Add test for bug fixed in 852ded9698
Sorry, I wrote that bug fix and forgot to check in a test at the
same time. Here is one that fails on the old version of the code
and now works.
This makes the diff rename tracking code more careful about the
order in which it processes renames and more thorough in updating
the mapping of correct renames when an earlier rename update
alters the index of a later matched pair.
This adds parameters to the four functions that allow for blob-to-
blob and blob-to-buffer differencing (either via callbacks or by
making a git_diff_patch object). These parameters let you say
that filename we should pretend the blob has while doing the diff.
If you pass NULL, there should be no change from the existing
behavior, which is to skip using attributes for file type checks
and just look at content. With the parameters, you can plug into
the new diff driver functionality and get binary or non-binary
behavior, plus function context regular expressions, etc.
This commit also fixes things so that the git_diff_delta that is
generated by these functions will actually be populated with the
data that we know about the blobs (or buffers) so you can use it
appropriately. It also fixes a bug in generating patches from
the git_diff_patch objects created via these functions.
Lastly, there is one other behavior change that may matter. If
there is no difference between the two blobs, these functions no
longer generate any diff callbacks / patches unless you have
passed in GIT_DIFF_INCLUDE_UNMODIFIED. This is pretty natural,
but could potentially change the behavior of existing usage.
A tree to index rename with no changes was getting erased by
the iteration routine (if the routine actually loaded the data
for the unmodified file). This invokes the code path that was
previously messing up the diff and iterates twice to make sure
that the iteration process itself doesn't modify the data.
In a case insensitive index, if you attempt to add a file from
disk with a different case pattern, the old case pattern in the
index should be preserved.
This fixes that (and a couple of minor warnings).
This adds two new public APIs: git_diff_patch_from_blobs and
git_diff_patch_from_blob_and_buffer, plus it refactors the code
for git_diff_blobs and git_diff_blob_to_buffer so that they code
is almost entirely shared between these APIs, and adds tests for
the new APIs.
This implements the loading of regular expression pattern lists
for diff drivers that search for function context in that way.
This also changes the way that diff drivers update options and
interface with xdiff APIs to make them a little more flexible.
This is a significant reorganization of the diff code to break it
into a set of more clearly distinct files and to document the new
organization. Hopefully this will make the diff code easier to
understand and to extend.
This adds a new `git_diff_driver` object that looks of diff driver
information from the attributes and the config so that things like
function content in diff headers can be provided. The full driver
spec is not implemented in the commit - this is focused on the
reorganization of the code and putting the driver hooks in place.
This also removes a few #includes from src/repository.h that were
overbroad, but as a result required extra #includes in a variety
of places since including src/repository.h no longer results in
pulling in the whole world.
1. internal iterators now return GIT_ITEROVER when you go past the
last item in the iteration.
2. git_iterator_advance will "advance" to the first item in the
iteration if it is called immediately after creating the
iterator, which allows a simpler idiom for basic iteration.
3. if git_iterator_advance encounters an error reading data (e.g.
a missing tree or an unreadable file), it returns the error
but also attempts to advance past the invalid data to prevent
an infinite loop.
Updated all tests and internal usage of iterators to account for
these new behaviors.
This extends the rename tests to make sure that every rename
scenario in the inner loop of git_diff_find_similar is actually
exercised. Also, fixes an incorrect assert that was in one of
the clauses that was not previously being exercised.
This adds a couple more tests of different rename scenarios.
Also, this fixes a problem with the case where you have two
"split" deltas and the left half of one matches the right half of
the other. That case was already being handled, but in the wrong
order in a way that could result in bad output. Also, if the swap
also happened to put the other two halves into the correct place
(i.e. two files exchanged places with each other), then the second
delta was left with the SPLIT flag set when it really should be
cleared.
This flips rename detection around so instead of creating a
forward mapping from deltas to possible rename targets, instead
it creates a reverse mapping, looking at possible targets and
trying to find a source that they could have been renamed or
copied from. This is important because each output can only
have a single source, but a given source could map to multiple
outputs (in the form of COPIED records).
Additionally, this makes a couple of tweaks to the public rename
detection APIs, mostly renaming a couple of options that control
the behavior to make more sense and to be more like core Git.
I walked through the tests looking at the exact results and
updated the expectations based on what I saw. The new code is
different from the old because it cannot give some nonsense
results (like A was renamed to both B and C) which were part of
the outputs previously.
This adds a bunch more rename detection tests including checks
vs the working directory, the new exact match options, some more
whitespace variants, etc.
This also adds a git_futils_writebuffer helper function and uses
it in checkout. This is mainly added because I wanted an easy
way to write out a git_buf to disk inside my test code.
There are a number of bugs in the rename code that only were
obvious when I started testing it against large old repos with
more complex patterns. (The code to do that testing is not ready
to merge with libgit2, but I do plan to add more thorough tests.)
This contains a significant number of changes and also tweaks the
public API slightly to make emulating core git easier.
Most notably, this separates the GIT_DIFF_FIND_AND_BREAK_REWRITES
flag into FIND_REWRITES (which adds a self-similarity score to
every modified file) and BREAK_REWRITES (which splits the modified
deltas into add/remove pairs in the diff list). When you do a raw
output of core git, rewrites show up as M090 or such, not at A and
D output, so I wanted to be able to emulate that.
Publicly, this also changes the flags to be uint16_t since we
don't need values out of that range.
Internally, this contains significant changes from a number of
small bug fixes (like using the wrong side of the diff to decide
if the object could be found in the ODB vs the workdir) to larger
issues about which files can and should be compared and how the
various edge cases of similarity scores should be treated.
Honestly, I don't think this is the last update that will have to
be made to this code, but I think this moves us closer to correct
behavior and I tried to document the code so it would be easier
to follow..
When the last item in a diff was an untracked directory that only
contained ignored items, the loop to scan the contents would run
off the end of the iterator and dereference a NULL pointer. This
includes a test that reproduces the problem and a fix.
If you use rename detection, the renamed and copied files would
not show any text diffs because the function that decides if
data should be loaded didn't know which sides of the diff to
load for those cases.
This adds a test that looks at the patch generated for diff
entries that are COPIED or RENAMED.
When a patch contained an eofnl change (i.e. the last line either
gained or lost a newline), the oldno and newno line number values
for the lines in the last hunk of the patch were not useful. This
makes them behave in a more expected manner.
This adds a new line origin constant for the special line that
is used when both files end without a newline.
In the course of writing the tests for this, I was having problems
with modifying a file but not having diff notice because it was
the same size and modified less than one second from the start of
the test, so I decided to start working on nanosecond timestamp
support. This commit doesn't contain the nanosecond support, but
it contains the reorganization of maybe_modified and the hooks so
that if the nanosecond data were being read by stat() (or rather
being copied by git_index_entry__init_from_stat), then the nsec
would be taken into account.
This new stuff could probably use some more tests, although there
is some amount of it here.
This makes diff use the cvar cache for config options where
possible, and also adds support for a number of other config
options to diff including "diff.context", "diff.ignoreSubmodules",
"diff.noprefix", "diff.mnemonicprefix", and "core.abbrev".
To make this natural, this involved a rearrangement of the code
that allocates the diff object vs. the code that initializes it
based on the combination of options passed in by the user and
read from the config.
This commit includes tests for most of these new options as well.
This adds tests for diffs with submodules in them and (perhaps
unsurprisingly) requires further fixes to be made. Specifically,
this fixes:
- when considering if a submodule is dirty in the workdir, it was
being treated as dirty even if only the index was dirty.
- git_diff_patch_to_str (and git_diff_patch_print) were "printing"
the headers for files (and submodules) that were unmodified or
had no meaningful content.
- added comment to previous fix and removed unneeded parens.
This started out trying to look at the problems from issue #1425
and gradually grew to a broader set of fixes. There are two core
things fixed here:
1. When you had an ignore like "/bin" which is rooted at the top
of your tree, instead of immediately adding the "bin/" entry
as an ignored item in the diff, we were returning all of the
direct descendants of the directory as ignored items. This
changes things to immediately ignore the directory. Note that
this effects the behavior in test_status_ignore__subdirectories
so that we no longer exactly match core gits ignore behavior,
but the new behavior probably makes more sense (i.e. we now
will include an ignored directory inside an untracked directory
that we previously would have left off).
2. When a submodule only contained working directory changes, the
diff code was always considering it unmodified which was just
an outright bug. The HEAD SHA of the submodule matches the SHA
in the parent repo index, and since the SHAs matches, the diff
code was overwriting the actual status with UNMODIFIED.
These fixes broke existing tests test_diff_workdir__submodules and
test_status_ignore__subdirectories but looking it over, I actually
think the new results are correct and the old results were wrong.
@nulltoken had actually commented on the subdirectory ignore issue
previously.
I also included in the tests some debugging versions of the
shared iteration callback routines that print status or diff
information. These aren't used actively in the tests, but can be
quickly swapped in to test code to give a better picture of what
is being scanned in some of the complex test scenarios.
This fixes some places where the new tests were leaving the test
area in a bad state or were freeing data they should not free.
It also removes code that is extraneous to the core issue and
fixes an invalid SHA being looked up in one of the tests (which
was failing, but for the wrong reason).
This adds a helper function for the cases where you want to
quickly set a single boolean config value for a repository.
This allowed me to remove a lot of code.
1. Fix sort order problem with submodules where "mod" was sorting
after "mod-plus" because they were being sorted as "mod/" and
"mod-plus/". This involved pushing the "contains a .git entry"
test significantly lower in the stack.
2. Reinstate behavior that a directory which contains a .git entry
will be treated as a submodule during iteration even if it is
not yet added to the .gitmodules.
3. Now that any directory containing .git is reported as submodule,
we have to be more careful checking for GIT_EEXISTS when we
do a submodule lookup, because that is the error code that is
returned by git_submodule_lookup when you try to look up a
directory containing .git that has no record in gitmodules or
the index.
Previously, 0 meant default. This is problematic, as asking for 0
context lines is a valid thing to do.
Change GIT_DIFF_OPTIONS_INIT to default to three and stop treating 0
as a magic value. In case no options are provided, make sure the
options in the diff object default to 3.
This standardizes iterator behavior across all three iterators
(index, tree, and working directory). Previously the working
directory iterator behaved differently from the other two.
Each iterator can now operate in one of three modes:
1. *No tree results, auto expand trees* means that only non-
tree items will be returned and when a tree/directory is
encountered, we will automatically descend into it.
2. *Tree results, auto expand trees* means that results will
be given for every item found, including trees, but you
only need to call normal git_iterator_advance to yield
every item (i.e. trees returned with pre-order iteration).
3. *Tree results, no auto expand* means that calling the
normal git_iterator_advance when looking at a tree will
not descend into the tree, but will skip over it to the
next entry in the parent.
Previously, behavior 1 was the only option for index and tree
iterators, and behavior 3 was the only option for workdir.
The main public API implications of this are that the
`git_iterator_advance_into()` call is now valid for all
iterators, not just working directory iterators, and all the
existing uses of working directory iterators explicitly use
the GIT_ITERATOR_DONT_AUTOEXPAND (for now).
Interestingly, the majority of the implementation was in the
index iterator, since there are no tree entries there and now
have to fake them. The tree and working directory iterators
only required small modifications.
The iterator APIs are not currently consistent with the parameter
ordering of the rest of the codebase. This rearranges the order
of parameters, simplifies the naming of a number of functions, and
makes somewhat better use of macros internally to clean up the
iterator code.
This also expands the test coverage of iterator functionality,
making sure that case sensitive range-limited iteration works
correctly.
`git_diff_get_patch()` would unconditionally load the patch object and
then simply leak it if the user hadn't requested it. Short-circuit
loading the object if the user doesn't want it.
The rest of the plugs are simply calling the free functions of objects
allocated during the tests.
This removes assertions that prevent us from having an empty
git_config object and then updates some tests that were
dependent on global config state to use an empty config before
running anything.