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-rw-r--r--Documentation/MyFirstObjectWalk.txt7
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RelNotes/2.25.0.txt29
-rw-r--r--Documentation/RelNotes/2.7.3.txt2
-rw-r--r--Documentation/config/core.txt10
-rw-r--r--Documentation/config/format.txt18
-rw-r--r--Documentation/diff-format.txt2
-rw-r--r--Documentation/git-add.txt16
-rw-r--r--Documentation/git-checkout.txt50
-rw-r--r--Documentation/git-clone.txt12
-rw-r--r--Documentation/git-credential.txt3
-rw-r--r--Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt257
-rw-r--r--Documentation/git-format-patch.txt5
-rw-r--r--Documentation/git-read-tree.txt2
-rw-r--r--Documentation/git-restore.txt26
-rw-r--r--Documentation/git-sparse-checkout.txt166
-rw-r--r--Documentation/gitcredentials.txt3
-rw-r--r--Documentation/gitmodules.txt2
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-allocation-growing.txt39
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-argv-array.txt65
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-credentials.txt271
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-diff.txt174
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-directory-listing.txt130
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-gitattributes.txt154
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-history-graph.txt173
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-merge.txt72
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-oid-array.txt90
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-ref-iteration.txt78
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-remote.txt127
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-revision-walking.txt72
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-run-command.txt264
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-setup.txt47
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-sigchain.txt41
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-submodule-config.txt66
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-trace.txt140
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-trace2.txt243
-rw-r--r--Documentation/technical/api-tree-walking.txt149
36 files changed, 458 insertions, 2547 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/MyFirstObjectWalk.txt b/Documentation/MyFirstObjectWalk.txt
index 4d24daeb9f..aa828dfdc4 100644
--- a/Documentation/MyFirstObjectWalk.txt
+++ b/Documentation/MyFirstObjectWalk.txt
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ revision walk is used for operations like `git log`.
- `Documentation/user-manual.txt` under "Hacking Git" contains some coverage of
the revision walker in its various incarnations.
-- `Documentation/technical/api-revision-walking.txt`
+- `revision.h`
- https://eagain.net/articles/git-for-computer-scientists/[Git for Computer Scientists]
gives a good overview of the types of objects in Git and what your object
walk is really describing.
@@ -119,9 +119,8 @@ parameters provided by the user over the CLI.
`nr` represents the number of `rev_cmdline_entry` present in the array.
-`alloc` is used by the `ALLOC_GROW` macro. Check
-`Documentation/technical/api-allocation-growing.txt` - this variable is used to
-track the allocated size of the list.
+`alloc` is used by the `ALLOC_GROW` macro. Check `cache.h` - this variable is
+used to track the allocated size of the list.
Per entry, we find:
diff --git a/Documentation/RelNotes/2.25.0.txt b/Documentation/RelNotes/2.25.0.txt
index 19d1341913..7163c33f8f 100644
--- a/Documentation/RelNotes/2.25.0.txt
+++ b/Documentation/RelNotes/2.25.0.txt
@@ -132,6 +132,19 @@ Performance, Internal Implementation, Development Support etc.
encourage new callers to use the correct and more strict
validation.
+ * Unnecessary reading of state variables back from the disk during
+ sequencer operation has been reduced.
+
+ * The code has been made to avoid gmtime() and localtime() and prefer
+ their reentrant counterparts.
+
+ * "git add -i" that is getting rewritten in C has been extended to
+ cover subcommands other than the "patch".
+
+ * In a repository with many packfiles, the cost of the procedure that
+ avoids registering the same packfile twice was unnecessarily high
+ by using an inefficient search algorithm, which has been corrected.
+
Fixes since v2.24
-----------------
@@ -261,6 +274,18 @@ Fixes since v2.24
generation, instead of following the "if it takes more than two
seconds, show progress" pattern, which has been corrected.
+ * "git rebase" did not work well when format.useAutoBase
+ configuration variable is set, which has been corrected.
+
+ * The "diff" machinery learned not to lose added/removed blank lines
+ in the context when --ignore-blank-lines and --function-context are
+ used at the same time.
+ (merge 0bb313a552 rs/xdiff-ignore-ws-w-func-context later to maint).
+
+ * The test on "fast-import" used to get stuck when "fast-import" died
+ in the middle.
+ (merge 0d9b0d7885 sg/t9300-robustify later to maint).
+
* Other code cleanup, docfix, build fix, etc.
(merge 80736d7c5e jc/am-show-current-patch-docfix later to maint).
(merge 8b656572ca sg/commit-graph-usage-fix later to maint).
@@ -288,3 +313,7 @@ Fixes since v2.24
(merge 528d9e6d01 jk/perf-wo-git-dot-pm later to maint).
(merge fc42f20e24 sg/test-squelch-noise-in-commit-bulk later to maint).
(merge c64368e3a2 bc/t9001-zsh-in-posix-emulation-mode later to maint).
+ (merge 11de8dd7ef dr/branch-usage-casefix later to maint).
+ (merge e05e8cf074 rs/archive-zip-code-cleanup later to maint).
+ (merge 147ee35558 rs/commit-export-env-simplify later to maint).
+ (merge 4507ecc771 rs/patch-id-use-oid-to-hex later to maint).
diff --git a/Documentation/RelNotes/2.7.3.txt b/Documentation/RelNotes/2.7.3.txt
index 6adf038915..f618d71efd 100644
--- a/Documentation/RelNotes/2.7.3.txt
+++ b/Documentation/RelNotes/2.7.3.txt
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ Fixes since v2.7.2
tests.
* "git show 'HEAD:Foo[BAR]Baz'" did not interpret the argument as a
- rev, i.e. the object named by the the pathname with wildcard
+ rev, i.e. the object named by the pathname with wildcard
characters in a tree object.
* "git rev-parse --git-common-dir" used in the worktree feature
diff --git a/Documentation/config/core.txt b/Documentation/config/core.txt
index ad4fa4dccd..9e440b160d 100644
--- a/Documentation/config/core.txt
+++ b/Documentation/config/core.txt
@@ -599,8 +599,14 @@ core.multiPackIndex::
multi-pack-index design document].
core.sparseCheckout::
- Enable "sparse checkout" feature. See section "Sparse checkout" in
- linkgit:git-read-tree[1] for more information.
+ Enable "sparse checkout" feature. See linkgit:git-sparse-checkout[1]
+ for more information.
+
+core.sparseCheckoutCone::
+ Enables the "cone mode" of the sparse checkout feature. When the
+ sparse-checkout file contains a limited set of patterns, then this
+ mode provides significant performance advantages. See
+ linkgit:git-sparse-checkout[1] for more information.
core.abbrev::
Set the length object names are abbreviated to. If
diff --git a/Documentation/config/format.txt b/Documentation/config/format.txt
index 513fcd88d5..45c7bd5a8f 100644
--- a/Documentation/config/format.txt
+++ b/Documentation/config/format.txt
@@ -106,4 +106,20 @@ If one wishes to use the ref `ref/notes/true`, please use that literal
instead.
+
This configuration can be specified multiple times in order to allow
-multiple notes refs to be included.
+multiple notes refs to be included. In that case, it will behave
+similarly to multiple `--[no-]notes[=]` options passed in. That is, a
+value of `true` will show the default notes, a value of `<ref>` will
+also show notes from that notes ref and a value of `false` will negate
+previous configurations and not show notes.
++
+For example,
++
+------------
+[format]
+ notes = true
+ notes = foo
+ notes = false
+ notes = bar
+------------
++
+will only show notes from `refs/notes/bar`.
diff --git a/Documentation/diff-format.txt b/Documentation/diff-format.txt
index 4d846d7346..fbbd410a84 100644
--- a/Documentation/diff-format.txt
+++ b/Documentation/diff-format.txt
@@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ Possible status letters are:
- R: renaming of a file
- T: change in the type of the file
- U: file is unmerged (you must complete the merge before it can
-be committed)
+ be committed)
- X: "unknown" change type (most probably a bug, please report it)
Status letters C and R are always followed by a score (denoting the
diff --git a/Documentation/git-add.txt b/Documentation/git-add.txt
index 8b0e4c7fa8..be5e3ac54b 100644
--- a/Documentation/git-add.txt
+++ b/Documentation/git-add.txt
@@ -11,7 +11,8 @@ SYNOPSIS
'git add' [--verbose | -v] [--dry-run | -n] [--force | -f] [--interactive | -i] [--patch | -p]
[--edit | -e] [--[no-]all | --[no-]ignore-removal | [--update | -u]]
[--intent-to-add | -N] [--refresh] [--ignore-errors] [--ignore-missing] [--renormalize]
- [--chmod=(+|-)x] [--] [<pathspec>...]
+ [--chmod=(+|-)x] [--pathspec-from-file=<file> [--pathspec-file-nul]]
+ [--] [<pathspec>...]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
@@ -187,6 +188,19 @@ for "git add --no-all <pathspec>...", i.e. ignored removed files.
bit is only changed in the index, the files on disk are left
unchanged.
+--pathspec-from-file=<file>::
+ Pathspec is passed in `<file>` instead of commandline args. If
+ `<file>` is exactly `-` then standard input is used. Pathspec
+ elements are separated by LF or CR/LF. Pathspec elements can be
+ quoted as explained for the configuration variable `core.quotePath`
+ (see linkgit:git-config[1]). See also `--pathspec-file-nul` and
+ global `--literal-pathspecs`.
+
+--pathspec-file-nul::
+ Only meaningful with `--pathspec-from-file`. Pathspec elements are
+ separated with NUL character and all other characters are taken
+ literally (including newlines and quotes).
+
\--::
This option can be used to separate command-line options from
the list of files, (useful when filenames might be mistaken
diff --git a/Documentation/git-checkout.txt b/Documentation/git-checkout.txt
index cf3cac0a2b..c8fb995fa7 100644
--- a/Documentation/git-checkout.txt
+++ b/Documentation/git-checkout.txt
@@ -12,14 +12,14 @@ SYNOPSIS
'git checkout' [-q] [-f] [-m] --detach [<branch>]
'git checkout' [-q] [-f] [-m] [--detach] <commit>
'git checkout' [-q] [-f] [-m] [[-b|-B|--orphan] <new_branch>] [<start_point>]
-'git checkout' [-f|--ours|--theirs|-m|--conflict=<style>] [<tree-ish>] [--] <paths>...
-'git checkout' [<tree-ish>] [--] <pathspec>...
-'git checkout' (-p|--patch) [<tree-ish>] [--] [<paths>...]
+'git checkout' [-f|--ours|--theirs|-m|--conflict=<style>] [<tree-ish>] [--] <pathspec>...
+'git checkout' [-f|--ours|--theirs|-m|--conflict=<style>] [<tree-ish>] --pathspec-from-file=<file> [--pathspec-file-nul]
+'git checkout' (-p|--patch) [<tree-ish>] [--] [<pathspec>...]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
Updates files in the working tree to match the version in the index
-or the specified tree. If no paths are given, 'git checkout' will
+or the specified tree. If no pathspec was given, 'git checkout' will
also update `HEAD` to set the specified branch as the current
branch.
@@ -79,13 +79,14 @@ be used to detach `HEAD` at the tip of the branch (`git checkout
+
Omitting `<branch>` detaches `HEAD` at the tip of the current branch.
-'git checkout' [<tree-ish>] [--] <pathspec>...::
+'git checkout' [-f|--ours|--theirs|-m|--conflict=<style>] [<tree-ish>] [--] <pathspec>...::
+'git checkout' [-f|--ours|--theirs|-m|--conflict=<style>] [<tree-ish>] --pathspec-from-file=<file> [--pathspec-file-nul]::
- Overwrite paths in the working tree by replacing with the
- contents in the index or in the `<tree-ish>` (most often a
- commit). When a `<tree-ish>` is given, the paths that
- match the `<pathspec>` are updated both in the index and in
- the working tree.
+ Overwrite the contents of the files that match the pathspec.
+ When the `<tree-ish>` (most often a commit) is not given,
+ overwrite working tree with the contents in the index.
+ When the `<tree-ish>` is given, overwrite both the index and
+ the working tree with the contents at the `<tree-ish>`.
+
The index may contain unmerged entries because of a previous failed merge.
By default, if you try to check out such an entry from the index, the
@@ -96,12 +97,10 @@ using `--ours` or `--theirs`. With `-m`, changes made to the working tree
file can be discarded to re-create the original conflicted merge result.
'git checkout' (-p|--patch) [<tree-ish>] [--] [<pathspec>...]::
- This is similar to the "check out paths to the working tree
- from either the index or from a tree-ish" mode described
- above, but lets you use the interactive interface to show
- the "diff" output and choose which hunks to use in the
- result. See below for the description of `--patch` option.
-
+ This is similar to the previous mode, but lets you use the
+ interactive interface to show the "diff" output and choose which
+ hunks to use in the result. See below for the description of
+ `--patch` option.
OPTIONS
-------
@@ -309,6 +308,19 @@ Note that this option uses the no overlay mode by default (see also
working tree, but not in `<tree-ish>` are removed, to make them
match `<tree-ish>` exactly.
+--pathspec-from-file=<file>::
+ Pathspec is passed in `<file>` instead of commandline args. If
+ `<file>` is exactly `-` then standard input is used. Pathspec
+ elements are separated by LF or CR/LF. Pathspec elements can be
+ quoted as explained for the configuration variable `core.quotePath`
+ (see linkgit:git-config[1]). See also `--pathspec-file-nul` and
+ global `--literal-pathspecs`.
+
+--pathspec-file-nul::
+ Only meaningful with `--pathspec-from-file`. Pathspec elements are
+ separated with NUL character and all other characters are taken
+ literally (including newlines and quotes).
+
<branch>::
Branch to checkout; if it refers to a branch (i.e., a name that,
when prepended with "refs/heads/", is a valid ref), then that
@@ -339,7 +351,13 @@ leave out at most one of `A` and `B`, in which case it defaults to `HEAD`.
Tree to checkout from (when paths are given). If not specified,
the index will be used.
+\--::
+ Do not interpret any more arguments as options.
+<pathspec>...::
+ Limits the paths affected by the operation.
++
+For more details, see the 'pathspec' entry in linkgit:gitglossary[7].
DETACHED HEAD
-------------
diff --git a/Documentation/git-clone.txt b/Documentation/git-clone.txt
index 34011c2940..bf24f1813a 100644
--- a/Documentation/git-clone.txt
+++ b/Documentation/git-clone.txt
@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ SYNOPSIS
[--dissociate] [--separate-git-dir <git dir>]
[--depth <depth>] [--[no-]single-branch] [--no-tags]
[--recurse-submodules[=<pathspec>]] [--[no-]shallow-submodules]
- [--[no-]remote-submodules] [--jobs <n>] [--] <repository>
+ [--[no-]remote-submodules] [--jobs <n>] [--sparse] [--] <repository>
[<directory>]
DESCRIPTION
@@ -156,6 +156,12 @@ objects from the source repository into a pack in the cloned repository.
used, neither remote-tracking branches nor the related
configuration variables are created.
+--sparse::
+ Initialize the sparse-checkout file so the working
+ directory starts with only the files in the root
+ of the repository. The sparse-checkout file can be
+ modified to grow the working directory as needed.
+
--mirror::
Set up a mirror of the source repository. This implies `--bare`.
Compared to `--bare`, `--mirror` not only maps local branches of the
@@ -262,9 +268,9 @@ or `--mirror` is given)
All submodules which are cloned will be shallow with a depth of 1.
--[no-]remote-submodules::
- All submodules which are cloned will use the status of the submodule’s
+ All submodules which are cloned will use the status of the submodule's
remote-tracking branch to update the submodule, rather than the
- superproject’s recorded SHA-1. Equivalent to passing `--remote` to
+ superproject's recorded SHA-1. Equivalent to passing `--remote` to
`git submodule update`.
--separate-git-dir=<git dir>::
diff --git a/Documentation/git-credential.txt b/Documentation/git-credential.txt
index b211440373..6f0c7ca80f 100644
--- a/Documentation/git-credential.txt
+++ b/Documentation/git-credential.txt
@@ -19,8 +19,7 @@ from system-specific helpers, as well as prompting the user for
usernames and passwords. The git-credential command exposes this
interface to scripts which may want to retrieve, store, or prompt for
credentials in the same manner as Git. The design of this scriptable
-interface models the internal C API; see
-link:technical/api-credentials.html[the Git credential API] for more
+interface models the internal C API; see credential.h for more
background on the concepts.
git-credential takes an "action" option on the command-line (one of
diff --git a/Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt b/Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt
index 3686a67d3e..a530fef7e5 100644
--- a/Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt
+++ b/Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt
@@ -466,13 +466,13 @@ The performance of git-filter-branch is glacially slow; its design makes it
impossible for a backward-compatible implementation to ever be fast:
* In editing files, git-filter-branch by design checks out each and
-every commit as it existed in the original repo. If your repo has 10\^5
-files and 10\^5 commits, but each commit only modifies 5 files, then
-git-filter-branch will make you do 10\^10 modifications, despite only
-having (at most) 5*10^5 unique blobs.
+ every commit as it existed in the original repo. If your repo has
+ 10\^5 files and 10\^5 commits, but each commit only modifies 5
+ files, then git-filter-branch will make you do 10\^10 modifications,
+ despite only having (at most) 5*10^5 unique blobs.
* If you try and cheat and try to make git-filter-branch only work on
-files modified in a commit, then two things happen
+ files modified in a commit, then two things happen
** you run into problems with deletions whenever the user is simply
trying to rename files (because attempting to delete files that
@@ -481,39 +481,41 @@ files modified in a commit, then two things happen
user-provided shell)
** even if you succeed at the map-deletes-for-renames chicanery, you
- still technically violate backward compatibility because users are
- allowed to filter files in ways that depend upon topology of
- commits instead of filtering solely based on file contents or names
- (though this has not been observed in the wild).
+ still technically violate backward compatibility because users
+ are allowed to filter files in ways that depend upon topology of
+ commits instead of filtering solely based on file contents or
+ names (though this has not been observed in the wild).
* Even if you don't need to edit files but only want to e.g. rename or
-remove some and thus can avoid checking out each file (i.e. you can use
---index-filter), you still are passing shell snippets for your filters.
-This means that for every commit, you have to have a prepared git repo
-where those filters can be run. That's a significant setup.
-
-* Further, several additional files are created or updated per commit by
-git-filter-branch. Some of these are for supporting the convenience
-functions provided by git-filter-branch (such as map()), while others
-are for keeping track of internal state (but could have also been
-accessed by user filters; one of git-filter-branch's regression tests
-does so). This essentially amounts to using the filesystem as an IPC
-mechanism between git-filter-branch and the user-provided filters.
-Disks tend to be a slow IPC mechanism, and writing these files also
-effectively represents a forced synchronization point between separate
-processes that we hit with every commit.
+ remove some and thus can avoid checking out each file (i.e. you can
+ use --index-filter), you still are passing shell snippets for your
+ filters. This means that for every commit, you have to have a
+ prepared git repo where those filters can be run. That's a
+ significant setup.
+
+* Further, several additional files are created or updated per commit
+ by git-filter-branch. Some of these are for supporting the
+ convenience functions provided by git-filter-branch (such as map()),
+ while others are for keeping track of internal state (but could have
+ also been accessed by user filters; one of git-filter-branch's
+ regression tests does so). This essentially amounts to using the
+ filesystem as an IPC mechanism between git-filter-branch and the
+ user-provided filters. Disks tend to be a slow IPC mechanism, and
+ writing these files also effectively represents a forced
+ synchronization point between separate processes that we hit with
+ every commit.
* The user-provided shell commands will likely involve a pipeline of
-commands, resulting in the creation of many processes per commit.
-Creating and running another process takes a widely varying amount of
-time between operating systems, but on any platform it is very slow
-relative to invoking a function.
+ commands, resulting in the creation of many processes per commit.
+ Creating and running another process takes a widely varying amount
+ of time between operating systems, but on any platform it is very
+ slow relative to invoking a function.
* git-filter-branch itself is written in shell, which is kind of slow.
-This is the one performance issue that could be backward-compatibly
-fixed, but compared to the above problems that are intrinsic to the
-design of git-filter-branch, the language of the tool itself is a
-relatively minor issue.
+ This is the one performance issue that could be backward-compatibly
+ fixed, but compared to the above problems that are intrinsic to the
+ design of git-filter-branch, the language of the tool itself is a
+ relatively minor issue.
** Side note: Unfortunately, people tend to fixate on the
written-in-shell aspect and periodically ask if git-filter-branch
@@ -546,51 +548,55 @@ easily corrupt repos or end up with a mess worse than what you started
with:
* Someone can have a set of "working and tested filters" which they
-document or provide to a coworker, who then runs them on a different OS
-where the same commands are not working/tested (some examples in the
-git-filter-branch manpage are also affected by this). BSD vs. GNU
-userland differences can really bite. If lucky, error messages are
-spewed. But just as likely, the commands either don't do the filtering
-requested, or silently corrupt by making some unwanted change. The
-unwanted change may only affect a few commits, so it's not necessarily
-obvious either. (The fact that problems won't necessarily be obvious
-means they are likely to go unnoticed until the rewritten history is in
-use for quite a while, at which point it's really hard to justify
-another flag-day for another rewrite.)
+ document or provide to a coworker, who then runs them on a different
+ OS where the same commands are not working/tested (some examples in
+ the git-filter-branch manpage are also affected by this).
+ BSD vs. GNU userland differences can really bite. If lucky, error
+ messages are spewed. But just as likely, the commands either don't
+ do the filtering requested, or silently corrupt by making some
+ unwanted change. The unwanted change may only affect a few commits,
+ so it's not necessarily obvious either. (The fact that problems
+ won't necessarily be obvious means they are likely to go unnoticed
+ until the rewritten history is in use for quite a while, at which
+ point it's really hard to justify another flag-day for another
+ rewrite.)
* Filenames with spaces are often mishandled by shell snippets since
-they cause problems for shell pipelines. Not everyone is familiar with
-find -print0, xargs -0, git-ls-files -z, etc. Even people who are
-familiar with these may assume such flags are not relevant because
-someone else renamed any such files in their repo back before the person
-doing the filtering joined the project. And often, even those familiar
-with handling arguments with spaces may not do so just because they
-aren't in the mindset of thinking about everything that could possibly
-go wrong.
-
-* Non-ascii filenames can be silently removed despite being in a desired
-directory. Keeping only wanted paths is often done using pipelines like
-`git ls-files | grep -v ^WANTED_DIR/ | xargs git rm`. ls-files will
-only quote filenames if needed, so folks may not notice that one of the
-files didn't match the regex (at least not until it's much too late).
-Yes, someone who knows about core.quotePath can avoid this (unless they
-have other special characters like \t, \n, or "), and people who use
-ls-files -z with something other than grep can avoid this, but that
-doesn't mean they will.
-
-* Similarly, when moving files around, one can find that filenames with
-non-ascii or special characters end up in a different directory, one
-that includes a double quote character. (This is technically the same
-issue as above with quoting, but perhaps an interesting different way
-that it can and has manifested as a problem.)
+ they cause problems for shell pipelines. Not everyone is familiar
+ with find -print0, xargs -0, git-ls-files -z, etc. Even people who
+ are familiar with these may assume such flags are not relevant
+ because someone else renamed any such files in their repo back
+ before the person doing the filtering joined the project. And
+ often, even those familiar with handling arguments with spaces may
+ not do so just because they aren't in the mindset of thinking about
+ everything that could possibly go wrong.
+
+* Non-ascii filenames can be silently removed despite being in a
+ desired directory. Keeping only wanted paths is often done using
+ pipelines like `git ls-files | grep -v ^WANTED_DIR/ | xargs git rm`.
+ ls-files will only quote filenames if needed, so folks may not
+ notice that one of the files didn't match the regex (at least not
+ until it's much too late). Yes, someone who knows about
+ core.quotePath can avoid this (unless they have other special
+ characters like \t, \n, or "), and people who use ls-files -z with
+ something other than grep can avoid this, but that doesn't mean they
+ will.
+
+* Similarly, when moving files around, one can find that filenames
+ with non-ascii or special characters end up in a different
+ directory, one that includes a double quote character. (This is
+ technically the same issue as above with quoting, but perhaps an
+ interesting different way that it can and has manifested as a
+ problem.)
* It's far too easy to accidentally mix up old and new history. It's
-still possible with any tool, but git-filter-branch almost invites it.
-If lucky, the only downside is users getting frustrated that they don't
-know how to shrink their repo and remove the old stuff. If unlucky,
-they merge old and new history and end up with multiple "copies" of each
-commit, some of which have unwanted or sensitive files and others which
-don't. This comes about in multiple different ways:
+ still possible with any tool, but git-filter-branch almost
+ invites it. If lucky, the only downside is users getting frustrated
+ that they don't know how to shrink their repo and remove the old
+ stuff. If unlucky, they merge old and new history and end up with
+ multiple "copies" of each commit, some of which have unwanted or
+ sensitive files and others which don't. This comes about in
+ multiple different ways:
** the default to only doing a partial history rewrite ('--all' is not
the default and few examples show it)
@@ -609,8 +615,8 @@ don't. This comes about in multiple different ways:
"DISCUSSION" section of the git filter-repo manual page for more
details.
-* Annotated tags can be accidentally converted to lightweight tags, due
-to either of two issues:
+* Annotated tags can be accidentally converted to lightweight tags,
+ due to either of two issues:
** Someone can do a history rewrite, realize they messed up, restore
from the backups in refs/original/, and then redo their
@@ -623,71 +629,74 @@ to either of two issues:
restored from refs/original/ in a previously botched rewrite).
* Any commit messages that specify an encoding will become corrupted
-by the rewrite; git-filter-branch ignores the encoding, takes the original
-bytes, and feeds it to commit-tree without telling it the proper
-encoding. (This happens whether or not --msg-filter is used.)
+ by the rewrite; git-filter-branch ignores the encoding, takes the
+ original bytes, and feeds it to commit-tree without telling it the
+ proper encoding. (This happens whether or not --msg-filter is
+ used.)
* Commit messages (even if they are all UTF-8) by default become
-corrupted due to not being updated -- any references to other commit
-hashes in commit messages will now refer to no-longer-extant commits.
-
-* There are no facilities for helping users find what unwanted crud they
-should delete, which means they are much more likely to have incomplete
-or partial cleanups that sometimes result in confusion and people
-wasting time trying to understand. (For example, folks tend to just
-look for big files to delete instead of big directories or extensions,
-and once they do so, then sometime later folks using the new repository
-who are going through history will notice a build artifact directory
-that has some files but not others, or a cache of dependencies
-(node_modules or similar) which couldn't have ever been functional since
-it's missing some files.)
+ corrupted due to not being updated -- any references to other commit
+ hashes in commit messages will now refer to no-longer-extant
+ commits.
+
+* There are no facilities for helping users find what unwanted crud
+ they should delete, which means they are much more likely to have
+ incomplete or partial cleanups that sometimes result in confusion
+ and people wasting time trying to understand. (For example, folks
+ tend to just look for big files to delete instead of big directories
+ or extensions, and once they do so, then sometime later folks using
+ the new repository who are going through history will notice a build
+ artifact directory that has some files but not others, or a cache of
+ dependencies (node_modules or similar) which couldn't have ever been
+ functional since it's missing some files.)
* If --prune-empty isn't specified, then the filtering process can
-create hoards of confusing empty commits
+ create hoards of confusing empty commits
* If --prune-empty is specified, then intentionally placed empty
-commits from before the filtering operation are also pruned instead of
-just pruning commits that became empty due to filtering rules.
+ commits from before the filtering operation are also pruned instead
+ of just pruning commits that became empty due to filtering rules.
* If --prune-empty is specified, sometimes empty commits are missed
-and left around anyway (a somewhat rare bug, but it happens...)
+ and left around anyway (a somewhat rare bug, but it happens...)
* A minor issue, but users who have a goal to update all names and
-emails in a repository may be led to --env-filter which will only update
-authors and committers, missing taggers.
+ emails in a repository may be led to --env-filter which will only
+ update authors and committers, missing taggers.
* If the user provides a --tag-name-filter that maps multiple tags to
-the same name, no warning or error is provided; git-filter-branch simply
-overwrites each tag in some undocumented pre-defined order resulting in
-only one tag at the end. (A git-filter-branch regression test requires
-this surprising behavior.)
+ the same name, no warning or error is provided; git-filter-branch
+ simply overwrites each tag in some undocumented pre-defined order
+ resulting in only one tag at the end. (A git-filter-branch
+ regression test requires this surprising behavior.)
Also, the poor performance of git-filter-branch often leads to safety
issues:
-* Coming up with the correct shell snippet to do the filtering you want
-is sometimes difficult unless you're just doing a trivial modification
-such as deleting a couple files. Unfortunately, people often learn if
-the snippet is right or wrong by trying it out, but the rightness or
-wrongness can vary depending on special circumstances (spaces in
-filenames, non-ascii filenames, funny author names or emails, invalid
-timezones, presence of grafts or replace objects, etc.), meaning they
-may have to wait a long time, hit an error, then restart. The
-performance of git-filter-branch is so bad that this cycle is painful,
-reducing the time available to carefully re-check (to say nothing about
-what it does to the patience of the person doing the rewrite even if
-they do technically have more time available). This problem is extra
-compounded because errors from broken filters may not be shown for a
-long time and/or get lost in a sea of output. Even worse, broken
-filters often just result in silent incorrect rewrites.
-
-* To top it all off, even when users finally find working commands, they
-naturally want to share them. But they may be unaware that their repo
-didn't have some special cases that someone else's does. So, when
-someone else with a different repository runs the same commands, they
-get hit by the problems above. Or, the user just runs commands that
-really were vetted for special cases, but they run it on a different OS
-where it doesn't work, as noted above.
+* Coming up with the correct shell snippet to do the filtering you
+ want is sometimes difficult unless you're just doing a trivial
+ modification such as deleting a couple files. Unfortunately, people
+ often learn if the snippet is right or wrong by trying it out, but
+ the rightness or wrongness can vary depending on special
+ circumstances (spaces in filenames, non-ascii filenames, funny
+ author names or emails, invalid timezones, presence of grafts or
+ replace objects, etc.), meaning they may have to wait a long time,
+ hit an error, then restart. The performance of git-filter-branch is
+ so bad that this cycle is painful, reducing the time available to
+ carefully re-check (to say nothing about what it does to the
+ patience of the person doing the rewrite even if they do technically
+ have more time available). This problem is extra compounded because
+ errors from broken filters may not be shown for a long time and/or
+ get lost in a sea of output. Even worse, broken filters often just
+ result in silent incorrect rewrites.
+
+* To top it all off, even when users finally find working commands,
+ they naturally want to share them. But they may be unaware that
+ their repo didn't have some special cases that someone else's does.
+ So, when someone else with a different repository runs the same
+ commands, they get hit by the problems above. Or, the user just
+ runs commands that really were vetted for special cases, but they
+ run it on a different OS where it doesn't work, as noted above.
GIT
---
diff --git a/Documentation/git-format-patch.txt b/Documentation/git-format-patch.txt
index 00bdf9b125..0d4f8951bb 100644
--- a/Documentation/git-format-patch.txt
+++ b/Documentation/git-format-patch.txt
@@ -333,11 +333,12 @@ you can use `--suffix=-patch` to get `0001-description-of-my-change-patch`.
Output an all-zero hash in each patch's From header instead
of the hash of the commit.
---base=<commit>::
+--[no-]base[=<commit>]::
Record the base tree information to identify the state the
patch series applies to. See the BASE TREE INFORMATION section
below for details. If <commit> is "auto", a base commit is
- automatically chosen.
+ automatically chosen. The `--no-base` option overrides a
+ `format.useAutoBase` configuration.
--root::
Treat the revision argument as a <revision range>, even if it
diff --git a/Documentation/git-read-tree.txt b/Documentation/git-read-tree.txt
index d271842608..da33f84f33 100644
--- a/Documentation/git-read-tree.txt
+++ b/Documentation/git-read-tree.txt
@@ -436,7 +436,7 @@ support.
SEE ALSO
--------
linkgit:git-write-tree[1]; linkgit:git-ls-files[1];
-linkgit:gitignore[5]
+linkgit:gitignore[5]; linkgit:git-sparse-checkout[1];
GIT
---
diff --git a/Documentation/git-restore.txt b/Documentation/git-restore.txt
index 1ab2e40ea9..5bf60d4943 100644
--- a/Documentation/git-restore.txt
+++ b/Documentation/git-restore.txt
@@ -8,8 +8,9 @@ git-restore - Restore working tree files
SYNOPSIS
--------
[verse]
-'git restore' [<options>] [--source=<tree>] [--staged] [--worktree] <pathspec>...
-'git restore' (-p|--patch) [<options>] [--source=<tree>] [--staged] [--worktree] [<pathspec>...]
+'git restore' [<options>] [--source=<tree>] [--staged] [--worktree] [--] <pathspec>...
+'git restore' [<options>] [--source=<tree>] [--staged] [--worktree] --pathspec-from-file=<file> [--pathspec-file-nul]
+'git restore' (-p|--patch) [<options>] [--source=<tree>] [--staged] [--worktree] [--] [<pathspec>...]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
@@ -113,6 +114,27 @@ in linkgit:git-checkout[1] for details.
appear in the `--source` tree are removed, to make them match
`<tree>` exactly. The default is no-overlay mode.
+--pathspec-from-file=<file>::
+ Pathspec is passed in `<file>` instead of commandline args. If
+ `<file>` is exactly `-` then standard input is used. Pathspec
+ elements are separated by LF or CR/LF. Pathspec elements can be
+ quoted as explained for the configuration variable `core.quotePath`
+ (see linkgit:git-config[1]). See also `--pathspec-file-nul` and
+ global `--literal-pathspecs`.
+
+--pathspec-file-nul::
+ Only meaningful with `--pathspec-from-file`. Pathspec elements are
+ separated with NUL character and all other characters are taken
+ literally (including newlines and quotes).
+
+\--::
+ Do not interpret any more arguments as options.
+
+<pathspec>...::
+ Limits the paths affected by the operation.
++
+For more details, see the 'pathspec' entry in linkgit:gitglossary[7].
+
EXAMPLES
--------
diff --git a/Documentation/git-sparse-checkout.txt b/Documentation/git-sparse-checkout.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..9c3c66cc37
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/git-sparse-checkout.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,166 @@
+git-sparse-checkout(1)
+======================
+
+NAME
+----
+git-sparse-checkout - Initialize and modify the sparse-checkout
+configuration, which reduces the checkout to a set of paths
+given by a list of atterns.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS
+--------
+[verse]
+'git sparse-checkout <subcommand> [options]'
+
+
+DESCRIPTION
+-----------
+
+Initialize and modify the sparse-checkout configuration, which reduces
+the checkout to a set of paths given by a list of patterns.
+
+THIS COMMAND IS EXPERIMENTAL. ITS BEHAVIOR, AND THE BEHAVIOR OF OTHER
+COMMANDS IN THE PRESENCE OF SPARSE-CHECKOUTS, WILL LIKELY CHANGE IN
+THE FUTURE.
+
+
+COMMANDS
+--------
+'list'::
+ Provide a list of the contents in the sparse-checkout file.
+
+'init'::
+ Enable the `core.sparseCheckout` setting. If the
+ sparse-checkout file does not exist, then populate it with
+ patterns that match every file in the root directory and
+ no other directories, then will remove all directories tracked
+ by Git. Add patterns to the sparse-checkout file to
+ repopulate the working directory.
++
+To avoid interfering with other worktrees, it first enables the
+`extensions.worktreeConfig` setting and makes sure to set the
+`core.sparseCheckout` setting in the worktree-specific config file.
+
+'set'::
+ Write a set of patterns to the sparse-checkout file, as given as
+ a list of arguments following the 'set' subcommand. Update the
+ working directory to match the new patterns. Enable the
+ core.sparseCheckout config setting if it is not already enabled.
++
+When the `--stdin` option is provided, the patterns are read from
+standard in as a newline-delimited list instead of from the arguments.
+
+'disable'::
+ Disable the `core.sparseCheckout` config setting, and restore the
+ working directory to include all files. Leaves the sparse-checkout
+ file intact so a later 'git sparse-checkout init' command may
+ return the working directory to the same state.
+
+SPARSE CHECKOUT
+---------------
+
+"Sparse checkout" allows populating the working directory sparsely.
+It uses the skip-worktree bit (see linkgit:git-update-index[1]) to tell
+Git whether a file in the working directory is worth looking at. If
+the skip-worktree bit is set, then the file is ignored in the working
+directory. Git will not populate the contents of those files, which
+makes a sparse checkout helpful when working in a repository with many
+files, but only a few are important to the current user.
+
+The `$GIT_DIR/info/sparse-checkout` file is used to define the
+skip-worktree reference bitmap. When Git updates the working
+directory, it updates the skip-worktree bits in the index based
+on this file. The files matching the patterns in the file will
+appear in the working directory, and the rest will not.
+
+To enable the sparse-checkout feature, run `git sparse-checkout init` to
+initialize a simple sparse-checkout file and enable the `core.sparseCheckout`
+config setting. Then, run `git sparse-checkout set` to modify the patterns in
+the sparse-checkout file.
+
+To repopulate the working directory with all files, use the
+`git sparse-checkout disable` command.
+
+
+FULL PATTERN SET
+----------------
+
+By default, the sparse-checkout file uses the same syntax as `.gitignore`
+files.
+
+While `$GIT_DIR/info/sparse-checkout` is usually used to specify what
+files are included, you can also specify what files are _not_ included,
+using negative patterns. For example, to remove the file `unwanted`:
+
+----------------
+/*
+!unwanted
+----------------
+
+
+CONE PATTERN SET
+----------------
+
+The full pattern set allows for arbitrary pattern matches and complicated
+inclusion/exclusion rules. These can result in O(N*M) pattern matches when
+updating the index, where N is the number of patterns and M is the number
+of paths in the index. To combat this performance issue, a more restricted
+pattern set is allowed when `core.spareCheckoutCone` is enabled.
+
+The accepted patterns in the cone pattern set are:
+
+1. *Recursive:* All paths inside a directory are included.
+
+2. *Parent:* All files immediately inside a directory are included.
+
+In addition to the above two patterns, we also expect that all files in the
+root directory are included. If a recursive pattern is added, then all
+leading directories are added as parent patterns.
+
+By default, when running `git sparse-checkout init`, the root directory is
+added as a parent pattern. At this point, the sparse-checkout file contains
+the following patterns:
+
+----------------
+/*
+!/*/
+----------------
+
+This says "include everything in root, but nothing two levels below root."
+If we then add the folder `A/B/C` as a recursive pattern, the folders `A` and
+`A/B` are added as parent patterns. The resulting sparse-checkout file is
+now
+
+----------------
+/*
+!/*/
+/A/
+!/A/*/
+/A/B/
+!/A/B/*/
+/A/B/C/
+----------------
+
+Here, order matters, so the negative patterns are overridden by the positive
+patterns that appear lower in the file.
+
+If `core.sparseCheckoutCone=true`, then Git will parse the sparse-checkout file
+expecting patterns of these types. Git will warn if the patterns do not match.
+If the patterns do match the expected format, then Git will use faster hash-
+based algorithms to compute inclusion in the sparse-checkout.
+
+If `core.ignoreCase=true`, then the pattern-matching algorithm will use a
+case-insensitive check. This corrects for case mismatched filenames in the
+'git sparse-checkout set' command to reflect the expected cone in the working
+directory.
+
+SEE ALSO
+--------
+
+linkgit:git-read-tree[1]
+linkgit:gitignore[5]
+
+GIT
+---
+Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite
diff --git a/Documentation/gitcredentials.txt b/Documentation/gitcredentials.txt
index adc759612d..ea759fdee5 100644
--- a/Documentation/gitcredentials.txt
+++ b/Documentation/gitcredentials.txt
@@ -186,8 +186,7 @@ CUSTOM HELPERS
--------------
You can write your own custom helpers to interface with any system in
-which you keep credentials. See the documentation for Git's
-link:technical/api-credentials.html[credentials API] for details.
+which you keep credentials. See credential.h for details.
GIT
---
diff --git a/Documentation/gitmodules.txt b/Documentation/gitmodules.txt
index b5d1c05756..67275fd187 100644
--- a/Documentation/gitmodules.txt
+++ b/Documentation/gitmodules.txt
@@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ submodules a URL is specified which can be used for cloning the submodules.
SEE ALSO
--------
-linkgit:git-submodule[1] linkgit:git-config[1]
+linkgit:git-submodule[1], linkgit:gitsubmodules[7], linkgit:git-config[1]
GIT
---
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-allocation-growing.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-allocation-growing.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 5a59b54844..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-allocation-growing.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,39 +0,0 @@
-allocation growing API
-======================
-
-Dynamically growing an array using realloc() is error prone and boring.
-
-Define your array with:
-
-* a pointer (`item`) that points at the array, initialized to `NULL`
- (although please name the variable based on its contents, not on its
- type);
-
-* an integer variable (`alloc`) that keeps track of how big the current
- allocation is, initialized to `0`;
-
-* another integer variable (`nr`) to keep track of how many elements the
- array currently has, initialized to `0`.
-
-Then before adding `n`th element to the item, call `ALLOC_GROW(item, n,
-alloc)`. This ensures that the array can hold at least `n` elements by
-calling `realloc(3)` and adjusting `alloc` variable.
-
-------------
-sometype *item;
-size_t nr;
-size_t alloc
-
-for (i = 0; i < nr; i++)
- if (we like item[i] already)
- return;
-
-/* we did not like any existing one, so add one */
-ALLOC_GROW(item, nr + 1, alloc);
-item[nr++] = value you like;
-------------
-
-You are responsible for updating the `nr` variable.
-
-If you need to specify the number of elements to allocate explicitly
-then use the macro `REALLOC_ARRAY(item, alloc)` instead of `ALLOC_GROW`.
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-argv-array.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-argv-array.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 870c8edbfb..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-argv-array.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,65 +0,0 @@
-argv-array API
-==============
-
-The argv-array API allows one to dynamically build and store
-NULL-terminated lists. An argv-array maintains the invariant that the
-`argv` member always points to a non-NULL array, and that the array is
-always NULL-terminated at the element pointed to by `argv[argc]`. This
-makes the result suitable for passing to functions expecting to receive
-argv from main(), or the link:api-run-command.html[run-command API].
-
-The string-list API (documented in string-list.h) is similar, but cannot be
-used for these purposes; instead of storing a straight string pointer,
-it contains an item structure with a `util` field that is not compatible
-with the traditional argv interface.
-
-Each `argv_array` manages its own memory. Any strings pushed into the
-array are duplicated, and all memory is freed by argv_array_clear().
-
-Data Structures
----------------
-
-`struct argv_array`::
-
- A single array. This should be initialized by assignment from
- `ARGV_ARRAY_INIT`, or by calling `argv_array_init`. The `argv`
- member contains the actual array; the `argc` member contains the
- number of elements in the array, not including the terminating
- NULL.
-
-Functions
----------
-
-`argv_array_init`::
- Initialize an array. This is no different than assigning from
- `ARGV_ARRAY_INIT`.
-
-`argv_array_push`::
- Push a copy of a string onto the end of the array.
-
-`argv_array_pushl`::
- Push a list of strings onto the end of the array. The arguments
- should be a list of `const char *` strings, terminated by a NULL
- argument.
-
-`argv_array_pushf`::
- Format a string and push it onto the end of the array. This is a
- convenience wrapper combining `strbuf_addf` and `argv_array_push`.
-
-`argv_array_pushv`::
- Push a null-terminated array of strings onto the end of the array.
-
-`argv_array_pop`::
- Remove the final element from the array. If there are no
- elements in the array, do nothing.
-
-`argv_array_clear`::
- Free all memory associated with the array and return it to the
- initial, empty state.
-
-`argv_array_detach`::
- Disconnect the `argv` member from the `argv_array` struct and
- return it. The caller is responsible for freeing the memory used
- by the array, and by the strings it references. After detaching,
- the `argv_array` is in a reinitialized state and can be pushed
- into again.
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-credentials.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-credentials.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 75368f26ca..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-credentials.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,271 +0,0 @@
-credentials API
-===============
-
-The credentials API provides an abstracted way of gathering username and
-password credentials from the user (even though credentials in the wider
-world can take many forms, in this document the word "credential" always
-refers to a username and password pair).
-
-This document describes two interfaces: the C API that the credential
-subsystem provides to the rest of Git, and the protocol that Git uses to
-communicate with system-specific "credential helpers". If you are
-writing Git code that wants to look up or prompt for credentials, see
-the section "C API" below. If you want to write your own helper, see
-the section on "Credential Helpers" below.
-
-Typical setup
--------------
-
-------------
-+-----------------------+
-| Git code (C) |--- to server requiring --->
-| | authentication
-|.......................|
-| C credential API |--- prompt ---> User
-+-----------------------+
- ^ |
- | pipe |
- | v
-+-----------------------+
-| Git credential helper |
-+-----------------------+
-------------
-
-The Git code (typically a remote-helper) will call the C API to obtain
-credential data like a login/password pair (credential_fill). The
-API will itself call a remote helper (e.g. "git credential-cache" or
-"git credential-store") that may retrieve credential data from a
-store. If the credential helper cannot find the information, the C API
-will prompt the user. Then, the caller of the API takes care of
-contacting the server, and does the actual authentication.
-
-C API
------
-
-The credential C API is meant to be called by Git code which needs to
-acquire or store a credential. It is centered around an object
-representing a single credential and provides three basic operations:
-fill (acquire credentials by calling helpers and/or prompting the user),
-approve (mark a credential as successfully used so that it can be stored
-for later use), and reject (mark a credential as unsuccessful so that it
-can be erased from any persistent storage).
-
-Data Structures
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-`struct credential`::
-
- This struct represents a single username/password combination
- along with any associated context. All string fields should be
- heap-allocated (or NULL if they are not known or not applicable).
- The meaning of the individual context fields is the same as
- their counterparts in the helper protocol; see the section below
- for a description of each field.
-+
-The `helpers` member of the struct is a `string_list` of helpers. Each
-string specifies an external helper which will be run, in order, to
-either acquire or store credentials. See the section on credential
-helpers below. This list is filled-in by the API functions
-according to the corresponding configuration variables before
-consulting helpers, so there usually is no need for a caller to
-modify the helpers field at all.
-+
-This struct should always be initialized with `CREDENTIAL_INIT` or
-`credential_init`.
-
-
-Functions
-~~~~~~~~~
-
-`credential_init`::
-
- Initialize a credential structure, setting all fields to empty.
-
-`credential_clear`::
-
- Free any resources associated with the credential structure,
- returning it to a pristine initialized state.
-
-`credential_fill`::
-
- Instruct the credential subsystem to fill the username and
- password fields of the passed credential struct by first
- consulting helpers, then asking the user. After this function
- returns, the username and password fields of the credential are
- guaranteed to be non-NULL. If an error occurs, the function will
- die().
-
-`credential_reject`::
-
- Inform the credential subsystem that the provided credentials
- have been rejected. This will cause the credential subsystem to
- notify any helpers of the rejection (which allows them, for
- example, to purge the invalid credentials from storage). It
- will also free() the username and password fields of the
- credential and set them to NULL (readying the credential for
- another call to `credential_fill`). Any errors from helpers are
- ignored.
-
-`credential_approve`::
-
- Inform the credential subsystem that the provided credentials
- were successfully used for authentication. This will cause the
- credential subsystem to notify any helpers of the approval, so
- that they may store the result to be used again. Any errors
- from helpers are ignored.
-
-`credential_from_url`::
-
- Parse a URL into broken-down credential fields.
-
-Example
-~~~~~~~
-
-The example below shows how the functions of the credential API could be
-used to login to a fictitious "foo" service on a remote host:
-
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-int foo_login(struct foo_connection *f)
-{
- int status;
- /*
- * Create a credential with some context; we don't yet know the
- * username or password.
- */
-
- struct credential c = CREDENTIAL_INIT;
- c.protocol = xstrdup("foo");
- c.host = xstrdup(f->hostname);
-
- /*
- * Fill in the username and password fields by contacting
- * helpers and/or asking the user. The function will die if it
- * fails.
- */
- credential_fill(&c);
-
- /*
- * Otherwise, we have a username and password. Try to use it.
- */
- status = send_foo_login(f, c.username, c.password);
- switch (status) {
- case FOO_OK:
- /* It worked. Store the credential for later use. */
- credential_accept(&c);
- break;
- case FOO_BAD_LOGIN:
- /* Erase the credential from storage so we don't try it
- * again. */
- credential_reject(&c);
- break;
- default:
- /*
- * Some other error occurred. We don't know if the
- * credential is good or bad, so report nothing to the
- * credential subsystem.
- */
- }
-
- /* Free any associated resources. */
- credential_clear(&c);
-
- return status;
-}
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-Credential Helpers
-------------------
-
-Credential helpers are programs executed by Git to fetch or save
-credentials from and to long-term storage (where "long-term" is simply
-longer than a single Git process; e.g., credentials may be stored
-in-memory for a few minutes, or indefinitely on disk).
-
-Each helper is specified by a single string in the configuration
-variable `credential.helper` (and others, see linkgit:git-config[1]).
-The string is transformed by Git into a command to be executed using
-these rules:
-
- 1. If the helper string begins with "!", it is considered a shell
- snippet, and everything after the "!" becomes the command.
-
- 2. Otherwise, if the helper string begins with an absolute path, the
- verbatim helper string becomes the command.
-
- 3. Otherwise, the string "git credential-" is prepended to the helper
- string, and the result becomes the command.
-
-The resulting command then has an "operation" argument appended to it
-(see below for details), and the result is executed by the shell.
-
-Here are some example specifications:
-
-----------------------------------------------------
-# run "git credential-foo"
-foo
-
-# same as above, but pass an argument to the helper
-foo --bar=baz
-
-# the arguments are parsed by the shell, so use shell
-# quoting if necessary
-foo --bar="whitespace arg"
-
-# you can also use an absolute path, which will not use the git wrapper
-/path/to/my/helper --with-arguments
-
-# or you can specify your own shell snippet
-!f() { echo "password=`cat $HOME/.secret`"; }; f
-----------------------------------------------------
-
-Generally speaking, rule (3) above is the simplest for users to specify.
-Authors of credential helpers should make an effort to assist their
-users by naming their program "git-credential-$NAME", and putting it in
-the $PATH or $GIT_EXEC_PATH during installation, which will allow a user
-to enable it with `git config credential.helper $NAME`.
-
-When a helper is executed, it will have one "operation" argument
-appended to its command line, which is one of:
-
-`get`::
-
- Return a matching credential, if any exists.
-
-`store`::
-
- Store the credential, if applicable to the helper.
-
-`erase`::
-
- Remove a matching credential, if any, from the helper's storage.
-
-The details of the credential will be provided on the helper's stdin
-stream. The exact format is the same as the input/output format of the
-`git credential` plumbing command (see the section `INPUT/OUTPUT
-FORMAT` in linkgit:git-credential[1] for a detailed specification).
-
-For a `get` operation, the helper should produce a list of attributes
-on stdout in the same format. A helper is free to produce a subset, or
-even no values at all if it has nothing useful to provide. Any provided
-attributes will overwrite those already known about by Git. If a helper
-outputs a `quit` attribute with a value of `true` or `1`, no further
-helpers will be consulted, nor will the user be prompted (if no
-credential has been provided, the operation will then fail).
-
-For a `store` or `erase` operation, the helper's output is ignored.
-If it fails to perform the requested operation, it may complain to
-stderr to inform the user. If it does not support the requested
-operation (e.g., a read-only store), it should silently ignore the
-request.
-
-If a helper receives any other operation, it should silently ignore the
-request. This leaves room for future operations to be added (older
-helpers will just ignore the new requests).
-
-See also
---------
-
-linkgit:gitcredentials[7]
-
-linkgit:git-config[1] (See configuration variables `credential.*`)
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-diff.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-diff.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 30fc0e9c93..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-diff.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,174 +0,0 @@
-diff API
-========
-
-The diff API is for programs that compare two sets of files (e.g. two
-trees, one tree and the index) and present the found difference in
-various ways. The calling program is responsible for feeding the API
-pairs of files, one from the "old" set and the corresponding one from
-"new" set, that are different. The library called through this API is
-called diffcore, and is responsible for two things.
-
-* finding total rewrites (`-B`), renames (`-M`) and copies (`-C`), and
- changes that touch a string (`-S`), as specified by the caller.
-
-* outputting the differences in various formats, as specified by the
- caller.
-
-Calling sequence
-----------------
-
-* Prepare `struct diff_options` to record the set of diff options, and
- then call `repo_diff_setup()` to initialize this structure. This
- sets up the vanilla default.
-
-* Fill in the options structure to specify desired output format, rename
- detection, etc. `diff_opt_parse()` can be used to parse options given
- from the command line in a way consistent with existing git-diff
- family of programs.
-
-* Call `diff_setup_done()`; this inspects the options set up so far for
- internal consistency and make necessary tweaking to it (e.g. if
- textual patch output was asked, recursive behaviour is turned on);
- the callback set_default in diff_options can be used to tweak this more.
-
-* As you find different pairs of files, call `diff_change()` to feed
- modified files, `diff_addremove()` to feed created or deleted files,
- or `diff_unmerge()` to feed a file whose state is 'unmerged' to the
- API. These are thin wrappers to a lower-level `diff_queue()` function
- that is flexible enough to record any of these kinds of changes.
-
-* Once you finish feeding the pairs of files, call `diffcore_std()`.
- This will tell the diffcore library to go ahead and do its work.
-
-* Calling `diff_flush()` will produce the output.
-
-
-Data structures
----------------
-
-* `struct diff_filespec`
-
-This is the internal representation for a single file (blob). It
-records the blob object name (if known -- for a work tree file it
-typically is a NUL SHA-1), filemode and pathname. This is what the
-`diff_addremove()`, `diff_change()` and `diff_unmerge()` synthesize and
-feed `diff_queue()` function with.
-
-* `struct diff_filepair`
-
-This records a pair of `struct diff_filespec`; the filespec for a file
-in the "old" set (i.e. preimage) is called `one`, and the filespec for a
-file in the "new" set (i.e. postimage) is called `two`. A change that
-represents file creation has NULL in `one`, and file deletion has NULL
-in `two`.
-
-A `filepair` starts pointing at `one` and `two` that are from the same
-filename, but `diffcore_std()` can break pairs and match component
-filespecs with other filespecs from a different filepair to form new
-filepair. This is called 'rename detection'.
-
-* `struct diff_queue`
-
-This is a collection of filepairs. Notable members are:
-
-`queue`::
-
- An array of pointers to `struct diff_filepair`. This
- dynamically grows as you add filepairs;
-
-`alloc`::
-
- The allocated size of the `queue` array;
-
-`nr`::
-
- The number of elements in the `queue` array.
-
-
-* `struct diff_options`
-
-This describes the set of options the calling program wants to affect
-the operation of diffcore library with.
-
-Notable members are:
-
-`output_format`::
- The output format used when `diff_flush()` is run.
-
-`context`::
- Number of context lines to generate in patch output.
-
-`break_opt`, `detect_rename`, `rename-score`, `rename_limit`::
- Affects the way detection logic for complete rewrites, renames
- and copies.
-
-`abbrev`::
- Number of hexdigits to abbreviate raw format output to.
-
-`pickaxe`::
- A constant string (can and typically does contain newlines to
- look for a block of text, not just a single line) to filter out
- the filepairs that do not change the number of strings contained
- in its preimage and postimage of the diff_queue.
-
-`flags`::
- This is mostly a collection of boolean options that affects the
- operation, but some do not have anything to do with the diffcore
- library.
-
-`touched_flags`::
- Records whether a flag has been changed due to user request
- (rather than just set/unset by default).
-
-`set_default`::
- Callback which allows tweaking the options in diff_setup_done().
-
-BINARY, TEXT;;
- Affects the way how a file that is seemingly binary is treated.
-
-FULL_INDEX;;
- Tells the patch output format not to use abbreviated object
- names on the "index" lines.
-
-FIND_COPIES_HARDER;;
- Tells the diffcore library that the caller is feeding unchanged
- filepairs to allow copies from unmodified files be detected.
-
-COLOR_DIFF;;
- Output should be colored.
-
-COLOR_DIFF_WORDS;;
- Output is a colored word-diff.
-
-NO_INDEX;;
- Tells diff-files that the input is not tracked files but files
- in random locations on the filesystem.
-
-ALLOW_EXTERNAL;;
- Tells output routine that it is Ok to call user specified patch
- output routine. Plumbing disables this to ensure stable output.
-
-QUIET;;
- Do not show any output.
-
-REVERSE_DIFF;;
- Tells the library that the calling program is feeding the
- filepairs reversed; `one` is two, and `two` is one.
-
-EXIT_WITH_STATUS;;
- For communication between the calling program and the options
- parser; tell the calling program to signal the presence of
- difference using program exit code.
-
-HAS_CHANGES;;
- Internal; used for optimization to see if there is any change.
-
-SILENT_ON_REMOVE;;
- Affects if diff-files shows removed files.
-
-RECURSIVE, TREE_IN_RECURSIVE;;
- Tells if tree traversal done by tree-diff should recursively
- descend into a tree object pair that are different in preimage
- and postimage set.
-
-(JC)
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-directory-listing.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-directory-listing.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 76b6e4f71b..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-directory-listing.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,130 +0,0 @@
-directory listing API
-=====================
-
-The directory listing API is used to enumerate paths in the work tree,
-optionally taking `.git/info/exclude` and `.gitignore` files per
-directory into account.
-
-Data structure
---------------
-
-`struct dir_struct` structure is used to pass directory traversal
-options to the library and to record the paths discovered. A single
-`struct dir_struct` is used regardless of whether or not the traversal
-recursively descends into subdirectories.
-
-The notable options are:
-
-`exclude_per_dir`::
-
- The name of the file to be read in each directory for excluded
- files (typically `.gitignore`).
-
-`flags`::
-
- A bit-field of options:
-
-`DIR_SHOW_IGNORED`:::
-
- Return just ignored files in `entries[]`, not untracked
- files. This flag is mutually exclusive with
- `DIR_SHOW_IGNORED_TOO`.
-
-`DIR_SHOW_IGNORED_TOO`:::
-
- Similar to `DIR_SHOW_IGNORED`, but return ignored files in
- `ignored[]` in addition to untracked files in
- `entries[]`. This flag is mutually exclusive with
- `DIR_SHOW_IGNORED`.
-
-`DIR_KEEP_UNTRACKED_CONTENTS`:::
-
- Only has meaning if `DIR_SHOW_IGNORED_TOO` is also set; if this is set, the
- untracked contents of untracked directories are also returned in
- `entries[]`.
-
-`DIR_SHOW_IGNORED_TOO_MODE_MATCHING`:::
-
- Only has meaning if `DIR_SHOW_IGNORED_TOO` is also set; if
- this is set, returns ignored files and directories that match
- an exclude pattern. If a directory matches an exclude pattern,
- then the directory is returned and the contained paths are
- not. A directory that does not match an exclude pattern will
- not be returned even if all of its contents are ignored. In
- this case, the contents are returned as individual entries.
-+
-If this is set, files and directories that explicitly match an ignore
-pattern are reported. Implicitly ignored directories (directories that
-do not match an ignore pattern, but whose contents are all ignored)
-are not reported, instead all of the contents are reported.
-
-`DIR_COLLECT_IGNORED`:::
-
- Special mode for git-add. Return ignored files in `ignored[]` and
- untracked files in `entries[]`. Only returns ignored files that match
- pathspec exactly (no wildcards). Does not recurse into ignored
- directories.
-
-`DIR_SHOW_OTHER_DIRECTORIES`:::
-
- Include a directory that is not tracked.
-
-`DIR_HIDE_EMPTY_DIRECTORIES`:::
-
- Do not include a directory that is not tracked and is empty.
-
-`DIR_NO_GITLINKS`:::
-
- If set, recurse into a directory that looks like a Git
- directory. Otherwise it is shown as a directory.
-
-The result of the enumeration is left in these fields:
-
-`entries[]`::
-
- An array of `struct dir_entry`, each element of which describes
- a path.
-
-`nr`::
-
- The number of members in `entries[]` array.
-
-`alloc`::
-
- Internal use; keeps track of allocation of `entries[]` array.
-
-`ignored[]`::
-
- An array of `struct dir_entry`, used for ignored paths with the
- `DIR_SHOW_IGNORED_TOO` and `DIR_COLLECT_IGNORED` flags.
-
-`ignored_nr`::
-
- The number of members in `ignored[]` array.
-
-Calling sequence
-----------------
-
-Note: index may be looked at for .gitignore files that are CE_SKIP_WORKTREE
-marked. If you to exclude files, make sure you have loaded index first.
-
-* Prepare `struct dir_struct dir` and clear it with `memset(&dir, 0,
- sizeof(dir))`.
-
-* To add single exclude pattern, call `add_pattern_list()` and then
- `add_pattern()`.
-
-* To add patterns from a file (e.g. `.git/info/exclude`), call
- `add_patterns_from_file()` , and/or set `dir.exclude_per_dir`. A
- short-hand function `setup_standard_excludes()` can be used to set
- up the standard set of exclude settings.
-
-* Set options described in the Data Structure section above.
-
-* Call `read_directory()`.
-
-* Use `dir.entries[]`.
-
-* Call `clear_directory()` when none of the contained elements are no longer in use.
-
-(JC)
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-gitattributes.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-gitattributes.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 45f0df600f..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-gitattributes.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,154 +0,0 @@
-gitattributes API
-=================
-
-gitattributes mechanism gives a uniform way to associate various
-attributes to set of paths.
-
-
-Data Structure
---------------
-
-`struct git_attr`::
-
- An attribute is an opaque object that is identified by its name.
- Pass the name to `git_attr()` function to obtain the object of
- this type. The internal representation of this structure is
- of no interest to the calling programs. The name of the
- attribute can be retrieved by calling `git_attr_name()`.
-
-`struct attr_check_item`::
-
- This structure represents one attribute and its value.
-
-`struct attr_check`::
-
- This structure represents a collection of `attr_check_item`.
- It is passed to `git_check_attr()` function, specifying the
- attributes to check, and receives their values.
-
-
-Attribute Values
-----------------
-
-An attribute for a path can be in one of four states: Set, Unset,
-Unspecified or set to a string, and `.value` member of `struct
-attr_check_item` records it. There are three macros to check these:
-
-`ATTR_TRUE()`::
-
- Returns true if the attribute is Set for the path.
-
-`ATTR_FALSE()`::
-
- Returns true if the attribute is Unset for the path.
-
-`ATTR_UNSET()`::
-
- Returns true if the attribute is Unspecified for the path.
-
-If none of the above returns true, `.value` member points at a string
-value of the attribute for the path.
-
-
-Querying Specific Attributes
-----------------------------
-
-* Prepare `struct attr_check` using attr_check_initl()
- function, enumerating the names of attributes whose values you are
- interested in, terminated with a NULL pointer. Alternatively, an
- empty `struct attr_check` can be prepared by calling
- `attr_check_alloc()` function and then attributes you want to
- ask about can be added to it with `attr_check_append()`
- function.
-
-* Call `git_check_attr()` to check the attributes for the path.
-
-* Inspect `attr_check` structure to see how each of the
- attribute in the array is defined for the path.
-
-
-Example
--------
-
-To see how attributes "crlf" and "ident" are set for different paths.
-
-. Prepare a `struct attr_check` with two elements (because
- we are checking two attributes):
-
-------------
-static struct attr_check *check;
-static void setup_check(void)
-{
- if (check)
- return; /* already done */
- check = attr_check_initl("crlf", "ident", NULL);
-}
-------------
-
-. Call `git_check_attr()` with the prepared `struct attr_check`:
-
-------------
- const char *path;
-
- setup_check();
- git_check_attr(path, check);
-------------
-
-. Act on `.value` member of the result, left in `check->items[]`:
-
-------------
- const char *value = check->items[0].value;
-
- if (ATTR_TRUE(value)) {
- The attribute is Set, by listing only the name of the
- attribute in the gitattributes file for the path.
- } else if (ATTR_FALSE(value)) {
- The attribute is Unset, by listing the name of the
- attribute prefixed with a dash - for the path.
- } else if (ATTR_UNSET(value)) {
- The attribute is neither set nor unset for the path.
- } else if (!strcmp(value, "input")) {
- If none of ATTR_TRUE(), ATTR_FALSE(), or ATTR_UNSET() is
- true, the value is a string set in the gitattributes
- file for the path by saying "attr=value".
- } else if (... other check using value as string ...) {
- ...
- }
-------------
-
-To see how attributes in argv[] are set for different paths, only
-the first step in the above would be different.
-
-------------
-static struct attr_check *check;
-static void setup_check(const char **argv)
-{
- check = attr_check_alloc();
- while (*argv) {
- struct git_attr *attr = git_attr(*argv);
- attr_check_append(check, attr);
- argv++;
- }
-}
-------------
-
-
-Querying All Attributes
------------------------
-
-To get the values of all attributes associated with a file:
-
-* Prepare an empty `attr_check` structure by calling
- `attr_check_alloc()`.
-
-* Call `git_all_attrs()`, which populates the `attr_check`
- with the attributes attached to the path.
-
-* Iterate over the `attr_check.items[]` array to examine
- the attribute names and values. The name of the attribute
- described by an `attr_check.items[]` object can be retrieved via
- `git_attr_name(check->items[i].attr)`. (Please note that no items
- will be returned for unset attributes, so `ATTR_UNSET()` will return
- false for all returned `attr_check.items[]` objects.)
-
-* Free the `attr_check` struct by calling `attr_check_free()`.
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-history-graph.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-history-graph.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index d0d1707c8c..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-history-graph.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,173 +0,0 @@
-history graph API
-=================
-
-The graph API is used to draw a text-based representation of the commit
-history. The API generates the graph in a line-by-line fashion.
-
-Functions
----------
-
-Core functions:
-
-* `graph_init()` creates a new `struct git_graph`
-
-* `graph_update()` moves the graph to a new commit.
-
-* `graph_next_line()` outputs the next line of the graph into a strbuf. It
- does not add a terminating newline.
-
-* `graph_padding_line()` outputs a line of vertical padding in the graph. It
- is similar to `graph_next_line()`, but is guaranteed to never print the line
- containing the current commit. Where `graph_next_line()` would print the
- commit line next, `graph_padding_line()` prints a line that simply extends
- all branch lines downwards one row, leaving their positions unchanged.
-
-* `graph_is_commit_finished()` determines if the graph has output all lines
- necessary for the current commit. If `graph_update()` is called before all
- lines for the current commit have been printed, the next call to
- `graph_next_line()` will output an ellipsis, to indicate that a portion of
- the graph was omitted.
-
-The following utility functions are wrappers around `graph_next_line()` and
-`graph_is_commit_finished()`. They always print the output to stdout.
-They can all be called with a NULL graph argument, in which case no graph
-output will be printed.
-
-* `graph_show_commit()` calls `graph_next_line()` and
- `graph_is_commit_finished()` until one of them return non-zero. This prints
- all graph lines up to, and including, the line containing this commit.
- Output is printed to stdout. The last line printed does not contain a
- terminating newline.
-
-* `graph_show_oneline()` calls `graph_next_line()` and prints the result to
- stdout. The line printed does not contain a terminating newline.
-
-* `graph_show_padding()` calls `graph_padding_line()` and prints the result to
- stdout. The line printed does not contain a terminating newline.
-
-* `graph_show_remainder()` calls `graph_next_line()` until
- `graph_is_commit_finished()` returns non-zero. Output is printed to stdout.
- The last line printed does not contain a terminating newline. Returns 1 if
- output was printed, and 0 if no output was necessary.
-
-* `graph_show_strbuf()` prints the specified strbuf to stdout, prefixing all
- lines but the first with a graph line. The caller is responsible for
- ensuring graph output for the first line has already been printed to stdout.
- (This can be done with `graph_show_commit()` or `graph_show_oneline()`.) If
- a NULL graph is supplied, the strbuf is printed as-is.
-
-* `graph_show_commit_msg()` is similar to `graph_show_strbuf()`, but it also
- prints the remainder of the graph, if more lines are needed after the strbuf
- ends. It is better than directly calling `graph_show_strbuf()` followed by
- `graph_show_remainder()` since it properly handles buffers that do not end in
- a terminating newline. The output printed by `graph_show_commit_msg()` will
- end in a newline if and only if the strbuf ends in a newline.
-
-Data structure
---------------
-`struct git_graph` is an opaque data type used to store the current graph
-state.
-
-Calling sequence
-----------------
-
-* Create a `struct git_graph` by calling `graph_init()`. When using the
- revision walking API, this is done automatically by `setup_revisions()` if
- the '--graph' option is supplied.
-
-* Use the revision walking API to walk through a group of contiguous commits.
- The `get_revision()` function automatically calls `graph_update()` each time
- it is invoked.
-
-* For each commit, call `graph_next_line()` repeatedly, until
- `graph_is_commit_finished()` returns non-zero. Each call to
- `graph_next_line()` will output a single line of the graph. The resulting
- lines will not contain any newlines. `graph_next_line()` returns 1 if the
- resulting line contains the current commit, or 0 if this is merely a line
- needed to adjust the graph before or after the current commit. This return
- value can be used to determine where to print the commit summary information
- alongside the graph output.
-
-Limitations
------------
-
-* `graph_update()` must be called with commits in topological order. It should
- not be called on a commit if it has already been invoked with an ancestor of
- that commit, or the graph output will be incorrect.
-
-* `graph_update()` must be called on a contiguous group of commits. If
- `graph_update()` is called on a particular commit, it should later be called
- on all parents of that commit. Parents must not be skipped, or the graph
- output will appear incorrect.
-+
-`graph_update()` may be used on a pruned set of commits only if the parent list
-has been rewritten so as to include only ancestors from the pruned set.
-
-* The graph API does not currently support reverse commit ordering. In
- order to implement reverse ordering, the graphing API needs an
- (efficient) mechanism to find the children of a commit.
-
-Sample usage
-------------
-
-------------
-struct commit *commit;
-struct git_graph *graph = graph_init(opts);
-
-while ((commit = get_revision(opts)) != NULL) {
- while (!graph_is_commit_finished(graph))
- {
- struct strbuf sb;
- int is_commit_line;
-
- strbuf_init(&sb, 0);
- is_commit_line = graph_next_line(graph, &sb);
- fputs(sb.buf, stdout);
-
- if (is_commit_line)
- log_tree_commit(opts, commit);
- else
- putchar(opts->diffopt.line_termination);
- }
-}
-------------
-
-Sample output
--------------
-
-The following is an example of the output from the graph API. This output does
-not include any commit summary information--callers are responsible for
-outputting that information, if desired.
-
-------------
-*
-*
-*
-|\
-* |
-| | *
-| \ \
-| \ \
-*-. \ \
-|\ \ \ \
-| | * | |
-| | | | | *
-| | | | | *
-| | | | | *
-| | | | | |\
-| | | | | | *
-| * | | | | |
-| | | | | * \
-| | | | | |\ |
-| | | | * | | |
-| | | | * | | |
-* | | | | | | |
-| |/ / / / / /
-|/| / / / / /
-* | | | | | |
-|/ / / / / /
-* | | | | |
-| | | | | *
-| | | | |/
-| | | | *
-------------
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-merge.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-merge.txt
index 9dc1bed768..487d4d83ff 100644
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-merge.txt
+++ b/Documentation/technical/api-merge.txt
@@ -28,77 +28,9 @@ and `diff.c` for examples.
* `struct ll_merge_options`
-This describes the set of options the calling program wants to affect
-the operation of a low-level (single file) merge. Some options:
-
-`virtual_ancestor`::
- Behave as though this were part of a merge between common
- ancestors in a recursive merge.
- If a helper program is specified by the
- `[merge "<driver>"] recursive` configuration, it will
- be used (see linkgit:gitattributes[5]).
-
-`variant`::
- Resolve local conflicts automatically in favor
- of one side or the other (as in 'git merge-file'
- `--ours`/`--theirs`/`--union`). Can be `0`,
- `XDL_MERGE_FAVOR_OURS`, `XDL_MERGE_FAVOR_THEIRS`, or
- `XDL_MERGE_FAVOR_UNION`.
-
-`renormalize`::
- Resmudge and clean the "base", "theirs" and "ours" files
- before merging. Use this when the merge is likely to have
- overlapped with a change in smudge/clean or end-of-line
- normalization rules.
+Check ll-merge.h for details.
Low-level (single file) merge
-----------------------------
-`ll_merge`::
-
- Perform a three-way single-file merge in core. This is
- a thin wrapper around `xdl_merge` that takes the path and
- any merge backend specified in `.gitattributes` or
- `.git/info/attributes` into account. Returns 0 for a
- clean merge.
-
-Calling sequence:
-
-* Prepare a `struct ll_merge_options` to record options.
- If you have no special requests, skip this and pass `NULL`
- as the `opts` parameter to use the default options.
-
-* Allocate an mmbuffer_t variable for the result.
-
-* Allocate and fill variables with the file's original content
- and two modified versions (using `read_mmfile`, for example).
-
-* Call `ll_merge()`.
-
-* Read the merged content from `result_buf.ptr` and `result_buf.size`.
-
-* Release buffers when finished. A simple
- `free(ancestor.ptr); free(ours.ptr); free(theirs.ptr);
- free(result_buf.ptr);` will do.
-
-If the modifications do not merge cleanly, `ll_merge` will return a
-nonzero value and `result_buf` will generally include a description of
-the conflict bracketed by markers such as the traditional `<<<<<<<`
-and `>>>>>>>`.
-
-The `ancestor_label`, `our_label`, and `their_label` parameters are
-used to label the different sides of a conflict if the merge driver
-supports this.
-
-Everything else
----------------
-
-Talk about <merge-recursive.h> and merge_file():
-
- - merge_trees() to merge with rename detection
- - merge_recursive() for ancestor consolidation
- - try_merge_command() for other strategies
- - conflict format
- - merge options
-
-(Daniel, Miklos, Stephan, JC)
+Check ll-merge.h for details.
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-oid-array.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-oid-array.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index c97428c2c3..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-oid-array.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,90 +0,0 @@
-oid-array API
-==============
-
-The oid-array API provides storage and manipulation of sets of object
-identifiers. The emphasis is on storage and processing efficiency,
-making them suitable for large lists. Note that the ordering of items is
-not preserved over some operations.
-
-Data Structures
----------------
-
-`struct oid_array`::
-
- A single array of object IDs. This should be initialized by
- assignment from `OID_ARRAY_INIT`. The `oid` member contains
- the actual data. The `nr` member contains the number of items in
- the set. The `alloc` and `sorted` members are used internally,
- and should not be needed by API callers.
-
-Functions
----------
-
-`oid_array_append`::
- Add an item to the set. The object ID will be placed at the end of
- the array (but note that some operations below may lose this
- ordering).
-
-`oid_array_lookup`::
- Perform a binary search of the array for a specific object ID.
- If found, returns the offset (in number of elements) of the
- object ID. If not found, returns a negative integer. If the array
- is not sorted, this function has the side effect of sorting it.
-
-`oid_array_clear`::
- Free all memory associated with the array and return it to the
- initial, empty state.
-
-`oid_array_for_each`::
- Iterate over each element of the list, executing the callback
- function for each one. Does not sort the list, so any custom
- hash order is retained. If the callback returns a non-zero
- value, the iteration ends immediately and the callback's
- return is propagated; otherwise, 0 is returned.
-
-`oid_array_for_each_unique`::
- Iterate over each unique element of the list in sorted order,
- but otherwise behave like `oid_array_for_each`. If the array
- is not sorted, this function has the side effect of sorting
- it.
-
-`oid_array_filter`::
- Apply the callback function `want` to each entry in the array,
- retaining only the entries for which the function returns true.
- Preserve the order of the entries that are retained.
-
-Examples
---------
-
------------------------------------------
-int print_callback(const struct object_id *oid,
- void *data)
-{
- printf("%s\n", oid_to_hex(oid));
- return 0; /* always continue */
-}
-
-void some_func(void)
-{
- struct sha1_array hashes = OID_ARRAY_INIT;
- struct object_id oid;
-
- /* Read objects into our set */
- while (read_object_from_stdin(oid.hash))
- oid_array_append(&hashes, &oid);
-
- /* Check if some objects are in our set */
- while (read_object_from_stdin(oid.hash)) {
- if (oid_array_lookup(&hashes, &oid) >= 0)
- printf("it's in there!\n");
-
- /*
- * Print the unique set of objects. We could also have
- * avoided adding duplicate objects in the first place,
- * but we would end up re-sorting the array repeatedly.
- * Instead, this will sort once and then skip duplicates
- * in linear time.
- */
- oid_array_for_each_unique(&hashes, print_callback, NULL);
-}
------------------------------------------
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-ref-iteration.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-ref-iteration.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index ad9d019ff9..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-ref-iteration.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,78 +0,0 @@
-ref iteration API
-=================
-
-
-Iteration of refs is done by using an iterate function which will call a
-callback function for every ref. The callback function has this
-signature:
-
- int handle_one_ref(const char *refname, const struct object_id *oid,
- int flags, void *cb_data);
-
-There are different kinds of iterate functions which all take a
-callback of this type. The callback is then called for each found ref
-until the callback returns nonzero. The returned value is then also
-returned by the iterate function.
-
-Iteration functions
--------------------
-
-* `head_ref()` just iterates the head ref.
-
-* `for_each_ref()` iterates all refs.
-
-* `for_each_ref_in()` iterates all refs which have a defined prefix and
- strips that prefix from the passed variable refname.
-
-* `for_each_tag_ref()`, `for_each_branch_ref()`, `for_each_remote_ref()`,
- `for_each_replace_ref()` iterate refs from the respective area.
-
-* `for_each_glob_ref()` iterates all refs that match the specified glob
- pattern.
-
-* `for_each_glob_ref_in()` the previous and `for_each_ref_in()` combined.
-
-* Use `refs_` API for accessing submodules. The submodule ref store could
- be obtained with `get_submodule_ref_store()`.
-
-* `for_each_rawref()` can be used to learn about broken ref and symref.
-
-* `for_each_reflog()` iterates each reflog file.
-
-Submodules
-----------
-
-If you want to iterate the refs of a submodule you first need to add the
-submodules object database. You can do this by a code-snippet like
-this:
-
- const char *path = "path/to/submodule"
- if (add_submodule_odb(path))
- die("Error submodule '%s' not populated.", path);
-
-`add_submodule_odb()` will return zero on success. If you
-do not do this you will get an error for each ref that it does not point
-to a valid object.
-
-Note: As a side-effect of this you cannot safely assume that all
-objects you lookup are available in superproject. All submodule objects
-will be available the same way as the superprojects objects.
-
-Example:
---------
-
-----
-static int handle_remote_ref(const char *refname,
- const unsigned char *sha1, int flags, void *cb_data)
-{
- struct strbuf *output = cb_data;
- strbuf_addf(output, "%s\n", refname);
- return 0;
-}
-
-...
-
- struct strbuf output = STRBUF_INIT;
- for_each_remote_ref(handle_remote_ref, &output);
- printf("%s", output.buf);
-----
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-remote.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-remote.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index f10941b2e8..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-remote.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,127 +0,0 @@
-Remotes configuration API
-=========================
-
-The API in remote.h gives access to the configuration related to
-remotes. It handles all three configuration mechanisms historically
-and currently used by Git, and presents the information in a uniform
-fashion. Note that the code also handles plain URLs without any
-configuration, giving them just the default information.
-
-struct remote
--------------
-
-`name`::
-
- The user's nickname for the remote
-
-`url`::
-
- An array of all of the url_nr URLs configured for the remote
-
-`pushurl`::
-
- An array of all of the pushurl_nr push URLs configured for the remote
-
-`push`::
-
- An array of refspecs configured for pushing, with
- push_refspec being the literal strings, and push_refspec_nr
- being the quantity.
-
-`fetch`::
-
- An array of refspecs configured for fetching, with
- fetch_refspec being the literal strings, and fetch_refspec_nr
- being the quantity.
-
-`fetch_tags`::
-
- The setting for whether to fetch tags (as a separate rule from
- the configured refspecs); -1 means never to fetch tags, 0
- means to auto-follow tags based on the default heuristic, 1
- means to always auto-follow tags, and 2 means to fetch all
- tags.
-
-`receivepack`, `uploadpack`::
-
- The configured helper programs to run on the remote side, for
- Git-native protocols.
-
-`http_proxy`::
-
- The proxy to use for curl (http, https, ftp, etc.) URLs.
-
-`http_proxy_authmethod`::
-
- The method used for authenticating against `http_proxy`.
-
-struct remotes can be found by name with remote_get(), and iterated
-through with for_each_remote(). remote_get(NULL) will return the
-default remote, given the current branch and configuration.
-
-struct refspec
---------------
-
-A struct refspec holds the parsed interpretation of a refspec. If it
-will force updates (starts with a '+'), force is true. If it is a
-pattern (sides end with '*') pattern is true. src and dest are the
-two sides (including '*' characters if present); if there is only one
-side, it is src, and dst is NULL; if sides exist but are empty (i.e.,
-the refspec either starts or ends with ':'), the corresponding side is
-"".
-
-An array of strings can be parsed into an array of struct refspecs
-using parse_fetch_refspec() or parse_push_refspec().
-
-remote_find_tracking(), given a remote and a struct refspec with
-either src or dst filled out, will fill out the other such that the
-result is in the "fetch" specification for the remote (note that this
-evaluates patterns and returns a single result).
-
-struct branch
--------------
-
-Note that this may end up moving to branch.h
-
-struct branch holds the configuration for a branch. It can be looked
-up with branch_get(name) for "refs/heads/{name}", or with
-branch_get(NULL) for HEAD.
-
-It contains:
-
-`name`::
-
- The short name of the branch.
-
-`refname`::
-
- The full path for the branch ref.
-
-`remote_name`::
-
- The name of the remote listed in the configuration.
-
-`merge_name`::
-
- An array of the "merge" lines in the configuration.
-
-`merge`::
-
- An array of the struct refspecs used for the merge lines. That
- is, merge[i]->dst is a local tracking ref which should be
- merged into this branch by default.
-
-`merge_nr`::
-
- The number of merge configurations
-
-branch_has_merge_config() returns true if the given branch has merge
-configuration given.
-
-Other stuff
------------
-
-There is other stuff in remote.h that is related, in general, to the
-process of interacting with remotes.
-
-(Daniel Barkalow)
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-revision-walking.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-revision-walking.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 03f9ea6ac4..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-revision-walking.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,72 +0,0 @@
-revision walking API
-====================
-
-The revision walking API offers functions to build a list of revisions
-and then iterate over that list.
-
-Calling sequence
-----------------
-
-The walking API has a given calling sequence: first you need to
-initialize a rev_info structure, then add revisions to control what kind
-of revision list do you want to get, finally you can iterate over the
-revision list.
-
-Functions
----------
-
-`repo_init_revisions`::
-
- Initialize a rev_info structure with default values. The third
- parameter may be NULL or can be prefix path, and then the `.prefix`
- variable will be set to it. This is typically the first function you
- want to call when you want to deal with a revision list. After calling
- this function, you are free to customize options, like set
- `.ignore_merges` to 0 if you don't want to ignore merges, and so on. See
- `revision.h` for a complete list of available options.
-
-`add_pending_object`::
-
- This function can be used if you want to add commit objects as revision
- information. You can use the `UNINTERESTING` object flag to indicate if
- you want to include or exclude the given commit (and commits reachable
- from the given commit) from the revision list.
-+
-NOTE: If you have the commits as a string list then you probably want to
-use setup_revisions(), instead of parsing each string and using this
-function.
-
-`setup_revisions`::
-
- Parse revision information, filling in the `rev_info` structure, and
- removing the used arguments from the argument list. Returns the number
- of arguments left that weren't recognized, which are also moved to the
- head of the argument list. The last parameter is used in case no
- parameter given by the first two arguments.
-
-`prepare_revision_walk`::
-
- Prepares the rev_info structure for a walk. You should check if it
- returns any error (non-zero return code) and if it does not, you can
- start using get_revision() to do the iteration.
-
-`get_revision`::
-
- Takes a pointer to a `rev_info` structure and iterates over it,
- returning a `struct commit *` each time you call it. The end of the
- revision list is indicated by returning a NULL pointer.
-
-`reset_revision_walk`::
-
- Reset the flags used by the revision walking api. You can use
- this to do multiple sequential revision walks.
-
-Data structures
----------------
-
-Talk about <revision.h>, things like:
-
-* two diff_options, one for path limiting, another for output;
-* remaining functions;
-
-(Linus, JC, Dscho)
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-run-command.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-run-command.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 8bf3e37f53..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-run-command.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,264 +0,0 @@
-run-command API
-===============
-
-The run-command API offers a versatile tool to run sub-processes with
-redirected input and output as well as with a modified environment
-and an alternate current directory.
-
-A similar API offers the capability to run a function asynchronously,
-which is primarily used to capture the output that the function
-produces in the caller in order to process it.
-
-
-Functions
----------
-
-`child_process_init`::
-
- Initialize a struct child_process variable.
-
-`start_command`::
-
- Start a sub-process. Takes a pointer to a `struct child_process`
- that specifies the details and returns pipe FDs (if requested).
- See below for details.
-
-`finish_command`::
-
- Wait for the completion of a sub-process that was started with
- start_command().
-
-`run_command`::
-
- A convenience function that encapsulates a sequence of
- start_command() followed by finish_command(). Takes a pointer
- to a `struct child_process` that specifies the details.
-
-`run_command_v_opt`, `run_command_v_opt_cd_env`::
-
- Convenience functions that encapsulate a sequence of
- start_command() followed by finish_command(). The argument argv
- specifies the program and its arguments. The argument opt is zero
- or more of the flags `RUN_COMMAND_NO_STDIN`, `RUN_GIT_CMD`,
- `RUN_COMMAND_STDOUT_TO_STDERR`, or `RUN_SILENT_EXEC_FAILURE`
- that correspond to the members .no_stdin, .git_cmd,
- .stdout_to_stderr, .silent_exec_failure of `struct child_process`.
- The argument dir corresponds the member .dir. The argument env
- corresponds to the member .env.
-
-`child_process_clear`::
-
- Release the memory associated with the struct child_process.
- Most users of the run-command API don't need to call this
- function explicitly because `start_command` invokes it on
- failure and `finish_command` calls it automatically already.
-
-The functions above do the following:
-
-. If a system call failed, errno is set and -1 is returned. A diagnostic
- is printed.
-
-. If the program was not found, then -1 is returned and errno is set to
- ENOENT; a diagnostic is printed only if .silent_exec_failure is 0.
-
-. Otherwise, the program is run. If it terminates regularly, its exit
- code is returned. No diagnostic is printed, even if the exit code is
- non-zero.
-
-. If the program terminated due to a signal, then the return value is the
- signal number + 128, ie. the same value that a POSIX shell's $? would
- report. A diagnostic is printed.
-
-
-`start_async`::
-
- Run a function asynchronously. Takes a pointer to a `struct
- async` that specifies the details and returns a set of pipe FDs
- for communication with the function. See below for details.
-
-`finish_async`::
-
- Wait for the completion of an asynchronous function that was
- started with start_async().
-
-`run_hook`::
-
- Run a hook.
- The first argument is a pathname to an index file, or NULL
- if the hook uses the default index file or no index is needed.
- The second argument is the name of the hook.
- The further arguments correspond to the hook arguments.
- The last argument has to be NULL to terminate the arguments list.
- If the hook does not exist or is not executable, the return
- value will be zero.
- If it is executable, the hook will be executed and the exit
- status of the hook is returned.
- On execution, .stdout_to_stderr and .no_stdin will be set.
- (See below.)
-
-
-Data structures
----------------
-
-* `struct child_process`
-
-This describes the arguments, redirections, and environment of a
-command to run in a sub-process.
-
-The caller:
-
-1. allocates and clears (using child_process_init() or
- CHILD_PROCESS_INIT) a struct child_process variable;
-2. initializes the members;
-3. calls start_command();
-4. processes the data;
-5. closes file descriptors (if necessary; see below);
-6. calls finish_command().
-
-The .argv member is set up as an array of string pointers (NULL
-terminated), of which .argv[0] is the program name to run (usually
-without a path). If the command to run is a git command, set argv[0] to
-the command name without the 'git-' prefix and set .git_cmd = 1.
-
-Note that the ownership of the memory pointed to by .argv stays with the
-caller, but it should survive until `finish_command` completes. If the
-.argv member is NULL, `start_command` will point it at the .args
-`argv_array` (so you may use one or the other, but you must use exactly
-one). The memory in .args will be cleaned up automatically during
-`finish_command` (or during `start_command` when it is unsuccessful).
-
-The members .in, .out, .err are used to redirect stdin, stdout,
-stderr as follows:
-
-. Specify 0 to request no special redirection. No new file descriptor
- is allocated. The child process simply inherits the channel from the
- parent.
-
-. Specify -1 to have a pipe allocated; start_command() replaces -1
- by the pipe FD in the following way:
-
- .in: Returns the writable pipe end into which the caller writes;
- the readable end of the pipe becomes the child's stdin.
-
- .out, .err: Returns the readable pipe end from which the caller
- reads; the writable end of the pipe end becomes child's
- stdout/stderr.
-
- The caller of start_command() must close the so returned FDs
- after it has completed reading from/writing to it!
-
-. Specify a file descriptor > 0 to be used by the child:
-
- .in: The FD must be readable; it becomes child's stdin.
- .out: The FD must be writable; it becomes child's stdout.
- .err: The FD must be writable; it becomes child's stderr.
-
- The specified FD is closed by start_command(), even if it fails to
- run the sub-process!
-
-. Special forms of redirection are available by setting these members
- to 1:
-
- .no_stdin, .no_stdout, .no_stderr: The respective channel is
- redirected to /dev/null.
-
- .stdout_to_stderr: stdout of the child is redirected to its
- stderr. This happens after stderr is itself redirected.
- So stdout will follow stderr to wherever it is
- redirected.
-
-To modify the environment of the sub-process, specify an array of
-string pointers (NULL terminated) in .env:
-
-. If the string is of the form "VAR=value", i.e. it contains '='
- the variable is added to the child process's environment.
-
-. If the string does not contain '=', it names an environment
- variable that will be removed from the child process's environment.
-
-If the .env member is NULL, `start_command` will point it at the
-.env_array `argv_array` (so you may use one or the other, but not both).
-The memory in .env_array will be cleaned up automatically during
-`finish_command` (or during `start_command` when it is unsuccessful).
-
-To specify a new initial working directory for the sub-process,
-specify it in the .dir member.
-
-If the program cannot be found, the functions return -1 and set
-errno to ENOENT. Normally, an error message is printed, but if
-.silent_exec_failure is set to 1, no message is printed for this
-special error condition.
-
-
-* `struct async`
-
-This describes a function to run asynchronously, whose purpose is
-to produce output that the caller reads.
-
-The caller:
-
-1. allocates and clears (memset(&asy, 0, sizeof(asy));) a
- struct async variable;
-2. initializes .proc and .data;
-3. calls start_async();
-4. processes communicates with proc through .in and .out;
-5. closes .in and .out;
-6. calls finish_async().
-
-The members .in, .out are used to provide a set of fd's for
-communication between the caller and the callee as follows:
-
-. Specify 0 to have no file descriptor passed. The callee will
- receive -1 in the corresponding argument.
-
-. Specify < 0 to have a pipe allocated; start_async() replaces
- with the pipe FD in the following way:
-
- .in: Returns the writable pipe end into which the caller
- writes; the readable end of the pipe becomes the function's
- in argument.
-
- .out: Returns the readable pipe end from which the caller
- reads; the writable end of the pipe becomes the function's
- out argument.
-
- The caller of start_async() must close the returned FDs after it
- has completed reading from/writing from them.
-
-. Specify a file descriptor > 0 to be used by the function:
-
- .in: The FD must be readable; it becomes the function's in.
- .out: The FD must be writable; it becomes the function's out.
-
- The specified FD is closed by start_async(), even if it fails to
- run the function.
-
-The function pointer in .proc has the following signature:
-
- int proc(int in, int out, void *data);
-
-. in, out specifies a set of file descriptors to which the function
- must read/write the data that it needs/produces. The function
- *must* close these descriptors before it returns. A descriptor
- may be -1 if the caller did not configure a descriptor for that
- direction.
-
-. data is the value that the caller has specified in the .data member
- of struct async.
-
-. The return value of the function is 0 on success and non-zero
- on failure. If the function indicates failure, finish_async() will
- report failure as well.
-
-
-There are serious restrictions on what the asynchronous function can do
-because this facility is implemented by a thread in the same address
-space on most platforms (when pthreads is available), but by a pipe to
-a forked process otherwise:
-
-. It cannot change the program's state (global variables, environment,
- etc.) in a way that the caller notices; in other words, .in and .out
- are the only communication channels to the caller.
-
-. It must not change the program's state that the caller of the
- facility also uses.
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-setup.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-setup.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index eb1fa9853e..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-setup.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,47 +0,0 @@
-setup API
-=========
-
-Talk about
-
-* setup_git_directory()
-* setup_git_directory_gently()
-* is_inside_git_dir()
-* is_inside_work_tree()
-* setup_work_tree()
-
-(Dscho)
-
-Pathspec
---------
-
-See glossary-context.txt for the syntax of pathspec. In memory, a
-pathspec set is represented by "struct pathspec" and is prepared by
-parse_pathspec(). This function takes several arguments:
-
-- magic_mask specifies what features that are NOT supported by the
- following code. If a user attempts to use such a feature,
- parse_pathspec() can reject it early.
-
-- flags specifies other things that the caller wants parse_pathspec to
- perform.
-
-- prefix and args come from cmd_* functions
-
-parse_pathspec() helps catch unsupported features and reject them
-politely. At a lower level, different pathspec-related functions may
-not support the same set of features. Such pathspec-sensitive
-functions are guarded with GUARD_PATHSPEC(), which will die in an
-unfriendly way when an unsupported feature is requested.
-
-The command designers are supposed to make sure that GUARD_PATHSPEC()
-never dies. They have to make sure all unsupported features are caught
-by parse_pathspec(), not by GUARD_PATHSPEC. grepping GUARD_PATHSPEC()
-should give the designers all pathspec-sensitive codepaths and what
-features they support.
-
-A similar process is applied when a new pathspec magic is added. The
-designer lifts the GUARD_PATHSPEC restriction in the functions that
-support the new magic. At the same time (s)he has to make sure this
-new feature will be caught at parse_pathspec() in commands that cannot
-handle the new magic in some cases. grepping parse_pathspec() should
-help.
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-sigchain.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-sigchain.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 9e1189ef01..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-sigchain.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,41 +0,0 @@
-sigchain API
-============
-
-Code often wants to set a signal handler to clean up temporary files or
-other work-in-progress when we die unexpectedly. For multiple pieces of
-code to do this without conflicting, each piece of code must remember
-the old value of the handler and restore it either when:
-
- 1. The work-in-progress is finished, and the handler is no longer
- necessary. The handler should revert to the original behavior
- (either another handler, SIG_DFL, or SIG_IGN).
-
- 2. The signal is received. We should then do our cleanup, then chain
- to the next handler (or die if it is SIG_DFL).
-
-Sigchain is a tiny library for keeping a stack of handlers. Your handler
-and installation code should look something like:
-
-------------------------------------------
- void clean_foo_on_signal(int sig)
- {
- clean_foo();
- sigchain_pop(sig);
- raise(sig);
- }
-
- void other_func()
- {
- sigchain_push_common(clean_foo_on_signal);
- mess_up_foo();
- clean_foo();
- }
-------------------------------------------
-
-Handlers are given the typedef of sigchain_fun. This is the same type
-that is given to signal() or sigaction(). It is perfectly reasonable to
-push SIG_DFL or SIG_IGN onto the stack.
-
-You can sigchain_push and sigchain_pop individual signals. For
-convenience, sigchain_push_common will push the handler onto the stack
-for many common signals.
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-submodule-config.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-submodule-config.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index c409559b86..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-submodule-config.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,66 +0,0 @@
-submodule config cache API
-==========================
-
-The submodule config cache API allows to read submodule
-configurations/information from specified revisions. Internally
-information is lazily read into a cache that is used to avoid
-unnecessary parsing of the same .gitmodules files. Lookups can be done by
-submodule path or name.
-
-Usage
------
-
-To initialize the cache with configurations from the worktree the caller
-typically first calls `gitmodules_config()` to read values from the
-worktree .gitmodules and then to overlay the local git config values
-`parse_submodule_config_option()` from the config parsing
-infrastructure.
-
-The caller can look up information about submodules by using the
-`submodule_from_path()` or `submodule_from_name()` functions. They return
-a `struct submodule` which contains the values. The API automatically
-initializes and allocates the needed infrastructure on-demand. If the
-caller does only want to lookup values from revisions the initialization
-can be skipped.
-
-If the internal cache might grow too big or when the caller is done with
-the API, all internally cached values can be freed with submodule_free().
-
-Data Structures
----------------
-
-`struct submodule`::
-
- This structure is used to return the information about one
- submodule for a certain revision. It is returned by the lookup
- functions.
-
-Functions
----------
-
-`void submodule_free(struct repository *r)`::
-
- Use these to free the internally cached values.
-
-`int parse_submodule_config_option(const char *var, const char *value)`::
-
- Can be passed to the config parsing infrastructure to parse
- local (worktree) submodule configurations.
-
-`const struct submodule *submodule_from_path(const unsigned char *treeish_name, const char *path)`::
-
- Given a tree-ish in the superproject and a path, return the
- submodule that is bound at the path in the named tree.
-
-`const struct submodule *submodule_from_name(const unsigned char *treeish_name, const char *name)`::
-
- The same as above but lookup by name.
-
-Whenever a submodule configuration is parsed in `parse_submodule_config_option`
-via e.g. `gitmodules_config()`, it will overwrite the null_sha1 entry.
-So in the normal case, when HEAD:.gitmodules is parsed first and then overlaid
-with the repository configuration, the null_sha1 entry contains the local
-configuration of a submodule (e.g. consolidated values from local git
-configuration and the .gitmodules file in the worktree).
-
-For an example usage see test-submodule-config.c.
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-trace.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-trace.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index fadb5979c4..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-trace.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,140 +0,0 @@
-trace API
-=========
-
-The trace API can be used to print debug messages to stderr or a file. Trace
-code is inactive unless explicitly enabled by setting `GIT_TRACE*` environment
-variables.
-
-The trace implementation automatically adds `timestamp file:line ... \n` to
-all trace messages. E.g.:
-
-------------
-23:59:59.123456 git.c:312 trace: built-in: git 'foo'
-00:00:00.000001 builtin/foo.c:99 foo: some message
-------------
-
-Data Structures
----------------
-
-`struct trace_key`::
-
- Defines a trace key (or category). The default (for API functions that
- don't take a key) is `GIT_TRACE`.
-+
-E.g. to define a trace key controlled by environment variable `GIT_TRACE_FOO`:
-+
-------------
-static struct trace_key trace_foo = TRACE_KEY_INIT(FOO);
-
-static void trace_print_foo(const char *message)
-{
- trace_printf_key(&trace_foo, "%s", message);
-}
-------------
-+
-Note: don't use `const` as the trace implementation stores internal state in
-the `trace_key` structure.
-
-Functions
----------
-
-`int trace_want(struct trace_key *key)`::
-
- Checks whether the trace key is enabled. Used to prevent expensive
- string formatting before calling one of the printing APIs.
-
-`void trace_disable(struct trace_key *key)`::
-
- Disables tracing for the specified key, even if the environment
- variable was set.
-
-`void trace_printf(const char *format, ...)`::
-`void trace_printf_key(struct trace_key *key, const char *format, ...)`::
-
- Prints a formatted message, similar to printf.
-
-`void trace_argv_printf(const char **argv, const char *format, ...)``::
-
- Prints a formatted message, followed by a quoted list of arguments.
-
-`void trace_strbuf(struct trace_key *key, const struct strbuf *data)`::
-
- Prints the strbuf, without additional formatting (i.e. doesn't
- choke on `%` or even `\0`).
-
-`uint64_t getnanotime(void)`::
-
- Returns nanoseconds since the epoch (01/01/1970), typically used
- for performance measurements.
-+
-Currently there are high precision timer implementations for Linux (using
-`clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC)`) and Windows (`QueryPerformanceCounter`).
-Other platforms use `gettimeofday` as time source.
-
-`void trace_performance(uint64_t nanos, const char *format, ...)`::
-`void trace_performance_since(uint64_t start, const char *format, ...)`::
-
- Prints the elapsed time (in nanoseconds), or elapsed time since
- `start`, followed by a formatted message. Enabled via environment
- variable `GIT_TRACE_PERFORMANCE`. Used for manual profiling, e.g.:
-+
-------------
-uint64_t start = getnanotime();
-/* code section to measure */
-trace_performance_since(start, "foobar");
-------------
-+
-------------
-uint64_t t = 0;
-for (;;) {
- /* ignore */
- t -= getnanotime();
- /* code section to measure */
- t += getnanotime();
- /* ignore */
-}
-trace_performance(t, "frotz");
-------------
-
-Bugs & Caveats
---------------
-
-GIT_TRACE_* environment variables can be used to tell Git to show
-trace output to its standard error stream. Git can often spawn a pager
-internally to run its subcommand and send its standard output and
-standard error to it.
-
-Because GIT_TRACE_PERFORMANCE trace is generated only at the very end
-of the program with atexit(), which happens after the pager exits, it
-would not work well if you send its log to the standard error output
-and let Git spawn the pager at the same time.
-
-As a work around, you can for example use '--no-pager', or set
-GIT_TRACE_PERFORMANCE to another file descriptor which is redirected
-to stderr, or set GIT_TRACE_PERFORMANCE to a file specified by its
-absolute path.
-
-For example instead of the following command which by default may not
-print any performance information:
-
-------------
-GIT_TRACE_PERFORMANCE=2 git log -1
-------------
-
-you may want to use:
-
-------------
-GIT_TRACE_PERFORMANCE=2 git --no-pager log -1
-------------
-
-or:
-
-------------
-GIT_TRACE_PERFORMANCE=3 3>&2 git log -1
-------------
-
-or:
-
-------------
-GIT_TRACE_PERFORMANCE=/path/to/log/file git log -1
-------------
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-trace2.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-trace2.txt
index 17490b528c..4f07ceadcb 100644
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-trace2.txt
+++ b/Documentation/technical/api-trace2.txt
@@ -188,261 +188,36 @@ purposes.
=== Basic Command Messages
These are concerned with the lifetime of the overall git process.
-
-`void trace2_initialize_clock()`::
-
- Initialize the Trace2 start clock and nothing else. This should
- be called at the very top of main() to capture the process start
- time and reduce startup order dependencies.
-
-`void trace2_initialize()`::
-
- Determines if any Trace2 Targets should be enabled and
- initializes the Trace2 facility. This includes setting up the
- Trace2 thread local storage (TLS).
-+
-This function emits a "version" message containing the version of git
-and the Trace2 protocol.
-+
-This function should be called from `main()` as early as possible in
-the life of the process after essential process initialization.
-
-`int trace2_is_enabled()`::
-
- Returns 1 if Trace2 is enabled (at least one target is
- active).
-
-`void trace2_cmd_start(int argc, const char **argv)`::
-
- Emits a "start" message containing the process command line
- arguments.
-
-`int trace2_cmd_exit(int exit_code)`::
-
- Emits an "exit" message containing the process exit-code and
- elapsed time.
-+
-Returns the exit-code.
-
-`void trace2_cmd_error(const char *fmt, va_list ap)`::
-
- Emits an "error" message containing a formatted error message.
-
-`void trace2_cmd_path(const char *pathname)`::
-
- Emits a "cmd_path" message with the full pathname of the
- current process.
+e.g: `void trace2_initialize_clock()`, `void trace2_initialize()`,
+`int trace2_is_enabled()`, `void trace2_cmd_start(int argc, const char **argv)`.
=== Command Detail Messages
These are concerned with describing the specific Git command
after the command line, config, and environment are inspected.
-
-`void trace2_cmd_name(const char *name)`::
-
- Emits a "cmd_name" message with the canonical name of the
- command, for example "status" or "checkout".
-
-`void trace2_cmd_mode(const char *mode)`::
-
- Emits a "cmd_mode" message with a qualifier name to further
- describe the current git command.
-+
-This message is intended to be used with git commands having multiple
-major modes. For example, a "checkout" command can checkout a new
-branch or it can checkout a single file, so the checkout code could
-emit a cmd_mode message of "branch" or "file".
-
-`void trace2_cmd_alias(const char *alias, const char **argv_expansion)`::
-
- Emits an "alias" message containing the alias used and the
- argument expansion.
-
-`void trace2_def_param(const char *parameter, const char *value)`::
-
- Emits a "def_param" message containing a key/value pair.
-+
-This message is intended to report some global aspect of the current
-command, such as a configuration setting or command line switch that
-significantly affects program performance or behavior, such as
-`core.abbrev`, `status.showUntrackedFiles`, or `--no-ahead-behind`.
-
-`void trace2_cmd_list_config()`::
-
- Emits a "def_param" messages for "important" configuration
- settings.
-+
-The environment variable `GIT_TRACE2_CONFIG_PARAMS` or the `trace2.configParams`
-config value can be set to a
-list of patterns of important configuration settings, for example:
-`core.*,remote.*.url`. This function will iterate over all config
-settings and emit a "def_param" message for each match.
-
-`void trace2_cmd_set_config(const char *key, const char *value)`::
-
- Emits a "def_param" message for a new or updated key/value
- pair IF `key` is considered important.
-+
-This is used to hook into `git_config_set()` and catch any
-configuration changes and update a value previously reported by
-`trace2_cmd_list_config()`.
-
-`void trace2_def_repo(struct repository *repo)`::
-
- Registers a repository with the Trace2 layer. Assigns a
- unique "repo-id" to `repo->trace2_repo_id`.
-+
-Emits a "worktree" messages containing the repo-id and the worktree
-pathname.
-+
-Region and data messages (described later) may refer to this repo-id.
-+
-The main/top-level repository will have repo-id value 1 (aka "r1").
-+
-The repo-id field is in anticipation of future in-proc submodule
-repositories.
+e.g: `void trace2_cmd_name(const char *name)`,
+`void trace2_cmd_mode(const char *mode)`.
=== Child Process Messages
These are concerned with the various spawned child processes,
including shell scripts, git commands, editors, pagers, and hooks.
-`void trace2_child_start(struct child_process *cmd)`::
-
- Emits a "child_start" message containing the "child-id",
- "child-argv", and "child-classification".
-+
-Before calling this, set `cmd->trace2_child_class` to a name
-describing the type of child process, for example "editor".
-+
-This function assigns a unique "child-id" to `cmd->trace2_child_id`.
-This field is used later during the "child_exit" message to associate
-it with the "child_start" message.
-+
-This function should be called before spawning the child process.
-
-`void trace2_child_exit(struct child_proess *cmd, int child_exit_code)`::
-
- Emits a "child_exit" message containing the "child-id",
- the child's elapsed time and exit-code.
-+
-The reported elapsed time includes the process creation overhead and
-time spend waiting for it to exit, so it may be slightly longer than
-the time reported by the child itself.
-+
-This function should be called after reaping the child process.
-
-`int trace2_exec(const char *exe, const char **argv)`::
-
- Emits a "exec" message containing the "exec-id" and the
- argv of the new process.
-+
-This function should be called before calling one of the `exec()`
-variants, such as `execvp()`.
-+
-This function returns a unique "exec-id". This value is used later
-if the exec() fails and a "exec-result" message is necessary.
-
-`void trace2_exec_result(int exec_id, int error_code)`::
-
- Emits a "exec_result" message containing the "exec-id"
- and the error code.
-+
-On Unix-based systems, `exec()` does not return if successful.
-This message is used to indicate that the `exec()` failed and
-that the current program is continuing.
+e.g: `void trace2_child_start(struct child_process *cmd)`.
=== Git Thread Messages
These messages are concerned with Git thread usage.
-`void trace2_thread_start(const char *thread_name)`::
-
- Emits a "thread_start" message.
-+
-The `thread_name` field should be a descriptive name, such as the
-unique name of the thread-proc. A unique "thread-id" will be added
-to the name to uniquely identify thread instances.
-+
-Region and data messages (described later) may refer to this thread
-name.
-+
-This function must be called by the thread-proc of the new thread
-(so that TLS data is properly initialized) and not by the caller
-of `pthread_create()`.
-
-`void trace2_thread_exit()`::
-
- Emits a "thread_exit" message containing the thread name
- and the thread elapsed time.
-+
-This function must be called by the thread-proc before it returns
-(so that the correct TLS data is used and cleaned up). It should
-not be called by the caller of `pthread_join()`.
+e.g: `void trace2_thread_start(const char *thread_name)`.
=== Region and Data Messages
These are concerned with recording performance data
-over regions or spans of code.
-
-`void trace2_region_enter(const char *category, const char *label, const struct repository *repo)`::
-
-`void trace2_region_enter_printf(const char *category, const char *label, const struct repository *repo, const char *fmt, ...)`::
-
-`void trace2_region_enter_printf_va(const char *category, const char *label, const struct repository *repo, const char *fmt, va_list ap)`::
-
- Emits a thread-relative "region_enter" message with optional
- printf string.
-+
-This function pushes a new region nesting stack level on the current
-thread and starts a clock for the new stack frame.
-+
-The `category` field is an arbitrary category name used to classify
-regions by feature area, such as "status" or "index". At this time
-it is only just printed along with the rest of the message. It may
-be used in the future to filter messages.
-+
-The `label` field is an arbitrary label used to describe the activity
-being started, such as "read_recursive" or "do_read_index".
-+
-The `repo` field, if set, will be used to get the "repo-id", so that
-recursive operations can be attributed to the correct repository.
-
-`void trace2_region_leave(const char *category, const char *label, const struct repository *repo)`::
-
-`void trace2_region_leave_printf(const char *category, const char *label, const struct repository *repo, const char *fmt, ...)`::
-
-`void trace2_region_leave_printf_va(const char *category, const char *label, const struct repository *repo, const char *fmt, va_list ap)`::
-
- Emits a thread-relative "region_leave" message with optional
- printf string.
-+
-This function pops the region nesting stack on the current thread
-and reports the elapsed time of the stack frame.
-+
-The `category`, `label`, and `repo` fields are the same as above.
-The `category` and `label` do not need to match the corresponding
-"region_enter" message, but it makes the data stream easier to
-understand.
-
-`void trace2_data_string(const char *category, const struct repository *repo, const char *key, const char * value)`::
-
-`void trace2_data_intmax(const char *category, const struct repository *repo, const char *key, intmax value)`::
-
-`void trace2_data_json(const char *category, const struct repository *repo, const char *key, const struct json_writer *jw)`::
-
- Emits a region- and thread-relative "data" or "data_json" message.
-+
-This is a key/value pair message containing information about the
-current thread, region stack, and repository. This could be used
-to print the number of files in a directory during a multi-threaded
-recursive tree walk.
-
-`void trace2_printf(const char *fmt, ...)`::
-
-`void trace2_printf_va(const char *fmt, va_list ap)`::
+over regions or spans of code. e.g:
+`void trace2_region_enter(const char *category, const char *label, const struct repository *repo)`.
- Emits a region- and thread-relative "printf" message.
+Refer to trace2.h for details about all trace2 functions.
== Trace2 Target Formats
diff --git a/Documentation/technical/api-tree-walking.txt b/Documentation/technical/api-tree-walking.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 7962e32854..0000000000
--- a/Documentation/technical/api-tree-walking.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,149 +0,0 @@
-tree walking API
-================
-
-The tree walking API is used to traverse and inspect trees.
-
-Data Structures
----------------
-
-`struct name_entry`::
-
- An entry in a tree. Each entry has a sha1 identifier, pathname, and
- mode.
-
-`struct tree_desc`::
-
- A semi-opaque data structure used to maintain the current state of the
- walk.
-+
-* `buffer` is a pointer into the memory representation of the tree. It always
-points at the current entry being visited.
-
-* `size` counts the number of bytes left in the `buffer`.
-
-* `entry` points to the current entry being visited.
-
-`struct traverse_info`::
-
- A structure used to maintain the state of a traversal.
-+
-* `prev` points to the traverse_info which was used to descend into the
-current tree. If this is the top-level tree `prev` will point to
-a dummy traverse_info.
-
-* `name` is the entry for the current tree (if the tree is a subtree).
-
-* `pathlen` is the length of the full path for the current tree.
-
-* `conflicts` can be used by callbacks to maintain directory-file conflicts.
-
-* `fn` is a callback called for each entry in the tree. See Traversing for more
-information.
-
-* `data` can be anything the `fn` callback would want to use.
-
-* `show_all_errors` tells whether to stop at the first error or not.
-
-Initializing
-------------
-
-`init_tree_desc`::
-
- Initialize a `tree_desc` and decode its first entry. The buffer and
- size parameters are assumed to be the same as the buffer and size
- members of `struct tree`.
-
-`fill_tree_descriptor`::
-
- Initialize a `tree_desc` and decode its first entry given the
- object ID of a tree. Returns the `buffer` member if the latter
- is a valid tree identifier and NULL otherwise.
-
-`setup_traverse_info`::
-
- Initialize a `traverse_info` given the pathname of the tree to start
- traversing from.
-
-Walking
--------
-
-`tree_entry`::
-
- Visit the next entry in a tree. Returns 1 when there are more entries
- left to visit and 0 when all entries have been visited. This is
- commonly used in the test of a while loop.
-
-`tree_entry_len`::
-
- Calculate the length of a tree entry's pathname. This utilizes the
- memory structure of a tree entry to avoid the overhead of using a
- generic strlen().
-
-`update_tree_entry`::
-
- Walk to the next entry in a tree. This is commonly used in conjunction
- with `tree_entry_extract` to inspect the current entry.
-
-`tree_entry_extract`::
-
- Decode the entry currently being visited (the one pointed to by
- `tree_desc's` `entry` member) and return the sha1 of the entry. The
- `pathp` and `modep` arguments are set to the entry's pathname and mode
- respectively.
-
-`get_tree_entry`::
-
- Find an entry in a tree given a pathname and the sha1 of a tree to
- search. Returns 0 if the entry is found and -1 otherwise. The third
- and fourth parameters are set to the entry's sha1 and mode
- respectively.
-
-Traversing
-----------
-
-`traverse_trees`::
-
- Traverse `n` number of trees in parallel. The `fn` callback member of
- `traverse_info` is called once for each tree entry.
-
-`traverse_callback_t`::
- The arguments passed to the traverse callback are as follows:
-+
-* `n` counts the number of trees being traversed.
-
-* `mask` has its nth bit set if something exists in the nth entry.
-
-* `dirmask` has its nth bit set if the nth tree's entry is a directory.
-
-* `entry` is an array of size `n` where the nth entry is from the nth tree.
-
-* `info` maintains the state of the traversal.
-
-+
-Returning a negative value will terminate the traversal. Otherwise the
-return value is treated as an update mask. If the nth bit is set the nth tree
-will be updated and if the bit is not set the nth tree entry will be the
-same in the next callback invocation.
-
-`make_traverse_path`::
-
- Generate the full pathname of a tree entry based from the root of the
- traversal. For example, if the traversal has recursed into another
- tree named "bar" the pathname of an entry "baz" in the "bar"
- tree would be "bar/baz".
-
-`traverse_path_len`::
-
- Calculate the length of a pathname returned by `make_traverse_path`.
- This utilizes the memory structure of a tree entry to avoid the
- overhead of using a generic strlen().
-
-`strbuf_make_traverse_path`::
-
- Convenience wrapper to `make_traverse_path` into a strbuf.
-
-Authors
--------
-
-Written by Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> and Linus Torvalds
-<torvalds@linux-foundation.org>