src/submodule.h


Log

Author Commit Date CI Message
lhchavez 6cd0c853 2020-12-11T05:08:45 Small refactor to make thing tidier Also repurposed an unused function and deleted another one.
lhchavez 41da4e16 2020-12-10T19:52:01 Cache the parsed submodule config when diffing This change makes that anything that calls `git_diff__from_iterators` (any of the `git_diff_xxx` functions) only need to parse the `.gitmodules` file once. This can be avoided by calling `git_repository_submodule_cache_all(...)`, but we can do that safely for the user with no change in semantics. Fixes: #5725
Patrick Steinhardt e54343a4 2019-06-29T09:17:32 fileops: rename to "futils.h" to match function signatures Our file utils functions all have a "futils" prefix, e.g. `git_futils_touch`. One would thus naturally guess that their definitions and implementation would live in files "futils.h" and "futils.c", respectively, but in fact they live in "fileops.h". Rename the files to match expectations.
Carlos Martín Nieto 91a4849d 2018-05-24T19:00:13 submodule: the repostiory for _name_is_valid should not be const We might modify caches due to us trying to load the configuration to figure out what kinds of filesystem protections we should have.
Carlos Martín Nieto 6b15ceac 2018-04-30T13:47:15 submodule: ignore submodules which include path traversal in their name If the we decide that the "name" of the submodule (i.e. its path inside `.git/modules/`) is trying to escape that directory or otherwise trick us, we ignore the configuration for that submodule. This leaves us with a half-configured submodule when looking it up by path, but it's the same result as if the configuration really were missing. The name check is potentially more strict than it needs to be, but it lets us re-use the check we're doing for the checkout. The function that encapsulates this logic is ready to be exported but we don't want to do that in a security release so it remains internal for now.
Patrick Steinhardt 0c7f49dd 2017-06-30T13:39:01 Make sure to always include "common.h" first Next to including several files, our "common.h" header also declares various macros which are then used throughout the project. As such, we have to make sure to always include this file first in all implementation files. Otherwise, we might encounter problems or even silent behavioural differences due to macros or defines not being defined as they should be. So in fact, our header and implementation files should make sure to always include "common.h" first. This commit does so by establishing a common include pattern. Header files inside of "src" will now always include "common.h" as its first other file, separated by a newline from all the other includes to make it stand out as special. There are two cases for the implementation files. If they do have a matching header file, they will always include this one first, leading to "common.h" being transitively included as first file. If they do not have a matching header file, they instead include "common.h" as first file themselves. This fixes the outlined problems and will become our standard practice for header and source files inside of the "src/" from now on.
Brock Peabody 4d99c4cf 2016-11-23T18:32:48 Allow for caching of submodules. Added `git_repository_submodule_cache_all` to initialze a cache of submodules on the repository so that operations looking up N submodules are O(N) and not O(N^2). Added a `git_repository_submodule_cache_clear` function to remove the cache. Also optimized the function that loads all submodules as it was itself O(N^2) w.r.t the number of submodules, having to loop through the `.gitmodules` file once per submodule. I changed it to process the `.gitmodules` file once, into a map. Signed-off-by: David Turner <dturner@twosigma.com>
Carlos Martín Nieto c4e3a3db 2015-05-09T11:22:57 submodule: handle writing out all enum values for settings We currently do not handle those enum values which require us to set "true" or unset variables in all cases. Use a common function which does understand this by looking at our mapping directly.
Carlos Martín Nieto dfda2f68 2015-04-27T19:27:29 submodule: remove the per-repo cache Having this cache and giving them out goes against our multithreading guarantees and it makes it impossible to use submodules in a multi-threaded environment, as any thread can ask for a refresh which may reallocate some string in the submodule struct which we've accessed in a different one via a getter. This makes the submodules behave more like remotes, where each object is created upon request and not shared except explicitly by the user. This means that some tests won't pass yet, as they assume they can affect the submodule objects in the cache and that will affect later operations.
Carlos Martín Nieto 624c949f 2015-06-20T16:17:28 index: make relative comparison use the checksum as well This is used by the submodule in order to figure out if the index has changed since it last read it. Using a timestamp is racy, so let's make it use the checksum, just like we now do for reloading the index itself.
Russell Belfer db0e7878 2014-03-28T16:50:49 Make submodule refresh a bit smarter This makes submodule cache refresh actually look at the timestamps from the data sources for submodules and reload as needed if they have changed since the last refresh.
Russell Belfer 69b6ffc4 2014-03-28T14:02:21 Make a real submodule cache object This takes the old submodule cache which was just a git_strmap and makes a real git_submodule_cache object that can contain other things like a lock and timestamp-ish data to control refreshing of submodule info.
Russell Belfer 7dcd42a5 2014-03-31T13:31:01 Cleanups
Russell Belfer 945c92a5 2014-03-31T12:26:46 Add faster git_submodule__is_submodule check
Russell Belfer 591e8295 2014-03-25T16:52:01 Fix submodule leaks and invalid references This cleans up some places I missed that could hold onto submodule references and cleans up the way in which the repository cache is both reloaded and released so that existing submodule references aren't destroyed inappropriately.
Russell Belfer a15c7802 2014-03-25T09:14:48 Make submodules externally refcounted `git_submodule` objects were already refcounted internally in case the submodule name was different from the path at which it was stored. This makes that refcounting externally used as well, so `git_submodule_lookup` and `git_submodule_add_setup` return an object that requires a `git_submodule_free` when done.
Russell Belfer c0644c3f 2014-01-28T11:45:06 Make submodule fetchRecurse match other options This removes the fetchRecurse compiler warnings and makes the behavior match the other submodule options (i.e. the in-memory setting can be reset to the on-disk value).
Robert Konrad 10311979 2014-01-02T03:14:03 Read the submodule branch option from Git 1.8.2.
Linquize fccadba2 2013-12-29T10:26:21 Accept 'submodule.*.fetchRecurseSubmodules' config 'on-demand' value
Russell Belfer f9775a37 2013-06-29T23:22:31 Add ignore_submodules to diff options This adds correct support for an equivalent to --ignore-submodules in diff, where an actual ignore value can be passed to diff to override the per submodule settings in the configuration. This required tweaking the constants for ignore values so that zero would not be used and could represent an unset option to the diff. This was an opportunity to move the submodule values into include/git2/types.h and to rename the poorly named DEFAULT values for ignore and update constants to RESET instead. Now the GIT_DIFF_IGNORE_SUBMODULES flag is exactly the same as setting the ignore_submodules option to GIT_SUBMODULE_IGNORE_ALL (which is actually a minor change from the old behavior in that submodules will now be treated as UNMODIFIED deltas instead of being left out totally - if you set GIT_DIFF_INCLUDE_UNMODIFIED). This includes tests for the various new settings.
Russell Belfer e807860f 2013-06-27T16:52:38 Add timestamp check to submodule status This is probably not the final form of this change, but this is a preliminary version of checking a timestamp to see if the cached working directory HEAD OID matches the current. Right now, this uses the timestamp on the index and is, like most of our timestamp checking, subject to having only second accuracy.
Russell Belfer 1aad6137 2013-06-29T13:16:33 Submodule status improvements This fixes the way that submodule status is checked to bypass just about all of the caching in the submodule object. Based on the ignore value, it will try to do the minimum work necessary to find the current status of the submodule - but it will actually go to disk to get all of the current values. This also removes the custom refcounting stuff in favor of the common git_refcount style. Right now, it is still for internal purposes only, but it should make it easier to add true submodule refcounting in the future with a public git_submodule_free call that will allow bindings not to worry about the submodule object getting freed from underneath them.
Edward Thomson 359fc2d2 2013-01-08T17:07:25 update copyrights
Russell Belfer 5f4a61ae 2012-08-09T19:43:25 Working implementation of git_submodule_status This is a big redesign of the git_submodule_status API and the implementation of the redesigned API. It also fixes a number of bugs that I found in other parts of the submodule API while writing the tests for the status part. This also fixes a couple of bugs in the iterators that had not been noticed before - one with iterating when there is a gitlink (i.e. separate-work-dir) and one where I was treating anything even vaguely submodule-like as a submodule, more aggressively than core git does.
Russell Belfer aa13bf05 2012-08-02T13:00:58 Major submodule rewrite This replaces the old submodule API with a new extended API that supports most of the things that can be done with `git submodule`.