Git core learned about the submodule.<name>.shallow option in
.gitmodules files, which is a recommendation to clone a submodule
shallow. A repo manifest may record a clone depth recommendation as
an optional field, which contains more information than a binary
shallow/nonshallow recommendation, so any attempted conversion may be
lossy. In practice the clone depth recommendation is either '1' or doesn't
exist, which is the binary behavior we have in Git core.
Change-Id: I51aa9cb6d1d9660dae6ab6d21ad7bae9bc5325e6
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Git core learned about attributes in pathspecs:
pathspec: allow querying for attributes
The pathspec mechanism is extended via the new
":(attr:eol=input)pattern/to/match" syntax to filter paths so that it
requires paths to not just match the given pattern but also have the
specified attrs attached for them to be chosen.
(177161a5f7, 2016-05-20)
We intend to use these pathspec attribute patterns for submodule
grouping, similar to the grouping in repo. So the RepoCommand which
translates repo manifest files into submodules should propagate this
information along. This requires writing information to the
.gitattributes file instead of the .gitmodules file. For now we just
overwrite any existing .gitattributes file and do not care about prior
attributes set. If this becomes an issue we need to figure out how to
correctly amend the grouping information to an existing .gitattributes
file.
Change-Id: I0f55b45786b6b8fc3d5be62d7f6aab9ac00ed60e
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
JGits PushCommand and BasePackPushConnection were throwing a generic
exception when the pushed pack-file was rejected by the server since it
contained too large objects. Teach JGit to better analyze the server's
response to detect this situation and throw a more specific exception.
Detect this situation by parsing the status line sent by the server.
This change only recognizes the response sent by a JGit based server.
All other servers which report such problems in a different way still
lead to a generic TransportExceptions.
Also see https://git.eclipse.org/r/#/c/46348/
Change-Id: I8d6d65e4585ebb3846f7207e7d1a2f82fa9cbd86
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
File.listFiles() returns null if the File is not a directory, improve
validation of directory and gitDir to fix this.
Change-Id: I763d08835faf96a0beb8e706992df0908526bd2c
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
JGit failed to do checkouts when the index contained smudged entries and
autocrlf was on. In such cases the WorkingTreeIterator calculated the
SHA1 sometimes on content which was not correctly filtered. The SHA1 was
computed on content which two times went through a lf->crlf conversion.
We used to tell the treewalk whether it is a checkin or checkout
operation and always use the related filters when reading any content.
If on windows and autocrlf is true and we do a checkout operation then
we always used a lf->crlf conversion on any text content. That's not
correct. Even during a checkout we sometimes need the crlf->lf
conversion. E.g. when calculating the content-id for working-tree
content we need to use crlf->lf filtering although the overall operation
type is checkout.
Often this bug does not have effects because we seldom compute the
content-id of filesystem content during a checkout. But we do need to
know whether a file is dirty or not before we overwrite it during a
checkout. And if the index entries are smudged we don't trust the index
and compute filesystem-content-sha1's explicitly.
This caused EGit not to be able to switch branches anymore on Windows
when autocrlf was true. EGit denied the checkout because it thought
workingtree files are dirty because content-sha1 are computed on wrongly
filtered content.
Bug: 493360
Change-Id: I1072a57b4c529ba3aaa50b7b02d2b816bb64a9b8
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
As per [1], but limited to absolute paths indeed. No support yet for
tilde or $HOME expansion. Support for the --[no-]includes options
([1]) is not part of this commit scope either, but those options'
defaults are in effect as described in [1].
[1] https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config
Included path can be a config file that includes other path-s in turn.
An exception is thrown if too many recursions (circular includes)
happen because of ill-specified config files.
Change-Id: I700bd7b7e1625eb7de0180f220c707d8e7b0930b
Signed-off-by: Marco Miller <marco.miller@ericsson.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Added the option to retrieve either merge or non-merge commits in the
LogCommand.
Change-Id: Ie0e1c515a823f2392783f1a47d385c31230e8167
Signed-off-by: Alcemir Santos <alcemir.santos@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
BufferedReader.readLine() returns null if the end of the stream has been
reached.
Change-Id: I83102bbfb1316407247e0f29023077af9e8d9606
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
There was a bug regarding how JGit handled untracked files when applying
a stash. Problem was that untracked files are applied by doing a merge
of HEAD and untrackedFiles commit with a merge base of the stashed HEAD.
That's wrong because the untrackedFiles commit has no parent and
contains only the untracked files. Using stashed HEAD as merge base
leads to unneccessary conflicts on files not event included in the
untrackedFiles commit.
Imagine this graph directly before you want to apply a stash which was
based on 0. You want to apply the stash on current HEAD commit 5.
5 (HEAD,master)
/
0---+
\ \
1---3 (WIP on master)
/
2 (untracked files on master)
Imagine for a specific (tracked) file f
- commit 0 contains X
- HEAD contains Y
- commit 2 (the untracked files) does not contain file f
A merge of 2 and 5 with a merge base of 0 leads to a conflict. The 5
commit wants to modify the file and the 2 commit wants to delete the
file -> conflict.
If no merge base is set then the semantic is correct.
Thanks to Bow for finding this bug and providing the test case.
Bug: 485467
Change-Id: I453fa6ec337f81b2a52c4f51f23044faeec409e6
Also-by: Bow Ruggeri <bow@bow.net>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
There are references which are returned by
RefDatabase.getAdditionalRefs() which are allowed to point to
non-existing objects. These refs should not save objects from being
garbage collected. Examples for these references are ORIG_HEAD,
MERGE_HEAD, FETCH_HEAD and CHERRY_PICK_HEAD. Native git will not take
these references into account when doing a gc and therefore these
references may point to non-existing objects after a gc. Teach JGit's
GC to behave the same: ignore additional refs if they don't start with
"refs/". Examples for refs returned by getAdditionalRefs() which do
start with "refs/" are the bootstrap refs when using reftree's (see
commit 115f1ad3974d1162b33d1c8eff466019d1f249f3). See also
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/294126.
Bug: 479697
Change-Id: I10e40589f13e72aacdd9f86f3b44696fd1cd068a
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
When performing a "reset --hard" a checkout is done. The pathes are
checked for potential checkout conflicts. But in the end for all
remaining conflicts these files are simply deleted from the working
tree. That's not the right strategy to handle checkout conflicts during
"reset --hard". Instead for every conflict we should simply checkout the
merge commit's content.
This is different from native gits behavior which reports errors when
during a "checkout --hard" a file shows up where a folder was expected.
"warning: unable to unlink d/c.txt: Not a directory"
Why it is like that in native git was asked in
http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/279482. Unless
it is explained why native git why this error is reported JGit should
overwrite the files.
Bug: 474842
Change-Id: I08e23822a577aaf22120c5137eb169b6bd08447b
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
git-apply allows modifying file modes in patched files using either
"new mode" or "new file mode" headers. This patch adds support for
setting files as executables and vice-versa.
Change-Id: I24848966b46f686f540a8efa8150b42e0d9c3ad1
Signed-off-by: Nadav Cohen <nadavcoh@gmail.com>
Before this fix, getting the value of 'key' below used to return
value1. This fix makes it so that value3 gets returned instead,
just like native git's get.
[section]
key = value1
key = value2
key = value3
Change-Id: Iccb24de9b63c3ad8646c909494ca3f8c9ed6e29c
Signed-off-by: Marco Miller <marco.miller@ericsson.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Change-Id: Ib9f0ae8207000a36c5bf1a92fcc2c32efc4c0984
Signed-off-by: Marco Miller <marco.miller@ericsson.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Before this change, jgit used to read packed-refs before scanning
loose refs. That was not a problem if gc didn't run concurrently. When
gc did run concurrently with such refs reading, that order sometimes
broke the latter. This lead to reading an older version of a ref's
tip, which meant "losing" the real tip or commit. The specific
read-Vs-gc concurrency scenario which broke reading that way follows:
1. let ref R be in packed-refs and R' be in loose
2. jgit starts reading packed-refs
3. gc also starts its business around that very time
4. jgit still has the time to read R from packed-refs
5. as gc is not done yet updating packed-refs with R'
6. jgit then starts scanning loose refs (or is about to)
7. gc quickly ends up being done moving loose R' to packed-refs
8. so gc (quickly) removes loose refs
9. -while jgit is scanning loose refs, now gone
10. so jgit assumes no loose to consider => packed-refs winning
11. so jgit wrongfully returns R (from 4.) as the tip, instead of R'.
This fix switches the order so loose refs are scanned (secured) before
taking the time to read packed-refs. This way, knowledge of the
likelier tip is guaranteed for ref reading to return the true tip
- despite concurrent gc. If there is no loose ref to scan, jgit reads
packed-refs and lands on R' (or S), which it then returns, as
expected. The gerrit issue [1] should be solved by this fix.
[1] https://code.google.com/p/gerrit/issues/detail?id=2302
Change-Id: Ibd120120a361a3a6ed565f3836afc1db706fbcdd
Signed-off-by: Marco Miller <marco.miller@ericsson.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
The special characters <> and '\n' interfere with parsing of
identities. C git strips these special characters, so we should too.
Rather than allocating extra strings by calling String#trim(), add a
few lines to our sanitization method to perform the same trimming as
described in String's Javadoc.
Change-Id: I96edcb93a2fc194ee354d60566d352299742a52f
This might be somewhat surprising behavior to users who might
naturally assume the following invariant:
ident.equals(parseIdent(ident.toExternalString()))
This invariant does not hold since whitespace is only trimmed during
serialization. We don't want to mess with the strings during
initialization, as this is called during the highly-optimized commit
parsing codepath.
Change-Id: I081a603f0ac0e33167462244779b0ff3ad51e80c
There was a bug in JGit which caused NPEs being thrown when Transport
errors should be reported. Avoid the NPE to let the original error show
up.
Change-Id: I9e1e2b0195bd61b7e531a09d0fc7bce109bd6515
We've found in Gerrit Code Review that it is common to pass around
both an ObjectReader (or more commonly a RevWalk wrapping one) and an
ObjectInserter. These code paths often assume that the ObjectReader
can read back any objects created by the ObjectInserter without
flushing. However, we previously had no way to enforce that constraint
programmatically, leading to hard-to-spot problems.
Provide a solution by exposing the ObjectInserter that created an
ObjectReader, when known. Callers can either continue passing both
objects and check:
reader.getCreatedFromInserter() == inserter
or they can just pass around ObjectReader and extract the inserter
when it's needed (checking that it's not null at usage time).
Change-Id: Ibbf5d1968b506f6b47030ab1b046ffccb47352ea
When CheckoutCommand or MergeCommand is called then not in all situation
the treewalks have been prepared to support clean/smudge filters. Fix
this
Bug: 491505
Change-Id: Iab5608049221c46d06812552ab97299e44d59e64
Repurpose RefDatabase#performsAtomicTransactions() slightly, to
indicate that the backend _supports_ atomic transactions, rather than
the current definition, which is that the backend always _uses_ atomic
transactions regardless of whether or not the caller actually wants
them. Allow BatchRefUpdate callers to turn off atomic transactions by
calling setAtomic(false). Defaulting to true means this is backwards
compatible.
Change-Id: I6df78d7df65ab147b4cce7764bd3101db985491c
Such hunks are identifiable by a zero value for "new start line". Prior
to the fix, JGit throws and ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException on such
patches.
Change-Id: I4f3deb5e5f41a08af965fcc178d678c77270cddb
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Schneider <jkschneider@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Now if refs are unreadable when serving an upload pack the handler
will fail due to the actual underlying failure. Previously all wants
would be rejected as invalid because Repository.getAllRefs() returned
an empty map.
Testing this required a new subclass of InMemoryRepository so that
an IOException could be injected at the correct time.
Signed-off-by: Michael Edgar <adgar@google.com>
Change-Id: Iac708b1db9d0ccce08c4ef5ace599ea0b57afdc0
Change-Id: I5b3b7b0633354d5ccf0c6c320c0df9c93fdf8eeb
Signed-off-by: Ned Twigg <ned.twigg@diffplug.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
CommitCommand already provided a method to set the comment which should
be written into the reflog. The underlying RefUpdate class supported to
skip writing a reflog entry. But through the CommitCommand API it was
not possible to prevent writing a reflog entry. Fix this and allow
creating commits which don't occur in the reflog.
Change-Id: I193c53de71fb5958ea749c4bfa8360a51acc9b58
PackWriter.writeObject() can get into an infinite loop when corrupt
packs are present. When it finds a pack file with an object that can be
reused it calls DfsPackFile.copyAsIs(). If that method sees an invalid
CRC, it adds the object to the DfsPackFile's corrupt object list and
throws a CorruptObjectException, which it later catches as an
IOException and wraps in a
StoredObjectRepresentationNotAvailableException.
PackWriter.writeObjectImpl() catches that SORNAE and retries the
operation by calling DfsReader.selectObjectRepresentation(). But
currently that method returns the same object which was just seen to
be corrupt.
Change DfsPackFile.isCorrupt() from private to package private, and use
that method in DfsReader.selectObjectRepresentation() to filter out
corrupt objects.
The stack traces that show the problem are:
org.eclipse.jgit.errors.CorruptObjectException.<init>(CorruptObjectException.java:113)
org.eclipse.jgit.internal.storage.dfs.DfsPackFile.copyAsIs(DfsPackFile.java:624)
org.eclipse.jgit.internal.storage.dfs.DfsReader.copyObjectAsIs(DfsReader.java:491)
org.eclipse.jgit.internal.storage.pack.PackWriter.writeObjectImpl(PackWriter.java:1478)
org.eclipse.jgit.internal.storage.pack.PackWriter.writeObject(PackWriter.java:1455)
org.eclipse.jgit.internal.storage.dfs.DfsPackFile.getPackIndex(DfsPackFile.java:228)
org.eclipse.jgit.internal.storage.dfs.DfsReader.findAllFromPack(DfsReader.java:476)
org.eclipse.jgit.internal.storage.dfs.DfsReader.selectObjectRepresentation(DfsReader.java:455)
org.eclipse.jgit.internal.storage.pack.PackWriter.writeObjectImpl(PackWriter.java:1492)
org.eclipse.jgit.internal.storage.pack.PackWriter.writeObject(PackWriter.java:1455)
Change-Id: Iad7bbcaed1f11a6aa3b4f5af911a73a34c0fabfd
Signed-off-by: Terry Parker <tparker@google.com>
RepositoryCache has 2 methods to remove a repository from the cache but
they are never called when a repository is closed. Users of the cache
were expected to call one of those 2 methods but how could they have
called them at proper time without having visibility of the repository
usage count.
Ideally, I would have reworked the RepositoryCache to wrap any
repository it opens in a class that would be responsible to unregister
them from the cache when it's really closed, i.e. when usage counter
reaches 0. The problem preventing the wrapping solution is the
RepositoryCache.register method that allows to register an already
opened repository in the cache. Such repositories cannot be wrapped
because callers are still holding a reference on the unwrapped
repository.
Document that RepositoryCache.close method is removing the repository
from the cache as well as closing it and rework
RepositoryCache.unregister method to only remove the repository from the
cache. Use the latter to unregister repository when Repository.doClose
is getting executed.
Change-Id: Ia364816e4da8d7b6cfa72f10758ca31aa8a1f9db
Signed-off-by: Hugo Arès <hugo.ares@ericsson.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
When repositories are opened using the RepositoryCache, they are kept in
memory and when the repository usage counter reaches 0, the
Repository.close method is called which then calls close method on its
reference and object databases.
The problem is that RefDirectory.close method was a no-op and the
reference database was kept in memory. This problem is only happening
when opening a repository using the RepositoryCache because it never
evicts repositories, it's just calling the close method.
Change-Id: Iacb961de8e8b1f5b37824bf0d1a4caf4c6f1233f
Signed-off-by: Hugo Arès <hugo.ares@ericsson.com>
Repository has a usage counter that is initialized to 1 at
instantiation and this counter is decremented when Repository.close
method is called. There is also a Repository.incrementOpen method that
RepositoryCache uses to increment the usage count when it's returning a
repository that is already opened.
The problem was that RepositoryCache was incrementing the usage count
for repositories that it just opened or registered. The usage count was
2 when it should have been 1.
Incrementing usage count is now only be done for repository that are
served from the cache.
This bug is causing slow memory increase of our Gerrit server until the
server become slow. Even if the RepositoryCache is using SoftReference,
it seems that the JVM is not garbage collecting the repositories because
it's not yet on the edge of being out of memory.
To test this change, I replicated all repositories(11k) from Gerrit
master to one slave. The Gerrit master used memory after this test was
10GB without this change and 3.5GB with.
Change-Id: I86c7b36174e384f106b51fe92f306018fd1dbdf0
Signed-off-by: Hugo Arès <hugo.ares@ericsson.com>