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cf286d5e
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2019-12-12T10:58:56
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attr: Update definition of binary macro
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f8346905
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2019-07-12T09:03:33
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attr_file: ignore macros defined in subdirectories
Right now, we are unconditionally applying all macros found in a
gitatttributes file. But quoting gitattributes(5):
Custom macro attributes can be defined only in top-level
gitattributes files ($GIT_DIR/info/attributes, the .gitattributes
file at the top level of the working tree, or the global or
system-wide gitattributes files), not in .gitattributes files in
working tree subdirectories. The built-in macro attribute "binary"
is equivalent to:
So gitattribute files in subdirectories of the working tree may
explicitly _not_ contain macro definitions, but we do not currently
enforce this limitation.
This patch introduces a new parameter to the gitattributes parser that
tells whether macros are allowed in the current file or not. If set to
`false`, we will still parse macros, but silently ignore them instead of
adding them to the list of defined macros. Update all callers to
correctly determine whether the to-be-parsed file may contain macros or
not. Most importantly, when walking up the directory hierarchy, we will
only set it to `true` once it reaches the root directory of the repo
itself.
Add a test that verifies that we are indeed not applying macros from
subdirectories. Previous to these changes, the test would've failed.
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df417a43
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2019-07-12T09:02:16
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tests: attr: verify that in-memory macros are respected
Add some tests to ensure that the `git_attr_add_macro` function works as
expected.
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4a7f704f
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2019-07-05T08:10:33
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tests: attr: implement tests to verify attribute rewriting behaviour
Implement some tests that verify that we are correctly updating
gitattributes when rewriting or unlinking the corresponding files.
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ed854aa0
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2019-07-05T07:45:22
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tests: attr: extract macro tests into their own suite
As macros are a specific functionality in the gitattributes code, it
makes sense to extract them into their own test suite, too. This makes
finding macro-related tests easier.
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