- 30 May, 2018 13 commits
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Erik van Zijst committed
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This adds the 'T' status character to git_diff_status_char() for diff entries that change type.
Erik van Zijst committed -
When we want to limit our graphwalk, we use the heuristic of checking whether the newest limiting (uninteresting) revision is newer than the oldest interesting revision. We do so by inspecting whether the first item's commit time of the user-supplied list of revisions is newer than the last added interesting revision. This is wrong though, as the user supplied list is in no way guaranteed to be sorted by increasing commit dates. This could lead us to abort the revwalk early before applying all relevant limiting revisions, outputting revisions which should in fact have been hidden. Fix the heuristic by instead checking whether _any_ of the limiting commits was made earlier than the last interesting commit. Add a test.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Signed-off-by: Sven Strickroth <email@cs-ware.de>
Sven Strickroth committed -
Etienne Samson committed
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This fixes a segfault in git_reference_owner on references returned from git_reference__read_head and git_reference_dup ones.
Etienne Samson committed -
on 32-bit systems with 64-bit file descriptor offsets enabled (added -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 when compiling the test suite)
Andreas Baumann committed -
When comparing whether a path matches a directory rule, we pass the both the path and directory name to `fnmatch` with `GIT_ATTR_FNMATCH_DIRECTORY` being set. `fnmatch` expects the pattern to contain no trailing directory '/', which is why we try to always strip patterns of trailing slashes. We do not handle that case correctly though when the pattern itself has trailing spaces, causing the match to fail. Fix the issue by stripping trailing spaces and tabs for a rule previous to checking whether the pattern is a directory pattern with a trailing '/'. This replaces the whitespace-stripping in our ignore file parsing code, which was stripping whitespaces too late. Add a test to catch future breakage.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
When fetching into a repository which has symbolic references via the "local" transport we run into an assert. The assert is being triggered while we negotiate the packfile between the two repositories. When hiding known revisions from the packbuilder revwalk, we unconditionally hide all references of the local refdb. In case one of these references is a symbolic reference, though, this means we're trying to hide a `NULL` OID, which triggers the assert. Fix the issue by only hiding OID references from the revwalk. Add a test to catch this issue in the future.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
When a ODB mempack gets free'd, we take no measures at all to free its contents, most notably the objects added to the database, resulting in a memory leak. Call `git_mempack_reset` previous to freeing the ODB structures themselves, which takes care of releasing all associated data structures.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
This updates the version of SHA1DC to c3e1304ea3.
bgermann committed -
The function `libssh2_session_startup` has been deprecated since libssh2 version 1.2.8 in favor of `libssh2_session_handshake` introduced in the same version. libssh2 1.2.8 was released in April 2011, so it is already seven years old. It is available in Debian Wheezy, Ubuntu Trusty and CentOS 7.4, so the most important and conservative distros already have it available. As such, it seems safe to just use the new function.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
The function `ssh_stream_free` takes over the responsibility of closing channels and streams just before freeing their memory, but it does not do so for the session. In fact, we never disconnect the session ourselves at all, as libssh2 will not do so itself upon freeing the structure. Quoting the documentation of `libssh2_session_free`: > Frees all resources associated with a session instance. Typically > called after libssh2_session_disconnect_ex, The missing disconnect probably stems from a misunderstanding what it actually does. As we are already closing the TCP socket ourselves, the assumption was that no additional disconnect is required. But calling `libssh2_session_disconnect` will notify the server that we are cleanly closing the connection, such that the server can free his own resources. Add a call to `libssh2_session_disconnect` to fix that issue. [1]: https://www.libssh2.org/libssh2_session_free.html
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 29 May, 2018 23 commits
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Backport fixes for CVE 2018-11235
Edward Thomson committed -
Carlos Martín Nieto committed
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Patrick Steinhardt committed
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Patrick Steinhardt committed
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Carlos Martín Nieto committed
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Carlos Martín Nieto committed
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Carlos Martín Nieto committed
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We might modify caches due to us trying to load the configuration to figure out what kinds of filesystem protections we should have.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
We still compare case-insensitively to protect more thoroughly as we don't know what specifics we'll see on the system and it's the behaviour from git.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
When dealing with `core.proectNTFS` and `core.protectHFS` we do check against `.gitmodules` but we still have a failing test as the non-filesystem codepath does not check for it.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
Any part of the library which asks the question can pass in the mode to have it checked against `.gitmodules` being a symlink. This is particularly relevant for adding entries to the index from the worktree and for checking out files.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
This is so we have it available for the path validity checking. In a later commit we will start rejecting `.gitmodules` files as symlinks.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
We may take in names from the middle of a string so we want the caller to let us know how long the path component is that we should be checking.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
We want to reject these as they cause compatibility issues and can lead to git writing to files outside of the repository.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
These will be used by the checkout code to detect them for the particular filesystem they're on.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
These can't go into the public API yet as we don't want to introduce API or ABI changes in a security release.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
Carlos Martín Nieto committed
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Given a path component it knows what to pass to the filesystem-specific functions so we're protected even from trees which try to use the 8.3 naming rules to get around us matching on the filename exactly. The logic and test strings come from the equivalent git change.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
It checks against the 8.3 shortname variants, including the one which includes the checksum as part of its name.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
This lets us check for other kinds of reserved files.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
Otherwise we would also admit `..\..\foo\bar` as a valid path and fail to protect Windows users. Ideally we would check for both separators without the need for the copied string, but this'll get us over the RCE.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
If the we decide that the "name" of the submodule (i.e. its path inside `.git/modules/`) is trying to escape that directory or otherwise trick us, we ignore the configuration for that submodule. This leaves us with a half-configured submodule when looking it up by path, but it's the same result as if the configuration really were missing. The name check is potentially more strict than it needs to be, but it lets us re-use the check we're doing for the checkout. The function that encapsulates this logic is ready to be exported but we don't want to do that in a security release so it remains internal for now.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
We should pretend such submdules do not exist as it can lead to RCE.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed
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- 23 Mar, 2018 3 commits
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odb: fix writing to fake write streams
Edward Thomson committed -
In commit 7ec7aa4a (odb: assert on logic errors when writing objects, 2018-02-01), the check for whether we are trying to overflowing the fake stream buffer was changed from returning an error to raising an assert. The conversion forgot though that the logic around `assert`s are basically inverted. Previously, if the statement stream->written + len > steram->size evaluated to true, we would return a `-1`. Now we are asserting that this statement is true, and in case it is not we will raise an error. So the conversion to the `assert` in fact changed the behaviour to the complete opposite intention. Fix the assert by inverting its condition again and add a regression test.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Our mempack ODB backend has no test coverage at all right now. Add a simple test suite to at least have some coverage of the most basic operations on the ODB.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 20 Mar, 2018 1 commit
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online tests: update auth for bitbucket test
Edward Thomson committed
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