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2020-04-28Merge branch 'jx/atomic-push'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-27/+5
"git push --atomic" used to show failures for refs that weren't even pushed, which has been corrected. * jx/atomic-push: transport-helper: new method reject_atomic_push() transport-helper: mark failure for atomic push send-pack: mark failure of atomic push properly t5543: never report what we do not push send-pack: fix inconsistent porcelain output
2020-04-17transport-helper: new method reject_atomic_push()Libravatar Jiang Xin1-26/+3
Add new method in transport-helper to reject all references if any reference is failed for atomic push. This method is reused in "send-pack.c" and "transport-helper.c", one for SSH, git and file protocols, and the other for HTTP protocol. Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-04-17send-pack: mark failure of atomic push properlyLibravatar Jiang Xin1-0/+2
When pushing with SSH or other smart protocol, references are validated by function `check_to_send_update()` before they are sent in commands to `send_pack()` of "receve-pack". For atomic push, if a reference is rejected after the validation, only references pushed by user should be marked as failure, instead of report failure on all remote references. Commit v2.22.0-1-g3bca1e7f9f (transport-helper: enforce atomic in push_refs_with_push, 2019-07-11) wanted to fix report issue of HTTP protocol, but marked all remote references failure for atomic push. In order to fix the issue of status report for SSH or other built-in smart protocol, revert part of that commit and add additional status for function `atomic_push_failure()`. The additional status for it except the "REF_STATUS_EXPECTING_REPORT" status are: - REF_STATUS_NONE : Not marked as "REF_STATUS_EXPECTING_REPORT" yet. - REF_STATUS_OK : Assume OK for dryrun or status_report is disabled. This fix won't resolve the issue of status report in transport-helper for HTTP or other protocols, and breaks test case in t5541. Will fix it in additional commit. Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-04-17send-pack: fix inconsistent porcelain outputLibravatar Jiang Xin1-4/+3
The porcelain output of a failed `git-push` command is inconsistent for different protocols. For example, the following `git-push` command may fail due to the failure of the `pre-receive` hook. git push --porcelain origin HEAD:refs/heads/master For SSH protocol, the porcelain output does not end with a "Done" message: To <URL/of/upstream.git> ! HEAD:refs/heads/master [remote rejected] (pre-receive hook declined) While for HTTP protocol, the porcelain output does end with a "Done" message: To <URL/of/upstream.git> ! HEAD:refs/heads/master [remote rejected] (pre-receive hook declined) Done The following code at the end of function `send_pack()` indicates that `send_pack()` should not return an error if some references are rejected in porcelain mode. int send_pack(...) ... ... if (args->porcelain) return 0; for (ref = remote_refs; ref; ref = ref->next) { switch (ref->status) { case REF_STATUS_NONE: case REF_STATUS_UPTODATE: case REF_STATUS_OK: break; default: return -1; } } return 0; } So if atomic push failed, must check the porcelain mode before return an error. And `receive_status()` should not return an error for a failed updated reference, because `send_pack()` will check them instead. Signed-off-by: Jiang Xin <zhiyou.jx@alibaba-inc.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-30oid_array: rename source file from sha1-arrayLibravatar Jeff King1-1/+1
We renamed the actual data structure in 910650d2f8 (Rename sha1_array to oid_array, 2017-03-31), but the file is still called sha1-array. Besides being slightly confusing, it makes it more annoying to grep for leftover occurrences of "sha1" in various files, because the header is included in so many places. Let's complete the transition by renaming the source and header files (and fixing up a few comment references). I kept the "-" in the name, as that seems to be our style; cf. fc1395f4a4 (sha1_file.c: rename to use dash in file name, 2018-04-10). We also have oidmap.h and oidset.h without any punctuation, but those are "struct oidmap" and "struct oidset" in the code. We _could_ make this "oidarray" to match, but somehow it looks uglier to me because of the length of "array" (plus it would be a very invasive patch for little gain). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2019-12-06Merge branch 'jk/send-pack-check-negative-with-quick'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-1/+3
Performance tweak on "git push" into a repository with many refs that point at objects we have never heard of. * jk/send-pack-check-negative-with-quick: send-pack: use OBJECT_INFO_QUICK to check negative objects
2019-12-01Merge branch 'jk/send-pack-remote-failure'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-4/+4
Error handling after "git push" finishes sending the packdata and waits for the response to the remote side has been improved. * jk/send-pack-remote-failure: send-pack: check remote ref status on pack-objects failure
2019-11-30send-pack: use OBJECT_INFO_QUICK to check negative objectsLibravatar Jeff King1-1/+3
When pushing, we feed pack-objects a list of both positive and negative objects. The positive objects are what we want to send, and the negative objects are what the other side told us they have, which we can use to limit the size of the push. Before passing along a negative object, send_pack() will make sure we actually have it (since we only know about it because the remote mentioned it, not because it's one of our refs). So it's expected that some of these objects will be missing on the local side. But looking for a missing object is more expensive than one that we have: it triggers reprepare_packed_git() to handle a racy repack, plus it has to explore every alternate's loose object tree (which can be slow if you have a lot of them, or have a high-latency filesystem). This isn't usually a big problem, since repositories you're pushing to don't generally have a large number of refs that are unrelated to what the client has. But there's no reason such a setup is wrong, and it currently performs poorly. We can fix this by using OBJECT_INFO_QUICK, which tells the lookup code that we expect objects to be missing. Notably, it will not re-scan the packs, and it will use the loose cache from 61c7711cfe (sha1-file: use loose object cache for quick existence check, 2018-11-12). The downside is that in the rare case that we race with a local repack, we might fail to feed some objects to pack-objects, making the resulting push larger. But we'd never produce an invalid or incorrect push, just a less optimal one. That seems like a reasonable tradeoff, and we already do similar things on the fetch side (e.g., when marking COMPLETE commits). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2019-11-13send-pack: check remote ref status on pack-objects failureLibravatar Jeff King1-4/+4
When we're pushing a pack and our local pack-objects fails, we enter an error code path that does a few things: 1. Set the status of every ref to REF_STATUS_NONE 2. Call receive_unpack_status() to try to get an error report from the other side 3. Return an error to the caller If pack-objects failed because the connection to the server dropped, there's not much more we can do than report the hangup. And indeed, step 2 will try to read a packet from the other side, which will die() in the packet-reading code with "the remote end hung up unexpectedly". But if the connection _didn't_ die, then the most common issue is that the remote index-pack or unpack-objects complained about our pack (we could also have a local pack-objects error, but this ends up being the same; we'd send an incomplete pack and the remote side would complain). In that case we do report the error from the other side (because of step 2), but we fail to say anything further about the refs. The issue is two-fold: - in step 1, the "NONE" status is not "we saw an error, so we have no status". It generally means "this ref did not match our refspecs, so we didn't try to push it". So when we print out the push status table, we won't mention any refs at all! But even if we had a status enum for "pack-objects error", we wouldn't want to blindly set it for every ref. For example, in a non-atomic push we might have rejected some refs already on the client side (e.g., REF_STATUS_REJECT_NODELETE) and we'd want to report that. - in step 2, we read just the unpack status. But receive-pack will also tell us about each ref (usually that it rejected them because of the unpacker error). So a much better strategy is to leave the ref status fields as they are (usually EXPECTING_REPORT) and then actually receive (and print) the full per-ref status. This case is actually covered in the test suite, as t5504.8, which writes a pack that will be rejected by the remote unpack-objects. But it's racy. Because our pack is small, most of the time pack-objects manages to write the whole thing before the remote rejects it, and so it returns success and we print out the errors from the remote. But very occasionally (or when run under --stress) it goes slow enough to see a failure in writing, and git-push reports nothing for the refs. With this patch, the test should behave consistently. There shouldn't be any downside to this approach. If we really did see the connection drop, we'd already die in receive_unpack_status(), and we'll continue to do so. If the connection drops _after_ we get the unpack status but before we see any ref status, we'll still print the remote unpacker error, but will now say "remote end hung up" instead of returning the error up the call-stack. But as discussed, we weren't showing anything more useful than that with the current code. And anyway, that case is quite unlikely (the connection dropping at that point would have to be unrelated to the pack-objects error, because of the ordering of events). In the future we might want to handle packet-read errors ourself instead of dying, which would print a full ref status table even for hangups. But in the meantime, this patch should be a strict improvement. Helped-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2019-10-09send-pack: never fetch when checking exclusionsLibravatar Jonathan Tan1-1/+2
When building the packfile to be sent, send_pack() is given a list of remote refs to be used as exclusions. For each ref, it first checks if the ref exists locally, and if it does, passes it with a "^" prefix to pack-objects. However, in a partial clone, the check may trigger a lazy fetch. The additional commit ancestry information obtained during such fetches may show that certain objects that would have been sent are already known to the server, resulting in a smaller pack being sent. But this is at the cost of fetching from many possibly unrelated refs, and the lazy fetches do not help at all in the typical case where the client is up-to-date with the upstream of the branch being pushed. Ensure that these lazy fetches do not occur. Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2019-02-06Merge branch 'jk/loose-object-cache-oid'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-1/+1
Code clean-up. * jk/loose-object-cache-oid: prefer "hash mismatch" to "sha1 mismatch" sha1-file: avoid "sha1 file" for generic use in messages sha1-file: prefer "loose object file" to "sha1 file" in messages sha1-file: drop has_sha1_file() convert has_sha1_file() callers to has_object_file() sha1-file: convert pass-through functions to object_id sha1-file: modernize loose header/stream functions sha1-file: modernize loose object file functions http: use struct object_id instead of bare sha1 update comment references to sha1_object_info() sha1-file: fix outdated sha1 comment references
2019-01-08convert has_sha1_file() callers to has_object_file()Libravatar Jeff King1-1/+1
The only remaining callers of has_sha1_file() actually have an object_id already. They can use the "object" variant, rather than dereferencing the hash themselves. The code changes here were completely generated by the included coccinelle patch. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2019-01-02pack-protocol.txt: accept error packets in any contextLibravatar Masaya Suzuki1-1/+3
In the Git pack protocol definition, an error packet may appear only in a certain context. However, servers can face a runtime error (e.g. I/O error) at an arbitrary timing. This patch changes the protocol to allow an error packet to be sent instead of any packet. Without this protocol spec change, when a server cannot process a request, there's no way to tell that to a client. Since the server cannot produce a valid response, it would be forced to cut a connection without telling why. With this protocol spec change, the server can be more gentle in this situation. An old client may see these error packets as an unexpected packet, but this is not worse than having an unexpected EOF. Following this protocol spec change, the error packet handling code is moved to pkt-line.c. Implementation wise, this implementation uses pkt-line to communicate with a subprocess. Since this is not a part of Git protocol, it's possible that a packet that is not supposed to be an error packet is mistakenly parsed as an error packet. This error packet handling is enabled only for the Git pack protocol parsing code considering this. Signed-off-by: Masaya Suzuki <masayasuzuki@google.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2019-01-02Use packet_reader instead of packet_read_lineLibravatar Masaya Suzuki1-18/+19
By using and sharing a packet_reader while handling a Git pack protocol request, the same reader option is used throughout the code. This makes it easy to set a reader option to the request parsing code. Signed-off-by: Masaya Suzuki <masayasuzuki@google.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2018-11-05send-pack.c: move async's #ifdef NO_PTHREADS back to run-command.cLibravatar Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy1-3/+2
On systems that do not support multithread, start_async() is implemented with fork(). This implementation details unfortunately leak out at least in send-pack.c [1]. To keep the code base clean of NO_PTHREADS, move the this #ifdef back to run-command.c. The new wrapper function async_with_fork() at least helps suggest that this special "close()" is related to async in fork mode. [1] 09c9957cf7 (send-pack: avoid deadlock when pack-object dies early - 2011-04-25) Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2018-05-18shallow: add repository argument to is_repository_shallowLibravatar Stefan Beller1-3/+3
Add a repository argument to allow callers of is_repository_shallow to be more specific about which repository to handle. This is a small mechanical change; it doesn't change the implementation to handle repositories other than the_repository yet. As with the previous commits, use a macro to catch callers passing a repository other than the_repository at compile time. Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2018-05-16object-store: move object access functions to object-store.hLibravatar Stefan Beller1-0/+1
This should make these functions easier to find and cache.h less overwhelming to read. In particular, this moves: - read_object_file - oid_object_info - write_object_file As a result, most of the codebase needs to #include object-store.h. In this patch the #include is only added to files that would fail to compile otherwise. It would be better to #include wherever identifiers from the header are used. That can happen later when we have better tooling for it. Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2018-03-14send-pack: convert remaining functions to struct object_idLibravatar brian m. carlson1-6/+6
Convert the remaining function, feed_object, to use struct object_id. Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2018-02-08always check for NULL return from packet_read_line()Libravatar Jon Simons1-0/+2
The packet_read_line() function will die if it sees any protocol or socket errors. But it will return NULL for a flush packet; some callers which are not expecting this may dereference NULL if they get an unexpected flush. This would involve the other side breaking protocol, but we should flag the error rather than segfault. Signed-off-by: Jon Simons <jon@jonsimons.org> Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-12-22send-pack: use internal argv_array of struct child_processLibravatar René Scharfe1-19/+9
Avoid a magic number of NULL placeholder values and a magic index by constructing the command line for pack-objects using the embedded argv_array of the child_process. The resulting code is shorter and easier to extend. Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-09-22consistently use "fallthrough" comments in switchesLibravatar Jeff King1-1/+1
Gcc 7 adds -Wimplicit-fallthrough, which can warn when a switch case falls through to the next case. The general idea is that the compiler can't tell if this was intentional or not, so you should annotate any intentional fall-throughs as such, leaving it to complain about any unannotated ones. There's a GNU __attribute__ which can be used for annotation, but of course we'd have to #ifdef it away on non-gcc compilers. Gcc will also recognize specially-formatted comments, which matches our current practice. Let's extend that practice to all of the unannotated sites (which I did look over and verify that they were behaving as intended). Ideally in each case we'd actually give some reasons in the comment about why we're falling through, or what we're falling through to. And gcc does support that with -Wimplicit-fallthrough=2, which relaxes the comment pattern matching to anything that contains "fallthrough" (or a variety of spelling variants). However, this isn't the default for -Wimplicit-fallthrough, nor for -Wextra. In the name of simplicity, it's probably better for us to support the default level, which requires "fallthrough" to be the only thing in the comment (modulo some window dressing like "else" and some punctuation; see the gcc manual for the complete set of patterns). This patch suppresses all warnings due to -Wimplicit-fallthrough. We might eventually want to add that to the DEVELOPER Makefile knob, but we should probably wait until gcc 7 is more widely adopted (since earlier versions will complain about the unknown warning type). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-09-07send-pack: release strbuf on error return in send_pack()Libravatar Rene Scharfe1-1/+4
Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-06-27Spelling fixesLibravatar Ville Skyttä1-1/+1
Signed-off-by: Ville Skyttä <ville.skytta@iki.fi> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-06-15config: don't include config.h by defaultLibravatar Brandon Williams1-0/+1
Stop including config.h by default in cache.h. Instead only include config.h in those files which require use of the config system. Signed-off-by: Brandon Williams <bmwill@google.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-04-19Merge branch 'bc/object-id'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-3/+3
Conversion from unsigned char [40] to struct object_id continues. * bc/object-id: Documentation: update and rename api-sha1-array.txt Rename sha1_array to oid_array Convert sha1_array_for_each_unique and for_each_abbrev to object_id Convert sha1_array_lookup to take struct object_id Convert remaining callers of sha1_array_lookup to object_id Make sha1_array_append take a struct object_id * sha1-array: convert internal storage for struct sha1_array to object_id builtin/pull: convert to struct object_id submodule: convert check_for_new_submodule_commits to object_id sha1_name: convert disambiguate_hint_fn to take object_id sha1_name: convert struct disambiguate_state to object_id test-sha1-array: convert most code to struct object_id parse-options-cb: convert sha1_array_append caller to struct object_id fsck: convert init_skiplist to struct object_id builtin/receive-pack: convert portions to struct object_id builtin/pull: convert portions to struct object_id builtin/diff: convert to struct object_id Convert GIT_SHA1_RAWSZ used for allocation to GIT_MAX_RAWSZ Convert GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ used for allocation to GIT_MAX_HEXSZ Define new hash-size constants for allocating memory
2017-03-31Rename sha1_array to oid_arrayLibravatar brian m. carlson1-2/+2
Since this structure handles an array of object IDs, rename it to struct oid_array. Also rename the accessor functions and the initialization constant. This commit was produced mechanically by providing non-Documentation files to the following Perl one-liners: perl -pi -E 's/struct sha1_array/struct oid_array/g' perl -pi -E 's/\bsha1_array_/oid_array_/g' perl -pi -E 's/SHA1_ARRAY_INIT/OID_ARRAY_INIT/g' Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-03-28sha1-array: convert internal storage for struct sha1_array to object_idLibravatar brian m. carlson1-1/+1
Make the internal storage for struct sha1_array use an array of struct object_id internally. Update the users of this struct which inspect its internals. Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-03-27Merge branch 'sb/push-options-via-transport'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-12/+8
Recently we started passing the "--push-options" through the external remote helper interface; now the "smart HTTP" remote helper understands what to do with the passed information. * sb/push-options-via-transport: remote-curl: allow push options send-pack: send push options correctly in stateless-rpc case
2017-03-22send-pack: send push options correctly in stateless-rpc caseLibravatar Brandon Williams1-12/+8
"git send-pack --stateless-rpc" puts each request in a sequence of pkt-lines followed by a flush-pkt. The push option code forgot about this and sends push options and their terminating delimiter as ordinary pkt-lines that get their length header stripped off by remote-curl before being sent to the server. The result is multiple malformed requests, which the server rejects. Fortunately send-pack --stateless-rpc already is aware of this "pkt-line within pkt-line" framing for the update commands that precede push options. Handle push options the same way. Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Brandon Williams <bmwill@google.com> Reviewed-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-03-07send-pack: report signal death of pack-objectsLibravatar Jeff King1-1/+14
If our pack-objects sub-process dies of a signal, then it likely didn't have a chance to write anything useful to stderr. The user may be left scratching their head why the push failed. Let's detect this situation and write something to stderr. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-03-07send-pack: read "unpack" status even on pack-objects failureLibravatar Jeff King1-0/+8
If the local pack-objects of a push fails, we'll tell the user about it. But one likely cause is that the remote index-pack stopped reading for some reason (because it didn't like our input, or encountered another error). In that case we'd expect the remote to report more details to us via the "unpack ..." status line. However, the current code just hangs up completely, and the user never sees it. Instead, let's call receive_unpack_status(), which will complain on stderr with whatever reason the remote told us. Note that if our pack-objects fails because the connection was severed or the remote just crashed entirely, then our packet_read_line() call may fail with "the remote end hung up unexpectedly". That's OK. It's a more accurate description than what we get now (which is just "some refs failed to push"). This should be safe from any deadlocks. At the point we make this call we'll have closed the writing end of the connection to the server (either by handing it off to a pack-objects which exited, explicitly in the stateless_rpc case, or by doing a half-duplex shutdown for a socket). So there should be no chance that the other side is waiting for the rest of our pack-objects input. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-03-07send-pack: improve unpack-status error messagesLibravatar Jeff King1-2/+2
When the remote tells us that the "unpack" step failed, we show an error message. However, unless you are familiar with the internals of send-pack and receive-pack, it was not clear that this represented an error on the remote side. Let's re-word to make that more obvious. Likewise, when we got an unexpected packet from the other end, we complained with a vague message but did not actually show the packet. Let's fix that. And finally, neither message was marked for translation. The message from the remote probably won't be translated, but there's no reason we can't do better for the local half. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-03-07send-pack: use skip_prefix for parsing unpack statusLibravatar Jeff King1-3/+3
This avoids repeating ourselves, and the use of magic numbers. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-03-07send-pack: extract parsing of "unpack" responseLibravatar Jeff King1-9/+14
After sending the pack, we call receive_status() which gets both the "unpack" line and the ref status. Let's break these into two functions so we can call the first part independently. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-10-12cocci: refactor common patterns to use xstrdup_or_null()Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-2/+1
d64ea0f83b ("git-compat-util: add xstrdup_or_null helper", 2015-01-12) added a handy wrapper that allows us to get a duplicate of a string or NULL if the original is NULL, but a handful of codepath predate its introduction or just weren't aware of it. Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-08-08Merge branch 'rs/use-strbuf-addstr'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-1/+1
* rs/use-strbuf-addstr: use strbuf_addstr() instead of strbuf_addf() with "%s" use strbuf_addstr() for adding constant strings to a strbuf
2016-08-01use strbuf_addstr() for adding constant strings to a strbufLibravatar René Scharfe1-1/+1
Replace uses of strbuf_addf() for adding strings with more lightweight strbuf_addstr() calls. In http-push.c it becomes easier to see what's going on without having to verfiy that the definition of PROPFIND_ALL_REQUEST doesn't contain any format specifiers. Signed-off-by: Rene Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de> Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-07-14push: accept push optionsLibravatar Stefan Beller1-0/+27
This implements everything that is required on the client side to make use of push options from the porcelain push command. Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-06-08send-pack: use buffered I/O to talk to pack-objectsLibravatar Jeff King1-17/+16
We start a pack-objects process and then write all of the positive and negative sha1s to it over a pipe. We do so by formatting each item into a fixed-size buffer and then writing each individually. This has two drawbacks: 1. There's some manual computation of the buffer size, which is not immediately obvious is correct (though it is). 2. We write() once per sha1, which means a lot more system calls than are necessary. We can solve both by wrapping the pipe descriptor in a stdio handle; this is the same technique used by upload-pack when serving fetches. Note that we can also simplify and improve the error handling here. The original detected a single write error and broke out of the loop (presumably to avoid writing the error message over and over), but never actually acted on seeing an error; we just fed truncated input and took whatever pack-objects returned. In practice, this probably didn't matter, as the likely errors would be caused by pack-objects dying (and we'd probably just die with SIGPIPE anyway). But we can easily make this simpler and more robust; the stdio handle keeps an error flag, which we can check at the end. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-20send-pack: isolate sigpipe in demuxer threadLibravatar Jeff King1-0/+1
If we get an error from pack-objects, we may exit send_pack() early, before reading the server's status response. In such a case, we may racily see SIGPIPE from our async demuxer (which is trying to write that status back to us), and we'd prefer to continue pushing the error up the call stack, rather than taking down the whole process with signal death. This is safe to do because our demuxer just calls recv_sideband, whose data writes are all done with write_or_die(), which will notice SIGPIPE. We do also write sideband 2 to stderr, and we would no longer die on SIGPIPE there (if it were piped in the first place, and if the piped program went away). But that's probably a good thing, as it likewise should not abort the push process at all (neither immediately by signal, nor eventually by reporting failure back to the main thread). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2016-04-20send-pack: close demux pipe before finishing async processLibravatar Jeff King1-2/+4
This fixes a deadlock on the client side when pushing a large number of refs from a corrupted repo. There's a reproduction script below, but let's start with a human-readable explanation. The client side of a push goes something like this: 1. Start an async process to demux sideband coming from the server. 2. Run pack-objects to send the actual pack, and wait for its status via finish_command(). 3. If pack-objects failed, abort immediately. 4. If pack-objects succeeded, read the per-ref status from the server, which is actually coming over a pipe from the demux process started in step 1. We run finish_async() to wait for and clean up the demux process in two places. In step 3, if we see an error, we want it to end early. And after step 4, it should be done writing any data and we are just cleaning it up. Let's focus on the error case first. We hand the output descriptor to the server over to pack-objects. So by the time it has returned an error to us, it has closed the descriptor and the server has gotten EOF. The server will mark all refs as failed with "unpacker error" and send us back the status for each (followed by EOF). This status goes to the demuxer thread, which relays it over a pipe to the main thread. But the main thread never even tries reading the status. It's trying to bail because of the pack-objects error, and is waiting for the demuxer thread to finish. If there are a small number of refs, that's OK; the demuxer thread writes into the pipe buffer, sees EOF from the server, and quits. But if there are a large number of refs, it may block on write() back to the main thread, leading to a deadlock (the main thread is waiting for the demuxer to finish, the demuxer is waiting for the main thread to read). We can break this deadlock by closing the pipe between the demuxer and the main thread before calling finish_async(). Then the demuxer gets a write() error and exits. The non-error case usually just works, because we will have read all of the data from the other side. We do close demux.out already, but we only do so _after_ calling finish_async(). This is OK because there shouldn't be any more data coming from the server. But technically we've only read to a flush packet, and a broken or malicious server could be sending more cruft. In such a case, we would hit the same deadlock. Closing the pipe first doesn't affect the normal case, and means that for a cruft-sending server, we'll notice a write() error rather than deadlocking. Note that when write() sees this error, we'll actually deliver SIGPIPE to the thread, which will take down the whole process (unless we're compiled with NO_PTHREADS). This isn't ideal, but it's an improvement over the status quo, which is deadlocking. And SIGPIPE handling in async threads is a bigger problem that we can deal with separately. A simple reproduction for the error case is below. It's technically racy (we could exit the main process and take down the async thread with us before it even reads the status), though in practice it seems to fail pretty consistently. git init repo && cd repo && # make some commits; we need two so we can simulate corruption # in the history later. git commit --allow-empty -m one && one=$(git rev-parse HEAD) && git commit --allow-empty -m two && two=$(git rev-parse HEAD) && # now make a ton of refs; our goal here is to overflow the pipe buffer # when reporting the ref status, which will cause the demuxer to block # on write() for i in $(seq 20000); do echo "create refs/heads/this-is-a-really-long-branch-name-$i $two" done | git update-ref --stdin && # now make a corruption in the history such that pack-objects will fail rm -vf .git/objects/$(echo $one | sed 's}..}&/}') && # and then push the result git init --bare dst.git && git push --mirror dst.git Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-11-20Convert struct ref to use object_id.Libravatar brian m. carlson1-8/+8
Use struct object_id in three fields in struct ref and convert all the necessary places that use it. Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2015-08-31Merge branch 'db/push-sign-if-asked'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-7/+36
The client side codepaths in "git push" have been cleaned up and the user can request to perform an optional "signed push", i.e. sign only when the other end accepts signed push. * db/push-sign-if-asked: push: add a config option push.gpgSign for default signed pushes push: support signing pushes iff the server supports it builtin/send-pack.c: use parse_options API config.c: rename git_config_maybe_bool_text and export it as git_parse_maybe_bool transport: remove git_transport_options.push_cert gitremote-helpers.txt: document pushcert option Documentation/git-send-pack.txt: document --signed Documentation/git-send-pack.txt: wrap long synopsis line Documentation/git-push.txt: document when --signed may fail
2015-08-19push: support signing pushes iff the server supports itLibravatar Dave Borowitz1-7/+36
Add a new flag --sign=true (or --sign=false), which means the same thing as the original --signed (or --no-signed). Give it a third value --sign=if-asked to tell push and send-pack to send a push certificate if and only if the server advertised a push cert nonce. If not, warn the user that their push may not be as secure as they thought. Signed-off-by: Dave Borowitz <dborowitz@google.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-05-05Merge branch 'bc/object-id'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-1/+1
Identify parts of the code that knows that we use SHA-1 hash to name our objects too much, and use (1) symbolic constants instead of hardcoded 20 as byte count and/or (2) use struct object_id instead of unsigned char [20] for object names. * bc/object-id: apply: convert threeway_stage to object_id patch-id: convert to use struct object_id commit: convert parts to struct object_id diff: convert struct combine_diff_path to object_id bulk-checkin.c: convert to use struct object_id zip: use GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ for trailers archive.c: convert to use struct object_id bisect.c: convert leaf functions to use struct object_id define utility functions for object IDs define a structure for object IDs
2015-04-20Merge branch 'jc/push-cert'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-0/+23
The "git push --signed" protocol extension did not limit what the "nonce" that is a server-chosen string can contain or how long it can be, which was unnecessarily lax. Limit both the length and the alphabet to a reasonably small space that can still have enough entropy. * jc/push-cert: push --signed: tighten what the receiving end can ask to sign
2015-04-02Merge branch 'sb/atomic-push'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-1/+1
* sb/atomic-push: send-pack: unify error messages for unsupported capabilities
2015-04-02push --signed: tighten what the receiving end can ask to signLibravatar Junio C Hamano1-0/+23
Instead of blindly trusting the receiving side to give us a sensible nonce to sign, limit the length (max 256 bytes) and the alphabet (alnum and a few selected punctuations, enough to encode in base64) that can be used in nonce. Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-04-02send-pack: unify error messages for unsupported capabilitiesLibravatar Ralf Thielow1-1/+1
If --signed is not supported, the error message names the remote "receiving end". If --atomic is not supported, the error message names the remote "server". Unify the naming to "receiving end" as we're in the context of "push". Signed-off-by: Ralf Thielow <ralf.thielow@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-03-13commit: convert parts to struct object_idLibravatar brian m. carlson1-1/+1
Convert struct commit_graft and necessary local parts of commit.c. Also, convert several constants based on the hex length of an SHA-1 to use GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ, and move several magic constants into variables for readability. Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>