The new tests were not taking core.filemode into account when
testing file modes after repo initialization. Fixed that and some
other Windows warnings that have crept in.
When PR #1359 removed the hooks from the test resources/template
directory, it made me realize that the tests for
git_repository_init_ext using templates must be pretty shabby
because we could not have been testing if the hooks were getting
created correctly.
So, this started with me recreating a couple of hooks, including
a sample and symlink, and adding tests that they got created
correctly in the various circumstances, including with the SHARED
modes, etc. Unfortunately this uncovered some issues with how
directories and symlinks were copied and chmod'ed. Also, there
was a FIXME in the code related to the chmod behavior as well.
Going back over the directory creation logic for setting up a
repository, I found it was a little difficult to read and could
result in creating and/or chmod'ing directories that the user
almost certainly didn't intend.
So that let to this work which makes repo initialization much
more careful (and hopefully easier to follow). It required a
couple of extensions / changes to core fileops utilities, but I
also think those are for the better, at least for git_futils_cp_r
in terms of being careful about what actions it takes.
This is designed to fix libgit2sharp #350 where if .gitignore is
a directory we abort all operations that process ignores instead
of just skipping it as core git does.
Also added test that fails without this change and passes with it.
This moves a couple of checks outside of the inner loop of the
find_similar rename/copy detection phase that are only dependent
on the "from" side of a detection.
Also, this replaces the inefficient initialization of the
options structure when a value is not provided explicitly by the
user.
Instead of creating three git_diff_similarity_metric statically
for the various config options, just create the metric structure
on demand and populate it, using the payload to specific the
extra flags that should be passed to the hashsig. This removes
a level of obfuscation from the code, I think.
This adds some new tests that actually exercise the similarity
metric between files to detect renames, copies, and split modified
files that are too heavily modified.
There is still more testing to do - these tests are just partially
covering the cases.
There is also one bug fix in this where a change set with only
MODIFY being broken into ADD/DELETE (due to low self-similarity)
without any additional RENAMED entries would end up not processing
the split requests (because the num_rewrites counter got reset).
This is the initial integration of the similarity metric into
the `git_diff_find_similar()` code path. The existing tests all
pass, but the new functionality isn't currently well tested. The
integration does go through the pluggable metric interface, so it
should be possible to drop in an alternative to the internal
metric that libgit2 implements.
This comes along with a behavior change for an existing interface;
namely, passing two NULLs to git_diff_blobs (or passing NULLs to
git_diff_blob_to_buffer) will now call the file_cb parameter zero
times instead of one time. I know it's strange that that change
is paired with this other change, but it emerged from some
initialization changes that I ended up making.
Previously the git_diff_delta recorded if the delta was binary.
This replaces that (with no net change in structure size) with
a full set of flags. The flag values that were already in use
for individual git_diff_file objects are reused for the delta
flags, too (along with renaming those flags to make it clear that
they are used more generally).
This (a) makes things somewhat more consistent (because I was
using a -1 value in the "boolean" binary field to indicate unset,
whereas now I can just use the flags that are easier to understand),
and (b) will make it easier for me to add some additional flags to
the delta object in the future, such as marking the results of a
copy/rename detection or other deltas that might want a special
indicator.
While making this change, I officially moved some of the flags that
were internal only into the private diff header.
This also allowed me to remove a gross hack in rename/copy detect
code where I was overwriting the status field with an internal
value.
This plugs in the three basic similarity strategies for handling
whitespace via internal use of the pluggable API. In so doing, I
realized that the use of git_buf in the hashsig API was not needed
and actually just made it harder to use, so I tweaked that API as
well.
Note that the similarity metric is still not hooked up in the
find_similarity code - this is just setting out the function that
will be used.
This moves the similarity metric code out of buf_text and into a
new file. Also, this implements a different approach to similarity
measurement based on a Rabin-Karp rolling hash where we only keep
the top 100 and bottom 100 hashes. In theory, that should be
sufficient samples to given a fairly accurate measurement while
limiting the amount of data we keep for file signatures no matter
how large the file is.
This makes the text similarity metric treat \r as equivalent
to \n and makes it skip whitespace immediately following a line
terminator, so line indentation will have less effect on the
difference measurement (and so \r\n will be treated as just a
single line terminator).
This also separates the text and binary hash calculators into
two separate functions instead of have more if statements inside
the loop. This should make it easier to have more differentiated
heuristics in the future if we so wish.
This adds a new `git_buf_text_hashsig` type and functions to
generate these hash signatures and compare them to give a
similarity score. This can be plugged into diff similarity
scoring.
This replaces most of the explicit vector iteration with calls
to git_vector_foreach, adds in some git__free and giterr_clear
calls to clean up during some error paths, and a couple of
other code simplifications.
The treebuilder entries vector flags removed items which means
we can't rely on the entries vector length to accurately get the
number of entries. This adds an entrycount value and maintains it
while updating the treebuilder entries.
The cppcheck static analyzer generates warnings for a bunch of
places in the libgit2 code base. All the ones fixed in this
commit are actually false positives, but I've reorganized the
code to hopefully make it easier for static analysis tools to
correctly understand the structure. I wouldn't do this if I
felt like it was making the code harder to read or worse for
humans, but in this case, these fixes don't seem too bad and will
hopefully make it easier for better analysis tools to get at any
real issues.
If gethostbyname() fails on platforms with NO_ADDRINFO, the code
leaks the struct addrinfo that was allocated. This fixes that
(and a number of code formatting issues in that area of code in
src/posix.c).
`git_diff_blobs` and `git_diff_blob_to_buffer` skip the step
where we check file attributes because they don't have a filename
associated with the data. Unfortunately, this meant they were also
skipping the check for the GIT_DIFF_FORCE_TEXT option and so you
could not force a diff of an apparent binary file. This adds the
force text check into their code path.
The callback will be called for each file, just before the `git_delta_t` gets inserted into the diff list.
When the callback:
- returns < 0, the diff process will be aborted
- returns > 0, the delta will not be inserted into the diff list, but the diff process continues
- returns 0, the delta is inserted into the diff list, and the diff process continues
Instead of returning directly the pattern as the return value, I used an
out parameter, because the function also tests if the passed pathspecs
vector is empty. If yes, it considers that the path "matches", but in
that case there is no matched pattern per se.
W/o this a libgit2 error message could have a mixed encoding:
e.g. a filename in UTF-8 combined with a native Windows error message
encoded with the local code page.
Signed-off-by: Sven Strickroth <email@cs-ware.de>
A leading slash confuses the name normalization code when the flags
include ALLOW_ONELEVEL. Catch this case in particular to avoid
triggering an assertion in the uppercase check which expects us not to
pass it an empty string.
The existing tests don't catch this as they simply use the NORMAL
flag.
This fixes#1300.
This adds a `git_diff_patch_line_stats()` API that gets the total
number of adds, deletes, and context lines in a patch. This will
make it a little easier to emulate `git diff --stat` and the like.
Right now, this relies on generating the `git_diff_patch` object,
which is a pretty heavyweight way to get stat information. At
some future point, it would probably be nice to be able to get
this information without allocating the entire `git_diff_patch`,
but that's a much larger project.
This is a new implementation of core git's config key checking
rules that prevents non-alphanumeric characters (and '-') for
the top-level section and key names inside of config files.
This also validates the target section name when renaming
sections.
OpenBSD's realpath(3) doesn't require the last part of the path to
exist. Override p_realpath in this OS to bring it in line with the
library's assumptions.