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.
These tests want to test that we don't recalculate entries which match
the index already. This is however something we force when truncating
racily-clean entries.
Tick the index forward as we know that we don't perform the
modifications which the racily-clean code is trying to avoid.
Since a diff entry only concerns a single entry, zero the information
for the index side of a conflict. (The index entry would otherwise
erroneously include the lowest-stage index entry - generally the
ancestor of a conflict.)
Test that during status, the index side of the conflict is empty.
When diffing against an index, return a new `GIT_DELTA_CONFLICTED`
delta type for items that are conflicted. For a single file path,
only one delta will be produced (despite the fact that there are
multiple entries in the index).
Index iterators now have the (optional) ability to return conflicts
in the index. Prior to this change, they would be omitted, and callers
(like diff) would omit conflicted index entries entirely.
When we discover that we want to keep a negative rule, make sure to
clear the error variable, as it we otherwise return whatever was left by
the previous loop iteration.
We want to use the "checkout: moving from ..." message in order to let
git know when a change of branch has happened. Make the convenience
functions for this goal write this message.
The signature for the reflog is not something which changes
dynamically. Almost all uses will be NULL, since we want for the
repository's default identity to be used, making it noise.
In order to allow for changing the identity, we instead provide
git_repository_set_ident() and git_repository_ident() which allow a user
to override the choice of signature.
Given
top
!top/foo
in an ignore file, we should not unignore top/foo. This is an
implementation detail of the git code leaking, but that's the behaviour
we should show.
A negation rule can only negate an exact rule it has seen before.
This function has one output but can match multiple files, which can be
unexpected for the user, which would usually path the exact path of the
file he wants the status of.
We consider an entry in .gitmodules to mean that we have a submodule at
a particular path, even if HEAD^{tree} and the index do not contain any
reference to it.
We should ignore that submodule entry and simply consider that path to
be a regular directory.
We currently consider CR to start the end of the line, but that means
that we miss cases with CR CR LF which can be used with git to match
files whose names have CR at the end of their names.
The fix from the patch comes from Russell's comment in the issue.
This fixes#2536.
`git help ignore` has this to say about trailing slashes:
> If the pattern ends with a slash, it is removed for the purpose of
> the following description, but it would only find a match with a
> directory. In other words, foo/ will match a directory foo and
> paths underneath it, but will not match a regular file or a
> symbolic link foo (this is consistent with the way how pathspec
> works in general in Git).
Sure enough, having manually performed the same steps as this test,
`git status` tells us the following:
# On branch master
#
# Initial commit
#
# Changes to be committed:
# (use "git rm --cached <file>..." to unstage)
#
# new file: force.txt
#
# Untracked files:
# (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
#
# ../.gitignore
# child1/
# child2/
i.e. neither child1 nor child2 is ignored.
When writing 'bin/*' in the rules, this means we ignore very file inside
bin/ individually, but do not ignore the directory itself. Thus the
status listing should list both files under bin/, one untracked and one
ignored.
The diff code was using an "ignored_prefix" directory to track if
a parent directory was ignored that contained untracked files
alongside tracked files. Unfortunately, when negative ignore rules
were used for directories inside ignored parents, the wrong rules
were applied to untracked files inside the negatively ignored
child directories.
This commit moves the logic for ignore containment into the workdir
iterator (which is a better place for it), so the ignored-ness of
a directory is contained in the frame stack during traversal. This
allows a child directory to override with a negative ignore and yet
still restore the ignored state of the parent when we traverse out
of the child.
Along with this, there are some problems with "directory only"
ignore rules on container directories. Given "a/*" and "!a/b/c/"
(where the second rule is a directory rule but the first rule is
just a generic prefix rule), then the directory only constraint
was having "a/b/c/d/file" match the first rule and not the second.
This was fixed by having ignore directory-only rules test a rule
against the prefix of a file with LEADINGDIR enabled.
Lastly, spot checks for ignores using `git_ignore_path_is_ignored`
were tested from the top directory down to the bottom to deal with
the containment problem, but this is wrong. We have to test bottom
to top so that negative subdirectory rules will be checked before
parent ignore rules.
This does change the behavior of some existing tests, but it seems
only to bring us more in line with core Git, so I think those
changes are acceptable.
There are a few tests that set up a fake home directory and a
fake GLOBAL search path so that we can test things in global
ignore or attribute or config files. This cleans up that code to
work more robustly even if there is a test failure. This also
fixes some valgrind warnings where scanning search paths for
separators could end up doing a little bit of sketchy data access
when coming to the end of search list.
This is a proposed adjustment to the trace APIs. This makes the
trace levels into a bitmask so that they can be selectively enabled
and adds a callback-level payload, plus a message-level payload.
This makes it easier for me to a GIT_TRACE_PERF callbacks that
are simply bypassed if the PERF level is not set.
This adds an option to refresh the stat cache while generating
status. It also rips out the GIT_PERF stuff I had an makes use
of the trace API to keep statistics about what happens during diff.
When we think the stat cache in the index seems valid and the size
or mode of a file has definitely changed, then don't bother trying
to recalculate the OID of the workdir bits to confirm that it is
modified - just accept that it is modified.
This can result in files that show as modified with no actual diff,
but the behavior actually appears to match Git on the command line.
This also includes a minor optimization to not perform a submodule
lookup on the ".git" directory itself.
There is an interesting difference with core Git here, though.
Because libgit2 will do rename detection with the working directory,
in the last case where the HEAD and the working directory both
have the decomposed data and the index has the composed data, we
generate a single status record with two renames whereas Git will
generate one rename (head to index) and one untracked file.
Ignore patterns that ended with a trailing '/*' were still needing
to match against another actual '/' character in the full path.
This is not the same behavior as core Git.
Instead, we strip a trailing '/*' off of any patterns that were
matching and just take it to imply the FNM_LEADING_DIR behavior.
When traversing the directory structure, the iterator pushes and
pops ignore files using a vector. Some directories don't have
ignore files, so it uses a path comparison to decide when it is
right to actually pop the last ignore file. This was only
comparing directory suffixes, though, so a subdirectory with the
same name as a parent could result in the parent's .gitignore
being popped off the list ignores too early. This changes the
logic to compare the entire relative path of the ignore file.