"git add -p" and friends notes what the current status of the hunk
being shown is.
* aa/add-p-previous-decisions:
add -p: show user's hunk decision when selecting hunks
Documentation clean-up.
The tip "fix-up" commit need to be reviewed for "make -C Documentation lint-docs"
* dk/replay-doc-omit-irrelevant-rev-list-options:
lint-gitlink: preemptively ignore all /ifn?def|endif/ macros
replay: drop rev-list formatting options from manual
Upstream symbolic link support on Windows from Git-for-Windows.
* js/symlink-windows:
mingw: special-case index entries for symlinks with buggy size
mingw: emulate `stat()` a little more faithfully
mingw: try to create symlinks without elevated permissions
mingw: add support for symlinks to directories
mingw: implement basic `symlink()` functionality (file symlinks only)
mingw: implement `readlink()`
mingw: allow `mingw_chdir()` to change to symlink-resolved directories
mingw: support renaming symlinks
mingw: handle symlinks to directories in `mingw_unlink()`
mingw: add symlink-specific error codes
mingw: change default of `core.symlinks` to false
mingw: factor out the retry logic
mingw: compute the correct size for symlinks in `mingw_lstat()`
mingw: teach dirent about symlinks
mingw: let `mingw_lstat()` error early upon problems with reparse points
mingw: drop the separate `do_lstat()` function
mingw: implement `stat()` with symlink support
mingw: don't call `GetFileAttributes()` twice in `mingw_lstat()`
Dscho observed that SVN tests are taking too much time in CI leak
checking tasks, but most time is spent not in our code but in libsvn
code (which happen to be written in Perl), whose leaks have little
value to discover for us. Skip SVN, P4, and CVS tests in the leak
checking tasks.
* js/ci-leak-skip-svn:
ci: skip CVS and P4 tests in leaks job, too
ci(*-leaks): skip the git-svn tests to save time
"git bugreport" and "git version --build-options" learned to
include use of 'gettext' feature, to make it easier to diagnose
problems around l10n.
* jx/build-options-gettext:
help: report on whether or not gettext is enabled
Remove implicit reliance on the_repository global in the APIs
around tree objects and make it explicit which repository to work
in.
* rs/tree-wo-the-repository:
cocci: remove obsolete the_repository rules
cocci: convert parse_tree functions to repo_ variants
tree: stop using the_repository
tree: use repo_parse_tree()
path-walk: use repo_parse_tree_gently()
pack-bitmap-write: use repo_parse_tree()
delta-islands: use repo_parse_tree()
bloom: use repo_parse_tree()
add-interactive: use repo_parse_tree_indirect()
tree: add repo_parse_tree*()
environment: move access to core.maxTreeDepth into repo settings
The logic that avoids reusing MIDX files with a wrong checksum was
broken, which has been corrected.
* tb/midx-write-corrupt-checksum-fix:
midx-write.c: assume checksum-invalid MIDXs require an update
t/t5319-multi-pack-index.sh: drop early 'test_done'
"git repack --geometric" did not work with promisor packs, which
has been corrected.
* ps/geometric-repacking-with-promisor-remotes:
builtin/repack: handle promisor packs with geometric repacking
repack-promisor: extract function to remove redundant packs
repack-promisor: extract function to finalize repacking
repack-geometry: extract function to compute repacking split
builtin/pack-objects: exclude promisor objects with "--stdin-packs"
Further preparation to upstream symbolic link support on Windows.
* js/prep-symlink-windows:
trim_last_path_component(): avoid hard-coding the directory separator
strbuf_readlink(): support link targets that exceed 2*PATH_MAX
strbuf_readlink(): avoid calling `readlink()` twice in corner-cases
init: do parse _all_ core.* settings early
mingw: do resolve symlinks in `getcwd()`
The object-info API has been cleaned up.
* ps/read-object-info-improvements:
packfile: drop repository parameter from `packed_object_info()`
packfile: skip unpacking object header for disk size requests
packfile: disentangle return value of `packed_object_info()`
packfile: always populate pack-specific info when reading object info
packfile: extend `is_delta` field to allow for "unknown" state
packfile: always declare object info to be OI_PACKED
object-file: always set OI_LOOSE when reading object info
The packfile_store data structure is moved from object store to odb
source.
* ps/packfile-store-in-odb-source:
packfile: move MIDX into packfile store
packfile: refactor `find_pack_entry()` to work on the packfile store
packfile: inline `find_kept_pack_entry()`
packfile: only prepare owning store in `packfile_store_prepare()`
packfile: only prepare owning store in `packfile_store_get_packs()`
packfile: move packfile store into object source
packfile: refactor misleading code when unusing pack windows
packfile: refactor kept-pack cache to work with packfile stores
packfile: pass source to `prepare_pack()`
packfile: create store via its owning source
Some error messages from the http transport layer lacked the
terminating newline, which has been corrected.
* kt/http-backend-errors:
http-backend: write newlines to stderr when responding with errors
Update code paths that check data integrity around refs subsystem.
cf. <CAOLa=ZShPP3BPXa=YnC-vuX4zF=pUTFdUidZwOdna8bfVTNM9w@mail.gmail.com>
* ps/ref-consistency-checks:
builtin/fsck: drop `fsck_head_link()`
builtin/fsck: move generic HEAD check into `refs_fsck()`
builtin/fsck: move generic object ID checks into `refs_fsck()`
refs/reftable: introduce generic checks for refs
refs/reftable: fix consistency checks with worktrees
refs/reftable: extract function to retrieve backend for worktree
refs/reftable: adapt includes to become consistent
refs/files: introduce function to perform normal ref checks
refs/files: extract generic symref target checks
fsck: drop unused fields from `struct fsck_ref_report`
refs/files: perform consistency checks for root refs
refs/files: improve error handling when verifying symrefs
refs/files: extract function to check single ref
refs/files: remove useless indirection
refs/files: remove `refs_check_dir` parameter
refs/files: move fsck functions into global scope
refs/files: simplify iterating through root refs
The iconv library on macOS fails to correctly handle stateful
ISO/IEC 2022 encoded strings. Work it around instead of replacing
it wholesale from homebrew.
* tb/macos-iconv-workarounds:
utf8.c: enable workaround for iconv under macOS 14/15
utf8.c: prepare workaround for iconv under macOS 14/15
The split command in "git subtree" (in contrib/) has been taught to
deal better with rebased history.
* cs/rebased-subtree-split:
contrib/subtree: detect rewritten subtree commits
"git fsck" used inconsistent set of refs to show a confused
warning, which has been corrected.
* en/fsck-snapshot-ref-state:
fsck: snapshot default refs before object walk
Instead of testing if the macro name is ifn?def:: as if it were a inline
macro, it is faster and safer to just ignore such block macro lines before
hand.
Signed-off-by: Jean-Noël Avila <jn.avila@free.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The rev-list options in our manuals are quite long; git-replay's manual
is no exception. Since replay doesn't use the formatting options at all
(it has its own output format), drop them.
This is the first time we have needed compound tests [1] for if[n]def in
our documentation:
git grep '^ifn\?def::' Documentation | grep '[,+]'
[1]: https://docs.asciidoctor.org/asciidoc/latest/directives/ifdef-ifndef/
For both ifdef and ifndef, the "," takes on the intuitive meaning:
- ifdef: if any of the listed attributes are set…
- ifndef: unless any of the listed attributes are set
(Use "+" for "all".)
Signed-off-by: D. Ben Knoble <ben.knoble+github@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
While all my commits appear under the same address, other addresses
appear in some commit trailers. Map those addresses to the canonical
one.
Signed-off-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In branch_get_push(), we usually allocate a new string for the @{push}
ref, but will not do so in push.default=upstream mode, where we just
pass back the result of branch_get_upstream() directly.
This led to a hacky memory management scheme in e291c75a95 (remote.c:
add branch_get_push, 2015-05-21): we store the result in the
push_tracking_ref field of a "struct branch", under the assumption that
the branch struct will last until the end of the program. So even though
the struct doesn't know if it has an allocated string or not, it doesn't
matter because we hold on to it either way.
But that assumption was violated by f5ccb535cc (remote: fix leaking
config strings, 2024-08-22), which added a function to free branch
structs. Any struct which is fed to branch_release() is at risk of
leaking its push_tracking_ref member.
I don't think this can actually be triggered in practice. We rarely
actually free the branch structs, and we only fill in the
push_tracking_ref string lazily when it is needed. So triggering the
leak would require a code path that does both, and I couldn't find one.
Still, this is an ugly trap that may eventually spring on us. Since
there is only one code path in branch_get_push() that doesn't allocate,
let's just have it copy the string. And then we know that
push_tracking_ref is always allocated, and we can free it in
branch_release().
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Most of the code paths in branch_get_push_1() allocate a string for the
@{push} value. We then return the result, which is stored in a "struct
branch", so the value is not leaked.
But there's one path that does leak: when we are in the "simple" push
mode, we have to check that the @{push} value matches what we'd get for
@{upstream}. If it doesn't, we return an error, but forget to free the
@{push} value we computed.
Curiously, the existing tests don't trigger this with LSan, even though
they do exercise the code path. As far as I can tell, it should be
triggered via:
git -c push.default=simple \
-c branch.foo.remote=origin \
-c branch.foo.merge=refs/heads/not-foo \
rev-parse foo@{push}
which will complain that the upstream ("not-foo") does not match the
push destination ("foo"). We do die() shortly after this, but not until
after returning from branch_get_push_1(), which is where the leak
happens.
So it seems like a false negative in LSan. However, I can trigger it
reliably by printing the @{push} value using for-each-ref. This takes a
little more setup (because we need "foo" to actually exist to iterate
over it with for-each-ref), but we can piggy-back on the existing repo
config in t6300.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The string returned from tracking_for_push_dest() comes from
apply_refspec(), and thus is always an allocated string (or NULL). We
should return a non-const pointer so that the caller knows that
ownership of the string is being transferred.
This goes back to the function's origin in e291c75a95 (remote.c: add
branch_get_push, 2015-05-21). It never really mattered because our
return is just forwarded through branch_get_push_1(), which returns a
const string as part of an intentionally hacky memory management scheme
(see that commit for details).
As the first step of untangling that hackery, let's drop the extra const
from this helper function (and from the variables that store its
result). There should be no functional change (yet).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We have an error_buf() helper that functions a bit like our error()
helper, but returns NULL instead of -1. Its return type is "const char
*", but this is overly restrictive. If we use the helper in a function
that returns non-const "char *", the compiler will complain about
the implicit cast from const to non-const.
Meanwhile, the const in the helper is doing nothing useful, as it only
ever returns NULL. Let's drop the const, which will let us use it in
both types of function.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Looking at the CI logs, the p4 and cvs tests account for another 24
minutes of test time and they offer minimal value for quite a
similar reason as the previous step.
Let's introduce and use a mechanism to skip these tests to save
some resources.
Suggested-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
I noticed recently that the leak-checking jobs still take a lot of time,
and upon analysis, the git-svn tests contribute significantly to this.
Analyzing a recent CI run, I saw that the Git test suite contains
1,017 tests, running for approximately 5¼ hours total. Of these, 65
git-svn-related tests (~6% of test count) took 42.24 minutes combined,
accounting for ~13.% of the total runtime. This implies that the git-svn
tests are roughly twice as expernsive compared to the other tests.
However, testing git-svn in the leak-checking jobs provides minimal
value: git-svn is implemented as a Perl script, and leak checking only
handles C code. While git-svn does call into Git's built-in commands
that are implemented in C, these are standard Git operations that are
already thoroughly exercised elsewhere in the test suite. Therefore,
running the git-svn tests in the leak-checking jobs only adds to the
overall run time with little value in return.
Given that the leak-checking jobs are particularly time-intensive and
these 42+ minutes of SVN tests per job provide no additional leak
detection value, skip them in the *-leaks jobs to reduce CI runtime.
Assisted-by: Claude Sonnet 4.5
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Replace instances of "! test -f <file>" with "test_path_is_missing <file>".
This macro provides better diagnostics when the test fails (it prints
"Path exists:" instead of silently failing).
Signed-off-by: Tian Yuchen <a3205153416@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When users report that Git has no localized output, we need to check not
only their locale settings, but also whether Git was built with GETTEXT
support in the first place.
Expose this information via the existing build info output by adding a
"gettext: enabled" line to `git version --build-options` (and therefore
also to `git bugreport`) when `NO_GETTEXT` is not defined at build time.
Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Test #29 ('ref transaction: corrupted tables cause failure') started to
fail intermittently for me (from v2.52.0-rc0) when running the testsuite
with '-j8'. (Also, having moved to a new laptop and windows 11, rather
than windows 10). If the test is run by hand, or without any parallelism,
then it passes without issue.
When the test fails (e.g. 1 out of 32 parallel runs) the cause is due to
a permission error while corrupting a table file:
./test-lib.sh: line 1010: .git/reftable/0x000000000001-0x000000000002-d89bb8ee.ref: Permission denied
This corruption is done in a shell loop, directly after a 'test_commit',
which uses an ': >"$f"' expression to truncate the file. Adding a sleep
of one second after the 'test_commit' and before the shell loop fixes
the test (it is not clear why). Replacing the redirection shell expression
with a 'test-tool truncate "$f" 0' invocation also provides a fix, which
could simply be another way to change the timing sufficiently to win the
race.
During a debug session, I tried looking at the strace output for the
shell redirection:
$ rm /tmp/hello; echo hello >/tmp/hello; ls -l /tmp/hello
-rw-r--r-- 1 ramsay None 6 Nov 10 17:25 /tmp/hello
$
$ strace -o zzz bash -c ': >/tmp/hello'
$
Similarly, for the test-tool solution:
$ strace -o xxx ./t/helper/test-tool truncate /tmp/hello 0
$
When comparing the output, the differences seemed to be what you would
expect and, if anything, the shell redirect probably would have taken
longer than the test-tool solution (many fcntl() calls to dup the stdout
to the <fd>). The call to the win32 api NtCreateFile() was identical,
apart from the first (FileHandle) parameter, of course.
In order to fix this flaky test on cygwin, despite not knowing why it
works, replace the shell redirection with the above 'test-tool truncate'
invocation.
Helped-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 4ec7ac101b ("t9700: accommodate for Windows paths", 2025-12-17)
changed the type of the absolute path to the git directory from unix to
win32 for both GfW and cygwin. This fixed the test for GfW but causes
new failures on cygwin, since the test expectation is that it uses unix
paths on cygwin. In order to not break cygwin, disable the new code by
removing the "or $^O eq 'cygwin'" sub-expression from the conditional
part of the fix.
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git patch-id" documentation updates.
* kh/doc-patch-id:
doc: patch-id: --verbatim locks in --stable
doc: patch-id: spell out the git-diff-tree(1) form
doc: patch-id: use definite article for the result
patch-id: use “patch ID” throughout
doc: patch-id: capitalize Git version
doc: patch-id: don’t use semicolon between bullet points
Update a FAQ entry on synching two separate repositories using the
"git stash export/import" recently introduced.
* bc/doc-stash-import-export:
gitfaq: document using stash import/export to sync working tree
035c7de9e9e (cocci: apply the "revision.h" part of
"the_repository.pending", 2023-03-28) removed the last of the repo-less
functions and macros mentioned in the_repository.cocci at the time. No
stragglers appeared since then. Remove the applied rules now that they
have outlived their usefulness.
Also add a reminder to eventually remove the just added rules for
tree.h.
Suggested-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This reverts commit f406b8955295d01089ba2baf35eceadff2d11cae,
reversing changes made to 1627809eeff75e6ec936fc609e7be46d5eb2fa9e.
It seems to have caused a few regressions, two of the three known
ones we have proposed solutions for. Let's give ourselves a bit
more room to maneuver during the pre-release freeze period and
restart once the 2.53 ships.