Add a new function that checks wether a given `struct
git_worktree` is valid. The validation includes checking if the
gitdir, parent directory and common directory are present.
Introduce a new `struct git_worktree`, which holds information
about a possible working tree connected to a repository.
Introduce functions to allow opening working trees for a
repository.
A repository's configuartion file can always be found in the
GIT_COMMON_DIR, which has been newly introduced. For normal
repositories this does change nothing, but for working trees this
change allows to access the shared configuration file.
The refdb_fs_backend is not aware of the git commondir, which
stores common objects like the o bject database and packed/loose
refereensces when worktrees are used.
Make refdb_fs_backend aware of the common directory by
introducing a new commonpath variable that points to the actual
common path of the database and using it instead of the gitdir
for the mentioned objects.
The variable '.path' of the refdb_fs_backend struct becomes
confusing regarding the introduction of the git commondir. It
does not immediatly become obvious what it should point to.
Fix this problem by renaming the variable to `gitpath`,
clarifying that it acutally points to the `.git` directory of the
repository, in contrast to the commonpath directory, which points
to the directory containing shared objects like references and
the object store.
The recent introduction of the commondir variable of a repository
requires callers to distinguish whether their files are part of
the dot-git directory or the common directory shared between
multpile worktrees. In order to take the burden from callers and
unify knowledge on which files reside where, the
`git_repository_item_path` function has been introduced which
encapsulate this knowledge.
Modify most existing callers of `git_repository_path` to use
`git_repository_item_path` instead, thus making them implicitly
aware of the common directory.
The commondir variable stores the path to the common directory.
The common directory is used to store objects and references
shared across multiple repositories. A current use case is the
newly introduced `git worktree` feature, which sets up a separate
working copy, where the backing git object store and references
are pointed to by the common directory.
When calling `git_path_dirname_r` on a Win32 prefix, e.g. a drive
or network share prefix, we always want to return the trailing
'/'. This does not work currently when passing in a path like
'C:', where the '/' would not be appended correctly.
Fix this by appending a '/' if we try to normalize a Win32 prefix
and there is no trailing '/'.
Getting the dirname of a filesystem root should return the filesystem
root itself. E.g. the dirname of "/" is always "/". On Windows, we
emulate this behavior and as such, we should return e.g. "C:/" if
calling dirname on "C:/". But we currently fail to do so and instead
return ".", as we do not check if we actually have a Windows prefix
before stripping off the last directory component.
Fix this by calling out to `win32_prefix_length` immediately after
stripping trailing slashes, returning early if we have a prefix.
Extract code which determines if a path is at a Windows system's root.
This incluses drive prefixes (e.g. "C:\") as well as network computer
names (e.g. "//computername/").
The code reversing a vector initially determines the rear-pointer by
simply subtracting 1 from the vector's length. Obviously, this fails if
the vector is empty, in which case we have an integer overflow.
Fix the issue by returning early if the vector is empty.
Fix the following warning emitted by clang:
[ 16%] Building C object CMakeFiles/libgit2_clar.dir/src/submodule.c.o
/Users/mplough/devel/external/libgit2/src/submodule.c:408:6: warning: variable 'i' is used uninitialized whenever 'if' condition is true
[-Wsometimes-uninitialized]
if ((error = load_submodule_names(names, cfg)))
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/Users/mplough/devel/external/libgit2/src/submodule.c:448:20: note: uninitialized use occurs here
git_iterator_free(i);
^
/Users/mplough/devel/external/libgit2/src/submodule.c:408:2: note: remove the 'if' if its condition is always false
if ((error = load_submodule_names(names, cfg)))
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/Users/mplough/devel/external/libgit2/src/submodule.c:404:17: note: initialize the variable 'i' to silence this warning
git_iterator *i;
^
= NULL
1 warning generated.
Set up a WinHTTP status callback; inspect the WinHTTP status for
WINHTTP_CALLBACK_STATUS_SECURE_FAILURE, and convert the status code
to a useful message for callers.
`git_submodule_status` is very slow, bottlenecked on
`git_repository_head_tree`, which it uses through `submodule_update_head`. If
the user has requested submodule caching, assume that they want this status
cached too and skip it.
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twosigma.com>
Added `git_repository_submodule_cache_all` to initialze a cache of
submodules on the repository so that operations looking up N
submodules are O(N) and not O(N^2). Added a
`git_repository_submodule_cache_clear` function to remove the cache.
Also optimized the function that loads all submodules as it was itself
O(N^2) w.r.t the number of submodules, having to loop through the
`.gitmodules` file once per submodule. I changed it to process the
`.gitmodules` file once, into a map.
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twosigma.com>
For username/password credentials, support NTLM or Basic (in that order
of priority). Use the WinHTTP built-in authentication support for both,
and maintain a bitfield of the supported mechanisms from the response.
The Git protocol does not specify what should happen in the case
of an empty packet line (that is a packet line "0004"). We
currently indicate success, but do not return a packet in the
case where we hit an empty line. The smart protocol was not
prepared to handle such packets in all cases, though, resulting
in a `NULL` pointer dereference.
Fix the issue by returning an error instead. As such kind of
packets is not even specified by upstream, this is the right
thing to do.
Each packet line in the Git protocol is prefixed by a four-byte
length of how much data will follow, which we parse in
`git_pkt_parse_line`. The transmitted length can either be equal
to zero in case of a flush packet or has to be at least of length
four, as it also includes the encoded length itself. Not
checking this may result in a buffer overflow as we directly pass
the length to functions which accept a `size_t` length as
parameter.
Fix the issue by verifying that non-flush packets have at least a
length of `PKT_LEN_SIZE`.
git_checkout_tree() sets up its working directory iterator to respect the
pathlist if GIT_CHECKOUT_DISABLE_PATHSPEC_MATCH is present, which is great.
What's not so great is that this iterator is then used side-by-side with
an iterator created by git_checkout_iterator(), which did not set up its
pathlist appropriately (although the iterator mirrors all other iterator
options).
This could cause git_checkout_tree() to delete working tree files which
were not specified in the pathlist when GIT_CHECKOUT_DISABLE_PATHSPEC_MATCH
was used, as the unsynchronized iterators causes git_checkout_tree() to think
that files have been deleted between the two trees. Oops.
And added a test which fails without this fix (specifically, the final check
for "testrepo/README" to still be present fails).
Error messages should be sentence fragments, and therefore:
1. Should not begin with a capital letter,
2. Should not conclude with punctuation, and
3. Should not end a sentence and begin a new one
We want to keep the git UA in order for services to recognise that we're
a Git client and not a browser. But in order to stop dumb HTTP some
services have blocked UAs that claim to be pre-1.6.6 git.
Thread these needles by using the "git/2.0" prefix which is still close
enough to git's yet distinct enough that you can tell it's us.
This partially reverts bdec62dce1 which activates
the transport code-paths which allow you to use a custom TLS implementation
without having to have one at build-time.
However the capabilities describe how libgit2 was built, not what it could
potentially support, bring back the ifdefs so we only say we support HTTPS if
libgit2 was itself built with a TLS implementation.
The function to write trees allocates a new buffer for each tree.
This causes problems with performance when performing a lot
of actions involving writing trees, e.g. when doing many merges.
Fix the issue by instead handing in a shared buffer, which is then
re-used across the calls without having to re-allocate between
calls.
When trying to uncompress deltas in a packfile's delta chain, we try to
add object bases to the packfile cache, subsequently decrementing its
reference count if it has been added successfully. This may lead to a
mismatched reference count in the case where we exit the loop early due
to an encountered error.
Fix the issue by decrementing the reference count in error cleanup.
git_rebase_finish relies on head_detached being set, but
rebase_init_merge was only setting it when branch->ref_name was unset.
But branch->ref_name would be set to "HEAD" in the case of detached
HEAD being either implicitly (NULL) or explicitly passed to
git_rebase_init.
Introduce `git_thread_exit`, which will allow threads to terminate at an
arbitrary time, returning a `void *`. On Windows, this means that we
need to store the current `git_thread` in TLS, so that we can set its
`return` value when terminating.
We cannot simply use `ExitThread`, since Win32 returns `DWORD`s from
threads; we return `void *`.
`giterr_set()` is used when it is required to format a string, and since
we don't really require it for this case, it is better to stick to
`giterr_set_str()`.
This also suppresses a warning(-Wformat-security) raised by the compiler.
Signed-off-by: Pranit Bauva <pranit.bauva@gmail.com>