The strbuf API was explained between the API documentation and in
the header file. Move missing bits to strbuf.h so that programmers
can check only one place for all necessary information.
* jk/strbuf-doc-to-header:
strbuf.h: group documentation for trim functions
strbuf.h: drop boilerplate descriptions of strbuf_split_*
strbuf.h: reorganize api function grouping headers
strbuf.h: format asciidoc code blocks as 4-space indent
strbuf.h: drop asciidoc list formatting from API docs
strbuf.h: unify documentation comments beginnings
strbuf.h: integrate api-strbuf.txt documentation
Optimize attribute look-up, mostly useful in "git grep" on a
project that does not use many attributes, by avoiding it when we
(should) know that the attributes are not defined in the first
place.
* nd/attr-optim:
attr: avoid heavy work when we know the specified attr is not defined
attr: do not attempt to expand when we know it's not a macro
attr.c: rename arg name attr_nr to avoid shadowing the global one
Merge branch 'ak/add-i-empty-candidates' into maint
The interactive "show a list and let the user choose from it"
interface "add -i" used showed and prompted to the user even when
the candidate list was empty, against which the only "choice" the
user could have made was to choose nothing.
* ak/add-i-empty-candidates:
add -i: return from list_and_choose if there is no candidate
"git apply --whitespace=fix" used to under-allocate the memory
when the fix resulted in a longer text than the original patch.
* jc/apply-ws-fix-expands:
apply: count the size of postimage correctly
apply: make update_pre_post_images() sanity check the given postlen
apply.c: typofix
Merge branch 'mg/commit-author-no-match-malformed-message' into maint
The error message from "git commit", when a non-existing author
name was given as value to the "--author=" parameter, has been
reworded to avoid misunderstanding.
The documentation incorrectly said that C(opy) and R(ename) are the
only ones that can be followed by the score number in the output in
the --raw format.
* jc/diff-format-doc:
diff-format doc: a score can follow M for rewrite
Merge branch 'bc/http-fallback-to-password-after-krb-fails' into maint
After attempting and failing a password-less authentication
(e.g. kerberos), libcURL refuses to fall back to password based
Basic authentication without a bit of help/encouragement.
* bc/http-fallback-to-password-after-krb-fails:
remote-curl: fall back to Basic auth if Negotiate fails
Merge branch 'jn/rerere-fail-on-auto-update-failure' into maint
"git rerere" (invoked internally from many mergy operations) did
not correctly signal errors when told to update the working tree
files and failed to do so for whatever reason.
* jn/rerere-fail-on-auto-update-failure:
rerere: error out on autoupdate failure
"git blame HEAD -- missing" failed to correctly say "HEAD" when it
tried to say "No such path 'missing' in HEAD".
* jk/blame-commit-label:
blame.c: fix garbled error message
use xstrdup_or_null to replace ternary conditionals
builtin/commit.c: use xstrdup_or_null instead of envdup
builtin/apply.c: use xstrdup_or_null instead of null_strdup
git-compat-util: add xstrdup_or_null helper
Longstanding configuration variable naming rules has been added to
the documentation.
* jc/conf-var-doc:
CodingGuidelines: describe naming rules for configuration variables
config.txt: mark deprecated variables more prominently
config.txt: clarify that add.ignore-errors is deprecated
An earlier workaround to squelch unhelpful deprecation warnings
from the complier on Mac OSX unnecessarily set minimum required
version of the OS, which the user might want to raise (or lower)
for other reasons.
* es/squelch-openssl-warnings-on-macosx:
git-compat-util: do not step on MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED
Clarify in the documentation that "remote.<nick>.pushURL" and
"remote.<nick>.URL" are there to name the same repository accessed
via different transports, not two separate repositories.
* jc/remote-set-url-doc:
Documentation/git-remote.txt: stress that set-url is not for triangular
The documentation incorrectly said that C(opy) and R(ename) are the
only ones that can be followed by the score number in the output in
the --raw format.
* jc/diff-format-doc:
diff-format doc: a score can follow M for rewrite
The error message from "git commit", when a non-existing author
name was given as value to the "--author=" parameter, has been
reworded to avoid misunderstanding.
"git apply --whitespace=fix" used to under-allocate the memory
when the fix resulted in a longer text than the original patch.
* jc/apply-ws-fix-expands:
apply: count the size of postimage correctly
apply: make update_pre_post_images() sanity check the given postlen
apply.c: typofix
The interactive "show a list and let the user choose from it"
interface "add -i" used showed and prompted to the user even when
the candidate list was empty, against which the only "choice" the
user could have made was to choose nothing.
* ak/add-i-empty-candidates:
add -i: return from list_and_choose if there is no candidate
A few files include the same header file directly more than once.
As all these headers protect themselves against repeated inclusion
by the "#ifndef FOO_H / #define FOO_H / ... / #endif" idiom, leave
only the first inclusion and remove the later inclusion as a no-op
clean-up.
Signed-off-by: Дилян Палаузов <git-dpa@aegee.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since 0b6806b9 (xread, xwrite: limit size of IO to 8MB, 2013-08-20),
we chomp our calls to read(2) and write(2) into chunks of
MAX_IO_SIZE bytes (8 MiB), because a large IO results in a bad
latency when the program needs to be killed. This also brought our
IO below SSIZE_MAX, which is a limit POSIX allows read(2) and
write(2) to fail when the IO size exceeds it, for OS X, where a
problem was originally reported.
However, there are other systems that define SSIZE_MAX smaller than
our default, and feeding 8 MiB to underlying read(2)/write(2) would
fail. Make sure we clip our calls to the lower limit as well.
Reported-by: Joachim Schmitz <jojo@schmitz-digital.de> Helped-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de> Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Mark file-local symbols as "static", and drop functions that nobody
uses.
* jc/unused-symbols:
shallow.c: make check_shallow_file_for_update() static
remote.c: make clear_cas_option() static
urlmatch.c: make match_urls() static
revision.c: make save_parents() and free_saved_parents() static
line-log.c: make line_log_data_init() static
pack-bitmap.c: make pack_bitmap_filename() static
prompt.c: remove git_getpass() nobody uses
http.c: make finish_active_slot() and handle_curl_result() static
Extending the js/push-to-deploy topic, the behaviour of "git push"
when updating the working tree and the index with an update to the
branch that is checked out can be tweaked by push-to-checkout hook.
* jc/push-to-checkout:
receive-pack: support push-to-checkout hook
receive-pack: refactor updateInstead codepath
"git push" has been taught a "--atomic" option that makes push to
update more than one ref an "all-or-none" affair.
* sb/atomic-push:
Document receive.advertiseatomic
t5543-atomic-push.sh: add basic tests for atomic pushes
push.c: add an --atomic argument
send-pack.c: add --atomic command line argument
send-pack: rename ref_update_to_be_sent to check_to_send_update
receive-pack.c: negotiate atomic push support
receive-pack.c: add execute_commands_atomic function
receive-pack.c: move transaction handling in a central place
receive-pack.c: move iterating over all commands outside execute_commands
receive-pack.c: die instead of error in case of possible future bug
receive-pack.c: shorten the execute_commands loop over all commands
Restructure "reflog expire" to fit the reflogs better with the
recently updated ref API.
Looked reasonable (except that some shortlog entries stood out like
a sore thumb).
* mh/reflog-expire: (24 commits)
refs.c: let fprintf handle the formatting
refs.c: don't expose the internal struct ref_lock in the header file
lock_any_ref_for_update(): inline function
refs.c: remove unlock_ref/close_ref/commit_ref from the refs api
reflog_expire(): new function in the reference API
expire_reflog(): treat the policy callback data as opaque
Move newlog and last_kept_sha1 to "struct expire_reflog_cb"
expire_reflog(): move rewrite to flags argument
expire_reflog(): move verbose to flags argument
expire_reflog(): pass flags through to expire_reflog_ent()
struct expire_reflog_cb: a new callback data type
Rename expire_reflog_cb to expire_reflog_policy_cb
expire_reflog(): move updateref to flags argument
expire_reflog(): move dry_run to flags argument
expire_reflog(): add a "flags" argument
expire_reflog(): extract two policy-related functions
Extract function should_expire_reflog_ent()
expire_reflog(): use a lock_file for rewriting the reflog file
expire_reflog(): return early if the reference has no reflog
expire_reflog(): rename "ref" parameter to "refname"
...
After attempting and failing a password-less authentication
(e.g. kerberos), libcURL refuses to fall back to password based
Basic authentication without a bit of help/encouragement.
* bc/http-fallback-to-password-after-krb-fails:
remote-curl: fall back to Basic auth if Negotiate fails
"git rerere" (invoked internally from many mergy operations) did
not correctly signal errors when told to update the working tree
files and failed to do so for whatever reason.
* jn/rerere-fail-on-auto-update-failure:
rerere: error out on autoupdate failure
"git blame HEAD -- missing" failed to correctly say "HEAD" when it
tried to say "No such path 'missing' in HEAD".
* jk/blame-commit-label:
blame.c: fix garbled error message
use xstrdup_or_null to replace ternary conditionals
builtin/commit.c: use xstrdup_or_null instead of envdup
builtin/apply.c: use xstrdup_or_null instead of null_strdup
git-compat-util: add xstrdup_or_null helper
The clone subcommand has long had support for excluding
subdirectories, but sync has not. This is a nuisance,
since as soon as you do a sync, any changed files that
were initially excluded start showing up.
Move the "exclude" command-line option into the parent
class; the actual behavior was already present there so
it simply had to be exposed.
Signed-off-by: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org> Reviewed-by: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
run_setup_gently() is called before merge-file. This may result in changing
current working directory, which wasn't taken into account when opening a file
for writing.
Fix by prepending the passed prefix. Previous var is left so that error
messages keep referring to the file from the user's working directory
perspective.
Signed-off-by: Aleksander Boruch-Gruszecki <aleksander.boruchgruszecki@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
builtin/blame: destroy initialized commit_info only
Since ea02ffa3 (mailmap: simplify map_user() interface, 2013-01-05),
find_alignment() has been invoking commit_info_destroy() on an
uninitialized auto 'struct commit_info' (when METAINFO_SHOWN is not
set). commit_info_destroy() calls strbuf_release() for each
'commit_info' strbuf member, which randomly invokes free() on
whatever random stack value happens to reside in strbuf.buf, thus
leading to periodic crashes.
Reported-by: Dilyan Palauzov <dilyan.palauzov@aegee.org> Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The string in 'base' contains a path suffix to a specific object;
when its value is used, the suffix must either be filled (as in
stat_sha1_file, open_sha1_file, check_and_freshen_nonlocal) or
cleared (as in prepare_packed_git) to avoid junk at the end.
660c889e (sha1_file: add for_each iterators for loose and packed
objects, 2014-10-15) introduced loose_from_alt_odb(), but this did
neither and treated 'base' as a complete path to the "base" object
directory, instead of a pointer to the "base" of the full path
string.
The trailing path after 'base' is still initialized to NUL, hiding
the bug in some common cases. Additionally the descendent
for_each_file_in_obj_subdir() function swallows ENOENT, so an error
only shows if the alternate's path was last filled with a valid
object (where statting /path/to/existing/00/0bjectfile/00 fails).
Signed-off-by: Jonathon Mah <me@JonathonMah.com> Helped-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
for_each_loose_file_in_objdir: take an optional strbuf path
We feed a root "objdir" path to this iterator function,
which then copies the result into a strbuf, so that it can
repeatedly append the object sub-directories to it. Let's
make it easy for callers to just pass us a strbuf in the
first place.
We leave the original interface as a convenience for callers
who want to just pass a const string like the result of
get_object_directory().
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git-compat-util: do not step on MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED
MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED may be defined by the builder to a
specific version in order to produce compatible binaries for a
particular system. Blindly defining it to MAC_OS_X_VERSION_10_6
is bad.
Additionally MAC_OS_X_VERSION_10_6 will not be defined on older
systems and should AvailabilityMacros.h be included on such as
system an error will result. However, using the explicit value
of 1060 (which is what MAC_OS_X_VERSION_10_6 is defined to) does
not solve the problem.
The changes that introduced stepping on MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN were
made in b195aa00 (git-compat-util: suppress unavoidable
Apple-specific deprecation warnings) to avoid deprecation
warnings.
Instead of blindly setting MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN to 1060 change
the definition of DEPRECATED_ATTRIBUTE to empty to avoid the
warnings. This preserves any MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED
setting while avoiding the warnings as intended by b195aa00.
Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
config_buf_ungetc: warn when pushing back a random character
Our config code simulates a stdio stream around a buffer,
but our fake ungetc() does not behave quite like the real
one. In particular, we only rewind the position by one
character, but do _not_ actually put the character from the
caller into position.
It turns out that this does not matter, because we only ever
push back the character we just read. In other words, such
an assignment would be a noop. But because the function is
called ungetc, and because it takes a character parameter,
it is a mistake waiting to happen.
Actually assigning the character into the buffer would be
ideal, but our pointer is actually a "const" copy of the
buffer. We do not know who the real owner of the buffer is
in this code, and would not want to munge their contents.
Instead, we can simply add an assertion that matches what
the current caller does, and will let us know if new callers
are added that violate the contract.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The decimal_width function originally appeared in blame.c as
"lineno_width", and was designed for calculating the
print-width of small-ish integer values (line numbers in
text files). In ec7ff5b, it was made into a reusable
function, and in dc801e7, we started using it to align
diffstats.
Binary files in a diffstat show byte counts rather than line
numbers, meaning they can be quite large (e.g., consider
adding or removing a 2GB file). decimal_width is not up to
the challenge for two reasons:
1. It takes the value as an "int", whereas large files may
easily surpass this. The value may be truncated, in
which case we will produce an incorrect value.
2. It counts "up" by repeatedly multiplying another
integer by 10 until it surpasses the value. This can
cause an infinite loop when the value is close to the
largest representable integer.
For example, consider using a 32-bit signed integer,
and a value of 2,140,000,000 (just shy of 2^31-1).
We will count up and eventually see that 1,000,000,000
is smaller than our value. The next step would be to
multiply by 10 and see that 10,000,000,000 is too
large, ending the loop. But we can't represent that
value, and we have signed overflow.
This is technically undefined behavior, but a common
behavior is to lose the high bits, in which case our
iterator will certainly be less than the number. So
we'll keep multiplying, overflow again, and so on.
This patch changes the argument to a uintmax_t (the same
type we use to store the diffstat information for binary
filese), and counts "down" by repeatedly dividing our value
by 10.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When we are parsing a config value, if we see a carriage
return, we fgetc the next character to see if it is a
line feed (in which case we silently drop the CR). If it
isn't, we then ungetc the character, and take the literal
CR.
But we never check whether we in fact got a character at
all. If the config file ends in CR, we will get EOF here,
and try to ungetc EOF. This works OK for a real stdio
stream. The ungetc returns an error, and the next fgetc will
then return EOF again.
However, our custom buffer-based stream is not so fortunate.
It happily rewinds the position of the stream by one
character, ignoring the fact that we fed it EOF. The next
fgetc call returns the final CR again, over and over, and we
end up in an infinite loop.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
run_diff_files(): clarify computation of sha1 validity
Remove the need to have duplicated "if there is a change then feed
null_sha1 and otherwise sha1 from the cache entry" for the "new"
side of the diff by introducing two temporary variables to point
at the object name of the old and the new side of the blobs.
Makefile: handle broken curl version number in version check
curl 7.11.0 through 7.12.2 when built from their official release
archives will present a 5 digit version number instead of the documented
6 digits which breaks the version check in the Makefile.
Correct these broken version numbers on the fly when extracting them to
ensure the comparison works correctly.
[jc: shortened the new sed scripts a bit]
Signed-off-by: Tom G. Christensen <tgc@statsbiblioteket.dk> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit dd61399 introduced support for http proxies that require
authentication but it relies on the CURL_PROXYAUTH option which was
added in curl 7.10.7.
This makes sure proxy authentication is only enabled if libcurl can
support it.
Signed-off-by: Tom G. Christensen <tgc@statsbiblioteket.dk> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When we add a new submodule the path of the submodule is being
normalized. We fail to normalize multiple adjacent '/./', though.
Thus 'path/to/././submodule' will become 'path/to/./submodule' where
it should be 'path/to/submodule' instead.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im> Acked-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
CodingGuidelines: describe naming rules for configuration variables
We may want to say something about command line option names in the
new section as well, but for now, let's make sure everybody is clear
on how to structure and name their configuration variables.
The text for the rules are partly taken from the log message of
Jonathan's 6b3020a2 (add: introduce add.ignoreerrors synonym for
add.ignore-errors, 2010-12-01).
Documentation/git-remote.txt: stress that set-url is not for triangular
It seems to be a common mistake to try using a single remote
(e.g. 'origin') to fetch from one place (i.e. upstream) while
pushing to another (i.e. your publishing point).
That will never work satisfactorily, and it is easy to understand
why if you think about what refs/remotes/origin/* would mean in such
a world. It fundamentally cannot reflect the reality. If it
follows the state of your upstream, it cannot match what you have
published, and vice versa.
It may be that misinformation is spread by some people. Let's
counter them by adding a few words to our documentation.
- The description was referring to <oldurl> and <newurl>, but never
mentioned <name> argument you give from the command line. By
mentioning "remote <name>", stress the fact that it is configuring
a single remote.
- Add a reminder that explicitly states that this is about a single
remote, which the triangular workflow is not about.
Some older versions of gpg (reportedly v1.2.6 from RHEL4) cannot
import the keyrings found in our test suite, and thus cannot even
make a signature. The previous change works it around, but we
cannot anticipate breakages update to GPG would cause in the future.
Do a test-sign before declaring the GPG prerequisite fulfilled
to future-proof our tests.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t/lib-gpg: include separate public keys in keyring.gpg
Since 1e3eefb (tests: replace binary GPG keyrings with
ASCII-armored keys, 2014-12-12), we import our test GPG keys
from a single file. Each keypair in the import stream
contains both the secret and public keys. However, older
versions of gpg reportedly fail to import the public half of
the key. We can solve this by including duplicates of the
public keys separately. The duplicates are ignored by modern
gpg, and this makes older versions work.
Reported by Tom G. Christensen <tgc@statsbiblioteket.dk> on
gpg 1.2.6 (from RHEL4).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
b6d8f309 (diff-raw format update take #2., 2005-05-23) started
documenting the diff format, and it said
...
(8) sha1 for "dst"; 0{40} if creation, unmerged or "look at work tree".
(9) status, followed by similarlity index number only for C and R.
(10) a tab or a NUL when '-z' option is used.
...
because C and R _were_ the only ones that came with a number back
then. This was corrected by ddafa7e9 (diff-helper: Fix R/C score
parsing under -z flag., 2005-05-29) and we started saying "score"
instead of "similarlity index" (because we can have other kind of
score there), and stopped saying "only for C and R" (because Git is
an ever evolving system). Later f345b0a0 (Add -B flag to diff-*
brothers., 2005-05-30) introduced a new concept, "dissimilarity"
score; it did not have to fix any documentation.
The current text that says only C and R can have scores came
independently from a5a323f3 (Add reference for status letters in
documentation., 2008-11-02) and it was wrong from the day one.
Noticed-by: Mike Hommey Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
As per the code, the --repo <repo> option is equivalent to the
<repo> argument to 'git push', but somehow it was documented as
something that is more than that. [It exists for historical
reasons, back from the time when options had to come before
arguments.]
Say so. [But not that.]
Signed-off-by: Michael J Gruber <git@drmicha.warpmail.net> Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There is no point in checking "!ref->name" when ref is a
"struct ref". The name field is a flex-array, and there
always has a non-zero address. This is almost certainly not
hurting anything, but it does cause clang-3.6 to complain.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When we are chomping newlines from the end of a strbuf, we
must check "sb.len != 0" before accessing "sb.buf[sb.len - 1]".
However, this code mistakenly checks "&sb.len", which is
always true (it is a part of an auto struct, so the address
is always non-zero). This could lead to us accessing memory
outside the strbuf when we read an empty file.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>