This adds an additional pathspec API that will match a pathspec
against a diff object. This is convenient if you want to handle
renames (so you need the whole diff and can't use the pathspec
constraint built into the diff API) but still want to tell if the
diff had any files that matched the pathspec.
When the pathspec is matched against a diff, instead of keeping
a list of filenames that matched, instead the API keeps the list
of git_diff_deltas that matched and they can be retrieved via a
new API git_pathspec_match_list_diff_entry.
There are a couple of other minor API extensions here that were
mostly for the sake of convenience and to reduce dependencies
on knowing the internal data structure between files inside the
library.
This adds a new public API for compiling pathspecs and matching
them against the working directory, the index, or a tree from the
repository. This also reworks the pathspec internals to allow the
sharing of code between the existing internal usage of pathspec
matching and the new external API.
While this is working and the new API is ready for discussion, I
think there is still an incorrect behavior in which patterns are
always matched against the full path of an entry without taking
the subdirectories into account (so "s*" will match "subdir/file"
even though it wouldn't with core Git). Further enhancements are
coming, but this was a good place to take a functional snapshot.
This option serves no benefit now that the git_status_list API
is available. It was of questionable value before and now it
would just be a bad idea to use it rather than the indexed API.
Minor point release! We got a lot of rather large features that we
wanted to get settled in:
- New (threadsafe) cache for objects
- Iterator for Status
- New Merge APIs
- SSH support on *NIX
- Function context on diff
- Namespaces support
- Index add/update/remove with wildcard support
- Iterator for References
- Fetch and push refspecs for Remotes
- Rename support in Status
- New 'sys/` namespace for external headers with low-level APIs
As always, this comes with hundreds of bug fixes and performance
improvements. We're faster and better than ever. And we haven't broken
many APIs this time!
Build stuff.
Fixed a few header @param and @return typos with the help of -Wdocumentation in Xcode.
The following warnings have not been fixed:
common.h:213 - Not sure how the documentation format is for '...'
notes.h:102 - Correct @param name but empty text
notes.h:111 - Correct @param name but empty text
pack.h:140 - @return missing text
pack.h:148 - @return missing text
This adds the ability for checkout to write to a target directory
instead of having to use the working directory of the repository.
This makes it easier to do exports of repository data and the like.
This is similar to, but not quite the same as, the --prefix option
to `git checkout-index` (this will always be treated as a directory
name, not just as a simple text prefix).
As part of this, the workdir iterator was extended to take the
path to the working directory as a parameter and fallback on the
git_repository_workdir result only if it's not specified.
Fixes#1332
This fixes the checkout case when a file is modified between the
baseline and the target and yet missing in the working directory.
The logic for that case appears to have been wrong.
This also adds a useful checkout notify callback to the checkout
test helpers that will count notifications and also has a debug
mode to visualize what checkout thinks that it's doing.
Files in status will, be default, be sorted according to the case
insensitivity of the filesystem that we're running on. However,
in some cases, this is not desirable. Even on case insensitive
file systems, 'git status' at the command line will generally use
a case sensitive sort (like 'ls'). Some GUIs prefer to display a
list of file case insensitively even on case-sensitive platforms.
This adds two new flags: GIT_STATUS_OPT_SORT_CASE_SENSITIVELY
and GIT_STATUS_OPT_SORT_CASE_INSENSITIVELY that will override the
default sort order of the status output and give the user control.
This includes tests for exercising these new options and makes
the examples/status.c program emulate core Git and always use a
case sensitive sort.
This adds three new public APIs for manipulating the index:
1. `git_index_add_all` is similar to `git add -A` and will add
files in the working directory that match a pathspec to the
index while honoring ignores, etc.
2. `git_index_remove_all` removes files from the index that match
a pathspec.
3. `git_index_update_all` updates entries in the index based on
the current contents of the working directory, either added
the new information or removing the entry from the index.
This adds parameters to the four functions that allow for blob-to-
blob and blob-to-buffer differencing (either via callbacks or by
making a git_diff_patch object). These parameters let you say
that filename we should pretend the blob has while doing the diff.
If you pass NULL, there should be no change from the existing
behavior, which is to skip using attributes for file type checks
and just look at content. With the parameters, you can plug into
the new diff driver functionality and get binary or non-binary
behavior, plus function context regular expressions, etc.
This commit also fixes things so that the git_diff_delta that is
generated by these functions will actually be populated with the
data that we know about the blobs (or buffers) so you can use it
appropriately. It also fixes a bug in generating patches from
the git_diff_patch objects created via these functions.
Lastly, there is one other behavior change that may matter. If
there is no difference between the two blobs, these functions no
longer generate any diff callbacks / patches unless you have
passed in GIT_DIFF_INCLUDE_UNMODIFIED. This is pretty natural,
but could potentially change the behavior of existing usage.
This simplifies some documentation and hopefully makes a couple
of things easier to read. Also, this rearrages the order in this
branch so that the overall diff against the trunk will hopefully
be a bit cleaner.
This adds two new public APIs: git_diff_patch_from_blobs and
git_diff_patch_from_blob_and_buffer, plus it refactors the code
for git_diff_blobs and git_diff_blob_to_buffer so that they code
is almost entirely shared between these APIs, and adds tests for
the new APIs.
Some tools use an extra level to maintain an application specific config files on top of the normal ones. Revision 16adc9fade broke this.
Signed-off-by: Sven Strickroth <email@cs-ware.de>
This implements the loading of regular expression pattern lists
for diff drivers that search for function context in that way.
This also changes the way that diff drivers update options and
interface with xdiff APIs to make them a little more flexible.
git_packbuilder_write() used to write a packfile to the passed file
path. Instead, ask for a destination directory and create both the
packfile and an index, as most users probably do expect.
This improves the docs for GIT_DIFF_INCLUDE_UNTRACKED_CONTENT as
well as the other flags related to UNTRACKED items in diff, plus
it makes that flag now automatically turn on
GIT_DIFF_INCLUDE_UNTRACKED which seems like a reasonable dwim type
of change.
The GIT_CONFIG_LEVEL constants actually work well as an enum
because they are mutually exclusive, so this adds a typedef to
the enum and uses that everywhere that one of these constants are
expected, instead of the old code that typically used an unsigned
int.
This adds docs for the cache control options to git_libgit2_opts
and also tweaks the cache code so that if the cache is disabled,
then the next time we attempt to insert something into the cache
in question, we will actually clear any old cached objects.
This adds a couple more tests of different rename scenarios.
Also, this fixes a problem with the case where you have two
"split" deltas and the left half of one matches the right half of
the other. That case was already being handled, but in the wrong
order in a way that could result in bad output. Also, if the swap
also happened to put the other two halves into the correct place
(i.e. two files exchanged places with each other), then the second
delta was left with the SPLIT flag set when it really should be
cleared.
This flips rename detection around so instead of creating a
forward mapping from deltas to possible rename targets, instead
it creates a reverse mapping, looking at possible targets and
trying to find a source that they could have been renamed or
copied from. This is important because each output can only
have a single source, but a given source could map to multiple
outputs (in the form of COPIED records).
Additionally, this makes a couple of tweaks to the public rename
detection APIs, mostly renaming a couple of options that control
the behavior to make more sense and to be more like core Git.
I walked through the tests looking at the exact results and
updated the expectations based on what I saw. The new code is
different from the old because it cannot give some nonsense
results (like A was renamed to both B and C) which were part of
the outputs previously.