- 10 Mar, 2018 16 commits
-
-
Carlos Martín Nieto committed
-
When we duplicate a user-provided options struct, we're stuck with freeing the url in it. In case we add stuff to the proxy struct, let's add a function in which to put the logic.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
If fetch_spec was a non-pattern, and it is not the first iteration of push_status vector, then git_refspec_transform would result in the new value appended via git_buf_puts to the previous iteration value. Forcibly clearing the buffer on each iteration to prevent this behavior.
Slava Karpenko committed -
If we enter the sha1_position() function with "lo == hi", we have no elements. But the do-while loop means that we'll enter the loop body once anyway, picking "mi" at that same value and comparing nonsense to our desired key. This is unlikely to match in practice, but we still shouldn't be looking at the memory in the first place. This bug is inherited from git.git; it was fixed there in e01580cfe01526ec2c4eb4899f776a82ade7e0e1.
Jeff King committed -
If the signature is invalid but we detect that after allocating the strings, we free them. We however leave that pointer dangling in the structure the caller gave us, which can lead to double-free. Set these pointers to `NULL` after freeing their memory to avoid this.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
When computing negative ignores, we throw away any rule which does not undo a previous rule to optimize. But on case insensitive file systems, we need to keep in mind that a negative ignore can also undo a previous rule with different case, which we did not yet honor while determining whether a rule undoes a previous one. So in the following example, we fail to unignore the "/Case" directory: /case !/Case Make both paths checking whether a plain- or wildcard-based rule undo a previous rule aware of case-insensitivity. This fixes the described issue.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
This test is by Carlos Martín Nieto.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Ignore rules allow for reverting a previously ignored rule by prefixing it with an exclamation mark. As such, a negative rule can only override previously ignored files. While computing all ignore patterns, we try to use this fact to optimize away some negative rules which do not override any previous patterns, as they won't change the outcome anyway. In some cases, though, this optimization causes us to get the actual ignores wrong for some files. This may happen whenever the pattern contains a wildcard, as we are unable to reason about whether a pattern overrides a previous pattern in a sane way. This happens for example in the case where a gitignore file contains "*.c" and "!src/*.c", where we wouldn't un-ignore files inside of the "src/" subdirectory. In this case, the first solution coming to mind may be to just strip the "src/" prefix and simply compare the basenames. While that would work here, it would stop working as soon as the basename pattern itself is different, like for example with "*x.c" and "!src/*.c. As such, we settle for the easier fix of just not optimizing away rules that contain a wildcard.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Patrick Steinhardt committed
-
Patrick Steinhardt committed
-
`sin_port` should be in network byte order.
Ian Douglas Scott committed -
Etienne Samson committed
-
Fixes #4274
Etienne Samson committed -
Ariel Davis committed
-
Ariel Davis committed
-
Ariel Davis committed
-
- 08 Mar, 2018 6 commits
-
-
Security fixes for reading index v4
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Patrick Steinhardt committed
-
Patrick Steinhardt committed
-
When computing the complete path length from the encoded prefix-compressed path, we end up just allocating the complete path without ever checking what the encoded path length actually is. This can easily lead to a denial of service by just encoding an unreasonable long path name inside of the index. Git already enforces a maximum path length of 4096 bytes. As we also have that enforcement ready in some places, just make sure that the resulting path is smaller than GIT_PATH_MAX. Reported-by: Krishna Ram Prakash R <krp@gtux.in> Reported-by: Vivek Parikh <viv0411.parikh@gmail.com>
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
The index format in version 4 has prefix-compressed entries, where every index entry can compress its path by using a path prefix of the previous entry. Since implmenting support for this index format version in commit 5625d86b (index: support index v4, 2016-05-17), though, we do not correctly verify that the prefix length that we want to reuse is actually smaller or equal to the amount of characters than the length of the previous index entry's path. This can lead to a an integer underflow and subsequently to an out-of-bounds read. Fix this by verifying that the prefix is actually smaller than the previous entry's path length. Reported-by: Krishna Ram Prakash R <krp@gtux.in> Reported-by: Vivek Parikh <viv0411.parikh@gmail.com>
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
The function `read_entry` does not conform to our usual coding style of returning stuff via the out parameter and to use the return value for reporting errors. Due to most of our code conforming to that pattern, it has become quite natural for us to actually return `-1` in case there is any error, which has also slipped in with commit 5625d86b (index: support index v4, 2016-05-17). As the function returns an `size_t` only, though, the return value is wrapped around, causing the caller of `read_tree` to continue with an invalid index entry. Ultimately, this can lead to a double-free. Improve code and fix the bug by converting the function to return the index entry size via an out parameter and only using the return value to indicate errors. Reported-by: Krishna Ram Prakash R <krp@gtux.in> Reported-by: Vivek Parikh <viv0411.parikh@gmail.com>
Patrick Steinhardt committed
-
- 07 Mar, 2018 7 commits
-
-
deps: upgrade embedded zlib to version 1.2.11
Edward Thomson committed -
Patrick Steinhardt committed
-
Patrick Steinhardt committed
-
The VM on Travis apparently will still proceed, but it's good practice.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
The trusty dependencies are now hosted on Bintray.
Edward Thomson committed -
When the MSVC_CRTDBG option is set by the developer, we will link in the dbghelper library to enable memory lead detection in MSVC projects. We are doing so by adding it to the variable `CMAKE_C_STANDARD_LIBRARIES`, so that it is linked for every library and executable built by CMake. But this causes our builds to fail with a linker error: ``` LINK: fatal error LNK1104: cannot open file 'advapi32.lib;Dbghelp.lib' ``` The issue here is that we are treating the variable as if it were an array of libraries by setting it via the following command: ``` SET(CMAKE_C_STANDARD_LIBRARIES "${CMAKE_C_STANDARD_LIBRARIES}" "Dbghelp.lib") ``` The generated build commands will then simply stringify the variable, concatenating all the contained libraries with a ";". This causes the observed linking failure. To fix the issue, we should just treat the variabable as a simple string. So instead of adding multiple members, we just add the "Dbghelp.lib" library to the existing string, separated by a space character.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
The current version of zlib bundled with libgit2 is version 1.2.8. This version has several CVEs assigned: - CVE-2016-9843 - CVE-2016-9841 - CVE-2016-9842 - CVE-2016-9840 Upgrade the bundled version to the current release 1.2.11, which has these vulnerabilities fixes.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
-
- 14 Jun, 2017 4 commits
-
-
Edward Thomson committed
-
adding GIT_FILTER_VERSION to GIT_FILTER_INIT as part of convention
Edward Thomson committed -
travis: replace use of deprecated homebrew/dupes tap
Edward Thomson committed -
Test improvements
Edward Thomson committed
-
- 13 Jun, 2017 7 commits
-
-
Mohseen Mukaddam committed
-
Mohseen Mukaddam committed
-
Introduce a new test suite "odb::backend::simple", which utilizes the fake backend to exercise the ODB abstraction layer. While such tests already exist for the case where multiple backends are put together, no direct testing for functionality with a single backend exist yet.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
The fake backend currently implements all reading functions except for the `exists_prefix` one. Implement it to enable further testing of the ODB layer.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
The `search_object` function takes the OID length as one of its parameters, where its maximum length is `GIT_OID_HEXSZ`. The `exists` function of the fake backend used `GIT_OID_RAWSZ` though, leading to only the first half of the OID being used when finding the correct object.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
In order to be able to test the ODB prefix functions, we need to be able to detect ambiguous prefixes in case multiple objects with the same prefix exist in the fake ODB. Extend `search_object` to detect ambiguous queries and have callers return its error code instead of always returning `GIT_ENOTFOUND`.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Initialization of the `git_proxy_options` structure is never tested anywhere. Include it in our usual initialization test in "core::structinit::compare".
Patrick Steinhardt committed
-