- 24 Jun, 2019 3 commits
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Create a separate `git_hash_sha1_ctx` structure that is specific to the SHA1 implementation and move all SHA1 functions over to use that one instead of the generic `git_hash_ctx`. The `git_hash_ctx` for now simply has a union containing this single SHA1 implementation, only, without any mechanism to distinguish between different algortihms.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
As we will include additional hash algorithms in the future due to upstream git discussing a move away from SHA1, we should accomodate for that and prepare for the move. As a first step, move all SHA1 implementations into a common subdirectory. Also, create a SHA1-specific header file that lives inside the hash folder. This header will contain the SHA1-specific header includes, function declarations and the SHA1 context structure.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
The hash source files have circular include dependencies right now, which shows by our broken generic hash implementation. The "hash.h" header declares two functions and the `git_hash_ctx` typedef before actually including the hash backend header and can only declare the remaining hash functions after the include due to possibly static function declarations inside of the implementation includes. Let's break this cycle and help maintainability by creating a real implementation file for each of the hash implementations. Instead of relying on the exact include order, we now especially avoid the use of `GIT_INLINE` for function declarations.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 02 Jan, 2019 1 commit
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The `git_hash_global_init` function is simply defined as a macro to zero for most of the different hash implementations. This makes it impossible to treat it like a function pointer, which is required for a later commit where we want to improve the way global initialization works. Fix the issue by converting all no-op macros to an inline function returning zero. There's a small gotcha here, though: as most hash implementations only have a header file, but not a corresponding implementation file, we cannot declare the function as non-static. But declaring it as `static inline` fails, too, as there is a previous declaration as non-static. So we have to move the function declaration after the include that brings in the function definition, as it is allowed to have a non-static declaration after a static definition, but not the other way round.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 01 Feb, 2018 1 commit
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use consistent names for the #include / #define header guard pattern.
Edward Thomson committed
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- 20 Dec, 2017 1 commit
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Teach the CommonCrypto hash mechanisms to support large files. The hash primitives take a `CC_LONG` (aka `uint32_t`) at a time. So loop to give the hash function at most an unsigned 32 bit's worth of bytes until we have hashed the entire file.
Edward Thomson committed
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- 24 Oct, 2014 1 commit
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OSX has its own cryptographic library, let's make use of it instead of calling out to OpenSSL.
Carlos Martín Nieto committed
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- 17 Sep, 2013 1 commit
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Increasingly there are a number of components that want to do some cleanup at global shutdown time (at least if there are not going to be memory leaks). This creates a very simple system of shutdown hooks that will be invoked by git_threads_shutdown. Right now, the maximum number of hooks is hardcoded, but since adding a hook is not a public API, it should be fine and I thought it was better to start off with really simple code.
Russell Belfer committed
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- 08 Jan, 2013 1 commit
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Edward Thomson committed
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- 13 Nov, 2012 4 commits
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Edward Thomson committed
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Edward Thomson committed
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Edward Thomson committed
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Edward Thomson committed
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