Merge branch 'jh/trace2'
A few embarrassing bugfixes.
* jh/trace2:
trace2: fix up a missing "leave" entry point
trace2: fix incorrect function pointer check
Merge branch 'cc/access-on-aix-workaround'
Workaround for standard-compliant but less-than-useful behaviour of
access(2) for the root user.
* cc/access-on-aix-workaround:
git-compat-util: work around for access(X_OK) under root
Merge branch 'pw/clean-sequencer-state-upon-final-commit'
"git chery-pick" (and "revert" that shares the same runtime engine)
that deals with multiple commits got confused when the final step
gets stopped with a conflict and the user concluded the sequence
with "git commit". Attempt to fix it by cleaning up the state
files used by these commands in such a situation.
* pw/clean-sequencer-state-upon-final-commit:
fix cherry-pick/revert status after commit
commit/reset: try to clean up sequencer state
Merge branch 'pw/rebase-i-internal'
The internal implementation of "git rebase -i" has been updated to
avoid forking a separate "rebase--interactive" process.
* pw/rebase-i-internal:
rebase -i: run without forking rebase--interactive
rebase: use a common action enum
rebase -i: use struct rebase_options in do_interactive_rebase()
rebase -i: use struct rebase_options to parse args
rebase -i: use struct object_id for squash_onto
rebase -i: use struct commit when parsing options
rebase -i: remove duplication
rebase -i: combine rebase--interactive.c with rebase.c
rebase: use OPT_RERERE_AUTOUPDATE()
rebase: rename write_basic_state()
rebase: don't translate trace strings
sequencer: always discard index after checkout
Merge branch 'jk/perf-aggregate-wo-libjson'
The script to aggregate perf result unconditionally depended on
libjson-perl even though it did not have to, which has been
corrected.
* jk/perf-aggregate-wo-libjson:
t/perf: depend on perl JSON only when using --codespeed
Merge branch 'dl/rev-tilde-doc-clarify'
Docfix.
* dl/rev-tilde-doc-clarify:
revisions.txt: remove ambibuity between <rev>:<path> and :<path>
revisions.txt: mention <rev>~ form
revisions.txt: mark optional rev arguments with []
revisions.txt: change "rev" to "<rev>"
Merge branch 'jc/make-dedup-ls-files-output'
A "ls-files" that emulates "find" to enumerate files in the working
tree resulted in duplicated Makefile rules that caused the build to
issue an unnecessary warning during a trial build after merge
conflicts are resolved in working tree *.h files but before the
resolved results are added to the index. This has been corrected.
* jc/make-dedup-ls-files-output:
Makefile: dedup list of files obtained from ls-files
Merge branch 'jk/ls-files-doc-markup-fix'
Docfix.
* jk/ls-files-doc-markup-fix:
doc/ls-files: put nested list for "-t" option into block
Merge branch 'jk/p5302-avoid-collision-check-cost'
Fix index-pack perf test so that the repeated invocations always
run in an empty repository, which emulates the initial clone
situation better.
* jk/p5302-avoid-collision-check-cost:
p5302: create the repo in each index-pack test
Merge branch 'dl/no-extern-in-func-decl'
Mechanically and systematically drop "extern" from function
declarlation.
* dl/no-extern-in-func-decl:
*.[ch]: manually align parameter lists
*.[ch]: remove extern from function declarations using sed
*.[ch]: remove extern from function declarations using spatch
Merge branch 'ew/repack-with-bitmaps-by-default'
The connectivity bitmaps are created by default in bare
repositories now; also the pathname hash-cache is created by
default to avoid making crappy deltas when repacking.
* ew/repack-with-bitmaps-by-default:
pack-objects: default to writing bitmap hash-cache
t5310: correctly remove bitmaps for jgit test
repack: enable bitmaps by default on bare repos
Merge branch 'js/partial-clone-connectivity-check'
During an initial "git clone --depth=..." partial clone, it is
pointless to spend cycles for a large portion of the connectivity
check that enumerates and skips promisor objects (which by
definition is all objects fetched from the other side). This has
been optimized out.
* js/partial-clone-connectivity-check:
t/perf: add perf script for partial clones
clone: do faster object check for partial clones
Merge branch 'jh/trace2-sid-fix'
Polishing of the new trace2 facility continues. The system-level
configuration can specify site-wide trace2 settings, which can be
overridden with per-user configuration and environment variables.
* jh/trace2-sid-fix:
trace2: fixup access problem on /etc/gitconfig in read_very_early_config
trace2: update docs to describe system/global config settings
trace2: make SIDs more unique
trace2: clarify UTC datetime formatting
trace2: report peak memory usage of the process
trace2: use system/global config for default trace2 settings
config: add read_very_early_config()
trace2: find exec-dir before trace2 initialization
trace2: add absolute elapsed time to start event
trace2: refactor setting process starting time
config: initialize opts structure in repo_read_config()
difftool: fallback on merge.guitool
In git-difftool.txt, it says
'git difftool' falls back to 'git mergetool' config variables when the
difftool equivalents have not been defined.
However, when `diff.guitool` is missing, it doesn't fallback to
anything. Make git-difftool fallback to `merge.guitool` when `diff.guitool` is
missing.
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
difftool: make --gui, --tool and --extcmd mutually exclusive
In git-difftool, these options specify which tool to ultimately run. As
a result, they are logically conflicting. Explicitly disallow these
options from being used together.
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
mergetool: fallback to tool when guitool unavailable
In git-difftool, if the tool is called with --gui but `diff.guitool` is
not set, it falls back to `diff.tool`. Make git-mergetool also fallback
from `merge.guitool` to `merge.tool` if the former is undefined.
If git-difftool, when called with `--gui`, were to use
`get_configured_mergetool` in a future patch, it would also get the
fallback behavior in the following precedence:
1. diff.guitool
2. merge.guitool
3. diff.tool
4. merge.tool
The behavior for when difftool or mergetool are called without `--gui`
should be identical with or without this patch.
Note that the search loop could be written as
sections="merge"
keys="tool"
if diff_mode
then
sections="diff $sections"
fi
if gui_mode
then
keys="guitool $keys"
fi
merge_tool=$(
IFS=' '
for key in $keys
do
for section in $sections
do
selected=$(git config $section.$key)
if test -n "$selected"
then
echo "$selected"
return
fi
done
done)
which would make adding a mode in the future much easier. However,
adding a new mode will likely never happen as it is highly discouraged
so, as a result, it is written in its current form so that it is more
readable for future readers.
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
mergetool--lib: create gui_mode function
Before, in `get_configured_merge_tool`, we would test the value of the
first argument directly, which corresponded to whether we were using
guitool. However, since `$GIT_MERGETOOL_GUI` is available as an
environment variable, create the `gui_mode` function which increases the
clarify of functions which use it.
While we're at it, add a space before `()` in function definitions to
fix the style.
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
mergetool: use get_merge_tool function
In git-mergetool, the logic for getting which merge tool to use is
duplicated in git-mergetool--lib, except for the fact that it needs to
know whether the tool was guessed or not.
Rewrite `get_merge_tool` to return whether or not the tool was guessed
through the return code and make git-mergetool call this function
instead of duplicating the logic. Note that 1 was chosen to be the
return code of when a tool is guessed because it seems like a slightly
more abnormal condition than getting a tool that's explicitly specified
but this is completely arbitrary.
Also, let `$GIT_MERGETOOL_GUI` be set to determine whether or not the
guitool will be selected.
This change is not completely backwards compatible as there may be
external users of git-mergetool--lib. However, only one user,
git-diffall[1], was found from searching GitHub and Google, and this
tool is superseded by `git difftool --dir-diff` anyway. It seems very
unlikely that there exists an external caller that would take into
account the return code of `get_merge_tool` as it would always return 0
before this change so this change probably does not affect any external
users.
[1]: https://github.com/thenigan/git-diffall
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
trace2: add variable description to git.txt
Documentation/technical/api-trace2.txt contains the full details
of the trace2 API and the GIT_TR2* environment variables. However,
most environment variables are included in Documentation/git.txt,
including the GIT_TRACE* variables.
Add a brief description of the GIT_TR2* variables with links to
the full technical details. The biggest difference from the
original variables is that we can specify a Unix Domain Socket.
Mention this difference, but leave the details to the technical
documents.
Reported-by: Szeder Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
status: fix display of rebase -ir's `label` command
The argument of a `label` command does *not* want to be turned into an
abbreviated SHA-1.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
trace2: fix up a missing "leave" entry point
Fix a trivial bug that's been here since the shared/do_write_index
tracing was added in 42fee7a388 ("trace2:data: add trace2
instrumentation to index read/write", 2019-02-22). We should have
enter/leave points, not two enter/enter points. This resulted in an
"enter" event without a corresponding "leave" event.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
check-non-portable-shell: support Perl versions older than 5.10
For thoroughness when checking for one-shot environment variable
assignments at shell function call sites, check-non-portable-shell
stitches together incomplete lines (those ending with backslash). This
allows it to correctly flag such undesirable usage even when the
variable assignment and function call are split across lines, for
example:
FOO=bar \
func
where 'func' is a shell function.
The stitching is accomplished like this:
while (<>) {
chomp;
# stitch together incomplete lines (those ending with "\")
while (s/\\$//) {
$_ .= readline;
chomp;
}
# detect unportable/undesirable shell constructs
...
}
Although this implementation is well supported in reasonably modern Perl
versions (5.10 and later), it fails with older versions (such as Perl
5.8 shipped with ancient Mac OS 10.5). In particular, in older Perl
versions, 'readline' is not connected to the file handle associated with
the "magic" while (<>) {...} construct, so 'readline' throws a
"readline() on unopened filehandle" error. Work around this problem by
dropping readline() and instead incorporating the stitching of
incomplete lines directly into the existing while (<>) {...} loop.
Helped-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
mingw: enable DEP and ASLR
Enable DEP (Data Execution Prevention) and ASLR (Address Space Layout
Randomization) support. This applies to both 32bit and 64bit builds
and makes it substantially harder to exploit security holes in Git by
offering a much more unpredictable attack surface.
ASLR interferes with GDB's ability to set breakpoints. A similar issue
holds true when compiling with -O2 (in which case single-stepping is
messed up because GDB cannot map the code back to the original source
code properly). Therefore we simply enable ASLR only when an
optimization flag is present in the CFLAGS, using it as an indicator
that the developer does not want to debug in GDB anyway.
Signed-off-by: İsmail Dönmez <ismail@i10z.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
mingw: do not let ld strip relocations
This is the first step for enabling ASLR (Address Space Layout
Randomization) support. We want to enable ASLR for better protection
against exploiting security holes in Git: it makes it harder to attack
software by making code addresses unpredictable.
The problem fixed by this commit is that `ld.exe` seems to be stripping
relocations which in turn will break ASLR support. We just make sure
it's not stripping the main executable entry.
Signed-off-by: İsmail Dönmez <ismail@i10z.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
trace2: fix up a missing "leave" entry point
Fix a trivial bug that's been here since the shared/do_write_index
tracing was added in 42fee7a388 ("trace2:data: add trace2
instrumentation to index read/write", 2019-02-22). We should have
enter/leave points, not two enter/enter points. This resulted in an
"enter" event without a corresponding "leave" event.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
difftool --no-index: error out on --dir-diff (and don't crash)
In `--no-index` mode, we now no longer require a worktree nor a
repository. But some code paths in `difftool` expect those to be
present.
The most notable such code path is the `--dir-diff` one: we use the
existing checkout machinery to copy the files, and that machinery looks
up replacement refs, looks at alternate ODBs, wants to use the worktree
path, etc.
Rather than running into segmentation faults, let's die with an
informative error message.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
tag: fix typo in nested tagging hint
In eea9c1e78f (tag: advise on nested tags, 2019-04-04), tag was taught
to hint at the user if a nested tag is made. However, this message had a
typo and it said "The object referred to by your new is...", which was
missing a "tag" after "new". Fix this message by adding the "tag".
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
diff-highlight: use correct /dev/null for UNIX and Windows
Use File::Spec->devnull() for output redirection to avoid messages
when Windows version of Perl is first in path. The message 'The
system cannot find the path specified.' is displayed each time git is
run to get colors.
Signed-off-by: Chris. Webster <chris@webstech.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The eighth batch
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Merge branch 'vk/autoconf-gettext'
The autoconf generated configure script failed to use the right
gettext() implementations from -libintl by ignoring useless stub
implementations shipped in some C library, which has been
corrected.
* vk/autoconf-gettext:
autoconf: #include <libintl.h> when checking for gettext()
Merge branch 'cc/aix-has-fileno-as-a-macro'
AIX shared the same build issues with other BSDs around fileno(fp),
which has been corrected.
* cc/aix-has-fileno-as-a-macro:
Makefile: use fileno macro work around on AIX
Merge branch 'jt/submodule-repo-is-with-worktree'
The logic to tell if a Git repository has a working tree protects
"git branch -D" from removing the branch that is currently checked
out by mistake. The implementation of this logic was broken for
repositories with unusual name, which unfortunately is the norm for
submodules these days. This has been fixed.
* jt/submodule-repo-is-with-worktree:
worktree: update is_bare heuristics
Merge branch 'jk/untracked-cache-more-fixes'
Code clean-up.
* jk/untracked-cache-more-fixes:
untracked-cache: simplify parsing by dropping "len"
untracked-cache: simplify parsing by dropping "next"
untracked-cache: be defensive about missing NULs in index
Merge branch 'jk/prune-optim'
A follow-up test for an earlier "git prune" improvements.
* jk/prune-optim:
t5304: add a test for pruning with bitmaps
Merge branch 'js/misc-doc-fixes'
"make check-docs", "git help -a", etc. did not account for cases
where a particular build may deliberately omit some subcommands,
which has been corrected.
* js/misc-doc-fixes:
Turn `git serve` into a test helper
test-tool: handle the `-C <directory>` option just like `git`
check-docs: do not bother checking for legacy scripts' documentation
docs: exclude documentation for commands that have been excluded
check-docs: allow command-list.txt to contain excluded commands
help -a: do not list commands that are excluded from the build
Makefile: drop the NO_INSTALL variable
remote-testgit: move it into the support directory for t5801
Merge branch 'dr/ref-filter-push-track-fix'
%(push:track) token used in the --format option to "git
for-each-ref" and friends was not showing the right branch, which
has been fixed.
* dr/ref-filter-push-track-fix:
ref-filter: use correct branch for %(push:track)
Merge branch 'ss/msvc-path-utils-fix'
An earlier update for MinGW and Cygwin accidentally broke MSVC build,
which has been fixed.
* ss/msvc-path-utils-fix:
MSVC: include compat/win32/path-utils.h for MSVC, too, for real_path()
Merge branch 'jt/clone-server-option'
"git clone" learned a new --server-option option when talking over
the protocol version 2.
* jt/clone-server-option:
clone: send server options when using protocol v2
transport: die if server options are unsupported
Merge branch 'tb/unexpected'
Code tightening against a "wrong" object appearing where an object
of a different type is expected, instead of blindly assuming that
the connection between objects are correctly made.
* tb/unexpected:
rev-list: detect broken root trees
rev-list: let traversal die when --missing is not in use
get_commit_tree(): return NULL for broken tree
list-objects.c: handle unexpected non-tree entries
list-objects.c: handle unexpected non-blob entries
t: introduce tests for unexpected object types
t: move 'hex2oct' into test-lib-functions.sh
Merge branch 'nd/sha1-name-c-wo-the-repository'
Further code clean-up to allow the lowest level of name-to-object
mapping layer to work with a passed-in repository other than the
default one.
* nd/sha1-name-c-wo-the-repository: (34 commits)
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_oid_mb()
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from other get_oid_*
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from maybe_die_on_misspelt_object_name
submodule-config.c: use repo_get_oid for reading .gitmodules
sha1-name.c: add repo_get_oid()
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_oid_with_context_1()
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from resolve_relative_path()
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from diagnose_invalid_index_path()
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from handle_one_ref()
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_oid_1()
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_oid_basic()
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_describe_name()
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_oid_oneline()
sha1-name.c: add repo_interpret_branch_name()
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from interpret_branch_mark()
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from interpret_nth_prior_checkout()
sha1-name.c: remove the_repo from get_short_oid()
sha1-name.c: add repo_for_each_abbrev()
sha1-name.c: store and use repo in struct disambiguate_state
sha1-name.c: add repo_find_unique_abbrev_r()
...
Merge branch 'cc/replace-graft-peel-tags'
When given a tag that points at a commit-ish, "git replace --graft"
failed to peel the tag before writing a replace ref, which did not
make sense because the old graft mechanism the feature wants to
mimick only allowed to replace one commit object with another.
This has been fixed.
* cc/replace-graft-peel-tags:
replace: peel tag when passing a tag first to --graft
replace: peel tag when passing a tag as parent to --graft
t6050: redirect expected error output to a file
t6050: use test_line_count instead of wc -l
Merge branch 'js/trace2-to-directory'
The trace2 tracing facility learned to auto-generate a filename
when told to log to a directory.
* js/trace2-to-directory:
trace2: write to directory targets
Merge branch 'dl/merge-cleanup-scissors-fix'
The list of conflicted paths shown in the editor while concluding a
conflicted merge was shown above the scissors line when the
clean-up mode is set to "scissors", even though it was commented
out just like the list of updated paths and other information to
help the user explain the merge better.
* dl/merge-cleanup-scissors-fix:
cherry-pick/revert: add scissors line on merge conflict
sequencer.c: save and restore cleanup mode
merge: add scissors line on merge conflict
merge: cleanup messages like commit
parse-options.h: extract common --cleanup option
commit: extract cleanup_mode functions to sequencer
t7502: clean up style
t7604: clean up style
t3507: clean up style
t7600: clean up style
Merge branch 'pw/sequencer-cleanup-with-signoff-x-fix'
"git cherry-pick" run with the "-x" or the "--signoff" option used
to (and more importantly, ought to) clean up the commit log message
with the --cleanup=space option by default, but this has been
broken since late 2017. This has been fixed.
* pw/sequencer-cleanup-with-signoff-x-fix:
sequencer: fix cleanup with --signoff and -x
Merge branch 'jk/pack-objects-reports-num-objects-to-trace2'
The "git pack-objects" command learned to report the number of
objects it packed via the trace2 mechanism.
* jk/pack-objects-reports-num-objects-to-trace2:
pack-objects: write objects packed to trace2
Merge branch 'tz/git-svn-doc-markup-fix'
Doc formatting fix.
* tz/git-svn-doc-markup-fix:
Documentation/git-svn: improve asciidoctor compatibility
Merge branch 'km/empty-repo-is-still-a-repo'
Running "git add" on a repository created inside the current
repository is an explicit indication that the user wants to add it
as a submodule, but when the HEAD of the inner repository is on an
unborn branch, it cannot be added as a submodule. Worse, the files
in its working tree can be added as if they are a part of the outer
repository, which is not what the user wants. These problems are
being addressed.
* km/empty-repo-is-still-a-repo:
add: error appropriately on repository with no commits
dir: do not traverse repositories with no commits
submodule: refuse to add repository with no commits
Merge branch 'dl/warn-tagging-a-tag'
"git tag" learned to give an advice suggesting it might be a
mistake when creating an annotated or signed tag that points at
another tag.
* dl/warn-tagging-a-tag:
tag: advise on nested tags
tag: fix formatting
Merge branch 'en/merge-directory-renames'
"git merge-recursive" backend recently learned a new heuristics to
infer file movement based on how other files in the same directory
moved. As this is inherently less robust heuristics than the one
based on the content similarity of the file itself (rather than
based on what its neighbours are doing), it sometimes gives an
outcome unexpected by the end users. This has been toned down to
leave the renamed paths in higher/conflicted stages in the index so
that the user can examine and confirm the result.
* en/merge-directory-renames:
merge-recursive: switch directory rename detection default
merge-recursive: give callers of handle_content_merge() access to contents
merge-recursive: track information associated with directory renames
t6043: fix copied test description to match its purpose
merge-recursive: switch from (oid,mode) pairs to a diff_filespec
merge-recursive: cleanup handle_rename_* function signatures
merge-recursive: track branch where rename occurred in rename struct
merge-recursive: remove ren[12]_other fields from rename_conflict_info
merge-recursive: shrink rename_conflict_info
merge-recursive: move some struct declarations together
merge-recursive: use 'ci' for rename_conflict_info variable name
merge-recursive: rename locals 'o' and 'a' to 'obuf' and 'abuf'
merge-recursive: rename diff_filespec 'one' to 'o'
merge-recursive: rename merge_options argument from 'o' to 'opt'
Use 'unsigned short' for mode, like diff_filespec does
submodule--helper: add a missing \n
This is a complete line. We're not expecting the next function to add
anything to the same line.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
coccicheck: make batch size of 0 mean "unlimited"
If you have the memory to handle it, the ideal case is to run a single
spatch invocation with all of the source files. But the only way to do
so now is to pick an arbitrarily large batch size. Let's make "0" do
this, which is a little friendlier (and doesn't otherwise have a useful
meaning).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t6500(mingw): use the Windows PID of the shell
In Git for Windows, we use the MSYS2 Bash which inherits a non-standard
PID model from Cygwin's POSIX emulation layer: every MSYS2 process has a
regular Windows PID, and in addition it has an MSYS2 PID (which
corresponds to a shadow process that emulates Unix-style signal
handling).
With the upgrade to the MSYS2 runtime v3.x, this shadow process cannot
be accessed via `OpenProcess()` any longer, and therefore t6500 thought
incorrectly that the process referenced in `gc.pid` (which is not
actually a real `gc` process in this context, but the current shell) no
longer exists.
Let's fix this by making sure that the Windows PID is written into
`gc.pid` in this test script so that `git.exe` is able to understand
that that process does indeed still exist.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t/lib-httpd: pass LSAN_OPTIONS through apache
Just as we instruct Apache to pass through ASAN_OPTIONS (so that
server-side Git programs it spawns will respect our options while
running the tests), we should do the same with LSAN_OPTIONS. Otherwise
trying to collect a list of leaks like:
export LSAN_OPTIONS=exitcode=0:log_path=/tmp/lsan
make SANITIZE=leak test
won't work for http tests (the server-side programs won't log their
leaks to the right place, and they'll prematurely die, producing a
spurious test failure).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Acked-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Make fread/fwrite-like functions in http.c more like fread/fwrite.
The fread/fwrite-like functions in http.c, namely fread_buffer,
fwrite_buffer, fwrite_null, fwrite_sha1_file all return the
multiplication of the size and number of items they are being given.
Practically speaking, it doesn't matter, because in all contexts where
those functions are used, size is 1.
But those functions being similar to fread and fwrite (the curl API is
designed around being able to use fread and fwrite directly), it might
be preferable to make them behave like fread and fwrite, which, from
the fread/fwrite manual page, is:
On success, fread() and fwrite() return the number of items read
or written. This number equals the number of bytes transferred
only when size is 1. If an error occurs, or the end of the file
is reached, the return value is a short item count (or zero).
Signed-off-by: Mike Hommey <mh@glandium.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
fsmonitor: force a refresh after the index was discarded
With this change, the `index_state` struct becomes the new home for the
flag that says whether the fsmonitor hook has been run, i.e. it is now
per-index.
It also gets re-set when the index is discarded, fixing the bug
demonstrated by the "test_expect_failure" test added in the preceding
commit. In that case fsmonitor-enabled Git would miss updates under
certain circumstances, see that preceding commit for details.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
fsmonitor: demonstrate that it is not refreshed after discard_index()
This one is tricky.
When `core.fsmonitor` is set, a `refresh_index()` will not perform a
full scan of files that might be modified, but will query the fsmonitor
and refresh only the ones that have been actually touched.
Due to implementation details, the fsmonitor is queried in
`refresh_cache_ent()`, but of course it only has to be queried once, so
we set a flag when we did that. But when the index was discarded, we did
not re-set that flag.
So far, this is only covered by our test suite when running with
GIT_TEST_FSMONITOR=$PWD/t7519/fsmonitor-all, and only due to the way the
built-in stash interacts with the recursive merge machinery.
Let's introduce a straight-forward regression test for this.
We simply extend the "read & discard index" loop in `test-tool
read-cache` to optionally refresh the index, report on a given file's
status, and then modify that file. Due to the bug described above, only
the first refresh will actually query the fsmonitor; subsequent loop
iterations will not.
This problem was reported by Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
perf-lib.sh: forbid the use of GIT_TEST_INSTALLED
As noted in preceding commits setting GIT_TEST_INSTALLED has never
been supported or documented, and as noted in an earlier t/perf/README
change to the extent that it's been documented nobody's notices that
the example hasn't worked since 3c8f12c96c ("test-lib: reorder and
include GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS a lot earlier", 2012-06-24).
We could directly support GIT_TEST_INSTALLED for invocations without
the "run" script, such as:
GIT_TEST_INSTALLED=../../ ./p0000-perf-lib-sanity.sh
GIT_TEST_INSTALLED=/home/avar/g/git ./p0000-perf-lib-sanity.sh
But while not having this "error" will "work", it won't write the the
resulting "test-results/*" files to the right place, and thus a
subsequent call to aggregate.perl won't work as expected.
Let's just tell the user that they need to use the "run" script,
which'll correctly deal with this and set the right
PERF_RESULTS_PREFIX.
If someone's in desperate need of bypassing "run" for whatever reason
they can trivially do so by setting "PERF_SET_GIT_TEST_INSTALLED", but
not we won't have people who expect GIT_TEST_INSTALLED to just work
wondering why their aggregation doesn't work, even though they're
running the right "git".
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
perf tests: add "bindir" prefix to git tree test results
Change the output file names in test-results/ to be
"test-results/bindir_<munged dir>" rather than just
"test-results/<munged dir>".
This is for consistency with the "build_" directories we have for
built revisions, i.e. "test-results/build_<SHA-1>".
There's no user-visible functional changes here, it just makes it
easier to see at a glance what "test-results" files are of what "type"
as they're all explicitly grouped together now, and to grep this code
to find both the run_dirs_helper() implementation and its
corresponding aggregate.perl code.
Note that we already guarantee that the rest of the
PERF_RESULTS_PREFIX is an absolute path, and since it'll start with
e.g. "/" which we munge to "_" we'll up with a readable string like
"bindir_home_avar[...]".
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
perf-lib.sh: remove GIT_TEST_INSTALLED from perf-lib.sh
Follow-up my preceding change which fixed the immediate "./run
<revisions>" regression in 0baf78e7bc ("perf-lib.sh: rely on
test-lib.sh for --tee handling", 2019-03-15) and entirely get rid of
GIT_TEST_INSTALLED from perf-lib.sh (and aggregate.perl).
As noted in that change the dance we're doing with GIT_TEST_INSTALLED
perf-lib.sh isn't necessary, but there I was doing the most minimal
set of changes to quickly fix a regression.
But it's much simpler to never deal with the "GIT_TEST_INSTALLED" we
were setting in perf-lib.sh at all. Instead the run_dirs_helper() sets
the previously inferred $PERF_RESULTS_PREFIX directly.
Setting this at the callsite that's already best positioned to
exhaustively know about all the different cases we need to handle
where PERF_RESULTS_PREFIX isn't what we want already (the empty
string) makes the most sense. In one-off cases like:
./run ./p0000-perf-lib-sanity.sh
./p0000-perf-lib-sanity.sh
We'll just do the right thing because PERF_RESULTS_PREFIX will be
empty, and test-lib.sh takes care of finding where our git is.
Any refactoring of this code needs to change both the shell code and
the Perl code in aggregate.perl, because when running e.g.:
./run ../../ -- <test>
The "../../" path to a relative bindir needs to be munged to a
filename containing the results, and critically aggregate.perl does
not get passed the path to those aggregations, just "../..".
Let's fix cases where aggregate.perl would print e.g. ".." in its
report output for this, and "git" for "/home/avar/g/git", i.e. it
would always pick the last element. Now'll always print the full path
instead.
This also makes the code sturdier, e.g. you can feed "../.." to
"./run" and then an absolute path to the aggregate.perl script, as
long as the absolute path and "../.." resolved to the same directory
printing the aggregation will work.
Also simplify the "[_*]" on the RHS of "tr -c", we're trimming
everything to "_", so we don't need that.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
perf-lib.sh: make "./run <revisions>" use the correct gits
Fix a really bad regression in 0baf78e7bc ("perf-lib.sh: rely on
test-lib.sh for --tee handling", 2019-03-15). Since that change all
runs of different <revisions> of git have used the git found in the
user's $PATH, e.g. /usr/bin/git instead of the <revision> we just
built and wanted to performance test.
The problem starts with GIT_TEST_INSTALLED not working like our
non-perf tests with the "run" script. I.e. you can't run performance
tests against a given installed git. Instead we expect to use it
ourselves to point GIT_TEST_INSTALLED to the <revision> we just built.
However, we had been relying on '$(cd "$GIT_TEST_INSTALLED" && pwd)'
to resolve that relative $GIT_TEST_INSTALLED to an absolute
path *before* test-lib.sh was loaded, in cases where it was
e.g. "build/<rev>/bin-wrappers" and we wanted "<abs_path>build/...".
This change post-dates another proposed solution by a few days[1], I
didn't notice that version when I initially wrote this. I'm doing the
most minimal thing to solve the regression here, a follow-up change
will move this result prefix selection logic entirely into the "run"
script.
This makes e.g. these cases all work:
./run . $PWD/../../ origin/master origin/next HEAD -- <tests>
As well as just a plain one-off:
./run <tests>
And, since we're passing down the new GIT_PERF_DIR_MYDIR_REL we make
sure the bug relating to aggregate.perl not finding our files as
described in 0baf78e7bc doesn't happen again.
What *doesn't* work is setting GIT_TEST_INSTALLED to a relative path,
this will subtly fail in test-lib.sh. This has always been the case
even before 0baf78e7bc, and as documented in t/README the
GIT_TEST_INSTALLED variable should be set to an absolute path (needs
to be set "to the bindir", which is always absolute), and the "perf"
framework expects to munge it itself.
Perhaps that should be dealt with in the future to allow manually
setting GIT_TEST_INSTALLED, but as a preceding commit showed the user
can just use the "run" script, which'll also pick the right output
directory for the test results as expected by aggregate.perl.
1. https://public-inbox.org/git/20190502222409.GA15631@sigill.intra.peff.net/
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
perf aggregate: remove GIT_TEST_INSTALLED from --codespeed
Remove the setting of the "environment" from the --codespeed output. I
don't think this is useful, and it helps with a later refactoring
where we GIT_TEST_INSTALLED stop munging/reading GIT_TEST_INSTALLED in
the perf tests in so many places.
This was added in 05eb1c37ed ("perf/aggregate: implement codespeed
JSON output", 2018-01-05), but since the "run" scripts uses
"GIT_TEST_INSTALLED" internally this was only ever useful for one-off
runs of a single revision as all the "environment" values would be
ones for whatever directory the "run" script ran last.
Let's instead fall back on the "uname -r" case, which is the sort of
thing the environment should be set to, not something that duplicates
other parts of the codpseed output. For setting the "environment" to
something custom the perf.repoName variable can be used. See
19cf57a92e ("perf/run: read GIT_PERF_REPO_NAME from perf.repoName",
2018-01-05).
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
perf README: correct docs for 3c8f12c96c regression
Since 3c8f12c96c ("test-lib: reorder and include GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS a
lot earlier", 2012-06-24) the suggested advice of overriding
GIT_BUILD_DIR has not worked. We've printed a hard error like this
given e.g. GIT_BUILD_DIR=/home/avar/g/git:
/bin-wrappers/git is not executable; using GIT_EXEC_PATH
error: You haven't built things yet, have you?
Let's just suggest that the user run other gits via the "run"
script. That'll do the right thing for setting the path to the other
git, and running the "aggregate.perl" scripts afterwards will work.
As an aside, if setting GIT_BUILD_DIR had still worked, then the
MODERN_GIT feature/fix added in 1a0962dee5 ("t/perf: fix regression in
testing older versions of git", 2016-06-22) would have broke.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
revisions.txt: remove ambibuity between <rev>:<path> and :<path>
The revision ':README' is mentioned as an example for '<rev>:<path>'
but the explanation forwards to the ':<n>:<path>' syntax. At the same
time ':<n>:<path>' did not mark the '<n>:' as optional.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Heiduk <asheiduk@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
revisions.txt: mention <rev>~ form
In revisions.txt, the '<rev>^' form is mentioned but the '<rev>~' form
is missing. Although both forms are essentially equivalent (they each
get the first parent of the specified revision), we should mention the
latter for completeness. Make this change.
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
revisions.txt: mark optional rev arguments with []
In revisions.txt, an optional rev argument was not distinguised.
Instead, a user had to continue and read the description in order to
learn that the argument was optional.
Since the [] notation for an optional argument is common-knowledge in
the Git documentation, mark optional arguments with [] so that it's more
obvious for the reader.
Helped-by: Andreas Heiduk <asheiduk@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
revisions.txt: change "rev" to "<rev>"
In revisions.txt, there were some instances of a rev argument being
written as "rev". However, since they didn't mean the string literal,
write "<rev>", instead.
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
notes: correct documentation of format_display_notes()
'flags' parameter was replaced by 'raw' in commit:
76141e2e62 ("format_note(): simplify API", 2012-10-17)
Signed-off-by: Chris Mayo <aklhfex@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
mingw: remove obsolete IPv6-related code
To support IPv6, Git provided fall back functions for Windows versions
that did not support IPv6. However, as Git dropped support for Windows
XP and prior, those functions are not needed anymore.
Remove those fallbacks by reverting fe3b2b7b827c (Enable support for
IPv6 on MinGW, 2009-11-24) and using the functions directly (without
'ipv6_' prefix).
Signed-off-by: Tanushree Tumane <tanushreetumane@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t5580: verify that alternates can be UNC paths
On Windows, UNC paths are a very convenient way to share data, and
alternates are all about sharing data.
We fixed a bug where alternates specifying UNC paths were not handled
properly, and it is high time that we add a regression test to ensure
that this bug is not reintroduced.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
cvsexportcommit: force crlf translation
When using cvsnt + msys + git, it seems like the output of cvs status
had \r\n in it, and caused the command to fail.
This fixes that.
Signed-off-by: Dustin Spicuzza <dustin@virtualroadside.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
ci: install 'libsvn-perl' instead of 'git-svn'
Since e7e9f5e7a1 (travis-ci: enable Git SVN tests t91xx on Linux,
2016-05-19) some of our Travis CI build jobs install the 'git-svn'
package, because it was a convenient way to install its dependencies,
which are necessary to run our 'git-svn' tests (we don't actually need
the 'git-svn' package itself). However, from those dependencies,
namely the 'libsvn-perl', 'libyaml-perl', and 'libterm-readkey-perl'
packages, only 'libsvn-perl' is necessary to run those tests, the
others arent, not even to fulfill some prereqs.
So update 'ci/install-dependencies.sh' to install only 'libsvn-perl'
instead of 'git-svn' and its additional dependencies.
Note that this change has more important implications than merely not
installing three unnecessary packages, as it keeps our builds working
with Travis CI's Xenial images. In our '.travis.yml' we never
explicitly specified which Linux image we want to use to run our Linux
build jobs, and so far they have been run on the default Ubuntu 14.04
Trusty image. However, 14.04 just reached its EOL, and Travis CI has
already began the transition to use 16.04 Xenial as the default Linux
build environment [1]. Alas, our Linux Clang and GCC build jobs can't
simply 'apt-get install git-svn' in the current Xenial images [2],
like they did in the Trusty images, and, consequently, fail.
Installing only 'libsvn-perl' avoids this issue, while the 'git svn'
tests are still run as they should.
[1] https://blog.travis-ci.com/2019-04-15-xenial-default-build-environment
[2] 'apt-get install git-svn' in the Xenial image fails with:
The following packages have unmet dependencies:
git-svn : Depends: git (< 1:2.7.4-.)
E: Unable to correct problems, you have held broken packages.
The reason is that both the Trusty and Xenial images contain the
'git' package installed from 'ppa:git-core/ppa', so it's
considerably newer than the 'git' package in the corresponding
standard Ubuntu package repositories. The difference is that the
Trusty image still contains these third-party apt repositories, so
the 'git-svn' package was installed from the same PPA, and its
version matched the version of the already installed 'git'
package. In the Xenial image, however, these third-party
apt-repositories are removed (to reduce the risk of unrelated
interference and faster 'apt-get update') [3], and the version of
the 'git-svn' package coming from the standard Ubuntu package
repositories doesn't match the much more recent version of the
'git' package installed from the PPA, resulting in this dependecy
error.
Adding back the 'ppa:git-core/ppa' package repository would solve
this dependency issue as well, but since the troublesome package
happens to be unnecessary, not installing it in the first place is
better.
[3] https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/reference/xenial/#third-party-apt-repositories-removed
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t4253-am-keep-cr-dos: avoid using pipes
The exit code of the upstream in a pipe is ignored thus we should avoid
using it. By writing out the output of the git command to a file, we can
test the exit codes of both the commands.
Signed-off-by: Boxuan Li <liboxuan@connect.hku.hk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
commit-graph: fix memory leak
Free the commit graph when verify_commit_graph_lite() reports an error.
Credit to OSS-Fuzz for finding this leak.
Signed-off-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
midx: add packs to packed_git linked list
The multi-pack-index allows searching for objects across multiple
packs using one object list. The original design gains many of
these performance benefits by keeping the packs in the
multi-pack-index out of the packed_git list.
Unfortunately, this has one major drawback. If the multi-pack-index
covers thousands of packs, and a command loads many of those packs,
then we can hit the limit for open file descriptors. The
close_one_pack() method is used to limit this resource, but it
only looks at the packed_git list, and uses an LRU cache to prevent
thrashing.
Instead of complicating this close_one_pack() logic to include
direct references to the multi-pack-index, simply add the packs
opened by the multi-pack-index to the packed_git list. This
immediately solves the file-descriptor limit problem, but requires
some extra steps to avoid performance issues or other problems:
1. Create a multi_pack_index bit in the packed_git struct that is
one if and only if the pack was loaded from a multi-pack-index.
2. Skip packs with the multi_pack_index bit when doing object
lookups and abbreviations. These algorithms already check the
multi-pack-index before the packed_git struct. This has a very
small performance hit, as we need to walk more packed_git
structs. This is acceptable, since these operations run binary
search on the other packs, so this walk-and-ignore logic is
very fast by comparison.
3. When closing a multi-pack-index file, do not close its packs,
as those packs will be closed using close_all_packs(). In some
cases, such as 'git repack', we run 'close_midx()' without also
closing the packs, so we need to un-set the multi_pack_index bit
in those packs. This is necessary, and caught by running
t6501-freshen-objects.sh with GIT_TEST_MULTI_PACK_INDEX=1.
To manually test this change, I inserted trace2 logging into
close_pack_fd() and set pack_max_fds to 10, then ran 'git rev-list
--all --objects' on a copy of the Git repo with 300+ pack-files and
a multi-pack-index. The logs verified the packs are closed as
we read them beyond the file descriptor limit.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
midx: pass a repository pointer
Much of the multi-pack-index code focuses on the multi_pack_index
struct, and so we only pass a pointer to the current one. However,
we will insert a dependency on the packed_git linked list in a
future change, so we will need a repository reference. Inserting
these parameters is a significant enough change to split out.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
branch: make create_branch accept a merge base rev
When we ran something like
$ git checkout -b test master...
it would fail with the message
fatal: Not a valid object name: 'master...'.
This was caused by the call to `create_branch` where `start_name` is
expected to be a valid rev. However, git-checkout allows the branch to
be a valid _merge base_ rev (i.e. with a "...") so it was possible for
an invalid rev to be passed in.
Make `create_branch` accept a merge base rev so that this case does not
error out.
As a side-effect, teach git-branch how to handle merge base revs as
well.
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t2018: cleanup in current test
Before, in t2018, if do_checkout failed to create `branch2`, the next
test-case would run `git branch -D branch2` but then fail because it was
expecting `branch2` to exist, even though it doesn't. As a result, an
early failure could cause a cascading failure of tests.
Make test-case responsible for cleaning up their own branches so that
future tests can start with a sane environment.
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
parse-options: don't emit "ambiguous option" for aliases
Change the option parsing machinery so that e.g. "clone --recurs ..."
doesn't error out because "clone" understands both "--recursive" and
"--recurse-submodules" to mean the same thing.
Initially "clone" just understood --recursive until the
--recurses-submodules alias was added in ccdd3da652 ("clone: Add the
--recurse-submodules option as alias for --recursive",
2010-11-04). Since bb62e0a99f ("clone: teach --recurse-submodules to
optionally take a pathspec", 2017-03-17) the longer form has been
promoted to the default.
But due to the way the options parsing machinery works this resulted
in the rather absurd situation of:
$ git clone --recurs [...]
error: ambiguous option: recurs (could be --recursive or --recurse-submodules)
Add OPT_ALIAS() to express this link between two or more options and use
it in git-clone. Multiple aliases of an option could be written as
OPT_ALIAS(0, "alias1", "original-name"),
OPT_ALIAS(0, "alias2", "original-name"),
...
The current implementation is not exactly optimal in this case. But we
can optimize it when it becomes a problem. So far we don't even have two
aliases of any option.
A big chunk of code is actually from Junio C Hamano.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
coccicheck: optionally batch spatch invocations
In our "make coccicheck" rule, we currently feed each source file to its
own individual invocation of spatch. This has a few downsides:
- it repeats any overhead spatch has for starting up and reading the
patch file
- any included header files may get processed from multiple
invocations. This is slow (we see the same header files multiple
times) and may produce a resulting patch with repeated hunks (which
cannot be applied without further cleanup)
Ideally we'd just invoke a single instance of spatch per rule-file and
feed it all source files. But spatch can be rather memory hungry when
run in this way. I measured the peak RSS going from ~90MB for a single
file to ~1900MB for all files. Multiplied by multiple rule files being
processed at the same time (for "make -j"), this can make things slower
or even cause them to fail (e.g., this is reported to happen on our
Travis builds).
Instead, let's provide a tunable knob. We'll leave the default at "1",
but it can be cranked up to "999" for maximum CPU/memory tradeoff, or
people can find points in between that serve their particular machines.
Here are a few numbers running a single rule via:
SIZES='1 4 16 999'
RULE=contrib/coccinelle/object_id.cocci
for i in $SIZES; do
make clean
/usr/bin/time -o $i.out --format='%e | %U | %S | %M' \
make $RULE.patch SPATCH_BATCH_SIZE=$i
done
for i in $SIZES; do
printf '%4d | %s\n' $i "$(cat $i.out)"
done
which yields:
1 | 97.73 | 93.38 | 4.33 | 100128
4 | 52.80 | 51.14 | 1.69 | 135204
16 | 35.82 | 35.09 | 0.76 | 284124
999 | 23.30 | 23.13 | 0.20 | 1903852
The implementation is done with xargs, which should be widely available;
it's in POSIX, we rely on it already in the test suite. And "coccicheck"
is really a developer-only tool anyway, so it's not a big deal if
obscure systems can't run it.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
trace2: fixup access problem on /etc/gitconfig in read_very_early_config
Teach do_git_config_sequence() to optionally gently check for access to
the system config. Use this option in read_very_early_config() when
initializing trace2.
In [1] SZEDER Gábor reported that my changes in [2] introduced a
regression when the user does not have permission to read the system
config.
This commit addresses that problem by optionally ignoring that error.
[1] https://public-inbox.org/git/285beb2b2d740ce20fdd8af1becf371ab39703db.1554995916.git.gitgitgadget@gmail.com/T/#m342e839289aec515523a98b5e34d7f42d3f1fd79
[2] https://public-inbox.org/git/285beb2b2d740ce20fdd8af1becf371ab39703db.1554995916.git.gitgitgadget@gmail.com/T/#m11b59c9228c698442f750ee8f9b10c629399ae48
Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <jeffhost@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
*.[ch]: manually align parameter lists
In previous patches, extern was mechanically removed from function
declarations without care to formatting, causing parameter lists to be
misaligned. Manually format changed sections such that the parameter
lists should be realigned.
Viewing this patch with 'git diff -w' should produce no output.
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
*.[ch]: remove extern from function declarations using sed
There has been a push to remove extern from function declarations.
Finish the job by removing all instances of "extern" for function
declarations in headers using sed.
This was done by running the following on my system with sed 4.2.2:
$ git ls-files \*.{c,h} |
grep -v ^compat/ |
xargs sed -i'' -e 's/^\(\s*\)extern \([^(]*([^*]\)/\1\2/'
Files under `compat/` are intentionally excluded as some are directly
copied from external sources and we should avoid churning them as much
as possible.
Then, leftover instances of extern were found by running
$ git grep -w -C3 extern \*.{c,h}
and manually checking the output. No other instances were found.
Note that the regex used specifically excludes function variables which
_should_ be left as extern.
Not the most elegant way to do it but it gets the job done.
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
*.[ch]: remove extern from function declarations using spatch
There has been a push to remove extern from function declarations.
Remove some instances of "extern" for function declarations which are
caught by Coccinelle. Note that Coccinelle has some difficulty with
processing functions with `__attribute__` or varargs so some `extern`
declarations are left behind to be dealt with in a future patch.
This was the Coccinelle patch used:
@@
type T;
identifier f;
@@
- extern
T f(...);
and it was run with:
$ git ls-files \*.{c,h} |
grep -v ^compat/ |
xargs spatch --sp-file contrib/coccinelle/noextern.cocci --in-place
Files under `compat/` are intentionally excluded as some are directly
copied from external sources and we should avoid churning them as much
as possible.
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu <liu.denton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t/perf: add perf script for partial clones
We don't cover the partial clone feature at all in t/perf. Let's at
least run a few basic tests so that we'll notice any regressions.
We'll do a no-blob clone, and split it into two parts: the actual object
transfer, and the subsequent checkout (which will of course require
another transfer to get the blobs). That will help us more clearly
assess the performance of each.
There are obviously a lot more possibilities besides just a no-blob
partial clone, but this should serve as a canary that alerts us to any
generic slow-downs (and we can add more tests later for cases that
aren't exercised here).
There are a few non-ideal things here that make this not an entirely
accurate test, but are probably OK for our purposes:
1. We have to do some extra prep/cleanup work inside the timing tests,
since they impact the on-disk state and the perf harness may run
each one multiple times.
In practice this is probably OK, since these bits should be much
less expensive than the operations we are measuring.
2. The clone time is likely to be dominated by the server's object
enumeration. In the real world, a repo large enough to drive people
to partial clones is likely to have reachability bitmaps enabled.
And in the opposite direction, our object transfer is happening at
the speed of a local pipe, whereas in the real world it would
bottle-neck on the network.
So any percentage speedups should be taken with a grain of salt.
But hopefully any regressions will produce enough of an effect to
be noticeable.
This script also demonstrates the recent improvement from dfa33a298d
(clone: do faster object check for partial clones, 2019-04-19):
Test dfa33a298d^ dfa33a298d
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
5600.2: clone without blobs 18.41(22.72+1.09) 6.83(11.65+0.50) -62.9%
5600.3: checkout of result 1.82(3.24+0.26) 1.84(3.24+0.26) +1.1%
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
trace2: fix incorrect function pointer check
Fix trace2_data_json_fl() to check for the presence of pfn_data_json_fl
in its targets, rather than pfn_data_fl, which is not actually called.
Signed-off-by: Josh Steadmon <steadmon@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Honor core.precomposeUnicode in more places
On Mac's HFS where git sets core.precomposeUnicode to true automatically
by git init/clone, when a user creates a simple unicode refname (in NFC
format) such as españa:
$ git branch españa
different commands would display the branch name differently. For
example, git branch, git log --decorate, and git fast-export all used
65 73 70 61 c3 b1 61 (or "espa\xc3\xb1a")
(NFC form) while show-ref would use
65 73 70 61 6e cc 83 61 (or "espan\xcc\x83a")
(NFD form). A stress test for git filter-repo was tripped up by this
inconsistency, though digging in I found that the problems could
compound; for example, if the user ran
$ git pack-refs --all
and then tried to check out the branch, they would be met with:
$ git checkout españa
error: pathspec 'españa' did not match any file(s) known to git
$ git checkout españa --
fatal: invalid reference: españa
$ git branch
españa
* master
Note that the user could run the `git branch` command first and copy and
paste the `españa` portion of the output and still see the same two
errors. Also, if the user added --no-prune to the pack-refs command,
then they would see three branches: master, españa, and españa (those
last two are NFC vs. NFD forms, even if they render the same).
Further, if the user had the `españa` branch checked out before
running `git pack-refs --all`, the user would be greeted with (note
that I'm trimming trailing output with an ellipsis):
$ git rev-parse HEAD
fatal: ambiguous argument 'HEAD': unknown revision or path...
$ git status
On branch españa
No commits yet...
Or worse, if the user didn't check this stuff first, running `git
commit` will create a new commit with all changes of all of history
being squashed into it.
In addition to pack-refs, one could also get into this state with
upload-pack or anything that calls either pack-refs or upload-pack (e.g.
gc or clone).
Add code in a few places (pack-refs, show-ref, upload-pack) to check and
honor the setting of core.precomposeUnicode to avoid these bugs.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git-compat-util: work around for access(X_OK) under root
On AIX, access(X_OK) may succeed when run as root even if the
execution isn't possible. This behavior is allowed by POSIX
which says:
... for a process with appropriate privileges, an implementation
may indicate success for X_OK even if execute permission is not
granted to any user.
It can lead hook programs to have their execution refused:
git commit -m content
fatal: cannot exec '.git/hooks/pre-commit': Permission denied
Add NEED_ACCESS_ROOT_HANDLER in order to use an access helper function.
It checks with stat if any executable flags is set when the current user
is root.
Signed-off-by: Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Makefile: use fileno macro work around on AIX
Declare FILENO_IS_A_MACRO on AIX
On AIX, fileno(fp) is a macro and need to use the work around already made for BSD's.
Signed-off-by: Clément Chigot <clement.chigot@atos.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The seventh batch
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Merge branch 'js/macos-gettext-build'
Build with gettext breaks on recent macOS w/ Homebrew when
/usr/local/bin is not on PATH, which has been corrected.
* js/macos-gettext-build:
macOS: make sure that gettext is found
Merge branch 'bs/sendemail-tighten-anything-by'
The recently added feature to add addresses that are on
anything-by: trailers in 'git send-email' was found to be way too
eager and considered nonsense strings as if they can be legitimate
beginning of *-by: trailer. This has been tightened.
* bs/sendemail-tighten-anything-by:
send-email: don't cc *-by lines with '-' prefix
Merge branch 'bc/send-email-qp-cr'
"git send-email" has been taught to use quoted-printable when the
payload contains carriage-return. The use of the mechanism is in
line with the design originally added the codepath that chooses QP
when the payload has overly long lines.
* bc/send-email-qp-cr:
send-email: default to quoted-printable when CR is present
Merge branch 'nd/submodule-foreach-quiet'
"git submodule foreach <command> --quiet" did not pass the option
down correctly, which has been corrected.
* nd/submodule-foreach-quiet:
submodule foreach: fix "<command> --quiet" not being respected
Merge branch 'js/iso8895-test-on-apfs'
Test fix on APFS that is incapable of store paths in Latin-1.
* js/iso8895-test-on-apfs:
t9822: skip tests if file names cannot be ISO-8859-1 encoded
Merge branch 'jc/gettext-test-fix'
The GETTEXT_POISON test option has been quite broken ever since it
was made runtime-tunable, which has been fixed.
* jc/gettext-test-fix:
gettext tests: export the restored GIT_TEST_GETTEXT_POISON
Merge branch 'jk/fetch-reachability-error-fix'
Code clean-up and a fix for "git fetch" by an explicit object name
(as opposed to fetching refs by name).
* jk/fetch-reachability-error-fix:
fetch: do not consider peeled tags as advertised tips
remote.c: make singular free_ref() public
fetch: use free_refs()
pkt-line: prepare buffer before handling ERR packets
upload-pack: send ERR packet for non-tip objects
t5530: check protocol response for "not our ref"
t5516: drop ok=sigpipe from unreachable-want tests
Merge branch 'jk/xmalloc'
The code is updated to check the result of memory allocation before
it is used in more places, by using xmalloc and/or xcalloc calls.
* jk/xmalloc:
progress: use xmalloc/xcalloc
xdiff: use xmalloc/xrealloc
xdiff: use git-compat-util
test-prio-queue: use xmalloc
Merge branch 'km/t3000-retitle'
A test update.
* km/t3000-retitle:
t3000 (ls-files -o): widen description to reflect current tests
Merge branch 'js/untracked-cache-allocfix'
An underallocation in the code to read the untracked cache
extension has been corrected.
* js/untracked-cache-allocfix:
untracked cache: fix off-by-one
Merge branch 'js/t3301-unbreak-notes-test'
Test fix.
* js/t3301-unbreak-notes-test:
t3301: fix false negative