|
8eb910b0
|
2019-06-23T11:26:10
|
|
largefile tests: only write 2GB on 32-bit platforms
Don't try to feed 4 GB of data to APIs that only take a `size_t` on
32-bit platforms.
|
|
6574cd00
|
2019-06-08T19:25:36
|
|
index: rename `frombuffer` to `from_buffer`
The majority of functions are named `from_something` (with an
underscore) instead of `fromsomething`. Update the index functions for
consistency with the rest of the library.
|
|
08f39208
|
2019-06-08T17:46:04
|
|
blob: add underscore to `from` functions
The majority of functions are named `from_something` (with an
underscore) instead of `fromsomething`. Update the blob functions for
consistency with the rest of the library.
|
|
0c2d0d4b
|
2019-06-14T14:07:26
|
|
tests: object: refactor largefile test to not use `p_fallocate`
The `p_fallocate` platform is currently in use in our tests,
only, but it proved to be quite burdensome to get it implemented
in a cross-platform way. The only "real" user is the test
object::tree::read::largefile, where it's used to allocate a
large file in the filesystem only to commit it to the repo and
read its object back again. We can simplify this quite a bit by
just using an in-memory buffer of 4GB. Sure, this cannot be used
on platforms with low resources. But creating 4GB files is not
any better, and we already skip the test if the environment
variable "GITTEST_INVASIVE_FS_SIZE" is not set. So we're arguably
not worse off than before.
|
|
1f47efc4
|
2019-06-07T14:20:54
|
|
tests: object: consolidate cache tests
The object::cache test module has two tests that do nearly the
same thing: given a cache limit, load a certain set of objects
and verify if those objects have been cached or not.
Convert those tests to the new data-driven initializers to
demonstrate how these are to be used. Furthermore, add some
additional test data. This conversion is mainly done to show this
new facility.
|
|
fb7614c0
|
2019-04-04T13:51:52
|
|
tests: test largefiles on win32
|
|
4e3949b7
|
2019-01-30T02:14:11
|
|
tests: test that largefiles can be read through the tree API
|
|
f673e232
|
2018-12-27T13:47:34
|
|
git_error: use new names in internal APIs and usage
Move to the `git_error` name in the internal API for error-related
functions.
|
|
cd350852
|
2019-01-17T10:40:13
|
|
object_type: GIT_OBJECT_BAD is now GIT_OBJECT_INVALID
We use the term "invalid" to refer to bad or malformed data, eg
`GIT_REF_INVALID` and `GIT_EINVALIDSPEC`. Since we're changing the
names of the `git_object_t`s in this release, update it to be
`GIT_OBJECT_INVALID` instead of `BAD`.
|
|
168fe39b
|
2018-11-28T14:26:57
|
|
object_type: use new enumeration names
Use the new object_type enumeration names within the codebase.
|
|
18e71e6d
|
2018-11-28T13:31:06
|
|
index: use new enum and structure names
Use the new-style index names throughout our own codebase.
|
|
7fafec0e
|
2018-10-29T18:32:39
|
|
tree: fix integer overflow when reading unreasonably large filemodes
The `parse_mode` option uses an open-coded octal number parser. The
parser is quite naive in that it simply parses until hitting a character
that is not in the accepted range of '0' - '7', completely ignoring the
fact that we can at most accept a 16 bit unsigned integer as filemode.
If the filemode is bigger than UINT16_MAX, it will thus overflow and
provide an invalid filemode for the object entry.
Fix the issue by using `git__strntol32` instead and doing a bounds
check. As this function already handles overflows, it neatly solves the
problem.
Note that previously, `parse_mode` was also skipping the character
immediately after the filemode. In proper trees, this should be a simple
space, but in fact the parser accepted any character and simply skipped
over it. As a consequence of using `git__strntol32`, we now need to an
explicit check for a trailing whitespace after having parsed the
filemode. Because of the newly introduced error message, the test
object::tree::parse::mode_doesnt_cause_oob_read needs adjustment to its
error message check, which in fact is a good thing as it demonstrates
that we now fail looking for the whitespace immediately following the
filemode.
Add a test that shows that we will fail to parse such invalid filemodes
now.
|
|
f647bbc8
|
2018-10-29T17:25:09
|
|
tree: fix mode parsing reading out-of-bounds
When parsing a tree entry's mode, we will eagerly parse until we hit a
character that is not in the accepted set of octal digits '0' - '7'. If
the provided buffer is not a NUL terminated one, we may thus read
out-of-bounds.
Fix the issue by passing the buffer length to `parse_mode` and paying
attention to it. Note that this is not a vulnerability in our usual code
paths, as all object data read from the ODB is NUL terminated.
|
|
d4ad658a
|
2018-10-29T17:24:47
|
|
tree: add various tests exercising the tree parser
We currently don't have any tests that directly exercise the tree
parser. This is due to the fact that the parsers for raw object data has
only been recently introduce with commit ca4db5f4a (object: implement
function to parse raw data, 2017-10-13), and previous to that the setup
simply was too cumbersome as it always required going through the ODB.
Now that we have the infrastructure, add a suite of tests that directly
exercise the tree parser and various edge cases.
|
|
7655b2d8
|
2018-10-19T10:29:19
|
|
commit: fix reading out of bounds when parsing encoding
The commit message encoding is currently being parsed by the
`git__prefixcmp` function. As this function does not accept a buffer
length, it will happily skip over a buffer's end if it is not `NUL`
terminated.
Fix the issue by using `git__prefixncmp` instead. Add a test that
verifies that we are unable to parse the encoding field if it's cut off
by the supplied buffer length.
|
|
c2e3d8ef
|
2018-10-25T12:01:18
|
|
tests: add tests that exercise commit parsing
We currently do not have any test suites dedicated to parsing commits
from their raw representations. Add one based on `git_object__from_raw`
to be able to test special cases more easily.
|
|
ee11d47e
|
2018-10-19T09:47:50
|
|
tag: fix out of bounds read when searching for tag message
When parsing tags, we skip all unknown fields that appear before the tag
message. This skipping is done by using a plain `strstr(buffer, "\n\n")`
to search for the two newlines that separate tag fields from tag
message. As it is not possible to supply a buffer length to `strstr`,
this call may skip over the buffer's end and thus result in an out of
bounds read. As `strstr` may return a pointer that is out of bounds, the
following computation of `buffer_end - buffer` will overflow and result
in an allocation of an invalid length.
Fix the issue by using `git__memmem` instead. Add a test that verifies
parsing the tag fails not due to the allocation failure but due to the
tag having no message.
|
|
4c738e56
|
2018-10-19T09:44:14
|
|
tests: add tests that exercise tag parsing
While the tests in object::tag::read exercises reading and parsing valid
tags from the ODB, they barely try to verify that the parser fails in a
sane way when parsing invalid tags. Create a new test suite
object::tag::parse that directly exercise the parser by using
`git_object__from_raw` and add various tests for valid and invalid tags.
|
|
f00db9ed
|
2018-07-27T12:00:37
|
|
tree: rename from_tree to validate and clarify the tree in the test
|
|
2dff7e28
|
2018-07-18T21:04:13
|
|
tree: accept null ids in existing trees when updating
When we add entries to a treebuilder we validate them. But we validate even
those that we're adding because they exist in the base tree. This disables
using the normal mechanisms on these trees, even to fix them.
Keep track of whether the entry we're appending comes from an existing tree and
bypass the name and id validation if it's from existing data.
|
|
9994cd3f
|
2018-06-25T11:56:52
|
|
treewide: remove use of C++ style comments
C++ style comment ("//") are not specified by the ISO C90 standard and
thus do not conform to it. While libgit2 aims to conform to C90, we did
not enforce it until now, which is why quite a lot of these
non-conforming comments have snuck into our codebase. Do a tree-wide
conversion of all C++ style comments to the supported C style comments
to allow us enforcing strict C90 compliance in a later commit.
|
|
ecf4f33a
|
2018-02-08T11:14:48
|
|
Convert usage of `git_buf_free` to new `git_buf_dispose`
|
|
a554d588
|
2018-02-28T12:21:08
|
|
tree: initialize the id we use for testing submodule insertions
Instead of laving it uninitialized and relying on luck for it to be non-zero,
let's give it a dummy hash so we make valgrind happy (in this case the hash
comes from `sha1sum </dev/null`.
|
|
c0487bde
|
2018-01-12T08:23:43
|
|
tree: reject writing null-OID entries to a tree
In commit a96d3cc3f (cache-tree: reject entries with null sha1,
2017-04-21), the git.git project has changed its stance on null OIDs in
tree objects. Previously, null OIDs were accepted in tree entries to
help tools repair broken history. This resulted in some problems though
in that many code paths mistakenly passed null OIDs to be added to a
tree, which was not properly detected.
Align our own code base according to the upstream change and reject
writing tree entries early when the OID is all-zero.
|
|
1dc89aab
|
2017-05-01T21:34:21
|
|
object validation: free some memleaks
|
|
35079f50
|
2017-04-21T07:31:56
|
|
odb: add option to turn off hash verification
Verifying hashsums of objects we are reading from the ODB may be costly
as we have to perform an additional hashsum calculation on the object.
Especially when reading large objects, the penalty can be as high as
35%, as can be seen when executing the equivalent of `git cat-file` with
and without verification enabled. To mitigate for this, we add a global
option for libgit2 which enables the developer to turn off the
verification, e.g. when he can be reasonably sure that the objects on
disk won't be corrupted.
|
|
28a0741f
|
2017-04-10T09:30:08
|
|
odb: verify object hashes
The upstream git.git project verifies objects when looking them up from
disk. This avoids scenarios where objects have somehow become corrupt on
disk, e.g. due to hardware failures or bit flips. While our mantra is
usually to follow upstream behavior, we do not do so in this case, as we
never check hashes of objects we have just read from disk.
To fix this, we create a new error class `GIT_EMISMATCH` which denotes
that we have looked up an object with a hashsum mismatch. `odb_read_1`
will then, after having read the object from its backend, hash the
object and compare the resulting hash to the expected hash. If hashes do
not match, it will return an error.
This obviously introduces another computation of checksums and could
potentially impact performance. Note though that we usually perform I/O
operations directly before doing this computation, and as such the
actual overhead should be drowned out by I/O. Running our test suite
seems to confirm this guess. On a Linux system with best-of-five
timings, we had 21.592s with the check enabled and 21.590s with the
ckeck disabled. Note though that our test suite mostly contains very
small blobs only. It is expected that repositories with bigger blobs may
notice an increased hit by this check.
In addition to a new test, we also had to change the
odb::backend::nonrefreshing test suite, which now triggers a hashsum
mismatch when looking up the commit "deadbeef...". This is expected, as
the fake backend allocated inside of the test will return an empty
object for the OID "deadbeef...", which will obviously not hash back to
"deadbeef..." again. We can simply adjust the hash to equal the hash of
the empty object here to fix this test.
|
|
d59dabe5
|
2017-04-10T09:00:51
|
|
tests: object: test looking up corrupted objects
We currently have no tests which check whether we fail reading corrupted
objects. Add one which modifies contents of an object stored on disk and
then tries to read the object.
|
|
86c03552
|
2017-04-10T09:27:04
|
|
tests: object: create sandbox
The object::lookup tests do use the "testrepo.git" repository in a
read-only way, so we do not set up the repository as a sandbox but
simply open it. But in a future commit, we will want to test looking up
objects which are corrupted in some way, which requires us to modify the
on-disk data. Doing this in a repository without creating the sandbox
will modify contents of our libgit2 repository, though.
Create the repository in a sandbox to avoid this.
|
|
1d41b86c
|
2016-11-14T12:22:20
|
|
tree: add a failing test for unsorted input
We do not currently use the sorted version of this input in the
function, which means we produce bad results.
|
|
4006455f
|
2016-08-09T10:09:23
|
|
tests: blob: remove unused callback function
|
|
faebc1c6
|
2016-06-20T17:44:04
|
|
threads: split up OS-dependent thread code
|
|
a2cb4713
|
2016-05-24T14:30:43
|
|
tree: handle removal of all entries in the updater
When we remove all entries in a tree, we should remove that tree from
its parent rather than include the empty tree.
|
|
53412305
|
2016-05-19T15:29:53
|
|
tree: plug leaks in the tree updater
|
|
92249656
|
2016-05-19T15:21:26
|
|
tree: use testrepo2 for the tree updater tests
This gives us trees with subdirectories, which the new test needs.
|
|
9464f9eb
|
2016-05-02T17:36:58
|
|
Introduce a function to create a tree based on a different one
Instead of going through the usual steps of reading a tree recursively
into an index, modifying it and writing it back out as a tree, introduce
a function to perform simple updates more efficiently.
`git_tree_create_updated` avoids reading trees which are not modified
and supports upsert and delete operations. It is not as versatile as
modifying the index, but it makes some common operations much more
efficient.
|
|
eb39284b
|
2016-04-25T12:16:05
|
|
tag: ignore extra header fields
While no extra header fields are defined for tags, git accepts them by
ignoring them and continuing the search for the message. There are a few
tags like this in the wild which git parses just fine, so we should do
the same.
|
|
6669e3e8
|
2015-11-08T04:28:08
|
|
blob: remove _fromchunks()
The callback mechanism makes it awkward to write data from an IO
source; move to `_fromstream()` which lets the caller remain in control,
in the same vein as we prefer iterators over foreach callbacks.
|
|
35e68606
|
2015-11-04T10:36:50
|
|
blob: fix fromchunks iteration counter
By returning when the count goes to zero rather than below it, setting
`howmany` to 7 in fact writes out the string 6 times.
Correct the termination condition to write out the string the amount of
times we specify.
|
|
0a5c6028
|
2015-11-04T10:30:48
|
|
blob: introduce creating a blob by writing into a stream
The pair of `git_blob_create_frombuffer()` and
`git_blob_create_frombuffer_commit()` is meant to replace
`git_blob_create_fromchunks()` by providing a way for a user to write a
new blob when they want filtering or they do not know the size.
This approach allows the caller to retain control over when to add data
to this buffer and a more natural fit into higher-level language's own
stream abstractions instead of having to handle IO wait in the callback.
The in-memory buffer size of 2MB is chosen somewhat arbitrarily to be a
round multiple of usual page sizes and a value where most blobs seem
likely to be either going to be way below or way over that size. It's
also a round number of pages.
This implementation re-uses the helper we have from `_fromchunks()` so
we end up writing everything to disk, but hopefully more efficiently
than with a default filebuf. A later optimisation can be to avoid
writing the in-memory contents to disk, with some extra complexity.
|
|
60a194aa
|
2016-03-20T11:00:12
|
|
tree: re-use the id and filename in the odb object
Instead of copying over the data into the individual entries, point to
the originals, which are already in a format we can use.
|
|
ea5bf6bb
|
2016-03-04T12:34:38
|
|
treebuilder: don't try to verify submodules exist in the odb
Submodules don't exist in the objectdb and the code is making us try to
look for a blob with its commit id, which is obviously not going to
work.
Skip the test if the user wants to insert a submodule.
|
|
f2dddf52
|
2016-02-28T15:51:38
|
|
turn on strict object validation by default
|
|
4afe536b
|
2016-02-28T16:02:49
|
|
tests: use legitimate object ids
Use legitimate (existing) object IDs in tests so that we have the
ability to turn on strict object validation when running tests.
|
|
2bbc7d3e
|
2016-02-23T15:00:27
|
|
treebuilder: validate tree entries (optionally)
When `GIT_OPT_ENABLE_STRICT_OBJECT_CREATION` is turned on, validate
the tree and parent ids given to treebuilder insertion.
|
|
2f1080ea
|
2015-05-19T11:17:07
|
|
conflict tests: use GIT_IDXENTRY_STAGE_SET
|
|
c4a2fd5c
|
2015-01-04T17:39:43
|
|
Plug a couple of leaks
|
|
208a2c8a
|
2014-12-27T12:09:11
|
|
treebuilder: rename _create() to _new()
This function is a constructor, so let's name it like one and leave
_create() for the reference functions, which do create/write the
reference.
|
|
dce7b1a4
|
2014-12-16T19:24:04
|
|
treebuilder: take a repository for path validation
Path validation may be influenced by `core.protectHFS` and
`core.protectNTFS` configuration settings, thus treebuilders
can take a repository to influence their configuration.
|
|
753e17b0
|
2014-11-19T18:42:29
|
|
peel: reject bad queries with EINVALIDSPEC
There are some combination of objects and target types which we know
cannot be fulfilled. Return EINVALIDSPEC for those to signify that there
is a mismatch in the user-provided data and what the object model is
capable of satisfying.
If we start at a tag and in the course of peeling find out that we
cannot reach a particular type, we return EPEEL.
|
|
3b2cb2c9
|
2014-09-16T11:49:25
|
|
Factor 40 and 41 constants from source.
|
|
4ca0b566
|
2014-08-18T12:41:06
|
|
oid: Export `git_oid_tostr_s` instead of `_allocfmt`
The old `allocfmt` is of no use to callers, as they are not able to free
the returned buffer. Export a new API that returns a static string that
doesn't need to be freed.
|
|
0cee70eb
|
2014-07-01T14:09:01
|
|
Introduce cl_assert_equal_oid
|
|
4d3f1f97
|
2014-06-09T04:38:22
|
|
treebuilder: use a map instead of vector to store the entries
Finding a filename in a vector means we need to resort it every time we
want to read from it, which includes every time we want to write to it
as well, as we want to find duplicate keys.
A hash-map fits what we want to do much more accurately, as we do not
care about sorting, but just the particular filename.
We still keep removed entries around, as the interface let you assume
they were going to be around until the treebuilder is cleared or freed,
but in this case that involves an append to a vector in the filter case,
which can now fail.
The only time we care about sorting is when we write out the tree, so
let's make that the only time we do any sorting.
|
|
fb591767
|
2014-06-07T12:51:48
|
|
Win32: Fix object::cache::threadmania test on x64
|
|
49e369b2
|
2014-05-18T10:06:49
|
|
message: don't assume the comment char
The comment char is configurable and we need to provide a way for the
user to specify which comment char they chose for their message.
|
|
af567e88
|
2014-05-12T10:44:13
|
|
Merge pull request #2334 from libgit2/rb/fix-2333
Be more careful with user-supplied buffers
|
|
1e4976cb
|
2014-05-08T10:17:14
|
|
Be more careful with user-supplied buffers
This adds in missing calls to `git_buf_sanitize` and fixes a
number of places where `git_buf` APIs could inadvertently write
NUL terminator bytes into invalid buffers. This also changes the
behavior of `git_buf_sanitize` to NUL terminate a buffer if it can
and of `git_buf_shorten` to do nothing if it can.
Adds tests of filtering code with zeroed (i.e. unsanitized) buffer
which was previously triggering a segfault.
|
|
5269008c
|
2014-05-06T16:01:49
|
|
Add filter options and ALLOW_UNSAFE
Diff and status do not want core.safecrlf to actually raise an
error regardless of the setting, so this extends the filter API
with an additional options flags parameter and adds a flag so that
filters can be applied with GIT_FILTER_OPT_ALLOW_UNSAFE, indicating
that unsafe filter application should be downgraded from a failure
to a warning.
|
|
217c029b
|
2014-04-09T14:08:22
|
|
commit: safer commit creation with reference update
The current version of the commit creation and amend function are unsafe
to use when passing the update_ref parameter, as they do not check that
the reference at the moment of update points to what the user expects.
Make sure that we're moving history forward when we ask the library to
update the reference for us by checking that the first parent of the new
commit is the current value of the reference. We also make sure that the
ref we're updating hasn't moved between the read and the write.
Similarly, when amending a commit, make sure that the current tip of the
branch is the commit we're amending.
|
|
eb46fb2b
|
2014-03-08T00:49:18
|
|
Add failing test for git_object_short_id
|
|
13f7ecd7
|
2014-03-04T16:23:28
|
|
Add git_object_short_id API to get short id string
This finds a short id string that will unambiguously select the
given object, starting with the core.abbrev length (usually 7)
and growing until it is no longer ambiguous.
|
|
80c29fe9
|
2014-01-17T10:45:11
|
|
Add git_commit_amend API
This adds an API to amend an existing commit, basically a shorthand
for creating a new commit filling in missing parameters from the
values of an existing commit. As part of this, I also added a new
"sys" API to create a commit using a callback to get the parents.
This allowed me to rewrite all the other commit creation APIs so
that temporary allocations are no longer needed.
|
|
629ba7f1
|
2014-02-05T13:07:46
|
|
Merge pull request #2027 from libgit2/rb/only-windows-is-windows
Some tests of paths that can't actually be written to disk
|
|
93954245
|
2014-01-27T09:39:36
|
|
Merge pull request #2075 from libgit2/cmn/leftover-oid
Leftover OID -> ID changes
|
|
e1d7f003
|
2014-01-26T16:32:49
|
|
messsage: use git_buf in prettify()
A lot of the tests were checking for overflow, which we don't have
anymore, so we can remove them.
|
|
d541170c
|
2014-01-24T11:36:41
|
|
index: rename an entry's id to 'id'
This was not converted when we converted the rest, so do it now.
|
|
79ccb921
|
2014-01-03T14:26:02
|
|
Further tree building tests with hard paths
|
|
97bbf61e
|
2014-01-03T12:14:22
|
|
Tree accessor tests with hard path names
|
|
452c7de6
|
2013-12-12T14:16:40
|
|
Add git_treebuilder_insert test and clarify doc
This wasn't being tested and since it has a callback, I fixed it
even though the return value of this callback is not treated like
any of the other callbacks in the API.
|
|
19853bdd
|
2013-12-10T13:01:34
|
|
Update git_blob_create_fromchunks callback behavr
The callback to supply data chunks could return a negative value
to stop creation of the blob, but we were neither using GIT_EUSER
nor propagating the return value. This makes things use the new
behavior of returning the negative value back to the user.
|
|
25e0b157
|
2013-12-06T15:07:57
|
|
Remove converting user error to GIT_EUSER
This changes the behavior of callbacks so that the callback error
code is not converted into GIT_EUSER and instead we propagate the
return value through to the caller. Instead of using the
giterr_capture and giterr_restore functions, we now rely on all
functions to pass back the return value from a callback.
To avoid having a return value with no error message, the user
can call the public giterr_set_str or some such function to set
an error message. There is a new helper 'giterr_set_callback'
that functions can invoke after making a callback which ensures
that some error message was set in case the callback did not set
one.
In places where the sign of the callback return value is
meaningful (e.g. positive to skip, negative to abort), only the
negative values are returned back to the caller, obviously, since
the other values allow for continuing the loop.
The hardest parts of this were in the checkout code where positive
return values were overloaded as meaningful values for checkout.
I fixed this by adding an output parameter to many of the internal
checkout functions and removing the overload. This added some
code, but it is probably a better implementation.
There is some funkiness in the network code where user provided
callbacks could be returning a positive or a negative value and
we want to rely on that to cancel the loop. There are still a
couple places where an user error might get turned into GIT_EUSER
there, I think, though none exercised by the tests.
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17820381
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2013-11-14T14:05:52
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Rename tests-clar to tests
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