"git verify-pack" and "git index-pack" started dying outside a
repository, which has been corrected.
* ps/index-pack-outside-repo-fix:
builtin/index-pack: fix segfaults when running outside of a repo
The code forgot to discard unnecessary in-core commit buffer data
for commits that "git log --skip=<number>" traversed but omitted
from the output, which has been corrected.
* jk/free-commit-buffer-of-skipped-commits:
revision: free commit buffers for skipped commits
"git bundle unbundle" outside a repository triggered a BUG()
unnecessarily, which has been corrected.
* ps/bundle-outside-repo-fix:
bundle: default to SHA1 when reading bundle headers
builtin/bundle: have unbundle check for repo before opening its bundle
The patch parser in "git patch-id" has been tightened to avoid
getting confused by lines that look like a patch header in the log
message.
cf. <Zqh2T_2RLt0SeKF7@tanuki>
* jc/patch-id:
patch-id: tighten code to detect the patch header
patch-id: rewrite code that detects the beginning of a patch
patch-id: make get_one_patchid() more extensible
patch-id: call flush_current_id() only when needed
t4204: patch-id supports various input format
It was reported that git-verify-pack(1) has started to crash with Git
v2.46.0 when run outside of a repository. This is another fallout from
c8aed5e8da (repository: stop setting SHA1 as the default object hash,
2024-05-07), where we have stopped setting the default hash algorithm
for `the_repository`. Consequently, code that relies on `the_hash_algo`
will now crash when it hasn't explicitly been initialized, which may be
the case when running outside of a Git repository.
The crash is not in git-verify-pack(1) but instead in git-index-pack(1),
which gets called by the former. Ideally, both of these programs should
be able to identify the hash algorithm used by the packfile and index
without having to rely on external information. But unfortunately, the
format for neither of them is completely self-describing, so it is not
possible to derive that information. This is a design issue that we
should address by introducing a new packfile version that encodes its
object hash.
For now though the more important fix is to not make either of these
programs crash anymore, which we do by falling back to SHA1 when the
object hash is unconfigured. This pessimizes reading packfiles which
use a different hash than SHA1, but restores previous behaviour.
Reported-by: Ilya K <me@0upti.me>
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In git-log we leave the save_commit_buffer flag set to "1", which tells
the commit parsing code to store the object content after it has parsed
it to find parents, tree, etc. That lets us reuse the contents for
pretty-printing the commit in the output. And then after printing each
commit, we call free_commit_buffer(), since we don't need it anymore.
But some options may cause us to traverse commits which are not part of
the output. And so git-log does not see them at all, and doesn't free
them. One such case is something like:
git log -n 1000 --skip=1000000
which will churn through a million commits, before showing only a
thousand. We loop through these inside get_revision(), without freeing
the contents. As a result, we end up storing the object data for those
million commits simultaneously.
We should free the stored buffers (if any) for those commits as we skip
over them, which is what this patch does. Running the above command in
linux.git drops the peak heap usage from ~1.1GB to ~200MB, according to
valgrind/massif. (I thought we might get an even bigger improvement, but
the remaining memory is going to commit/tree structs, which we do hold
on to forever).
Note that this problem doesn't occur if:
- you're running a git-rev-list without a --format parameter; it turns
off save_commit_buffer by default, since it only output the object
id
- you've built a commit-graph file, since in that case we'd use the
optimized graph data instead of the initial parse, and then do a
lazy parse for commits we're actually going to output
There are probably some other option combinations that can likewise
end up with useless stored commit buffers. For example, if you ask for
"foo..bar", then we'll have to walk down to the merge base, and
everything on the "foo" side won't be shown. Tuning the "save" behavior
to handle that might be tricky (I guess maybe drop buffers for anything
we mark as UNINTERESTING?). And in the long run, the right solution here
is probably to make sure the commit-graph is built (since it fixes the
memory problem _and_ drastically reduces CPU usage).
But since this "--skip" case is an easy one-liner, it's worth fixing in
the meantime. It should be OK to make this call even if there is no
saved buffer (e.g., because save_commit_buffer=0, or because a
commit-graph was used), since it's O(1) to look up the buffer and is a
noop if it isn't present. I verified by running the above command after
"git commit-graph write --reachable", and it takes the same time with
and without this patch.
Reported-by: Yuri Karnilaev <karnilaev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git rev-list ... | git diff-tree -p --remerge-diff --stdin" should
behave more or less like "git log -p --remerge-diff" but instead it
crashed, forgetting to prepare a temporary object store needed.
* xx/diff-tree-remerge-diff-fix:
diff-tree: fix crash when used with --remerge-diff
A flakey test and incorrect calls to strtoX() functions have been
fixed.
* kl/test-fixes:
t6421: fix test to work when repo dir contains d0
set errno=0 before strtoX calls
"git config --value=foo --fixed-value section.key newvalue" barfed
when the existing value in the configuration file used the
valueless true syntax, which has been corrected.
* tb/config-fixed-value-with-valueless-true:
config.c: avoid segfault with --fixed-value and valueless config
A recent update broke "git ls-remote" used outside a repository,
which has been corrected.
* ps/ls-remote-out-of-repo-fix:
builtin/ls-remote: fall back to SHA1 outside of a repo
The credential helper to talk to OSX keychain sometimes sent
garbage bytes after the username, which has been corrected.
* jk/osxkeychain-username-is-nul-terminated:
credential/osxkeychain: respect NUL terminator in username
Sync with Windows+VS build jobs used at CI.
* js/ci-win-vs-build:
ci(win+VS): download the vcpkg artifacts using a dedicated GitHub Action
ci: bump microsoft/setup-msbuild from v1 to v2
As we have operated with "write like how your surrounding code is
written" for too long, after a huge code drop from another project,
we'll end up being inconsistent before such an imported code is
cleaned up. We have many uses of cast operator with a space before
its operand, mostly in the reftable code.
Spell the convention out before it spreads to other places.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The Git for Windows project provides a GitHub Action to download and
cache Azure Pipelines artifacts (such as the `vcpkg` artifacts), hiding
gnarly internals, and also providing some robustness against network
glitches. Let's use it.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Perforce tests have been updated.
cf. <na5mwletzpnacietbc7pzqcgb622mvrwgrkjgjosysz3gvjcso@gzxxi7d7icr7>
* ps/p4-tests-updates:
t98xx: mark Perforce tests as memory-leak free
ci: update Perforce version to r23.2
t98xx: fix Perforce tests with p4d r23 and newer
An expensive operation to prepare tracing was done in re-encoding
code path even when the tracing was not requested, which has been
corrected.
* dh/encoding-trace-optim:
convert: return early when not tracing
"git notes add -m '' --allow-empty" and friends that take prepared
data to create notes should not invoke an editor, but it started
doing so since Git 2.42, which has been corrected.
* dd/notes-empty-no-edit-by-default:
notes: do not trigger editor when adding an empty note
"git rebase --help" referred to "offset" (the difference between
the location a change was taken from and the change gets replaced)
incorrectly and called it "fuzz", which has been corrected.
* jc/doc-rebase-fuzz-vs-offset-fix:
doc: difference in location to apply is "offset", not "fuzz"
"git add -p" by users with diff.suppressBlankEmpty set to true
failed to parse the patch that represents an unmodified empty line
with an empty line (not a line with a single space on it), which
has been corrected.
* pw/add-patch-with-suppress-blank-empty:
add-patch: use normalize_marker() when recounting edited hunk
add-patch: handle splitting hunks with diff.suppressBlankEmpty
It has been documented that we avoid "VAR=VAL shell_func" and why.
* jc/doc-one-shot-export-with-shell-func:
CodingGuidelines: document a shell that "fails" "VAR=VAL shell_func"
"git checkout --ours" (no other arguments) complained that the
option is incompatible with branch switching, which is technically
correct, but found confusing by some users. It now says that the
user needs to give pathspec to specify what paths to checkout.
* jc/checkout-no-op-switch-errors:
checkout: special case error messages during noop switching
It was reported that creating a stash with `--keep-index
--include-untracked` causes an error when HEAD points to a commit whose
tree is empty:
$ git stash push --keep-index --include-untracked
error: pathspec ':/' did not match any file(s) known to git
This error comes from `git checkout --no-overlay $i_tree -- :/`, which
we execute to reset the working tree to the state in our index. As the
tree generated from the index is empty in our case, ':/' does not match
any files and thus causes git-checkout(1) to error out.
Fix the issue by skipping the checkout when the index tree is empty. As
explained in the in-code comment, this should be the correct thing to do
as there is nothing that we'd have to reset in the first place.
Reported-by: Piotr Siupa <piotrsiupa@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This patch fixes a racy test failure in t4129.
The deletion test added by e95d515141 (apply: canonicalize modes read
from patches, 2024-08-05) wants to make sure that git-apply does not
complain about a non-canonical mode in the patch, even if that mode does
not match the working tree file. So it does this:
echo content >non-canon &&
git add non-canon &&
chmod 666 non-canon &&
This is wrong, because running chmod will update the ctime on the file,
making it stat-dirty and causing git-apply to refuse to apply the patch.
But this only happens sometimes, since it depends on the timestamps
crossing a second boundary (but it triggers pretty quickly when run with
--stress).
We can fix this by doing the chmod before updating the index. The order
isn't important here, as the mode will be canonicalized to 100644 in the
index anyway (in fact, the chmod is not even that important in the first
place, since git-apply will only look at the index; I only added it as
an extra confirmation that git-apply would not be confused by it).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Forgot to mention that the preformatted documentation repositories
are updated every time the master branch of the project advances.
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We hit a segfault when trying to open a bundle via `git bundle
list-heads` when running outside of a repository. This is caused by
c8aed5e8da (repository: stop setting SHA1 as the default object hash,
2024-05-07), which stopped setting the default object hash so that
`the_hash_algo` is a `NULL` pointer when running outside of any repo.
This is only a symptom of a deeper issue though. Bundles default to the
SHA1 object format unless they advertise an "@object-format=" header.
Consequently, it has been wrong in the first place to use the object
format used by the current repository when parsing bundles. The
consequence is that trying to open a bundle that uses a different object
hash than the current repository will fail:
$ git bundle list-heads sha1.bundle
error: unrecognized header: ee4b540943284700a32591ad09f7e15bdeb2a10c HEAD (45)
Fix the bug by defaulting to the SHA1 object hash. We already handle the
"@object-format=" header as expected, so we don't need to adapt this
part.
Helped-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The `git bundle unbundle` subcommand requires a repository to unbundle
the contents into. As thus, the subcommand checks whether we have a
startup repository in the first place, and if not it dies.
This check happens after we have already opened the bundle though. This
causes a segfault when running outside of a repository starting with
c8aed5e8da (repository: stop setting SHA1 as the default object hash,
2024-05-07) because we have no hash function set up, but we do try to
parse refs advertised by the bundle's header.
The next commit will fix that underlying issue by defaulting to the SHA1
object format for bundles, which will also fix the described segfault here.
But as we know that we will die anyway, we can do better than that and
avoid some vain work by moving the check for a repository before we try
to open the bundle.
Reported-by: ArcticLampyrid <ArcticLampyrid@outlook.com>
Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>