|
31d9c24b
|
2021-05-06T16:32:14
|
|
filter: internal git_buf filter handling function
Introduce `git_filter_list__convert_buf` which behaves like the old
implementation of `git_filter_list__apply_data`, where it might move the
input data buffer over into the output data buffer space for efficiency.
This new implementation will do so in a more predictible way, always
freeing the given input buffer (either moving it to the output buffer or
filtering it into the output buffer first).
Convert internal users to it.
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|
4ae41f9c
|
2020-08-02T16:26:25
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|
Make the odb race-free
This change adds all the necessary locking to the odb to avoid races in
the backends.
Part of: #5592
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|
931fd6b0
|
2020-04-05T17:29:13
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|
odb: use GIT_ASSERT
|
|
cc1d7f5c
|
2020-08-01T17:47:20
|
|
Improve the support of atomics
This change:
* Starts using GCC's and clang's `__atomic_*` intrinsics instead of the
`__sync_*` ones, since the former supercede the latter (and can be
safely replaced by their equivalent `__atomic_*` version with the
sequentially consistent model).
* Makes `git_atomic64`'s value `volatile`. Otherwise, this will make
ThreadSanitizer complain.
* Adds ways to load the values from atomics. As it turns out,
unsynchronized read are okay only in some architectures, but if we
want to be correct (and make ThreadSanitizer happy), those loads
should also be performed with the atomic builtins.
* Fixes two ThreadSanitizer warnings, as a proof-of-concept that this
works:
- Avoid directly accessing `git_refcount`'s `owner` directly, and
instead makes all callers go through the `GIT_REFCOUNT_*()` macros,
which also use the atomic utilities.
- Makes `pool_system_page_size()` race-free.
Part of: #5592
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|
3a197ea7
|
2020-06-27T12:33:32
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|
Make the tests pass cleanly with MemorySanitizer
This change:
* Initializes a few variables that were being read before being
initialized.
* Includes https://github.com/madler/zlib/pull/393. As such,
it only works reliably with `-DUSE_BUNDLED_ZLIB=ON`.
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|
c6184f0c
|
2020-06-08T21:07:36
|
|
tree-wide: do not compile deprecated functions with hard deprecation
When compiling libgit2 with -DDEPRECATE_HARD, we add a preprocessor
definition `GIT_DEPRECATE_HARD` which causes the "git2/deprecated.h"
header to be empty. As a result, no function declarations are made
available to callers, but the implementations are still available to
link against. This has the problem that function declarations also
aren't visible to the implementations, meaning that the symbol's
visibility will not be set up correctly. As a result, the resulting
library may not expose those deprecated symbols at all on some platforms
and thus cause linking errors.
Fix the issue by conditionally compiling deprecated functions, only.
While it becomes impossible to link against such a library in case one
uses deprecated functions, distributors of libgit2 aren't expected to
pass -DDEPRECATE_HARD anyway. Instead, users of libgit2 should manually
define GIT_DEPRECATE_HARD to hide deprecated functions. Using "real"
hard deprecation still makes sense in the context of CI to test we don't
use deprecated symbols ourselves and in case a dependant uses libgit2 in
a vendored way and knows it won't ever use any of the deprecated symbols
anyway.
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|
fb2198db
|
2019-06-23T16:23:59
|
|
futils_filesize: use `uint64_t` for object size
Instead of using a signed type (`off_t`) use `uint64_t` for the maximum
size of files.
|
|
bed9fc6b
|
2019-06-23T15:16:47
|
|
odb: use `git_object_size_t` for object size
Instead of using a signed type (`off_t`) use a new `git_object_size_t`
for the sizes of objects.
|
|
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.
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|
658022c4
|
2019-07-18T13:53:41
|
|
configuration: cvar -> configmap
`cvar` is an unhelpful name. Refactor its usage to `configmap` for more
clarity.
|
|
9f723c97
|
2019-06-26T14:49:37
|
|
docs: fixups
|
|
5d92e547
|
2019-06-08T17:28:35
|
|
oid: `is_zero` instead of `iszero`
The only function that is named `issomething` (without underscore) was
`git_oid_iszero`. Rename it to `git_oid_is_zero` for consistency with
the rest of the library.
|
|
459ac856
|
2019-02-23T18:42:53
|
|
odb: provide a free function for custom backends
Custom backends can allocate memory when reading objects and providing
them to libgit2. However, if an error occurs in the custom backend
after the memory has been allocated for the custom object but before
it's returned to libgit2, the custom backend has no way to free that
memory and it must be leaked.
Provide a free function that corresponds to the alloc function so that
custom backends have an opportunity to free memory before they return an
error.
|
|
790aae77
|
2019-02-23T18:40:43
|
|
odb: rename git_odb_backend_malloc for consistency
The `git_odb_backend_malloc` name is a system function that is provided
for custom ODB backends and allows them to allocate memory for an ODB
object in the read callback. This is important so that libgit2 can
later free the memory used by an ODB object that was read from the
custom backend.
However, the name _suggests_ that it actually allocates a
`git_odb_backend`. It does not; rename it to make it clear that it
actually allocates backend _data_.
|
|
a1ef995d
|
2019-02-21T10:33:30
|
|
indexer: use git_indexer_progress throughout
Update internal usage of `git_transfer_progress` to
`git_indexer_progreses`.
|
|
bbdcd450
|
2019-02-20T10:40:06
|
|
cache: fix misnaming of `git_cache_free`
Functions that free a structure's contents but not the structure
itself shall be named `dispose` in the libgit2 project, but the
function `git_cache_free` does not follow this naming pattern.
Fix this by renaming it to `git_cache_dispose` and adjusting all
callers to make use of the new name.
|
|
6b3730d4
|
2019-02-16T19:55:30
|
|
Fix a memory leak in odb_otype_fast()
This change frees a copy of a cached object in odb_otype_fast().
|
|
dd45539d
|
2019-02-16T22:06:58
|
|
Fix a _very_ improbable memory leak in git_odb_new()
This change fixes a mostly theoretical memory leak in got_odb_new()
that can only manifest if git_cache_init() fails due to running out of
memory or not being able to acquire its lock.
|
|
c6cac733
|
2019-01-20T22:40:38
|
|
blob: validate that blob sizes fit in a size_t
Our blob size is a `git_off_t`, which is a signed 64 bit int. This may
be erroneously negative or larger than `SIZE_MAX`. Ensure that the blob
size fits into a `size_t` before casting.
|
|
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.
|
|
f7416509
|
2019-01-20T20:15:31
|
|
Fix odb foreach to also close on positive error code
In include/git2/odb.h it states that callback can also return
positive value which should break looping.
Implementations of git_odb_foreach() and pack_backend__foreach()
did not respect that.
|
|
b2c2dc64
|
2019-01-19T01:36:40
|
|
Merge pull request #4940 from libgit2/ethomson/git_obj
More `git_obj` to `git_object` updates
|
|
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`.
|
|
7b453e7e
|
2019-01-05T22:12:48
|
|
Fix a bunch of warnings
This change fixes a bunch of warnings that were discovered by compiling
with `clang -target=i386-pc-linux-gnu`. It turned out that the
intrinsics were not necessarily being used in all platforms! Especially
in GCC, since it does not support __has_builtin.
Some more warnings were gleaned from the Windows build, but I stopped
when I saw that some third-party dependencies (e.g. zlib) have warnings
of their own, so we might never be able to enable -Werror there.
|
|
168fe39b
|
2018-11-28T14:26:57
|
|
object_type: use new enumeration names
Use the new object_type enumeration names within the codebase.
|
|
0fcd0563
|
2018-08-06T12:00:21
|
|
odb: fix use of wrong printf formatters
The `git_odb_stream` members `declared_size` and `received_bytes` are
both of the type `git_off_t`, which we usually defined to be a 64 bit
signed integer. Thus, passing these members to "PRIdZ" formatters is not
correct, as they are not guaranteed to accept big enough numbers.
Instead, use the "PRId64" formatter, which is able to represent 64 bit
signed integers.
|
|
ecf4f33a
|
2018-02-08T11:14:48
|
|
Convert usage of `git_buf_free` to new `git_buf_dispose`
|
|
a52b4c51
|
2018-03-23T09:59:46
|
|
odb: fix writing to fake write streams
In commit 7ec7aa4a7 (odb: assert on logic errors when writing objects,
2018-02-01), the check for whether we are trying to overflowing the fake
stream buffer was changed from returning an error to raising an assert.
The conversion forgot though that the logic around `assert`s are
basically inverted. Previously, if the statement
stream->written + len > steram->size
evaluated to true, we would return a `-1`. Now we are asserting that
this statement is true, and in case it is not we will raise an error. So
the conversion to the `assert` in fact changed the behaviour to the
complete opposite intention.
Fix the assert by inverting its condition again and add a regression
test.
|
|
a43bcd2c
|
2018-02-09T17:31:50
|
|
odb: fix memory leaks due to not freeing hash context
|
|
619f61a8
|
2018-02-01T06:22:36
|
|
odb: error when we can't create object header
Return an error to the caller when we can't create an object header for
some reason (printf failure) instead of simply asserting.
|
|
7ec7aa4a
|
2018-02-01T05:54:57
|
|
odb: assert on logic errors when writing objects
There's no recovery possible if we're so confused or corrupted that
we're trying to overwrite our memory. Simply assert.
|
|
138e4c2b
|
2018-02-01T06:35:31
|
|
git_odb__hashfd: propagate error on failures
|
|
35ed256b
|
2018-02-01T05:11:05
|
|
git_odb__hashobj: provide errors messages on failures
Provide error messages on hash failures: assert when given invalid
input instead of failing with a user error; provide error messages
on program errors.
|
|
59d99adc
|
2018-01-31T09:34:52
|
|
odb: check for alloc errors on hardcoded objects
It's unlikely that we'll fail to allocate a single byte, but let's check
for allocation failures for good measure. Untangle `-1` being a marker
of not having found the hardcoded odb object; use that to reflect actual
errors.
|
|
ef902864
|
2018-01-31T09:30:51
|
|
odb: error when we can't alloc an object
At the moment, we're swallowing the allocation failure. We need to
return the error to the caller.
|
|
97f9a5f0
|
2017-12-17T01:12:49
|
|
odb: provide length and type with streaming read
The streaming read functionality should provide the length and the type
of the object, like the normal read functionality does.
|
|
275f103d
|
2018-01-12T08:59:40
|
|
odb: reject reading and writing null OIDs
The null OID (hash with all zeroes) indicates a missing object in
upstream git and is thus not a valid object ID. Add defensive
measurements to avoid writing such a hash to the object database in the
very unlikely case where some data results in the null OID. Furthermore,
add shortcuts when reading the null OID from the ODB to avoid ever
returning an object when a faulty repository may contain the null OID.
|
|
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.
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|
cb3010c5
|
2017-06-12T12:56:40
|
|
odb_read_prefix: reset error in backends loop
When looking for an object by prefix, we query all the backends so that
we can ensure that there is no ambiguity. We need to reset the `error`
value between backends; otherwise the first backend may find an object
by prefix, but subsequent backends may not. If we do not reset the
`error` value then it will remain at `GIT_ENOTFOUND` and `read_prefix_1`
will fail, despite having actually found an object.
|
|
8d93a11c
|
2017-05-03T12:38:55
|
|
odb: fix printf formatter for git_off_t
The fields `declared_size` and `received_bytes` of the `git_odb_stream`
are both of type `git_off_t` which is defined as a signed integer. When
passing these values to a printf-style string in
`git_odb_stream__invalid_length`, though, we format these as PRIuZ,
which is unsigned.
Fix the issue by using PRIdZ instead, silencing warnings on macOS.
|
|
7776db51
|
2017-05-03T12:15:12
|
|
odb: shut up gcc warnings regarding uninitilized variables
The `error` variable is used as a return value in the out-section of
both `odb_read_1` and `read_prefix_1`. While the value will actually
always be initialized inside of this section, GCC fails to realize this
due to interactions with the `found` variable: if `found` is set, the
error will always be initialized. If it is not, we return early without
reaching the out-statements.
Shut up the warnings by initializing the error variable, even though it
is unnecessary.
|
|
e0973bc0
|
2017-04-28T14:05:15
|
|
odb: verify hashes in read_prefix_1
While the function reading an object from the complete OID already
verifies OIDs, we do not yet do so for reading objects from a partial
OID. Do so when strict OID verification is enabled.
|
|
14109620
|
2017-04-28T14:03:54
|
|
odb: improve error handling in read_prefix_1
The read_prefix_1 function has several return statements springled
throughout the code. As we have to free memory upon getting an error,
the free code has to be repeated at every single retrun -- which it is
not, so we have a memory leak here.
Refactor the code to use the typical `goto out` pattern, which will free
data when an error has occurred. While we're at it, we can also improve
the error message thrown when multiple ambiguous prefixes are found. It
will now include the colliding prefixes.
|
|
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.
|
|
6fd6c678
|
2017-03-22T20:29:22
|
|
Merge pull request #4030 from libgit2/ethomson/fsync
fsync all the things
|
|
52d03f37
|
2017-03-03T13:26:29
|
|
git_commit_create: freshen tree objects in commit
Freshen the tree object that a commit points to during commit time.
|
|
1c04a96b
|
2017-02-28T12:29:29
|
|
Honor `core.fsyncObjectFiles`
|
|
909d5494
|
2016-12-29T12:25:15
|
|
giterr_set: consistent error messages
Error messages should be sentence fragments, and therefore:
1. Should not begin with a capital letter,
2. Should not conclude with punctuation, and
3. Should not end a sentence and begin a new one
|
|
901434b0
|
2016-11-14T10:07:37
|
|
common: cast precision specifiers to int
|
|
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).
|
|
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.
|
|
20302aa4
|
2016-06-25T23:33:05
|
|
Merge pull request #3223 from ethomson/apply
Reading patch files
|
|
2076d329
|
2016-06-09T22:50:53
|
|
fix error message SHA truncation in git_odb__error_notfound()
|
|
6a2d2f8a
|
2015-06-17T06:42:20
|
|
delta: move delta application to delta.c
Move the delta application functions into `delta.c`, next to the
similar delta creation functions. Make the `git__delta_apply`
functions adhere to other naming and parameter style within the
library.
|
|
1bbcb2b2
|
2016-03-09T17:47:53
|
|
odb: Try to lookup headers in all backends before passthrough
|
|
e78d2ac9
|
2016-03-09T16:41:08
|
|
odb: Refactor `git_odb_expand_ids`
|
|
4416aa77
|
2016-03-09T11:29:46
|
|
odb: Implement new helper to read types without refreshing
|
|
9a786650
|
2016-03-09T11:00:27
|
|
odb: Handle corner cases in `git_odb_expand_ids`
The old implementation had two issues:
1. OIDs that were too short as to be ambiguous were not being handled
properly.
2. If the last OID to expand in the array was missing from the ODB, we
would leak a `GIT_ENOTFOUND` error code from the function.
|
|
62484f52
|
2016-03-08T14:09:55
|
|
git_odb_expand_ids: accept git_odb_expand_id array
Take (and write to) an array of a struct, `git_odb_expand_id`.
|
|
4b1f0f79
|
2016-03-08T11:44:21
|
|
git_odb_expand_ids: rename func, return the type
|
|
6c04269c
|
2016-03-04T00:50:35
|
|
git_odb_exists_many_prefixes: query odb for multiple short ids
Query the object database for multiple objects at a time, given their
object ID (which may be abbreviated) and optional type.
|
|
e10144ae
|
2016-03-04T01:18:30
|
|
odb: improved not found error messages
When looking up an abbreviated oid, show the actual (abbreviated) oid
the caller passed instead of a full (but ambiguously truncated) oid.
|
|
a0a1b19a
|
2015-10-14T19:31:54
|
|
odb: Prioritize alternate backends
For most real use cases, repositories with alternates use them as main
object storage. Checking the alternate for objects before the main
repository should result in measurable speedups.
Because of this, we're changing the sorting algorithm to prioritize
alternates *in cases where two backends have the same priority*. This
means that the pack backend for the alternate will be checked before the
pack backend for the main repository *but* both of them will be checked
before any loose backends.
|
|
43820f20
|
2015-10-14T19:24:07
|
|
odb: Be smarter when refreshing backends
In the current implementation of ODB backends, each backend is tasked
with refreshing itself after a failed lookup. This is standard Git
behavior: we want to e.g. reload the packfiles on disk in case they have
changed and that's the reason we can't find the object we're looking
for.
This behavior, however, becomes pathological in repositories where
multiple alternates have been loaded. Given that each alternate counts
as a separate backend, a miss in the main repository (which can
potentially be very frequent in cases where object storage comes from
the alternate) will result in refreshing all its packfiles before we
move on to the alternate backend where the object will most likely be
found.
To fix this, the code in `odb.c` has been refactored as to perform the
refresh of all the backends externally, once we've verified that the
object is nowhere to be found.
If the refresh is successful, we then perform the lookup sequentially
through all the backends, skipping the ones that we know for sure
weren't refreshed (because they have no refresh API).
The on-disk pack backend has been adjusted accordingly: it no longer
performs refreshes internally.
|
|
d3b29fb9
|
2015-10-01T00:50:37
|
|
refdb and odb backends must provide `free` function
As refdb and odb backends can be allocated by client code, libgit2
can’t know whether an alternative memory allocator was used, and thus
should not try to call `git__free` on those objects.
Instead, odb and refdb backend implementations must always provide
their own `free` functions to ensure memory gets freed correctly.
|
|
e5f9df7b
|
2015-06-29T21:45:04
|
|
odb: cast to long long for printf
|
|
9f3c18e2
|
2015-06-02T08:36:15
|
|
Fixed build warnings on Xcode 6.1
|
|
a6f2ceaf
|
2015-05-13T12:11:55
|
|
Merge pull request #3118 from libgit2/cmn/stream-size
odb: make the writestream's size a git_off_t
|
|
b0d7f329
|
2015-05-13T10:23:19
|
|
odb: reverse the default backend priorities
We currently first look in the loose object dir and then in the packs
for objects. When performing operations on recent history this has a
higher likelihood of hitting, but when we deal with operations which
look further back into the past, we start spending a large amount of
time getting ENOTENT from `access`.
Reversing the priorities means that long-running operations can get to
their objects faster, as we can look at the index data we have in memory
(or rather mapped) to figure out whether we have an object, which is
faster than going out to the filesystem.
The packed backend already implements an optimistic read algorithm by
first looking at the packs we know about and only going out to disk to
referesh if the object is not found which means that in the case where
we do have the object (which will be in the majority for anything that
traverses the graph) we can avoid going to to disk entirely to determine
whether an object exists.
Operations which look at recent history may take a slight impact, but
these would be operations which look a lot less at object and thus take
less time regardless.
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|
77b339f7
|
2015-05-12T13:06:33
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odb: make the writestream's size a git_off_t
Restricting files to size_t is a silly limitation. The loose backend
writes to a file directly, so there is no issue in using 63 bits for the
size.
We still assume that the header is going to fit in 64 bytes, which does
mean quite a bit smaller files due to the run-length encoding, but it's
still a much larger size than you would want Git to handle.
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7dd22538
|
2015-05-11T10:19:25
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|
centralizing all IO buffer size values
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|
f1453c59
|
2015-02-12T12:19:37
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|
Make our overflow check look more like gcc/clang's
Make our overflow checking look more like gcc and clang's, so that
we can substitute it out with the compiler instrinsics on platforms
that support it. This means dropping the ability to pass `NULL` as
an out parameter.
As a result, the macros also get updated to reflect this as well.
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15d54fdd
|
2015-02-10T22:34:03
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|
odb__hashlink: check st.st_size before casting
|
|
392702ee
|
2015-02-09T23:41:13
|
|
allocations: test for overflow of requested size
Introduce some helper macros to test integer overflow from arithmetic
and set error message appropriately.
|
|
c251f3bb
|
2014-12-08T16:05:47
|
|
win32: remember to cleanup our hash_ctx
|
|
e0156651
|
2014-11-21T13:50:46
|
|
odb: `git_odb_object` contents are never NULL
This is a contract that we made in the library and that we need to uphold. The
contents of a blob can never be NULL because several parts of the library (including
the filter and attributes code) expect `git_blob_rawcontent` to always return a
valid pointer.
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|
e1ac0101
|
2014-11-08T14:40:53
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|
odb: hardcode the empty blob and tree
git hardocodes these as objects which exist regardless of whether they
are in the odb and uses them in the shell interface as a way of
expressing the lack of a blob or tree for one side of e.g. a diff.
In the library we use each language's natural way of declaring a lack of
value which makes a workaround like this unnecessary. Since git uses it,
it does however mean each shell application would need to perform this
check themselves.
This makes it common work across a range of applications and an issue
with compatibility with git, which fits right into what the library aims
to provide.
Thus we introduce the hard-coded empty blob and tree in the odb
frontend. These hard-coded objects are checked for before going to the
backends, but after the cache check, which means the second time they're
used, they will be treated as normal cached objects instead of creating
new ones.
|
|
530594c0
|
2014-05-23T05:53:41
|
|
odb: clear backend errors on successful read
We go through the different backends in order, so it's not an error if
at least one of the backends has the data we want.
|
|
bc91347b
|
2014-04-30T11:16:31
|
|
Fix remaining init_options inconsistencies
There were a couple of "init_opts()" functions a few more cases
of structure initialization that I somehow missed.
|
|
48e60ae7
|
2014-04-21T11:23:29
|
|
Don't redefine the same callback types, their signatures may change
|
|
3ab57816
|
2014-03-31T23:23:32
|
|
Merge pull request #2178 from libgit2/rb/fix-short-id
Fix git_odb_short_id and git_odb_exists_prefix bugs
|
|
31a14982
|
2014-03-21T17:36:34
|
|
Fix wrong assertion
Fixes issue #2196
|
|
89499078
|
2014-03-10T10:53:39
|
|
Fix a number of git_odb_exists_prefix bugs
The git_odb_exists_prefix API was not dealing correctly when a
later backend returned GIT_ENOTFOUND even if an earlier backend
had found the object.
Additionally, the unit tests were not properly exercising the API
and had a couple mistakes in checking the results.
Lastly, since the backends are not expected to behavior correctly
unless all bytes of the short id are zero except for the prefix,
this makes the ODB prefix APIs explicitly clear out the extra
bytes so the user doesn't have to be as careful.
|
|
b9f81997
|
2014-03-05T21:49:23
|
|
Added function-based initializers for every options struct.
The basic structure of each function is courtesy of arrbee.
|
|
a064dc2d
|
2014-03-06T00:47:05
|
|
Merge pull request #2159 from libgit2/rb/odb-exists-prefix
Add ODB API to check for existence by prefix and object id shortener
|
|
26875825
|
2014-03-05T13:06:22
|
|
Check short OID len in odb, not in backends
|
|
7bd2f401
|
2014-03-05T11:35:47
|
|
ODB writing fails gracefully when unsupported
If no ODB backends support writing, we should fail gracefully.
|
|
f5753999
|
2014-03-04T15:34:23
|
|
Add exists_prefix to ODB backend and ODB API
|
|
ae3b6d61
|
2014-01-12T23:31:13
|
|
odb: handle NULL pointers passed to git_odb_stream_free
Signed-off-by: Brodie Rao <brodie@sf.io>
|
|
dd64c71c
|
2013-11-04T14:50:25
|
|
Allow backend consumers to specify file mode
|
|
5c50f22a
|
2013-10-28T09:25:44
|
|
Merge pull request #1891 from libgit2/cmn/fix-thin-packs
Add support for thin packs
|
|
98fec8a9
|
2013-10-22T16:05:47
|
|
Implement `git_odb_object_dup`
|
|
0b33fca0
|
2013-10-02T13:39:35
|
|
indexer: fix thin packs
When given an ODB from which to read objects, the indexer will attempt
to inject the missing bases at the end of the pack and update the
header and trailer to reflect the new contents.
|
|
92d19d16
|
2013-09-21T09:34:03
|
|
Merge pull request #1840 from linquize/warning
Fix warning
|
|
66566516
|
2013-09-08T17:15:42
|
|
Fix warning
|
|
a9f51e43
|
2013-09-11T22:00:36
|
|
Merge git_buf and git_buffer
This makes the git_buf struct that was used internally into an
externally available structure and eliminates the git_buffer.
As part of that, some of the special cases that arose with the
externally used git_buffer were blended into the git_buf, such as
being careful about git_buf objects that may have a NULL ptr and
allowing for bufs with a valid ptr and size but zero asize as a
way of referring to externally owned data.
|
|
2a7d224f
|
2013-09-10T16:33:32
|
|
Extend public filter api with filter lists
This moves the git_filter_list into the public API so that users
can create, apply, and dispose of filter lists. This allows more
granular application of filters to user data outside of libgit2
internals.
This also converts all the internal usage of filters to the public
APIs along with a few small tweaks to make it easier to use the
public git_buffer stuff alongside the internal git_buf.
|
|
85d54812
|
2013-08-28T16:44:04
|
|
Create public filter object and use it
This creates include/sys/filter.h with a basic definition of a
git_filter and then converts the internal code to use it. There
are related internal objects (git_filter_list) that we will want
to publish at some point, but this is a first step.
|
|
8cf80525
|
2013-09-11T20:13:59
|
|
errors: Fix format of some error messages
|