In theory, p_stat should never return an S_ISLNK result, but due
to the current implementation on Windows with mount points it is
possible that it will. For now, work around that by allowing a
link in the path to a directory being created. If it is really a
problem, then the issue will be caught on the next iteration of
the loop, but typically this will be the right thing to do.
This updates the calls that make the subdirectories for objects
to use a base directory above which git_futils_mkdir won't walk
any higher. This prevents attempts to mkdir all the way up to
the root of the filesystem.
Also, this moves the objects_dir into the loose backend structure
and removes the separate allocation, plus does some preformatting
of the objects_dir value to guarantee a trailing slash, etc.
With the new target directory option to checkout, the non-bareness
of the repository should be checked much later in the parameter
validation process - actually that check was already in place, but
I was doing it redundantly in the checkout APIs.
This removes the now unnecessary early check for bare repos. It
also adds some other parameter validation and makes it so that
implied parameters can actually be passed as NULL (i.e. if you
pass a git_index, you don't have to pass the git_repository - we
can get it from index).
This adds the ability for checkout to write to a target directory
instead of having to use the working directory of the repository.
This makes it easier to do exports of repository data and the like.
This is similar to, but not quite the same as, the --prefix option
to `git checkout-index` (this will always be treated as a directory
name, not just as a simple text prefix).
As part of this, the workdir iterator was extended to take the
path to the working directory as a parameter and fallback on the
git_repository_workdir result only if it's not specified.
Fixes#1332
This fixes the checkout case when a file is modified between the
baseline and the target and yet missing in the working directory.
The logic for that case appears to have been wrong.
This also adds a useful checkout notify callback to the checkout
test helpers that will count notifications and also has a debug
mode to visualize what checkout thinks that it's doing.
Files in status will, be default, be sorted according to the case
insensitivity of the filesystem that we're running on. However,
in some cases, this is not desirable. Even on case insensitive
file systems, 'git status' at the command line will generally use
a case sensitive sort (like 'ls'). Some GUIs prefer to display a
list of file case insensitively even on case-sensitive platforms.
This adds two new flags: GIT_STATUS_OPT_SORT_CASE_SENSITIVELY
and GIT_STATUS_OPT_SORT_CASE_INSENSITIVELY that will override the
default sort order of the status output and give the user control.
This includes tests for exercising these new options and makes
the examples/status.c program emulate core Git and always use a
case sensitive sort.
This adds some tests for updating the index and having it remove
items to make sure that the iteration over the index still works
even as earlier items are removed.
In testing with valgrind, this found a path that would use the
path string from the index entry after it had been freed. The
bug fix is simply to copy the path of the index entry before
doing any actual index manipulation.
This adds three new public APIs for manipulating the index:
1. `git_index_add_all` is similar to `git add -A` and will add
files in the working directory that match a pathspec to the
index while honoring ignores, etc.
2. `git_index_remove_all` removes files from the index that match
a pathspec.
3. `git_index_update_all` updates entries in the index based on
the current contents of the working directory, either added
the new information or removing the entry from the index.
Command line Git sometimes generates an error message if given a
pathspec that contains an exact match to an ignored file (provided
--force isn't also given). This adds an internal function that
makes it easy to check it that has happened. Right now, I'm not
creating a public API for this because that would get a little
more complicated with a need for callbacks for all invalid paths.
Right now, setting up a pathspec to be parsed and processed
requires several data structures and a couple of API calls. This
adds a new high level data structure that contains all the items
that you'll need and high-level APIs that do all of the setup and
all of the teardown. This will make it easier to use pathspecs
in various places with less repeated code.
This makes the diff rename tracking code more careful about the
order in which it processes renames and more thorough in updating
the mapping of correct renames when an earlier rename update
alters the index of a later matched pair.
This adds parameters to the four functions that allow for blob-to-
blob and blob-to-buffer differencing (either via callbacks or by
making a git_diff_patch object). These parameters let you say
that filename we should pretend the blob has while doing the diff.
If you pass NULL, there should be no change from the existing
behavior, which is to skip using attributes for file type checks
and just look at content. With the parameters, you can plug into
the new diff driver functionality and get binary or non-binary
behavior, plus function context regular expressions, etc.
This commit also fixes things so that the git_diff_delta that is
generated by these functions will actually be populated with the
data that we know about the blobs (or buffers) so you can use it
appropriately. It also fixes a bug in generating patches from
the git_diff_patch objects created via these functions.
Lastly, there is one other behavior change that may matter. If
there is no difference between the two blobs, these functions no
longer generate any diff callbacks / patches unless you have
passed in GIT_DIFF_INCLUDE_UNMODIFIED. This is pretty natural,
but could potentially change the behavior of existing usage.
This changes the behavior of the status RENAMED flags so that they
will be combined with the MODIFIED flags if appropriate. If a file
is modified in the index and also renamed, then the status code
will have both the GIT_STATUS_INDEX_MODIFIED and INDEX_RENAMED bits
set. If it is renamed but the OID has not changed, then just the
GIT_STATUS_INDEX_RENAMED bit will be set. Similarly, the flags
GIT_STATUS_WT_MODIFIED and GIT_STATUS_WT_RENAMED can both be set
independently of one another.
This fixes a serious bug where the check for unmodified files that
was done at data load time could end up erasing the RENAMED state
of a file that was renamed with no changes.
Lastly, this contains a bunch of new tests for status with renames,
including tests where the only rename changes are case changes.
The expected results of these tests have to vary by whether the
platform uses a case sensitive filesystem or not, so the expected
data covers those platform differences separately.
Trees are always case sensitive. The index is always case
preserving and will be case sensitive when it is turned into a
tree. Therefore the tree and the index can and should always
be compared to one another case sensitively.
This will restore the index to case insensitive order after the
diff has been generated.
Consider this a short-term fix. The long term fix is to have the
index always stored both case sensitively and case insensitively
(at least on platforms that sometimes require case insensitivity).
In a case insensitive index, if you attempt to add a file from
disk with a different case pattern, the old case pattern in the
index should be preserved.
This fixes that (and a couple of minor warnings).
This commit reinstates some changes to git_diff__paired_foreach
that were discarded during the rebase (because the diff_output.c
file had gone away), and also adjusts the case insensitively
logic slightly to hopefully deal with either mismatched icase
diffs and other case insensitivity scenarios.
This makes diff more careful about picking the canonical path
when generating a delta so that it won't accidentally pick up a
case-mismatched path on a case-insensitive file system. This
should make sure we use the "most accurate" case correct version
of the path (i.e. from the tree if possible, or the index if
need be).
The exclude submodules flag was not doing the right thing, in
that a file with no diff between the head and the index and just
a delete in the workdir could be excluded if submodules were
excluded.
On Linux: fix a warning message related to the volatile qualifier (cast)
On Windows: use SecureZeroMemory()
On both, inline the call, so that no entry point can lead back to this "secure" memory zeroing.
This makes the git_diff_patch definition private to diff_patch.c
and fixes a number of other header file naming inconsistencies to
use `git_` prefixes on functions and structures that are shared
between files.
This changes the size data to uint32_t, fixes the array growth
logic to use a simple 1.5x multiplier, and uses a generic inline
function for growing the array to make the git_array_alloc API
feel more natural (i.e. it returns a pointer to the new item).
This adds two new public APIs: git_diff_patch_from_blobs and
git_diff_patch_from_blob_and_buffer, plus it refactors the code
for git_diff_blobs and git_diff_blob_to_buffer so that they code
is almost entirely shared between these APIs, and adds tests for
the new APIs.
This implements the loading of regular expression pattern lists
for diff drivers that search for function context in that way.
This also changes the way that diff drivers update options and
interface with xdiff APIs to make them a little more flexible.
There are all sorts of misconfiguration in the wild. We already rely
on the signature constructor to trim SP. Extend the logic to use
`isspace` to decide whether a character should be trimmed.
This is a significant reorganization of the diff code to break it
into a set of more clearly distinct files and to document the new
organization. Hopefully this will make the diff code easier to
understand and to extend.
This adds a new `git_diff_driver` object that looks of diff driver
information from the attributes and the config so that things like
function content in diff headers can be provided. The full driver
spec is not implemented in the commit - this is focused on the
reorganization of the code and putting the driver hooks in place.
This also removes a few #includes from src/repository.h that were
overbroad, but as a result required extra #includes in a variety
of places since including src/repository.h no longer results in
pulling in the whole world.
There are two places where git_futils_mkdir should exit early or
at least do less. The first is when using GIT_MKDIR_SKIP_LAST
and having that flag leave no directory left to create; it was
being handled previously, but the behavior was subtle. Now I put
in a clear explicit check that exits early in that case.
The second is when there is no directory to create, but there is
a valid path that should be verified. I shifted the logic a bit
so we'll be better about not entering the loop than that happens.
This implements a basic callback to extract function context for
a diff. It always uses the same search heuristic right now with
no regular expressions or language-specific variants. Those will
come next, I think.
This makes sure that git_futils_mkdir always skips over the root
directory at a minimum, even on platforms where the root is not
simply '/'. Also, this removes the GIT_WIN32 ifdef in favor of
making EACCES as a potentially recoverable error on all platforms.
We ran into an issue where cloning a repository to a folder
directly underneath the root of a volume (e.g. 'd:\libgit2')
would fail with an access denied error. This was traced down
to a call to make a directory that is the root (e.g. 'd:') could
return an error indicated access denied instead of an error
indicating the path already exists. This change now handles
the access denied error on Win32 and checks for the existence
of the folder.
git doesn't do that, and it's not something that's usually
actionable to fix. if you have a git repository with one bad
timezone in the history, it's too late to change it most likely.
Instead of just blowing away the stat cache data when loading a
new tree into the index, this checks if each loaded item has a
corresponding existing item with the same OID and if so, copies
the stat data from the old item to the new one so it will not be
blown away.
It is obviously quite a serious problem if this happens, but mutex
initialization can fail and we should detect it. It's a bit like
a memory allocation failure, in that you're probably pretty screwed
if this occurs, but at least we'll catch it.
By zeroing out the memory when we free larger objects (i.e. those
that serve as collections of other data, such as repos, odb, refdb),
I'm hoping that it will be easier for libgit2 bindings to find
errors in their object management code.
1. internal iterators now return GIT_ITEROVER when you go past the
last item in the iteration.
2. git_iterator_advance will "advance" to the first item in the
iteration if it is called immediately after creating the
iterator, which allows a simpler idiom for basic iteration.
3. if git_iterator_advance encounters an error reading data (e.g.
a missing tree or an unreadable file), it returns the error
but also attempts to advance past the invalid data to prevent
an infinite loop.
Updated all tests and internal usage of iterators to account for
these new behaviors.
`lpExitCode` is a pointer to a long. A long is 32 bits wide on Windows.
It means that on Windows 64bits, `GetExitCodeThread()` doesn't set/clear the high-order bytes of the 64 bits memory space pointed at by `value_ptr`.
git_packbuilder_write() used to write a packfile to the passed file
path. Instead, ask for a destination directory and create both the
packfile and an index, as most users probably do expect.
This adds ~/ prefix expansion for the value of core.attributesfile
and core.excludesfile, plus it fixes the fact that the attributes
cache was holding on to the string data from the config for a long
time (instead of making its own strdup) which could have caused a
problem if the config was refreshed. Adds a test for the new
expansion capability.
This improves the docs for GIT_DIFF_INCLUDE_UNTRACKED_CONTENT as
well as the other flags related to UNTRACKED items in diff, plus
it makes that flag now automatically turn on
GIT_DIFF_INCLUDE_UNTRACKED which seems like a reasonable dwim type
of change.
The GIT_CONFIG_LEVEL constants actually work well as an enum
because they are mutually exclusive, so this adds a typedef to
the enum and uses that everywhere that one of these constants are
expected, instead of the old code that typically used an unsigned
int.
This adds docs for the cache control options to git_libgit2_opts
and also tweaks the cache code so that if the cache is disabled,
then the next time we attempt to insert something into the cache
in question, we will actually clear any old cached objects.
In theory, if there was a problem reading the REUC data, the
read_reuc() routine could have left uninitialized and invalid
data in the git_index vector. This moves the line that inserts a
new entry into the vector down to the bottom of the routine so we
know all the content is already valid. Also, per @linquize, this
uses calloc to ensure no uninitialized data.
This extends the rename tests to make sure that every rename
scenario in the inner loop of git_diff_find_similar is actually
exercised. Also, fixes an incorrect assert that was in one of
the clauses that was not previously being exercised.
This moves the GIT_CVAR_ABBREV lookup out of the loop. Also, this
fixes git_diff_print_raw to actually use that constant instead of
hardcoding 7 characters.
This adds a couple more tests of different rename scenarios.
Also, this fixes a problem with the case where you have two
"split" deltas and the left half of one matches the right half of
the other. That case was already being handled, but in the wrong
order in a way that could result in bad output. Also, if the swap
also happened to put the other two halves into the correct place
(i.e. two files exchanged places with each other), then the second
delta was left with the SPLIT flag set when it really should be
cleared.
This flips rename detection around so instead of creating a
forward mapping from deltas to possible rename targets, instead
it creates a reverse mapping, looking at possible targets and
trying to find a source that they could have been renamed or
copied from. This is important because each output can only
have a single source, but a given source could map to multiple
outputs (in the form of COPIED records).
Additionally, this makes a couple of tweaks to the public rename
detection APIs, mostly renaming a couple of options that control
the behavior to make more sense and to be more like core Git.
I walked through the tests looking at the exact results and
updated the expectations based on what I saw. The new code is
different from the old because it cannot give some nonsense
results (like A was renamed to both B and C) which were part of
the outputs previously.
This adds a bunch more rename detection tests including checks
vs the working directory, the new exact match options, some more
whitespace variants, etc.
This also adds a git_futils_writebuffer helper function and uses
it in checkout. This is mainly added because I wanted an easy
way to write out a git_buf to disk inside my test code.
- Add new GIT_DIFF_FIND_EXACT_MATCH_ONLY flag to do similarity
matching without using the similarity metric (i.e. only compare
the SHA).
- Clean up the similarity measurement code to more rigorously
distinguish between files that are not similar and files that
are not comparable (previously, a 0 could either mean that the
files could not be compared or that they were totally different)
- When splitting a MODIFIED file into a DELETE/ADD pair, actually
make a DELETED/UNTRACKED pair if the right side of the diff is
from the working directory. This prevents an odd mix of ADDED
and UNTRACKED files on workdir diffs.
There are a number of bugs in the rename code that only were
obvious when I started testing it against large old repos with
more complex patterns. (The code to do that testing is not ready
to merge with libgit2, but I do plan to add more thorough tests.)
This contains a significant number of changes and also tweaks the
public API slightly to make emulating core git easier.
Most notably, this separates the GIT_DIFF_FIND_AND_BREAK_REWRITES
flag into FIND_REWRITES (which adds a self-similarity score to
every modified file) and BREAK_REWRITES (which splits the modified
deltas into add/remove pairs in the diff list). When you do a raw
output of core git, rewrites show up as M090 or such, not at A and
D output, so I wanted to be able to emulate that.
Publicly, this also changes the flags to be uint16_t since we
don't need values out of that range.
Internally, this contains significant changes from a number of
small bug fixes (like using the wrong side of the diff to decide
if the object could be found in the ODB vs the workdir) to larger
issues about which files can and should be compared and how the
various edge cases of similarity scores should be treated.
Honestly, I don't think this is the last update that will have to
be made to this code, but I think this moves us closer to correct
behavior and I tried to document the code so it would be easier
to follow..
I frequently want to the the first N digits of an OID formatted
as a string and I'd like it to be efficient. This function makes
that easy and I could rewrite the OID formatters in terms of it.
Expose a way to retrieve, along with the target git_object, the reference
pointed at by some revparse expression (`@{<-n>}` or
`<branchname>@{upstream}` syntax).
In theory, if there was a problem reading the REUC data, the
read_reuc() routine could have left uninitialized and invalid
data in the git_index vector. This moves the line that inserts a
new entry into the vector down to the bottom of the routine so we
know all the content is already valid. Also, per @linquize, this
uses calloc to ensure no uninitialized data.
This adds an example implementation that emulates git cat-file.
It is a convenient and relatively simple example of getting data
out of a repository.
Implementing this also revealed that there are a number of APIs
that are still not using const pointers to objects that really
ought to be. The main cause of this is that `git_vector_bsearch`
may need to call `git_vector_sort` before doing the search, so a
const pointer to the vector is not allowed. However, for tree
objects, with a little care, we can ensure that the vector of
tree entries is always sorted and allow lookups to take a const
pointer. Also, the missing const in commit objects just looks
like an oversight.
Since I added the GIT_IDXENTRY_STAGE macro to extract the stage
from a git_index_entry, we probably don't need an internal inline
function to do the same thing.
Under some strange circumstances, diffs can end up listing files
that we can't actually open successfully. Instead of aborting
the git_diff_find_similar, this makes it so that those files just
won't be considered as valid rename/copy targets instead.
It is possible for there to be a submodule in a repository with
no .gitmodules file (for example, if the user forgot to commit
the .gitmodules file). In this case, core Git will just create
an empty directory as a placeholder for the submodule but
otherwise ignore it. We were generating an error and stopping
the checkout. This makes our behavior match that of core git.
Unlike blob updates, symlink updates cannot be done "in place"
writing over an old symlink. This means that in checkout when we
realize that we can safely update a symlink, we still need to
remove the old one before writing the new.
When the last item in a diff was an untracked directory that only
contained ignored items, the loop to scan the contents would run
off the end of the iterator and dereference a NULL pointer. This
includes a test that reproduces the problem and a fix.
There was a problem found in the Rugged test suite where the
refdb_fs_backend__next function could exit too early in some
very specific hashing patterns for packed refs. This ports
the Rugged test to libgit2 and then fixes the bug.