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.
- Fix stack corruption introduced in 9bccf33c due to passing pointer to
local variable _cred_acquire_called.
- Fix strcmp in do_verify_push_status when expected or actual push_status
is NULL
Check whether the backslash at the end of the line is being escaped or
not so as not to consider it a continuation marker when it's e.g. a
Windows-style path.
This is a convenience function to get the branch name of a given
ref. The returned branch name is compatible with the name that can
be supplied e.g. to git_branch_lookup(). That is, the prefixes
"refs/heads" or "refs/remotes" are omitted.
Also added a new test for testing the new function.
With the new code to make tree iterators support ignore_case,
there is a bug in setting the start entry for range bounded
iterators where memcmp was being used instead of strncasecmp.
This fixes that and expands the tree iterator test to cover
the cases that were broken.
The commit time is already stored as a git_time_t, but we were
parsing is as a uint32_t. This just switches the parser to use
uint64_t which will handle dates further in the future (and adds
some tests of those future dates).
This moves the check for the "encoding" header into a loop which
is just scanning for non-required headers at the end of a commit
header. That loop will skip unrecognized lines (including header
continuation lines) until a terminating completely blank line is
found, and only then does it move to reading the commit message.
This makes tree iterators directly support case insensitivity by
using a secondary index that can be sorted by icase. Also, this
fixes the ambiguity check in the git_status_file API to also be
case insensitive. Lastly, this adds new test cases for case
insensitive range boundary checking for all types of iterators.
With this change, it should be possible to deprecate the spool
and sort iterator, but I haven't done that yet.
This adds a test that confirms that the working directory iterator
can actually correctly process ranges of files case insensitively
with proper sorting and proper boundaries.
This changes the iterator API so that flags can be passed in to
the constructor functions to control the ignore_case behavior.
At this point, the flags are not supported on tree iterators (i.e.
there is no functional change over the old API), but the API
changes are all made to accomodate this.
By the way, I went with a flags parameter because in the future
I have a couple of other ideas for iterator flags that will make
it easier to fix some diff/status/checkout bugs.
In preparation for further iterator changes, this cleans up a few
small things in the iterator API:
* removed the git_iterator_for_repo_index_range API
* made git_iterator_free not be inlined
* minor param name and test function name tweaks
Core git just looks for NUL bytes in files when deciding about
is-binary inside diff (although it uses a better algorithm in
checkout, when deciding if CRLF conversion should be done).
Libgit2 was using the better algorithm in both places, but that
is causing some confusion. For now, this makes diff just look
for NUL bytes to decide if a file is binary by content in diff.
This was just wrong. Added a test that verifying patch line
numbers even for hunks further into a file and then fixed the
algorithm. I needed to add a little extra state into the patch
so that I could track old and new file numbers independently,
but it should be okay.
This adds an option to checkout a la the diff option to turn off
fnmatch evaluation for pathspec entries. This can be useful to
make sure your "pattern" in really interpretted as an exact file
match only.
It is not legal inside our `p_mmap` function to mmap a zero length
file. This adds a test that exercises that case inside diff and
fixes the code path where we would try to do that.
The fix turns out not to be a lot of code since our default file
content is already initialized to "" which works in this case.
Fixes#1210
This moves the implementation of these two APIs into common code
that will be shared between the two. Also, this adds tests for
the `git_diff_blob_to_buffer` API. Lastly, this adds some extra
`const` to a few places that can use it.
It turns out that using REMOVE_UNTRACKED with checkout for this
particular test was causing the .gitattributes file to be removed
and so we do have to allow for the CRs in the created file...
There are a couple of checkout bugs fixed here. One is with
untracked working directory entries that are prefixes of tree
entries but not in a meaningful way (i.e. "read" is a prefix of
"readme.txt" but doesn't interfere in any way). The second bug
is actually a redo of 07edfa0fc640f85f95507c3101e77accd7d2bf0d
where directory entries in the index that are not in the diff
were not being removed correctly. That fix remedied one case
but broke another.
When checking out with the GIT_CHECKOUT_REMOVE_UNTRACKED option
and there was an entire tree in the working directory and in the
index that is not in the baseline nor target commit, the tree was
correctly(?) removed from the working directory but was not
successfully removed from the index. This fixes that and adds a
test of the functionality.
For clone to work as expected, it should be using a SAFE_CREATE
checkout (i.e. create files that are missing, even if the target
tree matches the current HEAD).
Test a number of other cases, including intentionally forced
conflicts and deeper inspection that trees get created properly.
There is a still a bug in checkout because the first test here
(i.e. test_checkout_typechange__checkout_typechanges_safe) should
be able to pass with GIT_CHECKOUT_SAFE as a strategy, but it will
not because of some lingering submodule checkout issues.
Stash was sometimes obscuring the actual error code, replacing it
with a -1 when there was more descriptive value. This updates
stash to preserve the original error code more reliably along
with a variety of other error handling tweaks.
I believe this is an improvement, but arguably, preserving the
underlying error code may result in values that are harder to
interpret by the caller who does not understand the internals.
Discussion is welcome!
Previously a NULL oid was handled like an empty buffer and
returned a status empty string. This makes git_oid_tostr()
set the output buffer to the empty string instead.
Make checkout update entries in the index for all files that are
updated and/or removed, unless flag GIT_CHECKOUT_DONT_UPDATE_INDEX
is given. To do this, iterators were extended to allow a little
more introspection into the index being iterated over, etc.
This flips checkout back to be driven off the changes between
the baseline and the target trees. This reinstates the complex
code for tracking the contents of the working directory, but
overall, I think the resulting logic is easier to follow.
I've tried to map out the detailed behaviors of checkout and make
sure that we're handling the various cases correctly, along with
providing options to allow us to emulate "git checkout" and "git
checkout-index" with the various flags. I've thrown away flags
in the checkout API that seemed like clutter and added some new
ones. Also, I've converted the conflict callback to a general
notification callback so we can emulate "git checkout" output and
display "dirty" files.
As of this commit, the new behavior is not working 100% but some
of that is probably baked into tests that are not testing the
right thing. This is a decent snapshot point, I think, along the
way to getting the update done.
This adds a failure reporting function that is called by
cl_git_pass which captures the actual error return code and
the error message if available in the failure report.
* gen_pktline() in smart_protocol.c was skipping refspecs that deleted
refs that were not advertised by the server. The new behavior is to
send a delete command with an old-id of zero, which matches the behavior
of the official git client.
* Update test_network_push__delete() in reaction to above fix.
* Obviate messy logic that handles missing push_spec rrefs by canonicalizing
push_spec. After calculate_work(), loid, roid, and rref, are filled in with
exactly what is sent to the server
The diff constructor functions had some confusing names, where the
"old" side of the diff was coming after the "new" side. This
reverses the order in the function name to make it less confusing.
Specifically...
* git_diff_index_to_tree becomes git_diff_tree_to_index
* git_diff_workdir_to_index becomes git_diff_index_to_workdir
* git_diff_workdir_to_tree becomes git_diff_tree_to_workdir
The `git_iterator_reset` command has not been working in all cases
particularly when there is a start and end range. This fixes it
and adds tests for it, and also extends it with the ability to
update the start/end range strings when an iterator is reset.
This removes the need to explicitly pass the repo into iterators
where the repo is implied by the other parameters. This moves
the repo to be owned by the parent struct. Also, this has some
iterator related updates to the internal diff API to lay the
groundwork for checkout improvements.
Ahead-behind count is still a valid operation, even if the two
commits don't have a common merge-base. The old implementation was
buggy, so it returned ENOTFOUND. Fixed now.
There are many different broken filemodes in the wild so we need to
protect against them and give something useful up the chain. Don't
fail when reading a tree from the ODB but normalize the mode as best
we can.
As 664 is no longer a mode that we consider to be valid and gets
normalized to 644, we can stop accepting it in the treebuilder. The
library won't expose it to the user, so any invalid modes are a bug.
`revwalk.h:commit_lookup()` -> `git_revwalk__commit_lookup()`
and make `git_commit_list_parse()` do real error checking that
the item in the list is an actual commit object. Also fixed an
apparent typo in a test name.
Moved it into graph.{c,h} which i created for the new "graph"
functions namespace. Also adjusted the function prototype
to use `size_t` and `const git_oid *`.
There are many scattered functions that look into the contents of
buffers to do various text manipulations (such as escaping or
unescaping data, calculating text stats, guessing if content is
binary, etc). This groups all those functions together into a
new file and converts the code to use that.
This has two enhancements to existing functionality. The old
text stats function is significantly rewritten and the BOM
detection code was extended (although largely we can't deal with
anything other than a UTF8 BOM).
This fixes some missed places where we can apply const-ness to
various public APIs.
There are still some index and tree APIs that cannot take const
pointers because we sort our `git_vectors` lazily and so we can't
reliably bsearch the index and tree content without applying a
`git_vector_sort()` first.
This also fixes some missed places where size_t can be used and
where const can be applied to a couple internal functions.
This makes the diff functions that take callbacks both take
the payload parameter after the callback function pointers and
pass the payload as the last argument to the callback function
instead of the first. This should make them consistent with
other callbacks across the API.
Without this change, any failed assertion in the second (or a later) test
inside a test suite has a chance of double deleting memory, resulting in
a heap corruption. See #1096 for details.
This leaves alone the test cases where we "just" use cl_git_sandbox_init()
and cl_git_sandbox_cleanup(). These methods already take good care to not
double delete a repository.
Fixes#1096
The workdir iterator has always tried to ignore .git files, but
it turns out there were some bugs. This makes it more robust at
ignoring .git files.
This also makes iterators always check ".git" case insensitively
regardless of the properties of the system. This will make libgit2
skip ".GIT" and the like. This is different from core git, but on
systems with case insensitive but case preserving file systems,
allowing ".GIT" to be added is problematic.