When passing in a specific suite which should be executed by clar
via `-stest::suite`, we try to parse this string and then include
all tests contained in this suite. This also includes all tests
in sub-suites, e.g. 'test::suite::foo'.
In the case where multiple suites start with the same _string_,
for example 'test::foo' and 'test::foobar', we fail to
distinguish this correctly. When passing in `-stest::foobar`,
we wrongly determine that 'test::foo' is a prefix and try to
execute all of its matching functions. But as no function
will now match 'test::foobar', we simply execute nothing.
To fix this, we instead have to check if the prefix is an actual
suite prefix as opposed to a simple string prefix. We do so by by
inspecting if the first two characters trailing the prefix are
our suite delimiters '::', and only consider the filter as
matching in this case.
Ensure that we include conflicts when calling `git_index_read_index`,
which will remove conflicts in the index that do not exist in the new
target, and will add conflicts from the new target.
When showing copy information because we are duplicating contents,
for example, when performing a `diff --find-copies-harder -M100 -B100`,
then show copy from/to lines in a patch, and do not show context.
Ensure that we can also parse such patches.
git_repository_open_ext provides parameters for the start path, whether
to search across filesystems, and what ceiling directories to stop at.
git commands have standard environment variables and defaults for each
of those, as well as various other parameters of the repository. To
avoid duplicate environment variable handling in users of libgit2, add a
GIT_REPOSITORY_OPEN_FROM_ENV flag, which makes git_repository_open_ext
automatically handle the appropriate environment variables. Commands
that intend to act just like those built into git itself can use this
flag to get the expected default behavior.
git_repository_open_ext with the GIT_REPOSITORY_OPEN_FROM_ENV flag
respects $GIT_DIR, $GIT_DISCOVERY_ACROSS_FILESYSTEM,
$GIT_CEILING_DIRECTORIES, $GIT_INDEX_FILE, $GIT_NAMESPACE,
$GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY, and $GIT_ALTERNATE_OBJECT_DIRECTORIES. In the
future, when libgit2 gets worktree support, git_repository_open_env will
also respect $GIT_WORK_TREE and $GIT_COMMON_DIR; until then,
git_repository_open_ext with this flag will error out if either
$GIT_WORK_TREE or $GIT_COMMON_DIR is set.
GIT_REPOSITORY_OPEN_NO_SEARCH does not search up through parent
directories, but still tries the specified path both directly and with
/.git appended. GIT_REPOSITORY_OPEN_BARE avoids appending /.git, but
opens the repository in bare mode even if it has a working directory.
To support the semantics git uses when given $GIT_DIR in the
environment, provide a new GIT_REPOSITORY_OPEN_NO_DOTGIT flag to not try
appending /.git.
git only checks ceiling directories when its search ascends to a parent
directory. A ceiling directory matching the starting directory will not
prevent git from finding a repository in the starting directory or a
parent directory. libgit2 handled the former case correctly, but
differed from git in the latter case: given a ceiling directory matching
the starting directory, but no repository at the starting directory,
libgit2 would stop the search at that point rather than finding a
repository in a parent directory.
Test case using git command-line tools:
/tmp$ git init x
Initialized empty Git repository in /tmp/x/.git/
/tmp$ cd x/
/tmp/x$ mkdir subdir
/tmp/x$ cd subdir/
/tmp/x/subdir$ GIT_CEILING_DIRECTORIES=/tmp/x git rev-parse --git-dir
fatal: Not a git repository (or any of the parent directories): .git
/tmp/x/subdir$ GIT_CEILING_DIRECTORIES=/tmp/x/subdir git rev-parse --git-dir
/tmp/x/.git
Fix the testsuite to test this case (in one case fixing a test that
depended on the current behavior), and then fix find_repo to handle this
case correctly.
In the process, simplify and document the logic in find_repo():
- Separate the concepts of "currently checking a .git directory" and
"number of iterations left before going further counts as a search"
into two separate variables, in_dot_git and min_iterations.
- Move the logic to handle in_dot_git and append /.git to the top of the
loop.
- Only search ceiling_dirs and find ceiling_offset after running out of
min_iterations; since ceiling_offset only tracks the longest matching
ceiling directory, if ceiling_dirs contained both the current
directory and a parent directory, this change makes find_repo stop the
search at the parent directory.
Avoid declaring old-style functions without any parameters.
Functions not accepting any parameters should be declared with
`void fn(void)`. See ISO C89 $3.5.4.3.
Read a tree into an index using `git_index_read_index` (by reading
a tree into a new index, then reading that index into the current
index), then write the index back out, ensuring that our new index
is treesame to the tree that we read.
Test with some postimages that actually grow/shrink from the
original, adding new lines or removing them. (Also do so without
context to ensure that we can add/remove from a non-zero part of
the line vector.)
Parse values up to and including `\377` (`0xff`) when unquoting.
Print octal values as an unsigned char when quoting, lest `printf`
think we're talking about negatives.
Patches can now come from a variety of sources - either internally
generated (from diffing two commits) or as the results of parsing
some external data.
When we are provided some input buffer (with a length) to inflate,
and it contains more data than simply the deflated data, fail.
zlib will helpfully tell us when it is done reading (via Z_STREAM_END),
so if there is data leftover in the input buffer, fail lest we
continually try to inflate it.
Handle the application of binary patches. Include tests that
produce a binary patch (an in-memory `git_patch` object),
then enusre that the patch applies correctly.