|
a1ef995d
|
2019-02-21T10:33:30
|
|
indexer: use git_indexer_progress throughout
Update internal usage of `git_transfer_progress` to
`git_indexer_progreses`.
|
|
9fd9126e
|
2019-01-30T21:19:18
|
|
docs: minor changes
|
|
f6412c26
|
2019-01-15T13:35:41
|
|
transport: enhance documentation
|
|
22d2062d
|
2019-01-09T18:25:10
|
|
Introduce GIT_CALLBACK macro to enforce cdecl
Since we now always build the library with cdecl calling conventions,
our callbacks should be decorated as such so that users will not be able
to provide callbacks defined with other calling conventions.
The `GIT_CALLBACK` macro will inject the `__cdecl` attribute as
appropriate.
|
|
8ee10098
|
2018-11-06T13:10:30
|
|
transport: see if cert/cred callbacks exist before calling them
Custom transports may want to ask libgit2 to invoke a configured
credential or certificate callback; however they likely do not know if a
callback was actually configured. Return a sentinal value
(GIT_PASSTHROUGH) if there is no callback configured instead of crashing.
|
|
5c760960
|
2017-04-17T13:03:03
|
|
transport: provide a getter for the proxy options
As with the callbacks, third-party implementations of smart subtransports cannot
reach into the opaque struct and thus cannot know what options the user set.
Add a getter for these options to copy the proxy options into something external
implementors can use.
|
|
07bd3e57
|
2015-05-07T12:57:56
|
|
proxy: ask the user for credentials if necessary
|
|
bf28da47
|
2015-10-30T14:12:19
|
|
Fix build for custom transport users
We should explicitly include the declaration of git_strarray
from "include/git2/sys/transport.h"
|
|
4f2b6093
|
2015-09-08T13:53:41
|
|
Tell the git_transport about the custom_headers
|
|
47ed7e5a
|
2015-08-18T20:55:59
|
|
transport: provide a way to get the callbacks
libgit2 implementations of smart subtransports can simply reach through
the structure, but external implementors cannot.
Add these two functions as a way for the smart subtransports to get the
callbacks as set by the user.
|
|
058b753c
|
2015-04-22T15:45:21
|
|
remote: move the transport ctor to the callbacks
Instead of having it set in a different place from every other callback,
put it the main structure. This removes some state from the remote and
makes it behave more like clone, where the constructors are passed via
the options.
|
|
8f0104ec
|
2015-04-21T22:10:36
|
|
Remove the callbacks struct from the remote
Having the setting be different from calling its actions was not a great
idea and made for the sake of the wrong convenience.
Instead of that, accept either fetch options, push options or the
callbacks when dealing with the remote. The fetch options are currently
only the callbacks, but more options will be moved from setters and
getters on the remote to the options.
This does mean passing the same struct along the different functions but
the typical use-case will only call git_remote_fetch() or
git_remote_push() and so won't notice much difference.
|
|
142e5379
|
2015-03-17T12:49:33
|
|
Add a custom param to git_smart_subtransport_definition
The smart transport has already take the payload param. For the
sub transport a payload param is useful for the implementer.
|
|
a295bd2d
|
2014-12-06T03:36:18
|
|
doc: add documentation to all the public structs and enums
This makes them show up in the reference, even if the text itself isn't
the most descriptive.
These have been found with
grep -Przon '\n\ntypedef struct.*?\{' -- include
grep -Przon '\n\ntypedef enum.*?\{' -- include
|
|
b874629b
|
2014-12-04T21:06:59
|
|
Spelling fixes
|
|
41698f22
|
2014-09-11T10:04:05
|
|
net: remove support for outright ignoring certificates
This option make it easy to ignore anything about the server we're
connecting to, which is bad security practice. This was necessary as we
didn't use to expose detailed information about the certificate, but now
that we do, we should get rid of this.
If the user wants to ignore everything, they can still provide a
callback which ignores all the information passed.
|
|
9b940586
|
2014-07-04T12:45:43
|
|
Provide a callback for certificate validation
If the certificate validation fails (or always in the case of ssh),
let the user decide whether to allow the connection.
The data structure passed to the user is the native certificate
information from the underlying implementation, namely OpenSSL or
WinHTTP.
|
|
c180c065
|
2014-07-09T17:58:39
|
|
Custom transport: minor cleanups
* Move the transport registration mechanisms into a new header under
'sys/' because this is advanced stuff.
* Remove the 'priority' argument from the registration as it adds
unnecessary complexity. (Since transports cannot decline to operate,
only the highest priority transport is ever executed.) Users who
require per-priority transports can implement that in their custom
transport themselves.
* Simplify registration further by taking a scheme (eg "http") instead
of a prefix (eg "http://").
|