Note the the settings are slightly less restrictive for test bundles.
-Also cleanup a couple of malformed javadocs
-Update compiler warnings/errors to include default values from Juno
-We now flag diagnosed null dereference as error. We didn't do that
earlier because of some false positives.
Change-Id: I58386d63164e65d3d8d1998da3390d99bdc7381a
Signed-off-by: Chris Aniszczyk <zx@twitter.com>
For streams that should not be closed, i.e. don't own an underlying
stream, and in-memory streams that do not need to be closed we just
suppress the warning. This mostly apply to test cases. GC is enough.
For streams with external resources (i.e. files) we add the necessary
call to close().
Change-Id: I4d883ba2e7d07f199fe57ccb3459ece00441a570
Invoke the wrapper types' valueOf via static imports.
For booleans used in asserts, add a new assert in
the JUnit utility package since out current version of JUnit
does not have the assert(boolean, boolean) method.
Change-Id: I9099bd8efbc8c133479344d51ce7dabed8958a2b
Instead of a confusing 403 Forbidden error indicating the dumb file
service is disabled on this server, use 406 Not Acceptable to mean
the client sent a request for content (the plain info/refs file)
that this server does not want to provide.
The stock C Git client will report HTTP 406 error if it predates
1.6.6 or something goes wrong with the smart request and it tried
falling back to the dumb request. This may help to debug cases where
a broken proxy server exists between the client and the server and
has mangled a prior smart info/refs response.
Change-Id: Ic2b78ba9502e4bbdff7cc3ba1fd284cf7616412b
Enable streaming compression for any response that is bigger than
the 32 KiB buffer used by SmartOutputStream. This is useful on the
info/refs file which can have many branches and tags listed, and
is often bigger than 32 KiB, but also compresses by at least 50%.
Disable streaming compression on large git-upload-pack responses,
as these are usually highly compressed Git pack data. Trying to
compress these with gzip will only waste CPU time and additional
transfer space with the gzip wrapper. Small git-upload-pack data
is usually text based negotiation responses and can be squeezed
smaller with a little bit of CPU usage.
Change-Id: Ia13e63ed334f594d5e1ab53a97240eb2e8f550e2
I have unfortunately introduced a few bugs in the native Git client
over the years. 1.7.5 is unable to send chunked requests correctly,
resulting in corrupt data at the server. Ban this client whenever
it uses chunked encoding with an error message.
Prior to some more recent versions, git push over HTTP failed to
report status information and error messages due to a race within
the client and its helper process. Check for these bad versions and
send errors as messages before the status report, enabling users
to see the failures on their terminal.
Change-Id: Ic62d6591cbd851d21dbb3e9b023d655eaecb0624
This has no effect on Git clients, but for browsers, 403 Forbidden may
be more appropriate. 500 Internal Server Error implies that there is
a problem with the server, whereas ServiceMayNotContinueException is
specifically intended to cover cases where the server is functioning
correctly but has determined that the request may not proceed.
Change-Id: I825abd2a029d372060103655eabf488a0547c1e8
Include some behaviors that were not clear to me until I had used it a
few times.
Warn about broken behavior for capture groups that do not match. It
would be nice to support these, but even for the cases where it's
clear what the behavior should be, it would be infeasible to
implement.
For example, consider the second group of the regex "(/a)/b(/c)?"
matched against the path "/a/b". We might want getServletPath() to
return "/a/b" and getPathInfo() to return null, but this is hard to
implement: there's no easy way to say "the substring up to the point
where (/c) would have matched if it were in the string even though
it's not." And even if we could, it's not clear there is even a right
answer in the general case.
Moreover, ideally we could warn about such broken patterns at servlet
initialization time, rather than at runtime, but even answering the
question of whether there are capture groups that might not match
requires more customized regular expression parsing than we want to
embark on. Hence, the best we can do is document how it fails.
Change-Id: I7bd5011f5bd387f9345a0e79b22a4d7ed918a190
This reverts commit 24a0f47e32 and
updates JGit dependencies to use the latest available Jetty 7.x
release. We can't use Jetty 8.x since it depends on Servlet API 3.0
which requires Java 6 but JGit still wants to support Java 5.
Use one of the target platforms defined in
Ibf67a6d3539fa0708a3e5dbe44fb899c56fbd8ed to work with that in Eclipse.
Change-Id: I343273d994dc7b6e0287c604e5926ff77d5b585b
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Implementations may want to send an error message to the user, which
doesn't really fit with any of the existing exception types.
ServiceMayNotContinueException, on the other hand, is documented as
always containing a user-visible error string, so use that.
Modify the git and HTTP transport mechanisms to properly relay this
message to the end user.
Change-Id: I362e67ea46102a145bf2c6284d38788537c9735f
The fetch-pack/upload-pack stream usually has an LF at the
end of the first "want" line. Trim this when checking to
see if side-band or side-band-64k was used.
Perform the same trim for send-pack/receive-pack, as it is
harmless in this context to ignore an LF just before doing
an error report.
Change-Id: I6ef946bb6124fa72c52bd5320187eaac3ed906e7
When a client POSTs to /git-{upload,receive}-pack, the first line
includes their client capabilities. As soon as the C git client sends
side-band(-64k), it goes into a state where it chokes on data not sent
in a valid sideband channel.
GitSmartHttpTools.sendError() is called early in the request, likely
before a {Upload,Receive}Pack handler is assigned or, even so, before it
has read the request. In some cases we must read the first line manually
within sendError() to tell whether sideband is needed.
Change-Id: I8277fd45a4ec3b71fa8f87404b4f5d1a09e0f384
This is intended to replace the RefFilter interface (but does not yet,
for backwards compatibility). That interface required lots of extra
scanning and copying in filter cases such as only advertising a subtree
of the refs directory. Instead, provide a hook that can be executed
right before ref advertisement, using the public methods on
UploadPack/ReceivePack to explicitly set the map of advertised refs.
Change-Id: I0067019a191c8148af2cfb71a675f2258c5af0ca
This only works with Eclipse 3.6 and newer and requires installation
of new package. Documentation is not very good, but there is a blog
about it here:
http://eclipseandjazz.blogspot.com/2011/10/of-invalid-references-to-system.html
API checking is especially useful on OS X where Java5 is not readily
available.
Change-Id: I3c0ad460874a21c073f5ac047146cbf5d31992b4
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
In order to generate API reports run: mvn clirr:clirr
The reports are generated to the folder
target/site/clirr-report.html under the respective
project.
In order to check API compatibility and fail the build
on incompatible changes run: mvn clirr:check
For now we compare the API against the latest release
1.1.0.201109151100-r.
Bug: 336849
Change-Id: I21baaf3a6883c5b4db263f712705cc7b8ab6d888
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Kevin Sawicki <kevin@github.com>
The HTTP RFCs require a server to fully consume the request body before
it can return a non-error status code, which is any code below 400.
JGit returns most Git level errors inside of an HTTP 200 OK response,
and sometimes this happens before the entire request was consumed from
the servlet container. In such cases the body must be skipped or read
until EOF is reached, ensuring the HTTP keep-alive semantics will work
for the next request on the same TCP connection.
HTTP status codes >= 400 may be returned without consuming the body,
and a servlet container must set "Connection: close" in the response
headers when this happens, since the state of the request body is not
well defined with an early abort.
With the introduction of sendError() in GitSmartHttpTools there are
only a handful of locations that need to worry about the request body
being consumed, so sprinkle the call in as necessary.
Change-Id: I5381e110585f780c01a764df8e27c80aacf5146e
Error messages are typically short, below the 32 KiB in-memory buffer
size of the SmartOutputStream. When an error is queued up for sending
to a client and an exception is thrown up into the servlet handler we
discarded the message and sent nothing to the client, as the messages
were stuck inside of the SmartOutputStream buffer.
Hoist the creation of the output stream above the invocation of try
block of the service, and use close() in the few catch blocks that
assume there are buffered messages ready for transmission. This will
ensure errors from unpacking a stream in ReceivePack are sent off to
a client correctly, as previously these were causing no status report
to arrive at the client side as the data was stuck in the buffer.
Change-Id: I5534b560697731121f48979ae077aa7c95b8e39c
The stream must be closed to ensure the native resources associated
with its internal Deflater instance are cleaned up early, instead of
waiting for GC to identify the dead object and finialize it.
Change-Id: Ic31b5df563f19404ed4682556999f4332aa61562
The GitSmartHttpTools class started as utility functions to help report
useful error messages to users of the android.googlesource.com service.
Now that the GitServlet and GitFilter classes support filters before a
git-upload-pack or git-receive-pack request, server implementors may
these routines helpful to report custom messages to clients. Using the
sendError() method to return an HTTP 200 OK with error text embedded in
the payload prevents native Git clients from retrying the action with a
dumb Git or WebDAV HTTP request.
Refactor some of the existing code to use these new error functions and
protocol constants. The new sendError() function is very close to being
identical to the old error handling code in RepositoryFilter, however we
now use the POST Content-Type rather than the Accept HTTP header to check
if the client will accept the error data in the response body rather than
using the HTTP status code. This is a more reliable way of checking for
native Git clients, as the Accept header was not always populated with the
correct string in older versions of Git smart HTTP.
Change-Id: I828ac2deb085af12b6689c10f86662ddd39bd1a2
If removing the leading slash results in an empty string, return
with an HTTP 404 error before trying to use the RepositoryResolver.
Moving this into a loop ahead of the length check ensures there is
no empty string passed into the resolver.
Change-Id: I80e5b7cf25ae9f2164b5c396a29773e5c7d7286e
All Git URLs operate off a suffix approach, for example the default
binding is for paths such as:
*/info/refs
*/git-upload-pack
*/git-receive-pack
These names are not common on project hosting servers, especially
one like Gerrit Code Review.
In addition to offering Git-over-HTTP as a servlet, offer it as a
filter that triggers when a matching suffix appears, but otherwise
delegates the request through the chain. This filter would permit
Gerrit Code Review to place projects at the root of the server,
rather than within the "/p/" subdirectory, making the HTTP and SSH
URL structure exactly match each other.
To prevent breakage with existing users, the MetaServlet and
GitServlet are kept as wrappers delegating to their filters,
returning 404 Not Found when the filter has no match.
Change-Id: I2465c15c086497e0faaae5941159d80c028fa8b1
We should use a template for Mylyn commit messages that matches with our
guidelines for commit messages.
http://wiki.eclipse.org/EGit/Contributor_Guide#Commit_message_guidelines
Bug: 337401
Change-Id: I05812abf0eb0651d22c439142640f173fc2f2ba0
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>