This expands the types of peeling that `git_object_peel` knows
how to do to include TAG -> BLOB peeling, and makes the errors
slightly more consistent depending on the situation. It also
adds a new special behavior where peeling to ANY will peel until
the object type changes (e.g. chases TAGs to a non-TAG).
Using this expanded peeling, this replaces peeling code that was
embedded in `git_tag_peel` and `git_reset`.
It's not really needed with the current code as we have EOS and the
sideband's flush to tell us we're done.
Keep the distinction between processed and received objects.
Just clean up valgrind warnings about uninitialized memory
and also clear out errno in some cases where it results in
a false error message being generated at a later point.
This is a big redesign of the git_submodule_status API and the
implementation of the redesigned API. It also fixes a number of
bugs that I found in other parts of the submodule API while
writing the tests for the status part.
This also fixes a couple of bugs in the iterators that had not
been noticed before - one with iterating when there is a gitlink
(i.e. separate-work-dir) and one where I was treating anything
even vaguely submodule-like as a submodule, more aggressively
than core git does.
This fixes up a number of problems flagged by valgrind and also
cleans up the internal `git_submodule` allocation handling
overall with a simpler model.
This cleans up a number of items suggested during code review
with @vmg, including:
* renaming "outside repo" config API to `git_config_open_default`
* killing the `git_config_open_global` API
* removing the `git_` prefix from the static functions in fileops
* removing some unnecessary functionality from the "cp" command
This extends git_repository_init_ext further with support for
initializing the repository from an external template directory
and with support for the "create shared" type flags that make a
set GID repository directory.
This also adds tests for much of the new functionality to the
existing `repo/init.c` test suite.
Also, this adds a bunch of new utility functions including a
very general purpose `git_futils_mkdir` (with the ability to
make paths and to chmod the paths post-creation) and a file
tree copying function `git_futils_cp_r`. Also, this includes
some new path functions that were useful to keep the code
simple.
The extended version of repository init adds support for many
of the things that you can do with `git init` and sets up
structures that will make it easier to extend further in the
future.
In looking at PR #878, I found a few small bugs in the diff code,
mostly related to work that can be avoided when processing tree-
to-tree diffs that was always being carried out. This commit has
some small fixes in it.
This creates a public API for adding to the internal ignores
list, which already existing but was not accessible.
This adds the new default value for core.excludesfile also.
Up to now, the idea was that the user would do all the operations for
one repository in the same thread. Thus we could have the
memory-mapped window information thread-local and avoid any locking.
This is not practical in a few environments, such as Apple's GCD which
allocates threads arbitrarily or the .NET CLR, where the OS-level
thread can change at any moment.
Make the control structure global and protect it with a mutex so we
don't depend on the thread currently executing the code.
If you want to be absolutely safe with git_message_prettify, you
can now pass a NULL pointer for the buffer and get back the number
of bytes that would be copied into the buffer.
This means that an error is a non-negative return code and a
success will be greater than zero from this function.
Returning a negative cancels the walk, and returning a positive one
causes us to skip an entry, which was previously done by a negative
value.
This allows us to stay consistent with the rest of the functions that
take a callback and keeps the skipping functionality.
There is a little cleanup necessary from PR #843. Since the
new callbacks return `GIT_EUSER` we have to be a little careful
about return values when they are used internally to the library.
Also, callbacks should be checked for non-zero return values,
not just less than zero.
This updates all the `foreach()` type functions across the library
that take callbacks from the user to have a consistent behavior.
The rules are:
* A callback terminates the loop by returning any non-zero value
* Once the callback returns non-zero, it will not be called again
(i.e. the loop stops all iteration regardless of state)
* If the callback returns non-zero, the parent fn returns GIT_EUSER
* Although the parent returns GIT_EUSER, no error will be set in
the library and `giterr_last()` will return NULL if called.
This commit makes those changes across the library and adds tests
for most of the iteration APIs to make sure that they follow the
above rules.
Fixes#824
Exporting variables in a dynamic library is a PITA. Let's keep
these values internally and wrap them through a helper method.
This doesn't break the external API. @arrbee, aren't you glad I turned
the `GIT_ATTR_` macros into function macros? ✨
The 'git revert/cherry-pick/merge -n' commands leave .git/MERGE_MSG
behind so that git-commit can find it. As we don't yet support these
operations, users who are shelling out to let git perform these
operations haven't had a convenient way to get this message.
These functions allow the user to retrieve the message and remove it
when she's created the commit.
Instad of each transport having its own function and logic to get to
its refs, store them directly in transport.
Leverage the new gitno_buffer to make the parsing and storing of the
refs use common code and get rid of the git_protocol struct.
This allows us to add capabilitites to both at the same time, keeps
them in sync and removes a lot of code.
gitno_buffer now uses a callback to fill its buffer, allowing us to
use the same interface for git and http (which uses callbacks).
For the transition, http is going to keep its own logic until the
git/common code catches up with the implied multi_ack that http
has. This also has the side-effect of making the code cleaner and more
correct regardingt he protocol.
git.git uses an inlined hashcmp function instead of memcmp, since it
performes much better when comparing hashes (most hashes compared
diverge within the first byte).
Measurements and rationale for the curious reader:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/172286
Renamed git_checkout_index to what it really was,
and removed duplicate code from clone.c. Added
git_checkout_ref, which updates HEAD and hands off
to git_checkout_head.
Added tests for the options the caller can pass to
git_checkout_*.
This makes sure that an error code returned by the callback function
of `git_tree_walk` will stop the iteration and get propagated back
to the caller verbatim.
Also, this adds a minor helper function `git_tree_entry_byoid` that
searches a `git_tree` for an entry with the given OID. This isn't
a fast function, but it's easier than writing the loop yourself as
an external user of the library.
A diff that is created with a NULL options parameter could result
in a NULL prefix string, but diff merge was unconditionally
strdup'ing it. I added a test to replicate the issue and then a
new method that does the right thing with NULL values.
Josh Triplett noticed libgit2 actually does preorder entries in
tree_walk_post instead of postorder. Also, we continued walking even
when an error occured in the callback.
Fix#773; also, allow both pre- and postorder walking.
Also removes the unnecessary check for filter
length, since git_filters_apply does the right
thing when there are none, and it's more efficient
than this.
Not all delta bases are available on the first try. By delaying
resolving all deltas until the end, we avoid decompressing some of the
data twice or even more times, saving effort and time.
The correct way to advertise out capabilities is by appending them to
the first 'want' line, using SP as separator, instead of NUL as the
server does. Inconsistent documentation lead to the use of NUL in
libgit2.
Fix this so we can request much more efficient packs from the
remote which reduces the indexing time considerably.
passing 0 to git_strol(32|64) let the implementation guess if it's
dealing with an octal number or a decimal one.
Let's make it safe and ensure that both 'HEAD@{010}' and 'HEAD@{10}'
point at the same commit.
This added a flag to the `git_repository_set_workdir()` function
that enables generation of a `.git` gitlink file that links the
new workdir to the parent repository. Essentially, the flag tells
the function to write out the changes to disk to permanently set
the workdir of the repository to the new path.
If you pass this flag as true, then setting the workdir to something
other than the default workdir (i.e. the parent of the .git repo
directory), will create a plain file named ".git" with the standard
gitlink contents "gitdir: <repo-path>", and also update the
"core.worktree" and "core.bare" config values.
Setting the workdir to the default repo workdir will clear the
core.worktree flag (but still permanently set core.bare to false).
BTW, the libgit2 API does not currently provide a function for
clearing the workdir and converting a non-bare repo into a bare one.
Adding a new config iteration function that let's you iterate
over just the config entries that match a particular regular
expression. The old foreach becomes a simple use of this with
an empty pattern.
This also fixes an apparent bug in the existing `git_config_foreach`
where returning a non-zero value from the iteration callback was
not correctly aborting the iteration and the returned value was
not being propogated back to the caller of foreach.
Added to tests to cover all these changes.
This makes it easy to take a buffer containing a path with relative
references (i.e. .. or . path segments) and resolve all of those
into a clean path. This can be applied to URLs as well as file
paths which can be useful.
As part of this, I made the drive-letter detection apply on all
platforms, not just windows. If you give a path that looks like
"c:/..." on any platform, it seems like we might as well detect
that as a rooted path. I suppose if you create a directory named
"x:" on another platform and want to use that as the beginning
of a relative path under the root directory of your repo, this
could cause a problem, but then it seems like you're asking for
trouble.
* `git_buf_rfind` (with tests and tests for `git_buf_rfind_next`)
* `git_buf_puts_escaped` and `git_buf_puts_escaped_regex` (with tests)
to copy strings into a buffer while injecting an escape sequence
(e.g. '\') in front of particular characters.
passing 0 to git_strol(32|64) let the implementation guess if it's
dealing with an octal number or a decimal one.
Let's make it safe and ensure that both 'HEAD@{010}' and 'HEAD@{10}'
point at the same commit.
On GNU, the d_name field of the dirent structure is defined as "char d_name[1]",
so we must allocate more than sizeof(struct dirent) bytes, just like on Sun.
Once a file is registered, there is no way to deregister it, even
after the structure that contains it is no longer needed and has been
freed. This may be the source of #624.
Allow and use the deregister function to remove our file from the
global list.
Currently, the first call of git_indexer_stream_add adds the data to the
underlying pack file and opens it for later use, but doesn't start
parsing the already available data.
This means, git_indexer_stream_finalize only works if
git_indexer_stream_add was called at least twice. Kill this limitation
by parsing available data immediately.
When the repository was reinitialized, every configuration change in repo_init_config() was directly performed against the file on the filesystem. However, a previous version of the configuration had previously been loaded in memory and attached to the repository, in repo_init_reinit().
The repository was unaware of the change and the stale cached version of the configuration never refreshed.
So far they only create a repo, setup the "origin"
remote, and fetch. The API probably needs work as
well; there's no way to get progress information
at this point.
Also uncovered a shortcoming; git_remote_download
doesn't fetch over local transport.
1. compile warning:
D:\libgit2.git\src\win32\posix_w32.c: In function 'p_open':
D:\libgit2.git\src\win32\posix_w32.c:235:10: warning: 'mode_t' is promoted to 'int' when passed through '...' [enabled by default]
D:\libgit2.git\src\win32\posix_w32.c:235:10: note: (so you should pass 'int' not 'mode_t' to 'va_arg')
D:\libgit2.git\src\win32\posix_w32.c:235:10: note: if this code is reached, the program will abort
2. test crash.
3. the above two issues are same root cause. please see http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/cclass/int/sx11c.html
The call to repo_init_reinit already takes care of opening the
repository and giving us a git_repository object to give to the
caller. There is no need to call git_repository_open again.
If we find several objects with the same prefix, we need to free the
memory where we stored the earlier object. Keep track of the raw.data
pointer across read_prefix calls and free it if we find another
object.
oid_for_tree_path may not always find the path in the tree, in which
case we need to return an error. The current code doesn't do this and
results in undefined behavior.
This fixes git_index_add and git_index_append to behave more like
core git, preserving old filemode data in the index when adding
and/or appending with core.filemode = false.
This also has placeholder support for core.symlinks and
core.ignorecase, but those flags are not implemented (well,
symlinks has partial support for preserving mode information in
the same way that git does, but it isn't tested).
git_commit() and git_tag() no longer prettify the
message by default. This has to be taken care of
by the caller.
This has the nice side effect of putting the
caller in position to actually choose to strip
the comments or not.
Needs AmigaOS.cmake now from CMake package at OS4Depot, or contents below:
--8<--
SET(AMIGA 1)
SET(CMAKE_SHARED_LIBRARY_C_FLAGS "-fPIC")
SET(CMAKE_SHARED_LIBRARY_CREATE_C_FLAGS "-shared")
--8<--
When a configuration option is set, we didn't check to see whether
there was any escaping needed. Escape the available characters so we
can unescape them correctly when we read them.
On RAM: the .idx and .pack files become links to a .lock and the original download respectively.
Assume some feature (such as record locking) supported by SFS but not JXFS or RAM: is required.