If no refs match the input list and we are writing to a batch,
the returned new commit from write() will match the current commit.
Adding a command to the batch for this case is harmless as it will
succeed, but it's more straightforward to just skip adding a command
in this case.
Add tests or the combination of saving matching refs and saving to a
batch.
Change-Id: I6837389b08e6c80bc2d4c9e9c506d07293ea5fb2
- use NIO2's Files.move() to reimplement rename()
- provide a second method accepting CopyOptions which can be used to
request atomic move.
Change-Id: Ibcf722978e65745218a1ccda45344ca295911659
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
The WorkingTreeIterator.isEntryIgnored() should use originally requested
file mode while descending to the file tree root and checking ignore
rules. Original code asking isEntryIgnored() on a file was using
directory mode instead if the .gitignore was not located in the same
directory.
Bug: 473506
Change-Id: I9f16ba714c3ea9e6585e9c11623270dbdf4fb1df
Signed-off-by: Andrey Loskutov <loskutov@gmx.de>
When during Merge for a certain path OURS & BASE contains a file and
THEIRS contains a folder there was a bug in JGit leading to unnecessary
conflicts. This commit fixes it and adds a test for this situation.
Bug: 472693
Change-Id: I71fac5a6a2ef926c01adc266c6f9b3275e870129
Also-by: Clemens Buchacher <drizzd@aon.at>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
According to [1] leading spaces are allowed in ignore rules and trailing
spaces are allowed too if they are escaped via backslash.
[1] https://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/gitignore.html
Bug: 472762
Change-Id: I5e3ae5599cb9e5d80072f38c82c20cbc9475a18a
Signed-off-by: Andrey Loskutov <loskutov@gmx.de>
According to [1] backslash can escape leading special characters '#' and
'!' in ignore rules, so that they are treated literally.
[1] https://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/gitignore.html
Bug: 463581
Change-Id: I4c02927413a9c63ea5dbf2954877080d902ec1b2
Signed-off-by: Andrey Loskutov <loskutov@gmx.de>
While checking if we should consider an ignore rule without '[]'
brackets as a regular expression, check if the backslash escapes one of
the glob special characters '?', '*', '[', '\\'. If not, backslash is
not a part of a regex and should be treated literally.
Bug: 463581
Change-Id: I85208c7f85246fbf6c5029ce3c8b7bb8f4dbd947
Signed-off-by: Andrey Loskutov <loskutov@gmx.de>
Consider a BatchRefUpdate produced by Gerrit Code Review, where the
original command pushed over the wire might refer to
"refs/for/master", but that command is ignored and replaced with some
additional commands like creating "refs/changes/34/1234/1". We do not
want to store the cert in "refs/for/master@{cert}", since that may
lead someone looking to the ref to the incorrect conclusion that that
ref exists.
Add a separate put method that takes a collection of commands, and
only stores certs on those refs that have a matching command in the
cert.
Change-Id: I4661bfe2ead28a2883b33a4e3dfe579b3157d68a
37a1e4be moved this constant causing the following error message in
Eclipse: "The static field LocalDiskRepositoryTestCase.CONTENT should be
accessed directly".
Change-Id: I4ceb57a30f2e5a8f7e55109ef260a244ed5e7044
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Inspired by a proposal from gitolite[1], where we store a file in
a tree for each ref name, and the contents of the file is the latest
push cert to affect that ref.
The main modification from that proposal (other than lacking the
out-of-git batching) is to append "@{cert}" to filenames, which allows
storing certificates for both refs/foo and refs/foo/bar. Those
refnames cannot coexist at the same time in a repository, but we do
not want to discard the push certificate responsible for deleting the
ref, which we would have to do if refs/foo in the push cert tree
changed from a tree to a blob.
The "@{cert}" syntax is at least somewhat consistent with
gitrevisions(7) wherein @{...} describe operators on ref names.
As we cannot (currently) atomically update the push cert ref with the
refs that were updated, this operation is inherently racy. Kick the can
down the road by pushing this burden on callers.
[1] cf062b8bb6/contrib/hooks/repo-specific/save-push-signatures
Change-Id: Id3eb32416f969fba4b5e4d9c4b47053c564b0ccd
This will allow us to write the super project in a branch other than
master.
Change-Id: I578ed9ecbc6423416239e31ad644531dae9fb5c3
Signed-off-by: Yuxuan 'fishy' Wang <fishywang@google.com>
When pushing to an HTTP server using the C git client, I observed a
certificate lacking a pushee field. Handle this gracefully in the
parser.
Change-Id: I7f3c5fa78f2e35172a93180036e679687415cac4
We intend to store received push certificates somewhere, like a
particular ref in the repository in question. For reading data back
out, it will be useful to read push certificates (without pkt-line
framing) in a streaming fashion.
Change-Id: I70de313b1ae463407b69505caee63e8f4e057ed4
Discussion on the git mailing list has concluded[1] that the intended
behavior for all (non-sideband) portions of the receive-pack protocol
is for trailing LFs in pkt-lines to be optional. Go back to using
PacketLineIn#readString() everywhere.
For push certificates specifically, we agreed that the payload signed
by the client is always concatenated with LFs even though the client
MAY omit LFs when framing the certificate for the wire. This is still
reflected in the implementation of PushCertificate#toText().
[1] http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/273175/focus=273412
Change-Id: I817231c4d4defececb8722142fea18ff42e06e44
ObjectId.fromString already throws InvalidObjectIdException for most
malformed object ids, but for this kind it previously threw
IllegalArgumentException. Since InvalidObjectIdException is a child of
IllegalArgumentException, callers that catch IllegalArgumentException
will continue to work.
Change-Id: I24e1422d51607c86a1cb816a495703279e461f01
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrn@google.com>
Add methods that allow to unregister repositories from the
RepositoryCache individually.
Bug: 470234
Change-Id: Ib918a634d829c9898072ae7bdeb22b099a32b1c9
Signed-off-by: Tobias Oberlies <tobias.oberlies@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
For loose objects an expiration date can be set which will save too
young objects from being deleted. Add the same for packfiles. Packfiles
which are too young are not deleted.
Bug: 468024
Change-Id: I3956411d19b47aaadc215dab360d57fa6c24635e
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
These differ subtly from a PersonIdent, because they can contain
anything that is a valid User ID passed to gpg --local-user. Upstream
git push --signed will just take the configuration value from
user.signingkey and pass that verbatim in both --local-user and the
pusher field of the certificate. This does not necessarily contain an
email address, which means the parsing implementation ends up being
substantially different from RawParseUtils.parsePersonIdent.
Nonetheless, we try hard to match PersonIdent behavior in
questionable cases.
Change-Id: I37714ce7372ccf554b24ddbff56aa61f0b19cbae
The signature is intended to be passed to a verification library such
as Bouncy Castle, which expects these lines to be present in order to
parse the signature.
Change-Id: I22097bead2746da5fc53419f79761cafd5c31c3b
The default behavior is to read a repository's signed push
configuration from that repo's config file, but this is not very
flexible when it comes to managing groups of repositories (e.g. with
Gerrit). Allow callers to override the configuration using a POJO.
Change-Id: Ib8f33e75daa0b2fbd000a2c4558c01c014ab1ce5
A non-bare clone command with null remote produces a
NullPointerException when trying to produce a refspec to fetch against.
In a bare repository, a null remote name is accepted by mistake,
producing a configuration with items like 'remote.url' instead of
'remote.<remote>.url'. This was never meant to work.
Instead, let's make setRemote(null) undo any previous setRemote calls
and re-set the remote name to DEFAULT_REMOTE, imitating C git clone's
--no-origin option.
While we're here, add some tests for setRemote working normally.
Change-Id: I76f502da5e677df501d3ef387e7f61f42a7ca238
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrn@google.com>
- Consistently return structured data, such as actual ReceiveCommands,
which is more useful for callers that are doing things other than
verifying the signature, e.g. recording the set of commands.
- Store the certificate version field, as this is required to be part
of the signed payload.
- Add a toText() method to recreate the actual payload for signature
verification. This requires keeping track of the un-chomped command
strings from the original protocol stream.
- Separate the parser from the certificate itself, so the actual
PushCertificate object can be immutable. Make a fair attempt at deep
immutability, but this is not possible with the current mutable
ReceiveCommand structure.
- Use more detailed error messages that don't involve NON-NLS strings.
- Document null return values more thoroughly. Instead of having the
undocumented behavior of throwing NPE from certain methods if they
are not first guarded by enabled(), eliminate enabled() and return
null from those methods.
- Add tests for parsing a push cert from a section of pkt-line stream
using a real live stream captured with Wireshark (which, it should
be noted, uncovered several simply incorrect statements in C git's
Documentation/technical/pack-protocol.txt).
This is a slightly breaking API change to classes that were
technically public and technically released in 4.0. However, it is
highly unlikely that people were actually depending on public
behavior, since there were no public methods to create
PushCertificates with anything other than null field values, or a
PushCertificateParser that did anything other than infinite loop or
throw exceptions when reading.
Change-Id: I5382193347a8eb1811032d9b32af9651871372d0
C git's receive-pack.c strips trailing newlines in command lists when
present[1], although send-pack.c does not send them, at least in the
case of command lists[2]. Change JGit to match this behavior.
Add tests.
This also fixes parsing of commands in the push cert, which, unlike
commands sent in the non-push case, always have trailing newlines.
[1] 7974889a05/builtin/receive-pack.c (L1380)
where packet_read_line chomps newlines:
7974889a05/pkt-line.c (L202)
[2] 7974889a05/send-pack.c (L470)
Change-Id: I4bca6342a7482a53c9a5815a94b3c181a479d04b
The new submodule layout where GITDIR of a submodule is located at
<parent-repo-GITDIR>/modules/<submodule-path> was only used during
clone. Teach SubmoduleAddCommand to use the new layout.
Bug: 469666
Change-Id: Ie97dc0607b71499560444616f362bccee9cce515
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Most relative-URL tests for SubmoduleInitCommand carry out the following
steps:
1. add a submodule at path "sub" to the index
2. set remote.origin.url in .git/config
3. configure .gitmodules, possibly using relative URLs, and see what
happens
resolveWorkingDirectoryRelativeUrl() is meant to test the fallback when
remote.origin.url is not set, to match C git which treats the URL as
relative to the cwd in that case. To do so, in step (2) it sets
remote.origin.url to null.
However, Config.setString when taking a null value does not actually
unset that value from the configuration --- it sets it to the empty
string. This means we are testing a behavior that C git never
supported. Use Config.unset instead.
Change-Id: I7af29fbbd333a2598843d62c320093c48b2ad972
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrn@google.com>
Move ObjectCountCallback and WriteAbortedException to package
org.eclipse.jgit.transport, so that they'll become public API.
Change-Id: I95e3cfaa49f3f7371e794d5c253cf6981f87cae0
Signed-off-by: Yuxuan 'fishy' Wang <fishywang@google.com>
This reverts commit 96eb3ee397, which
broke Gerrit tests that set a config value to 'null', serialize the
result, deserialize, and expect 'null' from Config.getString[1].
The intent of that commit was to make it possible to distinguish between
an absent and an empty config value, which we'll have to do with a new
method.
Revert the behavior change. Keep the tests from 428cb23f2de8, since
they test the behavior more precisely than the old tests did.
[1] https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/68452
Change-Id: Ie8042f380ea0e34e3203e1991aa0feb2e6e44641
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrn@google.com>
Added callback in PackWriter and BundleWriter for the caller to get the
count of objects to write, and a chance to abort the write operation.
Change-Id: I1baeedcc6946b1093652de4a707fe597a577e526
Signed-off-by: Yuxuan 'fishy' Wang <fishywang@google.com>
exactRef(ref1, ref2, ref3) requests multiple specific refs in a single
lookup, which may be faster in some backends than looking them up one by
one.
firstExactRef generalizes getRef by finding the first existing ref from
the list of refs named. Its main purpose is for the default
implementation of getRef (finding the first existing ref in a search
path). Hopefully it can be useful for other operations that look for
refs in a search path (e.g., git log --notes=<name>), too.
Change-Id: I5c6fcf1d3920f6968b8b97f3d4c3a267258c4b86
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrn@google.com>
Unlike getRef(name), the new exactRef method does not walk the search
path. This should produce a less confusing result than getRef when the
exact ref name is known: it will not try to resolve refs/foo/bar to
refs/heads/refs/foo/bar even when refs/foo/bar does not exist.
It can be faster than both getRefs(ALL).get(name) and getRef(name)
because it only needs to examine a single ref.
A follow-up change will introduce a findRef synonym to getRef and
deprecate getRef to make the choice a caller is making more obvious
(exactRef or findRef, with the same semantics as getRefs(ALL).get and
getRefs(ALL).findRef).
Change-Id: If1bd09bcfc9919e7976a4d77f13184ea58dcda52
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrn@google.com>
This is a perfectly valid construction according to C git:
$ echo -en '[a]\nx =' > foo.config
$ git config -f foo.config a.x; echo $?
0
Change-Id: Icfcf8304adb43c79e2b8b998f8d651b2a94f6acb
The C git API and command line tools distinguish between a key having
the empty string as a value and no key being present in the config
file:
$ echo -e '[a]\nx =' > foo.config
$ git config -f foo.config a.x; echo $?
0
$ git config -f foo.config a.y; echo $?
1
Make JGit make the same distinction. This is in line with the current
Javadoc of getString, which claims to return "a String value from the
config, null if not found". It is more reasonable to interpret "x ="
in the above example as "found" rather than "missing".
We need to maintain the special handling of a key name with no "="
resolving to a boolean true, but "=" with an empty string is still not
a valid boolean.
Change-Id: If0dbb7470c524259de0b167148db87f81be2d04a