Now that strbuf_expand_literal_cb() is no longer used as a callback,
drop its "_cb" name suffix and unused context parameter.
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Avoid the overhead of passing context to a callback function of
strbuf_expand() by using strbuf_expand_step() in a loop instead. It
requires explicit handling of %% and unrecognized placeholders, but is
simpler, more direct and avoids void pointers.
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Extract the part of strbuf_expand that finds the next placeholder into a
new function. It allows to build parsers without callback functions and
the overhead imposed by them.
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Some atoms that can be used in "--format=<format>" for "git ls-tree"
were not supported by "git ls-files", even though they were relevant
in the context of the latter.
* zh/ls-files-format-atoms:
ls-files: align format atoms with ls-tree
"git pack-refs" learns "--include" and "--exclude" to tweak the ref
hierarchy to be packed using pattern matching.
* jc/pack-ref-exclude-include:
pack-refs: teach pack-refs --include option
pack-refs: teach --exclude option to exclude refs from being packed
docs: clarify git-pack-refs --all will pack all refs
"git tag" learned to leave the "$GIT_DIR/TAG_EDITMSG" file when the
command failed, so that the user can salvage what they typed.
* kh/keep-tag-editmsg-upon-failure:
tag: keep the message file in case ref transaction fails
t/t7004-tag: add regression test for successful tag creation
doc: tag: document `TAG_EDITMSG`
"git ls-files --format" can be used to format the output of
multiple file entries in the index, while "git ls-tree --format"
can be used to format the contents of a tree object. However,
the current set of %(objecttype), "(objectsize)", and
"%(objectsize:padded)" atoms supported by "git ls-files --format"
is a subset of what is available in "git ls-tree --format".
Users sometimes need to establish a unified view between the index
and tree, which can help with comparison or conversion between the two.
Therefore, this patch adds the missing atoms to "git ls-files --format".
"%(objecttype)" can be used to retrieve the object type corresponding
to a file in the index, "(objectsize)" can be used to retrieve the
object size corresponding to a file in the index, and "%(objectsize:padded)"
is the same as "(objectsize)", except with padded format.
Signed-off-by: ZheNing Hu <adlternative@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When we are showing multiple patches with format-patch, we have to
repeatedly overwrite the rev.message_id field. We take care to avoid
leaking the old value by either freeing it, or adding it to
ref_message_ids, a string list of ids to reference in subsequent
messages.
But unfortunately we do leak the value via that string list. We try
to clear the string list, courtesy of 89f45cf4eb (format-patch: don't
leak "extra_headers" or "ref_message_ids", 2022-04-13). But since it was
initialized as "nodup", the string list doesn't realize it owns the
strings, and it leaks them.
We have two options here:
1. Continue to init with "nodup", but then tweak the value of
ref_message_ids.strdup_strings just before clearing.
2. Init with "dup", but use "append_nodup" when transferring ownership
of strings to the list. Clearing just works.
I picked the second here, as I think it calls attention to the tricky
part (transferring ownership via the nodup call).
There's one other related fix we have to do, though. We also insert the
result of clean_message_id() into the list. This _sometimes_ allocates
and sometimes does not, depending on whether we have to remove cruft
from the end of the string. Let's teach it to consistently return an
allocated string, so that the caller knows it must be freed.
There's no new test here, as the leak can already be seen in t4014.44 (as
well as others in that script). We can't mark all of t4014 as leak-free,
though, as there are other unrelated leaks that it triggers.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We may allocate a message-id string via gen_message_id(), but we never
free it, causing a small leak. This can be demonstrated by running t9001
with a leak-checking build. The offending test is the one touched by
3ece9bf0f9 (send-email: clear the $message_id after validation,
2023-05-17), but the leak is much older than that. The test was simply
unlucky enough to trigger the leaking code path for the first time.
We can fix this by freeing the string at the end of the function. We can
also re-mark the test script as leak-free, effectively reverting
20bd08aefb (t9001: mark the script as no longer leak checker clean,
2023-05-17).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The index is read in 'cmd_diff_tree' at two points:
1. The first index read was added in fd66bcc31f (diff-tree: read the
index so attribute checks work in bare repositories, 2017-12-06) to deal
with reading '.gitattributes' content. 77efbb366a (attr: be careful
about sparse directories, 2021-09-08) established that, in a sparse
index, we do _not_ try to load a '.gitattributes' file from within a
sparse directory.
2. The second index access point is involved in rename detection,
specifically when reading from stdin.This was initially added in
f0c6b2a2fd ([PATCH] Optimize diff-tree -[CM]--stdin, 2005-05-27), where
'setup' was set to 'DIFF_SETUP_USE_SIZE_CACHE |DIFF_SETUP_USE_CACHE'.
That assignment was later modified to drop the'DIFF_SETUP_USE_CACHE' in
ff7fe37b05 (diff.c: move read_index() code back to the caller,
2018-08-13).However, 'DIFF_SETUP_USE_SIZE_CACHE' seems to be unused as
of 6e0b8ed6d3 (diff.c: do not use a separate "size cache"., 2007-05-07)
and nothing about 'detect_rename' otherwise indicates index usage.
Hence we can just set the requires-full-index to false for "diff-tree".
Add tests that verify that 'git diff-tree' behaves correctly when the
sparse index is enabled and test to ensure the index is not expanded.
The `p2000` tests demonstrate a ~98% execution time reduction for
'git diff-tree' using a sparse index:
Test before after
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
2000.94: git diff-tree HEAD (full-v3) 0.05 0.04 -20.0%
2000.95: git diff-tree HEAD (full-v4) 0.06 0.05 -16.7%
2000.96: git diff-tree HEAD (sparse-v3) 0.59 0.01 -98.3%
2000.97: git diff-tree HEAD (sparse-v4) 0.61 0.01 -98.4%
2000.98: git diff-tree HEAD -- f2/f4/a (full-v3) 0.05 0.05 +0.0%
2000.99: git diff-tree HEAD -- f2/f4/a (full-v4) 0.05 0.04 -20.0%
2000.100: git diff-tree HEAD -- f2/f4/a (sparse-v3) 0.58 0.01 -98.3%
2000.101: git diff-tree HEAD -- f2/f4/a (sparse-v4) 0.55 0.01 -98.2%
Helped-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Shuqi Liang <cheskaqiqi@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git --attr-source=<tree> cmd $args" is a new way to have any
command to read attributes not from the working tree but from the
given tree object.
* jc/attr-source-tree:
attr: teach "--attr-source=<tree>" global option to "git"
The ref transaction can fail after the user has written their tag
message. In particular, if there exists a tag `foo/bar` and `git tag -a
foo` is said then the command will only fail once it tries to write
`refs/tags/foo`, which is after the file has been unlinked.
Hold on to the message file for a little longer so that it is not
unlinked before the fatal error occurs.
Signed-off-by: Kristoffer Haugsbakk <code@khaugsbakk.name>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git fetch" learned the "--porcelain" option that emits what it did
in a machine-parseable format.
* ps/fetch-output-format:
fetch: introduce machine-parseable "porcelain" output format
fetch: move option related variables into main function
fetch: lift up parsing of "fetch.output" config variable
fetch: introduce `display_format` enum
fetch: refactor calculation of the display table width
fetch: print left-hand side when fetching HEAD:foo
fetch: add a test to exercise invalid output formats
fetch: split out tests for output format
fetch: fix `--no-recurse-submodules` with multi-remote fetches
Teach "diff-files" not to expand sparse-index unless needed.
* sl/diff-files-sparse:
diff-files: integrate with sparse index
t1092: add tests for `git diff-files`
The "--stdin" option of "git name-rev" has been replaced with
the "--annotate-stdin" option more than a year ago. We stop
advertising it in the "git name-rev -h" output.
* jc/name-rev-deprecate-stdin-further:
name-rev: make --stdin hidden
"git fsck" learned to detect bit-flip breakages in the reachability
bitmap files.
* ds/fsck-bitmap:
fsck: use local repository
fsck: verify checksums of all .bitmap files
Error messages given when working on an unborn branch that is
checked out in another worktree have been improved.
* rj/branch-unborn-in-other-worktrees:
branch: avoid unnecessary worktrees traversals
branch: rename orphan branches in any worktree
branch: description for orphan branch errors
branch: use get_worktrees() in copy_or_rename_branch()
branch: test for failures while renaming branches
Allow users to be more selective over which refs to pack by adding an
--include option to git-pack-refs.
The existing options allow some measure of selectivity. By default
git-pack-refs packs all tags. --all can be used to include all refs,
and the previous commit added the ability to exclude certain refs with
--exclude.
While these knobs give the user some selection over which refs to pack,
it could be useful to give more control. For instance, a repository may
have a set of branches that are rarely updated and would benefit from
being packed. --include would allow the user to easily include a set of
branches to be packed while leaving everything else unpacked.
Signed-off-by: John Cai <johncai86@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
At GitLab, we have a system that creates ephemeral internal refs that
don't live long before getting deleted. Having an option to exclude
certain refs from a packed-refs file allows these internal references to
be deleted much more efficiently.
Add an --exclude option to the pack-refs builtin, and use the ref
exclusions API to exclude certain refs from being packed into the final
packed-refs file
Signed-off-by: John Cai <johncai86@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The 'git merge-tree' command handles creating root trees for merges
without using the worktree. This is a critical operation in many Git
hosts, as they typically store bare repositories.
This builtin does not load the default Git config, which can have
several important ramifications.
In particular, one config that is loaded by default is
core.useReplaceRefs. This is typically disabled in Git hosts due to
the ability to spoof commits in strange ways.
Since this config is not loaded specifically during merge-tree, users
were previously able to use refs/replace/ references to make pull
requests that looked valid but introduced malicious content. The
resulting merge commit would have the correct commit history, but the
malicious content would exist in the root tree of the merge.
The fix is simple: load the default Git config in cmd_merge_tree().
This may also fix other behaviors that are effected by reading default
config. The only possible downside is a little extra computation time
spent reading config. The config parsing is placed after basic argument
parsing so it does not slow down usage errors.
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <derrickstolee@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The output of git-fetch(1) is obviously designed for consumption by
users, only: we neatly columnize data, we abbreviate reference names, we
print neat arrows and we don't provide information about actual object
IDs that have changed. This makes the output format basically unusable
in the context of scripted invocations of git-fetch(1) that want to
learn about the exact changes that the command performs.
Introduce a new machine-parseable "porcelain" output format that is
supposed to fix this shortcoming. This output format is intended to
provide information about every reference that is about to be updated,
the old object ID that the reference has been pointing to and the new
object ID it will be updated to. Furthermore, the output format provides
the same flags as the human-readable format to indicate basic conditions
for each reference update like whether it was a fast-forward update, a
branch deletion, a rejected update or others.
The output format is quite simple:
```
<flag> <old-object-id> <new-object-id> <local-reference>\n
```
We assume two conditions which are generally true:
- The old and new object IDs have fixed known widths and cannot
contain spaces.
- References cannot contain newlines.
With these assumptions, the output format becomes unambiguously
parseable. Furthermore, given that this output is designed to be
consumed by scripts, the machine-readable data is printed to stdout
instead of stderr like the human-readable output is. This is mostly done
so that other data printed to stderr, like error messages or progress
meters, don't interfere with the parseable data.
A notable ommission here is that the output format does not include the
remote from which a reference was fetched, which might be important
information especially in the context of multi-remote fetches. But as
such a format would require us to print the remote for every single
reference update due to parallelizable fetches it feels wasteful for the
most likely usecase, which is when fetching from a single remote.
In a similar spirit, a second restriction is that this cannot be used
with `--recurse-submodules`. This is because any reference updates would
be ambiguous without also printing the repository in which the update
happens.
Considering that both multi-remote and submodule fetches are user-facing
features, using them in conjunction with `--porcelain` that is intended
for scripting purposes is likely not going to be useful in the majority
of cases. With that in mind these restrictions feel acceptable. If
usecases for either of these come up in the future though it is easy
enough to add a new "porcelain-v2" format that adds this information.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The options of git-fetch(1) which we pass to `parse_options()` are
declared globally in `builtin/fetch.c`. This means we're forced to use
global variables for all the options, which is more likely to cause
confusion than explicitly passing state around.
Refactor the code to move the options into `cmd_fetch()`. Move variables
that were previously forced to be declared globally and which are only
used by `cmd_fetch()` into function-local scope.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Parsing the display format happens inside of `display_state_init()`. As
we only need to check for a simple config entry, this is a natural
location to put this code as it means that display-state logic is neatly
contained in a single location.
We're about to introduce a new "porcelain" output format though that is
intended to be parseable by machines, for example inside of a script.
This format can be enabled by passing the `--porcelain` switch to
git-fetch(1). As a consequence, we'll have to add a second callsite that
influences the output format, which will become awkward to handle.
Refactor the code such that callers are expected to pass the display
format that is to be used into `display_state_init()`. This allows us to
lift up the code into the main function, where we can then hook it into
command line options parser in a follow-up commit.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We currently have two different display formats in git-fetch(1) with the
"full" and "compact" formats. This is tracked with a boolean value that
simply denotes whether the display format is supposed to be compacted
or not. This works reasonably well while there are only two formats, but
we're about to introduce another format that will make this a bit more
awkward to use.
Introduce a `enum display_format` that is more readily extensible.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When displaying reference updates, we try to print the references in a
neat table. As the table's width is determined its contents we thus need
to precalculate the overall width before we can start printing updated
references.
The calculation is driven by `display_state_init()`, which invokes
`refcol_width()` for every reference that is to be printed. This split
is somewhat confusing. For one, we filter references that shall be
attributed to the overall width in both places. And second, we
needlessly recalculate the maximum line length based on the terminal
columns and display format for every reference.
Refactor the code so that the complete width calculations are neatly
contained in `refcol_width()`.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
`store_updated_refs()` parses the remote reference for two purposes:
- It gets used as a note when writing FETCH_HEAD.
- It is passed through to `display_ref_update()` to display
updated references in the following format:
```
* branch master -> master
```
In most cases, the parsed remote reference is the prettified reference
name and can thus be used for both cases. But if the remote reference is
HEAD, the parsed remote reference becomes empty. This is intended when
we write the FETCH_HEAD, where we skip writing the note in that case.
But when displaying the updated references this leads to inconsistent
output where the left-hand side of reference updates is missing in some
cases:
```
$ git fetch origin HEAD HEAD:explicit-head :implicit-head main
From https://github.com/git/git
* branch HEAD -> FETCH_HEAD
* [new ref] -> explicit-head
* [new ref] -> implicit-head
* branch main -> FETCH_HEAD
```
This behaviour has existed ever since the table-based output has been
introduced for git-fetch(1) via 165f390250 (git-fetch: more terse fetch
output, 2007-11-03) and was never explicitly documented either in the
commit message or in any of our tests. So while it may not be a bug per
se, it feels like a weird inconsistency and not like it was a concious
design decision.
The logic of how we compute the remote reference name that we ultimately
pass to `display_ref_update()` is not easy to follow. There are three
different cases here:
- When the remote reference name is "HEAD" we set the remote
reference name to the empty string. This is the case that causes
the left-hand side to go missing, where we would indeed want to
print "HEAD" instead of the empty string. This is what
`prettify_refname()` would return.
- When the remote reference name has a well-known prefix then we
strip this prefix. This matches what `prettify_refname()` does.
- Otherwise, we keep the fully qualified reference name. This also
matches what `prettify_refname()` does.
As the return value of `prettify_refname()` would do the correct thing
for us in all three cases, we can thus fix the inconsistency by passing
through the full remote reference name to `display_ref_update()`, which
learns to call `prettify_refname()`. At the same time, this also
simplifies the code a bit.
Note that this patch also changes formatting of the block that computes
the "kind" (which is the category like "branch" or "tag") and "what"
(which is the prettified reference name like "master" or "v1.0")
variables. This is done on purpose so that it is part of the diff,
hopefully making the change easier to comprehend.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When running `git fetch --no-recurse-submodules`, the exectation is that
we don't fetch any submodules. And while this works for fetches of a
single remote, it doesn't when fetching multiple remotes at once. The
result is that we do recurse into submodules even though the user has
explicitly asked us not to.
This is because while we pass on `--recurse-submodules={yes,on-demand}`
if specified by the user, we don't pass on `--no-recurse-submodules` to
the subprocess spawned to perform the submodule fetch.
Fix this by also forwarding this flag as expected.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
More header clean-up.
* en/header-split-cache-h-part-2: (22 commits)
reftable: ensure git-compat-util.h is the first (indirect) include
diff.h: reduce unnecessary includes
object-store.h: reduce unnecessary includes
commit.h: reduce unnecessary includes
fsmonitor: reduce includes of cache.h
cache.h: remove unnecessary headers
treewide: remove cache.h inclusion due to previous changes
cache,tree: move basic name compare functions from read-cache to tree
cache,tree: move cmp_cache_name_compare from tree.[ch] to read-cache.c
hash-ll.h: split out of hash.h to remove dependency on repository.h
tree-diff.c: move S_DIFFTREE_IFXMIN_NEQ define from cache.h
dir.h: move DTYPE defines from cache.h
versioncmp.h: move declarations for versioncmp.c functions from cache.h
ws.h: move declarations for ws.c functions from cache.h
match-trees.h: move declarations for match-trees.c functions from cache.h
pkt-line.h: move declarations for pkt-line.c functions from cache.h
base85.h: move declarations for base85.c functions from cache.h
copy.h: move declarations for copy.c functions from cache.h
server-info.h: move declarations for server-info.c functions from cache.h
packfile.h: move pack_window and pack_entry from cache.h
...
Remove full index requirement for `git diff-files`. Refactor the
ensure_expanded and ensure_not_expanded functions by introducing a
common helper function, ensure_index_state. Add test to ensure the index
is no expanded in `git diff-files`.
The `p2000` tests demonstrate a ~96% execution time reduction for 'git
diff-files' and a ~97% execution time reduction for 'git diff-files'
for a file using a sparse index:
Test before after
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
2000.94: git diff-files (full-v3) 0.09 0.08 -11.1%
2000.95: git diff-files (full-v4) 0.09 0.09 +0.0%
2000.96: git diff-files (sparse-v3) 0.52 0.02 -96.2%
2000.97: git diff-files (sparse-v4) 0.51 0.02 -96.1%
2000.98: git diff-files -- f2/f4/a (full-v3) 0.06 0.07 +16.7%
2000.99: git diff-files -- f2/f4/a (full-v4) 0.08 0.08 +0.0%
2000.100: git diff-files -- f2/f4/a (sparse-v3) 0.46 0.01 -97.8%
2000.101: git diff-files -- f2/f4/a (sparse-v4) 0.51 0.02 -96.1%
Signed-off-by: Shuqi Liang <cheskaqiqi@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The '--all' option of git-push built-in cmd support to push all branches
(refs under refs/heads) to remote. Under the usage, a user can easlily
work in some scenarios, for example, branches synchronization and batch
upload.
The '--all' was introduced for a long time, meanwhile, git supports to
customize the storage location under "refs/". when a new git user see
the usage like, 'git push origin --all', we might feel like we're
pushing _all_ the refs instead of just branches without looking at the
documents until we found the related description of it or '--mirror'.
To ensure compatibility, we cannot rename '--all' to another name
directly, one way is, we can try to add a new option '--heads' which be
identical with the functionality of '--all' to let the user understand
the meaning of representation more clearly. Actually, We've more or less
named options this way already, for example, in 'git-show-ref' and 'git
ls-remote'.
At the same time, we fix a related issue about the wrong help
information of '--all' option in code and add some test cases in
t5523, t5543 and t5583.
Signed-off-by: Teng Long <dyroneteng@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Earlier, 47cfc9bd (attr: add flag `--source` to work with tree-ish,
2023-01-14) taught "git check-attr" the "--source=<tree>" option to
allow it to read attribute files from a tree-ish, but did so only
for the command. Just like "check-attr" users wanted a way to use
attributes from a tree-ish and not from the working tree files,
users of other commands (like "git diff") would benefit from the
same.
Undo most of the UI change the commit made, while keeping the
internal logic to read attributes from a given tree-ish. Expose the
internal logic via a new "--attr-source=<tree>" command line option
given to "git", so that it can be used with any git command that
runs as part of the main git process.
Additionally, add an environment variable GIT_ATTR_SOURCE that is set
when --attr-source is passed in, so that subprocesses use the same value
for the attributes source tree.
Signed-off-by: John Cai <johncai86@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 34ae3b70 (name-rev: deprecate --stdin in favor of --annotate-stdin),
we renamed --stdin to --annotate-stdin for the sake of a clearer name
for the option, and added text that indicates --stdin is deprecated. The
next step is to hide --stdin completely.
Make the option hidden. Also, update documentation to remove all
mentions of --stdin.
Signed-off-by: "John Cai" <johncai86@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Mark strtok() and strtok_r() to be banned.
* tb/ban-strtok:
banned.h: mark `strtok()` and `strtok_r()` as banned
t/helper/test-json-writer.c: avoid using `strtok()`
t/helper/test-oidmap.c: avoid using `strtok()`
t/helper/test-hashmap.c: avoid using `strtok()`
string-list: introduce `string_list_setlen()`
string-list: multi-delimiter `string_list_split_in_place()`
In 0d30feef3c (fsck: create scaffolding for rev-index checks,
2023-04-17) and later 5a6072f631 (fsck: validate .rev file header,
2023-04-17), the check_pack_rev_indexes() method was created with a
'struct repository *r' parameter. However, this parameter was unused and
instead 'the_repository' was used in its place.
Fix this situation with the obvious replacement.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <derrickstolee@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
If a filesystem-level corruption occurs in a .bitmap file, Git can react
poorly. This could take the form of a run-time error due to failing to
parse an EWAH bitmap or be more subtle such as returning the wrong set
of objects to a fetch or clone.
A natural first response to either of these kinds of errors is to run
'git fsck' to see if any files are corrupt. This currently ignores all
.bitmap files.
Add checks to 'git fsck' for all .bitmap files that are currently
associated with a multi-pack-index or pack file. Verify their checksums
using the hashfile API.
We iterate through all multi-pack-indexes and pack-files to be sure to
check all .bitmap files, not just the one that would be read by the
process. For example, a multi-pack-index bitmap overrules a pack-bitmap.
However, if the multi-pack-index is removed, the pack-bitmap may be
selected instead. Be thorough to include every file that could become
active in such a way. This includes checking files in alternates.
There is potential that we could extend this effort to check the
structure of the reachability bitmaps themselves, but it is very
expensive to do so. At minimum, it's as expensive as generating the
bitmaps in the first place, and that's assuming that we don't use the
trivial algorithm of verifying each bitmap individually. The trivial
algorithm will result in quadratic behavior (number of objects times
number of bitmapped commits) while the bitmap building operation
constructs a lattice of commits to build bitmaps incrementally and then
generate the final bitmaps from a subset of those commits.
If we were to extend 'git fsck' to check .bitmap file contents more
closely like this, then we would likely want to hide it behind an option
that signals the user is more willing to do expensive operations such as
this.
For testing, set up a repository with a pack-bitmap _and_ a
multi-pack-index bitmap. This requires some file movement to avoid
deleting the pack-bitmap during the repack that creates the
multi-pack-index bitmap. We can then verify that 'git fsck' is checking
all files, not just the "active" bitmap.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <derrickstolee@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When "gc" needs to retain unreachable objects, packing them into
cruft packs (instead of exploding them into loose object files) has
been offered as a more efficient option for some time. Now the use
of cruft packs has been made the default and no longer considered
an experimental feature.
* tb/enable-cruft-packs-by-default:
repository.h: drop unused `gc_cruft_packs`
builtin/gc.c: make `gc.cruftPacks` enabled by default
t/t9300-fast-import.sh: prepare for `gc --cruft` by default
t/t6500-gc.sh: add additional test cases
t/t6500-gc.sh: refactor cruft pack tests
t/t6501-freshen-objects.sh: prepare for `gc --cruft` by default
t/t5304-prune.sh: prepare for `gc --cruft` by default
builtin/gc.c: ignore cruft packs with `--keep-largest-pack`
builtin/repack.c: fix incorrect reference to '-C'
pack-write.c: plug a leak in stage_tmp_packfiles()
These are conscious violations of the usual rules for error messages,
based on this reasoning:
- If an error message is directly followed by another sentence, it
needs to be properly terminated with a period, lest the grammar
looks broken and becomes hard to read.
- That second sentence isn't actually an error message any more, so
it should abide to conventional language rules for good looks and
legibility. Arguably, these should be converted to advice
messages (which the user can squelch, too), but that's a much
bigger effort to get right.
- Neither of these apply to the first hunk in do_exec(), but this
two-line message looks just too much like a real sentence to not
terminate it. Also, leaving it alone would make it asymmetrical
to the other hunk.
Signed-off-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The on-disk reverse index that allows mapping from the pack offset
to the object name for the object stored at the offset has been
enabled by default.
* tb/pack-revindex-on-disk:
t: invert `GIT_TEST_WRITE_REV_INDEX`
config: enable `pack.writeReverseIndex` by default
pack-revindex: introduce `pack.readReverseIndex`
pack-revindex: introduce GIT_TEST_REV_INDEX_DIE_ON_DISK
pack-revindex: make `load_pack_revindex` take a repository
t5325: mark as leak-free
pack-write.c: plug a leak in stage_tmp_packfiles()
Geometric repacking ("git repack --geometric=<n>") in a repository
that borrows from an alternate object database had various corner
case bugs, which have been corrected.
* ps/fix-geom-repack-with-alternates:
repack: disable writing bitmaps when doing a local repack
repack: honor `-l` when calculating pack geometry
t/helper: allow chmtime to print verbosely without modifying mtime
pack-objects: extend test coverage of `--stdin-packs` with alternates
pack-objects: fix error when same packfile is included and excluded
pack-objects: fix error when packing same pack twice
pack-objects: split out `--stdin-packs` tests into separate file
repack: fix generating multi-pack-index with only non-local packs
repack: fix trying to use preferred pack in alternates
midx: fix segfault with no packs and invalid preferred pack
The code to parse capability list for v0 on-wire protocol fell into
an infinite loop when a capability appears multiple times, which
has been corrected.
* jk/protocol-cap-parse-fix:
v0 protocol: use size_t for capability length/offset
t5512: test "ls-remote --heads --symref" filtering with v0 and v2
t5512: allow any protocol version for filtered symref test
t5512: add v2 support for "ls-remote --symref" test
v0 protocol: fix sha1/sha256 confusion for capabilities^{}
t5512: stop referring to "v1" protocol
v0 protocol: fix infinite loop when parsing multi-valued capabilities
Header clean-up.
* en/header-split-cache-h: (24 commits)
protocol.h: move definition of DEFAULT_GIT_PORT from cache.h
mailmap, quote: move declarations of global vars to correct unit
treewide: reduce includes of cache.h in other headers
treewide: remove double forward declaration of read_in_full
cache.h: remove unnecessary includes
treewide: remove cache.h inclusion due to pager.h changes
pager.h: move declarations for pager.c functions from cache.h
treewide: remove cache.h inclusion due to editor.h changes
editor: move editor-related functions and declarations into common file
treewide: remove cache.h inclusion due to object.h changes
object.h: move some inline functions and defines from cache.h
treewide: remove cache.h inclusion due to object-file.h changes
object-file.h: move declarations for object-file.c functions from cache.h
treewide: remove cache.h inclusion due to git-zlib changes
git-zlib: move declarations for git-zlib functions from cache.h
treewide: remove cache.h inclusion due to object-name.h changes
object-name.h: move declarations for object-name.c functions from cache.h
treewide: remove unnecessary cache.h inclusion
treewide: be explicit about dependence on mem-pool.h
treewide: be explicit about dependence on oid-array.h
...
Enhance `string_list_split_in_place()` to accept multiple characters as
delimiters instead of a single character.
Instead of using `strchr(2)` to locate the first occurrence of the given
delimiter character, `string_list_split_in_place_multi()` uses
`strcspn(2)` to move past the initial segment of characters comprised of
any characters in the delimiting set.
When only a single delimiting character is provided, `strpbrk(2)` (which
is implemented with `strcspn(2)`) has equivalent performance to
`strchr(2)`. Modern `strcspn(2)` implementations treat an empty
delimiter or the singleton delimiter as a special case and fall back to
calling strchrnul(). Both glibc[1] and musl[2] implement `strcspn(2)`
this way.
This change is one step to removing `strtok(2)` from the tree. Note that
`string_list_split_in_place()` is not a strict replacement for
`strtok()`, since it will happily turn sequential delimiter characters
into empty entries in the resulting string_list. For example:
string_list_split_in_place(&xs, "foo:;:bar:;:baz", ":;", -1)
would yield a string list of:
["foo", "", "", "bar", "", "", "baz"]
Callers that wish to emulate the behavior of strtok(2) more directly
should call `string_list_remove_empty_items()` after splitting.
To avoid regressions for the new multi-character delimter cases, update
t0063 in this patch as well.
[1]: https://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git;a=blob;f=string/strcspn.c;hb=glibc-2.37#l35
[2]: https://git.musl-libc.org/cgit/musl/tree/src/string/strcspn.c?h=v1.2.3#n11
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>