Otherwise successful, non-conflicting merges will never get a
Gerrit Change-Id.
Bug: 358206
Change-Id: I9b599ad01d9f7332200c1d81a1ba6ce5ef990ab5
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Various places on the client side of the push were creating unordered
maps and sets of ref names, resulting in ReceivePack processing commands
in an order other than what the client provided. This is normally not
problematic for clients, who don't typically care about the order in
which ref updates are applied to the storage layer.
However, it does make it difficult to write deterministic tests of
ReceivePack or hooks whose output depends on the order in which commands
are processed, for example if informational per-ref messages are written
to a sideband.[1]
Add a test that ensures the ordering of commands both internally in
ReceivePack and in the output PushResult.
[1] Real-world example:
https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/gerrit/+/171871/1/javatests/com/google/gerrit/acceptance/git/PushPermissionsIT.java#149
Change-Id: I7f1254b4ebf202d4dcfc8e59d7120427542d0d9e
Previously @ was allowed e.g. in branch names, but not as the last
character. The case that @ is the last character was not handled.
Change-Id: Ic33870b22236f7a5ec7b54007f1b0cefd9354bfb
Instead of hard-coding the encoding name, use the constant from
StandardCharsets. As a result it is no longer necessary to catch
the UnsupportedEncodingException.
Change-Id: I3cb6de921a78e05e2a894c220e0d5a5c85e172cc
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
This breaks any scenario where native git (with LFS) clones a repository
(and thus installs the hook) and later on JGit is used to push changes.
Change-Id: I2a17753377265a0b612ba3451b9df63a577a1c38
Signed-off-by: Markus Duft <markus.duft@ssi-schaefer.com>
These methods were introduced for 4.11.1 so we have to silence the API
error adding API in a service release raises.
Change-Id: Ic847cebbed439912d3979ec2ec1809f77a28f61e
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Getting attributes of files on Windows is an expensive operation.
Windows stores file attributes in the directory, so they are
basically available "for free" when a directory is listed. The
implementation of Java's Files.walkFileTree() takes advantage of
that (at least in the OpenJDK implementation for Windows) and
provides the attributes from the directory to a FileVisitor.
Using Files.walkFileTree() with a maximum depth of 1 is thus a
good approach on Windows to get both the file names and the
attributes in one go.
In my tests, this gives a significant speed-up of FileTreeIterator
over the "normal" way: using File.listFiles() and then reading the
attributes of each file individually. The speed-up is hard to
quantify exactly, but in my tests I've observed consistently 30-40%
for staging 500 files one after another, each individually, and up
to 50% for individual TreeWalks with a FileTreeIterator.
On Unix, this technique is detrimental. Unix stores file attributes
differently, and getting attributes of individual files is not costly.
On Unix, the old way of doing a listFiles() and getting individual
attributes (both native operations) is about three times faster than
using walkFileTree, which is implemented in Java.
Therefore, move the operation to FS/FS_Win32 and call it from
FileTreeIterator, so that we can have different implementations
depending on the file system.
A little performance test program is included as a JUnit test (to be
run manually).
While this does speed up things on Windows, it doesn't solve the basic
problem of bug 532300: the iterator always gets the full directory
listing and the attributes of all files, and the more files there are
the longer that takes.
Bug: 532300
Change-Id: Ic5facb871c725256c2324b0d97b95e6efc33282a
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
These methods were added after 4.11 so strictly speaking they violate
semantic versioning since new API requires increasing the minor version
number. Hence pretend these methods were introduced in 5.0
Change-Id: I7793ead16577dc1f2ddea09ba6b055103c783555
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
DfsReader is not opened in a try-with-resource because in the case where
the method returns an ObjectStream.Filter, the DfsReader should only be
closed from within the Filter's close() method.
Suppress the resource warning.
Change-Id: Ifcaf5e4a326bd1d03c6331b476c645ca43943b34
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Repository is not opened in try-with-resource because it is wrapped
in a Git instance which should be closed by the caller. On exeptions
during fetch, it is explicitly closed in the catch blocks.
Suppress the warning with an explanatory comment.
Change-Id: Ib32c74ce39bb810077ab84db33002bdde806f3b6
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
The runProcess method creates an OutputStream that is not managed by
a try-with-resource because it's manually closed and any IOException
raised by the close() method is explicitly ignored.
Suppress the resource warning with an explanatory comment.
Enclose the call to StreamGobbler#copy in an inner try-block, and move
the call to close() inside its finally block. This prevents the stream
from being left unclosed if StreamGobbler#copy raises IOException.
Change-Id: Idca9adfc4d87e0989d787ad8239c055c0c849814
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
An empty repository may have a dangling symref HEAD pointing to
refs/heads/master. In this case, there will be a reftable even though
there are no packs yet.
Change-Id: Ib759ffbbfc490953481853e74263dd46d2592888
Signed-off-by: Minh Thai <mthai@google.com>
Change If72b4b422 added a new method filterAndAddObject with a
partial Javadoc, which causes errors in Eclipse.
Since it's a private method, Javadoc is not strictly necessary, so
just convert it to a standard comment block.
Bug: 532540
Change-Id: I06aa79211d1223dccf6c931451ca885ca6d39cbc
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
A list of Transport instances is provided by Transport.openAll, and
then iterated over in a for loop. Eclipse warns that the Transport
in the for-loop should be managed by try-with-resource.
The Transport is explicitly closed in the finally block, so just
suppress the warning.
Change-Id: I92b73cd90902637cf1ac1ab7b02b5ee5ed6bdb1e
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Teach UploadPack to advertise the filter capability and support a
"filter" line in the request, accepting blob sizes only, if the
configuration variable "uploadpack.allowfilter" is true. This feature is
currently in the "master" branch of Git, and as of the time of writing,
this feature is to be released in Git 2.17.
This is incomplete in that the filter-by-sparse-specification feature
also supported by Git is not included in this patch.
If a JGit server were to be patched with this commit, and a repository
on that server configured with RequestPolicy.ANY or
RequestPolicy.REACHABLE_COMMIT_TIP, a Git client built from the "master"
branch would be able to perform a partial clone.
Change-Id: If72b4b422c06ab432137e9e5272d353b14b73259
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com>
The implementation of ObjectIdSerializer, added in change I7599cf8bd,
is not equivalent to the original implementation in Gerrit [1].
The Gerrit implementation provides separate methods to (de)serialize
instances of ObjectId that are known to be non-null. In these methods,
no "marker" is written to the stream. Replacing Gerrit's implementation
with ObjectIdSerializer [2] broke persistent caches because it started
writing markers where they were not expected [3].
Since ObjectIdSerializer is included in JGit 4.11 we can't change the
existing #write and #read methods. Keep those as-is, but extend the
Javadoc to clarify that they support possibly null ObjectId instances.
Add new methods #writeWithoutMarker and #readWithoutMarker to support
the cases where the ObjectId is known to be non-null and the marker
should not be written to the serialization stream.
Also:
- Replace the hard-coded `0` and `1` markers with constants that can
be linked from the Javadocs.
- Include the marker value in the "Invalid flag before ObjectId"
exception message.
[1] https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/gerrit/+/9792
[2] https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/gerrit/+/165851
[3] https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/gerrit/+/165952
Change-Id: Iaf84c3ec32ecf83efffb306fdb4940cc85740f3f
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Refactor getBitmapIndex to open ReadableChannel in try-with-resource
instead of closing the channel in the finally block.
The same cannot be done in copyPackThroughCache, so just suppress the
warning with an explanatory comment.
Change-Id: I9b95373d350728e85a159423d5ca80e8b215914d
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
In #writeTo, the TemporaryBuffer can't be opened in try-with-resource
because it's referenced in the finally block. Instead it is explicitly
closed within the try block. Suppress the warning with an explanatory
comment.
Change-Id: I02009f77f9630d5d55afc34eb86d304ff103b8b0
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
There are several cases where a FileInputStream is opened outside of
a try-with-resource because we want to explicitly close it and ignore
any IOException that is raised by the close() method.
Introduce a helper class, SilentFileInputStream, that overrides the
close method and ignores the exceptions. This allows to open the stream
in a try-with-resource block and remove the explicit handling of the
close method.
Change-Id: I8612f948a1a5b3d1031344922ad75ce4492cfc61
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
PackWriter is auto-closeable and should be opened in try-with-resource,
but this is not possible since the variable is being referenced in the
finally block before being explicitly closed there.
Suppress the warning and add an explanatory comment.
Change-Id: I161923f35142132234fd951c0146d3cb30920b7b
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
SubmoduleWalk is auto-closeable, and Eclipse warns that is is not
managed by try-with-resource. However in this case the resource should
not be closed, because the caller needs to use it. Instead, it is the
responsibility of the caller to close it after use.
Update the Javadoc to clarify this, and suppress the warning.
Change-Id: Ib7ba349353bfd3341bdcbe4bb19abaeb9f3aeba5
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Refactor to allow the temporary buffer to be opened in try-with-resource.
Change-Id: Id913e6c3ed3913fd5d79d66238b779e0c225b47d
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
The IOExceptions caught in the nested try blocks are all ignored,
so we can just wrap them all up into a single try-with-resource
block.
Change-Id: I536d682f1017c5088b94ff9f98ffa2b7c783d8bf
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
When an auto-closeable resources is not opened in try-with-resource,
the warning "should be managed by try-with-resource" is emitted by
Eclipse.
Fix the ones that can be silenced simply by moving the declaration of
the variable into a try-with-resource.
In cases where we explicitly call the close() method, for example in
tests where we are testing specific behavior caused by the close(),
suppress the warning.
Leave the ones that will require more significant refcactoring to fix.
They can be done in separate commits that can be reviewed and tested
in isolation.
Change-Id: I9682cd20fb15167d3c7f9027cecdc82bc50b83c4
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
As discussed with Thomas here:
https://git.eclipse.org/r/#/c/83506/31/org.eclipse.jgit.lfs/src/org/eclipse/jgit/lfs/SmudgeFilter.java@349
Move the code from ConfigureGerritAfterCloneTask to SshSupport and
eliminate the slightly modified copy of the code from
LfsConnectionFactory. Separate EGit commit will eliminate the code from
ConfigureGerritAfterCloneTask.
Change-Id: Ifb5adb1342e0fc1f2a70cddf693408d4e0ef7906
Signed-off-by: Markus Duft <markus.duft@ssi-schaefer.com>
StreamCopyThread: Do not let flush interrupt a write.
flush calls interrupt() to interrupt a pending read and trigger a
flush. Unfortunately that interrupt() call can also interrupt a
pending write, putting Jsch in a bad state and triggering "Short read
of block" errors.
Change-Id: I11f8a014fd72df06617cc8731d992eb14cc32a67
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>