This commit introduces the infrastructure for the core.fsync
configuration knob. The repository components we want to sync
are identified by flags so that we can turn on or off syncing
for specific components.
If core.fsyncObjectFiles is set and the core.fsync configuration
also includes FSYNC_COMPONENT_LOOSE_OBJECT, we will fsync any
loose objects. This picks the strictest data integrity behavior
if core.fsync and core.fsyncObjectFiles are set to conflicting values.
This change introduces the currently unused fsync_component
helper, which will be used by a later patch that adds fsyncing to
the refs backend.
Actual configuration and documentation of the fsync components
list are in other patches in the series to separate review of
the underlying mechanism from the policy of how it's configured.
Helped-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Neeraj Singh <neerajsi@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This commit introduces the `core.fsyncMethod` configuration
knob, which can currently be set to `fsync` or `writeout-only`.
The new writeout-only mode attempts to tell the operating system to
flush its in-memory page cache to the storage hardware without issuing a
CACHE_FLUSH command to the storage controller.
Writeout-only fsync is significantly faster than a vanilla fsync on
common hardware, since data is written to a disk-side cache rather than
all the way to a durable medium. Later changes in this patch series will
take advantage of this primitive to implement batching of hardware
flushes.
When git_fsync is called with FSYNC_WRITEOUT_ONLY, it may fail and the
caller is expected to do an ordinary fsync as needed.
On Apple platforms, the fsync system call does not issue a CACHE_FLUSH
directive to the storage controller. This change updates fsync to do
fcntl(F_FULLFSYNC) to make fsync actually durable. We maintain parity
with existing behavior on Apple platforms by setting the default value
of the new core.fsyncMethod option.
Signed-off-by: Neeraj Singh <neerajsi@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Plug (some) memory leaks around parse_date_format().
* ab/date-mode-release:
date API: add and use a date_mode_release()
date API: add basic API docs
date API: provide and use a DATE_MODE_INIT
date API: create a date.h, split from cache.h
cache.h: remove always unused show_date_human() declaration
The build procedure has been taught to notice older version of zlib
and enable our replacement uncompress2() automatically.
* ab/auto-detect-zlib-compress2:
compat: auto-detect if zlib has uncompress2()
Move the declaration of the date.c functions from cache.h, and adjust
the relevant users to include the new date.h header.
The show_ident_date() function belonged in pretty.h (it's defined in
pretty.c), its two users outside of pretty.c didn't strictly need to
include pretty.h, as they get it indirectly, but let's add it to them
anyway.
Similarly, the change to "builtin/{fast-import,show-branch,tag}.c"
isn't needed as far as the compiler is concerned, but since they all
use the "DATE_MODE()" macro we now define in date.h, let's have them
include it.
We could simply include this new header in "cache.h", but as this
change shows these functions weren't common enough to warrant
including in it in the first place. By moving them out of cache.h
changes to this API will no longer cause a (mostly) full re-build of
the project when "make" is run.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There has never been a show_date_human() function on the "master"
branch in git.git. This declaration was added in b841d4ff43 (Add
`human` format to test-tool, 2019-01-28).
A look at the ML history reveals that it was leftover cruft from an
earlier version of that commit[1].
1. https://lore.kernel.org/git/20190118061805.19086-5-ischis2@cox.net/
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git update-index --refresh" has been taught to deal better with
racy timestamps (just like "git status" already does).
* ms/update-index-racy:
update-index: refresh should rewrite index in case of racy timestamps
t7508: add tests capturing racy timestamp handling
t7508: fix bogus mtime verification
test-lib: introduce API for verifying file mtime
Assorted updates to "git cat-file", especially "-h".
* ab/cat-file:
cat-file: s/_/-/ in typo'd usage_msg_optf() message
cat-file: don't whitespace-pad "(...)" in SYNOPSIS and usage output
cat-file: use GET_OID_ONLY_TO_DIE in --(textconv|filters)
object-name.c: don't have GET_OID_ONLY_TO_DIE imply *_QUIETLY
cat-file: correct and improve usage information
cat-file: fix remaining usage bugs
cat-file: make --batch-all-objects a CMDMODE
cat-file: move "usage" variable to cmd_cat_file()
cat-file docs: fix SYNOPSIS and "-h" output
parse-options API: add a usage_msg_optf()
cat-file tests: test messaging on bad objects/paths
cat-file tests: test bad usage
We have a copy of uncompress2() implementation in compat/ so that we
can build with an older version of zlib that lack the function, and
the build procedure selects if it is used via the NO_UNCOMPRESS2
$(MAKE) variable. This is yet another "annoying" knob the porters
need to tweak on platforms that are not common enough to have the
default set in the config.mak.uname file.
Attempt to instead ask the system header <zlib.h> to decide if we
need the compatibility implementation. This is a deviation from the
way we have been handling the "compatiblity" features so far, and if
it can be done cleanly enough, it could work as a model for features
that need compatibility definition we discover in the future. With
that goal in mind, avoid expedient but ugly hacks, like shoving the
code that is conditionally compiled into an unrelated .c file, which
may not work in future cases---instead, take an approach that uses a
file that is independently compiled and stands on its own.
Compile and link compat/zlib-uncompress2.c file unconditionally, but
conditionally hide the implementation behind #if/#endif when zlib
version is 1.2.9 or newer, and unconditionally archive the resulting
object file in the libgit.a to be picked up by the linker.
There are a few things to note in the shape of the code base after
this change:
- We no longer use NO_UNCOMPRESS2 knob; if the system header
<zlib.h> claims a version that is more cent than the library
actually is, this would break, but it is easy to add it back when
we find such a system.
- The object file compat/zlib-uncompress2.o is always compiled and
archived in libgit.a, just like a few other compat/ object files
already are.
- The inclusion of <zlib.h> is done in <git-compat-util.h>; we used
to do so from <cache.h> which includes <git-compat-util.h> as the
first thing it does, so from the *.c codes, there is no practical
change.
- Until objects in libgit.a that is already used gains a reference
to the function, the reftable code will be the only one that
wants it, so libgit.a on the linker command line needs to appear
once more at the end to satisify the mutual dependency.
- Beat found a trick used by OpenSSL to avoid making the
conditionally-compiled object truly empty (apparently because
they had to deal with compilers that do not want to see an
effectively empty input file). Our compat/zlib-uncompress2.c
file borrows the same trick for portabilty.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Helped-by: Beat Bolli <dev+git@drbeat.li>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
There are two identical declarations of `ensure_full_index()` in
cache.h.
Commit 3964fc2aae ("sparse-index: add guard to ensure full index",
2021-03-30) provided an empty implementation of `ensure_full_index()`,
declaring it in a new file sparse-index.h. When commit 4300f8442a
("sparse-index: implement ensure_full_index()", 2021-03-30) fleshed out
the implementation, it added an identical declaration to cache.h.
Then 118a2e8bde ("cache: move ensure_full_index() to cache.h",
2021-04-01) favored having the declaration in cache.h. Because of the
double declaration, at that point we could have just dropped the one in
sparse-index.h, but instead it got moved to cache.h.
As a result, cache.h contains the exact same function declaration twice.
Drop the one under "/* Name hashing */", in favor of the one under
"/* Initialize and use the cache information */".
Signed-off-by: Martin Ågren <martin.agren@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
'git update-index --refresh' and '--really-refresh' should force writing
of the index file if racy timestamps have been encountered, as
'git status' already does [1].
Note that calling 'git update-index --refresh' still does not guarantee
that there will be no more racy timestamps afterwards (the same holds
true for 'git status'):
- calling 'git update-index --refresh' immediately after touching and
adding a file may still leave racy timestamps if all three operations
occur within the racy-tolerance (usually 1 second unless USE_NSEC has
been defined)
- calling 'git update-index --refresh' for timestamps which are set into
the future will leave them racy
To guarantee that such racy timestamps will be resolved would require to
wait until the system clock has passed beyond these timestamps and only
then write the index file. Especially for future timestamps, this does
not seem feasible because of possibly long delays/hangs.
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/git/d3dd805c-7c1d-30a9-6574-a7bfcb7fc013@syntevo.com/
Signed-off-by: Marc Strapetz <marc.strapetz@syntevo.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Many git commands that deal with working tree files try to remove a
directory that becomes empty (i.e. "git switch" from a branch that
has the directory to another branch that does not would attempt
remove all files in the directory and the directory itself). This
drops users into an unfamiliar situation if the command was run in
a subdirectory that becomes subject to removal due to the command.
The commands have been taught to keep an empty directory if it is
the directory they were started in to avoid surprising users.
* en/keep-cwd:
t2501: simplify the tests since we can now assume desired behavior
dir: new flag to remove_dir_recurse() to spare the original_cwd
dir: avoid incidentally removing the original_cwd in remove_path()
stash: do not attempt to remove startup_info->original_cwd
rebase: do not attempt to remove startup_info->original_cwd
clean: do not attempt to remove startup_info->original_cwd
symlinks: do not include startup_info->original_cwd in dir removal
unpack-trees: add special cwd handling
unpack-trees: refuse to remove startup_info->original_cwd
setup: introduce startup_info->original_cwd
t2501: add various tests for removing the current working directory
Change the cat_one_file() logic that calls get_oid_with_context()
under --textconv and --filters to use the GET_OID_ONLY_TO_DIE flag,
thus improving the error messaging emitted when e.g. <path> is missing
but <rev> is not.
To service the "cat-file" use-case we need to introduce a new
"GET_OID_REQUIRE_PATH" flag, otherwise it would exit early as soon as
a valid "HEAD" was resolved, but in the "cat-file" case being changed
we always need a valid revision and path.
This arguably makes the "<bad rev>:<bad path>" and "<bad
rev>:<good (in HEAD) path>" use cases worse, as we won't quote the
<path> component at the user anymore, but let's just use the existing
logic "git log" et al use for now. We can improve the messaging for
those cases as a follow-up for all callers.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Various operating modes of "git reset" have been made to work
better with the sparse index.
* vd/sparse-reset:
unpack-trees: improve performance of next_cache_entry
reset: make --mixed sparse-aware
reset: make sparse-aware (except --mixed)
reset: integrate with sparse index
reset: expand test coverage for sparse checkouts
sparse-index: update command for expand/collapse test
reset: preserve skip-worktree bit in mixed reset
reset: rename is_missing to !is_in_reset_tree
Removing the current working directory causes all subsequent git
commands run from that directory to get confused and fail with a message
about being unable to read the current working directory:
$ git status
fatal: Unable to read current working directory: No such file or directory
Non-git commands likely have similar warnings or even errors, e.g.
$ bash -c 'echo hello'
shell-init: error retrieving current directory: getcwd: cannot access parent directories: No such file or directory
hello
This confuses end users, particularly since the command they get the
error from is not the one that caused the problem; the problem came from
the side-effect of some previous command.
We would like to avoid removing the current working directory of our
parent process; towards this end, introduce a new variable,
startup_info->original_cwd, that tracks the current working directory
that we inherited from our parent process. For convenience of later
comparisons, we prefer that this new variable store a path relative to
the toplevel working directory (thus much like 'prefix'), except without
the trailing slash.
Subsequent commits will make use of this new variable.
Acked-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Remove `ensure_full_index` guard on `prime_cache_tree` and update
`prime_cache_tree_rec` to correctly reconstruct sparse directory entries in
the cache tree. While processing a tree's entries, `prime_cache_tree_rec`
must determine whether a directory entry is sparse or not by searching for
it in the index (*without* expanding the index). If a matching sparse
directory index entry is found, no subtrees are added to the cache tree
entry and the entry count is set to 1 (representing the sparse directory
itself). Otherwise, the tree is assumed to not be sparse and its subtrees
are recursively added to the cache tree.
Helped-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The strftime() function has a non-standard "%s" extension, which prints
the number of seconds since the epoch. But the "struct tm" we get has
already been adjusted for a particular time zone; going back to an epoch
time requires knowing that zone offset. Since strftime() doesn't take
such an argument, round-tripping to a "struct tm" and back to the "%s"
format may produce the wrong value (off by tz_offset seconds).
Since we're already passing in the zone offset courtesy of c3fbf81a85
(strbuf: let strbuf_addftime handle %z and %Z itself, 2017-06-15), we
can use that same value to adjust our epoch seconds accordingly.
Note that the description above makes it sound like strftime()'s "%s" is
useless (and really, the issue is shared by mktime(), which is what
strftime() would use under the hood). But it gets the two cases for
which it's designed correct:
- the result of gmtime() will have a zero offset, so no adjustment is
necessary
- the result of localtime() will be offset by the local zone offset,
and mktime() and strftime() are defined to assume this offset when
converting back (there's actually some magic here; some
implementations record this in the "struct tm", but we can't
portably access or manipulate it. But they somehow "know" whether a
"struct tm" is from gmtime() or localtime()).
This latter point means that "format-local:%s" actually works correctly
already, because in that case we rely on the system routines due to
6eced3ec5e (date: use localtime() for "-local" time formats,
2017-06-15). Our problem comes when trying to show times in the author's
zone, as the system routines provide no mechanism for converting in
non-local zones. So in those cases we have a "struct tm" that came from
gmtime(), but has been manipulated according to our offset.
The tests cover the broken round-trip by formatting "%s" for a time in a
non-system timezone. We use the made-up "+1234" here, which has two
advantages. One, we know it won't ever be the real system zone (and so
we're actually testing a case that would break). And two, since it has a
minute component, we're testing the full decoding of the +HHMM zone into
a number of seconds. Likewise, we test the "-1234" variant to make sure
there aren't any sign mistakes.
There's one final test, which covers "format-local:%s". As noted, this
already passes, but it's important to check that we didn't regress this
case. In particular, the caller in show_date() is relying on localtime()
to have done the zone adjustment, independent of any tz_offset we
compute ourselves. These should match up, since our local_tzoffset() is
likewise built around localtime(). But it would be easy for a caller to
forget to pass in a correct tz_offset to strbuf_addftime(). Fortunately
show_date() does this correctly (it has to because of the existing
handling of %z), and the test continues to pass. So this one is just
future-proofing against a change in our assumptions.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "GIT_TEST_FSYNC" environment variable now exists for
disabling fsync() even on packfiles and other "critical" data.
Running "make test -j8 NO_SVN_TESTS=1" on a noisy 8-core system
on an HDD, test runtime drops from ~4 minutes down to ~3 minutes.
Using "GIT_TEST_FSYNC=1" re-enables fsync() for comparison
purposes.
SVN interopability tests are minimally affected since SVN will
still use fsync in various places.
This will also be useful for 3rd-party tools which create
throwaway git repositories of temporary data, but remains
undocumented for end users.
Signed-off-by: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git commit" gave duplicated error message when the object store
was unwritable, which has been corrected.
* ab/fix-commit-error-message-upon-unwritable-object-store:
commit: fix duplication regression in permission error output
unwritable tests: assert exact error output
"git fsck" has been taught to report mismatch between expected and
actual types of an object better.
* ab/fsck-unexpected-type:
fsck: report invalid object type-path combinations
fsck: don't hard die on invalid object types
object-file.c: stop dying in parse_loose_header()
object-file.c: return ULHR_TOO_LONG on "header too long"
object-file.c: use "enum" return type for unpack_loose_header()
object-file.c: simplify unpack_loose_short_header()
object-file.c: make parse_loose_header_extended() public
object-file.c: return -1, not "status" from unpack_loose_header()
object-file.c: don't set "typep" when returning non-zero
cat-file tests: test for current --allow-unknown-type behavior
cat-file tests: add corrupt loose object test
cat-file tests: test for missing/bogus object with -t, -s and -p
cat-file tests: move bogus_* variable declarations earlier
fsck tests: test for garbage appended to a loose object
fsck tests: test current hash/type mismatch behavior
fsck tests: refactor one test to use a sub-repo
fsck tests: add test for fsck-ing an unknown type
Fix a regression in the error output emitted when .git/objects can't
be written to. Before 9c4d6c0297 (cache-tree: Write updated
cache-tree after commit, 2014-07-13) we'd emit only one "insufficient
permission" error, now we'll do so again.
The cause is rather straightforward, we've got WRITE_TREE_SILENT for
the use-case of wanting to prepare an index silently, quieting any
permission etc. error output. Then when we attempt to update to
that (possibly broken) index we'll run into the same errors again.
But with 9c4d6c0297 the gap between the cache-tree API and the object
store wasn't closed in terms of asking write_object_file() to be
silent. I.e. post-9c4d6c0297b the first call is to prepare_index(),
and after that we'll call prepare_to_commit(). We only want verbose
error output from the latter.
So let's add and use that facility with a corresponding HASH_SILENT
flag, its only user is cache-tree.c's update_one(), which will set it
if its "WRITE_TREE_SILENT" flag is set.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The ref iteration code used to optionally allow dangling refs to be
shown, which has been tightened up.
* jk/ref-paranoia:
refs: drop "broken" flag from for_each_fullref_in()
ref-filter: drop broken-ref code entirely
ref-filter: stop setting FILTER_REFS_INCLUDE_BROKEN
repack, prune: drop GIT_REF_PARANOIA settings
refs: turn on GIT_REF_PARANOIA by default
refs: omit dangling symrefs when using GIT_REF_PARANOIA
refs: add DO_FOR_EACH_OMIT_DANGLING_SYMREFS flag
refs-internal.h: reorganize DO_FOR_EACH_* flag documentation
refs-internal.h: move DO_FOR_EACH_* flags next to each other
t5312: be more assertive about command failure
t5312: test non-destructive repack
t5312: create bogus ref as necessary
t5312: drop "verbose" helper
t5600: provide detached HEAD for corruption failures
t5516: don't use HEAD ref for invalid ref-deletion tests
t7900: clean up some more broken refs
Code cleanup.
* ab/repo-settings-cleanup:
repository.h: don't use a mix of int and bitfields
repo-settings.c: simplify the setup
read-cache & fetch-negotiator: check "enum" values in switch()
environment.c: remove test-specific "ignore_untracked..." variable
wrapper.c: add x{un,}setenv(), and use xsetenv() in environment.c
Futz with the way 'errno' is relied on in the refs API to carry the
failure modes up the call chain.
* hn/refs-errno-cleanup:
refs: make errno output explicit for read_raw_ref_fn
refs/files-backend: stop setting errno from lock_ref_oid_basic
refs: remove EINVAL errno output from specification of read_raw_ref_fn
refs file backend: move raceproof_create_file() here
Improve the error that's emitted in cases where we find a loose object
we parse, but which isn't at the location we expect it to be.
Before this change we'd prefix the error with a not-a-OID derived from
the path at which the object was found, due to an emergent behavior in
how we'd end up with an "OID" in these codepaths.
Now we'll instead say what object we hashed, and what path it was
found at. Before this patch series e.g.:
$ git hash-object --stdin -w -t blob </dev/null
e69de29bb2
$ mv objects/e6/ objects/e7
Would emit ("[...]" used to abbreviate the OIDs):
git fsck
error: hash mismatch for ./objects/e7/9d[...] (expected e79d[...])
error: e79d[...]: object corrupt or missing: ./objects/e7/9d[...]
Now we'll instead emit:
error: e69d[...]: hash-path mismatch, found at: ./objects/e7/9d[...]
Furthermore, we'll do the right thing when the object type and its
location are bad. I.e. this case:
$ git hash-object --stdin -w -t garbage --literally </dev/null
8315a83d2acc4c174aed59430f9a9c4ed926440f
$ mv objects/83 objects/84
As noted in an earlier commits we'd simply die early in those cases,
until preceding commits fixed the hard die on invalid object type:
$ git fsck
fatal: invalid object type
Now we'll instead emit sensible error messages:
$ git fsck
error: 8315[...]: hash-path mismatch, found at: ./objects/84/15[...]
error: 8315[...]: object is of unknown type 'garbage': ./objects/84/15[...]
In both fsck.c and object-file.c we're using null_oid as a sentinel
value for checking whether we got far enough to be certain that the
issue was indeed this OID mismatch.
We need to add the "object corrupt or missing" special-case to deal
with cases where read_loose_object() will return an error before
completing check_object_signature(), e.g. if we have an error in
unpack_loose_rest() because we find garbage after the valid gzip
content:
$ git hash-object --stdin -w -t blob </dev/null
e69de29bb2
$ chmod 755 objects/e6/9de29bb2d1d6434b8b29ae775ad8c2e48c5391
$ echo garbage >>objects/e6/9de29bb2d1d6434b8b29ae775ad8c2e48c5391
$ git fsck
error: garbage at end of loose object 'e69d[...]'
error: unable to unpack contents of ./objects/e6/9d[...]
error: e69d[...]: object corrupt or missing: ./objects/e6/9d[...]
There is currently some weird messaging in the edge case when the two
are combined, i.e. because we're not explicitly passing along an error
state about this specific scenario from check_stream_oid() via
read_loose_object() we'll end up printing the null OID if an object is
of an unknown type *and* it can't be unpacked by zlib, e.g.:
$ git hash-object --stdin -w -t garbage --literally </dev/null
8315a83d2acc4c174aed59430f9a9c4ed926440f
$ chmod 755 objects/83/15a83d2acc4c174aed59430f9a9c4ed926440f
$ echo garbage >>objects/83/15a83d2acc4c174aed59430f9a9c4ed926440f
$ /usr/bin/git fsck
fatal: invalid object type
$ ~/g/git/git fsck
error: garbage at end of loose object '8315a83d2acc4c174aed59430f9a9c4ed926440f'
error: unable to unpack contents of ./objects/83/15a83d2acc4c174aed59430f9a9c4ed926440f
error: 8315a83d2acc4c174aed59430f9a9c4ed926440f: object corrupt or missing: ./objects/83/15a83d2acc4c174aed59430f9a9c4ed926440f
error: 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000: object is of unknown type 'garbage': ./objects/83/15a83d2acc4c174aed59430f9a9c4ed926440f
[...]
I think it's OK to leave that for future improvements, which would
involve enum-ifying more error state as we've done with "enum
unpack_loose_header_result" in preceding commits. In these
increasingly more obscure cases the worst that can happen is that
we'll get slightly nonsensical or inapplicable error messages.
There's other such potential edge cases, all of which might produce
some confusing messaging, but still be handled correctly as far as
passing along errors goes. E.g. if check_object_signature() returns
and oideq(real_oid, null_oid()) is true, which could happen if it
returns -1 due to the read_istream() call having failed.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Make parse_loose_header() return error codes and data instead of
invoking die() by itself.
For now we'll move the relevant die() call to loose_object_info() and
read_loose_object() to keep this change smaller. In a subsequent
commit we'll make read_loose_object() return an error code instead of
dying. We should also address the "allow_unknown" case (should be
moved to builtin/cat-file.c), but for now I'll be leaving it.
For making parse_loose_header() not die() change its prototype to
accept a "struct object_info *" instead of the "unsigned long *sizep"
it accepted before. Its callers can now check the populated populated
"oi->typep".
Because of this we don't need to pass in the "unsigned int flags"
which we used for OBJECT_INFO_ALLOW_UNKNOWN_TYPE, we can instead do
that check in loose_object_info().
This also refactors some confusing control flow around the "status"
variable. In some cases we set it to the return value of "error()",
i.e. -1, and later checked if "status < 0" was true.
Since 93cff9a978 (sha1_loose_object_info: return error for corrupted
objects, 2017-04-01) the return value of loose_object_info() (then
named sha1_loose_object_info()) had been a "status" variable that be
any negative value, as we were expecting to return the "enum
object_type".
The only negative type happens to be OBJ_BAD, but the code still
assumed that more might be added. This was then used later in
e.g. c84a1f3ed4 (sha1_file: refactor read_object, 2017-06-21). Now
that parse_loose_header() will return 0 on success instead of the
type (which it'll stick into the "struct object_info") we don't need
to conflate these two cases in its callers.
Since parse_loose_header() doesn't need to return an arbitrary
"status" we only need to treat its "ret < 0" specially, but can
idiomatically overwrite it with our own error() return. This along
with having made unpack_loose_header() return an "enum
unpack_loose_header_result" in an earlier commit means that we can
move the previously nested if/else cases mostly into the "ULHR_OK"
branch of the "switch" statement.
We should be less silent if we reach that "status = -1" branch, which
happens if we've got trailing garbage in loose objects, see
f6371f9210 (sha1_file: add read_loose_object() function, 2017-01-13)
for a better way to handle it. For now let's punt on it, a subsequent
commit will address that edge case.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Split up the return code for "header too long" from the generic
negative return value unpack_loose_header() returns, and report via
error() if we exceed MAX_HEADER_LEN.
As a test added earlier in this series in t1006-cat-file.sh shows
we'll correctly emit zlib errors from zlib.c already in this case, so
we have no need to carry those return codes further down the
stack. Let's instead just return ULHR_TOO_LONG saying we ran into the
MAX_HEADER_LEN limit, or other negative values for "unable to unpack
<OID> header".
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In a preceding commit we changed and documented unpack_loose_header()
from its previous behavior of returning any negative value or zero, to
only -1 or 0.
Let's add an "enum unpack_loose_header_result" type and use it for
these return values, and have the compiler assert that we're
exhaustively covering all of them.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Combine the unpack_loose_short_header(),
unpack_loose_header_to_strbuf() and unpack_loose_header() functions
into one.
The unpack_loose_header_to_strbuf() function was added in
46f034483e (sha1_file: support reading from a loose object of unknown
type, 2015-05-03).
Its code was mostly copy/pasted between it and both of
unpack_loose_header() and unpack_loose_short_header(). We now have a
single unpack_loose_header() function which accepts an optional
"struct strbuf *" instead.
I think the remaining unpack_loose_header() function could be further
simplified, we're carrying some complexity just to be able to emit a
garbage type longer than MAX_HEADER_LEN, we could alternatively just
say "we found a garbage type <first 32 bytes>..." instead. But let's
leave the current behavior in place for now.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Make the parse_loose_header_extended() function public and remove the
parse_loose_header() wrapper. The only direct user of it outside of
object-file.c itself was in streaming.c, that caller can simply pass
the required "struct object-info *" instead.
This change is being done in preparation for teaching
read_loose_object() to accept a flag to pass to
parse_loose_header(). It isn't strictly necessary for that change, we
could simply use parse_loose_header_extended() there, but will leave
the API in a better end state.
It would be a better end-state to have already moved the declaration
of these functions to object-store.h to avoid the forward declaration
of "struct object_info" in cache.h, but let's leave that cleanup for
some other time.
1. https://lore.kernel.org/git/patch-v6-09.22-5b9278e7bb4-20210907T104559Z-avarab@gmail.com/
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Move various *_INIT macros to use designated initializers. This helps
readability. I've only picked those leftover macros that were not
touched by another in-flight series of mine which changed others, but
also how initialization was done.
In the case of SUBMODULE_ALTERNATE_SETUP_INIT I've left an explicit
initialization of "error_mode", even though
SUBMODULE_ALTERNATE_ERROR_IGNORE itself is defined as "0". Let's not
peek under the hood and assume that enum fields we know the value of
will stay at "0".
The change to "TESTSUITE_INIT" in "t/helper/test-run-command.c" was
part of an earlier on-list version[1] of c90be786da (test-tool
run-command: fix flip-flop init pattern, 2021-09-11).
1. https://lore.kernel.org/git/patch-1.1-0aa4523ab6e-20210909T130849Z-avarab@gmail.com/
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Change the initialization of "struct strbuf" changed in
cbc0f81d96 (strbuf: use designated initializers in STRBUF_INIT,
2017-07-10) to omit specifying "alloc" and "len", as we do with other
"alloc" and "len" (or "nr") in similar structs.
Let's likewise omit the explicit initialization of all fields in the
"struct ipc_client_connect_option" struct added in
59c7b88198 (simple-ipc: add win32 implementation, 2021-03-15).
Do the same for a few other initializers, e.g. STRVEC_INIT and
CACHE_DEF_INIT.
Finally, start incrementally changing the same pattern in
"t/helper/test-run-command.c". This change was part of an earlier
on-list version[1] of c90be786da (test-tool run-command: fix
flip-flop init pattern, 2021-09-11).
1. https://lore.kernel.org/git/patch-1.1-0aa4523ab6e-20210909T130849Z-avarab@gmail.com/
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Now that GIT_REF_PARANOIA is the default, we don't need to selectively
enable it for destructive operations. In fact, it's harmful to do so,
because it overrides any GIT_REF_PARANOIA=0 setting that the user may
have provided (because they're trying to work around some corruption).
With these uses gone, we can further clean up the ref_paranoia global,
and make it a static variable inside the refs code.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Reviewed-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Instead of the global ignore_untracked_cache_config variable added in
dae6c322fa (test-dump-untracked-cache: don't modify the untracked
cache, 2016-01-27) we can make use of the new facility to set config
via environment variables added in d8d77153ea (config: allow
specifying config entries via envvar pairs, 2021-01-12).
It's arguably a bit hacky to use setenv() and getenv() to pass
messages between the same program, but since the test helpers are not
the main intended audience of repo-settings.c I think it's better than
hardcoding the test-only special-case in prepare_repo_settings().
This uses the xsetenv() wrapper added in the preceding commit, if we
don't set these in the environment we'll fail in
t7063-status-untracked-cache.sh, but let's fail earlier anyway if that
were to happen.
This breaks any parent process that's potentially using the
GIT_CONFIG_* and GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS mechanism to pass one-shot
config setting down to a git subprocess, but in this case we don't
care about the general case of such potential parents. This process
neither spawns other "git" processes, nor is it interested in other
configuration. We might want to pick up other test modes here, but
those will be passed via GIT_TEST_* environment variables.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Reduce number of write(2) system calls while sending the
ref advertisement.
* jv/pkt-line-batch:
upload-pack: use stdio in send_ref callbacks
pkt-line: add stdio packet write functions
"git maintenance" scheduler learned to use systemd timers as a
possible backend.
* lh/systemd-timers:
maintenance: add support for systemd timers on Linux
maintenance: `git maintenance run` learned `--scheduler=<scheduler>`
cache.h: Introduce a generic "xdg_config_home_for(…)" function
Since 8de7eeb54b (compression: unify pack.compression configuration
parsing, 2016-11-15) the variables core_compression_level and
core_compression_seen are only set, but never read. Remove them.
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Current implementation of `xdg_config_home(filename)` returns
`$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/$filename`, with the `git` subdirectory inserted
between the `XDG_CONFIG_HOME` environment variable and the parameter.
This patch introduces a `xdg_config_home_for(subdir, filename)` function
which is more generic. It only concatenates "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME", or
"$HOME/.config" if the former isn’t defined, with the parameters,
without adding `git` in between.
`xdg_config_home(filename)` is now implemented by calling
`xdg_config_home_for("git", filename)` but this new generic function can
be used to compute the configuration directory of other programs.
Signed-off-by: Lénaïc Huard <lenaic@lhuard.fr>
Acked-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This adds three new functions to pkt-line.c: packet_fwrite,
packet_fwrite_fmt and packet_fflush. Besides writing a pktline flush
packet, packet_fflush also flushes the stdio buffer of the stream.
Helped-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Helped-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Jacob Vosmaer <jacob@gitlab.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Move the raceproof_create_file() API added to cache.h and
object-file.c in 177978f56a (raceproof_create_file(): new function,
2017-01-06) to its only user, refs/files-backend.c.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Pathname expansion (like "~username/") learned a way to specify a
location relative to Git installation (e.g. its $sharedir which is
$(prefix)/share), with "%(prefix)".
* js/expand-runtime-prefix:
expand_user_path: allow in-flight topics to keep using the old name
interpolate_path(): allow specifying paths relative to the runtime prefix
Use a better name for the function interpolating paths
expand_user_path(): clarify the role of the `real_home` parameter
expand_user_path(): remove stale part of the comment
tests: exercise the RUNTIME_PREFIX feature
"git read-tree" had a codepath where blobs are fetched one-by-one
from the promisor remote, which has been corrected to fetch in bulk.
* jt/bulk-prefetch:
cache-tree: prefetch in partial clone read-tree
unpack-trees: refactor prefetching code
It is not immediately clear what `expand_user_path()` means, so let's
rename it to `interpolate_path()`. This also opens the path for
interpolating more than just a home directory.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Refactor the prefetching code in unpack-trees.c into its own function,
because it will be used elsewhere in a subsequent commit.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add missing format attributes to API functions that take printf
arguments.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>