Commit Graph

174020 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Johannes Schindelin
b53fe0e7ed mingw: ensure valid CTYPE
A change between versions 2.4.1 and 2.6.0 of the MSYS2 runtime modified
how Cygwin's runtime (and hence Git for Windows' MSYS2 runtime
derivative) handles locales: d16a56306d (Consolidate wctomb/mbtowc calls
for POSIX-1.2008, 2016-07-20).

An unintended side-effect is that "cold-calling" into the POSIX
emulation will start with a locale based on the current code page,
something that Git for Windows is very ill-prepared for, as it expects
to be able to pass a command-line containing non-ASCII characters to the
shell without having those characters munged.

One symptom of this behavior: when `git clone` or `git fetch` shell out
to call `git-upload-pack` with a path that contains non-ASCII
characters, the shell tried to interpret the entire command-line
(including command-line parameters) as executable path, which obviously
must fail.

This fixes https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/1036

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 14:27:37 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
e23ad91110 max_tree_depth: lower it for clang builds in general on Windows
In 436a42215e (max_tree_depth: lower it for clangarm64 on Windows,
2025-04-23), I provided a work-around for a nasty issue with clangarm
builds, where the stack is exhausted before the maximal tree depth is
reached, and the resulting error cannot easily be handled by Git
(because it would require Windows-specific handling).

Turns out that this is not at all limited to ARM64. In my tests with
CLANG64 in MSYS2 on the GitHub Actions runners, the test t6700.4 failed
in the exact same way. What's worse: The limit needs to be quite a bit
lower for x86_64 than for aarch64. In aforementioned tests, the breaking
point was 1232: With 1231 it still worked as expected, with 1232 it
would fail with the `STATUS_STACK_OVERFLOW` incorrectly mapped to exit
code 127. For comparison, in my tests on GitHub Actions' Windows/ARM64
runners, the breaking point was 1439 instead.

Therefore the condition needs to be adapted once more, to accommodate
(with some safety margin) both aarch64 and x86_64 in clang-based builds
on Windows, to let that test pass.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:36:18 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
d1f0a5ba34 mingw: always define ETC_* for MSYS2 environments
Special-casing even more configurations simply does not make sense.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:18:37 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
71c1841f0e mingw: rely on MSYS2's metadata instead of hard-coding it
MSYS2 defines some helpful environment variables, e.g. `MSYSTEM`. There
is code in Git for Windows to ensure that that `MSYSTEM` variable is
set, hard-coding a default.

However, the existing solution jumps through hoops to reconstruct the
proper default, and is even incomplete doing so, as we found out when we
extended it to support CLANGARM64.

This is absolutely unnecessary because there is already a perfectly
valid `MSYSTEM` value we can use at build time. This is even true when
building the MINGW32 variant on a MINGW64 system because `makepkg-mingw`
will override the `MSYSTEM` value as per the `MINGW_ARCH` array.

The same is equally true for the `/mingw64`, `/mingw32` and
`/clangarm64` prefix: those values are already available via the
`MINGW_PREFIX` environment variable, and we just need to pass that
setting through.

Only when `MINGW_PREFIX` is not set (as is the case in Git for Windows'
minimal SDK, where only `MSYSTEM` is guaranteed to be set correctly), we
use as fall-back the top-level directory whose name is the down-cased
value of the `MSYSTEM` variable.

Incidentally, this also broadens the support to all the configurations
supported by the MSYS2 project, i.e. clang64 & ucrt64, too.

Note: This keeps the same, hard-coded MSYSTEM platform support for CMake
as before, but drops it for Meson (because it is unclear how Meson could
do this in a more flexible manner).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:18:37 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
75886a3bc8 mingw: only enable the MSYS2-specific stuff when compiling in MSYS2
The tell-tale is the presence of the `MSYSTEM` value while compiling, of
course. In that case, we want to ensure that `MSYSTEM` is set when
running `git.exe`, and also enable the magic MSYS2 tty detection.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:18:37 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
3471074861 mingw: set the prefix and HOST_CPU as per MSYS2's settings
MSYS2 already defines a couple of helpful environment variables, and we
can use those to infer the installation location as well as the CPU. No
need for hard-coding ;-)

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:18:37 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
fb3404d94a mingw: avoid over-specifying --pic-executable
In bf2d5d8239 (Don't let ld strip relocations, 2016-01-16) (picked from
https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/pull/612/commits/6a237925bf10),
Git for Windows introduced the `-Wl,-pic-executable` flag, specifying
the exact entry point via `-e`. This required discerning between i686
and x86_64 code because the former required the symbol to be prefixed
with an underscore, the latter did not.

As per https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=10865, the
specified symbols are already the default, though.

So let's drop the overly-specific definition.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:18:37 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
fcae0f80eb mingw: only use -Wl,--large-address-aware for 32-bit builds
That option only matters there, and is in fact only really understood in
those builds; UCRT64 versions of GCC, for example, do not know what to
do with that option.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:18:37 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
6855ef0b35 mingw: drop the -D_USE_32BIT_TIME_T option
This option was added in fa93bb20d7 (MinGW: Fix stat definitions to
work with MinGW runtime version 4.0, 2013-09-11), i.e. a _long_ time
ago. So long, in fact, that it still targeted MinGW. But we switched to
mingw-w64 in 2015, which seems not to share the problem, and therefore
does not require a fix.

Even worse: This flag is incompatible with UCRT64, which we are about to
support by way of upstreaming `mingw-w64-git` to the MSYS2 project, see
https://github.com/msys2/MINGW-packages/pull/26470 for details.

So let's send that option into its well-deserved retirement.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:18:37 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
dd3b541d21 mingw: stop hard-coding CC = gcc
This is no longer true in general, not with supporting Clang out of the
box.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:18:37 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
55d1066492 windows: skip linking git-<command> for built-ins
It is merely a historical wart that, say, `git-commit` exists in the
`libexec/git-core/` directory, a tribute to the original idea to let Git
be essentially a bunch of Unix shell scripts revolving around very few
"plumbing" (AKA low-level) commands.

Git has evolved a lot from there. These days, most of Git's
functionality is contained within the `git` executable, in the form of
"built-in" commands.

To accommodate for scripts that use the "dashed" form of Git commands,
even today, Git provides hard-links that make the `git` executable
available as, say, `git-commit`, just in case that an old script has not
been updated to invoke `git commit`.

Those hard-links do not come cheap: they take about half a minute for
every build of Git on Windows, they are mistaken for taking up huge
amounts of space by some Windows Explorer versions that do not
understand hard-links, and therefore many a "bug" report had to be
addressed.

The "dashed form" has been officially deprecated in Git version 1.5.4,
which was released on February 2nd, 2008, i.e. a very long time ago.
This deprecation was never finalized by skipping these hard-links, but
we can start the process now, in Git for Windows.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:18:37 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
9c43955fed mingw: use mimalloc
Thorough benchmarking with repacking a subset of linux.git (the commit
history reachable from 93a6fefe2f ([PATCH] fix the SYSCTL=n compilation,
2007-02-28), to be precise) suggest that this allocator is on par, in
multi-threaded situations maybe even better than nedmalloc:

`git repack -adfq` with mimalloc, 8 threads:

31.166991900 27.576763800 28.712311000 27.373859000 27.163141900

`git repack -adfq` with nedmalloc, 8 threads:

31.915032900 27.149883100 28.244933700 27.240188800 28.580849500

In a different test using GitHub Actions build agents (probably
single-threaded, a core-strength of nedmalloc)):

`git repack -q -d -l -A --unpack-unreachable=2.weeks.ago` with mimalloc:

943.426 978.500 939.709 959.811 954.605

`git repack -q -d -l -A --unpack-unreachable=2.weeks.ago` with nedmalloc:

995.383 952.179 943.253 963.043 980.468

While these measurements were not executed with complete scientific
rigor, as no hardware was set aside specifically for these benchmarks,
it shows that mimalloc and nedmalloc perform almost the same, nedmalloc
with a bit higher variance and also slightly higher average (further
testing suggests that nedmalloc performs worse in multi-threaded
situations than in single-threaded ones).

In short: mimalloc seems to be slightly better suited for our purposes
than nedmalloc.

Seeing that mimalloc is developed actively, while nedmalloc ceased to
see any updates in eight years, let's use mimalloc on Windows instead.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:32 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
7e3722cc82 mimalloc: offer a build-time option to enable it
By defining `USE_MIMALLOC`, Git can now be compiled with that
nicely-fast and small allocator.

Note that we have to disable a couple `DEVELOPER` options to build
mimalloc's source code, as it makes heavy use of declarations after
statements, among other things that disagree with Git's conventions.

We even have to silence some GCC warnings in non-DEVELOPER mode. For
example, the `-Wno-array-bounds` flag is needed because in `-O2` builds,
trying to call `NtCurrentTeb()` (which `_mi_thread_id()` does on
Windows) causes the bogus warning about a system header, likely related
to https://sourceforge.net/p/mingw-w64/mailman/message/37674519/ and to
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=99578:

C:/git-sdk-64-minimal/mingw64/include/psdk_inc/intrin-impl.h:838:1:
        error: array subscript 0 is outside array bounds of 'long long unsigned int[0]' [-Werror=array-bounds]
  838 | __buildreadseg(__readgsqword, unsigned __int64, "gs", "q")
      | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Also: The `mimalloc` library uses C11-style atomics, therefore we must
require that standard when compiling with GCC if we want to use
`mimalloc` (instead of requiring "only" C99). This is what we do in the
CMake definition already, therefore this commit does not need to touch
`contrib/buildsystems/`.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:32 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
2f285aea9f mimalloc: adjust for building inside Git
We want to compile mimalloc's source code as part of Git, rather than
requiring the code to be built as an external library: mimalloc uses a
CMake-based build, which is not necessarily easy to integrate into the
flavors of Git for Windows (which will be the main benefitting port).

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Aßhauer <mha1993@live.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:32 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
e7cdf876a9 Import the source code of mimalloc v2.2.7
Update to newer mimalloc versions like this:

  update_mimalloc ()
  {
      test $# = 1 || {
          echo "Need a mimalloc version" 1>&2;
          return 1
      };
      for oneline in 'mimalloc: adjust for building inside Git' 'Import the source code of mimalloc';
      do
          git revert -n HEAD^{/^"$oneline"} && git checkout HEAD -- Makefile && git commit -sm "Temporarily revert \"$oneline\"" -m 'In preparation for upgrading to a newer mimalloc version.' || return 1;
      done;
      for file in $(git show --format='%n' --name-only --diff-filter=A HEAD^{/^"Import the source code of mimalloc "}) compat/mimalloc/arena-abandon.c compat/mimalloc/free.c compat/mimalloc/libc.c compat/mimalloc/prim/prim.c compat/mimalloc/mimalloc-stats.h;
      do
          file2=${file#compat/mimalloc/};
          case "$file2" in
              segment-cache.c)
                  : no longer needed;
                  continue
              ;;
              bitmap.h | *.c)
                  file2=src/$file2
              ;;
              *.h)
                  file2=include/$file2
              ;;
          esac;
          mkdir -p "${file%/*}" && git -C /usr/src/mimalloc/ show "$1":$file2 > "$file" && git add "$file" || {
              echo "Failed: $file2 -> $file" 1>&2;
              return 1
          };
      done;
      conv_sed='sed -n "/^ *eval/d;/      /p"' && git commit -sm "Import the source code of mimalloc $1" -m "Update to newer mimalloc versions like this:" -m "$(set | sed -n '/^update_mimalloc *() *$/,/^}/{s/^./  &/;p}')" -m '  update_mimalloc $MIMALLOC_VERSION' -m 'For convenience, you can set `MIMALLOC_VERSION` and then run:' -m '  eval "$(git show -s <this-commit> | '"$conv_sed"')"' || return 1;
      git cherry-pick HEAD^{/^'mimalloc: adjust for building inside Git'} || return 1
  }

  update_mimalloc $MIMALLOC_VERSION

For convenience, you can set `MIMALLOC_VERSION` and then run:

  eval "$(git show -s <this-commit> | sed -n "/^ *eval/d;/      /p")"

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:32 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
0f84586a47 git-compat-util: avoid redeclaring _DEFAULT_SOURCE
We are about to vendor in `mimalloc`'s source code which we will want to
include `compat/posix.h` after defining that constant.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:32 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
2f738e48d2 win32/pthread: avoid name clashes with winpthread
When asking the mingw-w64 variant of GCC to compile C11 code, it seems
to link implicitly to libwinpthread, which does implement a pthread
emulation (that is more complete than Git's).

In preparation for vendoring in mimalloc (which requires C11 support),
let's keep preferring Git's own pthread emulation.

To avoid linker errors where it thinks that the `pthread_self` and the
`pthread_create` symbols are defined twice, let's give our version a
`win32_` prefix, just like we already do for `pthread_join()`.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:32 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
5d6daeebfb mingw: include the Python parts in the build
While Git for Windows does not _ship_ Python (in order to save on
bandwidth), MSYS2 provides very fine Python interpreters that users can
easily take advantage of, by using Git for Windows within its SDK.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:32 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
39792672e5 Merge branch 'fixes-from-the-git-mailing-list'
These fixes have been sent to the Git mailing list but have not been
picked up by the Git project yet.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:31 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
133f5d9087 Merge branch 'disallow-control-characters-in-sideband-channel'
This addresses:

- CVE-2024-52005:

	Insufficient neutralization of ANSI escape sequences in sideband
	payload can be used to mislead Git users into believing that
	certain remote-generated messages actually originate from Git.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <Johannes.Schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:31 +01:00
Jeff King
154c3b8f2c grep: prevent ^$ false match at end of file
In some implementations, `regexec_buf()` assumes that it is fed lines;
Without `REG_NOTEOL` it thinks the end of the buffer is the end of a
line. Which makes sense, but trips up this case because we are not
feeding lines, but rather a whole buffer. So the final newline is not
the start of an empty line, but the true end of the buffer.

This causes an interesting bug:

  $ echo content >file.txt
  $ git grep --no-index -n '^$' file.txt
  file.txt:2:

This bug is fixed by making the end of the buffer consistently the end
of the final line.

The patch was applied from
https://lore.kernel.org/git/20250113062601.GD767856@coredump.intra.peff.net/

Reported-by: Olly Betts <olly@survex.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:31 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
2cd5611bd9 unix-socket: avoid leak when initialization fails
When a Unix socket is initialized, the current directory's path is
stored so that the cleanup code can `chdir()` back to where it was
before exit.

If the path that needs to be stored exceeds the default size of the
`sun_path` attribute of `struct sockaddr_un` (which is defined as a
108-sized byte array on Linux), a larger buffer needs to be allocated so
that it can hold the path, and it is the responsibility of the
`unix_sockaddr_cleanup()` function to release that allocated memory.

In Git's CI, this stack allocation is not necessary because the code is
checked out to `/home/runner/work/git/git`. Concatenate the path
`t/trash directory.t0301-credential-cache/.cache/git/credential/socket`
and a terminating NUL, and you end up with 96 bytes, 12 shy of the
default `sun_path` size.

However, I use worktrees with slightly longer paths:
`/home/me/projects/git/yes/i/nest/worktrees/to/organize/them/` is more
in line with what I have. When I recently tried to locally reproduce a
failure of the `linux-leaks` CI job, this t0301 test failed (where it
had not failed in CI).

The reason: When `credential-cache` tries to reach its daemon initially
by calling `unix_sockaddr_init()`, it is expected that the daemon cannot
be reached (the idea is to spin up the daemon in that case and try
again). However, when this first call to `unix_sockaddr_init()` fails,
the code returns early from the `unix_stream_connect()` function
_without_ giving the cleanup code a chance to run, skipping the
deallocation of above-mentioned path.

The fix is easy: do not return early but instead go directly to the
cleanup code.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:31 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
ed536c9232 sideband: do allow ANSI color sequences by default
The preceding two commits introduced special handling of the sideband
channel to neutralize ANSI escape sequences before sending the payload
to the terminal, and `sideband.allowControlCharacters` to override that
behavior.

However, some `pre-receive` hooks that are actively used in practice
want to color their messages and therefore rely on the fact that Git
passes them through to the terminal.

In contrast to other ANSI escape sequences, it is highly unlikely that
coloring sequences can be essential tools in attack vectors that mislead
Git users e.g. by hiding crucial information.

Therefore we can have both: Continue to allow ANSI coloring sequences to
be passed to the terminal, and neutralize all other ANSI escape
sequences.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:31 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
69ad7769d9 sideband: introduce an "escape hatch" to allow control characters
The preceding commit fixed the vulnerability whereas sideband messages
(that are under the control of the remote server) could contain ANSI
escape sequences that would be sent to the terminal verbatim.

However, this fix may not be desirable under all circumstances, e.g.
when remote servers deliberately add coloring to their messages to
increase their urgency.

To help with those use cases, give users a way to opt-out of the
protections: `sideband.allowControlCharacters`.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:31 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
72f5de3454 sideband: mask control characters
The output of `git clone` is a vital component for understanding what
has happened when things go wrong. However, these logs are partially
under the control of the remote server (via the "sideband", which
typically contains what the remote `git pack-objects` process sends to
`stderr`), and is currently not sanitized by Git.

This makes Git susceptible to ANSI escape sequence injection (see
CWE-150, https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/150.html), which allows
attackers to corrupt terminal state, to hide information, and even to
insert characters into the input buffer (i.e. as if the user had typed
those characters).

To plug this vulnerability, disallow any control character in the
sideband, replacing them instead with the common `^<letter/symbol>`
(e.g. `^[` for `\x1b`, `^A` for `\x01`).

There is likely a need for more fine-grained controls instead of using a
"heavy hammer" like this, which will be introduced subsequently.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-28 07:16:31 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
2fab893deb Start the merging-rebase to v2.53.0-rc2
This commit starts the rebase of 3de3111a1b to 20f0c2a0fbb01b94d417a0d633a47bfbdd080841
2026-01-28 07:16:27 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
e23c0db6dd t/t5571-prep-push-hook.sh: Add test with writing to stderr (#6063)
Git v2.53.0-rc0 included f406b89552 (Merge branch
'ar/run-command-hook', 2026-01-06), which caused a regression on
Windows. While this merge was reverted for independent reasons in
a3d1f391d3 (Revert "Merge branch 'ar/run-command-hook'", 2026-01-15),
it seems worthwhile to ensure that writing to standard error from a
`pre-push` hook remains unbroken.

The symptom, when running this regression test case against
v2.53.0-rc0.windows.1 is that the `git push` fails, with this message
printed to standard error:

.git/hooks/pre-push: line 2: /dev/stderr: No such file or
direct[61/1940]
   error: failed to push some refs to 'repo1'

When that hook runs, `/dev/stderr` is a symlink to `/proc/self/fd/2`, as
always, but `ls -l /proc/self/fd/` shows this in the failing run

  total 0
  lrwxrwxrwx 1 me 4096 0 Jan 27 14:34 0 -> pipe:[0]
  lrwxrwxrwx 1 me 4096 0 Jan 27 14:34 1 -> pipe:[0]
  lrwxrwxrwx 1 me 4096 0 Jan 27 14:34 2 -> pipe:[0]

instead of the expected contents (which are shown when running this
against v2.53.0-rc1.windows.1):

  total 0
  lrwxrwxrwx 1 me 4096 0 Jan 27 14:53 0 -> 'pipe:[0]'
  lrwxrwxrwx 1 me 4096 0 Jan 27 14:53 1 -> /dev/cons1
lrwxrwxrwx 1 me 4096 0 Jan 27 14:53 2 -> '/path/to/git/t/trash
directory.t5571-pre-push-hook/actual'

This suggests that the underlying reason might be that `stdout` has an
exclusive handle to that pipe, and opening `stderr` (which points to the
same pipe) fails because of that exclusively-opened `stdout` handle.

This closes https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/issues/6053.
2026-01-27 15:13:22 +00:00
Junio C Hamano
ab380cb80b Git 2.53-rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2026-01-26 22:26:31 -08:00
Thomas Braun
c9aea168b5 t/t5571-prep-push-hook.sh: Add test with writing to stderr
The 2.53.0.rc0.windows release candidate had a regression where
writing to stderr from a pre-push hook would error out.

The regression was fixed in 2.53.0.rc1.windows and the test here ensures
that this stays fixed.

Signed-off-by: Thomas Braun <thomas.braun@virtuell-zuhause.de>
2026-01-26 23:06:53 +01:00
Junio C Hamano
ab689ea7f9 Revert "Merge branch 'cs/rebased-subtree-split'"
This reverts commit 79e3055bab, reversing
changes made to 9813aace1e.

Regresison report

    https://lore.kernel.org/git/755578cb-07e0-4b40-aa90-aacf4d45ccaa@heusel.eu/
2026-01-25 22:37:35 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
6959eee16e Merge branch 'master' of https://github.com/j6t/git-gui
* 'master' of https://github.com/j6t/git-gui:
  git-gui: mark *.po files at any directory level as UTF-8
  git-gui i18n: Update Bulgarian translation (558t)
  git-gui i18n: Update Bulgarian translation (557t)
2026-01-25 09:08:06 -08:00
Johannes Sixt
1a729ccb93 git-gui: mark *.po files at any directory level as UTF-8
When a commit is viewed in Gitk that changes a file in po/glossary, the
patch text shows mojibake instead of correctly decoded UTF-8 text.
Gitk retrieves the encoding attribute to decide how to treat the bytes
that make up the patch text. There is an attribute definition that all
files are US-ASCII, and a later attribute definition overrides this.
But the override, which specifies UTF-8, applies only to *.po files in
directory po/ and does not apply to subdirectories.

Widen the pattern to apply to all directory levels.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
2026-01-25 10:53:08 +01:00
Johannes Sixt
4b700c24e8 Merge branch 'master' of github.com:alshopov/git-gui
* 'master' of github.com:alshopov/git-gui:
  git-gui i18n: Update Bulgarian translation (558t)
2026-01-25 10:32:21 +01:00
Alexander Shopov
539e6337b8 git-gui i18n: Update Bulgarian translation (558t)
- Translate new string (558t)
- Add graves for disambiguation
- Improve glossary translation (96t) and synchonize with git

Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2026-01-24 21:47:12 +01:00
Johannes Sixt
453fd8d14c Merge branch 'master' of github.com:alshopov/git-gui
* 'master' of github.com:alshopov/git-gui:
  git-gui i18n: Update Bulgarian translation (557t)

Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>
2026-01-24 09:25:29 +01:00
Junio C Hamano
ea24e2c554 A bit more before -rc2
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2026-01-23 13:34:37 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
a85b5220e1 Merge branch 'dk/replay-doc-omit-irrelevant-rev-list-options'
Documentation clean-up.

* dk/replay-doc-omit-irrelevant-rev-list-options:
  lint-gitlink: preemptively ignore all /ifn?def|endif/ macros
  replay: drop rev-list formatting options from manual
2026-01-23 13:34:37 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
26f50ef98f Merge branch 'js/symlink-windows'
Upstream symbolic link support on Windows from Git-for-Windows.

* js/symlink-windows:
  mingw: special-case index entries for symlinks with buggy size
  mingw: emulate `stat()` a little more faithfully
  mingw: try to create symlinks without elevated permissions
  mingw: add support for symlinks to directories
  mingw: implement basic `symlink()` functionality (file symlinks only)
  mingw: implement `readlink()`
  mingw: allow `mingw_chdir()` to change to symlink-resolved directories
  mingw: support renaming symlinks
  mingw: handle symlinks to directories in `mingw_unlink()`
  mingw: add symlink-specific error codes
  mingw: change default of `core.symlinks` to false
  mingw: factor out the retry logic
  mingw: compute the correct size for symlinks in `mingw_lstat()`
  mingw: teach dirent about symlinks
  mingw: let `mingw_lstat()` error early upon problems with reparse points
  mingw: drop the separate `do_lstat()` function
  mingw: implement `stat()` with symlink support
  mingw: don't call `GetFileAttributes()` twice in `mingw_lstat()`
2026-01-23 13:34:37 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
f2e92f7b04 Merge branch 'pw/mailmap-self'
Unify entries in .mailmap file for Phillip Wood.

* pw/mailmap-self:
  mailmap: add an entry for Phillip Wood
2026-01-23 13:34:36 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
1f047a6fba Merge branch 'js/ci-leak-skip-svn'
Dscho observed that SVN tests are taking too much time in CI leak
checking tasks, but most time is spent not in our code but in libsvn
code (which happen to be written in Perl), whose leaks have little
value to discover for us.  Skip SVN, P4, and CVS tests in the leak
checking tasks.

* js/ci-leak-skip-svn:
  ci: skip CVS and P4 tests in leaks job, too
  ci(*-leaks): skip the git-svn tests to save time
2026-01-23 13:34:36 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
3d95282129 Merge branch 'jx/build-options-gettext'
"git bugreport" and "git version --build-options" learned to
include use of 'gettext' feature, to make it easier to diagnose
problems around l10n.

* jx/build-options-gettext:
  help: report on whether or not gettext is enabled
2026-01-23 13:34:36 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
62627a3484 Merge branch 'ty/t1005-test-path-is-helpers'
Test clean-up.

* ty/t1005-test-path-is-helpers:
  t1005: modernize "! test -f" to "test_path_is_missing"
2026-01-23 13:34:36 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
cd8b8cba47 Merge branch 'rj/cygwin-test-fixes-for-2.53'
Test fixup.

* rj/cygwin-test-fixes-for-2.53:
  t0610-reftable-basics: mitigate a flaky test on cygwin
  t9700/test.pl: fix path type expectation on cygwin
2026-01-23 13:34:36 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
cfa173a5fa Merge branch 'sb/doc-update-ref-markup-fix'
Doc mark-up fix.

* sb/doc-update-ref-markup-fix:
  doc: fix `update-ref` `symref-create` formatting
2026-01-23 13:34:35 -08:00
Junio C Hamano
b3722b381e Merge branch 'kh/mailmap-avila'
* kh/mailmap-avila:
  .mailmap: fix and expand mappings for Jean-Noël Avila
2026-01-23 13:34:35 -08:00
Alexander Shopov
83a705b687 git-gui i18n: Update Bulgarian translation (557t)
Fix the meaning of a string

Signed-off-by: Alexander Shopov <ash@kambanaria.org>
2026-01-23 11:14:01 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
5f32b8db3c Merge 'readme' into HEAD
Add a README.md for GitHub goodness.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
v2.53.0-rc1.windows.1
2026-01-22 18:00:57 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
f37c01caaf Merge pull request #2837 from dscho/monitor-component-updates
Start monitoring updates of Git for Windows' component in the open
2026-01-22 18:00:57 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
325201db8e Merge branch 'deprecate-core.useBuiltinFSMonitor'
Originally introduced as `core.useBuiltinFSMonitor` in Git for Windows
and developed, improved and stabilized there, the built-in FSMonitor
only made it into upstream Git (after unnecessarily long hemming and
hawing and throwing overly perfectionist style review sticks into the
spokes) as `core.fsmonitor = true`.

In Git for Windows, with this topic branch, we re-introduce the
now-obsolete config setting, with warnings suggesting to existing users
how to switch to the new config setting, with the intention to
ultimately drop the patch at some stage.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-22 18:00:57 +01:00
Johannes Schindelin
7d28fd892e Merge branch 'phase-out-reset-stdin'
This topic branch re-adds the deprecated --stdin/-z options to `git
reset`. Those patches were overridden by a different set of options in
the upstream Git project before we could propose `--stdin`.

We offered this in MinGit to applications that wanted a safer way to
pass lots of pathspecs to Git, and these applications will need to be
adjusted.

Instead of `--stdin`, `--pathspec-from-file=-` should be used, and
instead of `-z`, `--pathspec-file-nul`.

Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
2026-01-22 18:00:57 +01:00