PCRE2 bug 2642 was fixed in version 10.36. Our 95ca1f987e (grep/pcre2:
better support invalid UTF-8 haystacks, 2021-01-24) worked around it on
older versions by setting the flag PCRE2_NO_START_OPTIMIZE. 797c359978
(grep/pcre2: use compile-time PCREv2 version test, 2021-02-18) switched
it around to set the flag on 10.36 and higher instead, while it claimed
to use "the same test done at compile-time".
Switch the condition back to apply the workaround on PCRE2 versions
_before_ 10.36.
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
grep/pcre2: move back to thread-only PCREv2 structures
Change the setup of the "pcre2_general_context" to happen per-thread
in compile_pcre2_pattern() instead of in grep_init().
This change brings it in line with how the rest of the pcre2_* members
in the grep_pat structure are set up.
As noted in the preceding commit the approach 513f2b0bbd4 (grep: make
PCRE2 aware of custom allocator, 2019-10-16) took to allocate the
pcre2_general_context seems to have been initially based on a
misunderstanding of how PCREv2 memory allocation works.
The approach of creating a global context in grep_init() is just added
complexity for almost zero gain. On my system it's 24 bytes saved
per-thread. For comparison PCREv2 will then go on to allocate at least
a kilobyte for its own thread-local state.
As noted in 6d423dd542f (grep: don't redundantly compile throwaway
patterns under threading, 2017-05-25) the grep code is intentionally
not trying to micro-optimize allocations by e.g. sharing some PCREv2
structures globally, while making others thread-local.
So let's remove this special case and make all of them thread-local
again for simplicity. With this change we could move the
pcre2_{malloc,free} functions around to live closer to their current
use. I'm not doing that here to keep this change small, that cleanup
will be done in a follow-up commit.
See also the discussion in 94da9193a6 (grep: add support for PCRE v2,
2017-06-01) about thread safety, and Johannes's comments[1] to the
effect that we should be doing what this patch is doing.
grep/pcre2: actually make pcre2 use custom allocator
Continue work started in 513f2b0bbd4 (grep: make PCRE2 aware of custom
allocator, 2019-10-16) and make PCREv2 use our pcre2_{malloc,free}().
functions for allocation. We'll now use it for all PCREv2 allocations.
The reason 513f2b0bbd4 worked as a bugfix for the USE_NED_ALLOCATOR
issue is because it targeted the allocation freed via free(), as
opposed to by a pcre2_*free() function. I.e. the pcre2_maketables()
and pcre2_maketables_free() pair.
For most of the rest we continued allocating with stock malloc()
inside PCREv2 itself, but didn't segfault because we'd use its
corresponding free().
In a preceding commit of mine I changed the free() to
pcre2_maketables_free() on versions of PCREv2 10.34 and newer. So as
far as fixing the segfault goes we could revert 513f2b0bbd4. But then
we wouldn't use the desired allocator, let's just use it instead.
Before this patch we'd on e.g.:
grep --threads=1 -iP æ.*var.*xyz
Only use pcre2_{malloc,free}() for 2 malloc() calls and 2
corresponding free() calls. Now it's 12 calls to each. This can be
observed with the GREP_PCRE2_DEBUG_MALLOC debug mode.
Reading the history of how this bug got introduced it wasn't present
in Johannes's original patch[1] to fix the issue.
My reading of that thread is that the approach the follow-up patches
to Johannes's original pursued were based on misunderstanding of how
the PCREv2 API works. In particular this part of [2]:
"most of the time (like when using UTF-8) the chartable (and
therefore the global context) is not needed (even when using
alternate allocators)"
That's simply not how PCREv2 memory allocation works. It's easy to see
how the misunderstanding came about. It's because (as noted above) the
issue was noticed because of our use of free() in our own grep.c for
freeing the memory allocated by pcre2_maketables().
Thus the misunderstanding that PCREv2's compile context is something
only needed for pcre2_maketables(), and e.g. an aborted earlier
attempt[3] to only set it up when we ourselves called
pcre2_maketables().
That's not what PCREv2's compile context is. To quote PCREv2's
documentation:
"This context just contains pointers to (and data for) external
memory management functions that are called from several places in
the PCRE2 library."
Thus the failed attempts to go down the route of only creating the
general context in cases where we ourselves call pcre2_maketables(),
before finally settling on the approach 513f2b0bbd4 took of always
creating it, but then mostly not using it.
Instead we should always create it, and then pass the general context
to those functions that accept it, so that they'll consistently use
our preferred memory allocation functions.
Make use of the pcre2_maketables_free() function to free the memory
allocated by pcre2_maketables().
At first sight it's strange that 10da030ab75 (grep: avoid leak of
chartables in PCRE2, 2019-10-16) which added the free() call here
doesn't make use of the pcre2_free() the author introduced in the
preceding commit in 513f2b0bbd4 (grep: make PCRE2 aware of custom
allocator, 2019-10-16).
The reason is that at the time the function didn't exist. It was first
introduced in PCREv2 version 10.34, released on 2019-11-21.
Let's make use of it behind a macro. I don't think this matters for
anything to do with custom allocators, but it makes our use of PCREv2
more discoverable.
At some distant point in the future we'll be able to drop the version
guard, as nobody will be running a version older than 10.34.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Replace a use of pcre2_config(PCRE2_CONFIG_VERSION, ...) which I added
in 95ca1f987ed (grep/pcre2: better support invalid UTF-8 haystacks,
2021-01-24) with the same test done at compile-time.
It might be cuter to do this at runtime since we don't have to do the
"major >= 11 || (major >= 10 && ...)" test. But in the next commit
we'll add another version comparison that absolutely needs to be done
at compile-time, so we're better of being consistent across the board.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Add optional printing of PCREv2 allocations to stderr for a developer
who manually changes the GREP_PCRE2_DEBUG_MALLOC definition to "1".
You need to manually change the definition in the source file similar
to the DEBUG_MAILMAP, there's no Makefile knob for this.
This will be referenced a subsequent commit, and is generally useful
to manually see what's going on with PCREv2 allocations while working
on that code.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
grep/pcre2: prepare to add debugging to pcre2_malloc()
Change pcre2_malloc() in a way that'll make it easier for a debugging
fprintf() to spew out the allocated pointer.
This doesn't introduce any functional change, it just makes a
subsequent commit's diff easier to read. Changes code added in 513f2b0bbd4 (grep: make PCRE2 aware of custom allocator, 2019-10-16).
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
grep/pcre2: correct reference to grep_init() in comment
Correct a comment added in 513f2b0bbd4 (grep: make PCRE2 aware of
custom allocator, 2019-10-16). This comment was never correct in
git.git, but was consistent with an older version of the patch[1].
grep/pcre2: drop needless assignment + assert() on opt->pcre2
Drop an assignment added in b65abcafc7a (grep: use PCRE v2 for
optimized fixed-string search, 2019-07-01) and the overly cautious
assert() I added in 94da9193a6e (grep: add support for PCRE v2,
2017-06-01).
There was never a good reason for this, it's just a relic from when I
initially wrote the PCREv2 support. We're not going to have confusion
about compile_pcre2_pattern() being called when it shouldn't just
because we forgot to cargo-cult this opt->pcre2 option.
Furthermore the "struct grep_opt" is (mostly) used for the options the
user supplied, let's avoid the pattern of needlessly assigning to it.
With my recent removal of the PCREv1 backend in 7599730b7e2 (Remove
support for v1 of the PCRE library, 2021-01-24) there's even less
confusion around what we call where in these codepaths, which is one
more reason to remove this.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Junio C Hamano [Fri, 12 Feb 2021 22:21:04 +0000 (14:21 -0800)]
Merge branch 'tb/precompose-prefix-too'
When commands are started from a subdirectory, they may have to
compare the path to the subdirectory (called prefix and found out
from $(pwd)) with the tracked paths. On macOS, $(pwd) and
readdir() yield decomposed path, while the tracked paths are
usually normalized to the precomposed form, causing mismatch. This
has been fixed by taking the same approach used to normalize the
command line arguments.
Junio C Hamano [Fri, 12 Feb 2021 22:21:04 +0000 (14:21 -0800)]
Merge branch 'jk/complete-branch-force-delete'
The command line completion (in contrib/) completed "git branch -d"
with branch names, but "git branch -D" offered tagnames in addition,
which has been corrected. "git branch -M" had the same problem.
* jk/complete-branch-force-delete:
doc/git-branch: fix awkward wording for "-c"
completion: handle other variants of "branch -m"
completion: treat "branch -D" the same way as "branch -d"
Junio C Hamano [Fri, 12 Feb 2021 22:21:04 +0000 (14:21 -0800)]
Merge branch 'tb/pack-revindex-on-disk'
Introduce an on-disk file to record revindex for packdata, which
traditionally was always created on the fly and only in-core.
* tb/pack-revindex-on-disk:
t5325: check both on-disk and in-memory reverse index
pack-revindex: ensure that on-disk reverse indexes are given precedence
t: support GIT_TEST_WRITE_REV_INDEX
t: prepare for GIT_TEST_WRITE_REV_INDEX
Documentation/config/pack.txt: advertise 'pack.writeReverseIndex'
builtin/pack-objects.c: respect 'pack.writeReverseIndex'
builtin/index-pack.c: write reverse indexes
builtin/index-pack.c: allow stripping arbitrary extensions
pack-write.c: prepare to write 'pack-*.rev' files
packfile: prepare for the existence of '*.rev' files
Junio C Hamano [Fri, 12 Feb 2021 22:21:04 +0000 (14:21 -0800)]
Merge branch 'ab/tests-various-fixup'
Various test updates.
* ab/tests-various-fixup:
rm tests: actually test for SIGPIPE in SIGPIPE test
archive tests: use a cheaper "zipinfo -h" invocation to get header
upload-pack tests: avoid a non-zero "grep" exit status
git-svn tests: rewrite brittle tests to use "--[no-]merges".
git svn mergeinfo tests: refactor "test -z" to use test_must_be_empty
git svn mergeinfo tests: modernize redirection & quoting style
cache-tree tests: explicitly test HEAD and index differences
cache-tree tests: use a sub-shell with less indirection
cache-tree tests: remove unused $2 parameter
cache-tree tests: refactor for modern test style
Junio C Hamano [Thu, 11 Feb 2021 21:58:43 +0000 (13:58 -0800)]
Merge branch 'en/merge-ort-perf'
The "ort" merge strategy.
* en/merge-ort-perf:
merge-ort: begin performance work; instrument with trace2_region_* calls
merge-ort: ignore the directory rename split conflict for now
merge-ort: fix massive leak
Junio C Hamano [Thu, 11 Feb 2021 21:58:43 +0000 (13:58 -0800)]
Merge branch 'en/ort-directory-rename'
ORT merge strategy learns to infer "renamed directory" while
merging.
* en/ort-directory-rename:
merge-ort: fix a directory rename detection bug
merge-ort: process_renames() now needs more defensiveness
merge-ort: implement apply_directory_rename_modifications()
merge-ort: add a new toplevel_dir field
merge-ort: implement handle_path_level_conflicts()
merge-ort: implement check_for_directory_rename()
merge-ort: implement apply_dir_rename() and check_dir_renamed()
merge-ort: implement compute_collisions()
merge-ort: modify collect_renames() for directory rename handling
merge-ort: implement handle_directory_level_conflicts()
merge-ort: implement compute_rename_counts()
merge-ort: copy get_renamed_dir_portion() from merge-recursive.c
merge-ort: add outline of get_provisional_directory_renames()
merge-ort: add outline for computing directory renames
merge-ort: collect which directories are removed in dirs_removed
merge-ort: initialize and free new directory rename data structures
merge-ort: add new data structures for directory rename detection
Junio C Hamano [Thu, 11 Feb 2021 00:48:07 +0000 (16:48 -0800)]
Merge branch 'tb/ci-run-cocci-with-18.04'
The version of Ubuntu Linux used by default at GitHub Actions CI
has been updated to one that lack coccinelle; until it gets fixed,
work it around by sticking to the previous release (18.04).
* tb/ci-run-cocci-with-18.04:
.github/workflows/main.yml: run static-analysis on bionic
Junio C Hamano [Wed, 10 Feb 2021 22:48:33 +0000 (14:48 -0800)]
Merge branch 'ab/detox-gettext-tests'
Get rid of "GETTEXT_POISON" support altogether, which may or may
not be controversial.
* ab/detox-gettext-tests:
tests: remove uses of GIT_TEST_GETTEXT_POISON=false
tests: remove support for GIT_TEST_GETTEXT_POISON
ci: remove GETTEXT_POISON jobs
Junio C Hamano [Wed, 10 Feb 2021 22:48:33 +0000 (14:48 -0800)]
Merge branch 'jk/pretty-lazy-load-commit'
Some pretty-format specifiers do not need the data in commit object
(e.g. "%H"), but we were over-eager to load and parse it, which has
been made even lazier.
* jk/pretty-lazy-load-commit:
pretty: lazy-load commit data when expanding user-format
Junio C Hamano [Wed, 10 Feb 2021 22:48:32 +0000 (14:48 -0800)]
Merge branch 'js/rebase-i-commit-cleanup-fix'
When "git rebase -i" processes "fixup" insn, there is no reason to
clean up the commit log message, but we did the usual stripspace
processing. This has been corrected.
* js/rebase-i-commit-cleanup-fix:
rebase -i: do leave commit message intact in fixup! chains
Junio C Hamano [Wed, 10 Feb 2021 22:48:32 +0000 (14:48 -0800)]
Merge branch 'jk/t0000-cleanups'
Code clean-up.
* jk/t0000-cleanups:
t0000: consistently use single quotes for outer tests
t0000: run cleaning test inside sub-test
t0000: run prereq tests inside sub-test
t0000: keep clean-up tests together
Junio C Hamano [Wed, 10 Feb 2021 22:48:31 +0000 (14:48 -0800)]
Merge branch 'jk/use-oid-pos'
Code clean-up to ensure our use of hashtables using object names as
keys use the "struct object_id" objects, not the raw hash values.
* jk/use-oid-pos:
oid_pos(): access table through const pointers
hash_pos(): convert to oid_pos()
rerere: use strmap to store rerere directories
rerere: tighten rr-cache dirname check
rerere: check dirname format while iterating rr_cache directory
commit_graft_pos(): take an oid instead of a bare hash
Taylor Blau [Mon, 8 Feb 2021 21:22:34 +0000 (16:22 -0500)]
.github/workflows/main.yml: run static-analysis on bionic
GitHub Actions is transitioning workflow steps that run on
'ubuntu-latest' from 18.04 to 20.04 [1].
This works fine in all steps except the static-analysis one, since
Coccinelle isn't available on Ubuntu focal (it is only available in the
universe suite).
Until Coccinelle can be installed from 20.04's main suite, pin the
static-analysis build to run on 18.04, where it can be installed by
default.
Junio C Hamano [Mon, 8 Feb 2021 22:05:55 +0000 (14:05 -0800)]
Merge branch 'pb/ci-matrix-wo-shortcut' into maint
Our setting of GitHub CI test jobs were a bit too eager to give up
once there is even one failure found. Tweak the knob to allow
other jobs keep running even when we see a failure, so that we can
find more failures in a single run.
* pb/ci-matrix-wo-shortcut:
ci: do not cancel all jobs of a matrix if one fails
Junio C Hamano [Mon, 8 Feb 2021 22:05:55 +0000 (14:05 -0800)]
Merge branch 'ab/branch-sort' into maint
The implementation of "git branch --sort" wrt the detached HEAD
display has always been hacky, which has been cleaned up.
* ab/branch-sort:
branch: show "HEAD detached" first under reverse sort
branch: sort detached HEAD based on a flag
ref-filter: move ref_sorting flags to a bitfield
ref-filter: move "cmp_fn" assignment into "else if" arm
ref-filter: add braces to if/else if/else chain
branch tests: add to --sort tests
branch: change "--local" to "--list" in comment
Junio C Hamano [Mon, 8 Feb 2021 22:05:54 +0000 (14:05 -0800)]
Merge branch 'ma/more-opaque-lock-file' into maint
Code clean-up.
* ma/more-opaque-lock-file:
read-cache: try not to peek into `struct {lock_,temp}file`
refs/files-backend: don't peek into `struct lock_file`
midx: don't peek into `struct lock_file`
commit-graph: don't peek into `struct lock_file`
builtin/gc: don't peek into `struct lock_file`
Junio C Hamano [Mon, 8 Feb 2021 22:05:53 +0000 (14:05 -0800)]
Merge branch 'ma/t1300-cleanup' into maint
Code clean-up.
* ma/t1300-cleanup:
t1300: don't needlessly work with `core.foo` configs
t1300: remove duplicate test for `--file no-such-file`
t1300: remove duplicate test for `--file ../foo`
We've carried compatibility codepaths for compilers without
variadic macros for quite some time, but the world may be ready for
them to be removed. Force compilation failure on exotic platforms
where variadic macros are not available to find out who screams in
such a way that we can easily revert if it turns out that the world
is not yet ready.
Junio C Hamano [Sat, 6 Feb 2021 00:40:46 +0000 (16:40 -0800)]
Merge branch 'pb/ci-matrix-wo-shortcut'
Our setting of GitHub CI test jobs were a bit too eager to give up
once there is even one failure found. Tweak the knob to allow
other jobs keep running even when we see a failure, so that we can
find more failures in a single run.
* pb/ci-matrix-wo-shortcut:
ci: do not cancel all jobs of a matrix if one fails
The "pack-objects" command needs to iterate over all the tags when
automatic tag following is enabled, but it actually iterated over
all refs and then discarded everything outside "refs/tags/"
hierarchy, which was quite wasteful.
* jv/pack-objects-narrower-ref-iteration:
builtin/pack-objects.c: avoid iterating all refs
Junio C Hamano [Sat, 6 Feb 2021 00:40:45 +0000 (16:40 -0800)]
Merge branch 'ph/use-delete-refs'
When removing many branches and tags, the code used to do so one
ref at a time. There is another API it can use to delete multiple
refs, and it makes quite a lot of performance difference when the
refs are packed.
* ph/use-delete-refs:
use delete_refs when deleting tags or branches
Junio C Hamano [Sat, 6 Feb 2021 00:40:45 +0000 (16:40 -0800)]
Merge branch 'tb/ls-refs-optim'
The ls-refs protocol operation has been optimized to narrow the
sub-hierarchy of refs/ it walks to produce response.
* tb/ls-refs-optim:
ls-refs.c: traverse prefixes of disjoint "ref-prefix" sets
ls-refs.c: initialize 'prefixes' before using it
refs: expose 'for_each_fullref_in_prefixes'
Junio C Hamano [Sat, 6 Feb 2021 00:40:44 +0000 (16:40 -0800)]
Merge branch 'zh/ls-files-deduplicate'
"git ls-files" can and does show multiple entries when the index is
unmerged, which is a source for confusion unless -s/-u option is in
use. A new option --deduplicate has been introduced.
* zh/ls-files-deduplicate:
ls-files.c: add --deduplicate option
ls_files.c: consolidate two for loops into one
ls_files.c: bugfix for --deleted and --modified
Junio C Hamano [Sat, 6 Feb 2021 00:40:44 +0000 (16:40 -0800)]
Merge branch 'ds/cache-tree-basics'
Document, clean-up and optimize the code around the cache-tree
extension in the index.
* ds/cache-tree-basics:
cache-tree: speed up consecutive path comparisons
cache-tree: use ce_namelen() instead of strlen()
index-format: discuss recursion of cache-tree better
index-format: update preamble to cache tree extension
index-format: use 'cache tree' over 'cached tree'
cache-tree: trace regions for prime_cache_tree
cache-tree: trace regions for I/O
cache-tree: use trace2 in cache_tree_update()
unpack-trees: add trace2 regions
tree-walk: report recursion counts
Junio C Hamano [Sat, 6 Feb 2021 00:40:44 +0000 (16:40 -0800)]
Merge branch 'en/ort-conflict-handling'
ORT merge strategy learns more support for merge conflicts.
* en/ort-conflict-handling:
merge-ort: add handling for different types of files at same path
merge-ort: copy find_first_merges() implementation from merge-recursive.c
merge-ort: implement format_commit()
merge-ort: copy and adapt merge_submodule() from merge-recursive.c
merge-ort: copy and adapt merge_3way() from merge-recursive.c
merge-ort: flesh out implementation of handle_content_merge()
merge-ort: handle book-keeping around two- and three-way content merge
merge-ort: implement unique_path() helper
merge-ort: handle directory/file conflicts that remain
merge-ort: handle D/F conflict where directory disappears due to merge
Junio C Hamano [Sat, 6 Feb 2021 00:40:44 +0000 (16:40 -0800)]
Merge branch 'so/log-diff-merge'
"git log" learned a new "--diff-merges=<how>" option.
* so/log-diff-merge: (32 commits)
t4013: add tests for --diff-merges=first-parent
doc/git-show: include --diff-merges description
doc/rev-list-options: document --first-parent changes merges format
doc/diff-generate-patch: mention new --diff-merges option
doc/git-log: describe new --diff-merges options
diff-merges: add '--diff-merges=1' as synonym for 'first-parent'
diff-merges: add old mnemonic counterparts to --diff-merges
diff-merges: let new options enable diff without -p
diff-merges: do not imply -p for new options
diff-merges: implement new values for --diff-merges
diff-merges: make -m/-c/--cc explicitly mutually exclusive
diff-merges: refactor opt settings into separate functions
diff-merges: get rid of now empty diff_merges_init_revs()
diff-merges: group diff-merge flags next to each other inside 'rev_info'
diff-merges: split 'ignore_merges' field
diff-merges: fix -m to properly override -c/--cc
t4013: add tests for -m failing to override -c/--cc
t4013: support test_expect_failure through ':failure' magic
diff-merges: revise revs->diff flag handling
diff-merges: handle imply -p on -c/--cc logic for log.c
...
Junio C Hamano [Sat, 6 Feb 2021 00:31:27 +0000 (16:31 -0800)]
Merge branch 'jk/log-cherry-pick-duplicate-patches' into maint
When more than one commit with the same patch ID appears on one
side, "git log --cherry-pick A...B" did not exclude them all when a
commit with the same patch ID appears on the other side. Now it
does.
Junio C Hamano [Sat, 6 Feb 2021 00:31:22 +0000 (16:31 -0800)]
Merge branch 'mt/t4129-with-setgid-dir' into maint
Some tests expect that "ls -l" output has either '-' or 'x' for
group executable bit, but setgid bit can be inherited from parent
directory and make these fields 'S' or 's' instead, causing test
failures.
* mt/t4129-with-setgid-dir:
t4129: don't fail if setgid is set in the test directory
Jeff King [Wed, 3 Feb 2021 21:07:32 +0000 (16:07 -0500)]
doc/git-branch: fix awkward wording for "-c"
The description for "-c" is hard to parse. I think the big issue is lack
of commas, but I've also reordered the words to keep the main focus
point of "instead of renaming, copy" together.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Jeff King [Wed, 3 Feb 2021 20:59:58 +0000 (15:59 -0500)]
completion: handle other variants of "branch -m"
We didn't special-case "branch -M" (with a capital M) the same as
"branch -m", nor any of the "--copy" variants. As a result these offered
any ref as the next candidate, and not just branch names.
Note that I rewrapped case-arm line since it's now quite long, and
likewise the one below it for consistency. I also re-ordered the
existing "-D" to make it more obvious how the cases group together.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The following sequence leads to a "BUG" assertion running under MacOS:
DIR=git-test-restore-p
Adiarnfd=$(printf 'A\314\210')
DIRNAME=xx${Adiarnfd}yy
mkdir $DIR &&
cd $DIR &&
git init &&
mkdir $DIRNAME &&
cd $DIRNAME &&
echo "Initial" >file &&
git add file &&
echo "One more line" >>file &&
echo y | git restore -p .
Initialized empty Git repository in /tmp/git-test-restore-p/.git/
BUG: pathspec.c:495: error initializing pathspec_item
Cannot close git diff-index --cached --numstat
[snip]
The command `git restore` is run from a directory inside a Git repo.
Git needs to split the $CWD into 2 parts:
The path to the repo and "the rest", if any.
"The rest" becomes a "prefix" later used inside the pathspec code.
As an example, "/path/to/repo/dir-inside-repå" would determine
"/path/to/repo" as the root of the repo, the place where the
configuration file .git/config is found.
The rest becomes the prefix ("dir-inside-repå"), from where the
pathspec machinery expands the ".", more about this later.
If there is a decomposed form, (making the decomposing visible like this),
"dir-inside-rep°a" doesn't match "dir-inside-repå".
Git commands need to:
(a) read the configuration variable "core.precomposeunicode"
(b) precocompose argv[]
(c) precompose the prefix, if there was any
The first commit, 76759c7dff53 "git on Mac OS and precomposed unicode"
addressed (a) and (b).
The call to precompose_argv() was added into parse-options.c,
because that seemed to be a good place when the patch was written.
Commands that don't use parse-options need to do (a) and (b) themselfs.
The commands `diff-files`, `diff-index`, `diff-tree` and `diff`
learned (a) and (b) in
commit 90a78b83e0b8 "diff: run arguments through precompose_argv"
Branch names (or refs in general) using decomposed code points
resulting in decomposed file names had been fixed in
commit 8e712ef6fc97 "Honor core.precomposeUnicode in more places"
The bug report from above shows 2 things:
- more commands need to handle precomposed unicode
- (c) should be implemented for all commands using pathspecs
Solution:
precompose_argv() now handles the prefix (if needed), and is renamed into
precompose_argv_prefix().
Inside this function the config variable core.precomposeunicode is read
into the global variable precomposed_unicode, as before.
This reading is skipped if precomposed_unicode had been read before.
The original patch for preocomposed unicode, 76759c7dff53, placed
precompose_argv() into parse-options.c
Now add it into git.c::run_builtin() as well. Existing precompose
calls in diff-files.c and others may become redundant, and if we
audit the callflows that reach these places to make sure that they
can never be reached without going through the new call added to
run_builtin(), we might be able to remove these existing ones.
But in this commit, we do not bother to do so and leave these
precompose callsites as they are. Because precompose() is
idempotent and can be called on an already precomposed string
safely, this is safer than removing existing calls without fully
vetting the callflows.
There is certainly room for cleanups - this change intends to be a bug fix.
Cleanups needs more tests in e.g. t/t3910-mac-os-precompose.sh, and should
be done in future commits.
[1] git-bugreport-2021-01-06-1209.txt (git can't deal with special characters)
[2] https://lore.kernel.org/git/A102844A-9501-4A86-854D-E3B387D378AA@icloud.com/
Reported-by: Daniel Troger <random_n0body@icloud.com> Helped-By: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Torsten Bögershausen <tboegi@web.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The test case added by 9466e3809d ("blame: enable funcname blaming with
userdiff driver", 2020-11-01) forgot to quote variable expansions. This
causes failures when the current directory contains blanks.
One variable that the test case introduces will not have IFS characters
and could remain without quotes, but let's quote all expansions for
consistency, not just the one that has the path name.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org> Acked-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Rafael Silva [Wed, 27 Jan 2021 08:03:10 +0000 (09:03 +0100)]
worktree: teach `list` verbose mode
"git worktree list" annotates each worktree according to its state such
as "prunable" or "locked", however it is not immediately obvious why
these worktrees are being annotated. For prunable worktrees a reason
is available that is returned by should_prune_worktree() and for locked
worktrees a reason might be available provided by the user via `lock`
command.
Let's teach "git worktree list" a --verbose mode that outputs the reason
why the worktrees are being annotated. The reason is a text that can take
virtually any size and appending the text on the default columned format
will make it difficult to extend the command with other annotations and
not fit nicely on the screen. In order to address this shortcoming the
annotation is then moved to the next line indented followed by the reason
If the reason is not available the annotation stays on the same line as
the worktree itself.
The output of "git worktree list" with verbose becomes like so:
$ git worktree list --verbose
...
/path/to/locked-no-reason acb124 [branch-a] locked
/path/to/locked-with-reason acc125 [branch-b]
locked: worktree with a locked reason
/path/to/prunable-reason ace127 [branch-d]
prunable: gitdir file points to non-existent location
...
Helped-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com> Signed-off-by: Rafael Silva <rafaeloliveira.cs@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>