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2020-04-22Merge branch 'mt/test-lib-bundled-short-options'Libravatar Junio C Hamano2-15/+49
Minor test usability improvement. * mt/test-lib-bundled-short-options: test-lib: allow short options to be bundled
2020-04-22Merge branch 'js/test-junit-finalization-fix'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-0/+1
Test fix. * js/test-junit-finalization-fix: tests(junit-xml): avoid invalid XML
2020-04-22Merge branch 'js/tests-gpg-integration-on-windows'Libravatar Junio C Hamano3-52/+77
Enable tests that require GnuPG on Windows. * js/tests-gpg-integration-on-windows: tests: increase the verbosity of the GPG-related prereqs tests: turn GPG, GPGSM and RFC1991 into lazy prereqs tests: do not let lazy prereqs inside `test_expect_*` turn off tracing t/lib-gpg.sh: stop pretending to be a stand-alone script tests(gpg): allow the gpg-agent to start on Windows
2020-04-22Merge branch 'jk/t3419-drop-expensive-tests'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-72/+42
Test update. * jk/t3419-drop-expensive-tests: t3419: drop EXPENSIVE tests
2020-04-22Merge branch 'ar/test-style-fixes'Libravatar Junio C Hamano13-49/+49
Style fixes. * ar/test-style-fixes: t: fix whitespace around && t9500: remove spaces after redirect operators
2020-04-19Sync with 2.26.2Libravatar Junio C Hamano3-19/+275
2020-04-19Git 2.26.2Libravatar Jonathan Nieder3-19/+275
This merges up the security fix from v2.17.5. Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19Git 2.25.4Libravatar Jonathan Nieder3-19/+275
This merges up the security fix from v2.17.5. Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19Git 2.24.3Libravatar Jonathan Nieder3-19/+275
This merges up the security fix from v2.17.5. Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19Git 2.23.3Libravatar Jonathan Nieder3-19/+275
This merges up the security fix from v2.17.5. Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19Git 2.22.4Libravatar Jonathan Nieder3-19/+275
This merges up the security fix from v2.17.5. Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19Git 2.21.3Libravatar Jonathan Nieder3-19/+275
This merges up the security fix from v2.17.5. Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19Git 2.20.4Libravatar Jonathan Nieder3-19/+275
This merges up the security fix from v2.17.5. Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19Git 2.19.5Libravatar Jonathan Nieder3-19/+275
This merges up the security fix from v2.17.5. Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19Git 2.18.4Libravatar Jonathan Nieder3-19/+275
This merges up the security fix from v2.17.5. Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19fsck: reject URL with empty host in .gitmodulesLibravatar Jonathan Nieder1-0/+32
Git's URL parser interprets https:///example.com/repo.git to have no host and a path of "example.com/repo.git". Curl, on the other hand, internally redirects it to https://example.com/repo.git. As a result, until "credential: parse URL without host as empty host, not unset", tricking a user into fetching from such a URL would cause Git to send credentials for another host to example.com. Teach fsck to block and detect .gitmodules files using such a URL to prevent sharing them with Git versions that are not yet protected. A relative URL in a .gitmodules file could also be used to trigger this. The relative URL resolver used for .gitmodules does not normalize sequences of slashes and can follow ".." components out of the path part and to the host part of a URL, meaning that such a relative URL can be used to traverse from a https://foo.example.com/innocent superproject to a https:///attacker.example.com/exploit submodule. Fortunately, redundant extra slashes in .gitmodules are rare, so we can catch this by detecting one after a leading sequence of "./" and "../" components. Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2020-04-19credential: treat URL with empty scheme as invalidLibravatar Jonathan Nieder2-0/+41
Until "credential: refuse to operate when missing host or protocol", Git's credential handling code interpreted URLs with empty scheme to mean "give me credentials matching this host for any protocol". Luckily libcurl does not recognize such URLs (it tries to look for a protocol named "" and fails). Just in case that changes, let's reject them within Git as well. This way, credential_from_url is guaranteed to always produce a "struct credential" with protocol and host set. Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19credential: treat URL without scheme as invalidLibravatar Jonathan Nieder2-5/+34
libcurl permits making requests without a URL scheme specified. In this case, it guesses the URL from the hostname, so I can run git ls-remote http::ftp.example.com/path/to/repo and it would make an FTP request. Any user intentionally using such a URL is likely to have made a typo. Unfortunately, credential_from_url is not able to determine the host and protocol in order to determine appropriate credentials to send, and until "credential: refuse to operate when missing host or protocol", this resulted in another host's credentials being leaked to the named host. Teach credential_from_url_gently to consider such a URL to be invalid so that fsck can detect and block gitmodules files with such URLs, allowing server operators to avoid serving them to downstream users running older versions of Git. This also means that when such URLs are passed on the command line, Git will print a clearer error so affected users can switch to the simpler URL that explicitly specifies the host and protocol they intend. One subtlety: .gitmodules files can contain relative URLs, representing a URL relative to the URL they were cloned from. The relative URL resolver used for .gitmodules can follow ".." components out of the path part and past the host part of a URL, meaning that such a relative URL can be used to traverse from a https://foo.example.com/innocent superproject to a https::attacker.example.com/exploit submodule. Fortunately a leading ':' in the first path component after a series of leading './' and '../' components is unlikely to show up in other contexts, so we can catch this by detecting that pattern. Reported-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2020-04-19credential: die() when parsing invalid urlsLibravatar Jeff King1-2/+1
When we try to initialize credential loading by URL and find that the URL is invalid, we set all fields to NULL in order to avoid acting on malicious input. Later when we request credentials, we diagonse the erroneous input: fatal: refusing to work with credential missing host field This is problematic in two ways: - The message doesn't tell the user *why* we are missing the host field, so they can't tell from this message alone how to recover. There can be intervening messages after the original warning of bad input, so the user may not have the context to put two and two together. - The error only occurs when we actually need to get a credential. If the URL permits anonymous access, the only encouragement the user gets to correct their bogus URL is a quiet warning. This is inconsistent with the check we perform in fsck, where any use of such a URL as a submodule is an error. When we see such a bogus URL, let's not try to be nice and continue without helpers. Instead, die() immediately. This is simpler and obviously safe. And there's very little chance of disrupting a normal workflow. It's _possible_ that somebody has a legitimate URL with a raw newline in it. It already wouldn't work with credential helpers, so this patch steps that up from an inconvenience to "we will refuse to work with it at all". If such a case does exist, we should figure out a way to work with it (especially if the newline is only in the path component, which we normally don't even pass to helpers). But until we see a real report, we're better off being defensive. Reported-by: Carlo Arenas <carenas@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19fsck: convert gitmodules url to URL passed to curlLibravatar Jonathan Nieder1-0/+29
In 07259e74ec1 (fsck: detect gitmodules URLs with embedded newlines, 2020-03-11), git fsck learned to check whether URLs in .gitmodules could be understood by the credential machinery when they are handled by git-remote-curl. However, the check is overbroad: it checks all URLs instead of only URLs that would be passed to git-remote-curl. In principle a git:// or file:/// URL does not need to follow the same conventions as an http:// URL; in particular, git:// and file:// protocols are not succeptible to issues in the credential API because they do not support attaching credentials. In the HTTP case, the URL in .gitmodules does not always match the URL that would be passed to git-remote-curl and the credential machinery: Git's URL syntax allows specifying a remote helper followed by a "::" delimiter and a URL to be passed to it, so that git ls-remote http::https://example.com/repo.git invokes git-remote-http with https://example.com/repo.git as its URL argument. With today's checks, that distinction does not make a difference, but for a check we are about to introduce (for empty URL schemes) it will matter. .gitmodules files also support relative URLs. To ensure coverage for the https based embedded-newline attack, urldecode and check them directly for embedded newlines. Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
2020-04-19credential: refuse to operate when missing host or protocolLibravatar Jeff King1-8/+26
The credential helper protocol was designed to be very flexible: the fields it takes as input are treated as a pattern, and any missing fields are taken as wildcards. This allows unusual things like: echo protocol=https | git credential reject to delete all stored https credentials (assuming the helpers themselves treat the input that way). But when helpers are invoked automatically by Git, this flexibility works against us. If for whatever reason we don't have a "host" field, then we'd match _any_ host. When you're filling a credential to send to a remote server, this is almost certainly not what you want. Prevent this at the layer that writes to the credential helper. Add a check to the credential API that the host and protocol are always passed in, and add an assertion to the credential_write function that speaks credential helper protocol to be doubly sure. There are a few ways this can be triggered in practice: - the "git credential" command passes along arbitrary credential parameters it reads from stdin. - until the previous patch, when the host field of a URL is empty, we would leave it unset (rather than setting it to the empty string) - a URL like "example.com/foo.git" is treated by curl as if "http://" was present, but our parser sees it as a non-URL and leaves all fields unset - the recent fix for URLs with embedded newlines blanks the URL but otherwise continues. Rather than having the desired effect of looking up no credential at all, many helpers will return _any_ credential Our earlier test for an embedded newline didn't catch this because it only checked that the credential was cleared, but didn't configure an actual helper. Configuring the "verbatim" helper in the test would show that it is invoked (it's obviously a silly helper which doesn't look at its input, but the point is that it shouldn't be run at all). Since we're switching this case to die(), we don't need to bother with a helper. We can see the new behavior just by checking that the operation fails. We'll add new tests covering partial input as well (these can be triggered through various means with url-parsing, but it's simpler to just check them directly, as we know we are covered even if the url parser changes behavior in the future). [jn: changed to die() instead of logging and showing a manual username/password prompt] Reported-by: Carlo Arenas <carenas@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19credential: parse URL without host as empty host, not unsetLibravatar Jeff King1-0/+17
We may feed a URL like "cert:///path/to/cert.pem" into the credential machinery to get the key for a client-side certificate. That credential has no hostname field, which is about to be disallowed (to avoid confusion with protocols where a helper _would_ expect a hostname). This means as of the next patch, credential helpers won't work for unlocking certs. Let's fix that by doing two things: - when we parse a url with an empty host, set the host field to the empty string (asking only to match stored entries with an empty host) rather than NULL (asking to match _any_ host). - when we build a cert:// credential by hand, similarly assign an empty string It's the latter that is more likely to impact real users in practice, since it's what's used for http connections. But we don't have good infrastructure to test it. The url-parsing version will help anybody using git-credential in a script, and is easy to test. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Reviewed-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19t0300: use more realistic inputsLibravatar Jeff King1-4/+85
Many of the tests in t0300 give partial inputs to git-credential, omitting a protocol or hostname. We're checking only high-level things like whether and how helpers are invoked at all, and we don't care about specific hosts. However, in preparation for tightening up the rules about when we're willing to run a helper, let's start using input that's a bit more realistic: pretend as if http://example.com is being examined. This shouldn't change the point of any of the tests, but do note we have to adjust the expected output to accommodate this (filling a credential will repeat back the protocol/host fields to stdout, and the helper debug messages and askpass prompt will change on stderr). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Reviewed-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-19t0300: make "quit" helper more realisticLibravatar Jeff King1-3/+13
We test a toy credential helper that writes "quit=1" and confirms that we stop running other helpers. However, that helper is unrealistic in that it does not bother to read its stdin at all. For now we don't send any input to it, because we feed git-credential a blank credential. But that will change in the next patch, which will cause this test to racily fail, as git-credential will get SIGPIPE writing to the helper rather than exiting because it was asked to. Let's make this one-off helper more like our other sample helpers, and have it source the "dump" script. That will read stdin, fixing the SIGPIPE problem. But it will also write what it sees to stderr. We can make the test more robust by checking that output, which confirms that we do run the quit helper, don't run any other helpers, and exit for the reason we expected. Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
2020-04-13Sync with v2.26.1Libravatar Junio C Hamano3-2/+32
2020-03-29Merge branch 'ds/default-pack-use-sparse-to-true'Libravatar Junio C Hamano2-4/+6
The 'pack.useSparse' configuration variable now defaults to 'true', enabling an optimization that has been experimental since Git 2.21. * ds/default-pack-use-sparse-to-true: pack-objects: flip the use of GIT_TEST_PACK_SPARSE config: set pack.useSparse=true by default
2020-03-26Merge branch 'ah/force-pull-rebase-configuration'Libravatar Junio C Hamano2-11/+49
"git pull" learned to warn when no pull.rebase configuration exists, and neither --[no-]rebase nor --ff-only is given (which would result a merge). * ah/force-pull-rebase-configuration: pull: warn if the user didn't say whether to rebase or to merge
2020-03-26Merge branch 'tg/retire-scripted-stash'Libravatar Junio C Hamano2-4/+14
"git stash" has kept an escape hatch to use the scripted version for a few releases, which got stale. It has been removed. * tg/retire-scripted-stash: stash: remove the stash.useBuiltin setting stash: get git_stash_config at the top level
2020-03-26Merge branch 'jc/describe-misnamed-annotated-tag'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-1/+19
When "git describe C" finds an annotated tag with tagname A to be the best name to explain commit C, and the tag is stored in a "wrong" place in the refs/tags hierarchy, e.g. refs/tags/B, the command gave a warning message but used A (not B) to describe C. If C is exactly at the tag, the describe output would be "A", but "git rev-parse A^0" would not be equal as "git rev-parse C^0". The behavior of the command has been changed to use the "long" form i.e. A-0-gOBJECTNAME, which is correctly interpreted by rev-parse. * jc/describe-misnamed-annotated-tag: describe: force long format for a name based on a mislocated tag
2020-03-26Merge branch 'at/rebase-fork-point-regression-fix'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-0/+20
The "--fork-point" mode of "git rebase" regressed when the command was rewritten in C back in 2.20 era, which has been corrected. * at/rebase-fork-point-regression-fix: rebase: --fork-point regression fix
2020-03-26Merge branch 'bc/filter-process'Libravatar Junio C Hamano2-30/+174
Provide more information (e.g. the object of the tree-ish in which the blob being converted appears, in addition to its path, which has already been given) to smudge/clean conversion filters. * bc/filter-process: t0021: test filter metadata for additional cases builtin/reset: compute checkout metadata for reset builtin/rebase: compute checkout metadata for rebases builtin/clone: compute checkout metadata for clones builtin/checkout: compute checkout metadata for checkouts convert: provide additional metadata to filters convert: permit passing additional metadata to filter processes builtin/checkout: pass branch info down to checkout_worktree
2020-03-26Merge branch 'hi/gpg-prefer-check-signature'Libravatar Junio C Hamano2-0/+128
The code to interface with GnuPG has been refactored. * hi/gpg-prefer-check-signature: gpg-interface: prefer check_signature() for GPG verification t: increase test coverage of signature verification output
2020-03-26Merge branch 'bc/sha-256-part-1-of-4'Libravatar Junio C Hamano7-34/+187
SHA-256 transition continues. * bc/sha-256-part-1-of-4: (22 commits) fast-import: add options for rewriting submodules fast-import: add a generic function to iterate over marks fast-import: make find_marks work on any mark set fast-import: add helper function for inserting mark object entries fast-import: permit reading multiple marks files commit: use expected signature header for SHA-256 worktree: allow repository version 1 init-db: move writing repo version into a function builtin/init-db: add environment variable for new repo hash builtin/init-db: allow specifying hash algorithm on command line setup: allow check_repository_format to read repository format t/helper: make repository tests hash independent t/helper: initialize repository if necessary t/helper/test-dump-split-index: initialize git repository t6300: make hash algorithm independent t6300: abstract away SHA-1-specific constants t: use hash-specific lookup tables to define test constants repository: require a build flag to use SHA-256 hex: add functions to parse hex object IDs in any algorithm hex: introduce parsing variants taking hash algorithms ...
2020-03-26Merge branch 'pb/recurse-submodules-fix'Libravatar Junio C Hamano2-20/+49
Fix "git checkout --recurse-submodules" of a nested submodule hierarchy. * pb/recurse-submodules-fix: t/lib-submodule-update: add test removing nested submodules unpack-trees: check for missing submodule directory in merged_entry unpack-trees: remove outdated description for verify_clean_submodule t/lib-submodule-update: move a test to the right section t/lib-submodule-update: remove outdated test description t7112: remove mention of KNOWN_FAILURE_SUBMODULE_RECURSIVE_NESTED
2020-03-26tests: increase the verbosity of the GPG-related prereqsLibravatar Johannes Schindelin1-14/+14
Especially when debugging a test failure that can only be reproduced in the CI build (e.g. when the developer has no access to a macOS machine other than running the tests on a macOS build agent), output should not be suppressed. In the instance of `hi/gpg-prefer-check-signature`, where one GPG-related test failed for no apparent reason, the entire output of `gpg` and `gpgsm` was suppressed, even in verbose mode, leaving interested readers no clue what was going wrong. Let's fix this by no longer redirecting the output not to `/dev/null`. This is now possible because the affected prereqs were turned into lazy ones (and are therefore evaluated via `test_eval_` which respects the `--verbose` option). Note that we _still_ redirect `stdout` to `/dev/null` for those commands that sign their `stdin`, as the output would be binary (and useless anyway, because the reader would not have anything against which to compare the output). Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-26tests: turn GPG, GPGSM and RFC1991 into lazy prereqsLibravatar Johannes Schindelin1-45/+57
The code to set those prereqs is executed completely outside of any `test_eval_` block. As a consequence, its output had to be suppressed so that it does not clutter the output of a regular test script run. Unfortunately, the output *stays* suppressed even when the `--verbose` option is in effect. This hid important output when debugging why the GPG prereq was not enabled in the Windows part of our CI builds. In preparation for fixing that, let's move all of this code into lazy prereqs. The only slightly tricky part is the global environment variable `GNUPGHOME`. Originally, it was configured only when we verified that there is a `gpg` in the `PATH` that we can use. This is now no longer possible, as lazy prereqs are evaluated in a subshell that changes the working directory to a temporary one. Therefore, we simply _always_ set that environment variable: it does not hurt anything because it does not indicate the presence of a working GPG. Side note: it was quite tempting to use a hack that is possible because we do not validate what is passed to `test_lazy_prereq` (and it is therefore possible to "break out" of the lazy_prereq subshell: test_lazy_prereq GPG '...) && GNUPGHOME=... && (...' However, this is rather tricksy hobbitses code, and the current patch is _much_ easier to understand. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-26tests: do not let lazy prereqs inside `test_expect_*` turn off tracingLibravatar Johannes Schindelin2-2/+17
The `test_expect_*` functions use `test_eval_` and so does `test_run_lazy_prereq_`. If tracing is enabled via the `-x` option, `test_eval_` turns on tracing while evaluating the code block, and turns it off directly after it. This is unwanted for nested invocations. One somewhat surprising example of this is when running a test that calls `test_i18ngrep`: that function requires the `C_LOCALE_OUTPUT` prereq, and that prereq is a lazy one, so it is evaluated via `test_eval_`, the command tracing is turned off, and the test case continues to run _without tracing the commands_. Another somewhat surprising example is when one lazy prereq depends on another lazy prereq: the former will call `test_have_prereq` with the latter one, which in turn calls `test_eval_` and -- you guessed it -- tracing (if enabled) will be turned off _before_ returning to evaluating the other lazy prereq. As we will introduce just such a scenario with the GPG, GPGSM and RFC1991 prereqs, let's fix that by introducing a variable that keeps track of the current trace level: nested `test_eval_` calls will increment and then decrement the level, and only when it reaches 0, the tracing will _actually_ be turned off. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-26t/lib-gpg.sh: stop pretending to be a stand-alone scriptLibravatar Johannes Schindelin1-2/+0
It makes no sense to call `./lib-gpg.sh`. Therefore the hash-bang line is unnecessary. There are other similar instances in `t/`, but they are too far from the context of the enclosing patch series, so they will be addressed separately. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-25Merge branch 'pw/advise-rebase-skip'Libravatar Junio C Hamano4-20/+149
The mechanism to prevent "git commit" from making an empty commit or amending during an interrupted cherry-pick was broken during the rewrite of "git rebase" in C, which has been corrected. * pw/advise-rebase-skip: commit: give correct advice for empty commit during a rebase commit: encapsulate determine_whence() for sequencer commit: use enum value for multiple cherry-picks sequencer: write CHERRY_PICK_HEAD for reword and edit cherry-pick: check commit error messages cherry-pick: add test for `--skip` advice in `git commit` t3404: use test_cmp_rev
2020-03-25Merge branch 'am/real-path-fix'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-1/+4
The real_path() convenience function can easily be misused; with a bit of code refactoring in the callers' side, its use has been eliminated. * am/real-path-fix: get_superproject_working_tree(): return strbuf real_path_if_valid(): remove unsafe API real_path: remove unsafe API set_git_dir: fix crash when used with real_path()
2020-03-25Merge branch 'hw/advise-ng'Libravatar Junio C Hamano5-0/+57
Revamping of the advise API to allow more systematic enumeration of advice knobs in the future. * hw/advise-ng: tag: use new advice API to check visibility advice: revamp advise API advice: change "setupStreamFailure" to "setUpstreamFailure" advice: extract vadvise() from advise()
2020-03-25Git 2.26.1Libravatar Junio C Hamano3-2/+32
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-25tests(gpg): allow the gpg-agent to start on WindowsLibravatar Johannes Schindelin1-1/+1
In Git for Windows' SDK, we use the MSYS2 version of OpenSSH, meaning that the `gpg-agent` will fail horribly when being passed a `--homedir` that contains colons. Previously, we did pass the Windows version of the absolute path, though, which starts in the drive letter followed by, you guessed it, a colon. Let's use the same trick found elsewhere in our test suite where `$PWD` is used to refer to the pseudo-Unix path (which works only within the MSYS2 Bash/OpenSSH/Perl/etc, as opposed to `$(pwd)` which refers to the Windows path that `git.exe` understands, too). Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-25test-lib: allow short options to be bundledLibravatar Matheus Tavares2-15/+49
When debugging a test (or a set of tests), it's common to execute it with some combination of short options, such as: $ ./txxx-testname.sh -d -x -i In cases like this, CLIs usually allow the short options to be bundled in a single argument, for convenience and agility. Let's add this feature to test-lib, allowing the above command to be run as: $ ./txxx-testname.sh -dxi (or any other permutation, e.g. '-ixd') Note: Short options that require an argument can also be used in a bundle, in any position. So, for example, '-r 5 -x', '-xr 5' and '-rx 5' are all valid and equivalent. A special case would be having a bundle with more than one of such options. To keep things simple, this case is not allowed for now. This shouldn't be a major limitation, though, as the only short option that requires an argument today is '-r'. And concatenating '-r's as in '-rr 5 6' would probably not be very practical: its unbundled format would be '-r 5 -r 6', for which test-lib currently considers only the last argument. Therefore, if '-rr 5 6' were to be allowed, it would have the same effect as just typing '-r 6'. Note: the test-lib currently doesn't support '-r5', as an alternative for '-r 5', so the former is not supported in bundles as well. Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Matheus Tavares <matheus.bernardino@usp.br> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-23tests(junit-xml): avoid invalid XMLLibravatar Johannes Schindelin1-0/+1
When a test case is run in a subshell, we finalize the JUnit-style XML when said subshell exits. But then we continue to write into that XML as if nothing had happened. This leads to Azure Pipelines' Publish Test Results task complaining: Failed to read /home/vsts/work/1/s/t/out/TEST-t0000-basic.xml. Error : Unexpected end tag. Line 110, position 5. And indeed, the resulting XML is incorrect. Let's "re-open" the XML in such a case, i.e. remove the previously added closing tags. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-22t: fix whitespace around &&Libravatar Andrei Rybak13-16/+16
Add missing spaces before '&&' and switch tabs around '&&' to spaces. Also fix the space after redirection operator in t3701 while we're here. These issues were found using `git grep '[^ ]&&$'` and `git grep -P '&&\t' t/`. Signed-off-by: Andrei Rybak <rybak.a.v@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-22t9500: remove spaces after redirect operatorsLibravatar Andrei Rybak1-35/+35
For shell scripts, the usual convention is for there to be no space after redirection operators, (e.g. `>file`, not `> file`). Remove these spaces wherever they appear. Signed-off-by: Andrei Rybak <rybak.a.v@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-22t3419: drop EXPENSIVE testsLibravatar Jeff King1-71/+41
When t3419 was originally written, it was designed to run a smaller test for correctness, and then the same test with a larger number of patches for performance. But it seems unlikely the latter was helping us: - it was marked with EXPENSIVE, so hardly anybody ran it anyway - there's no indication that it was more likely to find bugs than the smaller case (the commit message isn't very helpful, but the original cover letter describes it as: "The first patch adds correctness and (optional) performance tests". - the timing results are shown only via test_debug(). So also not run unless the user says "-d", and then not provided in any machine-readable form. If we're interested in performance regressions, a script in t/perf would be more appropriate. I didn't add one here, because it's not at all clear to me that what the script is timing is even all that interesting. Let's simplify the script by dropping the EXPENSIVE run. That in turn lets us drop the do_tests() wrapper, which lets us consistently use single-quotes for our test snippets. And we can drop the useless test_debug() timings, as well as their run() helper. And finally, while we're here, we can replace the count() helper with the standard test_seq(). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2020-03-21Merge branch 'en/rebase-backend'Libravatar Junio C Hamano1-1/+1
Test fix. * en/rebase-backend: t3419: prevent failure when run with EXPENSIVE
2020-03-20t3419: prevent failure when run with EXPENSIVELibravatar brian m. carlson1-1/+1
This test runs a function which itself runs several assertions. The last of these assertions cleans up the .git/rebase-apply directory, since when run with EXPENSIVE set, the function is invoked a second time to run the same tests with a larger data set. However, as of 2ac0d6273f ("rebase: change the default backend from "am" to "merge"", 2020-02-15), the default backend of rebase has changed, and cleaning up the rebase-apply directory has no effect: it no longer exists, since we're using rebase-merge instead. Since we don't really care which rebase backend is in use, let's just use the command "git rebase --quit", which will do the right thing regardless. Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>