The create function with default refspec is the same as the one with a
custom refspec, but it has the default refspec, so we can create the one
on top of the other.
An anonymous remote wouldn't create remote-tracking branches, so testing
we don't create them for TAGS_ALL is nonsensical. Furthermore, the name
of the supposed remote-tracking branch was also not one which would have
been created had it had a name.
Give the remote a name and test that we only create the tags when we
pass TAGS_ALL and that we do create the remote-branch branch when given
TAGS_AUTO.
When we update FETCH_HEAD we check whether the remote is the current
branch's upstream remote. The code does not check whether the current
refspec is relevant for this reference but always tries to perform the
reverse transformation, which causes it to error out if the refspec
doesn't match the reference.
Thanks to Pierre-Olivier Latour for the reproduction recipe.
When we first ask OpenSSL to verify the certfiicate itself (rather
than the HTTPS specifics), we should also return
GIT_ECERTIFICATE. Otherwise, the caller would consider this as a failed
operation rather than a failed validation and not call the user's own
validation.
For example, if you have
[include]
path = foo
and foo didn't exist, git_config_open_ondisk() would just give up
on the rest of the file. Now it ignores the unresolved include
without error and continues reading the rest of the file.
Talk about sharing objects and error messages; but the most important
part is about what to do with the cryptographic libraries, which sadly
have to become to responsibility of the application.
Threads are here to stay; and for a while now, users have had to call
the initialization function which sets up threads and crypto regardless
of whether the library was built threadsafe or not.
Already cherry-picked commits should not be re-included. If all changes
included in a commit exist in the upstream, then we should error with
GIT_EAPPLIED.
`git_rebase_next` will apply the next patch (or cherry-pick)
operation, leaving the results checked out in the index / working
directory so that consumers can resolve any conflicts, as appropriate.