For testing truncated log messages 'commit_msg' function uses `sed` to
cut a message. On various platforms `sed` behaves differently and
results of its work depend on locales installed. So, avoid using `sed`.
Use predefined expected outputs instead of calculated ones.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Shumkin <Alex.Crezoff@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In de6029a (pretty: Add failing tests: --format output should honor
logOutputEncoding, 2013-06-26) 'complex-subject' test was changed.
Revert it back, because that change actually removed tests for "%b"
and "%s" with i18n.commitEncoding set. Also, add two more tests for
mentioned above "%b" and "%s" to test encoding conversions with no
i18n.commitEncoding set.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Shumkin <Alex.Crezoff@gmail.com>
Suggested-by: Johannes Sixt <j.sixt@viscovery.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Function 'test_format' has become harder to read after its change in
de6029a2 (pretty: Add failing tests: --format output should honor
logOutputEncoding, 2013-06-26). Simplify it by moving its "should we
expect it to fail?" parameter to the end.
Note, current code does not use this last parameter as far as there
are no tests expected to fail. We can keep that for future use.
Also, reformat comments.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Shumkin <Alex.Crezoff@gmail.com>
Improved-by: Johannes Sixt <j.sixt@viscovery.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In previuos commit de6029a (pretty: Add failing tests: --format output
should honor logOutputEncoding, 2013-06-26) single quotes were replaced
with double quotes to make "$(commit_msg)" expression in heredoc to
work. The same effect can be achieved by using "EOF" as a heredoc
delimiter instead of "\EOF".
Signed-off-by: Alexey Shumkin <Alex.Crezoff@gmail.com>
Suggested-by: Johannes Sixt <j.sixt@viscovery.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Allows N instances of tests run in parallel, each running 1/N parts
of the test suite under Valgrind, to speed things up.
* tr/test-v-and-v-subtest-only:
perf-lib: fix start/stop of perf tests
test-lib: support running tests under valgrind in parallel
test-lib: allow prefixing a custom string before "ok N" etc.
test-lib: valgrind for only tests matching a pattern
test-lib: verbose mode for only tests matching a pattern
test-lib: self-test that --verbose works
test-lib: rearrange start/end of test_expect_* and test_skip
test-lib: refactor $GIT_SKIP_TESTS matching
test-lib: enable MALLOC_* for the actual tests
Do not use FIFOs on cygwin, they do not work. Cygwin includes
coreutils, so has mkfifo, and that command does something. However,
the resultant named pipe is known (on the Cygwin mailing list at
least) to not work correctly.
This disables PIPE for Cygwin, allowing t0008.sh to complete (all other
tests in that file work correctly).
Signed-off-by: Mark Levedahl <mlevedahl@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Both "iso8859-1" and "iso-8859-1" are understood as latin-1 by
modern platforms, but the latter is not understood by older
platforms;update tests to use the former.
This is in line with 3994e8a9 (t4201: use ISO8859-1 rather than
ISO-8859-1, 2009-12-03), which did the same.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Shumkin <Alex.Crezoff@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There are often parent pages logically above the gitweb projects
list, e.g. home pages of the organization and department that host
the gitweb server. This change allows you to include links to those
pages in gitweb's breadcrumb trail.
Signed-off-by: Tony Finch <dot@dotat.at>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The commit code accepts pseudo-UTF-8 sequences that encode a character with more
bytes than necessary. Reject such sequences, since they are not valid UTF-8.
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The commit code already contains code for validating UTF-8, but it does not
check for invalid values, such as guaranteed non-characters and surrogates. Fix
this by explicitly checking for and rejecting such characters.
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If the SMTP port is provided as part of the hostname to Net::SMTP, it passes
the combined string to the SASL provider; this causes GSSAPI authentication to
fail since Kerberos does not want the port information. Instead, pass the port
as a separate argument as is done for SSL connections.
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This script was added in 36e5e70 (Start deprecating "git-command" in
favor of "git command", 2007-06-30) with the intent of aiding the
transition away from dashed forms.
It has already been used to help the transision and served its
purpose, and is no longer very useful for follow-up work, because
the majority of remaining matches it finds are false positives.
Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* rs/empty-archive:
t5004: resurrect original empty tar archive test
t5004: avoid using tar for checking emptiness of archive
Conflicts:
t/t5004-archive-corner-cases.sh
"gitweb" forgot to clear a global variable $search_regexp upon each
request, mistakenly carrying over the previous search to a new one
when used as a persistent CGI.
* cm/gitweb-project-list-persistent-cgi-fix:
gitweb: fix problem causing erroneous project list
"git log -c --follow $path" segfaulted upon hitting the commit that
renamed the $path being followed.
* cb/log-follow-with-combined:
fix segfault with git log -c --follow
When a reflog notation is used for implicit "current branch", we did
not say which branch, and worse said "branch ''".
* rr/die-on-missing-upstream:
sha1_name: fix error message for @{<N>}, @{<date>}
sha1_name: fix error message for @{u}
Fix a typo ("remote remote-tracking") going back to the big cleanup
in 2010 (8b3f3f84 etc). Also, remove some more occurrences of
"tracking" and "remote tracking" in favor of "remote-tracking".
Signed-off-by: Michael Schubert <mschub@elegosoft.com>
Reviewed-by: Johan Herland <johan@herland.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Format-patch generates emails with the "From" address set to the
author of each patch. If you are going to send the emails, however,
you would want to replace the author identity with yours (if they
are not the same), and bump the author identity to an in-body
header.
Normally this is handled by git-send-email, which does the
transformation before sending out the emails. However, some
workflows may not use send-email (e.g., imap-send, or a custom
script which feeds the mbox to a non-git MUA). They could each
implement this feature themselves, but getting it right is
non-trivial (one must canonicalize the identities by reversing any
RFC2047 encoding or RFC822 quoting of the headers, which has caused
many bugs in send-email over the years).
This patch takes a different approach: it teaches format-patch a
"--from" option which handles the ident check and in-body header
while it is writing out the email. It's much simpler to do at this
level (because we haven't done any quoting yet), and any workflow
based on format-patch can easily turn it on.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In the current code, callers are expected to fill in the
pretty_print_context, and then the pretty.c functions simply
read from it. This leaves no room for the pretty.c functions
to communicate with each other by manipulating the context
(e.g., data seen while printing the header may impact how we
print the body).
Rather than introduce a new struct to hold modifiable data,
let's just drop the const-ness of the existing context
struct.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit e83d36b66f turned "print STDOUT" into "print {*STDOUT}", as
suggested by perlcritic. Unfortunately, it also changed two "binmode
STDOUT" calls the same way, which does not work and yield a "Not a GLOB
reference" error.
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since commit 00b347d (git-config: do not complain about duplicate
entries, 2012-10-23), "git config --get" does not exit with an error if
there are multiple values for the specified key but instead returns the
last value. Update the documentation to reflect this.
Signed-off-by: John Keeping <john@keeping.me.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add the --depth option to the add and update commands of "git submodule",
which is then passed on to the clone command. This is useful when the
submodule(s) are huge and you're not really interested in anything but
the latest commit.
Tests are added and some indention adjustments were made to conform to the
rest of the testfile on "submodule update can handle symbolic links in pwd".
Signed-off-by: Fredrik Gustafsson <iveqy@iveqy.com>
Acked-by: Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Users can set submodule.$name.update to '!command' which will cause
'command' to be run instead of checkout/merge/rebase. This allows
the user finer-grained control over how the update is done.
The primary motivation for this was interoperability with stgit;
however being able to intercept the submodule update process may
prove useful for integrating with or extending other tools.
Signed-off-by: Chris Packham <judge.packham@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
These three options mean "favor fast-forwarding when possible,
without creating an unnecessary merge", "never fast-forward and
always create a merge commit even when the commit being merged is a
strict descendant", and "we do not want to create any merge commit;
update only when the merged commit is a strict descendant".
They are "pick one out of these three possibilities" options, and
correspond to "merge.ff" configuration that is tri-state (yes, no
and only).
However, the implementation did not follow the usual convention for
the command line options (later one wins, and command line overrides
what is in the configuration).
Fix this by consolidating two variables (fast_forward_only and
allow_fast_forward) used in the implementation into one enum that
can take one of the three possible values.
Signed-off-by: Miklos Vajna <vmiklos@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Merge strategy and its options can be specified in `git rebase`,
but with `--interactive`, they were completely ignored.
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Fontaine <arnau@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When we call find_common to start finding common ancestors
with the remote side of a fetch, the first thing we do is
insert the tip of each ref into our rev_list linked list. We
keep the list sorted the whole time with
commit_list_insert_by_date, which means our insertion ends
up doing O(n^2) timestamp comparisons.
We could teach rev_list_push to use an unsorted list, and
then sort it once after we have added each ref. However, in
get_rev, we process the list by popping commits off the
front and adding parents back in timestamp-sorted order. So
that procedure would still operate on the large list.
Instead, we can replace the linked list with a heap-based
priority queue, which can do O(log n) insertion, making the
whole insertion procedure O(n log n).
As a result of switching to the prio_queue struct, we fix
two minor bugs:
1. When we "pop" a commit in get_rev, and when we clear
the rev_list in find_common, we do not take care to
free the "struct commit_list", and just leak its
memory. With the prio_queue implementation, the memory
management is handled for us.
2. In get_rev, we look at the head commit of the list,
possibly push its parents onto the list, and then "pop"
the front of the list off, assuming it is the same
element that we just peeked at. This is typically going
to be the case, but would not be in the face of clock
skew: the parents are inserted by date, and could
potentially be inserted at the head of the list if they
have a timestamp newer than their descendent. In this
case, we would accidentally pop the parent, and never
process it at all.
The new implementation pulls the commit off of the
queue as we examine it, and so does not suffer from
this problem.
With this patch, a fetch of a single commit into a
repository with 50,000 refs went from:
real 0m7.984s
user 0m7.852s
sys 0m0.120s
to:
real 0m2.017s
user 0m1.884s
sys 0m0.124s
Before this patch, a larger case with 370K refs still had
not completed after tens of minutes; with this patch, it
completes in about 12 seconds.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This helper function was introduced as a prio_queue
comparator to help topological sorting. However, other users
of prio_queue who want to replace commit_list_insert_by_date
will want to use it, too. So let's make it public.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We insert the commit pointed to by each ref one-by-one into
the "complete" commit_list using insert_by_date. Because
each insertion is O(n), we end up with O(n^2) behavior.
This typically doesn't matter, because the number of refs is
reasonably small. And even if there are a lot of refs, they
often point to a smaller set of objects (in which case the
optimization in commit ea5f220 keeps our "n" small).
However, in pathological repositories (hundreds of thousands
of refs, each pointing to a unique commit), this quadratic
behavior can make a difference. Since we do not care about
the list order until we have finished building it, we can
simply keep it unsorted during the insertion phase, then
sort it afterwards.
On a repository like the one described above, this dropped
the time to do a no-op fetch from 2.0s to 1.7s. On normal
repositories, it probably does not matter at all, but it
does not hurt to protect ourselves from pathological cases.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
One test in t1512 that expects a failure incorrectly passed. The
test prepares a commit whose object name begins with ten "0"s, and
also prepares a tag that points at the commit. The object name of
the tag also begins with ten "0"s. There is no other commit-ish
object in the repository whose name begins with such a prefix.
Ideally, in such a repository:
$ git rev-parse --verify 0000000000^{commit}
should yield that commit. If 0000000000 is taken as the commit
0000000000e4f, peeling it to a commmit yields that commit itself,
and if 0000000000 is taken as the tag 0000000000f8f, peeling it to a
commit also yields the same commit, so in that twisted sense, the
extended SHA-1 expression 0000000000^{commit} is unambigous. The
test that expects a failure is to check the above command.
The reason the test expects a failure is that we did not implement
such a "unification" of two candidate objects. What we did (or at
least, meant to) implement was to recognise that a commit-ish is
required to expand 0000000000, and notice that there are two succh
commit-ish, and diagnose the request as ambiguous.
However, there was a bug in the logic to check the candidate
objects. When the code saw 0000000000f8f (a tag) that shared the
shortened prefix (ten "0"s), it tried to make sure that the tag is a
commit-ish by looking at the tag object. Because it incorrectly
used lookup_object() when the tag has not been parsed, however, we
incorrectly declared that the tag is _not_ a commit-ish, leaving the
sole commit in the repository, 0000000000e4f, that has the required
prefix as "unique match", causing the test to pass when it shouldn't.
This fixes the logic to inspect the type of the object a tag refers
to, to make the test that is expected to fail correctly fail.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The earliest iteration of this test script used a magic string
110282 as the common prefix for ambiguous object names, but the
final edition switched the common prefix to 0000000000 (10 "0"s).
Unfortunately, instances of the original prefix were left in the
comments and a few tests. Replace them with the correct constants.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"stash save" is about saving the local change to the working tree,
but also about restoring the state of the last commit to the working
tree. When a local change is to turn a non-directory to a directory,
in order to restore the non-directory, everything in the directory
needs to be removed.
Which is fine when running "git stash save --include-untracked",
but without that option, untracked, newly created files in the
directory will have to be discarded, if the state you are restoring
to has a non-directory at the same path as the directory.
Introduce a safety valve to fail the operation in such case, using
the "ls-files --killed" which was designed for this exact purpose.
The "stash save" is stopped when untracked files need to be
discarded because their leading path ceased to be a directory, and
the user is required to pass --force to really have the data
removed.
Signed-off-by: Petr Baudis <pasky@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When the working tree walker encounters a directory, it asks the
function treat_directory() if it should descend into it, show it as
an untracked directory, or do something else. When the directory is
the top of the submodule working tree, we used to say "That is an
untracked directory", which was bogus.
It is an entity that is tracked in the index of the repository we
are looking at, and that is not to be descended into it. Return
path_none, not path_untracked, to report that.
The existing case that path_untracked is returned for a newly
discovered submodule that is not tracked in the index (this only
happens when DIR_NO_GITLINKS option is not used) is unchanged, but
that is exactly because the submodule is not tracked in the index.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The original way to specify remote repository using .git/branches/
used to have a nifty feature. The code to support the feature was
still in a function but the caller was changed not to call it 5
years ago, breaking that feature and leaving the supporting code
unreachable.
* rr/remote-branch-config-refresh:
t/t5505-remote: test multiple push/pull in remotes-file
ls-remote doc: don't encourage use of branches-file
ls-remote doc: rewrite <repository> paragraph
ls-remote doc: fix example invocation on git.git
t/t5505-remote: test url-with-# in branches-file
remote: remove dead code in read_branches_file()
t/t5505-remote: use test_path_is_missing
t/t5505-remote: test push-refspec in branches-file
t/t5505-remote: modernize style