1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/git/git.git synced 2024-11-16 14:04:52 +01:00
git/t/t6036-recursive-corner-cases.sh
Justin Lebar 235e8d5914 code and test: fix misuses of "nor"
Signed-off-by: Justin Lebar <jlebar@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2014-03-31 15:29:33 -07:00

776 lines
19 KiB
Bash
Executable file

#!/bin/sh
test_description='recursive merge corner cases involving criss-cross merges'
. ./test-lib.sh
get_clean_checkout () {
git reset --hard &&
git clean -fdqx &&
git checkout "$1"
}
#
# L1 L2
# o---o
# / \ / \
# o X ?
# \ / \ /
# o---o
# R1 R2
#
test_expect_success 'setup basic criss-cross + rename with no modifications' '
ten="0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9" &&
for i in $ten
do
echo line $i in a sample file
done >one &&
for i in $ten
do
echo line $i in another sample file
done >two &&
git add one two &&
test_tick && git commit -m initial &&
git branch L1 &&
git checkout -b R1 &&
git mv one three &&
test_tick && git commit -m R1 &&
git checkout L1 &&
git mv two three &&
test_tick && git commit -m L1 &&
git checkout L1^0 &&
test_tick && git merge -s ours R1 &&
git tag L2 &&
git checkout R1^0 &&
test_tick && git merge -s ours L1 &&
git tag R2
'
test_expect_success 'merge simple rename+criss-cross with no modifications' '
git reset --hard &&
git checkout L2^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge -s recursive R2^0 &&
test 2 = $(git ls-files -s | wc -l) &&
test 2 = $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) &&
test 2 = $(git ls-files -o | wc -l) &&
test $(git rev-parse :2:three) = $(git rev-parse L2:three) &&
test $(git rev-parse :3:three) = $(git rev-parse R2:three) &&
test $(git rev-parse L2:three) = $(git hash-object three~HEAD) &&
test $(git rev-parse R2:three) = $(git hash-object three~R2^0)
'
#
# Same as before, but modify L1 slightly:
#
# L1m L2
# o---o
# / \ / \
# o X ?
# \ / \ /
# o---o
# R1 R2
#
test_expect_success 'setup criss-cross + rename merges with basic modification' '
git rm -rf . &&
git clean -fdqx &&
rm -rf .git &&
git init &&
ten="0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9"
for i in $ten
do
echo line $i in a sample file
done >one &&
for i in $ten
do
echo line $i in another sample file
done >two &&
git add one two &&
test_tick && git commit -m initial &&
git branch L1 &&
git checkout -b R1 &&
git mv one three &&
echo more >>two &&
git add two &&
test_tick && git commit -m R1 &&
git checkout L1 &&
git mv two three &&
test_tick && git commit -m L1 &&
git checkout L1^0 &&
test_tick && git merge -s ours R1 &&
git tag L2 &&
git checkout R1^0 &&
test_tick && git merge -s ours L1 &&
git tag R2
'
test_expect_success 'merge criss-cross + rename merges with basic modification' '
git reset --hard &&
git checkout L2^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge -s recursive R2^0 &&
test 2 = $(git ls-files -s | wc -l) &&
test 2 = $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) &&
test 2 = $(git ls-files -o | wc -l) &&
test $(git rev-parse :2:three) = $(git rev-parse L2:three) &&
test $(git rev-parse :3:three) = $(git rev-parse R2:three) &&
test $(git rev-parse L2:three) = $(git hash-object three~HEAD) &&
test $(git rev-parse R2:three) = $(git hash-object three~R2^0)
'
#
# For the next test, we start with three commits in two lines of development
# which setup a rename/add conflict:
# Commit A: File 'a' exists
# Commit B: Rename 'a' -> 'new_a'
# Commit C: Modify 'a', create different 'new_a'
# Later, two different people merge and resolve differently:
# Commit D: Merge B & C, ignoring separately created 'new_a'
# Commit E: Merge B & C making use of some piece of secondary 'new_a'
# Finally, someone goes to merge D & E. Does git detect the conflict?
#
# B D
# o---o
# / \ / \
# A o X ? F
# \ / \ /
# o---o
# C E
#
test_expect_success 'setup differently handled merges of rename/add conflict' '
git rm -rf . &&
git clean -fdqx &&
rm -rf .git &&
git init &&
printf "0\n1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n9\n" >a &&
git add a &&
test_tick && git commit -m A &&
git branch B &&
git checkout -b C &&
echo 10 >>a &&
echo "other content" >>new_a &&
git add a new_a &&
test_tick && git commit -m C &&
git checkout B &&
git mv a new_a &&
test_tick && git commit -m B &&
git checkout B^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge C &&
git clean -f &&
test_tick && git commit -m D &&
git tag D &&
git checkout C^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge B &&
rm new_a~HEAD new_a &&
printf "Incorrectly merged content" >>new_a &&
git add -u &&
test_tick && git commit -m E &&
git tag E
'
test_expect_success 'git detects differently handled merges conflict' '
git reset --hard &&
git checkout D^0 &&
git merge -s recursive E^0 && {
echo "BAD: should have conflicted"
test "Incorrectly merged content" = "$(cat new_a)" &&
echo "BAD: Silently accepted wrong content"
return 1
}
test 3 = $(git ls-files -s | wc -l) &&
test 3 = $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) &&
test 0 = $(git ls-files -o | wc -l) &&
test $(git rev-parse :2:new_a) = $(git rev-parse D:new_a) &&
test $(git rev-parse :3:new_a) = $(git rev-parse E:new_a) &&
git cat-file -p B:new_a >>merged &&
git cat-file -p C:new_a >>merge-me &&
>empty &&
test_must_fail git merge-file \
-L "Temporary merge branch 2" \
-L "" \
-L "Temporary merge branch 1" \
merged empty merge-me &&
test $(git rev-parse :1:new_a) = $(git hash-object merged)
'
#
# criss-cross + modify/delete:
#
# B D
# o---o
# / \ / \
# A o X ? F
# \ / \ /
# o---o
# C E
#
# Commit A: file with contents 'A\n'
# Commit B: file with contents 'B\n'
# Commit C: file not present
# Commit D: file with contents 'B\n'
# Commit E: file not present
#
# Merging commits D & E should result in modify/delete conflict.
test_expect_success 'setup criss-cross + modify/delete resolved differently' '
git rm -rf . &&
git clean -fdqx &&
rm -rf .git &&
git init &&
echo A >file &&
git add file &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m A &&
git branch B &&
git checkout -b C &&
git rm file &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m C &&
git checkout B &&
echo B >file &&
git add file &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m B &&
git checkout B^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge C &&
echo B >file &&
git add file &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m D &&
git tag D &&
git checkout C^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge B &&
git rm file &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m E &&
git tag E
'
test_expect_success 'git detects conflict merging criss-cross+modify/delete' '
git checkout D^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge -s recursive E^0 &&
test 2 -eq $(git ls-files -s | wc -l) &&
test 2 -eq $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) &&
test $(git rev-parse :1:file) = $(git rev-parse master:file) &&
test $(git rev-parse :2:file) = $(git rev-parse B:file)
'
test_expect_success 'git detects conflict merging criss-cross+modify/delete, reverse direction' '
git reset --hard &&
git checkout E^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge -s recursive D^0 &&
test 2 -eq $(git ls-files -s | wc -l) &&
test 2 -eq $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) &&
test $(git rev-parse :1:file) = $(git rev-parse master:file) &&
test $(git rev-parse :3:file) = $(git rev-parse B:file)
'
#
# criss-cross + modify/modify with very contrived file contents:
#
# B D
# o---o
# / \ / \
# A o X ? F
# \ / \ /
# o---o
# C E
#
# Commit A: file with contents 'A\n'
# Commit B: file with contents 'B\n'
# Commit C: file with contents 'C\n'
# Commit D: file with contents 'D\n'
# Commit E: file with contents:
# <<<<<<< Temporary merge branch 1
# C
# =======
# B
# >>>>>>> Temporary merge branch 2
#
# Now, when we merge commits D & E, does git detect the conflict?
test_expect_success 'setup differently handled merges of content conflict' '
git clean -fdqx &&
rm -rf .git &&
git init &&
echo A >file &&
git add file &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m A &&
git branch B &&
git checkout -b C &&
echo C >file &&
git add file &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m C &&
git checkout B &&
echo B >file &&
git add file &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m B &&
git checkout B^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge C &&
echo D >file &&
git add file &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m D &&
git tag D &&
git checkout C^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge B &&
cat <<EOF >file &&
<<<<<<< Temporary merge branch 1
C
=======
B
>>>>>>> Temporary merge branch 2
EOF
git add file &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m E &&
git tag E
'
test_expect_failure 'git detects conflict w/ criss-cross+contrived resolution' '
git checkout D^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge -s recursive E^0 &&
test 3 -eq $(git ls-files -s | wc -l) &&
test 3 -eq $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) &&
test 0 -eq $(git ls-files -o | wc -l) &&
test $(git rev-parse :2:file) = $(git rev-parse D:file) &&
test $(git rev-parse :3:file) = $(git rev-parse E:file)
'
#
# criss-cross + d/f conflict via add/add:
# Commit A: Neither file 'a' nor directory 'a/' exists.
# Commit B: Introduce 'a'
# Commit C: Introduce 'a/file'
# Commit D: Merge B & C, keeping 'a' and deleting 'a/'
#
# Two different later cases:
# Commit E1: Merge B & C, deleting 'a' but keeping 'a/file'
# Commit E2: Merge B & C, deleting 'a' but keeping a slightly modified 'a/file'
#
# B D
# o---o
# / \ / \
# A o X ? F
# \ / \ /
# o---o
# C E1 or E2
#
# Merging D & E1 requires we first create a virtual merge base X from
# merging A & B in memory. Now, if X could keep both 'a' and 'a/file' in
# the index, then the merge of D & E1 could be resolved cleanly with both
# 'a' and 'a/file' removed. Since git does not currently allow creating
# such a tree, the best we can do is have X contain both 'a~<unique>' and
# 'a/file' resulting in the merge of D and E1 having a rename/delete
# conflict for 'a'. (Although this merge appears to be unsolvable with git
# currently, git could do a lot better than it currently does with these
# d/f conflicts, which is the purpose of this test.)
#
# Merge of D & E2 has similar issues for path 'a', but should always result
# in a modify/delete conflict for path 'a/file'.
#
# We run each merge in both directions, to check for directional issues
# with D/F conflict handling.
#
test_expect_success 'setup differently handled merges of directory/file conflict' '
git rm -rf . &&
git clean -fdqx &&
rm -rf .git &&
git init &&
>ignore-me &&
git add ignore-me &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m A &&
git tag A &&
git branch B &&
git checkout -b C &&
mkdir a &&
echo 10 >a/file &&
git add a/file &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m C &&
git checkout B &&
echo 5 >a &&
git add a &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m B &&
git checkout B^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge C &&
git clean -f &&
rm -rf a/ &&
echo 5 >a &&
git add a &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m D &&
git tag D &&
git checkout C^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge B &&
git clean -f &&
git rm --cached a &&
echo 10 >a/file &&
git add a/file &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m E1 &&
git tag E1 &&
git checkout C^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge B &&
git clean -f &&
git rm --cached a &&
printf "10\n11\n" >a/file &&
git add a/file &&
test_tick &&
git commit -m E2 &&
git tag E2
'
test_expect_success 'merge of D & E1 fails but has appropriate contents' '
get_clean_checkout D^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge -s recursive E1^0 &&
test 2 -eq $(git ls-files -s | wc -l) &&
test 1 -eq $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) &&
test 0 -eq $(git ls-files -o | wc -l) &&
test $(git rev-parse :0:ignore-me) = $(git rev-parse A:ignore-me) &&
test $(git rev-parse :2:a) = $(git rev-parse B:a)
'
test_expect_success 'merge of E1 & D fails but has appropriate contents' '
get_clean_checkout E1^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge -s recursive D^0 &&
test 2 -eq $(git ls-files -s | wc -l) &&
test 1 -eq $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) &&
test 0 -eq $(git ls-files -o | wc -l) &&
test $(git rev-parse :0:ignore-me) = $(git rev-parse A:ignore-me) &&
test $(git rev-parse :3:a) = $(git rev-parse B:a)
'
test_expect_success 'merge of D & E2 fails but has appropriate contents' '
get_clean_checkout D^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge -s recursive E2^0 &&
test 4 -eq $(git ls-files -s | wc -l) &&
test 3 -eq $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) &&
test 1 -eq $(git ls-files -o | wc -l) &&
test $(git rev-parse :2:a) = $(git rev-parse B:a) &&
test $(git rev-parse :3:a/file) = $(git rev-parse E2:a/file) &&
test $(git rev-parse :1:a/file) = $(git rev-parse C:a/file) &&
test $(git rev-parse :0:ignore-me) = $(git rev-parse A:ignore-me) &&
test -f a~HEAD
'
test_expect_success 'merge of E2 & D fails but has appropriate contents' '
get_clean_checkout E2^0 &&
test_must_fail git merge -s recursive D^0 &&
test 4 -eq $(git ls-files -s | wc -l) &&
test 3 -eq $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) &&
test 1 -eq $(git ls-files -o | wc -l) &&
test $(git rev-parse :3:a) = $(git rev-parse B:a) &&
test $(git rev-parse :2:a/file) = $(git rev-parse E2:a/file) &&
test $(git rev-parse :1:a/file) = $(git rev-parse C:a/file)
test $(git rev-parse :0:ignore-me) = $(git rev-parse A:ignore-me) &&
test -f a~D^0
'
#
# criss-cross with rename/rename(1to2)/modify followed by
# rename/rename(2to1)/modify:
#
# B D
# o---o
# / \ / \
# A o X ? F
# \ / \ /
# o---o
# C E
#
# Commit A: new file: a
# Commit B: rename a->b, modifying by adding a line
# Commit C: rename a->c
# Commit D: merge B&C, resolving conflict by keeping contents in newname
# Commit E: merge B&C, resolving conflict similar to D but adding another line
#
# There is a conflict merging B & C, but one of filename not of file
# content. Whoever created D and E chose specific resolutions for that
# conflict resolution. Now, since: (1) there is no content conflict
# merging B & C, (2) D does not modify that merged content further, and (3)
# both D & E resolve the name conflict in the same way, the modification to
# newname in E should not cause any conflicts when it is merged with D.
# (Note that this can be accomplished by having the virtual merge base have
# the merged contents of b and c stored in a file named a, which seems like
# the most logical choice anyway.)
#
# Comment from Junio: I do not necessarily agree with the choice "a", but
# it feels sound to say "B and C do not agree what the final pathname
# should be, but we know this content was derived from the common A:a so we
# use one path whose name is arbitrary in the virtual merge base X between
# D and E" and then further let the rename detection to notice that that
# arbitrary path gets renamed between X-D to "newname" and X-E also to
# "newname" to resolve it as both sides renaming it to the same new
# name. It is akin to what we do at the content level, i.e. "B and C do not
# agree what the final contents should be, so we leave the conflict marker
# but that may cancel out at the final merge stage".
test_expect_success 'setup rename/rename(1to2)/modify followed by what looks like rename/rename(2to1)/modify' '
git reset --hard &&
git rm -rf . &&
git clean -fdqx &&
rm -rf .git &&
git init &&
printf "1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n" >a &&
git add a &&
git commit -m A &&
git tag A &&
git checkout -b B A &&
git mv a b &&
echo 7 >>b &&
git add -u &&
git commit -m B &&
git checkout -b C A &&
git mv a c &&
git commit -m C &&
git checkout -q B^0 &&
git merge --no-commit -s ours C^0 &&
git mv b newname &&
git commit -m "Merge commit C^0 into HEAD" &&
git tag D &&
git checkout -q C^0 &&
git merge --no-commit -s ours B^0 &&
git mv c newname &&
printf "7\n8\n" >>newname &&
git add -u &&
git commit -m "Merge commit B^0 into HEAD" &&
git tag E
'
test_expect_success 'handle rename/rename(1to2)/modify followed by what looks like rename/rename(2to1)/modify' '
git checkout D^0 &&
git merge -s recursive E^0 &&
test 1 -eq $(git ls-files -s | wc -l) &&
test 0 -eq $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) &&
test 0 -eq $(git ls-files -o | wc -l) &&
test $(git rev-parse HEAD:newname) = $(git rev-parse E:newname)
'
#
# criss-cross with rename/rename(1to2)/add-source + resolvable modify/modify:
#
# B D
# o---o
# / \ / \
# A o X ? F
# \ / \ /
# o---o
# C E
#
# Commit A: new file: a
# Commit B: rename a->b
# Commit C: rename a->c, add different a
# Commit D: merge B&C, keeping b&c and (new) a modified at beginning
# Commit E: merge B&C, keeping b&c and (new) a modified at end
#
# Merging commits D & E should result in no conflict; doing so correctly
# requires getting the virtual merge base (from merging B&C) right, handling
# renaming carefully (both in the virtual merge base and later), and getting
# content merge handled.
test_expect_success 'setup criss-cross + rename/rename/add + modify/modify' '
git rm -rf . &&
git clean -fdqx &&
rm -rf .git &&
git init &&
printf "lots\nof\nwords\nand\ncontent\n" >a &&
git add a &&
git commit -m A &&
git tag A &&
git checkout -b B A &&
git mv a b &&
git commit -m B &&
git checkout -b C A &&
git mv a c &&
printf "2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n" >a &&
git add a &&
git commit -m C &&
git checkout B^0 &&
git merge --no-commit -s ours C^0 &&
git checkout C -- a c &&
mv a old_a &&
echo 1 >a &&
cat old_a >>a &&
rm old_a &&
git add -u &&
git commit -m "Merge commit C^0 into HEAD" &&
git tag D &&
git checkout C^0 &&
git merge --no-commit -s ours B^0 &&
git checkout B -- b &&
echo 8 >>a &&
git add -u &&
git commit -m "Merge commit B^0 into HEAD" &&
git tag E
'
test_expect_failure 'detect rename/rename/add-source for virtual merge-base' '
git checkout D^0 &&
git merge -s recursive E^0 &&
test 3 -eq $(git ls-files -s | wc -l) &&
test 0 -eq $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) &&
test 0 -eq $(git ls-files -o | wc -l) &&
test $(git rev-parse HEAD:b) = $(git rev-parse A:a) &&
test $(git rev-parse HEAD:c) = $(git rev-parse A:a) &&
test "$(cat a)" = "$(printf "1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n")"
'
#
# criss-cross with rename/rename(1to2)/add-dest + simple modify:
#
# B D
# o---o
# / \ / \
# A o X ? F
# \ / \ /
# o---o
# C E
#
# Commit A: new file: a
# Commit B: rename a->b, add c
# Commit C: rename a->c
# Commit D: merge B&C, keeping A:a and B:c
# Commit E: merge B&C, keeping A:a and slightly modified c from B
#
# Merging commits D & E should result in no conflict. The virtual merge
# base of B & C needs to not delete B:c for that to work, though...
test_expect_success 'setup criss-cross+rename/rename/add-dest + simple modify' '
git rm -rf . &&
git clean -fdqx &&
rm -rf .git &&
git init &&
>a &&
git add a &&
git commit -m A &&
git tag A &&
git checkout -b B A &&
git mv a b &&
printf "1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n" >c &&
git add c &&
git commit -m B &&
git checkout -b C A &&
git mv a c &&
git commit -m C &&
git checkout B^0 &&
git merge --no-commit -s ours C^0 &&
git mv b a &&
git commit -m "D is like B but renames b back to a" &&
git tag D &&
git checkout B^0 &&
git merge --no-commit -s ours C^0 &&
git mv b a &&
echo 8 >>c &&
git add c &&
git commit -m "E like D but has mod in c" &&
git tag E
'
test_expect_success 'virtual merge base handles rename/rename(1to2)/add-dest' '
git checkout D^0 &&
git merge -s recursive E^0 &&
test 2 -eq $(git ls-files -s | wc -l) &&
test 0 -eq $(git ls-files -u | wc -l) &&
test 0 -eq $(git ls-files -o | wc -l) &&
test $(git rev-parse HEAD:a) = $(git rev-parse A:a) &&
test $(git rev-parse HEAD:c) = $(git rev-parse E:c)
'
test_done