gitno_connect() can return an error or socket, which is fine on most
platforms where sockets are file descriptors (signed int), but on Windows,
SOCKET is an unsigned type, which is problematic when we are trying to
test if the socket was actually a negative error code.
This fix seperates the error code and socket in gitno_connect(), and fixes
the error handling in do_connect() functions to compensate. It appears
that git_connect() and the git-transport do_connect() functions had bugs
in the non-windows cases too (leaking sockets, and not properly reporting
connection error, respectively) so I went ahead and fixed those too.
Trying to send every single line immediately won't give us any speed
improvement and duplicates the code we need for other transports. Make
the git transport use the same buffer functions as HTTP.
This changes the git_remote_download() API, but the existing one is
silly, so you don't get to complain.
The new API allows to know how much data has been downloaded, how many
objects we expect in total and how many we've processed.
Adds a new public reference function `git_reference_lookup_oid`
that directly resolved a reference name to an OID without returning
the intermediate `git_reference` object (hence, no free needed).
Internally, this adds a `git_reference_lookup_resolved` function
that combines looking up and resolving a reference. This allows
us to be more efficient with memory reallocation.
The existing `git_reference_lookup` and `git_reference_resolve`
are reimplmented on top of the new utility and a few places in the
code are changed to use one of the two new functions.
This also includes droping `git_buf_lasterror` because it makes no sense
in the new system. Note that in most of the places were it has been
dropped, the code needs cleanup. I.e. GIT_ENOMEM is going away, so
instead it should return a generic `-1` and obviously not throw
anything.
It turns out that commit 31e9cfc4cbcaf1b38cdd3dbe3282a8f57e5366a5
did not fix the GIT_USUSED behavior on all platforms. This commit
walks through and really cleans things up more thoroughly, getting
rid of the unnecessary stuff.
To remove the use of some GIT_UNUSED, I ended up adding a couple
of new iterators for hashtables that allow you to iterator just
over keys or just over values.
In making this change, I found a bug in the clar tests (where we
were doing *count++ but meant to do (*count)++ to increment the
value). I fixed that but then found the test failing because it
was not really using an empty repo. So, I took some of the code
that I wrote for iterator testing and moved it to clar_helpers.c,
then made use of that to make it easier to open fixtures on a
per test basis even within a single test file.
This makes libgit2 compliant with the following scenario
$ git ls-remote file:///d:/temp/dwm%20tinou
732d790b702db4b8985f5104fc44642654f6a6b6 HEAD
732d790b702db4b8985f5104fc44642654f6a6b6 refs/heads/master
732d790b702db4b8985f5104fc44642654f6a6b6 refs/remotes/origin/HEAD
732d790b702db4b8985f5104fc44642654f6a6b6 refs/remotes/origin/master
$ mv "/d/temp/dwm tinou" /d/temp/dwm+tinou
$ git ls-remote file:///d:/temp/dwm%20tinou
fatal: 'd:/temp/dwm tinou' does not appear to be a git repository
fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly
$ git ls-remote file:///d:/temp/dwm+tinou
732d790b702db4b8985f5104fc44642654f6a6b6 HEAD
732d790b702db4b8985f5104fc44642654f6a6b6 refs/heads/master
732d790b702db4b8985f5104fc44642654f6a6b6 refs/remotes/origin/HEAD
732d790b702db4b8985f5104fc44642654f6a6b6 refs/remotes/origin/master
This converts virtually all of the places that allocate GIT_PATH_MAX
buffers on the stack for manipulating paths to use git_buf objects
instead. The patch is pretty careful not to touch the public API
for libgit2, so there are a few places that still use GIT_PATH_MAX.
This extends and changes some details of the git_buf implementation
to add a couple of extra functions and to make error handling easier.
This includes serious alterations to all the path.c functions, and
several of the fileops.c ones, too. Also, there are a number of new
functions that parallel existing ones except that use a git_buf
instead of a stack-based buffer (such as git_config_find_global_r
that exists alongsize git_config_find_global).
This also modifies the win32 version of p_realpath to allocate whatever
buffer size is needed to accommodate the realpath instead of hardcoding
a GIT_PATH_MAX limit, but that change needs to be tested still.
The following files now have 0444 permissions:
- loose objects
- pack indexes
- pack files
- packs downloaded by fetch
- packs downloaded by the HTTP transport
And the following files now have 0666 permissions:
- config files
- repository indexes
- reflogs
- refs
This brings libgit2 more in line with Git.
Note that git_filebuf_commit() and git_filebuf_commit_at() have both
gained a new mode parameter.
The latter change fixes an important issue where filebufs created with
GIT_FILEBUF_TEMPORARY received 0600 permissions (due to mkstemp(3)
usage). Now we chmod() the file before renaming it into place.
Tests have been added to confirm that new commit, tag, and tree
objects are created with the right permissions. I don't have access to
Windows, so for now I've guarded the tests with "#ifndef GIT_WIN32".