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-rwxr-xr-xt/t7415-submodule-names.sh194
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diff --git a/t/t7415-submodule-names.sh b/t/t7415-submodule-names.sh
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+#!/bin/sh
+
+test_description='check handling of .. in submodule names
+
+Exercise the name-checking function on a variety of names, and then give a
+real-world setup that confirms we catch this in practice.
+'
+. ./test-lib.sh
+. "$TEST_DIRECTORY"/lib-pack.sh
+
+test_expect_success 'check names' '
+ cat >expect <<-\EOF &&
+ valid
+ valid/with/paths
+ EOF
+
+ git submodule--helper check-name >actual <<-\EOF &&
+ valid
+ valid/with/paths
+
+ ../foo
+ /../foo
+ ..\foo
+ \..\foo
+ foo/..
+ foo/../
+ foo\..
+ foo\..\
+ foo/../bar
+ EOF
+
+ test_cmp expect actual
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'create innocent subrepo' '
+ git init innocent &&
+ git -C innocent commit --allow-empty -m foo
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'submodule add refuses invalid names' '
+ test_must_fail \
+ git submodule add --name ../../modules/evil "$PWD/innocent" evil
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'add evil submodule' '
+ git submodule add "$PWD/innocent" evil &&
+
+ mkdir modules &&
+ cp -r .git/modules/evil modules &&
+ write_script modules/evil/hooks/post-checkout <<-\EOF &&
+ echo >&2 "RUNNING POST CHECKOUT"
+ EOF
+
+ git config -f .gitmodules submodule.evil.update checkout &&
+ git config -f .gitmodules --rename-section \
+ submodule.evil submodule.../../modules/evil &&
+ git add modules &&
+ git commit -am evil
+'
+
+# This step seems like it shouldn't be necessary, since the payload is
+# contained entirely in the evil submodule. But due to the vagaries of the
+# submodule code, checking out the evil module will fail unless ".git/modules"
+# exists. Adding another submodule (with a name that sorts before "evil") is an
+# easy way to make sure this is the case in the victim clone.
+test_expect_success 'add other submodule' '
+ git submodule add "$PWD/innocent" another-module &&
+ git add another-module &&
+ git commit -am another
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'clone evil superproject' '
+ git clone --recurse-submodules . victim >output 2>&1 &&
+ ! grep "RUNNING POST CHECKOUT" output
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'fsck detects evil superproject' '
+ test_must_fail git fsck
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'transfer.fsckObjects detects evil superproject (unpack)' '
+ rm -rf dst.git &&
+ git init --bare dst.git &&
+ git -C dst.git config transfer.fsckObjects true &&
+ test_must_fail git push dst.git HEAD
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'transfer.fsckObjects detects evil superproject (index)' '
+ rm -rf dst.git &&
+ git init --bare dst.git &&
+ git -C dst.git config transfer.fsckObjects true &&
+ git -C dst.git config transfer.unpackLimit 1 &&
+ test_must_fail git push dst.git HEAD
+'
+
+# Normally our packs contain commits followed by trees followed by blobs. This
+# reverses the order, which requires backtracking to find the context of a
+# blob. We'll start with a fresh gitmodules-only tree to make it simpler.
+test_expect_success 'create oddly ordered pack' '
+ git checkout --orphan odd &&
+ git rm -rf --cached . &&
+ git add .gitmodules &&
+ git commit -m odd &&
+ {
+ pack_header 3 &&
+ pack_obj $(git rev-parse HEAD:.gitmodules) &&
+ pack_obj $(git rev-parse HEAD^{tree}) &&
+ pack_obj $(git rev-parse HEAD)
+ } >odd.pack &&
+ pack_trailer odd.pack
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'transfer.fsckObjects handles odd pack (unpack)' '
+ rm -rf dst.git &&
+ git init --bare dst.git &&
+ test_must_fail git -C dst.git unpack-objects --strict <odd.pack
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'transfer.fsckObjects handles odd pack (index)' '
+ rm -rf dst.git &&
+ git init --bare dst.git &&
+ test_must_fail git -C dst.git index-pack --strict --stdin <odd.pack
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'index-pack --strict works for non-repo pack' '
+ rm -rf dst.git &&
+ git init --bare dst.git &&
+ cp odd.pack dst.git &&
+ test_must_fail git -C dst.git index-pack --strict odd.pack 2>output &&
+ # Make sure we fail due to bad gitmodules content, not because we
+ # could not read the blob in the first place.
+ grep gitmodulesName output
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'fsck detects symlinked .gitmodules file' '
+ git init symlink &&
+ (
+ cd symlink &&
+
+ # Make the tree directly to avoid index restrictions.
+ #
+ # Because symlinks store the target as a blob, choose
+ # a pathname that could be parsed as a .gitmodules file
+ # to trick naive non-symlink-aware checking.
+ tricky="[foo]bar=true" &&
+ content=$(git hash-object -w ../.gitmodules) &&
+ target=$(printf "$tricky" | git hash-object -w --stdin) &&
+ {
+ printf "100644 blob $content\t$tricky\n" &&
+ printf "120000 blob $target\t.gitmodules\n"
+ } | git mktree &&
+
+ # Check not only that we fail, but that it is due to the
+ # symlink detector; this grep string comes from the config
+ # variable name and will not be translated.
+ test_must_fail git fsck 2>output &&
+ grep gitmodulesSymlink output
+ )
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'fsck detects non-blob .gitmodules' '
+ git init non-blob &&
+ (
+ cd non-blob &&
+
+ # As above, make the funny tree directly to avoid index
+ # restrictions.
+ mkdir subdir &&
+ cp ../.gitmodules subdir/file &&
+ git add subdir/file &&
+ git commit -m ok &&
+ git ls-tree HEAD | sed s/subdir/.gitmodules/ | git mktree &&
+
+ test_must_fail git fsck 2>output &&
+ grep gitmodulesBlob output
+ )
+'
+
+test_expect_success 'fsck detects corrupt .gitmodules' '
+ git init corrupt &&
+ (
+ cd corrupt &&
+
+ echo "[broken" >.gitmodules &&
+ git add .gitmodules &&
+ git commit -m "broken gitmodules" &&
+
+ git fsck 2>output &&
+ grep gitmodulesParse output &&
+ test_i18ngrep ! "bad config" output
+ )
+'
+
+test_done