Add a public API to the FileUtils to determine if an IOException is a
stale NFS file handle exception. This will make it easier to detect
such errors, and interpret them consistently throughout the codebase.
This new API is a bit more lenient in its detection than the previous
detection, and should be able to detect some errors which previously
were not identified as stale file handle exceptions because they had the
word NFS in the error message. Adjust the packfile handling code to use
this new API for detection.
Change-Id: I21f80014546ba1afec7335890e5ae79e7f521412
Signed-off-by: Martin Fick<mfick@codeaurora.org>
Signaling the need to flush() only via the interrupted status of a
copying thread doesn't work realiably with jsch. The write() method of
com.jcraft.jsch.Session catches the InterruptedException in several
places. As a result StreamCopyThread can easily miss the interrupt if it
was interrupted during the dst.write() or dst.flush() call. When it
happens, StreamCopyThread will not send some data to the remote side and
will not get the response back, because remote side will wait for more
data from us.
The flushCount field incremented during flush() method guarantees we
don't miss flush() even if jsch catches InterruptedException in
dst.write() or dst.flush() calls.
Checking the flushCount after dst.write() is needed because dst.write()
can clear interrupt status, in this case the next blocking src.read()
won't throw an exception and we will not call flush().
Flush is performed only after src.read() was blocked and thrown an
InterruptedIOException exception, this guarantees that we flush all the
data available in src so far (src.read() doesn't block while more is
available).
FlushCount is reset to 0 only when there were no flush() calls since
last blocked read, that means we flushed all data available in src. If
there were flush() calls, the interrupt status is restored, so next
blocked read will throw InterruptedException and we will flush()
again.
Change-Id: I692b226edaff502f06235ec05da9052b5fe6478a
Signed-off-by: Dmitry Neverov <dmitry.neverov@gmail.com>
There should be no functional change, the logic updated only to make
code simple so that compiler can understand what is going for. Removed
all @SuppressWarnings("null") annotations since they cannot be used if
"org.eclipse.jdt.core.compiler.problem.potentialNullReference" option is
set to the "error" level.
Bug: 470647
Change-Id: Ie93c249fa46e792198d362e531d5cbabaf41fdc4
Signed-off-by: Andrey Loskutov <loskutov@gmx.de>
- 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>
Root commits are commits with zero parents. If a commmit has no
parents it is the first commit in the repository. In general the root
commits should be unique for any given project, as the first commit
will be created at a different time, by a different user with its own
message. These root commits can be used as a "fingerprint" to
identify disjoint histories.
Change-Id: Id891dbc1f17c816cea404569578bb7635ff85cdb
The FS class and the subclasses FS_POSIX assumed in the findHook()
method that every repository has a valid gitDir. But in tests when using
in-memory-repositories this is not true and this method was generating
NPEs. Change the method to return null if no repository directory can be
determined.
Change-Id: I38a4d36dc6452b5dacae3d0dbf562b569ca3c19b
DfsGarbageCollector asks PackWriter for the set of objects packed
after the bitmap index is written out. This is now null as it was
cleared to release memory. Instead use PackBitmapIndexBuilder to
build the set as it also has the objects.
Reduce memory in PackBitmapIndexBuilder by fully discarding the
ObjectToPack instances. This was the original intent of commit
4bb523475d ("PackWriter: shed memory while creating bitmaps")
but failed as the instances were still held live here.
Switch to BlockList instead of ObjectToPack[]. This allows the
JVM to allocate many smaller arrays instead of one contiguous
array with 5.2M reference pointers. In a tight heap the smaller
allocations are more feasible.
Reduce the initial EWAHCompressedBitmaps for the 4 type maps. On
average a typical repository is 30% commits, 30% trees and 30% blobs.
These bitmaps are typically very dense. PackWriter orders objects by
commit, tree, blob when writing the file so these should always be a
very dense run of 1s with some 0s before and after. So even the 1/3rd
allocation is likely too large, but the later trim() will reduce the
internal buffer anyway.
Change-Id: If0b80a31cb00894f1485ff8f53ef7ae5a759a046
After jgit moved to Java 7 there is no need in an extra
Java7BasicAttributes class. Also all fields of Attributes can be made
final now.
Change-Id: I0be6daf7758189b0eecc4e26294bd278ed8bf7a0
Signed-off-by: Andrey Loskutov <loskutov@gmx.de>
Once bitmap creation begins the internal maps required for packing are
no longer necessary. On a repository with 5.2M objects this can save
more than 438 MiB of memory by allowing the ObjectToPack instances to
get garbage collected away.
Downside is the PackWriter cannot be used for any further opertions
except to write the bitmap index. This is an acceptable trade-off as
in practice nobody uses the PackWriter after the bitmaps are built.
Change-Id: Ibfaf84b22fa0590896a398ff659a91fcf03d7128
For construction performance each new EWAHBitmap is allocated at the
roughly worst-case size the bitmap would need if all of the words must
be literal and no run length compression is available. In practice
this is far larger than is required, wasting heap memory while the
bitmaps are computed.
Trim down each bitmap to its minimum required size. This copies the
internal array to a new smaller array, allowing the GC to reclaim the
prior larger array for reuse.
A single bitmap of 5.2M bits is only 79 KiB of memory without this
trim call but 15,000 such bitmaps is 1.1 GiB. Trimming can help fit
a larger number of bitmaps during processing.
Change-Id: I2bd19a786189db5b01c4c96f209b83de50e10c3b
The bitmap preparer only needs commit graph topology; it does not use
the message body. Allow the RevWalk to free the body after the commit
has been parsed to save memory.
Change-Id: I97d4a440c9fc313873fd224bd05b9d9e3dc575db
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>
Catch unexpected PatternSyntaxException and convert it to
InvalidPatternException. Log such errors, do not silently ignore them.
Bug: 463581
Change-Id: Id0936d9816769ec0cfae1898beda0f7a3c146e67
Signed-off-by: Andrey Loskutov <loskutov@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
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>
Rather than lazily parsing the push in this method, parse it at the
end of recvCommands(), which already contains the necessary try/catch
for handling this error. This allows later callers to avoid having to
handle this condition superfluously.
Change-Id: I5dcaf1a44bf4e321adc281e3381e7e17ac89db06
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
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>
Primarily to aid in writing end-to-end tests, which must be written
outside this package as we don't currently have a Bouncy Castle
dependency.
Change-Id: Ia24179773140d9ecc616b3a6b2e630c85d800157
We have done this since forever with the "wanted old new ref" error,
so let's do it for other such errors thrown in the same block as well.
Change-Id: Ib3b1c7f05e31a5b3e40e85eb07b16736920a033b
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