- 01 May, 2017 1 commit
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Do not free config when creating remote
Edward Thomson committed
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- 29 Apr, 2017 1 commit
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- 28 Apr, 2017 1 commit
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Branch renames with worktrees
Edward Thomson committed
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- 26 Apr, 2017 5 commits
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socket_stream: continue to next addrinfo on socket creation failure
Edward Thomson committed -
Honor read-only flag when writing to config backends
Edward Thomson committed -
When connecting to a remote via socket stream, we first use getaddrinfo to obtain the possible connection methods followed by creating and connecting the socket. But when creating the socket, we error out as soon as we get an invalid socket instead of trying out other address hints returned by addrinfo. Fix this by continuing on invalid socket instead of returning an error. This fixes connection establishment with musl libc.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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Configuration backends have a readonly-flag which is currently used to distinguish configuration snapshots. But somewhat unexpectedly, we do not use the flag to prevent writing to a readonly backend but happily proceed to do so. This commit modifies logic to also honor the readonly flag for configuration setters. We will now traverse through all backends and pick the first one which is not marked as read-only whenever we want to write new configuration.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 25 Apr, 2017 3 commits
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diff_parse: free object instead of its pointer
Edward Thomson committed -
The config_file.h header provides some inline declarations accessing the `git_config_backend`, but misses its declaration. Add the missing include for "git2/sys/config.h" to add it.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
In e7330016 (diff_parse: check return value of `git_diff_init_options`, 2017-03-20), we've introduced an error check whether we're able to correctly initialize the diff options. This simple commit actually introduced a segfault in that we now try to free the pointer to the allocated diff in an error case, instead of the allocated diff itself. This commit fixes the issue.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 21 Apr, 2017 3 commits
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Misc fixes
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
The threads::diff test suite has a static variable `_retries`, which is used on Windows platforms only. As it is unused on other systems, the compiler throws a warning there. Fix the warning by wrapping the declaration in an ifdef.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 17 Apr, 2017 2 commits
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Refactor some of the win32 POSIX emulation
Carlos Martín Nieto committed -
The `remediation` function is run in the retry loop in order to attempt to fix any problems that the prior run encountered. There is nothing "cleaned up". Clarify the name.
Edward Thomson committed
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- 12 Apr, 2017 2 commits
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fileops: fix leaking fd in `mmap_ro_file`
Edward Thomson committed -
When the `git_futils_mmap_ro_file` function encounters an error after the file has been opened, it will do a simple returns. Instead, we should close the opened file descriptor to avoid a leak. This commit fixes the issue.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 11 Apr, 2017 4 commits
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filter: only close filter if it's been initialized correctly
Edward Thomson committed -
Fix building against OpenSSL v1.1
Edward Thomson committed -
README: document our relation to changes in upstream
Edward Thomson committed -
libgit2 is a mere consumer of changes which are trickling down from the upstream git.git project. This commit documents the ramifications caused by this relation.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 10 Apr, 2017 2 commits
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Previous to OpenSSL version 1.1, the user had to initialize at least the error strings as well as the SSL algorithms by himself. OpenSSL version 1.1 instead provides a new function `OPENSSL_init_ssl`, which handles initialization of all subsystems. As the new API call will by default load error strings and initialize the SSL algorithms, we can safely replace these calls when compiling against version 1.1 or later. This fixes a compiler error when compiling against OpenSSL version 1.1 which has been built without stubs for deprecated syntax.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Up to version 1.0, OpenSSL required us to provide a callback which implements a locking mechanism. Due to problems in the API design though this mechanism was inherently broken, especially regarding that the locking callback cannot report errors in an obvious way. Due to this shortcoming, the locking initialization has been completely removed in OpenSSL version 1.1. As the library has also been refactored to not make any use of these callback functions, we can safely remove all initialization of the locking subsystem if compiling against OpenSSL version 1.1 or higher. This fixes a compilation error when compiling against OpenSSL version 1.1 which has been built without stubs for deprecated syntax.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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- 07 Apr, 2017 3 commits
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In the function `git_filter_list_stream_data`, we initialize, write and subesquently close the stream which should receive content processed by the filter. While we skip writing to the stream if its initialization failed, we still try to close it unconditionally -- even if the initialization failed, where the stream might not be set at all, leading us to segfault. Semantics in this code is not really clear. The function handling the same logic for files instead of data seems to do the right thing here in only closing the stream when initialization succeeded. When stepping back a bit, this is only reasonable: if a stream cannot be initialized, the caller would not expect it to be closed again. So actually, both callers of `stream_list_init` fail to do so. The data streaming function will always close the stream and the file streaming function will not close the stream if writing to it has failed. The fix is thus two-fold: - callers of `stream_list_init` now close the stream iff it has been initialized - `stream_list_init` now closes the lastly initialized stream if the current stream in the chain failed to initialize Add a test which segfaulted previous to these changes.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Coverity
Edward Thomson committed -
pkgconfig: fix handling of prefixes containing whitespaces
Edward Thomson committed
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- 05 Apr, 2017 11 commits
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Our libgit2.pc.in file is quoting the `libdir` variable in our declared "Libs:" line. The intention is to handle whitespaces here, but pkgconfig already does so by automatically escaping whitespace with backslashes. The correct thing to do is to instead quote the prefix, as this is the one which is being substituted by CMake upon installation. As both libdir and includedir will be expanded to "${prefix}/lib" and "${prefix}/include", respectively, pkgconfig will also correctly escape whitespaces. Note that this will actually break when a user manually wants to override libdir and includedir with a path containing whitespace. But actually, this cannot be helped, as always quoting these variables will actuall break the common case of being prefixed with "${prefix}". So we just bail out here and declare this as unsupported out of the box.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Whenever we rename a branch, we update the repository's symbolic HEAD reference if it currently points to the branch that is to be renamed. But with the introduction of worktrees, we also have to iterate over all HEADs of linked worktrees to adjust them. Do so.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Previously, we have extracted the logic to find and iterate over all HEADs of a repository. Use this function in `git_branch_is_checked_out`.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
While we already provide functions to get the current repository's HEAD, it is quite involved to iterate over HEADs of both the repository and all linked work trees. This commit implements a function `git_repository_foreach_head`, which accepts a callback which is then called for all HEAD files.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
The functions `git_repository_head_for_worktree` and `git_repository_detached_head_for_worktree` both implement their own logic to read the HEAD reference file. Use the new function `git_reference__read_head` instead to unify the code paths.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
The function `read_worktree_head` has the logic embedded to construct the path to `HEAD` in the work tree's git directory, which is quite useful for other callers. Extract the logic into its own function to make it reusable by others.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
If trying to set the HEAD of a repository to another reference, we have to check whether this reference is already checked out in another linked work tree. If it is, we will refuse setting the HEAD and return an error, but do not set a meaningful error message. Add one.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Currently, we only provide functions to read references directly from a repository's reference store via e.g. `git_reference_lookup`. But in some cases, we may want to read files not connected to the current repository, e.g. when looking up HEAD of connected work trees. This commit implements `git_reference__read_head`, which will read out and allocate a reference at an arbitrary path.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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Edward Thomson committed
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Instead of failing to set the timestamp of a read-only file (like any object file), set it writable temporarily to update the timestamp.
Edward Thomson committed
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- 04 Apr, 2017 2 commits
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When executing `git_futils_mmap_ro_file`, we first try to guess whether the file is mmapable at all. Part of this check is whether the file is too large to be mmaped, which can be true on systems with 32 bit `size_t` types. The check is performed by first getting the file size wtih `git_futils_filesize` and then checking whether the returned size can be represented as `size_t`, returning an error if so. While this test also catches the case where the function returned an error (as `-1` is not representable by `size_t`), we will set the misleading error message "file too large to mmap". But in fact, a negative return value from `git_futils_filesize` will be caused by the inability to fstat the file. Fix the error message by handling negative return values separately and not overwriting the error message in that case.
Patrick Steinhardt committed -
We do not check the return value of `git__calloc`, which may return `NULL` in out-of-memory situations. Fix the error by using `GITERR_CHECK_ALLOC`.
Patrick Steinhardt committed
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