Optionally do not list empty directories in git-ls-files --others
Without the --directory flag, git-ls-files wouldn't ever list directories,
producing no output for empty directories, which is good since they cannot
be added and they bear no content, even untracked one (if Git ever starts
tracking directories on their own, this should obviously change since the
content notion will change).
With the --directory flag however, git-ls-files would list even empty
directories. This may be good in some situations but sometimes you want to
prevent that. This patch adds a --no-empty-directory option which makes
git-ls-files omit empty directories.
When passing in a pathname pattern without the "--" separator on the
command line, we verify that the pathnames in question exist. However,
there were two bugs in that verification:
- git-rev-parse would only check the first pathname, and silently allow
any invalid subsequent pathname, whether it existed or not (which
defeats the purpose of the check, and is also inconsistent with what
git-rev-list actually does)
- git-rev-list (and "git log" etc) would check each filename, but if the
check failed, it would print the error using the first one, i.e.:
[torvalds@g5 git]$ git log Makefile bad-file
fatal: 'Makefile': No such file or directory
instead of saying that it's 'bad-file' that doesn't exist.
This fixes both bugs.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* jc/clone:
git-clone: typofix.
clone: record the remote primary branch with remotes/$origin/HEAD
revamp git-clone (take #2).
revamp git-clone.
fetch,parse-remote,fmt-merge-msg: refs/remotes/* support
* jc/name:
sha1_name: make core.warnambiguousrefs the default.
sha1_name: warning ambiguous refs.
get_sha1_basic(): try refs/... and finally refs/remotes/$foo/HEAD
core.warnambiguousrefs: warns when "name" is used and both "name" branch and tag exists.
* git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/gitk/gitk:
gitk: Fix two bugs reported by users
gitk: Improve appearance of first child links
gitk: Make downward-pointing arrows end in vertical line segment
gitk: Don't change cursor at end of layout if find in progress
gitk: Make commitdata an array rather than a list
gitk: Fix display of diff lines beginning with --- or +++
[PATCH] gitk: Make error_popup react to Return
gitk: Fix a bug in drawing the selected line as a thick line
gitk: Further speedups
gitk: Various speed improvements
gitk: Fix Update menu item
gitk: Fix clicks on arrows on line ends
gitk: New improved gitk
contrib/git-svn: stabilize memory usage for big fetches
We should be safely able to import histories with thousands
of revisions without hogging up lots of memory.
With this, we lose the ability to autocorrect mistakes when
people specify revisions in reverse, but it's probably no longer
a problem since we only have one method of log parsing nowadays.
I've added an extra check to ensure that revision numbers do
increment.
Also, increment the version number to 0.11.0. I really should
just call it 1.0 soon...
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This was triggered by me testing the "@@" numbering shorthand by GNU
patch, which not only showed that git-apply thought it meant the number
was duplicated (when it means that the second number is 1), but my tests
showed than when git-apply mis-understood the number, it would then not
raise an alarm about it if the patch ended early.
Now, this doesn't actually _matter_, since with a three-line context, the
only case that "x,1" will be shorthanded to "x" is when x itself is 1 (in
which case git-apply got it right), but the fact that git-apply would also
silently accept truncated patches was a missed opportunity for additional
sanity-checking.
So make git-apply refuse to look at a patch fragment that ends early.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
send-email: Identify author at the top when sending e-mail
git-send-email did not check if the sender is the same as the
patch author. Follow the "From: at the beginning" convention to
propagate the patch author correctly.
This makes sure that many commands that take refs on the command
line to honor core.warnambiguousrefs configuration. Earlier,
the commands affected by this patch did not read the
configuration file.
Some documentation "options" were followed by independent preformatted
paragraphs. Now they are associated plain text paragraphs. The
difference is clear in the generated html.
git-pull: further safety while on tracking branch.
Running 'git pull' while on the tracking branch has a built-in
safety valve to fast-forward the index and working tree to match
the branch head, but it errs on the safe side too cautiously.
The traditional one created refs/origin by mistake, not
refs/heads/origin. Also it mistakenly failed to prevent
$origin from being listed twice in remotes/origin file.
The first was a simple typo where I put $yc instead of [yc $row].
The second was that I broke the logic for keeping up with fast
movement through the commits, e.g. when you select a commit and then
press down-arrow and let it autorepeat. That got broken when I
changed the merge diff display to use git-diff-tree --cc.
clone: record the remote primary branch with remotes/$origin/HEAD
This matches c51d13692d4e451c755dd7da3521c5db395df192 commit to
record the primary branch of the remote with a symbolic ref
remotes/$origin/HEAD. The user can later change it to point at
different branch to change the meaning of "$origin" shorthand.
get_sha1_basic(): try refs/... and finally refs/remotes/$foo/HEAD
This implements the suggestion by Jeff King to use
refs/remotes/$foo/HEAD to interpret a shorthand "$foo" to mean
the primary branch head of a tracked remote. clone needs to be
told about this convention as well.
* --use-separate-remote uses .git/refs/remotes/$origin/
directory to keep track of the upstream branches.
* The $origin above defaults to "origin" as usual, but the
existing "-o $origin" option can be used to override it.
I am not yet convinced if we should make "$origin" the synonym to
"refs/remotes/$origin/$name" where $name is the primary branch
name of $origin upstream, nor if so how we should decide which
upstream branch is the primary one, but that is more or less
orthogonal to what the clone does here.
contrib/git-svn: allow rebuild to work on non-linear remote heads
Because committing back to an SVN repository from different
machines can result in different lineages, two different
repositories running git-svn can result in different commit
SHA1s (but of the same tree). Sometimes trees that are tracked
independently are merged together (usually via children),
resulting in non-unique git-svn-id: lines in rev-list.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
http-push: add support for deleting remote branches
Processes new command-line arguments -d and -D to remove a remote branch
if the following conditions are met:
- one branch name is present on the command line
- the specified branch name matches exactly one remote branch name
- the remote HEAD is a symref
- the specified branch is not the remote HEAD
- the remote HEAD resolves to an object that exists locally (-d only)
- the specified branch resolves to an object that exists locally (-d only)
- the specified branch is an ancestor of the remote HEAD (-d only)
Signed-off-by: Nick Hengeveld <nickh@reactrix.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
verbose option in git-commit.sh lead us to run git-diff-index, which
needs a commit-ish we are making diff against. When we are commiting
the fist set, we obviously don't have any commit-ish in the repo. So
we just skip the git-diff-index run.
It might be possible to produce diff against empty but do we need
that?
Signed-off-by: Yasushi SHOJI <yashi@atmark-techno.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
This patch makes the html docs right, makes the asciidoc docs a bit odd
but consistent with what is there already, and makes the manpages look
OK using docbook-xsl 1.68, but miss a paragraph separator when using 1.69.
For the manpages, current is like
-A <author_file>
Read a file with lines on the form
username = User's Full Name <email@addr.es>
and use "User's Full Name <email@addr.es>" as the GIT
With this patch, docbook-xsl v1.68 looks like
-A <author_file>
Read a file with lines on the form
username = User's Full Name <email@addr.es>
and use "User's Full Name <email@addr.es>" as the GIT author and
while docbook-xsl v1.69 becomes
-A <author_file>
Read a file with lines on the form
username = User's Full Name <email@addr.es>
and use "User's Full Name <email@addr.es>" as the GIT author and
The extra indentation is to keep the v1.69 manpage looking sane.
http-fetch: nicer warning for a server with unreliable 404 status
When a repository otherwise properly prepared is served by a
dumb HTTP server that sends "No such page" output with 200
status for human consumption to a request for a page that does
not exist, the users will get an alarming "File X corrupt" error
message. Hint that they might be dealing with such a server at
the end and suggest running fsck-objects to check if the result
is OK (the pack-fallback code does the right thing in this case
so unless a loose object file was actually corrupt the result
should check OK).
* A new flag --reference can be used to name a local repository
that is to be used as an alternate. This is in response to
an inquiry by James Cloos in the message on the list
<m3r74ykue7.fsf@lugabout.cloos.reno.nv.us>.
* A new flag --use-separate-remote stops contaminating local
branch namespace by upstream branch names. The upstream
branch heads are copied in .git/refs/remotes/ instead of
.git/refs/heads/ and .git/remotes/origin file is set up to
reflect this as well. It requires to have fetch/pull update
to understand .git/refs/remotes by Eric Wong to further
update the repository cloned this way.
For the former change, git-fetch-pack is taught a new flag --all
to fetch from all the remote heads. Nobody uses the git-clone-pack
with this change, so we could deprecate the command, but removal
of the command will be left to a separate round.
Currently we unpack the delta data from the pack and then unpack
the base object to apply that delta data to it. When getting an
object that is deeply deltified, we can reduce memory footprint
by unpacking the base object first and then unpacking the delta
data, because we will need to keep at most one delta data in
memory that way.
git.el: Get the default user name and email from the repository config.
If user name or email are not set explicitly, get them from the
user.name and user.email configuration values before falling back to
the Emacs defaults.
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Julliard <julliard@winehq.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
The point where the line for a parent joins to the first child
shown is visually different from the lines to the other children,
because the line doesn't branch, but terminates at the child.
Because of this, we now treat the first child a little differently
in the optimizer, and we draw its link in drawlineseg rather
than drawparentlinks. This improves the appearance of the graph.
The updated code reads the tip of the current branch before and
after the import runs, but forgot to chomp what we read from the
command. The read-tree command did not them with the trailing
LF.
gitk: Make downward-pointing arrows end in vertical line segment
It seems Tk 8.4 can't draw arrows on diagonal line segments. This
adds code to the optimizer to make the last bit of a line go vertically
before being terminated with an arrow pointing downwards, so that
it will be drawn correctly by Tk 8.4.
gitk: Don't change cursor at end of layout if find in progress
If the user is doing a find in files or patches, which changed the
cursor to a watch, don't change it back to a pointer when we reach
the end of laying out the graph.
cvsimport: honor -i and non -i upon subsequent imports
Documentation says -i is "import only", so without it,
subsequent import should update the current branch and working
tree files in a sensible way.
"A sensible way" defined by this commit is "act as if it is a
git pull from foreign repository which happens to be CVS not
git". So:
- If importing into the current branch (note that cvsimport
requires the tracking branch is pristine -- you checked out
the tracking branch but it is your responsibility not to make
your own commits there), fast forward the branch head and
match the index and working tree using two-way merge, just
like "git pull" does.
- If importing into a separate tracking branch, update that
branch head, and merge it into your current branch, again,
just like "git pull" does.
Before this patch git-blame <directory> gave non-sensible output. (It
assigned blame to some random file in <directory>) Abort with an error
message instead.
Signed-off-by: Fredrik Kuivinen <freku045@student.liu.se> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
As pointed out by Junio, it may be dangerous to cut off people's names
after 15 bytes. If the name is encoded in an encoding which uses more
than one byte per code point we may end up with outputting garbage.
Instead of trying to do something smart, just output the entire name.
We don't gain much screen space by chopping it off anyway.
Furthermore, only output the file name if we actually found any
renames.
Signed-off-by: Fredrik Kuivinen <freku045@student.liu.se> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
When fetching alternates, http-fetch may reuse the slot to fetch non-http
alternates if http-alternates does not exist. When doing so, it now needs
to update the slot's finished status so run_active_slot waits for the
non-http alternates request to finish.
Signed-off-by: Nick Hengeveld <nickh@reactrix.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
* fk/blame:
blame: Rename detection (take 2)
rev-lib: Make it easy to do rename tracking (take 2)
Make it possible to not clobber object.util in sort_in_topological_order (take 2)
Marco Costalba reports that --remove-empty omits the commit that
created paths we are interested in. try_to_simplify_commit()
logic was dropping a parent we introduced those paths against,
which I think is not what we meant. Instead, this makes such
parent parentless.
Marco Costalba reports that --remove-empty omits the commit that
created paths we are interested in. try_to_simplify_commit()
logic was dropping a parent we introduced those paths against,
which I think is not what we meant. Instead, this marks such
parent uninteresting. The traversal does not go beyond that
parent as advertised, but we still say that the current commit
changed things from that parent.
annotate-tests: override VISUAL when running tests.
The tests hang for me waiting for Emacs with its output directed
somewhere strage, because I hedged my bets and set both EDITOR and
VISUAL to run Emacs.
Signed-off-by: Mark Wooding <mdw@distorted.org.uk> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
imap-send: cleanup execl() call to use NULL sentinel instead of 0
Some versions of gcc check that calls to the exec() family have the proper
sentinel for variadic calls. This should be (char *) NULL according to the
man page. Although for all other purposes the 0 is equivalent, gcc
nevertheless does emit a warning for 0 and not for NULL. This also makes the
usage consistent throughout git.
The whitespace in function calls throughout imap-send.c has its own style,
so I left it that way.
RPM, at least on Fedora boxes, automatically creates a
dependency for any perl "use" lines, and one of the help text
lines unfortunately begins like this:
-S, --rev-file revs-file
use revs from revs-file instead of calling git-rev-list
RPM gets confused and creates a false dependecy for the
nonexistent perl package "revs". Obviously this creates a
problem when someone goes to install the git-core rpm.
Since other help sentences all start with capital letter, make
this one match them by upcasing "Use". As a side effect, RPM
stops getting confused.
If info/refs exists on the remote, get a lock on info/refs, make sure that
there is a local copy of the object referenced in each remote ref (in case
someone else added a tag we don't have locally), do all the refspec updates,
and generate and send an updated info/refs file.
Replace single-use functions with one that can get a list of remote
collections and pass file/directory information to user-defined functions
for processing.
Incorporate into http-push a fix related to accessing slot results after
the slot was reused, and fix a case in run_active_slot where a
finished slot wasn't detected if the slot was reused.
fetch,parse-remote,fmt-merge-msg: refs/remotes/* support
We can now easily fetch and merge things from heads in the
refs/remotes/ hierarchy in remote repositories.
The refs/remotes/ hierarchy is likely to become the standard for
tracking foreign SCMs, as well as the location of Pull: targets
for tracking remote branches in newly cloned repositories.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
rev-lib: Make it easy to do rename tracking (take 2)
prune_fn in the rev_info structure is called in place of
try_to_simplify_commit. This makes it possible to do rename tracking
with a custom try_to_simplify_commit-like function.
This commit also introduces init_revisions which initialises the rev_info
structure with default values.
Signed-off-by: Fredrik Kuivinen <freku045@student.liu.se> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
git-imap-send drops a patch series generated by git-format-patch into an
IMAP folder. This allows patch submitters to send patches through their
own mail program.
git-imap-send uses the following values from the GIT repository
configuration:
The target IMAP folder:
[imap]
Folder = "INBOX.Drafts"
A command to open an ssh tunnel to the imap mail server.
try_to_simplify_commit(): do not skip inspecting tree change at boundary.
When git-rev-list (and git-log) collapsed ancestry chain to
commits that touch specified paths, we failed to inspect and
notice tree changes when we are about to hit uninteresting
parent. This resulted in "git rev-list since.. -- file" to
always show the child commit after the lower bound, even if it
does not touch the file. This commit fixes it.
The fsck-objects command (back then it was called fsck-cache)
used to complain if objects referred to by files in .git/refs/
or objects stored in files under .git/objects/??/ were not found
as stand-alone SHA1 files (i.e. found in alternate object pools
or packed archives stored under .git/objects/pack). Back then,
packs and alternates were new curiosity and having everything as
loose objects were the norm.
When we adjusted the behaviour of fsck-cache to consider objects
found in packs are OK, we introduced the --standalone flag as a
backward compatibility measure.
It still correctly checks if your repository is complete and
consists only of loose objects, so in that sense it is doing the
"right" thing, but checking that is pointless these days. This
commit removes --standalone flag.