We don't support using an index object from multiple threads at the same
time, so the locking doesn't have any effect when following the
rules. If not following the rules, things are going to break down
anyway.
Include dotfiles when copying template directory, which will handle
both a template directory itself that begins with a dotfile, and
any dotfiles inside the directory.
Fix the possibility of returning successfully from ssh_stream_read()
with *bytes_read < 0. This would occur if stdout channel read resulted
in 0, and stderr channel read failed afterwards.
Note that we're not checking whether the resize succeeds; in OOM cases,
we let it run with a "small" vector and hash table and see if by chance
we can grow it dynamically as we insert the new entries. Nothing to
lose really.
Instead of calling `git_index_add` in a loop, use the new
`git_index_fill` internal API to fill the index with the initial staged
entries.
The new `fill` helper assumes that all the entries will be unique and
valid, so it can append them at the end of the entries vector and only
sort it once at the end. It performs no validation checks.
This prevents the quadratic behavior caused by having to sort the
entries list once after every insertion.
When replacing an index with a new one, we need to iterate
through all index entries in order to determine which entries are
equal. When it is not possible to re-use old entries for the new
index, we move it into a list of entries that are to be removed
and thus free'd.
When we encounter a non-zero error code, though, we skip adding
the current index entry to the remove-queue. `INSERT_MAP_EX`,
which is the function last run before adding to the remove-queue,
may return a positive non-zero code that indicates what exactly
happened while inserting the element. In this case we skip adding
the entry to the remove-queue but still continue the current
operation, leading to a leak of the current entry.
Fix this by checking for a negative return value instead of a
non-zero one when we want to add the current index entry to the
remove-queue.
When adding to the index, we look to see if a portion of the given
path matches a portion of a path in the index. If so, we will use
the existing path information. For example, when adding `foo/bar.c`,
if there is an index entry to `FOO/other` and the filesystem is case
insensitive, then we will put `bar.c` into the existing tree instead
of creating a new one with a different case.
Use `strncmp` to do that instead of `memcmp`. When we `bsearch`
into the index, we locate the position where the new entry would
go. The index entry at that position does not necessarily have
a relation to the entry we're adding, so we cannot make assumptions
and use `memcmp`. Instead, compare them as strings.
When canonicalizing paths, we look for the first index entry that
matches a given substring.
Fix the file-mode test to expect system umask being applied to the
created file as well (it is currently applied to the directory only).
This fixes the test on systems where umask != 022.
Signed-off-by: Michał Górny <mgorny@gentoo.org>