Valid refs are defined by git-check-ref-format(1). In addition
we will not try to perform a lookup of an invalid ref name in
Repository.resolve().
Reported by R Shapiro in the Eclipse JGit Forum.
Change-Id: I0b098eec9ecb98a9ce16b1cfb476729aaf2fb190
Without this check, the checkout was done but the result was a "both
deleted" status when inspecting it with C Git.
Found this while working on bug 390147.
Change-Id: Ic3693f2c651827239e838bf7f37da842a7ae9707
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
Some GC tests were sporadically failing. The reason was that they used
the setExpireAgeMillis method to define object expiration before
invoking the prune method. Depending on the CPU load during the test
run, the prune method may reach an object (which is considered
non-expired by the test) too late and actually prune it.
To make the test stable we now use the setExpire(Date expire) method and
define a time instant before which objects are considered to be expired.
This way the outcome of the prune method doesn't depend on the CPU load.
Change-Id: Ifc3323ca55ae56dbccdbc90a282ec3cf18ad7297
Signed-off-by: Sasa Zivkov <sasa.zivkov@sap.com>
resolve("foo~X") where X is greater than the distance from foo to the
root should return null, but 2a2362fb introduced a bug causing it to
either return resolve("foo") or NPE. Add a test for the correct
behavior.
Also add an analogous test for foo^X where X is greater than the
number of parents (which was not broken by that commit).
Change-Id: Ic580081ece57c8c2df29b652897b425ecb34e11f
For configuration parameter like "gc.pruneexpire" we need to understand
the value "never". Never is handled as a date so far into the future
that it will never happen. The actual value currently used is the
constant GitDateParser.NEVER.
Change-Id: I7744eaee9bf5026da517151c212c88325c348d6c
Signed-off-by: Robin Rosenberg <robin.rosenberg@dewire.com>
Instead of just returning null when something was not parseable we
should throw a real ParseException. This allows us to distinguish
between specifications which are unparseable and those which represent
no date (e.g. "never")
Change-Id: Ib3c1aa64b65ed0e0270791a365f2fa72ab78a3f4
Change-Id: Id5b578f7040c6c896ab9386a6b5ed62b0f495ed5
Signed-off-by: Sasa Zivkov <sasa.zivkov@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Change-Id: Id3ab5f56f88d7e9636c71b30258c268a75fc422e
Signed-off-by: Robin Stocker <robin@nibor.org>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
When a file is not in the index and neither contents nor mode differ
between "head" and "merge", the index state should be kept. If they
differ, a checkout conflict should occur. This is described in Git's
git-read-tree.txt.
JGit used to replace the index state with "merge" in both of the above
cases.
A confusing effect of this was that when one removed a file and then did
a rebase, the file silently reappeared again.
The changes to dir/file conflict handling are a consequence of this
change, as the index handling change made tests in DirCacheCheckoutTest
break. I compared these cases to C Git and the new behavior there also
matches what C Git does.
Bug: 387390
Change-Id: I5beb781f12172a68f98c67d4c8029eb51ceae62d
Signed-off-by: Robin Stocker <robin@nibor.org>
The transformation is the same as AutoCRLFOutputStream does, but
the direction is reversed. The tests are reused, but the implementation
derives somewhat from the EolCanonicalizingInputStream.
This stream will be used to compare blobs with LF line endings with
worktree data that has CRLF line endings.
Bug: 387501
Change-Id: I80d96e453e7f780dd464a89778de124cf35384e1
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
In order to parse user specified strings containing date and time info
a thread-safe parser is implemented. This is needed for example to
interpret configuration parameters (e.g. gc.pruneexpire where need to
parse strings like "2 weeks ago"). The parser is thread-safe by caching
SimpleDateFormat instances in a ThreadLocal cache.
Native git has a parser called approxidate which is able to interpret a
huge number of formats ("1 year ago", "tea time", ...). Ideally JGit
should be able to parse the same strings as native git but for now this
parser understands the following subset:
"now"
"yesterday"
"(x) years|months|weeks|days|hours|minutes|seconds ago"
"yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss Z" (ISO)
"EEE, dd MMM yyyy HH:mm:ss Z" (RFC)
"yyyy-MM-dd"
"yyyy.MM.dd"
"MM/dd/yyyy"
"dd.MM.yyyy"
"EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss yyyy Z" (DEFAULT)
"EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss yyyy" (LOCAL)
Change-Id: Iccb66dadb60da13104e73140e53d5e2de068369c
JGit was not able to lookup refs which had the name of files which exist
in the .git folder. When JGit was looking up a ref named X it has a
fixed set of directories where it searched for files named X
(ignore packed refs for now). First directory to search for is .git. In
case of the ref named 'config' it searched there for this file, found it
(it's the .git/config file with the repo configuration in it), parsed
it, found it is an invalid ref and stopped searching. It never looked
for a file .git/refs/heads/config.
I changed JGit in a way that when it finds a file in GIT_DIR which
corresponds to a ref name and if this file doesn't contain a valid ref
then it will ignore the InvalidObjectIdException and continue searching.
Change-Id: Ic26a329fb1624a5b2b2494c78bac4bd76817c100
Bug: 381574
Signed-off-by: Christian Halstrick <christian.halstrick@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Lay <stefan.lay@sap.com>
EGit wasn't able to decorate local branches tracking another local
branch with number of commits the checked out local branch differs from
the other local branch it's tracking.
Bug: 376970
Change-Id: I74e932d5eacd74dbf6b0dffcfc65ba3222a8250e
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
On conflicts in rebase or cherry-pick, the conflict markers were like
this:
<<<<<<< OURS
a
=======
b
>>>>>>> THEIRS
This is technically correct, but it could be better.
It's especially confusing during a rebase, where the meaning of
OURS/THEIRS is not obvious. The intuition is that "ours" is the commits
that "I" did before the rebase, but it's the other way around because of
the way rebase works. See various bug reports and stackoverflow
discussions.
With this change, in the case of a cherry-pick while on master, the
markers will be like this:
<<<<<<< master
a
=======
b
>>>>>>> bad1dea Message of the commit I'm cherry-picking
In the case of a "git rebase master":
<<<<<<< Upstream, based on master
a
=======
b
>>>>>>> b161dea Message of a commit I'm rebasing
It's not "master" because that would only be correct for the first
cherry-pick during a rebase, after that, it's master + already
cherry-picked commits.
And in the case of a "git pull --rebase":
<<<<<<< Upstream, based on branch 'master' of git@example.org:repo
a
=======
b
>>>>>>> b161dea Message of a commit I'm rebasing
Bug: 336819
Change-Id: I1333a8dd170bb0077f491962013485efb6f2a926
Signed-off-by: Robin Stocker <robin@nibor.org>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Change-Id: I03f59d07bcc3338ef8d392cbd940799186ca03bd
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Halstrick <christian.halstrick@sap.com>
Since git doesn't keep track of empty directories, they should be
created first. Test case included demonstrates that using
StashApplyCommand(). Bugfix is applied to the DirCacheCheckout class,
because StashApplyCommand() uses it internally to apply a stash.
Change-Id: Iac259229ef919f9e92e7e51a671d877172bb88a8
Signed-off-by: Jevgeni Zelenkov <jevgeni.zelenkov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
JGit allows to create commits which have duplicate parents: e.g. a
commit X has first parent Y and second parent Y. Such commits are not
handled correctly by PlotCommit leading to wrong display of the history
in EGit. In such cases there is a never ending passing line drawn beside
all commits younger than the commit with duplicate parents. This commit
fixes this by explicitly checking for duplicate parents.
In a different commit we should fix JGit not to create commits with
duplicate parents. I think native git also doesn't allow such commits,
although history display in native git (gitk, git log --graph) is not
damaged by such commits.
Change-Id: Ie3019ef613a507023958bea27b1badc3b8950279
Implements a garbage collector for FileRepositories. Main ideas are
copied from the garbage collector for DFS based repos
(DfsGarbageCollector). Added functionalities are
- pruning loose objects
- handling of the index
- packing refs
- handling of reflogs (objects referenced from reflog will not be
pruned/)
These are features of a GC which are not handled in this change and
which should come with subsequent changes:
- unpacking packed objects into loose objects (to support that pruning
packed objects doesn't delete them until they are older than two weeks)
- expiration of reflogs
- support for configuration parameters (e.g. gc.pruneExpire)
Change-Id: I14ea5cb7e0fd1b5c50b994fd77f4e05bfbb9d911
Signed-off-by: Christian Halstrick <christian.halstrick@sap.com>
A configured remote url like "../repo" works with C Git.
In JGit, it only worked if Java's current working directory happened to
be the local repository working directory.
Change-Id: I33ba3f81b37d03cf17ca7ae25a90774a27e7e02b
Signed-off-by: Robin Stocker <robin@nibor.org>
Currently, after a merge/cherry-pick/rebase, all index entries are
smudged as the ResolveMerger never sets entry lengths and/or
modification times. This change teaches it to re-set them at least for
things it did not touch. The other entries are then repaired when the
index is persisted, or entries are checked out.
The first attempt to get this in was commit
3ea694c252 which has been reverted.
Since then some fixes to ResolveMerger and a few more tests have
been added which check situations where the index is not matching
HEAD before we merge.
Change-Id: I648fda30846615b3bf688c34274c6cf4bc857832
Signed-off-by: Christian Halstrick <christian.halstrick@sap.com>
Also-by: Markus Duft <markus.duft@salomon.at>
Repository.resolve can only return an ObjectId and will
continue to do so, but another method, simplify(), will
be able to return a branch name for some cases.
Previous checkouts can be specified as @{-n}, where n is an
integer speifying the n:th previous branch. The result
is the branch name, unless the checkout was a detached head,
in which case the object id is returned. Since the result
is a branch it may be followed by a references to the reflog,
such as @{-1}@{1} if necessary.
A simple expression like "master" is resolved to master in
simplify, but anything starting with refs gets resolved to
its object id, even if it is a branch.
A symbolic ref is resolved to its leaf ref, e.g. "HEAD" might
be resolved to "master".
Change-Id: Ifb815a1247ba2a3e2d9c46249c09be9d47f2b693
Currently, after a merge/cherry-pick/rebase, all index entries are
smudged as the ResolveMerger never sets entry lengths and/or
modification times. This change teaches it to re-set them at least for
things it did not touch. The other entries are then repaired when the
index is persisted, or entries are checked out.
Change-Id: I0944f2017483d32043d0d09409b13055b5609a4b
Signed-off-by: Christian Halstrick <christian.halstrick@sap.com>
No branch before @ is interpreted as the currently checked out branch.
For detached heads it would be HEAD, but normally it is the branch
that HEAD refers to.
Change-Id: I051a1724fa390b8212e8986ba832b1347a20371e
Otherwise applying will fail with a FileNotFoundException, because
File.createNewFile() fails with missing parents.
Contains change & according test.
Change-Id: I970522b549b8bb260ca6720da11f12c57ee8a492
Signed-off-by: Chris Aniszczyk <zx@twitter.com>
An example where this is necessary is when a whole directory was deleted
and checkout is used to restore a file which was in that directory.
Bug: 372133
Change-Id: I1d45e0a5d2525fe1fdfbf08c9c5c166dd909e9fd
Signed-off-by: Robin Stocker <robin@nibor.org>
This was broken in fe1f1b8f8a, which
preferred the index over the working tree when both were present.
Change-Id: I97dcf9a088adcbd0187fa7eec9ef34445ce3a981
Signed-off-by: Kevin Sawicki <kevin@github.com>
When starting a rebase with C Git, there may be empty lines in the
git-rebase-todo file. Before this change, JGit would fail to parse the
file with e.g. the following exception:
JGitInternalException: Unknown or unsupported command "
#", only "pick" is allowed.
This happened when there was an empty line just before the comments,
because the nextSpace would be the one from the comment. Now the empty
lines are ignored by checking for nextSpace < ptr outside of the loop.
Change-Id: I94ad299f367c846e7729c74f49c6b8f93f75ae81
Signed-off-by: Robin Stocker <robin@nibor.org>
Before, the paths to delete were stored in a HashMap, which doesn't have
a particular order. So when e.g. both the file "a/b" and the directory
"a" were to be deleted, it would sometimes try to delete "a" first. This
resulted in a failed path because File#delete() fails when a directory
isn't empty.
With this change, an ArrayList is used for storing the paths to delete.
The list contains the paths in a top-down order, as defined by the order
of processEntry. When the files are deleted, the list is iterated in
reverse, ensuring that all files of a directory are deleted before the
directory itself.
Bug: 354099
Change-Id: I6b2ce96b3932ca84ecdfbeab457ce823c95433fb
Signed-off-by: Robin Stocker <robin@nibor.org>
ResolveMerger#mergeImpl() was only returning false (= failed) when there
were unmerged paths. In the case when there were only failing paths, it
returned true.
Because MergeCommand looks at the return value for determining if the
merge failed, it would fall into the successful case there, where it
should instead return a MergeResult with MergeStatus.FAILED.
This change adds a test case for this and makes the ResolveMerger return
false when there are failing paths.
This was discovered while working on fixing bug 354099 and is needed for
its test case.
Bug: 354099
Change-Id: I499f518f6289ef93e017db924b2aa857f2154707
Signed-off-by: Robin Stocker <robin@nibor.org>
Whenever a call to JGit returns a Repository the caller should make sure
to call close() on it if he doesn't need it anymore. Since instances of
Repository contain e.g. open FileOutputStreams (for pack files)
forgetting to close the repository can lead to resource leaks.
This was the reason why dozens of the JUnit tests failed on Windows
with "Can't delete file ...." errors.
In LocalDiskRepositoryTestCase.tearDown() we tried to delete the
repositories we used during tests which failed because we had open
FileOutputStreams.
Not only the obvious cases during Clone or Init operations returned
Repositories, but also the new SubModule API created repository
instances. In some places we even forgot to close submodule repositories
in our internal coding.
To see the effects of this fix run the JGit JUnit tests under Windows.
On other platforms it's harder to see because either the leaking
resources don't lead to failing JUnit tests (on Unix you can delete
files with open FileOutputStreams) or the java gc runs differently and
cleans up the resources earlier.
Change-Id: I6d4f637b0d4af20ff4d501db091548696373a58a
Signed-off-by: Christian Halstrick <christian.halstrick@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
When receiving a pack, data buffered after the pack can restored
to the InputStream if the stream supports mark and reset.
Change-Id: If04915c32c91be28db8df7e8491ed3e9fe0e1608