uninteresting
Using the ObjectWalk and marking a commit as uninteresting didn't mark
its root tree as uninteresting. This caused the "missing tree ..."
error in Gerrit under special circumstances. For example, if the
patch-set 2 changes only the commit message then the patch-set 1
and patch-set 2 share the same root-tree:
ps1 -> o o <- ps2
\ /
o root-tree
The transported pack will contain the ps2 commit but not the root-tree
object.
When using the BaseReceivePack.setCheckReferencedObjectsAreReachable
JGit will check the reachability of all referenced objects not provided
in the transported pack. Since the ps1 was advertised it will properly
be marked as uninteresting. However, the root-tree was reachable because
the ObjectWalk.markUninteresting missed to mark it as uninteresting.
JGit was then rejecting the pack with the "missing tree ..." exception.
Gerrit-issue: https://code.google.com/p/gerrit/issues/detail?id=1582
Change-Id: Iff2de8810f14ca304e6655fc8debeb8f3e20712b
Signed-off-by: Saša Živkov <sasa.zivkov@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
In Git 1.9 (5dbd767601 "support pushing from a shallow clone")
the git-core project intentionally broke the existing send-pack
protocol from shallow clients.
Shallow clients now transmit their shallow information during push,
ahead of the old-new command sequence. JGit must accept these lines
when presented.
To protect the server against clients sending partial history,
require the connectivity check when pushed to by a shallow client.
Change-Id: I46639366b0900052c376091e1688f07def44ab79
This matches what C Git does, see "stripped" in `man git-commit-tree`.
It also fixes the bug of the user where an user.email like "<>" would
show up as "<<>>" in EGit.
Bug: 439844
Change-Id: I567a3c620e191ce9d37d318417e63cb5d4483419
Signed-off-by: Robin Stocker <robin@nibor.org>
URIish.unescape() threw an ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException if the given
url has incorrect percent-encoding (e.g. http://example.com/%gg). But an
URISyntaxException is much better to know the reason of the failure.
Change-Id: I3f40a26d43cd2eb4e32c11aba7dc2594bc1f98e2
Signed-off-by: Yi EungJun <eungjun.yi@navercorp.com>
This is necessary to ensure objects accessed by the TreeWalk come from
the associated ObjectInserter when the merger is a RecursiveMerger
instance and a virtual common base was constructed but not flushed.
Change-Id: Iebe739d30fd868ebc4f61dbfb714673146a2c3ec
According to http://stackoverflow.com/a/8381338, the maximum array
size is not Integer.MAX_VALUE, but Integer.MAX_VALUE - 8
Change-Id: I6ddc7470368acd20abf0885c53c89a982bb0f176
Signed-off-by: Marc Strapetz <marc.strapetz@syntevo.com>
The native implementation of inflate() can set finished to return
true at the same time as it copies the last bytes into the buffer.
Check for finished on each iteration, terminating as soon as libz
knows the stream was completely inflated.
If not finished, it is likely input is required before the next
native call could do any useful work. Most invocations are passing
in a buffer large enough to store the entire result. A partial return
from inflate() will need more input before it can continue. Checking
right away that needsInput() is true saves a native call to determine
no bytes can be inflated without more input.
This should fix a rare infinite loop condition inside of inflation
when an object ends exactly at the end of a block boundary, and
the next block contains only the 20 byte trailing SHA-1.
When the stream is finished each new attempt to inflate() returns
n == 0, as no additional bytes were output. The needsInput() test
tries to add the length of the footer block to itself, but then loops
back around an reloads the same block as the block is smaller than
a full block size. A zero length input is set to the inflater,
which triggers needsInput() condition again.
Change-Id: I95d02bfeab4bf995a254d49166b4ae62d1f21346
This reverts commit b646578d89.
openInputStream() is never used in JGit, nor is it used by any
known working DFS implementation. The method was added as a
utility for reading back from a DfsInserter, but the final
implementation of that feature does not requrire this method.
Change-Id: I075ad95e40af49c92b554480f8993ef5658f7684
This allows callers performing multiple separate merges to reuse a
single ObjectInserter without flushing the inserter on each iteration
(which can be slow in the DFS case).
Change-Id: Icaff7d2bc2c20c873ce5a7d9af5002da84ae1c2b
This allows the RecursiveMerger to iteratively create new merge bases
without necessarily flushing packs to storage in the DFS case;
flushing only need happen at the end of the whole merge process.
Since Merger's walk now depends on its inserter, we need to construct
an inserter at Merger construction time. This should not be a
significant increase in overhead since unused inserters don't use any
resources (beyond a reference to the Repository).
We also must release and recreate the walk whenever setObjectInserter
is called, which can break usages where setObjectInserter is called in
the middle of stateful operations on the walk. No usages of this
method within JGit currently do this; the inserter is only ever set
before any stateful walk operations happen.
Change-Id: I9682a6aa4a2c37dccef8e163f132ddb791d79103
This kind of reverted 31148. URI.resolve actually can handle the absolute URL
well, the problem is only the missing "/".
Change-Id: Iee5866c005cbc1430dc20ee7db321b8b51afed30
Signed-off-by: Yuxuan 'fishy' Wang <fishywang@google.com>
In the DFS implementation, flushing an inserter writes a new pack to
the storage system and is potentially very slow, but was the only way
to ensure previously-inserted objects were available. For some tasks,
like performing a series of three-way merges, the total size of all
inserted objects may be small enough to avoid flushing the in-memory
buffered data.
DfsOutputStream already provides a read method to read back from the
not-yet-flushed data, so use this to provide an ObjectReader in the
DFS case.
In the file-backed case, objects are written out loosely on the fly,
so the implementation can just return the existing WindowCursor.
Change-Id: I454fdfb88f4d215e31b7da2b2a069853b197b3dd
Since 2badedcbe0 in-core merges can write up to 10 MiB
into a TemporaryBuffer.Heap strategy, where the data is stored
as a chain of byte[] blocks.
Support the inserter reading up to the streamFileThreshold (default 50
MiB) from the supplied input stream and hash the content to determine
if the merged result blob is already present in the repository. This
allows the inserter to avoid creating duplicate objects in more cases,
reducing repository pack file churn.
Change-Id: I38967e2a0cff14c0a856cdb46a2c8fedbeb21ed5
The base Merger class already has a single ObjectReader instance that
it handles releasing as necessary, so creating new readers is not
necessary.
Change-Id: I990ec43af7df448c7825fc1b10e62eadaa3e0c2a
Instead of always writing to disk use TemporaryBuffer.LocalFile to
store up to 10 MiB of merge result in RAM. Most source code will
fit into this limit, avoiding local disk IO for simple merges.
Larger files will automatically spool to a temporary file that
can be cleaned up in the finally, reducing the risk of leaving
them on disk and consuming space in /tmp.
Change-Id: Ieccbd9b354d4dd3d2bc1304857325ae7a9f34ec6
The only caller of writeMergedFile is updateIndex, and the only
user of this path object is the code within the method. This is
a no-op change that opens the door to refactoring the way temp
files are handled for inCore merges.
Change-Id: I863a303194689a806b667e55eb958e1decf046c1
When merging common ancestors to create a single virtual common
ancestor the commit does not need to be inserted into the Git
repository. Instead just mock it out in memory as part of the
merger's RevWalk pool.
Make the author and committer stable and predictable for any
given pair of merge bases. It is not necessary for the caller's
name or email to be used as the commit will not be written out.
Change-Id: I88d5ee4de121950e1b032a5c10486c9d2c42656c
Currently if the remote defined in repo manifest xml is non-relative (e.g.
"https://chromium.googlesource.com"), our code will break. This change fixed
that.
It also makes that remotes are ending with "/".
Change-Id: Icef46360b32227a9db1d9bb9e6d929c72aeaa8df
Signed-off-by: Yuxuan 'fishy' Wang <fishywang@google.com>
Instead of passing on the start point as is to CreateBranchCommand, the
resolved ObjectId was used. Given this, CreateBranchCommand did not set
up tracking.
This also fixes CreateBranchCommand with setStartPoint(null) to use HEAD
(instead of NPEing), as documented in the Javadoc.
Bug: 441153
Change-Id: I5ed82b4a4b4a32a81a7fa2854636b921bcb3d471
Signed-off-by: Robin Stocker <robin@nibor.org>
Previously an equality check was performed so an exception would
be thrown if any other options were set.
Change-Id: I36b60e2c0a8aef9fcfe663055dba520192996872
With these, more code can use BranchConfig instead of directly accessing
the raw configuration values.
Change-Id: I4b52f97ff0e3fc8f097512806f043c615a3d2594
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
If the IndexDiffFilter is asked whether it should include or filter out
a certain path and for that path there is a dircache entry with a stage
different from 0, then the filter should never filter out this entry.
IndexDiffFilter is an optimized version of AnyDiffFilter and there is no
case where the index contains non-0 stages but we still don't see any
diff for that path.
Change-Id: I25915880f304090fe90584c79bddf021231227a2
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
In change If45bc3d078b3d3de87b758e71d7379059d709603 a new parameter was
added to 3 protected methods of ResolveMerger. This breaks the code of
developers which have subclassed ResolveMerger. The API baseline check
in Eclipse reports this as API breakage.
Since this will break only providers but not consumers of the API this
should be allowed also in minor versions. According to OSGi semantic
versioning
http://www.osgi.org/wiki/uploads/Links/SemanticVersioning.pdf
breaking providers in a minor version update is ok.
Therefore silence these errors using API filter rules.
Bug: 440757
Change-Id: Icabbd0e1de7e877c66a5c4a2c8391473f992a1aa
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
It's an internal package which isn't part of the API. Mark it x-internal
to silence @since tag warnings which are only raised for new API.
Bug: 440757
Change-Id: Id05deaca43f135cd1bfe83cf1f29787cbbdbecac
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
The fix is to move the new head commit to the newly-created revert
commit, so that additional revert commits will use the correct head.
Change-Id: I5de3a9a2a4c276e60af732e9c507cbbdfd1a4652
Signed-off-by: Maik Schreiber <blizzy@blizzy.de>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Apparently repo allows projects overlapping, e.g. one project's path is "foo"
and another project's path is "foo/bar". This is not supported in git submodule.
At JGit repo side we'll skip all the submodules that are in subdirectories of
other submodules, and on repo side we'll make them submodules to resolve this
problem.
Change-Id: I6820c4ef400c530a36150b1228706adfcc43ef64
Signed-off-by: Yuxuan 'fishy' Wang <fishywang@google.com>
Previously when RecursiveMerger was trying to create a single virtual
common base for the merge it was failing when this lead to content-merge
conflicts. This is different from what native git is doing. When native
git's recursive merge algorithm creates a new common base it will merge
the multiple parents and simply take the merge result (potentially
including conflict markers) as common base. See my discussion with Shawn
here: http://www.spinics.net/lists/git/msg234959.html :
> - How should workingtree, index (stage1,2,3) look like if during
that
> merge of common ancestors a conflict occurs? Will I see in stage2
and
> stage3 really see content of X1 and X2?
Its done entirely in memory and never touches the working tree or
index. When a conflict exists in the X1-X2 merge the conflict is
preserved into the new virtual base.
There is still the possibility that the merge of parents lead to
conflicts. File/Folder conclicts, conflicts on filemodes. This commit
only fixes the situation for conflicts when merging content.
Bug: 438203
Change-Id: If45bc3d078b3d3de87b758e71d7379059d709603
During recursive merge jgit potentially has to merge multiple
common ancestors. If this fails because there are conflicts then
the exception thrown for that should have a message which states
this clearly. Previously a wrong message was given ("More than 200
merge bases ...")
Change-Id: Ia3c058d5575decdefd50390ed83b63668d31c1d1
Each time the longest common substring is found the diff algorithm
recurses to reprocess the regions before and after the common string.
Large files with many edits can trigger StackOverflowError as the
algorithm attempts to process a deeply split tree of regions. This
is especially prone to happen in servers where the Java stack size
may have been limited to 1M or even 256K.
To keep edits produced in order a queue is used to process edits
in a depth-first strategy.
Change-Id: Iae7260c6934efdffac7c7bee4d3633a8208924f7
When RecursiveMerger tried to determine a common base tree it was
recursively tried to merge multiple common bases. But these intermediate
merges which have just been done to determine a single common base for
the final merge already filled some important fields (toBeCheckedOut,
toBeDeleted, ...). These side effects of the intermediate merges led to
wrong results of the final merge. One symptom was that after a recursive
merge which should be succesful you could still see leftover files in
the worktree: files which existed in the (virtual) common base but which
don't exist anymore in the branches to be merged.
The solution is easy: Clear the appropriate fields after common base
determination and start the final merge with a clean state.
Change-Id: I644ea9e1cb15360f7901bc0483cdb9286308c226
Signed-off-by: Robin Rosenberg <robin.rosenberg@dewire.com>
As described in native gits file "git-read-tree.txt" git has in a
special mode when doing the "initial" checkout. "Initial" means that the
index is empty before the checkout. This was not handled correctly in
JGit and is fixed in this commit. Also see
https://github.com/git/git/blob/master/Documentation/git-read-tree.txt#L181
Change-Id: I9b9d1bd9ebf349cfca420c891c7b099a18d07ba4
Setting branch.<name>.rebase or pull.rebase to 'preserve' will preserve
merges during rebase. Also, pull.rebase is now consulted if there is no
branch-specific configuration.
Bug: 429664
Change-Id: I345fa295c7e774e0d0a8e6aba30fbfc3552e0084
Signed-off-by: Konrad Kügler <swamblumat-eclipsebugs@yahoo.de>
With --preserve-merges C Git re-does merges using the rewritten merge
parents, discarding the old merge commit. For the common use-case of
pull with rebase this is unfortunate, as it loses the merge conflict
resolution (and other fixes in the merge), which may have taken quite
some time to get right in the first place.
To overcome this we use a two-fold approach:
If any of the (non-first) merge parents of a merge were rewritten, we
also redo the merge, to include the (potential) new changes in those
commits.
If only the first parent was rewritten, i.e. we are merging a branch
that is otherwise unaffected by the rebase, we instead cherry-pick the
merge commit at hand. This is done with the --mainline 1 and --no-commit
options to apply the changes introduced by the merge. Then we set up an
appropriate MERGE_HEAD and commit the result, thus effectively forging a
merge.
Apart from the approach taken to rebase merge commits, this
implementation closely follows C Git. As a result, both Git
implementations can continue rebases of each other.
Preserving merges works for both interactive and non-interactive rebase,
but as in C Git it is easy do get undesired outcomes with interactive
rebase.
CommitCommand supports committing merges during rebase now.
Bug: 439421
Change-Id: I4cf69b9d4ec6109d130ab8e3f42fcbdac25a13b2
Signed-off-by: Konrad Kügler <swamblumat-eclipsebugs@yahoo.de>