Some nicer refactoring for index iteration walks.
The index iterator doesn't binary search through the pathlist space,
since it lacks directory entries, and would have to binary search
each index entry and all its parents (eg, when presented with an index
entry of `foo/bar/file.c`, you would have to look in the pathlist for
`foo/bar/file.c`, `foo/bar` and `foo`). Since the index entries and the
pathlist are both nicely sorted, we walk the index entries in lockstep
with the pathlist like we do for other iteration/diff/merge walks.
When using literal pathspecs in diff with `GIT_DIFF_DISABLE_PATHSPEC_MATCH`
turn on the faster iterator pathlist handling.
Updates iterator pathspecs to include directory prefixes (eg, `foo/`)
for compatibility with `GIT_DIFF_DISABLE_PATHSPEC_MATCH`.
Document that `GIT_DIFF_PATHSPEC_DISABLE` is not necessarily about
explicit path matching, but also includes matching of directory
names. Enforce this in a test.
When given a pathlist, don't assume that directories sort before
files. Walk through any list of entries sorting before us to make
sure that we've exhausted all entries that *aren't* directories.
Eg, if we're searching for 'foo/bar', and we have a 'foo.c', keep
advancing the pathlist to keep looking for an entry prefixed with
'foo/'.
Include the copyright notice from the deps/winhttp/ sources. Move the
LGPL to the bottom of the file (since multiple dependencies are LGPL
licensed) and include the actual copyright notices from the regex sources.
Starting at OS X 10.8, the Security framework offers some functions
which are unified across OS X and iOS. These are the functions that we
use.
Older versions of OS X do not have these functions and we fail to
compile. In these situations, fall back to using OpenSSL for our TLS
stream instead.
libgit2 implementations of smart subtransports can simply reach through
the structure, but external implementors cannot.
Add these two functions as a way for the smart subtransports to get the
callbacks as set by the user.
When parsing user-provided regex patterns for functions, we must not
fail to provide a diff just because a pattern is not well
formed. Ignore it instead.
When we ask for credentials, the user may choose to return EUSER to
indicate that an error has happened on its end and it wants to be given
back control.
We must therefore pass that back to the user instead of mentioning that
it was on_headers_complete() that returned an error code. Since we can,
we return the exact error code from the user (other than PASSTHROUGH)
since it doesn't cost anything, though using other error codes aren't
recommended.
This lock/unlock pair allows for the cller to lock a configuration file
to avoid concurrent operations.
It also allows for a transactional approach to updating a configuration
file. If multiple updates must be made atomically, they can be done
while the config is locked.
When a configuration file is locked, any updates made to it will be done
to the in-memory copy of the file. This allows for multiple updates to
happen while we hold the lock, preventing races during complex
config-file manipulation.
Instead of writing into the filebuf directly, make the functions to
write the modified config file write into a buffer which can then be
dumped into the lockfile for committing.
This allows us to re-use the same code for modifying a locked
configuration, as we can simply skip the last step of dumping the data
to disk.
When we're looking to update a tag, we can't stop if the tag auto-follow
rules don't say to update it. The tag might still match the refspec we
were given.
While we download the remote's remote-tracking branches, we don't
download the tag. This points to the tag auto-follow rules interfering
with the refspec.
When curl uses a proxy, it will only use Basic unless we prompt it to
try to use the most secure on it has available.
This is something which git did recently, and it seems like a good idea.