The code for warning_errno/die_errno has been refactored and a new
error_errno() reporting helper is introduced.
* nd/error-errno: (41 commits)
wrapper.c: use warning_errno()
vcs-svn: use error_errno()
upload-pack.c: use error_errno()
unpack-trees.c: use error_errno()
transport-helper.c: use error_errno()
sha1_file.c: use {error,die,warning}_errno()
server-info.c: use error_errno()
sequencer.c: use error_errno()
run-command.c: use error_errno()
rerere.c: use error_errno() and warning_errno()
reachable.c: use error_errno()
mailmap.c: use error_errno()
ident.c: use warning_errno()
http.c: use error_errno() and warning_errno()
grep.c: use error_errno()
gpg-interface.c: use error_errno()
fast-import.c: use error_errno()
entry.c: use error_errno()
editor.c: use error_errno()
diff-no-index.c: use error_errno()
...
"git rerere" can encounter two or more files with the same conflict
signature that have to be resolved in different ways, but there was
no way to record these separate resolutions.
* jc/rerere-multi:
rerere: adjust 'forget' to multi-variant world order
rerere: split code to call ll_merge() further
rerere: move code related to "forget" together
rerere: gc and clear
rerere: do use multiple variants
t4200: rerere a merge with two identical conflicts
rerere: allow multiple variants to exist
rerere: delay the recording of preimage
rerere: handle leftover rr-cache/$ID directory and postimage files
rerere: scan $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID when instantiating a rerere_id
rerere: split conflict ID further
Because conflicts with the same contents inside conflict blocks
enclosed by "<<<<<<<" and ">>>>>>>" can now have multiple variants
to help three-way merge to adjust to the differences outside the
conflict blocks, "rerere forget $path" needs to be taught that there
may be multiple recorded resolutions that share the same conflict
hash (which groups the conflicts with "the same contents inside
conflict blocks"), among which there are some that would not be
relevant to the conflict we are looking at. These "other variants"
that happen to share the same conflict hash should not be cleared,
and the variant that would apply to the current conflict may not be
the zero-th one (which is the only one that is cleared by the
current code).
After finding the conflict hash, iterate over the existing variants
and try to resolve the conflict using each of them to find the one
that "cleanly" resolves the current conflict. That is the one we
want to forget and record the preimage for, so that the user can
record the corrected resolution.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The merge() helper function is given an existing rerere ID (i.e. the
name of the .git/rr-cache/* subdirectory, and the variant number)
that identifies one <preimage, postimage> pair, try to see if the
conflicted state in the given path can be resolved by using the pair,
and if this succeeds, then update the conflicted path with the
result in the working tree.
To implement rerere_forget() in the multiple variant world, we'd
need a helper to do the "see if a <preimage, postimage> pair cleanly
resolves a conflicted state we have in-core" part, without actually
touching any file in the working tree, in order to identify which
variant(s) to remove. Split the logic to do so into a separate
helper function try_merge() out of merge().
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"rerere forget" is the only user of handle_cache() helper, which in
turn is the only user of rerere_io that reads from an in-core buffer
whose getline method is implemented as rerere_mem_getline(). Gather
them together.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Adjust "git rerere gc" and "git rerere clear" to the new world order
with rerere database with multiple variants for the same shape of
conflicts.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This enables the multiple-variant support for real. Multiple
conflicts of the same shape can have differences in contexts where
they appear, interfering the replaying of recorded resolution of one
conflict to another, and in such a case, their resolutions are
recorded as different variants under the same conflict ID.
We still need to adjust garbage collection codepaths for this
change, but the basic "replay" functionality is functional with
this change.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The shape of the conflict in a path determines the conflict ID. The
preimage and postimage pair that was recorded for the conflict ID
previously may or may not replay well for the conflict we just saw.
Currently, we punt when the previous resolution does not cleanly
replay, but ideally we should then be able to record the currently
conflicted path by assigning a new 'variant', and then record the
resolution the user is going to make.
Introduce a mechanism to have more than one variant for a given
conflict ID; we do not actually assign any variant other than 0th
variant yet at this step.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We record the preimage only when there is no directory to record the
conflict we encountered, i.e. when $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID does not
exist. As the plan is to allow multiple <preimage,postimage> pairs
as variants for the same conflict ID eventually, this logic needs to
go.
As the first step in that direction, stop the "did we create the
directory? Then we record the preimage" logic. Instead, we record
if a preimage does not exist when we saw a conflict in a path. Also
make sure that we remove a stale postimage, which most likely is
totally unrelated to the resolution of this new conflict, when we
create a new preimage under $ID when $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID already
exists.
In later patches, we will further update this logic to be "do we
have <preimage,postimage> pair that cleanly resolve the current
conflicts? If not, record a new preimage as a new variant", but
that does not happen at this stage yet.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If by some accident there is only $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID directory
existed, we wouldn't have recorded a preimage for a conflict that
is newly encountered, which would mean after a manual resolution,
we wouldn't have recorded it by storing the postimage, because the
logic used to be "if there is no rr-cache/$ID directory, then we are
the first so record the preimage". Instead, record preimage if we
do not have one.
In addition, if there is only $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID/postimage
without corresponding preimage, we would have tried to call into
merge() and punted.
These would have been a situation frustratingly hard to recover
from.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Some calls to strcpy(3) triggers a false warning from static
analysers that are less intelligent than humans, and reducing the
number of these false hits helps us notice real issues. A few
calls to strcpy(3) in "git rerere" that are already safe has been
rewritten to avoid false wanings.
* jk/rerere-xsnprintf:
rerere: replace strcpy with xsnprintf
This will help fixing bootstrap corner-case issues, e.g. having an
empty $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID directory would fail to record a
preimage, in later changes in this series.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The plan is to keep assigning the backward compatible conflict ID
based on the hash of the (normalized) text of conflicts, keep using
that conflict ID as the directory name under $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/, but
allow each conflicted path to use a separate "variant" to record
resolutions, i.e. having more than one <preimage,postimage> pairs
under $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/$ID/ directory. As the first step in that
direction, separate the shared "conflict ID" out of the rerere_id
structure.
The plan is to keep information per $ID in rerere_dir, that can be
shared among rerere_id that is per conflicted path.
When we are done with rerere(), which can be directly called from
other programs like "git apply", "git commit" and "git merge", the
shared rerere_dir structures can be freed entirely, so they are not
reference-counted and they are not freed when we release rerere_id's
that reference them.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This shouldn't overflow, as we are copying a sha1 hex into a
41-byte buffer. But it does not hurt to use a bound-checking
function, which protects us and makes auditing for overflows
easier.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Code clean-up and minor fixes.
* jc/rerere: (21 commits)
rerere: un-nest merge() further
rerere: use "struct rerere_id" instead of "char *" for conflict ID
rerere: call conflict-ids IDs
rerere: further clarify do_rerere_one_path()
rerere: further de-dent do_plain_rerere()
rerere: refactor "replay" part of do_plain_rerere()
rerere: explain the remainder
rerere: explain "rerere forget" codepath
rerere: explain the primary codepath
rerere: explain MERGE_RR management helpers
rerere: fix benign off-by-one non-bug and clarify code
rerere: explain the rerere I/O abstraction
rerere: do not leak mmfile[] for a path with multiple stage #1 entries
rerere: stop looping unnecessarily
rerere: drop want_sp parameter from is_cmarker()
rerere: report autoupdated paths only after actually updating them
rerere: write out each record of MERGE_RR in one go
rerere: lift PATH_MAX limitation
rerere: plug conflict ID leaks
rerere: handle conflicts with multiple stage #1 entries
...
There's a bug in builtin/am.c in which we take a lock on
MERGE_RR recursively. But rather than fix am.c, this patch
fixes the confusing interface from rerere.c that caused the
bug. Read on for the gory details.
The setup_rerere() function both reads the existing MERGE_RR
file, and takes MERGE_RR.lock. In the rerere() and
rerere_forget() functions, we end up in write_rr(), which
will then commit the lock file.
But for functions like rerere_clear() that do not write to
MERGE_RR, we expect the caller to have handled
setup_rerere(). That caller would then need to release the
lockfile, but it can't; the lock struct is local to
rerere.c.
For builtin/rerere.c, this is OK. We run a single rerere
operation and then exit immediately, which has the side
effect of rolling back the lockfile.
But in builtin/am.c, this is actively wrong. If we run "git
am -3 --skip", we call setup-rerere twice without releasing
the lock:
1. The "--skip" causes us to call am_rerere_clear(), which
calls setup_rerere(), but never drops the lock.
2. We then proceed to the next patch.
3. The "--3way" may cause us to call rerere() to handle
conflicts in that patch, but we are already holding the
lock. The lockfile code dies with:
BUG: prepare_tempfile_object called for active object
We could fix this by having rerere_clear() call
rollback_lock_file(). But it feels a bit odd for it to roll
back a lockfile that it did not itself take. So let's
simplify the interface further, and handle setup_rerere in
the function itself, taking away the question from the
caller over whether they need to do so.
We can give rerere_gc() the same treatment, as well (even
though it doesn't have any callers besides builtin/rerere.c
at this point). Note that these functions don't take flags
from their callers to pass along to setup_rerere; that's OK,
because the flags would not be meaningful for what they are
doing.
Both of those functions need to hold the lock because even
though they do not write to MERGE_RR, they are still writing
and should be protected from a simultaneous "rerere" run.
But rerere_remaining(), "rerere diff", and "rerere status"
are all read-only operations. They want to setup_rerere(),
but do not care about taking the lock in the first place.
Since our update of MERGE_RR is the usual atomic rename done
by commit_lock_file, they can just do a lockless read. For
that, we teach setup_rerere a READONLY flag to avoid the
lock.
As a bonus, this pushes builtin/rerere.c's setup_rerere call
closer to the functions that use it. Which means that "git
rerere totally-bogus-command" will no longer silently
exit(0) in a repository without rerere enabled.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
One of the most common uses of git_path() is to pass a
constant, like git_path("MERGE_MSG"). This has two
drawbacks:
1. The return value is a static buffer, and the lifetime
is dependent on other calls to git_path, etc.
2. There's no compile-time checking of the pathname. This
is OK for a one-off (after all, we have to spell it
correctly at least once), but many of these constant
strings appear throughout the code.
This patch introduces a series of functions to "memoize"
these strings, which are essentially globals for the
lifetime of the program. We compute the value once, take
ownership of the buffer, and return the cached value for
subsequent calls. cache.h provides a helper macro for
defining these functions as one-liners, and defines a few
common ones for global use.
Using a macro is a little bit gross, but it does nicely
document the purpose of the functions. If we need to touch
them all later (e.g., because we learned how to change the
git_dir variable at runtime, and need to invalidate all of
the stored values), it will be much easier to have the
complete list.
Note that the shared-global functions have separate, manual
declarations. We could do something clever with the macros
(e.g., expand it to a declaration in some places, and a
declaration _and_ a definition in path.c). But there aren't
that many, and it's probably better to stay away from
too-magical macros.
Likewise, if we abandon the C preprocessor in favor of
generating these with a script, we could get much fancier.
E.g., normalizing "FOO/BAR-BAZ" into "git_path_foo_bar_baz".
But the small amount of saved typing is probably not worth
the resulting confusion to readers who want to grep for the
function's definition.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
By consistently using "upon failure, set 'ret' and jump to out"
pattern, flatten the function further.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This gives a thin abstraction between the conflict ID that is a hash
value obtained by inspecting the conflicts and the name of the
directory under $GIT_DIR/rr-cache/, in which the previous resolution
is recorded to be replayed. The plan is to make sure that the
presence of the directory does not imply the presense of a previous
resolution and vice-versa, and later allow us to have more than one
pair of <preimage, postimage> for a given conflict ID.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Most places we call conflict IDs "name" and some others we call them
"hex"; update all of them to "id".
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Extract the body of a loop that attempts to replay recorded
resolution for each conflicted path into a helper function, not
because I want to call it from multiple places later, but because
the logic has become too deeply nested and hard to read.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Explain the internals of rerere as in-code comments, while
sprinkling "NEEDSWORK" comment to highlight iffy bits and
questionable assumptions.
This covers the codepath that implements "rerere gc" and "rerere
clear".
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Explain the internals of rerere as in-code comments, while
sprinkling "NEEDSWORK" comment to highlight iffy bits and
questionable assumptions.
This covers the codepath that implements "rerere forget".
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Explain the internals of rerere as in-code comments, while
sprinkling "NEEDSWORK" comment to highlight iffy bits and
questionable assumptions.
This one covers the codepath reached from rerere(), the primary
interface to the subsystem.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Explain the internals of rerere as in-code comments, while
sprinkling "NEEDSWORK" comment to highlight iffy bits and
questionable assumptions.
This one covers the "$GIT_DIR/MERGE_RR" file and in-core merge_rr
that are used to keep track of the status of "rerere" session in
progress.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
rerere_io_putconflict() wants to use a limited fixed-sized buf[] on
stack repeatedly to formulate a longer string, but its implementation
is doubly confusing:
* When it knows that the whole thing fits in buf[], it wants to
fill early part of buf[] with conflict marker characters,
followed by a LF and a NUL. It miscounts the size of the buffer
by 1 and does not use the last byte of buf[].
* When it needs to show only the early part of a long conflict
marker string (because the whole thing does not fit in buf[]), it
adjusts the number of bytes shown in the current round in a
strange-looking way. It makes sure that this round does not emit
all bytes and leaves at least one byte to the next round, so that
"it all fits" case will pick up the rest and show the terminating
LF. While this is correct, one needs to stop and think for a
while to realize why it is correct without an explanation.
Fix the benign off-by-one, and add comments to explain the
strange-looking size adjustment.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Explain the internals of rerere as in-code comments.
This one covers our thin I/O abstraction to read from either
a file or a memory while optionally writing out to a file.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A conflicted index can have multiple stage #1 entries when dealing
with a criss-cross merge and using the "resolve" merge strategy.
Plug the leak by reading only the first one of the same stage
entries.
Strictly speaking, this fix does change the semantics, in that we
used to use the last stage #1 entry as the common ancestor when
doing the plain-vanilla three-way merge, but with the leak fix, we
will use the first stage #1 entry. But it is not a grave backward
compatibility breakage. Either way, we are arbitrarily picking one
of multiple stage #1 entries and using it, ignoring others, and
there is no meaning in the ordering of these stage #1 entries.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
handle_cache() loops 3 times starting from an index entry that is
unmerged, while ignoring an entry for a path that is different from
what we are looking for.
As the index is sorted, once we see a different path, we know we saw
all stages for the path we are interested in. Just loop while we
see the same path and then break, instead of continuing for 3 times.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
As the nature of the conflict marker line determines if there should
be a SP and label after it, the caller shouldn't have to pass the
parameter redundantly.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Instead of writing the hash for a conflict, a HT, and the path
with three separate write_in_full() calls, format them into a
single record into a strbuf and write it out in one go.
As a more recent "rerere remaining" codepath abuses the .util field
of the merge_rr data to store a sentinel token, make sure that
codepath does not call into this function (of course, "remaining" is
a read-only operation and currently does not call it).
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The MERGE_RR file records a collection of NUL-terminated entries,
each of which consists of
- a hash that identifies the conflict
- a HT
- the pathname
We used to read this piece-by-piece, and worse yet, read the
pathname part a byte at a time into a fixed buffer of size PATH_MAX.
Instead, read a whole entry using strbuf_getwholeline() and parse
out the fields. This way, we issue fewer read(2) calls and more
importantly we do not have to limit the pathname to PATH_MAX.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The merge_rr string list stores the conflict ID (a hexadecimal
string that is used to index into $GIT_DIR/rr-cache) in the .util
field of its elements, and when do_plain_rerere() resolves a
conflict, the field is cleared. Also, when rerere_forget()
recomputes the conflict ID to updates the preimage file, the
conflict ID for the path is updated.
We forgot to free the existing conflict ID when we did these two
operations.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A conflicted index can have multiple stage #1 entries when dealing
with a criss-cross merge and using the "resolve" merge strategy.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When ac49f5ca (rerere "remaining", 2011-02-16) split out a new
helper function check_one_conflict() out of find_conflict()
function, so that the latter will use the returned value from the
new helper to update the loop control variable that is an index into
active_cache[], the new variable incremented the index by one too
many when it found a path with only stage #1 entry at the very end
of active_cache[].
This "strange" return value does not have any effect on the loop
control of two callers of this function, as they all notice that
active_nr+2 is larger than active_nr just like active_nr+1 is, but
nevertheless it puzzles the readers when they are trying to figure
out what the function is trying to do.
In fact, there is no need to do an early return. The code that
follows after skipping the stage #1 entry is fully prepared to
handle a case where the entry is at the very end of active_cache[].
Help future readers from unnecessary confusion by dropping an early
return. We skip the stage #1 entry, and if there are stage #2 and
stage #3 entries for the same path, we diagnose the path as
THREE_STAGED (otherwise we say PUNTED), and then we skip all entries
for the same path.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git rerere forget" in a repository without rerere enabled gave a
cryptic error message; it should be a silent no-op instead.
* jk/rerere-forget-check-enabled:
rerere: exit silently on "forget" when rerere is disabled
If you run "git rerere forget foo" in a repository that does
not have rerere enabled, git hits an internal error:
$ git init -q
$ git rerere forget foo
fatal: BUG: attempt to commit unlocked object
The problem is that setup_rerere() will not actually take
the lock if the rerere system is disabled. We should notice
this and return early. We can return with a success code
here, because we know there is nothing to forget.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git rerere" (invoked internally from many mergy operations) did
not correctly signal errors when told to update the working tree
files and failed to do so for whatever reason.
* jn/rerere-fail-on-auto-update-failure:
rerere: error out on autoupdate failure
"git rerere" (invoked internally from many mergy operations) did
not correctly signal errors when told to update the working tree
files and failed to do so for whatever reason.
* jn/rerere-fail-on-auto-update-failure:
rerere: error out on autoupdate failure
We have been silently tolerating errors by returning early with an
error that the caller ignores since rerere.autoupdate was introduced
in v1.6.0-rc0~120^2 (2008-06-22). So on error (for example if the
index is already locked), rerere can return success silently without
updating the index or with only some items in the index updated.
Better to treat such failures as a fatal error so the operator can
figure out what is wrong and fix it.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Move the interface declaration for the functions in lockfile.c from
cache.h to a new file, lockfile.h. Add #includes where necessary (and
remove some redundant includes of cache.h by files that already
include builtin.h).
Move the documentation of the lock_file state diagram from lockfile.c
to the new header file.
Signed-off-by: Michael Haggerty <mhagger@alum.mit.edu>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Use `git_config_get_*()` family instead of `git_config()` to take advantage of
the config-set API which provides a cleaner control flow.
Signed-off-by: Tanay Abhra <tanayabh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* rs/code-cleaning:
fsck: simplify fsck_commit_buffer() by using commit_list_count()
commit: use commit_list_append() instead of duplicating its code
merge: simplify merge_trivial() by using commit_list_append()
use strbuf_addch for adding single characters
use strbuf_addbuf for adding strbufs