The pack files were left open after the test ended, which meant
we could not delete them automatically when the test was over.
Make sure we close the repositories (and thus their underlying packs)
before the tear down finishes.
Bug: 310367
Change-Id: I4d2703efa4b2e0c347ea4f4475777899cf71073e
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
It is incorrect to use Eclipse.org as the providerName now,
we'll use Eclipse JGit.
Change-Id: I1621b93d4f401176704e7c43935a5ce0c8ee8419
Signed-off-by: Chris Aniszczyk <caniszczyk@gmail.com>
If a corrupt loose object is read, UnpackedObjectLoader was disposing
of the Inflater, and then attempting to return the disposed Inflater
to the InflaterCache. Since the disposed Inflater had its native
libz resource deallocated and its reference cleared out, the Inflater
threw NullPointerException and refused to reset itself before being
put back into the cache.
Instead of disposing of the Inflater when corruption is found, do
nothing, and allow it to be returned to the cache. The instance
will get reset, and should be usable by a future caller.
Bug: 310291
Change-Id: I44f2247c08b6e04fa62f8399609341b07508c096
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
* receive-pack-filter:
ReceivePack: Clarify the check reachable option
ReceivePack: Micro-optimize object lookup when checking connectivity
ReceivePack: Correct type of not provided object
IndexPack: Tighten up new and base object bookkeeping
ReceivePack: Remove need new,base object id properties
ReceivePack: Discard IndexPack as soon as possible
ReceivePack: fix ensureProvidedObjectsVisible on thin packs
Change-Id: I4ef2fcb931f3219872e0519abfcee220191d5133
This option was mis-named from day 1. Its not checking that the
objects provided by the client are reachable, its actually doing
a scan to prove that objects referenced by the client are already
reachable through another reference on the server, or were sent
as part of the pack from the client.
Rename it checkReferencedObjectsAreReachable, since we really are
trying to validate that objects referenced by the client's actions
are reachable to the client.
We also need to ensure we run checkConnectivity() anytime this is
enabled, even if the caller didn't turn on fsck for object formats.
Otherwise the check would be completely bypassed.
Change-Id: Ic352ddb0ca8464d407c6da5c83573093e018af19
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
If we are checking the visibility of everything referenced in the
pack that isn't already reachable by a reference, it needs to be
in the provided set. Since the provided set lists everything that
is in this pack, we can avoid checking to see if the blob exists
on disk, because we know it should be there, it was found in the
pack we just consumed.
Change-Id: Ie3c7746f734d13077242100a68e048f1ac18c34a
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
If a tree was referenced but not provided in the pack, report it
as a missing tree and not as a missing blob.
Change-Id: Iab05705349cdf0d30cc3f8afc6698a8d2a941343
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
The only current consumer of these collections is ReceivePack,
where it needs to test ObjectId equality between a RevObject and an
ObjectId. There we were copying from a traditional HashSet<ObjectId>
into an ObjectIdSubclassMap<ObjectId>, as the latter can perform
hashing using ObjectId's native value support, bypassing RevObject's
override on hashCode() and equals(). Instead of doing that copy,
directly create ObjectIdSubclassMap instances inside of ReceivePack.
We also only need to record the objects that do not appear in the
incoming pack, and were therefore copied from the local repositiory
in order to complete delta resolution. Instead of listing everything
that used an OBJ_REF_DELTA format, list only the objects that we
pulled from the destination repository via a normal ObjectLoader.
ReceivePack can now discard the IndexPack object, and all of its
other data, as soon as these collections are held by the check
connectivity method. This frees up memory for the ObjectWalk's
own RevObject pool.
Change-Id: I22ef71b45c2045a0202e7fd550a770ee1f6f38a6
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
These are more like internal implementation details of how IndexPack
works with ReceivePack to validate the incoming object stream.
Callers who are embedding the ReceivePack logic in their own
application don't really need to know the details of which objects
were used for delta bases in the incoming thin pack, or exactly
which objects were newly transmitted.
Hide these from the API, as exposing them through ReceivePack was
an early mistake.
Change-Id: I7ee44a314fa19e6a8520472ce05de92c324ad43e
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
The IndexPack object carries a good bit of state within itself about
the objects received over the wire. The earlier we can discard it,
the sooner the GC is able to reclaim this chunk of memory for other
uses. So drop it as soon as we are certain the pack is valid and we
have no connectivity concerns.
Change-Id: I1e8bc87c2e9183733043622237a064e55957891f
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
If ensureProvidedObjectsVisible is enabled we expected any trees or
blobs directly reachable from an advertised reference to be marked
with UNINTERESTING. Unfortunately ObjectWalk doesn't bother setting
this until the traversal is complete. Even then it won't necessarily
set it on every tree if the corresponding commit wasn't popped.
When we are going to check the base objects for the received pack,
ensure the UNINTERESTING flag gets carried into every immediately
reachable tree or blob, because these are the ones that the client
might try to use as delta bases in a thin pack.
Change-Id: I5d5fdcf07e25ac9fc360e79a25dff491925e4101
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
The Iterator contract says next() shall throw NoSuchElementException
if there are no more items remaining in the iteration. We got this
wrong when I originally wrote the implementation, so fix it.
Change-Id: Iea25e6569ead5c8b3128b8a368c5b2caebec7ecc
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This class behaves like a cross between a Set and a Map, sometimes
we might expect to use the method isEmpty() to test for size() == 0.
So implement it, reducing the surprise folks get when they are given
one of these objects.
Change-Id: I0d68e1243da8e62edf79c6ba4fd925f643e80a88
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
If we need to append less than 20 bytes in order to fix a thin pack
and make it complete, we need to set the length of our file back to
the actual number of bytes used because the original SHA-1 footer was
not completely overwritten. That extra data will confuse the header
and footer fixup logic when it tries to read to the end of the file.
This isn't a very common case to occur, which is why we've never
seen it before. Getting a delta that requires a whole object which
uses less than 20 bytes in pack representation is really hard.
Generally a delta generator won't make these, because the delta
would be bigger than simply deflating the whole object. I only
managed to do this with a hand-crafted pack file where a 1 byte
delta was pointed to a 1 byte whole object.
Normally we try really hard to avoid truncating, because its
typically not safe across network filesystems. But the odds of
this occurring are very low. This truncation is done on a file
we have open for writing, will append more content onto, and is
a temporary file that we won't move into position for others to
see until we've validated its SHA-1 is sane. I don't think the
truncate on NFS issue is something we need to worry about here.
Change-Id: I102b9637dfd048dc833c050890d142f43c1e75ae
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Since cc905e7d4b "Make Repository.getConfig aware of changed config"
its invalid to have a null result from FileBasedConfig.getFile(), as
the path is used to stat the location on disk before returning the
Config object from Repository.getConfig().
Mock out the isOutdated() method to return false all of the time
in the mock test environment, so we don't crash with an NPE when
this mock user configuration is being called.
Change-Id: I0b4d9cbd346d5dc225ec12674da905c35457fa7c
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
We can avoid one stat call by trying to perform a directory
listing without checking if the reference File is a directory.
Attempting a directory listing is defined to return. The other
case for null returns from list is when an I/O error occcurs.
Both cases are now intepreted as a possible plain reference. I/O
errors when reading plain references will be handled (ignored)
in scanRef().
Change-Id: I9906ed8c42eab4d6029c781aab87b3b07c1a1d2c
Signed-off-by: Robin Rosenberg <robin.rosenberg@dewire.com>
In the current implementation Repository reads user and repository
config only at creation point of time.
The new implementatiopn checks in Repository.getConfig if user or
repository config have changed on disk and reload the config if
required.
Change-Id: Ibd97515919ef66c6f8aa1a4fe8a11a6711335dad
Signed-off-by: Jens Baumgart <jens.baumgart@sap.com>
We only need to check file existense if some other stat returns
a value that may mean that the file does not exist. File.length() == 0
or File.lastModified() == 0 are two such properties. We use length
here.
Change-Id: If626b12e7bb4da994b5c086f6a5b7a12c187261c
Signed-off-by: Robin Rosenberg <robin.rosenberg@dewire.com>
The JSch bundle in Eclipse 3.4 does not export its packages with
version numbers. Use Require-Bundle on version 0.1.37 that comes
with Eclipse 3.4
There is no 0.1.37 in the maven repositories so the pom still refers
to 0.1.41 so the build can get the compile time dependencies right.
Bug: 308031
CQ: 3904 jsch Version: 0.1.37 (using Orbit CQ2014)
Change-Id: I12eba86bfbe584560c213882ebba58bf1f9fa0c1
Signed-off-by: Robin Rosenberg <robin.rosenberg@dewire.com>
When listing branches, EGit only reads the advertisement and
then disconnects. When it closes down the pack channel the remote
side is waiting for the client to send our list of commands, or a
flush-pkt to let it know there is nothing to do.
However if an error thread is open watching the SSH stderr stream,
we ask for it to finish before we send the flush-pkt. Unfortunately
the thread won't terminate until the main output stream closes,
which is waiting for the flush-pkt. A classic network deadlock.
If the output stream needs a flush-pkt we send it before we wait
for the error stream to close. If the flush-pkt is rejected, we
close down the output stream early, assuming that the remote side
is broken and we will get error information soon.
Change-Id: I8d078a339077756220c113f49d206b1bf295d434
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
* stable-0.7:
Qualify post-0.7.0 builds
JGit 0.7.0
This is an 'ours' merge to avoid bringing in the 0.7.0 version
numbers in the manifest and pom files.
Change-Id: Iad6354af57aaa2f233142fbf679489b08c121a71
Since the API is changing relative to 0.7.0, we'll call our next
release 0.8.1. But until that gets released, builds from master
will be 0.8.0.qualifier.
Change-Id: I921e984f51ce498610c09e0db21be72a533fee88
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Tag the version number and API range in the OSGi manifest files
whenever we bump the pom.xml files.
Change-Id: I7c38b51f7139c02bef6b0e67d3f9199cbcdc8a39
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Because this is the original contribution made under the project's
official license, EMO has tagged it "epl" and dropped it from the
project's IP log.
Change-Id: I55a2a57c570a555f4c86903767d60ae7cfddacbe
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
By default a receive pack assumes that its user will only provide
references to objects that the user already has access to on their
local client. In certain cases, an additional check to verify the
references point only to reachable objects is necessary.
This additional checking is useful when the code doesn't trust
the client not to provide a forged SHA-1 reference to an object,
in an attempt to access parts of the DAG that they weren't allowed
to see by the configured RefFilter.
Change-Id: I3e4b8505cb2992e3e4be253abb14a1501e47b970
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
* stable-0.7:
Reuse the line buffer between strings in PacketLineIn
http.server: Use TemporaryBuffer and compress some responses
Reduce multi-level buffered streams in transport code
Fix smart HTTP client buffer alignment
Use "ERR message" for early ReceivePack problems
Catch and report "ERR message" during remote advertisements
Wait for EOF on stderr before finishing SSH channel
Capture non-progress side band #2 messages and put in result
ReceivePack: Enable side-band-64k capability for status reports
Use more restrictive patterns for sideband progress scraping
Prefix remote progress tasks with "remote: "
Decode side-band channel number as unsigned integer
Refactor SideBandInputStream construction
Refactor SideBandOutputStream to be buffered
* push-sideband:
Reuse the line buffer between strings in PacketLineIn
http.server: Use TemporaryBuffer and compress some responses
Reduce multi-level buffered streams in transport code
Fix smart HTTP client buffer alignment
Use "ERR message" for early ReceivePack problems
Catch and report "ERR message" during remote advertisements
Wait for EOF on stderr before finishing SSH channel
Capture non-progress side band #2 messages and put in result
ReceivePack: Enable side-band-64k capability for status reports
Use more restrictive patterns for sideband progress scraping
Prefix remote progress tasks with "remote: "
Decode side-band channel number as unsigned integer
Refactor SideBandInputStream construction
Refactor SideBandOutputStream to be buffered
Change-Id: Ic9689e64e8c87971f2fd402cb619082309d5587f
When reading pkt-lines off an InputStream we are quite likely to
consume a whole group of fairly short lines in rapid succession, such
as in the have exchange that occurs in the fetch-pack/upload-pack
protocol. Rather than allocating a throwaway buffer for each
line's raw byte sequence, reuse a buffer that is equal to the small
side-band packet size, which is 1000 bytes. Text based pkt-lines
are required to be less than this size because many widely deployed
versions of C Git use a statically allocated array of this length.
Change-Id: Ia5c8e95b85020f7f80b6d269dda5059b092d274d
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
The HTTP server side code now uses the same approach that the smart
HTTP client code uses when preparing a request body. The payload
is streamed into a TemporaryBuffer of limited size. If the entire
data fits, its compressed with gzip if the user agent supports that,
and a Content-Length header is used to transmit the fixed length
body to the peer. If however the data overflows the limited memory
segment, its streamed uncompressed to the peer.
One might initially think that larger contents which overflow
the buffer should also be compressed, rather than sent raw, since
they were deemed "large". But usually these larger contents are
actually a pack file which has been already heavily compressed by
Git specific routines. Trying to deflate that with gzip is probably
going to take up more space, not less, so the compression overhead
isn't worthwhile.
This buffer and compress optimization helps repositories with a
large number of references, as their text based advertisements
compress well. For example jgit's own native repository currently
requires 32,628 bytes for its full advertisement of 489 references.
Most repositories have fewer references, and thus could compress
their entire response in one buffer.
Change-Id: I790609c9f763339e0a1db9172aa570e29af96f42
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
Some transports actually provide stream buffering on their own,
without needing to be wrapped up inside of a BufferedInputStream in
order to smooth out system calls to read or write. A great example
of this is the JSch SSH client, or the Apache MINA SSHD server.
Both use custom buffering to packetize the streams into the encrypted
SSH channel, and wrapping them up inside of a BufferedInputStream
or BufferedOutputStream is relatively pointless.
Our SideBandOutputStream implementation also provides some fairly
large buffering, equal to one complete side-band packet on the main
data channel. Wrapping that inside of a BufferedOutputStream just to
smooth out small writes from PackWriter causes extra data copies, and
provides no advantage. We can save some memory and some CPU cycles
by letting PackWriter dump directly into the SideBandOutputStream's
internal buffer array.
Instead we push the buffering streams down to be as close to the
network socket (or operating system pipe) as possible. This allows
us to smooth out the smaller reads/writes from pkt-line messages
during advertisement and negotation, but avoid copying altogether
when the stream switches to larger writes over a side band channel.
Change-Id: I2f6f16caee64783c77d3dd1b2a41b3cc0c64c159
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
This proved to be a pretty difficult to find bug. If we read exactly
the number of response bytes from the UnionInputStream and didn't
try to read beyond that length, the last connection's InputStream is
still inside of the UnionInputStream, and UnionInputStream.isEmpty()
returns false. But there is no data present, so the next read
request to our UnionInputStream returns EOF at a point where the
HTTP client code should have started a new request in order to get
more data.
Instead of wrapping the UnionInputStream, push an dummy stream onto
the end of it which when invoked always starts the next request and
then returns EOF. The UnionInputStream will automatically pop that
dummy stream out, and then read the next request's stream.
This way we never get into the state where we don't think we need
to run another request in order to satisfy the current read request,
but we really do.
The bug was hidden for so long because BasePackConnection.init()
was always wrapping the InputStream into a BufferedInputStream
with an 8 KiB buffer. This made the odds of us reading from the
UnionInputStream the exact number of available bytes quite low, as
the BufferedInputStream would always try to read a full buffer size.
Change-Id: I02b5ec3ef6853688687d91de000a5fbe2354915d
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
If the application wants to, it can use sendError(String) to send one
or more error messages to clients before the advertisements are sent.
These will cause a C Git client to break out of the advertisement
parsing loop, display "remote error: message\n", and terminate.
Servers can optionally use this to send a detailed error to a client
explaining why it cannot use the ReceivePack service on a repository.
Over smart HTTP these errors are sent in a 200 OK response, and
are in the payload, allowing the Git client to give the end-user
the custom message rather than the generic error "403 Forbidden".
Change-Id: I03f4345183765d21002118617174c77f71427b5a
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
GitHub broke the native git protocol a while ago by interjecting an
"ERR message" line into the upload-pack or receive-pack advertisement
list. This didn't match the expected pattern, so it caused existing
C Git clients to abort with a protocol exception.
These days, C Git clients actually look for this message and abort
with a more graceful notice to the end-user. JGit should do the
same, including setting up a custom exception type that makes it
easier for higher-level UIs to identify a message from the remote
site and present it to the user.
Change-Id: I51ab62a382cfaf1082210e8bfaa69506fd0d9786
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>
JSch will allow us to close the connection and then just drop
any late messages coming over the stderr stream for the command.
This makes it easy to lose final output on a command, like from
Gerrit Code Review's post receive hook.
Instead spawn a background thread to copy data from JSch's pipe
into our own buffer, and wait for that thread to receive EOF on the
pipe before we declare the connection closed. This way we don't
have a race condition between the stderr data arriving and JSch
just tearing down the channel.
Change-Id: Ica1ba40ed2b4b6efb7d5e4ea240efc0a56fb71f6
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>