This is trying to implement the strict IO error checks that Jim Meyering
suggested, but explicitly limits it to just regular files. If a pipe gets
closed on us, we shouldn't complain about it.
If the subcommand already returned an error, that takes precedence (and we
assume that the subcommand already printed out any relevant messages
relating to it)
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This should change no code at all, it just moves the definition of "struct
cmd_struct" out, and then splits out the running of the right command into
the "run_command()" function.
It also removes the long-unused 'envp' pointer passing.
This is just preparation for adding some more error checking.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Don't you just hate the fact sometimes, that git-rebase just applies
the patches, without any possibility to edit them, or rearrange them?
With "--interactive", git-rebase now lets you edit the list of patches,
so that you can reorder, edit and delete patches.
Such a list will typically look like this:
pick deadbee The oneline of this commit
pick fa1afe1 The oneline of the next commit
...
By replacing the command "pick" with the command "edit", you can amend
that patch and/or its commit message, and by replacing it with "squash"
you can tell rebase to fold that patch into the patch before that.
It is derived from the script sent to the list in
<Pine.LNX.4.63.0702252156190.22628@wbgn013.biozentrum.uni-wuerzburg.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Using `git push origin +foo` to forcefully overwrite the remote
branch named foo is a common idiom, especially since + is shorter
than the long option --force and can be specified on a per-branch
basis.
We now complete `git push origin +foo` just like we do the standard
`git push origin foo`. The leading + on a branch refspec does not
alter the completion.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
We always quote "unusual" byte values in a pathname using
C-string style, to make it safer for parsing scripts that do not
handle NUL separated records well (or just too lazy to bother).
The absolute minimum bytes that need to be quoted for this
purpose are TAB, LF (and other control characters), double quote
and backslash.
However, we have also always quoted the bytes in high 8-bit
range; this was partly because we were lazy and partly because
we were being cautious.
This introduces an internal "quote_path_fully" variable, and
core.quotepath configuration variable to control it. When set
to false, it does not quote bytes in high 8-bit range anymore
but passes them intact.
The variable defaults to "true" to retain the traditional
behaviour for now.
This commit fixes it by moving call to make_message_id() to
where it matters, namely, before the $message_id is needed to be
placed in the generated e-mail header; this has an important
side effect of making it clear that $from is already available.
Also throw in Sys::Hostname::hostname() just for fun, although I
suspect that the code would never trigger due to the modified
call sequence that makes sure $from is always available. This
is based on a suggestion by Michael Hendricks.
git-svn: trailing slash in prefix is mandatory with --branches/-b
Make clear in the documentation that when using --branches/-b and
--prefix with 'init', the prefix must include a trailing slash.
This matches the actual behavior of git-svn, e.g.:
$ git svn init -Ttrunk -treleases -bbranches --prefix xxx \
http://svn.sacredchao.net/svn/quodlibet/
--prefix='xxx' must have a trailing slash '/'
$
This was noticed by R. Vanicat and reported through
http://bugs.debian.org/429443
Signed-off-by: Gerrit Pape <pape@smarden.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
new-workdir: handle rev-parse --git-dir not always giving full path
rev-parse --git-dir outputs a full path - except for the single case
of when the path would be $(pwd)/.git, in which case it outputs simply
.git. Check for this special case and handle it.
Signed-off-by: Julian Phillips <julian@quantumfyre.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
t9500: skip gitweb tests if perl version is too old
gitweb calls Encode::decode_utf8 with two arguments,
but old versions of perl only allow this function to be called
with one argument. Even older versions of perl do not even
have an Encode module.
Signed-off-by: Sven Verdoolaege <skimo@kotnet.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Merge branch 'master' of git://repo.or.cz/git/fastimport
* 'master' of git://repo.or.cz/git/fastimport: (260 commits)
Avoid src:dst syntax as default bash completion for git push
Make it possible to specify the HEAD for the internal findUpstreamBranchPoint function.
Added git-p4 branches command that shows the mapping of perforce depot paths to imported git branches.
Warn about conflicting p4 branch mappings and use the first one found.
Fix the branch mapping detection to be independent from the order of the "p4 branches" output.
git-p4 fails when cloning a p4 depo.
Fix initial multi-branch import.
Only use double quotes on Windows
Fix git-p4 rebase to detect the correct upstream branch instead of unconditionally
Moved the code from git-p4 submit to figure out the upstream branch point
git-p4 submit: Fix missing quotes around p4 commands to make them work with spaces in filenames
Mention remotes/p4/master also in the documentation.
Provide some information for single branch imports where the commits go
git-p4: check for existence of repo dir before trying to create
Write out the options tag in the log message of imports only if we actually have
Fix support for explicit disabling of syncing with the origin
Fix depot-paths encoding for multi-path imports (don't split up //depot/path/foo)
Fix project name guessing
Fix updating/creating remotes/p4/* heads from origin/p4/*
Fixed the check to make sure to exclude the HEAD symbolic refs when updating
...
gitk: Improve handling of whitespace and special chars in filenames
The main thing here is better parsing of the diff --git lines in the
output of git diff-tree -p. We now cope with filenames in quotes with
special chars escaped. If the filenames contain spaces they aren't
quoted, however, which can create difficulties in parsing. We get
around the difficulties by detecting the case when the filename hasn't
changed (chop the part after "diff --git " in two and see if the halves
match apart from a/ in one and b/ in the other), and if it hasn't
changed, we just use one half. If the filename has changed we wait
for the "rename from" and "rename to" lines, which give the old and
new filenames unambiguously.
This also improves the parsing of the output of git diff-tree.
Instead of using lindex to extract the filename, we take the part from
the first tab on, and if it starts with a quote, we use [lindex $str 0]
to remove the quotes and convert the escapes.
This also gets rid of some unused tagging of the diff text, uses
[string compare] instead of [regexp] in some places, and fixes the
regexp for detecting the @@ hunk-separator lines (the regexp wasn't
accepting a single number, as in "-0,0 +1" for example).
gitk: Fix bug causing nearby tags/heads to sometimes not be displayed
When we compute descendent heads and descendent/ancestor tags, we
cache the results. We need to be careful to invalidate the cache
when we add stuff to the graph. Also make sure that when we cache
descendent heads for a node we only cache the heads that are actually
descendents of that node.
gitk: Limit how often we change the canvas scrolling region
For some unknown reason, changing the scrolling region on the canvases
provokes multiple milliseconds worth of computation in the X server,
and this can end up slowing gitk down significantly. This works around
the problem by limiting the rate at which we update the scrolling region
after the first 100 rows to at most 2 per second.
gitk: Add a "reset branch to here" row context-menu operation
This adds an entry to the menu that comes up when the user does a
right-click on a row. The new entry allows the user to reset the
currently checked-out head to the commit for the row that they did
the right-click on. The user has to select what type of reset to
do, and confirm the reset, via a dialog box that pops up.
The information in childlist is a duplicate of what's in the children
array, and it wasn't being accessed often enough to be really worth
keeping the list around as well.
We were doing two execs for each tag - one to map the tag ID to a
commit ID and one to read the contents of the tag for later display.
This speeds up the process by not reading the contents of the tag
(instead it is read later if needed), and by using the -d flag to
git show-ref, which gives us refs/tags/foo^{} lines which give us
the commit ID. Also this uses string operations instead of regexps.
gitk: Show local uncommitted changes as a fake commit
If there are local changes in the repository, i.e., git-diff-index HEAD
produces some output, then this optionally displays an extra row in
the graph as a child of the HEAD commit (but with a red circle to
indicate that it's not a real commit). There is a checkbox in the
preferences window to control whether gitk does this or not.
Clicking on the extra row shows the diffs between the working directory
and the HEAD (using git diff-index -p). The right-click menu on the
extra row allows the user to generate a patch containing the local diffs,
or to display the diffs between the working directory and any commit.
This only draws as much of the graph lines as is visible. This can
happen by adding coordinates on to an existing graph line or by
creating a new line. This means that we only need to have laid out
and optimized as much of the graph as is actually visible in order to
draw it, including the lines (previously we didn't draw a graph
line until we had laid out and optimized to the end of a segment of
the line, i.e. down to a down-arrow or to the row where the line's
commit is displayed). This also lets us get rid of the linesegends
list, and gives us an easy workaround for the X server bug that
causes long lines to be misdrawn. This also gets rid of the use
of rowoffsets in drawlineseg et al.
gitk: Store ids in rowrangelist and idrowranges rather than row numbers
This removes the need for insertrow to go through rowrangelist and
idrowranges and adjust a lot of entries. The first entry for a given
id is now the row number of the first child, not that row number + 1,
and rowranges compensates for that so its callers didn't have to
change. This adds a ranges argument to drawlineseg so that we can
avoid calling rowranges a second time inside drawlineseg (all its
callers already called rowranges).
gitk: Cope with commit messages with carriage-returns and initial blank lines
In some repositories imported from other systems we can get carriage
return characters in the commit message, which leads to a multi-line
headline being displayed in the summary window, which looks bad.
Also some commit messages start with one or more blank lines, which
leads to an empty headline. This fixes these problems.
gitk: Implement a simple scheduler for the compute-intensive stuff
This allows us to do compute-intensive processing, such as laying out
the graph, relatively efficiently while also having the GUI be
reasonably responsive. The problem previously was that file events
were serviced before X events, so reading from another process which
supplies data quickly (hi git rev-list :) could mean that X events
didn't get processed for a long time.
With this, gitk finishes laying out the graph slightly sooner and
still responds to the GUI while doing so.
gitk: Improve the behaviour of the initial selection
It used to be that if you clicked on a line while gitk was still drawing
stuff, it would immediately re-select the first line of the display.
This fixes that.
gitk: Don't try to list large numbers of tags or heads in the details pane
With some large repositories, a commit can end up on thousands of
branches, which results in an extremely long "Branches:" line in the
details window, and that results in the window being extremely slow
to scroll.
This fixes it by just showing "many (N)" after "Branches:", "Follows:"
or "Precedes:", where N is the number of heads or tags. The limit
is currently set at 20 but could be made configurable (and the "many"
could be a link to pop up a window listing them all in case anyone
really wants to know).
gitk: New infrastructure for working out branches & previous/next tags
Instead of working out descendent heads and descendent & ancestor
branches in a two-pass algorithm, this reads and stores a simplified
version of the graph topology, and works out descendent/ancestor
tags and descendent heads on demand (with a bit of caching).
The advantages of this are, first, that we now don't have to use
--topo-order on the git rev-list process. Secondly, we don't have
to re-read the whole graph when tags or heads change or even when
the graph changes. Since we can cope with parents coming before
children, we can update the graph by running a git rev-list with
arguments that just give us the new commits, and merge the new
commits into the simplified graph.
The graph is simplified in the sense that commits with exactly one
parent and one child (which is >90% of them in most cases) are grouped
together into arcs joining nodes or 'branch/merge points', which are
the commits that don't have exactly 1 parent and 1 child. This reduces
the size of the graph substantially and decreases the time to traverse
it correspondingly.
This fixes "git log --follow" to hopefully not leak memory any more, and
also cleans it up a bit to look more like some of the other functions that
use "diff_queued_diff" (by *not* using it directly as a global in the
code, but by instead just taking a pointer to the diff queue and using
that).
As to "diff_queued_diff", I think it would be better off not as a global
at all, but as being just an entry in the "struct diff_options" structure,
but that's a separate issue, and there may be some subtle reason for why
it's currently a global.
Anyway, no real changes. Instead of having a magical first entry in the
diff-queue, we now end up just keeping the diff-queue clean, and keeping
our "preferred" file pairing in an internal "choice" variable. That makes
it easy to switch the choice around when we find a better one.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Ok, I've really held off doing this too damn long, because I'm lazy, and I
was always hoping that somebody else would do it.
But no, people keep asking for it, but nobody actually did anything, so I
decided I might as well bite the bullet, and instead of telling people
they could add a "--follow" flag to "git log" to do what they want to do,
I decided that it looks like I just have to do it for them..
The code wasn't actually that complicated, in that the diffstat for this
patch literally says "70 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)", but I will have
to admit that in order to get to this fairly simple patch, you did have to
know and understand the internal git diff generation machinery pretty
well, and had to really be able to follow how commit generation interacts
with generating patches and generating the log.
So I suspect that while I was right that it wasn't that hard, I might have
been expecting too much of random people - this patch does seem to be
firmly in the core "Linus or Junio" territory.
To make a long story short: I'm sorry for it taking so long until I just
did it.
I'm not going to guarantee that this works for everybody, but you really
can just look at the patch, and after the appropriate appreciative noises
("Ooh, aah") over how clever I am, you can then just notice that the code
itself isn't really that complicated.
All the real new code is in the new "try_to_follow_renames()" function. It
really isn't rocket science: we notice that the pathname we were looking
at went away, so we start a full tree diff and try to see if we can
instead make that pathname be a rename or a copy from some other previous
pathname. And if we can, we just continue, except we show *that*
particular diff, and ever after we use the _previous_ pathname.
One thing to look out for: the "rename detection" is considered to be a
singular event in the _linear_ "git log" output! That's what people want
to do, but I just wanted to point out that this patch is *not* carrying
around a "commit,pathname" kind of pair and it's *not* going to be able to
notice the file coming from multiple *different* files in earlier history.
IOW, if you use "git log --follow", then you get the stupid CVS/SVN kind
of "files have single identities" kind of semantics, and git log will just
pick the identity based on the normal move/copy heuristics _as_if_ the
history could be linearized.
Put another way: I think the model is broken, but given the broken model,
I think this patch does just about as well as you can do. If you have
merges with the same "file" having different filenames over the two
branches, git will just end up picking _one_ of the pathnames at the point
where the newer one goes away. It never looks at multiple pathnames in
parallel.
And if you understood all that, you probably didn't need it explained, and
if you didn't understand the above blathering, it doesn't really mtter to
you. What matters to you is that you can now do
git log -p --follow builtin-rev-list.c
and it will find the point where the old "rev-list.c" got renamed to
"builtin-rev-list.c" and show it as such.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* js/filter:
filter-branch: subdirectory filter needs --full-history
filter-branch: Simplify parent computation.
Teach filter-branch about subdirectory filtering
filter-branch: also don't fail in map() if a commit cannot be mapped
filter-branch: Use rev-list arguments to specify revision ranges.
filter-branch: fix behaviour of '-k'
filter-branch: use $(($i+1)) instead of $((i+1))
chmod +x git-filter-branch.sh
filter-branch: prevent filters from reading from stdin
t7003: make test repeatable
Add git-filter-branch
Document git-gui, git-citool as mainporcelain manual pages
Jakub Narebski pointed out that the git-gui blame viewer is not a
widely known feature, but is incredibly useful. Part of the issue
is advertising. Up until now we haven't even referenced git-gui from
within the core Git manual pages, mostly because I just wasn't sure
how I wanted to supply git-gui documentation to end-users, or how
that documentation should integrate with the core Git documentation.
Based upon Jakub's comment that many users may not even know that
the gui is available in a stock Git distribution I'm offering up
two basic manual pages: git-citool and git-gui. These should offer
enough of a starting point for users to identify that the gui exists,
and how to start it. Future releases of git-gui may contain their
own documentation system available from within a running git-gui.
But not today.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Generate tags with correct timestamp (git-svnimport)
Now uses git-tag instead of manually constructing the tag. This gives us a
correct timestamp, removes some crufty code, and makes it work the same as
git-cvsimport.
The generated tags are now lightweight tags instead of tag objects, which may
or may not be the behaviour we want.
Also, remove two unused variables from git-cvsimport.
Import branch 'git-p4' of git://repo.or.cz/fast-export
Simon has asked that the git.git project include the git-p4 project
as at least a contrib/fast-import within git.git. I think it makes
a lot of sense, as git-p4 nicely complements the only other in-tree
fast-import user: import-tars.perl.
git-p4 is offered under the MIT license by its authors.
Avoid src:dst syntax as default bash completion for git push
Raimund Bauer just discovered that the default bash completion for
a local branch name in a git-push line is not the best choice when
the branch does not exist on the remote system.
In the past we have always completed the local name 'test' as
"test:test", indicating that the destination name is the same as
the local name. But this fails when "test" does not yet exist on
the remote system, as there is no "test" branch for it to match
the name against.
Fortunately git-push does the right thing when given just the
local branch, as it assumes you want to use the same name in the
destination repository. So we now offer "test" as the completion
in a git-push line, and let git-push assume that is also the remote
branch name.
We also still support the remote branch completion after the :,
but only if the user manually adds the colon before trying to get
a completion.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
git-gui: Don't require $DISPLAY just to get --version
Junio asked that we don't force the user to have a valid X11 server
configured in $DISPLAY just to obtain the output of `git gui version`.
This makes sense, the user may be an automated tool that is running
without an X server available to it, such as a build script or other
sort of package management system. Or it might just be a user working
in a non-GUI environment and wondering "what version of git-gui do I
have installed?".
Tcl has a lot of warts, but one of its better ones is that a comment
can be continued to the next line by escaping the LF that would have
ended the comment using a backslash-LF sequence. In the past we have
used this trick to escape away the 'exec wish' that is actually a Bourne
shell script and keep Tcl from executing it.
I'm using that feature here to comment out the Bourne shell script and
hide it from the Tcl engine. Except now our Bourne shell script is a
few lines long and checks to see if it should print the version, or not.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Alex Riesen wanted a quieter installation process for git and its
contained git-gui. His earlier patch to do this failed to work
properly when V=1, and didn't really give a great indication of
what the installation was doing.
These rules are a little bit on the messy side, as each of our
install actions is composed of at least two variables, but in the
V=1 case the text is identical to what we had before, while in the
non-V=1 case we use some more complex rules to show the interesting
details, and hide the less interesting bits.
We now can also set QUIET= (nothing) to see the rules that are used
when V= (nothing), so we can debug those too if we have to. This is
actually a side-effect of how we insert the @ into the rules we use
for the "lists of things", like our builtins or our library files.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
git-gui: Bind Tab/Shift-Tab to cycle between panes in blame
The blame viewer is composed of two different areas, the file
area on top and the commit area on the bottom. If users are
trying to shift the focus it is probably because they want to
shift from one area to the other, so we just setup Tab and
Shift-Tab to jump from the one half to the other in a cycle.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Mark Levedahl <mlevedahl@gmail.com> noted that installation on Cygwin
to /usr/bin can cause problems with the automatic guessing of our
library location. The problem is that installation to /usr/bin
means we actually have:
So git-gui guesses that its library should be found within the
c:\cygwin\share directory, as that is where it should be relative
to the script itself in c:\cygwin\bin.
In my first version of this patch I tried to use `cygpath` to resolve
/usr/bin and /usr/share to test that they were in the same relative
locations, but that didn't work out correctly as we were actually
testing /usr/share against itself, so it always was equal, and we
always used relative paths. So my original solution was quite wrong.
Mark suggested we just always disable relative behavior on Cygwin,
because of the complexity of the mount mapping problem, so that's
all I'm doing.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
If the remote repository does not have a "current branch", git-clone
was confused and did not set up the resulting new repository
correctly. It did not reset HEAD from the default 'master', and did
not write the SHA1 to the master branch.
Signed-off-by: Nanako Shiraishi <nanako3@bluebottle.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
ALLOC_GROW now expects the 'nr' argument to be "how much you
want" and not "how much you have". This fixes all cases
where we weren't previously adding anything to the 'nr'.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
pp_header(): work around possible memory corruption
add_user_info() possibly adds way more than just the commit header line.
In fact, it sometimes needs so much more space that there is a buffer
overrun, leading to an ugly crash. For example, the date is printed in its
own line, and usually takes up more space than the equivalent Unix epoch.
So, for good measure, add 80 characters (a full line) to the allocated
space, in addition to the header line length.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The ALLOC_GROW macro will never let us fill the array completely,
instead allocating an extra chunk if that would be the case. This is
because the 'nr' argument was originally treated as "how much we do have
now" instead of "how much do we want". The latter makes much more
sense because you can grow by more than one item.
This off-by-one never resulted in an error because it meant we were
overly conservative about when to allocate. Any callers which passed
"how much we have now" need to be updated, or they will fail to allocate
enough.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Document --stale-fix, used in "git reflog expire --stale-fix --all"
to remove invalid reflog entries, to fix situation after running
non reflog-aware git-prune from an older git in the presence of
reflogs (see RelNotes-1.5.0.txt).
A perforce command with all the files in the repo is generated to get
all the file content.
Here is a patch to break it into multiple successive perforce command
who uses 4K of parameter max, and collect the output for later.
It works, but not for big depos, because the whole perforce depo
content is stored in memory in P4Sync.run(), and it looks like mine is
bigger than 2 Gigs, so I had to kill the process.
[Simon: I added the bit about using SC_ARG_MAX, as suggested by Han-Wen]
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Sergeant <bsergean@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Simon Hausmann <simon@lst.de>
Do not use h_errno after connect(2): the function does not set it
Randal L. Schwartz noticed compilation problems on SunOS, which made
me look at the code again. The thing is, h_errno is not used by
connect(2), it is only for functions from netdb.h, like gethostbyname.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* jc/remote:
git-push: Update description of refspecs and add examples
remote.c: "git-push frotz" should update what matches at the source.
remote.c: fix "git push" weak match disambiguation
remote.c: minor clean-up of match_explicit()
remote.c: refactor creation of new dst ref
remote.c: refactor match_explicit_refs()
* fl/cvsserver:
cvsserver: Actually implement --export-all
cvsserver: Let --base-path and pserver get along just fine
cvsserver: Add some useful commandline options
* lh/submodule:
gitmodules(5): remove leading period from synopsis
Add gitmodules(5)
git-submodule: give submodules proper names
Rename sections from "module" to "submodule" in .gitmodules
git-submodule: remember to checkout after clone
t7400: barf if git-submodule removes or replaces a file
Refspecs with no colons are left with no dst value, because they are
interepreted differently for fetch and push. For push, they mean to
reuse the src side. Fix this for patterns.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Barkalow <barkalow@iabervon.org> Acked-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It turns out that the attribute definition we have had for a
long time to hide "^" character from AsciiDoc 7 was not honored
by AsciiDoc 8 even under "-a asciidoc7compatible" mode. There is
a similar breakage with the "compatible" mode with + characters.
The double colon at the end of definition list term needs
to be attached to the term, without a whitespace. After this
minimum fixups, AsciiDoc 8 (I used 8.2.1 on Debian) with
compatibility mode seems to produce reasonably good results.
$EMAIL is a last resort fallback, as it's system-wide.
$EMAIL is a system-wide setup that is used for many many many
applications. If the git user chose a specific user.email setup,
then _this_ should be honoured rather than $EMAIL.
Add a local implementation of hstrerror for the system which do not have it
The function converts the value of h_errno (last error of name
resolver library, see netdb.h).
One of systems which supposedly do not have the function is SunOS.
POSIX does not mandate its presence.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <raa.lkml@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
gitmodules(5): remove leading period from synopsis
Asciidoc treats a line starting with a period followed by a title as a
blocktitle element. My introduction of gitmodules(5) unfortunatly broke
the documentation build process due to this processing, since it made
asciidoc generate an illegal (empty) synopsis element. Removing the leading
period fixes the problem and also makes gitmodules(5) use the same synopsis
notation as gitattributes(5).
Noticed-by: Matthias Lederhofer <matled@gmx.net> Signed-off-by: Lars Hjemli <hjemli@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Also enforce that --export-all is only ever used together with an
explicit whitelist. Otherwise people might export every git repository
on the whole system without realising.
Signed-off-by: Frank Lichtenheld <frank@lichtenheld.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
cvsserver: Let --base-path and pserver get along just fine
Embarassing bug number one in my options patch.
Since the code for --base-path support rewrote
the cvsroot value after comparing it with a possible
existing value (i.e. from pserver authentication)
the check always failed.
Signed-off-by: Frank Lichtenheld <frank@lichtenheld.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git-svn: allow dcommit to retain local merge information
dcommit will still rewrite the HEAD commit and the history of the first
parents of each HEAD~1, HEAD~2, HEAD~3 as it always has.
However, any merge parents (HEAD^2, HEAD^^2, HEAD~2^2) will now be
preserved when the new HEAD and HEAD~[0-9]+ commits are rewritten to SVN
with dcommit. Commits written to SVN will still not have any merge
information besides anything in the commit message.
Thanks to Joakim Tjernlund, Junio C Hamano and Steven Grimm
for explanations, feedback, examples and test case.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git-svn: test for creating new directories over svn://
As reported by Matthieu Moy, this is causing svnserve to
terminate connections, because it segfaults.
This test is disabled by default and can be enabled by setting
SVNSERVE_PORT to an unbound (for 127.0.0.1) TCP port in the
environment (in addition to SVN_TESTS=1). I'm not comfortable
with having a test start a daemon by default and take up a port
that could potentially stay running if the test failed.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
git-svn: cleanup: factor out longest_common_path() function
I hadn't looked at this code in a while and had to read this
again to figure out what it did. To avoid having to do this
again in the future, I just gave gave the hunk a descriptive
name.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The async reading from the pipe was skipping some of the
input lines. Fix the same by making sure that we add the
partial content of the previous read to the newly read
data.
Signed-off-by: Aneesh Kumar K.V <aneesh.kumar@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Previously, the code would always set up the excludes, and then manually
pick through the pathspec we were given, assuming that non-added but
existing paths were just ignored. This was mostly correct, but would
erroneously mark a totally empty directory as 'ignored'.
Instead, we now use the collect_ignored option of dir_struct, which
unambiguously tells us whether a path was ignored. This simplifies the
code, and means empty directories are now just not mentioned at all.
Furthermore, we now conditionally ask dir_struct to respect excludes,
depending on whether the '-f' flag has been set. This means we don't have
to pick through the result, checking for an 'ignored' flag; ignored entries
were either added or not in the first place.
We can safely get rid of the special 'ignored' flags to dir_entry, which
were not used anywhere else.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Jonas Fonseca <fonseca@diku.dk> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>