|
14f6950b
|
2021-05-10T23:14:17
|
|
buf: bom enum is in the buf namespace
Instead of a `git_bom_t` that a `git_buf` function returns, let's keep
it `git_buf_bom_t`.
|
|
d525e063
|
2021-05-10T23:04:59
|
|
buf: remove internal `git_buf_text` namespace
The `git_buf_text` namespace is unnecessary and strange. Remove it,
just keep the functions prefixed with `git_buf`.
|
|
9fb755d5
|
2021-04-04T19:59:57
|
|
attr: validate workdir paths for attribute files
We should allow attribute files - inside working directories - to have
names longer than MAX_PATH when core.longpaths is set.
`git_attr_path__init` takes a repository to validate the path with.
|
|
37763d38
|
2020-12-05T15:26:59
|
|
threads: rename git_atomic to git_atomic32
Clarify the `git_atomic` type and functions now that we have a 64 bit
version as well (`git_atomic64`).
|
|
b44b262b
|
2020-04-05T10:07:09
|
|
attr_file: use GIT_ASSERT
|
|
0f35efeb
|
2020-05-23T10:15:51
|
|
git_pool_init: handle failure cases
Propagate failures caused by pool initialization errors.
|
|
4334b177
|
2019-06-23T15:43:38
|
|
blob: 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.
|
|
4fd5748c
|
2019-07-21T14:11:03
|
|
attr: optionally read attributes from repository
When `GIT_ATTR_CHECK_INCLUDE_HEAD` is specified, read `gitattribute`
files that are checked into the repository at the HEAD revision.
|
|
f8346905
|
2019-07-12T09:03:33
|
|
attr_file: ignore macros defined in subdirectories
Right now, we are unconditionally applying all macros found in a
gitatttributes file. But quoting gitattributes(5):
Custom macro attributes can be defined only in top-level
gitattributes files ($GIT_DIR/info/attributes, the .gitattributes
file at the top level of the working tree, or the global or
system-wide gitattributes files), not in .gitattributes files in
working tree subdirectories. The built-in macro attribute "binary"
is equivalent to:
So gitattribute files in subdirectories of the working tree may
explicitly _not_ contain macro definitions, but we do not currently
enforce this limitation.
This patch introduces a new parameter to the gitattributes parser that
tells whether macros are allowed in the current file or not. If set to
`false`, we will still parse macros, but silently ignore them instead of
adding them to the list of defined macros. Update all callers to
correctly determine whether the to-be-parsed file may contain macros or
not. Most importantly, when walking up the directory hierarchy, we will
only set it to `true` once it reaches the root directory of the repo
itself.
Add a test that verifies that we are indeed not applying macros from
subdirectories. Previous to these changes, the test would've failed.
|
|
97968529
|
2019-07-05T08:05:16
|
|
attr_file: refactor `parse_buffer` function
The gitattributes code is one of our oldest and most-untouched codebases
in libgit2, and as such its code style doesn't quite match our current
best practices. Refactor the function `git_attr_file__parse_buffer` to
better match them.
|
|
dbc7e4b1
|
2019-07-05T07:53:02
|
|
attr_file: refactor `load_standalone` function
The gitattributes code is one of our oldest and most-untouched codebases
in libgit2, and as such its code style doesn't quite match our current
best practices. Refactor the function `git_attr_file__lookup_standalone`
to better match them.
|
|
1bbec26d
|
2019-07-04T11:41:21
|
|
attr_file: completely initialize attribute sessions
The function `git_attr_session__init` is currently only initializing
setting up the attribute's session key by incrementing the repo-global
key by one. Most notably, all other members of the `git_attr_session`
struct are not getting initialized at all. So if one is to allocate a
session on the stack and then calls `git_attr_session__init`, the
session will still not be fully initialized. We have fared just fine
with that until now as all users of the function have allocated the
session structure as part of bigger structs with `calloc`, and thus its
contents have been zero-initialized implicitly already.
Fix this by explicitly zeroing out the session to enable allocation of
sessions on the stack.
|
|
05f9986a
|
2019-06-14T08:06:05
|
|
attr_file: convert to use `wildmatch`
Upstream git has converted to use `wildmatch` instead of
`fnmatch`. Convert our gitattributes logic to use `wildmatch` as
the last user of `fnmatch`. Please, don't expect I know what I'm
doing here: the fnmatch parser is one of the most fun things to
play around with as it has a sh*tload of weird cases. In all
honesty, I'm simply relying on our tests that are by now rather
comprehensive in that area.
The conversion actually fixes compatibility with how git.git
parser "**" patterns when the given path does not contain any
directory separators. Previously, a pattern "**.foo" erroneously
wouldn't match a file "x.foo", while git.git would match.
Remove the new-unused LEADINGDIR/NOLEADINGDIR flags for
`git_attr_fnmatch`.
|
|
451df793
|
2019-06-13T15:20:23
|
|
posix: remove implicit include of "fnmatch.h"
We're about to phase out our bundled fnmatch implementation as
git.git has moved to wildmatch long ago in 2014. To make it
easier to spot which files are stilll using fnmatch, remove the
implicit "fnmatch.h" include in "posix.h" and instead include it
explicitly.
|
|
3b517351
|
2019-06-07T10:13:34
|
|
attr_file: remove invalid TODO comment
In our attributes pattern parsing code, we have a comment that
states we might have to convert '\' characters to '/' to have
proper POSIX paths. But in fact, '\' characters are valid inside
the string and act as escape mechanism for various characters,
which is why we never want to convert those to POSIX directory
separators. Furthermore, gitignore patterns are specified to only
treat '/' as directory separators.
Remove the comment to avoid future confusion.
|
|
b3b6a39d
|
2019-06-07T11:12:54
|
|
attr_file: account for escaped escapes when searching trailing space
When determining the trailing space length, we need to honor
whether spaces are escaped or not. Currently, we do not check
whether the escape itself is escaped, though, which might
generate an off-by-one in that case as we will simply treat the
space as escaped.
Fix this by checking whether the backslashes preceding the space
are themselves escaped.
|
|
10ac298c
|
2019-06-07T11:12:42
|
|
attr_file: fix unescaping of escapes required for fnmatch
When parsing attribute patterns, we will eventually unescape the
parsed pattern. This is required because we require custom
escapes for whitespace characters, as normally they are used to
terminate the current pattern. Thing is, we don't only unescape
those whitespace characters, but in fact all escaped sequences.
So for example if the pattern was "\*", we unescape that to "*".
As this is directly passed to fnmatch(3) later, fnmatch would
treat it as a simple glob matching all files where it should
instead only match a file with name "*".
Fix the issue by unescaping spaces, only. Add a bunch of tests to
exercise escape parsing.
|
|
eb146e58
|
2019-06-07T09:17:23
|
|
attr_file: properly handle escaped '\' when searching non-escaped spaces
When parsing attributes, we need to search for the first
unescaped whitespace character to determine where the pattern is
to be cut off. The scan fails to account for the case where the
escaping '\' character is itself escaped, though, and thus we
would not recognize the cut-off point in patterns like "\\ ".
Refactor the scanning loop to remember whether the last character
was an escape character. If it was and the next character is a
'\', too, then we will reset to non-escaped mode again. Thus, we
now handle escaped whitespaces as well as escaped wildcards
correctly.
|
|
e50d138e
|
2019-06-06T09:48:30
|
|
Merge pull request #5095 from pks-t/pks/ignore-escaped-trailing-space
ignore: handle escaped trailing whitespace
|
|
4de6eb5b
|
2019-06-06T09:47:43
|
|
Merge pull request #5074 from libgit2/ethomson/ignore_leading_slash
Ignore: only treat one leading slash as a root identifier
|
|
d81e7866
|
2019-06-06T14:11:44
|
|
ignore: handle escaped trailing whitespace
The gitignore's pattern format specifies that "Trailing spaces
are ignored unless they are quoted with backslash ("\")". We do
not honor this currently and will treat a pattern "foo\ " as if
it was "foo\" only and a pattern "foo\ \ " as "foo\ \".
Fix our code to handle those special cases and add tests to avoid
regressions.
|
|
b6967c39
|
2019-06-06T14:02:17
|
|
attr_file: refactor stripping of trailing spaces
The stripping of trailing spaces currently happens as part of
`git_attr_fnmatch__parse`. As we aren't currently parsing
trailing whitespaces correct in case they're escaped, we'll have
to change that code, though. To make actual behavioural change
easier to review, refactor the code up-front by pulling it out
into its own function that is expected to retain the exact same
functionality as before. Like this, the fix will be trivial to
apply.
|
|
63adcc4e
|
2019-05-19T16:27:59
|
|
attr: optionally treat leading whitespace as significant
When `allow_space` is unset, ensure that leading whitespace is not
skipped.
|
|
133bceba
|
2019-05-19T13:57:13
|
|
ignore: skip UTF8 BOM in ignore file
|
|
e269b343
|
2019-05-19T13:12:47
|
|
ignore: only skip first leading slash
For compatibility with git, only skip the first leading slash in an
ignore file. That is: `/a.txt` indicates to ignore a file named `a.txt`
at the root. However `//b.txt` does not indicate that a file named
`b.txt` at the root should be ignored.
|
|
e3d7bccb
|
2019-03-14T15:51:15
|
|
ignore: Do not match on prefix of negated patterns
Matching on the prefix of a negated pattern was triggering false
negatives on siblings of that pattern. e.g.
Given the .gitignore:
dir/*
!dir/sub1/sub2/**
The path `dir/a.text` would not be ignored.
|
|
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.
|
|
3be73011
|
2018-06-11T18:26:22
|
|
Merge pull request #4436 from pks-t/pks/packfile-stream-free
pack: rename `git_packfile_stream_free`
|
|
ecf4f33a
|
2018-02-08T11:14:48
|
|
Convert usage of `git_buf_free` to new `git_buf_dispose`
|
|
20b4c175
|
2018-06-05T16:12:58
|
|
ignore: fix negative leading directory rules unignoring subdirectory files
When computing whether a file is ignored, we simply search for the first
matching rule and return whether it is a positive ignore rule (the file
is really ignored) or whether it is a negative ignore rule (the file is
being unignored). Each rule has a set of flags which are being passed to
`fnmatch`, depending on what kind of rule it is. E.g. in case it is a
negative ignore we add a flag `GIT_ATTR_FNMATCH_NEGATIVE`, in case it
contains a glob we set the `GIT_ATTR_FNMATCH_HASGLOB` flag.
One of these flags is the `GIT_ATTR_FNMATCH_LEADINGDIR` flag, which is
always set in case the pattern has a trailing "/*" or in case the
pattern is negative. The flag causes the `fnmatch` function to return a
match in case a string is a leading directory of another, e.g. "dir/"
matches "dir/foo/bar.c". In case of negative patterns, this is wrong in
certain cases.
Take the following simple example of a gitignore:
dir/
!dir/
The `LEADINGDIR` flag causes "!dir/" to match "dir/foo/bar.c", and we
correctly unignore the directory. But take this example:
*.test
!dir/*
We expect everything in "dir/" to be unignored, but e.g. a file in a
subdirectory of dir should be ignored, as the "*" does not cross
directory hierarchies. With `LEADINGDIR`, though, we would just see that
"dir/" matches and return that the file is unignored, even if it is
contained in a subdirectory. Instead, we want to ignore leading
directories here and check "*.test". Afterwards, we have to iterate up
to the parent directory and do the same checks.
To fix the issue, disallow matching against leading directories in
gitignore files. This can be trivially done by just adding the
`GIT_ATTR_FNMATCH_NOLEADINGDIR` to the spec passed to
`git_attr_fnmatch__parse`. Due to a bug in that function, though, this
flag is being ignored for negative patterns, which is fixed in this
commit, as well. As a last fix, we need to ignore rules that are
supposed to match a directory when our path itself is a file.
All together, these changes fix the described error case.
|
|
251d8771
|
2018-04-06T12:24:10
|
|
attr_file: fix handling of directory patterns with trailing spaces
When comparing whether a path matches a directory rule, we pass the
both the path and directory name to `fnmatch` with
`GIT_ATTR_FNMATCH_DIRECTORY` being set. `fnmatch` expects the pattern to
contain no trailing directory '/', which is why we try to always strip
patterns of trailing slashes. We do not handle that case correctly
though when the pattern itself has trailing spaces, causing the match to
fail.
Fix the issue by stripping trailing spaces and tabs for a rule previous
to checking whether the pattern is a directory pattern with a trailing
'/'. This replaces the whitespace-stripping in our ignore file parsing
code, which was stripping whitespaces too late. Add a test to catch
future breakage.
|
|
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.
|
|
2480d0eb
|
2017-06-30T13:34:05
|
|
Add missing license headers
Some implementation files were missing the license headers. This commit
adds them.
|
|
c3b8e8b3
|
2017-05-14T10:28:05
|
|
Fix issue with directory glob ignore in subdirectories
|
|
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
|
|
24b8ed2b
|
2016-02-09T11:11:38
|
|
attr_file: fix resource leak
|
|
1e5e02b4
|
2015-10-27T17:26:04
|
|
pool: Simplify implementation
|
|
34593aae
|
2015-05-12T17:00:25
|
|
attr: declare variable at top of block for msvc
|
|
90997e40
|
2015-05-12T12:14:55
|
|
attr: less path mangling during attribute matching
When handling attr matching, simply compare the directory path where the
attribute file resides to the path being matched. Skip over commonality
to allow us to compare the contents of the attribute file to the remainder
of the path.
This allows us to more easily compare the pattern directly to the path,
instead of trying to guess whether we want to compare the path's basename
or the full path based on whether the match was inside a containing
directory or not.
This also allows us to do fewer translations on the pattern (trying to
re-prefix it.)
|
|
9465bedb
|
2015-05-12T16:02:18
|
|
attr: don't mangle file path during attr matching
When determining whether some file matches an attr pattern, do
not try to truncate the path to pass to fnmatch. When there is
no containing directory for an item (eg, from a .gitignore in the
root) this will cause us to truncate our path, which means that
we cannot do meaningful comparisons on it and we may have false
positives when trying to determine whether a given file is actually
a file or a folder (as we have lost the path's base information.)
This mangling was to allow fnmatch to compare a directory on disk to
the name of a directory, but it is unnecessary as our fnmatch accepts
FNM_LEADING_DIR.
|
|
ef6d0722
|
2015-05-12T13:06:05
|
|
attr: don't match files for folders
When ignoring a path "foo/", ensure that this is actually a directory,
and not simply a file named "foo".
|
|
4c09e19a
|
2015-03-30T14:07:44
|
|
Improvements to ignore performance on Windows.
Minimizing the number directory and file opens, minimizes the amount of IO thus reducing the overall cost of performing ignore operations.
|
|
c02a0e46
|
2015-04-17T18:27:28
|
|
attr_file: fix subdirectory attr case.
Closes #2966.
|
|
f58cc280
|
2015-02-03T00:28:32
|
|
attr_session: keep a temp buffer
|
|
d4b1b767
|
2015-02-03T00:03:49
|
|
checkout: cache system attributes file location
|
|
9f779aac
|
2015-01-29T14:40:55
|
|
attrcache: don't re-read attrs during checkout
During checkout, assume that the .gitattributes files aren't
modified during the checkout. Instead, create an "attribute session"
during checkout. Assume that attribute data read in the same
checkout "session" hasn't been modified since the checkout started.
(But allow subsequent checkouts to invalidate the cache.)
Further, cache nonexistent git_attr_file data even when .gitattributes
files are not found to prevent re-scanning for nonexistent files.
|
|
6f73e026
|
2014-12-24T11:42:50
|
|
Plug some leaks
|
|
72d00241
|
2014-11-21T13:32:21
|
|
attr_file: Do not assume ODB data is NULL-terminated
That's a bad assumption to make, even though right now it holds
(because of the way we've implemented decompression of packfiles),
this may change in the future, given that ODB objects can be
binary data.
Furthermore, the ODB object can return a NULL pointer if the object
is empty. Copying the NULL pointer to the strbuf lets us handle it
like an empty string. Again, the NULL pointer is valid behavior because
you're supposed to check the *size* of the object before working
on it.
|
|
6069042f
|
2014-11-05T16:51:39
|
|
ignore: don't leak rules into higher directories
A rule "src" in src/.gitignore must only match subdirectories of
src/. The current code does not include this context in the match rule
and would thus consider this rule to match the top-level src/ directory
instead of the intended src/src/.
Keep track fo the context in which the rule was defined so we can
perform a prefix match.
|
|
5c54e216
|
2014-11-05T16:07:07
|
|
ignore: consider files with a CR in their names
We currently consider CR to start the end of the line, but that means
that we miss cases with CR CR LF which can be used with git to match
files whose names have CR at the end of their names.
The fix from the patch comes from Russell's comment in the issue.
This fixes #2536.
|
|
a0cacc82
|
2014-08-08T15:18:40
|
|
For negative matches, always use leading dir match
|
|
f25bc0b2
|
2014-08-08T14:51:36
|
|
Fix rejection of parent dir of negated ignores
While scanning through a directory hierarchy, this prevents a
positive ignore match on a parent directory from blocking the scan
of a directory when a negative match rule exists for files inside
the directory.
|
|
f554611a
|
2014-05-06T12:41:26
|
|
Improve checks for ignore containment
The diff code was using an "ignored_prefix" directory to track if
a parent directory was ignored that contained untracked files
alongside tracked files. Unfortunately, when negative ignore rules
were used for directories inside ignored parents, the wrong rules
were applied to untracked files inside the negatively ignored
child directories.
This commit moves the logic for ignore containment into the workdir
iterator (which is a better place for it), so the ignored-ness of
a directory is contained in the frame stack during traversal. This
allows a child directory to override with a negative ignore and yet
still restore the ignored state of the parent when we traverse out
of the child.
Along with this, there are some problems with "directory only"
ignore rules on container directories. Given "a/*" and "!a/b/c/"
(where the second rule is a directory rule but the first rule is
just a generic prefix rule), then the directory only constraint
was having "a/b/c/d/file" match the first rule and not the second.
This was fixed by having ignore directory-only rules test a rule
against the prefix of a file with LEADINGDIR enabled.
Lastly, spot checks for ignores using `git_ignore_path_is_ignored`
were tested from the top directory down to the bottom to deal with
the containment problem, but this is wrong. We have to test bottom
to top so that negative subdirectory rules will be checked before
parent ignore rules.
This does change the behavior of some existing tests, but it seems
only to bring us more in line with core Git, so I think those
changes are acceptable.
|
|
17ef678c
|
2014-04-21T11:55:57
|
|
Fix some coverity-found issues
|
|
ac16bd0a
|
2014-04-18T15:45:59
|
|
Minor fixes
Only apply LEADING_DIR pattern munging to patterns in ignore and
attribute files, not to pathspecs used to select files to operate
on. Also, allow internal macro definitions to be evaluated before
loading all external ones (important so that external ones can
make use of internal `binary` definition).
|
|
916fcbd6
|
2014-04-18T14:42:40
|
|
Fix ignore difference from git with trailing /*
Ignore patterns that ended with a trailing '/*' were still needing
to match against another actual '/' character in the full path.
This is not the same behavior as core Git.
Instead, we strip a trailing '/*' off of any patterns that were
matching and just take it to imply the FNM_LEADING_DIR behavior.
|
|
e3a2a04c
|
2014-04-18T14:29:58
|
|
Preload attribute files that may contain macros
There was a latent bug where files that use macro definitions
could be parsed before the macro definitions were loaded. Because
of attribute file caching, preloading files that are going to be
used doesn't add a significant amount of overhead, so let's always
preload any files that could contain macros before we assemble the
actual vector of files to scan for attributes.
|
|
823c0e9c
|
2014-04-17T11:53:13
|
|
Fix broken logic for attr cache invalidation
The checks to see if files were out of date in the attibute cache
was wrong because the cache-breaker data wasn't getting stored
correctly. Additionally, when the cache-breaker triggered, the
old file data was being leaked.
|
|
e6e8530a
|
2014-04-14T12:31:17
|
|
Lock attribute file while reparsing data
I don't love this approach, but achieving thread-safety for
attribute and ignore data while reloading files would require a
larger rewrite in order to avoid this. If an attribute or ignore
file is out of date, this holds a lock on the file while we are
reloading the data so that another thread won't try to reload the
data at the same time.
|
|
2e9d813b
|
2014-04-11T12:12:47
|
|
Fix tests with new attr cache code
|
|
7d490872
|
2014-04-10T22:31:01
|
|
Attribute file cache refactor
This is a big refactoring of the attribute file cache to be a bit
simpler which in turn makes it easier to enforce a lock around any
updates to the cache so that it can be used in a threaded env.
Tons of changes to the attributes and ignores code.
|
|
40ed4990
|
2014-02-11T14:45:37
|
|
Add diff threading tests and attr file cache locks
This adds a basic test of doing simultaneous diffs on multiple
threads and adds basic locking for the attr file cache because
that was the immediate problem that arose from these tests.
|
|
a9528b8f
|
2014-04-14T15:59:48
|
|
Fix core.excludesfile named .gitignore
Ignore rules with slashes in them are matched using FNM_PATHNAME
and use the path to the .gitignore file from the root of the
repository along with the path fragment (including slashes) in
the ignore file itself. Unfortunately, the relative path to the
.gitignore file was being applied to the global core.excludesfile
if that was also named ".gitignore".
This fixes that with more precise matching and includes test for
ignore rules with leading slashes (which were the primary example
of this being broken in the real world).
This also backports an improvement to the file context logic from
the threadsafe-iterators branch where we don't rely on mutating
the key of the attribute file name to generate the context path.
|
|
66566516
|
2013-09-08T17:15:42
|
|
Fix warning
|
|
4ba64794
|
2013-08-09T10:52:35
|
|
Revert PR #1462 and provide alternative fix
This rolls back the changes to fnmatch parsing from commit
2e40a60e847d6c128af23e24ea7a8efebd2427da except for the tests
that were added. Instead this adds couple of new flags that can
be passed in when attempting to parse an fnmatch pattern. Also,
this changes the pathspec match logic to special case matching a
filename with a '!' prefix against a negative pattern.
This fixes the build.
|
|
33d532dc
|
2013-08-09T09:32:06
|
|
Merge pull request #1462 from yorah/fix/libgit2sharp-issue-379
status: fix handling of filenames with special prefixes
|
|
22b6b82f
|
2013-06-20T12:16:06
|
|
Add status flags to force output sort order
Files in status will, be default, be sorted according to the case
insensitivity of the filesystem that we're running on. However,
in some cases, this is not desirable. Even on case insensitive
file systems, 'git status' at the command line will generally use
a case sensitive sort (like 'ls'). Some GUIs prefer to display a
list of file case insensitively even on case-sensitive platforms.
This adds two new flags: GIT_STATUS_OPT_SORT_CASE_SENSITIVELY
and GIT_STATUS_OPT_SORT_CASE_INSENSITIVELY that will override the
default sort order of the status output and give the user control.
This includes tests for exercising these new options and makes
the examples/status.c program emulate core Git and always use a
case sensitive sort.
|
|
2d160ef7
|
2013-05-29T16:03:30
|
|
allow (ignore) bare slash in gitignore
|
|
2e40a60e
|
2013-04-11T17:29:05
|
|
status: fix handling of filenames with special prefixes
Fix libgit2/libgit2sharp#379
|
|
0d32f39e
|
2013-03-04T11:31:50
|
|
Notify '*' pathspec correctly when diffing
I also moved all tests related to notifying in their own file.
|
|
5540d947
|
2013-03-15T16:39:00
|
|
Implement global/system file search paths
The goal of this work is to expose the search logic for "global",
"system", and "xdg" files through the git_libgit2_opts() interface.
Behind the scenes, I changed the logic for finding files to have a
notion of a git_strarray that represents a search path and to store
a separate search path for each of the three tiers of config file.
For each tier, I implemented a function to initialize it to default
values (generally based on environment variables), and then general
interfaces to get it, set it, reset it, and prepend new directories
to it.
Next, I exposed these interfaces through the git_libgit2_opts
interface, reusing the GIT_CONFIG_LEVEL_SYSTEM, etc., constants
for the user to control which search path they were modifying.
There are alternative designs for the opts interface / argument
ordering, so I'm putting this phase out for discussion.
Additionally, I ended up doing a little bit of clean up regarding
attr.h and attr_file.h, adding a new attrcache.h so the other two
files wouldn't have to be included in so many places.
|
|
11d9f6b3
|
2013-01-27T14:17:07
|
|
Vector improvements and their fallout
|
|
f08c60a5
|
2012-09-17T16:10:42
|
|
Minor fixes for ignorecase support
|
|
ec40b7f9
|
2012-09-17T15:42:41
|
|
Support for core.ignorecase
|
|
ca1b6e54
|
2012-07-31T17:02:54
|
|
Add template dir and set gid to repo init
This extends git_repository_init_ext further with support for
initializing the repository from an external template directory
and with support for the "create shared" type flags that make a
set GID repository directory.
This also adds tests for much of the new functionality to the
existing `repo/init.c` test suite.
Also, this adds a bunch of new utility functions including a
very general purpose `git_futils_mkdir` (with the ability to
make paths and to chmod the paths post-creation) and a file
tree copying function `git_futils_cp_r`. Also, this includes
some new path functions that were useful to keep the code
simple.
|
|
e25dda51
|
2012-08-02T01:38:30
|
|
Merge remote-tracking branch 'nulltoken/topic/amd64-compat' into development
Conflicts:
src/netops.c
src/netops.h
src/oid.c
|
|
0c9eacf3
|
2012-08-02T01:15:24
|
|
attr: Do not export variables externally
Fixes #824
Exporting variables in a dynamic library is a PITA. Let's keep
these values internally and wrap them through a helper method.
This doesn't break the external API. @arrbee, aren't you glad I turned
the `GIT_ATTR_` macros into function macros? :sparkles:
|
|
b8457baa
|
2012-07-24T07:57:58
|
|
portability: Improve x86/amd64 compatibility
|
|
02a0d651
|
2012-07-12T16:31:59
|
|
Add git_buf_unescape and git__unescape to unescape all characters in a string (in-place)
|
|
227f3131
|
2012-07-15T14:11:58
|
|
attr: Rename the `git_attr__` exports
Pevents collisions with the original libgit, which also exports those
exact symbols.
Fixes #822
|
|
2a99df69
|
2012-05-24T17:14:56
|
|
Fix bugs for status with spaces and reloaded attrs
This fixes two bugs:
* Issue #728 where git_status_file was not working for files
that contain spaces. This was caused by reusing the "fnmatch"
parsing code from ignore and attribute files to interpret the
"pathspec" that constrained the files to apply the status to.
In that code, unescaped whitespace was considered terminal to
the pattern, so a file with internal whitespace was excluded
from the matched files. The fix was to add a mode to that code
that allows spaces and tabs inside patterns. This mode only
comes into play when parsing in-memory strings.
* The other issue was undetected, but it was in the recently
added code to reload gitattributes / gitignores when they were
changed on disk. That code was not clearing out the old values
from the cached file content before reparsing which meant that
newly added patterns would be read in, but deleted patterns
would not be removed. The fix was to clear the vector of
patterns in a cached file before reparsing the file.
|
|
904b67e6
|
2012-05-18T01:48:50
|
|
errors: Rename error codes
|
|
e172cf08
|
2012-05-18T01:21:06
|
|
errors: Rename the generic return codes
|
|
41a82592
|
2012-05-15T14:17:39
|
|
Ranged iterators and rewritten git_status_file
The goal of this work is to rewrite git_status_file to use the
same underlying code as git_status_foreach.
This is done in 3 phases:
1. Extend iterators to allow ranged iteration with start and
end prefixes for the range of file names to be covered.
2. Improve diff so that when there is a pathspec and there is
a common non-wildcard prefix of the pathspec, it will use
ranged iterators to minimize excess iteration.
3. Rewrite git_status_file to call git_status_foreach_ext
with a pathspec that covers just the one file being checked.
Since ranged iterators underlie the status & diff implementation,
this is actually fairly efficient. The workdir iterator does
end up loading the contents of all the directories down to the
single file, which should ideally be avoided, but it is pretty
good.
|
|
2aa1e94d
|
2012-05-09T10:30:34
|
|
Fix 64-bit build warning
|
|
0f49200c
|
2012-05-09T04:37:02
|
|
msvc: Do not use `isspace`
Locale-aware bullshit bitting my ass again yo
|
|
f917481e
|
2012-05-03T16:37:25
|
|
Support reading attributes from index
Depending on the operation, we need to consider gitattributes
in both the work dir and the index. This adds a parameter to
all of the gitattributes related functions that allows user
control of attribute reading behavior (i.e. prefer workdir,
prefer index, only use index).
This fix also covers allowing us to check attributes (and
hence do diff and status) on bare repositories.
This was a somewhat larger change that I hoped because it had
to change the cache key used for gitattributes files.
|
|
821f6bc7
|
2012-04-26T13:04:54
|
|
Fix Win32 warnings
|
|
d58336dd
|
2012-04-26T10:51:45
|
|
Fix leading slash behavior in attrs/ignores
We were not following the git behavior for leading slashes
in path names when matching git ignores and git attribute
file patterns. This should fix issue #638.
|
|
01fed0a8
|
2012-04-25T10:36:01
|
|
Convert hashtable usage over to khash
This updates khash.h with some extra features (like error checking
on allocations, ability to use wrapped malloc, foreach calls, etc),
creates two high-level wrappers around khash: `git_khash_str` and
`git_khash_oid` for string-to-void-ptr and oid-to-void-ptr tables,
then converts all of the old usage of `git_hashtable` over to use
these new hashtables.
For `git_khash_str`, I've tried to create a set of macros that
yield an API not too unlike the old `git_hashtable` API. Since
the oid hashtable is only used in one file, I haven't bother to
set up all those macros and just use the khash APIs directly for
now.
|
|
19fa2bc1
|
2012-04-17T15:12:50
|
|
Convert attrs and diffs to use string pools
This converts the git attr related code (including ignores) and
the git diff related code (and implicitly the status code) to use
`git_pools` for storing strings. This reduces the number of small
blocks allocated dramatically.
|
|
14a513e0
|
2012-04-13T15:00:29
|
|
Add support for pathspec to diff and status
This adds preliminary support for pathspecs to diff and status.
The implementation is not very optimized (it still looks at
every single file and evaluated the the pathspec match against
them), but it works.
|
|
95dfb031
|
2012-03-30T14:40:50
|
|
Improve config handling for diff,submodules,attrs
This adds support for a bunch of core.* settings that affect
diff and status, plus fixes up some incorrect implementations
of those settings from before. Also, this cleans up the
handling of config settings in the new submodules code and
in the old attrs/ignore code.
|
|
0d0fa7c3
|
2012-03-16T15:56:01
|
|
Convert attr, ignore, mwindow, status to new errors
Also cleaned up some previously converted code that still had
little things to polish.
|
|
ab43ad2f
|
2012-03-14T11:07:14
|
|
Convert attr and other files to new errors
This continues to add other files to the new error handling
style. I think the only real concerns here are that there are
a couple of error return cases that I have converted to asserts,
but I think that it was the correct thing to do given the new
error style.
|
|
ae9e29fd
|
2012-03-06T16:14:31
|
|
Migrating diff to new error handling
Ended up migrating a bunch of upstream functions as well
including vector, attr_file, and odb in order to get this
to work right.
|
|
1a481123
|
2012-02-17T00:13:34
|
|
error-handling: References
Yes, this is error handling solely for `refs.c`, but some of the
abstractions leak all ofer the code base.
|
|
c63793ee
|
2012-03-02T03:51:45
|
|
attr: Change the attribute check macros
The point of having `GIT_ATTR_TRUE` and `GIT_ATTR_FALSE` macros is to be
able to change the way that true and false values are stored inside of
the returned gitattributes value pointer.
However, if these macros are implemented as a simple rename for the
`git_attr__true` pointer, they will always be used with the `==`
operator, and hence we cannot really change the implementation to any
other way that doesn't imply using special pointer values and comparing
them!
We need to do the same thing that core Git does, which is using a
function macro. With `GIT_ATTR_TRUE(attr)`, we can change
internally the way that these values are stored to anything we want.
This commit does that, and rewrites a large chunk of the attributes test
suite to remove duplicated code for expected attributes, and to
properly test the function macro behavior instead of comparing
pointers.
|
|
13224ea4
|
2012-02-27T04:28:31
|
|
buffer: Unify `git_fbuffer` and `git_buf`
This makes so much sense that I can't believe it hasn't been done
before. Kill the old `git_fbuffer` and read files straight into
`git_buf` objects.
Also: In order to fully support 4GB files in 32-bit systems, the
`git_buf` implementation has been changed from using `ssize_t` for
storage and storing negative values on allocation failure, to using
`size_t` and changing the buffer pointer to a magical pointer on
allocation failure.
Hopefully this won't break anything.
|