In Git-for-Windows, work on using ARM64 has progressed. The
commit 2d94b77b27 (cmake: allow building for Windows/ARM64, 2020-12-04)
failed to notice that /compat/vcbuild/vcpkg_install.bat will default to
using the "x64-windows" architecture for the vcpkg installation if not set,
but CMake is not told of this default. Commit 635b6d99b3 (vcbuild: install
ARM64 dependencies when building ARM64 binaries, 2020-01-31) later updated
vcpkg_install.bat to accept an arch (%1) parameter, but retained the default.
This default is neccessary for the use case where the project directory is
opened directly in Visual Studio, which will find and build a CMakeLists.txt
file without any parameters, thus expecting use of the default setting.
Also Visual studio will generate internal .sln solution and .vcxproj project
files needed for some extension tools. Inform users of the additional
.sln/.vcxproj generation.
** How to test:
rm -rf '.vs' # remove old visual studio settings
rm -rf 'compat/vcbuild/vcpkg' # remove any vcpkg downloads
rm -rf 'contrib/buildsystems/out' # remove builds & CMake artifacts
with a fresh Visual Studio Community Edition, File>>Open>>(git *folder*)
to load the project (which will take some time!).
check for successful compilation.
The implicit .sln (etc.) are in the hidden .vs directory created by
Visual Studio.
Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.email>
The CMakeSettings.json file is tool generated. Developers may track it
should they provide additional settings.
Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.email>
Git's regular Makefile mentions that HOST_CPU should be defined when cross-compiling Git: 37796bca76/Makefile (L438-L439)
This is then used to set the GIT_HOST_CPU variable when compiling Git: 37796bca76/Makefile (L1337-L1341)
Then, when the user runs `git version --build-options`, it returns that value: 37796bca76/help.c (L658)
This commit adds the same functionality to the CMake configuration. Users can now set -DHOST_CPU= to set the target architecture.
Signed-off-by: Dennis Ameling <dennis@dennisameling.com>
There are no Windows/ARM64 agents in GitHub Actions yet, therefore we
just skip adjusting the `vs-test` job for now.
Signed-off-by: Dennis Ameling <dennis@dennisameling.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In this context, a "feature" is a dependency combined with its own
dependencies.
Signed-off-by: Ian Bearman <ianb@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The vcpkg downloads may not succeed. Warn careful readers of the time out.
A simple retry will usually resolve the issue.
Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.email>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The vcpkg_install batch file depends on the availability of a
working Git on the CMD path. This may not be present if the user
has selected the 'bash only' option during Git-for-Windows install.
Detect and tell the user about their lack of a working Git in the CMD
window.
Fixes#2348.
A separate PR https://github.com/git-for-windows/build-extra/pull/258
now highlights the recommended path setting during install.
Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.email>
The `windows-latest` runner image migration that began on June 8, 2026
and completes on June 15, 2026 switches the default Visual Studio
install from VS 2022 (v17) to VS 2026 (v18), per
https://github.com/actions/runner-images/issues/14017.
CMake 4.x picks up the new generator name "Visual Studio 18 2026"
automatically and, crucially, writes the solution file with the new
`.slnx` (XML) extension rather than `.sln`. See
https://github.com/Kitware/CMake/blob/v4.3.2/Source/cmGlobalVisualStudioGenerator.cxx#L1147-L1159
where `GetSLNFile()` appends an "x" to the filename when the generator
version is `VS18` or newer.
As a result, the `MSBuild` step in the `vs-build` job fails with
MSBUILD : error MSB1009: Project file does not exist.
Switch: git.sln
because the file CMake actually wrote is `git.slnx`. An example of the
failure can be seen at
https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/actions/runs/27264770241/job/80556419519.
Teach the step to prefer `git.slnx` and fall back to `git.sln` so that
it works on both the new image and any runner still on VS 2022 during
the week-long staggered rollout. The conditional is written in
PowerShell rather than bash so the step stays on the default shell:
`microsoft/setup-msbuild@v3` adds `msbuild` to the Windows `PATH` only,
and an MSYS2 bash spawned by the SDK does not pick it up (an earlier
attempt at this fix using `shell: bash` failed with
`msbuild: command not found`, see
https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/actions/runs/27290221733/job/80608493655).
Letting MSBuild itself discover the solution by omitting the project
argument is not an option here either: CMake emits all `*.vcxproj`
files (one per `add_executable`/`add_library`, e.g.
`git-daemon.vcxproj`, `common-main.vcxproj`, `ALL_BUILD.vcxproj`, ...)
into the same build root as the solution file, and MSBuild's
auto-discovery in
`ProcessProjectSwitch()` (`dotnet/msbuild`, `src/MSBuild/XMake.cs`)
rejects that combination as `AmbiguousProjectError` because it only
disambiguates the special case of exactly two projects where one has a
`.proj` extension.
Additionally, drop the `-property:PlatformToolset=v142` argument that
had been carried since 889cacb6 (ci: configure GitHub Actions for
CI/PR, 2020-04-11), when this job was first configured for VS 2019.
The VS 2026 install on `windows-latest` only ships the v144 toolset
along with a v143 compatibility component
(`Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.14.44.17.14.x86.x64`); v142 is
no longer present, so the explicit pin would now also fail in its own
right. Removing it lets MSBuild use whatever toolset CMake selected
during configuration (v143 on a VS 2022 runner, v144 on a VS 2026 one),
which keeps the configure and build steps consistent with each other
regardless of which image picked up the job.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Assisted-by: Opus 4.7
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>
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>
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>
On Windows, symbolic links come in two flavors: file symlinks and
directory symlinks. Since Git was born on Linux where this distinction
does not exist, Git for Windows has to auto-detect the type by looking
at the target. When the target does not yet exist at symlink creation
time, Git for Windows creates a "phantom" file symlink and later, once
checkout is complete, calls `CreateFileW()` on the target to check
whether it is actually a directory.
If the symlink target is a UNC path (e.g. `\\attacker\share`), this
auto-detection triggers an SMB connection to the remote host. Windows
performs NTLM authentication by default for such connections, which
means a crafted repository can exfiltrate the cloning user's NTLMv2
hash to an attacker-controlled server without any user interaction
beyond `git clone -c core.symlinks=true <url>`.
There are ways to specify UNC paths that start with only a single
backslash (e.g. `\??\UNC\host\share`); All of them do start like
that, though, so let's use that as a tell-tale that we should skip
the auto-detection in `process_phantom_symlink()`. The symlink is
then left as a file symlink (the `mklink` default), and a warning is
emitted suggesting the user set the `symlink` gitattribute to `dir`
if a directory symlink is needed. When the attribute is already set,
auto-detection is never invoked in the first place, so that code path
is unaffected.
This is the same class of vulnerability as CVE-2025-66413
(https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/security/advisories/GHSA-hv9c-4jm9-jh3x)
and follows the same general mitigation pattern that MinTTY adopted for
ANSI escape sequences referencing network share paths
(https://github.com/mintty/mintty/security/advisories/GHSA-jf4m-m6rv-p6c5).
Note that there are legitimate paths starting with a single backslash
that are _not_ network paths: drive-less absolute paths are interpreted
as relative to the current working directory's drive. In practice, these
are highly uncommon (and brittle, just one working directory change
away from breaking). In any case, the only consequence is now that the
symlink type of those has to be specified via Git attributes, is all.
Reported-by: Justin Lee <jessdhoctor@gmail.com>
Addresses: CVE-2026-32631
Addresses: https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/security/advisories/GHSA-9j5h-h4m7-85hx
Assisted-by: Claude Opus 4.6
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Every once in a while I need to verify that Microsoft Git's test suite
passes for changes that are not yet meant for public consumption, and
since it was (made) too difficult to keep up a working Azure Pipeline
definition, I have to use GitHub Actions in a private GitHub repository
for that purpose.
In these tests, basically all Dockerized CI jobs fail consistently. The
symptom is something like:
error: cannot create async thread: Resource temporarily unavailable
in the middle of a test, typically in the t5xxx-t6xxx range. The first
such error is immediately followed by plenty more of these errors, and
not a single test succeeds afterwards.
At first, I thought that maybe the massive parallelism I enjoy there is
the problem, and I thought that the cgroups limits might be shared
between the many containers that run on essentially the same physical
machine. But even reducing the matrix to just a single of those
Dockerized jobs runs into the very same problems.
The underlying reason seems to be a substantial difference in the hosted
runners that execute these Dockerized jobs: forcing the PID limit of the
container to a high number lets the jobs pass, even when running the
complete matrix of all 13 Dockerized jobs concurrently. But that's not
the only difference: The jobs seem to take a lot longer in these
containers than, say, in the containers made available to
https://github.com/git/git.
When forcing a PID limit of 64k in that private repository, the jobs
completed successfully, but they also took a lot longer, between 2x to
2.5x longer, i.e. painfully much longer. Reducing the PID limit to 16k,
the CI jobs still passed, but took an equally long amount of time.
Reducing the PID limit to 8k caused the errors to reappear.
Here are the numbers from three example runs, the first one forcing the
PID and nproc limit to 65536, the second one to 16384, the third run is
from the public git/git repository:
Job | 64k | 16k | reference
------------------------------|---------|---------|---------
almalinux-8 | 19m 3s | 16m 0s | 9m 36s
debian-11 | 20m 31s | 20m 3s | 8m 5s
fedora-breaking-changes-meson | 16m 29s | 19m 19s | 9m 40s
linux-asan-ubsan | 1h 10m | 1h 11m | 34m 36s
linux-breaking-changes | 25m 39s | 25m 58s | 13m 15s
linux-leaks | 1h 9m | 1h 10m | 33m 30s
linux-meson | 28m 9s | 27m 4s | 13m 45s
linux-musl-meson | 16m 32s | 13m 39s | 8m 6s
linux-reftable-leaks | 1h 13m | 1h 13m | 34m 34s
linux-reftable | 26m 2s | 25m 48s | 13m 31s
linux-sha256 | 26m 12s | 26m 3s | 12m 36s
linux-TEST-vars | 26m 5s | 25m 21s | 13m 25s
linux32 | 21m 16s | 19m 57s | 10m 44s
It does not look as if the PID limit is the reason for the longer
runtime, seeing as the 64k vs 16k timings deviate no more than as is
usual with GitHub workflows. So let's go for 16k.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
A linker warning on macOS when building with Xcode 16.3 or newer has
been avoided by passing -fno-common to the compiler when a
sufficiently new linker is detected.
* hn/macos-linker-warning:
config.mak.uname: avoid macOS linker warning on Xcode 16.3+
In t3070-wildmatch, "via ls-files" test variants with patterns
containing backslash escapes are now skipped on Windows, avoiding 36
test failures caused by pathspec separator conversion.
* kk/wildmatch-windows-ls-files-prereq:
t3070: skip ls-files tests with backslash patterns on Windows
The documentation for "--word-diff" has been extended with a bit of
implementation detail of where these different words come from.
* mm/doc-word-diff:
doc: clarify that --word-diff operates on line-level hunks
A memory leak in `fetch_and_setup_pack_index()` when verification of
the downloaded pack index fails has been plugged. Also an obsolete
`unlink()` call on parse failure has been cleaned up.
* lp/http-fetch-pack-index-leak-fix:
http: fix memory leak in fetch_and_setup_pack_index()
http: cleanup function fetch_and_setup_pack_index()
The loose object source has been refactored into a proper `struct
odb_source`.
* ps/odb-source-loose:
odb/source-loose: drop pointer to the "files" source
odb/source-loose: stub out remaining callbacks
odb/source-loose: wire up `write_object_stream()` callback
object-file: refactor writing objects to use loose source
odb/source-loose: wire up `write_object()` callback
loose: refactor object map to operate on `struct odb_source_loose`
odb/source-loose: wire up `freshen_object()` callback
odb/source-loose: drop `odb_source_loose_has_object()`
odb/source-loose: wire up `count_objects()` callback
odb/source-loose: wire up `find_abbrev_len()` callback
odb/source-loose: wire up `for_each_object()` callback
odb/source-loose: wire up `read_object_stream()` callback
odb/source-loose: wire up `read_object_info()` callback
odb/source-loose: wire up `close()` callback
odb/source-loose: wire up `reprepare()` callback
odb/source-loose: start converting to a proper `struct odb_source`
odb/source-loose: store pointer to "files" instead of generic source
odb/source-loose: move loose source into "odb/" subsystem
The `git log -L` implementation has been refactored to use the
standard diff output pipeline, enabling pickaxe and diff-filter to
work as expected. Additionally, metadata-only diff formats like
--raw and --name-only are now supported with -L.
* mm/line-log-cleanup:
line-log: allow non-patch diff formats with -L
line-log: integrate -L output with the standard log-tree pipeline
revision: move -L setup before output_format-to-diff derivation
Correct use of sockaddr API in "git daemon".
* st/daemon-sockaddr-fixes:
daemon: guard NULL REMOTE_PORT in execute() logging
daemon: fix IPv6 address truncation in ip2str()
daemon: fix IPv6 address corruption in lookup_hostname()
This is the recommended way on GitHub to describe policies revolving around
security issues and about supported versions.
Helped-by: Sven Strickroth <email@cs-ware.de>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Git for Windows accepts pull requests; Core Git does not. Therefore we
need to adjust the template (because it only matches core Git's
project management style, not ours).
Also: direct Git for Windows enhancements to their contributions page,
space out the text for easy reading, and clarify that the mailing list
is plain text, not HTML.
Signed-off-by: Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.org>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Getting started contributing to Git can be difficult on a Windows
machine. CONTRIBUTING.md contains a guide to getting started, including
detailed steps for setting up build tools, running tests, and
submitting patches to upstream.
[includes an example by Pratik Karki how to submit v2, v3, v4, etc.]
Signed-off-by: Derrick Stolee <dstolee@microsoft.com>
The Git project followed Git for Windows' lead and added their Code of
Conduct, based on the Contributor Covenant v1.4, later updated to v2.0.
We adapt it slightly to Git for Windows.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In this time and age, AI is everywhere. However, it's sometimes not very
easy to use. For green-field projects it works quite a bit better than
for existing legacy projects. And Git's source code is _quite_ as legacy
code as they come... 😁
Now, the only way how AI can be used efficiently with legacy code
is by providing enough information by way of prompt context for the
AI to have a chance to make any sense of the code. The structure and
the architecture is, after all, not designed for AI, but rather the
opposite: By virtue of having grown organically over two decades, there
is no design that AI coding models would readily grasp.
So here is a document that describes all kinds of aspects about this
project. The idea is to help AI by providing information that it does
not have ingrained in its weights. The idea is to provide information
that a human prompter might take for granted, but no coding model will
have been trained on specifically.
Assisted-by: Claude Opus 4.5
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The Git for Windows project has grown quite complex over the years,
certainly much more complex than during the first years where the
`msysgit.git` repository was abusing Git for package management purposes
and the `git/git` fork was called `4msysgit.git`.
Let's describe the status quo in a thorough way.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
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>
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>
A fix for calling `vim` in Windows Terminal caused a regression and was
reverted. We partially un-revert this, to get the fix again.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
These are Git for Windows' Git GUI and gitk patches. We will have to
decide at some point what to do about them, but that's a little lower
priority (as Git GUI seems to be unmaintained for the time being, and
the gitk maintainer keeps a very low profile on the Git mailing list,
too).
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
On Windows, the current working directory is pretty much guaranteed to
contain a colon. If we feed that path to CVS, it mistakes it for a
separator between host and port, though.
This has not been a problem so far because Git for Windows uses MSYS2's
Bash using a POSIX emulation layer that also pretends that the current
directory is a Unix path (at least as long as we're in a shell script).
However, that is rather limiting, as Git for Windows also explores other
ports of other Unix shells. One of those is BusyBox-w32's ash, which is
a native port (i.e. *not* using any POSIX emulation layer, and certainly
not emulating Unix paths).
So let's just detect if there is a colon in $PWD and punt in that case.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Reintroduce the 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor' config setting (originally added
in 0a756b2a25 (fsmonitor: config settings are repository-specific,
2021-03-05)) after its removal from the upstream version of FSMonitor.
Upstream, the 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor' setting was rendered obsolete by
"overloading" the 'core.fsmonitor' setting to take a boolean value. However,
several applications (e.g., 'scalar') utilize the original config setting,
so it should be preserved for a deprecation period before complete removal:
* if 'core.fsmonitor' is a boolean, the user is correctly using the new
config syntax; do not use 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor'.
* if 'core.fsmonitor' is unspecified, use 'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor'.
* if 'core.fsmonitor' is a path, override and use the builtin FSMonitor if
'core.useBuiltinFSMonitor' is 'true'; otherwise, use the FSMonitor hook
indicated by the path.
Additionally, for this deprecation period, advise users to switch to using
'core.fsmonitor' to specify their use of the builtin FSMonitor.
Signed-off-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
The `--stdin` option was a well-established paradigm in other commands,
therefore we implemented it in `git reset` for use by Visual Studio.
Unfortunately, upstream Git decided that it is time to introduce
`--pathspec-from-file` instead.
To keep backwards-compatibility for some grace period, we therefore
reinstate the `--stdin` option on top of the `--pathspec-from-file`
option, but mark it firmly as deprecated.
Helped-by: Victoria Dye <vdye@github.com>
Helped-by: Matthew John Cheetham <mjcheetham@outlook.com>
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
In e3f7e01b50 (Revert "editor: save and reset terminal after calling
EDITOR", 2021-11-22), we reverted the commit wholesale where the
terminal state would be saved and restored before/after calling an
editor.
The reverted commit was intended to fix a problem with Windows Terminal
where simply calling `vi` would cause problems afterwards.
To fix the problem addressed by the revert, but _still_ keep the problem
with Windows Terminal fixed, let's revert the revert, with a twist: we
restrict the save/restore _specifically_ to the case where `vi` (or
`vim`) is called, and do not do the same for any other editor.
This should still catch the majority of the cases, and will bridge the
time until the original patch is re-done in a way that addresses all
concerns.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>