Currently the repo sub-command only "works", but the submodules will have .git
directories themselves, and lacks group support.
Change-Id: I88a6ee07109187c6c9bfd92a044775fcfb5befa6
Signed-off-by: Yuxuan 'fishy' Wang <fishywang@google.com>
Previously all HTTP communication was done with the help of
java.net.HttpUrlConnection. In order to make JGit usable in environments
where the direct usage of such connections is not allowed but where the
environment provides other means to get network connections an
abstraction for connections is introduced. The idea is that new
implementations of this interface will be introduced which will not use
java.net.HttpUrlConnection but use e.g.
org.apache.client.http.HttpClient to provide network connections.
One example: certain cloud infrastructures don't allow that components
in the cloud communicate directly with HttpUrlConnection. Instead they
provide services where a component can ask for a connection (given a
symbolic name for the destination) and where the infrastructure returns
a preconfigured org.apache.http.client.HttpClient. In order to allow
JGit to be running in such environments we need the abstraction
introduced in this commit.
Change-Id: I3b06629f90a118bd284e55bb3f6465fe7d10463d
Signed-off-by: Christian Halstrick <christian.halstrick@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Package was renamed, so I had to update the imports. Also, I verified
bitmap serialization was still compatible.
Change-Id: I161ad3875b963b56001beab477ef8d072accee4f
Translatable texts aren't API and shouldn't require maintenance of
@since tags to prevent API warnings.
Change-Id: I228ff37f17c0e792a6bc188c463a0d19138e88ac
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
The most important difference is that in Java7 we have symbolic links
and for most operations in the work tree we want to operate on the link
itself rather than the link target, which the old File methods generally
do.
We also add support for the hidden attribute, which only makes sense
on Windows and exists, just since there are claims that Files.exists
is faster the File.exists.
A new bundle is only activated when run with a Java7 execution
environment. It is implemented as a fragment.
Tycho currently has no way to conditionally include optional features
based on the java version used to run the build, this means with this
change the jgit packaging build always needs to be run using java 7.
Change-Id: I3d6580d6fa7b22f60d7e54ab236898ed44954ffd
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Commit 3344b93c erroneously exported the package org.eclipse.jgit.lib
from the org.eclipse.jgit.test bundle which made this a split package
since the bundle org.eclipse.jgit exports the same package.
Split packages are evil in general and most probably caused the build
cycle errors observed recently when importing the jgit projects in
Eclipse [1].
[1] http://dev.eclipse.org/mhonarc/lists/jgit-dev/msg02012.html
Change-Id: I89919e56b928acdbff0b90e3919808025a8562c6
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
This breaks all existing callers once. Applications are not supposed
to build against the internal storage API unless they can accept API
churn and make necessary updates as versions change.
Change-Id: I2ab1327c202ef2003565e1b0770a583970e432e9
A pack bitmap index is an additional index of compressed
bitmaps of the object graph. Furthermore, a logical API of the index
functionality is included, as it is expected to be used by the
PackWriter.
Compressed bitmaps are created using the javaewah library, which is a
word-aligned compressed variant of the Java bitset class based on
run-length encoding. The library only works with positive integer
values. Thus, the maximum number of ObjectIds in a pack file that
this index can currently support is limited to Integer.MAX_VALUE.
Every ObjectId is given an integer mapping. The integer is the
position of the ObjectId in the complete ObjectId list, sorted
by offset, for the pack file. That integer is what the bitmaps
use to reference the ObjectId. Currently, the new index format can
only be used with pack files that contain a complete closure of the
object graph e.g. the result of a garbage collection.
The index file includes four bitmaps for the Git object types i.e.
commits, trees, blobs, and tags. In addition, a collection of
bitmaps keyed by an ObjectId is also included. The bitmap for each entry
in the collection represents the full closure of ObjectIds reachable
from the keyed ObjectId (including the keyed ObjectId itself). The
bitmaps are further compressed by XORing the current bitmaps against
prior bitmaps in the index, and selecting the smallest representation.
The XOR'd bitmap and offset from the current entry to the position
of the bitmap to XOR against is the actual representation of the entry
in the index file. Each entry contains one byte, which is currently
used to note whether the bitmap should be blindly reused.
Change-Id: Id328724bf6b4c8366a088233098c18643edcf40f