Add the following Eclipse save actions executed when saving modified
lines. This should help to reduce manual work needed to maintain a clean
and consistent code style:
- organize imports
- always use braces around blocks
- add missing annotations
- @Override including implementation of interface methods
- @Deprecated
- remove
- unused imports
- unnecessary $NON-NLS$ tags
- redundant type arguments
Also add default values for new settings that were introduced in recent
Eclipse versions up to Neon since we updated save rules the last time.
Change-Id: Idc90b249df044d0552f04edf01a5f607c4846f50
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
C git silently ignores invalid tagopt values; so make JGit behave the
same way.
Bug: 429625
Change-Id: I99587cc46c7e0c19348bcc63f602038fa9a7f378
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Reading RefSpecs from a Config can be seen as another typed value
conversion, so add a getter to Config and to TypedConfigGetter. Use
it in RemoteConfig.
Doing this allows clients of the JGit library to customize the
handling of invalid RefSpecs in git config files by installing a
custom TypedConfigGetter.
Bug: 517314
Change-Id: I0ebc0f073fabc85c2a693b43f5ba5962d8a795ff
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Make the handling of typed values somewhat configurable by using
a separate converter. The default converter is the same as before;
just the implementations of the getters were moved. They also still
raise IllegalArgumentException on invalid values as before.
The converter can be set globally via Config.setTypedConfigGetter(),
which EGit can use in its core Activator to plug in a variant that
catches the IllegalArgumentException, logs the problem, and then
returns the default value.
In this way the behavior for other users of the JGit library is
unchanged, while EGit can deal gracefully with invalid git configs.
Bug: 520978
Change-Id: Ie8f81d206e358b6cc57aa29b9d7ad2a5d34b86a1
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
In Eclipse Oxygen, the following warning is emitted:
At least one of the problems in category 'synthetic-access' is not
analysed due to a compiler option being ignored
Removing the suppression gets rid of the warning.
Change-Id: Ibfe5cc1e347150b699f54e2f204ab5ee770da202
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Except for %p and %r and partially %C, we can do token substitutions
as defined by OpenSSH inside the config file parser. %p and %r can
be replaced only if specified in the config; if not, it would be the
caller's responsibility to replace them with values obtained from the
URI to connect to.
Jsch doesn't know about token substitutions at all. By doing the
replacements as good as we can in the config file parser, we can
make Jsch support most of these tokens.
%i is not handled at all as Java has no concept of a "user ID".
Includes unit tests.
Bug: 496170
Change-Id: If9d324090707de5d50c740b0d4455aefa8db46ee
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Ensure the Jsch instance used knows about ~/.ssh/config. This
enables Jsch to honor more user configurations (see
com.jcraft.jsch.Session.applyConfig()), in particular also the
UserKnownHostsFile configuration, or additional identities given
via multiple IdentityFile entries.
Turn JGit's OpenSshConfig into a full parser that can be a
Jsch-compliant ConfigRepository. This avoids a few bugs
in Jsch's OpenSSHConfig and keeps the JGit-facing interface
unchanged. At the same time we can supply a JGit OpenSshConfig
instance as a ConfigRepository to Jsch. And since they'll both
work from the same object, we can also be sure that the parsing
behavior is identical.
The parser does not handle the "Match" and "Include" keys, and it
doesn't do %-token substitutions (yet).
Note that Jsch doesn't handle multi-valued UserKnownHostFile
entries as known by modern OpenSSH.[1]
[1] http://man.openbsd.org/OpenBSD-current/man5/ssh_config.5
Additional tests for new features are provided in OpenSshConfigTest.
Bug: 490939
Change-Id: Ic683bd412fa8c5632142aebba4a07fad4c64c637
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
This is continuation from https://git.eclipse.org/r/#/c/94249/. When an
error happens, we might not read the entire stream. Consume the request
body before we flush the buffer.
Change-Id: Ia473a04ace600653b2d1f2822e3023570d992410
Signed-off-by: Masaya Suzuki <masayasuzuki@google.com>
The addition of "tooManyRedirects" in commit 7ac1bfc ("Do
authentication re-tries on HTTP POST") was an error I didn't
catch after rebasing that change. That message had been renamed
in the earlier commit e17bfc9 ("Add support to follow HTTP
redirects") to "redirectLimitExceeded".
Also make sure we always use the TransportException(URIish, ...)
constructor; it'll prefix the message given with the sanitized URI.
Change messages to remove the explicit mention of that URI inside the
message. Adapt tests that check the expected exception message text.
For the info logging of redirects, remove a potentially present
password component in the URI to avoid leaking it into the log.
Change-Id: I517112404757a9a947e92aaace743c6541dce6aa
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
There is at least one git server out there (GOGS) that does
not require authentication on the initial GET for
info/refs?service=git-receive-pack but that _does_ require
authentication for the subsequent POST to actually do the push.
This occurs on GOGS with public repositories; for private
repositories it wants authentication up front.
Handle this behavior by adding 401 handling to our POST request.
Note that this is suboptimal; we'll re-send the push data at
least twice if an authentication failure on POST occurs. It
would be much better if the server required authentication
up-front in the GET request.
Added authentication unit tests (using BASIC auth) to the
SmartClientSmartServerTest:
- clone with authentication
- clone with authentication but lacking CredentialsProvider
- clone with authentication and wrong password
- clone with authentication after redirect
- clone with authentication only on POST, but not on GET
Also tested manually in the wild using repositories at try.gogs.io.
That server offers only BASIC auth, so the other paths
(DIGEST, NEGOTIATE, fall back from DIGEST to BASIC) are untested
and I have no way to test them.
* public repository: GET unauthenticated, POST authenticated
Also tested after clearing the credentials and then entering a
wrong password: correctly asks three times during the HTTP
POST for user name and password, then gives up.
* private repository: authentication already on GET; then gets
applied correctly initially to the POST request, which succeeds.
Also fix the authentication to use the credentials for the redirected
URI if redirects had occurred. We must not present the credentials
for the original URI in that case. Consider a malicious redirect A->B:
this would allow server B to harvest the user credentials for server
A. The unit test for authentication after a redirect also tests for
this.
Bug: 513043
Change-Id: I97ee5058569efa1545a6c6f6edfd2b357c40592a
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Reserve "ref" extension for reftable files. This allows them to be
used in a DFS repository as a stream in a DfsPackDescription.
Change-Id: Ife781bb64d0bb063333183ad2be70a41a2482513
resolve(Ref) helps callers recursively chase symbolic references and
is a useful function when wrapping a Reftable inside a RefDatabase, as
RefCursor does not resolve symbolic references during iteration.
Change-Id: I1ba143f403773497972e225dc92c35ecb989e154
Transactions may wish to merge several tables together as part of an
operation. Setting a byte limit allows the transaction to consider
only some recent tables, bounding the cost of the compaction.
Change-Id: If037f2cbdc174ff1a215d5917178b33cde4ddaba
A compaction of reftables is just copying the results of a
MergedReftable into a ReftableWriter. Wrap this up into a utility.
Change-Id: I6f5677d923e9628993a2d8b4b007a9b8662c9045
MergedReftable combines multiple reference tables together in a stack,
allowing higher/later tables to shadow earlier/lower tables. This
forms the basis of a transaction system, where each transaction writes
a new reftable containing only the modified references, and readers
perform a merge on the fly to get the latest value.
Change-Id: Ic2cb750141e8c61a8b2726b2eb95195acb6ddc83
ReftableReader provides sequential scanning support over all
references, a range of references within a subtree (such as
"refs/heads/"), and lookup of a single reference. Reads can be
accelerated by an index block, if it was created by the writer.
The BlockSource interface provides an abstraction to read from the
reftable's backing storage, supporting a future commit to connect
to JGit DFS and the DfsBlockCache.
Change-Id: Ib0dc5fa937d0c735f2a9ff4439d55c457fea7aa8
This is a simple writer to create reftable formatted files. Follow-up
commits will add support for reading from reftable, debugging
utilities, and tests.
Change-Id: I3d520c3515c580144490b0b45433ea175a3e6e11
git-core follows HTTP redirects so JGit should also provide this.
Implement config setting http.followRedirects with possible values
"false" (= never), "true" (= always), and "initial" (only on GET, but
not on POST).[1]
We must do our own redirect handling and cannot rely on the support
that the underlying real connection may offer. At least the JDK's
HttpURLConnection has two features that get in the way:
* it does not allow cross-protocol redirects and thus fails on
http->https redirects (for instance, on Github).
* it translates a redirect after a POST to a GET unless the system
property "http.strictPostRedirect" is set to true. We don't want
to manipulate that system setting nor require it.
Additionally, git has its own rules about what redirects it accepts;[2]
for instance, it does not allow a redirect that adds query arguments.
We handle response codes 301, 302, 303, and 307 as per RFC 2616.[3]
On POST we do not handle 303, and we follow redirects only if
http.followRedirects == true.
Redirects are followed only a certain number of times. There are two
ways to control that limit:
* by default, the limit is given by the http.maxRedirects system
property that is also used by the JDK. If the system property is
not set, the default is 5. (This is much lower than the JDK default
of 20, but I don't see the value of following so many redirects.)
* this can be overwritten by a http.maxRedirects git config setting.
The JGit http.* git config settings are currently all global; JGit has
no support yet for URI-specific settings "http.<pattern>.name". Adding
support for that is well beyond the scope of this change.
Like git-core, we log every redirect attempt (LOG.info) so that users
may know about the redirection having occurred.
Extends the test framework to configure an AppServer with HTTPS support
so that we can test cloning via HTTPS and redirections involving HTTPS.
[1] https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config
[2] 6628eb41db
[3] https://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.html
CQ: 13987
Bug: 465167
Change-Id: I86518cb76842f7d326b51f8715e3bbf8ada89859
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Currently there is no way to determine the precise changes done
to the working tree by a JGit command. Only the CheckoutCommand
actually provides access to the lists of modified, deleted, and
to-be-deleted files, but those lists may be inaccurate (since they
are determined up-front before the working tree is modified) if
the actual checkout then fails halfway through. Moreover, other
JGit commands that modify the working tree do not offer any way to
figure out which files were changed.
This poses problems for EGit, which may need to refresh parts of the
Eclipse workspace when JGit has done java.io file operations.
Provide the foundations for better file change tracking: the working
tree is modified exclusively in DirCacheCheckout. Make it emit a new
type of RepositoryEvent that lists all files that were modified or
deleted, even if the checkout failed halfway through. We update the
'updated' and 'removed' lists determined up-front in case of file
system problems to reflect the actual state of changes made.
EGit thus can register a listener for these events and then knows
exactly which parts of the Eclipse workspace may need to be refreshed.
Two commands manage checking out individual DirCacheEntries themselves:
checkout specific paths, and applying a stash with untracked files.
Make those two also emit such a new WorkingTreeModifiedEvent.
Furthermore, merges may modify files, and clean, rm, and stash create
may delete files.
CQ: 13969
Bug: 500106
Change-Id: I7a100aee315791fa1201f43bbad61fbae60b35cb
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
When creating a new PackFile instance it is specified whether this pack
has an associated bitmap index file or not. This information is cached
and the public method getBitmapIndex() will always assume a bitmap index
file must exist if the cached data tells so. But it may happen that the
packfiles are repacked during a gc in a different process causing the
packfile, bitmap-index and index file to be deleted. Since JGit still
has an open FileHandle on the packfile this file is not really deleted
and can still be accessed. But index and bitmap index file are deleted.
Fix getBitmapIndex() to invalidate the cached packfile instance if such
a situation occurs.
This problem showed up when a gerrit server was serving repositories
which where garbage collected with native git regularly. Fetch and
clone commands for certain repositories failed permanently after a
native git gc had deleted old bitmap index files.
Change-Id: I8e620bec74dd3f310ba42024f9a657062f868f0e
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Per the git config documentation[1], pushInsteadOf is ignored when
a remote has explicit pushUris.
Implement this, and adapt tests.
Up to now JGit mistakenly applied pushInsteadOf also to existing
pushUris. If some repositories had relied on this mis-feature,
pushes may newly suddenly fail (the uncritical case; the config
just needs to be fixed) or even still succeed but push to unexpected
places, namely to the non-rewritten pushUrls (the critical case).
The release notes should point out this change.
[1] https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config
Bug: 393170
Change-Id: I38c83204d2ac74f88f3d22d0550bf5ff7ee86daf
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
According to [1], pushInsteadOf is
1. applied to the uris, not to the pushUris
2. ignored if a remote has an explicit pushUri
JGit applied it only to the pushUris. As a result, pushInsteadOf was
ignored for remotes having only a uri, but no pushUri.
This commit implements (1) if there are no pushUris. I did not dare
implement (2) because:
* there are explicit tests for it that expect that pushInsteadOf gets
applied to existing pushUrls, and
* people may actually use and rely on this JGit behavior.
[1] https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config
Bug: 393170
Change-Id: I6dacbf1768a105190c2a8c5272e7880c1c9c943a
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
This matches the proposal that has been discussed at length on
git-core mailing list and seems to be the accepted convention.
Change-Id: I9f6ab15144826893d1e2a4b48a2d657d6dd445ec
Otherwise fancy combinations of attributes (binary or -text in
combination with crlf or eol) may result in the corruption of binary
data.
Bug: 520910
Change-Id: I3ffc666c13d1b9d2ed987b69a67bfc7f42ccdbfc
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Attribute rules must match against the entry path relative to the
attribute node containing the rule. The global entry path is to be
used only for the init and the global node (and of course the root
node).
Bug: 520677
Change-Id: I80389a2dc272a72312729ccd5358d7c75e1ea20a
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Happily, most anonymous SectionParser implementations can be replaced
with FooConfig::new, as long as the constructor takes a single Config
arg. Many of these, the non-public ones, can in turn be inlined. A few
remaining SectionParsers can be lambdas.
Change-Id: I3f563e752dfd2007dd3a48d6d313d20e2685943a
This avoids executing mergeAlgorithm.merge on binary data, which is
unlikely to be useful.
Arguably, binary data should not make it to
ResolveMerger#contentMerge, but this approach has the following
advantages:
* binary detection is exact, since it doesn't only look at the start
of the blob.
* it is cheap, as we have to iterate over the bytes anyway to find
'\n'.
Signed-off-by: Han-Wen Nienhuys <hanwen@google.com>
Change-Id: I424295df1dc60a719859d9d7c599067891b15792
Very short abbreviations that are under 8 hex digits do not
have values in w2. Use w1 as the Java hashCode() instead, so
that the prefix of the abbreviation is always included in the
hashing function used by any java.util.Collection type.
Change-Id: Idaf69f86b62630ba4a022d31b4c293c6d138f557
SpotBugs [1] is the spiritual successor of FindBugs, carrying on from
the point where it left off with support of its community.
[1] http://spotbugs.readthedocs.io/
Change-Id: I127f2c54b04265b6565e780116617ffa8a4d7eaf
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
In a server scenario such as Gerrit Code Review, there may be many
atomic BatchRefUpdates contending for locks on both the packed-refs file
and some subset of loose refs. We already retry lock acquisition to
improve this situation slightly, but we can do better by using an
in-process lock. This way, instead of retrying and potentially exceeding
their timeout, different threads sharing the same Repository instance
can wait on a fair lock without having to touch the disk lock. Since a
server is probably already using RepositoryCache anyway, there is a high
likelihood of reusing the Repository instance.
Change-Id: If5dd1dc58f0ce62f26131fd5965a0e21a80e8bd3
If a repo frequently uses PackedBatchRefUpdates, there is likely to be
contention on the packed-refs file, so it's not appropriate to fail
immediately the first time we fail to acquire a lock. Add some logic to
RefDirectory to support general retrying of lock acquisition.
Currently, there is a hard-coded wait starting at 100ms and backing off
exponentially to 1600ms, for about 3s of total wait. This is no worse
than the hard-coded backoff that JGit does elsewhere, e.g. in
FileUtils#delete. One can imagine a scheme that uses per-repository
configuration of backoff, and the current interface would support this
without changing any callers.
Change-Id: I4764e11270d9336882483eb698f67a78a401c251
Make sure all objects referenced by references are reachable. Stop at
the first missing object.
Change-Id: Ifcd7392c4321b17d9290bd87f038bc62bc10dabb
Signed-off-by: Zhen Chen <czhen@google.com>
JGit already had some fsck-like classes like ObjectChecker which can
check for an individual object.
The read-only FsckPackParser which will parse all objects within a pack
file and check it with ObjectChecker. It will also check the pack index
file against the object information from the pack parser.
Change-Id: Ifd8e0d28eb68ff0b8edd2b51b2fa3a50a544c855
Signed-off-by: Zhen Chen <czhen@google.com>
On-disk reflogs are not stored in the packed-refs file, so we cannot
ensure atomic updates. We choose the lesser evil of dropping failed
reflog updates on the floor, rather than throwing an exception even
though the underlying ref updates succeeded.
Add tests for reflogs to BatchRefUpdateTest.
Change-Id: Ia456ba9e36af8e01fde81b19af46a72378e614cd