|
62494bf2
|
2016-11-02T09:38:40
|
|
transports: smart: abort receiving packets on end of stream
When trying to receive packets from the remote, we loop until
either an error distinct to `GIT_EBUFS` occurs or until we
successfully parsed the packet. This does not honor the case
where we are looping over an already closed socket which has no
more data, leaving us in an infinite loop if we got a bogus
packet size or if the remote hang up.
Fix the issue by returning `GIT_EEOF` when we cannot read data
from the socket anymore.
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|
61530c49
|
2016-11-01T16:56:07
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|
transports: smart: abort ref announcement on early end of stream
When reading a server's reference announcements via the smart
protocol, we expect the server to send multiple flushes before
the protocol is finished. If we fail to receive new data from the
socket, we will only return an end of stream error if we have not
seen any flush yet.
This logic is flawed in that we may run into an infinite loop
when receiving a server's reference announcement with a bogus
flush packet. E.g. assume the last flushing package is changed to
not be '0000' but instead any other value. In this case, we will
still await one more flush package and ignore the fact that we
are not receiving any data from the socket, causing an infinite
loop.
Fix the issue by always returning `GIT_EEOF` if the socket
indicates an end of stream.
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|
dc98cb28
|
2016-10-31T13:50:23
|
|
openssl_stream: fix typo
|
|
610cff13
|
2016-10-09T16:05:48
|
|
Merge branch 'pr/3809'
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|
dc5cfdba
|
2016-06-02T23:18:31
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|
make git_diff_stats_to_buf not show 0 insertions or 0 deletions
|
|
aae89534
|
2016-10-09T12:51:48
|
|
Merge pull request #3956 from pks-t/pks/object-parsing-hardening
Object parsing hardening
|
|
a719ef5e
|
2016-10-07T09:31:41
|
|
commit: always initialize commit message
When parsing a commit, we will treat all bytes left after parsing
the headers as the commit message. When no bytes are left, we
leave the commit's message uninitialized. While uncommon to have
a commit without message, this is the right behavior as Git
unfortunately allows for empty commit messages.
Given that this scenario is so uncommon, most programs acting on
the commit message will never check if the message is actually
set, which may lead to errors. To work around the error and not
lay the burden of checking for empty commit messages to the
developer, initialize the commit message with an empty string
when no commit message is given.
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|
45dc219f
|
2016-10-07T16:01:28
|
|
Merge pull request #3921 from libgit2/cmn/walk-limit-enough
Improve revision walk preparation logic
|
|
4974e3a5
|
2016-10-07T09:18:55
|
|
tree: validate filename and OID length when parsing object
When parsing tree entries from raw object data, we do not verify
that the tree entry actually has a filename as well as a valid
object ID. Fix this by asserting that the filename length is
non-zero as well as asserting that there are at least
`GIT_OID_RAWSZ` bytes left when parsing the OID.
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|
fedc05c8
|
2016-10-06T18:13:34
|
|
revwalk: don't show commits that become uninteresting after being enqueued
When we read from the list which `limit_list()` gives us, we need to check that
the commit is still interesting, as it might have become uninteresting after it
was added to the list.
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|
ab96ca55
|
2016-10-06T13:15:31
|
|
Make sure we use the `C` locale for `regcomp` on macOS.
|
|
3cc5ec94
|
2016-10-05T12:57:53
|
|
rebase: don't ask for time sorting
`git-rebase--merge` does not ask for time sorting, but uses the default. We now
produce the same default time-ordered output as git, so make us of that since
it's not always the same output as our time sorting.
|
|
82d4c0e6
|
2016-10-05T12:55:53
|
|
revwalk: update the description for the default sorting
It changed from implementation-defined to git's default sorting, as there are
systems (e.g. rebase) which depend on this order. Also specify more explicitly
how you can get git's "date-order".
|
|
ea1ceb7f
|
2016-10-05T12:23:26
|
|
revwalk: remove a useless enqueueing phase for topological and default sorting
After `limit_list()` we already have the list in time-sorted order, which is
what we want in the "default" case. Enqueueing into the "unsorted" list would
just reverse it, and the topological sort will do its own sorting if it needs
to.
|
|
9db367bf
|
2016-09-27T16:14:42
|
|
revwalk: get rid of obsolete marking code
We've now moved to code that's closer to git and produces the output
during the preparation phase, so we no longer process the commits as
part of generating the output.
This makes a chunk of code redundant, as we're simply short-circuiting
it by detecting we've processed the commits alrady.
|
|
e93b7e32
|
2016-09-27T13:35:48
|
|
revwalk: style change
Change the condition for returning 0 more in line with that we write
elsewhere in the library.
|
|
5e2a29a7
|
2016-09-27T13:11:47
|
|
commit_list: fix the date comparison function
This returns the integer-cast truth value comparing the dates. What we
want instead of a (-1, 0, 1) output depending on how they compare.
|
|
48c64362
|
2016-09-27T11:59:24
|
|
revwalk: port over the topological sorting
After porting over the commit hiding and selection we were still left
with mistmaching output due to the topologial sort.
This ports the topological sorting code to make us match with our
equivalent of `--date-order` and `--topo-order` against the output
from `rev-list`.
|
|
938f8e32
|
2016-09-23T13:25:35
|
|
pqueue: support not having a comparison function
In this case, we simply behave like a vector.
|
|
0bd43371
|
2016-09-23T12:42:33
|
|
vector, pqueue: add git_vector_reverse and git_pqueue_reverse
This is a convenience function to reverse the contents of a vector and a pqueue
in-place.
The pqueue function is useful in the case where we're treating it as a
LIFO queue.
|
|
6708618c
|
2016-07-21T01:24:12
|
|
revwalk: get closer to git
We had some home-grown logic to figure out which objects to show during
the revision walk, but it was rather inefficient, looking over the same
list multiple times to figure out when we had run out of interesting
commits. We now use the lists in a smarter way.
We also introduce the slop mechanism to determine when to stpo
looking. When we run out of interesting objects, we continue preparing
the walk for another 5 rounds in order to make it less likely that we
miss objects in situations with complex graphs.
|
|
9fbbb0ee
|
2016-10-01T19:32:16
|
|
Merge pull request #3931 from libgit2/ethomson/checkout_dont_calculate_oid_for_dirs
checkout: don't try to calculate oid for directories
|
|
955c99c2
|
2016-09-14T10:28:24
|
|
checkout: don't try to calculate oid for directories
When trying to determine if we can safely overwrite an existing workdir
item, we may need to calculate the oid for the workdir item to determine
if its identical to the old side (and eligible for removal).
We previously did this regardless of the type of entry in the workdir;
if it was a directory, we would open(2) it and then try to read(2).
The read(2) of a directory fails on many platforms, so we would treat it
as if it were unmodified and continue to perform the checkout.
On FreeBSD, you _can_ read(2) a directory, so this pattern failed. We
would calculate an oid from the data read and determine that the
directory was modified and would therefore generate a checkout conflict.
This reliance on read(2) is silly (and was most likely accidentally
giving us the behavior we wanted), we should be explicit about the
directory test.
|
|
2749ff46
|
2016-09-13T15:52:43
|
|
time: Export `git_time_monotonic`
|
|
9ad07fc0
|
2016-09-06T10:43:21
|
|
Merge pull request #3923 from libgit2/ethomson/diff-read-empty-binary
Read binary patches (with no binary data)
|
|
46035d98
|
2016-09-06T11:21:29
|
|
Merge pull request #3882 from pks-t/pks/fix-fetch-refspec-dst-parsing
refspec: do not set empty rhs for fetch refspecs
|
|
adedac5a
|
2016-09-02T02:03:45
|
|
diff: treat binary patches with no data special
When creating and printing diffs, deal with binary deltas that have
binary data specially, versus diffs that have a binary file but lack the
actual binary data.
|
|
f4e3dae7
|
2016-09-02T11:26:16
|
|
diff_print: change test for skipping binary printing
Instead of skipping printing a binary diff when there is no data, skip
printing when we have a status of `UNMODIFIED`. This is more in-line
with our internal data model and allows us to expand the notion of
binary data.
In the future, there may have no data because the files were unmodified
(there was no data to produce) or it may have no data because there was
no data given to us in a patch. We want to treat these cases
separately.
|
|
4bfd7c63
|
2016-09-01T16:55:27
|
|
patch: error on diff callback failure
|
|
4b34f687
|
2016-09-01T15:14:25
|
|
patch_generate: only calculate binary diffs if requested
When generating diffs for binary files, we load and decompress
the blobs in order to generate the actual diff, which can be very
costly. While we cannot avoid this for the case when we are
called with the `GIT_DIFF_SHOW_BINARY` flag, we do not have to
load the blobs in the case where this flag is not set, as the
caller is expected to have no interest in the actual content of
binary files.
Fix the issue by only generating a binary diff when the caller is
actually interested in the diff. As libgit2 uses heuristics to
determine that a blob contains binary data by inspecting its size
without loading from the ODB, this saves us quite some time when
diffing in a repository with binary files.
|
|
88cfe614
|
2016-08-24T01:20:39
|
|
git_checkout_tree options fix
According to the reference the git_checkout_tree and git_checkout_head
functions should accept NULL in the opts field
This was broken since the opts field was dereferenced and thus lead to a
crash.
|
|
ace0d36b
|
2016-08-29T09:29:34
|
|
Merge pull request #3900 from pks-t/pks/http-close-substream-on-connect
transports: http: set substream as disconnected after closing
|
|
b859faa6
|
2016-08-23T23:38:39
|
|
Teach `git_patch_from_diff` about parsed diffs
Ensure that `git_patch_from_diff` can return the patch for parsed diffs,
not just generate a patch for a generated diff.
|
|
7a3f1de5
|
2016-08-22T09:27:47
|
|
filesystem_iterator: fixed double free on error
|
|
c1b370e9
|
2016-08-17T09:24:44
|
|
Merge pull request #3837 from novalis/dturner/indexv4
Support index v4
|
|
635a9222
|
2016-08-17T08:54:48
|
|
Merge pull request #3895 from pks-t/pks/negate-basename-in-subdirs
ignore: allow unignoring basenames in subdirectories
|
|
b1453601
|
2016-08-17T11:38:26
|
|
transports: http: reset `connected` flag when closing transport
|
|
c4cba4e9
|
2016-08-17T11:00:05
|
|
transports: http: reset `connected` flag when re-connecting transport
When calling `http_connect` on a subtransport whose stream is already
connected, we first close the stream in case no keep-alive is in use.
When doing so, we do not reset the transport's connection state,
though. Usually, this will do no harm in case the subsequent connect
will succeed. But when the connection fails we are left with a
substransport which is tagged as connected but which has no valid
stream attached.
Fix the issue by resetting the subtransport's connected-state when
closing its stream in `http_connect`.
|
|
fcb2c1c8
|
2016-08-12T09:06:15
|
|
ignore: allow unignoring basenames in subdirectories
The .gitignore file allows for patterns which unignore previous
ignore patterns. When unignoring a previous pattern, there are
basically three cases how this is matched when no globbing is
used:
1. when a previous file has been ignored, it can be unignored by
using its exact name, e.g.
foo/bar
!foo/bar
2. when a file in a subdirectory has been ignored, it can be
unignored by using its basename, e.g.
foo/bar
!bar
3. when all files with a basename are ignored, a specific file
can be unignored again by specifying its path in a
subdirectory, e.g.
bar
!foo/bar
The first problem in libgit2 is that we did not correctly treat
the second case. While we verified that the negative pattern
matches the tail of the positive one, we did not verify if it
only matches the basename of the positive pattern. So e.g. we
would have also negated a pattern like
foo/fruz_bar
!bar
Furthermore, we did not check for the third case, where a
basename is being unignored in a certain subdirectory again.
Both issues are fixed with this commit.
|
|
5625d86b
|
2016-05-17T15:40:32
|
|
index: support index v4
Support reading and writing index v4. Index v4 uses a very simple
compression scheme for pathnames, but is otherwise similar to index v3.
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twitter.com>
|
|
aeb5ee5a
|
2016-05-17T15:40:46
|
|
varint: Add varint encoding/decoding
This code is ported from git.git
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twopensource.com>
|
|
b9895144
|
2016-08-08T14:47:32
|
|
stransport: do not use `git_stream_free` on uninitialized stransport
When failing to initialize a new stransport stream, we try to
release already allocated memory by calling out to
`git_stream_free`, which in turn called out to the stream's
`free` function pointer. As we only initialize the function
pointer later on, this leads to a `NULL` pointer exception.
Furthermore, plug another memory leak when failing to create the
SSL context.
|
|
97e57e87
|
2016-08-08T15:13:59
|
|
Merge pull request #3887 from libgit2/ethomson/empty_blob
odb: only provide the empty tree
|
|
b47e79e2
|
2016-08-08T08:42:32
|
|
Merge pull request #3890 from pks-t/pks/stransport-static-linkage
stransport: make internal functions static
|
|
067bf5dc
|
2016-08-08T13:49:17
|
|
stransport: make internal functions static
|
|
becadafc
|
2016-08-05T19:30:56
|
|
odb: only provide the empty tree
Only provide the empty tree internally, which matches git's behavior.
If we provide the empty blob then any users trying to write it with
libgit2 would omit it from actually landing in the odb, which appear
to git proper as a broken repository (missing that object).
|
|
9884dd61
|
2016-08-05T18:40:37
|
|
SecureTransport: handle NULL trust on success
The `SSLCopyPeerTrust` call can succeed but fail to return a trust
object if it can't load the certificate chain and thus cannot check the
validity of a certificate. This can lead to us calling `CFRelease` on a
`NULL` trust object, causing a crash.
Handle this by returning ECERTIFICATE.
|
|
274a727e
|
2016-08-05T10:57:42
|
|
apply: fix warning when initializing patch images
|
|
844f5b20
|
2016-08-05T10:57:13
|
|
pool: provide macro to statically initialize git_pool
|
|
27051d4e
|
2016-07-22T13:34:19
|
|
odb: only freshen pack files every 2 seconds
Since writing multiple objects may all already exist in a single
packfile, avoid freshening that packfile repeatedly in a tight loop.
Instead, only freshen pack files every 2 seconds.
|
|
8f09a98e
|
2016-07-14T16:23:24
|
|
odb: freshen existing objects when writing
When writing an object, we calculate its OID and see if it exists in the
object database. If it does, we need to freshen the file that contains
it.
|
|
d2794b0e
|
2016-08-04T20:49:50
|
|
Merge pull request #3877 from libgit2/ethomson/paths_init
sysdir: don't assume an empty dir is uninitialized
|
|
0d84de02
|
2016-08-04T13:20:49
|
|
Merge pull request #3869 from richardipsum/fix-outdated-comment
Fix outdated comment
|
|
78b500bf
|
2016-08-04T12:45:19
|
|
Merge pull request #3850 from wildart/custom-tls
Enable https transport for custom TLS streams
|
|
031d34b7
|
2016-07-29T12:59:42
|
|
sysdir: use the standard `init` pattern
Don't try to determine when sysdirs are uninitialized. Instead, simply
initialize them all at `git_libgit2_init` time and never try to
reinitialize, except when consumers explicitly call `git_sysdir_set`.
Looking at the buffer length is especially problematic, since there may
no appropriate path for that value. (For example, the Windows-specific
programdata directory has no value on non-Windows machines.)
Previously we would continually trying to re-lookup these values,
which could get racy if two different threads are each calling
`git_sysdir_get` and trying to lookup / clear the value simultaneously.
|
|
da7f9feb
|
2016-08-04T11:51:06
|
|
Merge pull request #3879 from libgit2/ethomson/mwindow_init
mwindow: init mwindow files in git_libgit2_init
|
|
2381d9e4
|
2016-08-03T17:01:48
|
|
mwindow: init mwindow files in git_libgit2_init
|
|
1eee631d
|
2016-08-04T13:45:28
|
|
refspec: do not set empty rhs for fetch refspecs
According to git-fetch(1), "[t]he colon can be omitted when <dst>
is empty." So according to git, the refspec "refs/heads/master"
is the same as the refspec "refs/heads/master:" when fetching
changes. When trying to fetch from a remote with a trailing
colon with libgit2, though, the fetch actually fails while it
works when the trailing colon is left out. So obviously, libgit2
does _not_ treat these two refspec formats the same for fetches.
The problem results from parsing refspecs, where the resulting
refspec has its destination set to an empty string in the case of
a trailing colon and to a `NULL` pointer in the case of no
trailing colon. When passing this to our DWIM machinery, the
empty string gets translated to "refs/heads/", which is simply
wrong.
Fix the problem by having the parsing machinery treat both cases
the same for fetch refspecs.
|
|
002c8e29
|
2016-08-03T17:09:41
|
|
git_diff_file: move `id_abbrev`
Move `id_abbrev` to a more reasonable place where it packs more nicely
(before anybody starts using it).
|
|
152efee2
|
2016-08-02T18:43:12
|
|
Merge pull request #3865 from libgit2/ethomson/leaks
Fix leaks, some warnings and an error
|
|
df87648a
|
2016-07-24T16:10:30
|
|
crlf: set a safe crlf default
|
|
4aaae935
|
2016-07-22T12:53:13
|
|
index: cast to avoid warning
|
|
60e15ecd
|
2016-07-15T17:18:39
|
|
packbuilder: `size_t` all the things
After 1cd65991, we were passing a pointer to an `unsigned long` to
a function that now expected a pointer to a `size_t`. These types
differ on 64-bit Windows, which means that we trash the stack.
Use `size_t`s in the packbuilder to avoid this.
|
|
581a4d39
|
2016-07-14T23:32:35
|
|
apply: safety check files that dont end with eol
|
|
c065f6a1
|
2016-07-14T23:04:47
|
|
apply: check allocation properly
|
|
531be3e8
|
2016-07-14T22:59:37
|
|
apply: compare preimage to image
Compare the preimage to the image; don't compare the preimage to itself.
|
|
b118f647
|
2016-07-22T14:02:00
|
|
repository: don't cast to `int` for no reason
And give it a default so that some compilers don't (unnecessarily)
complain.
|
|
8b2ad593
|
2016-07-23T11:55:43
|
|
Make comment conform to style guide
Style guide says // style comments should be avoided.
|
|
877282ea
|
2016-07-23T11:47:59
|
|
Fix outdated comment
SSH transport seems to be supported now.
|
|
d81cb2e4
|
2016-07-15T13:32:23
|
|
remote: Handle missing config values when deleting a remote
Somehow I ended up with the following in my ~/.gitconfig:
[branch "master"]
remote = origin
merge = master
rebase = true
I assume something went crazy while I was running the git.git tests
some time ago, and that I never noticed until now.
This is not a good configuration, but it shouldn't cause problems. But
it does. Specifically, if you have this in your config, and you
perform the following set of actions:
create a remote
fetch from that remote
create a branch off of the remote master branch called "master"
delete the branch
delete the remote
The remote delete fails with the message "Could not find key
'branch.master.rebase' to delete". This is because it's iterating over
the config entries (including the ones in the global config) and
believes that there is a master branch which must therefore have these
config keys.
https://github.com/libgit2/libgit2/issues/3856
|
|
bdec62dc
|
2016-07-06T13:06:25
|
|
remove conditions that prevent use of custom TLS stream
|
|
c18a2bc4
|
2016-07-05T15:51:01
|
|
Merge pull request #3851 from txdv/get-user-agent
Add get user agent functionality.
|
|
b57c176a
|
2016-07-05T12:46:27
|
|
Merge pull request #3846 from rkrp/fix_bug_parsing_int64min
Fixed bug while parsing INT64_MIN
|
|
f1dba144
|
2016-07-05T09:41:51
|
|
Add get user agent functionality.
|
|
d8243465
|
2016-07-01T18:47:06
|
|
Merge pull request #3836 from joshtriplett/cleanup-find_repo
find_repo: Clean up and simplify logic
|
|
ebeb56f0
|
2016-07-01T18:45:10
|
|
Merge pull request #3711 from joshtriplett/git_repository_discover_default
Add GIT_REPOSITORY_OPEN_FROM_ENV flag to respect $GIT_* environment vars
|
|
6249d960
|
2016-06-29T17:55:44
|
|
index: include conflicts in `git_index_read_index`
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.
|
|
6f7ec728
|
2016-06-29T17:01:47
|
|
index: refactor common `read_index` functionality
Most of `git_index_read_index` is common to reading any iterator.
Refactor it out in case we want to implement `read_tree` in terms of it
in the future.
|
|
59a0005d
|
2016-06-29T10:01:26
|
|
Merge pull request #3813 from stinb/submodule-update-fetch
submodule: Try to fetch when update fails to find the target commit.
|
|
21766702
|
2016-06-27T15:20:20
|
|
blame: do not decrement commit refcount in make_origin
When we create a blame origin, we try to look up the blob that is
to be blamed at a certain revision. When this lookup fails, e.g.
because the file did not exist at that certain revision, we fail
to create the blame origin and return `NULL`. The blame origin
that we have just allocated is thereby free'd with
`origin_decref`.
The `origin_decref` function does not only decrement reference
counts for the blame origin, though, but also for its commit and
blob. When this is done in the error case, we will cause an
uneven reference count for these objects. This may result in
hard-to-debug failures at seemingly unrelated code paths, where
we try to access these objects when they in fact have already
been free'd.
Fix the issue by refactoring `make_origin` such that we only
allocate the object after the only function that may fail so that
we do not have to call `origin_decref` at all. Also fix the
`pass_blame` function, which indirectly calls `make_origin`, to
free the commit when `make_origin` failed.
|
|
70b9b841
|
2016-06-28T20:19:52
|
|
Fixed bug while parsing INT64_MIN
|
|
de43efcf
|
2016-06-28T16:07:25
|
|
submodule: Try to fetch when update fails to find the target commit in the submodule.
|
|
20302aa4
|
2016-06-25T23:33:05
|
|
Merge pull request #3223 from ethomson/apply
Reading patch files
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|
1a79cd95
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2016-04-26T01:18:01
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patch: show copy information for identical copies
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.
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38a347ea
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2016-04-25T17:52:39
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patch::parse: handle patches with no hunks
Patches may have no hunks when there's no modifications (for example,
in a rename). Handle them.
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2b490284
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2016-06-24T15:59:37
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find_repo: Clean up and simplify logic
find_repo had a complex loop and heavily nested conditionals, making it
difficult to follow. Simplify this as much as possible:
- Separate assignments from conditionals.
- Check the complex loop condition in the only place it can change.
- Break out of the loop on error, rather than going through the rest of
the loop body first.
- Handle error cases by immediately breaking, rather than nesting
conditionals.
- Free repo_link unconditionally on the way out of the function, rather
than in multiple places.
- Add more comments on the remaining complex steps.
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0dd98b69
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2016-04-03T17:22:07
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Add GIT_REPOSITORY_OPEN_FROM_ENV flag to respect $GIT_* environment vars
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.
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39c6fca3
|
2016-04-03T16:01:01
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Add GIT_REPOSITORY_OPEN_NO_DOTGIT flag to avoid appending /.git
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 $GIT_DIR in the
environment, provide a new GIT_REPOSITORY_OPEN_NO_DOTGIT flag to not try
appending /.git.
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ed577134
|
2016-04-03T19:24:15
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Fix repository discovery with ceiling_dirs at current directory
git only checks ceiling directories when its search ascends to a parent
directory. A ceiling directory matching the starting directory will not
prevent git from finding a repository in the starting directory or a
parent directory. libgit2 handled the former case correctly, but
differed from git in the latter case: given a ceiling directory matching
the starting directory, but no repository at the starting directory,
libgit2 would stop the search at that point rather than finding a
repository in a parent directory.
Test case using git command-line tools:
/tmp$ 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.
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|
fe345c73
|
2016-02-09T12:29:31
|
|
Remove unused static functions
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|
8fd74c08
|
2016-02-09T12:18:28
|
|
Avoid old-style function definitions
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.
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|
bb0edf87
|
2016-06-20T22:50:46
|
|
Merge pull request #3830 from pks-t/pks/thread-namespacing
Thread namespacing
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|
aab266c9
|
2016-06-20T20:07:33
|
|
threads: add platform-independent thread initialization function
|
|
8aaa9fb6
|
2016-06-20T18:21:42
|
|
win32: rename pthread.{c,h} to thread.{c,h}
The old pthread-file did re-implement the pthreads API with exact symbol
matching. As the thread-abstraction has now been split up between Unix- and
Windows-specific files within the `git_` namespace to avoid symbol-clashes
between libgit2 and pthreads, the rewritten wrappers have nothing to do with
pthreads anymore.
Rename the Windows-specific pthread-files to honor this change.
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a342e870
|
2016-06-20T18:28:00
|
|
threads: remove now-useless typedefs
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|
4f10c1e6
|
2016-06-20T19:40:45
|
|
threads: remove unused function pthread_num_processors_np
The function pthread_num_processors_np is currently unused and superseded by the
function `git_online_cpus`. Remove the function.
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|
6551004f
|
2016-06-20T17:49:47
|
|
threads: split up OS-dependent rwlock code
|
|
139bffa0
|
2016-06-20T17:20:13
|
|
threads: split up OS-dependent thread-condition code
|
|
20d078df
|
2016-06-20T19:48:19
|
|
threads: remove unused function pthread_cond_broadcast
|
|
1c135405
|
2016-06-20T17:07:14
|
|
threads: split up OS-dependent mutex code
|