary objects, provided
they have path accessors.
The new interface is:
- `struct obj_order` for describing objects to ordering routine, and
- order_objects() for actually doing the ordering work.
Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
tree-walk: finally switch over tree descriptors to contain a pre-parsed entry
This continues 4651ece8 (Switch over tree descriptors to contain a
pre-parsed entry) and moves the only rest computational part
mode = canon_mode(mode)
from tree_entry_extract() to tree entry decode phase - to
decode_tree_entry().
The reason to do it, is that canon_mode() is at least 2 conditional
jumps for regular files, and that could be noticeable should canon_mode()
be invoked several times.
That does not matter for current Git codebase, where typical tree
traversal is
i.e. we do t -> sha1,path.mode "extraction" only once per entry. In such
cases, it does not matter performance-wise, where that mode
canonicalization is done - either once in tree_entry_extract(), or once
in decode_tree_entry() called by update_tree_entry() - it is
approximately the same.
But for future code, which could need to work with several tree_desc's
in parallel, it could be handy to operate on tree_desc descriptors, and
do "extracts" only when needed, or at all, access only relevant part of
it through structure fields directly.
And for such situations, having canon_mode() be done once in decode
phase is better - we won't need to pay the performance price of 2 extra
conditional jumps on every t->mode access.
So let's move mode canonicalization to decode_tree_entry(). That was the
final bit. Now after tree entry is decoded, it is fully ready and could
be accessed either directly via field, or through tree_entry_extract()
which this time got really "totally trivial".
Signed-off-by: Kirill Smelkov <kirr@mns.spb.ru> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
clean: replace match_pathspec() with dir_path_match()
This instance was left out when many match_pathspec() call sites that
take input from dir_entry were converted to dir_path_match() because
it passed a path with the trailing slash stripped out to match_pathspec()
while the others did not. Stripping for all call sites back then would
be a regression because match_pathspec() did not know how to match
pathspec foo/ against _directory_ foo (the stripped version of path
"foo/").
match_pathspec() knows how to do it now. And dir_path_match() strips
the trailing slash also. Use the new function, because the stripping
code is removed in the next patch.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
pathspec: pass directory indicator to match_pathspec_item()
This patch activates the DO_MATCH_DIRECTORY code in m_p_i(), which
makes "git diff HEAD submodule/" and "git diff HEAD submodule" produce
the same output. Previously only the version without trailing slash
returns the difference (if any).
That's the effect of new ce_path_match(). dir_path_match() is not
executed by the new tests. And it should not introduce regressions.
Previously if path "dir/" is passed in with pathspec "dir/", they
obviously match. With new dir_path_match(), the path becomes
_directory_ "dir" vs pathspec "dir/", which is not executed by the old
code path in m_p_i(). The new code path is executed and produces the
same result.
The other case is pathspec "dir" and path "dir/" is now turned to
"dir" (with DO_MATCH_DIRECTORY). Still the same result before or after
the patch.
So why change? Because of the next patch about clean.c.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
match_pathspec: match pathspec "foo/" against directory "foo"
Currently we do support matching pathspec "foo/" against directory
"foo". That is because match_pathspec() has no way to tell "foo" is a
directory and matching "foo/" against _file_ "foo" is wrong.
The callers can now tell match_pathspec if "foo" is a directory, we
could make an exception for this case. Code is not executed though
because no callers pass the flag yet.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
pathspec: rename match_pathspec_depth() to match_pathspec()
A long time ago, for some reason I was not happy with
match_pathspec(). I created a better version, match_pathspec_depth()
that was suppose to replace match_pathspec()
eventually. match_pathspec() has finally been gone since 6 months
ago. Use the shorter name for match_pathspec_depth().
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Documentation: describe 'submodule update --remote' use case
Make it clear that there is no implicit floating going on; --remote
lets you explicitly integrate the upstream branch in your current
HEAD (just like running 'git pull' in the submodule). The only
distinction with the current 'git pull' is the config location and
setting used for the upstream branch, which is hopefully clear now.
Signed-off-by: W. Trevor King <wking@tremily.us> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
submodule: explicit local branch creation in module_clone
The previous code only checked out branches in cmd_add. This commit
moves the branch-checkout logic into module_clone, where it can be
shared by cmd_add and cmd_update. I also update the initial checkout
command to use 'reset' to preserve branches setup during module_clone.
With this change, folks cloning submodules for the first time via:
$ git submodule update ...
will get a local branch instead of a detached HEAD, unless they are
using the default checkout-mode updates. This is a change from the
previous situation where cmd_update always used checkout-mode logic
(regardless of the requested update mode) for updates that triggered
an initial clone, which always resulted in a detached HEAD.
This commit does not change the logic for updates after the initial
clone, which will continue to create detached HEADs for checkout-mode
updates, and integrate remote work with the local HEAD (detached or
not) in other modes.
The motivation for the change is that developers doing local work
inside the submodule are likely to select a non-checkout-mode for
updates so their local work is integrated with upstream work.
Developers who are not doing local submodule work stick with
checkout-mode updates so any apparently local work is blown away
during updates. For example, if upstream rolls back the remote branch
or gitlinked commit to an earlier version, the checkout-mode developer
wants their old submodule checkout to be rolled back as well, instead
of getting a no-op merge/rebase with the rolled-back reference.
By using the update mode to distinguish submodule developers from
black-box submodule consumers, we can setup local branches for the
developers who will want local branches, and stick with detached HEADs
for the developers that don't care.
Testing
=======
In t7406, just-cloned checkouts now update to the gitlinked hash with
'reset', to preserve the local branch for situations where we're not
on a detached HEAD.
I also added explicit tests to t7406 for HEAD attachement after
cloning updates, showing that it depends on their update mode:
* Checkout-mode updates get detached HEADs
* Everyone else gets a local branch, matching the configured
submodule.<name>.branch and defaulting to master.
The 'initial-setup' tag makes it easy to reset the superproject to a
known state, as several earlier tests commit to submodules and commit
the changed gitlinks to the superproject, but don't push the new
submodule commits to the upstream subprojects. This makes it
impossible to checkout the current super master, because it references
submodule commits that don't exist in the upstream subprojects. For a
specific example, see the tests that currently generate the
'two_new_submodule_commits' commits.
Documentation
=============
I updated the docs to describe the 'submodule update' modes in detail.
The old documentation did not distinguish between cloning and
non-cloning updates and lacked clarity on which operations would lead
to detached HEADs, and which would not. The new documentation
addresses these issues while updating the docs to reflect the changes
introduced by this commit's explicit local branch creation in
module_clone.
I also add '--checkout' to the usage summary and group the update-mode
options into a single set.
Signed-off-by: W. Trevor King <wking@tremily.us> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
submodule: make 'checkout' update_module mode more explicit
This avoids the current awkwardness of having either '' or 'checkout'
for checkout-mode updates, which makes testing for checkout-mode
updates (or non-checkout-mode updates) easier.
Signed-off-by: W. Trevor King <wking@tremily.us> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Per Documentation/CodingGuidelines most C files in git start with
a #include of git-compat-util.h or another header file that includes
it, such as cache.h or builtin.h. This file doesn't need anything
beyond "git-compat-util.h", so use that.
Remove a #include of the system header <stdio.h> since it is already
included by "git-compat-util.h".
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
blame.c: prepare_lines should not call xrealloc for every line
Making a single preparation run for counting the lines will avoid memory
fragmentation. Also, fix the allocated memory size which was wrong
when sizeof(int *) != sizeof(int), and would have been too small
for sizeof(int *) < sizeof(int), admittedly unlikely.
Signed-off-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since the origin pointers are "interned" and reference-counted, comparing
the pointers rather than the content is enough. The only uninterned
origins are cached values kept in commit->util, but same_suspect is not
called on them.
Signed-off-by: David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
merge-recursive.c: tolerate missing files while refreshing index
Teach add_cacheinfo to tell make_cache_entry to skip refreshing stat
information when a file is missing from the work tree. We do not want
the index to be stat-dirty after the merge but also do not want to fail
when a file happens to be missing.
This fixes the 'merge-recursive w/ empty work tree - ours has rename'
case in t3030-merge-recursive.
Suggested-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
read-cache.c: extend make_cache_entry refresh flag with options
Convert the make_cache_entry boolean 'refresh' argument to a more
general 'refresh_options' argument. Pass the value through to the
underlying refresh_cache_ent call. Add option CE_MATCH_REFRESH to
enable stat refresh. Update call sites to use the new signature.
Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Move lstat ENOENT handling from refresh_index to refresh_cache_ent and
activate it with a new CE_MATCH_IGNORE_MISSING option. This will allow
other call paths into refresh_cache_ent to use the feature.
Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t3030-merge-recursive: test known breakage with empty work tree
Sometimes when working with a large repository it can be useful to try
out a merge and only check out conflicting files to disk (for example as
a speed optimization on a server). Until v1.7.7-rc1~28^2~20
(merge-recursive: When we detect we can skip an update, actually skip
it, 2011-08-11), it was possible to do so with the following idiom:
# Prepare a temporary index and empty work tree.
GIT_INDEX_FILE="$PWD/tmp-$$-index" &&
export GIT_INDEX_FILE &&
GIT_WORK_TREE="$PWD/tmp-$$-work" &&
export GIT_WORK_TREE &&
mkdir "$GIT_WORK_TREE" &&
# Convince the index that our side is on disk.
git read-tree -i -m $ours &&
git update-index --ignore-missing --refresh &&
# Merge their side into our side.
bases=$(git merge-base --all $ours $theirs) &&
git merge-recursive $bases -- $ours $theirs &&
tree=$(git write-tree)
Nowadays, that still works and the exit status is the same, but
merge-recursive produces a diagnostic if "our" side renamed a file:
error: addinfo_cache failed for path 'dst'
Add a test to document this regression.
Signed-off-by: Brad King <brad.king@kitware.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It is not obvious when looking at a new command what hooks will affect
it. Add a HOOKS section to the git-am(1) page, imitating
git-commit(1), to make it easier for people to discover e.g. the
applypatch-msg hook that can implement a custom subject-mangling
strategy (e.g., removing a "bug #nnnn:" prefix introduced by a bug
tracker).
Reported-by: Phillip Susi <psusi@ubuntu.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The remote we push can be defined either by
remote.pushdefault or by branch.*.pushremote for the current
branch. The order in which they appear in the config file
should not matter to precedence (which should be to prefer
the branch-specific config).
The current code parses the config linearly and uses a
single string to store both values, overwriting any
previous value. Thus, config like:
[branch "master"]
pushremote = foo
[remote]
pushdefault = bar
erroneously ends up pushing to "bar" from the master branch.
We can fix this by storing both values and resolving the
correct value after all config is read.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Many code paths assume that show_date and show_ident_date
cannot return NULL. For the most part, we handle missing or
corrupt timestamps by showing the epoch time t=0.
However, we might still return NULL if gmtime rejects the
time_t we feed it, resulting in a segfault. Let's catch this
case and just format t=0.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If an ident line has a ridiculous date value like (2^64)+1,
we currently just pass ULONG_MAX along to the date code,
which can produce nonsensical dates.
On systems with a signed long time_t (e.g., 64-bit glibc
systems), this actually doesn't end up too bad. The
ULONG_MAX is converted to -1, we apply the timezone field to
that, and the result ends up somewhere between Dec 31, 1969
and Jan 1, 1970.
However, there is still a few good reasons to detect the
overflow explicitly:
1. On systems where "unsigned long" is smaller than
time_t, we get a nonsensical date in the future.
2. Even where it would produce "Dec 31, 1969", it's easier
to recognize "midnight Jan 1" as a consistent sentinel
value for "we could not parse this".
3. Values which do not overflow strtoul but do overflow a
signed time_t produce nonsensical values in the past.
For example, on a 64-bit system with a signed long
time_t, a timestamp of 18446744073000000000 produces a
date in 1947.
We also recognize overflow in the timezone field, which
could produce nonsensical results. In this case we show the
parsed date, but in UTC.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When we check whether a timestamp has overflowed, we check
only against ULONG_MAX, meaning that strtoul has overflowed.
However, we also feed these timestamps to system functions
like gmtime, which expect a time_t. On many systems, time_t
is actually smaller than "unsigned long" (e.g., because it
is signed), and we would overflow when using these
functions. We don't know the actual size or signedness of
time_t, but we can easily check for truncation with a simple
assignment.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
fsck: report integer overflow in author timestamps
When we check commit objects, we complain if commit->date is
ULONG_MAX, which is an indication that we saw integer
overflow when parsing it. However, we do not do any check at
all for author lines, which also contain a timestamp.
Let's actually check the timestamps on each ident line
with strtoul. This catches both author and committer lines,
and we can get rid of the now-redundant commit->date check.
Note that like the existing check, we compare only against
ULONG_MAX. Now that we are calling strtoul at the site of
the check, we could be slightly more careful and also check
that errno is set to ERANGE. However, this will make further
refactoring in future patches a little harder, and it
doesn't really matter in practice.
For 32-bit systems, one would have to create a commit at the
exact wrong second in 2038. But by the time we get close to
that, all systems will hopefully have moved to 64-bit (and
if they haven't, they have a real problem one second later).
For 64-bit systems, by the time we get close to ULONG_MAX,
all systems will hopefully have been consumed in the fiery
wrath of our expanding Sun.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When t4212 was originally added by 9dbe7c3d (pretty: handle
broken commit headers gracefully, 2013-04-17), it tested our
handling of commits with broken ident lines in which the
timestamps could not be parsed. It does so using a bogus line
like "Name <email>-<> 1234 -0000", because that simulates an
error that was seen in the wild.
Later, 03818a4 (split_ident: parse timestamp from end of
line, 2013-10-14) made our parser smart enough to actually
find the timestamp on such a line, and t4212 was adjusted to
match. While it's nice that we handle this real-world case,
this meant that we were not actually testing the
bogus-timestamp case anymore.
This patch adds a test with a totally incomprehensible
timestamp to make sure we are testing the code path.
Note that the behavior is slightly different between regular log
output and "--format=%ad". In the former case, we produce a
sentinel value and in the latter, we produce an empty
string. While at first this seems unnecessarily
inconsistent, it matches the original behavior given by 9dbe7c3d.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>