- 23 Nov, 2019 1 commit
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The lsb-release command is missing on our images; just show the information from the file instead of relying on it.
Edward Thomson committed
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- 22 Nov, 2019 1 commit
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Provide a sane default for `CMAKE_GENERATOR` in the build script so that it can be invoked without having to set that in the environment.
Edward Thomson committed
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- 16 Nov, 2019 3 commits
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patch_parse: use paths from "---"/"+++" lines for binary patches
Edward Thomson committed -
Follow 308 redirect in WinHTTP transport
Edward Thomson committed -
fileops: correct error return on p_lstat failures when mkdir
Edward Thomson committed
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- 10 Nov, 2019 1 commit
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For some patches, it is not possible to derive the old and new file paths from the patch header's first line, most importantly when they contain spaces. In such a case, we derive both paths from the "---" and "+++" lines, which allow for non-ambiguous parsing. We fail to use these paths when parsing binary patches without data, though, as we always expect the header paths to be filled in. Fix this by using the "---"/"+++" paths by default and only fall back to header paths if they aren't set. If neither of those paths are set, we just return an error. Add two tests to verify this behaviour, one of which would have previously caused a segfault.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 09 Nov, 2019 1 commit
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IIRC I got a strange return once from lstat, which translated in a weird error class/message being reported. As a safety measure, enforce a -1 return in that case.
Etienne Samson committed
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- 06 Nov, 2019 3 commits
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config_mem: implement support for snapshots
Edward Thomson committed -
patch_parse: fix segfault when header path contains whitespace only
Edward Thomson committed -
Similar as in commit dadbb33b (Fix crash if snapshotting a config_snapshot, 2019-11-01), let's implement snapshots for in-memory configuration entries. As this deletes more code than it adds, it doesn't make any sense to not allow for this and allows users to treat config backends mostly the same.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 05 Nov, 2019 10 commits
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When parsing header paths from a patch, we reject any patches with empty paths as malformed patches. We perform the check whether a path is empty before sanitizing it, though, which may lead to a path becoming empty after the check, e.g. if we have trimmed whitespace. This may lead to a segfault later when any part of our patching logic actually references such a path, which may then be a `NULL` pointer. Fix the issue by performing the check after sanitizing. Add tests to catch the issue as they would have produced a segfault previosuly.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
config_file: fix race when creating an iterator
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
When creating a configuration file iterator, then we first refresh the backend and then afterwards duplicate all refreshed configuration entries into the iterator in order to avoid seeing any concurrent modifications of the entries while iterating. The duplication of entries is not guarded, though, as we do not increase the refcount of the entries that we duplicate right now. This opens us up for a race, as another thread may concurrently refresh the repository configuration and thus swap out the current set of entries. As we didn't increase the refcount, this may lead to the entries being free'd while we iterate over them in the first thread. Fix the issue by properly handling the lifecycle of the backend's entries via `config_file_entries_take` and `git_config_entries_free`, respectively.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
The function to take a reference to the config file's config entries currently returns the reference via return value. Due to this, it's harder than necessary to integrate into our typical coding style, as one needs to make sure that a proper error code is set before erroring out from the caller. This bites us in `config_file_delete`, where we call `goto out` directly when `config_file_entries_take` returns `NULL`, but we actually forget to set up the error code and thus return success. Fix the issue by refactoring the function to return an error code and pass the reference via an out-pointer.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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As with the predecessing commit, this commit renames backend functions of the configuration file backend. This helps to clearly separate functionality and also to be able to see from backtraces which backend is currently in use.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
The configuration snapshot backend has been extracted from the old files backend back in 2bff84ba (config_file: separate out read-only backend, 2019-07-26). To keep code churn manageable, the local functions weren't renamed yet and thus still have references to the old diskfile backend. Rename them accordingly to make them easier to understand.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Fix crash if snapshotting a config_snapshot
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
fix a bug introduced in 8a23597b
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
romkatv committed
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- 02 Nov, 2019 1 commit
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reflogs: fix behaviour around reflogs with newlines
Edward Thomson committed
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- 01 Nov, 2019 2 commits
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Signed-off-by: Sven Strickroth <email@cs-ware.de>
Sven Strickroth committed -
commit: verify objects exist in git_commit_with_signature
Edward Thomson committed
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- 30 Oct, 2019 2 commits
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There can be a significant difference between the system where we created the buffer (if at all) and when the caller provides us with the contents of a commit. Verify that the commit we are being asked to create references objects which do exist in the target repository.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
There can be a significant difference between the system where we created the buffer (if at all) and when the caller provides us with the contents of a commit. Provide some test cases (we have to adapt the existing ones because they refer to trees and commits which do not exist).
Carlos Martín Nieto committed
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- 29 Oct, 2019 1 commit
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patch_parse: fixes for fuzzing errors
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 26 Oct, 2019 1 commit
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pcpthm committed
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- 24 Oct, 2019 2 commits
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apply: add GIT_APPLY_CHECK
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
refs: unlock unmodified refs on transaction commit
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 22 Oct, 2019 1 commit
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This adds an option which will check if a diff is applicable without actually applying it; equivalent to git apply --check.
Drew DeVault committed
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- 21 Oct, 2019 1 commit
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When the patch contains lines close to INT_MAX, then it may happen that we end up with an integer overflow when calculating the line of the current diff hunk. Reject such patches as unreasonable to avoid the integer overflow. As the calculation is performed on integers, we introduce two new helpers `git__add_int_overflow` and `git__sub_int_overflow` that perform the integer overflow check in a generic way.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 19 Oct, 2019 3 commits
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We've got two locations where we copy lines into the patch. The first one is when copying normal " ", "-" or "+" lines, while the second location gets executed when we copy "\ No newline at end of file" lines. While the first one correctly uses `git__strndup` to copy only until the newline, the other one doesn't. Thus, if the line occurs at the end of the patch and if there is no terminating NUL character, then it may result in an out-of-bounds read. Fix the issue by using `git__strndup`, as was already done in the other location. Furthermore, add allocation checks to both locations to detect out-of-memory situations.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
When parsing patch headers, we currently accept empty path names just fine, e.g. a line "--- \n" would be parsed as the empty filename. This is not a valid patch format and may cause `NULL` pointer accesses at a later place as `git_buf_detach` will return `NULL` in that case. Reject such patches as malformed with a nice error message.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
It's currently possible to have patches with multiple old path name headers. As we didn't check for this case, this resulted in a memory leak when overwriting the old old path with the new old path because we simply discarded the old pointer. Instead of fixing this by free'ing the old pointer, we should reject such patches altogether. It doesn't make any sense for the "---" or "+++" markers to occur multiple times within a patch n the first place. This also implicitly fixes the memory leak.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 18 Oct, 2019 6 commits
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fuzzers: add a new fuzzer for patch parsing
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
In previous versions, libgit2 could be coerced into writing reflog messages with embedded newlines into the reflog by using `git_stash_save` with a message containing newlines. While the root cause is fixed now, it was noticed that upstream git is in fact able to read such corrupted reflog messages just fine. Make the reflog parser more lenient in order to just skip over malformatted reflog lines to bring us in line with git. This requires us to change an existing test that verified that we do indeed _fail_ to parse such logs.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
The refdb_fs code to parse the reflog currently uses a hand-rolled parser. Convert it to use our `git_parse_ctx` structure instead.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Currently, the reflog disallows any entries that have a message with newlines, as that would effectively break the reflog format, which may contain a single line per entry, only. Upstream git behaves a bit differently, though, especially when considering stashes: instead of rejecting any reflog entry with newlines, git will simply replace newlines with spaces. E.g. executing 'git stash push -m "foo\nbar"' will create a reflog entry with "foo bar" as entry message. This commit adjusts our own logic to stop rejecting commit messages with newlines. Previously, this logic was part of `git_reflog_append`, only. There is a second place though where we add reflog entries, which is the serialization code in the filesystem refdb. As it didn't contain any sanity checks whatsoever, the refdb would have been perfectly happy to write malformatted reflog entries to the disk. This is being fixed with the same logic as for the reflog itself.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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The code style of `git_stash_save` doesn't really match our current coding style. Update it to match our current policies more closely.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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