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90df4302
|
2022-01-05T12:18:05
|
|
Fix typos
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|
f0e693b1
|
2021-09-07T17:53:49
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|
str: introduce `git_str` for internal, `git_buf` is external
libgit2 has two distinct requirements that were previously solved by
`git_buf`. We require:
1. A general purpose string class that provides a number of utility APIs
for manipulating data (eg, concatenating, truncating, etc).
2. A structure that we can use to return strings to callers that they
can take ownership of.
By using a single class (`git_buf`) for both of these purposes, we have
confused the API to the point that refactorings are difficult and
reasoning about correctness is also difficult.
Move the utility class `git_buf` to be called `git_str`: this represents
its general purpose, as an internal string buffer class. The name also
is an homage to Junio Hamano ("gitstr").
The public API remains `git_buf`, and has a much smaller footprint. It
is generally only used as an "out" param with strict requirements that
follow the documentation. (Exceptions exist for some legacy APIs to
avoid breaking callers unnecessarily.)
Utility functions exist to convert a user-specified `git_buf` to a
`git_str` so that we can call internal functions, then converting it
back again.
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4732e030
|
2021-01-31T00:36:54
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|
revspec: rename git_revparse_mode_t to git_revspec_t
The information about the type of a revision spec is not information
about the parser. Name it accordingly, so that `git_revparse_mode_t`
is now `git_revspec_t`. Deprecate the old name.
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ef6b12b0
|
2020-04-05T21:58:40
|
|
revwalk: use GIT_ASSERT
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|
0f35efeb
|
2020-05-23T10:15:51
|
|
git_pool_init: handle failure cases
Propagate failures caused by pool initialization errors.
|
|
6eebfc06
|
2020-02-07T11:57:48
|
|
push: check error code returned by `git_revwalk_hide`
When queueing objects we want to push, we call `git_revwalk_hide` to
hide all objects already known to the remote from our revwalk. We do not
check its return value though, where the orginial intent was to ignore
the case where the pushed OID is not a known committish. As
`git_revwalk_hide` can fail due to other reasons like out-of-memory
exceptions, we should still check its return value.
Fix the issue by checking the function's return value, ignoring
errors hinting that it's not a committish. As `git_revwalk__push_commit`
currently clobbers these error codes, we need to adjust it as well in
order to make it available downstream.
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|
4b331f02
|
2020-01-18T17:56:05
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|
revwalk functions: return an int
Stop returning a void for functions, future-proofing them to allow them
to fail.
|
|
53f51c60
|
2019-08-21T19:48:05
|
|
smart: implement by-date insertion when revwalking
|
|
4b91f058
|
2019-08-21T19:43:06
|
|
revwalk: expose more ways of scheduling commits
Before we can tweak the revwalk to be more efficent when negotiating,
we need to add an "insertion mode" option. Since there's already an implicit
set of those, make it visible, at least privately.
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|
ab27c835
|
2019-05-12T22:05:26
|
|
revwalk: update error message for clarity
|
|
6990a492
|
2019-05-06T11:39:51
|
|
revwalk: fix memory leak in error handling
This is not implemented and should fail, but it should also not leak. To
allow the memory debugger to find leaks and fix this one we test this.
|
|
d55bb479
|
2019-04-26T15:59:49
|
|
git_revwalk_push_range: do not crash if range is missing
If someone passes just one ref (i.e. "master") and misses passing the
range we should be nice and return an error code instead of crashing.
|
|
2e0a3048
|
2019-01-23T10:48:55
|
|
oidmap: introduce high-level setter for key/value pairs
Currently, one would use either `git_oidmap_insert` to insert key/value pairs
into a map or `git_oidmap_put` to insert a key only. These function have
historically been macros, which is why their syntax is kind of weird: instead of
returning an error code directly, they instead have to be passed a pointer to
where the return value shall be stored. This does not match libgit2's common
idiom of directly returning error codes.Furthermore, `git_oidmap_put` is tightly
coupled with implementation details of the map as it exposes the index of
inserted entries.
Introduce a new function `git_oidmap_set`, which takes as parameters the map,
key and value and directly returns an error code. Convert all trivial callers of
`git_oidmap_insert` and `git_oidmap_put` to make use of it.
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|
9694ef20
|
2018-12-17T09:01:53
|
|
oidmap: introduce high-level getter for values
The current way of looking up an entry from a map is tightly coupled with the
map implementation, as one first has to look up the index of the key and then
retrieve the associated value by using the index. As a caller, you usually do
not care about any indices at all, though, so this is more complicated than
really necessary. Furthermore, it invites for errors to happen if the correct
error checking sequence is not being followed.
Introduce a new high-level function `git_oidmap_get` that takes a map and a key
and returns a pointer to the associated value if such a key exists. Otherwise,
a `NULL` pointer is returned. Adjust all callers that can trivially be
converted.
|
|
351eeff3
|
2019-01-23T10:42:46
|
|
maps: use uniform lifecycle management functions
Currently, the lifecycle functions for maps (allocation, deallocation, resize)
are not named in a uniform way and do not have a uniform function signature.
Rename the functions to fix that, and stick to libgit2's naming scheme of saying
`git_foo_new`. This results in the following new interface for allocation:
- `int git_<t>map_new(git_<t>map **out)` to allocate a new map, returning an
error code if we ran out of memory
- `void git_<t>map_free(git_<t>map *map)` to free a map
- `void git_<t>map_clear(git<t>map *map)` to remove all entries from a map
This commit also fixes all existing callers.
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|
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.
|
|
168fe39b
|
2018-11-28T14:26:57
|
|
object_type: use new enumeration names
Use the new object_type enumeration names within the codebase.
|
|
e7873eb2
|
2018-11-29T08:00:31
|
|
Merge pull request #4888 from TheBB/add-cb
revwalk: Allow changing hide_cb
|
|
852bc9f4
|
2018-11-23T19:26:24
|
|
khash: remove intricate knowledge of khash types
Instead of using the `khiter_t`, `git_strmap_iter` and `khint_t` types,
simply use `size_t` instead. This decouples code from the khash stuff
and makes it possible to move the khash includes into the implementation
files.
|
|
0836f069
|
2018-11-14T16:08:30
|
|
revwalk: Allow changing hide_cb
Since git_revwalk objects are encouraged to be reused, a public
interface for changing hide_cb is desirable.
|
|
12a1790d
|
2018-09-17T14:49:46
|
|
revwalk: only check the first commit in the list for an earlier timestamp
This is not a big deal, but it does make us match git more closely by checking
only the first. The lists are sorted already, so there should be no functional
difference other than removing a possible check from every iteration in the
loop.
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|
46f35127
|
2018-09-17T14:39:58
|
|
revwalk: use the max value for a signed integer
When porting, we overlooked that the difference between git's and our's time
representation and copied their way of getting the max value.
Unfortunately git was using unsigned integers, so `~0ll` does correspond to
their max value, whereas for us it corresponds to `-1`. This means that we
always consider the last date to be smaller than the current commit's and always
think commits are interesting.
Change the initial value to the macro that gives us the maximum value on each
platform so we can accurately consider commits interesting or not.
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|
aa8cb586
|
2018-08-21T01:12:11
|
|
revwalk: The left operand of '<' is a garbage value
At line 594, we do this :
if (error < 0)
return error;
but if nothing was pushed in a GIT_SORT_TIME revwalk, we'd return
uninitialized stack data.
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|
a4ffbae4
|
2018-07-29T11:46:05
|
|
revwalk: remove tautologic condition for hiding a commit
The contition cannot be reached with `commit->uninteresting` being true:
either a `break` or a `continue` statement will be hit in this case.
|
|
4fd81c53
|
2018-06-18T19:43:53
|
|
Clear revwalk sorting when resetting
Currently we fail to clear the sorting flag for revwalks when resetting.
This caused a poor interaction with the limited flag during a recent
patch. This patch clears the revwalk sorting flag and causes it to no
longer persist over resets.
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|
cc9c9522
|
2018-06-18T12:10:17
|
|
Merge pull request #4606 from libgit2/cmn/revwalk-iteration
revwalk: avoid walking the entire history when output is unsorted
|
|
ff98fec0
|
2018-06-18T10:25:07
|
|
revwalk: formatting updates
|
|
ecf4f33a
|
2018-02-08T11:14:48
|
|
Convert usage of `git_buf_free` to new `git_buf_dispose`
|
|
54fd80e3
|
2018-04-12T13:32:27
|
|
revwalk: fix uninteresting revs sometimes not limiting graphwalk
When we want to limit our graphwalk, we use the heuristic of checking
whether the newest limiting (uninteresting) revision is newer than the
oldest interesting revision. We do so by inspecting whether the first
item's commit time of the user-supplied list of revisions is newer than
the last added interesting revision. This is wrong though, as the user
supplied list is in no way guaranteed to be sorted by increasing commit
dates. This could lead us to abort the revwalk early before applying all
relevant limiting revisions, outputting revisions which should in fact
have been hidden.
Fix the heuristic by instead checking whether _any_ of the limiting
commits was made earlier than the last interesting commit. Add a test.
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|
ef682410
|
2018-04-11T17:52:51
|
|
revwalk: remove one useless layer of functions
We don't currently need to have anything that's different between `get_revision`
and `get_one_revision` so let's just remove the inner function and make the code
more straightforward.
|
|
2a6d0956
|
2018-04-01T14:01:52
|
|
revwalk: avoid walking the entire history when output is unsorted
As part of reducing our divergence from git, its code for revwalk was ported
into our codebase. A detail about when to limit the list was lost and we ended
up always calling that code.
Limiting the list means performing the walk and creating the final list of
commits to be output during the preparation stage. This is unavoidable when
sorting and when there are negative refs.
We did this even when asked for unsorted output with no negative refs, which you
might do to retrieve something like the "last 10 commits on HEAD" for a
nominally unsorted meaning of "last".
This commit adds and sets a flag indicating when we do need to limit the list,
letting us avoid doing so when we can. The previously mentioned query thus no
longer loads the entire history of the project during the prepare stage, but
loads it iteratively during the walk.
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|
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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|
c11c08a5
|
2017-03-09T14:01:10
|
|
Skip uninteresting commits in revwalk timesort iterator
Fixes #4099
|
|
0d716905
|
2017-01-27T15:23:15
|
|
oidmap: remove GIT__USE_OIDMAP macro
|
|
85d2748c
|
2017-01-27T14:05:10
|
|
khash: avoid using `kh_key`/`kh_val` as lvalue
|
|
f31cb45a
|
2017-01-25T15:31:12
|
|
khash: avoid using `kh_put` directly
|
|
cb18386f
|
2017-01-25T14:26:58
|
|
khash: avoid using `kh_val`/`kh_value` directly
|
|
a853c527
|
2017-01-25T14:14:32
|
|
khash: avoid using `kh_get` directly
|
|
64e46dc3
|
2017-01-25T14:14:12
|
|
khash: avoid using `kh_end` directly
|
|
9694d9ba
|
2017-01-25T14:09:17
|
|
khash: avoid using `kh_foreach`/`kh_foreach_value` directly
|
|
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
|
|
013ecb4f
|
2016-11-25T15:00:50
|
|
revwalk: do not re-declare `commit` variable
|
|
fedc05c8
|
2016-10-06T18:13:34
|
|
revwalk: don't show commits that become uninteresting after being enqueued
When we read from the list which `limit_list()` gives us, we need to check that
the commit is still interesting, as it might have become uninteresting after it
was added to the list.
|
|
82d4c0e6
|
2016-10-05T12:55:53
|
|
revwalk: update the description for the default sorting
It changed from implementation-defined to git's default sorting, as there are
systems (e.g. rebase) which depend on this order. Also specify more explicitly
how you can get git's "date-order".
|
|
ea1ceb7f
|
2016-10-05T12:23:26
|
|
revwalk: remove a useless enqueueing phase for topological and default sorting
After `limit_list()` we already have the list in time-sorted order, which is
what we want in the "default" case. Enqueueing into the "unsorted" list would
just reverse it, and the topological sort will do its own sorting if it needs
to.
|
|
9db367bf
|
2016-09-27T16:14:42
|
|
revwalk: get rid of obsolete marking code
We've now moved to code that's closer to git and produces the output
during the preparation phase, so we no longer process the commits as
part of generating the output.
This makes a chunk of code redundant, as we're simply short-circuiting
it by detecting we've processed the commits alrady.
|
|
e93b7e32
|
2016-09-27T13:35:48
|
|
revwalk: style change
Change the condition for returning 0 more in line with that we write
elsewhere in the library.
|
|
48c64362
|
2016-09-27T11:59:24
|
|
revwalk: port over the topological sorting
After porting over the commit hiding and selection we were still left
with mistmaching output due to the topologial sort.
This ports the topological sorting code to make us match with our
equivalent of `--date-order` and `--topo-order` against the output
from `rev-list`.
|
|
6708618c
|
2016-07-21T01:24:12
|
|
revwalk: get closer to git
We had some home-grown logic to figure out which objects to show during
the revision walk, but it was rather inefficient, looking over the same
list multiple times to figure out when we had run out of interesting
commits. We now use the lists in a smarter way.
We also introduce the slop mechanism to determine when to stpo
looking. When we run out of interesting objects, we continue preparing
the walk for another 5 rounds in order to make it less likely that we
miss objects in situations with complex graphs.
|
|
c5bd70d1
|
2016-02-23T11:48:30
|
|
revwalk: use GITERR_CHECK_ALLOC_BUF
|
|
1e5e02b4
|
2015-10-27T17:26:04
|
|
pool: Simplify implementation
|
|
c369b379
|
2015-07-31T16:23:11
|
|
Remove extra semicolon outside of a function
Without this change, compiling with gcc and pedantic generates warning:
ISO C does not allow extra ‘;’ outside of a function.
|
|
c332bb70
|
2015-04-16T19:26:40
|
|
Merge pull request #3042 from libgit2/cmn/odd-slowdown
revwalk: detect when we're out of interesting commits
|
|
a0541695
|
2015-04-14T03:26:45
|
|
revwalk: detect when we're out of interesting commits
When walking backwards and marking parents uninteresting, make sure we
detect when the list of commits we have left has run out of
uninteresting commits so we can stop marking commits as
uninteresting. Failing to do so can mean that we walk the whole history
marking everything uninteresting, which eats up time, CPU and IO for
with useless work.
While pre-marking does look for this, we still need to check during the
main traversal as there are setups for which pre-marking does not leave
enough information in the commits. This can happen if we push a commit
and hide its parent.
|
|
50fdfe2b
|
2015-04-08T23:51:49
|
|
revwalk: don't insert uninteresting commits into the queue
When a commit is first set as unintersting and then pushed, we must take
care that we do not put it into the commit list as that makes us return
at least that commit (but maybe more) as we've inserted it into the list
because we have the assumption that we want anything in the commit list.
|
|
b63b76e0
|
2014-10-12T11:42:31
|
|
Reorder some khash declarations
Keep the definitions in the headers, while putting the declarations in
the C files. Putting the function definitions in headers causes
them to be duplicated if you include two headers with them.
|
|
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.
|
|
753e17b0
|
2014-11-19T18:42:29
|
|
peel: reject bad queries with EINVALIDSPEC
There are some combination of objects and target types which we know
cannot be fulfilled. Return EINVALIDSPEC for those to signify that there
is a mismatch in the user-provided data and what the object model is
capable of satisfying.
If we start at a tag and in the course of peeling find out that we
cannot reach a particular type, we return EPEEL.
|
|
d6afda62
|
2014-10-08T17:17:31
|
|
revwalk: clear first-parent flag on reset
This should have been included when implementing the feature but was
missed.
|
|
9b5d6cea
|
2014-10-08T17:14:48
|
|
revwalk: catch no-push and no-hide cases
If there have been no pushes, we can immediately return ITEROVER. If
there have been no hides, we must not run the uninteresting pre-mark
phase, as we do not want to hide anything and this would simply cause us
to spend time loading objects.
|
|
e7970576
|
2014-10-08T15:52:11
|
|
revwalk: mark uninteresting only up to the common ancestors
This introduces a phase at the start of preparing a walk which pre-marks
uninteresting commits, but only up to the common ancestors.
We do this in a similar way to git, by walking down the history and
marking (which is what we used to do), but we keep a time-sorted
priority queue of commits and stop marking as soon as there are only
uninteresting commits in this queue.
This is a similar rule to the one used to find the merge-base. As we
keep inserting commits regardless of the uninteresting bit, if there are
only uninteresting commits in the queue, it means we've run out of
interesting commits in our walk, so we can stop.
The old mark_unintesting() logic is still in place, but that stops
walking if it finds an already-uninteresting commit, so it will stop on
the ones we've pre-marked; but keeping it allows us to also hide those
that are hidden via the callback.
|
|
ad66bf88
|
2014-10-08T10:45:47
|
|
revwalk: keep a single list of user inputs
The old separation was due to the old merge-base finding, so it's no
longer necessary.
|
|
42835aa6
|
2014-10-08T10:24:06
|
|
revwalk: clear the flags on reset
These store merge-base information which is only valid for a single run.
|
|
9746b36c
|
2014-07-24T16:46:59
|
|
revwalk: remove preallocation of the uninteresting commits
Preallocating two commits doesn't make much sense as leaving allocation
to the first array usage will allocate a sensible size with room for
growth.
This preallocation has also been hiding issues with strict aliasing in
the tests, as we have fairly simple histories and never trigger the
growth.
|
|
f9a97667
|
2014-06-11T00:06:44
|
|
revwalk: more sensible array handling
Instead of using a sentinel empty value to detect the last commit, let's
check for when we get a NULL from popping the stack, which lets us know
when we're done.
The current code causes us to read uninitialized data, although only on
RHEL/CentOS 6 in release mode. This is a readability win overall.
|
|
3bc3d797
|
2014-03-31T15:15:32
|
|
No need to find merge base.
|
|
7ca1584b
|
2014-03-11T11:49:19
|
|
Conforming to libgit2 coding style.
|
|
46e4d82d
|
2014-03-10T16:21:56
|
|
Remove unused push_cb_data
|
|
892aa808
|
2014-03-10T12:00:33
|
|
Callback to hide commits in revision walker.
|
|
704b55cc
|
2014-03-20T20:24:11
|
|
revwalk: don't try to find merge bases when there can be none
As a way to speed up the cases where we need to hide some commits, we
find out what the merge bases are so we know to stop marking commits as
uninteresting and avoid walking down a potentially very large amount of
commits which we will never see. There are however two oversights in
current code.
The merge-base finding algorithm fails to recognize that if it is only
given one commit, there can be no merge base. It instead walks down the
whole ancestor chain needlessly. Make it return an empty list
immediately in this situation.
The revwalk does not know whether the user has asked to hide any commits
at all. In situation where the user pushes multiple commits but doesn't
hide any, the above fix wouldn't do the trick. Keep track of whether the
user wants to hide any commits and only run the merge-base finding
algorithm when it's needed.
|
|
c4ee3b54
|
2014-02-07T18:32:06
|
|
Merge pull request #2100 from libgit2/rb/update-pqueue
Replace priority queue code with implementation from hashsig
|
|
d465e4e9
|
2014-02-01T15:19:13
|
|
revwalk: ignore wrong object type in glob pushes
Pushing a whole namespace can cause us to attempt to push non-committish
objects. Catch this situation and special-case it for ignoring this.
|
|
af817202
|
2014-02-01T15:29:16
|
|
revwalk: remove usage of foreach
|
|
f61272e0
|
2014-02-01T12:51:36
|
|
revwalk: accept committish objects
Let the user push committish objects and peel them to figure out which
commit to push to our queue.
This is for convenience and for allowing uses of
git_revwalk_push_glob(w, "tags")
with annotated tags.
|
|
882c7742
|
2014-02-04T10:01:37
|
|
Convert pqueue to just be a git_vector
This updates the git_pqueue to simply be a set of specialized
init/insert/pop functions on a git_vector.
To preserve the pqueue feature of having a fixed size heap, I
converted the "sorted" field in git_vectors to a more general
"flags" field so that pqueue could mix in it's own flag. This
had a bunch of ramifications because a number of places were
directly looking at the vector "sorted" field - I added a couple
new git_vector helpers (is_sorted, set_sorted) so the specific
representation of this information could be abstracted.
|
|
4075e060
|
2014-02-03T21:02:08
|
|
Replace pqueue with code from hashsig heap
I accidentally wrote a separate priority queue implementation when
I was working on file rename detection as part of the file hash
signature calculation code. To simplify licensing terms, I just
adapted that to a general purpose priority queue and replace the
old priority queue implementation that was borrowed from elsewhere.
This also removes parts of the COPYING document that no longer
apply to libgit2.
|
|
25e0b157
|
2013-12-06T15:07:57
|
|
Remove converting user error to GIT_EUSER
This changes the behavior of callbacks so that the callback error
code is not converted into GIT_EUSER and instead we propagate the
return value through to the caller. Instead of using the
giterr_capture and giterr_restore functions, we now rely on all
functions to pass back the return value from a callback.
To avoid having a return value with no error message, the user
can call the public giterr_set_str or some such function to set
an error message. There is a new helper 'giterr_set_callback'
that functions can invoke after making a callback which ensures
that some error message was set in case the callback did not set
one.
In places where the sign of the callback return value is
meaningful (e.g. positive to skip, negative to abort), only the
negative values are returned back to the caller, obviously, since
the other values allow for continuing the loop.
The hardest parts of this were in the checkout code where positive
return values were overloaded as meaningful values for checkout.
I fixed this by adding an output parameter to many of the internal
checkout functions and removing the overload. This added some
code, but it is probably a better implementation.
There is some funkiness in the network code where user provided
callbacks could be returning a positive or a negative value and
we want to rely on that to cancel the loop. There are still a
couple places where an user error might get turned into GIT_EUSER
there, I think, though none exercised by the tests.
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dab89f9b
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2013-12-04T21:22:57
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Further EUSER and error propagation fixes
This continues auditing all the places where GIT_EUSER is being
returned and making sure to clear any existing error using the
new giterr_user_cancel helper. As a result, places that relied
on intercepting GIT_EUSER but having the old error preserved also
needed to be cleaned up to correctly stash and then retrieve the
actual error.
Additionally, as I encountered places where error codes were not
being propagated correctly, I tried to fix them up. A number of
those fixes are included in the this commit as well.
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106c12f1
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2013-09-23T13:31:15
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Remove regex usage from places that don't need it
In revwalk, we are doing a very simple check to see if a string
contains wildcard characters, so a full regular expression match
is not needed.
In remote listing, now that we have git_config_foreach_match with
full regular expression matching, we can take advantage of that
and eliminate the regex here, replacing it with much simpler string
manipulation.
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15f7b9b8
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2013-09-08T00:52:26
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revwalk: allow simplifying by first-parent
When enabled, only the first parent of each commit will be queued,
enabling a simple way of using first-parent simplification.
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fb23d05f
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2013-08-17T07:58:55
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revwalk: make mark_unintersting use a loop
Using a recursive function can blow the stack when dealing with long
histories. Use a loop instead to limit the call chain depth.
This fixes #1223.
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2b562c3a
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2013-05-04T16:32:58
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refs: remove the OID/SYMBOLIC filtering
Nobody should ever be using anything other than ALL at this level, so
remove the option altogether.
As part of this, git_reference_foreach_glob is now implemented in the
frontend using an iterator. Backends will later regain the ability of
doing the glob filtering in the backend.
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cbda09d0
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2013-04-15T23:40:46
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git_revision -> git_revspec
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36c2dfed
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2013-04-15T23:32:40
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Is this crazy?
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299a224b
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2013-04-15T12:00:04
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Change git_revparse to output git_object pointers
This will probably prevent many lookup/free
operations in calling code.
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1aa21fe3
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2013-04-09T05:03:51
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Deprecate git_revparse_single and _rangelike
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af079d8b
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2013-03-03T20:54:23
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revwalk: Parse revision ranges
All the hard work is already in revparse.
Signed-off-by: Greg Price <price@mit.edu>
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359fc2d2
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2013-01-08T17:07:25
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update copyrights
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d5e44d84
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2012-11-29T17:02:27
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Fix function name and add real error check
`revwalk.h:commit_lookup()` -> `git_revwalk__commit_lookup()`
and make `git_commit_list_parse()` do real error checking that
the item in the list is an actual commit object. Also fixed an
apparent typo in a test name.
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4ff192d3
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2012-11-26T19:47:47
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Move merge functions to merge.c
In so doing, promote commit_list to git_commit_list,
with its own internal API header.
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2508cc66
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2012-11-18T21:38:08
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Rename ref and reflog apis for consistency
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8060cdc9
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2012-09-27T14:59:43
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revwalk: fix off-by-one error
Fixes #921.
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857323d4
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2012-09-09T15:53:57
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git_mergebase: Constness-Fix for consistency
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f335ecd6
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2012-08-30T14:24:16
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Diff iterators
This refactors the diff output code so that an iterator object
can be used to traverse and generate the diffs, instead of just
the `foreach()` style with callbacks. The code has been rearranged
so that the two styles can still share most functions.
This also replaces `GIT_REVWALKOVER` with `GIT_ITEROVER` and uses
that as a common error code for marking the end of iteration when
using a iterator style of object.
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4e323ef0
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2012-08-27T10:51:01
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revwalk: refuse push of non-commit objects
Check the type of the pushed object immediately instead of starting the
walk and failing in between.
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118cf57d
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2012-07-04T16:06:07
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revwalk: relax the parsing of the commit time
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11634346
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2012-06-22T17:04:16
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revwalk: make git_revwalk_(push|hide)_glob() leverage git_reference_foreach_glob()
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31eed56b
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2012-06-18T17:36:14
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Merge pull request #753 from nulltoken/topic/merge-base-many
Expose git_merge_base_many()
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471fa05e
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2012-06-11T15:38:33
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Fix fragile commit parsing in revwalk
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b46bdb22
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2012-05-25T16:28:53
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merge: Expose git_merge_base_many()
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