This extends the git_fuitls_readbuffer function to only read in if the
file's modification date is later than the given one. Some code paths
want to check a file's modification date in order to decide whether
they should read it or not. If they do want to read it, another stat
call is done by futils. This function combines these two operations so
we avoid one stat call each time we read a new or updated file.
The git_futils_readbuffer functions is now a wrapper around the new
function.
Signed-off-by: Carlos Martín Nieto <cmn@elego.de>
`git_futils_rmdir_r`: rename, clean up.
`git_reference_rename`: cleanup. Do not use 3x4096 buffers on the stack
or things will get ugly very fast. We can reuse the same buffer.
git_futils_rmdir_recurs() shall remove the given directory and all
subdirectories. This happens only if the directories are empty.
Signed-off-by: schu <schu-github@schulog.org>
The old `git_fileops_prettify_path` has been replaced with
`git_path_prettify`. This is a much simpler method that uses the OS's
`realpath` call to obtain the full path for directories and resolve
symlinks.
The `realpath` syscall is the original POSIX call in Unix system and
an emulated version under Windows using the Windows API.
Cleaned up the structure of the whole OS-abstraction layer.
fileops.c now contains a set of utility methods for file management used
by the library. These are abstractions on top of the original POSIX
calls.
There's a new file called `posix.c` that contains
emulations/reimplementations of all the POSIX calls the library uses.
These are prefixed with `p_`. There's a specific posix file for each
platform (win32 and unix).
All the path-related methods have been moved from `utils.c` to `path.c`
and have their own prefix.
The better solution would probably be to turn the gitfo_lstat /
gitfo_readlink macros into real functions that wrap either lstat or
gitfo_lstat__w32 (and readlink or gitfo_readlink__w32). However, that
would introduce an indirection unless inlined. For now, this is the less
intrusive change.
Handle Symlinks if they can be handled in Win32. This is not even
compiled. Needs review.
The lstat implementation is modified from core Git.
The readlink implementation is modified from PHP.
gitfo_exists() used to error out if the given file was a symbolic link,
due to access() returning an error code. This is not expected behaviour,
as gitfo_exists() should only check whether the file itself exists, not
its link target if it is a symbolic link.
Fix this by calling gitfo_lstat() instead, which is just a wrapper for
lstat().
Also fix the same error in index_init_entry().
retrieve_device returns the file device for a given path (so that we can detect device change while walking through parent directories).
abspath returns a canonicalized path, symbolic link free.
retrieive_ceiling_directories_offset returns the biggest path offset that path match in the ceiling directory list (so that we can stop at ceiling directories).
Temporary files when doing streaming writes are now stored inside the
Objects folder, to prevent issues when moving files between
disks/partitions.
Add support for block writes to the ODB again (for those backends that
cannot implement streaming).
Hey. Apologies in advance -- I broke your bindings.
This is a major commit that includes a long-overdue redesign of the
whole object-database structure. This is expected to be the last major
external API redesign of the library until the first non-alpha release.
Please get your bindings up to date with these changes. They will be
included in the next minor release. Sorry again!
Major features include:
- Real caching and refcounting on parsed objects
- Real caching and refcounting on objects read from the ODB
- Streaming writes & reads from the ODB
- Single-method writes for all object types
- The external API is now partially thread-safe
The speed increases are significant in all aspects, specially when
reading an object several times from the ODB (revwalking) and when
writing big objects to the ODB.
Here's a full changelog for the external API:
blob.h
------
- Remove `git_blob_new`
- Remove `git_blob_set_rawcontent`
- Remove `git_blob_set_rawcontent_fromfile`
- Rename `git_blob_writefile` -> `git_blob_create_fromfile`
- Change `git_blob_create_fromfile`:
The `path` argument is now relative to the repository's working dir
- Add `git_blob_create_frombuffer`
commit.h
--------
- Remove `git_commit_new`
- Remove `git_commit_add_parent`
- Remove `git_commit_set_message`
- Remove `git_commit_set_committer`
- Remove `git_commit_set_author`
- Remove `git_commit_set_tree`
- Add `git_commit_create`
- Add `git_commit_create_v`
- Add `git_commit_create_o`
- Add `git_commit_create_ov`
tag.h
-----
- Remove `git_tag_new`
- Remove `git_tag_set_target`
- Remove `git_tag_set_name`
- Remove `git_tag_set_tagger`
- Remove `git_tag_set_message`
- Add `git_tag_create`
- Add `git_tag_create_o`
tree.h
------
- Change `git_tree_entry_2object`:
New signature is `(git_object **object_out, git_repository *repo, git_tree_entry *entry)`
- Remove `git_tree_new`
- Remove `git_tree_add_entry`
- Remove `git_tree_remove_entry_byindex`
- Remove `git_tree_remove_entry_byname`
- Remove `git_tree_clearentries`
- Remove `git_tree_entry_set_id`
- Remove `git_tree_entry_set_name`
- Remove `git_tree_entry_set_attributes`
object.h
------------
- Remove `git_object_new
- Remove `git_object_write`
- Change `git_object_close`:
This method is now *mandatory*. Not closing an object causes a
memory leak.
odb.h
-----
- Remove type `git_rawobj`
- Remove `git_rawobj_close`
- Rename `git_rawobj_hash` -> `git_odb_hash`
- Change `git_odb_hash`:
New signature is `(git_oid *id, const void *data, size_t len, git_otype type)`
- Add type `git_odb_object`
- Add `git_odb_object_close`
- Change `git_odb_read`:
New signature is `(git_odb_object **out, git_odb *db, const git_oid *id)`
- Change `git_odb_read_header`:
New signature is `(size_t *len_p, git_otype *type_p, git_odb *db, const git_oid *id)`
- Remove `git_odb_write`
- Add `git_odb_open_wstream`
- Add `git_odb_open_rstream`
odb_backend.h
-------------
- Change type `git_odb_backend`:
New internal signatures are as follows
int (* read)(void **, size_t *, git_otype *, struct git_odb_backend *, const git_oid *)
int (* read_header)(size_t *, git_otype *, struct git_odb_backend *, const git_oid *)
int (* writestream)(struct git_odb_stream **, struct git_odb_backend *, size_t, git_otype)
int (* readstream)( struct git_odb_stream **, struct git_odb_backend *, const git_oid *)
- Add type `git_odb_stream`
- Add enum `git_odb_streammode`
Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Clean up a provided absolute or relative directory path.
This prettification relies on basic operations such as coalescing multiple forward slashes into a single slash, removing '.' and './' current directory segments, and removing parent directory whenever '..' is encountered. If not empty, the returned path ends with a forward slash.
For instance, this will turn "d1/s1///s2/..//../s3" into "d1/s3/".
This only performs a string based analysis of the path. No checks are done to make sure the path actually makes sense from the file system perspective.
It is not a good idea to export these internal symbols now that they are
not required to run the unit tests.
Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
Some external functions were not being exported because they were using
the 'extern' keyword instead of the generic GIT_EXTERN() macro.
Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
The constructor to git_repository is now called
'git_repository_open(path)'
and takes a path to a git repository instead of an existing ODB object.
Unit tests have been updated accordingly and the two test repositories
have been merged into one.
Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
No need to define inline as __inline because libgit2 code
should be using GIT_INLINE instead.
Signed-off-by: Julio Espinoza-Sokal <julioes@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Ericsson <ae@op5.se>
For information on FlushFileBuffers(), see the msdn document
at msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa364439(VS.85).aspx
Note that Windows 2000 is shown as the minimum windows version
to support FlushFileBuffers(), so if we wish to support Win9X
and NT4, we will need to add code to dynamically check if
kernel32.dll contains the function.
The only error return mentioned in the msdn document is
ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE, which is returned if the file/device
(eg console) is not buffered. The fsync(2) manpage says that
EINVAL is returned in errno, if "fd is bound to a special
file which does not support synchronization".
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>