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`.
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.
This is far from an ideal situation, but this causes issues on Windows which
make it harder to develop anything, as these tests hit issues which relate
specifically to the Windows filesystem like permission errors for files we
should be able to access. There is an issue likely related to the ordering of
the repack, but there's enough noise that it does not currently help us to run
this aspect of the test in CI.
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.
The function `cl_git_thread_check()` is defined as static. As the
function is defined in a header file which is included by our
tests, this can result in warnings for every test file where
`cl_git_thread_check` is never used.
Fix the issue by marking it as inline instead.
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.
Don't `cl_git_pass` in a child thread. When the assertion fails, clar
will `longjmp` to its error handler, but:
> The effect of a call to longjmp() where initialization of the jmp_buf
> structure was not performed in the calling thread is undefined.
Instead, set up an error context that threads can populate, and the
caller can check.
We want a predictable number of initializations in our multithreaded
init test, but we also want to make sure that we have _actually_
initialized `git_libgit2_init` before calling `git_thread_create` (since
it now has a sanity check that `git_libgit2_init` has been called).
Since `git_thread_create` is internal-only, keep this sanity check.
Flip the invocation so that we `git_libgit2_init` before our thread
tests and `git_libgit2_shutdown` again after.
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 *`.