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Get rid of our dependency on `the_repository` in `assert_oid_type()` by
passing in the object database as a parameter and adjusting all callers.
Rename the function to `odb_assert_oid_type()`.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Get rid of our dependency on `the_repository` in `find_odb()` by passing
in the object database in which we want to search for the source and
adjusting all callers.
Rename the function to `odb_find_source()`.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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In the preceding commits we have renamed the structures contained in
"object-store.h" to `struct object_database` and `struct odb_backend`.
As such, the code files "object-store.{c,h}" are confusingly named now.
Rename them to "odb.{c,h}" accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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The `object_directory` structure is used as an access point for a single
object directory like ".git/objects". While the structure isn't yet
fully self-contained, the intent is for it to eventually contain all
information required to access objects in one specific location.
While the name "object directory" is a good fit for now, this will
change over time as we continue with the agenda to make pluggable object
databases a thing. Eventually, objects may not be accessed via any kind
of directory at all anymore, but they could instead be backed by any
kind of durable storage mechanism. While it seems quite far-fetched for
now, it is thinkable that eventually this might even be some form of a
database, for example.
As such, the current name of this structure will become worse over time
as we evolve into the direction of pluggable ODBs. Immediate next steps
will start to carve out proper self-contained object directories, which
requires us to pass in these object directories as parameters. Based on
our modern naming schema this means that those functions should then be
named after their subsystem, which means that we would start to bake the
current name into the codebase more and more.
Let's preempt this by renaming the structure. There have been a couple
alternatives that were discussed:
- `odb_backend` was discarded because it led to the association that
one object database has a single backend, but the model is that one
alternate has one backend. Furthermore, "backend" is more about the
actual backing implementation and less about the high-level concept.
- `odb_alternate` was discarded because it is a bit of a stretch to
also call the main object directory an "alternate".
Instead, pick `odb_source` as the new name. It makes it sufficiently
clear that there can be multiple sources and does not cause confusion
when mixed with the already-existing "alternate" terminology.
In the future, this change allows us to easily introduce for example a
`odb_files_source` and other format-specific implementations.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Previous commit has plugged one leak in the normal code path, but
there is an early exit that leaves without releasing any resources
acquired in the function.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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4e513890008 (builtin/config: introduce "get" subcommand, 2024-05-06)
introduced `get` and `--url` but didn’t add `--url` to the synopsis.
Acked-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Kristoffer Haugsbakk <code@khaugsbakk.name>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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This option was introduced in a series of commits from fe3ccc7aab (Merge
branch 'ps/config-subcommands', 2024-05-15). But two styles were used
for the value provided to the option:
1. Synopsis: `--value=<value>`
2. Deprecated Modes: `--value=<pattern>`
(2) is also used in the synopsis on the command.
Use (2) consistently throughout since it’s a pattern in the general
case (`value` sounds more generic).
Acked-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Kristoffer Haugsbakk <code@khaugsbakk.name>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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"git merge/pull" has been taught the "--compact-summary" option to
use the compact-summary format, intead of diffstat, when showing
the summary of the incoming changes.
* jc/merge-compact-summary:
merge/pull: extend merge.stat configuration variable to cover --compact-summary
merge/pull: add the "--compact-summary" option
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An interchange format for stash entries is defined, and subcommand
of "git stash" to import/export has been added.
* bc/stash-export-import:
builtin/stash: provide a way to import stashes from a ref
builtin/stash: provide a way to export stashes to a ref
builtin/stash: factor out revision parsing into a function
object-name: make get_oid quietly return an error
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Commit c8009635785e ("fetch-pack, send-pack: clean up shallow oid
array", 2024-09-25) cleaned up the shallow oid array in cmd_send_pack,
but didn't clean up extra_have, which is still leaked at program exit.
I suspect the particular tests in t5539 don't trigger any additions to
the extra_have array, which explains why the tests can pass leak free
despite this gap.
Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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"git maintenance" lacked the care "git gc" had to avoid holding
onto the repository lock for too long during packing refs, which
has been remedied.
* ps/maintenance-ref-lock:
builtin/maintenance: fix locking race when handling "gc" task
builtin/gc: avoid global state in `gc_before_repack()`
usage: allow dying without writing an error message
builtin/maintenance: fix locking race with refs and reflogs tasks
builtin/maintenance: split into foreground and background tasks
builtin/maintenance: fix typedef for function pointers
builtin/maintenance: extract function to run tasks
builtin/maintenance: stop modifying global array of tasks
builtin/maintenance: mark "--task=" and "--schedule=" as incompatible
builtin/maintenance: centralize configuration of explicit tasks
builtin/gc: drop redundant local variable
builtin/gc: use designated field initializers for maintenance tasks
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"git whatchanged" that is longer to type than "git log --raw"
which is its modern rough equivalent has outlived its usefulness
more than 10 years ago. Plan to deprecate and remove it.
* jc/you-still-use-whatchanged:
whatschanged: list it in BreakingChanges document
whatchanged: remove when built with WITH_BREAKING_CHANGES
whatchanged: require --i-still-use-this
tests: prepare for a world without whatchanged
doc: prepare for a world without whatchanged
you-still-use-that??: help deprecating commands for removal
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In 9d2962a7c4 (receive-pack: use batched reference updates, 2025-05-19)
we updated the 'git-receive-pack(1)' command to use batched reference
updates. One edge case which was missed during this implementation was
when a user pushes multiple branches such as:
delete refs/heads/branch/conflict
create refs/heads/branch
Before using batched updates, the references would be applied
sequentially and hence no conflicts would arise. With batched updates,
while the first update applies, the second fails due to D/F conflict. A
similar issue was present in 'git-fetch(1)' and was fixed by separating
out reference pruning into a separate transaction in the commit 'fetch:
use batched reference updates'. Apply a similar mechanism for
'git-receive-pack(1)' and separate out reference deletions into its own
batch.
This means 'git-receive-pack(1)' will now use up to two transactions,
whereas before using batched updates it would use _at least_ two
transactions. So using batched updates is still the better option.
Add a test to validate this behavior.
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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"git stash" recorded a wrong branch name when submodules are
present in the current checkout, which has been corrected.
* kj/stash-onbranch-submodule-fix:
stash: fix incorrect branch name in stash message
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"git stash -p <pathspec>" improvements.
* pw/stash-p-pathspec-fixes:
stash: allow "git stash [<options>] --patch <pathspec>" to assume push
stash: allow "git stash -p <pathspec>" to assume push again
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The get_default_remote_submodule() function performs a lookup to find
the appropriate remote to use within a submodule. The function first
checks to see if it can find the remote for the current branch. If this
fails, it then checks to see if there is exactly one remote. It will use
this, before finally falling back to "origin" as the default.
If a user happens to rename their default remote from origin, either
manually or by setting something like clone.defaultRemoteName, this
fallback will not work.
In such cases, the submodule logic will try to use a non-existent
remote. This usually manifests as a failure to trigger the submodule
update.
The parent project already knows and stores the submodule URL in either
.gitmodules or its .git/config.
Add a new repo_remote_from_url() helper which will iterate over all the
remotes in a repository and return the first remote which has a matching
URL.
Refactor get_default_remote_submodule to find the submodule and get its
URL. If a valid URL exists, first try to obtain a remote using the new
repo_remote_from_url(). Fall back to the repo_default_remote()
otherwise.
The fallback logic is kept in case for some reason the user has manually
changed the URL within the submodule. Additionally, we still try to use
a remote rather than directly passing the URL in the
fetch_in_submodule() logic. This ensures that an update will properly
update the remote refs within the submodule as expected, rather than
just fetching into FETCH_HEAD.
Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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A future refactor got get_default_remote_submodule() is going to depend on
resolve_relative_url(). That function depends on get_default_remote().
Move get_default_remote_submodule() after resolve_relative_url() first
to make the additional functionality easier to review.
Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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The repo_get_default_remote() function in submodule--helper currently
tries to figure out the proper remote name to use for a submodule based
on a few factors.
First, it tries to find the remote for the currently checked out branch.
This works if the submodule is configured to checkout to a branch
instead of a detached HEAD state.
In the detached HEAD state, the code calls back to using "origin", on
the assumption that this is the default remote name. Some users may
change this, such as by setting clone.defaultRemoteName, or by changing
the remote name manually within the submodule repository.
As a first step to improving this situation, refactor to reuse the logic
from remotes_remote_for_branch(). This function uses the remote from the
branch if it has one. If it doesn't then it checks to see if there is
exactly one remote. It uses this remote first before attempting to fall
back to "origin".
To allow using this helper function, introduce a repo_default_remote()
helper to remote.c which takes a repository structure. This helper will
load the remote configuration and get the "HEAD" branch. Then it will
call remotes_remote_for_branch to find the default remote.
Replace calls of repo_get_default_remote() with the calls to this new
function. To maintain consistency with the existing callers, continue
copying the returned string with xstrdup.
This isn't a perfect solution for users who change remote names, but it
should help in cases where the remote name is changed but users haven't
added any additional remotes.
Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Both submodule--helper.c and submodule-config.c have an implementation
of starts_with_dot_slash and starts_with_dot_dot_slash. The dir.h header
has starts_with_dot(_dot)_slash_native, which sets PATH_MATCH_NATIVE.
Move the helpers to dir.h as static inlines. I thought about renaming
them to postfix with _platform but that felt too long and ugly. On the
other hand it might be slightly confusing with _native.
This simplifies a submodule refactor which wants to use the helpers
earlier in the submodule--helper.c file.
Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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The branch structure has both branch->merge_name and branch->merge for
tracking the merge information. The former is allocated by add_merge()
and stores the names read from the configuration file. The latter is
allocated by set_merge() which is called by branch_get() when an
external caller requests a branch.
This leads to the confusing situation where branch->merge_nr tracks both
the size of branch->merge (once its allocated) and branch->merge_name.
The branch_release() function incorrectly assumes that branch->merge is
always set when branch->merge_nr is non-zero, and can potentially crash
if read_config() is called without branch_get() being called on every
branch.
In addition, branch_release() fails to free some of the memory
associated with the structure including:
* Failure to free the refspec_item containers in branch->merge[i]
* Failure to free the strings in branch->merge_name[i]
* Failure to free the branch->merge_name parent array.
The set_merge() function sets branch->merge_nr to 0 when there is no
valid remote_name, to avoid external callers seeing a non-zero merge_nr
but a NULL merge array. This results in failure to release most of the
merge data as well.
These issues could be fixed directly, and indeed I initially proposed
such a change at [1] in the past. While this works, there was some
confusion during review because of the inconsistencies.
Instead, its time to clean up the situation properly. Remove
branch->merge_name entirely. Instead, allocate branch->merge earlier
within add_merge() instead of within set_merge(). Instead of having
set_merge() copy from merge_name[i] to merge[i]->src, just have
add_merge() directly initialize merge[i]->src.
Modify the add_merge() to call xstrdup() itself, instead of having
the caller of add_merge() do so. This makes it more obvious which code
owns the memory.
Update all callers which use branch->merge_name[i] to use
branch->merge[i]->src instead.
Add a merge_clear() function which properly releases all of the
merge-related memory, and which sets branch->merge_nr to zero. Use this
both in branch_release() and in set_merge(), fixing the leak when
set_merge() finds no valid remote_name.
Add a set_merge variable to the branch structure, which indicates
whether set_merge() has been called. This replaces the previous use of a
NULL check against the branch->merge array.
With these changes, the merge array is always allocated when merge_nr is
non-zero.
This use of refspec_item to store the names should be safe. External
callers should be using branch_get() to obtain a pointer to the branch,
which will call set_merge(), and the callers internal to remote.c
already handle the partially initialized refpsec_item structure safely.
This end result is cleaner, and avoids duplicating the merge names
twice.
Signed-off-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.keller@gmail.com>
Link: [1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/20250617-jk-submodule-helper-use-url-v2-1-04cbb003177d@gmail.com/
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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In ddee3703b3 (builtin/repack.c: add cruft packs to MIDX during
geometric repack, 2022-05-20), repack began adding cruft pack(s) to the
MIDX with '--write-midx' to ensure that the resulting MIDX was always
closed under reachability in order to generate reachability bitmaps.
While the previous patch added the '--stdin-packs=follow' option to
pack-objects, it is not yet on by default. Given that, suppose you have
a once-unreachable object packed in a cruft pack, which later becomes
reachable from one or more objects in a geometrically repacked pack.
That once-unreachable object *won't* appear in the new pack, since the
cruft pack was not specified as included or excluded when the
geometrically repacked pack was created with 'pack-objects
--stdin-packs' (*not* '--stdin-packs=follow', which is not on). If that
new pack is included in a MIDX without the cruft pack, then trying to
generate bitmaps for that MIDX may fail. This happens when the bitmap
selection process picks one or more commits which reach the
once-unreachable objects.
To mitigate this failure mode, commit ddee3703b3 ensures that the MIDX
will be closed under reachability by including cruft pack(s). If cruft
pack(s) were not included, we would fail to generate a MIDX bitmap. But
ddee3703b3 alludes to the fact that this is sub-optimal by saying
[...] it's desirable to avoid including cruft packs in the MIDX
because it causes the MIDX to store a bunch of objects which are
likely to get thrown away.
, which is true, but hides an even larger problem. If repositories
rarely prune their unreachable objects and/or have many of them, the
MIDX must keep track of a large number of objects which bloats the MIDX
and slows down object lookup.
This is doubly unfortunate because the vast majority of objects in cruft
pack(s) are unlikely to be read. But any object lookups that go through
the MIDX must binary search over them anyway, slowing down object
lookups using the MIDX.
This patch causes geometrically-repacked packs to contain a copy of any
once-unreachable object(s) with 'git pack-objects --stdin-packs=follow',
allowing us to avoid including any cruft packs in the MIDX. This is
because a sequence of geometrically-repacked packs that were all
generated with '--stdin-packs=follow' are guaranteed to have their union
be closed under reachability.
Note that you cannot guarantee that a collection of packs is closed
under reachability if not all of them were generated with "following" as
above. One tell-tale sign that not all geometrically-repacked packs in
the MIDX were generated with "following" is to see if there is a pack in
the existing MIDX that is not going to be somehow represented (either
verbatim or as part of a geometric rollup) in the new MIDX.
If there is, then starting to generate packs with "following" during
geometric repacking won't work, since it's open to the same race as
described above.
But if you're starting from scratch (e.g., building the first MIDX after
an all-into-one '--cruft' repack), then you can guarantee that the union
of subsequently generated packs from geometric repacking *is* closed
under reachability.
(One exception here is when "starting from scratch" results in a noop
repack, e.g., because the non-cruft pack(s) in a repository already form
a geometric progression. Since we can't tell whether or not those were
generated with '--stdin-packs=follow', they may depend on
once-unreachable objects, so we have to include the cruft pack in the
MIDX in this case.)
Detect when this is the case and avoid including cruft packs in the MIDX
where possible. The existing behavior remains the default, and the new
behavior is available with the config 'repack.midxMustIncludeCruft' set
to 'false'.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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When invoked with '--stdin-packs', pack-objects will generate a pack
which contains the objects found in the "included" packs, less any
objects from "excluded" packs.
Packs that exist in the repository but weren't specified as either
included or excluded are in practice treated like the latter, at least
in the sense that pack-objects won't include objects from those packs.
This behavior forces us to include any cruft pack(s) in a repository's
multi-pack index for the reasons described in ddee3703b3
(builtin/repack.c: add cruft packs to MIDX during geometric repack,
2022-05-20).
The full details are in ddee3703b3, but the gist is if you
have a once-unreachable object in a cruft pack which later becomes
reachable via one or more commits in a pack generated with
'--stdin-packs', you *have* to include that object in the MIDX via the
copy in the cruft pack, otherwise we cannot generate reachability
bitmaps for any commits which reach that object.
Note that the traversal here is best-effort, similar to the existing
traversal which provides name-hash hints. This means that the object
traversal may hand us back a blob that does not actually exist. We
*won't* see missing trees/commits with 'ignore_missing_links' because:
- missing commit parents are discarded at the commit traversal stage by
revision.c::process_parents()
- missing tag objects are discarded by revision.c::handle_commit()
- missing tree objects are discarded by the list-objects code in
list-objects.c::process_tree()
But we have to handle potentially-missing blobs specially by making a
separate check to ensure they exist in the repository. Failing to do so
would mean that we'd add an object to the packing list which doesn't
actually exist, rendering us unable to write out the pack.
This prepares us for new repacking behavior which will "resurrect"
objects found in cruft or otherwise unspecified packs when generating
new packs. In the context of geometric repacking, this may be used to
maintain a sequence of geometrically-repacked packs, the union of which
is closed under reachability, even in the case described earlier.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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show_commit_pack_hint() has heretofore been a noop, so its position
within its compilation unit only needs to appear before its first use.
But the following commit will sometimes have `show_commit_pack_hint()`
call `show_object_pack_hint()`, so reorder the former to appear after
the latter to minimize the code movement in that patch.
Suggested-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Noticed-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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With '--unpacked', pack-objects adds loose objects (which don't appear
in any of the excluded packs from '--stdin-packs') to the output pack
without considering them as reachability tips for the name-hash
traversal.
This was an oversight in the original implementation of '--stdin-packs',
since the code which enumerates and adds loose objects to the output
pack (`add_unreachable_loose_objects()`) did not have access to the
'rev_info' struct found in `read_packs_list_from_stdin()`.
Excluding unpacked objects from that traversal doesn't affect the
correctness of the resulting pack, but it does make it harder to
discover good deltas for loose objects.
Now that the 'rev_info' struct is declared outside of
`read_packs_list_from_stdin()`, we can pass it to
`add_objects_in_unpacked_packs()` and add any loose objects as tips to
the above-mentioned traversal, in theory producing slightly tighter
packs as a result.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Once 'read_packs_list_from_stdin()' has called for_each_object_in_pack()
on each of the input packs, we do a reachability traversal to discover
names for any objects we picked up so we can generate name hash values
and hopefully get higher quality deltas as a result.
A future commit will change the purpose of this reachability traversal
to find and pack objects which are reachable from commits in the input
packs, but are packed in an unknown (not included nor excluded) pack.
Extract the code which initializes and performs the reachability
traversal to take place in the caller, not the callee, which prepares us
to share this code for the '--unpacked' case (see the function
add_unreachable_loose_objects() for more details).
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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At the bottom of cmd_pack_objects() we check which mode the command is
running in (e.g., generating a cruft pack, handling '--stdin-packs',
using the internal rev-list, etc.) and handle the mode appropriately.
The '--stdin-packs' case is handled inline (dating back to its
introduction in 339bce27f4 (builtin/pack-objects.c: add '--stdin-packs'
option, 2021-02-22)) since it is relatively short. Extract the body of
"if (stdin_packs)" into its own function to prepare for the
implementation to become lengthier in a following commit.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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In add_object_entry_from_pack() we declare 'revs' (given to us through
the miscellaneous context argument) earlier in the "if (p)" conditional
than is necessary. Move it down as far as it can go to reduce its
scope.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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pack-objects has a handful of explicit checks for pairs of command-line
options which are mutually incompatible. Many of these pre-date
a699367bb8 (i18n: factorize more 'incompatible options' messages,
2022-01-31).
Convert the explicit checks into die_for_incompatible_opt2() calls,
which simplifies the implementation and standardizes pack-objects'
output when given incompatible options (e.g., --stdin-packs with
--filter gives different output than --keep-unreachable with
--unpack-unreachable).
There is one minor piece of test fallout in t5331 that expects the old
format, which has been corrected.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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A memory leak on an error code path has been plugged.
* ly/submodule-update-failure-leakfix:
builtin/submodule--helper: fix leak when remote_submodule_branch() failed
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Leakfix.
* ly/commit-buffer-reencode-leakfix:
repo_logmsg_reencode: fix memory leak when use repo_logmsg_reencode ()
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"git diff --no-index dirA dirB" can limit the comparison with
pathspec at the end of the command line, just like normal "git
diff".
* jk/diff-no-index-with-pathspec:
diff --no-index: support limiting by pathspec
pathspec: add flag to indicate operation without repository
pathspec: add match_leading_pathspec variant
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A memory-leak in an error code path has been plugged.
* ly/fetch-pack-leakfix:
builtin/fetch-pack: cleanup before return error
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A memory-leak in an error code path has been plugged.
* ly/commit-graph-graph-write-leakfix:
commit-graph: fix start_delayed_progress() leak
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Code clean-up.
* ly/do-not-localize-bug-messages:
BUG(): remove leading underscore of the format string
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"git cat-file --batch" learns to understand %(objectmode) atom to
allow the caller to tell missing objects (due to repository
corruption) and submodules (whose commit objects are OK to be
missing) apart.
* vd/cat-file-objectmode-update:
cat-file.c: add batch handling for submodules
cat-file: add %(objectmode) atom
t1006: update 'run_tests' to test generic object specifiers
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"git pack-objects" learns to find delta bases from blobs at the
same path, using the --path-walk API.
* ds/path-walk-2:
pack-objects: allow --shallow and --path-walk
path-walk: add new 'edge_aggressive' option
pack-objects: thread the path-based compression
pack-objects: refactor path-walk delta phase
scalar: enable path-walk during push via config
pack-objects: enable --path-walk via config
repack: add --path-walk option
t5538: add tests to confirm deltas in shallow pushes
pack-objects: introduce GIT_TEST_PACK_PATH_WALK
p5313: add performance tests for --path-walk
pack-objects: update usage to match docs
pack-objects: add --path-walk option
pack-objects: extract should_attempt_deltas()
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Existing `merge.stat` configuration variable is a Boolean that
defaults to `true` to control `git merge --[no-]stat` behaviour.
Extend it to be "Boolean or text", that takes false, true, or
"compact", with the last one triggering the --compact-summary option
introduced earlier. Any other values are taken as the same as true,
instead of signaling an error---it is not a grave enough offence to
stop their merge.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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"git merge" and "git pull" shows "git diff --stat --summary @{1}"
when they finish to indicate the extent of the changes brought into
the history by default. While it gives a good overview, it becomes
annoying when there are very many created or deleted paths.
Introduce "--compact-summary" option to these two commands that
tells it to instead show "git diff --compact-summary @{1}", which
gives the same information in a lot more compact form in such a
situation.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Now that we have a way to export stashes to a ref, let's provide a way
to import them from such a ref back to the stash. This works much the
way the export code does, except that we strip off the first parent
chain commit and then store each resulting commit back to the stash.
We don't clear the stash first and instead add the specified stashes to
the top of the stash. This is because users may want to export just a
few stashes, such as to share a small amount of work in progress with a
colleague, and it would be undesirable for the receiving user to lose
all of their data. For users who do want to replace the stash, it's
easy to do to: simply run "git stash clear" first.
We specifically rely on the fact that we'll produce identical stash
commits on both sides in our tests. This provides a cheap,
straightforward check for our tests and also makes it easy for users to
see if they already have the same data in both repositories.
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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A common user problem is how to sync in-progress work to another
machine. Users currently must use some sort of transfer of the working
tree, which poses security risks and also necessarily causes the index
to become dirty. The experience is suboptimal and frustrating for
users.
A reasonable idea is to use the stash for this purpose, but the stash is
stored in the reflog, not in a ref, and as such it cannot be pushed or
pulled. This also means that it cannot be saved into a bundle or
preserved elsewhere, which is a problem when using throwaway development
environments.
In addition, users often want to replicate stashes across machines, such
as when they must use multiple machines or when they use throwaway dev
environments, such as those based on the Devcontainer spec, where they
might otherwise lose various in-progress work.
Let's solve this problem by allowing the user to export the stash to a
ref (or, to just write it into the repository and print the hash, à la
git commit-tree). Introduce git stash export, which writes a chain of
commits where the first parent is always a chain to the previous stash,
or to a single, empty commit (for the final item) and the second is the
stash commit normally written to the reflog.
Iterate over each stash from top to bottom, looking up the data for each
one, and then create the chain from the single empty commit back up in
reverse order. Generate a predictable empty commit so our behavior is
reproducible. Create a useful commit message, preserving the author and
committer information, to help users identify stash commits when viewing
them as normal commits.
If the user has specified specific stashes they'd like to export
instead, use those instead of iterating over all of the stashes.
As part of this, specifically request quiet behavior when looking up the
OID for a revision because we will eventually hit a revision that
doesn't exist and we don't want to die when that occurs.
When exporting stashes, be sure to verify that they look like valid
stashes and don't contain invalid data. This will help avoid failures
on import or problems due to attempting to export invalid refs that are
not stashes.
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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We allow several special forms of stash names in this code. In the
future, we'll want to allow these same forms without parsing a stash
commit, so let's refactor this code out into a function for reuse.
Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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When creating a stash, Git uses the current branch name
of the superproject to construct the stash commit message.
However, in repositories with submodules,
the message may mistakenly display the submodule branch name instead.
This is because `refs_resolve_ref_unsafe()` returns a pointer to a static buffer.
Subsequent calls to the same function overwrite the buffer,
corrupting the originally fetched `branch_name` used for the stash message.
Use `xstrdup()` to duplicate the branch name immediately after resolving it,
so that later buffer overwrites do not affect the stash message.
Signed-off-by: K Jayatheerth <jayatheerthkulkarni2005@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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If rebase.instructionFormat is invalid the repository is left in a
strange state when the interactive rebase fails. `git status` outputs
boths the same as it would in the normal case *and* something related to
interactive rebase:
$ git -c rebase.instructionFormat=blah rebase -i
fatal: invalid --pretty format: blah
$ git status
On branch master
Your branch is ahead of 'upstream/master' by 1 commit.
(use "git push" to publish your local commits)
git-rebase-todo is missing.
No commands done.
No commands remaining.
You are currently editing a commit while rebasing branch 'master' on '8db3019401'.
(use "git commit --amend" to amend the current commit)
(use "git rebase --continue" once you are satisfied with your changes)
By attempting to write the rebase script before initializing the state
this potential scenario is avoided.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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In builtin/submodule--helper.c:update_submodule(), the variable
remote_name is allocated in get_default_remote_submodule() but
may be leaked if remote_submodule_branch() fails. Although it is
unlikely that remote_submodule_branch() would fail after successfully
obtaining a remote ref name from get_default_remote_submodule(),
it is still possible. To prevent a potential memory leak, add a
call to free(remote_name) at the early exit point.
Signed-off-by: Lidong Yan <502024330056@smail.nju.edu.cn>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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The support for assuming "push" when "-p" is given introduced in
9e140909f61 (stash: allow pathspecs in the no verb form, 2017-02-28) is
very narrow, neither "git stash -m <message> -p <pathspec>" nor "git
stash --patch <pathspec>" imply "push" and die instead. Relax this by
passing PARSE_OPT_STOP_AT_NON_OPTION when push is being assumed and then
setting "force_assume" if "--patch" was present. This means "git stash
<pathspec> -p" still dies so that it does not assume the user meant
"push" if they mistype a subcommand name but "git stash -m <message> -p
<pathspec>" will now succeed. The test added in the last commit is
adjusted to check that push is still assumed when "--patch" comes after
other options on the command-line.
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Historically "git stash [<options>]" was assumed to mean "git stash save
[<options>]". Since 1ada5020b38 (stash: use stash_push for no verb form,
2017-02-28) it is assumed to mean "git stash push [<options>]". As the
push subcommand supports pathspecs, 9e140909f61 (stash: allow pathspecs
in the no verb form, 2017-02-28) allowed "git stash -p <pathspec>" to
mean "git stash push -p <pathspec>". This was broken in 8c3713cede7
(stash: eliminate crude option parsing, 2020-02-17) which failed to
account for "push" being added to the start of argv in cmd_stash()
before it calls push_stash() and kept looking in argv[0] for "-p" after
moving the code to push_stash().
Fix this by regression by checking argv[1] instead of argv[0] and add a
couple of tests to prevent future regressions.
Helped-by: Martin Ågren <martin.agren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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pretty.c:repo_logmsg_reencode() allocated memory should be freed with
repo_unuse_commit_buffer(). Callers sometimes forgot free it at exit
point. Add `repo_unuse_commit_buffer()` in insert_records_from_trailers
at builtin/shortlog.c and create_commit at builtin/replay.c
Signed-off-by: Lidong Yan <502024330056@smail.nju.edu.cn>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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In commit-graph.c:graph_write(), if read_one_commit() failed,
progress allocated in start_delayed_progress() will leak. Add
stop_progress() before goto cleanup.
Signed-off-by: Lidong Yan <502024330056@smail.nju.edu.cn>
Acked-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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In builtin/fetch-pack.c:cmd_fetch_pack(), if finish_connect() failed,
it returns error code without cleanup which cause memory leak. Add
cleanup label before frees in the end of cmd_fetch_pack(), and add
`goto cleanup` if finish_connect() failed.
Signed-off-by: Lidong Yan <502024330056@smail.nju.edu.cn>
Acked-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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