Various build tweaks, including CSPRNG selection on some platforms.
* rj/build-tweaks:
config.mak.uname: set CSPRNG_METHOD to getrandom on Linux
config.mak.uname: add arc4random to the cygwin build
config.mak.uname: add sysinfo() configuration for cygwin
builtin/gc.c: correct RAM calculation when using sysinfo
config.mak.uname: add clock_gettime() to the cygwin build
config.mak.uname: add HAVE_GETDELIM to the cygwin section
config.mak.uname: only set NO_REGEX on cygwin for v1.7
config.mak.uname: add a note about NO_STRLCPY for Linux
Makefile: remove NEEDS_LIBRT build variable
meson.build: set default help format to html on windows
meson.build: only set build variables for non-default values
Makefile: only set some BASIC_CFLAGS when RUNTIME_PREFIX is set
meson.build: remove -DCURL_DISABLE_TYPECHECK
Update parse-options API to catch mistakes to pass address of an
integral variable of a wrong type/size.
* ps/parse-options-integers:
parse-options: detect mismatches in integer signedness
parse-options: introduce precision handling for `OPTION_UNSIGNED`
parse-options: introduce precision handling for `OPTION_INTEGER`
parse-options: rename `OPT_MAGNITUDE()` to `OPT_UNSIGNED()`
parse-options: support unit factors in `OPT_INTEGER()`
global: use designated initializers for options
parse: fix off-by-one for minimum signed values
Code clean-up.
* ps/object-file-cleanup:
object-store: merge "object-store-ll.h" and "object-store.h"
object-store: remove global array of cached objects
object: split out functions relating to object store subsystem
object-file: drop `index_blob_stream()`
object-file: split up concerns of `HASH_*` flags
object-file: split out functions relating to object store subsystem
object-file: move `xmmap()` into "wrapper.c"
object-file: move `git_open_cloexec()` to "compat/open.c"
object-file: move `safe_create_leading_directories()` into "path.c"
object-file: move `mkdir_in_gitdir()` into "path.c"
"git log --{left,right}-only A...B", when A and B does not share
any common ancestor, now behaves as expected.
* mh/left-right-limited:
revision: fix --left/right-only use with unrelated histories
Optimize the code to dedup references recorded in a bundle file.
* kn/bundle-dedup-optim:
bundle: fix non-linear performance scaling with refs
t6020: test for duplicate refnames in bundle creation
"make perf" fixes.
* pb/perf-test-fixes:
p7821: fix instructions for testing with threads
p9210: fix 'scalar clone' when running from a detached HEAD
p7821: fix test_perf invocation for prereqs
A common way to run Git's performance benchmarks on repositories other
than Git's own repository (which is not exactly large when compared to
actually large repositories) is to run them like this:
GIT_PERF_LARGE_REPO=/path/to/my/large/repo \
./p1234-*.sh -ivx
Contrary to developers' common expectations, this failed to work when
Git was built with a different `GIT_PERF_LARGE_REPO` value specified at
build time: That build-time option would have been written to the
`GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS` file, which in turn would have been sourced by
`test-lib.sh`, which in turn would have been sourced by `perf-lib.sh`,
which in turn would have been sourced by the perf test script,
_overriding_ the environment variable specified in the way illustrated
above.
Since perf tests are not run as part of the build, this most likely
unintended behavior was not caught and certainly not fixed, as the
`GIT_PERF_*` values would have been empty at build-time.
However, in 4638e8806e (Makefile: use common template for
GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS, 2024-12-06), a subtle change of behavior was
introduced: Whereas before, a couple of build-time options (the
`GIT_PERF_*` ones included) were written to `GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS` only
when their values were non-empty. With this commit, they are also
written when they are empty.
The consequence is that above-mentioned way to run the perf tests will
not only fail to pick up the desired `GIT_PERF_*` settings when they
were specified differently while building Git, instead the desired
settings will be only respected when specified _while building_ Git.
Let's work around the original issue, i.e. let `GIT_PERF_*` environment
variables override what is recorded in `GIT-BUILD-OPTIONS`.
Note that this is just the tip of the iceberg, there are a couple of
`GIT_TEST_*` options that may want a similar fix in `test-lib.sh`. Due
to time constraints on my side, this here patch focuses exclusively on
the `GIT_PERF_*` settings.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The previous commit started to insist TAG_F1_ONLY to be missing,
which was not in the original. Let's not be overly eager in the
conversion.
Also, the other hunk in the commit introduced a shell syntax error,
causing the test to fail. Fix it.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Incorrect sorting of refs with bytes with high-bit set on platforms
with signed char led to a BUG, which has been corrected.
* ps/refname-avail-check-optim:
refs/packed: fix BUG when seeking refs with UTF-8 characters
Remove remnants of the recursive merge strategy backend, which was
superseded by the ort merge strategy.
* en/merge-recursive-debug:
builtin/{merge,rebase,revert}: remove GIT_TEST_MERGE_ALGORITHM
tests: remove GIT_TEST_MERGE_ALGORITHM and test_expect_merge_algorithm
merge-recursive.[ch]: thoroughly debug these
merge, sequencer: switch recursive merges over to ort
sequencer: switch non-recursive merges over to ort
merge-ort: enable diff-algorithms other than histogram
builtin/merge-recursive: switch to using merge_ort_generic()
checkout: replace merge_trees() with merge_ort_nonrecursive()
"git blame --porcelain" mode now talks about unblamable lines and
lines that are blamed to an ignored commit.
* kn/blame-porcelain-unblamable:
blame: print unblamable and ignored commits in porcelain mode
"git fetch [<remote>]" with only the configured fetch refspec
should be the only thing to update refs/remotes/<remote>/HEAD,
but the code was overly eager to do so in other cases.
* jk/fetch-follow-remote-head-fix:
fetch: make set_head() call easier to read
fetch: don't ask for remote HEAD if followRemoteHEAD is "never"
fetch: only respect followRemoteHEAD with configured refspecs
This commit is the equivalent to the preceding commit, but instead of
introducing precision handling for `OPTION_INTEGER` we introduce it for
`OPTION_UNSIGNED`.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The `OPTION_INTEGER` option type accepts a signed integer. The type of
the underlying integer is a simple `int`, which restricts the range of
values accepted by such options. But there is a catch: because the
caller provides a pointer to the value via the `.value` field, which is
a simple void pointer. This has two consequences:
- There is no check whether the passed value is sufficiently long to
store the entire range of `int`. This can lead to integer wraparound
in the best case and out-of-bounds writes in the worst case.
- Even when a caller knows that they want to store a value larger than
`INT_MAX` they don't have a way to do so.
In practice this doesn't tend to be a huge issue because users typically
don't end up passing huge values to most commands. But the parsing logic
is demonstrably broken, and it is too easy to get the calling convention
wrong.
Improve the situation by introducing a new `precision` field into the
structure. This field gets assigned automatically by `OPT_INTEGER_F()`
and tracks the size of the passed value. Like this it becomes possible
for the caller to pass arbitrarily-sized integers and the underlying
logic knows to handle it correctly by doing range checks. Furthermore,
convert the code to use `strtoimax()` intstead of `strtol()` so that we
can also parse values larger than `LONG_MAX`.
Note that we do not yet assert signedness of the passed variable, which
is another source of bugs. This will be handled in a subsequent commit.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
With the preceding commit, `OPT_INTEGER()` has learned to support unit
factors. Consequently, the major differencen between `OPT_INTEGER()` and
`OPT_MAGNITUDE()` isn't the support of unit factors anymore, as both of
them do support them now. Instead, the difference is that one handles
signed and the other handles unsigned integers.
Adapt the name of `OPT_MAGNITUDE()` accordingly by renaming it to
`OPT_UNSIGNED()`.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There are two main differences between `OPT_INTEGER()` and
`OPT_MAGNITUDE()`:
- The former parses signed integers whereas the latter parses unsigned
integers.
- The latter parses unit factors like 'k', 'm' or 'g'.
While the first difference makes obvious sense, there isn't really a
good reason why signed integers shouldn't support unit factors, too.
This inconsistency will also become a bit of a problem with subsequent
commits, where we will fix a couple of callsites that pass an unsigned
integer to `OPT_INTEGER()`. There are three options:
- We could adapt those users to instead pass a signed integer, but
this would needlessly extend the range of accepted integer values.
- We could convert them to use `OPT_MAGNITUDE()`, as it only accepts
unsigned integers. But now we have the inconsistency that we also
start to accept unit factors.
- We could introduce `OPT_UNSIGNED()` as equivalent to `OPT_INTEGER()`
so that it knows to only accept unsigned integers without unit
suffix.
Introducing a whole new option type feels a bit excessive. There also
isn't really a good reason why `OPT_INTEGER()` cannot be extended to
also accept unit factors: all valid values passed to such options cannot
have a unit factors right now, so there wouldn't be any ambiguity.
Refactor `OPT_INTEGER()` to use `git_parse_int()`, which knows to
interpret unit factors. This removes the inconsistency between the
signed and unsigned options so that we can easily fix up callsites that
pass the wrong integer type right now.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While we expose macros for most of our different option types understood
by the "parse-options" subsystem, not every combination of fields that
has one as that would otherwise quickly lead to an explosion of macros.
Instead, we just initialize structures manually for those variants of
fields that don't have a macro.
Callsites that open-code these structure initialization don't use
designated initializers though and instead just provide values for each
of the fields that they want to initialize. This has three significant
downsides:
- Callsites need to specify all values up to the last field that they
care about. This often includes fields that should simply be left at
their default zero-initialized state, which adds distraction.
- Any reader not deeply familiar with the layout of the structure
has a hard time figuring out what the respective initializers mean.
- Reordering or introducing new fields in the middle of the structure
is impossible without adapting all callsites.
Convert all sites to instead use designated initializers, which we have
started using in our codebase quite a while ago. This allows us to skip
any default-initialized fields, gives the reader context by specifying
the field names and allows us to reorder or introduce new fields where
we want to.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 92f63d2b05 ("Cygwin 1.7 needs compat/regex", 2013-07-19) set
the NO_REGEX build variable because the platform regex library failed
some of the tests (t4018 and t4034), which passed just fine with the
compat library.
After some time (maybe a year or two), the platform library had been
updated (with an import from FreeBSD, I believe) and now passed the full
test-suite. This would be about the time of the v1.7 -> v2.0 transition
in 2015. I had a patch ready to send, but just didn't get around to
submitting it to the list. At some point in the interim, the official
cygwin git package used the autoconf build system, which sets the
NO_REGEX variable to use the platform regex library functions. The new
meson build system does likewise.
The cygwin platform regex library, in addition to now passing the tests
which formerly failed, now passes an 'test_expect_failure' test in the
t7815-grep-binary test file. In particular, test #12 'git grep .fi a'
which determines that the regex pattern '.' matches a NUL character.
The commit f96e56733a ("grep: use REG_STARTEND for all matching if
available", 2010-05-22) added the test in question, but it does not
give any indication as to why the test was framed as an expected fail,
rather than a 'positive' test that the 'git grep' command fails to
match a NUL. Note that the previous test #11 was also originally
marked in that commit as a 'test_expect_failure', but was flipped to
an 'success' test in commit 7e36de5859 ("t/t7008-grep-binary.sh: un-TODO
a test that needs REG_STARTEND", 2010-08-17).
In order to produce the same NO_REGEX configuration from autoconf, meson
and make, modify config.mak.uname to only set NO_REGEX for cygwin v1.7.
In addition, skip test t7815.12 on cygwin, by adding the !CYGWIN pre-
requisite to the test header, which (among other things) removes an
'...; please update test(s)' comment.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git cat-file --batch" and friends learned to allow "--filter=" to
omit certain objects, just like the transport layer does.
* ps/cat-file-filter-batch:
builtin/cat-file: use bitmaps to efficiently filter by object type
builtin/cat-file: deduplicate logic to iterate over all objects
pack-bitmap: introduce function to check whether a pack is bitmapped
pack-bitmap: add function to iterate over filtered bitmapped objects
pack-bitmap: allow passing payloads to `show_reachable_fn()`
builtin/cat-file: support "object:type=" objects filter
builtin/cat-file: support "blob:limit=" objects filter
builtin/cat-file: support "blob:none" objects filter
builtin/cat-file: wire up an option to filter objects
builtin/cat-file: introduce function to report object status
builtin/cat-file: rename variable that tracks usage
"make test" used to have a hard dependency on (basic) Perl; tests
have been rewritten help environment with NO_PERL test the build as
much as possible.
* ps/test-wo-perl-prereq:
t5703: refactor test to not depend on Perl
t5316: refactor `max_chain()` to not depend on Perl
t0210: refactor trace2 scrubbing to not use Perl
t0021: refactor `generate_random_characters()` to not depend on Perl
t/lib-httpd: refactor "one-time-perl" CGI script to not depend on Perl
t/lib-t6000: refactor `name_from_description()` to not depend on Perl
t/lib-gpg: refactor `sanitize_pgp()` to not depend on Perl
t: refactor tests depending on Perl for textconv scripts
t: refactor tests depending on Perl to print data
t: refactor tests depending on Perl substitution operator
t: refactor tests depending on Perl transliteration operator
Makefile: stop requiring Perl when running tests
meson: stop requiring Perl when tests are enabled
t: adapt existing PERL prerequisites
t: introduce PERL_TEST_HELPERS prerequisite
t: adapt `test_readlink()` to not use Perl
t: adapt `test_copy_bytes()` to not use Perl
t: adapt character translation helpers to not use Perl
t: refactor environment sanitization to not use Perl
t: skip chain lint when PERL_PATH is unset
Updating multiple references have only been possible in all-or-none
fashion with transactions, but it can be more efficient to batch
multiple updates even when some of them are allowed to fail in a
best-effort manner. A new "best effort batches of updates" mode
has been introduced.
* kn/non-transactional-batch-updates:
update-ref: add --batch-updates flag for stdin mode
refs: support rejection in batch updates during F/D checks
refs: implement batch reference update support
refs: introduce enum-based transaction error types
refs/reftable: extract code from the transaction preparation
refs/files: remove duplicate duplicates check
refs: move duplicate refname update check to generic layer
refs/files: remove redundant check in split_symref_update()
"git rev-list" learns machine-parsable output format that delimits
each field with NUL.
* jt/rev-list-z:
rev-list: support NUL-delimited --missing option
rev-list: support NUL-delimited --boundary option
rev-list: support delimiting objects with NUL bytes
rev-list: refactor early option parsing
rev-list: inline `show_object_with_name()` in `show_object()`
A few traditional unit tests have been rewritten to use the clar
framework.
* sk/clar-trailer-urlmatch-norm-test:
t/unit-tests: convert urlmatch-normalization test to clar
t/unit-tests: convert trailer test to use clar
The tests use grep to search the output of `git tag` for tagnames they
expect to exist, which can incorrectly pass if an unxpected tag
has the expected tag as its substring. We fix this by using `git
show-ref --verify` instead.
Additionally, we add a negative test to verify that a possible
uninteded tag does not show up in the imported repository.
This change also fixes an additional problem, where piping the
output of `git tag` caused the exit codes to be lost.
Signed-off-by: Anthony Wang <anthonywang513@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Code clean-up.
* js/comma-semicolon-confusion:
detect-compiler: detect clang even if it found CUDA
clang: warn when the comma operator is used
compat/regex: explicitly mark intentional use of the comma operator
wildmatch: avoid using of the comma operator
diff-delta: avoid using the comma operator
xdiff: avoid using the comma operator unnecessarily
clar: avoid using the comma operator unnecessarily
kwset: avoid using the comma operator unnecessarily
rebase: avoid using the comma operator unnecessarily
remote-curl: avoid using the comma operator unnecessarily
"git clone" still gave the message about the default branch name;
this message has been turned into an advice message that can be
turned off.
* jt/clone-guess-remote-head-fix:
advice: allow disabling default branch name advice
builtin/clone: suppress unexpected default branch advice
remote: allow `guess_remote_head()` to suppress advice
The job to coalesce loose objects into packfiles in "git
maintenance" now has configurable batch size.
* ds/maintenance-loose-objects-batchsize:
maintenance: add loose-objects.batchSize config
maintenance: force progress/no-quiet to children
"git reflog" learns "drop" subcommand, that discards the entire
reflog data for a ref.
* kn/reflog-drop:
reflog: implement subcommand to drop reflogs
reflog: improve error for when reflog is not found
The object layer has been updated to take an explicit repository
instance as a parameter in more code paths.
* ps/object-wo-the-repository:
hash: stop depending on `the_repository` in `null_oid()`
hash: fix "-Wsign-compare" warnings
object-file: split out logic regarding hash algorithms
delta-islands: stop depending on `the_repository`
object-file-convert: stop depending on `the_repository`
pack-bitmap-write: stop depending on `the_repository`
pack-revindex: stop depending on `the_repository`
pack-check: stop depending on `the_repository`
environment: move access to "core.bigFileThreshold" into repo settings
pack-write: stop depending on `the_repository` and `the_hash_algo`
object: stop depending on `the_repository`
csum-file: stop depending on `the_repository`
Fix our use of zlib corner cases.
* jk/zlib-inflate-fixes:
unpack_loose_rest(): rewrite return handling for clarity
unpack_loose_rest(): simplify error handling
unpack_loose_rest(): never clean up zstream
unpack_loose_rest(): avoid numeric comparison of zlib status
unpack_loose_header(): avoid numeric comparison of zlib status
git_inflate(): skip zlib_post_call() sanity check on Z_NEED_DICT
unpack_loose_header(): fix infinite loop on broken zlib input
unpack_loose_header(): report headers without NUL as "bad"
unpack_loose_header(): simplify next_out assignment
loose_object_info(): BUG() on inflating content with unknown type
The "object-store-ll.h" header has been introduced to keep transitive
header dependendcies and compile times at bay. Now that we have created
a new "object-store.c" file though we can easily move the last remaining
additional bit of "object-store.h", the `odb_path_map`, out of the
header.
Do so. As the "object-store.h" header is now equivalent to its low-level
alternative we drop the latter and inline it into the former.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 7b31b55db1 (perf: amend the grep tests to test grep.threads,
2017-12-29), p7821 was tweaked to test the performance of 'git grep'
under different number of threads. These tests are run if
GIT_PERF_GREP_THREADS is set to a list of thread numbers, but the
comment at the top of the file instead mentions GIT_PERF_7821_THREADS.
Fix the comment.
Signed-off-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
It was reported that using git-pull(1) in a repository whose remote
contains branches with emojis leads to the following bug:
$ git pull
remote: Enumerating objects: 161255, done.
remote: Counting objects: 100% (55884/55884), done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (5518/5518), done.
remote: Total 161255 (delta 54253), reused 50509 (delta 50364),
pack-reused 105371 (from 4)
Receiving objects: 100% (161255/161255), 309.90 MiB | 16.87 MiB/s, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (118048/118048), completed with 13416 local objects.
From github.com:github/github
97ab7ae3f3745..8fb2f9fa180ed master -> origin/master
[...snip many screenfuls of updates to origin remotes...]
BUG: refs/packed-backend.c:984: packed-refs backend yielded reference
preceding its prefix
error: fetch died of signal 6
This issue bisects to 22600c0452 (refs/iterator: implement seeking for
packed-ref iterators, 2025-03-12) where we have implemented seeking for
the packed-ref iterator. As part of that change we introduced a check
that verifies that the iterator only returns refnames bigger than the
prefix. In theory, this check should always hold: when a prefix is set
we know that we would've seeked that prefix first, so we should never
see a reference sorting before that prefix.
But in practice the check itself is misbehaving when handling unicode
characters. The particular issue triggered with a branch that got the
"shaved ice" unicode character in its name, which is composed of the
bytes "0xEE 0x90 0xBF". The bug triggers when we compare the refname
"refs/heads/<shaved-ice>" to something like "refs/heads/z", and it
specifically hits when comparing the first byte, "0xEE".
The root cause is that the most-significant bit of 0xEE is set. The
`refname` and `prefix` pointers that we use to compare bytes with one
another are both pointers to signed characters. As such, when we
dereference the 0xEE byte the result is a _negative_ value, and this
value will of course compare smaller than "z".
We can see that this issue is avoided in `cmp_packed_refname()`, where
we explicitly cast each byte to its unsigned form. Fix the bug by doing
the same in `packed_ref_iterator_advance()`.
Reported-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since we already teach the `repo_config()` in f29f1990 (config:
teach repo_config to allow `repo` to be NULL, 2025-03-08) to allow
`repo` to be NULL, no need to check if `repo` is NULL before calling
`repo_config()`.
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Usman Akinyemi <usmanakinyemi202@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* ps/object-wo-the-repository:
hash: stop depending on `the_repository` in `null_oid()`
hash: fix "-Wsign-compare" warnings
object-file: split out logic regarding hash algorithms
delta-islands: stop depending on `the_repository`
object-file-convert: stop depending on `the_repository`
pack-bitmap-write: stop depending on `the_repository`
pack-revindex: stop depending on `the_repository`
pack-check: stop depending on `the_repository`
environment: move access to "core.bigFileThreshold" into repo settings
pack-write: stop depending on `the_repository` and `the_hash_algo`
object: stop depending on `the_repository`
csum-file: stop depending on `the_repository`
The 'git bundle create' command has non-linear performance with the
number of refs in the repository. Benchmarking the command shows that
a large portion of the time (~75%) is spent in the
`object_array_remove_duplicates()` function.
The `object_array_remove_duplicates()` function was added in
b2a6d1c686 (bundle: allow the same ref to be given more than once,
2009-01-17) to skip duplicate refs provided by the user from being
written to the bundle. Since this is an O(N^2) algorithm, in repos with
large number of references, this can take up a large amount of time.
Let's instead use a 'strset' to skip duplicates inside
`write_bundle_refs()`. This improves the performance by around 6 times
when tested against in repository with 100000 refs:
Benchmark 1: bundle (refcount = 100000, revision = master)
Time (mean ± σ): 14.653 s ± 0.203 s [User: 13.940 s, System: 0.762 s]
Range (min … max): 14.237 s … 14.920 s 10 runs
Benchmark 2: bundle (refcount = 100000, revision = HEAD)
Time (mean ± σ): 2.394 s ± 0.023 s [User: 1.684 s, System: 0.798 s]
Range (min … max): 2.364 s … 2.425 s 10 runs
Summary
bundle (refcount = 100000, revision = HEAD) ran
6.12 ± 0.10 times faster than bundle (refcount = 100000, revision = master)
Previously, `object_array_remove_duplicates()` ensured that both the
refname and the object it pointed to were checked for duplicates. The
new approach, implemented within `write_bundle_refs()`, eliminates
duplicate refnames without comparing the objects they reference. This
works because, for bundle creation, we only need to prevent duplicate
refs from being written to the bundle header. The `revs->pending` array
can contain duplicates of multiple types.
First, references which resolve to the same refname. For e.g. "git
bundle create out.bdl master master" or "git bundle create out.bdl
refs/heads/master refs/heads/master" or "git bundle create out.bdl
master refs/heads/master". In these scenarios we want to prevent writing
"refs/heads/master" twice to the bundle header. Since both the refnames
here would point to the same object (unless there is a race), we do not
need to check equality of the object.
Second, refnames which are duplicates but do not point to the same
object. This can happen when we use an exclusion criteria. For e.g. "git
bundle create out.bdl master master^!", Here `revs->pending` would
contain two elements, both with refname set to "master". However, each
of them would be pointing to an INTERESTING and UNINTERESTING object
respectively. Since we only write refnames with INTERESTING objects to
the bundle header, we perform our duplicate checks only on such objects.
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The commit b2a6d1c686 (bundle: allow the same ref to be given more than
once, 2009-01-17) added functionality to detect and remove duplicate
refnames from being added during bundle creation. This ensured that
clones created from such bundles wouldn't barf about duplicate refnames.
The following commit will add some optimizations to make this check
faster, but before doing that, it would be optimal to add tests to
capture the current behavior.
Add tests to capture duplicate refnames provided by the user during
bundle creation. This can be a combination of:
- refnames directly provided by the user.
- refname duplicate by using the '--all' flag alongside manual
references being provided.
- exclusion criteria provided via a refname "main^!".
- short forms of refnames provided, "main" vs "refs/heads/main".
Note that currently duplicates due to usage of short and long forms goes
undetected. This should be fixed with the optimizations made in the next
commit.
Signed-off-by: Karthik Nayak <karthik.188@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Both of these existed to allow us to reuse all the merge-related tests
in the testsuite while easily flipping between the 'recursive' and the
'ort' backends. Now that we have removed merge-recursive and remapped
'recursive' to mean 'ort', we don't need this scaffolding anymore.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
More precisely, replace calls to merge_recursive() with
merge_ort_recursive().
Also change t7615 to quit calling out recursive; it is not needed
anymore, and we are in fact using ort now.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Switch from merge-recursive to merge-ort. Adjust the following
testcases due to the switch:
* t6430: most of the test differences here were due to improved D/F
conflict handling explained in more detail in ef52778708 (merge
tests: expect improved directory/file conflict handling in ort,
2020-10-26). These changes weren't made to this test back in that
commit simply because I had been looking at `git merge` rather than
`git merge-recursive`. The final test in this testsuite, though, was
expunged because it was looking for specific output, and the calls to
output_commit_title() were discarded from merge_ort_internal() in its
adaptation from merge_recursive_internal(); see 8119214f4e
(merge-ort: implement merge_incore_recursive(), 2020-12-16).
* t6434: This test is built entirely around rename/delete conflicts,
which had a suboptimal handling under merge-recursive. As explained
in more detail in commits 1f3c9ba707 ("t6425: be more flexible with
rename/delete conflict messages", 2020-08-10) and 727c75b23f ("t6404,
t6423: expect improved rename/delete handling in ort backend",
2020-10-26), rename/delete conflicts should each have two entries in
the index rather than just one. Adjust the expectations for all the
tests in this testcase to see the two entries per rename/delete
conflict.
* t6424: merge-recursive had a special check-if-toplevel-trees-match
check that it ran at the beginning on both the merge-base and the
other side being merged in. In such a case, it exited early and
printed an "Already up to date." message. merge-ort got rid of
this, and instead checks the merge base tree matching the other
side throughout the tree instead of just at the toplevel, allowing
it to avoid recursing into various subtrees. As part of that, it
got rid of the specialty toplevel message. That message hasn't
been missed for years from `git merge`, so I don't think it is
necessary to keep it just for `git merge-recursive`, especially
since the latter is rarely used. (git itself only references it
in the testsuite, whereas it used to power one of the three
rebase backends that existed once upon a time.)
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Incrementally updating multi-pack index files.
* tb/incremental-midx-part-2:
midx: implement writing incremental MIDX bitmaps
pack-bitmap.c: use `ewah_or_iterator` for type bitmap iterators
pack-bitmap.c: keep track of each layer's type bitmaps
ewah: implement `struct ewah_or_iterator`
pack-bitmap.c: apply pseudo-merge commits with incremental MIDXs
pack-bitmap.c: compute disk-usage with incremental MIDXs
pack-bitmap.c: teach `rev-list --test-bitmap` about incremental MIDXs
pack-bitmap.c: support bitmap pack-reuse with incremental MIDXs
pack-bitmap.c: teach `show_objects_for_type()` about incremental MIDXs
pack-bitmap.c: teach `bitmap_for_commit()` about incremental MIDXs
pack-bitmap.c: open and store incremental bitmap layers
pack-revindex: prepare for incremental MIDX bitmaps
Documentation: describe incremental MIDX bitmaps
Documentation: remove a "future work" item from the MIDX docs
Make the code in reftable library less reliant on the service
routines it used to borrow from Git proper, to make it easier to
use by external users of the library.
* ps/reftable-sans-compat-util:
Makefile: skip reftable library for Coccinelle
reftable: decouple from Git codebase by pulling in "compat/posix.h"
git-compat-util.h: split out POSIX-emulating bits
compat/mingw: split out POSIX-related bits
reftable/basics: introduce `REFTABLE_UNUSED` annotation
reftable/basics: stop using `SWAP()` macro
reftable/stack: stop using `sleep_millisec()`
reftable/system: introduce `reftable_rand()`
reftable/reader: stop using `ARRAY_SIZE()` macro
reftable/basics: provide wrappers for big endian conversion
reftable/basics: stop using `st_mult()` in array allocators
reftable: stop using `BUG()` in trivial cases
reftable/record: don't `BUG()` in `reftable_record_cmp()`
reftable/record: stop using `BUG()` in `reftable_record_init()`
reftable/record: stop using `COPY_ARRAY()`
reftable/blocksource: stop using `xmmap()`
reftable/stack: stop using `write_in_full()`
reftable/stack: stop using `read_in_full()`