Similar to the `preserve` mode simply passing the `--preserve-merges`
option to the `rebase` command, the `merges` mode simply passes the
`--rebase-merges` option.
This will allow users to conveniently rebase non-trivial commit
topologies when pulling new commits, without flattening them.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Once upon a time, this here developer thought: wouldn't it be nice if,
say, Git for Windows' patches on top of core Git could be represented as
a thicket of branches, and be rebased on top of core Git in order to
maintain a cherry-pick'able set of patch series?
The original attempt to answer this was: git rebase --preserve-merges.
However, that experiment was never intended as an interactive option,
and it only piggy-backed on git rebase --interactive because that
command's implementation looked already very, very familiar: it was
designed by the same person who designed --preserve-merges: yours truly.
Some time later, some other developer (I am looking at you, Andreas!
;-)) decided that it would be a good idea to allow --preserve-merges to
be combined with --interactive (with caveats!) and the Git maintainer
(well, the interim Git maintainer during Junio's absence, that is)
agreed, and that is when the glamor of the --preserve-merges design
started to fall apart rather quickly and unglamorously.
The reason? In --preserve-merges mode, the parents of a merge commit (or
for that matter, of *any* commit) were not stated explicitly, but were
*implied* by the commit name passed to the `pick` command.
This made it impossible, for example, to reorder commits. Not to mention
to move commits between branches or, deity forbid, to split topic branches
into two.
Alas, these shortcomings also prevented that mode (whose original
purpose was to serve Git for Windows' needs, with the additional hope
that it may be useful to others, too) from serving Git for Windows'
needs.
Five years later, when it became really untenable to have one unwieldy,
big hodge-podge patch series of partly related, partly unrelated patches
in Git for Windows that was rebased onto core Git's tags from time to
time (earning the undeserved wrath of the developer of the ill-fated
git-remote-hg series that first obsoleted Git for Windows' competing
approach, only to be abandoned without maintainer later) was really
untenable, the "Git garden shears" were born [*1*/*2*]: a script,
piggy-backing on top of the interactive rebase, that would first
determine the branch topology of the patches to be rebased, create a
pseudo todo list for further editing, transform the result into a real
todo list (making heavy use of the `exec` command to "implement" the
missing todo list commands) and finally recreate the patch series on
top of the new base commit.
That was in 2013. And it took about three weeks to come up with the
design and implement it as an out-of-tree script. Needless to say, the
implementation needed quite a few years to stabilize, all the while the
design itself proved itself sound.
With this patch, the goodness of the Git garden shears comes to `git
rebase -i` itself. Passing the `--rebase-merges` option will generate
a todo list that can be understood readily, and where it is obvious
how to reorder commits. New branches can be introduced by inserting
`label` commands and calling `merge <label>`. And once this mode will
have become stable and universally accepted, we can deprecate the design
mistake that was `--preserve-merges`.
Link *1*:
https://github.com/msysgit/msysgit/blob/master/share/msysGit/shears.sh
Link *2*:
https://github.com/git-for-windows/build-extra/blob/master/shears.sh
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Rename bunch of source files to more consistently use dashes
instead of underscores to connect words.
* sb/filenames-with-dashes:
replace_object.c: rename to use dash in file name
sha1_file.c: rename to use dash in file name
sha1_name.c: rename to use dash in file name
exec_cmd: rename to use dash in file name
unicode_width.h: rename to use dash in file name
write_or_die.c: rename to use dashes in file name
Shell completion (in contrib) that gives list of paths have been
optimized somewhat.
* cb/bash-completion-ls-files-processing:
completion: improve ls-files filter performance
This is more consistent with the project style. The majority of Git's
source files use dashes in preference to underscores in their file names.
Also adjust contrib/update-unicode as well.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
The mechanism to use parse-options API to automate the command line
completion continues to get extended and polished.
* nd/parseopt-completion-more:
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_cherry
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_ls_tree
completion: delete option-only completion commands
completion: add --option completion for most builtin commands
completion: factor out _git_xxx calling code
completion: mention the oldest version we need to support
git.c: add hidden option --list-parseopt-builtins
git.c: move cmd_struct declaration up
"diff-highlight" filter (in contrib/) learned to undertand "git log
--graph" output better.
* jk/diff-highlight-graph-fix:
diff-highlight: detect --graph by indent
diff-highlight: use flush() helper consistently
diff-highlight: test graphs with --color
diff-highlight: test interleaved parallel lines of history
diff-highlight: prefer "echo" to "cat" in tests
diff-highlight: use test_tick in graph test
diff-highlight: correct test graph diagram
From the output of ls-files, we remove all but the leftmost path
component and then we eliminate duplicates. We do this in a while loop,
which is a performance bottleneck when the number of iterations is large
(e.g. for 60000 files in linux.git).
$ COMP_WORDS=(git status -- ar) COMP_CWORD=3; time _git
real 0m11.876s
user 0m4.685s
sys 0m6.808s
Replacing the loop with the cut command improves performance
significantly:
$ COMP_WORDS=(git status -- ar) COMP_CWORD=3; time _git
real 0m1.372s
user 0m0.263s
sys 0m0.167s
The measurements were done with Msys2 bash, which is used by Git for
Windows.
When filtering the ls-files output we take care not to touch absolute
paths. This is redundant, because ls-files will never output absolute
paths. Remove the unnecessary operations.
The issue was reported here:
https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/1533
Signed-off-by: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@gmx.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Hotfix for recently graduated topic that give help to completion
scripts from the Git subcommands that are being completed
* nd/parseopt-completion:
t9902: disable test on the list of merge-strategies under GETTEXT_POISON
completion: clear cached --options when sourcing the completion script
There were some side discussions at Git Merge this year about how we
should just update the README to tell users they can dig these up from
the history if the need them, do that.
Looking at the "git log" for this directory we get quite a bit more
patch churn than we should here, mainly from things fixing various
tree-wide issues.
There's also confusion on the list occasionally about how these should
be treated, "Re: [PATCH 1/4] stash: convert apply to
builtin" (<CA+CzEk9QpmHK_TSBwQfEedNqrcVSBp3xY7bdv1YA_KxePiFeXw@mail.gmail.com>)
being the latest example of that.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The new function __git_complete_common can take over this job with
less code to maintain.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Many builtin commands use parseopt which can expose the option list
via --git-completion-helper but do not have explicit support in
git-completion.bash. This patch detects those commands and uses
__gitcomp_builtin for option completion.
This does not pollute the command name completion though. "git <tab>"
will show you the same set as before. This only kicks in when you type
the correct command name.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The established way to update the completion script in an already
running shell is to simply source it again: this brings in any new
--options and features, and clears caching variables. E.g. it clears
the variables caching the list of (all|porcelain) git commands, so
when they are later lazy-initialized again, then they will list and
cache any newly installed commmands as well.
Unfortunately, since d401f3debc (git-completion.bash: introduce
__gitcomp_builtin, 2018-02-09) and subsequent patches this doesn't
work for a lot of git commands' options. To eliminate a lot of
hard-to-maintain hard-coded lists of options, those commits changed
the completion script to use a bunch of programmatically created and
lazy-initialized variables to cache the options of those builtin
porcelain commands that use parse-options. These variables are not
cleared upon sourcing the completion script, therefore they continue
caching the old lists of options, even when some commands recently
learned new options or when deprecated options were removed.
Always 'unset' these variables caching the options of builtin commands
when sourcing the completion script.
Redirect 'unset's stderr to /dev/null, because ZSH's 'unset' complains
if it's invoked without any arguments, i.e. no variables caching
builtin's options are set. This can happen, if someone were to source
the completion script twice without completing any --options in
between. Bash stays silent in this case.
Add tests to ensure that these variables are indeed cleared when the
completion script is sourced; not just the variables caching options,
but all other caching variables, i.e. the variables caching commands,
porcelain commands and merge strategies as well.
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This patch fixes a corner case where diff-highlight may
scramble some diffs when combined with --graph.
Commit 7e4ffb4c17 (diff-highlight: add support for --graph
output, 2016-08-29) taught diff-highlight to skip past the
graph characters at the start of each line with this regex:
($COLOR?\|$COLOR?\s+)*
I.e., any series of pipes separated by and followed by
arbitrary whitespace. We need to match more than just a
single space because the commit in question may be indented
to accommodate other parts of the graph drawing. E.g.:
* commit 1234abcd
| ...
| diff --git ...
has only a single space, but for the last commit before a
fork:
| | |
| * | commit 1234abcd
| |/ ...
| | diff --git
the diff lines have more spaces between the pipes and the
start of the diff.
However, when we soak up all of those spaces with the
$GRAPH regex, we may accidentally include the leading space
for a context line. That means we may consider the actual
contents of a context line as part of the diff syntax. In
other words, something like this:
normal context line
-old line
+new line
-this is a context line with a leading dash
would cause us to see that final context line as a removal
line, and we'd end up showing the hunk in the wrong order:
normal context line
-old line
-this is a context line with a leading dash
+new line
Instead, let's a be a little more clever about parsing the
graph. We'll look for the actual "*" line that marks the
start of a commit, and record the indentation we see there.
Then we can skip past that indentation when checking whether
the line is a hunk header, removal, addition, etc.
There is one tricky thing: the indentation in bytes may be
different for various lines of the graph due to coloring.
E.g., the "*" on a commit line is generally shown without
color, but on the actual diff lines, it will be replaced
with a colorized "|" character, adding several bytes. We
work around this here by counting "visible" bytes. This is
unfortunately a bit more expensive, making us about twice as
slow to handle --graph output. But since this is meant to be
used interactively anyway, it's tolerably fast (and the
non-graph case is unaffected).
One alternative would be to search for hunk header lines and
use their indentation (since they'd have the same colors as
the diff lines which follow). But that just opens up
different corner cases. If we see:
| | @@ 1,2 1,3 @@
we cannot know if this is a real diff that has been
indented due to the graph, or if it's a context line that
happens to look like a diff header. We can only be sure of
the indent on the "*" lines, since we know those don't
contain arbitrary data (technically the user could include a
bunch of extra indentation via --format, but that's rare
enough to disregard).
Reported-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The current flush() helper only shows the queued diff but
does not clear the queue. This is conceptually a bug, but it
works because we only call it once at the end of the
program.
Let's teach it to clear the queue, which will let us use it
in more places (one for now, but more in future patches).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Our tests send git's output directly to files or pipes, so
there will never be any color. Let's do at least one --color
test to make sure that we can handle this case (which we
currently can, but will be an easy thing to mess up when we
touch the graph code in a future patch).
We'll just cover the --graph case, since this is much more
complex than the earlier cases (i.e., if it manages to
highlight, then the non-graph case definitely would).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The graph test in t9400 covers the case of two simultaneous
branches, but all of the commits during this time are on the
right-hand branch. So we test a graph structure like:
| |
| * commit ...
| |
but we never see the reverse, a commit on the left-hand
branch:
| |
* | commit ...
| |
Since this is an easy thing to get wrong when touching the
graph-matching code, let's cover it by adding one more
commit with its timestamp interleaved with the other branch.
Note that we need to pass --date-order to convince Git to
show it this way (since --topo-order tries to keep lines of
history separate).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We generate a bunch of one-line files whose contents match
their names, and then generate our commits by cat-ing those
files. Let's just echo the contents directly, which saves
some processes.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The exact ordering output by Git may depend on the commit
timestamps, so let's make sure they're actually
monotonically increasing, and not all the same (or worse,
subject to how long the test script takes to run).
Let's use test_tick to make sure this is stable. Note that
we actually have to rearrange the order of the branches to
match the expected graph structure (which means that
previously we might racily have been testing a slightly
different output, though the test is written in such a way
that we'd still pass).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We actually branch "A" off of "D". The sample "--graph"
output is right, but the left-to-right diagram is
misleading. Let's fix it.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Completion of tag names has worked for the short -d/-v options since
88e21dc746 ("Teach bash about completing arguments for git-tag",
2007-08-31). The long options were not added to "git tag" until many
years later, in c97eff5a95 ("git-tag: introduce long forms for the
options", 2011-08-28).
Extend tag name completion to --delete/--verify.
Signed-off-by: Todd Zullinger <tmz@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Clean-up to various pieces of Perl code we have.
* ab/perl-fixes:
perl Git::LoadCPAN: emit better errors under NO_PERL_CPAN_FALLBACKS
Makefile: add NO_PERL_CPAN_FALLBACKS knob
perl: move the perl/Git/FromCPAN tree to perl/FromCPAN
perl: generalize the Git::LoadCPAN facility
perl: move CPAN loader wrappers to another namespace
perl: update our copy of Mail::Address
perl: update our ancient copy of Error.pm
git-send-email: unconditionally use Net::{SMTP,Domain}
Git.pm: hard-depend on the File::{Temp,Spec} modules
gitweb: hard-depend on the Digest::MD5 5.8 module
Git.pm: add the "use warnings" pragma
Git.pm: remove redundant "use strict" from sub-package
perl: *.pm files should not have the executable bit
Teach parse-options API an option to help the completion script,
and make use of the mechanism in command line completion.
* nd/parseopt-completion: (45 commits)
completion: more subcommands in _git_notes()
completion: complete --{reuse,reedit}-message= for all notes subcmds
completion: simplify _git_notes
completion: don't set PARSE_OPT_NOCOMPLETE on --rerere-autoupdate
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_worktree
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_tag
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_status
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_show_branch
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_rm
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_revert
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_reset
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_replace
remote: force completing --mirror= instead of --mirror
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_remote
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_push
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_pull
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_notes
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_name_rev
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_mv
completion: use __gitcomp_builtin in _git_merge_base
...
"git worktree" learned move and remove subcommands.
* nd/worktree-move:
t2028: fix minor error and issues in newly-added "worktree move" tests
worktree remove: allow it when $GIT_WORK_TREE is already gone
worktree remove: new command
worktree move: refuse to move worktrees with submodules
worktree move: accept destination as directory
worktree move: new command
worktree.c: add update_worktree_location()
worktree.c: add validate_worktree()
A sample auto-gc hook (in contrib/) to skip auto-gc while on
battery has been updated to almost always allow running auto-gc
unless on_ac_power command is absolutely sure that we are on
battery power (earlier, it skipped unless the command is sure that
we are on ac power).
* ab/pre-auto-gc-battery:
hooks/pre-auto-gc-battery: allow gc to run on non-laptops
"git subtree" script (in contrib/) scripted around "git log", whose
output got affected by end-user configuration like log.showsignature
* sg/subtree-signed-commits:
subtree: fix add and pull for GPG-signed commits
Two subcommands are added for completion: merge and get-ref. get-ref
is more like plumbing. But since it does not share the prefix with any
other subcommands, it won't slow anybody down.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The new subcommand that takes these options is 'git notes edit'. Just
accept the options from subcommands since we handle them the same way
in builtin/notes.c anyway. If a user does
git prune --reuse-message=...
just let the command catches that error when it's executed.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This also adds completion for 'git notes remove' and 'git notes edit'.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There is not a strong reason to hide this option, and git-merge already
completes this one. Let's allow to complete this for all commands (and
let git-completion.bash do the suppressing if needed).
This makes --rerere-autoupdate completable for am, cherry-pick and
revert. rebase completion is fixed manually because it's a shell
script and does not benefit from --git-completion-helper.
Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The new "--show-current-patch" option gives an end-user facing way
to get the diff being applied when "git rebase" (and "git am")
stops with a conflict.
* nd/rebase-show-current-patch:
rebase: introduce and use pseudo-ref REBASE_HEAD
rebase: add --show-current-patch
am: add --show-current-patch
Clarify how configured fetch refspecs interact with the "--prune"
option of "git fetch", and also add a handy short-hand for getting
rid of stale tags that are locally held.
* ab/fetch-prune:
fetch: make the --prune-tags work with <url>
fetch: add a --prune-tags option and fetch.pruneTags config
fetch tests: add scaffolding for the new fetch.pruneTags
git-fetch & config doc: link to the new PRUNING section
git remote doc: correct dangerous lies about what prune does
git fetch doc: add a new section to explain the ins & outs of pruning
fetch tests: fetch <url> <spec> as well as fetch [<remote>]
fetch tests: expand case/esac for later change
fetch tests: double quote a variable for interpolation
fetch tests: test --prune and refspec interaction
fetch tests: add a tag to be deleted to the pruning tests
fetch tests: re-arrange arguments for future readability
fetch tests: refactor in preparation for testing tag pruning
remote: add a macro for "refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*"
fetch: stop accessing "remote" variable indirectly
fetch: trivially refactor assignment to ref_nr
fetch: don't redundantly NULL something calloc() gave us
In some projects contributions from groups are only accepted from a
common group email address. But every individual may want to receive
replies to her own personal address. That's what we have 'Reply-To'
headers for in SMTP. So introduce an optional '--reply-to' command
line option.
This patch re-uses the $reply_to variable. This could break
out-of-tree patches!
Signed-off-by: Christian Ludwig <chrissicool@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Move the Git::Error and Git::Mail::Address wrappers to the
Git::LoadCPAN::Loader::* namespace, e.g. Git::LoadCPAN::Error. That
module will then either load Error from CPAN (if installed on the OS),
or use Git::FromCPAN::Error.
When I added the Error wrapper in 20d2a30f8f ("Makefile: replace
perl/Makefile.PL with simple make rules", 2017-12-10) I didn't think
about how confusing it would be to have these modules sitting in the
same tree as our normal modules. Let's put these all into
Git::{Load,From}CPAN::* to clearly distinguish them from the rest.
This also makes things a bit less confusing since there was already a
Git::Error namespace ever since 8b9150e3e3 ("Git.pm: Handle failed
commands' output", 2006-06-24).
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Desktops and servers tend to have no power sensor, thus on_ac_power returns
255 ("unknown"). Thus, let's take any answer other than 1 ("battery") as
no contraindication to run gc.
If that tool returns "unknown", there's no point in querying other sources
as it already queried them, and is smarter than us (can handle multiple
adapters).
Reported by: Xin Li <delphij@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Adam Borowski <kilobyte@angband.pl>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git am" has learned the "--quit" option, in addition to the existing
"--abort" option; having the pair mirrors a few other commands like
"rebase" and "cherry-pick".
* nd/am-quit:
am: support --quit
Amazingly, timegm(gmtime(0)) is only 0 before 2020 because perl's
timegm deviates from GNU timegm(3) in how it handles years.
man Time::Local says
Whenever possible, use an absolute four digit year instead.
with a detailed explanation about ambiguity of 2-digit years above that.
Even though this ambiguity is error-prone with >50% of users getting it
wrong, it has been like this for 20+ years, so we just use 4-digit years
everywhere to be on the safe side.
We add some extra logic to cvsimport because it allows 2-digit year
input and interpreting an 18 as 1918 can be avoided easily and safely.
Signed-off-by: Bernhard M. Wiedemann <bwiedemann@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If log.showsignature is true (or --show-signature is passed) while
performing a `subtree add` or `subtree pull`, the command fails.
toptree_for_commit() calls `log` and passes the output to `commit-tree`.
If this output shows the GPG signature data, `commit-tree` throws a
fatal error.
This commit fixes the issue by adding --no-show-signature to `log` calls
in a few places, as well as using the more appropriate `rev-parse`
instead where possible.
Signed-off-by: Stephen R Guglielmo <srg@guglielmo.us>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Rename C++ keyword in order to bring the codebase closer to being able
to be compiled with a C++ compiler.
Signed-off-by: Brandon Williams <bmwill@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>