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>
This commit imports mimalloc's source code as per v2.1.2, fetched from
the tag at https://github.com/microsoft/mimalloc.
The .c files are from the src/ subdirectory, and the .h files from the
include/ and include/mimalloc/ subdirectories. We will subsequently
modify the source code to accommodate building within Git's context.
Since we plan on using the `mi_*()` family of functions, we skip the
C++-specific source code, some POSIX compliant functions to interact
with mimalloc, and the code that wants to support auto-magic overriding
of the `malloc()` function (mimalloc-new-delete.h, alloc-posix.c,
mimalloc-override.h, alloc-override.c, alloc-override-osx.c,
alloc-override-win.c and static.c).
To appease the `check-whitespace` job of Git's Continuous Integration,
this commit was washed one time via `git rebase --whitespace=fix`.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
We are about to vendor in `mimalloc`'s source code which we will want to
include `git-compat-util.h` after defining that constant.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
The mingw-w64 GCC seems to link implicitly to libwinpthread, which does
implement a pthread emulation (that is more complete than Git's). Let's
keep preferring Git's.
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>
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>
When adding tree objects, we are very careful to avoid adding the same
tree object more than once. There was one small gap in that logic,
though: when adding a root tree object. Two refs can easily share the
same root tree object, and we should still not add it more than once.
When adding tree objects, we are very careful to avoid adding the same
tree object more than once. There was one small gap in that logic,
though: when adding a root tree object. Two refs can easily share the
same root tree object, and we should still not add it more than once.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
macOS with fsmonitor daemon can hang forever when a submodule is
involved, which has been corrected.
* kn/osx-fsmonitor-with-submodules-fix:
fsmonitor OSX: fix hangs for submodules
Usability improvements for running tests in leak-checking mode.
* jk/test-lsan-improvements:
test-lib: check for leak logs after every test
test-lib: show leak-sanitizer logs on --immediate failure
test-lib: stop showing old leak logs
In 6241ce2170 (refs/reftable: reload locked stack when preparing
transaction, 2024-09-24) we have introduced a new test that exercises
how the reftable backend behaves with many concurrent writers all racing
with each other. This test was introduced after a couple of fixes in
this context that should make concurrent writes behave gracefully. As it
turns out though, Windows systems do not yet handle concurrent writes
properly, as we've got two reports for Cygwin and MinGW failing in this
newly added test.
The root cause of this is how we update the "tables.list" file: when
writing a new stack of tables we first write the data into a lockfile
and then rename that file into place. But Windows forbids us from doing
that rename when the target path is open for reading by another process.
And as the test races both readers and writers with each other we are
quite likely to hit this edge case.
This is not a regression: the logic didn't work before the mentioned
commit, and after the commit it performs well on Linux and macOS, and
the situation on Windows should have at least improved a bit. But the
test shows that we need to put more thought into how to make this work
properly there.
Work around the issue by disabling the test on Windows for now. While at
it, increase the locking timeout to address reported timeouts when using
either the address or memory sanitizer, which also tend to significantly
extend the runtime of this test.
This should be revisited after Git v2.47 is out.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
fsmonitor_classify_path_absolute() expects state->path_gitdir_watch.buf
has no trailing '/' or '.' For a submodule, fsmonitor_run_daemon() sets
the value with trailing "/." (as repo_get_git_dir(the_repository) on
Darwin returns ".") so that fsmonitor_classify_path_absolute() returns
IS_OUTSIDE_CONE.
In this case, fsevent_callback() doesn't update cookie_list so that
fsmonitor_publish() does nothing and with_lock__mark_cookies_seen() is
not invoked.
As with_lock__wait_for_cookie() infinitely waits for state->cookies_cond
that with_lock__mark_cookies_seen() should unlock, the whole daemon
hangs.
Remove trailing "/." from state->path_gitdir_watch.buf for submodules
and add a corresponding test in t7527-builtin-fsmonitor.sh. The test is
disabled for MINGW because hangs treated with this patch occur only for
Darwin and there is no simple way to terminate the win32 fsmonitor
daemon that hangs.
Suggested-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Suggested-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Koji Nakamaru <koji.nakamaru@gree.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
We tried quite a few things, but this is a failure introduced at the
last -rc before v2.47.0 _and_ it only documents existing behavior as
far as Windows is concerned (concurrent writes are a problem there with
reftables).
So let's punt and simply disable this test for now, to take the pressure
off of v2.47.0.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de>
Commit 253ed9ecff (hash.h: scaffolding for _unsafe hashing variants,
2024-09-26) introduced the concept of having two hash algorithms: a safe
and an unsafe one. When the Makefile knobs do not explicitly request an
unsafe one, we fall back to using the safe algorithm.
However, the fallback to do so forgot one case: we should inherit the
NEEDS_CLONE_HELPER flag from the safe variant. Failing to do so means
that we'll end up defining two clone functions (the algorithm specific
one, and the generic one that just calls memcpy). You'll see an error
like this:
$ make OPENSSL_SHA1=1
[...]
sha1/openssl.h:46:29: error: redefinition of ‘openssl_SHA1_Clone’
46 | #define platform_SHA1_Clone openssl_SHA1_Clone
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
hash.h:83:40: note: in expansion of macro ‘platform_SHA1_Clone’
83 | # define platform_SHA1_Clone_unsafe platform_SHA1_Clone
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
hash.h:101:33: note: in expansion of macro ‘platform_SHA1_Clone_unsafe’
101 | # define git_SHA1_Clone_unsafe platform_SHA1_Clone_unsafe
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
hash.h:133:20: note: in expansion of macro ‘git_SHA1_Clone_unsafe’
133 | static inline void git_SHA1_Clone_unsafe(git_SHA_CTX_unsafe *dst,
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
sha1/openssl.h:37:20: note: previous definition of ‘openssl_SHA1_Clone’ with type ‘void(struct openssl_SHA1_CTX *, const struct openssl_SHA1_CTX *)’
37 | static inline void openssl_SHA1_Clone(struct openssl_SHA1_CTX *dst,
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This only matters when compiling with openssl as the "safe" variant,
since it's the only algorithm that requires a clone helper (and even
then, only if you are using openssl 3.0+). And you should never do that,
because it's not safe. But still, the invocation above used to work and
should continue to do so until we decide to require a
collision-detecting variant for the safe algorithm entirely.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>