* sb/branch-attributes:
Add test for the default merges in fetch.
fetch: get the remote branches to merge from the branch properties
Add t5510 to test per branch configuration affecting git-fetch.
Fetch: default remote repository from branch properties
This makes --whitespace={warn,error,strip} option to also notice
the leading whitespace errors in addition to the trailing
whitespace errors. Spaces that are followed by a tab in indent
are detected as errors, and --whitespace=strip option fixes them.
We ought to handle anything in filenames and I actually see no reason why
we don't, modulo very little missing escaping that this patch hopefully
also fixes.
I have also made esc_param() escape [?=&;]. Not escaping [&;] was downright
buggy and [?=] just feels better escaped. ;-) YMMV.
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Seriously, is anyone still using this thing? It's collecting dust and
blocking the name for something potentially useful like a tool for
user-friendly marking of resolved conflicts or resolving index conflicts.
We've loved you when Git was young, now thank you and please go away. ;-)
This makes git-resolve.sh print a big deprecation warning and sleep a bit
for extra annoyance. It should be removed completely after the next release.
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This patch removes Git.xs from the repository for the time being. This
should hopefully enable Git.pm to finally make its way to master.
Git.xs is not going away forever. When the Git libification makes some
progress, it will hopefully return (but most likely as an optional
component, due to the portability woes) since the performance boosts are
really important for applications like Gitweb or Cogito. It needs to go
away now since it is not really reliable in case you use it for several
repositories in the scope of a single process, and that is not possible
to fix without some either very ugly or very intrusive core changes.
Rest in peace. (While you can.)
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
git-zip-tree can be safely removed because it was never part of a formal
release. This patch makes 'git-archive --format=zip' the one and only git
ZIP file creation command.
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Those cleanups are mainly to set the table for the support of deltas
with base objects referenced by offsets instead of sha1. This means
that many pack lookup functions are converted to take a pack/offset
tuple instead of a sha1.
This eliminates many struct pack_entry usages since this structure
carried redundent information in many cases, and it increased stack
footprint needlessly for a couple recursively called functions that used
to declare a local copy of it for every recursion loop.
In the process, packed_object_info_detail() has been reorganized as well
so to look much saner and more amenable to deltas with offset support.
Finally the appropriate adjustments have been made to functions that
depend on the above changes. But there is no functionality changes yet
simply some code refactoring at this point.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@cam.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
git-svnimport: Parse log message for Signed-off-by: lines
This add '-S' option. When specified svn-import will try to parse
commit message for 'Signed-off-by: ...' line, and if found will use
the name and email address extracted at first occurrence as this commit
author name and author email address. Committer name and email are
extracted in usual way.
Signed-off-by: Sasha Khapyorsky <sashak@voltaire.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Based on talk on the IRC with Junio some evenings ago, I've updated the
path showing in tree view to look better and sent updated patches
privately, but it seems the old version ended up being used, so here's
the new one again.
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Navigation bars in various views were empty or missed important items that
should have been there, e.g. getting a snapshot in tree view or log of
ancestry in commit view...
This feeble patch attempts to consolidate that.
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
gitweb: Link (HEAD) tree for each project from projects list
Current projects list is oriented on easily getting "what's new"
information. But when already using gitweb as an interface to something,
I personally find myself to _much_ more frequently wanting to rather
see "what's in" (or "what's new in") and it's quite annoying to have to
go through the summary page (which is also rather expensive to generate)
just to get there.
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This was lost in the packed-ref updates. The original test was a bit
dubious, so I cleaned that up, too. It fixes the case when the current HEAD
is refs/heads/bla/master: the original test was true for both bla/master
_and_ master.
However, it shares a hard-to-fix bug with the original test: if the current
HEAD is refs/heads/master, and there is a branch refs/heads/heads/master,
then both are marked active.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
git-for-each-ref: improve the documentation on scripting modes
When reading the synopsis for git-for-each-ref it is easy to miss
the obvious power of --shell and family. Call this feature out in
the primary paragragh. Also add more description to the examples
to indicate which features we are demonstrating. Finally add a
very simple eval based example in addition to the very complex one
to give a gentler introduction.
Signed-off-by: Andy Whitcroft <apw@shadowen.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This patch fixes two things - links to all path elements except the last
one were broken since gitweb does not like the trailing slash in them, and
the root tree was not reachable from the subdirectory view.
To compensate for the one more slash in the front, the trailing slash is
not there anymore. ;-) I don't care if it stays there though.
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Merge branch 'lt/refs' into jc/lt-ref2-with-lt-refs
* lt/refs: (58 commits)
git-pack-refs --prune
pack-refs: do not pack symbolic refs.
Tell between packed, unpacked and symbolic refs.
Add callback data to for_each_ref() family.
symbolit-ref: fix resolve_ref conversion.
Fix broken sha1 locking
fsck-objects: adjust to resolve_ref() clean-up.
gitignore: git-pack-refs is a generated file.
wt-status: use simplified resolve_ref to find current branch
Fix t1400-update-ref test minimally
Enable the packed refs file format
Make ref resolution saner
Add support for negative refs
Start handling references internally as a sorted in-memory list
gitweb fix validating pg (page) parameter
git-repack(1): document --window and --depth
git-apply(1): document --unidiff-zero
gitweb: fix warnings in PATH_INFO code and add export_ok/strict_export
upload-archive: monitor child communication even more carefully.
gitweb: export options
...
Merge branch 'lt/refs' into jc/for-each-ref-with-lt-refs
* lt/refs: (58 commits)
git-pack-refs --prune
pack-refs: do not pack symbolic refs.
Tell between packed, unpacked and symbolic refs.
Add callback data to for_each_ref() family.
symbolit-ref: fix resolve_ref conversion.
Fix broken sha1 locking
fsck-objects: adjust to resolve_ref() clean-up.
gitignore: git-pack-refs is a generated file.
wt-status: use simplified resolve_ref to find current branch
Fix t1400-update-ref test minimally
Enable the packed refs file format
Make ref resolution saner
Add support for negative refs
Start handling references internally as a sorted in-memory list
gitweb fix validating pg (page) parameter
git-repack(1): document --window and --depth
git-apply(1): document --unidiff-zero
gitweb: fix warnings in PATH_INFO code and add export_ok/strict_export
upload-archive: monitor child communication even more carefully.
gitweb: export options
...
"git pack-refs --prune", after successfully packing the existing
refs, removes the loose ref files. It tries to protect against
race by doing the usual lock_ref_sha1() which makes sure the
contents of the ref has not changed since we last looked at.
Also we do not bother trying to prune what was already packed, and
we do not try pruning symbolic refs.
This adds a "int *flag" parameter to resolve_ref() and makes
for_each_ref() family to call callback function with an extra
"int flag" parameter. They are used to give two bits of
information (REF_ISSYMREF and REF_ISPACKED) about the ref.
This is a long overdue fix to the API for for_each_ref() family
of functions. It allows the callers to specify a callback data
pointer, so that the caller does not have to use static
variables to communicate with the callback funciton.
The updated for_each_ref() family takes a function of type
int (*fn)(const char *, const unsigned char *, void *)
and a void pointer as parameters, and calls the function with
the name of the ref and its SHA-1 with the caller-supplied void
pointer as parameters.
The commit updates two callers, builtin-name-rev.c and
builtin-pack-refs.c as an example.
An earlier conversion accidentally hardcoded "HEAD" to be passed to
resolve_ref(), thereby causing git-symbolic-ref command to always
report where the HEAD points at, ignoring the command line parameter.
If receive.denyNonFastforwards is set to true, git-receive-pack will deny
non fast-forwards, i.e. forced updates. Most notably, a push to a repository
which has that flag set will fail.
As a first user, 'git-init-db --shared' sets this flag, since in a shared
setup, you are most unlikely to want forced pushes to succeed.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Update grep internal for grepping only in head/body
This further updates the built-in grep engine so that we can say
something like "this pattern should match only in head". This
can be used to simplify grepping in the log messages.
revision traversal: --author, --committer, and --grep.
This adds three options to setup_revisions(), which lets you
filter resulting commits by the author name, the committer name
and the log message with regexp.
builtin-grep: make pieces of it available as library.
This makes three functions and associated option structures from
builtin-grep available from other parts of the system.
* options to drive built-in grep engine is stored in struct
grep_opt;
* pattern strings and extended grep expressions are added to
struct grep_opt with append_grep_pattern();
* when finished calling append_grep_pattern(), call
compile_grep_patterns() to prepare for execution;
* call grep_buffer() to find matches in the in-core buffer.
This also adds an internal option "status_only" to grep_opt,
which suppresses any output from grep_buffer(). Callers of the
function as library can use it to check if there is a match
without producing any output.
git_get_refs_list always return reference to list (and reference to
hash which we ignore), so $taglist (in git_tags) and $headlist (in
git_heads) are always defined, but @$taglist / @$headlist might be
empty. Replaced incorrect "if (defined @$taglist)" with
"if (@$taglist)" in git_tags and respectively in git_heads.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
gitweb: Make git_get_refs_list do work of git_get_references
Make git_get_refs_list do also work of git_get_references, to avoid
calling git-peek-remote twice. Change meaning of git_get_refs_list
meaning: it is now type, and not a full path, e.g. we now use
git_get_refs_list("heads") instead of former
git_get_refs_list("refs/heads").
Modify git_summary to use only one call to git_get_refs_list instead
of one call to git_get_references and two to git_get_refs_list.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
gitweb: Always use git-peek-remote in git_get_references
Instead of trying to read info/refs file, which might not be present
(we did fallback to git-ls-remote), always use git-peek-remote in
git_get_references.
It is preparation for git_get_refs_info to also return references
info. We should not use info/refs for git_get_refs_info as the
repository is not served for http-fetch clients.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
cvsimport: move over to using git-for-each-ref to read refs.
cvsimport opens all of the files in $GIT_DIR/refs/heads and reads
out the sha1's in order to work out what time the last commit on
that branch was made (in CVS) thus allowing incremental updates.
However, this takes no account of hierachical refs naming producing
the following error for each directory in $GIT_DIR/refs:
Use of uninitialized value in chomp at /usr/bin/git-cvsimport line 503.
Use of uninitialized value in concatenation (.) or string at
/usr/bin/git-cvsimport line 505.
usage: git-cat-file [-t|-s|-e|-p|<type>] <sha1>
Take advantage of the new packed refs work to use the new
for-each-ref iterator to get this information.
Signed-off-by: Andy Whitcroft <apw@shadowen.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
gitweb: Even more support for PATH_INFO based URLs
Now the following types of path based URLs are supported:
* project overview (summary) page of project
* project/branch shortlog of branch
* project/branch:file file in branch, blob_plain view
* project/branch:dir/ directory listing of dir in branch, tree view
The following shortcuts works (see explanation below):
* project/branch: directory listing of branch, main tree view
* project/:file file in HEAD (raw)
* project/:dir/ directory listing of dir in HEAD
* project/: directory listing of project's HEAD
We use ':' as separator between branch (ref) name and file name
(pathname) because valid branch (ref) name cannot have ':' inside.
This limit applies to branch name only. This allow for hierarchical
branches e.g. topic branch 'topic/subtopic', separate remotes
tracking branches e.g. 'refs/remotes/origin/HEAD', and discriminate
between head (branch) and tag with the same name.
Empty branch should be interpreted as HEAD.
If pathname (the part after ':') ends with '/', we assume that pathname
is name of directory, and we want to show contents of said directory
using "tree" view. If pathname is empty, it is equivalent to '/' (top
directory).
If pathname (the part after ':') does not end with '/', we assume that
pathname is name of file, and we show contents of said file using
"blob_plain" view.
Pathname is stripped of leading '/', so we can use ':/' to separate
branch from pathname. The rationale behind support for PATH_INFO based
URLs was to support project web pages for small projects: just create
an html branch and then use an URL like
http://nowhere.com/gitweb.cgi/project.git/html:/index.html
The ':/' syntax allow for working links between .html files served
in such way, e.g. <a href="main.html"> link inside "index.html"
would get
http://nowhere.com/gitweb.cgi/project.git/html:/main.html.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Current git#next is totally broken wrt. cloning over HTTP, generating refs
at random directories. Of course it's caused by the static get_pathname()
buffer. lock_ref_sha1() stores return value of mkpath()'s get_pathname()
call, then calls lock_ref_sha1_basic() which calls git_path(ref) which
calls get_pathname() at that point returning pointer to the same buffer.
So now you are sprintf()ing a format string into itself, wow! The resulting
pathnames are really cute. (If you've been paying attention, yes, the
mere fact that a format string _could_ write over itself is very wrong
and probably exploitable here. See the other mail I've just sent.)
I've never liked how we use return values of those functions so liberally,
the "allow some random number of get_pathname() return values to work
concurrently" is absolutely horrible pit and we've already fallen in this
before IIRC. I consider it an awful coding practice, you add a call
somewhere and at some other point some distant caller of that breaks since
it reuses the same return values. Not to mention this takes quite some time
to debug.
My gut feeling tells me that there might be more of this. I don't have
time to review the rest of the users of the refs.c functions though.
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
gitweb: Fix mimetype_guess_file for files with multiple extensions
Fix getting correct mimetype for "blob_plain" view for files which have
multiple extensions, e.g. foo.1.html; now only the last extension
is used to find mimetype.
Noticed by Martin Waitz.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Older curl releases do not define CURLE_HTTP_RETURNED_ERROR, they
use CURLE_HTTP_NOT_FOUND instead. Newer curl releases keep the
CURLE_HTTP_NOT_FOUND definition but using a -DCURL_NO_OLDIES
preprocessor flag the old name will not be present in the 'curl.h'
header.
This patch makes our code written for newer releases of the curl
library but allow compiling against an older curl (older than
0x070a03) by defining the missing CURLE_HTTP_RETURNED_ERROR as a
synonym for CURLE_HTTP_NOT_FOUND.
Signed-off-by: Art Haas <ahaas@airmail.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
An earlier commit cbd64af added a check that prevents "git-am"
to run without its standard input connected to a terminal while
resuming operation. This was to catch a user error to try
feeding a new patch from its standard input while recovery.
The assumption of the check was that it is an indication that a
new patch is being fed if the standard input is not connected to
a terminal. It is however not quite correct (the standard input
can be /dev/null if the user knows the operation does not need
any input, for example). This broke t3403 when the test was run
with its standard input connected to /dev/null.
When git-am is given an explicit command such as --skip, there
is no reason to insist that the standard input is a terminal; we
are not going to read a new patch anyway.
Credit goes to Gerrit Pape for noticing and reporting the
problem with t3403-rebase-skip test.
This actually "turns on" the packed ref file format, now that the
infrastructure to do so sanely exists (ie notably the change to make the
reference reading logic take refnames rather than pathnames to the loose
objects that no longer necessarily even exist).
In particular, when the ref lookup hits a refname that has no loose file
associated with it, it falls back on the packed-ref information. Also, the
ref-locking code, while still using a loose file for the locking itself
(and _creating_ a loose file for the new ref) no longer requires that the
old ref be in such an unpacked state.
Finally, this does a minimal hack to git-checkout.sh to rather than check
the ref-file directly, do a "git-rev-parse" on the "heads/$refname".
That's not really wonderful - we should rather really have a special
routine to verify the names as proper branch head names, but it is a
workable solution for now.
and the end result is a largely working repository (ie I've done two
commits - which creates _one_ unpacked ref file - done things like run
"gitk" and "git log" etc, and it all looks ok).
There are probably things missing, but I'm hoping that the missing things
are now of the "small and obvious" kind, and that somebody else might want
to start looking at this too. Hint hint ;)
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The old code used to totally mix up the notion of a ref-name and the path
that that ref was associated with. That was not only horribly ugly (a
number of users got the path, and then wanted to try to turn it back into
a ref-name again), but it fundamnetally doesn't work at all once we do any
setup where a ref doesn't have a 1:1 relationship with a particular
pathname.
This fixes things up so that we use the ref-name throughout, and only
turn it into a pathname once we actually look it up in the filesystem.
That makes a lot of things much clearer and more straightforward.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
You can remove a ref that is packed two different ways: either simply
repack all the refs without that one, or create a loose ref that has the
magic all-zero SHA1.
This also adds back the test that a ref actually has the object it
points to.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
Start handling references internally as a sorted in-memory list
This also adds some very rudimentary support for the notion of packed
refs. HOWEVER! At this point it isn't used to actually look up a ref
yet, only for listing them (ie "for_each_ref()" and friends see the
packed refs, but none of the other single-ref lookup routines).
Note how we keep two separate lists: one for the loose refs, and one for
the packed refs we read. That's so that we can easily keep the two apart,
and read only one set or the other (and still always make sure that the
loose refs take precedence).
[ From this, it's not actually obvious why we'd keep the two separate
lists, but it's important to have the packed refs on their own list
later on, when I add support for looking up a single loose one.
For that case, we will want to read _just_ the packed refs in case the
single-ref lookup fails, yet we may end up needing the other list at
some point in the future, so keeping them separated is important ]
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* jc/pack:
pack-objects: document --revs, --unpacked and --all.
pack-objects --unpacked=<existing pack> option.
pack-objects: further work on internal rev-list logic.
pack-objects: run rev-list equivalent internally.
Separate object listing routines out of rev-list
* jk/diff:
wt-status: remove extraneous newline from 'deleted:' output
git-status: document colorization config options
Teach runstatus about --untracked
git-commit.sh: convert run_status to a C builtin
Move color option parsing out of diff.c and into color.[ch]
diff: support custom callbacks for output
upload-archive: monitor child communication even more carefully.
The current code works like this: if others flags than POLLIN is
raised we assume that (a) something bad happened and the child died or
(b) the child has closed the pipe because it had no more data to send.
For the latter case, we assume wrongly that one call to
process_input() will empty the pipe. Indeed it reads only 16Ko of data
by call and the the pipe capacity can be larger than that (on current
Linux kernel, it is 65536 bytes). Therefore the child can write 32ko
of data, for example, and close the pipe. After that poll will return
POLLIN _and_ POLLHUP and the parent will read only 16ko of data.
This patch forces the parent to empty the pipe as soon as POLLIN is
raised and even if POLLHUP or something else is raised too.
Moreover, some implementations of poll might return POLLRDNORM flag
even if it is non standard.
Signed-off-by: Franck Bui-Huu <vagabon.xyz@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* jc/archive:
git-tar-tree: devolve git-tar-tree into a wrapper for git-archive
git-archive: inline default_parse_extra()
builtin-archive.c: rename remote_request() to extract_remote_arg()
upload-archive: monitor child communication more carefully.
Add sideband status report to git-archive protocol
Prepare larger packet buffer for upload-pack protocol.
Teach --exec to git-archive --remote
Add --verbose to git-archive
archive: force line buffered output to stderr
Use xstrdup instead of strdup in builtin-{tar,zip}-tree.c
Move sideband server side support into reusable form.
Move sideband client side support into reusable form.
archive: allow remote to have more formats than we understand.
git-archive: make compression level of ZIP archives configurable
Add git-upload-archive
git-archive: wire up ZIP format.
git-archive: wire up TAR format.
Add git-archive
$export_ok: If this variable evaluates to true it is checked
if a file with this name exists in the repository. If it
does not exist the repository cannot be viewed from gitweb.
(Similar to git-daemon-export-ok for git-daemon).
$strict_export: If this variable evaluates to true only
repositories listed on the project-list-page of gitweb can
be accessed.
git-tar-tree: devolve git-tar-tree into a wrapper for git-archive
This patch removes the custom tree walker tree_traverse(), and makes
generate_tar() use write_tar_archive() and the infrastructure provided
by git-archive instead.
As a kind of side effect, make write_tar_archive() able to handle NULL
as base directory, as this is what the new and simple generate_tar()
uses to indicate the absence of a base directory. This was simpler
and cleaner than playing tricks with empty strings.
The behaviour of git-tar-tree should be unchanged (quick tests didn't
indicate otherwise) except for the text of some error messages.
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <rene.scharfe@lsrfire.ath.cx> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>