src/win32/path_w32.c


Log

Author Commit Date CI Message
Edward Thomson f63a1b72 2015-04-29T17:23:02 git_path_diriter: use FindFirstFile in win32 Using FindFirstFile and FindNextFile in win32 allows us to use the directory information that is returned, instead of us having to get the file attributes all over again, which is a distinct cost savings on win32.
Edward Thomson 35c1d207 2015-04-29T14:03:20 git_win32_path_dirload_with_stat: removed
Edward Thomson 544139f5 2015-04-28T16:39:47 win32: keep full path for realpath usage
Edward Thomson c074d7a4 2015-04-28T12:24:08 win32: mimic git_path_dirload_with_stat closely
Edward Thomson b3f6cef0 2015-04-28T11:16:42 dirload: loop conditional; less path mangling
Edward Thomson e05531dd 2015-04-27T18:02:06 win32 dirload: don't heap allocate DIR structure
Edward Thomson f3c444b8 2015-04-27T17:47:51 win32: abstract file attributes -> struct stat fn
J Wyman 1920ee4e 2015-03-26T18:10:24 Improvements to status performance on Windows. Changed win32/path_w32.c to utilize NTFS' FindFirst..FindNext data instead of doing an lstat per file. Avoiding unnecessary directory opens and file scans reduces IO, improving overall performance. Effect is magnified due to NTFS being a kernel mode file system (as opposed to user mode).
Edward Thomson a64119e3 2014-11-25T18:13:00 checkout: disallow bad paths on win32 Disallow: 1. paths with trailing dot 2. paths with trailing space 3. paths with trailing colon 4. paths that are 8.3 short names of .git folders ("GIT~1") 5. paths that are reserved path names (COM1, LPT1, etc). 6. paths with reserved DOS characters (colons, asterisks, etc) These paths would (without \\?\ syntax) be elided to other paths - for example, ".git." would be written as ".git". As a result, writing these paths literally (using \\?\ syntax) makes them hard to operate with from the shell, Windows Explorer or other tools. Disallow these.
Edward Thomson cceae9a2 2014-12-01T13:09:58 win32: use NT-prefixed "\\?\" paths When turning UTF-8 paths into UCS-2 paths for Windows, always use the \\?\-prefixed paths. Because this bypasses the system's path canonicalization, handle the canonicalization functions ourselves. We must: 1. always use a backslash as a directory separator 2. only use a single backslash between directories 3. not rely on the system to translate "." and ".." in paths 4. remove trailing backslashes, except at the drive root (C:\)