We want to use the "checkout: moving from ..." message in order to let
git know when a change of branch has happened. Make the convenience
functions for this goal write this message.
This namespace is about behaving like git's branch command, so let's do
exactly that instead of taking a reflog message.
This override is still available via the reference namespace.
The signature for the reflog is not something which changes
dynamically. Almost all uses will be NULL, since we want for the
repository's default identity to be used, making it noise.
In order to allow for changing the identity, we instead provide
git_repository_set_ident() and git_repository_ident() which allow a user
to override the choice of signature.
There are some combination of objects and target types which we know
cannot be fulfilled. Return EINVALIDSPEC for those to signify that there
is a mismatch in the user-provided data and what the object model is
capable of satisfying.
If we start at a tag and in the course of peeling find out that we
cannot reach a particular type, we return EPEEL.
A transaction allows you to lock multiple references and set up changes
for them before applying the changes all at once (or as close as the
backend supports).
This can be used for replication purposes, or for making sure some
operations run when the reference is locked and thus cannot be changed.
This adds another assertion to ensure that the reference name inside
the git_reference struct returned by `git_branch_create` is returned as
precomposed if `core.precomposeunicode` is enabled.
Only on a filesystem that is composed/decomposed insensitive,
should be testing that a branch can be looked up by the opposite
form and still work correctly.
When using Iconv to convert unicode data and iconv doesn't like
the source data (because it thinks that it's not actual UTF-8),
instead of stopping the operation, just use the unconverted data.
This will generally do the right thing on the filesystem, since
that is the source of the non-UTF-8 path data anyhow.
This adds some tests for creating and looking up branches with
messy Unicode names. Also, this takes the helper function that
was previously internal to `git_repository_init` and makes it
into `git_path_does_fs_decompose_unicode` which is a useful in
tests to understand what the expected results should be.
git_branch_t is an enum so requesting GIT_BRANCH_LOCAL | GIT_BRANCH_REMOTE is not possible as it is not a member of the enum (at least VS2013 C++ complains about it).
This fixes a regression introduced in commit a667ca8298 (PR #1946).
Signed-off-by: Sven Strickroth <email@cs-ware.de>
When we update the current branch, we must also append to HEAD's reflog
to keep them in sync.
This is a bit of a hack, but as git.git says, it covers 100% of
default cases.
Any well-behaved program should write a descriptive message to the
reflog whenever it updates a reference. Let's make this more prominent
by removing the version without the reflog parameters.
This changes the behavior of callbacks so that the callback error
code is not converted into GIT_EUSER and instead we propagate the
return value through to the caller. Instead of using the
giterr_capture and giterr_restore functions, we now rely on all
functions to pass back the return value from a callback.
To avoid having a return value with no error message, the user
can call the public giterr_set_str or some such function to set
an error message. There is a new helper 'giterr_set_callback'
that functions can invoke after making a callback which ensures
that some error message was set in case the callback did not set
one.
In places where the sign of the callback return value is
meaningful (e.g. positive to skip, negative to abort), only the
negative values are returned back to the caller, obviously, since
the other values allow for continuing the loop.
The hardest parts of this were in the checkout code where positive
return values were overloaded as meaningful values for checkout.
I fixed this by adding an output parameter to many of the internal
checkout functions and removing the overload. This added some
code, but it is probably a better implementation.
There is some funkiness in the network code where user provided
callbacks could be returning a positive or a negative value and
we want to rely on that to cancel the loop. There are still a
couple places where an user error might get turned into GIT_EUSER
there, I think, though none exercised by the tests.