This is something we do on re-init but not when opening a
repository. This hasn't particularly mattered up to now as the version
has been 0 ever since the first release of git, but the times, they're
a-changing and we will soon see version 1 in the wild. We need to make
sure we don't open those.
If an index entry for a file that is not in HEAD is in conflicted state,
when diffing HEAD with the index, the status field of the corresponding git_diff_delta was incorrectly reported as GIT_DELTA_ADDED instead of GIT_DELTA_CONFLICTED.
This was due to handle_unmatched_new_item() initially setting the status
to GIT_DELTA_CONFLICTED but then overriding it later with GIT_DELTA_ADDED.
Support hierarchical test resource data, such that you can have
`tests/resources/foo/bar` and move the `bar` directory in as
a fixture.
Calling `cl_fixture_sandbox` on a path that is not directly beneath
the test resources directory succeeds, placing that directory into
the test fixture. (For example, `cl_fixture_sandbox("foo/bar")`
will sandbox the `foo/bar` directory as `bar`).
Add support for cleaning up directories created this way, by only
cleaning up the basename (in this example, `bar`) from the fixture
directory.
Given a variety of combinations of core.autocrlf settings and
attributes settings, test that we check out data into the working
directory the same as a known-good test resource created by git.git.
As we attempt to replicate a situation in which an older checkout has
put a file on disk with different filtering settings from us, set the
timestamp on the entry and file to a second before we're performing the
operation so the entry in the index counts as old.
This way we can test that we're not looking at the on-disk file when the
index has the entry and we detect it as clean.
This allows the user to look up fields which we don't parse in libgit2,
and allows them to access gpgsig or mergetag fields if they wish to
check the signature.
When an entry has a racy timestamp, we need to check whether the file
itself has changed since we put its entry in the index. Only then do we
smudge the size field to force a check the next time around.
When a file on the workdir has the same or a newer timestamp than the
index, we need to perform a full check of the contents, as the update of
the file may have happened just after we wrote the index.
The iterator changes are such that we can reach inside the workdir
iterator from the diff, though it may be better to have an accessor
instead of moving these structs into the header.
When updating the index during a diff, preserve the original mode,
which prevents us from dropping the mode to what we have interpreted
as on our system (eg, what the working directory claims it to be,
which may be a lie on some systems.)
This is used by the submodule in order to figure out if the index has
changed since it last read it. Using a timestamp is racy, so let's make
it use the checksum, just like we now do for reloading the index itself.
When ticking over one second, it can happen that the actual time ticks
over the same second between the time that we undermine our own race
protections and the time in which we perform the index update. Such
timing would make the time in the entries match the index' timestamp and
we have not gained anything.
Ticking over five seconds makes it so that if real-time rolls over that
second, our index is still ahead. This is still suboptimal as we're
dealing with timing, but five seconds should be long enough for any
reasonable test runner to finish the tests.
We currently use a timetamp to check whether an index file has been
modified since we last read it, but this is racy. If two updates happen
in the same second and we read after the first one, we won't detect the
second one.
Instead read the SHA-1 checksum of the file, which are its last 20 bytes which
gives us a sure-fire way to detect whether the file has changed since we
last read it.
As we're now keeping track of it, expose an accessor to this data.
Credits to @directhex
It is possible for PKG_CHECK_MODULES(LIBSSH2 libssh2) to LIBSSH2_LIBRARIES to a string with more than one library in it - e.g. if your libssh2 was built against libgcrypt, it will be "ssh2;gcrypt"
Quoting the string is needed, or CHECK_LIBRARY_EXISTS will fail.