This is hidden in v2.55.0-rc0's own CI because of an omission in
5ba82911bc (ci: enable EXPENSIVE for contributor builds, 2026-05-11)
which fails to enable EXPENSIVE tests for tags.
Due to 7d78d5fc1a (ci: skip GitHub workflow runs for already-tested
commits/trees, 2020-10-08), the CI of `master` is now also mistakenly
green because it reuses the tag's CI run to prove that it's solid.
This is an evil merge by necessity because `survey.c` needs to adapt to
the changed function signatures.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
This is retry of #1419.
I added flush_fscache macro to flush cached stats after disk writing
with tests for regression reported in #1438 and #1442.
git checkout checks each file path in sorted order, so cache flushing does not
make performance worse unless we have large number of modified files in
a directory containing many files.
Using chromium repository, I tested `git checkout .` performance when I
delete 10 files in different directories.
With this patch:
TotalSeconds: 4.307272
TotalSeconds: 4.4863595
TotalSeconds: 4.2975562
Avg: 4.36372923333333
Without this patch:
TotalSeconds: 20.9705431
TotalSeconds: 22.4867685
TotalSeconds: 18.8968292
Avg: 20.7847136
I confirmed this patch passed all tests in t/ with core_fscache=1.
Signed-off-by: Takuto Ikuta <tikuta@chromium.org>
When checkout.workers > 1 and core.fscache is enabled on Windows,
'git checkout <tree> -- <pathspec>' fails when restoring files into
directories that do not yet exist on disk. Two failure modes occur:
1. create_directories(): the fscache returns a stale directory listing
that does not include a just-created directory. has_dirs_only_path()
reports it as non-existent, triggering the unlink+mkdir recovery
path which fails with 'cannot create directory: Directory not empty'.
2. write_pc_item(): after writing and closing a file, lstat() cannot
see it through the stale fscache, failing with 'unable to stat
just-written file'.
With workers=1, write_entry() calls flush_fscache() after each file,
keeping the cache in sync. With workers>1, enqueue_checkout() defers
the write (and the flush), leaving the cache stale for subsequent
entries.
Fix both by adding flush_fscache() calls after mkdir() in
create_directories() and before lstat() in write_pc_item(). On
non-Windows platforms flush_fscache() is a no-op.
Assisted-by: Claude Opus 4.6
Signed-off-by: Tyrie Vella <tyrielv@gmail.com>
On Windows, symbolic links actually have a type depending on the target:
it can be a file or a directory.
In certain circumstances, this poses problems, e.g. when a symbolic link
is supposed to point into a submodule that is not checked out, so there
is no way for Git to auto-detect the type.
To help with that, we will add support over the course of the next
commits to specify that symlink type via the Git attributes. This
requires an index_state, though, something that Git for Windows'
`symlink()` replacement cannot know about because the function signature
is defined by the POSIX standard and not ours to change.
So let's introduce a helper function to create symbolic links that
*does* know about the index_state.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
When `js/objects-larger-than-4gb-on-windows` widened the streaming,
index-pack and unpack-objects code paths, in the interest of keeping the
patches somewhat reasonably-sized, it left the public ODB API still
typed in `unsigned long`. In particular `struct object_info::sizep` and
the four wrappers built on top of it (`odb_read_object`,
`odb_read_object_peeled`, `odb_read_object_info`, `odb_pretend_object`)
still return the unpacked size through `unsigned long *`, so on Windows
`cat-file -s` and the `git add` / `git status` paths for a >4 GiB blob
silently cap at 4 GiB.
Widen the field and the four wrappers. The previous commits already
widened the `unpack_entry()` cascade and pack-objects' in-core size
accessors, so most of the cascade arrives here with no further work: the
temporary shims in `packed_object_info_with_index_pos()` and in
`unpack_entry()`'s delta-base recovery path go away, the two
`SET_SIZE(entry, cast_size_t_to_ulong(canonical_size))` calls in
`check_object()` and the matching one in `drop_reused_delta()` collapse
to plain `SET_SIZE`, and `oe_get_size_slow()`'s tail
`cast_size_t_to_ulong()` is gone too.
What remains narrow are the boundaries this series does not
intend to touch: the diff, blame, textconv and fast-import machinery.
Even so, this patch is unfortunately quite large.
Assisted-by: Opus 4.7
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The `core.checkstat` configuration is currently stored in the global
variable `check_stat`, which makes it shared across repository
instances within a single process.
Store it instead in `repo_config_values`, where eagerly‑parsed
repository configuration lives. `core.checkstat` is parsed eagerly
because it controls how `match_stat_data()` and related functions
decide file freshness; a lazy parse could lead to unexpected
behavior or complicate libification. This preserves the existing
eager‑parsing behavior while tying the value to the repository it
was read from, avoiding cross‑repository state leakage, and
continuing the effort to reduce reliance on global configuration
state.
Update all references to use `repo_config_values()`.
Mentored-by: Christian Couder <christian.couder@gmail.com>
Mentored-by: Usman Akinyemi <usmanakinyemi202@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Olamide Caleb Bello <belkid98@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "streaming" terminology is somewhat generic, so it may not be
immediately obvious that "streaming.{c,h}" is specific to the object
database. Rectify this by moving it into the "odb/" directory so that it
can be immediately attributed to the object subsystem.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Subsequent commits will move the backend-specific logic of object
streaming into their respective subsystems. These subsystems have gotten
rid of `the_repository` already, but we still use it in two locations in
the streaming subsystem.
Prepare for the move by fixing those two cases. Converting the logic in
`open_istream_pack_non_delta()` is trivial as we already got the object
database as input.
But for `stream_blob_to_fd()` we have to add a new parameter to make it
accessible. So, as we already have to adjust all callers anyway, rename
the function to `odb_stream_blob_to_fd()` to indicate it's part of the
object subsystem.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Rename `repo_read_object_file()` to `odb_read_object()` to match other
functions related to the object database and our modern coding
guidelines.
Introduce a compatibility wrapper so that any in-flight topics will
continue to compile.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
In the preceding commits we have renamed the structures contained in
"object-store.h" to `struct object_database` and `struct odb_backend`.
As such, the code files "object-store.{c,h}" are confusingly named now.
Rename them to "odb.{c,h}" accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "object-store-ll.h" header has been introduced to keep transitive
header dependendcies and compile times at bay. Now that we have created
a new "object-store.c" file though we can easily move the last remaining
additional bit of "object-store.h", the `odb_path_map`, out of the
header.
Do so. As the "object-store.h" header is now equivalent to its low-level
alternative we drop the latter and inline it into the former.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Stop using `the_repository` in the "progress" subsystem by passing in a
repository when initializing `struct progress`. Furthermore, store a
pointer to the repository in that struct so that we can pass it to the
trace2 API when logging information.
Adjust callers accordingly by using `the_repository`. While there may be
some callers that have a repository available in their context, this
trivial conversion allows for easier verification and bubbles up the use
of `the_repository` by one level.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We have a bunch of loops which iterate up to an unsigned boundary using
a signed index, which generates warnigs because we compare a signed and
unsigned value in the loop condition. Address these sites for trivial
cases and enable `-Wsign-compare` warnings for these code units.
This patch only adapts those code units where we can drop the
`DISABLE_SIGN_COMPARE_WARNINGS` macro in the same step.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Mark code units that generate warnings with `-Wsign-compare`. This
allows for a structured approach to get rid of all such warnings over
time in a way that can be easily measured.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When filtering files during delayed checkout, we pass a string list to
`async_query_available_blobs()`. This list is initialized with NODUP,
and thus inserted strings will not be owned by the list. In the latter
function we then try to hand over ownership by passing an `xstrup()`'d
value to `string_list_insert()`. But this is not how this works: a NODUP
list does not take ownership of allocated strings and will never free
them for the caller.
Fix this issue by initializing the list as `DUP` instead and dropping
the explicit call to `xstrdup()`. This is okay to do given that this is
the single callsite of `async_query_available_blobs()`.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
A CPP macro USE_THE_REPOSITORY_VARIABLE is introduced to help
transition the codebase to rely less on the availability of the
singleton the_repository instance.
* ps/use-the-repository:
hex: guard declarations with `USE_THE_REPOSITORY_VARIABLE`
t/helper: remove dependency on `the_repository` in "proc-receive"
t/helper: fix segfault in "oid-array" command without repository
t/helper: use correct object hash in partial-clone helper
compat/fsmonitor: fix socket path in networked SHA256 repos
replace-object: use hash algorithm from passed-in repository
protocol-caps: use hash algorithm from passed-in repository
oidset: pass hash algorithm when parsing file
http-fetch: don't crash when parsing packfile without a repo
hash-ll: merge with "hash.h"
refs: avoid include cycle with "repository.h"
global: introduce `USE_THE_REPOSITORY_VARIABLE` macro
hash: require hash algorithm in `empty_tree_oid_hex()`
hash: require hash algorithm in `is_empty_{blob,tree}_oid()`
hash: make `is_null_oid()` independent of `the_repository`
hash: convert `oidcmp()` and `oideq()` to compare whole hash
global: ensure that object IDs are always padded
hash: require hash algorithm in `oidread()` and `oidclr()`
hash: require hash algorithm in `hasheq()`, `hashcmp()` and `hashclr()`
hash: drop (mostly) unused `is_empty_{blob,tree}_sha1()` functions
Use of the `the_repository` variable is deprecated nowadays, and we
slowly but steadily convert the codebase to not use it anymore. Instead,
callers should be passing down the repository to work on via parameters.
It is hard though to prove that a given code unit does not use this
variable anymore. The most trivial case, merely demonstrating that there
is no direct use of `the_repository`, is already a bit of a pain during
code reviews as the reviewer needs to manually verify claims made by the
patch author. The bigger problem though is that we have many interfaces
that implicitly rely on `the_repository`.
Introduce a new `USE_THE_REPOSITORY_VARIABLE` macro that allows code
units to opt into usage of `the_repository`. The intent of this macro is
to demonstrate that a certain code unit does not use this variable
anymore, and to keep it from new dependencies on it in future changes,
be it explicit or implicit
For now, the macro only guards `the_repository` itself as well as
`the_hash_algo`. There are many more known interfaces where we have an
implicit dependency on `the_repository`, but those are not guarded at
the current point in time. Over time though, we should start to add
guards as required (or even better, just remove them).
Define the macro as required in our code units. As expected, most of our
code still relies on the global variable. Nearly all of our builtins
rely on the variable as there is no way yet to pass `the_repository` to
their entry point. For now, declare the macro in "biultin.h" to keep the
required changes at least a little bit more contained.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
When finalizing a delayed checkout, we sort out several strings from the
passed-in string list by first assigning the empty string to those
filters and then calling `string_list_remove_empty_items()`. Assigning
the empty string will cause compiler warnings though as the string is
a `char *` once we enable `-Wwrite-strings`.
Refactor the code to use a `NULL` pointer with `filter_string_list()`
instead to avoid this warning.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* maint-2.42: (39 commits)
Git 2.42.2
Git 2.41.1
Git 2.40.2
Git 2.39.4
fsck: warn about symlink pointing inside a gitdir
core.hooksPath: add some protection while cloning
init.templateDir: consider this config setting protected
clone: prevent hooks from running during a clone
Add a helper function to compare file contents
init: refactor the template directory discovery into its own function
find_hook(): refactor the `STRIP_EXTENSION` logic
clone: when symbolic links collide with directories, keep the latter
entry: report more colliding paths
t5510: verify that D/F confusion cannot lead to an RCE
submodule: require the submodule path to contain directories only
clone_submodule: avoid using `access()` on directories
submodules: submodule paths must not contain symlinks
clone: prevent clashing git dirs when cloning submodule in parallel
t7423: add tests for symlinked submodule directories
has_dir_name(): do not get confused by characters < '/'
...
* maint-2.41: (38 commits)
Git 2.41.1
Git 2.40.2
Git 2.39.4
fsck: warn about symlink pointing inside a gitdir
core.hooksPath: add some protection while cloning
init.templateDir: consider this config setting protected
clone: prevent hooks from running during a clone
Add a helper function to compare file contents
init: refactor the template directory discovery into its own function
find_hook(): refactor the `STRIP_EXTENSION` logic
clone: when symbolic links collide with directories, keep the latter
entry: report more colliding paths
t5510: verify that D/F confusion cannot lead to an RCE
submodule: require the submodule path to contain directories only
clone_submodule: avoid using `access()` on directories
submodules: submodule paths must not contain symlinks
clone: prevent clashing git dirs when cloning submodule in parallel
t7423: add tests for symlinked submodule directories
has_dir_name(): do not get confused by characters < '/'
docs: document security issues around untrusted .git dirs
...
* maint-2.40: (39 commits)
Git 2.40.2
Git 2.39.4
fsck: warn about symlink pointing inside a gitdir
core.hooksPath: add some protection while cloning
init.templateDir: consider this config setting protected
clone: prevent hooks from running during a clone
Add a helper function to compare file contents
init: refactor the template directory discovery into its own function
find_hook(): refactor the `STRIP_EXTENSION` logic
clone: when symbolic links collide with directories, keep the latter
entry: report more colliding paths
t5510: verify that D/F confusion cannot lead to an RCE
submodule: require the submodule path to contain directories only
clone_submodule: avoid using `access()` on directories
submodules: submodule paths must not contain symlinks
clone: prevent clashing git dirs when cloning submodule in parallel
t7423: add tests for symlinked submodule directories
has_dir_name(): do not get confused by characters < '/'
docs: document security issues around untrusted .git dirs
upload-pack: disable lazy-fetching by default
...
* maint-2.39: (38 commits)
Git 2.39.4
fsck: warn about symlink pointing inside a gitdir
core.hooksPath: add some protection while cloning
init.templateDir: consider this config setting protected
clone: prevent hooks from running during a clone
Add a helper function to compare file contents
init: refactor the template directory discovery into its own function
find_hook(): refactor the `STRIP_EXTENSION` logic
clone: when symbolic links collide with directories, keep the latter
entry: report more colliding paths
t5510: verify that D/F confusion cannot lead to an RCE
submodule: require the submodule path to contain directories only
clone_submodule: avoid using `access()` on directories
submodules: submodule paths must not contain symlinks
clone: prevent clashing git dirs when cloning submodule in parallel
t7423: add tests for symlinked submodule directories
has_dir_name(): do not get confused by characters < '/'
docs: document security issues around untrusted .git dirs
upload-pack: disable lazy-fetching by default
fetch/clone: detect dubious ownership of local repositories
...
When recursively cloning a repository with submodules, we must ensure
that the submodules paths do not suddenly contain symbolic links that
would let Git write into unintended locations. We just plugged that
vulnerability, but let's add some more defense-in-depth.
Since we can only keep one item on disk if multiple index entries' paths
collide, we may just as well avoid keeping a symbolic link (because that
would allow attack vectors where Git follows those links by mistake).
Technically, we handle more situations than cloning submodules into
paths that were (partially) replaced by symbolic links. This provides
defense-in-depth in case someone finds a case-folding confusion
vulnerability in the future that does not even involve submodules.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In b878579ae7 (clone: report duplicate entries on case-insensitive
filesystems, 2018-08-17) code was added to warn about index entries that
resolve to the same file system entity (usually the cause is a
case-insensitive filesystem).
In Git for Windows, where inodes are not trusted (because of a
performance trade-off, inodes are equal to 0 by default), that check
does not compare inode numbers but the verbatim path.
This logic works well when index entries' paths differ only in case.
However, for file/directory conflicts only the file's path was reported,
leaving the user puzzled with what that path collides.
Let's try ot catch colliding paths even if one path is the prefix of the
other. We do this also in setups where the file system is case-sensitive
because the inode check would not be able to catch those collisions.
While not a complete solution (for example, on macOS, Unicode
normalization could also lead to file/directory conflicts but be missed
by this logic), it is at least another defensive layer on top of what
the previous commits added.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Each of these were checked with
gcc -E -I. ${SOURCE_FILE} | grep ${HEADER_FILE}
to ensure that removing the direct inclusion of the header actually
resulted in that header no longer being included at all (i.e. that
no other header pulled it in transitively).
...except for a few cases where we verified that although the header
was brought in transitively, nothing from it was directly used in
that source file. These cases were:
* builtin/credential-cache.c
* builtin/pull.c
* builtin/send-pack.c
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
remove_or_warn() is only used by entry.c and apply.c, but it is
currently declared and defined in wrapper.{h,c}, so it has a scope much
greater than it needs. This needlessly large scope also causes wrapper.c
to need to include object.h, when this file is largely unconcerned with
Git objects.
Move remove_or_warn() to entry.{h,c}. The file apply.c still has access
to it, since it already includes entry.h for another reason.
Signed-off-by: Calvin Wan <calvinwan@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Tan <jonathantanmy@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The vast majority of files including object-store.h did not need dir.h
nor khash.h. Split the header into two files, and let most just depend
upon object-store-ll.h, while letting the two callers that need it
depend on the full object-store.h.
After this patch:
$ git grep -h include..object-store | sort | uniq -c
2 #include "object-store.h"
129 #include "object-store-ll.h"
Diff best viewed with `--color-moved`.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Since this header showed up in some places besides just #include
statements, update/clean-up/remove those other places as well.
Note that compat/fsmonitor/fsm-path-utils-darwin.c previously got
away with violating the rule that all files must start with an include
of git-compat-util.h (or a short-list of alternate headers that happen
to include it first). This change exposed the violation and caused it
to stop building correctly; fix it by having it include
git-compat-util.h first, as per policy.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Note in particular that this reverses the decision made in 118a2e8bde
("cache: move ensure_full_index() to cache.h", 2021-04-01).
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
* ab/remove-implicit-use-of-the-repository:
libs: use "struct repository *" argument, not "the_repository"
post-cocci: adjust comments for recent repo_* migration
cocci: apply the "revision.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "rerere.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "refs.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "promisor-remote.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "packfile.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "pretty.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "object-store.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "diff.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "commit.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "commit-reach.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: apply the "cache.h" part of "the_repository.pending"
cocci: add missing "the_repository" macros to "pending"
cocci: sort "the_repository" rules by header
cocci: fix incorrect & verbose "the_repository" rules
cocci: remove dead rule from "the_repository.pending.cocci"
Apply the part of "the_repository.pending.cocci" pertaining to
"object-store.h".
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Dozens of files made use of gettext functions, without explicitly
including gettext.h. This made it more difficult to find which files
could remove a dependence on cache.h. Make C files explicitly include
gettext.h if they are using it.
However, while compat/fsmonitor/fsm-ipc-darwin.c should also gain an
include of gettext.h, it was left out to avoid conflicting with an
in-flight topic.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "--super-prefix" option to "git" was initially added in [1] for
use with "ls-files"[2], and shortly thereafter "submodule--helper"[3]
and "grep"[4]. It wasn't until [5] that "read-tree" made use of it.
At the time [5] made sense, but since then we've made "ls-files"
recurse in-process in [6], "grep" in [7], and finally
"submodule--helper" in the preceding commits.
Let's also remove it from "read-tree", which allows us to remove the
option to "git" itself.
We can do this because the only remaining user of it is the submodule
API, which will now invoke "read-tree" with its new "--super-prefix"
option. It will only do so when the "submodule_move_head()" function
is called.
That "submodule_move_head()" function was then only invoked by
"read-tree" itself, but now rather than setting an environment
variable to pass "--super-prefix" between cmd_read_tree() we:
- Set a new "super_prefix" in "struct unpack_trees_options". The
"super_prefixed()" function in "unpack-trees.c" added in [5] will now
use this, rather than get_super_prefix() looking up the environment
variable we set earlier in the same process.
- Add the same field to the "struct checkout", which is only needed to
ferry the "super_prefix" in the "struct unpack_trees_options" all the
way down to the "entry.c" callers of "submodule_move_head()".
Those calls which used the super prefix all originated in
"cmd_read_tree()". The only other caller is the "unlink_entry()"
caller in "builtin/checkout.c", which now passes a "NULL".
1. 74866d7579 (git: make super-prefix option, 2016-10-07)
2. e77aa336f1 (ls-files: optionally recurse into submodules, 2016-10-07)
3. 89c8626557 (submodule helper: support super prefix, 2016-12-08)
4. 0281e487fd (grep: optionally recurse into submodules, 2016-12-16)
5. 3d415425c7 (unpack-trees: support super-prefix option, 2017-01-17)
6. 188dce131f (ls-files: use repository object, 2017-06-22)
7. f9ee2fcdfa (grep: recurse in-process using 'struct repository', 2017-08-02)
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
At the end of `git checkout <pathspec>`, we get a message informing how
many entries were updated in the working tree. However, this number can
be inaccurate for two reasons:
1) Delayed entries currently get counted twice.
2) Failed entries are included in the count.
The first problem happens because the counter is first incremented
before inserting the entry in the delayed checkout queue, and once again
when finish_delayed_checkout() calls checkout_entry(). And the second
happens because the counter is incremented too early in
checkout_entry(), before the entry was in fact checked out. Fix that by
moving the count increment further down in the call stack and removing
the duplicate increment on delayed entries. Note that we have to keep
a per-entry reference for the counter (both on parallel checkout and
delayed checkout) because not all entries are always accumulated at the
same counter. See checkout_worktree(), at builtin/checkout.c for an
example.
Signed-off-by: Matheus Tavares <matheus.bernardino@usp.br>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The clean/smudge conversion code path has been prepared to better
work on platforms where ulong is narrower than size_t.
* mc/clean-smudge-with-llp64:
clean/smudge: allow clean filters to process extremely large files
odb: guard against data loss checking out a huge file
git-compat-util: introduce more size_t helpers
odb: teach read_blob_entry to use size_t
t1051: introduce a smudge filter test for extremely large files
test-lib: add prerequisite for 64-bit platforms
test-tool genzeros: generate large amounts of data more efficiently
test-genzeros: allow more than 2G zeros in Windows
There is mixed use of size_t and unsigned long to deal with sizes in the
codebase. Recall that Windows defines unsigned long as 32 bits even on
64-bit platforms, meaning that converting size_t to unsigned long narrows
the range. This mostly doesn't cause a problem since Git rarely deals
with files larger than 2^32 bytes.
But adjunct systems such as Git LFS, which use smudge/clean filters to
keep huge files out of the repository, may have huge file contents passed
through some of the functions in entry.c and convert.c. On Windows, this
results in a truncated file being written to the workdir. I traced this to
one specific use of unsigned long in write_entry (and a similar instance
in write_pc_item_to_fd for parallel checkout). That appeared to be for
the call to read_blob_entry, which expects a pointer to unsigned long.
By altering the signature of read_blob_entry to expect a size_t,
write_entry can be switched to use size_t internally (which all of its
callers and most of its callees already used). To avoid touching dozens of
additional files, read_blob_entry uses a local unsigned long to call a
chain of functions which aren't prepared to accept size_t.
Helped-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Matt Cooper <vtbassmatt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The "Filtering content" progress in entry.c:finish_delayed_checkout()
is unusual because of how it calculates the progress count and because
it shows the progress of a nested loop. It works basically like this:
start_delayed_progress(p, nr_of_paths_to_filter)
for_each_filter {
display_progress(p, nr_of_paths_to_filter - nr_of_paths_still_left_to_filter)
for_each_path_handled_by_the_current_filter {
checkout_entry()
}
}
stop_progress(p)
There are two issues with this approach:
- The work done by the last filter (or the only filter if there is
only one) is never counted, so if the last filter still has some
paths to process, then the counter shown in the "done" progress
line will not match the expected total.
The partially-RFC series to add a GIT_TEST_CHECK_PROGRESS=1
mode[1] helps spot this issue. Under it the 'missing file in
delayed checkout' and 'invalid file in delayed checkout' tests in
't0021-conversion.sh' fail, because both use only one
filter. (The test 'delayed checkout in process filter' uses two
filters but the first one does all the work, so that test already
happens to succeed even with GIT_TEST_CHECK_PROGRESS=1.)
- The progress counter is updated only once per filter, not once per
processed path, so if a filter has a lot of paths to process, then
the counter might stay unchanged for a long while and then make a
big jump (though the user still gets a sense of progress, because
we call display_throughput() after each processed path to show the
amount of processed data).
Move the display_progress() call to the inner loop, right next to that
checkout_entry() call that does the hard work for each path, and use a
dedicated counter variable that is incremented upon processing each
path.
After this change the 'invalid file in delayed checkout' in
't0021-conversion.sh' would succeed with the GIT_TEST_CHECK_PROGRESS=1
assertion discussed above, but the 'missing file in delayed checkout'
test would still fail.
It'll fail because its purposefully buggy filter doesn't process any
paths, so we won't execute that inner loop at all, see [2] for how to
spot that issue without GIT_TEST_CHECK_PROGRESS=1. It's not
straightforward to fix it with the current progress.c library (see [3]
for an attempt), so let's leave it for now.
Let's also initialize the *progress to "NULL" while we're at it. Since
7a132c628e (checkout: make delayed checkout respect --quiet and
--no-progress, 2021-08-26) we have had progress conditional on
"show_progress", usually we use the idiom of a "NULL" initialization
of the "*progress", rather than the more verbose ternary added in
7a132c628e.
1. https://lore.kernel.org/git/20210620200303.2328957-1-szeder.dev@gmail.com/
2. http://lore.kernel.org/git/20210802214827.GE23408@szeder.dev
3. https://lore.kernel.org/git/20210620200303.2328957-7-szeder.dev@gmail.com/
Signed-off-by: SZEDER Gábor <szeder.dev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The 'Filtering contents...' progress report from delayed checkout is
displayed even when checkout and clone are invoked with --quiet or
--no-progress. Furthermore, it is displayed unconditionally, without
first checking whether stdout is a tty. Let's fix these issues and also
add some regression tests for the two code paths that currently use
delayed checkout: unpack_trees.c:check_updates() and
builtin/checkout.c:checkout_worktree().
Signed-off-by: Matheus Tavares <matheus.bernardino@usp.br>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Change all in-tree users of the string_list_init(LIST, BOOL) API to
use string_list_init_{nodup,dup}(LIST) instead.
As noted in the preceding commit let's leave the now-unused
string_list_init() wrapper in-place for any in-flight users, it can be
removed at some later date.
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
"git clean" and "git ls-files -i" had confusion around working on
or showing ignored paths inside an ignored directory, which has
been corrected.
* en/dir-traversal:
dir: introduce readdir_skip_dot_and_dotdot() helper
dir: update stale description of treat_directory()
dir: traverse into untracked directories if they may have ignored subfiles
dir: avoid unnecessary traversal into ignored directory
t3001, t7300: add testcase showcasing missed directory traversal
t7300: add testcase showing unnecessary traversal into ignored directory
ls-files: error out on -i unless -o or -c are specified
dir: report number of visited directories and paths with trace2
dir: convert trace calls to trace2 equivalents
Many places in the code were doing
while ((d = readdir(dir)) != NULL) {
if (is_dot_or_dotdot(d->d_name))
continue;
...process d...
}
Introduce a readdir_skip_dot_and_dotdot() helper to make that a one-liner:
while ((d = readdir_skip_dot_and_dotdot(dir)) != NULL) {
...process d...
}
This helper particularly simplifies checks for empty directories.
Also use this helper in read_cached_dir() so that our statistics are
consistent across platforms. (In other words, read_cached_dir() should
have been using is_dot_or_dotdot() and skipping such entries, but did
not and left it to treat_path() to detect and mark such entries as
path_none.)
Signed-off-by: Elijah Newren <newren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
The checkout machinery has been taught to perform the actual
write-out of the files in parallel when able.
* mt/parallel-checkout-part-2:
parallel-checkout: add design documentation
parallel-checkout: support progress displaying
parallel-checkout: add configuration options
parallel-checkout: make it truly parallel
unpack-trees: add basic support for parallel checkout
Builds on top of the sparse-index infrastructure to mark operations
that are not ready to mark with the sparse index, causing them to
fall back on fully-populated index that they always have worked with.
* ds/sparse-index-protections: (47 commits)
name-hash: use expand_to_path()
sparse-index: expand_to_path()
name-hash: don't add directories to name_hash
revision: ensure full index
resolve-undo: ensure full index
read-cache: ensure full index
pathspec: ensure full index
merge-recursive: ensure full index
entry: ensure full index
dir: ensure full index
update-index: ensure full index
stash: ensure full index
rm: ensure full index
merge-index: ensure full index
ls-files: ensure full index
grep: ensure full index
fsck: ensure full index
difftool: ensure full index
commit: ensure full index
checkout: ensure full index
...