It is possible to specify submodule URLs relative to the repository
location. E.g. having a submodule with URL "../submodule" will look for
the submodule at "repo/../submodule".
With the introduction of worktrees, though, we cannot simply resolve the
URL relative to the repository location itself. If the repository for
which a URL is to be resolved is a working tree, we have to resolve the
URL relative to the parent's repository path. Otherwise, the URL would
change depending on where the working tree is located.
Fix this by special-casing when we have a working tree while getting the
URL base.
References for a repository are usually created inside of its gitdir.
When using worktrees, though, these references are not to be created
inside the worktree gitdir, but instead inside the gitdir of its parent
repository, which is the commondir. Like this, branches will still be
available after the worktree itself has been deleted.
The filesystem refdb currently still creates new references inside of
the gitdir. Fix this and have it create references in commondir.
The three link files "worktree/.git", ".git/worktrees/<name>/commondir"
and ".git/worktrees/<name>/gitdir" should always contain absolute and
resolved paths. Adjust the logic creating new worktrees to first use
`git_path_prettify_dir` before writing out these files, so that paths
are resolved first.
The working tree's parent path should not point to the parent's gitdir,
but to the parent's working directory. Pointing to the gitdir would not
make any sense, as the parent's working directory is actually equal to
both repository's common directory.
Fix the issue.
While we already provide functionality to look up a worktree from a
repository, we cannot do so the other way round. That is given a
repository, we want to look up its worktree if it actually exists.
Getting the worktree of a repository is useful when we want to get
certain meta information like the parent's location, getting the locked
status, etc.
The function `diff_parsed_alloc` allocates and initializes a
`git_diff_parsed` structure. This structure also contains diff options.
While we initialize its flags, we fail to do a real initialization of
its values. This bites us when we want to actually use the generated
diff as we do not se the option's version field, which is required to
operate correctly.
Fix the issue by executing `git_diff_init_options` on the embedded
struct.
In a diff, the shortest possible hunk with a modification (that is, no
deletion) results from a file with only one line with a single character
which is removed. Thus the following hunk
@@ -1 +1 @@
-a
+
is the shortest valid hunk modifying a line. The function parsing the
hunk body though assumes that there must always be at least 4 bytes
present to make up a valid hunk, which is obviously wrong in this case.
The absolute minimum number of bytes required for a modification is
actually 2 bytes, that is the "+" and the following newline. Note: if
there is no trailing newline, the assumption will not be offended as the
diff will have a line "\ No trailing newline" at its end.
This patch fixes the issue by lowering the amount of bytes required.
The current logic of `git_diff_foreach` makes the assumption that all
diffs passed in are actually derived from generated diffs. With these
assumptions we try to derive the actual diff by inspecting either the
working directory files or blobs of a repository. This obviously cannot
work for diffs parsed from a file, where we do not necessarily have a
repository at hand.
Since the introduced split of parsed and generated patches, there are
multiple functions which help us to handle patches generically, being
indifferent from where they stem from. Use these functions and remove
the old logic specific to generated patches. This allows re-using the
same code for invoking the callbacks on the deltas.
An untracked file in a submodule should not prevent a rebase from
starting. Even if the submodule's SHA is changed, and that file would
conflict with a new tracked file, it's still OK to start the rebase
and discover the conflict later.
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twosigma.com>
When fsync'ing files, fsync the parent directory in the case where we
rename a file into place, or create a new file, to ensure that the
directory entry is flushed correctly.
Introduce a simple counter that `p_fsync` implements. This is useful
for ensuring that `p_fsync` is called when we expect it to be, for
example when we have enabled an odb backend to perform `fsync`s when
writing objects.
This test ensures that it's possible to create a symbolic ref that
has arbitrary data as its target. It also ensures it's possible
to obtain the target of that symbolic reference from the git_reference
object.
Provide more detailed messages when conditions pass or fail
unexpectedly. In particular, this provides the error messages when a
test fails with a different error code than was expected.