Since version 4.13 JUnit has an assertThrows method. Remove the
implementation in MoreAsserts and use the one from JUnit.
CQ: 21439
Change-Id: I086baa94aa3069cebe87c4cbf91ed1534523c6cb
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Instead of just looking for a substring match of user.signingKey
in a key's user ID implement the GPG matching formats[1] for:
'=' Full exact match
'<' Full exact match of the e-mail address
'@' Substring match within the e-mail address only
'*' General case-insensitive substring match (default)
When user.signingKey is not set, the committer's e-mail address is
used by default. In that case, use '<', i.e., require an exact match
on the OpenPGP e-mail address.
Also handle the optional "0x" prefix for (partial) key fingerprints.
[1] https://www.gnupg.org/documentation/manuals/gnupg/Specify-a-User-ID.html
Bug: 550335
Change-Id: I6ce482a099ff1a0dc9de45435cd4d3ec5b504f12
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Move the handling of cached user and system config to getSystemConfig
and getUserConfig methods and revert the implementation of
openSystemConfig and openUserConfig to the old stateless
implementation.
This ensures the open methods respect the passed-in parent config, which
may be different on each invocation. Additionally, returning a new
instance matches the behavior of the previous implementation of the
default system reader, which downstream callers may be depending on.
Move the implementation of the new caching methods getSystemConfig and
getUserConfig up to SystemReader. This avoids that we break the ABI for
subclasses of SystemReader.
Also see [1] which fixed a similar problem with Gerrit's custom
SystemReader.
[1] https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/gerrit/+/225458
Change-Id: If54a2491932d8fc914d4649cb73c9e837c5b8ad0
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
The method org.eclipse.jgit.util.FS.supportsAtomicCreateNewFile()
should default to true as mentioned in docs [1]
org.eclipse.jgit.util.FS_POSIX.supportsAtomicCreateNewFile() method
will set the value to false if the git config
core.supportsatomiccreatenewfile is not set.
It should default to true if the configuration is undefined.
[1]
4169a95a65/org.eclipse.jgit/src/org/eclipse/jgit/util/FS_POSIX.java (L372)
Bug: 544164
Change-Id: I16ccf989a89da2cf4975c200b3228b25ba4c0d55
Signed-off-by: Vishal Devgire <vishaldevgire@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
This enables higher file timestamp resolution on filesystems like ext4,
Mac APFS (1ns) or NTFS (100ns) providing high timestamp resolution on
filesystem level.
Note:
- on some OSes Java 8,9 truncate milliseconds, see
https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8177809, fixed in Java 10
- UnixFileAttributes truncates timestamp resolution to microseconds when
converting the internal representation to FileTime exposed in the API,
see https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8181493
- WindowsFileAttributes also provides only microsecond resolution
Change-Id: I25ffff31a3c6f725fc345d4ddc2f26da3b88f6f2
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
The placeholders in manifest and plugin.properties did not match. To
avoid similar issues, all placeholders have been changed to
Bundle-Vendor and Bundle-Name now.
Bug:548503
Change-Id: Ibd4b9bc237b323e614506b97e5fbc99416365040
Signed-off-by: Michael Keppler <Michael.Keppler@gmx.de>
Archives created by the ArchiveCommand didn't produce deterministic
archive hashes. For RevCommits RevWalk.parseTree returns the root tree
instead of the RevCommit hence retrieving the commit's timestamp didn't
work. Instead use RevWalk.parseAny and extract the tree manually.
Archive entries store timestamps with 1 second resolution hence we need
to wait longer when creating the same archive twice and compare archive
hashes. Otherwise hash comparison in tests wouldn't fail without this
patch.
Bug: 548312
Change-Id: I437d515de51cf68265584d28a8446cebe6341b79
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>