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Test clean-up.
* ab/detox-gettext-tests:
tests: remove all uses of test_i18cmp
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When "git pack-objects" makes a literal copy of a part of existing
packfile using the reachability bitmaps, its update to the progress
meter was broken.
* jk/pack-objects-bitmap-progress-fix:
pack-objects: update "nr_seen" progress based on pack-reused count
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A bit of code clean-up and a lot of test clean-up around userdiff
area.
* ab/userdiff-tests:
blame tests: simplify userdiff driver test
blame tests: don't rely on t/t4018/ directory
userdiff: remove support for "broken" tests
userdiff tests: list builtin drivers via test-tool
userdiff tests: explicitly test "default" pattern
userdiff: add and use for_each_userdiff_driver()
userdiff style: normalize pascal regex declaration
userdiff style: declare patterns with consistent style
userdiff style: re-order drivers in alphabetical order
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Userdiff patterns for "Scheme" has been added.
* ar/userdiff-scheme:
userdiff: add support for Scheme
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Plug the ort merge backend throughout the rest of the system, and
start testing it as a replacement for the recursive backend.
* en/ort-readiness:
Add testing with merge-ort merge strategy
t6423: mark remaining expected failure under merge-ort as such
Revert "merge-ort: ignore the directory rename split conflict for now"
merge-recursive: add a bunch of FIXME comments documenting known bugs
merge-ort: write $GIT_DIR/AUTO_MERGE whenever we hit a conflict
t: mark several submodule merging tests as fixed under merge-ort
merge-ort: implement CE_SKIP_WORKTREE handling with conflicted entries
t6428: new test for SKIP_WORKTREE handling and conflicts
merge-ort: support subtree shifting
merge-ort: let renormalization change modify/delete into clean delete
merge-ort: have ll_merge() use a special attr_index for renormalization
merge-ort: add a special minimal index just for renormalization
merge-ort: use STABLE_QSORT instead of QSORT where required
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"git apply" now takes "--3way" and "--cached" at the same time, and
work and record results only in the index.
* jz/apply-3way-cached:
git-apply: allow simultaneous --cached and --3way options
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"git apply --3way" has always been "to fall back to 3-way merge
only when straight application fails". Swap the order of falling
back so that 3-way is always attempted first (only when the option
is given, of course) and then straight patch application is used as
a fallback when it fails.
* jz/apply-run-3way-first:
git-apply: try threeway first when "--3way" is used
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Usage message fix for a test helper.
* cc/test-helper-bloom-usage-fix:
test-bloom: fix missing 'bloom' from usage string
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Clean-up codepaths that implements "git send-email --validate"
option and improves the message from it.
* ab/send-email-validate-errors:
git-send-email: improve --validate error output
git-send-email: refactor duplicate $? checks into a function
git-send-email: test full --validate output
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A configuration variable has been added to force tips of certain
refs to be given a reachability bitmap.
* tb/pack-preferred-tips-to-give-bitmap:
builtin/pack-objects.c: respect 'pack.preferBitmapTips'
t/helper/test-bitmap.c: initial commit
pack-bitmap: add 'test_bitmap_commits()' helper
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A NULL-dereference bug has been corrected in an error codepath in
"git for-each-ref", "git branch --list" etc.
* jk/ref-filter-segfault-fix:
ref-filter: fix NULL check for parse object failure
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Finish the removal I started in 1108cea7f8e (tests: remove most uses
of test_i18ncmp, 2021-02-11). At that time the function wasn't removed
due to disruption with in-flight changes, remove the occurrences that
have landed since then.
As of writing this there are no test_i18ncmp uses between "master" and
"seen", so let's also remove the function to finally put it to rest.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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When serving a clone or fetch with bitmaps, after deciding which objects
need to be sent our "pack reuse" mechanism kicks in: we try to send
more-or-less verbatim a bunch of objects from the beginning of the
bitmapped packfile without even adding them to the to_pack.objects
array.
After deciding which objects will be in the "reused" portion, we update
nr_result to account for those, and then trigger display_progress() to
show the user (who is undoubtedly dazzled that we managed to enumerate
so many objects so quickly).
But then something confusing happens: the "Enumerating objects" progress
meter jumps _backwards_, counting up from zero the number of objects we
actually add into to_pack.objects.
This worked correctly once upon a time, but was broken in 5af050437a
(pack-objects: show some progress when counting kept objects,
2018-04-15), when the latter half of that progress meter switched to
using a separate nr_seen counter, rather than nr_result. Nobody noticed
for two reasons:
- prior to the pack-reuse fixes from a14aebeac3 (Merge branch
'jk/packfile-reuse-cleanup', 2020-02-14), the reuse code almost
never kicked in anyway
- the output looks _kind of_ correct. The "backwards" moment is hard
to catch, because we overwrite the old progress number with the new
one, and the larger number is displayed only for a second. So unless
you look at that exact second, you just see the much smaller value,
counting up to the number of non-reused objects (though of course if
you catch it in stderr, or look at GIT_TRACE_PACKET from a server
with bitmaps, you can see both values).
This smaller output isn't wrong per se, but isn't counting what we ever
intended to. We should give the user the whole number of objects we
considered (which, as per 5af050437a's original purpose, is already
_not_ a count of what goes into to_pack.objects). The follow-on
"Counting objects" meter shows the actual number of objects we feed into
that array.
We can easily fix this by bumping (and showing) nr_seen for the
pack-reused objects. When the included test is run without this patch,
the second pack-objects invocation produces "Enumerating objects: 1" to
show the one loose object, even though the resulting pack has hundreds
of objects in it. With it, we jump to "Enumerating objects: 674" after
deciding on reuse, and then "675" when we add in the loose object.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Add a diff driver for Scheme-like languages which recognizes top level
and local `define` forms, whether it is a function definition, binding,
syntax definition or a user-defined `define-xyzzy` form.
Also supports R6RS `library` forms, `module` forms along with class and
struct declarations used in Racket (PLT Scheme).
Alternate "def" syntax such as those in Gerbil Scheme are also
supported, like defstruct, defsyntax and so on.
The rationale for picking `define` forms for the hunk headers is because
it is usually the only significant form for defining the structure of
the program, and it is a common pattern for schemers to have local
function definitions to hide their visibility, so it is not only the top
level `define`'s that are of interest. Schemers also extend the language
with macros to provide their own define forms (for example, something
like a `define-test-suite`) which is also captured in the hunk header.
Since it is common practice to extend syntax with variants of a form
like `module+`, `class*` etc, those have been supported as well.
The word regex is a best-effort attempt to conform to R7RS[1] valid
identifiers, symbols and numbers.
[1] https://small.r7rs.org/attachment/r7rs.pdf (section 2.1)
Signed-off-by: Atharva Raykar <raykar.ath@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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The ort merge backend has been optimized by skipping irrelevant
renames.
* en/ort-perf-batch-9:
diffcore-rename: avoid doing basename comparisons for irrelevant sources
merge-ort: skip rename detection entirely if possible
merge-ort: use relevant_sources to filter possible rename sources
merge-ort: precompute whether directory rename detection is needed
merge-ort: introduce wrappers for alternate tree traversal
merge-ort: add data structures for an alternate tree traversal
merge-ort: precompute subset of sources for which we need rename detection
diffcore-rename: enable filtering possible rename sources
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"git cherry-pick/revert" with or without "--[no-]edit" did not spawn
the editor as expected (e.g. "revert --no-edit" after a conflict
still asked to edit the message), which has been corrected.
* en/sequencer-edit-upon-conflict-fix:
sequencer: fix edit handling for cherry-pick and revert messages
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"git clone --reject-shallow" option fails the clone as soon as we
notice that we are cloning from a shallow repository.
* ll/clone-reject-shallow:
builtin/clone.c: add --reject-shallow option
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An on-disk reverse-index to map the in-pack location of an object
back to its object name across multiple packfiles is introduced.
* tb/reverse-midx:
midx.c: improve cache locality in midx_pack_order_cmp()
pack-revindex: write multi-pack reverse indexes
pack-write.c: extract 'write_rev_file_order'
pack-revindex: read multi-pack reverse indexes
Documentation/technical: describe multi-pack reverse indexes
midx: make some functions non-static
midx: keep track of the checksum
midx: don't free midx_name early
midx: allow marking a pack as preferred
t/helper/test-read-midx.c: add '--show-objects'
builtin/multi-pack-index.c: display usage on unrecognized command
builtin/multi-pack-index.c: don't enter bogus cmd_mode
builtin/multi-pack-index.c: split sub-commands
builtin/multi-pack-index.c: define common usage with a macro
builtin/multi-pack-index.c: don't handle 'progress' separately
builtin/multi-pack-index.c: inline 'flags' with options
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Simplify the test added in 9466e3809d (blame: enable funcname blaming
with userdiff driver, 2020-11-01) to use the --author support recently
added in 999cfc4f45 (test-lib functions: add --author support to
test_commit, 2021-01-12).
We also did not need the full fortran-external-function content. Let's
cut it down to just the important parts.
I'm modifying it to demonstrate that the fortran-specific userdiff
function is in effect by adding "DO NOT MATCH ..." and "AS THE ..."
lines surrounding the "RIGHT" one.
This is to check that we're using the userdiff "fortran" driver, as
opposed to the default driver which would match on those lines as part
of the general heuristic of matching a line that doesn't begin with
whitespace.
The test had also been leaving behind a .gitattributes file for later
tests to possibly trip over, let's clean it up with
"test_when_finished".
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Refactor a test added in 9466e3809d (blame: enable funcname blaming
with userdiff driver, 2020-11-01) so that the blame tests don't rely
on stealing the contents of "t/t4018/fortran-external-function".
I have another patch series that'll possibly (or not) refactor that
file, but having this test inter-dependency makes things simple in any
case by making this test more readable.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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There have been no "broken" tests since 75c3b6b2e8 (userdiff: improve
Fortran xfuncname regex, 2020-08-12). Let's remove the test support
for them.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Change the userdiff test to list the builtin drivers via the
test-tool, using the new for_each_userdiff_driver() API function.
This gets rid of the need to modify this part of the test every time a
new pattern is added, see 2ff6c34612 (userdiff: support Bash,
2020-10-22) and 09dad9256a (userdiff: support Markdown, 2020-05-02)
for two recent examples.
I only need the "list-builtin-drivers "argument here, but let's add
"list-custom-drivers" and "list-drivers" too, just because it's easy.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Since 122aa6f9c0 (diff: introduce diff.<driver>.binary, 2008-10-05)
the internals of the userdiff.c code have understood a "default" name,
which is invoked as userdiff_find_by_name("default") and present in
the "builtin_drivers" struct. Let's test for this special case.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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"git apply" does not allow "--cached" and "--3way" to be used
together, since "--3way" writes conflict markers into the working
tree.
Allow "git apply" to accept "--cached" and "--3way" at the same
time. When a single file auto-resolves cleanly, the result is
placed in the index at stage #0 and the command exits with 0 status.
For a file that has a conflict which cannot be cleanly
auto-resolved, the original contents from common ancestor (stage
conflict at the content level, and the command exists with non-zero
status, because there is no place (like the working tree) to leave a
half-resolved merge for the user to resolve.
The user can use `git diff` to view the contents of the conflict, or
`git checkout -m -- .` to regenerate the conflict markers in the
working directory.
Don't attempt rerere in this case since it depends on conflict
markers written to file for its database storage and lookup. There
would be two main changes required to get rerere working:
1. Allow the rerere api to accept in memory object rather than
files, which would allow us to pass in the conflict markers
contained in the result from ll_merge().
2. Rerere can't write to the working directory, so it would have to
apply the result to cache stage #0 directly. A flag would be
needed to control this.
Signed-off-by: Jerry Zhang <jerry@skydio.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Optimize "rev-list --use-bitmap-index --objects" corner case that
uses negative tags as the stopping points.
* ps/pack-bitmap-optim:
pack-bitmap: avoid traversal of objects referenced by uninteresting tag
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"git commit" learned "--trailer <key>[=<value>]" option; together
with the interpret-trailers command, this will make it easier to
support custom trailers.
* zh/commit-trailer:
commit: add --trailer option
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The apply_fragments() method of "git apply"
can silently apply patches incorrectly if
a file has repeating contents. In these
cases a three-way merge is capable of applying
it correctly in more situations, and will
show a conflict rather than applying it
incorrectly. However, because the patches
apply "successfully" using apply_fragments(),
git will never fall back to the merge, even
if the "--3way" flag is used, and the user has
no way to ensure correctness by forcing the
three-way merge method.
Change the behavior so that when "--3way" is used,
git will always try the three-way merge first and
will only fall back to apply_fragments() in cases
where blobs are not available or some other error
(but not in the case of a merge conflict).
Since user-facing results will be different,
this has backwards compatibility implications
for users depending on the old behavior. In
addition, the three-way merge will be slower
than direct patch application.
Signed-off-by: Jerry Zhang <jerry@skydio.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Improve the output we emit on --validate error to:
* Say "FILE:LINE" instead of "FILE: LINE", to match "grep -n",
compiler error messages etc.
* Don't say "patch contains a" after just mentioning the filename,
just leave it at "FILE:LINE: is longer than[...]. The "contains a"
sounded like we were talking about the file in general, when we're
actually checking it line-by-line.
* Don't just say "rejected by sendemail-validate hook", but combine
that with the system_or_msg() output to say what exit code the hook
died with.
I had an aborted attempt to make the line length checker note all
lines that were longer than the limit. I didn't think that was worth
the effort, but I've left in the testing change to check that we die
as soon as we spot the first long line.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Change the tests that grep substrings out of the output to use a full
test_cmp, in preparation for improving the output.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Like 'get_murmur3' and 'generate_filter', 'get_filter_for_commit' is a
subcommand of `test-tool bloom` not of `test-tool` itself.
Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <chriscool@tuxfamily.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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"git format-patch -v<n>" learned to allow a reroll count that is
not an integer.
* zh/format-patch-fractional-reroll-count:
format-patch: allow a non-integral version numbers
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A simple IPC interface gets introduced to build services like
fsmonitor on top.
* jh/simple-ipc:
t0052: add simple-ipc tests and t/helper/test-simple-ipc tool
simple-ipc: add Unix domain socket implementation
unix-stream-server: create unix domain socket under lock
unix-socket: disallow chdir() when creating unix domain sockets
unix-socket: add backlog size option to unix_stream_listen()
unix-socket: eliminate static unix_stream_socket() helper function
simple-ipc: add win32 implementation
simple-ipc: design documentation for new IPC mechanism
pkt-line: add options argument to read_packetized_to_strbuf()
pkt-line: add PACKET_READ_GENTLE_ON_READ_ERROR option
pkt-line: do not issue flush packets in write_packetized_*()
pkt-line: eliminate the need for static buffer in packet_write_gently()
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When multiple packs in the multi-pack index contain the same object, the
MIDX machinery must make a choice about which pack it associates with
that object. Prior to this patch, the lowest-ordered[1] pack was always
selected.
Pack selection for duplicate objects is relatively unimportant today,
but it will become important for multi-pack bitmaps. This is because we
can only invoke the pack-reuse mechanism when all of the bits for reused
objects come from the reuse pack (in order to ensure that all reused
deltas can find their base objects in the same pack).
To encourage the pack selection process to prefer one pack over another
(the pack to be preferred is the one a caller would like to later use as
a reuse pack), introduce the concept of a "preferred pack". When
provided, the MIDX code will always prefer an object found in a
preferred pack over any other.
No format changes are required to store the preferred pack, since it
will be able to be inferred with a corresponding MIDX bitmap, by looking
up the pack associated with the object in the first bit position (this
ordering is described in detail in a subsequent commit).
[1]: the ordering is specified by MIDX internals; for our purposes we
can consider the "lowest ordered" pack to be "the one with the
most-recent mtime.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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In some scenarios, users may want more history than the repository
offered for cloning, which happens to be a shallow repository, can
give them. But because users don't know it is a shallow repository
until they download it to local, we may want to refuse to clone
this kind of repository, without creating any unnecessary files.
The '--depth=x' option cannot be used as a solution; the source may
be deep enough to give us 'x' commits when cloned, but the user may
later need to deepen the history to arbitrary depth.
Teach '--reject-shallow' option to "git clone" to abort as soon as
we find out that we are cloning from a shallow repository.
Signed-off-by: Li Linchao <lilinchao@oschina.cn>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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After we run parse_object_buffer() to get an object's contents, we try
to check that the return value wasn't NULL. However, since our "struct
object" is a pointer-to-pointer, and we assign like:
*obj = parse_object_buffer(...);
it's not correct to check:
if (!obj)
That will always be true, since our double pointer will continue to
point to the single pointer (which is itself NULL). This is a regression
that was introduced by aa46a0da30 (ref-filter: use oid_object_info() to
get object, 2018-07-17); since that commit we'll segfault on a parse
failure, as we try to look at the NULL object pointer.
There are many ways a parse could fail, but most of them are hard to set
up in the tests (it's easy to make a bogus object, but update-ref will
refuse to point to it). The test here uses a tag which points to a wrong
object type. A parse of just the broken tag object will succeed, but
seeing both tag objects in the same process will lead to a parse error
(since we'll see the pointed-to object as both types).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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When writing a new pack with a bitmap, it is sometimes convenient to
indicate some reference prefixes which should receive priority when
selecting which commits to receive bitmaps.
A truly motivated caller could accomplish this by setting
'pack.islandCore', (since all commits in the core island are similarly
marked as preferred) but this requires callers to opt into using delta
islands, which they may or may not want to do.
Introduce a new multi-valued configuration, 'pack.preferBitmapTips' to
allow callers to specify a list of reference prefixes. All references
which have a prefix contained in 'pack.preferBitmapTips' will mark their
tips as "preferred" in the same way as commits are marked as preferred
for selection by 'pack.islandCore'.
The choice of the verb "prefer" is intentional: marking the NEEDS_BITMAP
flag on an object does *not* guarantee that that object will receive a
bitmap. It merely guarantees that that commit will receive a bitmap over
any *other* commit in the same window by bitmap_writer_select_commits().
The test this patch adds reflects this quirk, too. It only tests that
a commit (which didn't receive bitmaps by default) is selected for
bitmaps after changing the value of 'pack.preferBitmapTips' to include
it. Other commits may lose their bitmaps as a byproduct of how the
selection process works (bitmap_writer_select_commits() ignores the
remainder of a window after seeing a commit with the NEEDS_BITMAP flag).
This configuration will aide in selecting important references for
multi-pack bitmaps, since they do not respect the same pack.islandCore
configuration. (They could, but doing so may be confusing, since it is
packs--not bitmaps--which are influenced by the delta-islands
configuration).
In a fork network repository (one which lists all forks of a given
repository as remotes), for example, it is useful to set
pack.preferBitmapTips to 'refs/remotes/<root>/heads' and
'refs/remotes/<root>/tags', where '<root>' is an opaque identifier
referring to the repository which is at the base of the fork chain.
Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Add a new 'bitmap' test-tool which can be used to list the commits that
have received bitmaps.
In theory, a determined tester could run 'git rev-list --test-bitmap
<commit>' to check if '<commit>' received a bitmap or not, since
'--test-bitmap' exits with a non-zero code when it can't find the
requested commit.
But this is a dubious behavior to rely on, since arguably 'git
rev-list' could continue its object walk outside of which commits are
covered by bitmaps.
This will be used to test the behavior of 'pack.preferBitmapTips', which
will be added in the following patch.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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save_opts() should save any non-default values. It was intended to do
this, but since most options in struct replay_opts default to 0, it only
saved non-zero values. Unfortunately, this does not always work for
options.edit. Roughly speaking, options.edit had a default value of 0
for cherry-pick but a default value of 1 for revert. Make save_opts()
record a value whenever it differs from the default.
options.edit was also overly simplistic; we had more than two cases.
The behavior that previously existed was as follows:
Non-conflict commits Right after Conflict
revert Edit iff isatty(0) Edit (ignore isatty(0))
cherry-pick No edit See above
Specify --edit Edit (ignore isatty(0)) See above
Specify --no-edit (*) See above
(*) Before stopping for conflicts, No edit is the behavior. After
stopping for conflicts, the --no-edit flag is not saved so see
the first two rows.
However, the expected behavior is:
Non-conflict commits Right after Conflict
revert Edit iff isatty(0) Edit iff isatty(0)
cherry-pick No edit Edit iff isatty(0)
Specify --edit Edit (ignore isatty(0)) Edit (ignore isatty(0))
Specify --no-edit No edit No edit
In order to get the expected behavior, we need to change options.edit
to a tri-state: unspecified, false, or true. When specified, we follow
what it says. When unspecified, we need to check whether the current
commit being created is resolving a conflict as well as consulting
options.action and isatty(0). While at it, add a should_edit() utility
function that compresses options.edit down to a boolean based on the
additional information for the non-conflict case.
continue_single_pick() is the function responsible for resuming after
conflict cases, regardless of whether there is one commit being picked
or many. Make this function stop assuming edit behavior in all cases,
so that it can correctly handle !isatty(0) and specific requests to not
edit the commit message.
Reported-by: Renato Botelho <garga@freebsd.org>
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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Testfix.
* ab/detox-gettext-tests:
mktag tests: fix broken "&&" chain
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"git send-email" learned to honor the core.hooksPath configuration.
* rf/send-email-hookspath:
git-send-email: Respect core.hooksPath setting
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Remove the final hint that we used to have a scripted "git rebase".
* ab/remove-rebase-usebuiltin:
rebase: remove transitory rebase.useBuiltin setting & env
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More test coverage over "diff --no-index".
* ab/diff-no-index-tests:
diff --no-index tests: test mode normalization
diff --no-index tests: add test for --exit-code
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Code simplification by removing support for a caller that is long gone.
* ab/read-tree:
tree.h API: simplify read_tree_recursive() signature
tree.h API: expose read_tree_1() as read_tree_at()
archive: stop passing "stage" through read_tree_recursive()
ls-files: refactor away read_tree()
ls-files: don't needlessly pass around stage variable
tree.c API: move read_tree() into builtin/ls-files.c
ls-files tests: add meaningful --with-tree tests
show tests: add test for "git show <tree>"
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When "git checkout" removes a path that does not exist in the
commit it is checking out, it wasn't careful enough not to follow
symbolic links, which has been corrected.
* mt/checkout-remove-nofollow:
checkout: don't follow symlinks when removing entries
symlinks: update comment on threaded_check_leading_path()
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The 'read-midx' helper is used in places like t5319 to display basic
information about a multi-pack-index.
In the next patch, the MIDX writing machinery will learn a new way to
choose from which pack an object is selected when multiple copies of
that object exist.
To disambiguate which pack introduces an object so that this feature can
be tested, add a '--show-objects' option which displays additional
information about each object in the MIDX.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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"git commit --fixup=<commit>", which was to tweak the changes made
to the contents while keeping the original log message intact,
learned "--fixup=(amend|reword):<commit>", that can be used to
tweak both the message and the contents, and only the message,
respectively.
* cm/rebase-i-fixup-amend-reword:
doc/git-commit: add documentation for fixup=[amend|reword] options
t3437: use --fixup with options to create amend! commit
t7500: add tests for --fixup=[amend|reword] options
commit: add a reword suboption to --fixup
commit: add amend suboption to --fixup to create amend! commit
sequencer: export and rename subject_length()
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Follow-up fixes to "cm/rebase-i" topic.
* cm/rebase-i-updates:
doc/rebase -i: fix typo in the documentation of 'fixup' command
t/t3437: fixup the test 'multiple fixup -c opens editor once'
t/t3437: use named commits in the tests
t/t3437: simplify and document the test helpers
t/t3437: check the author date of fixed up commit
t/t3437: remove the dependency of 'expected-message' file from tests
t/t3437: fixup here-docs in the 'setup' test
t/lib-rebase: update the documentation of FAKE_LINES
rebase -i: clarify and fix 'fixup -c' rebase-todo help
sequencer: rename a few functions
sequencer: fixup the datatype of the 'flag' argument
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"rebase -i" is getting cleaned up and also enhanced.
* cm/rebase-i:
doc/git-rebase: add documentation for fixup [-C|-c] options
rebase -i: teach --autosquash to work with amend!
t3437: test script for fixup [-C|-c] options in interactive rebase
rebase -i: add fixup [-C | -c] command
sequencer: use const variable for commit message comments
sequencer: pass todo_item to do_pick_commit()
rebase -i: comment out squash!/fixup! subjects from squash message
sequencer: factor out code to append squash message
rebase -i: only write fixup-message when it's needed
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"git diff-index" codepath has been taught to trust fsmonitor status
to reduce number of lstat() calls.
* nk/diff-index-fsmonitor:
fsmonitor: add perf test for git diff HEAD
fsmonitor: add assertion that fsmonitor is valid to check_removed
fsmonitor: skip lstat deletion check during git diff-index
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GIT_TEST_FAIL_PREREQS is a mechanism to skip test pieces with
prerequisites to catch broken tests that depend on the side effects
of optional pieces, but did not work at all when negative
prerequisites were involved.
* jk/fail-prereq-testfix:
t: annotate !PTHREADS tests with !FAIL_PREREQS
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