Windows' equivalent to "bind mounts", NTFS junction points, can be
unlinked without affecting the mount target. This is clearly what users
expect to happen when they call `git clean -dfx` in a worktree that
contains NTFS junction points: the junction should be removed, and the
target directory of said junction should be left alone (unless it is
inside the worktree).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
It seems to be not exactly rare on Windows to install NTFS junction
points (the equivalent of "bind mounts" on Linux/Unix) in worktrees,
e.g. to map some development tools into a subdirectory.
In such a scenario, it is pretty horrible if `git clean -dfx` traverses
into the mapped directory and starts to "clean up".
Let's just not do that. Let's make sure before we traverse into a
directory that it is not a mount point (or junction).
This addresses https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/607
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
"git rev-list --maximal-only" has been optimized by borrowing the
logic used by "git show-branch --independent", which computes the
same kind of information much more efficiently.
* ds/rev-list-maximal-only-optim:
rev-list: use reduce_heads() for --maximal-only
p6011: add perf test for rev-list --maximal-only
t6600: test --maximal-only and --independent
Further work to adjust the codebase for C23 that changes functions
like strchr() that discarded constness when they return a pointer into
a const string to preserve constness.
* jk/c23-const-preserving-fixes-more:
git-compat-util: fix CONST_OUTPARAM typo and indentation
refs/files-backend: drop const to fix strchr() warning
http: drop const to fix strstr() warning
range-diff: drop const to fix strstr() warnings
pkt-line: make packet_reader.line non-const
skip_prefix(): check const match between in and out params
pseudo-merge: fix disk reads from find_pseudo_merge()
find_last_dir_sep(): convert inline function to macro
run-command: explicitly cast away constness when assigning to void
pager: explicitly cast away strchr() constness
transport-helper: drop const to fix strchr() warnings
http: add const to fix strchr() warnings
convert: add const to fix strchr() warnings
The experimental `git replay` command learned the `--ref=<ref>` option
to allow specifying which ref to update, overriding the default behavior.
* tc/replay-ref:
replay: allow to specify a ref with option --ref
replay: use stuck form in documentation and help message
builtin/replay: mark options as not negatable
Various code clean-up around odb subsystem.
* ps/odb-cleanup:
odb: drop unneeded headers and forward decls
odb: rename `odb_has_object()` flags
odb: use enum for `odb_write_object` flags
odb: rename `odb_write_object()` flags
treewide: use enum for `odb_for_each_object()` flags
CodingGuidelines: document our style for flags
"git backfill" is capable of auto-detecting a sparsely checked out
working tree, which was broken.
* th/backfill-auto-detect-sparseness-fix:
backfill: auto-detect sparse-checkout from config
The check in "receive-pack" to prevent a checked out branch from
getting updated via updateInstead mechanism has been corrected.
* ps/receive-pack-updateinstead-in-worktree:
receive-pack: use worktree HEAD for updateInstead
t5516: clean up cloned and new-wt in denyCurrentBranch and worktrees test
t5516: test updateInstead with worktree and unborn bare HEAD
Handling of signed commits and tags in fast-import has been made more
configurable.
* jt/fast-import-signed-modes:
fast-import: add 'abort-if-invalid' mode to '--signed-tags=<mode>'
fast-import: add 'sign-if-invalid' mode to '--signed-tags=<mode>'
fast-import: add 'strip-if-invalid' mode to '--signed-tags=<mode>'
fast-import: add 'abort-if-invalid' mode to '--signed-commits=<mode>'
fast-export: check for unsupported signing modes earlier
Internals of "git fsck" have been refactored to not depend on the
global `the_repository` variable.
* ps/fsck-wo-the-repository:
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` in error reporting
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` when marking objects
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` when checking packed objects
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` with loose objects
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` when checking reflogs
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` when checking refs
builtin/fsck: stop using `the_repository` when snapshotting refs
builtin/fsck: fix trivial dependence on `the_repository`
fsck: drop USE_THE_REPOSITORY
fsck: store repository in fsck options
fsck: initialize fsck options via a function
fetch-pack: move fsck options into function scope
Adjust the codebase for C23 that changes functions like strchr()
that discarded constness when they return a pointer into a const
string to preserve constness.
* jk/c23-const-preserving-fixes:
config: store allocated string in non-const pointer
rev-parse: avoid writing to const string for parent marks
revision: avoid writing to const string for parent marks
rev-parse: simplify dotdot parsing
revision: make handle_dotdot() interface less confusing
pack-objects's --stdin-packs=follow mode learns to handle
excluded-but-open packs.
* tb/stdin-packs-excluded-but-open:
repack: mark non-MIDX packs above the split as excluded-open
pack-objects: support excluded-open packs with --stdin-packs
t7704: demonstrate failure with once-cruft objects above the geometric split
pack-objects: refactor `read_packs_list_from_stdin()` to use `strmap`
pack-objects: plug leak in `read_stdin_packs()`
Object name handling (disambiguation and abbreviation) has been
refactored to be backend-generic, moving logic into the respective
object database backends.
* ps/odb-generic-object-name-handling:
odb: introduce generic `odb_find_abbrev_len()`
object-file: move logic to compute packed abbreviation length
object-name: move logic to compute loose abbreviation length
object-name: simplify computing common prefixes
object-name: abbreviate loose object names without `disambiguate_state`
object-name: merge `update_candidates()` and `match_prefix()`
object-name: backend-generic `get_short_oid()`
object-name: backend-generic `repo_collect_ambiguous()`
object-name: extract function to parse object ID prefixes
object-name: move logic to iterate through packed prefixed objects
object-name: move logic to iterate through loose prefixed objects
odb: introduce `struct odb_for_each_object_options`
oidtree: extend iteration to allow for arbitrary return codes
oidtree: modernize the code a bit
object-file: fix sparse 'plain integer as NULL pointer' error
The 'git rev-list --maximal-only' option filters the output to only
independent commits. A commit is independent if it is not reachable from
other listed commits. Currently this is implemented by doing a full
revision walk and marking parents with CHILD_VISITED to skip non-maximal
commits.
The 'git merge-base --independent' command computes the same result
using reduce_heads(), which uses the more efficient remove_redundant()
algorithm. This is significantly faster because it avoids walking the
entire commit graph.
Add a fast path in rev-list that detects when --maximal-only is the only
interesting option and all input commits are positive (no revision
ranges). In this case, use reduce_heads() directly instead of doing a
full revision walk.
In order to preserve the rest of the output filtering, this computation
is done opportunistically in a new prepare_maximal_independent() method
when possible. If successful, it populates revs->commits with the list
of independent commits and set revs->no_walk to prevent any other walk
from occurring. This allows us to have any custom output be handled
using the existing output code hidden inside
traverse_commit_list_filtered(). A new test is added to demonstrate that
this output is preserved.
The fast path is only used when no other flags complicate the walk or
output format: no UNINTERESTING commits, no limiting options (max-count,
age filters, path filters, grep filters), no output formatting beyond
plain OIDs, and no object listing flags.
Running the p6011 performance test for my copy of git.git, I see the
following improvement with this change:
Test HEAD~1 HEAD
------------------------------------------------------------
6011.2: merge-base --independent 0.03 0.03 +0.0%
6011.3: rev-list --maximal-only 0.06 0.03 -50.0%
6011.4: rev-list --maximal-only --since 0.06 0.06 +0.0%
And for a fresh clone of the Linux kernel repository, I see:
Test HEAD~1 HEAD
------------------------------------------------------------
6011.2: merge-base --independent 0.00 0.00 =
6011.3: rev-list --maximal-only 0.70 0.00 -100.0%
6011.4: rev-list --maximal-only --since 0.70 0.70 +0.0%
In both cases, the performance is indeed matching the behavior of 'git
merge-base --independent', as expected.
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <stolee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"print" is not a valid argument for --update-refs. List both valid
alternatives literally in the argh string, consistent with documentation
and usage string.
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe <l.s.r@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Commit 85127bcdea ("backfill: assume --sparse when sparse-checkout is
enabled") intended for 'git backfill' to consult the repository
configuration when the user does not pass '--sparse' or
'--no-sparse' on the command line. It added the sentinel check:
if (ctx->sparse < 0)
ctx->sparse = cfg->apply_sparse_checkout;
However, the ctx->sparse field is initialized to 0 instead of -1,
so this guard never triggers. Consequently, the repository config
(core.sparseCheckout) is never checked, and the command always
performs a full backfill even when sparse-checkout is enabled.
Fix this by initializing ctx->sparse to -1, ensuring the existing
fallback logic correctly reads the repository configuration when
no explicit flags are provided.
Add a test to verify that 'git backfill' automatically respects
sparse-checkout settings when no flags are passed.
Signed-off-by: Trieu Huynh <vikingtc4@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git replay" (experimental) learns, in addition to "pick" and
"replay", a new operating mode "revert".
* sa/replay-revert:
replay: add --revert mode to reverse commit changes
sequencer: extract revert message formatting into shared function
Reduce the reference to the_repository in the worktree subsystem.
* pw/worktree-reduce-the-repository:
worktree: reject NULL worktree in get_worktree_git_dir()
worktree add: stop reading ".git/HEAD"
worktree: remove "the_repository" from is_current_worktree()
Code clean-up around the recent "hooks defined in config" topic.
* ar/config-hook-cleanups:
hook: reject unknown hook names in git-hook(1)
hook: show disabled hooks in "git hook list"
hook: show config scope in git hook list
hook: introduce hook_config_cache_entry for per-hook data
t1800: add test to verify hook execution ordering
hook: make consistent use of friendly-name in docs
hook: replace hook_list_clear() -> string_list_clear_func()
hook: detect & emit two more bugs
hook: rename cb_data_free/alloc -> hook_data_free/alloc
hook: fix minor style issues
builtin/receive-pack: properly init receive_hook strbuf
hook: move unsorted_string_list_remove() to string-list.[ch]
`git backfill` learned to accept revision and pathspec arguments.
* ds/backfill-revs:
t5620: test backfill's unknown argument handling
path-walk: support wildcard pathspecs for blob filtering
backfill: work with prefix pathspecs
backfill: accept revision arguments
t5620: prepare branched repo for revision tests
revision: include object-name.h
Improve the recently introduced `git format-patch
--commit-list-format` (formerly `--cover-letter-format`) option,
including a new "modern" preset and better CLI ergonomics.
* mf/format-patch-commit-list-format:
format-patch: --commit-list-format without prefix
format-patch: add preset for --commit-list-format
format-patch: wrap generate_commit_list_cover()
format.commitListFormat: strip meaning from empty
docs/pretty-formats: add %(count) and %(total)
format-patch: rename --cover-letter-format option
format-patch: refactor generate_commit_list_cover
pretty.c: better die message %(count) and %(total)
"git format-patch --cover-letter" learns to use a simpler format
instead of the traditional shortlog format to list its commits with
a new --cover-letter-format option and format.commitListFormat
configuration variable.
* mf/format-patch-cover-letter-format:
docs: add usage for the cover-letter fmt feature
format-patch: add commitListFormat config
format-patch: add ability to use alt cover format
format-patch: move cover letter summary generation
pretty.c: add %(count) and %(total) placeholders
The "line" member of a packet_reader struct is marked as const. This
kind of makes sense, because it's not its own allocated buffer that
should be freed, and we often use const to indicate that. But it is
always writable, because it points into the non-const "buffer" member.
And we rely on this writability in places like send-pack and
receive-pack, where we parse incoming packet contents by writing NULs
over delimiters. This has traditionally worked because we implicitly
cast away the constness with strchr() like:
const char *head;
char *p;
head = reader->line;
p = strchr(head, ' ');
Since C23 libc provides a generic strchr() to detect this implicit
const removal, this now generate a compiler warning on some platforms
(like recent glibc).
We can fix it by marking "line" as non-const, as well as a few
intermediate variables (like "head" in the above example). Note that by
itself, switching to a non-const variable would cause problems with this
line in send-pack.c:
if (!skip_prefix(reader->line, "unpack ", &reader->line))
But due to our skip_prefix() magic introduced in the previous commit,
this compiles fine (both the in and out-parameters are non-const, so we
know it is safe).
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When option '--onto' is passed to git-replay(1), the command will update
refs from the <revision-range> passed to the command. When using option
'--advance' or '--revert', the argument of that option is a ref that
will be updated.
To enable users to specify which ref to update, add option '--ref'. When
using option '--ref', the refs described above are left untouched and
instead the argument of this option is updated instead.
Because this introduces code paths in replay.c that jump to `out` before
init_basic_merge_options() is called on `merge_opt`, zero-initialize the
struct.
Signed-off-by: Toon Claes <toon@iotcl.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
gitcli(7) suggests to use stuck form. Change the documentation strings
to use this form.
While at it, reorder them to match the order in the docs.
Signed-off-by: Toon Claes <toon@iotcl.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The options '--onto', '--advance', '--revert', and '--ref-action' of
git-replay(1) are not negatable. Mark them as such using
PARSE_OPT_NONEG.
Signed-off-by: Toon Claes <toon@iotcl.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git repo info -h" and "git repo structure -h" limit their help output
to the part that is specific to the subcommand.
* mk/repo-help-strings:
repo: show subcommand-specific help text
repo: factor repo usage strings into shared macros
Code paths that loop over another array to push each element into a
strvec have been rewritten to use strvec_pushv() instead.
* rs/use-strvec-pushv:
use strvec_pushv() to add another strvec
The HTTP transport learned to react to "429 Too Many Requests".
* vp/http-rate-limit-retries:
http: add support for HTTP 429 rate limit retries
strbuf_attach: fix call sites to pass correct alloc
strbuf: pass correct alloc to strbuf_attach() in strbuf_reencode()
Rename `odb_has_object()` flags to be properly prefixed with the
function name.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The unsigned integer that is used as an bitset to specify the kind
of branches interpret_branch_name() function has been changed to
use a dedicated enum type.
* jw/object-name-bitset-to-enum:
object-name: turn INTERPRET_BRANCH_* constants into enum values
When a bare repo has linked worktrees, and its HEAD points to an unborn branch,
pushing to a wt branch with updateInstead fails and rejects the push, even if
the wt is clean. This happens because HEAD is checked only for the bare repo
context, instead of the wt.
Remove head_has_history and check for worktree->head_oid which does
have the correct HEAD of the wt.
Update the test added by Runxi's patch to expect success.
Signed-off-by: Pablo Sabater <pabloosabaterr@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Both the synopsis and explanation are incorrect and contradict each
other.
The synopsis claims "push" can only be omitted when you do not give any
options and arguments.
The explanation correctly claims that non-option arguments are not
allowed, except pathspec elements preceded by double hyphens.
But it also adds "-p" to the list of exceptions, even though it is an
option argument.
Signed-off-by: Quentin Bernet <quentin.bernet@bluewin.ch>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In 5ee86c273b (repack: exclude cruft pack(s) from the MIDX where
possible, 2025-06-23), geometric repacking learned to exclude cruft
packs from the MIDX when 'repack.midxMustContainCruft' is set to
'false'.
This works because packs generated with '--stdin-packs=follow' rescue
any once-unreachable objects that later become reachable, making the
resulting packs closed under reachability without needing the cruft pack
in the MIDX.
However, packs above the geometric split that were not part of the
previous MIDX may not have full object closure. When such packs are
marked as excluded-closed ('^'), pack-objects treats them as a
reachability boundary and does not traverse through them during the
follow pass, potentially leaving the resulting pack without full
closure.
Fix this by marking packs above the geometric split that were not in the
previous MIDX as excluded-open ('!') instead of excluded-closed ('^').
This causes pack-objects to walk through their commits during the follow
pass, rescuing any reachable objects not present in the closed-excluded
packs.
Note that MIDXs which were generated prior to this change and are
unlucky enough to not be closed under reachability may still exhibit
this bug, as we treat all MIDX'd packs as closed. That is true in an
overwhelming number of cases, since in order to have a non-closed MIDX
you would have to:
- Generate a pack via an earlier geometric repack that is not closed
under reachability.
- Store that pack in the MIDX.
- Avoid picking any commits to receive reachability bitmaps which
happen to reach objects from which the missing objects are reachable.
In the extremely rare chance that all of the above should happen, an
all-into-one repack will resolve the issue.
Unfortunately, there is no perfect way to determine whether a MIDX'd
pack is closed outside of ensuring that there is a '1' bit in at least
one bitmap for every bit position corresponding to objects in that pack.
While this is possible to do, this approach would treat MIDX'd packs as
open in cases where there is at least one object that is not reachable
from the subset of commits selected for bitmapping.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In cd846bacc7 (pack-objects: introduce '--stdin-packs=follow',
2025-06-23), pack-objects learned to traverse through commits in
included packs when using '--stdin-packs=follow', rescuing reachable
objects from unlisted packs into the output.
When we encounter a commit in an excluded pack during this rescuing
phase we will traverse through its parents. But because we set
`revs.no_kept_objects = 1`, commit simplification will prevent us from
showing it via `get_revision()`. (In practice, `--stdin-packs=follow`
walks commits down to the roots, but only opens up trees for ones that
do not appear in an excluded pack.)
But there are certain cases where we *do* need to see the parents of an
object in an excluded pack. Namely, if an object is rescue-able, but
only reachable from object(s) which appear in excluded packs, then
commit simplification will exclude those commits from the object
traversal, and we will never see a copy of that object, and thus not
rescue it.
This is what causes the failure in the previous commit during repacking.
When performing a geometric repack, packs above the geometric split that
weren't part of the previous MIDX (e.g., packs pushed directly into
`$GIT_DIR/objects/pack`) may not have full object closure. When those
packs are listed as excluded via the '^' marker, the reachability
traversal encounters the sequence described above, and may miss objects
which we expect to rescue with `--stdin-packs=follow`.
Introduce a new "excluded-open" pack prefix, '!'. Like '^'-prefixed
packs, objects from '!'-prefixed packs are excluded from the resulting
pack. But unlike '^', commits in '!'-prefixed packs *are* used as
starting points for the follow traversal, and the traversal does not
treat them as a closure boundary.
In order to distinguish excluded-closed from excluded-open packs during
the traversal, introduce a new `pack_keep_in_core_open` bit on
`struct packed_git`, along with a corresponding `KEPT_PACK_IN_CORE_OPEN`
flag for the kept-pack cache.
In `add_object_entry_from_pack()`, move the `want_object_in_pack()`
check to *after* `add_pending_oid()`. This is necessary so that commits
from excluded-open packs are added as traversal tips even though their
objects won't appear in the output. As a consequence, the caller
`for_each_object_in_pack()` will always provide a non-NULL 'p', hence we
are able to drop the "if (p)" conditional.
The `include_check` and `include_check_obj` callbacks on `rev_info` are
used to halt the walk at closed-excluded packs, since objects behind a
'^' boundary are guaranteed to have closure and need not be rescued.
The following commit will make use of this new functionality within the
repack layer to resolve the test failure demonstrated in the previous
commit.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The '--stdin-packs' mode of pack-objects maintains two separate
string_lists: one for included packs, and one for excluded packs. Each
list stores the pack basename as a string and the corresponding
`packed_git` pointer in its `->util` field.
This works, but makes it awkward to extend the set of pack "kinds" that
pack-objects can accept via stdin, since each new kind would need its
own string_list and duplicated handling. A future commit will want to do
just this, so prepare for that change by handling the various "kinds" of
packs specified over stdin in a more generic fashion.
Namely, replace the two `string_list`s with a single `strmap` keyed on
the pack basename, with values pointing to a new `struct
stdin_pack_info`. This struct tracks both the `packed_git` pointer and a
`kind` bitfield indicating whether the pack was specified as included or
excluded.
Extract the logic for sorting packs by mtime and adding their objects
into a separate `stdin_packs_add_pack_entries()` helper.
While we could have used a `string_list`, we must handle the case where
the same pack is specified more than once. With a `string_list` only, we
would have to pay a quadratic cost to either (a) insert elements into
their sorted positions, or (b) a repeated linear search, which is
accidentally quadratic. For that reason, use a strmap instead.
This patch does not include any functional changes.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The `read_stdin_packs()` function added originally via 339bce27f4
(builtin/pack-objects.c: add '--stdin-packs' option, 2021-02-22)
declares a `rev_info` struct but neglects to call `release_revisions()`
on it before returning, creating the potential for a leak.
The related change in 97ec43247c (pack-objects: declare 'rev_info' for
'--stdin-packs' earlier, 2025-06-23) carried forward this oversight and
did not address it.
Ensure that we call `release_revisions()` appropriately to prevent a
potential leak from this function. Note that in practice our `rev_info`
here does not have a present leak, hence t5331 passes cleanly before
this commit, even when built with SANITIZE=leak.
Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@ttaylorr.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Using format-patch with --commit-list-format different than shortlog,
causes the commit entry lines to wrap if they get longer than
MAIL_DEFAULT_WRAP (72 characters).
While this might be sensible for many when sending changes through
email, it forces this decision of wrapping on the user, reducing the
control granularity of --commit-list-format.
Teach generate_commit_list_cover() to respect commit entry line lengths
and place this wrapping rule on the "modern" preset format instead.
Signed-off-by: Mirko Faina <mroik@delayed.space>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Doc updates.
* kh/doc-interpret-trailers-1:
interpret-trailers: use placeholder instead of *
doc: config: convert trailers section to synopsis style
doc: interpret-trailers: normalize and fill out options
doc: interpret-trailers: convert to synopsis style
merge-file --object-id used to trigger a BUG when run in a linked
worktree, which has been fixed.
* mr/merge-file-object-id-worktree-fix:
merge-file: fix BUG when --object-id is used in a worktree
Uses of prio_queue as a LIFO stack of commits have been written
with commit_stack.
* rs/prio-queue-to-commit-stack:
use commit_stack instead of prio_queue in LIFO mode
When git-config matches a url, we copy the variable section name and
store it in the "section" member of a urlmatch_config struct. That
member is const, since the url-matcher will not touch it (and other
callers really will have a const string).
But that means that we have only a const pointer to our allocated
string. We have to cast away the constness when we free it, and likewise
when we assign NUL to tie off the "." separating the subsection and key.
This latter happens implicitly via a strchr() call, but recent versions
of glibc have added annotations that let the compiler detect that and
complain.
Let's keep our own "section" pointer for the non-const string, and then
just point config.section at it. That avoids all of the casting, both
explicit and implicit.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The previous commit cleared up some const confusion in handling parent
marks in revision.c, but we have roughly the same code duplicated in
rev-parse. This one is much easier to fix, because the handling of the
shortened string is all done in one place, after detecting any marks
(but without shortening the string between marks).
As a side note, I suspect this means that it behaves differently than
the revision.c parser for weird stuff like "foo^!^@^-", but that is
outside the scope of this patch.
While we are here, let's also rename the variable "dotdot", which is
totally misleading (and which we already fixed in revision.c long ago
via f632dedd8d (handle_revision_arg: stop using "dotdot" as a generic
pointer, 2017-05-19)).
Doing that here makes the diff a little messier, but it also lets the
compiler help us make sure we did not miss any stray mentions of the
variable while we are changing its semantics.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The previous commit simplified the way that revision.c parses ".." and
"..." range operators. But there's roughly similar code in rev-parse.
This is less likely to trigger a segfault, as there is no library
function which we'd pass a string literal to, but it still causes the
compiler to complain about laundering away constness via strstr().
Let's give it the same treatment, copying the left-hand side of the
range operator into its own string.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In git-fast-import(1), the 'abort-if-invalid' mode for the
'--signed-commits' option verifies commit signatures during import and
aborts the entire operation when verification fails. Extend the same
behavior to signed tag objects by introducing an 'abort-if-invalid' mode
for the '--signed-tags' option.
Signed-off-by: Justin Tobler <jltobler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
With ee66c793f8 (fast-import: add mode to sign commits with invalid
signatures, 2026-03-12), git-fast-import(1) learned to verify commit
signatures during import and replace signatures that fail verification
with a newly generated one. Extend the same behavior to signed tag
objects by introducing a 'sign-if-invalid' mode for the '--signed-tags'
option.
Signed-off-by: Justin Tobler <jltobler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>