Commit Graph

60552 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Johannes Schindelin
bba19256be Error out when mingw_startup() *and* NO_UNSETENV are active
The unsetenv code has no idea to update our environ_size, therefore
causing segmentation faults when environment variables are removed
without compat/mingw.c's knowing (MinGW's optimized lookup would try
to strcmp() against NULL in such a case).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:43:06 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
8fd900fe22 Squash compile warning with MSys2
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:43:06 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
c08b7b86e0 Do not trust MSys2's MinGW gettext.sh
It does not quite work because it produces DOS line endings which the
shell does not like at all.

This lets t3406, t3903, t4254, t7400, t7401, t7406 and t7407 pass.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:43:05 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
613e0e99d2 Let's use gettext with MSys2
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:43:04 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
884250dffc Build Python stuff with MSys2
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:43:03 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
5bc922d9d7 config.mak.uname: supporting 64-bit MSys2
This just makes things compile, the test suite needs extra tender loving
care in addition to this change. We will address these issues in later
commits.

While at it, also allow building MSys2 Git (i.e. a Git that uses MSys2's
POSIX emulation layer).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:43:03 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
c19c31962a config.mak.uname: support MSys2
Git for Windows lags a little bit behind with the 2.x releases because
the Git for Windows developers wanted to let that big jump coincide with
a well-needed overhaul of the context within which Git for Windows is
developed.

To understand why this is such a big issue, it needs to be noted that
many parts of Git are not written in portable C, but instead relies on a
POSIX shell and Perl to be available. Even in the portable C part, there
is the ingrained notion that we can work with UTF-8 encoded strings.

To support the scripts, Git for Windows has to ship a minimal POSIX
emulation layer with Bash and Perl thrown in, and when the Git for
Windows effort started originally, in August 2007, we settled on using
MSys, a stripped down version of Cygwin. Consequently, the original name
of the project was "msysGit" (which, sadly, caused a *lot* of confusion
because few Windows users know about MSys, and even less care).

To compile the C code of Git for Windows, we used MSys, too: it sports
an additional version of the GNU C Compiler that targets the plain
Win32 API (with a few convenience functions thrown in) instead of the
POSIX emulation layer that would require the MSys runtime to run the
compiled programs. That way, Git for Windows' executable(s) are really
just Win32 programs. To discern executables requiring the POSIX
emulation layer from the ones that do not, the latter are called MinGW
(Minimal GNU for Windows) when the former are called MSys executables.

This reliance on MSys incurred challenges, too, though: some of our
changes to the MSys runtime -- necessary to support Git for Windows
better -- were not accepted upstream, the MSys runtime was not developed
further to support e.g. UTF-8 or 64-bit, and apart from not having a
package management system until much later (when mingw-get was
introduced), many packages provided by the MSys/MinGW project lag behind
the respective source code versions, in particular Bash and OpenSSL. For
a while, the Git for Windows project tried to remedy the situation by
trying to build newer versions of those packages, but the situation
quickly became untenable, especially with problems like the Heartbleed
bug requiring swift action and Git for Windows contributors being scarce
-- despite millions of downloads suggesting that there are many users.

After a brief push in the direction of mingw-get, thanks to the
long-time contributor and co-maintainer Sebastian Schuberth, it became
clear that we need to look for alternatives.

Happily, in the meantime the MSys2 project (https://msys2.github.io/)
emerged, and was chosen to be the base of the Git for Windows 2.x. MSys2
is a rewrite of the spirit of MSys: it is again a stripped down version
of Cygwin, but it is actively kept up-to-date with Cygwin's source code.
Thereby, it already supports Unicode internally, and it also offers the
64-bit support that we yearned for since the beginning of the Git for
Windows project.

MSys2 also ported the Pacman package management system from Arch Linux
and uses it heavily. This brings the same convenience to which Linux
users are used to from `yum` or `apt-get`, and to which MacOSX users are
used to from Homebrew or MacPorts, or BSD users from the Ports system,
to MSys2: a simple `pacman -Syu` will update all installed packages to
the newest versions currently available.

MSys2 is also *very* active, typically providing package updates
multiple times per week.

It still required a two-month effort to bring everything to a state
where Git's test suite passes, and a couple of patches await their
submission to the respective upstream projects. Yet without MSys2, the
modernization of Git for Windows would simply not have happened.

This commit lays the ground work to supporting MSys2-based Git builds.

Assisted-by: Waldek Maleska <weakcamel@users.github.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>

squash! config.mak.uname: support MSys2

Make sure that the nedmalloc patch is applied before.
2015-10-18 13:43:02 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
114fee85fd mingw: allow compiling with MSys2's compiler
With MSys2's GCC, `ReadWriteBarrier` is already defined, and FORCEINLINE
unfortunately gets defined incorrectly.

Let's work around both problems, using the MSys2-specific
__MINGW64_VERSION_MAJOR constant to guard them.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:43:01 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
9c38593b95 Do not re-define _CONSOLE_FONT_INFOEX when compiling with MSys2
MSys2 already has that structure.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:43:00 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
375b811414 Avoid redefining S_* constants
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:43:00 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
3840ece143 Assorted header fixes to support MSys2-based MinGW build
The excellent MSys2 project brings a substantially updated MinGW
environment including newer GCC versions and new headers. To support
compiling Git, let's special-case the new MinGW (tell-tale: the
_MINGW64_VERSION_MAJOR constant is defined).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:59 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
5110aa072c Help debugging with MSys2 by optionally executing bash with strace
MSys2's strace facility is very useful for debugging... With this patch,
the bash will be executed through strace if the environment variable
GIT_STRACE_COMMANDS is set, which comes in real handy when investigating
issues in the test suite.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:58 +02:00
Thomas Braun
34e04591fe Enable support for perl regular expressions (LIBPCRE)
Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@byte-physics.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:58 +02:00
Sebastian Schuberth
a55be9f69d Makefile: Set htmldir to match the default HTML docs location under MSYS
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
2015-10-18 13:42:57 +02:00
Sebastian Schuberth
42e45e82b5 MinGW: Use MakeMaker to build the Perl libraries
This way the libraries get properly installed into the "site_perl"
directory and we just have to move them out of the "mingw" directory.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
2015-10-18 13:42:56 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
8e4d4a21a7 Handle http.* config variables pointing to files gracefully on Windows
On Windows, we would like to be able to have a default http.sslCAinfo
that points to an MSys path (i.e. relative to the installation root of
Git).  As Git is a MinGW program, it has to handle the conversion
of the MSys path into a MinGW32 path itself.

Since system_path() considers paths starting with '/' as absolute, we
have to convince it to make a Windows path by stripping the leading
slash.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:55 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
0aa9633011 Merge pull request #93 from nalla/asciidoctor-fixes
Asciidoctor fixes

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:54 +02:00
Karsten Blees
39df1ccfba Win32: fix 'lstat("dir/")' with long paths
Use a suffciently large buffer to strip the trailing slash.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:54 +02:00
Karsten Blees
4f29456114 Win32: support long paths
Windows paths are typically limited to MAX_PATH = 260 characters, even
though the underlying NTFS file system supports paths up to 32,767 chars.
This limitation is also evident in Windows Explorer, cmd.exe and many
other applications (including IDEs).

Particularly annoying is that most Windows APIs return bogus error codes
if a relative path only barely exceeds MAX_PATH in conjunction with the
current directory, e.g. ERROR_PATH_NOT_FOUND / ENOENT instead of the
infinitely more helpful ERROR_FILENAME_EXCED_RANGE / ENAMETOOLONG.

Many Windows wide char APIs support longer than MAX_PATH paths through the
file namespace prefix ('\\?\' or '\\?\UNC\') followed by an absolute path.
Notable exceptions include functions dealing with executables and the
current directory (CreateProcess, LoadLibrary, Get/SetCurrentDirectory) as
well as the entire shell API (ShellExecute, SHGetSpecialFolderPath...).

Introduce a handle_long_path function to check the length of a specified
path properly (and fail with ENAMETOOLONG), and to optionally expand long
paths using the '\\?\' file namespace prefix. Short paths will not be
modified, so we don't need to worry about device names (NUL, CON, AUX).

Contrary to MSDN docs, the GetFullPathNameW function doesn't seem to be
limited to MAX_PATH (at least not on Win7), so we can use it to do the
heavy lifting of the conversion (translate '/' to '\', eliminate '.' and
'..', and make an absolute path).

Add long path error checking to xutftowcs_path for APIs with hard MAX_PATH
limit.

Add a new MAX_LONG_PATH constant and xutftowcs_long_path function for APIs
that support long paths.

While improved error checking is always active, long paths support must be
explicitly enabled via 'core.longpaths' option. This is to prevent end
users to shoot themselves in the foot by checking out files that Windows
Explorer, cmd/bash or their favorite IDE cannot handle.

Test suite:
Test the case is when the full pathname length of a dir is close
to 260 (MAX_PATH).
Bug report and an original reproducer by Andrey Rogozhnikov:
https://github.com/msysgit/git/pull/122#issuecomment-43604199

[jes: adjusted test number to avoid conflicts, reinstated && chain]

Thanks-to: Martin W. Kirst <maki@bitkings.de>
Thanks-to: Doug Kelly <dougk.ff7@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Original-test-by: Andrey Rogozhnikov <rogozhnikov.andrey@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:53 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
aea14be9ec Win32: support long paths
Windows paths are typically limited to MAX_PATH = 260 characters, even
though the underlying NTFS file system supports paths up to 32,767 chars.
This limitation is also evident in Windows Explorer, cmd.exe and many
other applications (including IDEs).

Particularly annoying is that most Windows APIs return bogus error codes
if a relative path only barely exceeds MAX_PATH in conjunction with the
current directory, e.g. ERROR_PATH_NOT_FOUND / ENOENT instead of the
infinitely more helpful ERROR_FILENAME_EXCED_RANGE / ENAMETOOLONG.

Many Windows wide char APIs support longer than MAX_PATH paths through the
file namespace prefix ('\\?\' or '\\?\UNC\') followed by an absolute path.
Notable exceptions include functions dealing with executables and the
current directory (CreateProcess, LoadLibrary, Get/SetCurrentDirectory) as
well as the entire shell API (ShellExecute, SHGetSpecialFolderPath...).

Introduce a handle_long_path function to check the length of a specified
path properly (and fail with ENAMETOOLONG), and to optionally expand long
paths using the '\\?\' file namespace prefix. Short paths will not be
modified, so we don't need to worry about device names (NUL, CON, AUX).

Contrary to MSDN docs, the GetFullPathNameW function doesn't seem to be
limited to MAX_PATH (at least not on Win7), so we can use it to do the
heavy lifting of the conversion (translate '/' to '\', eliminate '.' and
'..', and make an absolute path).

Add long path error checking to xutftowcs_path for APIs with hard MAX_PATH
limit.

Add a new MAX_LONG_PATH constant and xutftowcs_long_path function for APIs
that support long paths.

While improved error checking is always active, long paths support must be
explicitly enabled via 'core.longpaths' option. This is to prevent end
users to shoot themselves in the foot by checking out files that Windows
Explorer, cmd/bash or their favorite IDE cannot handle.

Test suite:
Test the case is when the full pathname length of a dir is close
to 260 (MAX_PATH).
Bug report and an original reproducer by Andrey Rogozhnikov:
https://github.com/msysgit/git/pull/122#issuecomment-43604199

[jes: adjusted test number to avoid conflicts]

Thanks-to: Martin W. Kirst <maki@bitkings.de>
Thanks-to: Doug Kelly <dougk.ff7@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Original-test-by: Andrey Rogozhnikov <rogozhnikov.andrey@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stepan Kasal <kasal@ucw.cz>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:52 +02:00
Doug Kelly
c308229ec7 Add a test demonstrating a problem with long submodule paths
[jes: adusted test number to avoid conflicts, fixed non-portable use of
the 'export' statement]

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:51 +02:00
Karsten Blees
623a391714 fscache: load directories only once
If multiple threads access a directory that is not yet in the cache, the
directory will be loaded by each thread. Only one of the results is added
to the cache, all others are leaked. This wastes performance and memory.

On cache miss, add a future object to the cache to indicate that the
directory is currently being loaded. Subsequent threads register themselves
with the future object and wait. When the first thread has loaded the
directory, it replaces the future object with the result and notifies
waiting threads.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:51 +02:00
Karsten Blees
bca8eec7ef Win32: add a cache below mingw's lstat and dirent implementations
Checking the work tree status is quite slow on Windows, due to slow lstat
emulation (git calls lstat once for each file in the index). Windows
operating system APIs seem to be much better at scanning the status
of entire directories than checking single files.

Add an lstat implementation that uses a cache for lstat data. Cache misses
read the entire parent directory and add it to the cache. Subsequent lstat
calls for the same directory are served directly from the cache.

Also implement opendir / readdir / closedir so that they create and use
directory listings in the cache.

The cache doesn't track file system changes and doesn't plug into any
modifying file APIs, so it has to be explicitly enabled for git functions
that don't modify the working copy.

Note: in an earlier version of this patch, the cache was always active and
tracked file system changes via ReadDirectoryChangesW. However, this was
much more complex and had negative impact on the performance of modifying
git commands such as 'git checkout'.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:50 +02:00
Karsten Blees
04f26a9ac6 add infrastructure for read-only file system level caches
Add a macro to mark code sections that only read from the file system,
along with a config option and documentation.

This facilitates implementation of relatively simple file system level
caches without the need to synchronize with the file system.

Enable read-only sections for 'git status' and preload_index.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:49 +02:00
Karsten Blees
ceee96374e Win32: make the lstat implementation pluggable
Emulating the POSIX lstat API on Windows via GetFileAttributes[Ex] is quite
slow. Windows operating system APIs seem to be much better at scanning the
status of entire directories than checking single files. A caching
implementation may improve performance by bulk-reading entire directories
or reusing data obtained via opendir / readdir.

Make the lstat implementation pluggable so that it can be switched at
runtime, e.g. based on a config option.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:48 +02:00
Karsten Blees
56348e62a6 Win32: Make the dirent implementation pluggable
Emulating the POSIX dirent API on Windows via FindFirstFile/FindNextFile is
pretty staightforward, however, most of the information provided in the
WIN32_FIND_DATA structure is thrown away in the process. A more
sophisticated implementation may cache this data, e.g. for later reuse in
calls to lstat.

Make the dirent implementation pluggable so that it can be switched at
runtime, e.g. based on a config option.

Define a base DIR structure with pointers to readdir/closedir that match
the opendir implementation (i.e. similar to vtable pointers in OOP).
Define readdir/closedir so that they call the function pointers in the DIR
structure. This allows to choose the opendir implementation on a
call-by-call basis.

Move the fixed sized dirent.d_name buffer to the dirent-specific DIR
structure, as d_name may be implementation specific (e.g. a caching
implementation may just set d_name to point into the cache instead of
copying the entire file name string).

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:47 +02:00
Karsten Blees
bdf3da7c0f Win32: dirent.c: Move opendir down
Move opendir down in preparation for the next patch.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:47 +02:00
Karsten Blees
a6162c6c16 Win32: make FILETIME conversion functions public
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:46 +02:00
nalla
0927eab23e asciidoctor: Fix giteveryday.txt to be built with asciidoctor.
When building the `doc` with `asciidoctor`, `asciidoctor` complains about
a nested code block in a callout list. This is a really dirty solution to
restore the callout list to function properly. There is a minimal visual
sideeffect; the *immitated* codeblock has no overall greyish background.
Instead the individual lines have it.

Note: When building this patch with `asciidoc` the background is totally
gone but the font is still monospaced.

Signed-off-by: nalla <nalla@hamal.uberspace.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:44 +02:00
nalla
d88c78abf7 asciidoctor: Fix user-manual to be built by asciidoctor
The `user-manual.txt` ist designed as a `book` but the `Makefile` wants to
build it as an `article`. This seems to be a problem when building the
documentation with `asciidoctor`. Furthermore the parts *Git Glossary*
and *Apendix B* had no subsections which is not allowed when building with
`asciidoctor`. So lets add a *dummy* section.

Signed-off-by: nalla <nalla@hamal.uberspace.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:43 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
412f610fd7 Teach 'git remote' that the config var branch.*.rebase can be 'interactive'
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:41 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
09cb37b70f Handle the branch.<name>.rebase value 'interactive'
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:40 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
ddd7442801 Teach 'git pull' to handle --rebase=interactive
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:39 +02:00
Jakub Bereżański
a2a8bdff4a wincred: handle empty username/password correctly
Empty (length 0) usernames and/or passwords, when saved in the Windows
Credential Manager, come back as null when reading the credential.

One use case for such empty credentials is with NTLM authentication, where
empty username and password instruct libcurl to authenticate using the
credentials of the currently logged-on user (single sign-on).

When locating the relevant credentials, make empty username match null.
When outputting the credentials, handle nulls correctly.

Signed-off-by: Jakub Bereżański <kuba@berezanscy.pl>
2015-10-18 13:42:37 +02:00
Jakub Bereżański
a20bb10abb t0302: check helper can handle empty credentials
Make sure the helper does not crash when blank username and password is
provided. If the helper can save such credentials, it should be able to
read them back.

Signed-off-by: Jakub Bereżański <kuba@berezanscy.pl>
2015-10-18 13:42:36 +02:00
Sebastian Schuberth
088582e5c3 gitk: Use an external icon file on Windows
Git for Windows now ships with the new Git icon from git-scm.com. Use that
icon file if it exists instead of the old procedurally drawn one.

This patch was sent upstream but so far no decision on its inclusion was
made, so commit it to our fork.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
2015-10-18 13:42:34 +02:00
Chris West (Faux)
3b2ef61338 Fix another invocation of git from gitk with an overly long command-line
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
2015-10-18 13:42:33 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
250527bf9c Work around the command line limit on Windows
On Windows, there are dramatic problems when a command line grows
beyond PATH_MAX, which is restricted to 8191 characters on XP and
later (according to http://support.microsoft.com/kb/830473).

Work around this by just cutting off the command line at that length
(actually, at a space boundary) in the hope that only negative
refs are chucked: gitk will then do unnecessary work, but that is
still better than flashing the gitk window and exiting with exit
status 5 (which no Windows user is able to make sense of).

The first fix caused Tcl to fail to compile the regexp, see msysGit issue
427. Here is another fix without using regexp, and using a more relaxed
command line length limit to fix the original issue 387.

Signed-off-by: Sebastian Schuberth <sschuberth@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:32 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
f7ff86cbd1 git gui: set GIT_ASKPASS=git-gui--askpass if not set yet
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:30 +02:00
Heiko Voigt
0084a511b2 git-gui: provide question helper for retry fallback on Windows
Make use of the new environment variable GIT_ASK_YESNO to support the
recently implemented fallback in case unlink, rename or rmdir fail for
files in use on Windows. The added dialog will present a yes/no question
to the the user which will currently be used by the windows compat layer
to let the user retry a failed file operation.

Signed-off-by: Heiko Voigt <hvoigt@hvoigt.net>
2015-10-18 13:42:29 +02:00
Heiko Voigt
346175bd6a Revert "git-gui: set GIT_DIR and GIT_WORK_TREE after setup"
This reverts commit a9fa11fe5b.
2015-10-18 13:42:28 +02:00
Johannes Sixt
fbfb0bc7c3 criss cross rename failure workaround
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:26 +02:00
Pat Thoyts
3c44853674 mingw: add tests for the hidden attribute on the git directory
With msysGit the .git directory is supposed to be hidden, unless it is
a bare git repository. Test this.

Signed-off-by: Pat Thoyts <patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>
2015-10-18 13:42:24 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
730ae80567 When initializing .git/, record the current setting of core.hideDotFiles
This is on Windows only, of course.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:23 +02:00
Erik Faye-Lund
5f22539842 core.hideDotFiles: hide '.git' dir by default
At least for cross-platform projects, it makes sense to hide the
files starting with a dot, as this is the behavior on Unix/MacOSX.

However, at least Eclipse has problems interpreting the hidden flag
correctly, so the default is to hide only the .git/ directory.

The config setting core.hideDotFiles therefore supports not only
'true' and 'false', but also 'dotGitOnly'.

[jes: clarified the commit message, made git init respect the setting
by marking the .git/ directory only after reading the config, and added
documentation, and rebased on top of current junio/next]

Signed-off-by: Erik Faye-Lund <kusmabite@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:22 +02:00
Karsten Blees
2eb7776960 git-gui:handle the encoding of Git's output correctly
If we use 'eval exec $opt $cmdp $args' to execute git command,
tcl engine will convert the output of the git comand with the rule
system default code page to unicode.

But cp936 -> unicode conversion implicitly done by exec is not reversible.
So we have to use git_read instead.

Bug report and an original reproducer by Cloud Chou:
https://github.com/msysgit/git/issues/302

Karsten Blees writes this code patch.
Cloud Chou find the reason of the bug.

Thanks-to: dscho
Thanks-to: patthoyts
Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
Original-test-by: Cloud Chou <515312382@qq.com>
Signed-off-by: Cloud Chou <515312382@qq.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:20 +02:00
Karsten Blees
aab99a9b09 Unicode file name support (gitk and git-gui)
Assumes file names in git tree objects are UTF-8 encoded.

On most unix systems, the system encoding (and thus the TCL system
encoding) will be UTF-8, so file names will be displayed correctly.

On Windows, it is impossible to set the system encoding to UTF-8. Changing
the TCL system encoding (via 'encoding system ...', e.g. in the startup
code) is explicitly discouraged by the TCL docs.

Change gitk and git-gui functions dealing with file names to always convert
from and to UTF-8.

Signed-off-by: Karsten Blees <blees@dcon.de>
2015-10-18 13:42:19 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
9743c9fa2d Start the merging-rebase to v2.6.2
This commit starts the rebase of 83610ba to 74c855f
2015-10-18 13:42:17 +02:00
Johannes Schindelin
f6643e05cc mingw: use MSys2's libgen.h
MSys2 actually *does* provide a libgen.h. Let's use it.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2015-10-18 13:24:52 +02:00
Junio C Hamano
33e8fc8740 usage: do not insist that standard input must come from a file
The synopsys text and the usage string of subcommands that read list
of things from the standard input are often shown like this:

	git gostak [--distim] < <list-of-doshes>

This is problematic in a number of ways:

 * The way to use these commands is more often to feed them the
   output from another command, not feed them from a file.

 * Manual pages outside Git, commands that operate on the data read
   from the standard input, e.g "sort", "grep", "sed", etc., are not
   described with such a "< redirection-from-file" in their synopsys
   text.  Our doing so introduces inconsistency.

 * We do not insist on where the output should go, by saying

	git gostak [--distim] < <list-of-doshes> > <output>

 * As it is our convention to enclose placeholders inside <braket>,
   the redirection operator followed by a placeholder filename
   becomes very hard to read, both in the documentation and in the
   help text.

Let's clean them all up, after making sure that the documentation
clearly describes the modes that take information from the standard
input and what kind of things are expected on the input.

[jc: stole example for fmt-merge-msg from Jonathan]

Helped-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2015-10-16 15:27:52 -07:00