There are several different version ranges specified in the various
manifest files.
Align them all to the same range: [4.12,5.0.0)
Change-Id: I02205b8b8546c9f53ed431b5fd9abf6ddcda4423
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
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 set of tests covers primitive storage of an empty
file, and each type of supported reference.
Change-Id: I3bdff35cae8ae27283051932f20608b3ac353559
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>
This implementation is derived straight from the description written
in RFC 3174. On Mac OS X with Java 1.8.0_91 it offers similar
throughput as MessageDigest SHA-1:
system 239.75 MiB/s
system 244.71 MiB/s
system 245.00 MiB/s
system 244.92 MiB/s
sha1 234.08 MiB/s
sha1 244.50 MiB/s
sha1 242.99 MiB/s
sha1 241.73 MiB/s
This is the fastest implementation I could come up with. Common SHA-1
implementation tricks such as unrolling loops creates a method too
large for the JIT to effectively optimize, resulting in lower overall
hashing throughput. Using a preprocessor to perform the register
renaming of A-E also didn't help, as again the method was too large
for the JIT to effectively optimize.
Fortunately the fastest version is a naive, straight-forward
implementation very close to the description in RFC 3174.
Change-Id: I228b05c4a294ca2ad51386cf0e47978c68e1aa42
Use Oxygen M3 Orbit repository which provides the bundles built using
the new orbit-recipe based build.
CQ: 11658
Change-Id: I7f3dcc966732b32830c75d5daa55383bd028d182
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Adds a JGit built-in implementation of the "git lfs clean" filter. This
filter should do the same as the one described in [1]. But since this
filter is written in Java and can be called by JGit without forking new
processes it should be much faster
[1]
https://github.com/github/git-lfs/blob/master/docs/man/git-lfs-clean.1.ronn
Change-Id: If60e387e97870245b4bd765eda6717eb84cffb1d